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                  <text>Page-12-The Dally Sentinel
I , .

I

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Liner kit dries out sweaty toilet tank
.

ASK ANNJ:

NAN

By ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN:
Could you sive us a remedy for
sweating toilet tanks? I have heard
there is a lray that attaches to the
bottom or the tank with some sort
of collection container for the
water. Do you know any other
inexpensive solution to the problem
or where I might gel this? - M.
PAINTER. Downinston. Pa.
DEAR M.: If you can't find the
toilet tank drip catcher you
describe in your leiter in the
plumbing section of your local
hardware/home supply store, you
can order it from the Voice of the

Mountains catalog, P.O. Box 3000,
Mancheste~ Center, VT OS2SS3000, It is uem !7712 and c~sts
$13.50, pl.us shlppmg. and ~~g.
Thl;a;e as ~so a to1let ~ nosweat do· It· yourself kat on ~e
market for around $20: It consists
of sheets of polyurethane aqjl a
tube of glue. You cut the poly to fit
the inside of yo~~ and use ~
~lue to keel? It 10 place. !~IS
anvolves, o~v1opsly, . f~l drainmg
and scrubbang the l,nude of the
tank.
,
. .
. ·
We could~ ~ find th1s Item an
an~ of our zijj1oo catalogs. But,
again, it is generally available in
hardware stores, or if that fails,
fr!Jm your local pl~mber .who
m1ght even agree to anslalllt for
you.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I
have a 60-year-old deck of ROOK
playing cards made by Parker Bros.
I wonder if you wOI!ld look it up i.n
your books on antiques to see 1f
anyone is collecting games as I
would like to sell them. Tbey 111'C in
the original box with all the literalure. - DOROTHY LeBERT,

DEAR DOROTHY: Games
have become a very collectible
item indeed! We looked up your
ROOK .cards in a book called
"Games: American Boxed Games
and Their Makers" by ·Bruce .
Whitehill (Wallace-Homestead
1992)r Prices for games run froni
$100~or a 193S first-edition ·
Monopoly game to No Value for
Trivial Pursuit.
The fiiSl ROOK cards were sold
in 1906 and the game became '!De
of the most popular, longest-selling
card games in history. This means
that there are a lot of ROOK games
still around or as our book
describes them: .:Very, very com·
moo." As a result, your cards are
worth very, very little: around $6.
READER FEEDBACK: Elinor
Gleet of Ocala, Fla., wanted to
know where sbe might obtain
toothbrushes for her Broxodent
Electric toothbrush, and we were
"Stumped."
·
Thanks to the many of you who
·wrote we have learned that the
tooth~sbes were recalled and dis·
continued by the company several

Honor rolls

~j~ts~:J!:U:8°,

Jon~Duffy,

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

PubliC Notice

(Continued from Page 9)
Dlvlalon Melga County,
Ohio, Addreu, Melgl
County Probata Court,
Court Houaa, Pomeroy,
Ohlo45761.
The obJect of the
Complaint Ia to oell th.a
dec:edent'o undivided ONE·
FOURTH lnterut In the
following deacrlbed rill
eahlta: .
An undivided ona-lourth
lntaraat In the following
ducrlbtd r11l eatate
altuated In the Townohlp of
Lebanon, Cciunly of Melgl
and State or Ohio, and
bounded and daacrlbed aa
lollowa:

Being In Section 20, Town
Range 11 of Ohio
Comptany'a Purchan.
Beginning at a atone
corner to Wm. Clark'• In
canter of road on. Walla
Run: thanca meandering
aald road aouth 5 dtgreaa
went 18 potu; thenc11outh
21 mlnutea watt 15 polaa;
eouth 41 degre11 weal 14
pol11; $.28 1/2 degree• W
67 polll; .s 87 dag ....
polaa; N13 dag: W36 polaa;
N 53 1/2 dtg. W 11 polaa to
a atoM In Hid road; thence
N 291/2 dag. E 124 polea to
a etone corner to Wm.
Clarki thence with eeld
Clark line N 13 1/2 dag. E 48

polu to the place of
baglnlng, containing 41
acree and 8 rode of land.
The purpo11 or aald •Ia
Ia to pay the debhl and
coata of admlnlatarlng the
utate of the decedent,
William Emmett larkin.
Vou ero required to
anewtr the Complaint
within 28 daya ellar the lilt!
publication or thla notice,
which will be publlahad
once tech weak lor alx
con.,cutlve -lea. The laat
publication will be made on
December 9, 1994 and the
28 daya for 1n1w1r Will
commence on that data.
In Clll of your fllllure to

3,

w.

~u're

ears ago due fu incidences of elec·

~sbcick.
If any of our readers are still
using them, please don't. Package
them up (used or unused) and send
them to Somerset Labs, c1o Clairol
Inc p 0 Box 10213 Stamford
cr'0692:i. and they•u' send you~
refund
'
write to "Ask Anne .t Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland. YrOS048.
Questions of general interest will
appear in the ~lumn. Due to ~e
volume of mad, personal replies
cannot be provided.

I·F8Bitured on page B-1

Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nash-Cummings are co-authors
or "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whet·
stone) and "Dear Anne and Nan:
Two Prize Problem-Sohers
Share Their Secrets" (Bantam).
To order, eall1-800·888-ll:ZO.
Copyrlght1994 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN..
(For Information on how to
communicate electronically wltb
this columnist and others, con·
tact America OnUne by calling 1·
800·827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Public Notice
anawar or otharwltt
rai'pond aa required by the
Ohio Rulte of Civil
Procedura, Judgment by
default will be rondared
agalnat you lor the roller
dtmanded In tha Complaint.
J.B. O'Brian, Attorney for
Holen A. Clevenger, Admx.
of the Etllte of William
Emmett Llrldna, dtce~led
100 112 Court st...t
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768
Lana M. Neaulrot~d
Clll'k of Court or
Common Pie..
Probata Dlvlalon,,
Malga County, Ohio

aU.

Ninth grade: Kelli Bailey, Chris
Buchanan, Michelle Caldwell, Billie Pooler, Michael Weeks; all A's;
Stepbani
Bearhs,
Billena
B d
B kl
Buchanan, ran on uc ey,
Jamie Drake, Joanna Gumpf,
Jeremiah Kehl, Misty Lyons,
Nicole White; overall.
Eighth grade: Beau Bailey, Jes·
sic Brannon, Stephanie Evans,
Valerie Karr, .Jessica Marcum,
Heath Proffitt, Aaron Will, Angela
Wolfe; overall.
Seventh grade: Joshua Broder·
ick, Maureen Heines; aU A's; Matt
Boyles, Mall Caldwell, Jeremy
Gillilan, Scou Needs , Brook
Nichols, Jessica Pore, Andrew
Rollins, Cassie Rose, Amanda
Upton, Steven Weeks, Joshua Will,
Deua Wrikeman: overall.

SPECIAL APPEARANCE - Holly William• and Daniel
Young, l,ons·time memben of the Shady River Sbumers, will be
maldiiiJ special appearance~ with the group wblch wW present a
novelty action number In the Meigs County Talent Showcase at the
Meigs Janlor High School in Middleport on Nov. 25 and 26.
WWiams, who Is now residing In Pittsburgh, bas been maldng trips
back to Meigs County In order to take part In the reunion appear·
ance ot tbe Shulften. Curtain time on show nights Is 8:10 p.m.

.

.

OREN'S GREENHOUSE

,.-.

.

-

.

Do To Overhelming Response .
We Have Cooked A New Batch Of

Apple Butter Cooked In A Cop...,
· Kettle Over An Open Fire
AYIIUILE IH PINTS AND.QUIRTS
·Greenhouse Hours:
Mon.·Fri. 9~5, Sat. 9·4, Sundar 1·4

KAREN'S GREENHOUSE
Located 3 y, miles pa1t Southern High School
on Rt. 124
949-2682

RACINE, OH

308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio
1-992-6614 1-800-8237-1094

40%*o

PRE-OWNED £AilS &amp; TRU£KS

f£ve'rgtliing in _the entire store!
See you on ~fie 20tli!

1991 GMC PICKUP- 5.speed, air, stereo .... ............................ ............... ............... $5,995 ..,
1990 CHEVY 1/2 PICKUP-V-8, auto, air ...................... :..................... .................... $9,995
1991 BUICK PARK AVE ULTRA· ......................................................................... $12,999
1993 CHEV. LUMINA Z·34·Bright Red, loaded, 23,000 miles, 1.1ocal owner .. .... $14,995
$15995
.
1993 CHEV
112 TON 4X4 PICKUP-auto, air.........................................................
,

~~ ·

c ~

~~ B.MOSS9i....,

1994 CHEVY STEPSIDE SPORT 4X4 PICKUP-auto, air, loaded ........................ $22,99~
1993 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX·2 dr, auto, air, 22,000 miles ................................. $12,995

,,

1993 NISSAN SENTRA-4 door, 5 speed, air, cassette ........................................... $8,995
1989 CHEV. S-10 BLAZER·V-:6, Tahoe, AC, 4x4, auto, stareo.............................$10,995

~

* Percentllge offappfid to origind ~t price,
not to 6e usetf with a"!! other tfiscount.
'1foes not app{y to previousfy purr:liaseimerchatuiise.
·
'J{p fwlifs pkase.
.l

••

if4Aiiil6tlt

Mo:, tly sun ny

Details

Ught winds

on Page A:!.

jud~ment

aga1nst CIC

provement PI'Ogrlim fund• second, resurface 17 miles of
1,_ Nld MelfiS County Com- Meigs Co~nty Roads 28 and 32 for
""

GALLIPOLIS - A motion for
summary judgment on behalf of a
man seeking$ I72,609 from the Com.
munity
Improvement Corporation of
r~~-•" "'· .• ~ l .
Galli
a
County
was rejected last week
' -r~t . .~ ~~
by
Common
Pleas
Court Judge Jo- ·
'
seph L. Cain.
Jack L. Swain, 232 Upper River
Road, Gallipolis, filed suit against the
CIC in June I 993, alleging breach of
contract on a land improvement
project off Airport Road, near SR 7..
According to the contract, Swain
ivas tiired to ...,.; fill din 10 raise lhe
elevation of a 2 I -acre tract even with
SR 7 and perform other projects.
As payment, the CIC was to trans·
fer a deed for I 6.8 acres of land to
Swai n's name and pay $58,978 for
the estimated 54.450 cubic yards of
soil used ·in the project.
Swain alleges the property was
never transferred and the project actually needed 74,000 cubic yards of
soil. The ClC claims it attempted to
' transfer the property, but Swain
wanted it deeded to a "joint venture"
instead of in his name.
'
Barker for alleged poaching activities and had received
Phillip M. Roberts &amp; Associates,
information that he would be in Meigs County that night. Inc., which provided an estimate for
Assisting Wood that night were several other wildlife the project, has been named as a thirdofficers, deputies of the Meigs .County Sheriff's Depart· party defendant. The CIC alleges the
ment and an Ohio Division of Wildlife airplane, he sa id. company was off by more than 20,000
"We set ourselves up in areas where Barker had been cubic yards.
·
arrested in the past," he added.
The CIC is asks any judgment made
Wood said he and his partner, sp&lt;teial deputy Dana in favor of the plaintiff be levied
Aldridge of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department. ob· against Roberts &amp; Associates;· and
served a car shining a light into surrounding fields around seeks judgment to cover l:osts and
12:55 a.m. and pulled down onto the road to wait for the legal fees. It is also asks a $5,000
car.
judgment against Swain, claiming he
"I was able to see into the car and recognized Barker," fa iled to stay within a designated area
Wood said. "He looked right at me. 1 know Mike."
for the project and that he did not seed
Continued on page A2
and mulch the area.

'.

'*•r•

$375,090 an grants;
• lhird, pave brick side streets
off Middleport's North Second

Prosecutor: Husband may plead
guilty to wife Is murde-:_during
Tuesdayls scheduled arraignment

for cook_ies, puncli, friends, and. ..

GRAND CENTRAL MALL

208

Court rejects
motion ·(or
summary

By GEORGE ABATE
Tlme..S.ntlnel Staff
POMEROY • The new Keno Bridge - slated for completion by the
beginning of next year- gained the top ranking for the ninth 'round of State
Capital lmprovemenl Program funding at the regular meeting of the Meigs
P,unty Board of Commissioners Friday.
sap grants would total$ 173,112 to replace this key bridge on County Road
28 which closed in September because it was unsafe.
The local SCiP committee prioritizes county projects based on points
awarded by the nine-county Buck.On sversge, the county eyeHiiiS/HockingValleyRegional
Development District.
,.,. between $600,000 snd
The list iif other projects encapttsllm- :~ by the local committee iil-

. ACCIJIId W8/vts right tp sUornczy

{6ejore iJ'ftank§giving antf aff tfie matfness)

.. •

Low:

suit.· Former U.S. Rep. John Anderson, who unsuccess·
" We allege that the lines were drawn to favor their
fully ran for president as an independent in 1980, is co- friends and to hurt their foes,'' Stivison said.
counsel.
The lawsuit charges that the current system violates the
Plaintiffs hope the case equal protection clause of the Constitution, free speech
goes to the U.S. Supreme and free association rights and the right.to have the state
Court and becomes pre- remain neutral in political contests.
cedent for the rest of the
The lawsuit is asking for new, nonpartisan lines drawn
country.
in time for the 1996 election.
The case centers on the
"Some people will be helped and some will be hurt,"
1992redrawingof0hio's Stivison said. " But it will be the lhrow of the dice, not
congressional districts.
because someone had it out for you .• '
The plaintiffs say that
Senate President Stanley Aronoff, one of the defen·
Republicans and Demo- dants, said he believes the lines are fair.
crats agreed each would
"In general, the districts meet the criteria of the highest
lose one seat when the state lost two seats following the court in the land, the Constitution and the Voting Rights
1990 census.
Continued on
A2

Avenue for $21,131 in grants;
• fourth, develop the Tuppers Plains Sewer District for $250,000 in grants;
and ,
· ·• fifth, pave 2.25 miles of Noble-Summit Road in Salisbury and Rutland
Townships for $107,929 in grants:
•
The regional committee will decide which projects will get funded first out
of a $7 million pot, and !he state usually complies with !he region's wishes, said
Fred Hoffman, Meigs County Commission president.
On average, the county gets between $600,000 and $800,000 in SCIP By JIM FREEMAN
projects funded, Hoffman said, adding he believes the county will gel three Times-Sentinel ataft
projects funded this year.
.POMEROY- A West Virginia man .accused of asThe local committee specifically discussed the Tuppers Plains Sewer saulting an Ohio wildlife officer following a car chase the
District project -which would end more than 20years of building bans forced morning of Nov. 11 will face a Meigs County grand jury
on the town by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency.
for possible indictment on two felony charges Monday.
Committee member and County Engineer Bob Eason said although he sees
Michael R. Barker, 49, Charleston, is charged with
tbe need for the sewer project it has not progressed as far as the sewer district felony fleeing and felonious assault of Meigs County
has led D(:Ople to believe.
Wildlife Officer Keith 0. Wood.
~My problem is this is for specific individuals not a system," Eason said,
Barker was bound over to the grand jury after a prelimiadding that he is concerned about the money being use!l to subsidize tap fees nary hearing Friday afternoon before Judge Patrick H.
i~¥~tead of going toward the entire system.
O'Brien of the Meigs County Court.
Gary Dill, representing the township trustees, said he is concerned because
During questioning by assistant prosecutor Chris
the sewer district has not spent previous SCIP funds.
Tenoglia, Wood recalled !he incident saying Ohio and
Continued on page A2
West Virginia wildlife officers had been inve~!ga ting

Sunday, 9\{{Jvember 20tli. ..

I

60s

· · · · · · ·· · · · · · · ·

Keno Bridge top ·
Meigs priority for
state capital funds

••••

(with an ~a early opening at 10 o'cfocl(
to give you fots of ~a tit11£)

. I

HI~

Alleged poacher faces Meigs grand jury

Invited. ..

W .. I

· COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Ohio js the testing ground
for a Constitutional challenge of political tinkering with
congressional district boundaries.
· Former U.S . Rep.
Oarence Miller, the Libertarian Party ofObio and several defeated congressional
candidates filed a lawsuit
. Friday in U.S. District Court,
accusing Democrats and
Republicans of unfairly re·
ducing the power of the voters.
· · •'We are trying to take the
state of Ohio out of the business of rigging elections, •' said
David Stivison, a Philadelphia lawyer handling the law-

missioner FrtHI Hoffman. ... ..

(11) 4,11,18, 25;
{12) 2, t; etc

...To a very Specia{
!J{ofiaay Open !J{ouse!
join us for One tfay Onfy-a{{ tfay...

0

··

-

nn.es-

Action charges Republicans, Democrats rig elections
:through political 'tinkering' with district boundaries

Eleventhgrade:RebeccaEvans,
Jessica Karr,Jennlfer Mora. Gin~er
Noller, Brandi Reeves, all A s;
Jorge Gomez. Robert Hoffman,
Lena Knous, Crystal Morris,
Robert Murphy, Nicole Nelson,
Micah
smit h,Otto,
H Connie
h w Pooler,
11 L Amy
eat er
e • auren
Young; overall.
Tenth grade: Meridith Crow,
Maria Frecker, aU A's; Patsy Aeiker, Angela Bissell, Angela Cabney,
William Francis, Lisa Frigiola,
Traci Heines, Martie Holter, Sean
Maxey, Amanda Milhoan, Jeanie
Newell, Erin Sexton, Lisa Stethem,
Alicia Walker, Tracy White; over·

,.

Miller suit challenges·congressional redistricting

aU.

~eikb:aB.ml~~. ~~~i~: fr:~!r~~;

GOP in charge:rhebattlebeglns - PageA7
o.s.u. beats Michigan, 22-6 -Page C1

•

un

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

Baker,La
__H_o_o_o_r_r_o_ll_s-fo_r_th_e_E_a_s_te_rn_""!"le-y-."!'A"!d-am'""'!C!!!'be-valier, Jessica OilSixth grade: Joshua Kehl, all
Local ScbooiDislrict for the rust ion, Amanda Felly, Sonya Freder- A's; Dean Alexander •. Mallhew
nine-weeks grading period have ick Mathew O'Brien, Jennifer Grubb, Joshua lble, Kevm Keaton,
been announced.
~ma. Chelsey Wood; overall.
Dustin Kebler, Michelle .O'~ail,
Students earning a grade of au
Third frade: Kassandra Lod- Wesley Shafer, Gary V1erlmg;
• A"s, "B" or beuer in all subje&lt;:ls, wick, all A s; Eric Batey, Brittany . overall.
or "B" or better in all academic Hauber Alyssa Holter, Ashley
Fifth grade: Bradley Brannon,
1o
11w1 O'Brie~. Jonathan Owen, Ryan Lin~sel Cross, Tiff~ny Kidder,
m:t'c and Stobarl Rebecca Taylor, Adam Chns yons, all A s; Theresa
Baker, Michael Bennett, Jan_el Cal·
"hysical education made the honor WI'Il·, overall' .
"
RiverView Elementary
away, Darlene Connolly, Kimberly
roll. The list includes the following
Sixth grade: Amber Baker, Marcinko, Bille Jo Welsh; overall.
Fourth grade: Ashley Boyles,
students from their respective Brandon Browning, Amber
schools:
Church Nathan Marcinko; overall. Thomas Simmons, Danielle
Cbester Elementary
.
Fifth gmde: Danielle Rucker, Thomas, Michelle Thomas, Jaime
Sixth grade: Juli Bailey, Kristen overall.
Whitlock, Carrie Wiggins; overall.
Chevalier, Cindll Clifford, John
Fourth grade: Joshua Eagle,
Third grade: Jessica Boyles,
Coolce. Wes Crow, Tiffany Hollon; Nichol Honaker; all A's; Krystal Hailee Cline, Chrissie Gregory,
Baker Miranda Buckley, Cyrus Ryan Kidder, Katie Robertson,
.
grade:
Ben Knoll;, Randall Mahon, Abbi · Nicholas Weeks; overall.
Ea.~tem Hi2h Scbqol .
H0 I G
Kart 011 W1'll all Thompson, Ryan Wachter, Chris
ter, arrell · •
Wilson; overall.
Twelfth grade: Charlie BISSell,
;·
A's; Jessica Bartels, Anthony
Third gmde: Sandy Powell, all Julie Brown, Jane! ~cDonald,
Bearbs, Tammy Bissell, Holly A's; Cody Bartram. Kevin Black- Becky Mcintyre, Hetdi Nelson, all
Broderick, Tricia Congo, Amber bum Steven Dillon Jennifer Har- A's; Ryan Buckley, Randy Burke,
·
•
R
H 11
Ellis, Whitney Karr, Sara Mansris Jimmy Husk Hollie Rose
Jessica Chevalier, yan o on,
field , Michael Taylor, Charlie Tyier Thompson, Annette Tucker: Joe Karschnilc, J.essica Radfor~.
You~~;:.eralgr!de: Carrie Crow, all Denise West; overall.
John Suttle, Dav1d Toundas, V1c
A's·, Joshua Basham, Brent Buck, Tuppers Plains ElementarY
Vanmeter, Stacey Woolard; over-

ov~fth

Holiday
food fest

----+-

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
Taxes and title fee not included. All payments ·All prices Include
· subject to credit approval.
':.'~:s;r:.a~~

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

~~luded.

HOURS:
Morday·Frlday
9AM · BPM

Salunlay
9AM · 4PM

. Sunday
IPM·SPM

News capsules

GOOD MORNING

Court rules against
congressman-elect
in concrete dispute
GALLIPOLIS • Failure to file a
reply to a lawsuit has cost congress·
man-elect and Gallipolis business·
man Frank Cremeans$9,655, according to records from Gallia County
Common Pleas Court.
Judge Joseph L. Cain ruled in favor
of D.G.M., Inc., of Pike County
Wednesday because Creme~ns,
own"r of Cremeans Concrete &amp; Supply Co., Inc., failed to file a response
within 30 days of being served the
suit.
D.G.M. claimed it soliciied
" Cremeans for a price quotation for
concrete and used the quote in calculating a bid submined for an Ohio
Department ofTransportation project.
The company was awarded the co·n·
tract, but Cremeans refused to sell the
concrete for !he agreed price, the suit
alleged. ·
·
The suit asked for $38,000.

Today's Times-Sentinel
14 Settioas . 162 Pages

Business
Calendars
Classifaeds
Comics
Editorials

Dl
83&amp;4

D3·7
Insert
A4
A3

Obituaries

A6

Sports

Cl-8
Bl
A2

A1oa the Rinr
Weather
Columns
Jask Apdcneg.
tJedCrnw
Jim Sagds

ChAckStope
c ..... ow. ....

.--.c..

'

•

�..

.-.

t~~~--

Page-A2--sunday nmes-Sentlnel

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

Sunday, Nov. 20
Accu-WeaW forecast for daytime conditions and

••
IToledo I.54• I

••

r.

IMansfield Iss• I•
iN D.

PA.

You

W.VA.

:

Ice

SLflny Pt CIO::dy Cloudy

VHIAuoci•t«&lt;P,...,~.,

~Keno

C1994Accu·Wealher, lnc.

Bridge

~

By The Associated Press
A large storm system mat bas
been producing snow over the
·Rockies began to move toward lbe.
Great Lakes this weekend.
The first sign of the system's
approach was lbe development of
some patchy clouds across Ohio
late Saturday. Lows dropped
between 25 and 35.
Today, as the low-pressure system moves closer, winds will begin
to increase from the southeast. This
will allow temperatures to return to
near 60 or even higher for most of
the slate.
Partial sunshine is expected
today but clouds eventually will
lbicken, which likely will lead to
some showers late tonight and into
Monday.
The system will generate gusty
winds and cooler temperatures
across Ohio. It will be cool enough
on Tuesday that a few snow flurries
may fall in the northeast.
The record bigb temperature for
Nov. 19 at tile Columbus weather

.I st

• increase the Meigs County Department of Human Services budget
from$10,000to$20,000fordrugand
alcohol abuse counseling, which will
l!e entirely federally funded.
• allow the department of human .
services to buy a new photocopier
from Office World for $1,649 since
the old copier required $900 in repairs.
•let the Meigs County Park District
get$64.45fornewpostcardsand$128
'or
,, soccer reg1'strat1'on to buy new
equipment.
• open advert 1's1'ng ,,'or the county
court's new computer .system.

ct .I n s
g

u•lt
. .

·

wascarvedintofourpiecesandheran
against another incumbent, Rep. Bob
. McEwen.
Miller said Republicans "sacrificed"
his seat in the political gerrymandering that the parties agreed to.
" This case is something that can
change the standa rds·so pol't'
1 1ca I gerd
·
ld
not
be
com1'ng
ryman enng wou
forth again to harm the challengers
and lo harm the present Congressmen," Miller said.

Continued from page A1
. Wood said Barker sped from the
area, leading officers on a 15 mile
chase on Mei~ County's twisting
township, county and state highways.
Barker'scarthen struck a deer and ran
into a ditch.
Wood said he chased after Barker
on foot, eventually tackled him and
found himself involved in a struggle
for control of his handgun.
"I felt both his hands on my gun,"
he said.
The struggle ended after Aldridge
knocked Barker unconscious with a
flashlight, Wood said.
During a search of Barker's car,
officers found a spotligh~ a highpowere!l .22-caliber rifle and deer
parts- blood and hair.
In addition to the two felony
charges, Barker will also face arraignment on 22 misdemeanor wildlife
charges, Wood said.

Earlier, officials agreed, te drop
. felony charges,against two other men
with Barker that night in exchange for
their lilstimony. However, the two
entered pleas to several misdemeanor
wildlife offenses.
Rickie D. Gobert, 40, Hurricane,
W.Va., pleaded guilty to six counts of
spotlighting, five counts of taking a
deer with a gun during closed season
and one count of improper trans porta- .
lion of a firearm.
Warren M. Shirkey, 36, South
Charleston, W.Va ., pleaded no contest with a finding of guilt to a charge
of spotlighting.
West Virginia officials are also investigating Barker's allegedpoaching activities, Wood said.
Barker has a history of wildlife
offenses dating back to 1975, Tenaglia
said earlier. The men were attempting
to kill trophy-sized deer so they could
sell the antlers, he added.

l'llbl- eadl Suodly, ll5 Third AYO.,
Oallpollo. Oltlo. by lite Oltlo Volley Pllbuatoa
'Co-y/NultJmocMa, Ia&lt;. Socood ......
lllpoid. Ollllpllll. Oltlo 4.16)[.- •
Oltlo,

. . .--llat-.._,.,
Tbt -

PRIVATE
INSURANCE
PLANS PROCESSED

RESIDENT
PSYCHIATRISTS
CONFIDENTIALITY.
PSYCHOLOGISTS &amp;
PROTECTED
SOCIAL WORKERS
~ Adolo-.1
.Patii-SeMco lor lho Homotou o!lo'*"-.
cou.-.ua lltonpy
~
oev- &amp; r-.g

-24-Hr. CllllliROIIclortill

-.

-Millll-

~n·o R - I l l

"24 Hr. Ernorgl!q SI.W.
-Monlogo&amp;Fwty

ofmplo)'HOAIII. ProgrM.

-~tontT-11

•Yicllm'o_p_

CO..-.g

GAlLIPOLIS - Woodland Centers, Inc., will be closed Nov.
24 and 25 for lbe Thanksgiving holiday. Those in need of emergency services or crisis intervention may call the 24-hour Crisis Line at
446-5554 or toll-free at 1-800-252-5554.

W1u1 Conrnunly T1111rq
oStopo-Houotnglor

Public school forum slated

Emallonotty'*-

oCMoloiOMIPTonl

MEOICAREoMEOICAli&gt;TlTLE XX•SliOING FEE SCALE-CERTIFIED BY STATE OF OHIOoEVENtNG APPTS. AVAILABLE

JACKSON

24 HOUR
CRISIS LINE

200 MAIN ST.
286·5075

T:::;!~~
24HOU

CAWPOUS CALUNG AREA

GALLIPOLIS

POMEROY - A symposium on public school concerns involving Meigs County schools will be held 7 p.m. Monday atlbe Meigs
Higb Scbool cafeteria
William L. Phillis, executive director of the Ohio Public School
.Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of School Funding will be the
featured speaker at the event which will also include several local
speakers.
·
Phillis will also discuss the state's appeal of a decision by a
Perry County Common PI~ Coun Ju~g~ who ruled t1!~1 the state_' s
education funding process as unconsutuuonal. In addauon, be wtll
be available to answer qu~tions from the audience.
Tb!l public is epc;o~ged to attend the symposium.

LOCAL CRISIS LINE

OUTSIDEOF

s

POMEROY

3086 STATE RT. 160

TOLL FREE DIAL 1
AND THEN

MULBERRY HEIGHTS

446-5500

800-252-5554

992-2192

Trustee meeting changed
EWINGTON - The Huntington Township Trustees' meeting
bas been changed to 7 p.m. Nov. 23 due t~ the }b_an~givin_g holiday. The meeting will be held at the township buildmg an Ewmgton.

Meigs awarded emergency funds

•••

CHESHIRE - Meigs County will receive $14,749 from the
Federal Emergency Management Agency for emergency ~ood ~d
shelter programs, according to a release from lbe Gallaa-Meags
Community Action Agency. .
A board of Meigs County citizens must decide bow the funds
will be awarded and distributed among emergency food and shelter
programs.
·
The local organizations must meet ~e
following criteria to get funds: be non-profit. have an accountmg
system and conduct an annual audit, practice non-discriminatio~,
show delivery of emergency food and/or shelter programs, and af
they are a private v61untary orglll1ization they must have a voluntary
board.
Local organizations are urged t:J apply. For more details, call
Sidney Edwards, executive director of the Gallia-Meigs C.A.A. at
992-6629.
Editor's note: Names, ages and addresses are printed as they
appear on official reports. All newsworthy actions wUI be pub·
Iisbed without exception.

11 12
18 fi
25.

5power
epsed·
, air, automatic,
windows
&amp; lot:Q,

llfoV whllla, powtt sunroof,
dual air bagl &amp; men.

----·- '

.

.~I'll

IWL~
.....
..

(614)
667-3350

Blue, 4 cyllnde&lt;, 5 opood,
!50 miloo per gallon.

Call
John Reeves

~c..,

;JI
_. _______ ,.1t6
I _S -______
- - -----------S21.14

- -----------. --SK~
-~~c..,

.

(614)
667-3350

~s-~--------._--S21~
oft _
________ _._ ___ ...

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

Jolep. L. Celo, JIJdae.
ArraigDmeDII
Micltae1Parker,227 SharpRoad,
Vinton, pleaded not guilty to a grand
jury indictment for receiving stolen
propcaty. Bond was set at $1,000
with 10 peroent secured.
Richard D. McDonald, 12
Georges CtWt Road, Gallipolis,
pleaded not guilty to a probation
violation. Bond was set at $5,000
with 10 peroent secured.
DlssolutioD
. N. Ralph Dean, 1116 Ge!l~&amp;es
&lt;:Rck Road, Gallipolis, and Janice
K. Dean,2183 Georges Creek Rood,
Gallipolis.

Gampoli§ Mupicjpal
William S. Medley, judge.
DUis
RichardSaunders,32,20Chamben Road, Ciown City, $1,500 plus
coon costs, six months jail {all but
three days suspended), one year probationandaone-yearlicensesuspension. Charges of possession of drug
paraphernalia and failure to yield
dismissed in exchange for guilty plea.
Mark A.Curnutte, 34,2549 Mill
Creek-Road, Gallipolis, $750 plus
ooun cOSls, six months in jail {all but
three days suspended), two years
probation, a one-year license suspension and !Odays community service;
$50 plus couneosts for no operator's

Divorces and
dissolutions
POMEROY - The following
actions to end marriage were filed
recently in the office of Larry
Spencer, Meigs County Clerk of
Courts.
Dissolutions asked: Wanda M.
Blackburn and Nick R. Blackburn,
both of Long Bottom, Nov. 15;
William Gregory Peck from Della
L. Peck. both of Langsville, Nov.
15; Clyde Kuhn , Ravenswood,
W.Va, and Shirley Marlene Kuhn,
Tupper'S Plains, Nov. 10.
Divoo:es asked: Kalby I. Fraley
from Curtis B. Fraley, both of
Pomeroy, Nov. 15; Peggy T. Stob~ Albany, from Jerry L. Stobart.
Coolville, Nov. 15.
Dissolution granted: Robert E.
Robie and Oara L. Robie, Nov. 9.
Divorces granted: Phyllis I.
Green· and William Ray Green,
Nov. 8; Bonnie Friend from Marvin L. Friend, Nov . 8; Ronda
Speelman from Faron-Speelman,
Nov. 8.

News Hotline

446-2342
Editors....Ext. 18 or 23
News•.••••:Ext. 19 or 21
Society..............Ext. 20
Sports............... Ext. 22

license.
Rol.en Halley. 30, 7(f.J Gage
Road, Patriot, $450 plus court costs
for DUI reduced to reckless ope111lion;$2SO(suspcnded)pluscouncosu
and one year probation Cor driving
under suspension. Charges of driving
a weaving course and possession of
marijuana dismissed in exchange for
pleas.
EdwardR.Siden,31, 164Paxton
Road, Gallipolis, $450 plus court
cosiS, 10 days in jail (seven days •
suspended), one year probation and a
six-rnonthlicense suspension. Charge
ofdrivingundersuspensiondismissed
in exchange for guilty plea. ·
Deborah Clary, 104 Green Tcoz-

Bobby Leach, I694 McCormick
Road,Gallipolis$150pluscourtcosts,
30 days in jail (suspended). one year
probation and I 0 days community
service for domestic violence.
Ryan M. Fullcoz, Vinton, $100
plus ooun costs, 30 days in jail (suspended) one year probation and five
days community service for underage consumption of alcohol.
Ryan Fullcoz, State Route 325,
Vinton,$50pluscourtCOSU,30days
in jail (suspended) one year probation and live days community service

operation due to low breathalyzer test
results.
Criminal
KeruJeth E. Sowards, 316 Swan
Creek Road, Crown City, $100 plus
court costs,! Odays in jail (suspended)
and six months probation.
Jeffrey E. Oiler, Gallia Met.
Estates, 38 I Buck Ridge Road, Bidwell, $100 (suspended) plus court
costs and six months probation for
underage consumption of alcohol
reduced to possession of an open
container of alcohol.
Alben M. Rose, 47, 104 Griffin
Street, Charleston, W.Va., $250 plus
coon costs, 30 days in jail {27 days
suspended) and one year probation
for petty theft.

Miseellaneous
Daniel L. Gillenwater, 21, 2524
Bunce Road, Gallipolis, $100 plus
coon costJ for driving under suspension.
Christopher Miller, 88 Locuat
Street,Gallipolis$100pluscourtcosls
for improper transportation of a firt.

ann.

Editor's Dote: Names, age$,
addresses and other information
are reported as available on court
rtrords. All newsworthy actions
will be published without exception.

Now watch television
on a Flex-A-Bed.

race~Gallipolis,$100pluscoun
costs for DUI reduced to reckless

•

H ONESTSAY I NuSD~ LI VERY • SERV ICE

15 YEAR WARRANTY

SOLD ONLY BY LOCAL EXCLUSIVE DEALERS

~~~~~~flilV.A.DGO
owe it to

~ourself to come in or

l~"'

call for prices today.

BOWMAN'S

DALE'S

IIOMEC.4RE MEDICAL SU PPI.Y

SI\IOIHiASBORD I

.J 1

~

Gallipolis 446-7283
Jackson 286-7484
Toll Free 1-800-458-6844

SILVER BRIDGE
SHOPPING CENTER
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Thanksgiving
Dinner Menu
Thursday,
Nove1111ber 24th
Serving 11 :00 a.m.
til 7:00 p.m.

•Turkey &amp; Dressing
•fried Chicken
•Baked Fish
•Ham wftll Raisin Saute
.Carved Roast Beef
•Stir fries
"Chicken &amp;Noodles
•Pumpkin Pie
95
Ad1lts

-'
· LET YOUR LOVE SHINE THIS HOLIDAY SEASON THROUGH A "LO'IE
LIGHTS A TREE" ORNAMENT
ORNAMENTS WILL BE DISPLAYED ON THE AMERICAN CANCER SOClElY AND '
COMMUNITY CHRISTMAS TREE AT THE GALLIA COUNTY COIJRTIIOUSE.

,,

Join us by completing the form tow.

•

r--------------7-~---------, ~
Enclosed is my gift of$
that will help li ght a Christma.'i Trtt I ·
,
($5.00. S lll.OO, $20.00, OlllerJ
J ,~
in honor of someorte spec ial to me .

My N a m e • - - - - - - - - - Phon&lt;
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Town/Siate _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Zi p_,....._ _ __

I would like lo hooor - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

I would like an ackn Qwkdgment card sent to:_ __ _ _ __

_

....:,

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Children Ages 3·9 $250
Monday thru Saturday
11 a.m. til 3 p.m.
4 p.m. Ill 8 p.m.
Sunday &amp; Holidays

..

FRIDAY- DECEMBER 2,1994 -6:00pm

$5

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Zip

Town/Stme

I

AMERICAN
&lt;;?CANCER
~ soom ·

L.

,

RET URN TO: ~meriun Can&lt;&gt;er Sociely

1AMERICAN

Galha Cou nty Unit
P.O. Bo• 813, Gallipolis,OH 45631

'f'CANCER

• SOCIOY ·

•

.J .

·-------------------------

.

(lark's twtlry Jtort

F S

·s

6 7

12
19
25 26

13 14
20"
27 21

$

~nnual thristmas

,
•

20

1995 HC'MDA PASSPORT LX

OO
0~

4 wheel drive, a Jmatlc,
power windows &amp; locks,

~~=--canette,

FF

.

$

23,450
.

s2oo·
,

~00
. FF

4 door,

stereo caisette,
tiH wheel,

dual air 11aga ..

$11,900.

"WWth approved credH

'·

·; '

60% ·~~
CHAINS, CHARMS. BRACELETS.
. EARRINGS AND MOREl
LEGITIMATE
211H

11:00-8:00 ~ .M. •
DUE TO THE OVERWHElMING WPONSE TO 001 PAST SAlES, WE ARE EXTENDING
.
~-··--·~·--··~·-~·--····~=IS SALt fOllWO IIIG DAYS TO ACCOJIUilODATI AU Of OUI CUSTOMERS. SO, SHOP

I
I .......................

J

SATlJIOAY Ol SUNDAY AND SAVE ON ATIEMENOOUS SEL£mON Of 14K COLO CHAIN
AND A sELEmoN oF DIAMOND JEWEUY NEVE&amp; auo&amp;E sEEN IN THIS AREA. sHoP
WHEIE vou w ALWAYS ASSUlED Of THE am QUALm AT THE am POSSIBLE PRICE~
DONT MISS THIS ONCE AYEAl SALE.
•

1

~.~-~

¥1--r:::;;;;

.· ~lE !/{jtpt_pty 9-l09{__'1J.9L nOPLT.

Every Hou; Glve A""aya . .-~
,

~

YOGa ftiOR"pw•J POLL I&amp;IMC8 .-......

\·

'·

'11~ktS- J.,--~
•••., flt_
m
v·

Con&gt;.....C...leba:a---'rbe. Yyletide Se.,aon.__ .
Thla 'Weekend At" Clark' a 'Wlffi Hoa:aetovvn
Service And Storewide Savina• ----------r
Sunday Novema.b•r 27th Stop By For
RefreshDleni• And Reals'ter Par Our

810 E. STATE ST~, ATHENS, OHIO
Phone.594·8555
'

.,
•

OUR PROS HAVE OVER 17 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE IN
SATElLITE SALES &amp; SERVICE fO ANSWER YOUR
QUESTIONS AND END THE CONFUSIONII!

-CARS

I

,•

Elptn House

JOE AND SUSAN CLARK WOULD LIKE TO EXTEND A WARM
INVITATION TO THEIR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS FOR THEIR
FINEST SALE OF THE CHRISTMAS SEASON; GIVING YOU THE
OPPORTUNITY TO VIEW OUR MABUFACTURERS COMPLETE LINE:

CAU THE EXPERTS
WHO'VE INSTALLED lOV's!

1995 HONDA CIVIC DX .

IJU-"' Ill' -.plflllillod to -

'IIIIo....,..
.
_ _ ,ledeelwlllaoiM
. , _ _ .. _ . . . .

Common Plea§

1995

19N FORD FESTIVA
.

Sunday Timcs-Scntinel/A3

~

1994 HONDA PRELUDE

\'.-........................................... 116,1)

·

Woodland Centers to close

-

17c-loror--

Regional

.

'

- . ............................... _. __.. __!10f

•,1, r

Walter Perry, First Holzer Apartments, Second Ave., Gallipolis, ·
was issued a summons Friday to appear in court to answer a charge
of domestic violence, the Gallipolis Police Department reported.
Police also cited David K. Navarro, 36, Las Vegas, Nev., early
Saturday morning for driving under the influence.

PAnE NT

1994 HONDA·ACCORD LX

IVNDAYOILY
AJJSCari'ION U'IU

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

Police issue summons

In,_,.

4 door, demo, automatic,
air, power windows &amp;
locks, cruise, dual · air
bags, AM/FM casaens.

............ ..attto Oltlo

,_.. . . -

GALLIPOLIS - A downed power line was the cause of a twoacre brush and woods rue Friday afternoon on Paxton Road, the
Gallipolis Volunteer Fue Department reponed.
Eleven firefighters responded with two trucks and batUed the
blaze for 1-112 hours. About 450 gallons of water were used on the

Plck·up,
5 spe8d, rally wheels .

Nlw s .,..wa ''Ina.

,_

Power line starts fire

JlootOftloo.

'

.,.._

GALLIPOLIS - William B. Caroots, 35, Dayton, was Jailed
Friday on a common pleas coun order for drug abuse, acwrding to
Gallia County Jail recmls.
Arrested by Gallipolis police early Saturday lOoming was Larry
D. Barcus, 44, 1063 Seoond Ave., Gallipolis, for driving under the
influence.
. Jailed by Gallia County Sberifrs Deputies was Timothy E. Johnson, 20, 106 Vine Street. Gallipolis, early Saturday monung for no
operator's license, driving under suspension, improper lane usage
and no seat belt, and Paula S. Johnson, Gallia Met. Estates, 381
Buck Ridge Road, Bidwell, Friday rtigbt on a municipal court bench
warrant for failure to appear.
James G. Shaver, Jr., 25, 2092 Johnson Ridge Road, Gallipolis,
was jailed Friday afternoon for a common pleas court ordered 10day commianent for a previous charge of drug trafficking.

Aloolloi,Drug Addlollonond - o l l l o o l l h -

1995
F S
7
14
21
26 27 28

'litnft- Jei~ud .' ·

_

ONE C:E THE M06TCOIFAEt£NSIVE &amp;PRlFESSIONAL IIENTALHEALTI!AGENCES HSOOli£ASTEFW CfiKl
I
WOOdllncl ~ II tundld
by the 0.1111-JecDon PI alga IMrd of

ell

junhq

_ _.,..

Wooa{andCenters, Inc.

VB, 5.0L, automatic, AM/FM cassette, power
seats , wincklws &amp; IOCtel. air conditioning, wtre
wheels. cruise, tilt. low miles.

• 011."

•··

Man jailed for drug abuse

4 5

~cylinder,

""

Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative workers removed the
downed line, a GVFD spokesman said.
The call was the 396th of the year.

troopers
~ promote use
~of safety belts

automatic, power lOcks/Windows,
tnt, 9600 miles.

0•

Local News in Brief..--.· - - - - - Gallia County Court News-----

~ State

-4.3L, 200 horsepower, 4JC4 , crurse,

-¥- ._.. ••••

November 20, 1994

Iii••

• GALLIPOLIS - Ohio drivers
· who buckle up will not only avoid
a ticket, but may also receive a T•
sbiJ1, ice scraper or other item from
Stale Highway Patrol troopers.
. LL .Dartiel Gibson of the Gallia·Meigs Post said the "Buckle Up
Every TWie" effm't is pt11t of a pre:holiday campaign aimed at increasing compliance with the state's
safety belt law.
Abut 69 percent of the 1,076
·f!COple killed in 1993 vehicle aasbes were not wearing seal belts, Gib-son said.
Less than half of ooe percent of
injury crashes involve fires or
submersiOil in water and 7~ percent
,t~f all crashes occur on short lrlps
- within 25 miles of borne, Gib-son said, knockinJ down two of the
.lnost popular masconceptions of
safety belt use.
-:.: "Defeating ignorance is. an
!lpbiD battle but we must c:oounuc
to combille enforcement with edu. c atiOD," Gibson aaid. "We have
,lound tbat campalgus wbicb reward
Jbo1c who buckle up every time arc
-poaitlve steps toward achieving dial

#

rue.

fun'ding-m~ISSIO-ners-agree...,..,...-ato=--

Continued from page At
Salem Township site must be fin• "They are big enough and bound ishedbynextThursday.MeigsCounty
"'for growth so they should become Economic Development Director Julia
,jncolj)Orated," Dill said, adding this Houdashelt-Thornton is leading the
':':W
· horne th'IS
~ 1 ould open more avenues for fundcounty •s effort to brmg
.:!ng.
facility, he added.
- Commissioner Janet Howard said
Thornton told the board that the
"'ihe commissioners have made prom- county's system for tax breaks has
"ses to the sewer district and they beenapprovedbythestate. The Rural
3 hould be kept.
Enterprise Zone system is now effec: "They've waited 20 years to get it tive, she said.
'llone," Howard said.
AI so, a barge fac1·11·1y can be m·
Other projects not given priority by stalled at the potential Great Bend
~helocaiSCIPcommitteeincluded,in deve1opme ht s1·1e, Th om ton added.
orderoftheirpoints: 275, Middleport
In budgetary transfers, the comSouth Second Avenue paving; 265,
Lebanon Township Road 29 paving; R e d
r·l
• 255, Pomeroy water line replacement;.
~ 205,SuttonTownship'sYellowBush
Continued from page A1
: Road paving; 190, Rutland village's Act," said Aronoff, R-Cincinnati.
· lOO,()()().gallonwatertank; 185,Letart
"! don ' t think you can ever have
':.Township's Flood Road; lBO,Chester lines in a political process that do not
.,Township's paving of dead-end have some political overtones."
: streets; 160, Racine street paving; 160,
Stivison said they started the case
Tuppers Plains water treatment plant; in Ohio because what happened 10
• and 0, Tuppers Plains Cook Road Miller was what he called an obvious
: water lines.
abuse of political gerrymandering.
Committee members included: all
Millerrepresentedtbeold lOth Dis: three commissioners, Gary Dill rep- trict,coveringmuchofsoutheastOhio, \
resenting township trustees, Economic from 196610 1993 _He lost in the 1992
: Development Director Julia R.epublican ~-;~·~after
·
' Houdashelt-Thornton and County
• Engineer Robert Eason representing
• the integrating committee.
: In other business, the commission: ers passed a resolution supporting thecreation of a four-county regional jail
: -without earmarking any funds.
·• Hoffman said the board would
~ to have the new jail built in Meigs
·County -but all the details for this

.

station was 73, set in 1985. Tbe
record low of -3 was established in
1880.
Today's sunrise was at 7:22
a.m. and sunset will be at5:12 p.m.
Southern Ohio
Today ... Partly sunny. High
around 60.
Extended forecast
Tonigbt... Becoming windy with
showers likely. Lows in the 40s.
Monday ... Windy with a chance
of showers. Highs SO to 60.
Tuesday ...Colder. Fair except
for a chance of flurries northeast.
Lows upper 20s to lower 30s.
Highs upper 30s to lower 40s.
Wednesday ...Fair. Lows in the
20s. Highs in the 40s.

·..,~ ·~· .,.

November 20, 1994

Alleged poacher·------

Pleasant weekend
ends with rain tonight

OHIO Weather

&lt;,&gt;

~~~

Ill

"Ill.,,

..

113 COURT BTRSft
POII&amp;ROY~ OHIO

,

�:------------------~---------------------------------------

Commentary

November 20, 1994

sundayTimes-sentinel/A4

:

Ohio/W.Va.

Novembcr20,1994

Sunday Times-Sentinel/f-.5

•

Democrats rush to counter Limbaugh
A DlYlllon of
~tiC.
825 Third Ave., GaUipoU., Ohio
(614) 446-2342

Ill Court St., PoDieroy, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PlobUaber
HOBART WILSON JR.

MARGARET LEHEW
Camtroller

Execud.. Editor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and tbe American
Newspaper Publishers Associalion.
LETIERS OF OPINION aro welcome. They should be Jess than
300 words. All letters are subject lo editing and musl be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be
published. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
personalities.

GOP governors worried
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WHilE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W.Va. (AP} -It is the primesi of
times 10 be a Republican governor. They are resurgent, in charge in 30 of
the SO states, political power brokers- even prospective contendersin the arenas that will nominale a Republican challenger for the 1996
presldenllal election.
Headr days indeed.
. .
But ngbt behind the celebrations comes the business, the budgeting,
the searcb for revenue 10 balance spending, the beavy duty of governing.
And In those tasks, the reinforced GOP governors are just lilce the
Democrats and the independent from Maine - they could bave
headaches with an incoming Republican Congress bent on cuts in spend·
lng and taxes. a course thai bas sometimes forced costs back· upon the
states.
.
Gov. William F. Weld of Massachusetts, re-elected by landslide, said
ln an interview that il's worth the pressure because govemmenl is simply,
too big and too costly. "You've got to shrink the s~ of the beast," be
said.
No one was disputing that at a National Governors' Association cram
course for governors-elect, bul with a 10uch of caution.
Gov. Howard Dean of Vermont, a Democrat and chairman of the association, said that DemoCratic Congresses have been all to willing 10 tell
the states what 10 do by passing laws that cost money but don'! provide it. ·
Those are the unflBided mandates governors have griped about for years.
The governors association bas no quarrel with the balanced budget
ame~dment that House Republicans bave made their IOJ&gt; priority. But
• Jliey're wary of cost-shifting; Dean said that would be diSbonest politics
:as usual.
• Dean said the Republican governors ought to be helpful getting that
message to the GOP Congrc:ss. They won'~ have to \Vaitlong -":ben
:.chool is out here, GOP governors are gomg to the11 own Republican
:l]overnors' Association meeting in Williamsburg, Va., and the new lead·
~rs of Congress wUI be !here.
·
. An expanding economy is boosting state revenues and helping 10 bal·
.nee budgets, but the association's self assessmenl is that states are "star:Jng down the barrel of some major spending pressures" with the"new
lineup in Congress.
·
.
• There are a dozen Republican governors-elect, three Democrats, one
1ndependent, and one contest still unsettled. Ten came as srudents, ~bout
lwice as many veterans to serve as the faculty, for two days of semmars
lm topics like budgeting, dealing with Washington, and the social and
Jamily pressures of their new roles.
• Handling Washington may be tire toughest course of all, regardless of
'ibeir party lineups. The governors do their work In 50 capitals, separately,
.with neither the direct leadership nor the collective muscle that worts In
Congress.
Too often for their liking, Congress, or the federal bureaucracy,
:(Jecides bow. they should govern.
.
.
Republicans in Congress say they 'II pay for tax cuts wub spendmg
cuts. That's been said before and hasn't quite worked out.
But something bas 10 give. AU but the most draconian of economizers
:)ICknowledge the need fa a social safety net, to catch and cover the needi·
est. Reforming welfare will save money, but there are costs attached. Cuts
~n education, housing and other federal programs leave gaps 10 be dealt
with elsewhere.
That gets miX'Il difficult if Republicans in Congress and in state capi·
1ats all try to cut taxes at the same time. And there were some major
'Republican state vic:tMes buill around jus! that promise.
·
; Gov. -elect GeoQJe Pataki of New York:, a Republican trophy stale with
'the defeat of Democrat Mario Cuomo, pledged a 25 pen:ent state tax cut
over four years. Now be's looking at a budget that won't stretch to balince even under the CUJTent tax code.
• · In Connecticut, Republican John Rowland said he would phase out an
;Income tax that took effect three years ago, bul it covers nearly 28 percent
pf a state budge! already in the red..
.
.
• . Like the congressiortal Republicans, be talks of cutung spendmg to
:inake ends meet with lower taxes.
: New Jersey Gov. Christine Tod~ Whitman, elecled. a rear ago ,on a
.promise to cui state income taxes, IS on the faculty th1s ume. Sbe s up
l gainst budget pressures !!'at make ~ pledge bard to keep - but !he
1trategy bas made ber a nauonal reputauon.
: Teach the new class of governors bow 10 do it, and she'll deserve an
'bonorary degree.
.,
:: EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colurn·
•lsl for The Associated Press, has reported on Washin11ton and
llational politics for more than 30 years.

COGNITIVE ·
NON·ELITE
'ftfNit&lt;

•

•

~·

••

••
•
•••

• •

•

..
..
•

By

THE T~CKLE [';OWN EFF,CT. ..

Anolfter option under conslden·
tion is to recruil political figures
who can be groomed into alterna·
lives - an.idea being advanced by
Rep. Sam Gejdenson, D-Conn. A
While House spokesperson confirmed at least one Oval Office
meeting on the subject during the
fall campaign: "The president and
Congressman Gejdenson did meet
where they did talk about !he
impact of talk show hosts not only
on politics but !be impact on people's lives and bow more Americans are liSienlng 10 them. They
talked a little bit about what we
could do as a party to be more
proactive, about gelling individuals
on the radio."
Sources say Hollywood moguls
Sleven Spielberg and Norman Lear
have been approached to belp fund
the fledgling effort for equal time.
Meanwhile, tbe informal !alent
search spilled over inlo a recent
morning slrategy meeting in the
office of House Majority Leader ·
Richard Gepbanlt, D-Mo. Several ·
Democrats floated names that
included retiring Rep. Butler Der- :
rick, D-S.C.
.
Derrick !old us it began as a ,
joke but took on a serious tone.
"There needs lo be some reasonable calm voice out there setting ·
the record straigbt.on a continuous
basis," be said.
Some While House officials
caution againsl overreacting to
Rush-mania. In what may be wish·
ful thinking, one official noted that
there is "one school of thougb't that
there are the same 400 yahoos call·
ing in" to his and olber programs.
But any question about the need to
neulralize what's become the
Republicans' secrel weapon was
dispelled last week wben Speakerto-be New! Gingrich, R-Ga., brandished talk radio like the weapon
it's become.
Gingrich, who declined 10 inler·
rup1 an appearance on talk radio to
take President Clinton~s post·elec·
lion phone call, said the GOP bad
"means of commuqicating other
than the elite media, and we have
lobe prepared to use them."
Jack Andetson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

A review 9f the Nov. 8 general election
The general election in the Uniled States was held on Tuesday,
Nov. 8. More than a week bas now
lranSpired. I have been listening to
!he various reporters and other
media experts and they all came to
one conclusion and that is the
Republicans won it in a big way
and have taken over both branches ··
of the US LegislaiUre.
Usually at mid-term elections
there are some changes in
Congress, bot n01 as drastic as this
one. For example, the Speaker of
the House, Tom Foley, was defeated after 32 years of service in the
governmenl which makes him eligible to start collecting an annual
pension of $123,804 starting in
January. Other national figures
were toppled, thus giving the
Republicans control in both bouses.
What does Ibis mean?
FltSt of all, on Nov. 9,1eaders of
both houses want to kiss and make
up and jointly pass legislation for
the betterment of the country. This
is what they tell the public. However, on Nov. 9 the President staned
campaigning for re-election and
members of Congress will also be
campaigning for the job of President of the United States in the
next election. In short, the idea of
getting together to solve !be problems of governmenl is good
rbeloric but it is a lot of bunk.
Don't get excited, this is what bap·

pens every time.
By the way, did you know that
Congressman Foley was paid a
more than $100,000 salary and that

FredW. Crow
his pension will be more than he
would receive in salary. The congressmen surely know bow to pro- ·
tee! lhemselves. To me, this is not·
right. Tb~ only solution to this
problem is term limits. I would
limil a Senator, or a member of the
House 10 two terms. Instead of a
two-year term I would increase
each lerm of a congressman to four
years. II is going to be difficult for
Congress 10 pass this legislation,
but I feel that it will.
Prior to Nov. 8, the Republicans
executed a documenl pledging term
limits, line item veto by the presidenl, and a balanced budget
amendment to the Constitution. I
hope Congress passes all three of
these measures. However, since
this country has mortgaged its ·soui
to the company store, it may ~e a
few years to achieve Ibis result.
Over the years the congressmen
have a tendency to forget about
balancing the budger when it
comes to salaries, pensions, etc. for
those in control of the budget.
In this week's U.S. News and
World Reports, there is an article
about the changes which tbe
Republicans inlend to make. There

a

is mention of cutting taxes, prun- term. Thai means that U.S. 33 from
ing the government, fighting crime, Athens to Darwin will be built and
saving the family, and reforming this highway will conlinue easl
health care. There is no men :ion of from Rock Springs to the
balancing the budget, term limits, Ravenswood bridge. The skepL•CS
line item vetoes and the balanced state "that the state of Ohio will run
budget amendmenl will be glossed out of money or the Nelsonville
over lightly and CQnveniently for- bypass will be given preference,"
gotten by this Congress? Again, the will all be wrong.
Governor Voinovicb will prove
odds makers in Las Vegas will bel
you that none of these three will be to all Meigs Countians that be is a
passed in the next two years. I hope man of his word. Governor
· Voinovich' s position is fortified
lhe odds makers are wrong.
By the way, did you notice thai because of the influence of Kenner
Senator Phil Gramm is now a can- Bush of Athens arid Bob Evans of
didate for president on the Republi- Gallipolis. These men, chief reprecan ticket and that Senator Dole sentatives of the Southeastern Ohio
will make his announcement in Regional Council, are backing the
governor in this project.
February 1995 for the presidency.
Today's chuckle: "A young man
In Ohio, Governor' Voinovicb
won by a landslide. There is no dropped in on his mother one afterquestion aboul his brilliance-as a noon and was swprised to find her
politician. He ran with virtually no watching a ball game on television.
one opposing him. Democrats as "I didn't know you'd become a
well as Republicans voted for him baseball fan," be said. "I haven't,"
in record numbers. lbis means that she replied, "Bul your father went
be has the ability to cabo any-per- to the store for me - and while
son. or group by his decisions in be's gon.e, I'm the designated
watcher."
~JCfice. If he can continue bis good
In God we trust.
work for tbe next 1wo years he
Editor's note • LonK·tlme
should be a candidate for presidenl
of lhe United States. Nancy HoUis- Attorney Fred W. Crow Is the
ter should also be a good candidate contributor of a weekly column
for The Sunday Times-Sentinel.
for Governor of the state of Ohio.
Whal does all of Ibis mean to Readers wishing to applaud, crlt·
Meigs County? In Marietta last lclzi'or comment on any subject
summer Governoi' Voinovicb (except religion or polltlca) are
promised to have the Ravenswood encouraged Io write to Mr. Crow
Corridor built before the end of his In care orthls newspaper.

~lated Prea Writer

• WASHINGTON (AP} -The
NAACP'sc:asbOow,oncedownto
) trickle, .is now up to a steady
,stream, thanks to the release of a
~~~-delayed gran! from one of its
· or conlributors.
•
e Ford Foundation rele~d
'$250.000 to the NAACP's special
'J:ODtribution fund Friday, after the
:civil rights group presented a plan
'to repair its financial management
systems and restore its credibility
wilh donors.
, "All of these are signs of a
beginning. 11 doesn't mean .we'~e
solved tbe problem,'' sud G1I
Jonas the chief fund raiser of the
Nali~nal Association for the
Advancement of Colored People.
"We've lumed the first comer of
what is goi\1$ to be a long climb."
Meanwb1Ie, the NAACP was
dealt a legal setback. A judge tem~-----

lions in the Chicago brancb, afler
Earl B. King, an ally of ousted
Executive Director Benjamin
Chavis, alleged the group barred
young members fran voting.
Chavis formerly was a civil
rights activist in Cleveland.
. King said the action was tak~n
m order to keep 3,000 youth bed
recruited from voting for bim for
president of the branch.
Ford spokesman Lloyd Garrison
confirmed the grant money was
released Thursday but would not
·reveal specifics. Jonas said the
foundation also approved use ~f
$350,000 from a reserve fund II
established with the NAACP in
1993.
Since Chavis' firing, NAACP
debt rose to nearly $4 million. The
organization laid off employees
and limped along on a slim staff of
volunteers, wbo mailed more than

•10 b r 1•ef S·
0h

Offi#Oer
char·aed
Wl'th bur··oalary.
'JJ"'
o

·

LANCASTER (AP} -A Shawnee Hills reserve police officer
bas been charged with felony burglary and misdemeanor stalking of
a former girlfriend.
Terry Allen Olsen Jr., 28, of lhe Columbus suburb of Grove City,
was arraigned Thursday in Lancasler Municipal Court and released
on ss.ooo bond.
.
The court bas issued a protective order banning Olsen from contacting the victim or going to Lancaster except to meet with his
attorney or for a court appearance.
Olsen, a reserve officer for the Delaware County village for two
years, allegedly broke into the victim's home while she was there
and began harassing her, said police Lt Don Regan.
. "He used his position of trusl and authority to intimidate and terrorize lhe victim," Regan said.

Four accused of theft in office
STEUBENVILLE (AP)- The state auditor's office bas accused
four people, including 1wo police officers and another city worker,
of theft in office.
Clerk of Courts spokeswoman Mary Murray said the complaints
were flied Thursday in Mulridpal Court and that warrants had no!
been issued. She did not release the identities of the four and did not
know which city office employed the third worker.
The complaints involve the theft of more than $300, which could
result in felony charges.
City Law DirectorS. Gary Repella filed a motion to have a special prosecutor appointed to the ease. The special prosecutor would
review the charges and prooeed with issuing warrants.
Police ProSecutor Michael Bednar said he \Vas aware of the affi.
davits filed Thursday, but declined further comment.

Two charged in bank robberies
IRONTON (AP} - Two Lawrence County men have been
charged with robbing al least seven banks in Scioto, Marion and
Lawrence counties since July.
; Mark A. Crager, 23, of South Point, and Willis Cochran, 32, of
··· IriiliiOn, each have been charged with seven counts of bank robbery.
Crager was being beld Friday in the Scioto County Jail. Cochran
was in the Lawrence County Jail.
Lawrence County Sheriffs Deputy Brian Deer said each man is
charged with robbing three banks..in Ironton, one in South Poin~
1wo in Wheelersburg and one in Marion.

Inmate saves prisoner's life ·

.

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - An inmate at the Montgomery County
Jail helped save lhe life of a prisoner whO was trying to bang himself. tJW.iwarden said.
,
'fllffliam Elias Stepp, who is in jail on an assault charge, helped
bold up the inmate until guards could get a key to the cell and cut
the man down, tbe warden, Maj. Jim Olin, said.
"I'm not sure I'd call him a hero. but be did in fact save a life,"
Olin said Friday.
Olin said the inmale, who was not identified, tried to kill himself
Nov. I by banging from a sheet be tied around his neck. The man
later tried to cut his wrists.
'
He bas been transferred to Dayton Mental Health Center, Olin
said.
Stepp pleaded guilty in Vandalia Municipal Court to a misdemeanor assault charge. He began serving a 90-day sentence Oct 4
and is due 10 be released Dec. 20.

This Week's Special
Monday thru Saturday
November 21·26

Victorian Marble
Top Dresser

20%otf
REG.$400
$320.
NOW

Blame it on the .b lack guy
"Round up the usual suspects." ic criminality because it makes
Several years ago, durin&amp; my randomly picking up black men
- Claude Rains as a police chief police work easier. They always association with the Philadelphia and mean-spiritedly hassling them
1n "Casablanca"
round up the "usual suspects."
Daily News, police continually as suspects in Carol Sluarl's murBiack males experienced a
White victims know they'll get picked up a tall black Center City der.
336
university professor while be
Any death diminishes us. But :
depressing deja vu when Susan
Smith confessed to killing ber two
Chuck Stone
walked in the evening, especially if America slill places the highesllife .
value on the deaths of white ·
children after she had,reviously
a crime bad been committed.
accused a black man o abducting immediate sympathy - and usualWhen I interceded for bim with women by black men and the lowthem.
. ly credibility - if they accuse a afriendly bigb.Jevel police official, est life value O!l black male dealhs
The South Carolina mother joins black man. This past spring, a 43- be quipped, "Wben a call goes out by black males.
a growing list of white Americans rear-old white woman in Mount for a tall, black suspect, the only
This sociological reality under·
who kill their relatives and then
aurel, N.J., reported that a black person safe from beinf picked up is scores the basis {or the national
blame some unidentified black for man bad struck her on the head a short white midget.'
spate of political ads with !heir subthe crime. The wrongful.accusation with a hammer and then beat and
In lhe Daily News city room, a hminal appeal to racial fears.
is not as horrid as the fact that the stal!bed her 71-year-old mother-in- police radio constantly warned
Wben America comfonably
significant majority of white Amer· law.
police to be on the lookout for a embraced the Willie Horton ad In
icaos in any community readily
Police became suspicious when tall, black man. "Tbey haven't the Busb-Dukakis race, the nation
accept black culpability for any c;ontradictions repeatedly surfaced caught you yet, Chuck?" joked my crossed an ethical RublcoQ. We
crimefortworeasons:
in the younger woman's story. coUeagues.
were Hortonized into accepting
1. African-American males Even beller, neighbors bad seen the
Readers may recall !he sorrow- more than lhe black disproportioncommit an egregiously dispropor- two women going at each other like ful case ofOiarles Swart who mur- ate commission of crimes. All
I
'tionate peitentage of crln!es, a sta- George Foreman and Mike Moorer. dered bls pregnant wife, Carol, in black men became potential sus·
tistical fact that even AfricanUnlit !hen, however, ber Boslon in 1989. He even gave a pects.
American leaders will concede. description of that ubiquitously description over the phone to a
And that bas made it even easier
"The black community bas deteri- prototypical black criminal was police dispatcher about,:~e~=~1~~~~:~~~o~:s~b~~Iv~e~o~n~~e~o~\f~~~ic~~i~vi~llr~za~~-~~---:-"-+~­
oraled so much," Nation of Islao! ~ible, A PQ!i~_WSI even drew_ -.!2.!!! _black criiJiinal '1
Mimster Louis- Fmaklra.rtold-t a sketch ·Ctom her statement
muroer bliiiaiiilliiS wife.
killed
.
black guy.
packed North Carolina auditorium
If the police had not gotten susBecause they were such a well·
Chuck Stone Is a ayadlcated
In August, "that we are the .:~ief picious and the neighbors bad not respected middl~;.-class couple, their writer for New1paer Enterprlle
destroyers of ourselves. We. are the seen t~e lwo in-laws furiously tra~et!Y caught tile public's S)'lllpa- Association.
No. 1 rapers, robbers and hUers of · wbackmg each other, the pollee lhy w1th the same passion as Susan
(For lnformallon on how to
ourselves."
sketch would have been released Smith's allegations about a black communicate electronically with
2. The average policema.; in and ev~ black man remotely fit· man'sabductionofhertwoboys,
thla colunmlst and other•, con·
most major metiopolitan areas nw · ling the description within 10 mi:~s
But Boston police responded tact America OnUne by calU1181·
tures theI .stereotype of black genet·
would have been picked up.
more aggressively
to the crime by 800.827-6364, ext. 8317.) ·
. .
.
.

The Dove's Nest Anti4ues

Berry•s World

.....• '

mixture of anger and awe, the fltSt
lady said be managed to disrupt her
trip in late September to Philadelphia on behalf of several Catholic

information and entertainment.
. White House officials have
debated ways they can prevent
right-wing talk radio from/amming
the Democrats' politica signal.
"We can complain all we want and
Jack Anderson it's
interesting in journalism
schools, but we have to figure out a
and
way to deal with it," one senior
Michael Binstein · · White House official told us.
"That's !he hand we've been
hospitals. Soon after Limbaugh dealt.''
announced the visit to his 20 mil·
Officials think they. have one
lion-plus listeners, she said, the trump card to play: Grant interhospital phone lines were ringing views 10 radio show hosls wbo are
wilh angry protests.
·
' · friendly, or who at leas! give Clin"The moral of the story is this ton a fair shake.
guy (Limbaugh} has so many lenta"The interviews we've granted
ernment''
cles that 15 or 30 minutes after are with those folks to elevate their
"She believes we bave to get something happens be can generate stature," explains Ibis official.
engaged in (countering Limbaugh} a grass roots movement that "Tbey can market and increase
and we can't ignore it any longer," besieges somebody," said one their stations because they get the
says one official close to the fltSt source who attended the meeting.
president." Jim Hightower - the
lady. "We can no longer let Rush
Even before the Republican funny and in-your-face former
Limbaugh have that territory with- blow-out in the midterm elections, Te)las state Agriculture Commisout opposition. The misinformation administration officials had gone sioner - has the. official blessing.
back to the drawing board to revi- Hightower is an unabashed liberal
bas got to be checked."
Mrs. Clinton was armed during talize the Clinton presidency. Talk populist whose syndicated program
a recent White House meeting with radio has always been conservative is gaining new markels. Unlike
examples of Limbaugh's capacity country, over wbicb Limbaugh Limbaugh be's not a knee-jerk parfor wreaking havoc. Expressing a towers with a be~uilin~ blend of tisan.

WASHINGTON - The White
House is plannin~ an unprecedented war of the auwaves against
Rusb Limbaugh and other rig~t­
wlng talkmeisters by promoting
Democratic-minded talk radio
hosts across the country.
FltSt lady Hillary Rodbam Clinton, often the target of Limbaugh's
lampoons, is leading a group of
Democrats who are calling for a
communications counteroffensive.
Mrs. Clinton argues that Democrats
must find talent to -counteract archconservatives, and believes the
Wbite House bas been too timid in
taking on the man who bails himself as the "fourth branch of gov-

Voinovich to DAS:
{!!.r:!,Foun'!!!.~~!!;!!S,~!!.
~'!!
te.J!.~~~
..
lionS

Sedbnd Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio
446-8776

HOLIDAY LOAN
SPECIAL
'

and help in restructuring.
cal and policy reforms.
Ford withheld its contribution
Meanwhile, Illinois Circuit
last summer, after it was revealed JudgeAaronJaffedelayedlbeelecthat Chavis bad quietly negotiated lion of officers for the South Side
a settlement worth $334,400 to NAACP, in response 10 a lawsuit
resolve an employee's sex discrim· b~ presidential candidate Earl B.
ination claims, as tbe NAACP King.
grappled with a $3 million deficit
~ng, a close ally_of Chavis, had
Chavis subsequently was flied.
regJStered 3,000 supporters aged 17
Besides tbe Ford money, the to 20 with $3 youlh memberships
NAACP has raised $590,000 in the in time for them to be eligible to
past few weeks- $350,000 from vote m Saturday's election. Two
local and state conferences, days after King submille.d their
$80,000 from members-at-large appltcauons and $20,000 m fees,
and $160,000 from seven large cor- colleg~ NAACP cbaplers and youth
porations, Jonas said.
.
coune~ls we~e. noufied of ~ ~ules
In a letter to special contribuuon change requmng them to JOID as
fund donors NAACP interim adults, for an additional $7, if they
administrator Earl Shinboster said imended to vote in local branch
the Ford grant would belp the elections.
.
NAACP "restart our funding
Jaffe posqxmed the. Soulh S1de
mechanisms" and pay bills.
election pendmg a heanng Jan. I0.
He also listed nine steps the
S
NAACP bad taken 10 stabilize its
0
OUm
wobbly finances. These included
CLEVELAND (AP} - There
bringing in the accounting firm of was one ticket sold naming a11 five
Price Waterhouse to work on its numbers drawn in Friday night's
budget; a Wasbinglon. law ftrm to Buckeye 5 drawing and it's ~ortb
handle debt restructunng and non· $100,000, the Ohio Lottery smd.
civil rights legal matters; and a
The ticket was sold at Hoehn's
"blue-ribbon committee of nolable Party Shop in Delphos.
Here are Friday night's Ohio
Lottery selections:
Pick 3 Numbers
8"3"7
(eigb~ three, seven)
Pick 4 Numbers.
8-6-5-1
(eight. six, five, one)
Buckeye 5
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP} _ The
18-21-25-26-28
coercion !rial of state AudiiOr
(eigbleen, twenty-on~, twentyThomas E. Ferguson bas been five, twenty-six, twenty-e1gbt)
.
There were 195 Buckeye 5 tickrescheduled for Jan. 3.
ets with four of the numbers, and
City Prosecutor John Madigan
6 033 · k
said the trial, originally slated to each is worth $250. The ,
uc .
begin nexl Wednesday, was ets showing three of the numbers
rescheduled because of vacation are eacb worth $10, and the 61,398
tickets showing two of the numbers
Plans for the alleged victim in the are
each worth $1.
·
case, Lucas Counly Auditor Larry
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
Kaczala
Madigan said be hopes the case $699.363 to winners in Friday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales
will be settled before trial in Tole- in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
do Municipal Court.
In a telephone call to Kaczala on $! ·~~~~~~~ daily game, Pick 4
April 21 , Ferguson allegc!!!y Numbers players wagered
threatened to withhold slate and $340,983 and will share $130,500.
federal funds from ~ county.
Kaczala was refu ing 10 cooperSales in Buckeye 5 totaled
5
ate with Ferguso11' audit of the · $S~\~ ~ackpot for Saturday's
county and his -Special audit or Super Lotto drawing is worth $8
county Treasurer Ray Kes~ claim- million.
ing lhe audits were being used for
political purposes. Neither audit
was completed.
Kaczala, a Republican, suspecl·
ed that Ferguson, a Democrat who
did not seek re-election, was trying
to generate damaging political
information against Kest.
Kest was seeking the Democratic nomination for state audiiOr
againsl Sweeney, a Columbus busi·
nessman.
Sweeney won the May 3 primary but lost the election last week 10
Republican Jim Petro of Cuyahoga
County.

L Hery

ber

Audit or of
state's trial
pOStponed
unt"ll January

WHY
PAY
MORE
FOR
CARPET

Lower
costs orDAS,!~se
jobs
_
COLUMBUS, Obi.o (AP} Thai could
70 percenl
affect

Gov. George Volnovicb's admini•· to 80 percem of aU university protration wants the business arm of ·jects.
state government to perform more
- Boosting limits on agency·
canpetitively.
goods from $10,000 to $25,000 and
The 1,300 state employees at the services from $25,000 to $50,000.
Ohio Department of Administtative That would require about 75 perServices will have to produce cent of all purchases DAS adminisgoods and services at the lowest ters to be competitively bid.
~ssible price or risk losing !heir
Conrad said bureaucracy too
JObs, Director James Conrad said oflen holds back the agency.
Friday.
"We can eitber get creative and
"It's a different way of looking come up with a whole bunch of
at privatization - privatization new ideas ... or, just like a regular
with public-sector employees," business, if we can'! justify th e
Conrad said.
manning level, we have to downVoinovich and Conrad will pro- size and reduce the functions," be
pose two major changes to the Leg- said.
islalure next year:
Conrad would make no predic- Raising the threshold from lions about bow many employees
$1.5 million to $4 miUion for state- could lose their jObs if the reorganisupported universities to seek bids zation doesn' t produce the desired
and adminisler their own construe- results.
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~·------------------~----~----------------------~

November 20, 1994

Pomeroy-Mlddleport~alllpolls, O~olnt Pleasant, WV

Area.deaths-- . Canada's army t~ngJed in torture

I .
I

I

William Carter
GALLIPOLIS -William Chancie Carter, 93, Gallipolis, died Friday,
Nov . 18,1994atHolzcr Medical Center. He wasamcmberoftheF'II'IlBaptisl
Church.
Born May 7, 1901 in Gallia County, he was the son of
the late Ross and Margaret Sowards Carter.
Survivors include two sons, Ellis and Charles Carter,
both of Gallipolis; one brother, Stanley Carter of Boston,
Mass; two sisters, Myrl Dmkee and Mabel Cox, both of
Gallipolis; sill grandchildren and six great grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by two brothers and two
sisters.
Friends maycal16 to 9p.m. Monday at the Waugh-Halley-WoodFuneral
Home in Gallipolis where services will be held 3 p.m. Tuesday with die Rev.
Alvis Polllllli officiating. Burial will be in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.

Freda Ferguson
RACINE - Freda F. Proffitt Ferguson, 66, Racine, died Saturday,
Nov. 19. 1994, at Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. She was a
retired secretary for the Interstate Utility Company of Mason, W.Va
She was a member of the Reorganized Olurcb of Jesus Christ of Latter .
. Day Saints wbete she served as music director for many years and taught
an evening Bible study group.
.
Born Jan. 28, 1928, in Lebanon Township, Meigs County, she was the
daughter of Lillian E. Mosier Proffitt of Racine and the late Roy E.. Proffin.
Survivors include one daughter, Sharon Russell of Pomeroy; one sister,
Maxine Sellers; three grandchildren, Sherry Wolfe of Racine, Mark Russell of Pomeroy and Lisa Russell of the home; and two great-grandchildren.
She was preceded ilf death by one sister, Betty Adams.
Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Ewing Funeral
Home, Pomeroy.

Hazel McHaffie
MIDDLEPORT- Hazel Marie McHaffie, 87, Middlepon, died Satur·
day, Nov. 19, 1994, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis. Sbe was a
bomemalcer and a member of the Silver Run FreewiU Baptist Olurcb.
Born Nov. 7, 1909, in Gallia County sbe was the daughter of the lale
George and Elizabeth Hipplewbite Butcher.
Survivors include five daughters, Judith McHaffie and Reva Smith of
Middleport, Madelene Chattin of Oifton, W.Va., and Eleanor Faulk and
Betty Carsey of Pomeroy; one daughter, Doris (Russell) ,Skidmore of
Newport News, Va; two sons, James (Anna) McHaffie of Portland and
George (Betty) McHaffie of Lancaster; two sisters, Betty Baird of Gallipolis and Dessie Pauley of McConnellsville; 15 grandchildren; 19 greatgrandchildren and one great-great-gllUlddaughter. .
.
She was preceded in death by bet husband, George McHaffie Sr.. in
1982; one son, William McHaffie; two daughters, Dessie and Emogene
McHaffie; five sisters; five brothers; two grandsons; and one granddaughter.
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Monday at the Fisher
Funeral Home in Middleport and one hour prior to services, which will be
held I p.m. Tuesday at Silver Run Freewill Baptist Church, Middlepon,
with the Rev. Bill Little officiating.
Burial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cbesbire.

Asa Mossbarger
Asa Lincoln Mossbarger, 91, Patriot, died Friday, Nov. 18, 1994 at
Holzer Medical Center. He was a graduate of Cadmus Higb School and
Rio Grande College. He taught school in Lawrence County and retired
from the Gallipolis Developmental Cenrer and farming. He attended Calvary Baptist Church.
.
.
A World War II U.S. Navy veteran, be was a member of Veterans of
Foreign Wars Post #4464 and American l..ellion Post m. He waa also a
member of several clubs and lodges, including the Gallipolis Shrine Club
and Gallipolis Chapter Ordet of the Eastern Star 11283.
Born Jan. 17, 1903 in Walnut Township, be was the son of the late
Edwlllli E. Mi~nie McDonald Mossbarger.
Survivors include bis wife, Clafa Mae _Davis, whom be manied May
10, 1947.
He .was preceded in death by bis parents; two brothers, Elmer and
Cecil Mossbarger; and one sister, Ruth Meadows.
Friends may cal13 to 7 p.m. today at the Waugb-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home, where services wiU be held 1 p.m. Monday with the Revs. Cbarles
Lusher and Luther Tracy officiating. Masonic services, conducted by
Patriot Lodge #496, will be conducted 6:30 p.m. Sunday at the funeral
borne.
Burial will be iii Mound Hill Cemetery. Flag presentation will be.made
by the VFW and America_n Legion.

Sally Priode
SOtrrH POINT - Sally Wheeler Priode, 68, South Point, died Satur·
day, Nov. 19, 1994. A 1944 graduate of Ironton High School, she was .a
lifelong resident of Lawrence County and a member of the Christian Science Church.
Born Nov. 9, 1926, in Iroiuon, sbe was the daughter of the late Halsey
and Mabel Kouns Wheeler.
.
.
Survivors include one son, Timothy Priode of Le~ingtoll. Ky.; one
daughter, Tamara (Pbil) Bartel of Gallipolis; one brother, Fmi!k Wbeeler
of Ironton: three grandchildren and one great granddaughter.
Sbe'was preceded in death by her husband, James Jacob Priode..
Friends may call 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Monday at the Phillips
Funetal Home, 1004 S. Seventh Street, Ironton. Graveside services will
bci held 1 p.m. Monday at the Woodland Cemetery, Ironton.

By JEFFREY ULBRICH
Associated Prea Writer
TORONTO (AP) - Late one
sultry evening just outside a bonedry town in Somalia's western
desert, soldiers from Canada's elite
Airborne Regiment methodically
beat, kicked and tonured a 16-yearold civilian captive until be died.
Twenty months and eigbt
coons-martial later, only one soldiet, a private, has received significant punishment. Now, a military
doctor who was in Belet Huen,
Somalia, on the nigbt of March 16,
1993, is alleging a cover-up by
senior Canadian military officers.
Tlie charges, tbe trials, tbe
wbole sordid story or what happened during the Airborne Regiment's stint with the U.N. intervention force in Somalia has tarnished
the image of the world's premier
peacekeeping nation. It also bas
dampened the morale of many professionals who feel that 40 years of
success in peacekeeping, a concept
developed by Canada, is being
obscured by one incident.
Under mounting pressure,
Defense Minister David Collenene
announced on Thursday that a public inquiry will be beld into the
conduct of the Canadian forces in
Somalia.
"The stories are concentrating
on everything from cover-up at the
very top right down to individuals
on the ground conducting activities
that should have been stopped by
tbe chain of command,'' said
"retired Maj. Gen. Lewis MacKenzie, who once commanded U.N.
forces in Sarajevo.
Ale~ MOllison, e~ecutive director of the Canadian Institute of
Strategic Studies, said th~ killing In
Belet Huen "will have a great
impact on future preparations for
peacekeeping...
"Well informed Canadians recognize that incident for what it is:
regrettable, obscene and sorry, but
they place it in the overall context
of the Canadian Armed Forces,"
Morrisoo·shld.
The Canadian Airborne Regiment went into Belet Huen in
December 1992 as part of the

~

f

;

,.
i

•

trial.

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Ei:onomlcl Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- America's trade deficit worsened to
$10.13 billion - on track for the.
second-worst year ever. Negative
records in September included the
blggesr one-month deficit with
Cbina and the most barrels of crude
oil ever importtd.
Tbe Coounerce Deparunent said
the September deficit was 4.6 percent higher than in August. While
imported goods di~ a tiny 0.1
percent from August s record level,
U.S. merchandise exports fell more
rapitlly, by 1.3 percent
The new report came in a week
wben President Olnton traveled to
Jakarta, Indonesia, to push for
e~panded U.S. trade opponunities
at a second summit meeting with
11 other leaders in the Asia-Pacific

interfere with U.S.Iaw.
"0 ATT does not force us to
change any laws that we don't want
to change. GATT will not require
the United States to adopt lower
international food safety standards
or force us to accept any food
imports that we consider to be
unsafe. Those are myths."
.
Gore said a variety of leaders,
including Rep. Newt Gingrich,
soon to become Republican House
SJleaker; and Rep. • Ric bard
Gephardt, Democratic majority
leader until January, "agree that
we need GATT this year."
"GATT should be approved
solely for Its economic benefits,"
Gore said, "but it's also critical to
U.S. leadersbip."

Shannon Vaugban of Gallipolis,
Friday,
Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W. Va
Survivors include bet mother; her maternal grandj)areors. Beverly and
Larry Bond of Gallipolis and lames Vaughan of Point Pleasant; one aunt,
Amber Vaughan of Gallipolis; and one uncle, Tun Smith of Gallipolis.
· (iraveside services will be beld 1\ a.m. Monday·at Oblo Valley Memory Gardens. TbeJe will be DO visitation.
Arrangembnll are under the direction of the WUlis Funeral Hane. Gallipolis. I
.,

- .Auoclated
Pnu
Writer
1
,; WASHINGTON (AP) :R,epublicana will be In control of
~tllc House next January but not of
.the Demoaats, wbo arc signaling a
' contentious session ahead.
. "We're not about to roll over
,and play dead wbilc the RepubUcans rubber stamp their extremist,
supply-side agenda," outgoing
:Majority Leader Richard Ger'lardt.
~1?-Mo., said Friday. .
t He said that the Republicans'
"Contract with America" would
be a "disaster for America" if
enacted without change.
Aiso on Friday, Republican

TORTURE SCANDAL- Canadian Forces soldier Master CpL
Clayton M~tebee points to a bloodied Somali man In a March 16,
1993 pboto In the Somali town or Belet Huen. Late one evening
oublde a town In Somalia's western desert, peacekeepers from
Canada'• elite Airborne regiment beat, kicked and tortured a ttlyear-old Somali captive until be died. Matcbee wu arrested
Mardi 18 and round later tbat day banging In bls celL Althougb be
wu cut down alive, be suffered sucb brain damage that be was
found unfit to stand trial. (AP)

•
·.

·
.

Cbina, the two countries that
together account for two-thirds of
the total U.S. deficit.
"The APEC agreement for free
trade in the Pacific is the equivalent
of a balanced-budget amendment.
·It is a nice goal but without specific
market-opening measures 11 will
never be accomplished," said
Lawrence Cbimerine, cbief
economist at the Economic Strate·
gy Institute, a Washington think

STAIRLIFT TO
INDEPENDENCE

,.rade.

HOW TO TELL
A MEMORIAL
. COUNSELOR FROM
AMEMO!Ui\L
Si\ LESI'ERSON.

• A Japan~se patent official, brieflog reporters on condition of
•nonymlty, said tbe U.S. Patent
Pffice bas aln!atly begun releasing
jnformation on patents for AIDStreatment products tbrougb tbe
Interne~ an international computer
6etwork.
: He said it would probably talce
01 least six months for AIDS data
from Japanese patent files to be
translated and released.
: U.S. Patent Offrce Commission~Paul Lehman and bis Japanese
and European counterparts, Akira
takashima and Paul Ba:aendli, pai.
QCipated in the meeting.
,

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AF.an Autll&lt;Ki7..«1 Dealer for
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POMEROY
llelga County DIIFIJV Ylnl ....

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·TOKYO (AP) - Top patent
officials from Japan, tbe United
Stares and Europe agreed FridaY. to
jelease information on AIDS-relateel patents on the Internel
~ Tbe agreement came at an anna~ meeting of top patent officials.
:;lbe officials also agreed to cooper,re in implementing a treaty to pro\ect intellectual property rigbtiteached last year as part of the
Pcneral Agreement on Tariffs and

tank.

The United States imported the
largest volume of crude oil iii bistory - 260.8 million ·barrels in
September, topping the old mark

, •• 446·2327

·.By RICHARD CARELLI
-Auoclated Prell Writer
. WASHINGTON (AP) - Con:aervativc religious groups are far
from uolted in support of a Republican proposal for returning organized prayer to public schools by
Junending the Constitutioo.
·, Some think Republicans have
failed so far to capture the best lan·
guage for a school prayer amendment Others believe there might be
a better way to end wbat they see
as hostility toward God in public
schOols.
Most surprising, there's even
open opposition on the religious
right
"We don't need Newt Gingrich
to raise our consciousness about
the importance of prayer for our
youth,' said Steven McFarland of
the Christian Legal Society.
"Amending the Constitution is
unnecessary. The effon will leave
blood all over the floor of Congress
and divert attention from more
needed measures to protect religious freedom," McFarland said in
an interview.
Forest Montsomery of tbe
National Association of Evangeli-

OH.
•

cals said a constitutional amendment "may or may not be the best
way to address a basic problem in
our society - public schools have
been sanitized of all mention of
God and our nation's religious heritage.
'
"Tbere could be a statutory
solution, or perhaps some other
better way, •' ·Montgomery said.
Gingrich, the Georgia Republican congressman likely to become
House speaker in January, bas
called for bearings and a House
vote by July 4 on a scbonl prayer
amendment. He bas said tbe
amendment will allow "voluntary
prayer" in schools, a term open to
numerous interpretations.
Tbe Supreme Court ruled in
1962 that organized prayer in public schools. violated the constitu·
tionally required separation or
cburcb and stale.
Many Catholic, Protestant and
Jewi$11 groups have supported the
1962 ruling and subsequent
Supreme Coun church-state decisions that flowed from it.
"We are not opposed to
prayer," said J. Brent Walker of
the Baptist Joint Committee. "It is
precisely because we believe so
fervently in prayer that we do not
want the government to meddle in

across the nation featured prayers
to start each day, recitations of the
distincdy Christian Lord's Prayer
before all assemblies, and use of
s~·written pmyers.
A federal appeals court ruled
last week that school Rraduation
prayers are unconstitutional even if
a majority of students vote to pray.
A panel of tbe 9th U.S. Circuit
Coun of Appeals voted 2-1 to bar
the annual religious observances in
an Idaho school districL
· "Elected officials cannot avoid
constitutional mandates by putting
them to a majority vote," said the
opinion by Judge Cbarles Wiggins,
a former Republican congressman.
"Tbe decision (on whether to bave
a prayer) is made by a majority of
the senior class and imposed on a

the heart of the Democratic Party,
and at the heart of America's working people, they've got to understand that we will never yield, and
we will never concede," said
Gephardl
Rep. Ben Cardin, D-Md., wbo
will bead the Democratic transition, said GOP plans for reorganizing the · House look generally
acceptable to Democrats. -·

•Portable {Refmable)
•Stafloaary

NEBULIZERS
•For the lrealment of
respiratory problems

minority.••

Joseph Conn of Americans
United for Separation of Church
and State accused Gingrich of bidIng behind a "voluntary prayer"
banner while pushing for "orga- :
nized praxers in publjc schools
everyday.'
Conn said that students now are 1
free to pray individually throughout '
the school day, and that federal law
entidcs students to meet during offhours for prayer or worship in public schools where othet extracurricular groups meel

(Asthma, Bronchitis) ·

CONCENIRAIORS
Some homes tJy to separate
you from the environment
Our hoines make you a
part of it

Countries
it"
Before the 1962 ruling, schools
OK release
,o f AIDS data Sen..Helms doubts

set in June.
Tbe country's total foreign oil
biD declined, however, to $4.71 bil·
lion, reflecting a price decline to
$15.03 a barrel in September, down
from $16.01 in August.

r...... 1o s,;,

·

log the popular deductions for
mortgage interest, charitable donalions and state and local taXes.
Corporations ·would no longer
be allowed to dedUct fringe benefits paid to their employees. That
would encourage them to pay cash
instead of benefits, giviilg individuals the freedom to choose bow to
spend that money, be said.
Armey also would stop the
withholding of taxes from paychecks, envisioning families .writing a monthly check to cover their
federal taxes.
But Gepbardt and other
Democrats, worldng on their transilion from the majority party, said

that

Pre..4mJnPo8'

•VAULTS
•MARKERS

waste, Armey also predicted:
·~Possibly within three yeara we
wiD come to a point wbere we will
comprehensively change the taX
code of the United States."
He said a national sales tax will
vie with his own proposal for a flat
-single-rate- income tax as the
top federal revenue raiser.
Under Armey's proposal, lndividuals would pay no tax on inter;r
est, dividends and capital gains.
They would pay a nat tax of 17
percent above an e~clusion:
$13,100 for individuals, $26,200
for married couples plus an addi·
tiona! $5,300 for each child. There
would be no deductions- includIf 1

MAUSOLEUM
ENTOMBMENT
•LOTS

-Rep. Dick Armey of Texas, wbo
will be tbe new House majority
leader, said a GOP-run Congress
could overhaul the tax system;
Republicans bave promised a
House vote on a number of rax
changes in the fust 100 days of the
new Congress, including a $500per-cbild tax credit, tax-favored
savings accounts for middle-class
people, repeal of tbe 1993 tax
increase on tbe Social Security
benefits of upper-income recipients
and reduction of the tax on capital
gains.
Spealcing to the National Taxpayers Union, a group that lobbies
against taxation and government

Religious Right not reioicing
o"er s1der
:;~dtousb,~1~:~t:::c~~:
'J
unsound.
school prauer
amendment idea
tro;·~: ~~~:.~~r::.e:~~"it
I '
comes to the pnnc1ples
are at

BOWMAN'S

Richard Spurlock

Ia Vaughan .

tB1 DIANE DUSTON

Brown was court-martialed and
found guilty of manslaughter and
,.
torture. He was dismissed from the
army "with disgrace" and sen- Capt. Michael Sox, who passed . Armstrong also claimed that a
.along the "abuse" order, is await- Somali infiltrator killed March 4,
tenced to five years in prison.
1993, was shot in the back of the
Lt. Col. Mathieu was acquitted ing trial.
bead,
"e~ecution style." Nobody
Maj. Barry Armstrong, a miliof negligent performance of duty.
was
charged
in that death.
•
tary
"
surgeon,
claimed
last
week
Maj. Seward was convicted of negMorrison
said
"it's
a
very
bigb;
that
senior
officers
issued
orders
to
ligent performance of duty and
ly disciplined unit with a bigb
given a severe reprimand. Sgt. destroy evidence about violence sense
of esprit de corps. Leaders
against
civilians,
including
Sbi
~
Marc Boland pleaded guilty to negare
ever
vigilant that this sense o(
dane's
death.
He
said
be
refused
to
ligent performance of duty, was
unit
pride
doesn't boil over. But it .
jailed 90 days and demoted to ·pri- obey the orders and bas evidence
this
case
it
did.''
'!:_ate. ~!I others were acquitted. locked in a safe.

Economic Cooperation forum. The
group pledged to create a Pacific
free-trade zone by 2020.
Wbile the administration insists
that Asia represents one of tbe
biggest IIUIIketing opportunities for
American business, Friday's report
showed the region also ·presented
the United States with its biggest
trade headaches.
The United SUites ran up $10.08
billion in goods deficits with countries in the region. Leading the way
were Japan, with a $5.37 billion
imbalance, and China. with a $149
billion goods deficit - the second
straight month the deficit with
China set a record bigb.
Some analysts worried tbat
Clinton's APEC agreement could
divert the administration from pursuing country-specific negotiations ·
to open markets in Japan ·and

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A7

§Democrats signal a contentious session ahead

Gore pitches GATT
as massive ~tax cut'

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
world trade agreement that
Congress will be asked to ratify
contains the "biggest taX cut in history" .in the form of lower tariffs
and lower consumer prices. Vice
President AI Gore said today.
Gore, stepping in for the traveling President Clinton in his weekly
radio address, said congressional
critics wbo want to delay voting on
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - Alma Jean Simms, 81, died Saturday, the accord until the Republicans
Nov. 19, 1994, at the Ravenswood Village Health Center. Sbe was a take conttol of Congress m January
bomematcer and a member of the Fust Baptist Church.
are actually out to kill il
Born Dec. 23, 1912, in Eagle, W.Va., she was the daughter of the late
"It's bard to imagine ... they
James and Viola Bums Thurmond.
want to delay an agreement that
Survivors include one sister, Gamet Nagy of Okahumpka, Fla.
creates hundreds of thousands of
She was preceded in death by her husband, William Howard Simms.
new jobs here in the United States
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Monday at the Sttalght- and expands economic opportuniTucker-Roush Funeral Home, 205 Ritchie Ave., Ravenswood. wbere ser- ty," Gore said.
vices will be beld 11 a.m. Tuesday with !be Rev. Kenneth Miller officiat"GATT contains the biggest tax
ing.
cut in history - a record $744 bilBurial will be in Montgomery Memorial Parle, London, W.Va.
lion reduction in tariffs, wbicb will
lower prices for consumers and
spark economic growth around the
globe, and, most importandy, here
VINELAND, N.J.- Richard Lander Spurlock, Vineland, N.J., for- atbome."
merly of Gallia County, died Thursday, Nov. 17, 1994 at Cooper Hospital
Tbe accord negotiated under the
in Camden. N.J. He .was a self-employed oil and gas well drilling contnK:- Genetal Agreement on Tariffs and
tor. He was a graduate·of Prestonburg, Ky., High School and attended Trade is opposed by some in both
Mashall College. He was also a U.S. Navy World War II veteran.
parties wbo say cheaper imports
Born Aug. 4, 1925 in Fon Gay, W.Va. be was the son of Ailfair Par- wiD put Americans out of work and
sons Spurlock and the late Homer B. Spurlock.
·
that multinational regulation of the
Survivors include his mother; his wife, Ruby Swango Spurlock; one agreement will compromise U.S.
daughter, Nan9 (David) Mullins of Columbia, S.C; two sons, Ricbard sovereignty.
·
Spurlock of Hurricane, W.Va., and Robert Spurlock of Vineland' one
Gore said tbe World Trade
brother. James T. Spurlock of Virgie, Ky; seven grandchildren and one Organization, wbich would ovetsee
great grandchild.
.
the 123-country accord, could not
Friends may call 6 to 9 p.m. Monday at the Waugb-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home, wbere services will be held I p.m. Tuesday with Fatbet
Tom Betlenbach officiating. Burial will be in Mound HiD Cemetery.

Me

.

.

ExpoJts decline, trade gap worsens

Alma Simms

,'

American-led U.N. intervention
foroe. Three Somalis were shot and
killed in separate incidents during
the tour. A fourth, Sbidane Arone,
was captuned and beaten to death.
The story, as it emerged in
courts-mania! and reconstruction
by journalists:
Tbe Canadians were having
trouble with looters at their compound. The Airborne's commander, Lt. Col. Carol Mathieu, gave
permission to shoot infiltrators in
the legs if they refused to stop.
Maj. Anthony Seward authorized
the men to "abuse" prisoners
cauRht snealcinR into the camo in
ordet to discourage them.
Sbidane was captured and
became a victim of that permission.
He was taken to a bunker called
"the pit," where he was tied and
blindfolded. Over the ne~t three
hours, Master Cpl. Clayton
Matcbee beat bim with bis fists, a
truncheon, and eventually a metal
bar. He put a pistol to Sbidane's
bead and used a small cigar to bum
bis feet.
Pvt. Elvin Kyle Brown participated briefly, striking Sbidane in
the jaw once and kicking bim several times. Brown then took photographs of the bloody Sbidane and
Matchee.
More than a dozen enlisted men
stopped at the pit to look. Dozens
more, including officers, helllli Sbidane' s screams. Nobody stopped iL
Matchee was arrested March 18.
Later that day, be was found hanging in bis cell. He was cut down
alive, but suffered such tnin dama~~ be was found unfit 'to stand

Nation/World

November 20, 1994

: PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP)
._ Former Haitian military chief
k.aoul Cedras spends bis days
cloistered inside a bigh-rise in this
tapital's most exclusive oeighbor.ood, wrltins bis memoirs in an
f.partment overlooking Panama
Bay.
One month after neein$ bis
•omeland under U.S. mihtary
~scon, the man wbo 'helped overthrow Haiti's first democratically
elected president is settling into
comfortable, anonymous exile.
Tbere is nothing outside the 17story building named "'lbe EmperOr'' to indicate it is the new home
or the former military coup lender,
bis wife and their three children.
Tbere are no police or armed
iccurity' fUards in the lobby. The
Panamaman government provided
~ednls and bis family with sec:urity
enly durinll their fust two weeks in
tbe country, as a courtesy.
: Now, tbere arc only a pair of
unarmed, casually dressed watch·
qten in the lobby of the a:8am-colored building where two• and
· three-bedroom apartments rent for
qtore than $1,000 a month. Their .
11\aiD job these days aeems to be
keep,ing out joumalists.
·
, 'It makes tbe people here
u'ncomforlable," one building
·
said of
who
wbo bas refused all interview
riqueats since arriving In Panama
ciiOcL 13.
; None of tbe residents of tbe
apartment building aeems to bave
.talked 10 their new neighbors. One
woman admitted to having seen
c:edral' ' wife, ·Yannick, returning
ffom a sb'oppiu· trip, carrying
"loU of packages!· · ' ·

Call today for m~ lnf~rmalt;,D '

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen . .
Jesse Helms, the next Senate Forelgn Relations CoiJ!mit!ee c~ai~­
man, says be doesn t thmk Presldent Clin.ton is. eq~i~ to .be commander-m:cb1ef and neather do
· the people 10 the armed forces."
In an interview for CNN' s
"Evans and Novak" program,
released Friday, Helms was asked
if be thought Clin~n w!IS up to the
job as commander 10 chaef.
"No, I do not, and neither do
the people in the armed forces,"
tbe Noflb Carolina Republican
said; ~ked to name any gen~rals
or adm1rals wbo bold that vaew,
Helms said there are some. but be
would not name ~m.
Helms also said on the program.
taped for broadcast today, that be
will try as soon as tbe new
Congress convenes in January to
ge~ _all U.S. troops borne from
Haau.
·~~y ousJ!t never to have ~~
sent m there an tbe (irst place,
Helms said. "I think it's disgraceful that we have u.s. troops col-

\._

Mqn clrolcts maU for IJcller living.

Jecting garbage in Haiti."
1
In a wide-ranging interview
Helms, 73, said be would like to
abolish the U.S. Agency for International Development, wbich
bands out most foreign aid.
"I think we ought to replace it
with something that does not willynilly give away United States taxpayer money to foreign governments who are opposed to us, or at
least opposed to civil rights and all
the rest of i~" be said.
·
And Helms said be opposes an
option reportedly under consideration by the administtation to provide up to $5 billion in military aid
for Bosnia's Muslim-led govern' menL
· "Let's give compassionate aid
where we can to help children ...
and that sort of thing," he said.
!'But ... sooner or larer we're going
to get down to common sense and
realize that we can't solve disputes
with money and the blood of our
people by interfering with things
that have been going on for thouSands of years."

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PEOPLES BANK'S ANNUAL STOCK PICKING CONTEST

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

•
•
••

•

IHE SHOE
CAFE • •

CathyGessner
Silas Woodruff
Nancy Smathers

+:21.0
+20.6
+19 ..5

Helen Carithers

+ 18.1:\

Jeri Tomes

+ 18.1

Pete +4.3

As of Nol'cmber II , thc:;c were lhe top S pcrfonning ponfolios out ofthe hundn•ds
in our contf!&gt;1: 214 ponfoUos art ahead of Pete. Each contestant chose S puhliril

""&amp;;&gt;G1-14tl• 9w••-_.

traded stock&gt; from a list of 100 selcetcd companies. Performance is ha:;cti upon
change in ponfolio v.J.Iue from the close of busines.~ Friday. Sept. .\0, 1994. throu~h
Friday, October 13. The value of all ponfoUos wiD be tracked thro u~h 1')')4.
Peoples Bank will aw.rrd $500 to the top performer, $250 for second place and
$100 for third place.

THI! QUAIJT'I COIIPMY IIINCII. .
•

Happ~ Holida~

Inc.

•Urltllry /Osloaty

-c.-Chain

· 1\pp~ll&lt;{h.!,an(
' '
l , 'Jitlo~turu,

Clinton's competency

· •Balli Safety Aids

•Salts, Rllllais, Repaks
•Wbtllchrm
allospH.. ltds
-c..s &amp; Crutcllts

From Our Staff

PLIIIED PAREifBIID
or SIUtHEIS., IHII

The Peoples Bank IJiscount Brokerage Service is ideal for investors who do nol
require the benefit of research or recommendations, but who still insist on senin•
and personal benefits. Peopilos Bank Discount Broker.tge Services are offered
thmugh Olde Discount ('.orporation, member SIPC, NYSE, NASD. Discount
brokerage funds arc not bank deposits and are not guar.mteed by or insured by
any bank, IDIC, or any agency. lnvestmenl~ involve risk and market value.changcs.
including possible loss of principal.

Confldentlttl Family Planning ~rvlcea
for females 8a males. ·
•Medical Exams
•Pap Tests
.Pregnancy t•sts &amp; counseling
•Testa 4 treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
•Anonymous HIV testa &amp; counseling
•Methods and supplies for birth control and safer sex

~~

Pete's ponfolio picks include British Petroleum. johnson &amp;johnson.
Martin Marietta, Pr.ooir, Inc. and Roc~ Shoes and llooLs.
Pick of the Week: .Johnson &amp;Johnson. "In general I'd have lo say that I hate baths. Butj&amp;J makes a ~.rlly

epoll'rOVBir~lniK!l!g!L~~----1~..:...-.-I~~fi:ne:_b':u:"b:bl::.e:lnth
=-tb
=at~m:ak:es
:::_baths, well,jim. Anyway, that puts themon the map for me ..
Ask/or a complimenuary discount brokerage fee schedule at any Pe~ples Bank office.

Birth control pill
Condom/Spermicide
Sliding Fee Scale

'
Mariena
373·3155

We accept Medicaid and private Insurance.
414 SECOND STREET
GALUPOUS

'
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MIDDLEPORT

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992-5812

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, C)H-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Along.the River

November 20, 1994

U.S. aid to Bosnia could- include troops, tanks, training ~-

I

I

By JOHN DIAMOND
.A.Hcbltecl Preu Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- Presl·
dent Clinton is warning Congress
that endina the arms embargo
against Bosnia could cost billions
of dollars and put Americans In
~~arm's way.
The caution was included In
options presented to lawmakers Ibis
week in classified briermgs by l'l:n·
tagon and State Department officials.
Presenting tlie options reluctant·
ly at Congress' direction, the
atlminisuation told lawmakers that
endin• the embargo might require a
mass1ve package of armaments,

mUilary lriiining -for the Muslim-led
Bosnian army, and an Air Force
bombing campaign.
Lawmakers said Friday they
were sobered by the presentation.
Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-NJ ..
who vou:d for the Uniu:d Stales to
defy lbe international embargo.
called the briefing "an eye opener."
"I assumed !bat l.be weapons
flow that would come from the
(!.bird-party) sources would be a
relatively easy thing to accomplish," Lautenberg said. But he
added. " We're talking about massive financial commitments, per·
sonnel contmitments and. ultimate-

ly, the possibility of America being
engaged in a full-scale war. That is
not likely to get a lot of support."
At the low end of the options,
the United States could simply
encourage a flow of arms into l.be
Bosnian government from other
counuies.
· But helping the BQsnians overcome Bosnian Serb attacks - the
real aim of the anti-emb!llgo poHcy
- would likely require a more
active role. That would make tbe
United States a partisan in the
Balkan conflict and could involve
investment of as much as $5 biiHon
over several years, according to
Pentagon officials who spoke on

condition of anonymity.
Because some .l9,000 United
One administration offtclal said Nations peacekeepers would be
U.S. action could include "a very Immediately endal:lgcred by a liftheavy air campaign" against l.be ing of the arms embargo, the Unitt
Bosnian Serbs, including l.beir sup- ed States could ~lp airlift !bose
ply lines, headquarters, arms facto· French, Britlsb and Dutcb troops
ries and front-line troops.
out of tbe region.
The mililary option also would
"The liftlns of the embargo
involve a complex program to train drags tbe United 'States into the
the Bosnian army. U.S. trainers conflict at a time . ·wben l.be U.N.
would w!X'k in a third country, out- and our allies are pulling out." said
side Bosnia where the lighting is Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., outgogoing on.
ing chairman of tbe House Foreign
In addition, the United States Affairs Committee. "It could
would provide mililary intelligence ' Americanize the war."
and tquipment including tanks,
Hamilton is an opponent of uni·
antitank weapons, small arms, lateral U.S. action. But lawmakers
armored vehicles and radar.

on all sides of tbe Issue bad were
resualned.
Rep. Newt Gingrich, R.Oa;, tbe ··
House speaker-to-be. said. "I Cl!ll',t
imagine, aiven ·the currenl budaet
consuaints, tbat Ibis administration
would contmii itself to $5 biUion in
aid to Bosnia." Earlier this year
Gingrich supported legislation
directing Clinton to defy the
embargo.
, One concern dogging U.S. mill·
tary planers, according to Lauten·
berg, is the possibility tbat neighboring Serbia. wil.b its formidable
military capability, would enter the
-war alongside its Bosnian Serb
brethren.

I
I

Daly says tbe Smyth affair has
put him under his greatest professional strain since be became a
bishop in the 1970s.
•
A conference of Ireland's
Cathonc bishops, meeting Wednes·
day at the Maynool.b seminary west
of Dublin, apologized for the

church's insufficient attention to
pedophiles in the priesthood.
"Child sexual abuse by a priest
is especially heinous not only
because it is an evil in itself, but
because it is also a violation of a
sacred trust," the bishops said in a
statement.

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Skip the pie, se.rve Spiced Cranberry Tart for Thanksgiving

TAWNEY'S JEWELERS, INC.
422 SECOND AVE.

By ne Associated Press
Cranberry spiced tart is very much like a Linzer tart- but with a cranberry filling instead of a raspberry one.
'The tartness of the cranberry is sweetened with sugar. The filling is wrapped in a cinnamon and almond-scented pastry.
Cl'llllberry Spiced Tart
I 1/4 cups flour
314 cup fine Iy chopped almonds
2cupssugar
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
Pinch ground cloves
2 egg yolks
114 teaspoon almond extract
I 1/2 sticks ( 314 cup) butter, softened
Two 12..ounce !*kages rresb cranberries (6 cull')
.
1/4 cup cold water
··
·
; •• ~ _ t/2 stick ( 114 cup) butter, cut into 4 pieces
'- . . To pnepue CIUSt: IlU large bowl of an eiCcfric mixer, combine flour, almonds, 1/4 cup of the sugar, cinnamon and cloves. On medium
'speed, beat in eA yolks and almond extract until just blended. Add butter; mix just until butter is combined, about 2 minutes.
On lightly floured surface, shape dough into a flattened round. In a 9- or 10-inch tart pan with removable bottom or 9-inch pie plate, place
dough; press into bOttom and sides. (Dough should be 114-inch thick. Refrigerate until firm, about! hour.) Using reserved dough, cut into 8 equal
portions .. On a lightly floured surface, using floured hands, roll each piece into a 1().inch long, 114-inch thick rope; roll each piece onto a flat
baki··.' sheet. Refrigerate covered with plastic wrap until firm, about I hour.
·
-.
To prepare filling: Meanwhile, in a large, nonreactive saucepan, combine cranberries, remaining I 314 cups sugar and 114 cup
,water. Over medium-high beat bring to a boil; reduce beat to medium-low. Simmer until cranberries are soft, about 15 minutes. Add .
:butter, stirring until melu:d. Cool to room temperature.
·
To assemble tart: Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Fill reserved pastry-lined tart pan with cooled cranberry mixture. Arrange reserved
:tour pastry ropes across pie space evenly; place four remaining pastry ropes across pie in opposite direction forming a lattice pattern. Bake in a
:350-degree F oven until pastry is golden and filling is bubbling, 30 to 40 minutes. Serve at room temperature. Makes 8 servings.
:
NutrldOa racts per tiervlq: 472 a.L~ 611! carbo., 251! rat.

GALUPOUS, OH.

Four killed
inHamas
protests
By SAID GHAZALI
.A.Hclated Press Writer
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP)
- Israeli troops shot dead four
Arabs as hundreds of Musnm militants rioted today in the West Bank
and Gaza Suip to prolest a deadly
crackdown by Palestinian police.
Palestinian leaders hammered
out a one-day truce to pull back
from l.be brink of civil war afterFriday's clashes In Gaza City
between Muslim worshipers and
Palestinian police, the worst since
autonomy began. Thirteen were
killed and more than ISO wounded.
In an attempt to appease his
earaaed Islamic militant opponents,
PLO cbief Vasser Arafat estab·
Jisbed a 2().member commission or
Inquiry today that was to include
repreaentatives of Hamas and
Islamic Jlbad, the two leading
opioition factioos.
.
However, in a private meeting
with Israeli Arab leaders, Arafat
was seething, saying his Islamic
opponents bad challenged bis
authority again and ag8in and must
be put in their place.
· Grabbina a pile or anti·Arafat
leaflets by Hamas, lhe .,..0 chair·
men threw the papers on the table
before him and sbouted that Hamas
was "waaina war" against him,
said a senior Palestinian ofllt:lal.
Despite bis IIIJCI', Arafat said be
was ready to resume a dialogue
wil.b Hamas about sharing power,
said the official, wbo spoke on con·
dition of anonymity.
PalcstiniBD Planning Minister
Nabil Sbaatb said Palestinian
police were not equipped to handle
ri&lt;U.
Arafat adviser Abmed Tibi and
otber Palestinian officials suggest·
ed some or tbose killed and wound·
ed were tlbot by Muslim militants,
not police. Tbey said some fatal
bullet&amp; abown In hospital X-rays
were not the type used by Palestini·

Turkev
Noodle Casserole ~A delicious way to use leftovers
By The ~ted Press
Although only crumbs remain of the pumpkin pie, and the candied yams are just a sweet memory, there 's almost sure to be an abundance of leftover
Thanksgiving turkey.
-Mediterranean noodle turkey casserole combines leftover turkey with roasted red peppers, artichoke hearts, mozzarella cheese, olives and noodles. The
casserole can be frozen for later use.
·
Mediterranen Noodle Turkey Casserole
I pound medium egg noodles, uncooked
14 1/2-ounce can low-sodium chicken broth
I cup skim milk
I teaspoon salt
114 cup cornstarch
2 cups chopped. cooked turkey
14-ounce can artichoke hearts, drained and quartered
17 1/2-ounce jar roasted red peppers, drained and sliced
9 Calamata olives, pitted and sliced
112 cup grated part-skim mozzarella cheese
1/2 cup white wine
·
I teaspoon lemon juice
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
Vegetable oil cooking spray
2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese
•
Prepare noodles according to package dire&lt;:tions. Drain.
:
Stir the broth, milk. salt and cornstarch together in a large pot or Dutch oven until the cornstarch is dissolved. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly. until thickened and bubbly. Stir in noodles. turkey; artichoke !leans,
:red peppers, olives, mozzarella clteese, wine, lemon juice and black pepper.
.
.
•
Spray a 3-quart baking dish with cooking spray. Spoon noodle mixture into dish. Sprinlde with Parmesan cheese. Bake in a 350-degree F oven until bubbling around the edges, about 35 minutes. Let stand 5 minutes before
:serving. Makes 8 servings.
.
·
:
Nutiitloa racts per serving: 278 eal. (17 pemnt calories from rat), 20.6 g pro., 35.5 g carbo., 5.1a rat, 66 ma cbol., 1,069 sodium.

.

~ Thanksgiving

won't be Thanksgiving without the stuffing; tips on making the supreme sidedish

lb MARIALISA CALTA

,
I cup finely chopped onion
I think it was writer Nora Ephron who said that when it comes to turkey stuffing, anyone who has
(about 1 medium onion)
~ildren has about a four-year window of opportunity to experiment. After age 4 or 5, kids' notions of stuffing
1 cup finely chopped celery (4
lire set in stone. Thanksgiving won't be Thanksgiving without The Sluffing.
medium ribs)
•
I grew up with basic bread stuffing, the kind wilh poultry seasoning and celery and onions. I love it,
1/2 cup finely chopped shallots (2
and Thanksgiving wouldn't be Thanksgiving without it. I have a friend- a rather well-known food authority
shallots)
· 'ol(ho shall remain nameless- who makes a truly disgusting cracker stuffing that she grew up.with, and which
3 crisp apples, peeled and .
still defines Thanksgiving at her bouse. I have friends wedded to sage and cornbread, wild rice, apples and
coarsely c~opped
Pe&amp;rs... you get the picture. To paraphrase the old Paul Simon song, there must be 50 ways to stuff a turkey.
112 cup golden raisins
:
This column is for anyone working in that "window of opportunity," or anyone who wants a second
112 cup finely chopped Italian
stuffing up !heir sleeve, or anyone who, for whatever reason, is desperately seeking stuffing.
(flat-leaf) parsley
· Some food safety and taste tips:
.
2 teaspoons dried tailagon,
-Defrost the turkey in the refrigerator.
crumbled
. -Rinse the turkey thoroughly under cold running water, and pat dry with paper towels, before
I teaspoon dried thyme
cooking.
·
·
10 to 12 dried sage leaves,
. -:It's better to bake tbe stuffing outside~ turkey, for reasolls of h~lth (it lessens the possibility of crumbled (or 2 teaspoons dried sage)
contamtnatton) and gastronomy (the turkey stays mo1ster). Stuff yQur turkey With a sliced onion, carrot, celery
I teaspoon salt, or to taste
Ptloto by Paul o. Boisvert rex New
rib, a sliced lemon, and some chopped parsley, sage, !OfCmary and tbyme. If you MUST put the stuffing in the '
I teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, or to taste
turlr,ey, do it right before roasting, and remove the stuffing immediately after the bird is done.
I cup bomemade turkey stock.or canned chickep broth, if baking in separate pan
-Never, ever wok a turkey overnight or over a twiHiay period.
In a small bowl, soak ~berries in Madeira.for seve~! hours, or overnight.
1
..

an~-~ rioting in Gaza today

oa:tllml near lhe Jewish settlement
~Nelllrim. Some 300 Hamas supportal advanced toward an Israeli

umy checkpoint near l.be settle·

tllelllllld IIOIIed soldiers who fled
intQ Netzarim. Rioters destroyed
the' cbeckpost, raised·a Palestinian
nag _tbele and tbell followed troops
to Neu.im where they stoned the
warclitower.
· Troops fired tear gas, rubber
b!alleta and live rounds from inside,
abootina a 17-year-old who later
died of his wounds, Paiesthiian
·' reporters said. The army said it wai
cbectln8 the report.
Tbe
also atoned PaJea.

SAVE SOc

I

When yo(l buy two 2-llter

ac~vt...e. The
fon:ca
area withOut rtr1n1 sbols, but
returned later and dispersed the

of.Caffelne Free Pepsi
or Caffeine Free Diet- Pepsi

cro~ a1ao erupted in.tbe West

•'

r

'

Amerlcu Spoon Holiday Stulllnt
6ounces dried tart cherries (see note)
1 cup Madeira
·
. • .
·
,
14 slices day-old. dense-te~tured white bread, toasted and tom into pieces (approximakly 8 cups)
1·112 cups t~u:d pecan p1eces
112 C)IP unsalted butter
'
·

'.
"

~----

..
addto
Add I he apPIes, ra1s1ns,
, tamgon, thyme, sage, salt, pepper and ~rved
· toss well. Cool.
Right before cooki~g turkeY_. stuff i~. Or, preheat oven to 350_degrees. Butter a baking dish. Put stuffing in.
Pour stock over a~d cover ~tth alummum fc;nl. Bake about 30 to 45 m1nutes, until heated through.
.
Npte: Dn~ chemes can be found 10 f11any health food and specialty stores and some supermarkets. A mail
ordi:r ~u~: Amencan Spoon Foods, P.O. Box566, Petoslr.y, Ml4977~; 1-800-222-5886. A six-ounce bag is $5
plus Sh1pp10g.
I
Yield: 12 cups.
·~

your bread is not truly stale, bake it in • 200 degree oven until dry, about 30 minutes.
- Allow 1/2 to 314 cup stuffing per person. If stuffing the bird. allow 1/2 cup stuffing per pound of

'

r

1

.

~~~~~=R~d~
rfriend
i~ge~ra~k~~~&amp;~v
~~~~tse~m~·n~~~~~~~~~~~~~fi·A~~~
-~~~~art~~~~eibow~l~,oo~mib~methe~~~ns. ·~thc*~~~gthc~~~~~~thc ·
Carole~e~rs~w~i~th!~!tw~o~bL
moister if roasu:d breast side"'"'""''
. as . mtxture.
turkey.

Baat towD of1'u111111em 011 Friday
. eveiriliJ ud ~y. llnell. troops
tired Ill the ~·· killing two
west Bank Palestinians and an
Israeli Arab; IUICii bosp~tal Ofli·
cilia said.
'
,I

November 20,1994

:By The Alsodated Press
·
..
A juicy, flavorful roasted chicken is a popular alternative to turkey as the centerpiece for holiday meals. This year serve a :hght and flavorful roasted chicken with a cheese and rice stuffing.
'
In the_following necipe, a festive mosaic pattern is created by carefully arranging cilantro leaves underneath tbe
: .
.c:h1cken's skin. The Latin-style stuffing is made with broth-cooked rice, Anaheim chills and Monterey Jack cheeSe:, then pep~red with colorful and tangy pomegranak seeds.
The stuffing can also be served on its own with beef or lamb
dishes.
Routed MOSIIc Chicken Stuffed wltb Cheese and Rice
1 whole roaster cbickeo, 6 to 7 pounds
1 teaspoon seasoned salt
1/2 cup cilantro leaves
3 cups cooked rice, preferably in chicken broth
. 1/2 cup chopped onion
2 cloves garfii:, minced
1/2 teaspoon ground pepper
1·3rd cup chopped Anaheim cbilis
2 cups grau:d Monkrey Jack cheese
1/2 cup pomegranate seeds or raisins
2 tablespoons melted butter
Remove neek and giblets from chicken. Rinse chicken;
drain well. Sprinkle inside cavity wilh seasoned salt. Wilh
bands, gently separate breast skin from meat, being careful not to
lear. Lay about2 tablespoons cilantro leaves on meat under skin,
making an attractive pattern. Place in a large baking pan.
.
~ medium bowl, combine rice, onion, garlic, pepper, cbilis,
remaining cilantro leaves, cbeese and pomegranate seeds or raisins. Toss well to mix.
· Stuff chicken wilh rice stuffing. Piece remaining stuffing in a greased casserole. Brusb chicken wilh butter. Bake in
a ~reheated 325-degrec F oven for 30 minutea per pound or until meatthermomekr reads 185 degrees F when inserted into
th1gh. Baste chicken several times during roasting. During last 30 minutes of cooking, place stuffing casserole in' oven.
Note: If dalred, 2 to 3 tablapoou of cbkllea drlpplup am be drizzled o•er tbe rice stumna befOR placing iDto
oven. Wllea cbkkea Is done, remo.e lrom ona. Allow to stand 5 mlautes. Re1110•e rice stufllag, sBce chicken aad sene
wltb stulllng.
.
Nutrition racts per servlq: 631 QJ,, 59 11 pro., l60 mg eaJ., 31 1 carbo., 28 1 fat., l.Ba dietary llber, 172 mg
_chol., 555 mg sodium.
.

Government falls over sex-scandal pr_i~st
force as with the case of the
Belfast-based priest Brendan
Smyth.
Smyth, 67, fled to the headquarters of bis Norbertine order in rural
County Cavan last year j!Jer~u­
sations surfaced of child molesta·
tion going bac.k to the 1960s.
Northern Ireland police filed an
extradition request. wbicb sat unat·
tended in Attorney General Harry
Whelehan' s office for seven
months.
Cardinal Cabal Daly, leader of
lbe Irish church, finally ordered
Smyl.b to return to Northern Ireland. The priest pleaded guilty in
June to 17 counts or indecently
assaulting five girls and two boys
while serving in west Belfast. He
was sentenced to four years in
prison.
When Irisb premier Albert
Reynolds appoinu:d Wbeleban to a
top judicial post Nov. 11, his Labor
Party partners stormed out of their
22-month-old coalition governmenl
Reynolds resigned Thursday as
prime minister. He is expected to
step down Saturday as Flanna Fail
party leader. Wbeleban also quit
Thursday as High Court president.

Section B

:chicken takes on a new look and flavor for Thanksgiving

Catholic church admits sin

By SHAWN POGATCHNIK
Aaoc:lated Press Writer
DUBLIN, Ireland (AP)
Maura Donnell lit a candle, knelt
and prayed Friday for &lt;tbe.soul or
her parish priest, the Rev. Liam
Cosgrove, whose death last week·
end in a gay nightclub shook l.be
faithful of north Dublin.
"Father Liam was a good fellow, a decent Christian man. I
couldn't explain to you bow be
came to be there," said Mrs. Donnell, a retired nurse wbo attends St.
Laurence O'Toole Catholic
Church.
"I'm sure· God's forgiven bim
where be is now," sbe said.
Just as Ireland's government ·
collapsed for misbandHng the case
of another priest charged with
molesting children, Its dominant
Roman Catholic church. is confrontin~ its own sexual scandals,
includmf the circumstances or
Cosgrove s death.
Church and state intersected
often in the lrisb Republic, wbose
population of 3.5 million people is
95 percent Roman Cal.bolic. But
never before bave its political and
reli 6 ious establishments been
rocked simultaneously with such

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November 201 1994_

Pomeroy-Middlepo_
rt-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Sunday

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Christmas parade set

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Vaughan's Deli will prepa:a;e
your Thanksgiving Dinner.
Vaughan's does not ship in
your Thanksgiving Dinner.
Our dinners are
Homemade with a
Family Touch.

Vaughan's·Cardinal
Supermarket's
In Middleport and
Mason
Will be closed on
THANKSGIVIN·G
DAY
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GAUJPOLIS- "An Old FashIoned Christmas" will tate the
11ree11 of Gallipolis as the Gallipolis Retail Mercballts Association .
1111111 the annual Christmas parade
11 a.m. Dec. 3.
Deldllne for en~ is Nov. 30.
With An" Old Fash10ned Christmas" theme awards wiU be given to
Mercbants Award, Best Theme
Float, Best Overall Float, Most

424 SECOND AVE.

GALLIPOUS

MELODIE FORBES AND BRUCE BISSELL
AMY GATEWOOD, MAT SANDERS

: CROWN CITY - Sandra

~othacber announces the engage-

6lent of her daughter Amy M.
Gatewood to Christopher Mathew
Sanden.
: Gatewood is the daughter of
Rotbacher and Charles Gatewood
Qf Columbus. She is a 1992 graduAcademv HiRh S:cbnol

Wedding
policy

TURKEY DINNERS

1 doz. Rolls
1 10" Pum.pkin Pie

·only$29

-

CHERYL RAIRDEN AND MICHAEL WOLLERMAN

Rairden-Wollerman·
. POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.Cheryl Lynn Rairden and Michael
Wollerman were married Sept. 23
In Pearisburg, Va.
: Cheryl is a 1989 graduate of
parkersburg Community College
and graduate from Kyger Creek
High School. She is employed at .
liolzer Medical Center as a regis-

95

HAM DINNER

tered nurse in the obstetrics unit.
Michael is a 1979 graduate of Ohio
University and graduated from
Elyria High School in Elyria. He is
employed by Federal Mogul Corporation as a Product Line Manag-

er.

The couple resides in Point
Pleasan~ W.Va.
.

Society
scrapbook

6-71b. Ham
2 lb. Homemade Sweet Potatoes
2 lb. Green Beans
1 lb. Cole Slaw
1 doz. Rolls
1 10" Pumpkin Pie

. THANKSGIVING DINNER
MIDDLEPORT- The annual
Thanksgiving Dinner of Feeneyl'ennett Post 128, American
Lesion will be 6 p.m. Tuesday,
Nov. 22 at the Legion Annex In
Middleport.
All legion members and auxiliary members are invited 10 attend
Ibis dinner.
Following dinner at 7:30 p.m.
The legion will meet at the post
home. Tbe auxiliary will also be
meeting at lhe annex following din-

$2995
Only

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MASTERS DEGREE
GALLIPOLIS - Brett A. Wilt,
son of Ruby A. Wilt, Gallipolis,
and the tare Larry E. Wilt, recently
received his Master of Science
degree from the University of Wisconsin in Madison, Wis., with a
GPAof3.94.
He received his BS degree from
Ohio University in Athens in 1992
majoring
in
atmpspheric
sciencelmeteorology.
He is employed by Weather
Central, Inc., Madison as a private •
forecaster and research development specializing in severe weather
and tornado prediction.
His wife, the fonner Tabitha A.
Lawrence, is employed as a teacher
at Abundant Life Chtistian School.
in Madison. They reside in Madison.
·
SKATING PARTY
GALLIPOLIS - DARE will be
sponsoring a Food Raiser Skating
Party from 7 to 9 p.m. Nov. 22 at
Skatesville USA.. behind Ponderosa

.-steU-HoUse~

Admission is $1 and a can 0'---11"
food. Proceeds and goods will bl;
donated to local food ~a.nks .as
referred by the local Mmutenal
Assoeiation.
·
The event is made possible by
Blll and Patricia Ross owners of
Sltatevllle and DARE officers of
Gallla County.

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Forbes-Bissell

MIDDLEPORT - Melodic wbo will complete bis training
Dawn Forbes and Bruce Hayward there in 1995.
Bissell announce their approaching
marriage.
and attends the University of
They will eKchangewedding
Akron majoring in accounting.
vows
3 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 26, at
Sanders is the son of Steve and the Rejoicing
·Under New ManagementLife Church, 500
Brenda Sanders of Crown City. He _
"La«Jies Preference
is a 1991 graduate of Hannan trace· North Second Ave., Middleport
The
bride-elect
is
a
student
at
High School and is employed by
Health Club" ··
Hocking College, Nelsonville, and
Hi-Way Paving Inc. of Columbus.
will
graduate
from
the
nursing
pro• Profeuional Trainenfor
Wedding arrangements will be
gram in December. Her fiance is
Penonalaed Protrrarru
Rnnnunced later.
also a Hocking College student
• Vomly of Heald• Equipm«nl

Gatewood-Sanders

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Parade organizers ask au ridiiiJ:
units to enter from the Millc:rect:
Road entrance at Gallipolis Dcvel~
opmental Center.
•
Tbe Kiwanis Club is assistina:
with organization of the parade. -

TAWNEY STUDIO

Call Today 992·3471 Last Day to order Nov. 22
Pickup No Later Than Wed. Nov. 23· I 0:00 p.m.
. ss.oo·charge extra to go out hot• .

..... -· ,.-· .'

Rclisious, Moll Original, Best;
walking Unit. Best BatoD Group,.
Best Old Car and Best Dcconflld::
Bike. Plaques wiD be given to ~
two best participating bands.
:

Let us copy your old
family photos. Special 25x7's for $14.95. Reg.
$19.95. SAVE $5.00. We
also do passport ph~tos,
Identification photos end
photo finishing.

We will be closing Wednesday November 23rd 10-12 lb. Turkey
2.1b. Homemade Sweet Potatoes
at Midnight and we will be Reopening - 2 lb. Homemade Dressing
Frid-.y November .25th at 6:00am.
1 lb. Cole Slaw

Vaughan-'s .Cardinal, A family
Supermarket feels that
family is important and
Thanksgiving is a time our
·employees need to be home
with their families.
Have a Happy and Safe
Thanksgiving.

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• Aerobiu and E%ercue Clm•••
lo meel oU jilne" !net.
• Molher-Doug/tler t&lt;&gt;orltoull

• Lieemed Dieddan

The ~unday Times-Sentinel • Vnlimiled Tanning
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs • Mmtoge Therapy
• On aile, Child Care
and Mason Counties as news and is
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m. Iii 8 p.m.
happy to publish wedding stories
Soi.JO o.m. lil2 p .m.
and photographs without charge.
Clo•ed Sun
. However, wedding news must
Plea•• plto,... for
meet general standards of timelian introductory 1lilit
ness. Tbe newspaper prefers to
446-3401
publish accounts of weddings as
Complete Memberllaip
soon as possible after the event.
$50.00 monlhly
To be published in the Sunday
only)
Equipm""I/CLu•••(
edition, the wedding must have
$35.00 monlhly
taken place within 60 days prior to
Vnlimiled Tanning (only)
the publication. and may be up to
125.00 monlltly
600 words in length. Material for
One d4y drop in Along lh~ River must be received
f:q,.,_llllc,...•• ss.oo
by the edilorial department by
One •e,.ion drop in •
Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the date
Tanning 13.00
of publication.
"We cater to a woman's
Those not making the 60 day
special fitness needs"
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride 11nd groom may be
published with wedding stories is
desired. Photographs may be either I
black and while or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, snapshots or instant-developing photos
are not of accepiabie quality.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

November 26th .
' 9:00-5:00

FREE
Cider-Coffee-Cookies
Poinsettias, Christmas Trees, Bulk
• Candy, Crafts, Amish Jelly, Candy •
&amp; Jelly Gifts. Handmade Baskets
10 Door Prizes.
&gt;

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Karens Greenhouse
ll3 1/2 miles past Southern High School""

St. Rt. 124 Racine, Oh ·
614·949·2612

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Sl.J FI"E:~ ~~-

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The French City Child Care Center is
considering opening a new center, 1:
conveniently located in the downtown
business area of Gallipolis. Your help in
determining the need for such a program is 1:
'""----'
.
Iimportant and will be very much appreciated. 1 ~
If you have an interest in seeing a downtown child care center opened, f:
please complete this survey and mail back within ten days. Applications 1
for the admission of your child will be mailed to you as soon as youn :
survey is received.
1:
Please keep in mind that this Center will be designed for a limited 1:
number of children and a waiting list will be maintained.

1:

1:

********

Age(s) of children who would attend the center:
18 months to 3 years
3 years to 4 years_ _ __
4 years to 6 years.___~ _ _ _ _ __
********

Time of day you would use the Center:
6 AM - 12 Noon
12 Noon- 7 PM _ __ 6 AM - 7 PM _ _
How much would you be willing to pay for your child to attend the
Center?
_ _Hourly
Daily
Weekly
· Monthly
Yearly
* * * * • * * *
Is your child presently enrolled in a day care Center?
NO
' '
- -Yes
Would you be interested in having day care hours on Satu.rdays?
Yes
No
...

----------:-; ·.

145 Linwood Drive, Apt. 5, Gallipolis, OH 45631
Your name and address:

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November

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Sunday

Last call made on· t
Americorps postions ·,1

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50th to be celebrated
GALLIPOLIS -LOuis and M.ioa Ford will celebrate their 50th
weddina aooivcrsary during the
'I'ballks&amp;iviDa holiday weekend. A
celebration/family reunion is
planned. Mr. and Mrs. Ford were
married Nov. 25, 1944 at the

RIO GRANDE- Tuesday, Nov. plus health inswancc and dd~
22 Ia lbe fmal cutoff dale for appli- (based on fin~ need).
&gt;' :
calioos for tbe southeastern Ohio
job OIICIIinp with Americorps. 1be
For each year of servloe (1,700)
poaitloos arc part of Appalachian hours minimum will also receive
Acceu, a program to belp improve an educational benefit of $4,72,
aa:ess to beallb care and education tbat can be used 10 pay tuition at 11
in Appalachian Ohio.
college or university or to pay off a.
student loan.
:
The posldona are for a fuU year,
' begin Nov. 2t.
The jobs will
with a possibility they may be
renewed for a second year. Those 'Hlosc ilat=sted In applying should
selected will be working on me of Immediately contact Jake Bapst ai
six projects lbat Involve II com· the University of Rio Grande al
munltics In southeastern Ohio. A · 245 -7356. At least one of th~
Uving allowance of $7,662 per year Amerlcorps positions will be based
'
n monthly installments will be paid atURG.

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WE MAlE YOUR WINDOWS LOOK GREin
IIIRSCH VERTICAL BLINDS

UR(3 professor receives
doctorate in communications

\

1,

CRYSTAL CLARK

Clark-Matthews
NEW HAYEN - Mr. and Mrs.·
MANIDJ JMDEN AND MATT LOVEDAY

••

Jividen-Loveday

••

• GALLIPOLIS - Mark and Drea: ma Jividen announce lbe upcoming
marriage of lbeir daughter, Mandl
; to Malt Loveday, son of Phyliss 1
~ LOveday and Walter LOveday Jr.
' Jividen is a senior at Gallia
• Academy High School and is
: employed at Dairy Queen, Gallipo. lis.
.

Loveday Is a graduate of GaJiia
academy High School and is
employed wilb Boilermakers LOcal
105.
The open church wedding will
be 5:30p.m. Nov. 26 at Christ
United Melbodlst Church.
The couple will reside in Gallipolis.

Glen D. Clark of New Haven,
W.Va and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald E.
Matlbewa of Cheshire, announce
the ellgagement and forthcoming
marriage of lbeir children, ~stal
M. Clark, and Gerald uJay' E.
Matlbews, Jr.
The bride-elect is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. George
E. Carson. of New Haven, and lbe
late Mr. and Mrs. Kennelb D. Clark
of Mason. She is a 1991 Rraduate

of Wabama High School and Is
currently employed at Hills Department Store, Gallipolls.
Her fiance Is the grandson of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Goodall of
Middleport, Evelyn and Harry
Thomas of Cheshire, and the late
Carroll Matthews. He is a 1990
~duate of Kyger High School and
as currently employed at Vaughan's
Cardinal, Middleport
Wedding plans are incomplete.

Wyou are plelnlng • wtddlngp
then you ahould come 111 ua at
Huldn•·T1nner.
You wli hiVt over 180 atylta of
tuxtdoe to ch- from. W• have 1

ADRIAN AND SHARON GIBSON

Gibsons to mark 40th
' GALLIPOLIS • The daughters be held ai lbe Chapel Hill Church '
•of Adtiilll and Sbaron Gibson of Christ Gallipolis ·from 4 to 6
announce the celebration of lbeir p.m. Nov. 26.
Family and friends are invited to
·parents 40111 wedding anniversary.
join
lbe oelebration.
· A I'CI:CPtion in lbeir honor will

large nllctton or the latlat etylta ·

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

llldco~~tor

thll !lptCil1 occlllon.

Gallia community calendar

AHnW.Prlces

Tbe Commanlty Calendar Is
publlabed .• • a free service to
aon·proflt aroups wlsblng to
1naouace meetings and special
ennts. The calendu Is not
designed to promote sales or
-fuad·ralsera of any type. Items
, are printed as space permits and
:cannot be guar.nteed lo run •
: speclftc number of clays.

CLASS RINQS

SAVE

50%

GET THE lEST FOR
YOUR WIIDOWS
DUIII&amp; THIS
116 SAlE

...

S1111C1ay, Nov. 20
CENTENARY - Rawlei!Jb
:Stewart 6 p.m. Centenary United
Jdelbodist Olurch. ·

•••

•

• GALLIPOLIS • American
•Legion Auxiliary Lafayette Post
·-'Iba!lks&amp;iving dinner 2 p.m. Mem.bers neced 10 bring a dessert.

in Trillium.,.

•

•

LAYAWAY NOW fOI CHIISl

•••

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SHAVER AND JEREMY PUTNEY

TAWNEY JEWELERS

Shaver-Putney
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
CHRmTYSHORTANDCHADVANCO
Robert E. Shaver of GaJJipolls and
Mr. and Mn. Roger W. Putney of
Point Pleasant, W.Va. announce
the engagement and forlbcoming
CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs. Clinic, GaJJipolis, as amedical sec- marriage
of their children, Bobbie
:Troy y;. Short of Crown City retary in internal medicine.
Jean
Shaver
to Jeremy Wayne PutVanco is a 1990 graduate of
:announce the engagement and
ney.
·upcoming marriage of lbeir daugh· Gallia Academy high School. He
Bobbie is the granddaughter of
.ter, Christy Dawn to Chad Aaron also attended lbe University of Rio· Helen
of Middleport and
.Vanco, son of Mr. and Mrs. Grancje and is employed by Shell the lateLemley
George
D. Lemley and
Chemical Company in Applegrove,
·Charles Vanco of GaJJipolis.
Pauline
Shaver
of
Gallipolis and
: Short is a 1991 graduate of Han· W.Va.
the
late
Francis
L.
Shaver.
She is a
An open church wedding will be
:nan Trace High Scbool and a 1993
1991
graduate
of
Kyger
·graduate of lbe University of Rio held 12 p.m. Feb. 4 at St. Louis High School and is a fourthCteek
year
:Grande. She is employed by Holzer Catholic Church.

Short-Vanco

,.

422 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS

student in the University of Cincinnati CoUege of Pharmacy.
Jeremy Is lbe grandson of Lester
and Edna Putney of Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va. and the late Albert
and Lydia Stephens ofPoint Pleasant, W.Va. He is a 1990 graduate
of Point Pleasant High School and
a 1994 graduate of Marshall University wilb a BS degree in chemistry. He is employed as a chemist
with Sun Chemical, Cincinnati.
The open church wedding will
be 3:30p.m. Dec. 17 at Grace United Methodisr Church, Gallipolis
wilb music staning at 3 p.m.

,- ----Meigs community calendar·--~-SUNDAY

High School. '!'bose attending to
take two covered dishes. Meat,
beverages and rolls will be provided. Greg Smith, former Ohio State
All-American, speaker.

. R'ACINE - Saved by Grace, a
·student minisuy group from Mt.
:Vernon Nazarene College, will be
presenting music and speaking at
the Racine Church of lbe Nazarene,
10:30 a.m. Sunday.

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

POMEROY - Annual Agape
supper, 6 p.m. Sunday, Enterprise
United Methodist Church.

MIDDLEPORT Meigs
County Men' s Fellowship family
Thanksgiving dinner, Monday,
6:30 p.m. at Middlepon Church of
Christ. Meat and beverages provided, tbose attending to take covered
dish. Chris Stew\l(t speaker at 7:30
p.m.

. MIDDLEPORT -Community
·Thanksgiving service, Sunday,
:ueath United Methodist Church,
Middleport, 7 p.m. Those attending
requested to take canned food for
food pantry of the county.

MONDAY

TUPPERS PLAINS- The
Voice of Democracy speech con-

POMEROY - Meigs Athletic
Boosters fall spoi'1S banquet, 6:30
Monday in lbe_cafeteria at Meigs

test, 7:30 p.m. Monday, sponsored
by Post 9053 VFW and Auxiliary.
Refreshments. Public invited.
POMEROY - Public school
symposium Monday at 7 p.m. In
the Meigs High School cafeteria
featuring William L. Phillis, executive director of the Ohio Public
School Coalition. for Equity and
Adequacy of School Funding. All
welcome.

TUESDAY

MIDDLEPORT -Feeney-Bennett American Legion, Post 128,
annual Thanksgiving dinner, 6 p.m.
Tuesday, Legion annex on Mill St.,
legionnaires, auxiliary members
and guests.

rme

~uisitions
Jewefrg
OPEN TODAY

•u•••

(SUNDAY)
1:00·4:00
GALLIPOLIS

MIDDLEPORT

446-0332

992-6250

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,.BE POMEROY MERCBINft
ASSOCII,.ION WOULD LIKE ft
IllitE EVERYOII '0:

OFF

"IOMETOWI CIRIS,.MAS'"

OFFER GOOD THRU WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1994

WEDNESDAY

POMEROY - Free clothing
day at the Salvation Army, 115
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Wednesday, 10 a.m. to noon. All area residents welcome.

1814

CBRI

FIFTH ANNUAL HOLIDAY CRAFT SHOW
Davis Hall Building
(Former School of Nursing)
Downtown, Gallipolis, Ohio
-taturday, December 3, 1994
J · 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Sunday, December 4, 1994
Noon to 4 p.m.

12:0N:OO PM.
MAY Will 1 1 M II If ID ftl MIIDI II
ftiMIII

~

-· .. _. .... _. -- ... .. -· -· ... . ..

01

LOOK FOIII-Iftiii.IPICIILIII
. WDIDDIY'I DlftOI
Christma~

Parade 2:00-p.m.
·
. Free Parking

T·Shirt or
Sweat Shirt
i
Get a FREE levi's
Sweatshirt

FREE

Buy 2 pair levi's Jeans
Get a FREE levi's T·shirt

Lev•·s

MEN'S DENIM

SPORT SHIRTS
Button or Snap front

ALL FASHION
JEANS
Values to $42.99

10% off

ALL LADIES
LEVI'S

$3699
Group Men's .

Reg. 28.99
14 oz. unwashed
straight leg or boot cut

REG.$30.99
14 OZ.PREWASHED
Straight leg or Boot Cut

LEVI'S

.LEVI"S JEANS

$2399 $2599

DRESS SHIRTS
Values To $26.00

$1950
,
or
2 For s35

OPEN EVENINGS Dl8 P.M.
QOSED SUNDAY

Rejre1hment•

I

Holzer Medical Center
Employee Activity Association
.

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For additlonallnformatloa call 446-!056

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OPEl BOUSE

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2P

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RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education, 7 p.m. Tuesday at the high school.
POMEROY - Flu vaccine
available, Tuesday, Health Department, 9 to 11 a.m. 1 to 3 p.m. $2
under 55; $1 over 55. Only 100 ·
doses left.

GET A FEW OF THOSE ·GIFrS
KNOCitED-OFF-T- 1J.IF.-11 :l~'lr-:_;---1--i-~__J
A HUGE SAVINGS!

'

FREE

LAUNDERED
PAl'S 8 SLACKS

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Ukrainian CatboUc Cburch of th(
Holy Spirit, Brootlyu, N.Y.
·
They arc the pareots of Aono
(John) Landry, Marie (John) MIB'~
phy, Bob (Lyn) Ford, Joan (Ned)
Braun and Teresa Ford and bavc 11
grandchildren.

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�November 20, 1994
Times-Sentinel

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OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

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Gay man wins paternity rights :~

I

By SAMUEL MAULL
Aaoclated Pria Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - A gay
mao who fatbered a cblld for a lesbian couple through artificial
insemiJiation, then sued ovez visitation, has woo paternity rights to the
girl.
A state apl)eals panel ruled that
Thomas Steel, 44, of San Francisco, can call himself the father of Ry
Russo-Young, 13.
"The notion that a lesbian
mother should enjoy a parental
relationship with her, but a gay
falber should not, is so innately dis·
criminatory as to be unworthy of
comment," the state Supreme
Court's Appellate Division said in
a 3-2 decision made public Friday.
Ry lives in Manhattan wilb her
mother, Robin Young, Young's
partner, Sandra
and Russo's

I

I
,·

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ott-Point Pleasant, WV

~1 0 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.

•
daughter by another sperm donori:

CadC.

Sunday nmes-Sentlnel-Page 87

~--------------~~----~~~~~-------· Daily Special In Our Bakery

November

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By mutual asreement of her b~ •
logical parents, Ry vislled with
father' from about ages 4 through 9. ;
Steel said Ry sent him cards and •
letters, including one which called::
him "the best dad·I ever loved," ·:
and wrote a song for his 40th birth-.:
day.
'
But when Steel asked in 1990 to ;
bring both Ry and Cade to Callfor- •
nia for a visit without their moth- :~
ers, the women objected and cut off :
all. contact. Steel then sued for··
paternity rights.
:
Steel, a lawyer, praised the·:
appellate judges for "recognizing:•
alternative family structures in their:!
diversity." He said be never want· ·~
ed custody, just "reasonable visita-.:
lion rights," such as holidays and a·•
summer visit.
~

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JODY AND WESS HOWARD

Taylor-Howard

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POMEROY - Jody Lynne
Taylor and Wess J. Howard were
united in marriage Oct 1 at a small
family wedding in Greenbrier
County, W.Va. Rev. Steven Engle
of Lewisburg, W.Va. performed
the ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Jeannie and Fenton Taylor, and the
bridegroom is tile son of Eva and
Dan Howard, all of Pomeroy.
The ceremony was held on
property belopging to the bride's
family. The couple was man:ied on
a wooden bridge over a small
stream midst a grove of trees.
Jennifer Bartrum of Overland
Park, Kan., served a s matron of
honor for her sisters. Bridesmaids

MR. AND MRS. MARK VANCO

Conklin-Van co

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Do To Overhelming Response.
We Have Cooked A New Batch Of

bunter green and cranberry dress
with an ivory corsage.
The bride groom's mother wore
a hunter green and cranberry pai~­
ley dress with a cranberry and
ivory corsage.
A reception was held at the
AMVETS building. The wedding
cake was three tiers with a layer
supported by wine glasses. It was
accented in bunter green and cranberry and decorated with assorted
flowers.
Christy Short registered guests
and Brigitte Soles, Kelly Peters,
Deanna Lipscomb, Lynn Hudson
and Virgina Taylor served as
hostesses at the reception.
The couple spent their boney·moon at Blennerhasset Hotel. Parkersburg, W.Va. and will reside in
Gallipolis.
The bride is a 1990 graduate of
Minford High School and attended
Ohio University. Sbe is employed
at Gallipolis Super 8 Motel at the
front desk.
The bridegroom is a 1988 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School. He is employed at .,bilip
Spoon, AEP in New Haven, W.Va.

GALLIPOLIS - Karen Marie
Conklin of BidweU and Mart: Alan
Vanco were united in marriage
l\ug. 28 in the GaJlipolis Cily Pa!k
at Kerr Fountain with Rev. Bobby
flood officiating.
• Karen is the daughter of Darold
C:onldin of Lucasville and Carolyn
Conklin of Minford.
· • Marc is the son of Chuck and
Cheryl Vanco of Gallipolis.
; Music was performed by organist Ruth Ann Fellure. Kerr Fountain
was decorated with bunter green
ribbons and flowers and ferns.
: The bride wore an ivory gown
accented with lace and pearls and
earried a bouquet of bunter green
~ nd cranberry flowers.
• Matron of honor was Lori Hull,
5ister of the bride and flower girl
:Was Amy L. Hull, niece of.the
bride. They wore bunter green long
jlleevcd full-length dresses accent·
td with ivory pearl jewelry.
, Best man. was Chad Van.co,
brother of the groom. Ushers were
Wendell Hull, brother-in-law of the
bride and Chuck Vanco, father of
lbegroom.
; The bride's mother wore a

were Patty Taylor, sister-in-law of
the bride, Racine, and Missy
Howard, sister-in·· law of the
groom, Pomeroy.
Breanna Taylor Racine and
Morgan Howard of Pomeroy,
nieces of the couple, served-as .
flower girls.
Best man was Jesse Howard;
brother of the groom, Pomeroy,
and groomsmen were Greg Taylor,
brother of the bride, Racine and
Michael Barturm, brother-in-law of
the bride, Overland Park, Kansas.
On the weekend following the
ceremony, a cookout for family and
friends was held at the home of the
bride's parents.

Apple Butter Cooked In A Copper
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Located 3 ~ IT!IIes past Southern High School

on Rt.124

RACINE, OH .

Homecoming. Those who wish to
audition should be available for all
four performance dates.
Tbe Ariel Players is a community theatre ensemble based in the
Ariel Theatre. Anyone interested in
participating, either onstage or
behind the scenes, may call 446ARTS for more information.

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IUP REPlACEMENT
KNU IUilGUit

MR. AND MRS. CLIFTON WATI

AIIC.ITt ro Cll:'l ro.IUIU A CUll m "r"l"llffl 4U I nr.•1 , .UI»

Fultz-Watt
fuchsia dress and carried a small

j THURMAN • Sharlene Kay

bouquet of pink tea roses.
fultz and Clifton Neil Watt were
The groom wore a black wxedo
pnited in marriage Oct. 13 at Thur· with a black tie with a boutonniere
man United Methodist Church. The of red rose with baby's breath.
(louble-ring ceremony was per·
The best man was Joe Whittingformed by Rev. Russell Botti, fol- ton, of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. He
lowing a half-hour of music per-· also wore a black tuxedo.
.
formed by Carla Ferris of Jackson.
A reception was held at the
: Sharlene is the daughter of Lon· Stowaway Lounge. The white
nie and Patricia Fultz of Rib three-tiered wedding cake was dec(lrande. Cliff is the son of Doris orated with red and pink roses and
Watt of Lima.
topped with a crystal heart and
: The bride was given in marriage lace.
by her parents and was escorted tu
The bride is employed at Pleas!be alter by her father. She wore a ant Valley Hospital, as an regis)vbite satiti floor-length gown. Her tered nurse. The groom is
bouquet was a cascade of white. employed at Ryder Truck Rental,
pink and red carnations and roses as a mechanic.
81ong with baby's breath.
The couple spent a two week .
' The maid of honor was Alice bone)'ll'toon traveling and reside in
Proffitt, of Portland. She wore a

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Auditions open for 'Little Women'
GALLIPOLIS • The Ariel Players will be holding open auditions
for their upcoming production of
Little Women 2 p,m. Nov. 27 at the
Morris and Dorothy Haskins Ariel
Theatr. There are parts for adult
men and women and one adolescent girl.
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Women have been scheduled for
April 29 and 30 and May S and 6,
1995 to coincide with the annual
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November 20, 1994

Sports

OliN It 110M Ml AND

UYI JOUYIII

INTERVIEW
WITH THE

__ .....
,.,

VAMPIRE
,..,...

November 20, 1994

THE Y.\MPI•f
CHIIONICIU
,

In college football action,

7a00 1 1 J l0 Do\ILI
MTIUU lA! I lUI
11
l lO

PAUL AND CHARITY ANSPACH

·{

Seyer-Anspach
MIDDLEPORT - Charily
Ricbelle Beyer and Paul Jonathan
Anspach, both of Middleport,
exchanged wedding vows at tbe
United Pentecostal Cburcb 2 p.m.
0cL22.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John Ward, Groveport,
and lbe groom is lbe son of Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene F. Anspach, Middleport
Rev. Eugene Anspach, father of
tbe groom, perfonned the ceremony.
The bride was escorted to the
altar by ber fatber. Sbe carried a
bouquet of red roses and tbe band·
kerchief given to her by the
groom's grandmother, Edna Chris·
man, Cambridge.
Matron of honor was Eugenia
Kelley, sister of tbe groom,
Rochester, .NJ. and junior brides-

...

.... ..J.J,'J,~

A

Etienne Aigner

'

~

maid was Brandy Ward, sister of
RONALD AND AUSSA JACKSON
lbe bride, Groveport. Aower girl
was Chelsea Ward, also the bride's
sister. Ringbearer was Zachery ·
Chrisman of Oak Hill, W.Va., and
GALLIPOLIS • Alissa Kim was ihe maid of honor. Sbe wore a
Charles Kelly of Rochester, N.Y. Fugaro, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. black floor-length silk shantung
served as bis brother-in-law's best Francis Fugaro of Point Pleasant, witb crystal delails on tbe front and
man.
W.Va. and Ronald Allen Jackson, back. Sbe canied bouquet of wbite
Vocalists were Timothy Chris- son of Mr. and Mrs. Jobnnie Jack- roses wra!llled in white satin.
man of New Concord and Richard son of Gallipolis, were united in
Gene "Canaday, friend of the
Chrisman of Ashtabula, both marriage Oct. I at tbe Ariei"Tbeatre groom, served as best man. Ushers
uncles of the groom. Jennifer wilb Judge William Medley ofrtei· were Ron Ellis and Lyle Sheets of
Chrisman of Oak Hill, W.Va., aling.
Gallipolis.
cousin of tbe groom, was tbe
Following lbe ceremony, a can·
The lbeatre was decorated with
pianisl
dleligbt
buffet was served at tbe
a brass candelabra with wbite
A reception was held in the tapers, while magnolias, brass Holiday Inn, GaUipolis.
basement of tbe United Pentecostal bases with ferns and white satin
The bride's table was decorated
Church following the wedding. ribbons. Edie Ross served as witb white roses and orchids and
Aunts of the groom serve.
candles in sll ver bolders and
pianist
Following tbeir honeymoon to
Given in maniage by her father, votives. The cake, designed by Sue
Hawk's Nest, the couple now tbe bride wore an off-the-shoulder Handley, consisted of swirls of
resides in Middleport. .
white satin sbeatb wilb pearls and white roses and pearls.
crystals on tbe bodice, hem and
Assisting and registering guests
were Angela Liberatore, Kim Hanedging of the trim.
Her bouqpet consisted of white dley, Niki Kersey and Carrie Handroses and orchids tied witb pearls ley.
The couple resides in Gallipolis.
and satin ribbon.
Lynn Fugaro, sister of the bride,

Ohio State hands Michigan 22-6 setback
By RUSTY MU..LER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Marlon Kerner blocked a field
~oal, and Luke Fickell tipped and
mtercepted a pass to set up 10
fourtb-qWirter points, as Ohio State
ended a seven-year drought by
beating No. IS Michigan 22-6 Sat·
urday.
No. 22 Ohio State (9-3 overall.
6-2 in the Big Ten) locked up second place in lbe conference with
tbe victory and a berth in the Aori·
da Citrus Bowl Jan. 2 against lbe
Southeastern Conferen(jjl runner·
_up.
'
The Buckeyes bad not beaten
• their nemesis since Earle Bruce's
~ final game as bead coach in 1987.
; John Cooper, Bruce's successor,
: bad gone 0.5-1 against the Wolver• ines. There was speculation that
· without a victory, be could lose his

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MON., NOV. 21
NOON•7

Akron's victory broke the
job.
.
Finkes recovered die bouncing ball,
The victory was Ohio State's Obio State bad the ball at the longest losing streak in NCAA
Division 1-A. The Zips (1-10) bad
first at Oblo Stadium over Michi- Michigan 47.
gan in 10 years.
Seven plays later, after quarter· lost 12 straight games, stretching
Michigan (7-4, 5-3 Big Ten) back Bob Hoying bad bit wide back to last season.
Ohio (0-11) finished lbe season
will go to tbe Holiday Bowl Dec. .receiver Joey Galloway on pass
30 against the Western Athletic plays covering 18 and 11 yards, as lbe onl_y team in major-coiie~e
C~rence champion.
Josh Jaclcson kicked a 36-yard field football wtthout a victory or a tie m
1994.
Tbe'!lame hinged on a series of to make it 15-6.
The game was believed 10 be lbe
big plays, most of which came after
Akron l4, Oblo 10
three quarters of conservative foot·
At Akron, Ohio, Symeon Aoyd first ever between 0-10 teams in
ball by both teams.
carried tbe ball twice, botb times Division 1-A football.
Trailing 12-6, Michigan drove for touchdowns, as Akron defeated
No.3 Florida l4, VanderbUt 7
to tbe Ohio State 15 early in tbe Ohio University 24-10 Saturday in
At NasbviUe, Tenn., freshman
fourth quarter, but a completion for a matchup of winless teams.
Fred Taylor rushed 16 times for
no gain, a four-yard run by Ed
Floyd scored on runs of two
140 yards and scored two touch·
Davis and an incompletion in tbe yards run with 4:54 left in the first downs as No. 3 Flocida went to lbe
end zone forced tbe Wolverines to quaner and five yards wilb 2:57 10 ground for a 24-7 victory over
Vanderbilt on Saturday.
go for a field goal.
play.
Remy Hamilton lined up for a
32-yard attempt with 1ll:371efl, but
Kerner broke lbrougb the line to
block lbe kick. By tbe time Matt
East: Brown 59, Columbia 27; Bucknell· 29, Fordham 26;
Connecticut 21, Massachusetts 13; Delaware 26, Rhode Island 7;
Holy Cross 27, Colgate 6; Lafayette 54, Lehigh 2Q; Miami 38,
Temple 14; New Hampshire 52, Boston Univ. 51 &lt;on: Penn 18,
CorneD 14; Penn St. 45, Northwestern 17; Princeton 20, Dartmouth
13; St. John's, NY 34, Wagner 14; Syracuse 21, Maryland 16;
Towsoo St. 42, MOJgan SL 7; WEST VIRGINIA 21, Boston College
2Q; Yale 32, Harvard 13
South: Davidson 28, Sewanee 14; East Carolina 30, Memphis 6;
Aorida 24, Vanderbilt 7; North Carolina 41, Duke 40; Northeastern
9, James Madison 6; S. Carolina SL 46, N. Carolina A&amp;T 24; SW
Missowi St. 19, Jacksonville St. 15; Soulb Carolina 33, Clemson 7;
Tennessee 52, Kentucky 0; UT -Chattanooga 34, Furman 20;
Virginia 42, Virginia' Tecb 23; Wake Forest 20, Georgia Tech 13;
William &amp; Mary 21, Richmond 20
Midwest: Akron 24, OHIO 10; Ball SL 34, Kent 0; Cincinnati 28,
Tulsa 13; E. Michigan 40, Toledo 37; Indiana 33, Purdue 29; Kansas
31, Missouri 14; OHIO ST. 22, Michigan 6; W. Illinois 73, Murray
St. 17
Southwest: Texas Tech 34, Houston 0; Texas A&amp;M 34, TCU 17

Major college football scores

Vanderbilt (5-S, 2-S Southeastern Conference) sacked Danny
Wuerffel four times and held Aori·
da (9-1, 7-1) to 221 yards passing
and it lowest point production Ibis
season. Florida previously beat
Tennessee 31..0 in September.
So lbe Gators turned to the run
in tbe lbird quarter, letting Taylor
carry seven times in an.eigbt-play,
64-yard drive that be capped witb a
12-yard run lbat put Florida up 247 witb 3:02 lefl
Taylor caught a five-yard pass
from Wuerffel in lbe second quarter that put tbe Gators up 17-7 at
halftime. The freshman, whose previous best was 136 yards and two
touchdowns against LSU, also
caught four oasses for 29 yards.
Elijab Williams added 15 carries
for 99 yards as the Gators piled up
229 yards on the ground. Florida
came in averaging 167 yards rushing while leading the SEC in total
offense at 488 yards a game.
No. S Mlaml38, Temple 14
At Philadelphia, James Stewart,
Alfred Shipman and Larry Jones

combined for 234 rushing yards
and four touchdowns as No. S
Miami overcame a slow start and
rolled over Temple 38-14 on Saturday.
The victory clinched tbe Big
East Football Conference title for
the Hurricanes (9-1, 6-0 Big East).
Temple (2-9, 0-7) finished its
season with its eighth straight loss
and 25th straight conference loss.
The Owls did become lhe only Big
East team to score two touchdowns
in a game against Miami Ibis season.
No. 9 Texas A&amp;M 34
Texas Christian 17
At College Station, Teus,
Corey Pullig threw a third-and-long
touchdown pass and No. 9 Texas
A&amp;M came up witb two driveslOpping plays in tbe tbird quarter
of a 34-17 victory over Texas
Christian on Saturday.
The Aggies (I 0-0-1 , 6-0·1
Southwest Conference) are on
NCAA probation and can· t play in
a bowl game. But they may have
damaged TCU's (6-4, 3-3) chances
of postseason play.

Befort Chrlllmll

Prosecution wraps up case
against Hollywood madam

RODNEY AND JENNIFER KELLER

Meadows-Keller
POMEROY - Jennifer Ellen
Meadows, daughter of Ina Meadows, Hamilton, and Dan Meadows,
Bidwell, and Rodney Lee Keller,
son of Roger and Rosemary Keller,
Chester, were married Sept. 30,_at
tbe Closer Home Church, Fancy
Gap, vii.
The new Mrs. KeUer is a graduate of Ohio State University College of Pharmacy and is employed
as a registered pharmacist at Fruth

Pharmacy, Middleport. Her busband is a graduate of the Hobart
School of Welding Technology and
the owner/operator of Keller's Custom Bending, Chester.
A reception for the couple wiU
be held Nov. 25 at the American
Legion baD on MiU Stree~ Middleport
.
Mr. and Mrs. Keller reside at
Chester.

By JOHN BORN
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
prosecution finished its case
qUD~r reputed Hollywood madam
Heidi Fleiss witb tesljmony from a
woman wbo said Fleiss sent ber to
a hotel room to have sex witb a
group of men.
The men tumcd out to be under·
cover police orr~cen, said Kimber·
ly Burcb, who testified on videotape because of illness. Her testimony was shown to tbc jury Friday.
.
"You expected to eng~ in sex
for money, didn't you?' Burch
was asked by Deputy District
Attorney Alan Cartei. ·
"Yes, I did," sbe said. "I knew
what was expected."
Burcb was lbe last of four wit·

nesses called by the prosecution.
Tbc defense was scheduled to
begirl.its case Moo~.
Prosecutors say flciss, 28, ran a
caJI-glrl rine catering to tbe rich
and famous. She faces up to .J 1
years in prison if convicted.
Her lawyers say she was
enttapped by police, and is tbe victim of selective prosecution
because ber clients weren't arrest·
ed.

COLONY THEATRE

Su1., Nov. 20, 4 p.111.
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Battered Chiefs to take on AFC Central-leading Browns
By DOUG TUCKER
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Being tbe fifth quarterback to pass
· for 40,000 yards interests Joe
Mootana much less thaD being tbe
winning quartertJaclt Sunday.
He bas 39 300-yard games and
needs only 230 against Cleveland
to take bh place alongside Dan
Fouts, Daa Marino, Fran Tarkenton
and Johnny Unitas in lbe 40,000
career club.
But tbe Kansas City Chiefs (64) are beat up and slumping. The
Browns (8·2) are playing tough
defense. Montana agrees with
coach Many Scbottenbeimer that
such milestones are meant to be
savored far away from tbe fray.

,
'

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- The top
pick in tbe draft dido' t get a chance
to Jay a band on No. 2 when Iiley
met In tbe pre-season. Things

11 a.m. • 2:30 p.m.

f' •Honey Baked Ham

I

pictures

mcluded

/

Thu·rsclay, Nov. 24

'
No

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in a limited role, taking pressure
off rookie wide receiver Lake
Dawson. But a slumping ground
game bas been putting undue presthat."
Instead Eling old stories on sure on a passing game already
tbe sideline Ibis eet, tbe NFL' s. weakened by key injwies.
"We haven't bad just one or
newest 40,
yard passer may be
giving quickie lessons in football two injuries. We've bad a bunch,"
strategy. A virtual epidemic of Montana said. "That's not an
injuries bas taken out Montana's excuse. But tbat's all part of it.
two top receivers. two top tigbt You look at teams tbat went to lbe
ends, bis best blocker and Marcus Super Bowl - tbey might have
Allen, his best running back and one key guy get burt. But tbey
don't bave five starters or six or
feUow fuwre Hall offamer.
Through it all, tbe offense bas seven starters out at one time.
"That's just somelbing we have
scored ~ly one touchdown in each
to live wilb and go on and do the
of tbe last two games.
JJ. Birden, out three weeks with best we can," Montana said
He faults faulty execution overa back injury, may be bact Sunday
"Rigbt," Montana said. "Right
now, we've got enough problems
wltbout looking at somelbing lite

allfor mostoftbe problems.
"This offense for .years when I
fli'Sl gol to San Francisco bad survived wilhoul a running game for a
long time," Montana said.
Rookie running bact Greg Hill,
lacking Allen's experience, bas
struggled at times.
"Marcus adds a big dimension
to the offense, not only catching
IIH; ball but as a blocker. He kind
of directs things out there,''
Montana said.
Allen, who injured his knee in
tbe victory over the Raiders two
weeks earlier, was not expected
back against tbe Browns.
"He's tbe kind of guy you can
count on. If be's supposed to go

right and block, and .there's more
problems on lbe left. be's going to
end up on lbe left,' ' Montana said.
"You know if be goes tbat way
there's trouble over there. He~ s a
big part of lbe offense. That hurts
us rigbt now."
By losing 14-13 to San Diego
last week, the Cbiefs fell two
games bebinil the Chargers in lbe
AFC West, probably dooming
them to wild-card status. Most
galling was an inability to gel anytbing but field goals out of San
Diego turnovers.
'"One thing we have to do
when we get in the scoring zone is
attack it a little more,'' Montana
said. "We've been more of a run

team wben we gel down real close.
We need to spread 11 out and get
something done wilb our receivers.
"It all stans witb the passing
game. If we can ge.t lbat going, we
can get the defensive line ofllbeir
toes and get tbem on their heels a
linle biL"
Montana could pick a betler
time to tend an ailing, inexperienced offense. Tbe Browns lead
the AFC in scoring defense by giving up only 11 .8 per game.
"The Browns like to get you in
third and long, and then bring peapie," be said. "That's probably
been their biggest key. They come
up and make you get rid of the ball
quick."

Bengals to host Colts today in ·search of thh d straight win

----------

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Kerner puts s stop to the rorward progress or Michigan tailback
Tyrone Wheatley In tbe first quarter or Saturday's Big Ten grldge
match In Columbus, where I be Buckeyes won 12-6 to claim their first
victory over tbe Wolverines since 1987, (AP)

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'

',,
I

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&lt;

.
I

ought to be different Ibis time
around.
The Indianapolis Colta probably
are going to run, run and run
Marshall Faulk- tbe No. 2 pick
in last 'April's draft- rigbt at lbe

middle of tbe Cincinnati Bengals' pre-season game at Riverfront
line today. That will give Dan Stadium last August because Fault
Willtinson, tbe top draft pick, a bruised his back in the fmt quarter
chance to ~ow his slUff.
and sat out
,.
They dtdn't get much of a
How well No. 1 fares agamst
chance to face each other in their No. 2 could be a major factor in
the rematch. The Bengals (2-8) are
having lbeir usual problems stop. ping the run. The Colts (4-6) have
tbe second-worst passing game in
the league.
So the story line most likely
will be: See Marshall. See
Marshall run. See Dan and lbe rest
of tbe Bengals' battered frontline
run after bim.
"I'm concerned about our run
defense at Ibis stage, especially
going against tbe Colts and·
Marshall Faulk," Cincinnati bead
coach Dave Shula said. "He is as
good as there is going in tbe
league."
.
Tbe Ben gals' front line bad
been getting better all season wilb
Wilkinson slowly improving at
tackle and end John Copeland
T1~~~;~~in~;to,~a~:so~li~·d~~runhisS!opJ!!&lt;r,
ankle
two weelcs ago and is out indefinitely, leaving the run defense in
uouble.
"Tbere's no question tbat not
baving Copeland is hurting us,"
Sbula said. "He was playing
exceptionally well against tbe

run."
Wilkinson bas been doing belter
after a disappointing fmt half. He
failed to get a sack until .the seventb game and averaged JUSt two
tackles a game. He got a careerbigb four tackles and a sack last
today in a 34-31 victory over
Houston.
Wilkinson bas 22 tackles in 10
games and 3.5 saclcs overall and is
feeling more comfortable.
"It's just the change alone, the
atmospbere,lbe competitive part."
be said. ''It's not tbe pbysical
(part) butlbe menial part That's a
change in itself, coming in and
being rushed through and rush try ·
ing 10 be lbe savior of lbe team." .
Faulk bas been good from the
start. He leads tbe AFC in touchdowns and total yards. He needs
119 yards io become the 27th
rookie 10 rush for 1,000.
He bas surpassed even tbe
Colis' expectations.
"His production overall is more
!ban w!!at _ ~--ex pebted.:_'
Indianapolis bead coac :rea
Marcbibroda said. "We knew wbat
we were getting in a football player. But for him to be doing as well
maybe is where tbe unexpected
comes in. Marshall b11s bad an
immediate impact."
He bas a legitimate chance to

reach lhe 1,000-yard mark today.
The Bengals have allowed Seattle
119 yards rushing and Houston
155 tbe last two weeks. Forget
about Jeff Blake - the offense
will be on tbe sideline unless
WiiJcinson and company can stop
FauiJc from controlling lbe game.
"I'm not worried about Dan
any more than the rest of tbe
defense." Faulk said. "They have
a very good defense; I don'tlrnow
if lbey know it or not. Tbey have
been playing very weU and they're
capable of stopping an offense. It's
not just Dan. He's just a piece of
the puzzle."
.
It appears that Faulk bas a linle
extra motivation Ibis weelc to outshine the only ptayer chosen ahead
of bim in the 'draft. Faulk told
reponers dwing·the week that the
Bengals bad badmoutbed bim
before the draft, an allegation tbe
team denied.
He cackled long and loud when
a reporter reminded bim tbe

--ffiffilfcf~(j

unsuccessfully tried to play down
lbe revenge angle.
;'I'm not out to sbow them anything. I'm not out to prove no point
to no one," be said. "If I happen
to have a good game against them,
well, so be it."

�-~·

-· ........,...,...-_.....

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.,.........

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

.•:..page C2-Sunday Times-sentinel

November 20, 1994

November 20, 1~4

In the NBA,

OU hands Virginia 94-83 loss; Alabama . &amp; GW also win
CHARLOTTESVILLE, , Va.
part, to live or die on the play of its
· guards this season.
The 14th-ranked Cavaliers discovered Friday that they also will
bave to have an inside game as
• Ohio University beat them 94-83 in
the second round of tbe Preseason
NIT.
"Virginia is a tremendous
offensive team, and we were able
• to get them out of conuol," Bobcats coacb Larry Hunter said.
One guard, Harold Deane, led
: Virginia (1 -1) with 20 points; the
other, Corey Alexander bad 19.
:
But nobody bad a better nigbt
• tban Gary Trent, wbo witb Ed
Sears and Curtis Simmons, con; uolled the inside and the boards.
:
Trent bad 20 points and 13
~ rebounds on 7-for-IS shooting .
~ Sears was 4-for-S, and Simmons 6• for-9 from tbe field witb eigbt
: rebounds.
•
: · "We were beaten in every facet
~ 'Of tbe game. We were manhandled
:in the paint," Virginia coach Jeff
i. J ones said.
: : Nor could tbe Cavaliers do any: ;thing outside the paint, missing 23
:. ;or 27 three-point attempts. Deane
, -was o-ror-6 on three-pointers and
~ ' Alexander 1-for-4.
'That, said Hunter, gave the Bob• _ cats (2.0) tbe opening they needed.

r

,.

"I think the key for us was to
play witb tbe lead and tty to keep
the crowd out of it," be said.
Obio seized control midway
through the first balf, scoring on
nine of 10 possessions to go on a
23-9 run and open a 33-18 lead.
Trent bad six points In the run.
Tbe Cavaliers cut tbe lead .to
nine, the last witb 4: t7 left in the
fits! balf, but could get no closer
because of their three-point sbooting. Virginia made one of its f1tst
19 three-point attempts.
Obio later scored on live consecutive possessions to return to a
15-poi~tt lead, mating it 47-32 on
Geno Ford's basket with 1:2I left
in tbe balf. Ford bad 14 points, all
in the.first balf.
Trent scored seven points in a
. span of I :41 early in tbe second
half, keying a 12·2 run, as tbe Bobcats led by as many as 21 points
three times. .
•
The Cavaliers did make a game
of it in the final minutes. Tbey
went on a 23-6 run spurred by two
three-pointers from fresbman Curtis Staples and.capped by Yuri
Bames' tip-In with 2:38 left, wbich
made it 82-79. The three-point lead
was Obio's smallest since 13:42
remained in the ftrSt balf.
After Barnes' basket Trent
missed twice, but S iinmons ·
grabbed the second rebound and

made a layup witb 1:2lleft to give
the BobcatS their first field goal in
nearly five minutes.
The Cavaliers then missed and
turned the ball over, and the Bobcats' Gus Jobnson and Mike Reese
made free throws to provide some
breathing room.
It was Obio's f1tst-ever victory
against an Atlantic Coast Conference opponent
The victory advanced Obio to
tbe semifmals of tbe tournament at
Madison Square Garden in New
York next Wednesday. Tbe Bobcats will play George Washington,
wbich upset No. 12 Syracuse in the
first round and defeated Canisius
Friday night
New Mexico 86, Alabama 69
At Las Cruces, N.M., the Alabama Crimson Tide, terrific in
Tuscaloosa, ran dry in tbe desert.
New Mexico State's pressure
defense overwhelmed No. 18
Alabama 86-69 Friday night to
clinch a spot for tbe Aggies in the
semifinals of the Preseason NIT in
Madison Square Garden.
Senior forward Thomas Wyatt's
23 points and the Aggies' 40 minutes of fullcoun pressure proved
too tough for an Alabama team that
routed Kansas State 79-48 in
Tuscaloosa in tbe tournament's
opening round Wednesday nigbt.
New Mexico State's opponent

will be determined tonigbt wben
San Francisco visits Memphis
State.
The ftrSt semifinal was set Friday nlgbt when Ohio University
surprised No. 14 Virginia 94-83
and George Washington shaded
Canisius 62-59.
Alabama missed 17 of 26 sbots
in tbe f1tst balf and linisbed with
18 turnovers and 34 percent shooting.
"We didn't bandle tbeir defense
as well as I thought we would,"
Alabama coacb David Hobbs said.
"The way they play, it's a tough
preparation in one day."
The Aggies, wbo rebuild eacb
year with junior college players.
bave used a match-up zone and a
variety of trapping defenses to win
hack-to-back Big West Conference
titles and five straight trips to the
NCAA tournament.
" A lot or people think we just
come out runninS and wild," New
Mexico State coacb Nell McCaAby
said. "It looks like there's a lot of
boles in that matcbup, but if we're
popping, it' s tougb."
Wyatt bit five three-pointers and
keyed an early 8-0 run that put the
Aggies in front for good. Teammates Paul Jarrett, Rodney Walker
and Crafton Ferguson added 13
points eacb.
(See NIT on C·3)

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Oly. Falla Walsh Jsuil 21, Dennce

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Beloit Wed Brauch 21 , Twinabura

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loDdon 34, MoDtoe Lemoa-MoDroe

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Cnlrol.................4 1 .667
DoaoM .....................5 l .625
a.I!VBL\NI) .........4 l J71
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Cle. BeoodictiBC26, Brookfield 6
Oermutowa Valley View 49 , Cia .
Wromioall
Onvitle 21. Wueon 14 (01')

WHEE(ERSBURO
SONVILLE· YORK 7

·za :

~USTON

Man MwTiy, Brlu B•k. pitchen: ud
Troy Huafu, culfielder, for .,launeol
CHICAGO CUBS: Named Tooy Ouri&gt;oa
miaor-leaauc field cootdiattor aad RoD
Clark n-..naaer o( Iowa of the Amerig,a

CINCINNA11 REDS: Claimed Lorry
Luebben , pitcher, orr WliVen from Ule
Ctlica11o Cubs. Si1111ed Kwt Stillwell, illfieldcr,ud Scott Scudder, pitcher, to mioor-lcaiiiJC

=·

ASTIIOS: Purdl....t the
coatrlet or OU11 G•dllll'•.
from
Tucscm of the Pacific COlli
MONTREAL EXPOS: Purc:luued lhe
coatndl ol Mart OnidzieloMt, illllelder,
aad Curtll Sdlmidl, Uaueth Urbina aDd '
BJ. Wallac:e, pltdttn, !rom Harrisblq or
111e Euteto Leque ..d bo..l AlcaDin, ·
infietder. aud Sce~b Gentile, Jose PaniiiUI
aad EvtrtU Stull, pitchers. from West
Palm a-It ol the Fiorillo SIIIO Loop

A.IIOCilliDD•

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pilch~•· from Portlaad or lhl Euterl
~e . SeDI. Ore1 O'HaJlona, catcher,
outtiJhl Lo ct.lott. of the lala'Dilloul

N•loa .. Leapt
ATLANI'A BRAVES: lleaiJ- Ramoa Caraballo, infielder; Jerry Koll«,

~OIItracls .

Reclaimed Jamie
buenwa, off waiven from

Dismuke, fnt
!he L&lt;&gt;o AnJ&lt;Ieo Dodaen ODd dalaDIIOd
him for UllJDment. Reteued Scott Ser·
vitc, pitcher.
A.ORIDA MARLINS: Purchuod tile
or Steve Decker, Weber, from
Elt~;niO~or the Pacific Cout Lea11ue
and Vic O..ensbourl.

. . . . . . :J

WESTERN CONFERENCE

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2.5
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STRUGGLES FOR REBOUND - Oblo University fonvard
Trent (:ZO) strugles With an unldenliOed Virginia player for the
rebound during Friday night's Preseason NIT quarterfinal game In
Cbarlotlesvllle, Va~ where the Bobcats beat the 14th·ranked C.va·
llers 94-83. (AP)

With Purchase Of
Any Vehicle!
Does Nol Apply To Prior Sales

•

'
l

;
:·
•
::
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Oolda 51110 ............6

-

SlcnmeaiO .............. l

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LA. Lokcn .............. 4 l .44-4
5........................... ] 4 .429
LA. a;_. ...........O I .000

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l'llllldelpllio 97, LA. Clipper&gt; ll

• Orlllldo Ill, New Ieney 101
BoiiOa Ill. Miomllll
Mii....U. 97. Allu&lt;a 93 (01')
lndiua 9_., Sable 11
Ullh 121, O«roit 96

RK!eDil 124, Portlmllll
LA. LaUn 12, CL£VELAND 10

They played Saturday
- · . Wlllhia..... 7:30 p.IIL
IDcliuiM Otlrl- 7:10p.m
SU Amoaio 11 Mi.-. I p.m.

Seoalo. M i - l:lO p.m.
A...... II New Y«k.l:lO p.m.
Oli..,. 11 Dot.-.1:30 p.m

Houllol ll Deaww, 9 p.m.
Ullh 11 Ooklea Sllle. !CillO p.m
Toalght~1

&amp;am..

LA. Clipper&gt; 11New lencr. 7 p.m.
CL£VELAND 11 Socnmed&lt;&gt;. 9 p.m.
Detroit II Portlud, 10 p.DL

Preseason NIT
Friday'•·
quartullaal IICOI'OI
Oeorto Wuhlatloo 62, Clalllull9

OHIO 94, Viltlaill3
.
New Melico fute "· Alllbala 69

They played Saturday
San FriDtiiDD 11 Men.,his.l:30 p.m.

Wedu...ay'• ~emmaols
AI Mad!Mn SqUU"t G•dt•

New Mexico 51. n . USF·Memphil
whmw. 5:30p.m.
Goorae Wubiaatoo

VI.

omo. 7:30

p.m.

Frklay'•Onall

AI~SqwueC•~

Scmlfiul-., 7 p.m
5emifiul wtDDen, 9 p.m.

Ohio high ~ool
playoff scores

'·

Crom Bowie of lbe Euacro Leaaue; ud
Billy -.a~ l 1 0 t n - of 1llc bt«·
lllllo. . ' BOSTON ttll SOX: Pun:lwed the
cootrletl of Frut Roctipez; Joel Ben·
aetl aad Mike Sullivn, pitchers; and
S&amp;ue l.adripa. ud DiU Selby, iofieJO.
en, rrom PawtucUt of lhe IDttrutlollll
t..e.aue: ud Joe Hudloo, pitcher, fram
Tret&amp;oa of the &amp;Item Leape.. Claimed
Dill Watz, pitcber,
waiv. . from lhe
C~vclud fltdian~ . Seat Je(( McNeely,
OU1Iieldlr, DWilltt 0&gt; l'lwtucUL
CAIJRliNIA ANGELS: Dlai&amp;DIIOd
Joe Gnbe, pitcher, for . . ipment. Pur·
chuod the cCIIti'Kt of Mart Ratetla,
pitcher, from Vt~eounr of the Pacific
CCIIII Lequc.
CLEVELAND INDIANS : SiJDtd
Willie Smith. pitchet. IVcbaed the COD·
trac:U of Briao Oitea, outfielder, from
Charlotte o! the latenatioaal Leaaue;
Tooy Mitc:bell, outlieldu, fram CaaLoaAtroD of lbe Eastern Lapc; aod Eillll
Diu, catcher, from Columbua of the
South Allaolie Leque.
MILWAUKE£ BREWERS : Pur·
chucd the coottacta of Tim Uoiot ud
W"' Wep, lolleldcn; Sid Robcnoa ..d
Scou Karl, r,ltchera; ud DaDDY Perez,
outfielder, rom El Puo or 1be Texu
,Leape aad Ku Felder. outfieldtr. aDd
Bobby Hullha, catcher, from Stocktoa oC
the CaJiforaia Leap. Alliaoed Charlie
Roaera, pitcher, to New Orlean• of the
AmeriCID Aaocillioa.

orr

NEW NISSAN SENTRA LE
Air, Cass., Power Windows &amp; Locks, lilt, Cruise.

$11 ,600

SEATTLE MARINERS : Rtl..,ed

tlo•

ShaWD Bost.ie, pitch•, •Dd Ruben Santaaa, iDfietder. Seat Crala Clayton.
Ocorp Gliollils ud JdTWilli~m~ , pitchers: and Brian Tun.oa, iunctdcr, to TIC()·
rna of lhe Plcific: COIII.Leaaut.

TEXAS RANGERS: Siaoed Chria

Nichtiaa. p11cber. Sen I James Hunl,
pitcher, and Dcsi Wi11oa, outfielder, 10
Ok!llhoma City of the Ameritaa AaociatJon.
TOROI'li'O BLUI! lAYS: Traded Ed·
die Zolty, iafielder, lO the florida~·
liu for a player to be umed lati!t. Pur·
chued the contract• or Tim Crabtree,
pitcher, from SyrKWC of the latcraalioul
LeqUe; felipe Crapo ud Quia Styoca,
lanelden . .,.. Ricordo Jordu. 1..e Silva
and Jeff W•e. pitchm, from KAol'lille of
the Southero J..eaaua; Loleil Rcb«U, OUI·
neldct, from Duacdia of the Florida State
Leque: IJid Edwl• Hwudo, pilc:l1cr, lntm
lllamtDwo or the Souilt AU ..uc Leoaue.
Seal Huct Fleoer. pitchu. outri&amp;ht to
Syracuse of the lnteraatioaal Leaaue.
Daiautcd Willie Caute, outlietdet, for
aalaomcot.

,.
~:
·,

11180 PONTIAC GRAND AM, 14705, red, A!C, AfT,
AM.IFII Clll., rear daf., cloth Int............................ $6,11t5
1191 CHEV. &amp;-10 147011, extra Clb, rear ftlp nata, 11r
COIIG., AII/FII CUI., till, V-6 eng., aport whetlt ...$9,11t5
11180 CHEV. CAVAUER, 14689, blue, A!C, AfT, AII/FM,
lnt.................................................................... $5,4115
CHEV. LUMINAAPV, 14685, white, AfT, A!C,
AMJIFII, tilt, crulaa, P. wlndowa &amp; loeka .............. $12,875
Ol.DS CUTLASS SUPREME·S, 14880, Dk. pewter,
""'"'•,., , AM/FM CHI., P. eaatl &amp; wlndowa ........ $12,200
1992 PON'nAC SUNBiRD CONVT., 14527, AfT, (VC,
AM,IFII ~11., Alloy whetla, red ............................. $9,195
1992 CHEV. LUMINA, 14498, A!C, AfT, AM/FM, tilt, cloth

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ftrSt win at home this season 3l the
Lakers beat Cleveland.
New Lakers coach Del Harris,
whose team is playlg 10 or its first
14 games on the road, won for the
farst time at tbe Forum after borne

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Nov. 28 .......~~~.~~Virginia Tecb
Sports briefs
Dec. 4 ...............31 Cincinnati-2 p.m. _ .
BasebaU
TAKES AIM - The L.A.
Dec. 9-llat Hawaii Tow.-3:30 p.m.
NEW YORK (AP)- The New Lakers' Elden Campbell (right)
Dec.14 .........atMicbigan-7:30p.m. York Mets traded outfielder takes aim at tbe basket In front
Dec. 16-17 ......at OSU Tour.-6 p.m. _ Jeromy Burnitz and a minor league of Cleveland CIVallers Michael
Dec. 28 .............. :..............Duquesne pitcher to tbe Cleveland lndi811S for C.ge (44) •ncl Mark Price (25) In
Jan. 4 ................................81 Ball St. four minor leaguers.
tbe Orst quarter of Friday nlgbt's
Jan. 7 .................................... .Miami
Burnilz, drafted in tbe first NBA game In Inglewood, Calif.,
Jan. It ..................................31 Kent round by the Mets in 1990, and wlaere the Lakers won82-80 on
Jan. IS ..................... BowliDg Green pitcher Joe Roa were sent to Cleve- Tony Smltb's tbree·polnter at tbe
Jan. 18 ..................................Toledo land for pitcbers Dave Mliclci, Jerry buzzer. (AP)
Jan. 21 ....................81 Akron-3 p.m. DiPoto, Paul Byrd and a position
Jan. 25 ................Western Michigan player to be named later.
Sports brief
Jan. 28 ......at Cenl Micbigau-3 p.m.
Tennis
Hockey
Feb. t.. .. ...............Eastern Michigan
FRANKFURT, Gennany (AP)
BOSTON (AP) Hope
: Feb. 4 .....................at Miami·2 p.m. - Witb belp from Germany's
Feb. 8 .......................................Kent Boris Becker, top-r~finkelsd Pfethte replaced seven weeks of strife as
Feb. 12 at Bowling Green-5:30p.m. Sampras lllllde tbe sem• ma o e negotiators in the NHL labor dis: Feb. 15.. ............................ 31 Toledo $3 million IBM-ATP Tou~ W~rld pute wrapped up two days of ''very
· Feb. 18 ............ ...........Akron-3 p.m. Championship, joiSnin~ , eSc er: constructive dialogue.''
Mucb like tbe Major League
: Feb. 22.......... .. 81 Western Michigan Andre Agassi and pam s erg•
Baseball
strike, tbe dispute centers
• Feb. 25 ........:.........Central Michigan Brugucra.
G
.
· March 1 ...at E. Micbigan-7:30 p.m.
Sampras, who beat oran Ivan•- on the onwers' demand for a pay. March 4................................ Ball St.. sevic of Croatia. needed BecE ker to roll tax. Therefore, teams spending
. March 7-ll.MAC Tour.(time TBA) d~feat Sweden' s Stefan dberg more on salaries than the average
of all teams would be taxed on tbe
because of the round-robin fonnat
excess.
Players interpret that as a
· . (Unless otherwise noted, all
Meanwhile, Ivanisevic faces a
: games will start at '1 p.m.) .
two-month suspension after an oul- form of a salary cap, which they
oppose.
burst in the second set.

ill:

liiJ

•·
.,
,
•.

1192 CHEV. CAVAUER WAGON, 14602, AfT, A!C,
AM,IFII Clll., P. loc:ka ............................................. $7,litiS
1992 BUICK REGAL CUSTOM, 14556, blue, A!C, A/f,
AIUI!FII, tilt, erulaa, P. IIIII, V-6 eng..................... $8,9115
1191 CHEV. &amp;-10, 14639, v-e eng., 2 tone paint, aport
wheela, rear allde, dual mlrror1, cloth lnt. ............ $7,11t5
1989 CHEV. S·10 BLAZER 4X4, 14847, Tahoe, A!C,IVf,
AIUIIFII. Alloy wheels, running boarda, cruise, rear def.,
luggage raek .......................................................... $10,495
1191 CHEV. 5-10, 14898, red, A/C, AM/FII Clll., rtlr
allde, aport wheela, rear bumper...........................$6,985
1191 CHEV. &amp;-10, 14819, white, AM/FM CUI., dUll
mlrrora ..................................................................... $6,615
1193 CHEV. &amp;:10, 14703, red, V-6 eng., air cond, AM/FM
e111., rMr slide, rear chrome bumper ................ $11,250
1192 PONTIAC SUNBIRD, 14898, red, 4 dr., A/C, A/f,
AM/FII, cloth 1111. ..................................................... 18,174
1191 FORD RANGER, 14887, white, AM/FM, aport
wheela, dual mirrors, rear bumper ........................ $6,195
1993 FORD MUSTANG, 14895, green, AfT, A/C, AMIFM
cua., erulaa, P. wlndowa, 25,000 mllea ................ $8,830
1192 FORD TAURUb Gl., 14700, blue, AM/FM caia.,
A/C, A!r, P. nata, P. windows, crulae..;.................$9,870
119.3 DODGE CARAVAN, 14572, burgundy, 7 pa11., V-6
eng., A!C, A!r, AM/FM eaaa., tilt, crulu............... $12,99$
1992 DODGE DYNASTY, 148113, whitt, A!C, AfT, air big,
tilt, crulu, cloth lnt. ................................................ $7,9115
111e0 NISSAN SENTRA, 14818, blue, A!C, AM/FM call.,
rear def.~ .................................................................... l5495
1191 HYUNDAI EXCEl., 14823, A!C, AfT, AM/FM eaaa.,
rear daf., cloth lnt. ...................................................$4,989
1991 GEO STQRII, 14827, bleek, A!C, AM/FM caaa.,
rear clef., cloth lnt. ...................................................$6,11t5
198i NISSAN PUI.SAR NX. 14818, low mllea, T-topa,

~:;'::·i&gt;vN'AsiY:·I4iii;;j;~~~;;;i;:·;vr:A!~'

~~k~

or more or the semlfmalists could
be included In next week's poll.
George Wasblngton 6Z
C.nlslus 59
At Washington, D.C .. Kwame
Evans scored 13 points and Nimbo
Hammons and Antoine Hart 12
eacb as George Wasbington coolinued a run that began with its 111104 overtime upset at Syracuse.
Ohio University
Tbe Colonials (2-0) toot tbe
lead
for good at16-1S on a basket
WOmen 1S Slate
by Hart with just over nine minutes
remaining in tbe fust half, and beld
Dill
OIIJ!Onent a 32-29 advantage at balftime. CanNov.10 ..............Latvia(exbib,ition) isius (1-1) cut a nine-point deficit
(won 68-SO)
to 58-55 with 2:23 to play, but got
Nov. 1S ............... Atbletes in Action no closer.

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11180 IIITSUBISHI TRUCK, 14873, AfT, A!C, AM/FM
Clll., aport whHII .......................................,.........$6,145
1eB8 NISSAN TRUCK, 14890, aport wheels, AII/FM
cau., 1lr cond., dual mlrrore .................................. $4195
1193 NISSAN TRUCK 14102, white, AM/FM ca11., 1llciy
wtleela, topper, rear llldt ...............................;.......$8,985
1993 HVUNDAI EXCEL, 14803, AfT, A/C, AM/FM CIH.,

See Puzzler on Page D-2

Pboenix ovei Portland.
Danny Manning, wbo also bad a
three-point play during the surge,
scored 26 points. Mllierle fiJiisbcd
with 24, and Kevin Joboson, back
after missing four games because
of sore ribs and a sprained knee,
bad20.
Buck Williams bad 2S Jl?iDts
and ·12 rebounds for the vtsiting
Blazers; wbo outrebounded
Pboenlx 43·27 but were undone by
sloppy ballbandting that resulted in
24 turnovers.
Laten BZ, CaYallen 80
Tony Smitb's three-pointer at
tbe buzzer gave Los
its

Eric Washington led Alabama
(1-1) with 23 points.
Alabama scored the first four
points of the game, but the Aggies
promptly forced the Tide out of its
game plan.
The loss by the Crimson Tide
eliminated tbe last ranted team
from the tournament, altbougb one

;:

PRICE

BALTIMORE ORIOLES : Slaoed
Mlrt Lee, pitdw, ..d Rod Rob«Uoo. Ia·
rielder. to miaor-leque coatn.ctl. Pw·
chaaed the coatracta o! Joe Borowak.i.
Jimmy Hayae1 IDd Brbo Sackinsty,

~

Preseason NIT.•.

'·

·

BueboU

Cor Utab, and the Jazz beld tbe Piatons to IS-far-42 sbootlng In the
second balf.
Utab, wbicb led by 16 points at
halftime and by 25 points br tbe
end or tbe third quarter; bdd Grant
Hill to just four second-balf points
and Joe Dumars to one free throw.
Hill led the visiting Pistons with 16
points, and Duman added 13.
Felton Spencer, Karl Malone
and Tom Cbambers eacb scored 16
points for Utab.
Suns 124, Tnll Blazers 111
Dan Majerle bad a three-point
play and a three-pointer during a
17-8 fourth-quarter run that carried

losses to Denver and New York.·
Nick Van Exel broke out or a
sbooting slump with 22 points and
I0 assists for Los Angeles.
lobo Williams led the Cavalien
with 16 points.
·

.

i

C.ey 21, Smillwille 0
Lore City Buckeye traill4, Suaar

A...nc.Lo ...•

.

:.
!

NEL-

llll

· ·

l;r Tile Aacx:llted Pna
bad 19 points and Dana Bamis 14
Tbe Seaule SuperSonics lost for tbe 76ers, wbile Loy Vaugbtled
just 1S road fames last season. tbe Cllppen wltb 14 points and 14 ·
Tbls year, tbey re finding tbe Joing rebounds.
M•P: 113, Neu 103
1• a lot rougher.
(.
With a 94-87 loss to the Indiana · Nick Anderson scored nine of
f Pacers on Friday nl&amp;bt, Seattle · bis 2S points in the final 4:08 as
1: dropped to o-3 on a rour·Siune road Orlando pulled away from New
:· trip and are 34 overall. Tbe last Jersey.
:: time tbe Sonics were below .SOO
Andenon also bad 12 rebounds
•, was Feb. 3, 1992.
and six ass IsiS, and Anfernee Hard;.
Defense was supposed to be the away bad 16 points, 10 assists and
1: Soules' specialty, but the ·Pacers six slcals.
,: beld th~m to their lowest output
Despite foul trouble, Sbaquille
1
&lt;
ever agamstlndiana.
O'Neal fmisbed with 22 points, and
•·
"Indiana is a great defensive Horace Grant bad 18 for the Magic.
:: team, probably the fust team that
Derrick Coleman led tbe visiting
: we've played with that mucb ablli~ Nets witb 22 points and 10
ty," Seattle coacb George Karl rebounds.
said. "Tonigbt, two good teams .
Celtles 115, Heat 111
played, tbe bome team with more
Dominique Wilkins scored 24
confidence."
· points, includina four in the final
Tbe Sanies dropped games at minute, as Boston beld off Miami.
New Jersey and Boston earlier this
Wilkins scored nine points in
week. Tbey travel to Milwaukee tbe Courtb period. His final basket
tonigbl before returning borne.
witb 16 secol)ds remaining 1ave
In other NBA games, It was the Celtlcsa 114-109lead after tbe
• Pbiladelpbia 97, the Los Angeles Heat tied It 109-109 on a thrceClippers 83; Orlando 113, New Jer- point play by Glen. Rice, who
1 sey 103; Boston liS, Miami 111; scored 34 points.
· Milwaukee 97, Atlanta 93 In overDee Brown liad 19 or bis 22
time; Utab 121, Detroit 96; points in tbe second balf .for
Pb()tlnix 124, Portland 111; and the Boston, and Dino Radja also scored
~ : Los Angeles Laten 82, Cleveland 22. Kevin Willis bad 19 points· for
80.
the visiting Heat.
76en 'n, Cllppen 83
Bucks 'n, Hawks 93 (OT)
Shawn Bradley reacbed career
Lee Mayberry's off-balance, 12·
. bigbs witb 28 points and 22 foot jumper snapped a tie with 28
rebounds and bad nine blocked seconds left in overtime to ~ive
•· sbots to lead Pbiladelpbia over vis- Milwaukee tbe win at the Omm. .
• iting Los Angeles.
Mayberry bad 14 points and 10
~.
Tbe Clippers' eigbth straight assists. Glenn Robinson, in bis farst
1 defeat set a franchise recorl) ror start, led the Bucks witb 26 points.
, consecutive losses at the start of the
Atlanta's Mootie Blaylock got
: season. The 1982-83 team lost its bis tbird career rerular-season
: farst seven games.
triple-double with 7 points, 12
•
Philadelphia maintained il dou- assists and 10 rebounds.
' ble-digit lead for most or the secJazz Ul, Plstotu !16
tI ond half. Clarence Weatherspoon Jeff Hornacek scored 21 points
•
'·••
(Continued from C-2)
'

SAN DIEGO PADRES: Dcola,.tcd
Archl Clanfrocco, third buernu, Wally
Whitehurst, Hilly Hathaway and £rik
PtaDteobera. pitchers, for a11ianmeot.
Named Rop Riley director of media relatiom aod twn tntvc:t.

Orove·Beme Uni.on 10
Wei~Yiile 21. Alroo Maocheoler 0
Venaillet 21, Cin. Martemout 10

.

t•

Division V

•

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-C3

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

.

UfREE TURKEY"
Dl•lslon II

•

Pacers slow down SuperSonics; Lakers edg~ Cavs 82-80

In the Preseason NIT quarterfinals,

'(AP)- Virginia expected, in large

-

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1193 FORD TAURUS Gl., 141137, red, A/C, AfT, AMIIFM.

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1990 CHEVY 112 PICKUP-V-8, auto, air .....................: ............. . ............ _..... .. .. . .. $9,995

BUICK PARK AVE UL.TRA· ......... ......................... .......... ... .. .... ................... ... $12,999
CHEV. LUMINA Z·34-Bright Red, loaded, 23,000 miles, 1 focal owner... ... $14,995
CHEV 1/2 TON 4X4 PIC!&lt;UP.auto, air ......................................., ................. $15,995
994 CHEVY STEPSIOE SPORT 4X4 PICKUP-auto, air, loaded ........................ $22,995

1993 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX-2 dr; auto, air, 22,000 miles ................................. $12,995
1993 NISSAN SENTRA-4 door, 5 speed, air, cassette ................................ :, ......... $8,995"
1989 CHEV. S-10 BLAZER·V-6, Tahoe, AC, 4x4, auto, stereo ............................. $10,995

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�•

t4ovember 20, 1994

Page C4 Sunday nmes-sentlnel

Area sports briefs ·

Baseball owners
and players as
hard-headed as e1(er
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
HERNDON, Va. (AP) - Base·
ball owners and playen spen1111011:
time meeting on their own than
m.eeting together Friday and
emerged no closer to an agreement
tban they wen: months I!BO.
When they finally sat down
together in a conference room, the
session lasted just 2 112 hours and
was mainly devoted to the union
asking questions about management's new taxation proposal.
"We bad questions about bow
certain aspects or their proposal ·
wort. and they answered our qilcs·
lions," union lawyer Doyle Pryor

said.
"We bave to make sure we fully
understand tbe impact of wbat
they've proposed before we can
respond to it," union bead Donald
Febrsaid.
When that response comes, it
will definitely not be an outright
acceptance or the taxation orrer
made Thursday, wbicb calls ror
teams witb payrolls above tbe
league averaae to pay a progressive .
tax.

Rio teams win tourney games
. RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande's b•sketball teams c:apiUred firslrouod victories In the Bevo Francis Classic Invitational Fridsy
nlgbL
.
After CumberlaDd's women beat Cooconl 75-631n.tbe touma·
~~· Dave Smalley's Redwomen earned tbc rigbtto play
'-Keuu....... uwu ~ the fJrSt Saturday nigbt title poe by knoctin&amp; oil
ntucty Christian 102-94in overtime. These teams wen: tied at 88
at the end ot regulatloo berm the Redwomen jumped to a tO.polnl
lead to get the win.
Mter Pikeville College's men knocked off bluefield Colleac
~03-80, Jobn Lawhorn's Redmen earned the rlgbtto play Pikeville
m the final cbalilpionsbip game Saturday nigbt by blastins Neumann College 117-76.
JANTZEN GOLDEN HELMET WINNER • Terry Qualls, Gal~ .

Birmingham beats Blizzard 7-3

MVP HONOREE- Heath. Hutchbuon (left) aeeepll the 51st Gal· :
llpolls Blue Devill Most Valuable Player Award from Jue Drummond:
ol City Ice and Fuel durlna Tbunday evenlag's 111111ual fall spoiia ·
banquet at Buckeye llllb Career Center aear Rio Graade. Hutdlln100, 5-10, 160-pound senior ballbac:kldefenslve back, set four lndlvid·
ual GARS markl- most toucbdownsln oM ICUOn (21), most yards
rushing In one siason (1,149), most total yards In all departments .
(755) lllJd IIIDilt points In a career (171).

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - With two-goal efforts rrom Ian
H~bert and Jim Larlcin, Birmingbam knocked oil the Huntington
btiZZBrd 7-3 .~rore a crowd numbering 5,001, the largest at tbe
Huntington CIVIc Center Ibis seasoo.
Also scoring ror Birmingham wen: Norm Bazln Cbrls Bergeroo
and Rob Donovan. Huntington's goals came from Jim Bermingham
Mark Flllll)cs and Mark Woolf. wbicb came before Birmingham got
on the board.
·
The Blizzard wiD play Tuesday at Tallahassee, Fla.

Academy's fi·S, 160-pound senior light end/defensive end, was pre''The numbers that they bave sented
tbe 1!194 lanizen Golden Helmet Award durlnalbunday's
plu~ged into this system will not
amiual
faD sports banquet at Buckeye HUts Career Center. Pictured
Oy, ·' union lawyer Gene Orza said. with Qualb
Is David Thmas, wbo presented tbe award. Thomas
"Tbe question is whether this tax
bas
sponsored the award for lfi/ears.. Keith Thomas, the
Clotblen
system can survive."
owner of Thomas Clothlen, said Ibis woul be the last trophy by bls
Mediator W.J. Usery said joint
lalks
would reslime Saturday mom· linn. He Is planning to retire.
Marshall men's slate
ing. He wouldn't predict whether
Ulll
011JK1Mnt the lalks would continue into Sun- fiJDI bired by the union wiD make a
lllov. 12 .lnter-Bratlslava (Slovakia) day or beyond.
"This is a lengthy proposal. second analysis over the weekend.
(woo 89-80)
There's
a lot more to be understood union official Mark Belanger said.
·Nov. 19 ...........Tcam Reebok·MU
· "This is one or those periods
before
the
uoioq can make a com·
Nov. 26 ................ Blqefield Collel!e
·where there's not much to say,"
mitment
about
tbe
proposal's
mer·
Nov. 30.81 Cenll'al Michigan-7 p.m.
Fehr said. "This question-and·
lack or merits,'' Usery said.
'Dec. 6 .......... .at E. Kentucky-7 p.m. its or
answer
process bas to go oo as tong
Under the proposed tax plan, a
Dec. 9-10 ...Cincinnati Tour.-6 p.m.
as it bas to go oo before everyone
surcharge
would
be
levied
on
any
Dec. 19 .................CenU'al Michigan
bas a run grasp on what's being
\lonth
\lonth
Dec. 22 ............................Kansas St. team wltb a payroll above the offered."
league
average,
wbich
was
$36
Dec. 27 ..............at Kentucty-8 pin
Febr described Friday's session
\ Iaturit~
\ laturity
Dec. 30 ....................at Wate Fores1 million last season including bene· as "civil" and .. businesslike:·
Jan. 2 ................E. Keotucky-6 p.m fits. Eacb $250,000 or $500,000
Usery called it "constructive"
fan. 7 .....................UT-Oiattanooga jump in payroU would increase the and ,"part or the collective barfain·
Jan. 14 ......... Appalachlan St.-5 p.m. tax rate, and there would be no pre· ing process. I'm at least simling
.Jan. 16 .......................at VMI:7 p.m. set top mte.
Annual ·
Annual
Economists bired by the union today," be said.
'Jan. 18 ...WVU at Cbarlestoo-8 p.m.
Then: was no word on w)len the
warted
all
day
Friday
figuring
out
Percentage
Percentage
Jan. 21 ...................E. Tennessee St.
bow the tax would errect eacb union will make its official
Yield
Jan. 23 ....at UT-Chattanooga-7 p.m.
Yield
response.
1an. 28 .....:...... .at Davidson College team. Another ecooomic con~utting
Jan. 30 .................................Furman
Rio Grande women's slate
Feb. 4 ............ .at The Ciladel·7 p.m.
Minimum Deposit: $2,500.00
Minimum Deposit: $500.00
OJ!~nml Jan. 12 ................. :..... Urbana-4 p.m.
1"eb. 6 ...................Western Carolina Dill
feb. 11 .................Georgia Southern Nov. 18-19 .... .Bevo Francis lassie Jan,. 14 ...................:....Walsb-4 p.m.
These COs are automatically renewable. Penalty for early withdrawal.
(Nov. 18-6 P:D'·; !'ov. 19-TBA)
Jan. 17... .....0bio Dominican-2 p.m.
•Feb. 13.81 Appalachian Slale-7 p.m.
A.P. Y. is available as of the date of this issue, but is subject to change.
Feb.18 ..................................... VMI Nov. 25-2681 PikevtUe Tour. (TBA) Jan. 24 ...................... Malone-7 p.m.
Nov.
30
...
Central
Stat
Wilberforce
Jan.
28
...................
at
Urbana-2
p.m
.
.Feb. 20 .. .at E. Tennessee St.·7 p.m.
(8:~0 p.m.)
Jlin. 31 ...:.....Shawnee St-5: IS p.m.
Feb. 25 ...............Davidson Cyllege
Dec.
2
.........
at
Pitt-Johnstown
Tour.
Feb. 4 ...............at Cedarville·S p.m.
feb. 27 .............at Georgia Southern
(8:30
P:m.)
Feb.
7.....at Mt Vernon Naz.-7 p.m.
March 2-S ..at Southern Conr. Tour.
,
(TBA)
Dec. S......... Wcst Uberty S.t·7 p.m. Feb. II ..................... Findlay-2 p.m.
Dec. 8 ..............Transylvama-7 p.m. .Feb. 14 ............... ,....at Walsb-5 p.m.
(Unle11 otherwise noted, !Ill Dec. 10 .................at Mal~ne-2 p.m. Feb. 18 ........................ Tiftin-2 p.m.
Dec, l3 .................Cedarville·7 p,m. Feb. 23 .at Cwnberland Coll.-5 p.m .
.zames wUI start at 7:30 p.m.)
Dec. 17..........at Sbawnee SL-5 p.m. March 2-8Great Lakes Reg. playoffs
Dec. 20 ...................at IUPUI-1 p.m.
(TBA)
;;Marshall women's
Jan. 5......81 Obio Dominican-7 p.m.
basketball slate
Jan. 7 .. Ml Vernon Nazarene-2p.m.
(Unless otherwise noted, all
Jan. 10 ..................at Fmdlay-7 p.m. games will start at 7 p.m.)
•
'12m
· Opponent
Nov: 19 Spons Crusaden-5:15 p.m.
' Nov. 26 .. Youngstown St-5:15 p.m.
Nov. 30 ... .81 E. Kentucky-7:30p.m.
Dec. 3 ...................DIIqucsne-7 p.m.
Dec. 6..............Mocebead St.·7 p.lil.
Dec. 10 ................81 Radford-2 p.m.
Dec. 16 .....................Furman-6 p.m.
19900LDS
1989FORD
Dec. 18 .....at James Madison-2 p.m.
CUTLASS
SUPREME
ESCORT
Dec. 21... ..............~rig~t St.-7 p.m.Jan. 3-4 ..81 UNC-Wilmmgton Tour.
4 door, 6.~¥]. Auto, Air,
2 Door, 5 speed, Ps,
94 lalo•
94 Lazor
(6p.m.)
AM!FM
Cass,
PS,
PB,
TW,
AM/FM,
Air,
PB,
Jan. 7 .................at E. Tennessee St.
DL
2 Dr.II~B.
San. IO ..................Cincinnati-7 p.m.
CC, PW, Royal Blue Finish
Low Miles
2 Dr., deep green, Med. red, auto.,
Emerald
green,
Jan. 14 ........Ga. Southem-2:30 p.m.
loaded. Also anti·lock
automatic, sunroof, sunroof, AM/FM
Was
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Was
$3,995"'
Jan. 16 .......UT-Cbattanooga-7 p.m.
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steering, cass.,air, PS, rear
Jan. 18 ..............WVU at Charleston
00
""'"""'·!one.
Retail $23,117.
00
rear defrost.
Now $5,995
del., mats. Spoiler.
Now $3,495
(5:30p.m.)
After
Reblle
After Rebate
After Rebate
Jan. 21 .....at Appalachian St.·7 p.m.
per month
per month
112,672
113,551
*19,994
Jan. 23 .. at Western Carolina-4 p.m.
Jan. lO ............. Davidson-S:IS p.m.
Monllll1 PaJDWIIU B - Upaa $1,11011.00 Down Or Equal Value In Tnde-ln And
Feb. 4 .........E. Tennessee St.·7 p.m.
94Ram
B..._ n...,.....n,.. .......,. laolllullona. Taxes 11&lt; r- Not llldudod.
Feli. 8 ......... .at Kentucky·7:30 p.m.
Feb.
at UT-Cbattanooga-5 p.m.
THE PLACE FOR SAVINGS IS AT•••
8 Passenger,
Feb. 3 ... .atGa. Southem-7:30 p.m.
blue, auto., V·B,
Feb. 8 Western Carolina-S: IS p.m.
lilul car. Loaded.
Feb. .. ...... Appalachian St.·7 p.m.
eng.
Package. Look
446-9971
Feb. ~ .........at Davidson-7:30p.m.
mikes,
demo..
this.
Retail $30,352.
Feb.l6 .................at Furman-4 p.m.
264 UPPER RIVER RD.
After Rebate
GALLIPOLIS, OH
After Rebate
Mar&lt;:4Jl·3 ..~ll Southern Conf. Tour.

8

-SPECIALSNO PAYMENTS 'TIL FEB '95

KENOSHA. Wis.- Rio Grande's men's cross country team and
Redwomen runner Ann-Marie Hynes arrived In Keoosba 'Friday in
preparation for Saturday's NAJA National CbampioliSbips.
:t'b~ Redm~ 'm~ it to Kenosha by virwe or its second-place
firusb m the M1d-&lt;&gt;b10 Conference meet earlier Ibis DIOiltb.
Running in the national meet wen: Mark Benneu. Chris Davisson, Bart Goble, Bobby Hunter, Brian Lutz, Hidemitsu Maeda
Andy Scborr, Chris Smith and Scott Wenger. Head coacb Bob wu:
ley and assislant coacb Ed Sayre accanpanied the team.

39

6~0

Men's basketball league planned
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Department
will sponsor a men's basketball league ror players 81least 18 yean
old that bave no bi8b school or college eligibility in the sport
The league, which will begin play on Saturday, Dec. 10, will
bold its games at the Gallipolis Developmental Center at 2500 Oblo
Ave. on Saturday mornings or early afternoons. The ree is $150 per
team. Tbe ru-st IS teams to register and bave turned in tbeir CIDI•
plete rosters and their registration fees will form the league. All
teams will be limited to 10 players.
For more information, call 441-6022 during regular business
boors or contact P&amp;R director Tom Hopkins at 446-8755 in the
evenings.

7~0

ly TIM DAHLBERG
.
five punches. Time after time, be
,: LAS VEGAS (AP) - It was would lure Toney into a corner,
Jupposed to be a great fight · then counter•puncb bis way out or
•lletween two unbeaten champions. it with smasbing shots to the bead.
~y Jones Jr. turned it into a great
Toney, wbo entered the ring
:boc·man display or boxing talent.
wearing a 1acket that read ' 'Losing
~ Jones not only won tbe IBF is not an Option," round out early
per middlewe•gbt title rrom that it might be.
atnes Toney, be also served notice
Tbougb be was continually on
at be may become one or tbe tbe offensive, be took the worst of
's more exciting and dominat· tbe punishmenl as be tried to move
oung champions.
inside and land big right bands.
I knew my bands were so fast
"I've got no excuses. no excus·
~my feet so quick that aU 1 bad es at all," Toney said. "I did my
.to do was box," Jones said after besL I'm a true champion. I will be
ialdng the !68-pound title Friday bac k."
pigbt with a unanimous and lopsid· · Toney was already in trouble
C&lt;l decision over Toney.
wben, in the third round, Jones
: Tbe previously undefeated mugged at bim and Toney dropped
:J'oney was beaten on the outside is bands and mugged back. Jones
fnd tied up on the iris ide as Jones shot out a left book that sent Toney
fUton a masterful performance in a sprawling back toward bls comer,
~gbt be bad entered as a 6-5 under- landing on the canvas.
Though up quickly, Toney
,._
uug.
: It was tbe first fight at 168 couldn't get back in the figbt. By
pounds for Jones, wbo relinquished now, Jones bad conttol and dielated
Ills middleweight title to right both the pace and the intensity or
:Toney, and the last at the weight the fight the rest or the bout.
for tbe now once-beaten former
Tbe three ringside judges
j:bampion.
.
favored Jones by margins of 119·
' "I'D never fight at 168 again," 109, 117-110 and 118-109. Tbe
:rooey said. "I want a sbot at the Associated Press bad Jones ahead
· light heavyweight title as soon as 119-108.
possible."
The fight bad been billed as a
, Toney had never lost in 46 pro- rare duel between two fighters at
fessional fights, either as a mid- tbe peak or their careers, with the
!lleweigbt or a super middleweight. 26·year-old Toney entering the
But, .in defending bis 168-pound fight at 44.().2 and the 25-year-old
title for the fourth time, be ran into Jooes coming in unbeaten at 26-0.
~ cballenger simply too fast and too
But Jones controlled the fight
akiUfull.
witb bis quickness, mucb lilce the
Time after time, Jones would crowd pleasing style of a former
. land a big left hand, then follow it fighter wbo was impressed with the
with quick combinat!~~s or four '!... performance.

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Notes: A Lyne Center member·
ship is required to use the facllltiea.
Faculty. staff. students and admin·

E

Y~R·EID

KENNY'S 10,.0 CENtER

RIO GRANDE - Here: is the II p.m.
scbcdulc for the week of Nov. 20.
Pool
27 at the ·University or Rio
T~
-1-3
and 6-9 p.m.
Grande's Lyne Center.
M
ay- closed
.
·
FIIDea center,
Tuesday- 6-9 p.m.
I)'IDIIUium
WedDeaclay- closed
aad racquetball courts
lbunday- closed
Today -1-3 and 6-11 p.m.
Monday- 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
friday - ~losed
Saturday ..;... dosed
Tuesday- 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 27-6-9 p.m.
WedDeaclay - 7 a.m.·S p.m.
Tbunday- closed
. Free-weight room
Friday -dosed
Today-6-11 p.m.
Saturday- dosed
Monday - 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 27- 1-6 and 1).

istraton 1R admitted with their ID
cards, I'
IUcauetball court reservations'
can now be made one day in
advance by calling 245·7495 local·
ly or toll-free a1 1-800-282-7201,
extension 7495.
All guests are to be acco~pa­
nied by a Lyne Center membership
bolder and a S2 ree.

Tuesday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
WedDeaday -closed
Thvsday- cloied
Friday -closed
Saturday- closed
.
Sunday, Nov. 27-6-11 p.m.

- - - Lyne Center slate----

Jones beats Toney to win
~BF supermiddleweight title

ONLY ILl"

$129

Sunday Times-Sentlnei-Pag&amp;-(:5

Rio runners in NAJA Nationals

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November 20, 1994

Pomerov-filddleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page-C&amp;-Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

Rio Grande High School•s glpry days on the hardwood recalled
iiJ

By James Sandi.
Special Correspondent
The farst basketball team at Rio
Grande Higb Scbool that we have
records for was the 1977 team•.. but
lhe sport was probably Introduced
during WWI.
That 1927 team was made up of
Verne Altizer,
John Clark, Vic
Fowler, Aub1ey
B o o e c u Iter,
Matere Irwin,
Dave Jones, Joe
McDonaugb, Van
Northrup , Paul
Williams and Jobn Wickline. This
team lost 33-12 to tiny Pine Grove
·

(Walnut Township) ln tbe
Gallia County tournament
In 1928 and 1929 Rio Grande
reigned as champs of tbe Gallla
County League tourney. In 1928,
lhe Bluemen beat Cadmus 20-11 in
tbe finals . The coach was Elbert
Oder. In 1929 the George Broyles
coacbed team beat Cadmus 32-17
·for the tille.
Rio Grande basketball was not
particularly good in lhe 1930's matil
John Wickline became the coach in
1937. The 1939 team lo~l ~ GCL
fmals to Mercerville. Wackline was
the coacb at Rio Grande 1937 to
1942 and from 1946 to 1961.
The 1940 Rio Grande team was

probably the best Gallla County
team up to lhat time. In lhe regular
season, tbe Bluemen lost only to
Racine and Kitts Hill. They easily
defeated Bidwell in the GCL
championship game 62ci7, but were
upset in the sectional by
Jacksonville-Trimble
36·33 .
, MembersoftbatteamlncludedGien
EYIIIIS, Jobn Bm'lile, Paul Kat, Paul
Cofer and Junior Smilh. From 1940
to 194S under Wickline and coacb
Mendell Beattie, the Bluemen were
7!-6 against Gallia County teams.
Rio Grande won lhe GCL In 1941
and 1942. In the latter year, the
Bluemeo led by George Hamrick
defeated Vinton for lheaown.

Super-sub Dizzy Davis beat
Gallipolis and Rome Stewart that
year 011 last-second two banded set
shot. The 1943 team lost lhe finals
. to Mercerville 19-16 but won 17-IS
in 1944 behind Bob Evans, Wayne
Evans and Merrill Wiseman. Tbe
194S team won the title over Vinton
38-25.
In 1948 Rio beat Gallipolis 36-35
on Harold Wiseman's last second
shot Later in lhe GCL tourney lhey
upset a very good Cadmus team
behind a 6'4" sophomore Harland
Wood. Tbe 1949 ww" team with
Weibcr Wood, Wiseman WiseDWJ
Wickline and Waite~ 'won tbe
league butlhey needed tbe help of a
non-W, by the name of Hooey. Rio
Grande beat Middleport in the
sealonals lhatyear.
The 1950 team also won a
sectional game after winning the.
GCL. In 19S1 Rio Grande was 6-14
but they bouneed back in 19S2 to
win the league behind Don Cofer,
Lee Weiber and Don Weiber. This
team also bad Morgan Copley wbo
the Tribune always called a "sUJC!ty

guard':. Tb_e 1954 team won tne
championship of lhe regular season
on a forfeit, Ahead at the half at
Cadmus, one of tbe ~eferees was
roughed up at balfume and tbe
remaining ref ordered a forfeit
The ,195S Rio Grande team was
be doubllhe best in Gallla County
League history. Tbey even
emabarrassed lhe Purple Tornadoes
at Racine 97-51. They bad only one
loss in lhe regular season (Beaver).
The Bluemen woo the district
touniey In 19S5, beating Thornville.
In lhe regionals they advanced to tbe
championship game, losing to
Pleasant City. Starters on Ibis team
were Clyde Evans, Bill Hackney,
Don Cofer, Bill Lyncb and Mickey
Morgan. In lbe district tournament,
Clyde Evans averaged 25 points a
game.
From 19S2 to 19S1 Rio Grande
w.oJl SO Str!light regular season

DR.

lJCLes In the Gf~~ ~~~:::::
tournamen I loss during
41 stralgbt. The on Y nent was to
lhay·l s~ ~~:i~.£P!'treaks w~re
anton n
b
1957 by
ended Nov em er 22 ' Gr~nde
·Kyger Creek _33-.32. R10 d 1957
won lhe GCL title m 19~~y~ - 17 ; '
buttbe 1958 team was of
RGfiS
Tbe last year or d tjle
basketbal:. ~~
a~egular
Bluemen mas e • ~ir las~ Z
season play. They W?n M Arthur
borne gamesr::p:tang ~in
and Coalton. e t game
·
lhe GCL to.ume/. when lhey lost~
N~rlh Galha_ S -4!inJoe Clark le
this last teamGI~~- g. IS
Jar
In au, Rio "'"""won regu
s.eas~o titles and IS tou,rnamenl
lilies an lhe GCL. The ~s 30J~
regular-season record 1n the C
~as 195-59. Rio Grande H.S . closed
an 1961.

i;6J•1

R. TODD RAGAN

River Valley freshmen

Dec. 5
Dec. 8...................................Eas1e111
Dec. 14 ..............at Melgs-5:55 p.m.
Dec. 1S,..............................at Logan
Dec. 19...................Gallla Academy
Dec. 22 ...................Soutbem-S p.m.
Jan. S......................at Wan-en Local
Jan. 12 ................... :............ Jackson
Jan. 17 ............Point Pleasant-S p.m.
Jan. 19 ...............................81 Athens
Jan. 23 ...................at Point Pleasant
Jan. 26 .................................... Meigs
Jan. 31 .....................:............Athens
Feb. 1......... ...........at Eastem-6 p.m.
Feb. 2 .....................................Logan
Feb. 6 ..,.., ...........at Gallia Academy
Feb. 9 ......................... Wan-en Local
Feb. 13 ...........................at Soulhem
(Unless otherwise noted, all
games will begin at 5:30 p.m.)
0000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

'--

Jones, Joe Hall, Tracy and Alvis Salmons. Wick·
line coached tbe Bluemen ror more than :ZO
years, and produ~d a championship from over
hair of bls teams. Tbe best Rio Grande team was
the 1955 squad that went to the reglonals at
Ohio UDiverslty In Athens.
·

Rio Grande Hlgb School basketball team and
cheerleader• Included (first row, left to rlgbt)
Gaye Winters, Karen Tope, Christine Hall and
Carolyn Evans. Second row: Frank Petrie,
GUbert Roberts, Paul Wickline, Lonnie Jordan
and Herb Smltb. Standing: Coach John Wick·

~-t\.. countJ'"

fJiHd

Sports deadlines

461 SOUTH THIRD

The Gallipolis Daily Tribunt,

Small Business Administration Guaranteed Loans - This
federal guarantee program is available for qualifying small
business owners. Programs include the SBA's new L.owDoc
Loan program, a greatly_simplified, faster and more friendly
federal program for busmess loans under $100.000.
FmHA Business and Industrial Guaranteed Loan~ Fanners Home Administration can guarantee quahty loans
made to business and industry involving manufacturing,
Ylholesale, retail and services. Projects must involve the
creation and/or saving o.f jobs. Purpose need not be ,
agriculturally related.

4 DR. 4.6 V-8 engine, P.S, PB, auto.
trans., AM/FM stereo cass. with Premium
sound, air cond., dual air bags, dual P.
seats, P. windows &amp; P. locks, tilt &amp; cruise,
cast alum. wheels, rear defroster, full size
. spare.
WAS $24,345

Small Business Unked Deposit Program- This slate
financing program re~uires that qua!ifving businesses .
must create one full-lime equovalent JOb or not lay off a JOb .
for every $15,000 to $25,000 requested.

lOW

For infonnation about our small business loan programs,
please visit your local
Bank One office or call
-

BANK'"iONE

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-Gr
~

Whatever it takes:
V 1994 BANCONE COAPORATION

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3.8 V-6 eng., P. steer., P. brakes, auto.
trans .• air con d., dual air bags, AM/FM
stereo cassette, tilt &amp; cruise, P. windows
&amp; P. door locks, P. driver seat, rear
defroster.
Stk. #4150700

Remington 870
Express Comba 28
ln.,YR Plus 20 ln.
DHr Barrel

Iasco
Pronghorn
. 3d Scope

$319"

1110 FORD'
351 V-8 eng., P. steer., P. brakes, auto.
trans., air cond., AM/FM stereo cass., tilt
&amp; cruise, sliding rear window, 8 foot bed,
chrome rear step bumper, cast aluminum wheels . .Extra _clean.

$39"

OPEl UllnL laOO P.M. FRIDAY, IIOVIMIEit 2511 AID
SATURDAY. IOVIMIER 2611• OPIII SUNDAY, IIOVEMIER 2711 1 P.M. TO 6 P.M.
' OPEl UIITIL laOO P&amp; ALL DEER SWOII WIEK.
.
IITEIDED IIOUU fOIIIUinll&amp; SUPPLIES OILY.

ST. IT. 248

causing cancer in humans, the federal Environmental Protection
Agency says.
In May 1986, the Council of
Great Lakes Governors agreed
there was a need for uniform guidelines because states were issuing
conflicting advice.
Heallh and environmental scientists representing Great Lakes
states came up with lhe proposed
regional advisory, wbicb also bas
been approved by two groups of
independent scientists.
State health officials currently
recommend tbat women of child·
bearing age and children younger
than I 5 not eat cbinook salmon
longer lhan 21 inches, and that no ·
one eat chinook longer tban 32
incbes. The new advisory says con- ·
somers can safely eat one meal a
month of chinook less lhan 26

:
:
;,
,
:

DAYTON, Ohio (AI')- A new
state law requiJes people to eilher
kUI isance animals lhey catch &lt;r
keen~
tined r, 6S da
to
~;are ms:se.rrel.s
l The law toot effect Sept. IS. It
1
and
~'f: lhat
·
· ild
~WX::' :~ m w
:
Officials in Montgomery,
'I Greene, Clark, Warren, Butler,
Champaign, Clinton, Mercer,
Miami and Preble counties au have
takenreponsofdiseasedanillials.
1
,
Under tbe law, people may
•, eilher humanely kUI a captured ani·
1 mal or may bold it for 6S days and.
1 if it sbows no signs of disease,
release it in lhe saDie county where
· it was captured.
; Officials from lhe Ohio Division
:¥:bf Wildlife said lbey do not plan to
:~'l!O after average citizens who

J:.e

l;

.

:f:!:

J!

I

release animals in tbe wild.
EnforeelDCDt of the law will focus
on commercial pest control opera-

!drs.

A violation is a fourlh-degree
misdemeanor that carries a maximum penalty of a $250 fme and 30
days in jail. Commercial operators
also could lose their pest control
Jieeases for iDegally relocatiog ani-

mats.

"I do notlllce this law at all,"
said Tony Lutz, owner of Critter
Control of Dayton, a pest serviee.
"I got into lbls business because I
love animals, Now I'm being
forced to put them down. It
stinks."
Todd Haines, state wildlife
supervisor for the Miami Valley
area. said tbe blin on releasing wild
animals is aimed at stopping lhe
spread of disease in animal populalions-that have grown to unprec;c-

delltel! levels:

. .

Minnesota already bas adopled
inches long and no more lhan one
meal every two months of longer tbe uniform advisory for Lake
Superior. Indiana plans to adoptlhe
cbinooks.
There is no restriction on Lake guidelines for Lake Michigan by
Michigan yeUow perch less than 9 January.
· , In recent !etten to cbarttr indusinches long or smelt of any size.
The proposal advises consumers
lhey should not eat catfish oc carp
of any size from Lake Michi,an, or
brown trout more than 27 anches
long or lake trout more than 26 .
inches long.
Wisconsin could adopt .lhe recommendations before spring if a
.Modei180.Ciulln . . .
third panel of scientists completes
feldurea1
its review of the proposal before
• Lsrpe 2.3 cu. ln. eng/llfl (38oc}
lhen, Meyer said.
Tbe third panel was asked In
• ChiO(IIfl cylitW1Ir for longer
June to review lhe document after
enp;ne life
charter boat owners convinced
• 14."l'llduald kickback
Michigan Gov. John Engler the
gJJidB bar and
advisory was too stricL
low-kick chain
• • Automatic chain oiler
• 1-year fllllit8d warranty

try representatives, Wisconsi n
DNR officials said guidelines were
necessary although most Great
Lakes fi sh bad lower level's or
PCBs lhan.considered acceptable
for fish sold by stores.

~~ and sneezes~ ~y tleas.

.

r
It s a vecy agonazll!g dealh f~.
a raccoon wbo gets distemper,
said Sandy Werner, a volunteer
animal rescuer who works W_tth
south ~ubur~an Dayton . pohce
~ts.. .The conv~s1~ are
so vaolent It s really ttmble. ,
"It's a bard cbo1ce, but I d
rather put a baby raccoon .down
lhan to have it die from dostem·
per," she said.

Hame~ saad 111s estJmal;ed lhat

the state s raccoon population bas
grown by about 700 pereent and
lbe opossum population by 450
percent since 1979. The Jl(lJlU)abon
.growth seems to be linked !O ~
rlectine in demand f&lt;r fur, wildlife
offiCials $Bid.
The biggest kUler in the wild in
the Miami Valley is distemper,
wblcb can be passed by air through

Poulan PRO
THE PRO - APPROACH

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

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399W. Main

WE WILL NOT BE
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992·2164

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CAPS

~~ .
{\}

All BDU
Pants &amp;

\JhanksgiVing Day hunting
' radition remains s_
t rong . .

Competition Sound Systems
Radios -Amps - Crossover .3 5 Top Name Car
Stereo Brands
Speakers
Get'Your
No Fear
Miscellaneous Car Stereo
T-Shlrts Herel
Accessories

~

Pomeroy, Ohio

\\Aile SURPLUS

Car Audio Specialists

.. JOHN WlSSE
sonnel will release ~ total ot 2,650
' vblon or Wild lire
pheasants on 29 public bunt.ong
.· ~ COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _
~· The largest number of birds
raditlon of bunting on w~ll be release~ on lhe Delaware,
giving Day remains sb'OIIg.
Killdeer, Ind1~n Cr.ee~ Caesar
t was as tradiriona1 as tbe Creek and Falls valle woldhfe areas.
. , anksgiving di'nner," said Paul .
· hiff, lhe Division of Wildlife's
. IIC8Iilon section supervisor, about
· boyhood holiday buntS.
:,;; Wildlife photographer Ron Keil
~ id of bis ea;ly Thanksgiving
;al)lnts 35 years ago, "Just getting
gat bere and spending some quality._ .
iiime wilh my dad was tbe most
l.illpo{tanl thing , not if we sbot a
ftbbit or pheasant."
N" And from Steve Gray, assistant
; ildlife chief, "I shot my farst rabliit as a kid on Thanksgiving Day."
:,:: For many bunting families, lhe
!(omen stiU do lhe cooking and lhe
een and boys go bunting. But not
150 offend, some of lhe ladies go
£5COrt V4agot'S
ting wilh the men, or let lhe
94 ford
· utornatit,
en stay borne to cook while tbey
to
cnoose
t_yodm.;s
&amp; loti&lt;S,
8
T w•n o
g borne wild game.
air, powe M/fM cassette
•.. Tbere are an estimated 18,000
tilt, cruose. ~
·
:Ohio women ages 16 and older
:,Wbo bunt each year, according to a
-t991 survey by the U.S. Fish and
:Wildlife Service. An estimated
J 2,000 Ohio bunters are boys and
! iris age 15 and less.
~ Mucb of lhe Thanksgiving Day
..
..:·:.........
' unting tradition in the Midwest
ocuses on rabbits, pheasants and
aterfowl. It is also a time when
88 cadlllaCO
leatner
'uis GS
.......·..
~bn-resident bunting licenses hit a
one owner, 56.'!, Grand Marti ..... ..... ...... .............
t\igb malic.
• 'les loaded ....... ...... .. .
89 MefCtl•
9
Ohio offers a tourist small game
ooo
·
a c
4
power Seat. • rn•sable
.....
.. .... ......................... .......
"cense for S2S which allows non·
loaded ........... ... .... ·
·
sldents to hunt pheasants, rabbits,
90 1111ercur'l
. urn wnee1s,
· aterfowl, migratory game birds,
Leatt&gt;er, alurnon
· use. woodcock. quail, squirrels
·. groundhogs for three consecu'
AStro conversl•" ....... ..... .........
' ve days. This small game lhree·
chevrolet
torn paint .. ........... ..,... ..
ay non-resident license is not
88
&amp; lotkS, (US
convefS 0
.. ......
· id for bunting deer, wild turkeys .
power windo';.let AStro ...... ......... .. ...................... .... ~o
' fur bearerS.
90 CheV 'les loaded .............. .
~-. '
. . Thanksgiving Day is a time to
52
only G~c5afarl van rear air ... · · .. .. ........... .. .....
lebrate a beginning for a young _
91 P• quad taPtains thatrs.
'unter who may be led through lhe
... ...... ..
one owner.
--'-d•f
........ .. .... ..
uidance of a father or grandfalher.
· 90 Ford ~e~-:les loaded ...... .. ...... ........
,
d before they know it, tbe young
.
lowrn•
•
·· nters will soon be passing onlhis
.
Eddie Bauer Editoon.
· ·lion to a son or daughter as did
!heir great-great grandparents
b
llefore lhem.
.
·
81ssan ){t~•-~aded ....... ......... ~.... . ... ,... ......
:; "A lot of non-resident family
87
jilembers get togelher to ~ni?Y two
tornatot, atr.
-sab
...... ......
·
lhree-day bunts beganmng on
'J6, s~auf-150
c.~•
91
. loaded ......
~-,-,,
~:f;~ii:! tradition
Day. It'sthat
simply
beatsa
X.l'T trim. ~ofma~'so'
aor. 4112 p~kU~ ......... ......................... ~, AftG
hearts of a lot of
- - . - ••
.
tornat•c........
,_,..,..,
;r • - : 00 miles, aor, au
........
'
~~~~~fRic• bs;aa:;d
'il Dl vision of
J(.L'T trorn. 47,0 Bla&amp;8f .
.. .. ........ ... ................... .. .

~!~!'!'=s~:.:~;~,d\l;atit l~~~e·d· · : · ·:· :
~~

&lt;

Jackets
T·Shirts •
Your One Stop
Camping Supply
Store

·~
G.!. Style
Combai Boots
G.!. M65 Field Jacket

All New Inventory
U.S. Govt. Surplus
Army-Navy Surplus
Headquarters

..

&lt;

1

. ......s7999

..

$9999
S8999
$7999

999
$7 9
S999 .
999
S9g99

VANS

S
TRUCK

REMINGTON 12 GA. SLUG (SP12RS),___ s1.:99 Box (Whneauanmleslast)

II

exposure to PC.:Bs in fish to no
more tban 3.S !JIIcrograms rer
meal, Amrhein said. A mea is
defined as a bait pound of skinned
and fat-trimmed fish per person.
The advisory assumes skin and
fat are removed from fish before .
coolclng, wblcb cuts lhe amount of
cootaminants in half, Amrbein said. .
Pollutants such as polychlorinated
biphenrts, or PCBs, accumulale in
fatty llssue and are absorbed by
humans eadng the fish unless skin
and fat are removed.
Exposure to blgb levels of PCBs
can disrupt physical and intellectual development In infants born to
women wbo eat the fish, health
officials say. The chemicals also
can reduce male spenn counts and
impair reproduction.
PCBs also are suspected of

t·

. DEER Jlt1NTERS SPECIAI.
Mossberg 500 Slugster
CoMbo Shotgun 28 In
VR Plus 24 ln. Rifle
Slug Barrel

.

~}' . Mn.WAUKEE '(AP) - Low~ '
·' 1evels of contamination .In Great
. . . . flsb have led to new guideq lnes onlhe number and size of fJSb
~'it is safe to eat.
·
; ~ · The advisory for lhe eight states
·· bordering tbe Great Lakes were
· '·issued by a task foro: of lhe Coun;--icil o~ qteat LakEGovrs. Wis' Jcoosm u expected
pt lhe new
"' guklellnes by A · .
Wisconsin De
ent of Natu·.•ral Resources Secretary George
i ~Meyer said lhe advisory would let
' •officials more actively promote
: lallc cbartcr fishing.
; '· Tbe new guidelines spell out
bow many meals of fisb of varying
• _sizes a ~rs~n can eat safely in a
: year, satd Jon Amrhein, an envi' roomental toxicologist with tbe
; DNR in Madison.
The advisory_'s goal is to limit

~

WAS$15,995

I

I'

~~~' .Governors' council OKs new guidelines on Great Lakes fish

CARS .

4 cy!. eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., AM/FM
stereo cassette, tilt &amp; cruise control, P.
windows &amp; P. locks, rear defroster, cast
alum. wheels. Extra clean.

•HUNTING CLOTHING
•SHOTGUNS AND BARRELS
•SLUGS BY REMINGTON, FEDERAL,
WINCHESTER AND BENNEKE
•HUNTING LICENSE
•LURES •ALL ACCESSORIES

tl

.

r-----------------..---------------....;------------------

loans

WE HAVE EVERYTHING
FOR THE SERIOUS
HUNTER

1

PHONE 992·2196

AfiODLEPOR1", o\'\

The Daily Sentinel and lhe Sunday

,,

Saturday and Evening Hours Available:

line, Darvln Bloomer, Clifton Ramey, Charles

1959 RIO GRANDE BLUEMEN • Tbe 1959

Times-SentiMl value lhe contributi ons tbeir readers make to tbe
sports sections of these papers. and
tbey will continue to be published. · ·
However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed.
Tbe deadline for pbotos and
re lated articles for football and
otber fall sporiS is lhe Saturday_
before lhe Super Bowl.
Tbe deadline for photos and
related articles for basketball (summer basketball and related camps
fall under lhe siDIIU\er sports deadline) and olher winter sports is lhe
las t day of tbe NBA finals , The
deadline for submissions of local
baseball- and softball-related photos and related articles, from T-ball
to the majors. as well as ~tber
sprin g and ·summer sports, 1s the
day of lhe last game of lhe World
Series.
These deadlines are in place to
allow contributors the time lhey
need to acquire their photos from
tbe photography studio/developer
of choice and to give lhe slall's lhe
chance to p~blisb lhese items in lhe
appropriate season for lhose sports.

(Formerly Dr. George Davis' Office)

446-2236

Sunday TIIDCs-Scntincl /C1

! Kill pests or quaranfine them, new Ohio law sa_ys

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

• Complete Eye Exams
•.Adult, ·Infant and Children
• Contact Lenses - All Types
• Large Selection of Eyeglasses
• Treatment of Eye Infections
• Foreign Body Removal
• Treatment of Glaucoma
• Evaluation of Cataracts
• Most Insurances Accepted

t~Because of. lower pollutant levels,

•

458 SECOND AVE.

Oooongt ·
at Jackson

Outdoors

November 20, 1994

l

OPTOMETRIST
OPEN FOR BUSINESS

·Dill

~ e·

.

.

S6999
· ........... - gg
S99

se

999

su.,e·-:.. . . . . . ... . .. . . . . . . ..... .

!

'"''"'";r,,.,

Pieree.

:· The wildlife agency also helps
buntins tradition along by
jttc:asio~g pheasants on public buntareas. On Nov. 23. wildlife per·

Sports brief:
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif.
- The team of Lailny Wadand Andrew Magee combined

g4 c;heVJ 'J6 20,000 moles .........
,ll.utomat\t, atr,

'

0 PRIOR S/I.LE
•SUBJECT T

'

'

. 0 ,...1 woo~
atters'
D l~

BAUM LUMBER
985·3301

CHESTER
-~-...,..__.___~---

I

I.

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

,_

'

-f

0

•

•

�I

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

· Page-C&amp;-Sunday Times-sentinel

..

•

us1ness

'limes. jtntinel

Section

Super ·Sundry st9re opens Monda
By GEORGE ABATE
T~SIIIIr

1995 WINDSTAR GL

1994-ASPIRE

1994 THUNDERBIRD
"VS ENGINE"

• 7 Pass Bkt Seats
• Speed Controlmlt
*Ught Group
• Rear Defrost
• ~'. CondiUon

.,

• 4 cyl. Engine

* Option Group #3

* 5-Speed

• Dual Illuminated VIsor Mirrors

* 3 yr.f36,000 Mile Warranty

*Cast Aluminum Wheels

• Great Gas Mileage!

* Option Group #2
*Auto Air CondiUon

*AMJFM Cass

* Real Defrost

* Power WindowS/Locks

*Auto Transmission

* Power Mirrors

* Keyleas Entry

* Luggage Rack

*Floor Mats

*Loaded '

* Power Windows and Locks

Was S22,340

00

ALDI.INC. TO LOCATE IN GAU.IPOLIS. Aldl, Inc.. a dJs.
COIUit grocery chain, with IICIYertlsiD&amp; IUld publk: relaUons head·
quarten In Cblago, II planning to locllte • store oa the old Indus·
trial park lite otr SR 7, nortb ril Galllpolll.l.aat -k. Apna Construction of lndlanapolll, Ind., bepn clearing the lot for the project. Don Roee, Racine, an exca....,.. and subconll'llctor, Aid It will
take tbree to four weeks (pro'Jiclln&amp; the weather remains gQOd) to
haul in %1,800 euble yuds ril Ill dirt before store COIIItrudlon can
. bepn. Other ulllll are also expec:ted to locate on the property. Aldl
recently purehued the property flam the GaW. County Improve·
meat Corporetlon.

*Power Seat

1994 F250, 4x4, Supercab, Turbo Diesel, XLT .. $23,995

"5 To Choose From!".

1993 Ranger Splash, V6, Air, Low Miles ............$10,995

Dr. Atkins begins
p~actice in Galli olis

1993 F150 XLT, VB, low Miles, .......................... $12,900
1992 F150, Custom, Work Truck .......................... $9,995

OALUPOUS • Dr. William B.
Thomas Friday announced the
association IX Charles E. Aikins, 0.
D. to the practice located at 346
· Third Avenue, Gallipolis.
Born in Atbens, Ohio, Dr.
Atkins moved to Pike county when:
he graduated from Eastern High
School. Dr. Atkins majored in
Microbiolon at the Ohio State
University. He gaduated from the
O.S.U. College of Optometry In
June, 1994.
Durin&amp;. opto\lletry school, he
'became certified as 111 eye bank
·technician procuring tissue nece.JI!II'Y for transplants. Interested in
i~ awe. Dr. Atklns is llcensed
to diaiiKlSC and ~mat eye diseases,
:as weJI as prcscribin11 eye11lasses
, ..a ·
and coni8CIIcnscs.
_.
.Dr. Atkins~ active in f~s
CHAJU.ES E. ATKINS. O.D.
-pnor to attending college. His bob-._
·
bles lllclude basketball, boating, and travel.

1993 F.150, Custom; Short Bed ............................ $9,995
1986 Dodge D150, Power, Auto, VB ........... ....., .... $3,995
19{J6 F150, Custom, Low Miles ....... .................. :.. $4,995

1994 AEROSTAR EXTENDED

1991 F150, XLT, low Miles ................................... $9,995

*Auto

• Power Locks

1993 F150, 4X4, XLT, Auto, loaded ................... $14,995

*Air

* Cruise/Tilt

1988 Dodge Dakota, Alr..................... :.................. $3,995

* Power Windows

*Loaded

_1994 Aerostar Wagons, Loaded 5 available:...... $14,995

* Remainder of Factory Warranty

1985 Econoline Cargo Van ................................... $1 ,000
1984 Chev GZO Conversion, Raised ROof, Southem Coach •• $3,800
1993 Thunderbird LX, Anti-Lock Brakes·, Loaded ...... $11 ,995
1994 Tempo or Topaz, Several to Choose ............ $9,995

ALL NEW TAURUS
AND SABLE
~.9% APR
FOR

:

THE PLAINS - Betty Wagner
-Lou of The Plains, formerly of
'Racine, bas taken her skills into
·selling and financing from the
·automotive business and bas started
Meadows Flnauciai Quest, Inc.
Her business deals with financ·
'·inll commcrciai, construction pro·
jects residential first and second
·mortgages with A tbroul!h D cn:dit
•levels, SBA loans, and will be
expandin11 into , leasing and
accounts n:celvable fmandng.
·
· Meadows Financiai Quest, Inc.
functions as a marketing pro to
develop relationships witb lenders
and borrowers alike, matching the
needs ,of one segment witb tbe
'Deeds of anotber.
• The office is located at 15 North
Plains Road, Tbe Plains, ud tbe
office Is open 9 a.m. to -~ p.m.
Monday through Fridey with
evening and weekend hours by
appointment. Lou's telepllone
number 797-2553.

1993 Taurus GL,loaded ....................................$11 ,995
· 990 Olds International, Loaded ........................ :.. $7,995
1990 Nissan Sentra, Air, Only 33,000 miles .......... $4,995

'

Lo~de/......................... $7,995
(

1995 CONTOUR GL
*Automatic
*Air
* Power Heated Mirrors
* Rear Defrost
*Power Locks
* Cruise Control
* Premium Sound
*Alum Wheels
Total Before Dlecounta
5

16,87()00

1995 PROBE SE

GREAT SELECTION

-OF NEW 4x4's

RANGER • F-SERIES
•BRONCO

• Air
* Pram AMfFM Cass
·• Rear Defrost
*Tilt/Cruise
• Power Wlndows{Locks
*SE Package
• Alum Wheels
• Power Sun Roof
Total Before Dlscounta

•17,85000

Extension Corner
ByHALKNEEN

.• '

Payments
~till ~

I

·c

·_

Feb 1995

I

{

-

0

Free Bedlin
With Purchase
of F-Seriesr Ranger

years managing n:tail chains and
elpcricnce in basic balDing at the
state police ~my.
Super Slllldry' s hours will be: 9
a.m.-9 p.m. Monday through Saturday llld II a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday.

Restaurant under
new ownership
H

CHEsTER- Ownership of the window service area to the kitcben
former Keebaugb's of Chester and dining room.
Restaurant has cban11ed from Mar·
Ceilings, lighting, floors, furnivln and Marae KeebaUI!h who bave ture and fixtun:s will be replaced
opcraiCd il. for the past eight years and the Interior will be rcdccoraled,
to William Pooler and his daughter, Pooler said. Once the work is comBiBee, Spencer Road, Chester.
pleted, the restaurant will begin
The name of the restaurant bas opcraling on a year-round basis.
been changed to Chester Country
Since the n:staurant sets on over
Kitchen.
two acn:s, Pooler plans to n:move
The restaurant wbicb seats 36 some of the trees, taJce out the bailwill opcrale until Dee. 4 at wblcb er whicb is parted there and extend
time it will close for the winter, the roadway around the building to
IWpcnin11 in mid-Marcb.
provide additional parking space
· Extensive n:modellng will begin for customers, and particularly tbc
once the restaurant closes next many truckers wbo visit tbe restau·
mooth.
rant.
Pooler, wbo is a retired Kaiser
Pooler Is also planning at some
Aluminum employee and is futun: time to add a banquet an~
involved in several business actlvl· meeting room just off the dining
ties including tree farming, plans to room along with barbecue facill·
n:model tbe entin: interior from the tics.

f

•

H

A BUSlNESS CHANGE- WUIIIIIII I'Goler, centcr,IIINI•II J
daughter, BWee, are tbe new ownen of the former Keebaugh '• of . ·
Chester Restaurant located on Route 7 near Chester. Tbey laave
renamed the restaurant, tbe Cbester Country Kitchen. Here, right,
Marvin Keebaugh bandJ the keys to the new owner•

'

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'•
I

(U,

/f

II

, POMEROY • On this Thanks·
sivlns Day Thursday, as your family and friends gatbcr, remember the
farmer, trucker, arocer and food
prcparer wbo has assisted In brins·
lng forth the bounty of this land to
your food laden table. Cherish the
freedom that our democracy per·
mits us to farm crops, raise anlinals, bunt tbe land and fish the
~-: Tbe 1995 farmlna season is
comina to a close. Some fiUillers
J!avc made 1JIODey, while others
llave nOt. No maaer wbicb catesory
¥ou belonJ to then: will be several
~ucational opportunities available
within Meiss- County and tbe surrounding counties throughout tbe
~ter~ w!!icb may iJ!!JWve
your profitability. lorairnurc-to
allow stxne time to attend those
' fil'!l8fiiDIS wbidllntcn:st you.
. Flies in Your Home or Office?
• Cluster flies arc once aaaln
making their presence known.
·1bese ~ large flies, sometimes
called "attic flies", appe11 on
,..arm, . sunn)' days from late
il.,nmn tbrou&amp;b early aJiina. lbcY
.
8

...'

, "'\~

BETTY WAGNER LOTI'

DISCUSS PROPOSED POLICY • GleM Lackey, Stewart, dis·
cusses prop01ed policy with Oblo Department of Agriculture
Dlndor Fred Dalley during a recent policy development meeting
for the Ohio Fann Bureau Federation In Columbus. Lackey is a
member of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation Board of Trllllea
and repr-IIU memben In Athe111, Gallla, Lawrence, and Melp
countiu. Conslstlna of 10 county Farm Bure~tu representatives
and 10 alate trustees from tbroug•out Ohio, the OFBF Polley
Development CoauniHee complies county poUcy recommendations
Into suge~ted poUcy for consideration ot ODF annual meeting
delegatu. Lackey returned to Columbus for tbe final round of pol.
Icy dnelopmentsesslon Nov. 9. More than 300 delegates to
OOF'1 76th aMual meetin1 will VOte 00 th- policies Dec. 6 and
7 •t the Omnl Netherland Plaza Hotel, Cincinnati ConYentlon·
Center In Cincinnati.

occur in large numbers, especially
at windows and in rooms not fre·
qucntly used. They make irritating,
buzzing noises, spin around and
move slulllishly. They do not bite
humans nor feed on structun:s or
furnishings.
Adult cluster flies lend to seek By LISA MEADOWS
lisbt colored buildings or houses
· GAU.JPOUS • flll'merS sufferespeciaily if located on exposed ing crop. loss in 1994 due to
hill tops. As dayli11bt shortens In advene weather conditions may
the fall SCIISOII, 111o. flies seek places apply for cmer11ency assistance at
to hibernate (overwinter). Cracks their local Flll'm Service Agency
and crev~s in buildinll structun:s
(formerly ASCS) be11innina
provide an entralice point into your December 1, 1994.
home or office.
tbe tiles an: ·
Although many crops an: proInside your bomp. whenever tem- duclna record yields, abnormal
pcraturcs riSe above 54 dearccs weather paUcms, causlnJ excessive
they will become active. Many rainfall, bail, or drought, have
times, a brlabt sunny winter day caused substantial crop losses In
warms up the air witbin window l!ll!•ted but widespread an:as in the
frames thus bringing on a resur- Natioo.
11ence of flies.
,
National. pf!&gt;C!uction was not
Control mcasun:s should start in alfcclcd, but Individual los5CI have
the summer by pn:ventlnJ the Dies been lfCYCre. The 1994 JWPIID Is
_from entsins-your-bol_ne_or of(lg:._ _simi... to those or recent yc~ .
Caulkina or sealing off ail cracks f&amp;me.l with a up iDiurance Wlio
and openings is tbe first line of aufferedolcnlp losses areater than 35
defense. Maintain window and pen:ent IIClllllalproduclion (or«!
door ~en:ens. Once inside, a ny • percent losses for those. '!itbout
swatter or strong suction vacuum crop ~) will be ehg~ble for
cleaner can quickly dispatch a few a J)IWtill n:imbursemcnL
flies . Fly paper, sticky strips and
~ arc reminded tbat the
bug zappcrs 11re or little, if any. recqaninliOD ol USDA has com. ·
biDed the func:tions oldie A . J.
Continued on D-8
turai Stabilization and Con~a-

OPTOMETRIST RELOCATES- Dr. A. Jackson Balles
recently moved his Pomeroy omce to 21 East Main St. Left to
rlghtt are stan members Janel Coen and Debbie MUler and· Dr.
Balles. The new omce - wblle expanding available space and
being more accessible - will belp in eye examinations for glaucoma IIINI c:alllrads. Dr. Balles, wbo bas practiced 16 years or optometry, Uve1 In GaWpolll with bls wife, M•ry, and lbelr two daugh·
.ten. He Is a member of the Ohio OptonJttric Association, Amerl·
can Optometric .A.aodation, GaJUpolis Lions Club and Gallipolis
Christian Church. (T-S pboto by Geol'lle Abate)

Crop disaster funds available.·

Onee

lion Service (ASCS), tbe farmQcdit pQ!')ion of the Fanners Home
Administration (FmHA), and the
Federal Crop lnsuraoce Corporation (FCIC) into a new agency
titled the F11rm Service Agency
(FSA). Producers should know tbal
the reorganization did not eliminate
any progn~~~s. The goai is to offer.
betler, mon: efficient service and
mate It easier for farmers to use
USDA programs by offering "onestop" sboppiDg
The farmer-elected committee
lllCDibenl will continue to oversee
fann prop-am lllmini•IJIItlon. Other
loas olfcred by the former FmHA
will be asslaned to a new rural

~O:'t,~iid;c 1~ ~-~.~~~~~=~=~~at~
Ave. on Nov.
111115
Jllah School graduate and valedictorian,

· Disuler Assistance Proanm or the
recqMivalion of USDA should be

ed Rio Gl'lllllle CoDeae for two years before trlllllferrtna to Olllo

dln:ued to your local FSA office
(446-8686in OaiJia County), &lt; ·
LIM Meadows 11 tile Acting
Ctwty Eoe.ti'Je Director rilth
Gallla F~Senlce AencY· ·

Ulllnrall)' w•ert •e received bls BS dear• In 1919. He J•ter
Oblo State Unlvenlty where be i'ecelved a doctorut 1a
optaa.t&amp;J Ia 1~3. During bll 11na1 year at OSU, .. received tile
lole reward olacelle- 1D contact le"'a ProYlded by J.._ a
Job- Vlllllk._ Co. (T-S photo)

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· NEW POMEROY STORE - The Super Sundry wUI open
Monday, taldn1 the place ot tbe recently departed Super 10 store
og Eut Main Street. Pictured left to rljjbt an: owner Mark Prof.
fttt aDd derb Debonla Oeek. Judy Wolfe, Kathy Marcum and
Heather Smith. Promtt Aid be'• exdted about openlna and senIna area ahoppen. (T-S photo by Geoflle Abate)

I

·Americans have plenty to
·be thankful for Thursday .

HURRY
WHILE
.
SELECTION IS GOOD!
-

CyDtbla.
Proffitt bas managed a number
or convenience stores, includiDI! 10

:Lott starts new business ·

48MONTHS~

1994 Taurus or Sable, Several to Choose.......... $13,995

1989 Mustang GT, Auto,

POMEROY -The lwd wort
of a pwp olii'CI IDdlvldUIII baa
filled a VICIIII Main Street I!Uft·
flalt willl a uew ~!lineal. 'l1lroulb
ClllliDJ V1lldon, lliriDI emplo~.
IIUIIIIIIDJ the boots and CleaDIDJ
ud siOCkinstbe shelves-- tbe
openins dMc bas arrival.
The Super SUIOy - loc:alcd on
East Main Street in the former
Super 10 spot- will open its
doors for business Monday at 9
a.m. ud Is readyinjl for a grand
opening at the begiDniDf of tbc
new year, said Pome!Oy I Mlll'k
Proffitt. sue owner/minqer.
1bc four-employee lelailfaJUvenlence store will feature brudnamc items Including applilllccs
(taaslers and hair dryas), DOII·ptCscription medicine, Clwislmas toys,
school and office supplies and
other items - similar to a classic
five and dime, Proffill said.
"Our 110111 is to establish a viable
sue for people to IXIIIIC In and so
we can build a rapport witb our
customcn. My personal hope is we
satisfy the customers and let than
know we' n: here to help the public," he added. wl'm Clcited. I'm
not scared - I'm n:ady to meet

'

•Y challenp."
·
Prollltt cbole Ibis $,000-~q~~~n:o
foot IOCIIIoll muse o1 11a IIX1CU
to MaiD Stn:et traffic:, more than
""'qlllte pRingllld ila proxlmltx
to buJineil people wbo might _.
a place to 11nn In for a mack.
"I doo'ilbink II will be a pnble
· brcause we have ben: wllll people
Willi," he Nid. lddlng he WilliS to
wort with other stores IIIII not fight
tbem. Ml have no competition
heca1se tben:'si'ODIII for everyone
I'm DOt ben: to put another atorC
out ofbl!lineu."
When liked to describe himself,
Proffitt paused and said: •rm a
warm, carlos penon. I'm a hlll'd
worker llld loyal to my employees
and customers. I take pride in
cverytbing I do."
Wiih bls life based In his Christian failll, he aiso cailed himself a
fiiDIIy man. He has a 6-year-old
daughter and is married to his wife,

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�Page-02-Sunday 11mes-Sentlnel

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

November 20,

1994

OH-Polnt f'leasant, WV
PubUc Notlc:'e

Nlllc Notice

...

::
LEGAL NOTICE
:;: · The Huntington Townahlp
.. trullall hlva changed lhelr
"' ll)lltlng
dale
from

BERNICE
BEDE

OSOL

Sunday,Nov. 20, t994

lor your family. It 'will be generally benefi:
ciat
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 18) Specilic
plans stand a good chance of being realized today. Concentrate on things you
need to accomplish sooner rather than
later.
TAURUS (AJirii:IO-May 20) You are now
in the early stages of a cycla of begin·
nings. Be optimistic; there's a lot of posi·
t1ve change in store, especially materially.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You may
have an opportunity today to disengage
from an unproductive arrangement.
There will be something better coming
along very shortly.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You might

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Work
industriously on a financial project today.
11 you concentrate your efforts in this
area, material rewards are a strong probability.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mirch 20) Today you
might find yourseH launched into the role
of path finder. Your leadership qualities
will be more evident than your pears' at
this time .
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Something
you're involved 1n presently has good
possibilities. but they might be of a limited
nature . Don't misinterpret losses as
gains.
TAURUS (April 20-May 201 Because
you are more informed about the ramHi-

have to make some adjustments to
improve your financial posilion, •and it

cations of a current endeavor, you mtght
enjoy personal advantages undetected

Experience has taught you valuable would be wise to make the cha,nges now. by coworkers.
lessona 11111 year. II you adjust your goals LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're .i n. a lavor- GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Listen to the
in the coming year to your new perspec- able cycle lor launching an oriQinai pro- advice of others today, but give more cretive ~could bring prO&amp;perity.
Jacl. If you lh1nk you have some.thlng , dance to your Instincts in financial dealSCQRPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be on the good on the draw1ng board, get mov~ngl
ings . Avoid acting against your better
lookout for a solid investment proposal VIRGO (Aug. -23-Sapt. 22) Today you .judgment.
during thi8 cosmic cycle. You may find a might be. invited to participate in a com- CANCER (June 21-July 22) Positive
new way to irlCfllasa your earnings If you pany protect. Your best bel IS to o.ffer as thinking can tip a situation in your favor
poke around a bll. Scorpio, treat yourseH much support as you can from behind the today. If you sincerely believe you can do
to a birthday gih. Send lor your Astro- scenes.
something well, you won't be disappoint·
Grapn predictions lor the year ahead by LIBRA (Sept. 23-0CI. 23) An old friend ed.
mailing $1 .25 to Astro-Graph, c/o this might unexpectedly resurtace at this time. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Keep your ideas
newspaper, P.O. Box 4465, New York, It will be a buddy who moved away a long to yourself todey, especially n you're conNY 10163. Be sure to state your zodiac time ago.
templating an ambitious undertaking .
sign.
Ct994NEWSPAPERENTERPRISEASSN.
Don't share your intentions until you
5AOIT!~RIUS '(Nov. 23-Dec:. 21) Today
know the details and have mustered supyou might reach an agreement on some·
port.
thing that has been dilficutt to negoliata.
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 22) Loyal old
Although it's been a tedious process,
Monday, Nov. 21 , 1994
friends are too important to ignore or
both parties should be pleased with tha
In the year ahead, your luck might sur- overlook today. Make sure they're includresufts.
.
prise you. Whenever you need help, a ed in your social arrangements.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)
few toots on the bugle could have the LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) FuHilllng perBeginning today, those in positions to
sonal goals will be important to you
cavalry charging to your rescue.
help might take more interest in your spe·
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) T9day, a today, but if there is room to include olh·
cial projects. Your career might skyrock·
lesson to youngsters could be extremely ers, don'tlet seHishness prevent you lrom
el. Good luck.
constructive. Make it a poin.t to teach doing so.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 19) Take the
0 11194 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
them to look lor the good In people
inniative today to establish a relationship
instead of the bad. Major changes are
you've been considering. The o111er par1y
ahead lor Scorpio in the com1ng year.
has been waning lor your cues.
BINGO
Send for your Astra-Graph predictions
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Set the
loday. Mail $1.25 to Astro-Graph, .clo 111is
Racine American
wheels of change in motion today if
newspaper, P.O. Box 4465, New York,
Legion Post 602
there's something you've been planninq
NY J0163. Be sure to state your zodiac
Now having Bingo
sign.
every Sunday Night
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec:. 21) Today
Starting 6:45 pm
it's important 10 fOC:Y§ on the ends you
BRIDGE
Doo111
open 4:30 pm
desire. This will help you overcome
The
mo111
people
obsiacles ano slay on course ~ the going
gets rough.
playing the bigger
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 18) An
the pay-off.
uncooperative associate can be swayed
Save ad for 1 lrae card.
PHILLIP
to your side today. Emphasize reality and
949-2038 or 949-2044
not your expectations when prssenting
ALDER
your case.

l

NEW SHENNU FARM TUCTORS

NORTH
11-19-94
•Q J 9 7
u 2
t!O 6
4'Q 10 8 6 4
EAST

WEST

9KJI0985
tA 2

.. 9 7 3 2

SOUTH
6K8532
9A
tKQJ73
•A J

100's of Used Items To Choose From:

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South
Wesl North East
1•
Pass 2 •
Pass
4•
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead: • K

COME SU TJDSE An

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT CENTER

Blending bids
and plays

1467 JACKSON PIKE (Old US 35 West)
Gallipolis, OH
PHONE: 446-9m or 446-2484

By Pllllllp Alder
I write tbese column&amp; using a verllal
blender, as David lves calls a word
processor in "The Universal
Language." (This is one-sixth or his de·
ligbtful play "All in the Timing."&gt; lves'
piece was inspired by malapropisms
and Espei'Bjlo. but it didn't hurt that it
was performed so admirably by Wendy
Lawless and Jason Graae.
Today'&amp; deal features another bril·
liant performance by a woman and a
man, Keni Shuman (now Sanborn&gt; and
Barry Crane. It occurred during the
1978 World Mixed Pairs. which they

~r a simple auction to rour spades,
bad
h
West got his side otr to a
start w en
he led the club king ..&lt;Leading king

from ting·doubleton at trick one in an
unbid side suit .must be. one or the
biggestPointiOsersinbridge.l
South, Shuman, won with the ace,
played a trump to dlimllly's queen and
a second epiiCie to her king and West's
ace. He continued with his second club.
Declarer won with tier' iatk. played a
trump to dummy's jack and c:alled £or

~~~:::~this was fiR' a
Now Shuman cashed dummy's three
club win~n. diacarding the diamond

J:\:
::U~;~~YU:eh~
and
"'

ace
diamond seven. Both defenden do(gedly dung to their hearts, so

the lalt Irick- Wlin by the diamond

r-.;rHE iEURiiS MERRv-;...,
~irr

_
1
I
I

.

I

I

.

MQQe. :

l:tf:

310
400'o

36
57

' ~~
1100's
1100's
eos·

COUPON VALIJii:
$150 ·

Bure•u af Contract S1l1a,

Room 118 ol the Ohio
Department
of
Tranaportatlon, Columbua,
Ohio, unlll10:00 a.m.
Thursday, December 8,
1994 for Improvement• In:
Gallla County, Ohio lor
Improving aecllon GAL-7·
5.28, State Route 7 In Ohio
Townahlp, by grading,
draining, paving with
reinforced
concrete
pavement
and
by
conatructlng Bridge No.
GAL-7-01152, a three apan
contlnuoua and compoolte
A588-50 ateel beam with
reinforced deck end
a.ubalructure (apana 90'-0",

PubliC Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbua, Ohio
Bureau of Controct Sella
Legal Copy Number 94-841
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Mailing Data 11/4194
NH-1(201)
Sealed propollla will be

qualified blddlf~ at Ilia
Bureau of Col)ltil~t 8111.,
R00111 11.8 ot the OhiO
D 1 pI r t m I ri I
01
Tranaportallon, Columbua,
Ohio, uniii10:00 a.m.
1
Thursdlty, December 1,
1994 for lmprOVIIIIIntl 1~:
011111 County, Ohio lor
Improving varlouo IICIID~ia
cif Slate Route 7, City·. el
Ollllpolla, by pavamt~t
planing, pavament repair,
lnalallalton oftrafllc algnala
and reaurlaclng with
aaphan cancret•.
;
The Ohio D•P•r!monl 11
Tronaportetlon harab:V
nolllill all pre-quallllld
blddtrl thet dludvantag..
buolnna anterprl..a wtl ba
afforded lull opportunity to
aubmlt blda In raoponu .t o
thta lnvllatlon 1nd wiU n91
be dlecrlmlnated 1galnat on
the ground• ol roce, colt~r.
or national origin l,n
conalderalton lor an lwlr(
Minimum wage rat11 fer
thta prolact have ll••n
predalermlnad 11 ~!llr8d
by l1w and .,. 111 forth In
the bid propo11L "The dar.
aet for completion of lh 1
work ahell be 11 aet forth In
the bidding propoaal. •
.
Plan• and Speclflcetlo~a
aro on lite at the Dlpartment

of Tr•n•portatlon.

101 -Francisco
104 Destiny
· 1oe·rwosome
108 Club charge
110 Painful spots
114 Dais
t 17 Russian river
119 Fast kind of speed
121 Well-to-do
122 Wild disturbance
124 Mild oath
126 -canto
121 Retail happening
128 Land measure
I 29 Corpuscle
131-lheRed ·
133 Perched
135 Crowlike bird
136 River in England
137 Contracls a muscle
139 Stage play
141 Party givers
143 Hearing organ
145 Rosters
14.7 Dust
149 Taxi
152 Ancienllang.
154 Give a name to
157. Enrages
161 Itinerary: abbr.
162 Certain votes
164 Indian of Peru
165 Pigpen
167 Vesselfor dye
168 Solemn promises·
170 Claw
173 Sharp
175 Old Greek thinker
177 Glossy
178 Chimp's cousin
179 Gone up
180 Sea duck
181 City in Alabama
182 Calls
183 Commence
184 Web-looted birds
DOWN
1 Make obscure
2 Destroy by degrees
3 Harder to lind
4 And so forth:
Latin abbr.

s

5200
:: ·
S300

:~

1100'•

67
at
at
too

2390 Jackson Pike
Oh 446-2134
Experienced Floral Desigher
needed Apply in person at
Basket Delights
1725 Eastern Ave. Gallipolis
441-0110

Foot dlgn
6 Strikebreaker
·7 Reasonable
8 Gardner of "The
Sun Also Rises"
9 Gold, e.g.
10 An alloy
11 Counlry in Africa
12 Unclose, poetically
13 Certain party
member. abbr.
14 ·-go braghl'
15 Delayer's mono
16 Underground
chamber
17 Male sheep
18 Serviceable
19 Chile saltpeter
20 ' We're oft - - the
Wizard ... "
30 Ancient
32 Home: abbr.
34 '-Like It Hot"
37 Place of rest
36 Part of M.I.T.: abbr.
40 Ulah city
41-Drink to excess
42 Cuts
46 Greasy spoon
48 Copenhagen
natives
50 Opan square
51 Make suitable
52 Monte53 Bury
55 Knock '
56 Decorate
58 Makes a sound
reconding
60 Like a lot
61 Restaurant patron
62 Strict
65 Promise to pay
(abbr.)
67 Oolong and pekoe,
e.g.
71 Every
73 Authentic ·
75 Astonish
77 Plane part
80 Ledge
81 Hit

7~~

:

$300
$300

-----------------____

. ... ____

1

·~~ ·--~

21l - -- ·- ....-

.

- ·-

"'""- ---- - - - - -... _ _ .

- -- - - - - - - - -- ··-···· -··- .... .. - --

~ ~ -~-· .:~-- ----- - -~

240 Upper River Road

ovailo."'.,,

~

11571-

.

- -

Cancelled{Rejected

. Wrestling Shoes

• DUI • No Prior

In Stock!

Insurance

New company coming into area.
We are a Fitness Center
dedicated to the needs of todays
woman. We provide tanning
beds, aerobics, weight loss
training, physical fitness training.
Group and privale instruction
available, also child care facilitythis facility is open for women
.only. For more information call
446-3401. Scheduled to open
October 1st.

83 AHention
85 Search for
weapons
88 Jacob's brother
90 Ticket piece
94 Churlish one
96 Charter
88 Belgrade native
100 Lois and lots
101 Jack who ate no tat
102 Wonderland girt
103. Molher-of..peart
105 Courtroom evenl
107 Great anger
109 Playground Rem
111 Peruses
112 Brilliance
113 Distorts
115 The ones here
116 Bates - ("Psychp1
118 Fa(
120 Pie --mode
123 Poisonous
125 s .s .w .• e.g.
130 Interlock
132 Outer garment
134 At that time
137 Fight
138 Violins, violas, etc.
· 140 Ogre
142 Assoc. relalive
144 Our largest state
146 Do wrong
148 24 hours
149 Traverse
150 "--'- o!Two
Cities"
151 ,Kind ol palm
I 53 Wyoming range
I 55 Marks from wounds
156 lmpli&amp;d but unsaid
158 Sidestep
159 Appraises
160 Boutique
t63 Poet Teasdale
166 Tepee
169 Skirt border
171 On the- (fleeing)
172· United
174 "Born inlhe-"
175 Thole
176 Untruth

Jefl's Carry Out &amp; Tavern
Pomeroy, Ohio
Hunting Tags- Ammo Dee·r
Checking Station Big Buck
Contest Ice-Pop-Beer-Food
Open 7 am - 11 pm

•

Sew Creative
Fabric &amp; Craft Outlet
24" length Cafe Lace
Curtain- $2 yard
Lots of fabrics
$1.50 &amp; .99 per yard
Accepting orders for Raggedy
and Sunflower dolls
Call

446-1407

for hours and info
Personal Touch Hair
&amp; Tanning Salon
54 State Street 44p-Hair
Nov. Specials
Perms reg. 35.00 For 25.00
Totallook reg . 15.00 for 12.00
Color reg. 25.00 for 20.00 ·
New bulbs
10 Tanning Sessions for 20.00
Open Mon-Fri 10-7:00
Sat. 9-6:00
Sun t -5:00

•

Women's Hand Gun
Safety Course.
Ohio Peace Officers

•
•

Training Academy. Sat.
Nov.

I

26 and

Dec. Srd

Sam-5pmat995
· Jackson Pike Suite
Must be

'

.•

18 yrs

201

or over.

Cost $35.00 Must bring

•

own hand gun plus 50

..-..

rounds of amo. -For ·
information or Register

•

Call 614-446-3332
;' .'

Call446-2342
or 992-2156

Gallipolis,

FOR MORE INFORMATION

m ... ~ ......... ~ . . ........ II'O . . . . . .., ·. o

_;;;-.-.0111}'•-;;:..-~~~

Gallipolis
Bank One
Coats for Kids Program
• Collection Points•
Kmart

O'Dells

•

t'

Quality F;Ym

&amp; Fleet

Bank One- Gallipolis
Help by Donating a Warm
Coat For Those In Need

Help Wentld

Public Sale
Public Notice

ouctlon
HI'Vict.
u..IN,Ohlo I Woat VIrginia, 304-

-·.

""'

momo4...,

Arts &amp; Crafts Show
Overbrook Center
Middleport, Ohio
Saturday, December 10, 1994
tO a.m. lo 5 p.m.
Arts and Crafts by Area
Craftsmen
Free Table Space Available
For More Information Please
Contact Mike Crites at
Overbrook Center at 992-6472
between 9-4 M-F

&amp;Auction
Rtcll ,_...., Auction Compony,
tul time •uctlonMr, oomJ*Il•

77W'IIII.
PUBUC NOnCE
Separate,
111led
propoulo wilt be received
II the office of the Tr~aaursr
of lhe Board of Educetlon of
Southern Local School
Dlatrtct, Racine, Ohio, Melga 9 Wanted to Buy
County, unlll 12:00 o'clock
noon, December 13, 1994.
For Bua Cha.. ra and
Bodl11. Coplea of the
SPECIFICATIONS,
lnatructlon lo blddera, and
propoaal forma may be Wa ..od To Buy: A c- Of The
obtalnad lithe ofllca ollha Dncull Plly AI llio Arlo!
Thootro On Oct 11133, ~Treaaursr, Dannie E. Hill.
Said Boord ol Education Claan Lata llodol Cars Or
reaarvea lhe right to reJect
111117 Or Sm"h Buick Pontiac 1to0
any and all, or parta of any Truclla,
ea-..
.......
Galllpotle.
Md Ill bide.
By order ol BOI!d of Aod Pomtoc Potat-. IIW45Education of Southern
l.oclll School Dlatrtct.
·
Dannie E. Hill, TriiiUrer. - o d a t -...... ,....
phonoo, old llm~pa
old tltar(11) 13, zo, 27; (12) 4; 4TC
old
lrtllque
tumftn. A I 1quoo
Auto
.
.
·
IM-I!Ii
2521. Wab&lt;ly tala!H.

Announc ements

Thanks for the overwhelming
support frgm the many fire
departments.
family
and
friends during our time of
trouble. Doug, Patty, Christy,
Paul Combs

Bev Garrett Formerly of Top Shelf
Is back! on 160 at Whispers Hair
Salon by Haflelts Outlel &amp;
:lummer Image. For appointment
call 446-1336 Walk-ins Welcome

..

- ~~·

(614)446-6111

2 mi. North of S. Bridge on SR 7

'·
•

'

Phone

IVYDALE
COUNTRY
Presents
Fall and Christmas
Decorations
Gifts

STOWAWAY
Bakery-Deli
42 Court St.
Next to Shoe Cafe
Making Homemad~ from
Scratch - No frozen doughs
Bread-Rolls-Pastries- CakesDoughnuts-Pies
Breads
Rye-Sourdough-French Whole Wheat-White

Sponsored by Southern

I

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

Hills

" - t ........ --~ ............. C.,.. ...... ._.OMiriO,IiiMN

,

.Asics•

The Shoe Cafe
Lafayette ·Mall Gallipolis, Ohio

•

lJT•., ... ·I

r,:x,

Auto Insurance
LowDown
Payment
SR-22

:

I

$250

W...-- . . . . AI-AVON-11

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
Insulated, Safety, Gortex
Swain Furniture 62 Olive St.
Gallipolis
All U.S. Made

D.J.'s Craft Shop

See Answer to Puzzler on Page C-2
ACROSS
1 French cap
6 Shuts with Ioree
11 Cover girt
16 Hog's sound
21 Muse ol poetry
22 Desire greedily
23 Musical drama
24 Methematical
proportion
25 Compel
26 Playing marble
27 Send, as payment
28 Leaves out

Building In Ewlngton.
·
R. Shane Hamp10n
Clerlk
Novamber20,21,22,1tl4

Blrthda:~s. Anniversaries,
Showers, Weddings
Bring Sally your Logo or
Emblem and she will duplicate
it in your special order. Also
wedding mints and chocolates
Cakes by Sally at

Jerry Wr~y
Dir~ctor of Tranaportallqn
November 13, 20, 1994
,

1
I

I LOWELL C. SHINN TRAaORI
~~~~~ 1
Oh. 45631j _.
·}1:
a~ u_pon ·
Phone 614 446-1044
I
P#J'
I
'
O
fll
1/1.1*
·
a: .,.. . . . . . . . .
:J
~ .._.,..,IIi.'•,.
• -·1 y

NOTICE TO. BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbua, Ohio
Bursau ol Contr~ct Sataa
Legal Copy Number 94-840
• UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Milling Dati 11/4/14
Nll-1(189)
Sealed propo1111 will be
accepled lrom all praqualllled blddara at the

Thursday, November 24,
1U4
to
Wednnd1y,
-November 23, 1994 117:00
o.m. at the Townahlp

4

center to 1ccaptod liom. •II pr•:

hi~ ~:n·inl,!~

Wc\·e ft11 un earl)' Chri)&lt;;flll:IS
for yuu . One rlwt lets )'HU \Hl* Jl ur
1111 a
Belarus tractor"" alreudy luw price. Just hrinf Ihi ~ coupun in liu \IJl l!l :1 thm•~all\1 Jull:ar
!I:IVing:s un nur line nr'Jll Ill .n s HP two and fnur Ytht•d UriVC' HL'I:nm lrat'lt""'- Sinlply
a"k ynur dt•.1trr tn ,;uflmit un .l.'ntl-us(r cL·rtinr:tU' tu tflmlify rur rdmhurstmcnr . _

, ::~~::~after
OJ69.

Public Notice ·

100'·0", 71'.0"

canter blarlnga), ovor Swan
Crwk.
The Ohio Department of
Trenaportetlon hereby
notlflea all pre-qualified
blddera that dlaadvantagad
bualn••• enterprl111 wilt bl
afforded lull opportunity to
aubmlt blda In raapona1 lo
thla Invitation and will not
ba dlac:rlmlnated agalnat on
the grounda ol race, color,
or nallon•l origin In
coneldtrotlon lor an award.
Minimum wage ratea for
thla project have b11n
predetermined 11 roqulr~d
by law and are aet lorth In
the bid propoaal. "The date
111 lor completion ol thla
work ahall be 11 111 forth In
the bidding propoul."
Plana and Speclllcatlona
are on file et the Dlpartment
of Transportation.
Jerry Wray
Dlractor of Tr~naportatlon
November 13, 20, 1994

I CIIIISTMAS COOPON SPECIAL :
:I UPTO $1,001J.OFF II

;;~-:-:::::::·:::1-

1•• I14.Hjiflcl
......Jrit
....... ~..
N.
P.• . JIUI'.

SCHOOL DISTRICT
ELOISE BOSTON
TREASURER OF EASTERN
LOCAL SCHOOLS
38900-SR7
Reeclavllle, Ohio 45m
(11) 6, 13, 20, 27 4tc

Pubac Nota

Public Notice

BULLETIN BOARD

Public Notlc:e

Public Notice

SUNDAY PUZZLER

30 Kimono sash
31 Gas: prefix
33 Bind habitat
35 Gypsy Rose 36 Pet rodent
39 Gathers
430ecompose
44 Before: poelic
45 Make beloved
47 Chide
49 Swab
51 Sour substances
54 Watchful
57 Drug
59 Boys
63 Rather ol TV
64 -for tat
66 Store
68 labbumer
69 Mine entrance
70 Commedia dell' 12 Poelic conlraction
74 Bakeshop ~ems
76 Calendar abbr.
78 Region
79 Enjoyable lhings
82 School subject
84 Mariner .
86 Flaming light
87 New Haven school
89 Takes legal action
91 Knightly tnle
92 Eagle
g3 Israel's lang.
95Whip
97 Earns as profit
gg Illuminated

Used Ford, Masaey Ferguson, IH Tractors
field ready.'

Public Notice

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Purchlu of (1) School Bua
for
EASTERN LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATION
Seeled propo11li will be .
received by the Board of
Education ol the Eaalern
Local School Dletrlct of
lleecl1vllle, Ohio, by 12:00
o'clock noon on December
6, 1994, and at that time
opened by the Truaurar ol
aald Board aa provided by
law for one (1) 71·72
paaaenger achool bua
according to apeclfloattona
of ukt board of ecluOIIIon.
Speclflcatlona
and
lnatructlona to blddere may
be obtained 11 the olflce of
the Truatnr, Eaalern High
School building.
A cartllled chock payable
to the Treaaurer of the
above Board ol Educallon
or a aatlalactory bid bond
executed by tha bidder and
the aurety company In an
amount equ11 to five percent of the bid ahall be
aubm111ed with 11ch bid.
Satd Board of Education
reaerva1 the right to waive
lnlormalltln to accept or
re(lct any and all or parll ol
any and ell blda.
No blda may be
withdrawn for at leaat thirty
(30) daya alter tht
ochedulecl cloafng time lor
racalpt ol blda.
BOARD OF EDUCATION
OF EASTERN LOCAL

29 Poem

Diesel • 25 HP • 2 &amp; 4 Wheel Drive, Uve Lift, 3 Pt.
Hit~h, Standard Cat. #1.
Tractor Seats Starting At $100.00
Complete line of KING KUTTER Equipment,
Kutters 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 &amp; 10ft. Rear Blades 6, 7, &amp; aft.
Regular and heavy duty.

•e

.A 10 4
•Q 7. 8 4
t9 8 54
•K 5

Pubic Nollc:e

•

Sunday

J a o·o Auto Porta and Satvago
buylnt -ka,Junk autoe i
truclut, Also. DOno lof Nil. 304-

773-1343 wl73-5033.

614-446-6939
614-441 -1168
For all your Video needs

Meigs Athletic Boosters Fall
Sports Banquet Monday 6:30pm
Meigs High School Cafeteria
Bring 2 covered dishes, meat,
beverages &amp; roils provided.
Greg Smith speaker
(former O.S.U. Ail-American)
Video Ventures
Special Events Videography
Promotional Videos

----odtodullng.

paid

dlllao•ltlol,

tunlly lllCI - . . . - •pe.
~":"hln
Aor. .....

...,,

_..,.,. --lor . . .
Rani 1 a ad Clrw c.nt•._1~3

Waolllnfon
•
Ravena
c. WV Ia c:uriWIIIV

1!'11 ...........

jWII

lnir!).

Include:, r.allh ln-

-

......... - - . . r i n g,
paid ..111, ftw ......
_ , _ , and
diU,.
r.qunct.
c:ompatlt.. · ·--

Ae,.•ace•

ReeiEM..eC.... Pt F I ..,
training. ERA Town I Country

-

!Main,

:O~Ji

WILDUFE

4

Giveaway

I IINutllul

llack KIHan To

Goad Horne, fl4..44~1121.

I~~~~~~~~~

B::I"·38W.Will Ill 'Snutti

Dogo,614

CoHIWChow mix, IMIII, nine
rnonlhl
good -ch dog, to
homi, 114-112-2154.

.....m, otd,

~~~ood.

Yw Cut. lt4-

ICOIISERVATIOII

JOBS
Wa-.
Etc.

Motat

Undankl~tna Fila 12110

MoblleHomo,IM~Io0221.
Pratty lllola Khlan,_ To Good

.

Secutly,
No

'i::;

~"'::~
A.ll To10 P.ll. 7Diyl._ _·:._

~~agio Rabbit Dog. 114-

Employment Serv;ces

Shootiag Match
Bailey •• Rd.
Legion F...
r... 1:00 pm Nov. 20
Fllltory Chake Guns
5

"\-':

o\gf-t..
. - - 1011
-lalaty. :10-35

=!:..,
::s,~
AlloSiar Wat
lllaU- . . . , Silver ltklat Plaza,

Gallpotlo. No-. Calia.

Homo Only, lt4-&lt;Mion10.
Roody To Go 4 WMk Old Pupplio, AKC Malhar: Aklll. Fothar:
Dobannon lltxacl, 114-317-7008.
Sit- /Sobla St&gt;ltZ lllxacl, ~~
Vory Frlandlv, lluat Find

A- II ,._ Hourly -.a
AI Woifl ,._, Flaxtbla Houral

Homo, Duo To - · 114-3880321

Dtoc-.1 No Door /Door. lnclap. Aop. 1-1142-4738.

maohanlo,

Auto

ax-

-

parianca - . 114-112-2311.

AVON IIIIOUDAY

Family History
Training Videos
• Also available GAHS Parents'
Night 1/ideos
Call Mike Tompson at 245-1519
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
LARGE SELECTION OF
LANE ACTION RECLINERS,
ROCKERS, WALL
HUGGERS, CHAISE
LOUNGE RECLINERS
$250-$425
LAYAWAY FOR
CHRISTIMAS 10% DOWN
FREE DELIVERY
MON-SAT. 9-5 446·0322
3 MILES OUT BULAVIUE PIKE

PubUc Notice

WARNING
NO HUNTING·
NO TRESPASSING
This notice is a warning to any
and all persons that no hunting
.
or trespassing will be allowed c;m
the lands of Crown City Mining,
Inc. located in Galli a and
Lawrence Counties.
•
Anyone found hunting or
trespassing on these lands· will
be prosecuted ~o the fullest
extent of ~he law, in accordance
with Section2911.21 of the Ohio
Revised Code.

EY KIDS ..•..

GRANDMA]
BEHGDOUIS
SOMETHING, MONDA¥.21
11

Help Wanted

"

•

'

I

Crown City Mining, Inc.
November 20, 21 1 22,
November 23, 25, 27, 1994

POSITION AVAILABLE
·FULL TIME

"

Service Person
To repair
• Heat Pumps
• Air Condition
• Refrigeration
Apply at __
·--

YATES HEATING
24S·S8S8
296 W,. College St.
Rio Grande Ohio

II

'

The family of Paul J.
Jeffers, Would like to
thank everyone who
sent flowers, food,
cards, visited, called or
helped in any way
during !he illness and
death of our loved one.
The Cremeens Funeral
Home , for . their
kindness and concern.
Pasto r Melvin Mock
f or hi s comforting
words. The pallbearers ,
the organist, Ruth Ann
Fellure, for her lovely
music. The Providence
Baptist Church , for
their lovely meal , the
day of the funeral.
Prepared by the Joy
Ladies, of the Church .
God Bless each and
everyone , for their
kindness, and prayers;
in our time of need.
Delores, Linda &amp; Ray
Brothers &amp; Sisters

.:.tt.;__;H_;e;;:lp:;..;.,W;.;:a::;nt::;ad:..:...__

BNutllul Garman Wltlltlllld AVON I AU - · I S111t1ay
Potmar, Spaclt, 114 38111321.
Sj&gt;aoro, ~-.

Klnan 8 WMkl Old, ll4o44e633!.

ltcltla

3 Announcements

p-.

3 Khtona, I W- Old, To A
Good ........ lnokla
114-

Mothar,

,:.rr-·

llalnl--

-

258-IJH.
Would Uks To Buy: Fann With
I W11k Okl Adonoblt Puii!IIH. TCIItacco - · Atoo would Uka

Video Transfers

We would like to
thank the family,
neighbors &amp; friends
No! leo....
POSTAL EIIPIDI'IIEHT
for their kindness,
t12.2l ,.., • ........ c.m.r,
food, flowers, cards
- : . ,CflrflPotltlonoL For y...,
lrlrm
,. ADDIIclllon ~
&amp;
prayers during
- t o n , llil1 1-2lllo7:J1.&lt;171[
Ext. 1'143:1. I A.ll. To I PJI., T Ihe illness and loss
Doyo.
of our husband and
PC U . . . - 4CIK!yr,,.....,..
1111, 714a-33tt Ill.~
father.
POSTAL JOBS
A special thanks
""" tlt41 lilt. For Enm And
-'-ion
Into, Coli f2111 - lo
the Silver Run
a;o, Ext. 011111, I A.ll, -41 P.ll.,
s..n .frf.
Bapti'st Church and
RI'4MII6eucod c.,. c.ntw, 1113
its members for
~on Sl, Ravenewood,
WY It cumnlty oocoptlng IP'
their support.
ptlclltlonl lof a tuu u- and
'
The family of .
part
tlma
Day
Shift
Hou-kuper. lenlfb kM:Iude:
Robert E. Mcintosh
hoanh
~-.
ltoxlbla

I

.

, ,I

.

�..
Tlmes---S~ntinel

See Scram..Lets on Page D-7~.

I.

54 Mlecellaneoua
Merchandlaa

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

l

IMPAIR
CHURCH
VANDAL
PALACE
GOSSIP
BICKER
_CAPPUCCINO

November 20, 1994

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

I had entered a diner to get directions.
I found myself face to face with some 1
unsavory looking characters. Trying not t
to appear scared I sat down to order t
something. I relaxed when I noticed that
they had all ordered CAPPUCCINO. .1

~

IIIW ....... -

........

l

.

I
I

Raat Estate Ganaral

IIHS
CIIIISTMAS 1Rn5

• 1111111-* T.V.

~

Sunday

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Choose and
cut your tree •
(or we'll cut it for you}

Riggs Tree Farm
39507 Rocksprings Ad.
(at comer of US AI. 33}
Pomeroy, Ohio .
992-5702
Carol &amp; David Riggs

BIRO'S EYE VIEWU Soar wllh lhe eagles with
this hilltop home. Very unique home and
salting. OUtstanding view over1oof&lt;lng the Ohio
River, Gallipolis and Weel Virginia. Home In
great condition. Perlactly private location close
to town. $154,900
11227
Ande"""

Wanted to Do

: :18

Nonto Ollndllo 21x?U S lr., :lor. lnlllor, -

Wll--.
8IQtno

-··--·

do yon! - -

houlod, Ill; Johnlnllllng moe..-, 13410

with

REPO"S
TRADE INS
1ita Knox Mr?U, tlml a.-y
141M, 1m ..._ - . fm
Fllnnont 12110, 1111 C.rollno
141M, 1m 'llcnoy 121110. 1m
K i r - 14114, 11114 llanor
10xll4, 1111 eom...~~orw MJI3
11188' R - ·121110, 11JT1
PanthO&lt;IM 121110, 1188 Shultz
121110,, 1m I.Mdmork 12114,
111711 """""" 121M, 1m sun""• 12114, 1811 lrlalcloN - ·
lna 1 111111 on 111011 1Dmt1.

I'M-l11N11l or - ·

. 0110,
72111.

.....

Don, Arepllel, Lull. Blllt, S...
~·-·
clll Prlco, Saw $2,000 On l.d ~-Laoull
llodol. Fronch City 11ob11o

-=··--.
.
h·.--,....-·-·
: :21

Opportunity

•
INOIICEI
· .oHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

·- ..

h~,...- ond

ttiiOiiah ihl t.~:"ll~~""=
City
to 11-, 114· - .... ,...- -litotod F441o1340.

:""'-...

t.r:·on oiQk

St

Tnollor, linror ..... •

=

~No "'!~.-...~.
, Plue ~ 114-

........ ~--'-~· ~

~- • ~~..!.....".!"•- 111

f'enY•...,..,_or

to
·

~

Houaahold

---

MEIGS COUNTY

FneDellwly.

Goods
~VInyl In ltoollti.OO liD
_ _ ........... RII7N.I14-

!!lohlrii· WI ml olonlollo Rd. Pt.

No ....,._

-

-----lnyour
~- ,.... belling llot·

Schul

Rogoncy

v.r

2-

Dtywtoll T.out, tnoulotad wtn.
doWoL 2xS Wallo, Oak C.blnota 3
BR, wn, Save 1\000 On Lot
IIIC&gt;blto
Homoo,I14-44US40.

nwlllllna -'unltloL
:c.. 1144tNI\2
IDr oppolnl·

·-

- . ,...,.., car

Real Estale

Textured
Callings,
B.O.C.A. Coda
approv9d.

~

11112, I . . . oul ....... Rd.

PICICENI RJRIITURI

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

For Rolli: 1 -

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

LAYNE'I RJRHINRI

Holn: llloft.lol, M

Ill ,.

lnsiAalion, 8'

NEW LISTINGS WANTED!
Makes The Difference! CaU
Cheryl Lemley, For a FuU Time Meigs
County Agent For Over 17 yeara!

.-......fur.

::::.::· Oil 114411o1410,

Unit $SilO

11601

bCiihooltno Pool llodo Out 01

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

.

=~

1-800-585-710

Or

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

A Quality Home is many quality components, put
together by·experienced and caring craftsmen, into a
beautiful home you will enjoy for years to come. Feel
free 10 drop by and take a look at our three model
homes. You'll be lad ou did!!·

I - l o Saptlc
100 T1tN 2,0011 Oollortl
VIM Enll.......o, JICI&lt;·
..... 011_17..511.

rl•il

Two
.......
lloclno- ...., 114-IINIII.

44

a new
without the haoale of
bulldlngtll Then we have the home tor you.
Built In 1993, this vinyl &amp; brick spilt level offers
3·4 bedrooms. 2 baths. living room. family
room, lovely kitchen with dining area, 2 car
garage situated on 1.75 acres, m/1 . To make
your dream of owning a new home a reality,
call Carolyn today at a price of $97,000 you
can't aftord not lo.
11604

Apartmenl

for Rent

~""":"':"'::~~.....;.==:­
1 oncl Z _,.,.,_,
-_..., ......,
""" rwqutrod,
...~
no
pllo,li4-IIN2t8.

--·~

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

.........

lllrrattlo Whlolcholi l:tlor.... Goad Cond.l14 441 12CI.

4 Acr• Off Add!_, Pll!o, Qor.

-Of -um Trot And 81oDr
Rood, 114,000, 114-311o78tt.

~.. - ......-n.
,
_
For131 A Lood

14 ..... Crib Cllllt Rd.
128,000. On ...... top-. -

Doltver, Colt~W~Um.
fitoowoa4 .... ltlotlory I Mh.

I7Wllt1.

i

story home, living room, knchen, erd~~~~~~~~~~
2 car garage. FA electric 1urnance. A
home hook-up. Must call today for an appolntmentl

All real estate advertising in

this newspaper Is subject 10
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol 1968 which makes 11111egal

15511

to advertise Many preference,

llml1atlon or dlscnmtnanon

only,
•- MhOol.,_
301 ' " " ' '

This newspaper will not

·-

advertisements for real estate
which ls In violation ol the law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed thai all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal

41

tlanot
lllnloCcompula For
Cltltdral Hoe 2 Elllll -

=r

_'""c::::..

2bdrm. oplo., Iaiii -..to, II"
.....,_ turnlohod, . . _ ,

And -

.... 114-245-

. . . .: Realna ......,••,.,

...._

lulavlne

44W770.

17f a. AI: IIIII
PIU. ·carr 1111, fM.

ochoOI
lntawn.
..........
II: Yfloao ·o.. I Apto. l4t or
..., f1441NT11. EOII.

Rentals

knoWIIngly accept

ior lllo: Compulnn Ed_.

LOOKING · FOR A HOME THAT YOU CAN
AFFORD? Then Call Cheryl to see this onel 1 t/2 :
story with 3 bedrooms, bath, living room, 12'x24'
detached garage, 30'x30' log building. Approx. 1 acre
lawn.
Ht7

Two Iorge ... llor loCI with
hoolcupo .... .... In Hrutlard,
undrlr t4000; OM 2 b 1 drocrn
trollorlar-. .................
fumlohod. Rooponolblo P I -

based on race, color, religion,
sax familial status or national
origin, or any intenUon to
make any suCh preference,
limitation or dlscrlmlnatton.•

~

==~
&amp;illilift ,.,.,tlonlllt Fumoco

lt'o not too loll to be In your now home by
winter. These ownera are moving to their riew
home so you can hive possession immediately
upon closing. This lovely ranch offers 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, cozy living room and dining
area off of large cheery kitchen. The man of the
house will love all the tinkering space· 1car
attached garage; 20x30 detached garage and
large storage building . Call Carolyn today to
make this home yours. Priced at only $58,000.

E~~:perience

Nloo I or I - - ._,. In- - . . . . . . •~
88111:
Rolli Sol On L a n d - 2
3CJl.
or 1--10711. Bod-, llltllfll Cleo fw.
In Clall!polll, . _ _
Schult ~-tlfiO ' Br, 2 Or~--. S.7 P.ll.

Buslnaaa

· NOT 1o -

r.lerchandt se

t..nor In

...-. EJaopl

0~~~~ WANTS AN OFFER NOWIII MAKE AN
01
AND YOU JUST MIGHT BE SURPRIZEDI
bu•;inf!SS opportunity corner of Third Avenue
Street. 2 Story brick/frame building,
uo1;tairs used as 2 rental units, each consisting of 1
living room, bath &amp; kitchen . Downstairs
used on one side as beauty shop other side
880 sq. fl. vacant. Call for ~Qrnl'.lle!!l
NEW
PRICE $48,900.00
1682
RI:IDUt;eo PRICE TO $23,000.001 OVER 47 ACRES
woodland. Nice setting to build a rustle style home
place a mobile home. on. Paved county road,
Mllintv water available!
1633

HOU888 for Rent

Z Bod- Nouoo In CletUpallo,
~I lllto:aocoo,

opportunity basis.
)

31 Homes for Sale
'We Hood Llotlngo"

p- alw

. . . 011 • ""' . . lnl-oilln

..:.•.=;. ~-=
.-.

3 Bod-•$35Wo.
Dopaolt
- Houoo,
....
Roqutr.cl, c:ountrr 8otttng, 11424W047.
.
3111'. - . 1 both. ....,..
1720.

Houoo 3

11 ..... And 11om

.

llfroo-. 1 112 ~ LR. l I "'-o; 111110 laC,
....... ~.114 ... 0134.
d:w:clowa, $271/Mo. 104-171-tttl.
I 11*00111 ..._ I 2 Car

I:"Cir'::. ~J!

441 8001

F........... Apl. 2 BR t2tl
Utlltloo. PIN M1 Avo.
·o·lpnllt 111 111 ... After
7pJIL

·c lolhanl. 2 ''" lllhl, 10
.lo.............. lullcllngo,

__ ..,..... __

REDUCED TO $49,900.00 RANCH &amp; ACI~EA.GE­
bedrooms, 1 112 baths, .eat-In kitchen, living room,
basement. Newer carpeting &amp; roof. 2.75 acre lawn.
1699
Owners want sold, make them an offer!

0 . . . . - , , , _ .......

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
510 Second Avenue, Gallipelis, OH 45631
· (614) 446-7101 or 1-800-585-7101

::."'a:

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

4End
IR,
· 211othl
ltooll.

Lol'a 111M A Doll. IMIII ._
ltoiY On Carrw Lot. 1 .....

- -..........1244.

-

Ut.,

,......111 1112201

frame home
new thermo payne windows.
Heat, remodeled In 1990 - 91 . Newer
wiring, plumbing. windows. carpet. front
porch, side decking, blown·ln Insulation.
Forced air electric furnace in full basement.
ASKING $27,500.00.

bur In

- 2 Full .........~
~iloOriiL
u.tng,..
Dtntna.
lllo1il ""
• • •'
lmll 3 lldi'OOM HDinl In

cw.

=---=~E=

42 Moblla Homaa

torRent

~~-

..

1111 ..,._ 141711, I IR, 1 112
Ioiii. _.., lllcrmuo onct
Dlltt ala. Nlw
11100. • • funllohool -

c.n.t;

AtWipMI11111 ....

-

dopOII.-....... .,.

.'.

C!1Wton Ttdlr. 2 I J owo,

~..=.~ ~

=-:-i~&amp;==

54 ll.:el..naous
MercMncll•

~ ott. lbnlrnl
SMII......
QmZ ,, U.
-

Now~- r-----~r-----------------------------,
I

~ai':i.,;i

/ =.""

1.o1

'for gour fwfitfag fruit ca{es we

liave aJresli suppfy of'

ttt,IOO,

Chopped Dates .................................. $1.66 lb.
Fruit Mix ............ ................................. $1.n lb.
Candied Red &amp; Green Cherries ........ $3.10 lb.
Dark or Golden Raisins ..................... $1 .62 lb.
Mincemeat ......................................... $3.00 lb.
Pecan pieces .. ,..............1................... $4.831b.
Walnut Pieces., ...... :.'.... ;........ :...... ;;;.. :$3.25 lb. .
Pecan Meal ........................................$1 .55 lb.
Merckens Chocolate ......................... $2.45 lb.
Clausen Chocolate ............................ $2.20 lb.
Drop by and check out the resl of our baking
staples tor your holiday needs.

IUINGISYILLE· Great Hunting! Beautifully remodeled (almost

18 acres mit. 3 BR, LR, FR. OR. Nice home. Call
Only $29,900

..

Now -

tlodrttln Md4;"1..- .

- . , . , . . . Ellatrla,

Uo•fl!i•

f!1n1. _ , To lnlo On
...... llol!lo
CoUll. 111 ..... 01, 114-

CoriW Lot -

..:r,.==,r
. ...... 441-778t

. . ............,..r.

Now- 1M8, .....- 1 ...................

...... , . laC ..... Only

Nonte A1p111 1111711 1 •·
......,., ..... " ' " On Lot

I

OHIO VALLEY lULl FOODS .

514 EAST MAIN ~
POMEROY
• ·

992-6910
·We accept

.......
. . .l'ltrlllt
. . .10atJ , . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _._ _ _Food
_ _Sflmpe
_ _.....
...... 1M 11,1110.
~

"t
m..:d ...... Dlc.lth.

frame home with newer roof. 3 bedrooms,
112 baths, gas floor furnace, new unH air,
rear screened porch. appliances. blinds,
fireplace, block st001ge building &amp; wood
storage building, 3 room apt. with storage &amp;
cellar below. Lovely flowers. Storm doont &amp;
windows. Very well taken cara of,
ASKING $37,000 ·

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER· 446-9555

Loretta McDade· 446·7729
Sonny Garnes· 446·2707
Real Estate General

LENDER

Carolyn Wasch • 441·1 007

Real Estate General

Real Estate General
Pilon~

~

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

l!!r
.
·
tr-VIRGINIA SMrrH, BROKER ................. 388 8826 r-j ./ !iiwm

Main Oflict·388-8826
958 Chut Cluqnl Rd.
Bidwdl, Ohio 45614

'-"'tyu · ·
~

IOTTO~Iver

Watchlra Dreamt Great vacation

~~~~::iretreat. 3 BR, bath, LR wllp, kit, partial bsmt.

IF

Front porch completely along front of house to
·

watching the rive/ flow. Priced right.

)DJ,InVIN- Need a great building lila on 15 112 acres
with a gas well and free gas (and hunting). Could be 3 or
good building Jiles. You can maks some money hire. Call us
today.
·

CHESTER • SR 248- This tieautiful 1 floor
Stone/frame home ori 4.3+ acres Includes 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car garage. 3.decks,
family room, flreptace, .hot tub, diShwasher,
dlspcisal, partial basement, neat p~
WIC.A. triple payne windoWs. Carpet/wood
flooring, C&amp;S electric and TPC water.
ASKING $94,900.
MIDI)LEPORT· Located on 6111 St. I 1/2
story frame with 2 bedrooms, 1 112 baths,
gas heat, fireplace. An older home with lots
!)I possibilities, In a wry good location.
N.QW AS!(IN(I $19,900

-

POMEROY· Kingsbury Rd. • 2.490 acre
lots. Water ·and electric available. OWNER
MAY HELP FINANCE! ASKING $7,000.00
Tract tS first on right past trailer.
FOR ALL YOUR HOME BEWNG l
BUYING NEEDs COME SEE THE
PAOFESSibNALS "CLELAND
REALITY''! WE NEED NEW UBnNGS,
FOR ~EW CUSTOMERS, COME IN
AND BEE US WE WILL FIND THE
LOCATION YOU ARE LOoKING FOR
AND THE PAICEI

'

LOT IN GREEN TWP. FOR SALE· 156X100 city water
and sewer, electric to pole level. Priced $14,000. CALL
FOR INFORMATION.
HOME ON RACCOON CREEK· 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
living room, dining room, kitchen, 2 car garage located
on approximately 1 112 acres more or less. C1ty
Schools:.CALL TO SEEI
NEW LISTING· 2 homes located on approximately 1 112
acres On~ home has 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms. 1 1/2 baths,
11\llng 'room, dining room, family, kitchen . One home has
8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, kitchen,
family room. Both have rural water, LP gas Fulf18C8, and
more. Call tor appointment to see.

CREYo( Ro;• Just minutes from Pomeroy!
1,26+ acres with nice splk foyer home. 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, appliances, newer
.siding, electric B.B. heat, patio, TPC ,water.
Located on paved street, very nice loCation
and quiet neighborhood.
ASKING $54,1100

• FLATWOODS RD~ ~lthome - will room
addiUons shingle roof, new parma..phyne
windows, electric heat pump, TPC W11Br
Home looUdes 2 bedrooms, fireplace, attiC
space, above ground pool, 2 car ga,age
carport &amp; deck. Good location. home In V1!fY
nice shape.
ASKING 544;900.00

LETART· SR. 338 vacant trailer lot wit)
saptlc. Tuppera Plains· Chester Wllllt'
available, CUII8ntly ~ the road.
, '
ASI(ING ta,ooo.po .

..'
I

crop land &amp; pasture 6 wooded. Close to Holzer. All
utilities avaiable.

nn ATTENTION! PRICE REDUCED to 59,900,

will

purchase a lovely 3 bedroom ranch wt full basement, 2
car garage. Also 2nd home which was remOOeled . This
can be great Income property. Located In town. Quick
Solo Needed.

&gt;

Bronch Office · 446-a!U
23 Locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

1t12 RIO GRANDE HOME. $40,000.00 tor tho 3 bedrm,
2 bath 1 1/2 story, full basem ent home. Gas and wood

I
can
one urVt and rent the
other.
to schools. shopping &amp;churehes. Call for
full information and an appointment. Vl Smith 388·
8826.

1114S LOOKING FOR A BUSINESS? then look no
farther. this 4000 sQuare n. commercial bldg. with three

1147. NEW USTINCl - KING SI2E FAMILY HOME or

heat, village water &amp;sewage. Patio &amp; 2 car garage. Also
1973 Champion mobile home &amp; lot $20.000.00 Both
$56,000. Owner wants oftor.

phase electric can be used lor just about an~ business
you'd like and also a 3 bedroom 2 1/2 bath white brick
home all on 4 acres and close to Gallipolis. call Wilma
today tor more info.

1814 PRICED RIGHT FOR YOIJ, this 4 bedroom home
has lots of space and newly remolded with new siding,
furnace and roof. ckln'l heSitate to own your own hOrne call
us bday and take a peek .

11311. APAR111ENT BLDG. · 7 unns. Well maintained
&amp; choice location overlooking the Ohio River.

·

1838 VACANT FARMLAND WITH A 4 bedroom

1174. RANCH HOME wl1h full basement. app. 1710

acres at $60,000.00

" IH-4 NOTICE: ONLV 2 LOTS AVAILABLE IN
LAKEVIEW ESTATE. BUY NOW TO BUILD YOUR
MASTERPIECE IN THIS OUTSTANDING
NEIGHBORHOOD. 5 ACRES MIL ALSO 2.348 ACRES
MIL. CLOSE TO SHOPPING AND HOLZER
HOSPITAL AU. LOTS SUBJECT TO AESTAICTIVE
COVENANTS.

farmhouse and 2 outbuildings in the Ewington area, SO
·

1850 OWNER ANXIOUS TO MAKE A SELL OR
TRADE on this 3 bedroom 2 story home with full
basement and 2 ca r garage and a 4 room garage
apartment for extra income in tne Alban&gt;t area.

LA , OR kit. tam . rm .. enclosed porch, 3 building. Sates
onice, extra building, fenced . ~lacktop" drive &amp; patto.

Great Bu1 $44.500

H45. SA 1150 - Conven1ent to the Freeway, 3
bedrms ., ranch w/new kil. &amp; bath lg. family rm .
wlwoodbuming fireplace . On acre m/1. Only $45.500.
388·8826

1t53 GRANOVIEW ESTATES SECLUSION, Lovelj iroed
lOt for lots ol privacy this 3·4 bedroom b•·level. must see to
appreciate. call now tor a vieW.

1958 FOR THE CAMPER IIINOED, this·22 n. camper on
lol is priced to sen so call us today and get ready for the
lovely n1ghts of camping and only $5,500.00.

ltti:J. LARClE STEEL BUILDING W/15.750sq. n. M/1..
bath, snack bar, loading, dock fenced, 6 ac. WL, Well
....:ater, county water available. Propane gas heater! .
ORner may tease w/optlon to purchase . Can use.as a.
trucking terminal. storage lOckers . boat storage. or
may ~ :l b11m dance hall. Tl'lls can be a real money
makt:l.

~:.~ " ~-

~~ . ~.\:' I

" ..

ll

-

•r

1M4 SPACIOUS HOME DOWN RIVER tO AMS, to
enjoy. 4 bedroom!. 1 1/2 baths, equipped kitchen with
beautiful cabinets, woodbum1ng fireplace. e~rtra room
for a hobby garage. 2 acres m/1, city schools. This Is
an affordable $73.500.
ltfl7 BEAUTIFUL FARiriLAND. with a lovely • bedroom
bHevel on 100 acres with pasture land, woods and tillable
acreage, owner wants sold, you need to see this one.

l t f t ROAM ON THIS RETREAT.
Acreage,
Acreage , 123 in auto bulla that aream nome on and
hunt on the rest or use tor farmland . Priced at

SS8.500.00.

1t3V COUNTRY GENTLEMAN'.$ OELIClHT, 3 room log
a.bin w~h 25 acres on Morgan center Road $38,000.00

lt31 NO REASONABLE OFFER WILL BE TURNEO
DOWN, owner5 want's this home off his books now, don't

pass up 1~1! OPPMUMY to own YOU' own home at a good

buy on this 4 bedroom full basement. fireplace. lots ol
extra closet space and in a·vert nice area close to town ,
call Wilma WiUiamson 441..()632 for more lnfonnation.

t

fD

.....

.•

lt73 OWNER WANTS THIS SOLO TODAY SO
CALL AHO TAKE A LOOK. this lowrty 1993 mobile
hOme on 1rz acre lot ctose to the convenience of town
shopping. also haS a 2 car garage .

1148 UNIQUE BEAUTY • The remarl&lt;abkf spacious home

YIJ

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTlRE USTINGS
PICK UP THE FREE QUALITY HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS,
RETAIL SfORES, SUPERMARKETS, r,IOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS.

IMO FOIJR BEAUTIFUL ROWNCl. LOTS on White
Rd. aU utilities available. 2 1/2 Ac. m/1 each make your
choice now! Build your dream home in the country and
have everlas~ng comlort

lt11. LARGE HOllE IN VINTON · 5 bedrm . 2 stories

__

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCfi TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
14100-8114-1066

1 112 story home. oaraoe &amp; outbuildings. 5 acres all
lanced. Remodeled w/IOvety kitchen cabinets, tg. LA &amp;
OR, new heat pump &amp;good roor.

lt55. HOME W/2 UNITS one rents lor $275. mo .. can

HO!oiE FOR SALE • 3 bedrooms, batn, Hving room ,
family room, kitchen. fenced in back yard ..PRICED AT
$45,000.00
.
_.............. -...
...._
VACANT LAND • Approximately 10 acres located on
BOb McCormick Rd. Call lor more Information.
"

nee COUNTRY NOME/ClREEN TWP. • 3 bedrooms,

LR, DR kit. fam . rm ., enclosed porch.·3 building. Sales
office, extra building, fenced, blacktop drive &amp; patio.
Great Buy s-44.500

repair. Call VLS 388·8826.

.•

use "this super nice 5 bedrm. for PRIVATE HOME
CARE . 3 baths. 3 ac. mil. Virginia L Smith 388-8826.

lt43. HOME &amp; INVESTMENT • Can be bought
together. New 3 bearm. ranch home w/large rms..
White brick front , charm ing LR. din. rm .. large rms .
throughout . loads ol oak cabinets In kit., 2 car garage,
~ ac. MIL. wlhome.

lt11. LARClE HOME IN VINTON c5 bednn .. 2 stones

living space, gas heal, cent . at'r, 2 fireplaces, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths . 2car detached garage, 30lol16 shed,
2 small outbuildings, small rrame home with 2 BA and t
bath. 2 homes and buildings situate don 5 acres more
or less priced in the $70's.

HOME ON RACCOON CREEK FOR SALE· 2
bedrooms, a bath, 2 decks, new roof. electric heat, 1 112
acres, more or less. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.
HOME FOR SALE· 3 bedroom home, hardwood floors,
ceiling fans, lire place with insert 20 x 24 garago and
much more. City schools. CALL TODAY
HOUSE, 8 ACRES MORE OR LESS, located In
Lawrence Co .. 2 bedrooms, living room, dining room,
kitchen. bath. lg . · garage 24x40. CALl. F.OR
APPOINTMENTIII

'

Two story home, full basement and garage has a great
deal to ol'fer. Designed tor great living. First floor has
formaJ entry with open stairway, formal living room with
fireplace, formal dining room, Cherry cabinets lino the
wall of the extra large kitchen. Breakfast room anct
powder room. Second floor offers four bedrooms and
bath. Bedrooms are king size, carpet over hardwood
floors. bath has all new fh&lt;lures and Love Tub.
Basement has huge family room w/fireplace, bedroom,
exercise area, laundry room ana storage room. This
home Is of superb quality as the plumbing has been
replaced . All riew all covering, beautiful new carpet
throughout. new windows installed . Spacidus kitchen
with cherry cabinets, island for Jeni'I-Air range. Only
privata showing will deckfe the vaJue Is here.

be revert8(1 to one large home. This home is In good

Now Whllporo: liOOO fiii'IO'III
_... .............. 114-112-

POMEROY·
Rd. •
contemporary home, 1+ yrs. old Includes,
bedrooms, 2 112 baths. dOuble g1aas
windows, carpet, heat pump CIA C&amp;$
electric, TPC . water, patio, deck, Tv
antenna,
dishwasher,
refrigerator,
microwave, range &amp; hood, ~replace, septic
tank. bar &amp; 2 car garage with door openera
on 1+ acre. Very Nicel
ASKING $110,000

...-....-. --;:

Allen C. Wood, Reallor/Broker-446·4523
Ken Morgan, Reallor/Broker-446·0971
Mose Canterbury, Reallor-446-3408
Jeanette Moore, Realtor- 256·1745
Tim Watson, Realtor-446·2027

Hood~·' Col
~ou1 Nov. a 'n

LONG BOTTOM· Post
nice 1 floor frame home
bedrooms, 1 bath, beautiful river frontage,
carpeting throughout, range &amp; hood, TV
antenna, lull basement with garage and 1/2
beth, F.A. B. G heat, Monogahella elec:. and
TPC water.
_ _ _........ASKING ~.000

........ 121110, t.ntwaocl
2 lr J oono- Homo In Tho
blnlll oobl-. ,.. tflj~··
In Utcll
CGuntr,
Ollie Rood, lll!loii.11W71-•n

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

446-1066

~Wl~-~th~~3:«b~~~~s~

two ~ t droom h04IM 1ar

. .h Oflllon to

~
--

446-3644

1873. OLD PLANTATION HOME · Built-In 1100's
waning to be restored. U!rge bam &amp; shed. I 17 N:. Mil.

Wood Realty, Inc.
-

m
----~
. as

CAlL VIACliNIAL. SMITH 446·6806 or 388·6826

Real Estate General

''"'
4:pM ,,, 114-2"-- -

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE INC •

ELEGAHT ALL BRICK BEAUTY

~Or-Ofllr,

. 1WDood
Quia

tt'a great! Located minutes from town ,
spacious four bedroom home with fireplace,
three baths. two car garage. pool and much
more. You must see it Call tor an appointrnen~
$96,000
1400

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

For Ronl: I Borlroo111 Houoe """" ..hln ~- .... $300/llo. ""'" Dopaolt, ~ Point ........ 1044'1af7a
...........1101.

=~--111,000,

INVESTMENT PROPERTY IN TOWN Three
unit rental house brings in great 1ncome.
Located on 2nd Avenue. Good rental history.
Good condition. You make an Initial investment
and let the rent take care of the payments.
Priced at $49.900 .
1233 ·

WILMA WILliAMSON, REALTOR ......... 441-G632
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR................... 446-1897
LYNDA FRA~, REALTOR .................. 446-6806

-····-·.....
-·----·-

Saconct A -

L:;.*':.""F.!.~ ~

~:.:..."''!.'!CIIIIIOII

Henry E.

.._~-A
- Clolll
11M AI: 140 range. Nfrlier*w', dills ·adlll,
llpallo, 114- d' ; r nllr . . . , a .,_,

TEll I P.ll.

Look for the
latest edition of
the Gallia &amp;
Meigs County
Quality Homes
Guide, or give us
a call and we'll
mail one to you.

Owens

Coming

tnllor laC ....

For ,.Ill 2 -

Windows,
Stanely Doors.

Real Estate General

42 Mobile Homaa
for Rant

32 Mobile Homaa
for Sale

PRICED AEDUCEO Owner Relocated Out of
Statal Very attractive ranch style home on a
very peaceful and quiet 1.2 acre, m/1, lot. "Neat
as a pin". 3 bedroom home has 2 full baths ,
large living room. dining area, attractive oak
kitchen with eat·in bar. and den or library.
Outside enjoyment al Its finest with Iota of
usable yard . garden space. 2 patios and
beautiful flowers and landscaping. Large 2 car
garage with worl&lt;shop area . Energy effiCient
heat pump/CA. Owner anxious to sell. Call for
an appointment
1232

with vk)w of the county. Italian tile toyer, cathedral ceiling
with balcony, 3 BR, 2 1/2 baths, living room with
WOQdbllrjng ftrepiace. oqulp. kftc:hen, bAI!Ikfasl room has
a lg. window, stereo speakers throughout . brass light
fixtures and much mort. 2 car attached garage. attic
stot'age, 2 acres mn. This house Is maintenance free ol

l

beSt quality. Make your lll&gt;t&gt;Ointment and see n you tloill
agroe .

stotage 210 &amp; 220 elect. -

sewer. ' cement tO load

1

a unload in front. 30l80

, building appro•. 3900 sq. ft. btocl&lt; &amp; ~ome. $45,000.

I

�... .-. '" .
,

'*·'"'

•· v-.,.· , (.-· ••• · - .J

I

~· ~

•

• •••

....

...

.... . .

.. ..

~·

... . .. .. .......... "'
;•

~

..

Tlmes-Sentinel

54 Miscellaneous

54 MIIC811aneoua

Merchandl• ·

-.IIG,

Reglno llwdoood
poo lnd ....
lll2.z1117.

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

...rchandl•

!low......,.
114-

55

wv

November

-

1\lo ...... -

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV •

'- l

DAILY d.~
p~

PUIILII

81 Farm Equipment

·Building

~~--

.

WOII
lA II

...... In

.. lltlgllltmorv

AuloParta &amp;
AcCIIIDi'IN

R I P AMI
Motorcyclu

74

!a,alo, a....- 4 WhHI
Drl¥1,1100, 114-445-1110.

IIIII 414 ._._ 4o

1. . -

1\lo ' ' - with . . - . .... 14",

. . . . bath, lf4.111.2·23W.

56

''

Pets for Sale

, I •'

:~+

11114.
-· -

c uR c H H
It

1117 Quod -

OFFICE 992-2886
Farm Suppl ies
&amp; Livestock
W.C RaiWIIIIIr Pu1oe. I - .
1300 Eacll, 114 441-3113•
441-t:MI.
Aqutr1um Catfloh 14 lnchto
LOng $25, 114 441 MM.

Or'"'"

61 Fann Equipment ·

Real Estate General

205 Nonh Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

LOOKING
FOR
CITY
PROPERTY to build a new office
or start a new business. Also
would be ideal for residential. 4
lots, can be bought together or
SOLD separately. Give us a call
for more details.

GREEN TOWNSHIP
Lovely 3 bedroom, 2 baths. L.A.
features lg. bow window, modem
kitchen &amp; dining, area, pool, gas
heal.
Excellent neighborhood.

NEW LISTING - INCOME
PROPRTY Duplex,
excellent area . Call lor
more details.

Only $70,000.

ST. AT. 588 - Can be sold on
Land contract 2.33 acres +1·. All
wooded. some lg. limber. Green
Twp. Only 5 miles from town.
50
ACRES +/·. Green
Elementary. Some good ·building
sites.

.•

I

1taT_ _ _

vA D

cc

............Ol

5

'

FARII147 ACAES 11/L.
Nice remodeled &amp; redecorated fann home wtlh oentra1 air
heat, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, new vin)1 oovaredThlt~1!181'&gt;el
windows. new carpet. vin)1 sidng, &amp; new shing"-1
of paslure land, woods, &amp; tillable land. All minerals
goes with lhe l n. Be lhe first to see this beautiftJ
home and land.

d~":O:"= =:'~

E_Pr-1 lr-c-jl"!'s. ,Llr-tl

1-:..,...1
_A
...... ........_._...._....___.,...,.....# to face with some unsavory .
~

looking characters. Trying no·
• to appear scared I sat down tc
7
8
t' order something. I relaxedwher
'
'
:: I noticed that they had all or·
,......~~~~----, dered-- • ·- ·---- -. ·

.• S P 0 G I
•'

s

..-~~~-r--r-,..--tl e

RACINE· SA 124- Wait till you see this 3 bedroom home
with beautiful hardwood floors in living room, a detijched 2
car garage with a one bedroom apartment over the garage
all sitting on approx. 5 acres.
$65,000

111111111.1

SYRACUSE· River View· This 1994 Fleming 14x56 has 2
bedrooms, one bath, garden tub, skylight, cathedral ceiling
In LA. equipped kitchen, patio, and a nice lot.
$29,900

IT'S HALF PAST FALL
Winter Is jult arotn1 lhe comer (aecordlng to ttie calenderll
time to move to a oonvenlent city location. Yoo stiU
to own lhia newly llatad 3 bedroom home In city of ~~=:I
It has a LMng !loom. Dining Room with a cozy. ft
Famly or sawing or oi111ng room. Don't be stranded
country, be lhe lim to call for an 8IJI)Ofntment to see
home.
~~

- - I P.ll. Alii l'or • •

Complete ·the chu:kle quotld
by filling In the missing words
~,........,_._......,_.__,.,__,_ you develop from lltp No. 3 below.

Real Estate Generar

100 Good

=:~~~,~=

. 'N A L
'..
NEW LISTING - LOVELY
BRICK HOME sitting on 2
acres, more or less. Private
and secluded, 4 BAs, 2
baths, formal entry and din·
ing, large kitchen, full
·
basement.

104-111ICintlll 21111 ....... 4

-.11,11111, ... .,...• .an.
-

~

See Answer to Scram-Lets on Page D-'!_-

-

72 Truckl for Sail

POMEROY· Mulberry Heights· A nice 4 bedroom 1 1/2 story
home with lull basement. breezeway and one car garage.
Comes with equipped kitchen, heat p4mp, CA, and a large
lot.
ONLY $57,500.

CLAUDE DANELS, Aeeftor· Ph. 38H612
KENNETH AIISBART, REALTOR, PH. 245-5855
WILUS LJADINOHAII, BROKER

1N7 17 11ll'oo4 ..II(IIJII!w,
Wllh CUddy Cabin, ...., ......
. . , _ Otftooftl, With Cillo
.........
Vwol Good
dMion, an. Cor&gt;-

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

euoo. .,......

Real Estate General

MIDDLEPORT· N. 4th· A 2 story frame home wl,lh 4
!&gt;edrooms, 2 baths, some remodeling already done.·70x130
lot. J!,JST 13,000
NOW $10,000

~L-'ty,

1fJ

446-7101 or 1-800-585-710
(jive rus .9l. Ca{L ..

11473. BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY CAPE COD
· offers 63.75 acres, mn, mostly pasture,
tobacco base, 40x60 bam, 22x44 block milk
house. 750' road frontage for posslbl~ bldg.

11452· RIO GRANDE· t 112 story brick
hOrne offers 4 BR, 1 112 baths, LA, FA, DR,
lull finished basement, attached garage.Call
for more details.

~
Ctotiloe,N,IMoltd,·4
"'
... :M•••U.
. . ....,..... a1111l

DEBBIE DRIVE-EVERYONE SHOULD
OWN A NEW HOME AT LEAST ONCE.
This 2 story beauty features 3 or 4 br's,' 2
baths. beamed ceilings in the LA &amp; family nn.
cherry cabinets in kitchen, 6 iri. ooter walls &amp;
mucn more. Fantastic view.

~~es.

MIDDLEPORT· Oliver Slreat- A one story home with 2·3
bedrooms, one bath, space heaters, vinyl siding, and
carport. REDUCED $16,1100
WAS $21,000
HYSELL RUN ROAD- A spacious ranch home with free gas
sming on approx. 11 acres. Home haa a bedroom &amp; 1 112
baths. Also there ·is a garage and above ground swimming
pool.
$11,500
ROY JONES ROAD- Syracuse· Approx. 1/2 acre of
. and a 12x60 Windsor with 2 bedrOoms, bedroom addition.
living room. An equipped kitchen,
J~~~12,000

COURT STREET RESIDENCE· Older home
has 2 aep. units or could be converted back
10 1 family dwelling. Faces dty perk.

-lo10T....._ _
1111.
PW,PI,.-,
,

:=:.-. ............

ONE AND HAVE THE INCOME .
THREE MORE.. each unit has 2
apartments. Facing city park with all the
convanlences of in town living.

1461· EXCELLENT LOCATION FOR A DAIRY BAR BUSINESS. All equipment

Real Estate General

stays. Building Is brick and has approx. 624 sq. fl., 3 half baths. Electric.heal, cent air,
dty water. CALL FOR INDEPTH DETAILS.

OWNERS LOWERED PRICE
,900
Remodeled 1 1/2 story horne consisting. of 3
bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, living room , dining
room kitchen and mora. over 41 acres, bam
and iann pond. Nice quiet place to live, call
today for an appointmanU
1612

11411-LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN PEjiCE
AND QUIET·This could be 11. 49.66 acres,
Andrews Rd, 8 year-old home with 3 BAs, 2
1/2 baths, LR, DR, FA, heat pump, 2 car
garage plus 24x48 delachad garage.

.

LOCATED NEXT TO
Affordable
at $35,000. 1 112 story
wilh vinyl siding.
Uving room, dining room, kitchen, 3 bedrooms,
1 112 baths. 2 car garage.
1720

··..,.,-_

BLAZER ROAD- Ranch horne, 3 BRa, 1 112
baths, LA, kitchen, 16x28 garage. River
Valley school dlatrfct.

LOOKING fOR A COMMERCIAL LOn • Just off the main

street. You really need to clleck this one out. Located on 3rd
Str991, Middleport.

t405- NEED A NEW OFFICE + A RENTAL
APARTMENT? 250 Sec. Ave. Nice olftce
downstairs and apartment and storage up.
Convenient to banlul and shopping.
.

$10,000

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY· A 3 car garage now being
used as a used car lot. Could be mechanics garage.
Welders· eleo. &amp; gas and air CQUfP,essor. Has 14x65 !jolly
Park mobile home also. With liloblle home $11iO,OOO
Without mobile hclme $111,000
MIDDLEPORT· S. Third· A 2 story home that has 3
bedrooms, 1 1/3 baths, part basement, and storage building
on a 661&lt;90 lo!, Home has had a tot of remodeling done to H.
Make your appoontment lo see.
$35,000

33 ACRES. MIL corner of SR 325 and
Woods Mill Roa~. recreetlonal land only
$16.500.
ATTENTION
DEVELOPERS AND
INVESTORS...EXTRA NICE pEICE OF
PROPERTY
LOCATED
NEAR
PORTER ... Large lake with lalul front sites,
mobile home on property· at present time,
county water, entire tract cQnslsts of 77
acres, mil.

'

in the family rm., Immaculate kitchen, Breakfast rm. with a
Also an all purpose rm. New carpet through-out, ceramic tile
the kltt:he1n. new hardwood floors in the dining rm., breakfast rm. and
Heat:
Heat Pump w/CA., also a whole house fan. Partial
ltntgh~ld basement w/shower bath and closet storage. New hot water
12.12 Acres M/L w/ a beautiful treed yard (2.3 Varieties) also and
Reserve for wild animals. Stocked pond for the sportsman .
a wonderful new
of
in this suburban paradise. Call for
information and nri,•ate

1422· OLD CHEVY.OLDS BUILDING. 420'
front on Second Avenue and 62' frontage on

. Grape.
~~,,11UU

Just minutes from
' used lor
property now. 3 BRa,
FA. kftchan, DR, gas heat.

64 ACRES. mil, Corner of Woods Mill and
1SA 554, has a really rilce homesite old bam,
· lots of privacy yet close to school and oller

==c-·

HQI~EJliiEC:RE.lTIC)N/ll.ANNDDScemiCAicres surround this charmirlo

r

TURNER, Broker.......................... m-58112
BRENDA JEFFERS........,............................892•3058
JERRY SPRAOLING .............,............ (304) 882-3488
OFFICE ..... :••, ....;.......................................... 892·2886

.

REDUCED $$$- ROOMY MODERN 4 BR
HOME· This one has plenty ot extra space. 4+
acres, grassed. County water. well &amp; spring.
36'x70' barn . EKtra· mobile home hookup . ·
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
1705

LOOKING FOR A UTTLE ACREAGE? Then
consider these 3 112 acres more or less.
Owner asking $7,000.
1716
FOURTEEN PLUS ACRES! Lots of ctear&amp;d &amp;
wooded land. Road frontage, mineral rights
included . Coonty water available.
t696

LOTS! TWO 4 acre tracts or owner would sale
one tract being approx. 8 acres . County water
available. Frontage along SA 325, Rio Grande
area!
1714

LOOK THIS ONE OVER! A very nice home
built In 1977. Full two story &amp; 2 full baths. A
. nice set1fng with a yard to enJoy. Most of the
land Is tillable and will raise good crops . Has a
tobaccO base and timber lot. Should be a good
hunting area. as wall a~ Wayne National Forest
owns lots of land close by. County water for
house and a strong stream tor fann. Call today
for a showing.
1710.

9
VIEW! One story frame
home consisting of 3 bedrooms, living room,
dining room, kitchen , bath . Storage building .
Good hunting area! Call today tor an
appointmentt 40's.
1718

·---~~--------~

MIDDLEPORT· Corner of S. nird and Gener·aalli~:::~~[;
reaifyJaroeJJviJ!Q room 2·3 bedrooms. newer wi
s~ing, several rooriis ifeslilydrywallea: t:arge lot-- Sltt,soo-H

DOmE

TWO HOUSES! TWO LOTS! Situated in
Gallipolis. Live in one &amp; rent the other. (1) 2
story horne wlalum exterior, 4 BR, 2 BA, large
rooms, over 2.000 sq. ft. (2) 1 BR home. .,Call
for information.
ti'o9

OVER 83 ACRES. Wooded land. Would
ideal hunting ground. Call today! IZl,:KJt:I.IIU.
WESTVACO

Don't pass up this brick! Located at SA 586 .
1.5 story horne w/4 BA , 2 BA, LA, kitchen,
large front pon:h. City schools! Convenient to
downtown Gillipolis.
t712

LANGSVILLE· A 1 1/2 story frame home with 4 bedrooms,
living room, family room with flreplace, above ground pool,
large rear deck and newer front porch floor, some newer
Carpet. .
.
$28,1100

LANGSVILLE· Crouser Road· A nice 3 bedroom ranch
style home with heal pump, attached one car garage, and
one car detached' garage, above ground pool and storage
building on nice laying lot.
ONLY $45,000

SEmNG ALL ALONE! OWNER WANTS TO
SELl. NOWI MAKE HER AN OFFER! 4 BR,
1 5 s'iory home which has been remodeled. 2
BA, 1 car detached garage. concrete driveway.
20+ acres.
1622

227 LARIAT DRIVEl Exceptional 2,200 sq. ft.
ranch, vinyl siding. beeutitul view. Large living
room and family room each with a fireplace. 3
bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths. Lots of cabinets in
kttcllen, large dining area. Super locatior1 ctoee
to hospital Md shOpping.
1715

activities.
$31 500 84 ecret, Morgan Two., vacant
lana. Possible fanning land or recreational 11401- FOUR LOTS- 4 BA hOme, reduced EXECUTIVE BUILDING LOTS. 5 mlnut..
to $44,000, 2 baths, LR, DR, full basement. from Holzer, ailS acres or more.
land.
gas heaVcent. air. Corner lots ..

MIDDLEPORT· Walnut Street· A large 4·5 bedroom home
with 2 112 baths, bilsemenl and a one car garage. This
home comes with 2'101s. fenced back yard and 4 porches,
and some ~ardwood floors.
• . . $47,OQC!

.,

t

1447· OAK HILL· former clothing
store ... $27,900, corner lot. Call for more
lnfomlaljon.

$16,800 47 acres, mil, Harrison Twp, Elliott
Road.

133 MIL VACANT ACREAGE· wooded land, .
super hunting land. Full of wildllfe1
WESTYACO
NOT RESTRICTED FDA MOBILE HOliES!
1.207 acre lot. County water available. Paved
road frontage. Call today!
1695
REDUCED PRICE ON THIS TRACT OF
LANDI $$$-1 o Acresl Coonty water available,
city schOOls. Nice wooded setting. Make an
offer!
1634· ·

!~~~~~lnvning foyer entry, formal livtng rm. &amp; d1nmg rm. Woodburn1ng

1419 • JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD- Addlaon
Twp, 386 acre fann, 3 ponds, lobaooo ~.
44x1 00 barn with concrete floors. May
oonslder spl~. (578)

1453- OHIO RIVER PROPERTY· lOcated at
end of While Avenue off Gartleld. Several
lots $20,000.

.· '

•JSI:A~ITYfor the Professional or Executive. Comfortable 3 bedrms., 31/2
Extra large master bedrm . ~~th bath, v~n~ty. dressing area. &amp;

1428- CHERRY DRIVE·]ust at the edge of

city water, good Investment property.

-·

~CE~IONALLY SMART A~ BRICK RANCH WITH GRACE &amp;

,.

town, 2 BAs, 1 beth, LA, ldtchen. Gas heat,

-· .•

NEW LISTING! MOBILE HOME· UNI)ER
$10,000 Bayview 14'x70' with 21' long
expando. 3 bedrooms. 1 112 baths, living room,
dining room. kitchen. FA electric
tumace/central ac. Washer. dryer &amp; Iron! porch
Included in sale!
1723

. Real Esteta General

11427· EXTRA NICE HOME . ST. AT. 7
SOUTH· 3 BAs, LA. FA, dining area, full
~men!, garage. Call today!

liiiNERSVILLE· Approx. 3 aorea with a 2 llory home with
equipped k~chen, newer roof, double front porch, washer
.·and dryer.
$21,1100

Inc.

-.olio....,. . . . . -

RUTLAND· A recently remodeled home with newer vinyl
siding, newer roof. and textured walls. Has 2 bedrooms. and
one bath with attic space that could be used for more room.
Comes with equipped kitchen and washer and dryer.
'
REDUCED $28,000

~ui~li1ng.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Russell D. Wood, Broker............................... :.446-4618
Phyllis Miller...........................256-1136 Martha Smith ................. 379-2651
J. Merrill Carter ...................... 379-2184 Cathy Wray .................... 446-4255
Tammie·Dewltt ....................... 245-0022 Cindy Drongowski ........ 245·9697
Judy Dewltt ............................ 441·0262 Cheryl Lemley ...,............ 742·3171
Ruth Barr. ............................... 446-0722

MIDDLEPORT· Hudson Street· A very neat 2 bedroom
home with aluminum siding and detached garage. Kitchen
comes.equipped. Call for an appointment
$25,000

POMEROY· Laurel Clltl Road· Have you always wanted a
m1ni tarm? Wall, here It Is. approx. 17.34 acre farm with
1979 Holly f"ark 14x70 mobile home with 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2
baths and ·Barn.
$45,000

Home
llnprcwementa

1\lo- o f - ' - wll tM

"" JacM~, tz~, '"'"

8t

Rearrange the 6 scrambled
• . worCts below to make 6
sfmple words. Print leHers of
t(lch In lb line of squores.

114-W-

WhMe lll2.z1117.

73 Yanl &amp;4 WD'I

Eclltecl by ClAY I. POLLAN - - - - - -

=--m=--.. ---..
Tlno . . - .I!¥Jng -

November 20, 1994

USTING, 1 YR OLD LoG HOME • Sports
2700 sq. ft. or living area; solid wood walls.
&amp; ceilings; extra large rooms; wrap-around
basement; attached garage' &amp; 2 barns,
_-.-~,- ~''- - · gage on a sprawling 4.2 acre tract.

500 ACRES LOCATED ON US 35· Between RiQ
Grande &amp; Centerville approx. 75 ac cropland &amp; the
balance In woods and brushy pasture; very nice 1 112
story brick home wllh 4 br's &amp; a lull basement: some
buildings, $250,000.

PERFECT FOR EXPANDING FAMILY· 1.6 Acres +/·,
3 BR, 1 1/2 bath, full basement, 24x30 detached
garage wlln 10 ft. doors •. Great for large trucks. Low
maintenance vinyl siding. Include'- an above-ground
pool. This Is a must·see. FHA apprOved.
,

Am., Inviting kitchen, 3 bedtTns on the first floor.
1110111111,,,u Ft.
~1 em;entflnjshed 2 11arge rms., 1/2 bath, utility area closets. Enclosed
"'"'''"· Pool wlbath house, party house overlooking a stocked pond. 2 car
1an1111111, 21 acres more or less. The home setting is back from road for
ww11..,y. oWner. may sell on tetTns to a qualified buyer. Reduced For Quick

home at1021
room dlnng 'room, kitchen, 2 car garage.
carpfung &amp; more. Don't delay call today! 40's.
I
·
1717
LOOK $15,000 or make an offer. VInyl siding
home oonalsting of 2 bedrooms. living room,
belh,ldlohen· Nice front porch. Lev.!

tawnHea

'

:·

FRENCH HISTOIW MAIIKERI THIS IS ONE
SECURITY IS OWNING YOUR OWN HOIIEI
OF THREE TO CHOOSE FROM. Large
ideally located close 10 Gallipolis. 712 SA 588.
beautiful homes that overtool&lt; the city park with
Nice sized lot. Large living room wlnewer
a view ot lhe Ohio River. Renovate to suit your
carpeting newer roof, alum. siding, eat m own taste! Can today of yoor own pfivate tour
kltdlen. WILL CONSIDER LAND CONTRACT ' and mont detalfsl
TO QUALIFIED BUYER! CALL FOR MORE
DETAILS!·
1713
QUIET SEmNG FOR THAT NEW HOME!
Nice 'building tot approKimately 100'x300'.
County- a'l8ilabte. $7•000 ·00
Hal
COMIIERCIALII IWLTIPLE USE GALORE!
91-bualnas'sl listing too '· ACREAGE· 12 ptU. acresl ROlla frontage
Information.
In this edt Call for~e
county water evaffabla. Nice homesite. t83S'
SIMPLY BEAUTIFUL! Really nice 10+ acies
(correct amount of acreage to be detennfned
by survey), pond and 1992 14'x70' Mansion
mobile
consists of 3 'Jedrooms &amp; 2
baths.
I
16811

•

Low m.tntanan~ home {braJid new~ One
at~ ranch, 3 large bedrooms. dining room,
hing room, kitChen. cathedra.! ceiling. 2 balhs
with skylights. over 1 acre lawn. Electric
~·

I

-

...... '·

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•.•

-~ ·

..

·•·

-..,;,

~.,

••.. •

···-""·•·~'"- "'" ' - ~ ~·."~ · ~ - ··•·

• • • .,-• ..-.!!:1'"":-'·

r•~ r ~··•·•~ ~

. ... ,.·~v-T-.+.;...·~;".

··•-

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•-

•

• •'

nmeS:-Sentinel

Greg Smith Says: .

No need to buy out oftown.
We Will Match Any Advertised Price.
On New '95" Buicks &amp; Pontiacs.

Super Lotto:
8-21-25-26-31-45
Kicker:

1-6-4-9-4-4
PICkJ:
4-4-7

Pick 4:
4-9-1-3

Page4

entine

Shop At Home For Friendly Local Service
Vol. 45, NO. 141
Copyright 1994

you may win a $5 prize from the Ohio VaHey
Publishing Co. Leave your name,. addrea and
telephone number with your card or letter. No
telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
entries should be turned In to the newsraper
ontce by 4 p.m. each Wednesday.ln case o a Ue, ·
the winner will be chosen by lottery. Next week,
a Gallla County farm wiD be featured by the
Gallla Soli and Water Conservation DlstricL

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery

farm, featured by the Meigs Soli and Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
Meigs County. lndlvlduab wishing to participate In the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm'• owner. Just mall, or drop olr your
guess to the Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., GaDipoiiB, Ohio, 45631, or The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, and

Americans have..c;,ontlnued rrom o-1
value since the nies do not ny
around much in space. Make sure
dead flies are cleaned up, as secondary infestations of carpet or
larder beetles and rodents may

1910 lUlCK REGAL
LIMITED

1991 FOlD CROWN
VICTO-IA

1992 FORD CROWN
VICTORIA

Unbeliewbly Low 28,000
actual miles. Fully equipped.
95 Regal Trade-in.
CHECKITOUTI

Another very clean local
trade. Only 42,000 low miles.
Ruby Red paint, power seat,
windows, tilt, cruise, Landau
roof. Quality Condition

Local 1 owner, shows TLC.
Power everything. 37,000 low
miles. White with Ruby Red
cloth trim.

JOINS STAFF • Barlban
Wolford has Joined the stair of
Woodland Centers, Inc. as
total quality Improvement
coordinator. She bas a masters degree In agency counselIng from the University or
Daytrn, and 15 yean experience In C.e mental and bebav·
loral health fteld. She Is the
former deputy director or the
Gallla-Jack.son-Melgs Board
or Alcohol, Drug Addiction
and Mental Health SerVIces.

1992
Local 1 owner: 26,000 actu!ll
low miles. 4.3 V-6. STD shift.
cassette, sliding back glass.
bed liner. Sharp Black finish.

Auto, A/C; Tilt, Cruise,
engines, Rear defog.
'

'

~!wAs...
There's a great way to supplement
your group medical policy to cover
extra hospital expenses.

$

"People expect me to speak
perfect English," Gomez said.
Many either talk too fast or wltb
too much slang, he added.
"Sometimes If they talk slowly .
it makes me feel smpid."

V-6

.

10,990

are serving as
Gomez's bost family, sai~ their
guest's English bas improved
draljulticall y.
"We found out Americans·· • . EASTFJRN EXCHANGE - Eastem High School bas among Its student population a resident
of Spain until June. Jorge Gomez, a native of Madrid, bas adapted weD·to rurlll Appalachian Ufe,
don't listen to him," HID added.
said Ron HIU, beacJ of the host CamBy. Above, from left, are 15-year-old Daniel Otto, 16-year-old
The Hills consider Jorge as
Eric Hill, .Joyce HID, Ron Hill, liS-year-old Micah Otto and 16-year-old Jorge Gomez• .
anolher son in 1heir family . which already bas three other
sons about 1he ~age.
·
brother and parents. Beyond the
again to study until alfout 9
goings-on less, she added.
"We proceeded from the
language bai'Jier, daily routines
p.m., when tbe family sits down
Schools in tile different counpremise that kids are kids everyand custoDII 'differ between the
for a light dinner.
tries are much the same countries, he,added.
where," Hill sa\d. "It's awful
· "Teenagers in Spain are a lot
except after eighth grade stu·
Waking early in the morning
bard to get a multicultural expefreer," Mrs. Hill said, adding tile
dents must take a test and lhen
rience here in Meigs County."
to catch a bus for school,
difference between living in a
either go on to college preparaAt fust, Gomez said be was
Gomez returijs home for a lunch
city and country accounts for the
tory courses or a trade school,
· afraid of being so far away from
and then sometimes a siesta
free time. But, parents also conGomez said.
his family of three sisters, a
about 2:30 p.m. Then be leaves
trol their children's time and
(Continued on Page 3)

AVENUE
Compare

.

At...

M2s..i"'-

~-c-H=

$_19,995

1994 CHEVROLET ASTRO
VAN

lt.o44W511

Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.®
lfAU fAIM

A

Senators doubtful on prayer amendment

$15,888.

IIIIUUNC~

Slllte Farm Mutual

WASHINGTON (AP)- Sena-

change. we beuer bring up some
measures we cdn pass, so the
Sunday that a constitutional American people will ,get tbe mesamendment allowing scbool/rayer sage tilat we· re serious about it,"
could' pass, and Indicate they said Dole, who is expected to
would prefer to steer away frr m become majority leader next year.
sucb social issues.
House Speaker-to-be Newt Gin"I don't 1hink we ought to get grich bas promised a vote on a
bogged down" on such divisive school prayer amendment by next
matters, Minority Leader Bob July 4. While most Republicans,
Dole, R·Kan., said on ABC's This including Dole, support the princi·
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He said that while there was
support for a silent prayer or reflection amendment, "I would prefer
to solve the economic problems
flfSt."

Sen . Christopher Dodd, D·
Conn., appearing with Hatch on
CBS, said there was a ''real reluc·
tance to have Ibis Congress be tbe
first Congress in 205 years to
amend any part of the BiII of
Rights."

Expanding prison
budget vexes state

- -..../

Helms' colleagues
move to tone down
criticism of Clinton
By JIM ABRAMS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Future Senate Majprity Leader Bob Dole.
seeking to calm a storm raised l;ly
Clinton antagonist Sen·. Jesse
Helms. is defending the president
as a capable commander in chief.
"I bad some reservations early
on, but I think be's up to the job
now," Dole, R-Kan., said Sunday
on ABC's This Week Wilh David
Brinkley.
Helms, R·N .C., in line to be
c~airman of tbe Senate Foreign
Relali.91\S Committee when Republicans· like control of Congress in
January, said in a CNN interview
Friday that he did not think Clinton
was qualified to be commander in
chief. He said many military leaders shared that view.
Helms· assertion was quick! y
disputed by Joint Chiefs of Staff
Cbainnan Gen. John Sbalikasbvili.
who called' several news organiza·
tions Saturday to express his full
confidence in Clinton.
"I think it's important to me
that this view not be represented as
1hat of 1he military leadership. or
for that maner. the view of the mil·
itary as a whole," he told The
Washington Posl.
Dole. who bas been a sharp Clit·
ic of Clinton in such foreign policy
areas as Bosnia. said be lhougbt tile
president bad p~rformed beuer
recently in Haiti and the Middle
East, "I tbink he's doing bener all
the time."
Sen. Orrin Hatch, a conservative
Republican from Utah, also sought
to tone down Heims' rhetoric. He
criticized Clinton's compromise
agreement with Nonh Korea on its
nuclear weapons program and said
he'd been "very alarmed and concerned by some of tile foreign policies of Ibis administr. tion."
But be said on CBS' Face the
Nalion tbat Americans should back

whoever is president in military
matters. and "I personally believe
the president has been doing beaer
in foreign policy" recently.
The conservative Helms, an
adamant foe of foreign aid programs !!lid longtime nemesis of tbe
State Deparunent, bad previously
shown be will be a confrontational
bead of the Foreign Relations
Commiuee.
Soon after the RepubliC!ID victO! ·
ry in the midterm elections, be
urged Clinton to put off a vote 011
1he GATI world trade agreement,
planned for early December, until
next year. and warned lUf hls
cooperation on foreign policy mat·
ters depended on lhe administr.l.tion ·
acceding to his demand. Helms is a
strong opponent of the GATT
agreement.
,
White House Cbief of Staff
Leon Panetta returned fare Sunday,
saying that Helms' views usually
represent "a very narrow range of
the political spectrum" and "don't
re nect tbe mainstream of what this
country is aboot."
Appearing on CNN's Late Edit io n, Panetta said such remarks
could strain White House relations
with Heims as likely bead of the
Foreign Relations Committee. He
said Helms should clecido wbetber
be owes Clinton an apology.
Sen. Christopher Dodd, D. Conn., a Foreign Relations Commince member. said Helms was
"coming close to aiding and abet·
tang insubordination" of the
nation· s chosen commander in
chief.
Dodd, also appearing on CBS,
said Helms· remarks were "very,
very reckless" .and affirms the
"notion that Ibis (election) was a
mandate for extremism.··
Clinton bas bad a tenuous relationship with the military because
of his history of protesting tbc
Vietnam War

NATO aircraft bombs
Serbian strongholds

By SRECKO LA TAL
Adm. Leighton W. Smith,
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Reynoldsburg. the likely House
As.sociated
Pres.s
Writer
Nap
les-based commander of
George Voinovicb may make speaker .next year, said sbe ha:&gt; not
COLUMBUS
(AP)
-The
state's
$1.5
billion
prison
budget
SARAJEVO.
Bosnia-HerzegovNATO
forces in soutilem Europe,
another attempt to gain control of discussed tbe school board as~ue
could
increase
as
mucb
as
30
percent
next
year
as
officials
try
to
ina
in
tbe
biggest
NATO
attack
said
about
30 reconnaissance and
the State Board of Ed11cation next with Voinovicb, but said, "We
deal with overcrowding, mentally ill prisoners and commumty corever,
warplanes
from
tile
U~ited
warplanes
from
the United States,
year, a stale offiCial said.
would carefully consider any recrections.
States and three other nauons Britain, France and tbe Netilerlands
Tbe 11-member board, charged ommendations 1h~ governor might
Most of 1he extr.l money would go for extra employees - an
bombed an airbase and nearby sur- carried out "good bits" on Ubdiwilh forming state education poli- have."
.
estimated 1,500 prison guards, mental health professionals and supface-to-air missile site used by na's runways , taxiways and on·
cy is elected by nonpartisan ballot. .
board was cut from 22
port staff at 28 state institutions, The Columbus Dispaleh reponed
Serbs to terrorize Bosnia.
planes parked nearl&gt;y.
'But board President Oliver members in a 1991 comrromise
Sunday.
·
The
raid
on
the
Udbina
airbase
Tbe~e were no reports of losses
Ocasek said in a story published on based on an unsuccessfu bid by
Gov. George Voinovicb bas not·yet approved a budget increase
in Serb-beld Croatia was NATO' s among allied aircraft and all
Sunday in The Columbus Dispatch Volnovicb and some Republican
that could total several hundred miUion dollars.
·
seventh since war broke out. in returned safely to their bases,
be believes Voinovicb will try to state senators to make it an
Bosnia .in April 1992. It was by far Washington officials said.
But be bas said that adding guards, paying for court-ordered
turn. it into an appointed body.
appointed body.
.
·
treatment
of
mentally
ill
prisoners
and
expanding
community
cor1he
large$! by Nortb Atlantic Treaty
The ajrfield altack came tbe
Ocasek said Voinovocb would
Deaeasing 1he size of tbc board
rections
will
sln:lcb
lbe
pnsons
budget.
.
·
Organization
fo.rces
in
the
same
day as Sems. backed by reneprobably .use the two-year budget resulted in members trying to rep"We're
going
to
have
a
difficult
time
in
that
area."
Voinovicb
alliance's
45-year
history.
gade
Muslim
forces, attacked gov.
to be passed next summer to resent districts or nearly one milsaid.
Previous
NATO
air
saikes
have
ernment
troops
across nortbwestcm
change 1he law so be can appoint lion people, which is not the most
The
cost
or
running
swe
prisons
is
the
fourth-largest
expense
in
all
been
in
Bosnia
and
all
invol~ed
Bosnia
and
u
.N. peacekeepers
board members.
effective war to oversee education.
1he $30.8 billion state budget after Medicaid, welfare.and education. ·
a small number of planes agamst were targeted in three separate
"I 1hink it will be a very diffi· Davidson wd.
Tbe prison system, wilh 41,468 prisoners, or 176 percent of
highly limired Serb targets, such as assaults.
. .
cult battle," ~k said, predict"I'm DOl sure people know who
capacity, cootlnues to grow. There are28 percent more prisoners in
a single tank. A statement from tile
Two of the five olher U.N.-«s.
ing a Voinovich failure. "Educa- board members are or how meanOhio 1han four years. ago; 1he
n
ulation bas more than dou·
Brussels .headquarters or ~A ~0 ig~ted safe ~- 1he BosniaJI
lion should be nonpolitical and ingt'ulthe election&amp; are," sbe said.
blec!
since
I
~8~.
.
_
~
.
---~
-~
·
---,rud·lhe-1111"
rwd on the Udbma au~ -capual-of-8araJevo and-the aovcrno~. . __ - lncJependent!
_Y-oinovich hinted several-weeki·
Pri5ons
11ireaor
Reginald
Wilkinson
Said SOme of the growth in
field
from
allied
bases in Italy was ment-beld northeastern city of
Mike Dawson, Voinovicb's ·· ago at a news conference about the
1he nellt two-year budget, which be described as "well above tbe
conducted at the request of t~e Tuzla - also were attacked today .
spokesman. said 1he governor bas state of education in Ohio that be
rate r:J inflation," is rel!ated to paying 904 additional guards includ·
U.N: peacekeeping force in ~osma. by Bosnian Serbs.
·
not decided wbelher to push 1he stiD hoped to change the board by a
ed but not entirely funded In 1he current bu&lt;lget.
Sem planes from 1he Udbma atr·
A U.N. spokesman in Za&amp;reb
Issue, but "1hat will be ~scussed conTbcstlmamtlo:':O~~O:t~ speciA coun order in a lawsuit about trcaUnent of mentally iU prisonbase bombarded U.N.-designated said government troops ~n and
before the end oflhe year.
eq; also is expected to add to costs because the state will have to
safe areas in Bibac, n~rthwest around Velika Kladusa, nortb of
Dawson said that because · fy whether the bo,ard should be
hire psychiatrists, counselors. nurses and suppt1rt staff, 1he newspaBosnia. twice last week, mcumng Bibac; were under attack Ibis morn. Republicans bave captured the 1 elected or appointed. but legislators
per
said.
·
the wrath of U.N. peacekeepers. ing by Serbs from 'neighborioa
1
Ohio House from Democrats. "lhc passed a law requiring.nonpartisan
Three
new
p!lsons
slated
to
open
in
1995·
""d
1996
will
further
'
who called for tile air attacks.
Croatia and Muslims Joyal, to ftlle· ;
dynamics ca1alnly.have changed." ' eleetions.
·'
burden 1he budget.
.
'
gade leader Fikret Abdic.
Rep. Jo Ann Davidson, Rp
. n
• so

·~, :1:3"1...:1:1 CK.&lt;IIL. .

STOll IOUII1 IIOIIIAY •

party must'ftrSt concentrate on economic matters.
Sen. Orrin Hatcb, a conservative
Republican from Utab, said on
CBS' Fact the Nation it is more
important \o pass constitutional
amendments on a balanced budget,
unfunded federal mandates on 1he
states and a line-item veto..
"On school prayer, I really
don't believe 1he votes are there for
a vocal prayer amendment."

.

ers Union luncheon. "But I hope some time during my tenure in die
Congress that we will be able to replace tbe income taX completely as we
know it today."
Some economists have argued against over-reliance on sales, or cOa.sumption. taxes because they place a greater burden on lower-and.middleincome taxpayers than on the wealthy.
However, those attending 1he National Taxpayers Union conf~
loudly applauded Archer' s call to scrap the income tax. favoring alalea
tax. But some participants also scoffed at Archer's suggestion of adoptinJ
a "value added" tax that is imposed during stages of productioo, callinJ
it a "bidden tax". buried in the price of products and. tberefore. more euily manipulared by government.
The Taxpayers Union. which claims 300,000 members, is a vocal
advocate for lower taxes and more government accountability In tax policy.

The

1994 lUlCK CENTURYS

,lA.

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Stair
When Jorge Gomez stepped
off the airplane this August, lhe
only word his host family could
understand was "problem."
The 16-year-old native of
Madrid, Spain, may bavc; bad
five years of English training,
but be'd never spoken it every
ilay. all day long, Gomez said.
Gomez attends Eastern High
School through June and bas
been active in sports and family

life.

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GRADUATES • Brenda
G. Swann who recendy gradu·
ated from Hocking College
with an associate degree In
nursing, Is employed at the
· Holzer Medlc11l Center. She
paned her state boards to
become llcenHd. Swann
resides In Syracuse wltb her
husband, Bryan, and daugb·
te.r, Kyrle. She Is the daughter
or David and Ann Zirkle of
Racine 11nd the granddaughter
of Mrs. Roberta Swisher and
the late Jesse MBynard or New
Haven, W. Va. and the step·
granddaughter of Harley
Swisher of MlddleporL

By H. JOSEF HEBERT
And in remarks to the National Taxpayers Union, Sen. Phil Gramm, RAssociated Press Writer .
Texas, also singled out 1he Educalion Deparunent, saying tbe ftrSt tbing
WASHINGTON - Republicans who will control the next Congress . Congress ouaht to do is give notice "that we will not renew 1he leases"
are providing more details of their oft-repealed pledge to cut spending and on its Washington office space.
.
1he size of 1he federal government,
These were tile same deparunents and agencies that were targets for
Appearing Sunday on television talk shows and before a conference of elimination in the Reagan administration a decade ago, but at that time
irate taxpayers, GOP congressional leaders said dramatic changes are D~mocrats in Congress ensured tbeir survival. Now 1he GOP controls
Congress for tbe ftrSt time in 40 years.
needed in 1he tax syscem and tbc federal burea11C111Cy.
· Incoming Seruue Majority Leader Bob Dole of Kansas said that a DIIDI·
The change in power also bas prompted key Republicans to suggest it
ber of departments and agencies ought to be eliminated, including tlie is time to end 1he government's reliance on federal income taxes as its
Energy Department, 1he Education Deparunent and tbe Interstate Com- chief source of revenue.
merce Commission.
Rep. Bill Archer, R-Texas, who will head the House Ways and Means
"If we're going to limit or re-limit government, we have to do it. We Committee next year, said Sunday he plans bearings to explore ways to
can't talk about it, we have to do it," said Dole on ABC's This Wetk Wilh replace the income tax with a broad-based consumption tax, such as a
David Brinkley. He said, for example, be didn't "see any useful'purpose" direct sales tax or "value added" tax.
in keeping the Energy Department.
"It's not going to happen overnight," Arcber tol~ a National Taxpay-

Spanish student sojo,u rns in Meigs

· Hal Kneen.ls the Agrlcullur·
111/ Hor tic u It u r a 1/ Nat u r 111
Resource Agent for The Ohio
State University Extension,
· Meigs County.

to PllgN 35-*
A Multlmeclle Inc. HeM p p

1 Section,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 21, 1994 .

GOP leaks more plans for less government

I

Extension Office at 9Y2-66%.
The statewide Buckeye Sbepherds Symposium is being held
November 25 and 26 at the Rama·
da .Universit.Y H~tel i~ Columbus,
Ohm. In conjuncuon watb the meet·
occ~~ge populations of mes may ing will be the Sheep Youlh lnsti.
.
• · tute for 4-H and FFA members
requtre ~ .extem.unator or the ~se ·being held on November 26 at The
of a pesliCJde. Gave our ExtensiOn Ohio State University Animal SciOffice a ca!l a! 992-~96 .~d ask ence Building. For further mformafo~ o~public~on enutl~. Cluster lion please call the Extension
Flies to help m your decasaon.
Oflice
Dates to Remember
·
On Tuesday, November 22 at 3
Vegetable Producers. save MonP.M. the Ohio Deparunent of Agri- day,
December 12 to attend the
culture will be giving 1he Pesticide annual Meigs/Washington County
Private Applicator's Test at the
School ~ing held from
Meigs County Public Library. Veg~table
9.00 A.M. • 2.30 P.M. at the
Pomeroy branch, located at 216 Racine United Melhodist Church
West Main Street. If you are plan- Fellowship Hall. Further informa·ning to take the test . please_call tbe tion will be forthcoming.

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