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Pag~12-The

Dally Sentinel

Undeterred Serbs imperil Bosnian .town

Saturday,Ncw.26
fcncuc

I

By ROBERT H. RI;ID
'
Aaoct.ted Press Writer
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Henegov· 1
ina- U.N. officials scrambled ·
today to arrange a cease-rue aaoss
Bosnia after rebel Serb forces ,
i~ored warnings of more NATO ·
austrites and pushed to the out·
skirts of Bihac. .
NATO Secretary-General Willy
Claes said today would be "crucial" for the northwe!t Bosnian
town. but that be hoped a cease-lire
for the area could be negotiated.
"The Bosnian Serb Jll'm.y ilL
poised to enter the town," said
UN. spokeswoman Claire Grimes
in Zagreb, Croatia. "There are
hundreds of refu~ees streaming
into the center of Bihac."
She said the Serbs were just
over balf a mile from lbe Bosnian
army government headquarters in
Bihac.
The attacking forces. made· up
of Bosnian Serbs and rebel Serbs
from neighboring Croatia, were
seen burning villages as IIley took a
high ridge south of Bihac on Thursday, said a U.N. spokesman, Lt.
Col. Jan-Dirk von Mer.veldt.
A Bihac ham radio operator,

IND.

•lcolumbuslso•

I

Mirza Sadltovic, reported Ibis
mornin~ that "the town is in
flames,' 'tlviJians were fleeing tile
fighting and that medicines and
food were running short for 2,000
patients in Bihac hospital.
The Bosnian Serb foroes are so
close to Bihac lhat it would be
e~tremely bard for NATO to bomb
them without causing civUian casualties. In addilion, some 1,200 Bangledesbi peacekeejlcrs are slalioned
in the "safe area" to protect the
mostly Muslim populatioo.
A U.N. source in Zagreb said
senior civilian officials from the
Serb and Muslim-led government
sides would meet today at Sarajevo
airport to try and agree on a ceasefire for Bihac and across Bosnia.
The Serbs would prefer a country-wide cease-fire, believing it ·
would help freeze their control
over llle 70 percent of Bosnia IIley
bold. They are suspicious of local
cease-fires, because IIley believe
those truces only help government
forces regroup for future strikes.
"All diplomatic efforts have
been put forth to get the Bosniawide ceasefire," said the source,
insisting on anonymity.

The arioouncement came after
Sesb forces rolled into the 32·
square-mile, U.N.-designated "safe
·area" of Bihac, 90 miles frOJD
Sarajevo, which Bosnian leaders
say now shelters 70,000 civilians
and government troops.
Sll'ajevo radio said today the
Serbs sbellcd lbroughout' the nigh_t

·'TOpleSS' SmOking

and there was hand-to-band figbtini oo the outskirts of town.
· Gen. Mustafa Hajrulabovlc-Tal·
jan of the government army said
the Scibs renewed anillcry atiiCb
on Bihac Ibis morning.
"There are a lot ill dead there.
and Ibis Ia the last time for NATO
and ihc U.N. to acL"
.

CORRECTION

tmts •

Wednesday Ad Should Have Read

Casual Dtesses
, 12 mos. to Size 14

A Multimedia Inc .. Newspaper

100 E. Main St. 992-5177 Pomeroy

:By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmei-Sentlnel Steff
, GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Police Chief Roger
'Brandeberry expects lo bear by February if his efforts to
·obtain federal funding for two more officers will be
approved.
Brandeberry said he is filing an application with the ·
U.S.Jiistice Department's COPS FAST program thatwil!
pay 75 percent of lhe cost for the officers. The city must
provide a 2S percent malch, the chief explained.
The City Commission approved an emergency ordinance on the 3Jllllication when it met last Tuesday.
The funds are available lhrough COPS FAST to communities of 50,000 or less, while larger cities are allowed

MIDDLEPORT
First 50

Tomorrow- Saturday
9-7

Marquise Solitaire
Reg.$579

$349

By KEVIN PINSON
Tlme..Sentlnel Steff
GALLIPOLIS- Spring Valley business people's opinionsoflhe proposed
stockyard are as mixed as the restofGallia County. Some see it as a boom for
busin~ss; others see it as a nuisance and potential safely hazard.
· The stockyard, operated by Producers Livestock Associalion of Columbus,
.would be localed on fair board-owned property just wesl of the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds.
One of its closest neighbors is Miss Paula's Day Care Center,
·
Co-owner Jan Hartman said she
•county Extension Agent is coDciirncil atici~! .il,l~- §·1~ a_nd .
, .,,..,,,.
'·
, .,, , •1-..i&gt; 'li:.. , .safe!f.ofthecentcr syoung~liliiiti• .
Ed •...,.,., uOI'h -lfii:-· 881U'· tne·- At!cQroihg·to-plans·included1il a
stockywel·co~o~lct gentretCI as pre-application for state and fed,
1
:.•
·
•
era! grant dollalli, the stockyard's
much aa $50 million for the parking lot would end where lhe
local economy.
center's playground begins.
· ''I'm not againstthe slockyard,"
Hartman said. "I'm opposed to where. tile stockyard is going to be placed."
One of Hartman's concerns is pests. She said she fea!ll the stockyard will
attract insects and rodents.
'
"I really am worried about the big fly infeslation," she said.
,Every year at fair lime, the center spends weeks battling a serious fly
problem, Hartman said.
'
"Every year we all put up with this terrible influx of flies. They are just thick
in both (our) buildings. To think you would have to tolerate it all year around
· is unbearable."
Hartman said the day care center must use an expensive insecticide designed
for hospitals. The spray is safe for use around children, she said.
Otherroncerns include traffic problems with trucks and parents dropping .
off and picking up lhcir children and the possibility of an animal gelling loose
from the pens.
.
Hartman said she was once in Hillsboro when cow got loose from the PLA
stockyard lhere.
Chased by stockyard workers and law enforcement officials, the animal ran
up several miles of streets and through homeowners' y~rds before escaping
into a forested area.
.
"That's something to think about," she said. "Our wood fence wouldn't hold
back any running animals."
On the opposite side of Jackson Pike (and other side of the stockyard issue)
is Phyllis Tegethoff, owner of the Red Rooster Restaurant.
"I think it would be wonderful," she said. "If it's good for thefarmers, if il's
Continued on page A2
·

Acquisitions Means
Low, Low Prices
Every Day!

1/10 Carat
Diamond Engagement Ring

· Dia.
P•n•ant

Reg. $259

SALE

I

$}49·

14K

CHOOSE FROM HUNDREDS • IN STOCK

1/4 tw.
Reg.$249

101 AND 141 GOLD CHAINS

SALE

NECKLACES· BUCELETS

$149

SAVE 50% TO 70%*
·COMPARE ANYWHERE·

Aprlications
wil be taken
for toy fund

GOLD •s• BAR

Applicalions .arc being lilken at
!be Meigs County Heallh Depart·
ment through Dec. 2 for Christmas
toys for needy.children.
The toys were collected by lhe
Meigs Coonty Bikers. Remembering needy children is an annual
project of the group.
Wbeo mating application,
some proof of income showing
below poverty level will be
required. WIC guidelines are insuf·
ficieotto qualify, it was reported.
Families wilb children from birlb
to 16 years of age may apply.
·
Last year, 525 children were
given gifts.
Meanwhile, the bikers are continuing to accept doJilldons of new
to~ or money wilb whicb to purchase toys. Information on pickup
of donations may be obtained by

DIAMOND BRACELET
1 ct. Total Weight

Reg, $699.00

2 ct. TWfor

sggg

'
ONE YEAR FREE FINANCING
-No lnterelt chilrgea from up to one year

with purcheaea made Saturday-or Sunday
.$300 minimum (with.~ credit)

·

Dia•ond
"

•••• $351.00

$299

SALE

$179

DIAMOND FACTORY

Installation expected In '95

ProsecutQr updates commission
on status of sewer district project

Represe•tatlves will be In our
ltore with an additional one
million dollars
·$1,000,000.00·
of outstandl111 Jewelry• Choose
that perfect Christmas Gift at
Hu• Savings.·
Gallipolis ·.Sat•rd•y 2:00·7:00
Middleport· Sunday I:00 • 5:00

This Weekend Only!

..__ _ _ __

I

,,·

Wednesday lottery
By Tile Allodtltecl Pna
Tbe numbers· selected for
Wedoesday's Ohio Lottery were:

•

'I

..
·,

I

•

lfthecity's apagainst communities o(
plication is ap50,000 peopie or less, so.
proved. the posiit's not a sure thing," the"
lions will be
chief said. "We ' re starting,
funded for a
;"tl.·';&gt;.~i'l'-'·
out with a little disadvan-:
three-year pe=o...~ tage there, but it's been
riod.
MORE MANPOWER - Fedenl and state fandlng for two made easier because until
. The burden of additional pollee omcers in Gallipolis is sought by the city, which COPS FAST was intra..:
meeting
Ihe is submitting an appllcalloo tbls week. Above, Patrolman Mkbael duced, we would have been,
match require- · Fulks maas tbe dispatcher's desk during a relief period.
up against cities the size ofmentwillbesoftCleveland andNewYork."
ened, Brandeberry said, by a state program that provides
The department has a contingent of 13 auxiliary officers.
up lo 10 percent to comm11nities going afler the federal who serve on a volunteer basis and assist with enforce:
funding .
ment at busy times, Brandeberry explained.

U.S. ships .
head out:
To assist NATO
forces in Bosnia

Spring Valley business operators
express mixed opinions on proposal

Both Saturday
an.d Sunday

Sunday 1-5

.

Supa-I..otto:t-3-5·17·20-24
Kkter. 7~3-1-2-4
Pict 3: 3-2-6 .
, • Piclt 4: 6-S-3-6

~i;.;~~· :: :~~:~:;

Stockyard:

Customers receive a
FREE.14K Gold
Heart

Two Days Only

Tuesday ...A cbance of rain or
snow northeast. Fair elsewhere .
Lows upper 20s west to mid 30s
east. Highs upper 30s to lower 40s.

·

cr1me:
to apply under the COPS AHEAD program. Both are
funded as part of the White House's anti-crime bill approved by Congress laslsummerwhichappropriated$165 .
million to pollee agencies to obtain more officers.
!Jrandeberrysaidheisapplyingbecausehisdepartment
can use the additional manpower.
"If you go back to lhe early-to-mid 1980s, the department had 21 full-time officers and now we have 13," he
said. "Since then, new problems have arisen, the traffic
count in lhe city is up, and we're dealing with a 30 percent
decrease in our staff.
"The government is trying to push what it callscommunity-orienled policing. and that's fine if you have the
people and the time," Brandeberry added.

{I '

I

BY JIM FREEMAN
Tlmei-Sentlnel itlft
POMEROY -The Meigs County Board of Commissioners was updated
Friday afternoon on lhe goals of the Tuppers Plains Sewer District.
·
Meigs County Prosecuting Allomey John R. Lentes, representing the
district, inet wilh the board lo clear up any questions about the district
following last week's commission meeting.
The sewer district is an incorporaled regional d_istrict, Lentes said.
"We were incorporated - not just for Tuppers Plains, but for as big an area
as possible;" he said.
The proposed sewer system will utilize a lagoon system which can double
or triple in size, covering a lllt'ger area than just Tuppers Plains, he said.
Lentes said the $2.4-to-$2.6-JIIillion sewer system would likely be installed
in 1995.
The district is seeking additional funding, not to subsidize tap fees, but to
lower the overall cosl of tl!e projccl to consumelli, he said.
tlook up to the syslem is part of the ~o~al cost of the project, he said. Hooking
up to the system could cost up to $2,000 per household.
"A lot of people are on fixed incomes and can 'I afford it," he said.
"We do not .want sewer bills tobeover$25 to $30 per month," he said. "We
want to be sure people can afford'it."
Lentes said sewer service will be at a flat rate and not tied in with water
service.
,
The more money we·get, the lower the sewer bills will be, he said.
Lentes said people living within the district wiH
· likely be forced by the
Environmenlal Protcclion Agcncy"'o hook up I
wer system,_he said.
Some people have asked if the projecl is being be right, he said.
''The project !s being done righl," he commented.
·,
In other business, the board:
•Accepted tbe bid from Asphalt Materials Inc. of Marietta for bituminous
paving material for December.
.
· •Approved transfers of $2,300 within the commission budget and $200
within tbe county court budget.
·
•Accepted a $4,905 transfer from Ill~ public assistance account into the
·general fund.
•Paid llills and approved the minuies of the Nov. l8 meeting.
· •Disoussed atti:nding a regional jail commission meeting Wel)nesday afternoon in Wellston.
,

Vol. 29, No. 42
The application deadline
is Dec. 31but Brandeberry
said he wanted to get the
go-ahead from the commission to apply in the hope
Gallipolis' request can be:
processedearly.Heexpecl(

Boom or nuisance?

50s.

I

••

-City seeks federal crime bill funding.

.,---:o---:o""'!ii-.'1! !

.
.

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant- November 27, 1994

F_i htin

25% .QFF
SHOP BUTIONS &amp; BOWS

.Saturday

calling 742-2081.
.
Tbe bikers arc also continuing
to ~1'$. clonalions for lhe project
and resJCients may have their names
·pt.ced on Christmas tree or Santa
replicas for a (Iollar. Cans for donalions are also in several locations.
The toy run which took place on
()a. 3 was the ninth annual for the
bikers. In a.dditlon to Cliristmas
toyl for children, the group raised
$1,000 to lie contributed to the
Middleport Pool Fund.

I

•

I

possible

GALLIPOLIS

HI: 60a
Low: 40s

·AnnLanders-Page84

College football results -Page c1

Light rain

By The Assoct.ted Press
Seasonably cool and dry wealher was forecast for most of Ohio
through Saturday. The National
Weather Service said sprinkles
could occur in extreme southern
Obio on Sarurday.
A cold front situated just soulh
·of the state will produce some
clouds tonight Lows will be 35-40.
The cold front will become a
warm front as it starts to retreat to
the north on Saturday. This will
bring a cllance of rain to the far
south by afternoon and a gradual
increase in clouds over llle resl of
lhe state. Highs will reach the mid40s norlheast to low 50s south.
The record-high temperature far
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 68 degrees in 1908
while lhe record low was 5 in 1950.
Sunset tonight wiU be at 5:09 p.m.
and sunrise Sarurday at 7:')9 am.
Weather forecast:
Today ... Mostly cloud;ro~tb a
chance of spritikles or 1Iurirei ·
northeast...Ciearing in the after- ,
tloon. Pallly'W mostly clouily' elsewhere, becoming mostly sunny
.norlbwest in lhe afternoon. tlighs 1
from tbe mid 40s to around 50
south.
Tonight... Partly clol!dY north.
MoSily clear south. Lows in the
30s.
Saturday...Mostly cloudy southwest wilh a chance of rain in the
afternoon. Partly sunny elsewhere.
Highs lower 40s norlbeast to lower
50s southwest
Extended forecast:
Sunday...Rain likely. Lows 35
to 45. Highs in !be 50s and lower
60s.
Monday ... Rain likely. Lows in
the 40s. Highs In the lower and mid .

- ·"

Friday, ~ovember 25, 1~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

·~

Wildlife wardens prepare for deer season
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The busiest lime of the caught the manshiningaspotlightinto a Meigs County
year for Ohio's wildlife office!ll begins next week with field, a common method of poaching deer.
the start of deer season.
The man ran from the officer in a car and then on f'i!"t.
· The Ohio Department of Natural Resources ' Division His escape was thwarted when he struck a deer with his
of Wildlife has about 150 enforcemenl officers who car and drove into a ditch. He was indicted on felony
make about 125,000 contacts each year with outdoor counts of fleeing and assSult, and was charged with 22
enthusiasts, primarily hunte!li and fishers.
misdemeanor wildlife violations.
Officials are anticipating a lot of those encounters · The job of enforcing game laws can sometimes turn
with hunters.during the six-day gun season for whitetail dangerous for wildlife office Ill, although no officer has
deer that.begins Monday.
been killed in the line of duty since the 1950s.
" Many of our officelli are working day and night at
The most recent deliberate shooting of an officer was
this time of year," said Jim Johnson, the . division's in October 1987, when David Wilson, then a Clark
assistanl administrator for enforcement. ·
County warden, was checking on three men runn ing
Earlier this month, a wildlife officer arrested a West their dogs prior to racoon season.
Virginia man suspected of poaching. The warden had
Continued on page A2

News .capsules
AP

WASHINGTON (AP) - Three
U.S. ships with 2,000 Marines aboard
were heading from a French pori for
the Adriatic Sea to provide support
for NATO forces in Bosnia, according to administration officials.
A Pentagon offical emphasized that
the action was taken solely for precautionary reasons and does not reflect increased U.S. involvement in .
• fighting in the formu ·¥ugoslavia ,
An Amphibious Ready Group com- •
posed of the USS Nassau and two
other shi ps left Poulon in southern
Francefourdays ahcad ofa scbeduled •
departure. The names ofthe other two
ships could not be learned immedi - :
ately.
The reason for sending the three .
ships is to have helicopter support •
more readily available in case NATO
forces ask for assistance, said the Pen- ·
tagon officials, speakin g on the con- .
dition that he not be further identified.
The deployment, the official added, :
does·not change that policy and does
not signal a stepped up U.S: involve· :
ment in BOsnia. He said the ships had
long been scheduled to depart for the •
Adriatic next Tuesday, anyway. One
example cited as possible use of the .
U.S. forces was to help rescue NATO ·
. pilots should they be shot down over
the Adriatic.
·
NATO pfanes buzzed the besieged
city of Bihac on Friday after Serb ·
tanks and artillery resumed fire on the
encl ave. Howeve r, there were no •
NATO ai r str ikes on the Serb positions.
In addition to the 2,000 Marines
the three Navy ships carry about4,oo0 •
sailors, the Pentagon official said. -

GOOD MORNING

poll finds rising

Critics from Nader

financial expectations

to Perot step up

-u

Financial exp8ctattons .

NEW YORK (AP)
bargainhunting seems especially frenzied
(\ • Do you expec! to have more
at the mall, _perhaps it's because
Qe money or less . ~1)8lt(
only a third of Americans plan to
, 'year, compareo to lhis,yaat?
ilcn
spendlessmoneyongiftslhisChrislmas sesson compared wilh the last
few years.
An Associated Press poll last
weekend found only 14 percent intending to spend more money on
(!ifts and 50 percent planning to
spend about the same as the last few
years.
·· How concerned lie you
Retailers, who count on the holiabout prices goilg up?
daysforalargeshareoflheiryearly. !'. !I' ~conc:emed ~ NalliiiY
profits, will find some cheer io_t}le ._, •.,
. CCitoiulttl
poll'sfindingthat55percentexpect """"'Sc!meWhat
Calcemed
G&gt;Nalllll
1o have more money next year tha n
this year.
lllil.,.ted·
Personal financial expectations
bave risen slightly over the past two
years, especially among the y,oung
and ·employed. Fully 74 pe nt of
· ·•
those under age 35 expect t have
more money, as do 67 pe nt of
those working full· or part-ti . ·
Among all adults in the pol,
percentlhinkthey'llbavelcssmoney
and 18 perccnt.Jndict the same.
Abouthalftbolepolledlbinklhcir ·
communitywillhavemorejobsoext
year- 48 p1rcent. up from 41 percent a year aJO.
The rtcent rise in intereat ratcs.-a move by lllc Federal Reserve Board to
guard apiosl inflalion, matcsOIIly 18 percent feel more hopeful about the
economy. A majority of mid!lle-agc and upper-income adults feel less
hopeful as a resuU of tile interest-rate rise. •
r

.

Today~ Times-Sentinel
22 S.,ctious - 160 Pages

attack on trade pact
Business
Dl
WASHINGTON (AP) - Oppo- Calendars
BJ&amp;~
nentsfromRalphNadertoRoss Perol
Classifieds
03-7
say they can still defeat a 123-nation
world trade agreement when Con- ·comics
Insert
gress takes it up ne~t week during a Editorials
A4
lame-duck session ---: even without
Local
A3
the help of Sen. Bob Dole.
The anti-GATI movement, a col· Obituaries
A6
lection of consumer, environmental Sports
Cl-6
and labor groups, said Friday they
B1
planned a television and newspaper Along the River
ad blitz in coming days in an effort to Weather
A2
bring pressure on wavering senators. ...:..:..:=:..::.:..._ _ _ ____:.=__
The critics are zeroing in on the
new world Trade . Organization,
Columns
which they say will have unprec.
ede ntcd power t o overru Ic US
. . envtlack Anderson
ronmental and safety laws in the name
Wmjam Rusher
of free trade.
They also are attacking next week's UMSands
vole because 90 of the lawmakers Chuck Stone
who will participate - 10 in the.
c ,..., """' ••.., ,..,...,_, c~
Senate and 80 in the House - arc
retiring or have been defeated.
•'To have a lame-duck Congress with 90 losing or retiring members of
Congress coming to town to deeide America 's economic future is an
abominatiQn,' ' consumer activisl Ralph · Nader said Friday at a GATT
11
opponents news conference.
On Wednesday, Dole, who had been undecided, announced that the
administration had satisfied his concerns about the WI'O's threat to U.S.
laws and be would now support llle proposal, a decision he announced wilb
President Ointon standing by his sidt in the Rose Garderl.
While tile administration portrayed Dole's decision as crucial to victory,
.Nader said GATf supporters still were short of the votes needed, especially
'in the Senate.
;

'----------.. .1

..

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�. "" ..

\
•
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E '

:Pag• -'2 Sunday 11m--slntlnel

Pomero~lddleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

•
•

OHIO Weather
Sund~, Nov. 27.
MICH.

IToledo I 54· I
IND.

'

November 27, 1994

GATT vote to test bipartisanship

Aa:u·Weatber"'

''
, , , Ir---...,.....;'~':,'
Mansfield Ifi7• I•

'''''

0111114

.~Blustery conditions, rain
·~o precede cooler weather

By DAVJD ESPO
·
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- In mid-passage to Republican rule, Congress
meets Ibis week 10 vote on GATT,
a global trade accord ardently supported by President Clinton and
depicted as a model or bipartisan
cooperation witb lhe GOP.
The lame-duck session of the
expiring, 103rd Congress will be
brief- a haif-day in the Hou~
and two ~ys m the Senate. But n
wJli be sp1ced by selecuon of leaders for the new, GOP-controlled
104tb Congress tbat convenes In
January.
Passage for legislation blessing
GATT is assured in the House,
where departing Democratic
Speaker Thomas Foley and his
incoming Republican successor,
Newt Gingrich, both favor the
laboriously negotiated plan to
reduce trade barriers around the
world.
Foley, D-Wasb., whose normally well-ord.ered su!te or offices _Is
cluttered w11h movmg canons, will
speak ~n behalf of lhe me:asure in
what wtll be bJS final day m office
and the Democrats' final day in

power foUowing their EIC(;:!;,n Day
debacle.
.
"He's got one objective in his
last four hours and that's to pass
GATT," said spokesman Jeff
Biggs.
For Gingrich, R-Ga., and the
House Republicans, it wiU be one
final day in the minority before
·assuming power in January.' "My
sense is that everything is under
control" for passage, said his
spokeSJri!ID. Tony _BI~ey. .
Forbis~ G~ngncb has reJect·
ed conservatives cla1ms that the
!Jllde acco~ would diminls~ ~er•can sovereignty by estabhshmg a
\Yorld Trade Organization to adjudtcate disputes among countries.
The United States would be "surrendering zero authority," be told a
Heritage Foundation audience
recently. lmtead, he said, tbe country would be "entering a partners~ip contract fr~m ~~ich we can
withdraw at any IJille.
Concerns that the pact would
f~l in tbe S~nate under tbe c~mbmed oppos1t1on of conservatives
and labor·ba~ed Democrats eased
when Republican Leader Bob Dole
announred his suppon last week at

lhe White House.
"There sbould be a big, big vote
- not a narrow vote, but a big
margin, a bipartisan marsin as
.we've always bad when It came to
votes on trade," said Dole of
Kansas, who wiU become majority
leader in the GOP-controlled Sen· ate in January.
"It's not perfect," be said, and
noted be's been receiving 2,000
calls a day 00 lhe subject. Buras
lhe pivotal senator on a subject crit·
ical 10 the president's prestige,
Dole woo concessions and assur·
ances from the White House on
issues ranging from lhe World
Trade Organization 10 the furure of
lhe oilseed industry
Sen Daniel Patrlck Moynihan
D-N. Y. said shortly after Dol~
spoke that GATT would enjoy "a
super majority
thanks to Ibis
agreement which ' was reached in
good faith and which augurs ror a
bipartisan moment in our capital
whi.cb is really very welcome
indeed." GATT wiU need 60 votes
on a procedural vote before final
passage.
Dole dropped his demand lhat
the White House agree to a capital

Stockyard proposal

~State-run liquor stores fall
_~a~ g_overnor wields his ax

RACINE - Racine Village
Council denied a request by Mayor
Jeff Thornton to apply for funding
to pay for an officer from lhe feder·
a! anti-crime biU.
It was noted lhat the village
would bave to pay 25 percent of
~ salary for lhe IKiditional officer
and council is not sure it can even
fund lhe current marshal full-time
in 199 5, due to general fund
finances.
It was also noted that if the viilage did receive any money, at lhe
end or three years lhe viUage would
have to pay lhe fuU salary, or lay
off the officer and pay unemployment
Council approved lhe payment
for tbe new leaf vacuum. Vlllase
Street Commissioner Glenn Rizer
is to set up a schedule f~ leaf pick-

Joseph L. Cain, Jud&amp;e.
Sentenclugs .
Sandra Daft, 6281 Clark Road,
Sunberry, $150 'plus court costs, six
months in jail (suspended), and 18
months probation for falsificatioo;
$150 plus court costs, one year in jail
(suspended), and three years·proba·
lion for tampering with records.
Accord to court records, Daft provided false information to lhe Gallia
County Department of Human Services and received more tbali $56,900
in Aid 10 Dependent Children, food
stamps and medical benefits. Baned
from receivins welfare benefits for
18 years, Daft bas paid $1,176 in
restitution.
William B. Caroots, 109 E.
Hudson Ave., Dayton, $1,500 plus
court costs, one year in jail and a six·
. month license suspension for drug
abuse.
Arralpment
Eddie D. Collier, 4362 Lanrel

MIDDLEPORT - R. Gene
Brasel of Middlepon was recently
inducted into lhe Ohio Oil and Gas
Association's Hau of Fame.
Brasel owned Brasel Operating.
Tlli'ougli Ills etrotts dudng-bls lenD
as Ohio Oil &amp; Gas Association
president, Brasel originated lhc
Hall of Fame.
·
He served as pesident or lhe oil
and gas group in 1986 and 1987.

Sunday news show lineup
lleotsed; Thoow ·l'riedmtiD ot-IJU~
New Yort TUMS and Gloria Bllll· ..
er of
Nf&lt;Ys &amp; ,World Rtpqrr.
NB'C's Mttt 1M P;ess- Top- .
ics: Bosnia, GA'IT and lhe new
Republican leadership. Guests:
Defense Secretary William Perry
and Senate RepubUcan Leader Bob
Dole.
CNN' s Late Edition With Frank.
Sesno - Topic: The oew Senate.
Guests: Sens. John Breaux, D-La.,
.and Phil Gramm, R·Texas.

u.s.

Crash kills two

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' Sharon B. Brunner and Rlck D.
Dailey, both of Houston, Texas.
KristiA. VanMatre,CrownCity,
and Larry S. Powell, Pomeroy.
Lori D. Hamilton and Donald P.
Strieter, both of Gallipolis.
~gela D. White and T~othy
. D. Clickenger, both ofGall1pohs.

Southeastern Business College'
Spring VaDey Plaza • GaDipolis

Edltor'snote: Names, ages, ad·
dresses and other inrormation are
reported as available on court records. All newsworthy adiom will
be publisbed without exception.

446·4367

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Reg. 190-05-12748

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BIG CREEK, Ky. (AP) - A
Virginia man and his 8-year-old
daughter were killed Friday in a
three-vehicle cpllision on the
Daniel Boone Parkway in southeastern Kentucky.
Charles Gary Rakes, 47, lhe cir·
cuit court clerk in Wise County,
Va., was pronounced dead at the
scene. Candice Rakes, 8, died
while being airlifted 10 lhe Univer·
sity of Tennessee Hospital in
Knoxville, Tenn.
Three people in the two other
vehicles were treated for mi11or
injuries.
.
Kentucky State Police at Hazard
said tbe accident happened about 3
p.m. EST when Rakes • eastbound
pickup crossed the center line.
Police said . Rakes' truck
sideswiped a westbound car, turned
sideways and was struck on lhe
driver's side by a westbound pick·
up truck.
The accident happened in Leslie
County, just east of lhe Clay Coun·
ty line.

JUST AJIRJVm)

.

several funds to be able to purchase
gasoline;
• Agreed to send a letter to a resident concerning an outbuilding
leaning over an alley, makinJ it
difficult for the compactor truck to
make its rounds;
• Agreed to send letters to resi·
dents concerninJI dog manure and
trailer underpinning;
• Recessed until Dec. S at 7 p.m.
Present were Thornton, Clerktreasurer Karen Lyons and council
members Robert Beegle, Henry
Bentz, Dale Hart, Scott Hill, Henry
Lyons and Larry Wolfe.
Also attendinJ were Rizer, auxiliary polire officers Matt Richards,
Brian Holman and Mark Norman,
and Bob Roy and John Holman
from tbe board of public affairs.

. Area man honored

THE SHOE CAFE

reception
.• 1 satellite
.
• 0 free channels
• Some premium Channels not.
available in cable areas.
• No local service
• Most retailers don't have ·
installers
• limited sports action

Isn't It nme
to Think
About A

rizins the clat to make transfers in

malfrial uaining.
in addition, the fire chief was
authorized 10 contact lhe fire marlhal's offJCC to have a representa·
live come to lhe village regarding
vacant structures that are a hazard
and should be repaired or demol-"
isbed.
Councilman Dale Hart. coordi·
nator of lhe Racine Museum/Cross
MUl projecl, was questioned about
lhe status or lhe project.
More funds are needed for lhe
project, Hart said.
·
If funds are o01 forlhcootlng, the
project will be put on bold, be
added.
In other business, council:
• Noted that examiners from the
state auditor's office are auditing
viUage records;
• Approved a resolution autho-

ROid, Lorain, pleaded not guilty to 299 JohnSen Road, Gallipolis.
an indictment cbarJe IX UDIIItbor·
izcd UBCof amOUJrvehiclc. Bond was Probate
set at $5,000, own recognizance.
Thomas S. Moulton, judge.
Divorces
Tbc followinJ couples have
Teddy J. FCigiiSOII, 1714 Cox
Road, Crown Ciy, and Rhonda F. applied for marriage Ucenses:
Nora Wooten and Victor Bur·
Fcrgul10n. Sctttown.
KalpesbhaiNagin!NiPatel,260· }ess, both of Gallipolis.
JacbonPikc,Gallipolis,andPhabha·
Angela D. Rider and John A.
vati ~ubhai Patel, lSI Upper Bunch, both of Gallipolis.
River Road.
Sonya L. Shriver and Jerry W.
Rick Wolford.
Pine Street. Vandeiinde, both of Point Pleasant.
Thunnan, and Susan W. Wolford, W.Va.

CPmmop Pleas

W"ldl"fe wardens

18" Dish DBS

up.
It was reported lhe leaf vacuum
will not go on ~ate property;
leaves must be p
by lhe road·
way for pick up. Leaves cannot be
taken to lhe landfill, but the leaf
vacuum. ausbes lhe leaves, render·
lnJ them uscrul for sanlcnl.
Council approved a fire depart·
mcnt requesliO purchase insulation
for lhe fire statioo at cost just over
$3,000. Tbe fuemen wiU be doin&amp;
lhe worlc.
. It ~as reported that lhe ceiling
!fiSUlation sbouid eut clown on beat·
ms costs..
Couneil also approved a request
to purchase a pair ol bunker pants.
'FirefiJbter David Neigler ·
reported several members of lhe
fire department recently completed
the second level or hazardous

Cases concluded in Gallia County court

Institute, a liberal think tank.
cost or cars ana rates Ibis biJb, we
"We reel very lucky lhat we weren't going for a new one," Mrs.
were able to refinance when we Foflygen ·said.
did,'' said Mrs. Foflygen, a 42Private economists and lhe Clioyear-old mother of four. "If we ton administration say such a fami·
bad waited, the savings wouldn't ly is typical of a middle class that is
be wonb it."
feelipg a bigger pinch from rising
She and her husband, who bas rates.
two jobs - teaching art classes at.
"Rising interest rates are bitting
borne and working as a delivery middle-class families wilh higber
man r~ an engineering f1IDI - eut payments on cars, mongages, and
their monthly spendinJ by about credit cards," Labor Secretary
$200 thanks to a new mortgage Roben Reich said this week. "Betrefinanced at8.25 percent in April. ter fiscal management cannot
Thirty-year conventional mon- reverse the long-term decli!le of
gages are now at 9.25 percent, up America's middle-class,"
from a 25-yeat low or 6.74 percent
Edward Wolff, a New York
about a year ago. A 2 112 percenl· · University economics professor,
age point increase on a $150,000 · cited.government figures thai sbow
!!Qmll mong!!g~ !;Osts more lhan . wealthier people benefit directly
$250 in monthly payments.
because they own most of the
The FoHygens also replaced tbe bonds that are paylnJ more to
family car tccently, buying a 1990 investors. and they do not have to
sedan and paying 12.5 percent borrow as much to pay for what
in~! on lhe ~uto loan .. "With the
lhey putebase.

By 'l1lt AIIIJI'IIted PNB
Lineup b lhe Sunday TV news
shows:
ABC's This Wed: With David
Brinkley - Topic: Welfare
Reform. Guests: Michigan Gov.
John Ensler, a Republican; Sen.
Nancy Landon Kassebaum, RKansas; and Bisbop James Malone
of Youngstown, Obio.
CBS' Face the Nation -Topics: Tai cuts, welfare and GATT.
Guests: Treasury Secretary Lloyd

Sunday Tunes-Sentinel/A3

Council ·nixes request for. application ·

gains tax cut. but observed drolly a
few hours later, "I figure we'll
have a little leverage around here
on Jan. 4."
That's the date lhe new
Congress convenes. To pave lhe
way, lhe 71-year-old Dole will be
elected majority leader without
opposition at a Republican caucus
on Friday. -In a race tbat reflects
underlying stresses, longtime GOP
Whip Alan Simpson or Wyoming
faces a cb_allenge from Sen. Trent
L~tt.. R·MJSs., for the No.2 leader·
ship JOb.
~ott is backed by_ Texas Se~.
Ph1i Gramm who, hke Dole, IS
expected to seek the party's 1996
presidential nomination. If Dole
runs for president. he'd be turnlnJ
day-to-day Senate responsibilities
over to lhe winner of lhe race. A.
fonner House member, Lou also
bas ties to Gingrich, whose cam·
paign Contract with America
appeals to some GOP senators but
giVes pause to others. '
Senate Democrats electing a
leader will choose between Tom
Dascble or South Dakota an~ Sen.
Christopher Dodd of Connl:(;tiCut.

Rising interest rates hit middle class most

By JAMES H. RUBIN
figures, say lhe bigber cost of borcontinue statewide along witb tbe Associated Press Writer
rowing is increasing the burden ·on
' 'By Tbe Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Despite ris· lhe middle class disproportionately.
· A fuU 111Dge of weather condi· chance of thunderstorms. Highs
ing ipterest rates that analysts say The average family gets bun in two
dons wUI occur across Ohio Ibis · should range lhrougb tbe 50s.
The
record
high
temperature
for
are
a particular blow to lhe middle ways, analysts say.
~JVCCkcDd.
Saturday
at
the
Columbus
weather
class,
l.inda Foflygen considers ber
Fust, middle-income Americans
· Temperatures remained cool
station
was
70
in
1896.
The
record
family
among
lhe
fonunate.
aren't
benefiting from lhe higher
"'Saturday with lower 40s north,
low
was
7
in
1950.
She
and
her
husband
refmanoed
rates
being
paid by bonds because
:teacblnJ around SO soulh. Windy ·
Weather rorecast:
the mongage on their Frederick, they are not heavy investors in
· and rainy conditions were expected
Sunday...Windy with occasional Md., borne seven months ago bonds. Second, average Americans
to spread across lhe state Saturday
•DiJbt as a storm system over lhe rain and a chance of thunderstorms. before interest rates bad climbi:d 10 accumulate debt more rapidly tban
Highs mainly in lhe 50s.
tbeir current level. Like millions of the wealthy to pay for homes,
• i:eiltral Plains intemified.
Americans,
they have become appliances and cars.
Extended
rorecast:
The rain may besin as a little
more
cautious
spenders because of
.
Monday
...
A
chance
or
rain.
"The poor, in general, don't
snow· over norlheast Ohio Sunday
lhe
rise
in
rates
lhat
the
Federal
Lows
mostly
in
lhe
40s.
Highs
mid
have
much access to credit. and the
'mominJ as temperatures will be
Reserve
bas
helped
engineer.
40s
to
mid
50s.
wealthy
don't need it," said Dean
:bear freezinJ but sbould change to
Economists,
citing
sovenunent
Tuesday
...
A
chance
of
snow
Baker
of
lhe Economic Policy
•ialn soon aftct dajbrcaL Tempera·tures will rise ovemisbt in most nonbeast. Fair elsewhere. Lows
• areas into lhe upper lOs norlh to upper 20s to middle 30s. Highs
middle 30s to middle 40s.
.
the low and mid-40s in lhe south. ·
Wednesday
...
Flurries
norlheast.
~: Sunday will be quite blustery
Continued from page A1
ered and a statement made if approacross lhe state and a biJb wind Fair elsewhere. Lows in lhe 20s. good for the community, we all have priate," a press release from the haswatch bas been Issued. Rain will Highs middle 30s to middle 40s.
to bite the bullet a little."
pita! said. "The Gallia County Fair
Tegethoffsaidthestockyardwould Board has been a good friend to the
be a real boom for business and help hospital and we are very supportive of
her to improve the lives of her em· their operations wbicb are of immeaployees.
·surable value to our total community.
"I would like to see them all rnak· Wcare·verymuchintcrestedioseeing
,; COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Cfatic opposition m the Legislature, iDJ a good, good living," she said. "If pbsilive economic progress in Gallia
Oc!orge Voinovich bas cut lhe num· which compromised by increasing it does go in, it·will definilely create County .•
bCir Of atatc-opcrated ~f.: stores lhe cap to 70,000 last year.
Ibm: new jobs (here). Plus, it will
Bill McOure, owner McClure's
rRim :ZS7 to 12S since · g offiCe
Ponerfield said lhat makes all mean more money in my waitresses' Family Restaurant, said he has mixed
ill 1991. lllvinf about SS.S million but 78 state-operated s10res eligible pockets.
feeling about the propo~l. It would
·1i )'ell', 111 oftlcill said.
to become contract operations.
"I hope this community as a whole be good for business, but may stunt
- Forty-seven more will be closed
Those stores sell about $99 mil· will look at this as how it will benefit growth in the Spring Valley area, he
"11cltt )'ell', and lbe administration is lion worth or liquor each year, the community .It's just good for ev- said.
eqJeCted 10 ask f~ authority to get Ponerfield said.
"I feel this area is going to grow ...
out of retail liquor sales entirely _
"We're now left wilh lhe larger eryone when you keep that money
Oowing
locally."
anyway,
but I hope the stockyard
aflcr Republicans take control of -stores that are more profitable,
During
fair
week,
business
at
the
won't
deter
that away," he said.
lbc LeJislatule in January.
therefore there's JOing to be less
Red
Rooster
jumps
from
9,000
cusJerry
Darst,
manager of the Shake
Not included in lhe savings are savings from lhem," sbe said.
tomersto14,000,Tegetboffsai!l,
AIShoppe
said
he
would expect,a 25
reductions such as dosing some
though
she
doubts
a
stockyard
would
percent
increase
in business if PLA
'ciulleta entirely and cousolidatins
generale
that
kind
of
business
for
her
moved
in.
.:aut1es in administrative offices,
I I
restauranl, she said she could anlici"I believe it would help us oul," he
~said Marl-jean Poner~eld of lhe
Continued
from
page
A1
pate
a
healthy
increase.
said.
"I believe it would be good for
..Qbio Department of Ltquor ConOne
of
the
men
pointed
a
.22-cali·
She
added
that
she
bas
faith
PLA
Galli
a
County."
~.
.
Presently, the PLA's Hillsboro fa· By June 30, more conversions ber rifle at Wilson, who was shol in will operate a clean facility and not
cility is one of the nearest stockyards.
.abould increase lhe annual savings . the abdomen and left arm after grab- create any health hazards,
bing the barrel and thrusting it aside.
"They have to maintain it or the The proposed Gallipolis site would
:.10 SI0.4 million, sbe said
There also are some costs assoWilson recovered from his wounds EPA will come down on them like a conduct business with 2,000 farms in
;ciated with lhe closings, such as and spent six more years as an officer ton of bricks,'' she said.
the area and create lhrce full-lime and
;early retirement or unemployment before transferring this year to the
The site's biggest neighbor, Holzer 10 pan-time jobs.
:tienefits for workers who lose jobs, division'sColumbusoffice, where be Medical Center, has not yet taken an
County Extension Agent Ed
•fortedield said. She said lhe total coordinates hunter and trapper edu· official posilion.
:Vol! born has said the stockyard could
•CIIItofeatly retirements sinre 1991 cation programs.
"When all peninent infonnation is generate as much as $50 million for
:lias bcien $2.7 miUion.
• lcle said peer counseling and a sup- available, the subject will be consid- the local eronomy.
: Voinovich wants to tum over
helped
dealshooting.
with the · . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·
:liquor sales to private operators, ponivewife
post-traumatic
stresshim
of tbe
· ~uch as carryouts and supermarH U ·S H PUP PIE s •
But while the encounter gave him a
;li:ets, who are paid a percentage deeper appreciation :or life, it did not
SHOES YOU CAN LIVE IN
coliUIIissioo. Contracton receive 6 cause him to distrust bunters.
Available In
·pen:ent of retail sales and 4 percent
"When I am out there working
Black&amp;
•of wholesale sales:
· Agency atores, as lhe conlract enforcement, now I am still more conAnUque
: bushicsses are termed. have been a cerned about being hun from an acci·
Brown
•part of Ohio's liquor distribu~o~ dental discharge than from someone
·system since the repeal of Prohlbi· trying to hurl me," he said.
"I don't take any chances, but my
MALL WALKER SMOOTH LEATHER
:ljon. But until Voinovicb became
frame
of
mind
is
not
that
these
guys
:aovernor, sales mostly were conare going ·to try to hurt me. I don't
Lafayette Mall
~ li'acted only in sparsely populated
think
that
is
in
any
of
our
officers
Gallipolis
'treM.
• • W~n Voinovich took office, minds."
!he law allowed contract operations
in communities or less tbali 20,000
'JSopulatlon. His administration
11uempted to have lhe population
ctlP remov~. but ~ l_nto Demo-

Regional

November 27,1884

91 Mill Street
Mlddlepolt, OhiO .

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service logged eight caUs for assistance Friday. Units responding
included:
MIDDLEPORT
11:30 a.m., South Fifth Avenue.
Alex Marcum, Holzer Medical
Center.
1:25 a.m., SuperAmerica, Barney Hiles, treated and not trans·
poned.
10:10 a.m., Leading Creek
Road, Maude Sperlock, treated and
not transported.
RUfLAND
11:17 a.m., Kingsbury Road,
Forest W. Lee, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
SYRACUSE
1:07 p.m., State Route 338,
Margaret Milby, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
11:27 a .m., State Route 7,
smoke odor in Debbie Young's
home.
4:44 p.m., Blake Road, Lorean
Gorrell. SL Joseph's Hospital.

Paul Davies Jewelers of Gallipolis has teamed up with
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Hospital news
. VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - Fannie
Durst. Portland.
Friday discbarges - Violet Sin. clair, Athens; Laura Yoto,
Reedsdlle; Cbarlea Barrett Sr.•
, R~.

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404 SECOND AVENUE

GAWPOUS, OHIO ,

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Commentary
UMW chief bri.n gs fire to debate . ·
Sunday TIJIICs-Sentinel/A4

November27, 1994
I

A DlviiiOil of

~INC.
8l5 Third Ave, GaUipoU., Ohio

(614) 4411-l34l

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 991-1156

ROBERT L WINGE1T
Publllber

HOBART WILSON JR.
EneaUoe Editor

MARGARET LEHEW
CoDtroller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and the American
Newspaper Publisbe111 Auociation.
I..I!'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lhan
300 words. All !etten are subject to editing and must be signed wilh

addres&amp; and telephone number. No unsigned louen will be
publiabed. Letters should be tn good taste. addreasing iuues, not

nam~,

persooalitios.

Letters to the Editor
Responds to letter

I

, I

Dear Editor:
and from a job you bavc to bave a
I am wrltlog in response to Mr. reliable automobile. If some teachNorman Curfman's letter to the erswantnicecan,tbeyhavearight
editor cntilled ~Poor kids need a to spend their payc:bec:ks however
fair cbance" in your Nov. 18, 1994 tbey wanL
edilion.
Meigs Counry teachers, on the
Dear Mr. Curfman, yow' letter whole, do a fantastic job. They do
overwhelmed me. 1 could write a · Ibis despite being paid a third less
20-paae reply and still DOl satisfy than the state "average" ~acbcr.
your burt and anger. I'm sorry. But Mr. Curfman, we are I,IOillnm&amp; our
this Ia Meias County. We have teachers' pockets wtth luxuries.
about the lowest property tax base · They sttuggle witb payins bills and
in the state of Oblo and until there attempting to meet lbeir children's
is "equity in school funding" we needs just lite you. A lot of tbem
wiU c:ontinue to sttuggle providing are even still paying off their c:olbasic educational needs for our lese loans. Tbe difference, Mr.
cbildren.
Curfman, Is tbat they bave a job.
Now, there Is one area of your And they can spend wliat little lbey
letter tbat I am res to respond to bave left after taxes on whatever
In depth. Wbat m tbe world is Ibis they wanL
Maureen Hennessy
big fuss about teacbers' cars? They
Pomeroy
bave a job, Mr. Curfman. To get to

wASHINGTON - There talked matter-of-factly about ralsshould be a "Trumta test" ing tbe retirement age for Social
imposed on politicians who are Seruriry to aae 70 c. even 7S.
inclined to mate Indiscriminate
A third-generation coal miner.
cuts in entitlement spending to
prove they are deficlt-bawks:
By Jack A J
"Tape yourmoutb shut and tape
nueTSQn
one of your nostrils shuL Then run
Bnd
up and down a flight of stairs 20 .
times and cry to c:atcb your breath
Micltae/ Binste/n
witbjustonenostril."
That's bow Richard L. Trumka Trumlca's rr8ining underground bas
describes tbe way bis father served blm.well on the entitlement
breathes 24 hours a day. Trumka is commission. He's not afraid to get
president of the United Mine bis bands dirty, and be's easy to
Workers of America, and a mem- spot at the commission's bearings.
ber of the politically cbar~ed Trumlca is tbe burly man with tbe
Bipartisan Commission on Enutle- busby black muslacbe who squir'IIS
meat and TaJt Reform. Like so in the starched white collar and
many c:oal miners Trumka's falber, necktie.
Franlc, acquired the dreaded black
Trumta's tilling-at-windmills
lung disease In bis 50s. He barely style bas given the cmunon pei'SOII
made it to 62, when be ~as able.to a seat at the table, and bas 3iveo
retire and start collectmg Soctal tbe commission a rebel and a rcaliSec:urity. Today be's tethered to an ty check. He was tbe only orie of
oxygen
32 members to vote against the
Trumlca
a beartbcat to tbe commission's preliminary report
hubris
the entitlement "because of the impresston IIIey
debate.
when some of leave tbat entitlements are tbe
bis
on the commission cause of tbe nation's fiscal woes.''

Unlike many Democrats, Trumka is proud to defend the social
safety net and declare tbat not all
entitlements are evil. "For millions
of Americans, entitlements are
· their only IIOIIICC of financial sccurity and adequate llcaltb care," be
says. "You c:an't lump them all
together."
Left out of the commission's
report, meanwhile, were all of ibe
tax breaks enJoyed by corpol'lllions
and wealthy Atiieric:ans. Essentially
these are entitlements for tbe affluent, and Trumka thinks bls fellow
c:ommissioners are forgettins lbat
balf of their ailssion is tax reform.
Witb tax cuts for the ricb on me
horizon In a Republic:an-c:onbOUed
Consress, Trumta notes lbat the
1982 tax cuts drained tbe treasury
of$1.2 trillion.
"And now they come to us and
aay 'We've sot to set rid of lbcae
entitlement pros rams because
they're aolng to till us!"' says
Trumta. "Before you talk about
soaking tbe middle c1asa, let's take
bact some of those goodies we
save tbe ricb."

I~CALL1N5

FI\OA100R
LOCATION.

Dear Editor:

·

"The thing that really upset me
tbe most was 'bow easily they
talked about it," Trumka told our
associate Dale Van Atta. "I
tbougbt about my dad, literaii,Y·;
staggering off to wort, l!laking 11 J
until tbe day be was 62 and just
sayin~. 'That's it. I can't so any- f
more. And now they're saying to 1
bim, 'Ob Franlc, you have anotbcr ;
good eight yean In you. Go on out I
there and suffer for eigbt more
years or just die in the process.'
Social S.ccuriry was bis safety net.
If you bad told my dad, 'Hey, you
gotta wort till age 70,' be would 1
bave died -literally.''
•
(Jack Anderson and Mlcbael :
Blostein are syndicated colum- :
nlsts for United Feature Syndl- •
cate.)

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liatenint ID·RuSb ·Limbaugh ~very
weet, and beins focused and
have seen tt - 10 wbic:b Gingncb informed on the truth about each
declared, "We will cooperate, but liberal smear as it is launched. are
we wiU n01 compromise." People an information network not to be
who also saw tbe longer version or sneezed at. But our liberal friends
1"'l.lll·am A. Rusher
rr I
bis. remarks k~ow that thi~ mtber aie frightened, angry and desperate,
arbttrary-sounding formu~uon ~as and lbey will spare no weapon in
tlms wilb an obsidian knife), didn't p~ b~ a ~~ m·wbtcb their capacious arsenal.
get under way until they grimly Gmg':lcb smd, We wll! not comWbicb brings me to my final
· desbOyed that honorable and scbol- proouse on ~ur. core beliefs'' - a point The liberals have just !alcen a
arly man, Robert Bart, whom Pres- much J_D~ limited and ~nable terrible, quite probably terminal,
ident Reasan bad n&lt;mlnaled for lbe propostb~n. But lbe media ran the · beating. But. like the Bourbons of
Supreme Court. That bloody job sbol1 v~10n about as often as lbey old, they bave learned oothins and
took only a .few weeks, but gave !3D the clip of the L.A. pohce beat- forgotten nothing. They have 00
birtb to a brand-new verb: to mg Rodney King, and lbe effect on more intention of listerung to rea•'bort'' s&lt;meone.
viewers was mucb tbe same.
sonable Democrats like' the DLC' s
Clarence Thomas was slated to
It will be up to Gingrlcb to learn AI From titan lbey do to Gingrich.
be borked, but escaped - mostly to avoid furnishing bis enemies They would rather die with their
· by lbe sheer force of his own titan- witb out-of-c:uttcxt sound bites like boots on, and 1n my heart of hearts
· tic and· outraaed personality. Now that one. No one expects blm to 1 am glad tbat Newt Gingrich Is
it's Newt Gingrich's tum, and lbe c:bange overnight Into a FJaocis of . ready to oblige tbem. As John
drums are already throbbing.
Asslsi, but if be keeps 00 lettlna the Parter said to bis Minute Men at
Gingric:b is a brilliant man _; a liberals c:ast blm as Savonarola, be Lexington, "If they mean to have a
Ph.D., in fact- and bigbly articu- too c:ould wind up bein&amp; banged war, let it begin berel"
late. He is solidly conservative, and Bl!d burned.
·
(William Rusber Is a Dlstlndetermined to deliver tbe c:banges
To be sure, the playlna field (to aulshed FeUow of the Claremont
be believes the voters want. But be change the mecapbor) Is a lot level- Institute for the Study of Statescan also be abrasive, and this is the er DOW than It was wben tbc libel- mansbip and Political Phllo•o·
trait the liberal media are counting ala were scorina all those touch- pby.)
on. They think Gingrich is their downs. TwCI!'Y ~on Americ:ans
But the modern era of ritual
murder by the liberals and tbe
media, on tbe model of the Aztecs
(who cut out the hearts of their vic-

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It must be Tbantssivina. The

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Like it or no~ · tbe next few festive weeks wiU be a celebration of
everylbiug those critics detest few weeks of holidays eould not Americ:a' s multlcultural bcritaae. I
bave coou: at a more needed time.
After one of the most mean-spirited
. Chuck Stone
and polarizin&amp; electiODS in American history, we need somelblnt to
remind us of "lbe tiel tbat bind.'I''
call it the American Festival of
The approadlin&amp; holiday season Holidays.
won't narrow any of ·tl!c divisive
Tbe feslival ofrtclally be&amp;hlS
gender, racial, d~s and religious last weet with Tbanksgivinl,
saps. But it c:an help all of ·us to praised by tbat lovely hymn. "We
beam- benlanly at each otbcr.
galber to'etber to ask the Lord's
For tbc next eight weeks, differ- blesslna.' For kids, it slsnals the
ent groups wW celeblatc the same arrival of Santa Claus In departholidays-together or holidays pcc:u- ment store parades.
' ·
llar only to those aroups. There' a
Just as the Pilgrims c:elebrat¢
one word tbat defines Ibis happy tbe first year of their miraculous
c:ultural symbiosis: multicultural- survival in America, Jews celcbclte
ism.
a·2,IS9-year-old mlraci~.Swbil:b
To a few critics, howeves, mnlti- Ibis yesw beglna on the ftnt IJIIdlty
culturalism Ia a dirty word, tanta- evening alia' Tbanksgivlna.
mount to Mr. Dooley's description
Hanukkah c:ommemorates the
of the vice presidency. "It isli't a victory of tbe Jews who drove the
crime exactly. Ye c:an 't be slot to Macc:abeea out of tbelr temple In
jail rr it, but It's kind lv a disgrace. 165 B.C. They tbcu found aiiMIJ
It's like wrlliu' anonymous let· "use of oU, wltb wbicb to ligllt
tal."
their lamps. Mlracnlously, tbe oil
Critia of multlculturalism sbln bumed for eight days. Durin&amp; .
-that metaphorical contempl. "A Hanukkab, Jews light a candle In a
cam palau to lower America' a menorah each evening In memory
moral statui," pumbles that con- of those eight days.
(enilal Intellectual Scrooac.
On Christmas Eve, Dec:. 24,
GeorJe F. Will. "lbe disunitin&amp; of Cbrlstians wW also light candles In
America,"
sniffs
Arthur churc:b, while !Dercantilistlc: 81'*
Sc:hlcsinser Jr. "A Mcaliank: polit- talDIS lbe Nativity repi8CCIJICDI with
lc:al proaram," snarls Richard · Santa Oaus. But the day's blessel1Bernstein. "Dumbed-down text· ness stiU exa1ta the beuer anscJa of
~..
lains lbat high ournature.
.
of the bi:I8 aristocntcy, Cltarles
African Americans will
Mlll'l'liy.
'
.
Bgbt c:andles each day ~ IIIII . .

at"'

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iii c:elelntloo of Kwanza. wblcb Is
Swabili for "first fruits." Fomided
iu 1966 by the blac:lt nationalist
acbolar, Manlan• Karenga. Kwanza
Is a family effort to celebrate tbe
berita&amp;e of Ametiauls liviD&amp; In tbc
Afric:an diaspora.
Each of lbe seven Kwanza days
define a principle by wblcb the
young are taught to live - umoja
(unity), ku)icbagulia (ICif-dctermination), ujlma (collec:tlve wort),
ujamaa (co-operative economics),
nia (purpose), tjuumba (acativity)
and 1man1 (faith).
Next c:omes New Year's Eve,
which tbc enlire world rcoognlzes.
In Amlirica, dils jubilant bln&amp;e Is
followed by a recupendive day of
dozin&amp; lbrouab an oriY of football ·
pmes, .
.
Five days later, Puerto Ricans
celebrate the Festival of Three
Kings (EI Dia de los Reyes). Our-

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SAVE UP TO

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60%

ALL 4 STORES

rope)s furniture ya[feries
Lifestyfe furniture Sfwwcase
5lcquisitions fine jewefty
- GALLIPOLIS AND MIDDLEPORT -

Sheriff William Laird said.
Tbe man tben exchanged sun-

FREE Gift To First 50
Cu stom ers At All 4 Stores

fire witb another man at a housing
project In Mount Hope, Laird said.

•Refreshments

Lottery numbers
By Tlte Aaoc:iated Prell
The foUowiDf numbers were
selected in Friday s Ohio and West .
Virginia loaeries:
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6~
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~XUgrams

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for "

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Mayor Greg Lasbut~'s 199S
budget proposal asks for $199 000
to bire two full-time epidemi~IG­
gists, a part-time epidemiologist
and two computer specialists, and
to pay for some private consultants.
Health Commissioner WUiiam
Myers said many cities now
emphasize epidemiology, altboup
Columbus might be abellll' of most
In aeating a team.
"I think everyone is aware
we've been cballenged in our community to look at dioxin, atrazine,
1~. We will be dealing wilb cblonne, electromagnetic fields and
violence," Myers said in a briefma
hst week before City Council staff ·
members.

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 SECOND AVE.
GAWPOUS

As
Low

As

75o/oAPR

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With Approved Credit

CELLULARONE® PHONE*

PRICE
l;:H!VY ::1-10, 14839, Villflli., 2 tone Jlallii. i !Ml

whnla, rear allder, dual mlrrora, cloth lnt.............$7995
GMC S-10JIMMV 4X4, 14651, blue,A/T,IVC,
AM/FM, aport wheela ............................................... $7974
11192 PONTIAC SUNBIRD CONVERTIBLE, 14527, AT,
AM/FM caaa., alloy wheel a, 37,000 mile a. power '
1993 OLDS. CUTLASS SUPREME S, 14680, Dk. pewter,
AC, AT, AM!FM Cll8a., P. windows, P. aeata ......... $12,200
1991 CHEVY LUMINA, 14659, ·blue, AC, AT, AIII/FM, .
cloth lnL .................................................................... $74!15
1993 CHEVY LUMINAAPV, 14685, while, AT, AC,
· AIII/FM, tilt, cruise, P. windows &amp; locka .............. $12,875
1910 CHEVY CAVALIER, 14689, blue, AC, AT, AM/FM,
cloth lnL .................................................................... $54!15
1992 PONTIAC SUNBIRD, 14696, red, 4 Dr., AC, AT,
AM/FM, cloth Int....................................................... $8174
1910 PONTIAC GRAND AM, 14705, red, AT, AC, AM/FM
caaa., rear del...........................................................$8995
1991 CHEVY S-10, 14706, Extra cab, AC, AM/Fill caaa.,
iport whnla, V-6 englne...................................$9995
1993 CHEVY CAVAUER RS, 14713, V-6 eng., AC,
caaa., tilt, c:rulae, P. locka ........................... $8995
1910 CHEVY 5-10, Black, 14718, black, V-6 eng., AC, ·
AM/FM caaa., aport wheela, rear allder ............ $79!15
Ul89 CHEVY BERETTA GTU, 14717, Red, at,mrool, AC,
AII.JFII can., tilt, crulae, P. win., alloy whnla ......$7450
1191 PONTIAC FIREBIRD, 14719, T. Tops, low mllea,
AC, AT, AM/FM eaaa., lilt, P. wlndowa &amp; locka .......$8995
1189 CHEVY 5-10, 14707, white, custom stripes, auto.
AM/FM, dual mlrrora ..................................... :$3995
1990 PONTIAC GRAND AM, 14721, AT, AC, AM/FM,
cloth Int., aport wheels ............................................ $4995
1992 FORD TEMPO, 14654, Blue, AT, AC, AM/FM caiS.,
cloth Int., crulae .......................................................sn24
1993 FORD TAURUS GL, 14637, Red, AC, AT, AM/FM,t
1111, crulse,alr bag, P. wlndowa ............................. $11 ,995
1993 FORD TEMPO GL, 14604, AT, AC, AM/FM caas., P.
locka, cuaL wheela ............................................... _. $8313
1991 FORD RANGER, 14687, While, AM/FM, sport
whaela,dual mlrrora, 'THr bumper .......................... $6995
1993 FORD MUSTANG,I4895, Green, AT, AC, AM/FM
. cata., cruiH, P. windows, 25,000 mllea ................. $8830
1992 FORD TAURUS, 14700, Blue, AM/FM ca11., AC,
AT, P. aelta, P. windowa, crulae, rear def......... .. ....$9870
1993 DODGE CARAVAN, 14572, Burgundy, 7 11111.. Y.
6 eng., AC, AT, AM/FM.can., tilt, cruise .............. $12,995
1993 DODGE DYNASTY, 14652, Burgundy, AT, AC,
All/Fit, tilt, CruiH, P. windows, lllr bag ................. $9435
1992 DODGE DYNASTY, 14693, While, AC, AT, air
bag,tllt, crulae,cloth lfll. ................................, .......... $7995
1Bn PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE, 14712, Red, AC, AT,
cloth Int. ...................................................... $3495
1983 HVUNDAI EXCEL, 14603, AT, AC, AM/FM can.,
644

Pk:t 3: 0-4-3
Pick 4: 3+2.0

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SUPER SPECIALS.

mled

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federal

ropl ................................................................................. s~

omo

B The Alloclated Prell
'·
Today Ia Sunday, Nov. 27, lbe 331st day or 1994. There are 34 days :;
left In tbc year. The Jewish Festival of Lights, Hamtkksh, begins at sun- '•
~
'
Toda 's Hi&amp;blilbt In Histay~
.
· ~
Oa
27, 1942, !luring World War n, the Frencb navy at Touloo
scuttled Its ships and submarines to prevent.lbem f~ fallin&amp; Into the · ·
banda of lbe Nazis.
1
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Oalbis~

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·Hunt on for Cleveland man
suspected In two shootings

Buckeye S: 7-17-22-28-29
The Obio Lottery wW pay out
$291,523 to wiooen In Friday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily 8~·
Salclln Pick 3 Num
$1,413,679.SO.
In lbe Olber dally game. Pick 4 1
Numben players wagered
S321,270.SO and will share
$104,600.
.
Sales In Buckeye S totaled
$S04,373.
The jac:tpot for Saturday's
Sujler LotiO drawinl was $16 mlllloo.
WEST VIRGINIA
Dally 3: 7-1-7
Dally4: 6-4-H
Cub~; 6-7-1-11-14-24

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SUNDAY

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-LAST DAY-

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FAYETI'EVILLE, W.Va. (AP)
- Fayette County authorities
seardled Satlllday for a Cleveland
man wanted io a double shooting
anc1 separare sbootout.
The man, illentified only as
"Ore,'' Is
of sbootin&amp; two
people at Da FUnky Playground. a
~ghiCiub In Carlisle. early Friday,

• •

several years.
A preliminary rtudlng released
in ·Dec:ember 1991 showed tbat tbe
Fernald plant released two-and-ahalf times more uianium into the
air from 1951 to 1988 than the
Department of Energy bad estimated.

s~ and

Open House

COLUMBUS- Sharpshooters bave started kiUing deer In seven
of lbe Franldin County Metro Parks.
•
The sboolers wort for lbe part system and the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources' Division of Wildlife. They r.re rifles at night
from a platform, wbi&lt;:b.allows buUets to ttavel toward lbe aruund.
Tbe deer bave multiplied in the parts to the point where tbey
have difficulry rmdina enough to eat.
·
Last year, omcials permitted tbe deer to be relocated, but the
. division said earlier Ibis fall it would not allow them to be moved
again.
.
.
The shooters bave been tilling five to 10 animals each ume out,
said Roger HubbeU, parts director. He would not P!'!&gt;Vide an exact
count of deer tilled smce the berd thinni~g started IbiS week..
The meat is being given to food pantries for needy people m central Ohio.
-Tbe ~ialed Press

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In 1839; tbc American StatiMical Association was toilitded in BOlton.
In 1901, Army War College wis established in Washington D.C. '
In 1910, New York's Peniisylvanta.Station opened.
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~·Erie County Probate Coun approved the settlement, then

Sharpshooters start deer kill

(Chuck Stone Ia a columlibt
for NeWIIpaper Euterprlse A..
elation.)

rlov.

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COOLVll.LE- A Ravenswood. W.Va., man was erusbed to
death In a workplace accident near thiS southeastern Oblo villaae.
the Atbeus County Sheriff's Office said.
.
Micbael S. Lewis, 38, died Wednesday wbile loading a truck at
Mountaineer Bulk ServiCe Inc:., a haulins company.
. Lewis' supervisor, Richard Cunningham, found blm Thursday
under a one-ton bas of materials.
Sheriffs Dispatcber Bobbi Woodgenl said Friday tbc coroner's
office bad ruled Lewis' death an accident

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. CINCINNATI (AP)- People
wbo live near a former uranium
processing plant in southwest Oblo
say they are Impatient over delays
In a study to determine their radia·
tion expo11ure.
Tbe slx,pbasc study that the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control
sponsors bas bee.n under way for

West Virginia man crushed

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products bring at markets in Obio,
Kentucky, Tennessee, West Virginia, Indiana, Missouri, Virginia
and North Carolina.
"These guys don't look at it as
cagcer, they look at it as cash,"
said Jolm Grimes, Ohio State University's extension agent In Brown
County. "It's the next farm payment for lbem."

Delays irk Fernald residents

McDowell was not allowed to meet wilb bls seaelary to handle
legal·malteiS. prompting him to me a c:unplaint In wbidt be commented oo the judge's appearance.

log the day and evening, three biblical kings, dressed in costumed
finery, go from door to door, distrilluting gifts to children.
Finally, on Jan. 31, tbe American Festival of Holidayi soars to a _
pyrotechnic enll witb the celebra- ,.
lion oftbc Otinese New Year, usb- .;
ering in the Yearoftbc Pig.
""
For decades, these groups have
celebrall:d tbe diversity of lbeir etb- ,
niclties along wilb the unity ot their
Americ:an c:illzensbip. Now the ~
multiculturalism critics are sayina .'
tbat they .threaten American unity. •
But let us leave the ·rhetoric of '.
meanness to Newt Gingrich. Let
the rest of us renew the ties tbat ,
bind and be blessed by tbem durin&amp;
tbis uniquely Americ:an holiday ""

season.

overseas. While domestic consumption of dgarettes bas dec:llned
steadily, lbe market bas exploded
iu other countries, especially In
Southeast Asia and Germany.
More than $22 miUion wortb of
tobacc:o was sold at lasf year's ·markei. Tbat is a big boost for rural
soutbem Ohio, where unemploy- ·
men! is a cbron!c problem,

J llided_il ~ IC811lin&amp; the w~ never moved to Sandusky.
.__
. Heydlnser later ap~XUveillllesetuemenl. tiiil oromcl l.rcDoweu
to return bis le&amp;al fees. When be refused;lteydlnger round blm In
c:ootempl of rourt and ordered blm to spend 20 days In jail.

j

Today in history
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about raising and seUina tobacco at an eucUon
at the OK Tobacc:o Warehouse In Ripley, Oblo.

Brown, Adams and Clermont
counties ranted I, 2 and 3 In Ohio
tobacco )Wductioo in 1993. Farmers In tbosC counties alone harvested more than 13 million I;lOUDds of
· tobacco tbat year, ac:onrding to lbe
Ohio Department of Agriculture.
Farmers throughout tbe eisht·
state burley bell are anxiously
watcbing_to see what price.! __lbeir

on

help.

let us copy your Old
family photoa. Special 25x7's for $14.95. Reg.
$19.95. SAVE $5.00. We
also do passport photos,
Identification photos and
photo finishing.

(AP)

COLUMBUS - A lawyer who called a Huroo Counry judge a
"walrus-lite, mustachloed, little punk" bas been suspended tiom
practicinalaw ror uslna a phony address to escape tbe Judie's Jurisdiction.
.
The•Oblo Supreme Court Ibis week said attorney Gregory Alan
McDoweU of Willard was guilry of committing fraud against the
judicial system and lndefmitely suspended bis license to practice.
Court records sbow McDowell represented a woman wbose soo
was AA!!:k ancJ Injured by a car in 1989. The attorney r.Jed in Hunll(l
County for approval of a S423,SOO settlement from lbe driver's
Insurance company.
·
Probale Jndse Thomas E. Heydinaer dls8pproved of tbc settlemeal
McDowell said be rented an aparl!llent In Sandusky for bis client
and her children and refilcd for ap~XUval of lbe settlement In Erie

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Take~~ new.s chp.- yo.u m~st

TOBACCO TALK - Cbarlle Moore, left,
briefs bls 4-year-old _JP'andson, Qulnten Scott,

Combative attorney suspended

-liberals will try ~to 'Bork' ~ Gingrich · l
· fiVID the mootent the outcome
bec:ame apparent on election night,
it was Inevitable tbat natlooal attenlion would focus witb almost ferocious Intensity on Speaker-to-be
Newt Gingrich . His power and
c:lear determination to change tbe
American national aaenda guaranteed tbaL
Witb Gingrlcb's new eminence,
however, bas come a leas welc&lt;me
cbanse In bis status: He is now, and
will be for at least tbe next two
years, the chief target and whipping-boy of tbe liberal media. If
(Improbably) be doesn't yet know
wbat tbat entails, be will rmd out.
Liberals are pleasantly acc:ustomed to having their worst enemies desiroyed with the help of the
media. One or tbe earliest and best
examples was · Joe McCarthy.
Another and far bigger one was
Richard Nixon. For a few beady
years it even seemed possible lbat
first Ronald Reagan and tben
George Busb migbt actually be
brought down by the wide-sweeplog scythe of Impeachment, if only
Lawrence Walsh's endless invest!gations could set somewhere.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Tbe
Columbua Health Department
wants to do more to track bow
toxic chemicals and other environmental or social factors might be
. affecting public beallb.
Tbe !lepartment is asking for
IIIIIICY llel.t year to pay for a fivemember epidemiology team to
study neiabborbood patterns of
beallb problems and bow lbose patterns might relate to such tblnss as
dioxin from a trash-burning power
plant, violence and commUDicable
diseases.
Epidemiologists study bow and
wby diseases and other beallb
problema spread In ac:ommuniry.
Tbe department now bas one
epidemiologist,
.
. . .but. relies heavily

Ohio News in Brief:

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Christmas decoralions are up.
This festive III'Oloaue to the next

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.--------------.Celebrate America's multiculturalism
Berry's World

RIPLEY (AP) -There's a cautious.optimlsm in the land of tobacco.
After years of talclng a beating
from bcaltb wambtgs, tighter federal rcgulatioo and no-smoking onllnances, tobaa:o growe~ are talclng
beart In Improved prices and the
promise of a more sympathetic
Congress wben Republic:ans
assume control in January.
"It's kind or upliftins." said Pat
Raines, wbo grows 13 acres of
tobacc:o In Adams Counry. "It may
be more of a brighter future.''
The annual 3!k1ay sale of tobacco began Monday in this small
Ohio River town, the state's only
burley tobacco market.
Farmers were enoouraaed by tbe
prices, wbicb were averaging about
$1.8S a pound.
Buyers from the major dgarette
manufacturers annually converge at
the three tobacco warehouses by
the river to pun;base more than 12
million pounds of burley tobacc:o.
Ripley is the only place In tbe
12 southern Obio counties wbere
tobacCo is grown tbat farmers can
sen their goods.
·Much or the tobacco sold in
Ripley will. ..eventually
be sblpped
\

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City seeks health answers

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I

Son's trial a 'mockery'
· derer. My cbildren were raised up
Since I am not too well I would poor and taught to help anyone tbat
lite to say a few tht!:fs to Meigs needed help. They were taught tbat
County people: you
better hope money wasn't everytblna so money
you don't bave to go to court for means ootbiog to tbcm. people do.
anything more tban a traffic ticket
I tnow people tblnt I am just a
and if you do, hope you can afford . bitter molber. No. I bave bad two
a lawyer.
years to study every law boot I
When a jury 'Sits and listens 10. could find. I cv.cn. wc:nt 10 Athcua .
two people say they lied to get to the Ohio University Library. I
wbat they wanted, there is some- don't bave much education, but I
thins wrong wben they can sive a learned enough to tnow my SOD's
guilty verdict on tbat kind of testi- trial was a mockery of j~~tice.
mony.
Now I know why
y Justice
My SOD was offered a plea bar- wears a blindfold: abe's ashamed
gain and refused because be of what our judicial system has
believed · tbe jury would see become. If you bave a son, I pray
through tbe co-defendant and his - )'OU dou't bave to go through wbat
wife's lies.
I bave and what my SOD bas been
But wben you have a public through and still bas to jo tbrou&amp;b
defender, they are tbere for the for many years until someone fllllllmoney they get paid and you get ly believes bis side for aU bis statethe shaft. One of lbe jurors bad a menu were t~e s~me. Tbe c:osoo to die from an overdose, be defendant and bis wife made se\lergave my son a guilty verdict a1 statements and not any were the
because be blames anyone tbat bas same.
anything 10 do with drugs. This
If Ibis is justice, It sure wasn't in
was reoorted to my son's lawyers any of the law books I read. I want
but notbin&amp; was done. The whole to thank the people tbat stood by
jury knew Ibis; I bave a letter to me through all Ibis and Rev. Grace
IXI&gt;ve it.
for bis prayers and bis help.
I wonder bow many of tbe
I haven't given up and I woo't
juron would bave went to police until my son is set free.
tnowlns tbelr family life was at
Anna Barnes
state if tbe jury bad went to my
Pomeroy
bouse and seen for itself tbe buck•1
shot 111 my steps. Maybe their ves(EDITOR'S NOTE: Mra.
diet would have been differeo~ but Barnea' aon, WWiam Lemuten,
for some odd reason they c:banaed waa found guilty In 1993 on
the scbedule after my 100• 5 lawyer counts stemming from the 1991
saw tbc steps. My SOD smoked pot double murder of Jeffrey L. and
but tbat doeln't mate blm a mur- Jeffrey S. U.Uey.)

Tobacco
growers.
optmistic

Trumta taraets ~e F'!relan
lnves~J!ient Tax Crec!it. wbtcb be
says gtves c:orporauons ~ c:redlt
"for every dollar they pay m taxes
to F"tdel Castro or$the a~lllOUab" at
an annual cost of 17 billloo.lt's a
drop In a SI.S trilliOI! bu~get, bowever, so the symbolism II lpst .on
Irumka's fello~ c:ommiss~pner~; .
These are all mc~els ~d diines,
~~n S,en. Harry Retd, D-Nev.
They re good to lalk about, and,
we sboul.d, do soD_tetblng about
tbem, but II s not gomg to solve our
finandai~XUblems."
.
Trumka bas a message for the
~-bers of C~n~ ~ 1be ~­
mtsston who ndtcule bts rbetonc:
By tbe coounlsslon's own calculalions, federal spendlns on Medicare and Medical~ - wbic:b DOw
account ror.one:thinJ of all entitlementa- will triple as a J!CK?~ta&amp;e
of the economy by 2030 tf left
unchecked. Yet, Trumta note~,
Congre~s cbtctened out wben 11
came ume to pass health care
ref~.
.
There is a problem wttb entitlements and lbe problem centers
on beallb care," says Trumka. "I
bear some of the people on that
commission being sanctimonious
about it, but when tbey bad a
chance to really tackle the problem
facing the country with entitlements tbey just walked away from
it."

NEW

Ohio/W.Va.

November27, 1994

•

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Annual
Percentage
Yield

Minimum Deposit: $2,500.00

7~0
-

Annual
Percentage
Yield

Minimum Deposit: $500.00

These CDs arc automatically renewable. Penally for early withdrawal.
A.P.Y. is available as of the dale of Ibis issue, but is subjcctto change.

1991 =~~AM';·I4827;·&amp;i;~t:·ic:·iM'iFM·~~~~~~
- r del., cloth lnL .................................................... $6995
1Bn NISSAN PULSAR NX, 14618, Low miles, T. Topa,
AM1'fll. cloth Int. ...................................................... $6195
1992 NISSAN SEHTRA XE, 1.4613, AT, AC, tilt, cruise,
AMIIFih-.............................................................. $7103

1192 TOYOTA COROLLA, 14619, Lt. pewter, AC, AT,
...., clef., clolh lnt. .................................................., .. $8975
1192 TOYOTA CoROLLA, .,..., White, AC, AT, rear
cloth lnt. ............................................................$1700

liiiiii

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Pau•

A8 Sunday Times-Sentinel

--Area deaths-- For SQme,
Betty ~- ~ughes
WOR1HINGTON - Betty Jean Hovatter Hugbes, 64, Wortblngton,
died 'Jlnnday, Nov. 24, 1994 at bcr residc~C.
Bom Dec. 29, 1929 iD Canton, tbe daughter'of tbe late Mildred Fool ·
. IIIII OydC Hovaaer, sbc was employed by tbe Oblo DepariDlCDI of Taxa·
tioD 11114 bad bccD a ~. S~ served iD tbe U.S. Alr Fon:c dmiDg tbe
KmeaD Will and was a member of the Westerville Cburch of Jesus Christ
of the Latter Day Saints.
She is survived by her daughters, Marcia Metzger of Fayetteville
N.C.. Lci1a Hall of Martin. Ky.. Brenda Paulino of Ag3111, Guam aud
Valerie Bennington of LouisVIlle, Ky.; sons, John Michael Mark and
.Wllliam Mabbew Hughes of Columbus; 12 grimdchltdren; sisters. Allee
_Spelbnan of Massachusetts, Gerry Fenton of Huntington, W.Va., and
, Plana Hovatter, Karen Unger and Gloria Hampton, all of Columbus;
brotbers, Ronald Hovatter of Columbus, William Hovatter of Flore~C
.JC., Clyde Leon Qovatter of Cuyahoga Falls, GBO' Hovatter of Cir:
·C\IIville. Rlcbarl1 Hovatter of Middleport, and James Hovatter Taylor of
Augusta, Ga; 111d several nieces and nephews.
, .She was ~ecled iD death by a son, David Ranllall Hughes.
Services will be 10 a.m. Monclay in the Scboe&lt;linger Worthington
(lbapc~ with Bishop William Brode~ officiating. Burial wiU be in tbe
~wrvlew Cemetery, M111dleport. Fnenlls may call at the chapel from 7.,
J'-P,I· Sunl1ay.
&gt;

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;MichaelS.
Lewis
·1
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. :, RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.- Michael Scott Lewis, 38, Ravenswood,
.dlc4 Wednesday, Nov. 23,1994 iD CoolviUe.
.h l,l,cira May 19, 1956jo Weston, W.Va., son of Willie Junior and LucUle
, ·8elltrice Smith Lewis, he was a truck driver for Mountaineer Bulk Ser·
·Jti:ea of Coolville. A Methodist, be was a 197S graduate of Ravenswood
' Jl1&amp;ll School.
'• '.lo additioD to his PfllCOU, survivorS include a daughter, Mika Lewis,
.ill4 a son. Scottie Lewis, both or the home; a btotber, Mark Lewis of
J&amp;venswood; anl1 a fiance, Edie Conner of Ravenswood.
1.-·«Scrvicea will· be Sunclay at· 2 p.m. in the Straight·Tucker &amp; Roush
pPa1 Home, Ravenswoocl. with ~ Rev. Pbillip 'Scarberry officiating.
B,urial wUl be iD tbe Ravenswood Cemetery.
'•. r •

·~

Martha E. Sowards
· ., VINTON- Martha E. Louise Sowards, 58, Ewingllln, died Thursday
Nov.24,1994intbeObioStateUniversltyHospitai,Columbus.
•
Bom Nov. 8, 1936 iD Seth, W.Va., daughter of tbe late David Bishop
IIIIITbelmaAmGiover,sbcaaendedPoplarRidgeCburcb.
Surviving tue six 10115, Samuel (Rhonda) Sowards, Jeff Sowards and
Jim (Tooya) Sowards, aD of ViDIDll, WiUiam "Shane" (Shelby) Sowarils
of Patriot, Vance (Pepper) Sowards or Rodney, and Russell (Jamie)
Sowards of Columbus; three daughters, Ruth A. Warden of Gallipolis.
Nloka (~)
Spencer of Vinton, and Cbe-bona (Wade) Miller of Pab'J.
~ 13
n; four sisters, Juanita (Hawthorn) Snead of Wayoes·bUrJ, Va., He (Gene) Morrisoo of Racine, W.Va., Aleta (John) Brace
of l'arkerJburJ, W.Va., and Jane "Penny" (Jim) Fulk of Harpen Ferry,
W.Va.; and three brothers, Pon (Faye) Glover of Waynesboro, Va.,
Arlbw (Ubby) Glover of Ftsbervillc, Va .• and Larry (Mary Ann) Glover
-of Peytona. W.Va.
.
· She was also preceded in death by a son, Viclllr Sowards; a sister,•Ruth
.Glover; a brother, Russell Eugene Glover; and her ex-husband, Samuel G.
Sowards Jr.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunclay in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
·Vlilwn, wltli'tlie Rev. Joe 6Winn·offieialing, Burial wiU be in tho W~

~
_·, et, eryea·ths
U

else·where ·

.
·1
R..(llel Herrera
nesota in 1931. He retired in 1967. .
By the mid·l950s, be and his '
' SANTO DOMINGO, Domini·
C. Republic (AP)- Rafael Her· colleagues bad discovered 80 per·
rcra, a 33-year editor of Listin cent or tbe 205 known white dwarf
.Oilrio who helped buill1 it into one stars and clozeos of faint blue stars.
of tbe Dominican Republic' s- Jn 1980 be discovered asteroid No.
..III'ODgest aewspapen, died Friclay 1,964, which was named after him.
of stomar" cancer. He waa 83.
Luyten is survived hy his wife,
· Herrera also worked for the Willemina, a son and two claugbU.N. Educalional, Scientific and ters. A memorial service Is sched·
Cultural Orpoization, was a.direc· uled Dec. 10 a! the University or
:tOt of tbe Dominican Association Minnesota Campus Club.
~f Newspapers. ~represented his
VIola SpoUn
aewl)llllet at meetings or tbe Inter
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Viola
American Plas Association.
Spolin, whose improvisational
· He h surv.lved by bis wife, games trained generations of
Rosa; two cbtl~reo; and several actors, died Tuesday. She was 88.
-slbliDJI, lncl~dmg b!other F~io
Her family did not disclose the
-}Jcrrcia. loogUJDC assiStant foretgn cause and place of death.
ii)lnlster who was recevtly noml·
SpoliD' s repertoire of more than
liate'd to serve as ambassador to 200 games, designed to help actors
Spain.
work with eacb other instantly,
,
WWem Luyten
have become stanclard acting-les·
MINNEAPOJ.IS (AP) . son tools. Sbe wrote several books.
Wlllem J. Luyten, a former Univer· including Improvisation for rht
'slty 'of Minnesota professor and Thtastr.
iDICI'natlooal expert on ihite dwarf
In 1946 she came to HoUywood
and l'aint blue stars, died at his and created the Youna Actors
home Mixil!ay. He waa 95.
Company, but returned 10 Olicago
Luyten became interested in to found the Compass Theater with
astronomy at ase 11 when be her son, Paul Sills. Compass stu·
watched Halley's Comet streak dents included Elaine May, Mike
llicroSI tbe sky over bls native Java Nichols, and later. Alan Arkin,
iD wlul is now Indonesia.
Peter Boyle and Valerie Harper. '
His career ioclucled positions iD
Besides her son. Paul, Ms.
California, Massachusetts and Spolin is survived by another son.
South Africa before be became a William Hall Sills, and her busprofessor ll JM. University of MiD· · band, Robert Kolmus Greene.

Free clothing day scheduled

Most prospective jurors have
said they understand Simpson is
innocent until proven gull!y. In
lbeir next breath, they say tbey' d
like to bear him testify. He bas
pleaded innocent to murder charges
in tbe slaying of ex-wife Nicole
Brown Simpson and her. friend
Ronald Goldman.
"Do you understand that OJ.
Simpson doesn't bave to do any·
thing in this trial?" defense lawyer
Robert Shapiro bas asked jury
prospects. "He can sit over there
and take a nap if be wants to."
The prospects inevitably shake
their heads in agreement but appear
mystified.
So much for the idea that the
defense need not present any evidence if the prosecution's case is
inadequate and that the dcfenclant
needn't tystify.
"We all mouth these words."
Levenson said. "But the legalese·
doesn't mean anything to people.
Tbe term 'presumption of inno·
cence' is overused in our society.
It's like 'in GOO we trust.' No one
stops to think what it means.''
It could mean more for Simpson
than for most defen'!an~·

BALTIMORE (AP)- Renee
Aulton wu sruff with her little
often neslected them and
't CVCII bodlcr to bang curtains
ill bcr llollle, aeiJbbcn aaicl
So, wileD Aulton wu chfllaed
With ldlllq llct two dilldren iD a
bouse fll:e - and confessed ilelpbori were appalled but not

str:·

·

GALI;IPOLIS -;-Keith A. Nibert, 32, 162S Teens Run Road, .
was ~ted Friday by Gallipolis City Police for beiDJ an
mJOJticated pedeslrian on tbe highway, according 10 police records. .

l)eputies jail man for DUI
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County sherifrs deputies cited Paul A.
Mtller, 33, 467 Salem St., Rolland. for driving under the influence
early Saturday. Miller was booked Into the county jail at 1·45 a.m
accading 10 jail records.
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"
Editor's note: Names, ages ancl addresses are printed u they
appear on oftlclal reports. All newsworthy actlo111 Will be published witltout excepUon.

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

Report:. Smith said
ACCI•dent sen ds t hree she was molested

t 0 HMC w•th
I •InJ•ur•Ie·s
GALLIPOLIS -Three people
were taken 10 Holzer Medical Ctn·
ter Friday by the Gallia County
Emergency Medical Service with
injuries received iDa lhree·vebicle
accident on Jackson Pilce, the Gailia-Meigs Post of the Stare Hlgbway Patrol reported.
Admitted for observation were
Fern:ll G. Randolph, 57, Gallipolis,
and Barbara A. Denney, 52, 7480
Slate Route 160, BidweD, an HMC
spokesperson saicl.
. Candico R Denney, S1 120!1 SR

4
=~:::!~~=~~~
but the hospital
oo record of
bad

treatment, the spokespi:rson added.
The llCCident occurred at 6:30
p.m., two-tenths of a mile east or
County Road 8 (Mitchell), the
patrol said. It Involved cars driven
by Randolph, Barbara Denney and
a pickup truck driven by John
Finney, 64, 155 Woodland Drive,
Gallipolis. The Randolph and Den·
ney vehicles were severely dam·
aged, the patrol salcl and no dam·
age was listed to Finney's pickup.
The accident was still under
investigation and further details
were unavailable aa of presstime.
Area woman Injured
A Thurman woman was iDjqred
in a two·car collision Friday on
County Road 87 (Tick Ridge) in
Raccoon Township, tbe patrol
reponed.
Carolyn J. Hal~ 3S, was taken to
HMC by the Gallia EMS, where
she was treated and released, a hos·
pita! spokesperson said.
Troopers S&amp;id Hall was north·
bound, three-tenths of a mile north
of U.S. 35, at 11:40 a.m. when she
met a southbound car driven by
Vicky K. Bryant, 24, 8S3 Com
Road, Vinton. Both vehicles were
lefl of center and collided, accordlng to the repon. Both cars were
moderately damaged.
Crash Injures youth
A Gallipolis youth received
minor injury in a one-car crash Friday on Green Township Road 298
(Haskins), the patrol reported.
Harvey II. Willoughby, 16, 121

State Route 588, at 4:30 p.m. wben
the car went off the ten side of the
road.
The car continued on, went off
the right side of the r()~, Struck
embankment and ovenUrned onto
its lOp, according 10 the report. The
car was moderately damaged and
Roesky wa~ cited for failure to control .
Two died in accidents
The patrol cited Karen R. Justice, 27, Kitts Hill, for failure to
oon~l in a one.car cmb Ericb)' on
State Route 141 In Green Town·
ship.
Justice was eastbound at 10 a.m.
when she lost cootrol of ber car on
wet pavement, went off tbe right
side of tbe road and ~truck a malibox. Tbe car continued on and
went over an embankment before
coming to a stop, according 10 the
repon .
The car was sligbtly clamaged,
the patrol saicl
In another accident investigated
Friclay, the patrol cited TIUiothy D.
Campbell, 17. S09 Frederick Road,
Bidwel~ for failure to yielcl
Troopers said Campbell was
backinf southbound onto County
Road 01 (Africa) in Cheshire
Township at IO:SS a.m. when be
collided with a northbound pickup
driven by Elmer L. Spaulding, 56,
6516 State Route SS4, BidweU.
Damage to Spaulding's vehicle
was moderate and sllgbt to the
Campbell car, the patrol said.

an

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) Wben Susan Smith was 16 she told
pollee ber stepfather bad molested
bcr, but aile did not want to press
charges and authorities halted the
investigation, a newspaper reported
Saturday.
.
Mrs. Smith, now 23, is facing
two 111urder charges iD the deaths of
ber spna. She bas confessed to
killing 3-year-okl Michael and 14·
month-old Alex on Oct. 25 when
she rolled her car inlll a lake with
tbe boys suapped into safety seats.
According to her Nov. 3 c:onfession, she falsely told authorities
and the public for nine days that
the children bad been abducted by

Jolly wouldn't -say whether
investigators thought the molesta·
lion allegations were true. He said
the investigation was dropped in
early 1989.
"We Investigated and weren't
able 10 pursue it," saicl JoUy, now
an investigator with the State Law
Enforcement Division. Without a
wil!less. there was no case, Jolly
said.
·
Russell, a stockbroker and tax
consultant, is a state Republican .
executive committeeman and a ·•
member of the Bllvisory board or : ·
tbe Christian Coalition.
:
Russell and Mrs. Smith's moth·
er, Linda, did not immediately ',
- al:iiijacker; . . · ·
retu111 ~ telep~ol!c messaae. The '"
. In 1988 Mrs. Smith told a bigb n~wsp.~r .•a•d they·refused to ·
school guidance counselor that sbe comment 6n the allegation;
~
bad ~nmolcsted by Beverly Rus· I• .Mn: Smltbls•,father committed : .
sell, .ber·stepfatber of 10 years, The sutcide when she was 6 years old. ·
Cohlmbia Slatt reported. Tbe .. _..Court .c)o,cuments,filed ·ec~ulier .
·counselor ale'jted authorities for- · this week said 'Mts. Smith tned 10
mer Union County Sheriff Wllliam kill herself by overdosing on Jolly JOid the ~c~~paper. .. .
aspirin twice while a teen-ager.
'

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WHEN IT COMES

up at tbe bouse and noticed ~t w~ bound six-tenths of a mile north of
burning, be jumped out or his taJU
•
cab and ran iD tbe front door.

lf'any Jc,ci.ion.sl.oo~lrelkcl
yourwisheo. it istheelloic&lt;&gt;ofa

'"""'"'"'d.
1\r.a ltock ol' 1\p Dc...ltr, we
~i1.ethcm. V..i1 """""'·
::ia 1hc cl.oi.:e ol'a ........,.;.1 will

really

""yours.

'

...,,....
·~

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POM~AOY

Melge County Dleplly Ylrcl ,._

Pomeroy IIHon Brlclge
KMie Miller, Men-ver

BOWMAN'S

a . ...Ill. .· ,. . ..

, ....,:

1112·2518

;.~~

VINTON
Odla County Dll!llar Ylfd
· 1111 Meln St.
Jay I Jot Moon, llanagera

t.~

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t ) . A U T /IfiOI.'oJI

..r;::
•0:

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:~

;: tASTING TilE GOODIES- After the workshop wu com•
: · pkted, tile •arlou •oUda)' foods prepued hy tlte ~~- -~
: . asenta from Melp, Gallla and Lawrence eountlu ,..re 1hared

'' wltlttltui ~
,.

.~~ ~~·~~..~·~·~·~··~-·~~~ .~ ~

,.
. I

a special family occasion were JR·
sented by the tbree extension
agents.
Their tips included sharing values and beliefs as a way of bring·

band.

work and play to build family
ina families together iD a spiritual togetherness every day of the
way for tbe holiday seasoo, and of remaining four weeks before
spending time to&amp;etbcr fQ!:n_sina !l!! Christmas.

to 40 minutes or until golden
brown. Cool in pan S minutes;
remove from pan. Cool completely
oo wire rack before slicing. Make
one loaf 10 serve 20.

1 cup sour cream or plain yogurt
1 package ranch dressing mix
green food coloring
Styrofoam wreath form
parsley or clark green leaf lettuce
tootbpicks
.
assorted fresb vegetables (cherry
1 1/2 packaaes (12 ounces)
tomatoes. carrot slices, radish rose,
semi-sweet chocolate
broccoli, and cauliflower florets)
1 package (8 ounces) cream
cheese (cubed or cut into star
cbeese, softened
shapes)
3 cups powdered sugar
· Mix sour cream or yogurt with
1 112 tsp. vanilla
ranch dressing. Add green food
Ground nuts, unsweetened
coloring to desired color. Cover
wreath form with parsley or lettuce, cocoa, flaked coconut, toasted
using toothpicks to bold greens in coconuL
place. Place vegetables and cbeese
011 wreath using toothpicks to bold . Melt chocolate In large
io place. Place bowl or dip iD cen- microwavable bowl on high 2 10 3
ter or wreath.
minutes or until almost melted, stirring after each minutes. Stir until
chocolate is completely mcltCIJ. Set
aside.

'

Holiday Cobbler

Beat cream cheese until smooth.
Gradually
8lld sugfll, beatiD&amp; until
1 package yellow cake mix
well
blended.
Add melted choco1/4 tsp. nutmeg
late
and
vanilla,
mix well. Refriger.
3/4 cup chopped nuts
ate
about
1
hour.
Shape inlO 1 inch
1 16 ounce can cranberry sauce
balls.
Roll
in
nuts, cocoa or
112 tsp. cinnamon
Store
in refrigerator.
coconut.
1 cup margarine
Makes
about
five
dozen
balls.
1(21 Oounce) can peacb pie ftlling.
Variation: to flavor trullles with
liqueurs,
vanilla, divide truffle
Combine cake mix, seasonings mixture omit
into
A 1 Tbs.
and butter in bowl. Cut in IJutter almond, coffee thirds.
or
orange
witb pastry knife or fork until third mixture; mix weD . to eacb
crumbly. Stir in nuts.
Combine peach pie filling and
cranberry sauce in ungreased
13x9x2 inch pan. Mix weD. Sprin·
kle aumb mixture over fruit. !lake
at 350 for 50 minutes or until
brown.
1 112 cups nondairy powdered
creamer
•
112 cup instant coffee granules
or crystals
dash salt
114 teaspoon almond extract
I cup sugar
112 cup unsweetened cocoa
I cup shredded apple (about 1
1/4 tsp. vanilla
medium)
boiling water
1/4 cup low-fat sour cream
2 egg whites or 114 cup cholesterol free egg product
1 112 cups a!l·purpose flour
Combine creamer. suaar. Cllffee.
2 T packed brown sugar
cocoa and saiL Mix well. Place I
2 t. bakina.powder
1/2 cups of mixture iD small bowl
1/4 L baking soda
Adcl
vanilla; mix well. Add almc:wwl
1/2 L salt
extract to remaining mixture in
112 t.ground cinnamon
large bowl; ~ ~D. StiR iD aepa·
1/4 L ground nutmeg
rate containers. tightly covereiJ, To
1/4 t. ground cardamon
Heat oven to 3SQ degrees F. serve, combine three tablespoons
Spray loaf pan with nonstick cook· · of desired mix with one cup boiUDJ
· Ina spray. dust with flour. Mix water. stir to blend. Gltllisb wltb·
apple, sour cream liDd egg whites whipped cream if clesiJed. Mates I
in lar~e bowl. Sttr in remaining 1/2 cups of each flavor d mix. .,,'
illlfedlenll. Spread iD pa. Bake 3S

Apple Spice
Bread

..•..f
J.~

.~'
' .......,:Del~··
·~~~
-. -~
tbe·..a.n
.

.,

t~

I

The recipes were shared by the
extension agents and after the program the holiday foods they pre·
pared were enjoyed by tbose
attending.

Flavored Mocha
Mix

-....

I"

tmoliil i:UT~ twice eatcftd
ibo.li!I(D.\111 · to, lpok for ~ ,

~

..••

,.

said r,at Oill.,wbo owua acil!l-

J

...

~·

to
IJOIDCihiiiJ. But Aultoa and
bcr boyfriead, Frank Wooters,
ato(l:ll 'oataicle the bome and
· allide411llunl. DCighbcn aald.
···~ were actellilina. 'You ·
.~. J08 murl!ercn. You
1 illciulil ..ve done aomethina,"'

'"-'.ad

'.

...'

women yelled 11 bcr

Friday he
try
toiMdle'ptl.~-~

'•

·know how imJlananl dm i..
'l11111's whyweolfcro wirle riU1J!"
ofn,..oon.J.. on&lt; Ill., allility to

:C:!:,dinlicle.
tbe bouse
five.

~~

CREATING CARDS - lJsiDJ colorful ailleo print fabric cut
Into two Inch ~quares and plain cardstock wu aU It took ror
• those at tbe holiday worksbop to crute attractive holiday cards.
· Here Uncia Fitch concentrates on g,ettlos her earcl just rlghL UslDJ
an angel pattern she glued pieces or the calico Into place, and then
: added faclal features using a 11111rker before writing her greeting
Inside.
·

MEIGS MEMORY GARDENS

YouRS.

Ideas on bow to make Ouistmas

THE OLDEST CJtAFI'ER- Gamet Enloe, 93, of Raci""• Cl1llll to oaklng crafb at tile llolldaJ wad;.
lhop, "A Collotry Celebration" held at the Senior Cbbe• C.lller.
Tile attracUve decoration wu 11111cle with clothaplnl ....._.,
elleolUe and ribbon, put toaether with 10me glue tmd a nail~
DOt outd- when It

Easy Chocolate
Truffles

Death toll at 11

.

cbocolate truffles and a flavored
mocha mix.

Holiday Wreath
and Dip

sent wbeo Mrs. Garrisb ucbose to :
ROYAL OAK, Mich. (AP) Dr. Jack Kevorkian was present end her suffering by mercifullr, :.
Sattuclay at.the suicide of a 72· · ending her olvn life at ber borne. ' . ·
year:-eld waoan, his auomey said. Tbe statement dill not say bow she ·
.
It was the 21st suicide Kevorkian died.
bu attended since 1990 and the
fint iD more than a yefll.
Margaret Garrisb died at her. By Tile Associated Prell
·.,
1
home in Royal Oak, the Detroit
At least II people have died on
suburb wbere Kevorkian used to Obio'i roadways during tbe :
live.
Thanksgiving holiday period, tbe c
In a statement, attorney Michael State Highway Patrol said Satur· 1 '
Schwanz said Kevorkian was pre· clay.
The patrol was counting the hoi· ~
lday weekend traffic deaths from
12:01 a.m. Wednesday through ··midnight Sunday.
'

To CHoOSiNG
A MEMORIAL,
THE CHOICE
SHOULD BE

COLORFUL WREATH TO EAT- This attractive iaoUclaJ
wreath of vegetables was prepared by Cindy Oliveri, Melp Collllty Extension agent, at the annual holiday workshop. The -wreath
wu created on a Styrofoam wreath form covered with lettuce.
Vegetables were attached with toothpicks.

Holiday feast
-··made easy

'Dr. Death' in attendance
for Mich. woman's suicide

RT. 7 &amp; EAGLE RIDGE RD.
POMEROY, OH. 45769
614-992-7440
PRE-NEED PlANNING FOR
• MAUSOLEUMS • WESTMINSTER CRYPTS
• MEMORIALS • WTS • VAULTS

r---;..·-----------------1

i

~~ City.

dill faiL ••
~~
Wldi Aullal'a

VliD •.~ - Uv,l.

"Witla the return of that 1ft•
The cballenge is to feel festive,
t!OD wlaea allepherda watcbed not frazzled.
;their lloc:kl by night, comu tlae
And that means Elanning abeal1,
,tenewal of broken ties, the firmer making a "to-do list and fallowing
rtementllll or tender friendships, it through iD an effort to skirt the
'~ burnishing or the pure gold of feeling or "being taxed to tbe llllll"
.clomesUc alredlon, and the aosel before tbe celebrations begin.
of tbe·beart ehiUldDJ 'Peace and .
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs County
lood will.' ....DeBowa Review, extension agent, believes ill getting
~ew Orleans, 1868.
started early and that's why sbe
;.,
beld tbe Extension Service's annual
holiday happening - and n11
ChristmaS in Meigs County would
l•
be complete without it - before
~.llY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tbanlcsgiving.
·Time1-SenUnel starr
Theme was "A Country Cele: It's been well over a hundred
:·years since those words were writ· bration", and it too1t on the flavor
:len but tbey still reflect the essence of preparing for an old fashioned
· of the Christmas season - a ChristmaS.
More than 60 woman - one 93
:warmth and generosity of spirit
years
old - enthusiastically delved
~which, somebow, transcends the
into the Ouistmas crafts.
;t&gt;rdinary cares of daily living.
They made calico holiday cards
,. For s0111e capturing the best of
:the boli&lt;!ay season means bours of and angel tree decorations.
:preparation, cooking and baking,
They got lips on time savers for
: cleanil!g IIIII decorating.
everything from malting no·balte
• While for others a more sim· cookies to using convenience
jllistlc celebration suffices, a few ingredients in home-bakel!delica·
..evergreens and canl11es to decorate, cies.
:ll plate of cookies and candies to
They listened to suggestions on
:$Crve those wbo stop by during the bow to make inexpensive decora·
·holidays.
lions, and tbey got tips on bow tD
:. Whatever the approach, ulti· get tbe family involved iD sbarina
:mately tbe goal is tbe same - to holiday chores.
:embrace the joy of the season and
Oliveri was assisted in tbe
:to share that joy with family and demonstrations and program by
Rebecca A. Culbertson, Gallia
·friends.
: Christmas, the most popular and County extension agent. and Nitld
'best loved of all American boll· Cavalier Rabel, extension-agent
·IJays, is a time when traditions are from 'Lawrence County.
·remembered and repeated, when
For something different, Oliveri
new wa~ of celebrating are iDcor· made an attractive holiday wreath
' Porated into the old, imd wheo just or vegetables which she served
being together results in feeling with a dip, along with a delicious
good about relationships some· cranberry holiday cobbler. The
times neglected iD the everyday Lawrence County agent shared
hassle of making a living.
tasty apple spiced breal1, one of her
Now lh8l Tbank.sgiving is over, demonstration foods, and a citrus
it's run speel! ahead toward Quist· spiced tea mix, and Culbertson of
Gallia County, some ol bcr iio-bake
mas.

City police ticket area man

Bcatlell sald~riday. "We-thought

. aiM.

t

RIO GRANDE - A meeting on agriculture laws baa been
scheduled for Wednesclay, Dec. 14 in Room ISS of tbe Human
ResOU{CCS Center at Buckeye HiUs Career Center.
'lbt meeting is sponsored by E. Glenn Graham, fann business
planning analyst for the Gallia-Jackson· Vinton Joint Vocational
S~l Disbict. The speaker wiD be Don Davis, fann business plan·
rung analyst at Tri-Coilnty Joint Vocational School.

J(le're wa DO way tbat fire ~ld .

Dclr=

petting creative at 'A Country Celebration'

Agriculture laws meeting set

~·"'PI"""' ber ripl f~
lbc biai- ." oelpWEleiiiOI'
-

t·

POMEROY - Tbe annual Christmas dinner 11 the Meiss Coun·
ty Museum wUI be Friclay, Dec. 2 at 6:30 p.m., with entertainment
by the Historical Society SiDgen.
Reservatloos are by due by Tuesclay.
"

hb
l'l
1we1g orl! appa .ed, but 3:~~:.~:u:~~~ttreated
·not surprised over deaths
.car16,'X:f~~~g~~YR~.!tal~O:OJ~J;~
.
:
Columbus, that was north·
AI •

·r

'l

Museum slates holiday dinner

.

November 'Ef,,·1...

:t

CHESHIRE - Gallla·Meigs Community Action Agency will
have Its free clothing clay Tuesclay from 9 a.m. until noon. The
clothlna bank Is located In the old scboolbouse bulldins in
Cheshire.

We want tbe sovernment 10 prove
guilt beyond a reasonable doubL''

-athnt5- Jtntine! Section B

...

Tri-County Briefs:-

o.J's

innocence not ·
taken for granted

By LINDA DEUTSCH
AP Spcclal Correspondent
LOS ANGELES - The
prospective juror scratched his
bead when asked if be understood
!hat OJ. Simpson was presumed
mno.:ent.
"I really don't get it," the man
confessed. "I think he should be
required to prove his innocence."
He is not alone.
.
Judge Lance Ito bas expressed
coocem that 95 percent of prospec·
tive Simpson jurors filling out
questionnaires disagreed with two
tenets of American jurisprudence:
tbe presumption of innocence and
the prosecution's burden of proof
- the requirement that the state
prove a defenclant guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt or set bim free .
"People believe where there's
smoke there's fire," said Loyola
University law professor Laurie
Levenson. "If someone is arrested
they must have done somethiDg."
That belief collides with Ameri·
cans' wariness of the power of the
state, leading jurors to confusion.
· "We as a people dori't trust IJie
government," defense lawyer Har·
land Braun saicl. "We put the burden of proof on tbe ~ovemment
because we are- afratd they are
going to convict innocent people.

jA.Iong the River

November 27,.1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolll, ~oint Pleaunt, WV

rl
• .A •• ,

-n

atteodlnJ the worlulbop. I

'

11

All aboard ·for Santa
Claus ·train ride
Santa Claus train rides are again
tbis yc!U' being offered by tbc
Hocking Valley Scenic Railway.
So drive up U.S. 33 north to
NelsonviUe and there you'll find aD
decked out in boliday trim the turn·
of-tbe-cenwry depot.
The ~pec;ial trains will feature
old-time beited passenger cars that
arc &amp;lowing with the holiday spirit,
pulled by a beautifully restored
1916 steam loc0111otive. And the
rides ~ on regardless of weatber
conditiODS. .
.
The 2S·mllc DOSIII&amp;Ic ~ rides
wUl be offered on tbe three week·
eilds before Christmas at II a.m.
and 2:15 p.m.
And the recommendation is to
make your reservations early. par·

licularly if you bave a group. Seats
are usually available for families
without reservation.
During the ride passenaen tue
treated to a special narration of
Cbristma~ poems, stories and
music-and. or course, a visit from
Santa.
·
Traditionally there 1W beeli a
stop at Robbins Crossings when:
costumed settlers i:arry Olllllllllle of
the beri~e _sltills, like dippioa Cllldles, stttogtng popcorn and a..
berries, Tbere the pusenaen dbembark for aloat at life In lbe lllid1800's log villqe.
·
For reservations call (SI3)33~
0382 or tbey Clll be made by writin4 the Hocki'g.~~lcy Sceaic
Railway. Santa
Traina, P 0
Box 427, Nelsonville.
. •. r

I

�Sunday, Nov.l7

•••

. CROWN CnY • Genesis 7p.m.
Liberty Chapel Church.
.

•••
GALLIPOLIS • Multiple Scle·

.

THURMAN • Thlnlllll Gran,e
supper 6 p.m. at ball.

•••

...

Tuesday, Nov.ll
'

rosis Suppon Oroup I :30 p.m. New
Life Lutheran Church.

GALLIPOLIS • Ameri~.an
Legion Auxiliary Unit 27 7:30p.m.
elect officers .

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA ..
Narcotics Anonymous Tri County
Group 7:30p.m. 611 Viand St.

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.•
Narcotics Anonymous Clean ud
Free Group 7:30, p.m. Episcopal
Church.

•••
•••

•••

••

GALLIPOLIS • Homecoming .
•
Rodney Pike Church 10:30 am. to
GALLIPOLIS • Alcoholics
2p.m.
Anonymous 8 p.m. St. Peter's
Episcopal Church.
•••
Monday, Nov.ll

•••

_GALLIPOLIS · Divorce Support Group 7:30 p.m. New Life
Lutheran Church. More informatioo call-446-4889.

JOHN McCARLEY

Janis-McCarley ·
CYNTHIA

AND KEITH ANGEL

Mason-Angel
LORI HAMILTON AND DONALD STRIETER

Hamilton-Strieter

I

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Grande ma]onng mnursing.
Dan . Hamilton announce tbe
Slrieter is a 1994 graduate of the
engagement and upcoming mar- University of Rio Grande and is
riege Qf tbelr daughter Lm DaneUe · employed by Precision Millworkof Gallipolis to Donald Paul Stri· ing of Huntington.
eter ol Cleveland.
The open' churcb wedding will
is a 1990 graduate of be 6 p.m. Dec. 17 at Christ United .
High School and Methodist Church on SR 7 South.
of Rio

'
''

LISA RICKARD AND JEFFREY OHLINGER

'

II
i

Rickard~Ohlinger

~m:1~EN - Lisa Ann Mason, and her fi8Dce Is lhe son of

of New Havenm:J GeVne Obllnger Robert and Marion Oblinger,

tllelr eo
' . a. annolll!ce
marr~aa!agemeot and approaching
The bride-elect is lhe da h
of Fl'lllll: 111c1 Gladys Re ~a! tef
Partcl'lburg
yno 1
. .
• w• Va .••, ormer
y of

°.

Letart, W.Va.
The wedding wiD be 6:30 p.m.
Dec. 1~ at tbe Mason United
Me~odJ!~t Cburcb. A balf-~ur of
must~ wtll precede the wedding.

Grande. She is employed by
GALLIPoLIS - Mr. and Mrs. H. Rio
Bank
One in Marietta.
Dean Mason of Gallipolis and Mr.
Angel
is a 1990 graduate of Galand Mrs : Junior Angel of Crown
lia
Academy
High School and is
City armounce lhe engagement and employed by Ahem
approaching marriage of their chil· of Soulb Charleston. and Associates
_dren Cynthia Sue and Keith Allen.
The closed wedding will be r2
~ason is a 19.89 graduate of p.m. Dec. 17 at Centenary United
Gall~&amp; Academy Htgb Schoor and a
Methodist Church.
1994 graduate of the University of

Wedding
policy
Tbe Sunday Timu-Sentinel
regards weddings of Gallla, Meigs
and Mason Counties as news and is
happy to publish wedding stories
and pbotograpbs wilhout charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeli·
ness. Tbe newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after lhe event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
laken place wilhin 60 days prior to
lbe .publication, and may be up to
600 words in Ienglb. Material for
Along lbe River must be received
by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to lbe date
of publication.
Those not making the 60 day
deadline will be published during·
tile daily papef as spaee allows.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories is
desired. Pbotographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, bi11fold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally. snapshots or instant-developing photos
arc not of acceptable quality.
· All malerial sulmitted for publi·
calion is sul!ject to editin,.
Questions may be dtrected to
the editorial department from I·S
p.m. Monday through Friday at
446-2342.

DAYI'ON • Joni and Les Janis
of Atlanta, Ga. announce the
eugagement of their daughter Tmcy
Karen Janis to John David McCar·
ley, son of Peggy (Skidmore) and
David McCarley of Dayton.
Bolb Janis and McCarley are
graduates of Miami University in

This Week's Special:
Monday thru Saturday ..

Nov. 28-Dec. 3

Have a hot news tip
or
story suggestion?
Call the
Tribune 446-2342
Sentinel992-2155

'"

Drop Leaf
Table

News Hotline
=

20%off
REG. $3:~w $240

The Dove's Nest Anti4ue~
336 Second Ave.

Shelling out

&lt;hlord. McCarley will gmduate jiJ
May from the University of Wli·
coosin Medical School and Janis 1\
employed by a radio station In
Madison.
·
The wedding will be March 11
at lbe Sesquicentennial Chapel in
Oxford.

Gallipolis, Ohio
446-8776

HOLIDAY LOAN
SPECIAL

AVW~ge percaDitll
conaumptlon, 1993

KENNY AND PAULA WILLIAMS

Masters-Williams

JOEL AND LULA COLLINS

s·mith-Collins _

cousin of the bride and Ashley
Masters, niece of the bride.
CROWN CITY - Lula Denise
Best man Was John Paul Robens
and serving as ushers were Scot Smith and Joel Edan Collins were
Boster and Robert Masters Jr., united in marriage Oct. 22 at Mays
brother of the bride. Serving as Chapel United Methodist Church.
Lula is the daughter of James R.
ringbcarer was Donnie MiUer.
Amy Williams, sister of tbe and Shirley Smith of Lavalette,
groom registered guests.
W.Va. Joel is the son of Joe and
Joyce Co!HnsofQownCity.
The couple resides in BidweU.
Rev. Walter Adkins performed
r
r
the ceremony wilh music provided
by Sonja Lowe, aunt of the groom,
on piano and Raymond Evans,
gre:it-micle of lhe groom singing.
The bride was escorted by her
father. Maid of honor was Debbie
May. Honor maid was Shari New·
ing movies and programs viewers man. Bride's maids were Angie
: By DORIAN BENKOD..
would be eager to see.
: Associated Press Writer .
Burriss and Penny May. Flower
But when Sony announced it girl was Caitlin Lowe, cousin of
: • TOKYO (AP) - The last major
was cutting.the book value of the lhe bride.
~ Japantse induslrial pioneer retired
studios,
it indirectly acknowledged
:..&amp;iday as chairman of Sony Corp.
Best man was Marie Dillon.
after leading Japan's rise into a that it paid biUions of dollars too Groom's men were Bill Pfieffer.
maker .o f the electronic machines much for lbem.
Kevin Smith, brother of the groom
Morita's retirement comes as and John Byers. Ring bearer was
the world wall:hes and listens to.
Sony, its profits burt by Japan •s ris- Isaac Kitchen, cousin of the bride.
ing yen, is searching for a new
Its last major success was
co- direction.
lbe CD player, developed simulta·
neously wllb Phillips of the Nelberlands in the 1980s.
Sony was born in 1946 when
Morira, lhe oldest son of rice-wine
brewer, joined former J~tpanese
navy colleague Masaru lbuta, a
I
teUow engineer, to start a business
: · BIDwELL - Paula Masters and
:-Kenneth Williams were united in
r marriage Oct. 15 at Trinity United
~ Methodist Church in Porter.
i: Serving as malron of honor was
~ Lora Griffith, sisier of the birde.
~ M~d ,of ho.nor was ·stacy Brown.
• Bnde s mrud was Sheila Masters
: sister-in-law of the bride. Flowe;
: girls were Amanda Hendricks,

~ Last major Japanese
.~ industrial pioneer retires

Walnutsl.52

Guest book attendant was DebAlmondsl.46
bie CambeU, cousin of lhe bride.
A reception was held in tbe
Pecansl.3t
basement of lbe Lavalette Fire Sta·
lion. The cake was served by Car·
Filberts l.o9
olyn Shepherd and Sherri Giller·
lain. Those serving at lhe reception
were Doris Watts, Fern Simmons
and Mary Chatterton, .aunt of the On average, Americans eat 7.1
bride;
.
pounds. of peanuts per year, and
The bride graduated from Buffa· that estimate doesn't even include
lo High School and Marshall Uni· the nuts used in the peanut butter
·
versity where she earned a masler' s they.consume. .
degree in elementary education.
She is employed by the Wayne
County Board of Education, teach·
ing at Dunlow Elementary.
The bride groom is a graduate of
Gallia Academy ~igb Sc~ool and
attended Rio Grande College. He is
employed by West Virginia
Paving, where be is a quality con·
trol technician.
The couple reside in Lavalette,
W.Va.

SIU·SAVE $87

s12995 ::o.~
Slgg. letaill216.95

POSTUREPEDIC

. Morita, 73,
founded Sony In
a bombed-out
storefront after
World War II.

repiilrillf radios on a llotrowed

ful Size Set 5449.95
Queen Size Set 1499.95

-SUI!S 8
SPOR!COA,.S

·.Atlo ·Modta, 73, co-founded $500.
Sony in a bombed-out storefront
lbulca, 86, also is an honorary
after World War II, going on to chairman.
·
create the TVs Wallcmans and CD
Sony made the world's fli'Sl all·
piayl:ls sold ~und the world by 8 . transistor tele_vision in 1960 and the
S36 billion-a-year conglomemte.
first home vtdeo tape recorder in
Morita is lhe last of a generation 1965.
.
.
With Morita as president of
of industrialists that included carmaker Sboichiro Honda and elec· Sony's U.S. subsidiary. Sony in
·Ironies rival Konosuke Matsushila.
1970 became the first Japanese
More than any other Japanese firm to be listed on the ~ew York
induslrialis~ Morita "is a founder Stock Exchange and 10 1972
that's really identified with the -became. one of _the rust Japanese
OFFER GOOD THRU WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 30, 1994
company," said industry analyst companies to bwld.a U.S. factory.
Joseph Osha of Baring Securities.
Sony began se!Hng Its Wafktn~n
Morita suffered a debilitating personal stereo cassette players .u~
strolce and underwent brain surgery the 1980s, and they became us
last November. He bas regained the most famous success.
ability to speak, but is reported 10
be weak and restricted to a
wheelchair.
Sony said he submitted his res·
ignation Nov. 16.
It was lbe second blow in two
weeks to Sony, whose stock
plunged more lban 5 percent last
week after it said it was writing
S2. 7 billion off tbe value of the
Hollywood movie studios it bought
with great fanfare in 1989.
Sony announced Morita's resig·
nation after stuck markets closed in
Tokyo and before they opened in
Europe and New York.
It did not announce a successor,
but analysis said Sony president
Norio .Ohga was the most likely
choice.
Morita pioneered new behavior
for corporate Japan. He pushed bis
engineers to take risks with new
products and criticized·lavishly
\.
paid American executives.
Under Morita's guidance, Sony
was instrumental in changing
Japan's image from a maker of ,
slipshod products to a world leader
in supplying high-quality automobiles and electronics.
During the beadiesr days of
Japan's economic boom, Sony paid
$3.4 billion to buy Columbia Pic·
This series of classes is repeated every month.
tures and Tristar Pictures, then
invested billions more in them.
Coming after Sony's earlier purTo register call446-5380. We are anxious to share
chase of CDS records, tbe move
was praised tpr its potenlial to sell
information about our personalized program
TVs and video equipment by creal·

OFF

,,

Holzer Maternity &amp; Family Services

-

invite you to

For a fevv weeks only get terrific bargains on toys. gifts. home decor. Christmas deer ltions and
91ft wrap. Save on name brands. overstocks, closeouts and discontinued lines!
.

~a

SHOP EARLY. SOME QUANTITIES UMfTED.

··'

411 cr. CRAYONS.

Non-roXie. Briiliam
color&gt;.

Inflatable. Wich
bells in wcighccd
bottom.
PINBAll
MACHINE.
With 2 table cih
scands. 9 I /2" x
5 112".

Pictures with Santa

ll"L

GUMBALL

TURTI.E MAGNETS.
Teenage Mucanc Ninj•
T urdcs®! Sec of 2.

MACHINE.
Plastic. fJ.&lt;'i~"ib.\
Gumballs not I 'f-.!.I.,A.d}~
included.

6·H.

ClfiuSTMAs

~~MU~tto~'$.. Cor

____,

PANCYHORSE
'N &lt;lOMB. Soft vinyl
with rainbow hair. 4 1/l"H.

•..,

Snowman,
Sant2 or '
Reindeer.

12"BOPBAG.

holiday fun.

IWIY PEE WJ!Ee.
Asoorted miniature
doU.. 3 I/2"H.

Thursday, -o·ecember 1
6:00 - 8:00 P.M.
"

I

Attend our prenatal classes

After the p·arade!

LOCAnON: 300 SECOND AVE.
GALUPOUS, OHIO
STORE HOUR$: N IION..SAT.
N FRI.: 11~ SUNDAY
' we accept
,viSA and MaSterCard

"

1. What To ~xpect When You Are Expecting
2. Preparation For Childbirth - Anesthesia Options
3. How To Cope With Childbirth
4. You And Your Newbom

News policy

WIDE VARIElY OF STOCKING STUFFERS AVAilABLE

'

....

•

In an effort to provide our
readership with 'current news,
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
The Daily Sentinel will not
accept weddings after 60 days
from the date of lhe evenl
All club meetings and other
news anicles l!llbe society sec·
tlon must bC submitted wit,bln
30 days of occurrence . All
birthdays must be submitted
wilhin 42 days of the occurence.
All material submitted tor
pubUcation is subject If editting.

to m:eet your special needs:
* tours of the hospital and birthing room

;J{ofzer

rJ.f_

•
•
- • one-on-one 1nstrucbon

* infant car seat program (KISS)
• sibling class .
• infant and child CPR class
*at-home nursing v'isits for new m:other's

·' -

:JYLU fernt

I.
f

.

~ami[y

Services
FOUNDATION FOR A HEALTHY FUTURE

/

.•

Holzer Medical Center

'

'

. ,.

ty &amp; -

I

.

�.••

.•.
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•

November 27, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, O~olnt Pleasant, WV

Page-84-Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

•

November 27, 1994

Sunday nmei-Sentlnel Page Bl

A subdivision with a
difference: Anasazi ruins

Topless cigarette smoking is grounds for arrest in New York 1:
· reaction of the passing mOtorists.
I was not only stunned butofended
that Alben would suggest such a
lhing. I told him straight out that I
., , lol~
thought it wupositivelyindecentfor
nm.. s,........ .,.
a man to want his wife to appear half
c,..... s,.........
naked in public. Hiscocnment was "If
the wife was built like you, he would
Dear Ann Landen: My huSband be proud 10 show her of." When I
and I arc having a major told bim there is a law against
disagrecnncnt and have decided to let indecent exposure, AI said, "You're
wrong about that There is no such
you sculc it.
law
in the state of New York."
Recently, • Albert" bought a
I
cannot
believe be is right about
COilvcnible. We were driving down
Ibis,
Ann.
WiD
you please check it
a busy highway, and Albert suddenly
out
and
let
me
know?
- IN SHOCK
IIIIIOiliiCCd that it "would be fun • if I
AND
INSULTED
ltd off my T-shirt lll)d bra to see how
DEAR IN SHOCK AND
much attention we would auracL He
INSULTED:
Albert deserves to be
said it would be inlel'CSting to seelhe

Ann
. der
Lan S

1194

clobbemlforhialiiSICieas suggestion.
In fact. be is the winner of the Slob
of the Month award (a bouquet of
skunk cabbage) for his crude
suggestion. He is right, however,
about the law in New York.
The New York Transit Authority
ruled recently lhat bare-breasled
women on subways should be
arrested 011/y if they create a
disruptive or dangerous situation. In
fact, a police spotesman named AI
O'Leary said, "If a woman were
sitting on a subway bench, topless,
mwti11g a clgamte, we would take
action."
So, follcs,l guess it's OK to go half
naked in public in New York, just
don't smolce while you're doing it.

And now, dear readers: Por
evmy yin there is ~ yang. I c~tly
ran across some mformauon that
balances the letteryoujustread from
my New York correspondent This
releaaecomes from the ReutctsNews
Service in Jerusalem:
• According to an Israeli
IICWiplljlel',&amp;'leiAvivllbbihasruled,
inthemidstofawitberingheatwave.
that a man can divorce his wife foc
rollingupherslcevespastherelbows
in public.
'Some Orthodox Jews insist that
women must cover their irms for
modesty. The sleeve must reach the
elbow, covering the entire elba"!'
according to Rabbi Moshe Bitan's
ruling reported the Maariv dail~

''Even on the not days ofsumme~;
if 8 woman bares he~ arm~ in the
street, her husband ts entttled to
divorce her,' the rabbi said."
. Walt, there's more. In some Arab
countries, until recently, a formal
divorce was not nece•wy. tr a IQBJI
no longer found his wife desillhlc,
· all he had to say to her was "I
divorceyou"tbreetimcs,andshewas
history.
Clleclcaroundtbeworld,follcs,and
you will find that America keeps
looking better and betlet
DeuAuLuders:Pieueinform
your readers that if a so-called
temporary tax is levied, people
should not be fooled by that
adjective.
•
Remind them that in 1913,on Peb.

25, the federal income- llll was :
introduced ~s "temporary" -- and, :
baby,loolcatttnowi--OAKBROOK .
PAN
•
Clem of the Day: It may be lonely •
at lhe top, but it's IUftl a lot IIIOftl :
interesting than beins 1tUck in the .
mi~ or, heaven forbicUowerdown :
the line.
·
Loolcillgfor the perftctiiOckillg :
stll/ftr? AM~rs'lltlll bookltt, •A ·
Colkcrio11 of My FaliOI'ile Gems 11/ :
the Day, • 1w jUSJ btell ~kaud. To ·
get a copy, selld a self-addtrsse~; ~
lo11g, b111iness-siu e11vtlope alld 111 •
clwclc or mo~~ey oldtr for $3 (tlci&amp; illeludes postage a11d ltaltdli11g) to: ·
Collectio11, c/o A11111Atuhrs, P.O~ .
Box 11562, Clticago,/11. 60611-{)562. :
(Ill Catltlda, selld $6.)

Crowd riots after American evangelist fails to heal the sick ·
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia
(AP) - A Texas evangelist fled
Cambodia today after a mob angry
over his failure to perform faithhealing miracles rioted outside his
bolel.
''Mike Evans is a religious
swindler," shouted Sin Virak, 25.
"I want 10 burn the swindler Milce
EV811s' car."
Only the arrival of 20 armed
pollee on Friday night kept the
more than 100 violent protesters
from storming tbe luxury Hotel
Cambodlana. where the Rev. Milce
Evans and bls entourage were stay-

ing after arriving for a scheduled
five-day visit here Wednesday.
The preacher's appearance bad
been heralded on radio and lelevision stations with promotional
announcements promising: "Blind
eyes will open, the paralyzed will
walk."

Thousands of Cambodians.
including sick, blind and paralyzed
people from remote areas, came to
the capilal to attend his meetings.
The angry crowd, carrying
sticks and hurling stones at hotel
guards, gathered Friday after Evans

preached to a crowd of more than
7,000 ar a stadium in Phnom Penh.
"Nothing bas happened to us ...
our people sold their housing malerials and caule for their trip to
Phnom Penh," said Men Soryan,
20.
Some demanded Evans reimburse them for dleir uavel costs.
The crowd broke up afler police
told them be was no longer at the
bolel. No injuries were reported.
. Evans, reached by the Fort
Worth (fexas) Star-Telegram at the
bole!, said be dido' t know what the

advenisements bad promised.
He blamed the rioting on the
Khmer Rouge, Cambodia's bloody
guerrilla insurgents, saying that
they were upset about the crusade's
success in converting Cambodians
to Christianity.
He also told the paper that be
feared foc his life.
"We're getting out of here,"
Evans, 47, said just before police
were to escort him to the au-port.
"We've been in a lot of areas that
arc dangerous and bad problems
before. But this bas been a very dif-

Subdivision has
ruins left by prehistoric people
who lived there
more than 1,000
years departing
about the year
1,300.

..

Christian crusades in developing.
countries and in inner-city neigbborboods.
.
Evans sought unsuccessfully in
1987 to replace Jim Bakker as bost
of a popular syndicated religious
television program after Bakker
was involved In a sex scandal.

ficult poblem."
Cambodian Interior Minister
You Hoclay said Evans left Cambodia this morning.
Evans Is pastor of Cbwcb on the
Move in Euless, Texas, and is bead
of Mite Evans Ministries Inc., a
Euless-based Rroup that orRanizes

BJ ROBERT WELLER
A..oclatecl Prul Writer
CORTEZ, Colo. (AP) - Views
fn:m Nancy Reynolds' log bouse ·
bip lbove this P&lt;u Comers town
resemble scenes from a classic
Western film.
Tbe decJc offers a panorama of
Sbiprock, N.M., more than 40
miles away, Sleeping Ute Mountain, Mesa Verde National Parle and
the La Plata and San Juan Mountains.

.
.
·
.
:
:

3GTH ANNIVERSARY • Jack Ray and Betsy Lou Crank or
Henderson are celebrating their 30tb anniversary, Nov. 28. Tbey
wen ma1Tled Nov, 28, 1964 by Rev. Huey Jones at Grace United
Methodist Church, Gallipolis. Jack Is tbe siln or Mr. and Mra. Ray
Crank or Casselberry, Fla. Betsy Is the daughter or Mr. and Mrs.
Max Tawney or GaUipolls.

.. : f! .

)

Tbe Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
noD•pront sroups wishing to
announce meetings and special
evenll. The calendar Is not
dulaned to promote sales or
fund raisers or any type. Items
an printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
spedftc number or days.

revival services at 7:30p.m. Nov.
25-27 at the cburcb. The Victory
Trio wiD sing. Rev. Judy Williams,
evangelist
MONDAY
RUTLAND _ The Rutland
Garden Club will bold its reg Jar
m .
u
ee_un.g ~onday at .the bome of
MaJ)one Rice. New Luna Road.

Barnetts to mark 50th

SUNDAY
RU1LAND - Believer's Fellowship located on New Lima
Road, revival services, Friday
tbrougb Sunday, 7:30 cacb
evening. Rev. Doug Willis of
Maryland, spealcer. Special singing
Lesley Allen on Saturday. Pastor
Margaret Robinson Invites the public.

LONG BOTTOM - The Long
Bottom Community Association
will bost a dl.!lner for bunters
·beginning at 4 p.m . . Monday
'through Wednesday at the community building.

I

MIDDLEPORT - The Wesleyan Bible Holiness Cburcb

Roule 143. Rev. and Mrs. BtU and
Naomi Tillis wUI be evangelist and
singers. Rev. Victor Roush, pastor,
TUESDAY
::ini.VIIo·te;;,;;s.;thlle.;.p.lcubilliolc._ _ _ _,...
CHESHIRE- Free clothing •
day, Tuesday, 9 a.m. to noon at
Cheshire.

uu--~.

POMEROY - Revival Tuesday to Sunday at 7:30 p.m. nightly
at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel on state

-

Lebanon

years with Clecorations throuibout
.tbe museum by county garden
clubs.
.
.
Breakfast wub Santa wtll be
held at tbe museum on Dec. 10
from 9-11 _a.m. All you can eat
break!~ will be offered for $2.50
fo~ cbtldren under 12 and $3 for
children ov~ 12 and adults.
.
There well be c~ts for t1!e chiidreu and a spe~tal re~dtn,~ of
· C!ement Moore . s clas.~tc, The
~tgbt Before Christmas. Reservauon.s need to be made by Dec. 8 by
cal.--li...:ng::..99_..:.2·..:.3.:..81...:0.:...- - - - - - - ,

·Golden anniversary marked
:

GALLIPOLIS
Harold
"Buddy'' and Pauline Watson will
. . ce!ebrate..Jheir 50th wedding
anniversary with an open bouse
from 1 to 4 p.m. Dec. 4. at their
bome, 5102 SR 21g, Gallipolis.
They were married Dec. 2, 1944
at Kitts Hill by Rev. Luwellen
Sanders.
They are the parents of two
daughters, Donna Massie of Gallipolis and Dorothy Hunt or Logan.

"

NEBULIZERS
·•For tile treatmeat of
respiratOry problems
(Asthm~ Braachltls)

CONCENTUTORS
•Sales, Rllllals, Repairs
•Whetlchalrs
•Hospital hds

•Ia• Safety Aids

.C:anes &amp; &lt;rutdtts

•lnni'IIIICI ( ..lms

eCIIIIIIIIIIII Cllats

ProctSsetl

(Wart &amp; "r"=H

•Walklfs

•24 HeM Senb

......

acceptlll)
MARK DILLON
IAU!SIIANAQEA

IIIC.

"JUST MINUTES FROM HOUER"

446·2206
The

Thanks For Being A Great
Mom&amp;Dad
Don, Pam, Dodger, Ashlee &amp; Cassie,
Beth &amp; John, Zandra, Elizabeth,
·Richard &amp; Jacob.

'

. SYRACUSE- Willard and
•Leota Harden Kendall of Warren,
:Mich. observed their 50th wedding
:~ versary recently at the HiUcrest
:Banquet Center in Michigan.
·i\bout 100 friends and relatives
:attended the observance.
: Mr. and Mrs. ,Kendall, the for- ·
·mer Leota Harden-of Syracuse,
.were married by the Rev. Ralpb
:Kuether in the chapel of Federated
Cburcb, POmeroy, an 1944.
: Among the relatives attending
were Mary Lisle, sister to Mrs.
ICendall, Jobn and Janice Lisle,
Keitb and Karen Lisle, Roy and
Rose Ann Jenltins, Kimberly and

Tawney Jewelers Inc.
422 Second Ave.

;•

... SHOPPING UNIVERSITY MALL!
You'll find kids' and grown-up toys ... from compact discs to
computers, dazzling diamonds to dolls. And the fashions what a selection!

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

CLOSED

FAMILY PRACTICE

THANKSGIVING DAY*

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

SHOP FRI. NOV. 26th
9AM -10 PM*

GLAMOUR PHOTOGRAPHY

: POMEROY · Members brougbt
l]lyette 11ems to be sent to the
~ua Indian Mission in Mexico
~ FOeQcily Circle met recently

PERSONAL TOUCH HAIR &amp; TANNING

IS COMING TO ...

•

FRIDAY, DEC. 2

i Uay Perrin, president thanked

,,

zsm &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT
(304) 675-1675

Items collected
for missions
j[Trillity CIIUteb.

I

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

RocbeUe, Robert and Esther Harden, a brother and sister-in-law of
Mrs. Kendall, Robert A. Harden,
all of Syracuse. and bis friend,
Nancy Davenport, of Fairfield; and.
James Harden, London.
Mr. and Mrs. Kendall bave four
children, Kay and Osama Sibl~i,
Kenny and Connie Kendall, Ketth
and Brenda Kendall, and Garrell
BJid Kathy Jones, eigllt grandcbil·
dren, and one great-granddaughter.
Mrs. Kendall is the daugbler of
the late Roscoe and Aorence Hard·
en of Syracuse, and graduated from
Pomeroy High School.

VISIT SANTA

MON. • FRI. 6 PM - 8 PM, SAT.
NOON· 8,PM &amp; SUN. NOON- 6 PM
1002 E.

By LARRY McSHANE
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Fashion
bigwigs Karl Lagerfeld, Oscar de Ia
Renta and Bob Mackie were the
target of anti-fur protesters who
blasted the designers for pulling
pelts on their clothes.
With the fur industry insisting
sales are booming, activists resorted to marching. shouting and disrupting shoppers Friday to get
allention in cities across the counuy. More than 40 were arrested,
said Margo Tannenbaum. a
spokeswoman for the National
Activists Networlc.
"Hey Bob Mackie, fur is
tacky!" demonstrators chanted outside the New York offices of the
Council of Fashion Designers of
America at their annual post-bollday rally.
Tbe protesters, waving signs
and shouting "Compassion is the
fashion," then marched 25 blocks
through Manhattan while banding
out anti-fur leaflets. While there
were minor skinnishes between the
700 marcbers and fur-wearing
passers-by, police reported no
arrests.
Friends of Animals president
Priscilla Feral said this year's
protest was aimed at persuading
top designers to swear off fur .

"These designers refuse to stop
using fur," Feral said. "Behind the
production of every fur coat is
unspeakable horror - neck-breaking, electrocution or animals.··
The anti -fur group People for
\ Animals claims that fur sales
nationwide are down 82 percent
from five years ago. The industry
says sales are up 20 percent in the
last two years, according to the Fur
Infonnation Council of America
.
Merchants in some of the areas
targeted by protesters agreed that
the fur business was looking up.
"In the last three weeks sales
have been totally unbelievable,"
said Wanda Presburger, owner of
Somper Furs in Beverly Hills,
Calif.
About 200 protesters uooped
past Somper Furs and other shops
in the ritzy area after dumping
scores or rurs , including a tiger
skin complete with bead, on a ·

About 200 furs have been with fur items," said Jeri Lerner, ·
donated to two anti-fur groups in · the publisher of The Animals' .
the last two weeks after a plea to Voice Magazine. " These are peo- .
fur owners to turn over coats, bats, pie who wanted to get this cruelly
stoles and rugs.
out of the closet, and make a state"We were deluged, literally, menl··

MEN'S DENIM

SPORT SHIRTS
Button or Snap front

·(*Anchor Stores' Hours· May Varyf

TO ACCOMMODATE mOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUFSDAYS

WILLARD AND LEOTA KENDALL

50th anniversary celebrated

We Love YOU!

For 011er 15 Year•"

They have l'ive grandchildren,
one step-grandchild, five greatgrandchildren and two step-great:
grandchildren.
Harold is a veteran of WW II
and is retired from Gallipolis
Developmental Center. Pauline is
retired from Holzer Medical Ceo·
ter. They also farmed and raised
beef cattle for many years.
The couple requests no girts.

Fur flies between animal rights protesters and industry

Happy 40th Anniversary
Dick and Ruby Vaughan

•Url.-y/OstorlrJ
SuppiJH

1480 JACKSON PIKE • GALUPOUS, OHIO

Ostomy party,
meeting set
GALLIPOLIS • The Ohio Valley Ostomy Association will bold
its BJinual Christmas pany I p.m.
Dec. 4 in the French 500 Room at
Holzer Medical Center.
A covered disb and a wrapped
"wbite elephant" exchange is
requested. Meat, rolls, drinks and
table seivice wiU be provided.
The association will also meet 2
._:p.m. Dec. 7 in tbe French 500
:Room widl other support groups to
·llear Candace Pope, BS, RN. speak
: rolbe MaxWeU SO program.
·: · Tbose needing more informa"llon may call Pbyllis Pope-Brown,
·-itN, CETN. HMC Enterostomal
:~berapy Nurse at at 446-5080 or
.:446-5313.

'614 446-6700

•Portable (Refmable)
!Stationary .

Meigs museum holiday
.activities scheduled ..
POMEROY _ ·A variety of
Christmas activities bave been scbc.duled for the Meigs County
Museum on Butternut Avenue in
Pomeroy including a Christmas
dinner, an open bouse and Breakfaat with Santa.
Tbe annual Christmas dinner
wiU be held 6:30 p.m. Dec. 2 with
entertainment by t!le Historical
Society Singers. Tbe cost Is $10
per person and reservations must
be lll8de by Tuesday by calling the
museum at 992-3810.
The museum's Christmas open
bouse will be from 1 to S p.m. Dec.
4. Tbe main CbrisbDas exhibit will
be Barbie dolls from ·the past 35

PHOIOGUPHY

Profelllonll Wfddln11 Plrotogr~p/ly

HAROLD AND PAULINE WATSON

POMEROY - Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission
meeting Monday, 7:30p.m. at the
Velerans Service office.
PORTLAND

11JPPERS PLAINS -Clarence George and Ida Cooper. Mr. Barand Georgia Bamcott of Tuppers nett is the son of the lale Jobn BarPlains will celebrate their 50th nett and the late Carrie Dixon,
They are the parents of Ron and
wedding anniversary on Sunday,
Dec:. 4, with an open house recep- Roger Barnett, botb of Tuppers
tion from 2 to 4 p.m. at Hickory Plains, and grandparents are Robyn
Hills Church of Christ, Stale Route Barnett, Grand Cayman Island, .
BWI; Steven Barnett, Michael and
7, Tuppers Plains.
Tbe reception is being bosled by Brittany Barnett, all of Tuppers
Plains.
their children.
Tbe reception is open to family
Mr. and Mrs. Barnett were married on Dec. 4, 1944 in Gallipolis. and friends and the couple request
Mrs. Barnett is the focmer Georgia that gifts be omitled.
Cooper, dau.gbter of the late

Township Trustees, Monday, 7
p.m. at lhe township building.

·ATHENS

592-3574 '

" This isn't massive Intelligence."
We just feU into this. We're trying
to have our cake and ea1 it. too.''
Four more housing starta arc
expected next year. Seventeen sites
have been sold.
The siles, all at least 35 acres,
are selling for between $151,0005200,000, with utility connections
provided but homes to be built by
owners. Covenants bar uailers oc
modular bomes, and archaeologists
approve building sites for homes.
" For my busband, money is
only spent to do something well,"
said Mary Hanson. Only one home
and one guest home are allowed
per site.
Reynolds is the first Indian
Camp resident to build a bouse.
Sbe bad it blessed by a Navajo
chanter before moving in last
AUfUSl.
'I think It's fantastic . It' s
unique. Archie's got lbe foresipl
to see that the people wbo are
going to buy their lots are into
preservation and love the rules,"
sbe said.
Reynolds says ·she expects most
of tbose who buy into Indian Camp
will be amateur archaeologists lilce.
her wbo studied at neighboring
Crow Canyon Archaeological Center. Thousands of students, many of
them retired people, have paid the·
privately run rescarcb center to
take part in archaeological digs.
More than 200 siles have been
found at Indian Camp, the highest:
recorded site density in Colorado,said Hanson. More than 10,000"
artifacts have been recovered from
the pueblo the Hansons have excavaled on their own sile.
Home sites are marked by melal
statues of Kokopelli, the bumpbacked, flute-playing satyr wbo
tribal legends say uaveled the
Southwest seducing women.

"There's different weather on
each side,'' Reynolds says, adding
the "sunsets, double rainbows and
crackling lightning make this the
best show in town."
But it's the backy&amp;rll that makes
her Indian Camp home unique. It
bas its own Anasazi ruin, left by
the prehistoric people w"o lived
here for more than 1,000 years,
depaning about die year 1,300.
Anyone wbo buys one of the 31
siles among the junipers, pinpns
and sage at Indian Camp, 6 miles
east of Mesa Verde, must agree to
preserve the pueblos and semisubterranean ceremonial ltivas of those
the Navajos call the Ancient Ones.
They may only be excavated
under the supervision of a certified
far the project hasn't drawn
archaeologist, excavations muSI be anySopublic
opposition, although
covered and artifacts cannot be William Docile
of Desen Archaesold. Upon the owner's death, they ology Inc. of Tucson,
Ariz., says
must be given to a museum.
that
in
most
areas
local
state
Archie and Mary Hanson of laws would preclude this or
kind
of
Templeton, Calif.. wbose family development.
bas developed the exclusive
Rolling Hills, Hidden Hills and
Hidden Valley subdivisions or
Sandy Tbompson of the Crow
Southern California. decided to buy Canyon Center said that "given the
land here after taking an arcbaeo- allemalive", - the likely ransacklogical tour.
ing of the sites if the area is deveiOnce they bad acquired more oped piecemeal - Indian Camp is
than 800 acres they decided to a good i&lt;!ea. There are t!!QI!sa!lds of
build Indian Camp.
sites in Monlezuma County, where
"Wefell in love with tlie South· · .Mesa Verde is located, and somewest niany, many years ago and landowners have sold arcbacologithen we went on this Uip to Crow cal rights to pothunlers who peddle
Canyon and thought it would it be their finds.
great fun to live in the area. And
then it grew. son of topsy turvy. We · Judy Knight-Frank, chairman of
bad no cboice but to develop along t.be Ute Mountain Ule tribe, isn't so·
archaeological lines because there sure. "If anybody disturbed my
they were," said Arcbie Hanson. , ·bones I" d haunt them." she said.

CLARENCE AND GEORGIA BARNETI

---Meigs community calend·ar . _ . .

.

a

I

· tfte wome.n for their work at the
rJ;ceni' bfoodmobile beld at the
~urcb BJid recognized· volunleers
ril)ti food prqviders for their contriljMilons.
,
•'" It wu noted that $200 was colIil:~d for Habitat for Humanity
. .use Qf·lh)e efforts of the circle.
~ The program was presenled by
Mrs. Pertill· who sbared several
~ms concerning Tbantsglving
dd asked each person to ~ a
'J'11811bgiving memory from cbtld·
bQod.

.

·. Rel'reshnlents were served duriii"g a social hour which followed .
tbt meeting.
. .
.
/{
• ·r)
•

.

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Gallipolis

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�Page-86-Sunday Times-Sentinel

--cochran

Salvaging unused
postage stamps

~ named

:·:young
:~careerist
GALLIPOLIS · Kris Cochran
.. has been named the 1995 Young
.,Careerist of Gallia County by the
·.· Gallipolis Business and Profession.' at Women's Club, according to
"Robin Fowler, Cbair of the Club's
:.~ Y-oung Careerist Committee and
last year's Young Careerist.
. A 1985 graduate of Sheridan
".High Schools Cochran is tbe
daughter of Andrew and Carole
' Cocbran of SomerseL Sbe received
ber bachelor of scienee degree in
"·communications from the Universi• 'ty of Rio Grande and was a four·
,.year member of tbe university's
volleyball team. Sbe was also
'involved with the Tau Kappa
: Epsilon Little Sis program.
:.. She is employed at the Holzer
.. Medical Center as a Community
Relations Assistant. Among ber
: responsibilities are the editing and
: layout of the Hospital's monthly
.in-bouse newsletter, preparation of
· news releases, as well as the ere: ation and design of advertising and
; marketing materials for both the
:print and electronic media

YOUNG CAREERIST • Krls Coebnn, rlgbt, who was recently
named the 1995 Young Careerlsl of GaJUa County by the GaiUpolls Business and Professional Women's Club receives her plaque
from Robin Fowler, Young Careerlsl Commlllee chairman.
Before joining tbe Hospital
staff, she bad four years of media
experience, including both newspaper and radio.
Her community activities
include serving as Public Information Officer for the Gallia County
Local Emergency Planning Com·
mittee, 1994-1995 chairman of the
Nominating Cottunlttee for Gallia
County Unit of the American Cancer Society an&lt;! member of the Gal·

Jia County Strategic Plan Promotions and Marketing Committee.
In March, 1995, Cochran will
represent the Gallipolis Business
and Professional Women's Club at
the regional competition in Athens.
At the November meeting of the
Gallipolis Club, she delivered ber
seven minute prepared presentation
that she will again use in the
regional competition.

By ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH..CVMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I
bave 200 calligrapbled inscribed
wedding invilations that are sealed
and stamped. The wedding was ·
canceled. How can I unseal the
envelopes and remove tbe stamps?
- FLO NORWOOD, Baton
Rouge, La.
DEAR FLO: There are a couple
of ways to open the envelopes and
remove the stamps. You could
steam them open with either a
steamer that is designed for steam·
ing wrinkles out of clothes or bold
the envelofe over a steaming
teakettle. I you use steam, the
adhesives will be p-eserved.
Also, you could soak tbe
envelopes in tepid water, the ink
would run but the stamps will come
off and envelopes will open. They
won't have any glue on them when
they dry.
You could also take tbe
envelopes to your local post office
and you will receive 90 percent of
the value of the stamps as long as
they are on whole envelopes. U you
do this, you must bundle the
envelopes in packets of 50.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I
would like an address for Efrem
Zimbalist Jr. and/or bis sister, Marcia Davenport. I have an old 78
Victor record of their mother

;

•

IN 3 DAYS!

•

•

W/ftl ChromiumIAON~Y SACK QUAAANn'E

•

•

•

All

Natu,.l C.H. 2001

t

iMoore
f. selected as
ii· woman
of
.
~ the year
',.
;

GALLIPOLIS • Sarah Evans·
~ Moore was honored as Gallipolis
;Business Professional Women's
'Club (BPW) Woman of the Year at
;tbe 38th Annual BPW Bosses
:Night Oct. 17, at Grace United
·MetbQI!ist Church, Gallipolis.
·-:-" E.vw-Moore spijtnn Prores"
:siooalilu;lln Sports and the recrui~­
lng prOcesr•.Siie was Ali·Oblo FirSt
:ream and SEOAL MVP in 1982 as
basketball player at Gallia Acade·
my Hlgb School.
·
· Evans-Moore attended StanfordJ]niversity, Stanford, Calif., from
1982-86 and bad two years of bas·
·tetball where she was leading soor~:r and rebounder ber Sophomore
~ear befo(e a career ending bact
mjury. Sbe also received her BA in
EConomics, August, 1986.
. Sbe bas ooacbed as an AJsistant
at Murray State University from
1987-89, helping to earn her team a
Fmal Four appearance in Women's
National Invitational Tournament
in 1989. Sbe also assisted at the
Univellity of Louisville 1989·90,
where the team received the honor
of NCAA Division I Most
Improved Team in the Nation.
·At botb Kentucky Universities,
sbe was illso -the Recruiting Coordinator. From 1990-92 sbe coached
at the Unfversi~y of Georgia as
Assistant Wo.men's Basketball
Coach and Recruiting Coordinator.
Her 1991 recruiting class earned a
Blue Star as the Nations 12th and
the 1992 class received a Blue Star
and ranking as the Nations number
three recruiting class. The learn
was 1991 SEC Champions with a
reoord of 28-4.
CurrenUy, Evans-Moore is the
Head Women's Basketball Coach
of Marshall University, Huntington, W.Va.

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Register to Win Candy • Free Calendars
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SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

Kennelh McCullough, A. Ph. Chllrlea Rllfte, A. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, A. Ph.
lion. thru s.t. 8:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Sundoy 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.

•

($2.00 off with thi• coupon) Limit! •

• Gallipolis, OH

Copyrlgbl1994 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

(EXTRA SPECIAL - The first 18 sold
Sunday will be at 50°/e Off)

PRESCRIPTION

: Fruth2991Pharmacy
:
St. Rt. 160

COLUMBUS, Obio (AP) Area children are taking part In a
national study to determine
whether reducing lead intake can
make a difference in intellectual
development
· The Central Obio Lead Clinic at
Children's Hospital is one of five
sites in tbe country testing lbe
effectiveness of the drog succimer
' in mitigating tbe effects of lead
poisoning in children.
The clinic is acting as a suboon·
tractor to the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, wbicb
received a $6.2 million grant from
the National lnsUtutes of Health to
study succimer. Other test sites are
in Baltimore, Philadelphia and
Newark, NJ.
Succimer Is a drog that binds to
lead and removes it front the bloodstream via tbe kidneys and urine.
Licensed for use in children in
1991, it Is tbe first new cbelating
drug available in decades.
.
Higb blood-lead levels in cbil·
dren have been sbown·to cause
problems and detays in intellectual
REV. WIWAM AND PEGGY HINDS
development, said Dr. Mary Ellen
Mortensen, director of the lead
clinic.
The longer a child's blood-lead
.
level remains higb, the greater tbe
Both the minister ani! bis wife likelihood the child wi[ suffer IQ
; CHESTER Tbe Rev.
bave ministered at several cburcbes deficits. It also bas been suggested
~ William Hinds bas been named
i new pastor of tbe New Life in tbe United States, most recenUy that lead poisoning stunts growth in
•Covenant Cburcb of God on Riebel in New Meuoo.
some children, Mortensen said.
Service houri at the cburcb are
! Road in Chester.
Researobers will follow children
: He and bis wife, Peggy, recenUy 9:30 am. 111d 6 p.m. on Sundays, from ages I through 2 112 for five
and 7 p.m. on Wednesday.
;moved from a pastorale in Xenia.
vears.

Anne B. Adam• and Nancy
Nash-Cummings are eo-authors
or "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whet·
stone) and "Dear Anne and Nan:
Two Prize Problem-Solvers
Share Their Secrets" (Bantam).
To order, ca111·800-888-1220.

Jewelry (complete stock) ••••••••••• ~ Price
Christmas Cards in Boxes.".• ~ Price
Christmas Wrapping Paper•.• ~ Price
Lorus Disney &amp;
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nmex Watches ....•....•......... 40o/o Off

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•

. By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Ti-senllnei'Sialr.
POMEROY- ElizabeiJI Smith,
, R. N., coordinator for Veterans
Memorial Hospilal' s Home Health
' Service sinee February, 1985, will
retire Wednesday .
Named to fill the vacancy bas
been Paula Eichinger, R.N .,a grad. U'!'C of Capilal University in 1981,
. wtth extensive experience in general nursing, tbe Hospital Review
· Program for Medicare, and utiJiza.
tlon review and case management
programs.
. Eichinger, a Pomeroy native,
comes to Home Health from the
Borden Co., Columbus, wbere.slie
coordinated the case management
' program for several yeJifs . Sbe
; began working with. Smitb in mid·
~ August in preparation tor Lhe man·
• agement cbange. ·
~ Smith began ber wort with the
:·vMH Home Health Service in
' October, 1971, soon after it started
~as a pilpt project to take skilled
:nursing into the patient's borne. At
' that time the staff consisted of a
4coordinator, a nurse and a clerk.
: Today .there is a staff of tbe
'·COOrdinator, I 0 registered nurses,
feijlbt aides, four clerical persons,
~w1tb contracted services from a
· physical therapist and a speecb
;therapist.
1 The department now bas a oon·
·tinuing caseload of about 250
)homebound
patients.
The emphasis
a
.
.. .

OPEN TODAY 10 A.M.-5 P.M.

-

PH. 1182·2teli

E. Main

•

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..

awney

'I

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years, it still wodtsl"
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan:• at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, Vf 05048.
Questions of general interest will
appear in the column. Due to tbe
· volume of mail, personal replies ·
cannot be provided.

Service Pomeroy, Oh.

446-6620 •

•••••Ill!••••••

EB

ONLY

IN OUR STORE

Sunday Tlme.-Sentlnel Page B7

OH-Point Pleasant, WV

health ·
;service

PrlceaGood
Sunday,
Nov. 27th Only

LISA SOLLEY
than women wbo do wbat society hurt for so long.
ber arm, and I lOoked and sbe bad
·The Tribune Chronicle
tells them - leave the abusive
"She bad left before for a week, saliva coming from ber mouth and
: WARREN, Obio (AP)
relationship. National statistics a month. But the time would come it was bubbling.
:Fredrick Benson says be wishes be sbow women are most vulnerable when one of us (kids) would need a
"I thought, 'Ob boy, there's air
· :Jiad killed Samuel Young when be in the rJtSt two years after they sep- pair of shoes of school clothes. He comin' out of ber lungs and she's
ilad the chance.
arate from their mate.
. bad tbe control with his pay- not gomg to make it. So let me go
i Instead, be took away the gun
Today, Benson. 43, toys with cbeck," Benson said.
getmygunandgoaflerbim.'
)is stepfather bad pulled on bis what is left of tbe rifle be used to
Young, 59, who had worked at
"I got my gun and went bac;Jt to
)Rother on Christmas Day 1992 and beat bis stepfather two years ago. WCI Corp., tried to make up for my mother. I asked the doctor if be
'-beat him wilh i~ breaking bis arm. It's minus the stock, which broke the abuse by providing material thought sbe would make it and he
:Senson walked away tbat day, tak· on Young:s body.
thinfS for bis wife and her children. said. 'I don't think so."' .
:ing his mother Ruby Young with
Benson talked about the often' You couldn't find a person
Benson said his rage grew. He
:him.
violent marriage bis mother and wbo was more ltind and generous," wanted revenge. He drove bis van
• 11 wasn't tbe first time the 63· Young bas and bow be watched monetarily, Benson said. "For that from the scene, searching for bis
~year-old Warren woman bad
Young gun down bis mother in be couldn't be topped. He would molher's killer.
:walked out during her stormy 35· broad dayligbt on Fe!!. Z3 -()Illy a treat YOI! real niee the'n turn to the
Meanwhile, polic;e bad cauBbt
;year marriage . Only this time. month after a rmal divonce bearing. devil."
Young, wbo told them be feared
'When sbe dido' t go back, Young
When Ruby Young walked out
And so their relationship went.
Benson. Numerous officers escort·
:hunted ber down and killed her.
with her son that Christmas Day,
II carne to an end Feb. 23, when ed Young to bis court bearing.
; Ruby Young is no different than sbe did wbat many women can't-:- Young stalked his wife to ber doc· Benson said be initially thought be
~ore than half the women mursbe didn't return.
tor's office. AJ sbe was walking to bad calmed down by then.
)lered in the United States. A 1993
She filed for a legal separation a van where Benson and ber 11"I was sitting there next to my
'Survey of FBI reports from 1976 to in February 1993. It was a huge year-old grapdson sat waiting, wife and I beard bim say, 'Not
:1987 showed that of 38,648 people step for the Pentecostal woman Young walked up and sbot ber four guilty.' it just filled me up!'' said
;age 16 and over wbo were killed, . wbo pul all she bad in the word ef- times.
.~ ~ Ben$on, who recalled lllllkinJ_bis&lt;61 percent were women killed by God. He religion does not recog·
"I didn't know wbat to do. I way past a baH-dozen officers
~male partners alid 39 percent were nlze divorce. Benson said it was kept saying, 'Ob no,' and going
before lunging at bls stepfather.
one or the reasons she put up with bact and forth from my motber·and Police wrestled Benson to,,tbe
: men kiUed by female parmers.
Ruby Young also is 110 different tbe beatings, the insults and the him. I took ber pulse on ber neck.
ground an~ c~arged bim With
numerous v1olauons.

Children
taking part in
lead study

.Smith to
retire ·from

ASK ANNJ: • NAN

singinf "LitUe Gray Home in the
West' that I would like them to
bave. Thank you for the service.
you provide to so many people! HELEN WOODWARD, Elkton,
Mich.
DEAR HELEN: "Who's Wbo·
In America" didn't yield either
address. Our suggestion is to write
to Marcia Davenport in care of tbe
publisher of ber still-in-print book.
"Mozart." The book is published
by Avon Books, a division .of The
Hearst Corp., 105 Madison Ave.,
New York. NY 10016.
MORE ON BAT REMOVAL
- Joan Anfinson .of Prescott,
Ariz., writes, "We bad bats roust·
ing, dozens at a time, in our.breeze·
way ceiling. The urine stains and
bat guano were terrible. Someone
suggested banging an electtic 'bug
getter' near the area. After two

Battered
woman
could
run,
but
not
hide
;sy

,
'

27 1994

November 27,1894

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

COORDINATOR CHANGE- Ellzllbetla Smllb, R.N., left,
will rellre Wednesday u coordinator of Veten111 Memorial Hospl·
tal'• Home Health Servlee, and Paula Elclllnaer, R. N. will aaume
tile pOildon. Wednesday a comblnaUon rellremenl party for Smllh
and observance of Home Health Week, Nov. 28-Dec.l, wUJ be held
from llo 4 p.m. Tbe pubUc llllnvlled.
of the program is to Mlake care into
the home, to make it possible for
people to stay in their bomes as
long as possible."
Wednesday an open bouse will
be beld in Home Health's offices in
the medical building across from
the hospital from 2 to 4 p.m. The
open bouse will mart both tbe
retirement of Smith, and Home
Health Week, Nov. 28-Dec. 2. The
public is invited to attend.
Smitb wbo resides In Reedsville
with her husband, Grant, already
retired, was honored ·recenUy with
a surprise retirement dinner party at
Seyler's House of Treasures. She
was presented gifts by the Home
Health employees wbo hosted tbe
party.
Sleeping late, traveling and visiting with ber childr~ and grand·

children are bigb on Smith's retire·
mentplans.
"My big ambition is to sleep 'til
7. For years, I've gotten up at 5
o'clock to get ready to come to
work: at 6:30."
The grandchildren already bave
plans for extended summer visits in
Reedsville with their $randparents,
and Mr. and Mrs. S101th expect to
be making frequent trips to the
Lima area wbere one son and his
family live, and to Weston, W.Va.
wbere another resides. The third .
son and bis family are in
ReedsviDe.
As for travelin'-, thai will begin
soon. The couple a tbree 1001 and
their families as a rellmnent gift to
Elizabeth, gave the couple a ttip to
"Christmas in Nashville."

•,

Byl'tJAX TAWNEY
1 - glad I went to YIJIOI)avia
.
in 1985'wben it
was a very
peaeelul country. I met IOd
talked to the
le in the
enf.ses and
throughout tbc
camtry. It was
a pleuure to
walk front village to village and talll: to average
wortingpeople,especially the people
wboworkedon the fanns.1treminded
me of my boyiJood days on my father' s farm on Olillioothe Road, now
lrnown as Route 588, just three miles
from Gallipolis.
I came from a large family. My
falber and mother had 11 children and
· I was the youngest. They are all gone
now except me. Just a week ago, on
Nov. 5,1 belpedbury my last brother,
Earl. Earl- very good to me. When
I was 14 years old, be bought me a
rifle and a bi:ycle. He had a good job
at the Gallia Produce. When I wanted
something, I always went to Earl.
My dad was very sttict on all of
us. When be told us to do something,
we did iL Thete wns no talking back.
I am very tbankfuii had a dad like
that He made me get upat5 o'cloclr
everymomingtodotbechoresbefore
I went tosdloolthal wasamileaway.
I walked. There was no bickering
among any of my brothers or sisters.

VISit to
My fimily - a beautiful family.
Wen, I oould write a boolt about my
family, but now back to Yugoslavia.
When I Wil=.·
Sara' vo I met a
student who could
English. 1
asked him ifhe
go with me and
be my guide and aanslator.1 offered
him $20 a day. He $aid he would be
glad 10 do so. I told him I did not want
to sec the cities, ~ I wanted to
seetbeoountryandthefarmsandtalll:
to the working people.
It was two of the happiest days of
my life. I helped two fanners milk
their cows, turned an old cream seoarator like we used to bave 81 home,
held a sheep while it was being
sheared, and helpedJlitth hay onto an
old wagon. I drove ~old lniCIOr that
puBcd the wagon to the 111m·
I was Invited to lunch with the
family of one oftbe fanners. It - a
family of seven who satarounchm old
wooden table like we had at home. I
always carried a pocket full of half
dollars,solgaveeacbfamilymember
one which made them vtry happy to
baveaU.S.ooin.lalsocarricdseveral
$2 bills. I gave these to the outstand·
ing friends I met along the way .I met
many people front many countries,
but I must say the Yugoslavia people
are among the friendliest people I
bave ever met
But oow they m having a civil
war like we bad m Jl!li(J.I865. Why
are they killing each otber'll cannot
understand this. Every night I watch
the news and see women and small

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•Methods and supplies for birth control and safer sex

414 SECOND STREET
GALLIPOUS

·

. 446-0166

r

Y..ct.IIBJ 1119

DepoProvera-lnjection
Birth control pill
Condom/Spermicide
Sliding Fee Scale
We accept Medicaid and private Insurance.

·~.

law over
·they
had had no food or wattr for 10111e
time. They looked like they were
notbingbutskinandbonea.therewere
many lying dead. It also showed pic·
turcsofayoungboylyinginapoolof
blood. They turned him over and he ,
was dead with part of his head shot
off. I cannot unden!tand how bUIIIIII
beings.can do such things to One
anolher
The Wall StRetJoumal reponed
horrible stories about how many
families suffered by being suffered
by being separated from each other
with·no hopes of seeing each other
again. We think we have it bad here
with all of tbe kiUing going on • al·
most everyone has a gun. But just
thinkofallofthepoorinnocentpeople
beingkilledinabeautifulcountrylike
Yugoslavia.
In three years there have been
200,000 people Jcilled and thousands
upon thousands wounded.
Some day, if Yugoslavia ever
rmds peace and citizens live again as
humans should, I will get a plane
ticlcet and go back 10 sec if I can fmd
111y of those beautiful people I met 10
!-'YC8fl;;;o,.;:ag::;;o,;,. - - - - - - - .

509 S. THIRD STREET
MIDDLEPORT

992·5912

Layaway

.•.
.,,

Now for

Y. ct.
H•rt

Christmas

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Vi ct Ring f199

Y. ct. Earrlags '179
H you want to aave on
Diamonds, go to
Tawney's, 422 2tld Ave .•
the best place in town to
shop for diamonds.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave. Gallipolis

.

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'

WOMAN OF THE YEAR • Glaclyl
left,
Conunlttee Chairman and LOri Chun:., president, preaentl Sanh EvansMoore lbe GalUpolb BPW Woman of the Year Award ata reeenl
banqueL

Hyou are piiiMing a weddingr

lhen you ahould come ••• ua at
H•kln•·Tanner.
You wii havt over 190 stylet of
1uxedoa lo ehooee from. We nave a
large aelectlon of lhllatlll atyt,a ·
and COI'I'f)lmtntaJY 8C!»IIOMI for
lhll aptclal occlllon.

....h, ........., ..
lfferHW.Prlc••

..

.;Hinds named new pastor

.

Onyx &amp; Diamonds
7 Diamonds

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•

~Parents

.

fight to keep dead daughter'$ son

•~

OTTAWA, Obio (AP) -Jim
~ Betsy UIZ of Ottawa lost their
•c~auabter In a car-train crash in
1,uly, anif'now tbcy are fighting to
.pep bcr lOll.
~ ICeUie Utz. 25, left a wiD giving
01cr paren~~ auardlaolhiP of 2-year~Dalllll.

•

.

Richard Suarez, 29, who has
Zacwr met tbc cblld and wba'n Utz
Jllllrled. 1111 filed suit in Pul- l
CouDiy Jnveaile Comt BlkiDJ
!IIIC aJUrt to eatablilh that be II Dal- .
'!toa'l falbcr and lo gnml him CIIS• .

:..ever
&gt;a

~Tuesday, both Dalton 111d

· :Suarez bid blood ICIU doae.

.

,. "Jim IIICI I were both de~ ;
~d illfuria&amp;Cd,'' Mra. Utz, nld
&gt;Wbcp
. abo bo~d
. ..bout tbo a_uit.

..

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'

'"Ibe whole time after Kellie was ,
1:illed, we oever heard a word, be
never sent a Dower."
Suarez and Utz dated for about a
year and broke up In 1992. The two
lived together, rl!'ll in 'Ottawa and
later with Suarez's parents near
Plilladelpbia.
Suarez's mother, Cathie Suarez,
said Utz frequently - depressed.
''There were CX!IIItlllt problemJ
with their reladonabip," abc aald.
"Afterwardt, abe said abe was
pregnant, tbeu abe said abe
wam'L"
.'
Mrs. Suarez said ber son
thouJht UIZ - ttylnJ to use tbc 1
prcp!lllcy 10 llllvqe lbc couple's ,
1 •••
rellltiombl •
Sbe s~ Utz catlect ber bome

repeatedly after Dalton was born
Oct 6, 1992. Sbo-sent pictures of
the baby, but Mn. Suarez said &amp;be
did not give them 16 her son. Sho
said be did not believe the child
-his.
· Utz riled ault to eslllblisb Suarez
as Dallal's fadler and sued blm for
child suppOrt, bul be never
responded 10 tbc court case.
lobo Huftinan, bla attmiCy, ~
Suaiez either did not l'e(:Cive Lhe
court s'UIIII!IODSCI or did not tall:e
lhcm serloualy.
It - not untillalet thai S"uarez
decided he should find out if be
wasDaital'af~.
Suare:~: now lives

In Folcroft,
Pa., with his wife and 1-year-old
daughter, I
'

·-·

·
·

-

Emeralda, Rublla or Sapphlrea •
.6 Dllmonda

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Holzer Medical Center
Employee Activity Association

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~im~s- tentintJ

Entertainment

November 27 1994

People in the news

David

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Chris Parker rushed for 180
yards and lbn:lc toucbdowua Satur·
day as Manball beat Middle Ten~
nessee State 49-14 in tbe first
round of the NCAA I·AA playoft'a.
MarsbaU (11·1) toolt a 28..0 lead
midway tbrougb the second quancr
as Parker scored oo runs of three,
three and four yards. Quarterback
Todd Donnan threw 14 yards to
Shawn Goodwyn for the Herd's
otber first·balf ICOI'C.
Middle Tenneasee {8·3·1)
appeared to finally slow the
onslaught wben ftanker Dcmclric
Mostlller outjumped safety Shan·
non Morrison for an 18-yanl touch·
down on the final play·of the half
to make it 28·7.
But tbc Blue Raiders failed to
move the ball on the first posses. • sion of the third quaner.

ing. Beame, 88, was admitted to Mount Sinai Hospital Friday morning.
The bleeding stopped laler in the day, but preliminary tests shed liale light
on the cause, said hospital spokeswoman Lawic Ander!on.
The ailment did not appear to be life-threatening.
Btame served as New Y&lt;R's mayor from 197410 19n.

Kenneth Branagh takes longest leap with ~Frankenstein'
lenge with "Mary Shelley's
Frankenstein.•' Although remade
ad finitwn, the 1931 version direct·
ed by James Whale with Colin
Clive as Frankenstein and Boris
Karloff as the monster remains in
every film buff's mind.
Branagb reviewed the earlier
films and was not deterred.
"I checked out all tbe films,
including my favorite, Mel Brooks'
'Young Frankenstein.' It really is
tbe summation or every farodic
response to the story itsel and to
the briniant ways it has been made
in the past. Having seen that, I
knew what we couldn't do."
Tbe Karloff makeup, with its
platf(IUl shoes, high dome and bolt
through the neck, bas long been
copied and parodied. Branagb
wanted to avoid comparisons wilh
his monster, Robert De Niro.
"We wanted to bave a patch·
work man, someone put together
witb bits from other people, wbicb
is what happened in the book,"
Branagb said. "We talked 10 surgeons and other advisers about
wbat sort of stitches would have
been done tben under the pressure
of time that Dr. Frankenstein would
ha~~Wfaecewdanted bl·m to be some-

FRANKENSTEIN • Kenneth Branagh appean In 1 tcene fro!D
the film "Mary Shelley's Frankenstein," wblcb be also directed.
Despite numermu movie versl0111 based on the famous Mary Sbel·
ley work, Bnnagb was not deterred from making his own , with
: Robert DeNlro starring as the monster.

·By BOB TIIOMAS
dies have been almost totally
·A.ssoclatecl Pnss Writer
neglected. Yet, last year, Branagb
. LOS ANGEl ES (AP) - Ken· made an all·star version of "Much
:neth Brana~b possesses a young Ado About Nothing" that charmed
.man's conftdence in challenging c rfliitciec.s and did acceptable box
:popular beliefs - be proved it 0 1
Branagb bas directed two mod- body wbo was in pain, as though be'
·wben be directed and starred in the
:mm "Henry V" at age 28.
em films: "Dead Again," a film· was covered wiib sores IIJ!d cuts
: Laurence Olivier was 37 when noir murder story, and "Peter's lhat even as you watcbed hiDl you
· Jle tlhcclf:ll 111\lsllilletl Ilia JaviSll Friends,•• a kind ot- Brltl1b •''111~~-;v were lOre.
film version of "Henry V" in Big Cbill." Neither was well
We also l'aced tbe problem ...
1944. It became an instant classic, received by critics or the public.
t~ ~ake sure .(the makeup) was
considered the best Shakespeare
Branagb faced his biggest cbal· yavid, but wilbin it tbe actor could
ever filmed. Most filmmakers---~
dared not attempt the play again.
Undaunted, Branagb, who bad
appeared in two movies and direct.. _
ed none, undertook "Henry V,"
portraying royalty and commoners
alike as a scruffy, wawasbed replica
of wbat they probably bad been.
Tbe results were critical buzzab!&gt;
and Academy Award nominations
for best actor and best picture of
1988.
.
Shatcespeare' s tragedy is a bard
enough sell in tbe film market·
place; wilh the exception of "The
Taming of the Sbrew," .bis come·

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By JOHN MOSSMAN
DENVER (AP) - 8arring a
complete collapse, tbe top-rated
passer in the AFC after Ibis week·
end's games woo't be Dan Marino
or John Elway or Joe Montana or
IDY of die usual SUSpectS.
It figures to be Jeff Blake, who
wasn't exactly a bot commodity
when tbe Cincinnati Bengals
plucked him off tbc waiver wire
last Aug. 29, but who unquestion·
ably is now.
Aflcr two bench·siaing seasons
with the New York Jets, Bllike is
an ovaaigbt sensation in the NFL.
Given tbe Bengals' starting job a

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NEW YORK (AP) - Alonzo
Mourning scored a game-high 27
points and grabbed 18 rebounds
Saturday as tbe Charlotte Hornets
sent the New Y&lt;R Knlcks to their
first home loss or the season. LOS·

9S.

New York bad won its finlfour
games at Madison Square Garden.
Palrick Ewing WIU held to 11
points after the opening quarter, in
which be scored 11 points 10 get
New York off to a 13-pointlcad.
Mourning scored five points in
a key 9..0 run by the Hornets in a
4:28 minute span of the fourth
quarter, just after the Knicks bad
pulled to within one point, 84·83.
l ,·
Larry Johnson of the Hornets ~ , ~'
scored 16 of bis 22 points in the
·~
l - 1~1nd balf. Derek Harper added •
·-v--:~
19 points for New Y&lt;B.
'
Cbarloac broke a 79·79 lie after
- ..;.......;IIi
three quarters by scoring the firSt
GETflNG A GRIP oa the basketball before New York center
five points of the fourth, while Patrick Ewing (top ri&amp;bt) gets his bands on It is the task of the
New York missed five straight moment for Charlotte postman Alonm Mourning In the ftrst half
shots. .
of Saturday's NBA contest In New York's Madison Square
Garden, where the Hornets won 105-95. (AP)

month ago, Blalte bas compllcd a Dallas and Indianapolis close jn It's rough to get pressure on him.
quarterback rating of 96.6, nearly the two losses.
"He must be a great leader
So it is a decidedly different . because if you look at the games
10 points higher than current AFC
lelKier Marino. Blalte doesn't bavc Cincinnati ream that invades Mile earlier and you loot at tbe games
enough pass attemptS 10 qualify for High Stadium today, one tbat now, it's a completely different
the rankings, but be likely will does!l't accurately reflect its 2·9 team -even though it's the same
have enougb after today' s game in fCCOid.
guys except for bim. Tbcy're play·
Denver.
"It would have been betler to ing good football rigbt now."
Denver quarterbaclc John Elway
The fomer East Carolina star catch tbem early," said Broncos
bas completed 89 of 147 passes linebacker Karl Mecklenburg, . said Blake bas "made some big
(61%) for 1,195 yards, with seven refening to the BensaJs' G-8 start.
plays for them. With bim coming
"Bringing in this kid bas in and giving them thatspart. they
toucbdowns and just two intercepeverybody
up,"· are a wbolc different team."
tions. He's also been sacked ooly livened
Mecklenburg said. "He's not
The Broncos (5-6) believe they,
live times in his four starts.
The Bengals have exceeded 300 afraid to just throW it up and Jet bis 100. are a different team than they
total yards in all four of his satrts; receivers go up and get it. He's were in the first mooth of the~·
and they've won twice, playing always dangerous scrambling, 100. son, when tbey went 0-4. They've

won five of their last seven games
to climb within one game of .500.
"We still have five games left
and we are clawing back into the
bunt," Elway said. "We're start·
ing to get the feeling and excite·
men1 of playing in big games with
playoff ramifiC8tioos.' •
Last week. Cincinnati losl lo
Indianapolis 17·13. Blake, both·
cred by a sore left ankle, threw for
207 yards witb one touchdown and
one interceptioo. Carl Pickens bad
his second· straight 100-yard
receiving game.
Denver defeated Atlanta 32-28
as Elway threw two s~cond-balf

touchdown passes and ran four
yards for the dindling score with
1:56 left, capping his 34th career
comeback effon.
The teams are meeting for tbe
fiftli straight time in Mile Higb
Stadiwn, wben: Denver owns an 8·
2 advantage. OveraU, the Broncos
lead the series 10-6.
It is the th ird straight borne
game for the Broncos, wbo will,

after facing lhe Bengats, embark
on a tough three-game road trip
that puts lhem up against Kansas
City. the Los Angeles Raiders and
San Fran,isco.

Rodman and Rison·th.e latest 'trouble men' on the scene

I Carat

...., Dtc. 3, laOO p.&amp;
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championship hopei of both ICIDJ, .
With the possibility of geain1 .
the ball back, the Scrninolca (9-1-1)
decided against going for two and ·
pulled even on Dan Mowrey's
e11tra point kick followinJ Rock
Preston •a four-yard sconng run
with 1:45 left
Florida State regained posse&amp;·
sion wilh 22 sec:onds left at its 29·
yard line, and tbe Seminoles were
driving again wben time ran out.
The game ended ll the Florida 43
after an eight-yard scramble by·
Kanell, wbo couldn't get out of ·'
bounds in time.
Tbe Seminoles are assured a
berth in a major bowl coalition
game - the Sugar, Facsta, Cottoaor Orange - by virtue of their
Atlantic Coast Conference cbampi·
onship.

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.OHIO VALLEY
SYMPHONY
I

ries for 156 yards against the
Giants.
.
Houston's new running foma·
lion seems 10 lit blm perfectly.
"He looked great," Burnett
said "I think he's a lot better back
out of the ).formation, lining .UP
seven yards deep, than be was lin·
ing up four or five yards back in
the run-and-shoot. He's deeper. He
gets more momentum. He has bet·
ter vision.
"Unlike the run·and·shoot,
where they were going to throw 40
times a game, now we have to stop
the run first."
Against New York, the Oilers
Jan 29 times and atiCmpted just IS
passes, the first time in nearly two
years that they ran m~:e often than
they passed. The 1S passes were
tbe fewest they bad anempted in a
aame since 1981.

Marshall respi&gt;ndcd with an 11·
play, 7S-yard scoring drive 10 put
the game away. Parker rushed for
IS yards on the drive and caught a
screen pass for eigbt more yards.
Goodwyn, however, was lhe key
player on the series. The 6-foot-2
high jumper for Marshall's track
team had a 24-yard reception on
the fourth play of the series, tben
capped the drive by easily oudeaping six-foot defensive baclc Jeremy
Pruitt for a nine·yard touchdown
with 8:341eft in the third quarter.
Florida 31, Florida St 31
At Tallahassee, Fla., Danny
Kanell passed for 232 yards in the
fourth quarter Saturday as seventhranked Florida State scored 28
straight points to earn a 31-31 tie
with No. 4 Florida
Tbc lie coded the slim naliooal

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By CHUCK MELVIN .
and-shoot remained rare enough
CLEVELAND (AP) - Tight that it f&lt;:recd them to study a little
ends. !·formations. Straigbt·abead harder whenever a game against
power running.
Houston was coming up.
Clearly, more .tban just tbe
Their preparations for the Oil·
coach bas changed since the Cleve· ers' offense ·this week were much
land Browns saw the Hous100 OIJ. simpler. They bad tapes of only
ers last month.
one game on wbicb to base their
"They're a normal team now," defensive plan: Houston's 13·10
said Cleveland defensive end Rob loss to the New York Giants in
Burnett. "We used to bave to Fisher's head coaching debut last
change our whole defense for tbe Monday night
run·and·shoot."
"It's a nonnal pro set. It's noth·
But new Houston coacb Jeff ing strange," Burnett said. "Acto·
FUlbef, who wH promoted from " ally;· the run·nnd·shoot was strange
defensive ,oordinator when Jack compared to the rest of . the
, Pardee was fired last week, bas all league.''
,, · .;, , ·
btU scrapped the four-receiver
Running back Lorenzo· White
s~beme and intends to turn to it was the mos1 obvious beneficiary
only·occasiona11y in obvious pass· of the Oilers' new apJXO!Icb. Aflcr
ing situations.
running for 95 yards an the second
Even though the Browns (8·3) ball at Cincinnati the week before,
were ac~ustomed to playing the While set career highs with 27 car·
Oilers (1-10) twice a year, the run- .

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Hornets
defeat
Knicks

CLOSING IN -Florida State defenders Sean State arudge matcliln Talla~ tla., where the
Gaton watched tbelr 28-polnt lead disappear In
Hamlet (18) and Corey FuUer close In on Florida
the fourth quarter before settJIDa for a 31·31 tit.
taUhack Fred Taylor 11 Taylor tries to turn the
(AP)
coriler In the ftrst quarter of Saturday's Sunshine ·

PUPPET SHOW • Tbe Du Puppensplel production of The ,
·Snow Queen, wiD be presented by the ManhaU Artllts Series and ·
The W. J. Maler Storage Company 7 p.m. Dec. 1 at the Keith·
Albee Theatre In downtown Huntington, W.Va. A combination of ··.·
'bunraku' (puppets and their puppeteers) and 'body' puppets II
used to teU the story. Tlllkets are $8, $10 and $12 for adults. Half· ·
prke tickets are avaU.ble for youth 17 and under, part-time Marshall students, racalty and staff. Tickets are free to full·tlme lllu·
dents wltb valid MUID. For more Information contact the Mar·
lball Artists Series, (304)696-6656.

Nllf)\'LJ il.

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be seen and could convey his per·
formance in a way that would
touch us, so it wouldn't be too
mucb of a mask."
Branagh, who will be 34 on
Dec. 10, published his autobiography, "Beginnings," at age 28. He
is serious about his work, but be is
also affable, his boyish Irish face
often wi~ing in a smile.
. He and his Oscar-winning wife,
Emma Thompson ("Howards
End"), met in 1986 when both
were cast in a BBC miniseries,
"Fortunes of War."
Even thougb they have worked
closely, including Branagb direct·
ing ber, no signs of friction have ·
appeared. Both seem to lack the
ego of such high-powered perfOJm·
ers.

I~

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Marshall bombs MTSU;
Florida &amp;.FSU tie 31-31

NEW YORK (AP) - Former Mayor Abraham D. Beamo was in
stable condition today after being hospitalized for gastrointestinal bleed·

SAVANNAH,Ga.(AP)- Theycouldn't~et
seatsforDavidLetterman,buttheymanagedtogettbemfor'lbantsgivmg
dinner- courtesy of Dave.
The group of 19 people- strangers until being rejected in the ticket

•

"

November 27,1994

line for "Laic Night With David Lettaman" - were !CIIt on an im·
prompcu, all-expenses-plid ttip to Miami by the CBS talk. show ~
On Thunday, the group was treated to a Soulhcm·stylc tulkcy diiiiiCJ'
with dressing and grits It the Hyatt Regency.
·
.
Then they greeted Leiterman long distance for his show.
Traveler Carolyn Mazur' said members r:A the group were getting
along wen and were becoming "life:~ends."
The group has stopped in Atlantic . , Washinaton. D.C., and Fon
Bragg, N.C., since boarding the bus
• Leuerman's !llldio Monday
night

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Norman
Lear and bis wife, Lyn Davis Lear, are the
pazents of twin girls boot on Thanksgiving
Day. And as with Lear's rclevision produc·
tions,lhcrc's a c:onrcmporary plot lWiSt.
A surrogate mother save birth to Madelaine
RoscandBriannaEiiz.abethl.ear,Learspokes·
woman Pam Ruben Golwn said Friday. The
Lears are the biological Jmell!S, Golum said.
Lear, 72, and his 47-year-old wife, who is a
psy~ho~st, also have a 6-year-old son,
BenJamm.
The TV producer is best known as creator of
the 1970s sitcom "All in the Family."

Section 1CL-

'
Rt.2, Bypue
' POINT PLEASANT

1

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•

''

By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Writer
Trouble just seems to follow some guys arotmd.
Ask Dennis Rodman. Or Andre Rison. Or· Dexter
MIDiey. Or Art Scblicbrcr.
These are guys who've been given chance after
cbance after dlancc, only to aet in mess attet mess
afi.er mess, perhaps betrayed by talent so gn:at it' a
.llllide their bosses reluctant to~ down on them.
All four bad their pasts caleb up with them recent·
ly,' bringing them jams ransing frol!l suspension to
.jail
.
.
Rodman is in trouble wi~ the San Antonio Sptn,
sometbin~ about not following team rules. Why are
the Detroit PiStons not surprised?
Rodman was a miaralne beada!:be in gym aborts
durias bia days with the Pistons. His shenanigans
made the froot office 10 nuts that player personnel
boas BiUy McKinney, knowing Podm•n wanted out,
once threatened to keep blm around. just for spite.
Hll CICIIIlC to San Antonio, wentiiiiOOibly for all
of - ICISOII befoce a new administration sot these
•quslnt ideas about followlna team rules. Dye your
·hair lilY color you wanL Just don't throw ice at tbe
'coach.
l
· "If his mind ig on basketball," teammate Avery
Johns'on
said, "it's a Sharp mind, very intense,
very
p
..

good for the people around him. If not, well ... "
Meanwhile, Rison got himself suspended by the
Atlanta Falcons last week. Seems be was late for, ob,
20 or so team meetings. And be couldn't understand
wbr, management 4ot so bent out of shape over that.
. 'I think I don t deserve beinJt suij)Cnded," be
told Fox Sports. "I feel as tbougb I shouldn't have
been suspended because or some of the things other
players have done !bat are more detrimental to our
team. Coaches know it and they still don't talce
·action. Then I'm a minute, two mlnutes,late 10 a special team m~tillg and you suspend me?"
Well, yes, after tbi20tb time.
Rison. remember, also bad problems at his fint
NFL atop In lndianiti'Qiis. Is there a trend bere?
Now bere we bav~ two extremely talented ltb·
letes. Rodmlln bas le3 the NBA In rebounding for
three ltlalgbt yean. ~ his cau~!c:ore pusea
in tbe first five yean of a career lban
.
And yet, trouble keeps followilll them arotmd.
There are otben, with more serious problems,
wbo are part of the reddivlst Community.
Manley played In three Super Bowls and bad fJ7
1
career sac:1ts, founb best In NFL history. He also bid
tbis nasty drua babiL 1brce years ago, be c:ontesscd
to a setback and was suspended for tbe second time

from the NFL.
"I am in trouble and I must renew my battle wilh
this disease," he said at lhe time. "The banle in foot·
ball is a game; the battle for my life is not. I may
have lost a battle, but 1will win the war."
A year later, in bis 1autobiograpby, Manley wrote
bow he "gave up a $6SO,()()().a-year contract for a
lousy $20 wortb of cocaine."
"Drugs rob you of your c.redibiiity and your
morals. They make you a liar and a cheat. It takes
time to get tbat back. I want to show recovery can
work.''
All tbe right words: All the prqlCf sentiments.
Last week in Houston, Dexter Manley got busted
for felony posacssioo of craclt coa~ioe
Schiicbter CIIIIC out of Ohio SIIIC as a can't-miss
quarterback prospect He missed. Tbc problem: Gam·
bling.
Schlichter, one observer suggested. would bet on
1
wbich of two people would get across the street fii'Sl.
He'd love those dot races that ball parks use 10 iDII!SC
fans between innings.
After gambling finished him in football,
Scbllcbter wuted as a radio talk show host ln. of all
placeS ror ID lddicted gamb1cr, Las Vegas. He plead·
ed aulltY last week ~ a federal charge of bank ~

,,

\

- writing bad Cllecks.
When bis addiction.was diagnosed. Schlichter wu
treated at South Oaks Hospital in Amityville, ·N.y.
where Dr. Sheila B. Blume is medical direaa or tbC
alcoholism. chemical dependency and cOmpulsive
gambling unit.
•'Relapsing is very mudl a part of addictive disor·
ders," she said. "That is wby a single treatment, inpatient ~ out-patient, is neVCJ considered a cure. A
very lmponant part of treatment is that recovery Is a
lifelong endeavor. Once professional treatment ia
done, self-help groups like Alcoholics Anonymous
and Gamblers Anonymous are important. It's the
kind of disease that if you forget about it, it will
SIIC8k up when you're not looking.
"For someone who is clean a year or two yean,
relapse is less frequent"
Dwight Gooden was clean for seven yean before
be staned fouling testing boales - perhaps as 111111y
as 10 times - last summer. "I bad an alcoholic
ratient wbo relapsed after 14 years," Blume said.
·~ condition can be ~ted. It never Is cored.
1be one bet, the one cocktail, the one bit of crack
opens tbe door.
"It's like riding a bicycle. Once lhe system lell'lll,
it ne;ver forgets."

I

�,,
Mrtll'hber 27, 1994

-

fllage C2-Bunday nme~ntln'l

November 27; 1994

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

In the upcoming basketball season,

In the 19!J4:.95 basketball season,

River Valley girls need health
&amp; grit to revive winning ways

Gallia Academy girls seeking
sole possesion of SEOAL title
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
immediate past with pride and use
Tlma-Sentlnel Sid
it to their advantage.
GALLIPOLIS - One Step
The 1993-94 Angels (21-3)
Farther.
shared the Southeastern Obio
That might be the main motto Athletic League crown with Logao
for the 1994-9S Gallia Academy before advancing to the ftrSt round
Blue Angels. -wbo will begin their of the Division II regional tournaseason Thursday nigbt near ment at Lancaster, wbere they lost
Proctorville agpinst the Fairland to final four contender Logan Elm.
~ons witb the memory of bav- The 1992-93 Angels (14-7) made
mg gone one tournament farther it to the Chillicothe district tourna·
last year than they did the year ment, but they lost to Hillsboro in
before.
the opening round. a step "farther
With only three player~ having · than the 1991-92 Angels (4-17)
gradnat~ in lhe last two seasons,
went. That crew was beaten by
the cast IS pretty moch the same. Jackson in the sectional tournaTberc might be a new face here ment at Oak Hill.
~ a new face ~ (sophomores
With such progression In the
Kri~ty ~· Ttffany Foster and last three years. it's only logical
Lori Milliron and freshman Susan for them to believe that they can
Tackett will battle to see who will make it to Ohio State University's
split time between reserve and var· St Jobn Arena, the annual site of
Slty .action), but some o( the same the state tournament.
old faces - Misty Coleman,
Granted, Melissa Cooper, Tami
Whitney Hastwell, Megban Hampshire and Tez Kraft are no
Kolcun, Sara Walker and of longer at Logan to endanger their
course, scoring monarch Mindy quest for the club' s first whollyPope - will still be 011 band.
owned SEOAL title since tbe
The Angels can look to their 1988-89 edition that produced two

cotiegiate players - former
LaSalle and Rio Grande center
Lori HamiltOn and Ohio Wesleyan
junior guard/forward Dena Greene
- and broughl home league honors. However, today's Angels still
have their work cut out for them.
"We have to take it one game at
a time," said Renee Barnes.
"They're not going to just step out
on the court and get a W. They're
going to have to put out the
effort"
• Avoid Complacency.
Barnes, whose third season at
the Academy's helm will likely be •
spent as a slavedriver if the Angels
expect to avoid being forced to
come up with spectaCUlar fmishes
in games the morning line will
have them winning. is likely to, as
some point in the season, condense
her philosophy into those words.
The teams that beat the Angels
in the regular season last year Logan lost one-third of its roster
but at least two-thirds of its
offense to graduation, while
Fairland lost about balf of its roster
and at least half of its offense to
gmduation - are projected to be
Slue Angels'1994-95 flight plans
less dominant but sliD worthy con1!111
Cb~J~oncnt Jan. 19 ...........................at Marietta tenders this time aroiD!d. Does that
Dec. 1 """"""""""""""at Fairland Jan. 23 ............................. Rock Hill mean the Angels can cruise
Dec. 2 ...................... at Chesapeake Jan, 26 ............................... Jackson through the schedule without
Dec. S ...................at Warren Local Feb. 2..........:·:....................... Athens . breaking a sweat?
Dec. 8 ............................... .Marietta Feb. 6 ......................at River Valley
Not quite.
Dec. 12 ...........................al Jacks011 Feb. 9................................... ~ogan
For one thing, tbe Marietta
Dec. 1S ............................at Athens Feb. ll ...........................at Mmford Tigers. fresh off an 11-10 finisb in
Dec. 19 ....................... River VaHey
Cathy Boricb's first season in
(Unless otherwise noted, all . charge, will be hungry, not to menDec. 22 ........................at RllCII: Hill
Dec. 29 ................................ .Meigs Monday through Thunday dates tion ready, willing and able to take
Jan. S ............................... .at Logan are doubleheaders that ftature the top contender's position. Tbe
Jan. 9 ................................ .Fairland 5:30 p.m. reserve games and 7 Athens Bulldogs, in the second
Jan. 12 ......................Warren Local p.m. varsity games. All times are year of Dawn Heideman· s reign,
Jan. 18 ........:........at Vinton County approximate.)

(JAHS varsity boys hand Wellston
34-27 loss in pre-season tuneup
each tossed "in four P.?ints. Dave with 12 points. Steve Fink added
Rucker and Chuck Miller eacb bad five . Jeremy Lambert and Tbad
three.
Smith each bad three, while Brad
Scoring two points each for the Patton and Pat Riepenhoff each bad ·
Gallians were Ryan Barnes, Jay two.
Lambcn, Seth Davis and Brett CreWellston hit 11 of 2? from the
'meeiiS.
- · fielil . The RocketS wei€'1-4
GAHS hit 11 of 24 field goal line, had 10 rebounds (three by
attempts for 55 percent. The Gal- Brett Fink), and committed six
liaos were eight of 10 at the foul twnovera.
line, bad nine personals, 15
Gallipolis scrimmaged Rock
rebounds, four each by Kuhn and Hill at Rio Grande Saturday.
Saunders, Davis bad four steals and
The Blue Devils will open their
three assists. Lambert had four 1994-9S campaign at Waverly in
·· In the first two-quarter preview, assists. Tbe winners bad six the Waverly fnvitational Friday at
die GAHS freshmen led 9-8 after. turnovers.
4 p.m. against Dayton Colonel
one period.
· lkett Fink paced tbe Rockets White.
~ Jason Jobnson' s tip-in gave ·
GAHS a 19-18 lead with 2:09 ten
10 play. Wellston' s Joey Jonas lied
It at 19-all with 1:19left. Wellston
missed two free throws with 17
lecon\IS left.
: Johnson led Gallia's auack will'
llorris Northup Dodge Parts Department Is Now
)Jx points. Andray Howell and Seth
Offeri•g NEXT DAY Delivery For all Your
· ·Davis each bad five, while Jimmy
Gilmore bad three.
AutoMotive Needs.
.: Nathan McManis led the Little ·
Rockets with seven points. Joey
1pnas added six, while Scott Fain
Cont•ct Bob Ml•••r or Phil Mitchell
-bad three, Man Burris scored two
.&amp;nd Matt Phillips sot one.
PHONE 446.0842
•
: In tbc second outing, the Blue
'~ps led 13·11 after one period.
.Wellston outscored the Imps 20.8
ln the second sumza.
• • Isaac Saunders led the GaUians
.With nine points. Greg Lloyd added
·aix, while Brad Call scored three,
.Bob Rogers got two and Heath
.McKinniss bad one.
• Shad Wooden pumped In 12 f~
1he winner~. Brodie Mennill added
:10. Zack l:Jolzapfel scored sill. and
BiJce Olafm bad three.
GALLIPOLIS- Down 17-12
lltler one period of play, the host
Gallia Academy Blue Devils
ouucored wellston 22-10 in the
.ccond period to dcfe8l the Golden
lloc:ketal4,27ID 1 ~season var·
~review on the GAHS hard.
Friday evening.
:: In the two preliminary games,
die GAHS freshmen batlled Well·
iiOn to a 19-191ie, and Wellston's
~es captured a 31-21 decision
~er tbe Blue Imps.

ar ilie-

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tlmes-8entinel Slalf
· CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP DetenniiiBOOn and staying healthy.
. That's what David Moore,
Rtver Valley head ·varsity girls'
basketball coach, said bis team
needs to avoid a repeat of tbe
1993-94 season, which saw a bliz·
zard oClnj uries that made tbe
Raiders' bencb resemble the set nf
the television series "ER •
. Most of the injuries fell intO tbe
mmor-but·nagging category (dislocated mandibular joints. leg
cramps, twisted ankles, etc.), but
Nicltie Meade, tbe firat casualty,
suffered a knee injury tbat did

lion of freshman Susan Taclceu llbe wu a star of sons during her
days with the Bidwell-Porter
Pirates - to attend Gallia
Al:lii.Jlmy is but the 1asteat blow to
tbe future of Moore's program.
g~
.
However, if Moore ia crying
It was also forgeuable tbat about not having a player who
though tbc Raider~ put two wins could have played varsity for bis
together, they suffered tbrougb aew on the season's rll'SI day. as
four· and six-game losing sueats Tackett's neighbor Mindy Potle
did at Gallia Academy, be isn't
aloof tbe way.
·
· Senior center Cindy Armstead lbowlng IL Why?
Freshman Sarah Ward,
and junior point guard Amber
Staton, last year's offensive lead· Tackett's old teammate and anothas, will be badt for aootber c:ract er former B-P star, bas joined
at Southeastern Obio Athletic Holly Hash and Vanessa Sbon to
l.cque competition, but the dcci· CODipOsc the Raidcra' underclass
contingent.
If Ward, wbo was a regular on
Lady Raiders' 1994-95 tigenda
various tournament all-star teams
DAle
OW!wnt J111. 19 .................................Atbells in her early youth, becomes a forte
Nov. 28 .............at Meigs-S:SS p.m. J111. 2J...................Soutbem-1 p.m. Cll her new team as she was on ber
Dec. 1................ :.............. .Manena Jan. 26 .............".at Fairland~ p.m. former clubs, she can alleast make
Dec. s................................JacksOII Jan. 30 ................. ".....Chesapeake the beat go on if she doesn't create
Dec. 8 .............................. at Athens .Feb. 2...,............................at Logan a new tempo.
When asked about how bis
Dec. lO .........atCbesapeake-1 p.m. Feb. 6 ....................Gallia Academy
Dec. 12 ..............................Fairland Feb. 9 ....................at W811'Cn Local ream plaas to take advantage of the
expected changing of the guard in
Dec. IS .................................Logan
(Un1eu otberwl•• noted, all the SEOAL, Moore said MWe're
Dec. 19 ............. aa GaUia Academy
Dec. 23.. ............at Soulhern-3 p.m. Monday through nuncbty dates oot worried about wbat anybody
Jan. S ........................Warren Local are doablebeaden·tbat feature . else iS doing. We've got to dictate
Jan. 9 .............................atMarieua 5:30 p.m. raene games and 7 the game.
"I'd lib to see us put tbe ball in
Jan. l2 ............................atJackson p.m. Yanlty pmes. AU tinMs are
from the perimeter a little bit
Jan. 14.................................. .Meigs approximate.)

. FIRST CONTEST THURSDAY- Since Muon, Whitney Hastweii, 'Tiffany Foster and
Gallla Academy's Blue Angels kepf'most of their Krhty Carter. Standing are assistant coaches Todd
1993-94 roster on band, they will begin their drive Miller and Kim Adkins, Susan Tackett, Mindy
for their third consecutive wln"lng season Pope, Misty Coleman, Meghan Kolcun, Sara
Thursday night as tbe guests of the Fairland Walker and head coach Renee Barnes. (Times·
Dragons . In front are (L-R) Lori Milliron, Brandl Sentinel photo)
were young and stumbled at times done.
burden that heavily on their shoullast year, but their last meeting at
• Find Another Way.
ders, tbe Angels can't artord .to
The Plains saw them give
Tbe Academy has been very wait until any of these three is
Gallipolis a scare before losing by fonunate in having Pope in every injured.
If all the staners and at least the
six. Tbis time, the Bulldogs are game since her rise to the varsity
highly favored to use their experi- plateau two years ago. She has first one off tbe bench (Walker
ence to give the Academy and never missed a game because of was last year and is likely to' be.
Marietta fits.
injury. She has only missed the this year) concentrate on averaging
Warren Local, River VaHey and fll'SI balf of one game because of a double figures in scoring, their
offensive shell game would give
Jackson, all of which finished disciplinary suspension.
How valuable was she in the them a better chance of keeping all
below the .500 mark in the league,
should be a lillie better than last 1993-94 season? She was respon· their oppone!!ts l)ff balance and
year. However, they will probably sible for 33.4% of the Academy's possibly Slatting up a winning
end up fighting for ascendancy to offense last year. Kolcun and streak at least as long as last year's
the middle of the pack, where at senior point guard Bmndi Muon, 17 -game trip down the yellow
least one of these three - Logan, the next two on last year's GAHS brick road.
Marietta and Athens - is likely to scoring list, contributed 30.4% of
"One of the coaches we scrimreside when tbis year's race is tbe offense . With the offensive maged walked up to me and said.

'You don't~~.!'&gt; Mindy as .mocb as
y,ou used to, Barnes saJd of an
observation by one of her peera.
"If we depend on one or two
players, teams will shut us down.
But we've got five who can s11oot
the bal~" Barnes added.
• Keep on streaking.
The Angels won all of their 10
bome games last year mainly
, because they scored at least twice
as many pointS as their guests in
the first and third quaners. Even
tbe second quarter saw them
outscore their guests by at least

(See B.LUE ANGELS·on C-3)

~t\.. COUJlf,...
t;'i;;a ."J'
461 SOUTH THIRD

In addition, some of the players
have personal streaks still in effect.
Pope has scored mdouble figures
in each of the 45 Wrsity games the six-footer stepped from Garry
Adkins' cigltUI-I!Illde. I!JlWI!!I i!!to

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20%oFF

• In tbc nightcap, Richard Kuhn
and Wes Saundera tossed in seven
:ibd five owlcers, respectively, as
·tbc Blue Devils came from behin4
j,g post a aeven-polnt victory.
'Eric Humphreys and Josh Cook

RENT OUR

.

Ojlponent
Nov. 29..................... ......at Marietta
Dec. 6 .................................... LoganDec. 8.....................................Meigs
Dec. 12.................at Vinton County
Dec. IS ............................. at Athens
Dec. 19 .................. ..........at Jaclcson
Jan. 2 ..................................at Meigs
Jan. 5 .................................Wellston
Jan. 17 ............................... .Marietta .
Jan. 19 ...................at Vinton County .
Jan. 23 .... :......................at Wellston
Jan. 26 .................................. Athens
Jan. 30 ........ ........................ Jaclcson
Jan. 31 ..................., ............at Logan.

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BIRD FEEDERS

SEASON OPENER MONDAY - River Erin Conley, Vanessa Sbort, Amber Staton and
Valley's Lady Raiders, bit bud by Injuries In the Sanh Ward. Behind them are Heidi Hash, BoDy
1993-94 season, will begin their new season Hash, Jl.acbael Polcyn, Cindy Armstead, Nickle
Monday night as tbe guests of the Meigs Meade and Michelle Farley. (Times·Sentlnel
Marauders. In front are (L·R) Stephanie Cash, photo)
more.' be added. 'we'll be more and juniors Erin Conley and Saturday games on D ~c . tO at
competitive on ~e boards. We're a Michelle Farley will belp lead a Chesapeake. In the last 'of their
lillie sbon on hetght, but we make club that, if Mother Nature cooper- nine games on the 1994 side of
up for it in determination and ates, will have some different their slate, they will play Southern
aggressiveness."
twists and turns in tbe upcoming at Racine on Dec. 23, wbicb is
But as expected, Moore is look· season.
· their only Friday appoinbllent of
~g to his veterans to keep things
Tbe Raiders will play four the season. Tbe other Saturday
games on days other tban games will be January contests at
m Oilier.
Seniors Stephanie Casb, Heidi Mondays and Thursdays. They home against Meigund Southern.
Hash, Meade and Rachael Polcyn will play the first of their three

(ContinucdfromC-2&gt;
the Barnes corps without spending
one quarter io the reserve ranks she bas played for the Academy.
Kolcun will enter tile season baYing
made her last 2S free: throws.

SO%.

AtflODL-EPO R.
·1' , • ---4

IIIOf'C than take a valued forwaid
out of tbe lineup. Tbe Injury
laiiO'I'ed one of tbe ICIID 's leadeiS
and made the Raiders' 5-13 season. their first in the SoutbcMtem
Obio Athletic League, one to for- ·

Varsity Blue Angels•••

I

FEED ,.HE WILD BIRDS

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

I

I"

\'

t

,,

�Page C4 Sunday llme,-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, O~olnt Pleasant,,WV

November27, 1994

Meigs girls to begin season_Mond~y against Riv~r Valley
By Davellarrb
·
Time• Statlael CorrtlpoadeDt
Meiga bead coach Roo Logan
and bil Lady Marauders will tick
off tbe 1994-95 season Monday
eveolng when tbe marooo and Bold
host the River Valley Raiders.
Logan is in lith year as the
Marauder girls c:oacb aft« stints as
the !rcshman. reserve boys' and
varsaty boys' COld!. He bas flO$Ied a
record of 162-63 (72'11 winoioa
percentage) and a 129-30 mark
since the M.auders have joined the

wilb a 12-8 record tied with
NelsouviiJe.York with~ place
bcbind Belpre. Graduated arc point
guard Lee Henderson (4.5 points,
1.7 reb., 71 assists) forward Joy
O'Brien (11.9 points, 4.7 reb., S6
assists) and center ,Heather Hudson
(5.8f19ints,5.8rebounds).
· Loaao welcomes bact two
starters in seniors Vanessa
Compston and Amber Blackwell
and classmate Melissa Clifford, wbo
last year was the rust ofT the bench,
wiD start this year.
Td-ValleyCoof&lt;~
Compston was a rust-leiiii1VC
Loganmlllt
.
startcn selection and all-district selection ·
from last year's leiDI
flnlsbed last season. Sbe averaged 13.8

··
· •·1· , b · ,_ tb 11
AlSO 0 n th 8 911~
S 8S~t.e 811 SCene,

points a game and 6.6 rebounds a
contest
Blac;kwcll averaged 8.7 points a
contest, puUed ill 2.9 rebounds and
added 52 assists. Clifford, wbo
came on ill the second balf of the
IC8I(JO last year, averaged 5.7 points
agameand4.6rebouods.
The rest of die staninglincup is
up ill tbe air. Fighting for the fmal
two starting positions are Jaclyo
Swartz and juniors Cynthia
Cotterill. Anne Brown. Kristen
Dassaylva and Alicia Hagay.
Swartz. Conerill, Brown and
Dassaylvaareleuerwinners.
.

.

.

"

Eastdern to stay~ cage season
Mon ay as N- s guest team

Othen fighting for playing time
arc four sophomores - Laura
Eastman, Cheryl Jewell, A~bley
Roacb and T~ Doidge.
.
This year s edition of the
Marauders lsa ~blend of Y!lllth
and ~xperlence With four se01ors,
fo~ JUniors and four sophoD;IOtCSMeigs should be able to go III1IC or
10 playcn deep.
. '
Logan feels tha! theu strength
SlllltS With~ expenence. :'!'e have
seyen retumang lettermen • !-'&gt;1an
wd. ~as team shoots weU, IS very
compeuuve and bas good depth. But
our ball bandling ~d bl~!ng out
on the boards bas to 101prove .
Logan also feels that defeodillg
champion Belpre is tbe favorite to

;·

r~~~~2;1~,1~994~============~P~o~m:e~ro~y;-ll~.~~ld~d~le~p~o~rt;-G~alllpolls, Oft-.Polnt Pleasa~n;:t;~WV~======~S;;u;;n;da~y~ll;m;;;n~~Se;;;;n;tlnei~=P=age~~Cipo.­

Valley. Meigs will play Easlem and
Logan will again be assisted l,y
Southern in a pair of contests but Cathy Edwanls, wbo will handle die
only one wiD be a conference aamc . . reserve lellll.
j
.

Me/ns varsity roster

film .

:~·

.

.W.. I&amp;:.

Tlll)'ll Doidge .................... s-8 So.
CberyJJeweU .................... S-8 So.
Ashley Roadl .................... s-5 So.
· Anne Brown ...................... s-9 Jr.
Cynthia Cottcrlll ............... s-6 Jr.
·

.

;

it

.

~o Dassylva...............s-9
Alic111 Haggy...................5-11
AmbcrB~U ..............s-5

•

Tr.

Sf.

Melissa Clifrorcl ................s-a
Vanessa Compston ........... s-4
Jaclyn Swartz ....................s-4

S(.
SJ.
Sf.
:

Melgs.Msrauders• 1994-95 slate

Dill

Opponent
Nov.28 ........................ RiverValley
Dec. 1.. .............81 Nelsonville· York
Dec. 5 ................................Southern
Dec. 8 ................atFederai Hocldng

'

:
Jan. 12 ...................... Vinton Coun~
Jan. l4 ..................... atRiverValley
Jan. 19 .........................at Alcxandcp:
Jan. 23 ..................................East~ ,
Jan. 26 ........... ....... Nelsonville·Y~

~~"T':~::= E~ ::::~: -:::~~ !t::: -~;.~:w~

~::.a::ln~~~oo:ur~~ ~·r::: : : : : : :.~.~~.~~~~~ do~~~~=:~:!~:r:;~~eb::::d~~~,

By SCOlT ·WOLFE
.
W ~
Other non-conference games Jan. 9 .. .":\..............................Trimble ·reserve contests at S:SS p.m.)
At right wing will be another winners. lacks expenence. ol e include a pair of games with River Jan. 11 ..............................81 Easlem
EAST MEIGS -Sateen girls two-year letterman and defensive said. "Our weaknesses, ine~tperlarc aJIJlpeting few positions on the player of the year. senior Amy ence and youth, may well be our
reserve and varsity glrla' hoslretball Redovian. Redovian brin1s a good slrength at the end of the season. I
teams at Eastern High School. shooter and a much improved ball- think we will continue to improve
Eastern will open with a non- ·handler to the .lineup. Tbe top as we gain floor lime. Our bustle
leaaue road game at Nelsonville- replacements in tbe post will be can make up for our mistakes.
York on Monday.
junior Rebecca Evans, sophomore
"I"ve watcbed these girls play
Eastern enters the season under Patsy Aeiker and Melissa Guess. for four or live years, but they've
third-year coach Scou Wolfe lild That trio bas looked •super" under got to overcome a few things, all
assistant Paul Brannon, .wbo dou- the basket so far In the pre-season, dealing with mental toughness. The
bles as varsity assistant and j101ior while junior Beth Bay and Crystal girls are notorious for a slow start
blgb coach. The two arc assisted by Morris wiD be pushing them to get and a sluggish finish. I never have
1994 graduate Penny Aeiker.
some playing time in the post. ·
to worry about these girls' bebav·
. ~ coaching staiJ is very cptiEvans bas improved I00% and ·· ior. They arc very nice girls and
m~c about tbe llpC(lllling season, strengthened ber inside game while most are honor students, a true
clung good practice sessions and also exblblting tremendous sld1ls as class acL
the ~act tbal_pre-season scrimmages an outside shooter. The younaest
"S?metimes, they arc too nice
agaanst Mea1s. Jackson and River Aeiker loob to be 1 top contender and SIDiply lack the tiller Instinct
Valley have gone weD.
• ror ber sister's positkio. Senior Jes- necessary for puUina th_e ~pponent .
Eastern has some pretty big sica Radford and Nicole Nelson away. We have tbe skills. tbe
•'
shoes to liU in some key positions. will vie for the left swing guard know-bow and tbe woman power
bo~ever, losing pointauard Jaime pOSition. Both arc cited for ~elr to act the job done. If and ~ben
W1lson, top rebounder Penny Aeik- great bustle and have done weU ill they get mentally tough. we will be
er and Micbelle Murphy to gradua· tb8l position. Radford is the defen- a force."
Buy One Dress Shirt
Buy One Wembley ne
Bty One Sweater
lion. Also, a two-year, senior center sive specialist and Nelson a good
Tbe Tri· Valley Conference Is
~ .l~lerman became academically off guard ball bandler.
always tou~. but is pro!&gt;aJ&gt;Iy more
Save 20"
Save 20"
Save 20%
1neilg1ble. Between the lost center
Rounding out the lineup will be balanced th1s year than m the pasl
Buy Two Dress Shi'ls
Buy Two Wt~~bley nes Buy Two Sweaters
and Penny Aeiker who grabbed scpbomoces Martie Holter Crystal Alexander, Federal Hocking and
165 rebounds last year, Eastern Holsinger Tracy White and Mindy Trimble loot to be the teams to
Save 25"
Save 25"
Save 25%
losca a pair that together grabbed Sampso~ as well as freshmen beat. Southern and Miller are
Buy Three Dress Shi'ls Buy ThrH Wlllltley nts Buy Thm Sweaters
325 rebounds.
Michelle Caldwell Joanna Gumpf improved.
Wolfe said, "We weren't a good and Billena Bucba!W..
Wolfe praised bis club for their
Save 30"
Save 30"
Save 30"
rebounding team last year. We've
Wolfe said, "We're a fairly ~ne bustle and willingness '!'work
~otto rllld soDieone to rep~ the quiclr. team. We hope to usc our 1n the preseason. Ea$te~ s first
SALE ENDS MONDAY NIGHT AT 8 P.M.
reboundills we lost and then add s~d 10 piclt up the ~ac~ defen- four games are tough but wmnable,
some. So far, ·as a team during the s1vely and to fast break. •
according to the coach.
CALL 1-800-560-LEVI
preseason, we have held our own,
Eastern lacks a true "bill man,"
. Wit~ a little luck, the Eagles .
but are looting for s Jmeone to and despite returning seven letter will be 10 ror a good season.
com~ on stronf. and pick up the
pace m the post. •
Eastern Eagles' 1994-95 schedule
· ·With Wilson, a three-year letter
wilmer gone, junior Jessica Karr DIUs .
~Ill . Jan. l!l ..................NetwnlliUe,York,;;;
moves from rwlng guara lo tlie Nov. 211 ............81 Nelsonillle:Yu'f Jan. 23 ...............................
'
.at M.
e1gs
point Wllsoo .WI,' the JCCO!id !.tad· Dec. I ...........,..............at Ale~der Jan. 25 ...81 Warren Locai-S:30 p.m.
ID$ scorer last season w1tb 137 Dec. 7 ..........at Waterford-6:1S p.m. Jan. 26 ............................. Alexander
pomts aft« scoring 219 her junior Dec. 8 ....................................Belpre Jan. 30 ................................... .MiUer
year. Both Aeiker and Wilson were Dec. 12 ...............................at Miller Feb. 2.. ...........................at Southern
Disbict 13 All-Stars and Tri-Valley Dec. 19 ..............................Southern Feb. 6 ................81 Federal Hoelting
Conference honorable-mention Dec. 22 ..............................Wellston Feb. 9 ........................Trimble-6 p.m.
choices.
·- ..,.an. s.., ............. ;... .Federal n--..
'-g
""""'
Kan returns a 13.5 scoring aver- Jan. 9 ....................at Vin!On County
(Unless otherwise noted, all
a~t to tbe Eas1em lineup and a near Jan. li ................................... .Meigs d&lt;!ublebeaders will begin wltb
70'11 free throw shooting percent- Jan. 12 .............................at Trimble reserve contests at 5:55p.m.)
•IC· Kan is a good driver and stop- Jan. 18 ..................~aterford-6 p.m.

!
,

TIMES THE SAVI

..........

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

and~pop shooter.
Sbe team
was rust
team
aU-Disbict
13, rust
ail-Dis-

trict AP. Honorable Mention all·
state and 1VC rust-teamer.

-

.....................J

lodlau .....................7

-•

\\"--

~

VlriJnla Dental Senlce

--•••aiD v.
--

· t• POPUli fOliC Ill.

a....n D.D.S Ia
•'' C.

6 .SOO

s .soo

6 .4011
1 .m

3

Allllood 80, OlcaYille St Q

~RNCONFERENCE
MW•.ODI•IIIoo

llt L 2o1.

Ida ·

8apli11 Bible 91, Mouat Vernoa
-Co1Jeae93 ·

a

Sill AIIIDDlo ............J
5 JOO
Millolda .......... 1 II .013

IJ

Weatera Keatueky Clualc
.ala...ua, G......, KJ.
No. 22 Mllllalppl76, JloJ!oo 42.

Podllcnhltloo
Ooldea Sllle .....,......7
. ....................?

3
3
4

s..r.n-..............5

.700
.700

JS6
5 J4.1
5 .54.1

LA.. Labn ..............6
Seoale ......................6

I'Orllud ...................5 5 JOO
L.A. CIIPI*I ...........0 12 .000

IJ
IJ
1.5

New Ioney 107, LA. Clippen 102

AultiDtOWI·filcb 62, YouaplowD
O...ey29

Avoo Hilh 42. Lonla SoulhYiew 29

CLEVELAND 116. WuhlDJIOI 94
LA Labn 92, Alluoal7
lodiaao Ill . Milwlllbol06
Miami Ill, llclroll97

s- 40, st AuJWII•• A&lt;ooJ. ll

l'llllodelpbioiOII,Mio-11
DIIIIIIDI, Fonlmcl 91
Seollle 114, Sill AIIIA&gt;alo 94
Ufah 124, O.ic:lao 94
S"""""ID IOI,IleD.,.IOS (OT)

Clnliaol 46, Colli""ood 36
Ceala1IWil7, U&lt;klq 1111: l9

Bluflloo 67, Ubollr·B-• 61
c..llcld 51, Youq. Mooooy 42

,

They played Soturdooy
Booloalll'bllotlolpllll. 7:30p.m.
LA Labn ll WIIIIIDifDa. 7:10p.m.

•
Orl•do • Mn...a., 1:30 p.m.

..

Seollle 11 HOUifoo,l:30 p.m.

-·
. 34,Natlhtldp24,
LaUwood 57,
&gt;ille 10
M.-ioa Rhw Val. 61, W}'Dford 44

lllllllll JleO¥or, 9 p.m.

Sill Allloolo 11 Phocall, 9 p.m.

Mi..,a49, Uolled l.o&lt;ol 19

Toal&amp;bt'a pmea

Ooldeo Sflle llllelrol~ 1 p.m.
New Joner lll'hoeDla. 9 p.m.
Ufah 11 SacnmcaiD, 9 p.m.
lodiaao 11 Portlud,IO p.m.

49

57

Major college $cores
Recular-aeuoa actlolo
1.. .J
'

.

....... fnocllcoa IO,flr.. lif, 40 •
Po!Dt VIlli. 61. ~-U7

" " ' 42, llnteo Sdlool23
S-75,HubbloU7
Upper Sill-y 57, Kl,..o11

Boa1oo eoueae '11, c,~ Polr.s'Lo 60
Booloo Uoiv. IO. Rldi1r 71

VerAUoo11,UocoJo.Weol26
WeiiiDifDD Sl,l!lyrio Ctlbollo 52

MMedl,.tlll 104, At-ICI

Wic:kliffe

CoDIIIOiicuiiiO. Lola,....41

ss. Klnlaod 21

wao Vupoiii03, 11Dborlt.lolria62

Sool.
lll¥idloo 93, Roooob61

Sputb

Dike 10, Browo 31

Ftullalorll5,
Aorlda 73, -

Tn&gt;r So. 110

Ooor&amp;lo 41, aeor111 Tedl 10
N. Cltoliaa so. 30, Vupoil 27

64

Aorido Alloollo9Z , Wlnllnp67
florida So.ll.l'l&amp;.lof«lllioaol il _

UOOr'ji"Siiiilliira 61, Sfiillia·Piiliif
5I
• l.SU·III6. SB·Loooilllll 10
Miam166, NE Dlloolo ..
Monllood SO. 119, Mo......·AIIdtnoa
69
South Cltoliaa 68, N.C.·-•ille 66

Midwest

'

-Mld....c

~

Soutbwesl
N-ll,otllho.. l
Tolll Qvillilo 24, Teuo Tedl 17

Far Weal

••

SWTClK SL IS, llltdi•Si111111011152

r.w...

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

llnllllo......, piQ04 - · . . ,
Mcllollld (12.0) n . BcallaviUe (II·
l),llltdlq Slldium. Steubeo&gt;ille. 7 p.m.
Saowdly
llelpl&gt;ooSI. Jolla't (12.0) ... Hemy
(10-l). $tip Bauahmu St•dium, Sl.
M"J". 1 p.m. Salunlay
Champiooahip: Dee. 2, 3 p.m.

so.

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

Pcpai·Matlat Ciullo

.

.

.

i f

'

-

,

Athens

CarS
I

'

\

TOTALS 9.0-9::27

.

(22-12::34)

Marie Whiting 2..()..1=5. Jeremy
Roush 0..().2:2, Jeremy Dotson 1·
1-0=S, Adam Mitchell 1-0-0-2.
Chad Nelson 0-3-~. Jeremy Tol·
son 3-0-0=6, Nathan Gilders 0-02=2, Ben Fortney 1-0-1=3.
TOTALS 8-4-6::34

The GAHS 1994-95 wrestling slate
l!a!l
Oooonent Jan. 20 ......at River Valley (vs. JVs)
Dec. 10 ........ ,.......... at Meigs (quad) Jan. 26 .................................. Athens
Feb. 2...............................atJaclr.son
Feb. 9 .................. ..at Point Pleasant
Feb. 19 ...... SEOAL meet at Jackson

(Unless otherwise noted, all
begin at S p.m.)

meets wiU

NEW SHENNU FARM TRACTORS
Diesel - 25 HP , 2 &amp; 4 Wheel Drive, Live Lift, 3 Pt.
Hitch, Standard Cat. #1.

Tractor Seats

Startir;tg At $100.00
Complete line of KING KUTTER Equipment,
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Used Ford, Massey Ferguson, IH Tractors
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EQUIPMENT C!NTIR ·
1467 JACKSON PIKE (Old US 35 West)
Gallipolis, OH
PHONE: 446-9777 or 446-2484

mo.

*153 00mo. . .

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4 Dr., 6 cyl., auto., air. AM/FM,
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00

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.1990 FORD
TAURUS LX
4 Dr., 6 cyl .. loaded, low miles.

s

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MSRP
$13,618

- Like a good neighbor.
lfAH
rAUl
State Farm is there.

A

l NSUaANC ~

Chlrdoo (13-0) ¥1. Rayland Bucbye
....... (13-0),De&lt;. 2.1 p.m.

a.-·· ..,

Bcloll Wcol B18Dch (13-0) n . Clyde
(12· 1) J)oc. l, ]p.m.

.

FEDERAL HOCKING

$120

~

o11J

State Farm Fire and
Casualty Company
Home Offtee:

$11,600

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Dl•_m.,.._...,

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ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP UP
D.IUVERED AND .SPREAD!

•Mason
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•Concrete Sand
•Fill Dirt
•Pit Run
•Driveway
•Drainage Gravel
Mat
•Pea Gravel
•Drainage Tile
· .Culvert Tile (all sizes up to 5')
•Block and Mortar Mix

594•21.14 : .

J

Cass Cleland 0-0-2a2, Travis
Abbott 4-0-0=8, Nick Hanning 10-0=2. Gary Stanley 1·0·0•2,
Brent Hanson 1..()..1•3, Ray Russell
1-0·0=2, Benny Ewing 1-0·6=8.

Dl•liloo o.tr~UJ

Mlrill 61, Coaldlil 57
Vormoll61, Buoboll66

.

MEIGS
(12-15=27)

nue-zame pslrlap

See Puzzl~r on.Page D-2

!

1990 CHEV. CAVALIER

Venaillcoi4,C..rO

Dlvlsloa Vl·polrlap

SL lohD I 93, DarOmoulll63

mo.

2 Dr., 4 cyl. . auto .• air, PS, PB,
AMIFM cass
00

Dlvlsloa IV

VillllloYaM

CoiL oC Cl&gt;lr.....D 66, AIL·Birmloa·

• Made In U.S.A.

S73

Om!Ue 54, Cl"'lud Beaedlcllae Tl
oe·rmtaiClWD Valley View •••
WHEELERSBURG 0

Wetl«&gt;&gt;llt So\011 (11·1) n. Cloollllllll
CoiCIIia (12·0), Mc111011ol Slldlum, TniJ,
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Lapcblck Memorial

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. -: HORIZON

4 Dr., auto., air, PS, PB, AM/FM
00

Cl)'le 42, Loodoo 24

Attaa. 1 p.m. Salunlay

.

1 ~.~'-•

BeJoU WCII Blllldl 31, SilubeoYille

tallllluo (11·1) n . c.,.

In other action in the preview,
Logan walked over Vinton Cow!ty
37-17, Trimble dereated Ncl·
sonville-York 31-16 and Athens
slipped past Alexander 24-23.
Meigs wiU open tbe regular on
Tuesday, Dec. 6 at River Valley.

COME S.l.l '.nf.IS.I AT:

7 pass., 6 cyl., auto., air, PB,
PS, TW, PDL, PW, CC.

ClevoiiDd St

,.,_IO'I,AIIIIIo--11

'j '

~

DlvbloaU

toD MeKial~y (10-2), Rullher Bowl,

three times.

· 1oo·s of Used Items To Choose From:

Slolo

Dlvlolo• I pslrlap
5ooollloolo-dM7 ploJN 5-.lllf

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

'

WINS TOURNAMENT Daniel Craycraft, a member of
tbe Cheshire Boxing Club, won
tbe National Dando Kkkboxlng
Tournament, held In Columbus.
Arter winning the elimination
bout, be advanced to defeat
Leonardo Guevara witb a threeround unanimous decision.

Wclllvllle 13. I.Doo Clfr B.a.,. Troil

otllho.. SL 75,1-a SL !7

.

t

.:·
:

1990 FORD
AEROSTAR VAN

21

-~OnoD72,l'Orllud61

TheHonda~rt

.

Dtvbloo V

....1ft. .

-ss

'f;.'~,'
' ',
~

and nine of I 5 from the line toi
60%. Meigs pulled in lS rebounda,
with Abbot! grabbing five. Tbe
Marauders turned the ball over

'

}

•"''

_ ........... r..-,.. 23ol0101101 0111o
:If'
School Alhlcdo Allooilllioo piiJ•

21

By DAVE HARRIS
Federal Hocking outscored
Meigs II.{) in a two-minute slretcb
in the first half and went on to
defeat the Marauders 34-27 in the
Athens Shrine Basketball preview
Friday eveoins at Athens High
School.
Meigs jumped put to an early 63 lead on two Ben Ewing free
throws at the 6:03 mark of the rJtSt
balf. But Chad Nelson. wbo led all
scorers wilh nine points, bit three·
three pointen in a 90-second span
of tbe first period to give tbe
Lancers a 14-6 lead with 4: II left
in lhe period. Jeremy Tolson laid in
a buzzer beater to increase the lead
10 22-12 at the end or the period.
Twice in the second period the
Lancers built up an 11-point advan·
tage. the last coming at the 53-second mark to make it a 34-23 lead
on a bucket by Jeremy Roush.
Travis Abbott and Ben Ewing
made bucte.ts in the final seconds
to make it a 34-27 fmal.
Abbon and Ewing led tbe
Marauders with eight points each.
Meigs bit nine of 23 from the
floor, including missing all six
from three-point range for 39%.

. Dec. 18 ..................at Point Pleasant
Dec. 22 .............................. .atl.Dgan
Dec. 29 .........GallijJolis lnviiational
Jan. S .................................. Jackson
Jan. 14-15 ...... Marietta Invitational

Dh1sloom

Bti....,.Youoa75,........,W.60

.......-

(Continued from C-4)
· in regulation and led No. 23 Ohio
to an 84-80 victory over New Mexico State in the championship
game.
.
· George Washington used a 12-3
run in the final 4:30 to defeat
Memphis 69-60 in the consolation
game.
Trent, wbo finished with 33
points and 20 rebounds, sc&lt;red rour
in the extra period and grabbed
every.important rebound as Ohio
captured die championship.
"Gary's taken us to anotber
level," Ohio coach Larry Hunter
said. "Still, we're more than a one·
man team.''
Cenainly. Trent bad help with
13-point efforts from Curtis Sim·
moos and Gus Jolmson. But in the
end, !be big guy who is touted as
"The Sbaq of the MAC," was the
difference in Ibis one. For a
moment, though, it seemed be
might be the soat.
Trent was cornered by three
New Mexico State defenders with
tbe score tied at 71 and a.hairminute !() (!lay, in r~gulati~n. H~
was called for wlillWig, gJVmg ilie
Aggies possession and a cbance to
set tip for a game-winning sboL
Thomas Wyatt missed and Trent
grabbed the rebound - as well as
two more vital ones after Aggies
misses in tbe exua

a.doal7,01,..,...1'o111WIIiab•
1111114
Roylud Buobyel.-1 21.""'" 14

Great A!Uka Sbootoul

l·

.:..:·~·

.

Olilo U.S. semlftnals

Barktr 91, NW Looolalaoa 61
- · 76,1IIIICI j\lldlloa 74

c

.

Arimao 2&amp;, AtizAIDI SL 27

Iowa 121. Motpo 51. 11

..-as.

, _

Youoptowo So. 63, Aloon SO. 20 ••.

South Floridll6, App~odllu SL 71

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

.,

·

New IWrcohin IO,IIoly 0...73
PcDD St. 90, Mwat St Miry... M4. 60

SL l'oler'aiO. BuUor 68
Slaalor4 12, Colplo 70

594·1555:

~

NewBtemea79, Anlll23
New KDoulllelS, Sldaey l.ell..., 40
Newcomentowa 50. ConoUol Valley
Olllllled F~la67, Onftoo Mid¥iew 32
Ollowille 12, Huilud WayM Trace

Fry'a lavtlatloasl

:110 E. STITI ST. •IIHEIS, OHIO
•.
NEW Cll DEPIIIMEIT .
USED ·Cit DEPIUMENI

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....

"·

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Da1poo Jo«...,o 46, V• Wtr0'33
£Ill Culoa79, Mol,.. 43
l!lilll 54, Belllomla Lopa 24
Fo~Roou MII)I•IIJt 40
Fall Jeaoiop·l4, -OIII'IrkWIJ ll
Fall Roco~.
Collao 17 .

Ollllolle II New Yorl, I p.m. ,

p.m.

Bobcats win ...

Cola. Reodr s2, CllcleYIIIe 33
Cory-Riw1oa 43. Arll....ol6
Daavme U , Eut Knox II
DoOowaro OlufaOIY 54, Bucur• VIlli.

,.,..,.....

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·

Ohio U.S. girls' scores

OriiOdo 124, - · Ill

Jowl 51.11, llliaoil St 71
New Orlwl 90, N. lowa IIIUf)
1'11rd11111, Niqan 60

Don't Get Caught WithoutYour Passport

GETTING BY an unidentified Federal Hocking defender Ia tbe
task of tbe moment for Meigs guard Cass Cleland {left), wbo pre.-ru
to take tbe blllllo tbe boop during Friday .U.bt's Athens Sbrlne Pre·
view at Athens mgb School, where tbe Lancen won 34-27. Cleland
finished wltb two points, botb or wblcb came attbe foul line. (Dave
Harris pbolo)

lohD c...u75, So\011 25

Frlclay'a ICOI'CI

1\lnl .....

_...-----...

Othen

No. 19 Ooor~a79, Ohio SUU70

2
I

0eorp Wllldqlal69. Mlqbla 60

-----

Ohio women's
colle~e scores

3.5

0100 14. New Muloo SO. 10 (OT)

,

Mllml. Ohio 9!,Hetde\boq 69
XoYior. Ollio 104.1Dd. l'llr.·lldpla. 67

Ho..... ...................9 . 2 ~II .
DoD.,. .....................6 4 .6CO 2J
Ufah .........................7 s Jll
u
Doiiii ...................... J
4 JS6
3

Pau1 -NIT

•

Othen

4

Toumamenll
Big Island lnvllalloaal

SALE
ENDS
· DEC. 1, 1994

Rifle Slugs

l'lrtl ......
Wlliall74, Lob &amp;It 66
W0011« 14, Oeoevo 72

2

nno..-

12, 16, 20 GA. 5 Pack

Comfort IDa Toumament

1J
IJ,

lldoabkoo
CoDOCO Dilen 91, Te111 Chrlllilll92
SO. Fnacia, N.Y. 99, Swocliah Nt&lt;looal

5 IN ST~K I'OR ~DIATE DELIVERY
SALE
STARTS
10-9-94

nr.. ,.....

S. Ullh 14, Humboldl SO. 60
WllbiDJIOI 64, E. Wllhl ..... 48

E'IMtn,~r.A...,Ir

m!qate here and there. The one be

Lapchlek TourDUitat
Bowlloa Oneil 72, Portllod 61

Moo-81,51RM~oFt.f6S

For An Appolntmeni or lnfllnnlllon.

DENTURES START AT 1143 PER DENTURE!
SMALL ADDtTIONAL CHARGE FOR SAllE DAY SERMCE

college scores

s

19

By HAL BOCK

Other Ohio men's

4J

ldallo 69, Mo...., Tedl 61
ldallo StIll, E. 0r&lt;101 68

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made Friday Uight, though. Dell"ly
cost Ohio University the l&gt;reseason
NIT tille.
Trent, perfCCl from the field on
alll2 of his shots. shook ofT a devastatin&amp;. walt with 30 seconds left
(See BOBCATS on C-S)

Maloe 74, Yolo ISO

IJ
,,
,,
lJ

S .545
S .545

Cllorlol!o .................4
Allanlo .....................4

ByOurt»JohiiiDn•hAndTNinedltall'. ·
Mlldeln Our DIRtal Llboi'*"Y By au.JIIted TecllnlcllnL '

be~~~=~ ~lJ:t :'!

.161

3 .100

CUlVELAND .........6
Doln&gt;lt. .....................6
Clllc:o&amp;o....................6
Milw .. a. .............. J

Cullom Flltld Denttne In One 0., At Our TNp V.., Office

State 84•80

-..-

. Oo111111!10. Goatllo SL ~

Ctalnlllltltlao

. . IJII-.----•

Mex.ICO

Sboolout Spokaae

~ a

1 .461
6 .4.15
S .444
1 .364
1 .lOO

Wtllll....a..............4
I'I!U!&lt;!elpllil .............4
Wloml ...................... 3

---~~~~~~~!III~~
.
lOR
II Oil

..

Ou defeats
New

ER.LASt WINtER?

\3

Now Yart ................6
Now ...., . ............6

I

I

_

62

NBA standings

MONDAY - LAST DAY ,
TO SAVE!
Save on men's suits, dress shirts, ties, sweaters, sport shirts, you name it!

\
See Levi's
Ad In This
Paper for
Big
Savings

FedetSI Hocking beats Meigs
in Athens Shrine Preview ·

•

NEW 1995 NISSAN 4X4 TRUCK
AiF, Cassette, Chrome Wheels, Much More.
MSRP
$16,764

.

.

~0~

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2.9% APR - 36 Mo .. Ouallflad

all Allimas

�.

•

.•
•'

•

.Vinton High School hardwood history cradles winning legacy

Farm Bureau pas$es along ·
tips in field dressing deer

· Rio 'dr&amp;nde 36-10, Mercerv~e 35: wbo ,would often score 75% of bis fusta-y. He scored 2S ot bis team's to Rome-Canaan by one point.
the Tiger•. .
21 and Cadmus 21-15 10 WID the team .• points. Behind Evans Brown, 42 points but Rio Grande won by
The 19S!i Ttger team let au kinds
The last ViDtoD team. lhe 1956
BubthaD at Vinton High School GCL title . Tbe starters were Edmiston a~d the two Dowlen, three. Earlier in that tournament of scorinJ records, Including the team, was coached by Qiff Wilson.
dalel to lbc 1910., but reconls are McGhee, Glenn Rees, Hull and Vinron made 11to the GCL flnal_s in Fullen set a GCL record by scoring most points 1n 1 106-66 win over The Tigers fmlsbed 2-IS. They did
. acara: for lbc lint two decades of Miller. In the fin~l same, Gerald 19~7. only to lose to Mercerville. 32 poiniS. Davia bad losing teama in - Bidwell. Wilson WalidDa scored 63 bave an exciting overtime ooc-'poinl
, tbal history.
Hull acored 12 pomts on wbat the Tbts team went on to the district 19SI and 1952, but the 1953 team points in a win over HardeD He bad wio over Bidwell- wben Fred Fitcb
, Tbe 1921 team did beat ~ue Tribun~ called "long looping tournament and nearly upset a m_ade it to GCL finals, but lost to previously •rung up" 52· ~d 44- scored 32 points. Tbe last-ever game
. 41-U) and McArthur by a similar baskets.
stron~ Chauncey-Dover le~.
Rio Grande.
point games. Vinton was for VHS was a 79·53 1oaa to
In 1931 Love took Hull's place
Vmton bad good teams m 1_940,
Tbe 1954 Vinton team finished embarrassed by Rio Grande in the Mercerville. Petrie scored 17, and
score. Some of
tbe players off
but all the oilier starten returned and · 1941 and 1942, Led by Jack Quickie 16-4 in regular-season play. Gene GCL finals that year by an 87-46 Glenn Dunn bad 13. wblle Lee
this team later
.Vinton again made it to the GCL and O.C. W~ke~, tbe 1942 team Argabright set a regular season GCL margin. However in the district Tyler bad 10.
oraaniml a semi·
final~, but this time Cadmus even beat Gall1pol1S. .
record wben be acored 50 points tournament, Vinton gave a good
In 26 years of GCL action,
pro team n~ed
prevailed _33-31. Tbe sports reporter
Tbe 1945 team With Pl:gg, Pegg. against Mercerville. Vinlalloattwo Thornville team a struggle before Vinton was 82·98. In 1956, Vintoo ~ ·
tbe
Vmton
for the Tribune bad an unusual style Kennedy, Polsiey and Friend one-point gamea to Rio Grande In fading in tile last quarter It was aDd Bidwell merged for fCl1111 North
CoUe,ians.ID lbc
-"ThecrowdgeiSelastic.Luman's finished second, Coaches io the tbe regular season but in tbe Warren Walkins' 28 points.tballed GalliaH.S
·
came
basket does not count as be played 1940's included Cecil Davis, L.F. semifinals or the 'tournament,
·
1920 s
Vinton's first in a long line of great race borse while playing baskethall. Miller, Maurice Thomas, Snipe Vinton won Sl-50 wben Carl . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •·-shooters, Shorty Kennedy.
Ahlborn subs for Allison. Ahlborn Parsons and E.W. Cole.
McDonald bit a free throw and then
,,
The 1927 team was composed of: travels. Queen goes out and Stevens
In 1950 Cecil Davis returned as dribbled out the remaining time ·
'r
Waller McGhee. J.W. Buller. comes ln. Keller makes two poiniS. coach and produced a 13-4 team led · after a Rio mlss.ID the fmals qa1nst
Lannie Cam, Gerald Hull, Dick But the wblstle blows. Tbe game Is by_Sonny FuUeo wbo averaged _22 Cadmus, McDonald made a "buzzer
Kennedy, JN. Reel, Alben Robens, over Cadmus 33-31 Vinron.
pomtsagame. ID the 19SOGCL Utle beater" as Vintoo WOD by apolnl 1D
Georxe Miller, Keith McGbee, Ken
In 1934, Vinton bad a game Fullen turned in one of ~e the districttoumameot. Vintoo upset
Ill
Harris, Jobn Ewing an4 Lester sharpshooter named Wilbur Gray, great individual performances m Nelsonville by a point before loslnJ
,.
Metcalf. The 1929 team won lhird
•
(Most
Cars)
'
place in the GaDia County League
toumameDt. Tbe 1930 team won the
title.
This TiJer team, coached by
Chap Jonea, beat Cheshire 34-14,
.

•TIRES BALANCED AND
INS9ALLED
•OIL CHANGES

NEW FIRE EQUIPMENT BUSINESS • Tuppen Plalna welcomed a new buslnea recent•.. ly, the Ohio VaHey Fire Equipment Inc. The
·· ftrm sped·H- In ftre exllnaubben, ftre alann
_ay1tems, lnduatrlal fire systems, hotel and

$15''

Lyne Center slate

Most automotive Repairs Available

By GEORGE ABATE
Tlmu-Senllnel Stair
TUPPERS PLAINS - A new
rue equipment COOJpany bas located In Tuppers Plains, pooling more
tban 50 years of experience in
1nduslrial safety.
· · Ohio Valley Fire Equipment,
inc., located on Main Street near
the Tuppers Plains. Volunteer Fire
. Depatllllent. will supply fire prevention equipment, install ftre systems and provide tecbnical training
· for restaurants, hotels and industry.
' said Norm· Kraft. a panner in the
.',,c:ompany.
: ., With 20 years of business expe.:: rience In the Cleveland area as
:~ pan-owner of a similar operation,
• •· Kraft said be•s certain of this ven-

OJIIIIUium

and ncquetball cwrfl

WESTERN

Today-6-11 p.m.
Monday- 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
' Ttlllday -7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Wedn-lay -7 a.m.-5 p.m.
Tlaunday -7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Fridly -7 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday - 1-6 p.m.
. Sunday, Dec. 4 - 1-6 p.m. and

AUTO

Pool
Today- 6-9 p.m.
Monday- dosed
Tuudly- 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday- 6-9 p.m.
. Frldly - 6-9 p.m.
Saturllay-1 -3 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 4-1-3 p.m. and
6-9 p.m . .

788 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT
992·5515

Petrie, Knight and May. The coach wu Cecil
Davil. Vinton bad two championship Ieima 1930 and 1!154 -In Its history. Some great shooten came out of VInton through Its history.

SECOND IN THE LEAGUE -The 1955 Vln·
ton High School team finished second to Rio
Grande In the GaiDa County League. Team members were Hill, Davis, Lambert, Oller, Tyler,
Cardwell, Warren Walklu, Wilson Watkins,

~llp.m.

: ::tore's success. ·

: •. "Wilh what we have to offer we
::;can't lose," Kraft said. Sales are
•:; anticipated to double within a year,
: •.with targets of $250,000 for the
·~;, fi.ISI and $500,000 in the following
•. ,;year.
~ Tho five-employee compan)l bas

Free·wtlaht room

Today-6-11 p.m.
Monday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Tllelday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Wlii!'!IIIIY - 3:30-8: 3(! fUll,
Th..niliy- 3:30:8:~p.m.
Friday - 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Saturdly- J-6 p.m.
•
Simclly, Dec. 4 - 1·3 Jj.m. aDd
6-11 p.m.
.

Bear Cub Super

. $99.99

Notes: A Lyne Center memberlbip is required to use the facilities.
Faculty, 11811', _students aDd admiDISIIBIDn are admitted with their ID ca'dl.
Racquitball coun reservations
can now be made one day In
idvance by calling 245-7495 locally or toll-free at 1-800-282-7201,
exteiiSion 7495.
·
·
All guests are to be accompanied by a Lyne Centes membersbip
bolder llld a $2 fee.

))e(,

s

~-

Black B~a~ lllualon Camo

(2 onb') 12 ga Plain
12ga
Vent Rib

~

149.99

5

169.99

$219.99

$399.99
'
.

$649.99

Autos

5

299.99

Black Powder

CH. .UI DALY

12or
20ga.

DriUed and Tapped
for Scope

i

Black
Finish
',~&gt;\I

lit. $5t.H

. , buielbill and relaled CI!IIPI
tail iiDdcr die
sports dead·

lilt clay or tbe -NBA fillals. Tbe
iJellll!no for aubmlsaiOI!a. of local
bl{fill• lild IOftlllll·rellled pboaeillled lllldca. l'ram T"-ball
to dif:c:.'9ora; u we_
n aa Qther
~:S
'
Wimer aporta, ladle
dli 1111
. ol the World
. .ptDC

•

.

' ne..dad•lnet are In plll;e 10
. ~ow cOatrlbaton die lime they
ileed 10 icq~ dlelr .pbo(Os from

~

.

•

"'j •
~

Powder

399.99

IIIOMPIDN/Giiid

·-mONs

•

"New" lnline Ignition
Includes Rifte
-Total Package Price
with Black Walnut Stock.
Scope, see thru scope mounts
5

379.99

lli!BitHlMIR IUFU!

- SO Cal
Caplock

Is

119.99

Super Mag
'·

SRDwHI~G '

•

I

Upiand Waterproof
Thlnaulate Boots
,

.I

RIO. t101.11

Sfoclr

•

.

t

.

.

POMEROY- Folks can step

Farm Flashes

reacuc:
m

Pesky insects actually beneficial
ByEDWARDM. VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS - The troublesome, 8Dllllyiog populations of lady
bugs or beetles continued to be a
problem recently for many local
residents. These insects become a
problem wbc!l they begin congregating wblle loolcing for overwintering sites.
Tbese insecls are considered
quite "'beneficial." Tbey feed 011
harmful aphids, scales and spider
mites. Although there are many
kinds of ladybugs, the multi-colored Asian lady beetle seems to
bave the largest population locally.
Cool summers with tender
foliage and bigb populations of
apbids will often result in large
lady beede populations. Lady beetles bave a few natural enemies
sucb as the praying mantis. North
Carolina resean:ll shows up to lS
percent of lbcse Asian lady beede
populalioa are now being pansilizedby a tacbioid Oy.
Due 10 the beneficial nature of
this insect, lhe use of insecticides

are not recwunended. The use of a slowed by lack of room to store lbc

vacuum cleaner is a good way to
remove the beedes from inside or
outside your home. A few cold
days should put an end to Ibis sea-

grain.

The avera~e moisture of harvested com was reported a1 19 percent The Oblo average corn yield
is estimated to be 139 busbels per
acre. Locally, there are some iRuy
big ranges in yield but several
fields are yielding into lbc 11i);200
bushels per acre range. Dr. Allan
Lines. OSU extension ecooomisL ·
said this week !bat despite mud!
lower price, lbc higher yield will
more lhan offsetlbe difference Jiving lhe total value of this year' a
com crop a higher total doli¥ figure lhan last year.

sonai~lem.

·

Biological control of insects is.a
focus of many researchers. The
hope is to eliminate the use of
many toxic pesticides. Scientists in
Pennsylvania bave isolated a new
slrain of BaciUus Thuringiensis that
is active against adults and larvae
of tbe southern com rootworm.
Tbis discovery provides for the
possibility of microbial-based control strategies being developed for
com rootworms,

--

Did you koow? lo the United
States lawns occupy more land
than any single crop, including
com. 1'bere are 2S millioo aaa of
lmf ~ in tile u.s .. Ill ibwt
the si1! of Pl:~ylvat!ja. , __ ...,_

The Ohio com harvest bad progressed to the 81 percent complete
level !!li or Noll. 13, This was above
the last year and live-year average.
The "crcp report" people say llllif

(Edward..., VoliiGia II.._

storage space is a premium because
of Ibis year's bin-buster com crop.
In some areas. harvest is being

County's extension agent for
agriculture.)

are expected to be beid sometime
in 199S.
Tbe current county committee
- James Burleson. Paul Pope and
Tom Woodward - bave been
authorized to act as FSA couunittcepcople until the election is beid.
CROP INSURANCE: There are
lots of questions with few definite
answers 011 lbc reform of the crop
insurance program. Farm Service
AgeDCy employees are expected to
be trained before tbe end of
December 1994. All details. sucb

as wbicb aops are required to have
coverage, will be announced as
they become available.
FSA COMMITTEE MEETINGS: Tbe regular commiuee
meetings for the FSA committee in
December will be beid on lbc first
and .lhird Tuesdays at 8:30 a.m.
This is a change from lhe normal
second and fowtb Tuesdays.
•
(Lisa Meadows Is acllnc caa- •
ly execudve director or the Gallla
Farm Service Agency.)

Utilities offer payment plans

lJSDA
notes decline in livestock
ontal feed
·· '
·
·

CROSSBOWS
··
'
Hunter Sup~e

not endemic
in Obio'a deer populallon because
the small red deer tick. wbicb carries the disease. is not normally
found in Ohio. However, some
studies suggest other ticks common.
to Ohio may also carry lbc disease.
Deer killed during moderate weatber may carry active ticks on their
bides. To lower the risk of contracling Lyme disease, bunters and
others wbo handle deer are encouraged to wear long-sleeved sbins
with tigbt fitting cuffs. and long
trousers tied at tbe bottom or
sluffed into boots. Medical aulborities suggest "tick checks" wben
undressing.
For more information on companies lbal offer deer processing, or

shul-off or to bave disconnected
service restored. Income eligibility :
guidelines are the same for HEAP.
• The Ohio Energy CrediiS Pro- :
gram, funded by the state, offers a :
discount of 25 percent of 30 percent on beating bills from Decem- :
ber through April for low-income :
customers wbo are 65 or older, or .
permanendy aDd totally disabled, •
• The One-Third Payment Plan •
allows cus1omers to maintain ser- ·:
vice by paying one-third of lhcir :
lolal bill (consisling of overdue ·
billings, plus lhe current monthly :
amounl) from Nov. I through April :
15.
Customers having trouble pay- :
ing lheir electric bills can contact ·
CSP at 1-800-277-2217 or Obio :
(Continued on D8)
1

1

CellularOne ·
is available
in Pomeroy _

- - - -- -- --

--~

.HORTON~

..-b'dlllle spoltlo

1

Black . -··

5

I'

'

rl.cllolile.W ·IO pe die 1111111 die
dllilliD toPib&amp;W. lltlie;llelu In the .

.

*44"

'""mer

uDc) IIICl oGler wiDtcr 1p01t1 II lbc

I

RIMFIRE RIFLE

sores.
6. Lyme disease is

AI we move Into the huntlna
and holiday aeasons, take a few
moments to review proper safetyprocedures with everyone in the ·
' family.
Tbia includes knowiD~
emergency numbcn 10 ca1J
. .
lhe need arise, and being able to
tell the emergeDCy reiJIOIIMI crew
bow to find your bouse. HaviDI·
your driveway well-marked is·
imponant for the fare and
crews to fmd you lnunedi•tely. 'l1le
life you save may be your
cr
someone in your family.
If you would like one of the
sreen reflective bouse number
sisns, they may be obtaincod at lbc
Gallia Soil and Wau:r Conservalioo
District at a cost of $7 per .s ip,
wbiCb includes two sets of yolll'
bouse numbers.
(Patty Dyer Ia lnformalloD
coonlloalor for the GaiDa eo...
ly Fann Burea11.)

GALLIPOLIS - Several pro- lbe winter beating season (Nov. !grams are available to ease the April IS) by paying a percentage of
financial burden of Columbus household income instead of the
Southern Power and Obio Power total monthly billing amount
cus10111ers experiencing difficulties
Tbe percentage is detelmined by
in paying higher beating bills dur- the primary beating source used.
in&amp; winter.
To qualify, cusromers must have a
."Our job is to provide all of our IOial household income of no more
cusromers wilh electricity, and pan tban 150 percenl of tbe federal
of that commitment means helping poveny level.
NEW POMEROY SHOP - A new gift shop feabnina Vlctorl· . those with financial problems to
• The Home Energy Assistance
1·dresses.
an lle- wiD cOpeD at 10 a.m. Monday. Owner Slll'llh Fisher, pic·
avoid service disconnection." said Program (HEAP), like PIP. assists
; ·~ Tbe store is segmented into
Gallipolis Area Manager Ronald G. customers wbose income is al or
· lured above, wW MD old, new and antique goods at the Victorian
Parlor on East Main Street In Pomeroy. AU employees wiD wear
McDade.
below 150 percent of the federal
:· ~maner I'OOIIIS !bat showcase bas. •.kets, band-dipped candles, figPayment assistance plans poveny ievet This federally-fwadRoor·lenath dreues and special band-made llema will be •old,
include:
ed program pays a portion ol eiigi:•urines and furniture. Furniture
Flslaer llid.
'
' The Percentage of Income ble cus10111ers' beating. bills during
• items iDCiude love seats, dressers
:.aDd chairs.
Plan (PIP) allows eligible cus· the winter months.
• EmergeDCy HEAP .provides a
;: - The store's gem will be a sec- wallpaper and dedication to details era bas been remembered for its ··tomers to maintain service during
one-lime payment of up to $17S to
emphasis on manners, almospbere
&lt;'don devoted to band-made Victorib bad th' k d ho
~an women •s clothing including in this s op · IC mu a ve of warmth and family, and more
allow a customer to avoid utilily
the baseboards, Fisher said. Fisb~dresses, undergarments and bats. er' 5 husband, Jobn, and Jonathan simple clothes and fashions for
;fisher added.
•
• Dunn removed old gas pipes, stor- women, F'tsber said.
"I think a lot of people are inter•,: Fisber. w-bo baa resided in age tanks and sinks, since it bad
ested
in tbe past," sbe added.
:.Meigs Coonty for at least 25 years, previously Jleen a doctor's office. .
•,ran Tbe Brancbwood Restaurant
• be
1 0f b d rk " "Young people are sort of missing
!until three .years ago and opened
"It s en a ot
ar wo • · oul'"
Making tbe past and classic
;lier home to ~ public for tours o~ she~ictorian era roughly from
POMEROY - CeliularOne is
;decorated Christmas rooms.
1880 to 1900 coiDCided with Meigs goods accessible io customers
remains lbc key, F'ISber said.
• • But a casual observer would not C , • be da sbe added 1b·
now providing cellular telephone
:~alize just three months a11o the , oun.y ' . Y y,
· IS
service fionl its oewesltower local••
ed in Pomeroy.

.

· WI

.. arddca for bfdmtball (111111-

, ~be .~ ~de~loper

$159.99

l !r",' • I'- I ' (

.· l:~~e for pbotoa . ~d

....,

MODEL.60

SO CaL Percussion

1be Gallipolis Daily Tribu11e,
7711 Daily Snuilltllllld 1bc Sllllllay
Tilltll•&amp;lllilltl value lbc contributlona their readers make to the I
aectlons of these papers. and
'
will continue to be published. :
owever, certa1D deadliDeS for
luJwnt..lc!m wW be oblcMd.
The cleadUDC for
l'ellle!l articles for
odle'r fiJI
Ia

.

Tbe Victorian Parlor. located on
:~~ Main Street next to the new
·...super Sundry. wiD open for its fu:st
:::day of business 81 10 a.m. Monday,
:~:&amp;tore owner Sarah F'asber said. The
·:·Jwo-story shop will feature old,
·.:new and antique items.
·":; "I really enjoy creating and just
: •seeing someone's look on their
::race.'' F'asber said. "I really wanted
.•:to create something unique for the
:-~unity and I feel! have."
·~ Wben walking inro this srore, a
: :c:ustomer can sample lhe scents of
:;berbs aDd perfume, listen to classi•::W period music and enjoy paint:-mgs and crafts indicative of the
;:Victorian age, sbe added. All
•:employees will wear Victorian gar;_ments, particularly full-length

$559.99
s599.99

300 Mag

water.
S. Hunters, especially those with
open cuiS or sores 011 their bands,
may want to wear proleelive latex
gloves wben bleeding and field
dressing deer carcasses. Diseases,
including Lyme and brucellosis,
may be transmiued wbell body Ouida from infected animals come
into contact with open cuts or

By LISA MI!:ADOWS
GALLIPOLIS - ELECTION:
Tbe USDA reform that changed the
Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service to the Farm Service Ag~ncy bas prompted a
review or the election procedure
for the county committees and
COIIImUDity committees.
This review bas put lbe upcoming community committee election
on bold. This election and the
couqty convention, which would
bave been beld in early December,

· ~ By GEORGE ABATE

MODEL BAR liWU( II
. SI!MI-Alll'OMATIC RlfU!S

information about prepariill deer
meat, contact the ODA'a Meat·
Inspection Division 81 1-800-282·
1955.
For more informali011 011 l!.yme
disease, ca1J the Ohio Department
of Health at 752-1029.

rine bleacli (liquid) toone gallon of

Agency reform delays election

·~-.

•

JTOIGU

l2or
20ga.

.

Tom Taylor, another partner in
the company, bas 35 years of experience in chemical safety and
-chemical industry. Partner Mike
Nutter is a recent Marietta College
graduate in accounting.
Other businesses can refill ftre
extinguishers, but bydro testing
would require at least a two-week
wait, Kraft said. Obio Valley F'tre
Equipment can be at any customer's door in lhe region within a
day, offering 24-bour service.
• Anything we sell we will carry
all our pans in bouse," -Kratt said.
Tbe Tuppers Plains company distributes only Amerex fire extinguishers.
For more information on Ohio
V!!!~y Fue Equipment Inc., call l8lllh957,Y73.

·;·back into Victorian life by simply
:•':browsing a new Meigs County
.•.·· ··store
. .

BROWNING

BROWNING•

Sports deadlines

•

,r·

OONDOR I OVER/UNDER

(U111l••• otberwl1e noted, all
alii are doublebeaden that wiD
bealn with •nnth-p-ade games at
5:llp.1L)

SedeJ.

$21.9.99

12, 16,20
410ga
Single
Shot

Super Price

JTOIGU'

12or
20ga. ·

~;arui

otherwise.

By PATrY DYER
GALLIPOLIS - Tbe Gallla
County Farm Bureau, In 'i:OOperalion with lhe Oblo Department of
Agriculture, encouraaea bUDtcrs to
take the following precautiOIII to
belp ensure aood quality venisoa:
1. Ensure the deer ia properly
bled immediately following the
ltiU. Failure to remove blood from
tissue will alow cbilling of the meat
and cause tRmature spoiJa&amp;e.
2. Fae~,: the deer by opening lhe
and removina lbc
thoracic an abdominal viscera
immediately after bleedina. The
insideoflbcbodymaybeapinltled .
with liberal amounts of food grade
salt to help lobiblt bal:lerial growth.
3. Take s~ps to coollhe carcass
as quicltly as possible. Wbeo outside temperatures are above 40
degrees Fahrenheit, bunters may
want to pack the body cavity with
clean plastic bags of food grade
ice.
4. Hands and tools that come in
contact with the carcass sbould be
clean. Chemical sanitizin¥ may be
accomplished by lmmersmg clean
utensils and bands in a solutiOII of
one tablespoon of.household cblo-

-t~

:•:

20gaONLY

JJec. 8 .................................81Meigs
oec.t4 ..................... Bidweli-Poner
Dec. 15 ................................. Athens
Dec. 19 ........... ., .................. Jackson
Jan. 2................................. .Maiietta
Jan. 9...............................81 Fairilllld
Jan. 12 ................................... .Meigs
Jan. 17 ..........;.................at Marietta
Jan. 23 ..................at Bidweii-Pix-ter
Jan. 26...............................at Athens
Jan. 30 .............................81 Jackson
]an. 31 ....................................Logan

1

• fire extinguisher refills with
wlllt done at the cus1001er' s site,
"We can save customer service
charges because we're local.'' Kraft
said, adding customers would have
to work with Columbus companies

:f ·TimeloSentiDel Stair

Qppo!!tplj

·

•

set up sbop in lhe 5,000-squarefoot strucblre wilb a $150,000 initial inveslment. Kraft said. /
. The company cbose-this site
because of liS access to the MidOhio Valley, nearby bigbway and
,tbe business environment, be
added.
"A bandsbalce is still worth a lot
here," Kraft said. Tbe fum expeciS
to eventually hire qualified
employees. When growth Is
achieved, the business can also be
to expand on-site, be added.
The businesses' services
include:
• gas Wile pressurization cbecks
to ensure they can withstaDd pressure for welding and gas supply
c001panies;
._ _ _
• carbon dioxide bulk storase to
fiU all types of beverage cylinders;
• restaurantltitcben bood system
installation and all types of industrial ftre potection !~,)'Stems, including sprinkler systems;
• close-circuit television security

}Parlor set _
4~to open .
.

NIW INOLAND RRIAIIMI

MOIAIIIO

$99.99 -·lloml

""""""" '''" ' ' "'''''"" " "'.Fairland 1

.101.-

20ga0NLY

Main Street near the vol11nteer Rre baD. Pic·
tured from left are parlnera Bob Harlleben,
Mike Nutter, Tom Taylor and Nonn Kraft.

~~Victo·rian

MODBL 1300 RANG11R I'UMP SllaJ'GillliS

5

laydro tesllna and bulk stor-

~-

B!lrry

UIU/WINCIIII'IIIl

~~

Bean
Black Bears

J)e(. 6................................ .at Logan

\

Price

- -···· (J)
Only

(3 only) Vent Rib

BEAR ARCHERY

Junior high Devils'
1994-95 datebook·

us

- '1IAVIItiCK ·.

redauranlay~lems,

age f1l carboa dioxide. The business Is located on

. : .New fire equipment -concern
,focuses on industrial need

•SHOCKS
•lUKES

RIO GRANDE - Here Is the
scbedulc for lbc week of Nov. 27·n ec. 4 at the University of Rio
Grallde's Lyne Center.
Fllllell center,

J

NoveniW fT,

BrJibleiSandl

.sp.d.t Corrapoodent

t.

~imtli- itntintl Section~

us1ness

November 27,1994 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleaunt; WV

. Page-C&amp;-Sunday Ttmet-Sentlnel

f.

:.. WASHINGI'ON (AP) - Catde
:o·n feed destined for slaughter
·:dropped 6 percent from lbc previ•0111 year, to 8.S 1 muuon be~ at
;tbe begionlng of October, lbc Agrl;Culture DeparlmeDt says. 1bla wu
..a.l perc:entdeclinefrom 1992.
•• PlaocmcDts of cattle- 111imal•
'* tlnto feedloCs _feU 1 percent in
tober from a year eulier. Tbe
46 million animals placed also
~presented an 8 percent decline
1lrom 1992.
.
-~-- Caule ahlpped from feedlots 10
jlaugbterhouses. or markelinla.
·ng the monlh rose 4 perceDt
.
1993, 10 l .~_'!IUUIIII beail, up

4 percent from 1993 and 9 percent percent of lbc to. ~ventorybased.
m&lt;R than two years ago.
AU cattle staUSUcs are
on
Disappearances, wblch Include the seven states that prepare
clealhl and OOier losses. for October m011tbly reportS.
totaled 56,000 bead, bringing the
Sheep and lambs on feed as of
net placementa for the monlilto Nov. I. 1994,-lotaled 1.!12 million
just over 2.-t million head. This bead. down 8percent from lbcpre·
"marked a alislll rise over lbc tRVi· viws year, acconling to lbc Agri·
ous .year and a 7 .percent decline culture Dcpll'IIIICIIL
from 1992.
·
Of tbe total, 1 ·47 million were
Cattle and calves 011 feed aa of lamba, which are less than a year
Nov· 1 In lots with. a capacity of old; and 56,000 were m¥ure
more
I,~ bead amou,
belntedthto mi!Amolllli lbcln~'!!'! f~libe
011 were
1011• " percen
1.78
ow e
,__,..,
,previous year, but2 percent above remalnlng 447 •000 fed 011 pasture
~~ -- IJlese lots aa:oont for 9U araqu~ldue.

m

:f

"

I(

nr:~~=~v~rd
:::e~e::c~a~
receive calls from their cellular

phones in the Pomeroy aDd Meigs
County areas," said Bryan Butler,
general manager ol CeUulluOne In
Athens
"It is imponant that customera
be able to cOOJmunicate while on
the road," be added. "Tbe latest
additiOII to lbc coverage area will
povide residents, business people
and travelers with a continually
eJPIIIIdiog callio&amp; area."
Acconlingto Butler, additional
. cell sitea are planned for lbc .-ca.
wbicb conslsta of Athens, Meigs.
Vinton, Hocking, MorJan and

Penjcounlka.

I

•

EMPLoYEES RECOGNIZED- Rocky Happ, 1en, v1 w •ai

port, IUIII Larry Dnmmond of Galllpnlla were ..-aw ~
· Cllpl by AIDerlcaa Geaeral Life and Accident ......_ c., ...
• .......... aalel productloll cluing the MCODd qUrt.r o1 liN.

--

QIIPP- 1110 a-.c1 t.adq •nlln t1ae _..._ r•l••....._
lneladel OWo, Weal Vlrglnla and puts f1l KenblckJ aM p r J1o
.

•

,,

.

"·

�•

wv

Ott-Point

November27

Subdued·week's end rally.=..
.may not stem rush to sell .

A1TACIC AFI'ERMATH- A Sanjevo llrenabter extinguished names on tbe roof of a
boue bit by an anti-aircraft rocket nred from a
Serb podtion toward a rnldendal neighborhood

Saturday. Despite ongoing etrorts to negotiate a
ccascftrc between tbc warring factloDJ, attacb
continued In tbe Bosnian capitol and tbe V.N.
Afe area of Blbac. (AP)

Ceasefire efforts continue
as Serbs imperil 'safe area'
By SRECKO LATAL

tagon official said the troops were
Auoctated Prea Writer
on their way to the Adriatic Sea to
SARAJEVO, Bosuia-Herzegov- provide support for rescui11g any
ina- Serbs capiUitd a Muslim vii- downed NA10 pilots.
Jage and converged 'on army beadU.N. official Viktor Andreev
quarters Saturday In northwestern met with Serb officials in Pale,
Bosnia's last Jovernment their headquarters east of Sanijevo,
stronghold as the .N. tried to but it wasn't clear what came of the
organize a ceasefue.
talks.
The Bosnian government said
The Serbs refused to see
the fate of 70,000 mostly Muslim Yasusbl Akasbi, the top U.N. omresidents of Bibac was up to .the cial in former Yugoslavia, sending
United Nations. NATO buzzed a message tbat there was "no rea. Serb positipns near Bibac late Fri- son for him to come," according to
day but did not strike, blaming the U.N. sources.
dartness.
Tbe U.N. commander in Bosnia,
"It's quite clear that we bave Lt. Gen. Sir Michael Rose, also
failed to deter an auack on the 'safe was rebuffed when be showed up at
area'," said U.N. spokesman the presidency building to discuss
Colum Murphy in Sarajevo. "We negotiations with Serbs. The
were supposed to deter attack on . . Bosnian prime minister, Haris Sila. civilians and to protect the civilian jdzic, walked out saying the United
population."
Nations was holding up NATO
Tbe U.N. Security Council was action in Bibac.
"I don't want anything to do
meeting in emergency session Saturday at the request of Bonsian wilh him," be said.
To ward off NA10 attacks, the
Ambassador Muhamed Sacirbey,
who demanded the Unill!d Nations Serbs cnntinu"d de taining or
protect tbe safe haven.
restricting the movements of more
In Serb-lleld ce~tral Bosnia, tlian 200 U.N. peacelreepen around
NA10 pilOts said they were fued Sarajevo, another U.N.-designated
at by a surface-to-air missile Satur- safe haven where Serbs have also
day while flying regular patrols.
increased sniping. Tbe fire paraU.N. sources sai.~ the attack_ lyzc:cJ a main thoroughfare in the
occurred over Donjt Vakuf, SO · capital Saturday and at least one
miles west of Sarajevo, as two woman was wounded.
British Tornadoes were fly in~
Bibac Is one of six U.N.-desigoverbead to enforce the "no-fly'
nated safe havens entitled to pro-·
z!lne over B?snia. There was no tection from NATO warplanes.
ht~ and tbe pilots returned safely to Some 1,200 UN. soldiers are posted in the zone, which is roughly 32
their base in Italy.
Meanwhile, three U.S. warships square miles.
wilit at least 2,000 U.S. sailors and
Infantry fighting raged Saturday
Marines aboard were beaded closer in the southwestern part of the
to the scene of Europe's ~orst con- Bibac safe haven near the hospital
ftict since World War II. A Pen- and headquarters of tbe govern-

New cardinals hailed
for past hards.h ips
a

By BRIAN MURPHY
where the pope bad tci cancel visit
Alsocblted Press Writer
in September.
VATICAN CITY - Clergymen
"I am thinking in particular of
who will help select the next pon- the Christians of Sarajevo and
tiff knelt before Pope John Paul U Bosnia-Herzegovina," the pontiff
on Saturday to receive the red hat said . "The devastating roar of
of canJinal and bear praise for what weapons has not yet ceased and so
some have eadured: gulag prison much innocent blood continues to
camP,! and bloodsbed in Bosnia.
be shed without any prospect for
' In Rome, you have the history peace in sight"
of the early Christian martyrs.
The pope, who confronted the
Todar, you bad some living mar- communist regimt1n liis native
tyrs,' said one of tbe 30 new cardi- Poland, took special note of others
Dills, AR:bbisbop William Keeler of who have • 'bad to endure tbe
Baltimore. Another American also oppression of an alhcistic totalitariwas e!evated to card.inal, Detroit an regime."
Archbishop Adam-Maida. .
. One new cardinal, Archbishop
Some of the new cardmals are Kazimierz Swiatek of Minsk
struggling to rebuild their lives and Belarus, spent nearly tO years i~
the church after decades of perse- Soviet prisons. The archbishop of
cut~on in former aut~oritarian Prague, Miloslav Vlk, was harassed
reJtmea s~cb as Albama and the by secret police under the Commu. Soviet ~nton. Others .traveled to nists and washed windows for a
tbe Vaucan from Sarajevo, Com- living. Archbishop Jaime Lucas
muniS!-rulc4 Cu~ and the poveny Ortega y Alamino of Cuba spent a
of Mnca and Asia.
.
year in a labor camp in the mid The poop represents 24 nauons, 1960s
. reflec~tng th~ pop~'s goal of
Pa~l Joseph Pham Dinb Tung,
. expanding the mtemalioll!l' cbar:lc- the arcbbb.."'&gt;p of Hano~ Vietnam,
ter oC tbe College of Cardinals. ,
was put under bouse arrest by amIt also broadens John ~au I .s munist rulers from 1963 to 1989.
Imprint 011 the conclave. During bu
In Albania, where religion was
16-year JJIIIIICY: be has named 100 outlawed under Ellver Hoxba's dieof the 120 ~~ under 80 years tatorship, !be Rev. Mikel Koilql
old 1114 eligtble to vote for. pope, was i,risooed for 38 years. The
- y of~ may share bJS con- frail , 2-year-otd Koliqi was
servative VJCws on issues such as helped up the stepS to the pope by
birtb control and tbe ban on )"omen ushers.
~· · ,
, .
.
Another new cardinal, 84-yeat'DII!',preaenee IS a great StiJI old Rev. Alois GriJJmeier of Gerofllope, the pope told the new ·many, was brought to tbe pope In a
canUn•h "II allows that the whole wheelchair.
cljutcjt
beside those who
Tbe otben knelt before the pope
suffer."
. .
·
and were given tbe three-cornered
A. thl:. ~ ICid tbe list of
red hau that signify the position.
acw ClldiDall. tbe 6,000 people m Tbey receive their rings 011 Sunday
tbe auditorium applauded. Tbe ()vaThere are now the m8llimuui
lion grew wben .be reached the number of 120 cardinals able to
lllllllCI. of diose once Jailed In the vote for the pope. Tbere are 47
.soviet bloc. l.:uba and Vietnam. other cardinals aged 80 and older
Maay peo.,.•t rose to their feet who cannot palticipale 1n lbe selcc. w!Jea"die pope announced Vlnlco tim.
.
Puljie, thl: adlbishop of Sariljevo,

••!II

"!e

'

ment army's 5th Corps, said
Alexander Ivanko , a U.N.
spokesman in Croatia.
He said Vedro Polje, a village
about two miles south of Bihac, fell
in fighting overnight. He did not
know the fate of the inhabitants
wbo fled the burning village.
Bangladeshi peacekeepers Ibis
morning began palrolling the Bibac
hospital, which is very close to lite
fighting, "to try to give a sense of
security," said Claire Grimes, a
U.N. official in Croatia.
Serb forces from Bosnia and
neighboring Croatia also narrowed
the government army's only escape
route to the north, U.N. officials
said

BRIDGE

BULLETIN BOARD

ALDER

NORTH
11 ·26·94
•Q J 6 5
•Q 9 8 3
tA Q 8 7
•10
EAST

•a

•K7

•J6 5 4

t652
•Q7 5 32

tAI094
•A964
SOUTH
•A K 1 3 2

•Io 2
t K J 3
•K J 8

Vulnerable: North·South
Dealer: North
South West North East
Pass
2•

4•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: • K

Suspend
your disbelief
By Phillip Alder
For those of you who have already
looked at the hand diagram, there isnl
a misprint. All will be revealed. And as
hard as you might find it to believe, to·
day's deal really did happen as will be
described. No, the players had not been
imbibing alcohol for some hours. The
deal was played during the World Open
Team Championship for the Rosen.
blum Cup in Albuquerque fast
September.
North, a player from Japan, opened
two diamonds, showing either 4+ J.4 or
H+l shape and 11 ·15 high·card
points. South took a shot at the spade
game.
Now the spotlight turned on West,
Lloyd Arvedon, from Medford, Mass.
He had to select an opening lead. When
an opponent is known to have a H·H,
the textbook attack is a trump. But this
wouldn't have had much effect here. A
diamond is obviously possible, but
Arvedon decided to go for the throat.
He led the heart king. When this won
the trick, he continued with the heart
seven. Declarer, after ascertaining that
the lead could have been from the ace·
king or king'(jueen or shortage, played
low from the dummy. East, Paul
Kinney, won with the heart jack and
then surprised declarer more than
somewhat by leading the diamond·ace.
Upon investigation, it was found that
dummy's diamond ace was actually the
heart ace! Kinney cashed the club ace
before leading a.third heart. However,
declarer, who was struggling to keep
his emotions in check, had enough
presenc&amp; or mind to ruff high, draw
trumps and concede only one down.

Phillip Alder hal ju8t published hi8

new book, "Get Smarter at Bridge."

It iB aooilable, OUWgrcJphed upon request, }'or $14.95 inc! p&amp;p j'rrJm P.O.
Boo: i69, RoBiyn Ht8., NY 11577~169.
C 1994 NEA ·

Analysts warned that inves~
continue to worry about the longterm outlook for the economy an'ct
may tontinue to bail out of stoclcl
in favor of bonds.
:
"There's been no change ii£
heart,·· said Thomas Gallagher.,
director of trading at Oppenbeimel:
&amp; Co. "The selling will continue
early next weelc until we get ~t
change in interest rate slructure." ·The NYSE's composite inde~
rose 1.42 to 247.60, and tbe Stan&gt;:
dard &amp; Poor's 500-stock lnde~t
increased 2.57 to 4S2.SO. The Nas..
daq composite index rose 5.82 tO;
742.52 and at the American Stocri
Exchange, the market value indel.C
rose 2.29 to 434.69.
...
S locks ended mostly lowe.:
abroad. In Tokyo, lhe Nikkei indeJ:
slipped 0.2 percent. In London, thlt
Financial Times-Stock Exchang!l"
I 00-sbare index closed 0.2 percent]
lower, while Frankfurt's DAle:
index ended 0.1 perceiu lower. :
Stocks in Paris rose 0.6 percenl

In recent months , drops 1i1

American securities markets have

tended to burt the dollar, since currency dealers track U.S. stock and
bond prices to gauge demand for'
the currency.
._
"The stock market is recovering, bond prices are strong, and'
that's made people a lot less wor:~.
ried." said Guy Bouaziz, managing·
director at C-Wave Capital Man•·
agement in Fort Lee, N;J. "Thii
weakness of the stock market in the ·
past few days didn't bave a bearistl
tmpact {on the dollar). We had a·
strong bond market. which made·
people less willing to sell dollars." .,

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Wooden duck
6 Aflower
11 Commence
16 Garment with
sleeves
21 l:lweiling
22 That pJace
23 Kind of union
24 Delester
25 Changes posillon
26 Grasping tool
27 Kind of daisy
28 Last Greek letter
29 Opp. of WSW
30 Piece
31 Taxi
33 Domesticaled
35 Name for a stranger
36 'Auld Lang-·
38 Behave
39 Dog breed
40 Destiny
41 Cunning
42 Good fonune
44 Animal raiser
48 Hurry
51 Twenly-one·gun54 Pointed instrument
55 Cily in Iowa
57 Type slyle
61 Unrefined
62 Penn or Connery
63 Sofa's cousin
65 Fixed gaze
66 Hoarfrost
67 Altered
70 Strictness .
72 Playing card
73 "Do-- say .. ."
74 Animal group
75 Fuel for cars
77 Fully satisifes
79 Explosive stuff
80 Five: prefix
82 Moray
83 Highly decorated
85 Small horses
87 Avid
89 Exist
90 Conducted

91 Kind ol box or hall
92 The universe
94 Deadly
96 --de·sac
97 Destructive insect
100 Curved line
101 DeCOrative paper
transfer .
104 Everyorie!S:1iilcle
105 Saloons
106 The - (Roger
Daltrey group)
107 Employ
108 Oregon's capital
110 Not care for
112 Explosive sound
113 Bellads
116 Money earned
118 Cautious
119- Haute
120 Inveigle
122 Ooze
123 One: comb. form
124 Stopping
mechanisms
125 On cloud 127 Singing bird
129 Playthings
130 Abbr. in polrtics
133 Water barrier
135 Beery beverage
136 - and hers
137 Kind of bag
141 Regret
142 Something valuable
144 English·TV inits.
145 Cooking vessels
146 Smoked salmon
147 Kind offinger
149 Exchange
151 Open
153 Skin shape (hyph.
wd.)
155 Weighing device
156 lncrte to action:
2wds.
157 Rental contract
158 Body organ
159 Narrates
160 Sleeps"
161 Rhythm

OkJ you Mnow that ... Planned Pwenthood of
SOUiheaal Ohio In Gallipol~ J)[OYides

Birthdays, 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

.

162 Blissful
DOWN
1 Women ol rank
2 Black wood
• 3 Group ol witches
4 P.,oem _
.
· 5 WOfdol asseni .
6 Assail
7 Brief
8 Ponable shelter
9 Work unit
· 10 Saved
11 Unkempt one
12 Levy
13 Help in wrongdoing
14 - flush (poker)
15 Ashaking
16 Wearing footgear
17 Meat for
sandwiches
18 Particulars
19 Kingly
20 Dick -of comics
30 Step
32 Grow older
34 Small case
37 Get away lrom
39 Fork pan
43 Western Indian
44 Mark with a hot iron
45 Family man
46 Arab VIP
47 Corrected, as a text
49 Wall and Main:
abbr.
50 Head covering
51 Discarded piece
52 Get up
53 Glowing
54 Mother·ol-56 Lon~ story
58 Crisscross structure
59 Girl's name
meaning "peace"
60 Pennies
62 Utter
64 Believe rt or - !
67 Brie and
Camemben, e.g.
68 Wading birds
69 Actor Aykroyd

71 Drive back
76 Deli meat
78 Distress call letters
81 Scot's cap
83 Mineral
JM. Avil'
86 Bite
88 Deily
· 89 Asserts withOut
proof
91 Obscure
92 Bring about
93 Welles or Bean
95 Possessed
96 Egypt's capital
98 Dinah of TV
99 Big books
102 Cry of a crow
103 "Oh, woe!"
105 Em ply space
109 Mik:l·mannered
111 Took an oath
112 Animal
114 Card game
115 Chern. or bioi.
117 Secret agent
119 Attempt
121 Ceases
123 Actor McDowell
124 Supervisor
126 Spring holiday
128 Experiment nn.
128 Laugh
130 Grain lor grinding
131 Unit of weight
132 Bicycle part
134 Combine
136 Kind of sense
138 Oil source
139 Musical sounds
140 Put fonh effort
142 Hatchets
143 Tie·on lickels
144 Vereen and
Franklin
145 Kind ol moss
148 Building extension
150 Round mark
152 A letter
,153 Priest's vestment
154 - Abner

NOTICJ; TO BIDDERS
Purchase of (1) School Bus
lor
EASTERN LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATION
· Sealed proposals will be .
received by .the Board , of
Education of the Eutern
Local School Dlatrlct of
Roedavlllo, Ohio, by 12:00
o'clock noon on December
11, 1994, and at that time
opened by the TreaiUrer of
aold Board as provided by
l~w lor one (1) 71-72
pa11enger ochool but
according to apeclllcotlono
of aald board of education.
"Speclllcatlona and
lnetructlono to bidders may
be obtained ot the office of
the Treaaurer, Eastern High
School building.
Acertllled check payable
to the Treaaurer of the
above Board of Education
or a satielactory bid bend
eucuted by the bidder and
the surety company in an
amount equal to live percent of the bid shall ba
aubmlttod with each bid.
Said Board of Education
reeorvee tho right to waive
Informalities to accept or
reject any and all or portl of
any and all bldo.
No bide may be
withdrawn lor at leaet thirty
IQO) · ctayt ell•• tha
ochodulod cloolng time for
receipt of bids. ·
BOARD OF EDUCATION
OF EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
ELOISE BOSTON
TREASURER OF EASTERN
LOCAL SCHOOLS
Reedavllle, Ohio 45m
(11) 6, 13, 20,27 4tc

.,

..
...

,.
"'

..

···~'~

··~

..

·· · ~

.....\

'

.•

~

..

. ..

and bi~h confrnl suJllllleo. WOINH1 and """'
maY receive tests and treatment for sexually
transmitted dlseaae 11nd anonymous Hrv
tn11. Slkllng Fee Scale: Private Insurance
and Medicaid are accepted. Planning
prevents unlntended pregnancy. For an
appt call (614) lo46-01fMI

2390 Jackson Pike
Oh 446-2134

38900-SR 7

v--

IXlllfidentlal family planning ..Nicol to 800
Gallla County reoidonfs each year. Birth
Con!JoJ Serv&lt;:es Include a physician
examinatiOn, cancer scraenlng, oducaliOII

D.J.'s Craft Shop

3 Announcements

Dollar mixed in quiet trading
NEW YORK (AP) - Tbe dollar was mixed and little changed
against other key currencies, compared witb !ale European levels, In
quiet post-boliday trading Friday,
drawing some strength from a
rebound.in U.S. stock prices.
The Dow Jones industrial average. of big-company stocks rose .
more tban 33 points, pardy recoverin¥, from the week's sell-off.
• Cmrency traders were looking
closely at the stock markets with
tbe falloff over the last few days,"
said Matt Porio, a vice president at
Cbase Manhattan Bank. "But there
was no cause for alarm today."

.·

lntemaUmal Paper was up t-1/4 CQ
69-S/8.
. !

See Answer to Puzzler on Page C-5

PHILLIP

WEST
•t094

tigbtenings will dampen economic
arowtb too mlJCh and make it difficult for corporations to boost profits in the c0111ing quarters.
· With the outlook for equities
· uncertain and interest rates rising,
many have fled to bonds in search
of better returns. The buying sent
tbe price of the Treasury's 30-year
bond up $20 for every $1,000 in
face value earlier this week.
Stocks seesawed Wednesday,
with the Dow falling 40 points at
its worst, but improved near the
day's end. Analysts said the matket
was oversold and that buyers
entered lhe market late Wednesday.
Follow-tbrouflh buying commenced early Friday and set the
day's tone.
"It's not a day that's rally analyzabie," said Alfred E. Goldman,
vice president at A.G. Edwards &amp;
Sons Inc. in St Louis. "Today is a
natural knee-jerk reaction to what
happened earlier in tbe week.' •
Stocks that are sensitive to
changes in lite economy benefited.
Allied Signal rose 1-114 to 32-118,
Alcoa rose 2-3/8 to 80-3/8 and

Sunde~

•

•

By KAREN GUU.O
AP Busineu Writer
NEW YORK - Stocks rallled
Friday In subdued post-holiday
trading, as lnveston took a brealt
froiD selling inspired by fears that
higher interest rates will burt ibe
economy.
Tbe session, which ended at 1
p.m., was a surprisingly strong
about-face from the dramatic selling that sent the Dow Jones average plummeting 91 points on Tuesday.
The Dow Jones industrial average rose 33.64 points Friday to
3,708.27.
Analysts said the rally was tied
to a dearth of participants in the
market, as many traders took the
day after Thanksgiving off.
Buyers outnumbered sellers,
sending prices higher. But analysts
warned that the day's activity did
not indicate a majll' change fn heart
on the part of investors.
Advancing issues outnumber
decliners by about 13 to 5 on the
New Yorlc Stock Exchange.
Volmne on the floor of lhe Big
Board came to 118.29 million
shares as of 1 p.m., down from
430.76 in tbe previous session. ·
The rally was nol a complete
surprise, coming as it did on the
heels on two sessions or heavy selling.
On Tuesday, computer-guided
programs led stocks lower as fears
swept the market about higher
interest rates and their potential
impact on the economy, corporate
earnings and the desirability of
stocks.
Tbe Dow average plunged 91.52
points to 3,677.99, its biggest oneday loss since the Fed started pushing interest rates bigber in February. Tbe Fed is hoping to slow economic growth and forstall inflation.
But many investors fear the Fed

wv

OH-Polnt

lor center lln11 end lone
NOTICE TO BIDDER~
line e.
STATE OF OHIO
"Tho dolo ut for
DEPARTMENT OF
completion of thlo work
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo, Ohio.
lhlll be 11 eel forth In the
November 11, 11114
bidding propoool." Pion a
BurMu of Contrlct Salol
end Spoclllcotlono oro on
Llgol Copy Number 114-857 file In tho Deportment of
UNIT PRICI! CONTRACT
Trenoportltlon.
Jorry Wroy
Seelod
will be
oil 'proDirector of Tronoportltlon
blddora at the November 20, 'Zl, 11114
of Contrect Salee,
Room 118 of tho Ohio
Announce men ls
Deportment
of
Tronaportotlon, Columbus,
Ohio, until 10:00 e.m. 3 Announcements
Thurodey, December 8, 1994 E~·for lmprovemonteln:
,_,.., ..., It 1..,_ 110
t-eol!lf c;n E - ond
Atheno, Galllo, Hocking, LUII\or &amp;mllh F1m11, .1 -h
Melgo, Monroe, Morgan, Onm; Rd., R,._ duo toNoble, VInton, Waahlngtan hun-. tlilll.ncl dooJnictlon of
Countln, Ohla tar Pftii*IY, All- pannllo.,.
Improving eectlon ATH·143- caneellodl
o.oo on Stele Route 143 tnd No t..ntlna ol lilY kind on ..,
other vorlout route• tnd lonn on lin- Rd., lbiclno.
tectlone by applying retro- Connie Enlllii, - ·
reflective
polynlor No Hunllng or Troopnllng iii
pavement merkln:g~m:•:'•:r:l•~l!:on~rt~lmo.~Rii=y=niOI~id.:;,D·:...:SmH::::;IL;.:__

NO huntna or t.._lng 11
anytime on "Chara. VOlt FanM.

NPr_.ng
CIMniiiiiHII'f, co0Jor

DMrf
kip,
1mobd dMr •nllaiM. Craw..
lonl'o 0.-y, Hondotaon, wv.
304-1175-6404.

4
Giveaway
_ ___;_;,;.,;..,:.:~-­
2 v... Old llaJe Cockotlol 814381-8151.

Adorable Pupploo: llotlilr II
B~~glo.._Will Be Small Doga, 11444e-38•t.

Full blooded

1118.

S..gltlo, 30Ul'S-

Kina 11.. monroa lor watoillod,
114-\12·3117.
Lib mix puppy, 4moe. old. 3C)4..
115-1812.
Male Brittany, been neuter.d,
ood hunting dog, very gontlo,

l 14-1112-3012.
Puppln, to

304-1175-6818.

good home

only.

Splntt Hommond Otaan To A
Church Or Group, 1~1 8031.
ThrM BNgle mix pupploo, 6141112-31100.

Public Notice

Two .omoll gu hoot.,., 114-11125844 •

WARNING
NO ttUNTING •
NO TRESPASSING
This notice is a warning to any
.-

-

"

and all persons

tha~

no hunting

L.ott:
Couch Alllln&gt;L ....
B.twMn
Bound

Rew•rdl
l..ott: Collie dog, Jowor end

In VInton Ani; SI.Fomolo Bo11r Hu Tiifltl
ContiCI Roger Wanl, 114-38&amp;L.ott:

F~doy,

the lands of Crown City Mining,

colllf, sable and whfle, Amber·
gor Rd. vlclnHy, lt4-114i-245r.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Separate,
taaled
propoeals will·be received
11 tho office of tho Treuurer
of the Board of Education of
Southern Loco! School
Dlatrlct, Racine, Ohio, Malga
County, until 12:DO o'clock
noon, December 13, 11194.
For But Cha111a and
Bodl11. Coplea of the
SPECIFICATIONS,
Jnatructlan to blddore, end
propo .. t forme may be
obtolnod at tho office of the
Trtaturer, Donnie E. Hill.
Stld Board af Education
re'urvee tho right to reject
1ny. end all, or parte of eny
tnd all bide.
By order of Board ol
Educa11on of Southern
Local School Dlatrtct.
Dennie E. Hill, Trouurer.
(11) 13, 20, 'Zl; (12) 4; 4TC

Inc., located in Gallia and

8

be prosecuted to the fullest

l..ott: old

molo Collie wHh

full Urn. •uctk»neer, compa.te
•uctlon
eervlce.
UcenMd
MMI,OI!Io l W11t Vlrglnlo, 304113-5185.

Wodomeyer'a Auction Sorvlce,
Golllpotll, Ohio 614-311-2720.
Auctlonllf Col. Oocer E. Click,
Uc.noo I 754-114
304.ft5-3430.

with Section 2911.21 of the Ohio

tiiloel Any

ARIES (March 21·' ~"I 19) Someone
mtght present you wtth an offer today thai
sounds too good to be true. It might be
lrue, lhough, so don't reject it until you
investigate it lunher.
TAURUS (April 2D-May 20) Persons with
whom you associate.today could be lucky
and that might rub oft on you. If they
score, a portion could be you;s.
GEMINI (May 21-Juna 20) Upgradtng
your methods at work could incri ase

paper.

a

Bonded,

Wanted to Buy

9

Crown City Mining, Inc.

loooe

Public Sale
a. Auction
Rick Pooroon Auc;Uon Compony,

extent of the law, in accordance
Revised Code.

Jeff's Carry Out &amp; Tavern
Pomeroy, Ohio
Hunting Tags· Ammo Deer
Checking Station l,lig Buck
Contest lce-Pop-Beer·Food
Open7am - 11 pm
IVYDALE COUNTRY
Presents
* B&amp;B Christmas Trees
* Fresh cut Christmas
Trees
• Live Poinsettias
*All grown in Gallia and
Meigs "Counties
. 2 miles N. of S . Bridge
on SR 7

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

All Ages; All Risks
We try to insure
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance
Phone (614)446-6111

Gallipolis
Bank One
Coats for Kids Program
• Collection Points• ·
Kmart
O'Dells
Hills
Quality Farm &amp; Fleet
Bank One- Gallipolis
Help by Donating a Warm
Coat For Those In Need

Middleport Arts
Council Annual
Open House
Sunday
1 pm --5-pn
Handmade gifts
Homemade candy

Arts &amp; Crafts Show
Overbrook Center
Middleport, Ohio
Saturday, December 10, 1994
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Arts and Crafts by Area
Craftsmen
Free Table Space Available
For Mote rnrormatlon Please
Contact Mike'Crites at
Overbrook Center 111992-&amp;472
between 9·4 M-F

Deer Processing, $35,
Skinned &amp; Cut &amp; Wrapped.
We will cube free of charge!
Also. ONe Day Service.
614-446-7936.

American Legion Auxiliary
Unit 27 Nov. 29, 1994 at
7:30 for the purpose of
election of officers.

~~

Public Notice

trespassing on these lands will

Christmas craft supplies
Lots of lace in designer
colors 50e yd. Dolls,
sweeper covers, and
other crafts made to
order. Call 446-1407 for
hours and info.

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

1110011. 304-7T.Io5878.

8133.

Anyone found hunting ·or

Sew Creative
Fabric &amp; Craft Outlet

446-4530

or trespassing will be allowed on

Lawrence Counties.

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

BOOTS
All leather Western Boola
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
Enginesr ........... ............. $49.00
Wellington ........... ........ ... $49.00
Loggers ......................... $50-55
Harness ........................$59.00
Carolina·Georgia-H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex
Swain Fumrture 62 Olive St.
Gallipolis
All U.S. Made

Comi)IMe Hoi nhold Q- E.
~PI 01 Fumlt;n,

Apptlonceio, Antlquo'e, Etc. Aloo

For Sale
Quality office furniture- Like
new. File cabinels, desks,
computer equip. and more.
Call446-7216 Non thru Fri.

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 BULAVILLE PIKE

DEER SEASON
Open al 4:30 am
BREAKFAST &amp; LUNCH
SPECIALS
3 EGGS, HOME FRIES &amp; TOAST
$1 .99

SAUSAGE, BISCUITS &amp; GRAVY
$ 1.19

STEAK &amp; EGGS $4.99 '
PLUS MANYOTHER HOME
COOKED SPECIALS.
Pirates Cove Restaruant
St Sr. 160 Bidwell. Oh.

r ' t Avalllblol 814-3711-

Dicorotod - -...... toJo.
phonM, old llm~old t'- - . old
anllquo
lumH~n. Rtv.rino
lq-.
R,_-.,
.
ltWI2·
~. Wo buy nlotaL
Box 4465, New York , NY

. 10163. Be sure to state your zodiac Sign .

Meeting of Gallia County
Veterans Association will be
helped Monday 28th at
American Legion Post 27,
7:30. All members are urged
to attend.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Your
anitude and presence will exhilarate peo.

pie loday. You may funclion as a calalysl
for something constructive.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) Set your
stghts h igh for your re putation an d
career. You have an excellent chance ol

scoring big today.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) People may

your produclivity today. Search for better cluster around you in social settings
today . You r persona lity is part icularly
ways to do things.
. 1994
In the year
you mighl develop a CANCER (June 21-July 22) Take magnetic at this t1me.
strong relationship with a new lriend. This advantage of a chance to socialize with ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) Although
person can introduce you to new people old friends and n"ew people today . your methods might seem uno rth odox
,and activi!ies. but as you build Y.,ur net· Something beneficial might develop today. you know what yau·re doing. You
will 9et the results you desire .
work, include old pels.
through these encounters .
SAG In ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Be LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Focus your mind TAURUS (Aptll 20·May 20) This is a
responsive to the needs of those less lor· on personal desires today, because the good day to discuss your lalesl ideas wtth
tunate than you;se~ today, but avoid fa,n· possibility of realizing them is very strong. confidants whose judgments you trust.
The ·exchange may help to make some·
fore. You won't need to ensure thai your Be a dreamer w~h an objective.
good deeds are acknowledged. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) Try lo ·allow thing good even bener.
Sagittarius, treat yourself to a birthday lor a flexible schedule today, mentally GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) Act upon any
giH ..Send for your Astro·Graph predic· and physically. Even a mundane errand inspirations today that co uld increase
your earnings. The probabilities tor suclions for the year ahead by mailing $1 .25 could tum into a fun adventure.
to Astro-Graph. c/o this newspaper, P.O. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Material cess are very strong .
Box 4465; New York, NY 10163. Be sure advantages might come to you through CANCER (June 21 ·July 22) So cia l
to state your zodiac sign.
unusuai arrangements today. Expect the encounters today could help further your
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 18) Be care- unexpected ao that you wonl be caught self·inlerests. Take advantage ot the
opportunities created by these contacts.
lui today not to write oft persons who 1 off guard by developments.
belong to.a group you dislike. Given haH SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Try lo maintain a
a chance, they could tum out to be new . remarkable resiliency could enable you to positive outlook today about the outcome
f.riends.
.
. recover quickly from a daunting s~ualion of important events . How you perceive
things could influence critical factors.
AQUARIUS (Jin. 20-Fib. 18) "Proceed. today,
Monday, Nov. 28, 11114·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Promote new
don't postpone," should be your battle
cry. Your important objectives should be ·sAGinAR1US (Nov. 23·Doc. 21) YoJL endeavors today and add your own ere·
the focus of your attention today . Big could be extremely adept at handli n~ alive twists. Oare to design something
goals are reachable.
co·mplicated
situations
today, different.
"
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mirch 20) Your Imagi- lnSllnctlvely, you will put everything In LIBRA (Sept. 23-()ct. 23) Oo not permit
nation might generate a whole aeries of proper context. Major changes are ahead yourseK to be inti")idated today by devol·
bright ideas today. Your brilliance, how.-. for Sagittarius in .the coming year. Sand · opmenls measured in large ligures. Lady
ever, may be more apparent to otherti for your Astro·Graph predlct_!ons today . Luck will be pulling lor a profitable ou1·
than to youreeW.
Mail $1 .25 to Astro-Graph, c/o thla newa- come.

SANTA CLAUS

Deer Hunters
Sight in your guns
Slug shoot
. Saturday Nov. 26-1 :00
Sunday Nov. 27- 10:00 am

Will come To Your Home.

Gallia County Gun Club

Call 441-01 08
for Details

Buck Ridge Road

Shop At Jewel Evans

Kemper 's Butcher Shop
FOR ALL YOUR CUSTOM
PROCESSING NEEDS.
Beef, Pork. Lamb. and Deer!
(614) 388·9847
105 Thompson Rd., Vinton, Oh.

Country Store
on St. At. 850.
Crafts &amp; Products made in Gallia
County. Gift Packs, Breads &amp;
Crafts. Open Weekdays 7:30·5.
Open Weekends thru Christmas
· 12·5. Oh. 245-5654.
EMPIRE FURNITURE
842 Second Ave.
Gallipolis
NOW HAS A GOOD
SELECTION OF
. • WASHERS • DRYERS
• REFRIGERATORS
• FREEZERS • RANGES
• DISHWASHERS
• MICROWAVES

I

Call 446-2342
or992-2156

FOR MORE INFORMATION

~~~
' I

I

II

'

�Page-04-Sunday nmes-8entlnel

·- ------------------18 Wanted to Do

See Scram-Lets on Page D-7

Ace TIM loMoo. Com.,._..... 20yn....... lnoUiod, ...
. .lmlt•. 1114o441·11SI.

ALPINE.
NUDISM
"Ttiese binoculars would be a are1aU
OSPREY
gift for Dad," the son informed his MniTI
QUAKER
After looking al the price tag the mo~n a
FLINCH
said, "I think it would be cheaper to get
TREATY
him seats NEARER the FIELD."
EARER the FIELD

·9

wanted to Buy

: W.rUd To

11

lluJ: A c- 01 Tile

· er-a PIQ- AI Tlio Ar111
. 'n..
11114. .. On Oct - · . , . _
Doll1 .Junk ll Sill u. ,_ ,.,...
Worldng I!*' _....._,

• Colot T.V. a,
lllo!r~Qont-.
• F_ _,, 'ICA'o, lllciawa..._

- Air

Condl.-,
w-.
c- llochl-, - r

• DrveN.

: roe.. Etc. ti4-211-.1H8.

• aoon Lllo .._ ea..

Or

Or lleiiiil
Eulem
AVWM.Ie,
a Wpch
-h · - - -

- Truolco, 1117 -

J • D'o Auto Porto ond - buylna wnoc:~unk 1u1oo •
· lruclui. Aleo,
lor •lo. 304-

lrMihl*""

Avon w....
lnterlltod In !l""!!na M 414 lllr. No
Door To DoOr. , _ _
lnd. lllop.

ChuRh ~ .()ompulor
Expolloo- ........,. 811111ng
$1.00 Per Hour. 40 Hounl Ptr

Willi, Halh!aJ.._Sick n- A11111Y
tn - Tile NouNno,Flrot
01
1110Chuicfl
F1nl
AVIIIIIO, OoiiiDollo F""" 11:00
A.ll. To 1:00 P.ll. T......, Nov
21th.

"* '""

In COU'*Y

PC
U...
- · eit.
IWKIW.
.............
7tWIS-4580
tllda.

POSTAL JOSS
Slort 111.41 /Hr. For Elllm And
......... ian Info. Coli 1211) 7&amp;8:161 Ellt. 011581, t A.ll . .e P.ll.,
Bun-l'ri.

AN or LPN In loell
Ph¥ 'c'•• o111ce. mUll Mw.
WY ..._ I Ill copoble ol

!\::!

hondltng ... , DOiknl ...
good •lilY ' bonelllo.
101 R-21, c/o Pl.
P I - Alaletw:le= lloln 81.,
PI.P-....,'"WVI
.

,..,...!

llpooch-longuoo

E'torTuc.tton
oort
-·
.,._h -~
lnd hoolint
lhoropy

. Gold-e="rn.'=

. 1111 -Annul, Oolllpollo.

Employment Ser vices
11

GET STARTED WITH ~ho
new llcDonllkl'l
llor - I n Rio Orondo,
OH le ..,...nlly occopllng liP'
tor ""' lnd poof~­
i&gt;oolllono on oil 1111111. Only
hlgh!J - - loom ployoro
nood opply. 1111~
progrwn .o no uPirience li

,...want """

,-tono

=-

Pold: All Old U.S.

Help wanted

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

ioaiitrod.. .Compol.l..
Ptld
hdojo oft -fNO

. , _ In 10 cloyt. VIIJ pold ·-..... pion••for
poll~tmoro.loortoln
-lcolroolllctlono
-·
IVIIIoblo
IDIIIYI. H lniON!!I!!r olop II¥
llciDilftotd'1 al 1111Upollo 1nil
pick up .. 1 ............

a-t- Houlor ....... Dltwr

Wllh Cleon COL'1, SoiM Aou11

oblllleo. A ltoonood~
~~::'h~~ g~ , , , :

poolonod. Compolfthi oololy

and
- llondoy, Doc...W
Appllcellon
-Unt:
5,
11M. Bond lo : llolao
Counlly 1oon1 ol IIRIDD, 1:110
Coriolon Stroll, P.O. Box S07,

AMI Eat.te c.n.r. Prohe,'rl'lll
llllnlna. ERA Town 6 ~
biota, - . 8oclcJi

···~
Nuiolng Aoolollri Aoglol-

'--"T.,.

C...
for

~•- rolollng -~ tor ...

'4,.

R-~llhM.""--•

WOuldAioo-...s--

-~-

VIollt And ..... Wlh Ouollly
- - Houro: 111-F 1:30 .. :00.

Pro-

To:

Nice · - - -

7010.
A or nolblo odun . . do
......Ina In yow homo·=
can go Ctvlil:mM stmrr 1
EYonlng houll only. ,_...,,
llo_, Hovon
·tiM-

Roollna 20 Yro. ElqL
F- Eollmof•. ~~-­
Call ond ....

IAwle

AI

=.

1111 Cl1ylon TNIIor. 2 Bod-,
1 112 litho. Now 14124 A-.

Add"lon. Blluolod on 1 112
Ac- Ltlort, Ott. Elcollonl
Condlllon, Uu Now 114-247-

II-

mol uniA you hove ln-Tgolod 441-77111
tho otllrlng.
.
Now 11115 14117)l,lncl- - lng,
-ko, 1 yoor
bomlownera ~ and 1
monlho FREE tal IIIII. Only
1120 down end 11M per mo.
CaUl-

a

during thla trying time.

....

Nb201S---

homo In lllddllporl, · - -

,.._on 2 112 ouee.. P01111r0r

lull

~

llmlo.....
._
-_
. A...""'" clopoolt
ond
.....
moclotoly, wloollon lo IMiy

......,.,....7272.

1. .

Two bedroom mobile horne,

In ru_.
......pooll .ond

44

-

Apanment
torRent

Full

Rentals
3 lodroo~M, 2 hlho, 1 Car

~~=':i..=
lion Lol, Canlonory,

TOO: 114-441-3101,
EEO /.lOA Employor.

118,100,114-44Mllll.

NoiJco._
POSTAL EII'I.OI'IIENT
$12.21 Mr • ...,...._ eonw,
!*llr1.c_lorll-lono. For Your
- 1 Al&gt;l&gt;lleollon llllllna
In-Ion, c.!l141f.~(

4 lod-. FIIIIIIY

-Rool au
flrrnooo, llkllng •
Cllool Nolah--For

Chlkf,.rtl114 ..:41121

En Pl432. I A.ll. To I P.ll., 'I
Doyo.

11

In Memoty
In Loving Memory
of Roy Allen Sayre
who passed away on
November 26, 1992
Wherever we go,
Whatever we do,
Locked into our
hearts
Memories of you.
Memories
are
treasures
No one can take
away
Memories . keep
you close to us
Despite
the
passin~ of the years.
But 1s cannot still
the longing
For the loved one
gone before
Who shall say the
grief is lessened
Though the smile
may hide the tears
Death
is
a
heartache
Nothing can heal
Sad I y missed by
children, and
their

5

Happy Ads

=a.

For Aonl: SmoU Houoo In
llpollo, a- To a_,.
DowniOWI\
-Dtpooll, 1-11111.

8

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST
Ohio UniveiSity Penonnel Services is currently accepting
applicalions for lhe posilion of part· lime permanenl
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST for the College of
Osteopathic Medicine. JOB DUTIES: Transcribe medical
diclalion for clinical·facuhy in the Osteopathic Medical
Center. QUALIFICATIONS: High school diploma or
eq uivalent required. Six · to eighteen months related
experience and medical terminology required. Experience in
the use of lranscription equipment wilh the ability to
interpret, translate and edit medi~ a l dictation required.
Excellent 1yping, spelling and prool'ieading skills ~equired.
Ability to read and follow writlen and oral instructions.
Applicants will be required to pass a clerical written
examination and be able lo type at least 50 wpm . A
transcription lest will be administered by the College of
OSieopalhic Medicine . Starting salary is $10.07 hourly.
Hours of work arc 3:30 p.m. to midnight three days/week
and 3:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m. one day/week: APPLICATION
DEADLINE: December 2, 1994.
All individuals interested in this position are required in
complete and applicalion (no applications by phone)
available a1 University Perso_
nnel Services, 44 University
Terrace, Athens, Ohio. Applications may be obtained
belween lhe hours of 8:_
00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Monday
lhrough F1iday.
·
Ohio University, Athens, Ohio
An affirmaliveAclionJEqual Oppollunity Employer
Minorities and Women are Encouraged to Apply

REFERRAL
DEVELOPMENT
COORDINATOR

Public Sale

a. Auction

FLEA MARKET

At Hutchinson Auction Inc.
on SOW towards McCarthur
December 2, 3, and 4th
9-5 p.m. Antiques,
collectibles, and new items,
used fum., Inside space
$25.00, Outside $15.00.
Call 592-4349 for
more details.

I

RehabCare Corporation, a national leader
in the delivery of physical rehabilitation

s.ervices, is seeking an experienced marketing professional for the adult, inpatient

program at HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
in Gallipolis, OH.
·

We offer a highly competitive salary and
benefit paCkage along with opportunities
for career advancement. For more information, please send/fax your resume to:
BaJbara Snell, RthahCare Corporation,
77J3 Forsyth I MI., Suite I 700, St Louis,
MO .63105. 1-800-677-1238, exl. 216.
FAX 314-863-0769. .

Thursday, Dec. 1, 1994
at 7:00p.m.
From Gallipolis take Route141, Turn
Lett onto Rt. 775, Tum Right Onto
Patriot Rol!d, Watch For Signa.
Lots and Lots of Toys.
Jam Boxes, AM-FM clock radios, pillows,
lamps, pictures, gun racks, tools, singing
animals, trucks, christmas paper, clocks, sweat
shirts. christmas, night gowns, jewelry,
cookware, dishes, CBB\11ron toys, car sets,
pottery, Iron stone, chums, pellet guns, living
room suits, Aunt Jemlna Tea Pots, ·
and much much more.
Big Truck Load of New Merchandise.
Something for every member_of the family.

Marlin Wedemeyer,
Auctioneer

ChlriiiiOII, wv.

Equal Opportunlly Emptoyer

Lie. 3615

a. Auction

1 .00 a.m.

614-379-2720

Cash
Eats
· Positive I. D.
·:- Ncrt_RIISJlCl,nsltlla For Acddent Or Loss Of Prorlii!IV

.

SW~

sa
=~ 0:::~~- ~'..."-:
AIJCI1DII •

Take St. Rt. 124 10 Racine, Ohio then Main St. nexi
to boat ramp. Watch for auction signs.
"Antique or Collector's Items"
1960·70's Football, Baseball &amp; Basketball cards
(OJ Simpson, Joe Namith, Bill Russell &amp; Chamblin
Just to name a few), clay marbles, Indian artifacts,
gasoline ration stamps, several old coins, milk &amp; pop
bottles, 1800's silver, flash unit for cameras, oak
dresser, 33's records, Pictures, one man cross cut saw,
Block planes &amp; Ect.
"Household"
Channel master salellite receiver I rotor 1 rotor
box, 12" B&amp;W T.V., 14" Zenith Color TV, Zenith
25" color TV• Magnovox 27" color console, omni
portable car/home TV new, GE Portable Phone,
Singer sweeper, B&amp;D dust buster, Kenmore upright 2
speed sweeper, 2 H.P. shop vac, ~nd tables,
refrigerators, glass fireplace skirt, beds, woodchairs,
rocker, desk, couch, electric appliance (mixer, food
processor, meat grinder, sandwich maker (new) can
opener) &amp; ect.

FUANII'\IAE.

Wooll- • - •
VI'AA FURNITURE
411U. 0u1 Al.14l
~~

Hoo•ollold Furniollll1g0
·· 9uollr
=:.:,r·.::-,111~'-:t..':'~;
Living Room 81. ·1211.00;_IIod11.
•
$3n.OO;
llllllgaol.., • 111oft1oo
......,. /Dryolo

Houoo-.

-rSO-

Forgoi t,;. ';l'J':·~

• Doll,

: t1oft.

'

' W'*'Pool W - • -

. . . Whirlpool

lli'

• 1111; -

fl21

Eloclrlc

. !lonao Sll; Goo llonao
• I1IOi Porlolile - r
:.o-Pt~';!;!=::.:

:

: =-

• 11 eu. ., .,., ..._
: Alllllln WIN, 1'Vttr W.r;
• Nnly
; All Appl!- loki

m~v.:

C:::

7311, Or 1. -

:

,

,

' 52 Sporting Goods
~
\
l Wlnchn"11r 1300• ·~

c:a.ua..

!~~=-&amp;f: -~~
12100. ca....

=-=

DMr ..,.. S.c.

12

I.

! C4!nd. 1221.l'IIIIOhl 12 !IM'I'

C::::• SO" At1t oncl
·: Single =~2 0ougo / : ,
; 8orill Camo IIIII IIIIa f121114, 441-34'13 or .........,..17.
'

154

Mltcellaneoua
Men:halldiSI

J

.

56"x48" Storm windows, 70 1/2 x 73 1/2 slidingglass door w/screen, Okidata computer printer,
brothers electric typewriter w/correction and lots
more.
·

\113111,
::.:::"'"~.J.ont Itt 4l;'
t--.e301.

Owner Scott Wolfe &amp; Family
Auctioneer Dan Smith Racine, Ohio

, Goo Fumoot, I.P Or Noturol,

Positive ID

; 1 UMd 2 Ton Hlat PUMp, NN
i

; ~ ~ E1octrlc F..,.
1 . 20KW: UMd Duothenn
:1

.._.,_!

,10,000 ITIJ'o, Down
• ~ Cnno Goo F...,... l'I,OOU

Refreshments

• STU, Down l'lcMi!r 1 811 01 Ani~
·Goo l.ap, r-or Flroolooo; 1
,-11,000
• E~,
Now -ITU,
" " 10Qoo
.........
, Noltnl Goo. Only, I Yw
• -yt lnolollllloli A-1111, 1-

w.,.

ISAAC'S AUCnON HOUS~
'
ANnQUE OR COUEcnBLE SALE
VINTON, OHIO
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1994,7:00 P.M. ;;
Directions; Approx. 95 mi. SE of Cols., Oh. Frorli
Cols. Take 235 to Chillicothe, 35E. to Rio Grande, tum·
left on 325N to Vinton, Oh.
The following Ia a partial llatlng, mont Hema ant
arriving dally.
. ·'
Four Poster Bed, late 1800's, Whis Bone dresser
w/swivel mirror and glove boxes, late 1880's 3 ·•
chest, oak wash stand (original paint), 6 board blanket
chest, Hoosier style cabinet, child's roll top pigeofl'!
hole desk, oak table w/4 chairs + extra leaf, 4 dl':l
chest, oak swivel chair w/cast iron base, 4 matching,
oak dining chairs, early I 900's wood + screen fold-ujl
baby play pen, old wood medicine chest, oak sldl,!·
board, small parlor table, S.T.P. wood child's calf~
Burled walnut table w/Bome' base, Pre-owned estal(
jewelry, all gold setting; 1/5, 1/4, and 1/2 ct. diamon!f
rings (all items guaranteed by owner lo be as
described), 1927 Coke tray (w"er serving Coke)·~
American Art Works, 1984 Commemorative Big Bel!_r
Coke tray · (50th Anniversary of Big Bear Super
Markets on back), lots of Depression glass, Fenton,
Camival, Westmorelimd Carnival- Butter dish, kitten
plate (w 3 kittens), Cream+ Sugar, footed bowt,Punch ,
bowl, chlcken·on-nest, Imperial Carnival Pitcher w/6
glasses, Chocolate slag tooth pick holder, Toby mugs,
Child's punch boul w/6 cups, Cobalt, Ruby, Fire King,
Federal, Watt 'apple" creamer, glass powder box, Aunt
Jemima items. pickle jars (one unusual size), Hall T·
pots, glass string holder, Pig bank, New Hand-Stitched.
Quilts, Deering caSt iron implement seal, ' Metal
Masteo' toy bus, Cast iron Overland Circus Wagon,
(wlhorse + driver), lhe following Cast iron toys:
motorcycle + driver, tee cream bank (Pat. 1875), mask,
electric Jack Straws game, Griswold Skillets, Griswold
Santa Clause + Rabbit cake molds, cast iron lamb
cake mold, msny Sad irons, miniature cast "on skillets
(one adv. NKerex tablets), large hunting traps,Wagn
Aluminum T·Kettte (Pat. 1902), milk strelner.
Aluminum lunch bucket, double shoe last (halllf held)
Pepsi bottle opener, SmRh Bros. wash boardr
'TeeDee' kraut cutter, flour sifters, greters, lots of o
kRchen utensils; wood juggling pins, Darsqn wooa,
paddle, sliver plated kems, lots of granite Kerns, canc~t
making thermometer, feed sacks, Mohr's cigar boii
(Gallipolis Ferry W. va.), roller razor, cuff links+ tie:
pins, 'Weste_
n l" metal clock, 1946 Unlvelllity of DaytO!)'
Yearbook, antique magazines (40's+ SO's), aU types
ball cards, jewelry, Westem Flyer bicycle, Are Chi«
pede I car, Redlo Flyer wagon, Ohio Valley ,MFG 1~
gauge shot gun (1900), KKK kr1He, Pring 'lear!" La .
at Bar, Currier and lves print, Hand painted
painting, (plate no. bloCks, stamps, and coins.
-,
AUCTIONEER FINIS "IKE" ISAAC
PHONE: 614 388 9370 AND 388 18110
LICENSED AND BONDED OHIO 137211
~·
TERMS: CASH OR APPROVED CHEQK , rNot Responsible .For Accidents Or Lost Items. •

..

5/8x4x8 Foil Face: $4.9S t:L

2''.-~"'"!~,:::~~i~~ Brown Storm Doors tn glass. Provcntial Bottom
JJt.i -·
1 YWaos:
WhktDool
Dryer "'-;J

:' DootiJIIIOI
rllnly,

"Mise:. Parts &amp; Tools"

B~

8. Penru!Sione Fibel)llass. Brick and Slone. ( 11"&lt;48") in white.
and beige. rust. Reg. S15.95 ea. pc. Now as low as $2.50 u.
for trailor uhdetpining.
9. New 1994 Oodge Van Bucket SealS. Gmy only. Reg.
NOW$49.95.
10. New Tractor, Boat, Fork Lift Seats (5 styles) From $16.95-1
$29.95.
II. Oak Kitchen c,_
binel Doon $1.00 ea. Hinges, Sell-Closure
pr.
U. Western Red Cedar Gable Ends House Vents.
OCIOgon, rec.) (Arched lOps) Reg.
13. Balh (Accessories) in Chrome. Brnss. While. ~······~·-·•
Cherry. Soapdishes. TOOihbrush Holders, Toile! paper holden.
Bars ( 18" 24" 30") Less lhan hall price. Eumple 30" U11SS 1owel
Reg. $15.95 NOW $3.99 Over 1000 in stock.
·
14. 5 pc . Tub wall kits in Almond nnd White, with shelves. 3
lo choose Irom $29.95 lo 59.95.
15. Brass t::nlrllJlce Locks. Special $59.95.
16. En1rance and Exit Door Panic Bnn;. Single Door $49.95.
$79.95 Double doo" $~.95 Reg. $199.95.
17. Keyed Enlmnce Lock Aluminium. Closroul. NOW. $1.99.
18. Keylon Gloss Enamel wilh Polyurnlhene oil in Gal. only and ·
Deep Red Reg. $18.95 NOW $5.95 or 4 gal. case $20.011
19. Krylon Clea1 Lacquer (Spray) (Brush) or (Wipe) Reg.
NOW$6.95. Case of6 gal. $.15.011.
20. White 11ppliance ~pray enamel exterior/i nterior 12 oz. cnn
NOW $1.2.5 or case or(6) $6.00.
Scn:&lt;"n Doors B Grade. Reg. $24.011 NOW $12.00

rr•·•--.

Saturday. .e.;ember 3, 1994

Cash

7. Penna R Foom Insulation

No
Hounhold fur.
~ 112 .... Jonloho Ad. Pl.
Pl. . WV, ool IOM1Io1410,

11............

~AFTER
t.lvlnto - I

PAINT PLUS
AI inlerseclion of Sand
Hill Road and Route 62,

ON RT.87

Point Pleasant

Balled snd Bur11ppsd T~ee~:

(Rooted)
White Pine • Blue Spruce

ALSO WHOLESALE ORDERS
AVAILABLE

BEAU11FIJL MODERN HOllE
In GaJDpolis· 3 bedrooms · 2 baths. A uniquely designed
I11IJt: level home With leatures RARELY sean in
conslrudion. Andelson Windows Thmughoulceiling tans, Laundry chut&amp;- Whole house exhaust system •
PhOne )8d&lt;s in every room. Property Tax ABATED for nell
14 yrs. means a great savings. Phone now for an
EXCLUSIVE SHOWING.
1713

SPECIES AVAILABLE:
WHITE PINE • SCOTCH PINE • BLUE SPRUCE • NORWAY SPRUCE
DOUGLAS RR • FRASER RR • VIRGINIA PINE • RED CEDAR
Notway Spruce

1

Reg. $169.95 NOW $89.95.
Amp. 40 Circut Elwrical Bo&lt;. $149.95. 15 or 20
single pole $1.99.
8' Auoresceni Light Bulbs New $3.95 Reg. $5.91. Case of
$45.011. u..d $1.011 ea.
25. White Melal Ceiling Gaids and Cross Tees and Wall
tO% discoun1 Example 2'tee 79e lee. $1.2.5.
26. Cabinel and furniture Board. In oakwood grain. Black
walnul. cherry 5/8, 3/4 thick 4' and 5' wide. 8' and 12' 1ong. 20¢
It Example 5'&lt;8'•40 sq. n. $8.00 B grade. 2.5 pes and up
per pc. discounL
27. Nails All Sizes and Discriptions Good Discounls. Example

Pollet Ne~il 501b. Bo~~:. Reg. $Z9.95 NOW $6.95.
18. f/8" and 114" Masonite underlayment board 24"x48'.

STANDS (Guaranteed for Life)
DISPOSAL BAGS fREE BAUNG SERVICE FOR HAUUNG
itACIPING tBOUGHS
(Charleston and farm only)
- 14" and 20"
(Handmade from Greenery From Our Farm
John
Owner (Silricullurill)
PHONE

BEAUTY IN BRICK

Well

...

~-

·I

(

-

bul" home, With 3 or 4 bedrooms, tan'!ly room, large

dinlna room, and kithen. NO WATER BILLS with a very
good well, County Water available. Shown by appointment.
Be the FIRST to see this home.
1722

CLAUDE DANIELS, Relllor· Ph. 381H1612
KENNETH AMSBARY, Relllor· Ph. 245-5855

595-3001

LEailli~ii'IMiilil51an
.... 446·7699 ., 446-9539

D. C. •111 Stitt, llu.
Cannelburg, Inc. 45719
Specializing in Pole
Buildings.
Designed to meet your
needs. Any size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Posl Buildings and
Package Deats . Save
Hundreds, even Thousands
of Dollars .
Local Sales Representative
,W~S L EY MULLET
141 BatlowRd .
Patrioi,Ohio 45658
PH . 614-256·6031

NEW LISTING - Need a
Medical or Dental Office?
Excellenl location wlpark·
ing. Building features lg.
waiting room, receptions!
and work area. 3-4 offices,
staff lounge, large deck in
area in back for some
peace &amp; quiet or a lovely
lunch . Be the first to see
this well planned bukilding.

NEW USTING - Let the income make
your payment. Lg. Duplex. One is rent~
ed, live in the other. Both feature 2 bedrooms, lv. room. Complete kttchen , one
car garge each. No outside main·
tenance. Jackson Pike area. Call for m
details.

Reat Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

4CITY LOTS
To build a new office or start
a new business. Also would
be ideal for residenti&lt;il. 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 kitoh·
en &amp; dining, area, pool, gas heat
Excellent neighborhood. Only $70,000.

NOWll:4J or laP.,.. SU.ecr.--n- -~ -~ - ~- - ~·~~·•

29, Steel Picnic table kits. White or block tops and seats.

lrarne Reg. S9.9S NOW 29.9S.
30. Pes of Plywood 5/8" X. 12'"&lt;48" 99t ea. or 40 pes $35.00.

31.Eimers Glue lor Parquel noors. Reg. $16.95 gal. NOW $8.95
2 gal C/ISt $17.00.
32. Pressure treated post caps. Large sizes traditional style
$4.95. NOW $2.50 ea.

33. Truckers Nyldn Webb Belling. 4" wide 2l' lo JS'Iong. 1200 I
leSI Reg. $24.95 NOW $7.011
.
34. New shipmen! ol wall paper. All double rolls. All pretla&lt;lted I
Vinyls, Vinyl coated, scrubbable. OVer 2000 rolls in
$12.00 to 15.00 roll. NOW $6.00 lo 9.00 a' roll. 5 rolls and
10% olf.
35. All Iabrie in Slock at 15% off Example Reg. $6.95 NOW
cottons. velvets, flannels, holiday prints clc. much more,
36. ChriSima&lt; hems. Wrenlhs (Deco haiS) OrnameniS, Bns,kel!;,l
Silk Poin,.cttns. Holly. Bolos. Hell Buckels.
more.

·Brl~k Raneh In Mini Condition· Very well
cared for home offers the lamily everything it
could need. Features include parquet lloors _in
entry and dining room. _3 bedtooms. 2 full

baths, living room, attract1ve ki1Ch~n an~ 2 car

garage. Larg_e back patio. Famtly onented
neighbolttood. _
$66.500
1222

l ......WWJIWWJii51/4~~i!J:iiWJ~l:a~L...J

STRETCH THE VALUE OF YOUR DOLLARS
in this su~prisingty affordable 3 bedroom, 1 112
bath ranch 011 a large level lot. Vinly siding will
keep maintenance to a minimum. Better be an
eager beaver and call Loretta loday. Priced at
$58,500.
1504

Real Estate General

·~11,,411101

:10'•IIOIMr IIIII ....
_., -.1800.
:»tll23211.

:Antiquo -

T.V. b -

11441~-e~:rt.

: ~. . . . . lOp,

.....
Nl.-

:AliT..,
llobMe a DouiiiTWidl
·11om a 1.,1 Wa C.rry A Com. ...... 8locll

Good tocationll 2+ acl81 3

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

•
- lorloo
Caoo Sltld
: .._
L.GIIcllr, 1111
exc cond,
304o
, ~1ftor B:OOPII.

:a
inoto ,Condlllan, 1200,

Wood Realty, Inc.

01

mit.a from Gallipolio. Cozy 3 bedt110111 home

446-106~6

Allen C. Wood, Realtor/Bro r-446·4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Bro er·446·0971
Mose Canterbury, Realt -446·3408
· Jeanette Moore, Realtor· 56-1745
Tim Watson, Realtor-446-2027

114-

,~ 441-118.
_

rOll' own
::r,...no,.. 112.
out. ..... -oil .. Avolloblo 1112WW7
O.kll•• ~ GUt

-

IH-4-10-11 only, 114-ID-

Pot'!~~~ and ohotr, 2llmpl,

11tii:IIIMI.

1110.

I:NIIIIollo ........ llod. ...
oontl1lon, 114 . . ...
«11 oleo: I ...... lloohll-,

-

Coldllon,
Tile .... .....
-..-; "' Tile ...... lloiJill;
. . . llltM Bod Or
In Cloilol. 1 II 1111: Othor
1M TOJ!Oo . Ill Thlnl

I

'

nl

llrllllltl!ll•
('

•...,..... .,._..,_

acre. Room tor another mobile horile with own

septic , water and electric hook ups·.
Outbuilding . Located on Hannan Trace Road.
$t5,300
f100

Building . 3 retail units and 3 residentia l
apallments privide excellent 1ncome. Access to
all the rental units from the rear alley and
municipal parking lot. Call Dave for more
inlormation.
1229

A ..':':-·

,._ .._kn tor on Aulo

-

" KEYSTONE
' to the Do,vnttlwn
Business Dislrictl Here's an opportunity to own
one olthe largest buildings in the heart of the

.2
an

downtown business district- The, Lupton

·u. -

.• ot,.,d, hlah

NEW USTING! Good Rental
bedroom mobile horne situaled on .92

ti11111horn!

' 12liEER Hall P - And ,..,..
:And llallllo Fur·Wlft
l'lnlnclng
.Avellllllo Cal _ . . •HIIIno Haollna I~ AII14......... 0r~Aoll
Tile Eftllll!e .......
·Woll , .WV
,_
Thol Uooo
.llo Elo otllclty.
0102t2.

-.--.

tocalld in • family o!Mnted neighborhood.
Extllt include woodbumer and beck dock.
Euily alloldolblo II $-13,000.
Ml4

.HOME ON RACCOON CREEK· 3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
living room, dining room, kitchen, 2 car garage located
on approximately 1 1/2 acres more or less. Ctly
Schools. CALL TO SEE!
'
HOME ON RACCOON CREEK FOR SALE· 2
bedrooms, a bath, 2 decks, new roof, electric heat, t 1/2
acres. more or less. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.
HOME FOR SALE· 3 bedroom home, hardwood floors,
ceiling fans. fire place with Insert. 20 1 24 garage and
much more, city school - ~LL TODAY
HOUSE, 8 ACRES .....IRE OR LESS, ~ocated in
Lawrence Co., 2 bedrooms, living room. dining room.
kitchen, bath, lg. garage 24x40. CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT!!!
LOT IN GREEN TWP. FOR SALE· 156X100 city water
and sewer, electric to pole level. Priced '$14,000. CAll
FOR INFORMATION.
·
NEW USTING· 2 homes located on approttlmately 1 112
acres. One home has 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths,
living room, dining room, t~mlly, kitchen. One home has
8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. living room, kit_
chen,
family room. Both_have rursl,water, LP gas Furnace, and
more. Call for appOintment to see.
HOME FOR SALE • 3 bedrooms, bath, living room,
tamlly room, kftchen. fenced In back yard. PRICED AT
$45,000.00
I
VACANT LAND • Approximately 10 acres located 011
Bob McC01mlck Rd. Call for more lnlormatiOn.
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
' 1.aD().894.1066

m

HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS· And your
heart will tell you lo make this house your
home. Remodeled 1 1/2 story home includes
all the charm ol yoor grandmother's home--just
updated! 3 bedrooms, living room , eat-in
kitchen and dining room. Bonus: large block
building with potential lor many uses. $52,000
. 1214
25,000 SQ. FT. OF WAREHOUSE SPACE!
Located only 3 miles from Interstate 35 on a
stale highway. Several loading docks and
ramps. Very nice office spat:e (5 offices) and
conierence room. 2 baths. Many possible uses.
Approx. 7 acres ol llat land. $175.000. Call
David Wiseman.
M213
CXlUNmY RANCH lm1gino living in tho
oountry. "-» &amp;quiet. llloutilul roling hiltido
oconory. But not loo far. Only 5 minultl to
Holar and .tlopplng.1 Smoll lwnity orienlld
nolghbolhood. Thil tpll:ioul home 0"-rl it d .
I bodroomo, 3 baft1, ~ flllnily room with
woOcl»umer, NmOtillld kitch«1 and mo,.. It
vou'N 1 hllndy 111111 or IIOid extraiiOrag. you'I
love 1111 outbuildlngo • 24x32 polo bam l 12
x11 workohop. Plu1 largo 24130 drivo-lhru
giii'IIQO. Homo In gre11 canditlonl Gr"n
oclloolt. 1114,500
1221

OWNER WANTS tT SOLDII Very nieo ranch
sttlo homo in lamily oriontod noighbortl&lt;xxl. 3
bedrooms, large family room, 2 ~r garag&lt;~ .
Located in Groen School D1stnct. Larga
covered patio to enjoy. Fenced m yard.
Outbuilding. $69,900
1201
RODNEVI 3-4 bedroom
home lpcated on Cora Road offers a large tot
with finished outbuilding (currently used as a
guest house). living room with woodbumer and
oat-in kitchen. Nice dock. Large yard . 1 car
garage with workshop . $49,900
1209
CHARMING CAPE CODI Here's an
dutstanding 3·4 home that's 1n beaulilul
conditiOn. Features include an outstanding oak
kilchen looking over the best back yard deck
around . 2 lull baths . both remodeled in
excellent taste . Large living room with
-attractive fireplace, 2 car garage and full
basement. D011't we~ to call because believe
me, It won't last long. Call David.
1211

~...,EMAN

NEW LISTING! Don'! Nix It, Fl1 Ill ' This
home localed on LeGreande Boolevard needs
some work, but ala price ol $49,000, you can
afford to do the work. Offers 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, large kitchen plus office space currently
rented. Bonus features include a new root and
brick exterior. You can't alford not to call
Carolyn today.
1600
Mind Your Own Bu•ln... at Homell Catch
up on olfice wollt or teiaull !Mdina in tho
priv.cy of 1111 tiUdy white tho nlll of flo fomily
golhora around tho fireplooo in tho t.miy room.
'thi• 3 bedroom. 2 bllh randl with 2 ear
alltoc:hod gorago o"-ro plentt of iving ..,... lor
1M growing fomily. Call lodoy for on
appoinrnont 10- t&gt;is Rio G~ homo
priced II $50,1100.
.
1501
,.....,..... Ate E~l OVer 14,000 oq. ft.
of ollico, warollou• &amp; gorago ..,... Noally 1
1/41C11 of land in tho heart ol town·...., 322'
ol .._lnlntooo on two di"-11nt 1111011. OVer
21 ,OOO:=fl.of porttina ..,..._ l,luch, much
IliON.
In very good ll!*r. Call Dave

formo,.

·

REAL ESTATE, INC.
446-3644

M

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENl)RE USnNOS
PICK UP THE FREE QUALITY HOliES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS,
RETAIL STORES, SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS.

Lontta •Dade • 446·7729
Sonny Garn11 • 446·2707

Carolyn Wasch • 441·1 007

•

I -

P.ll.. . . -

Nulling License 146

6. Bamsiding No . 1. pine 6" wide V groovecenter match.

PICKENS FURNITURE
Nolllllood

Pub~·c Auction

.,_

Groove Edge 14" and 16"1ong. (16 $4.98) (14 $4.2.5).

~ out lulovlllo Ad.

Public Sale

"Mise:."

•

----.,

ing, business development and liaison to
physicians, 3rd pany payors and case
manager. PrQIIen healthcare marketing/
sales abili1ies and knowledge of third party
payors are essential. RN or clinical background preferred.

Malernll grendp1r1n11
. . Undo and John Carlon,
Polaobll, OH 1nd Phil 1nd
Fl'lln Molllly, Pomeroy,
Patoirn•l gr1ndp1ren1o
INihllola 1111 ind T -

Houses lor Rent
Bod,_ 137Wo. Pluo
And - - . 114-

HelpWBntad

This full-time position involves patient
screenings as well as community market-

1 daughtor, J1mte Lyn,
April 3,1184 II Womon'o.
Child"'"''
Hoop It 11,

Roon1,

41
2

$19.95.

~·
homo lwnmtllolllnao."""-oo
_ , - . . . .. .... 114-4{&amp;.

Step bumper for Ford or Chev., Truck tool box, 350
Chev. car parts, L. F. Ford truck door, 2 13: 78 Chev.
4 w/drive wheels 6 lug, New Fuel pumps for \957-5~~
Ford Edsel still in boxes, 1992 up Ford lhrottle bod:r
fuel injections &amp; 3 cyl. intake, Micky Thompson, 6().
ser!es (S!!eet) raci!!g tires, Pon\iac 301 block, 71·7
Monte CarJOlfeader panel/gr11f, f914~77 ie8rCamarlf
Louvre, Chcv. starter, Flexplates, blocks, head,
intake, manifolds, flywheels,.clutchforks &amp; Etc., 70·
73 Camaro bumpers, 73 Camaro front underpanel 4
fenders, Hyd. Floor Jack, New D.A. sander, Paint
spray gun, toque wrench, Set truck mirrors, Camping
lights, Proto 1/2" ratchet, vibrator sander (like new);_:
Pipe wrenches, Hand tools &amp; Etc.
·•

175-S431.

~05.

The family of Roger
Thalli would like to
express their sincere
gratitude to those who
assisted In any way
during his lllneu and
following his death.
Spacial thariks to
neighbors and frlenda
who visited or brought
food, Rev. Ken Baker,
Recine Emergency
Squad, Dr. Witherell, ·
VMH nursing staff,
Home Health nursing
ataff, Senior Citizens
home cara aldet
Alzhelmers DIHIH
Support Group and
~Wing Funeral Home.
~ Your words and cllldt
1 _: of klndnetl were
• •
I
· gr..tly appraclatid

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

$3CIO
Rood,

rvlllo
J04.f7S.S030
oolllnf-- ,. " ' · - or

c!l~~=~
Upollo, un 45131, Phono: 114-

The family of Myron
O'Neill, would like to
thank everyone who sent
flowers, food, cards,
visited, called or helped
in any way during the
illness and death of our
loved one.
A special thanks to
Rev. Larry Hall, Rev.
Merideth Turley, Gene
and Lola Johnson ,
pallbearers , 4 East
Holzer Hospital, Willis'
Funeral Home, and all
donations.
Your kindness will
never be forgotten.
Norma Jean &amp; Howard
Sister &amp; Brother

F....Dollooll On$300111o.
Cloy Ch8pol

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

e~~"'~~fnf=

8

DoubiiWidT
......
- . • s Ulhllloo, 2114-4414110.

FuiiJ
Gollillollo
ForrY. =-~,..
or 1711-(o71.

cartons.
S. Crete Boss. Premium Acrylic Latex Concrete . Sealant.
driveways and sidewalks, patios (5-gal buckets) Reg. $64.00

LAYNE'I FURNITURE

..

TWo todrOOIII

Pte"-- 8oriCI RotUmt To:
-'Willi. Dlroetor 01 Humon

We would like to
thank the family,
friends, and everyone
In the community for
their kindness, food,
'flowers, cards and
prayers during the
Illness and loss of our
husband, father and
grandfather.
A special thanks to
Rev. Curfman, Gallia
EMS, Veterans Hos·
pital and Waugh·
Halley-Wood Funeral
Home.
The family of Paul
Raymond Layne

-- ··*'*"

"""' Or ... On Lend Col*oot 2
3113 EvM11ngo.
8 1 ~ NIIUNI Ou FurINOTICEI
Now 1115 Aodmon 141M, 2 Bod- MOT. In CIIIIDolla.11t ttl 2001
otiO VAI.LIY PUILISHINQ CO. room, Tolol Eloctrlc, Undorptn- O r - - - · ~~ P.ll.
NIIIIMI..... lhlll ~do bull- nlng. ANdy To llovo lnlo On
- ' ... IIIObtlo In
..h ....... you..._ IIIII eomor Lol Pork Lone llobllo Tlvoo
l'cmonlf,
2 lui 1111111 gorNOT 10 ollici~~~C~MY t!RUiiltiho COUrt. Phone 11t 4tl 1101, 114- don
IUD, now ooopol, nliioly

limo And Pill Tlmo
...,......Canlon,olorllo,-- PooiUono In Tile Obolllrlco And
... l molnlononco lobo. For Clltlcol ea.. Arou 4vollablo For
tlllm ln-I!Ht OIMI IHflg.
Uon ..u 711W14-- m.·1MI.

Cllrd of Thanks

•

Whirlpools (Tubs)· While and Colors (Ovals) (Comers)
!r~~:.~~~aboul 50 pes. in Slock 50% off Reg. rclail; F.xiunple,
$6~.95. Staning prices $3~.95
One and Two Pieces. Over I 000 pes. in stock.
Example I pc. top of che line Gcecn Ice Reg. $Z99.9~i.l
$89.95. Slaning Prices $49.95 lor col..-.
Load of Glue·CauU:ing -Si licone Great Prices (Siliconel
(29 oz. Drywall Glue .50) Over IS different types. Deals

.Canloll ~In llodiii.OO 1111
11117 N. 114-

tal tor
clooooll.
Rl ,.
lid. .·~~g~~~.

- troller In
l'cmonlf -2 114 11112 11011.

APPLIANCII

·= . . . . .

-

For -

l

- ~~·-"";;i,,.

ar.,oll-..tc.
- • *-·
AC, no polo, ..._._ :104-ns:

Will Do ...... Cl::'tL
llondoy 1171 Schu" 141170 S l o d ThN Frtdoy, 1 1 4 , Aftor 1 112 hlho, W-mii!IJ
7P.II.
ilo """''"Dill&gt;. :r -!_'lOot,
Undorplnntna.
Good I'On&lt;llllon, To Bol.
IM-44&amp;-114S Aftor 4:30 Wlcdyo,
Anytlmo Wkondo.

UllD

- l i l t ' . . - - . - ·- -

..... QuliiJ flws .... 1954

. ~~• .;lr""'ol~

l..ooltlon.t1t . . . .

"WI flood Llollngo" , _ ....
U1 I ... I you ONintorooloil In

Nor••

Hotlllhold
Goods .

Ilc'...ie-.;~

........, ....... Of ....., Grn.w flws •• 1111 ,,.._

LOCATIONS:

.: : : :.........-. hlltaab•d
. 311U7Wn!.

2IAT-.In~­

31 Homes tor Sale

Evontnao,ll-? P.ll. 114-440..804.
NEEDED -EDIATELY
ATTENTION POIIERO't: polloi.

:1

.....

2 lldroom lloiiUe Home In
mt.
. ··~• 114-441ChMhiN, 11t ...

Plolno, -

Bowmtn'l

. 5I

GOOD

IIlii.

114-

.....,.. Wost Vlrglnlo~ T,. •IIOriadon
llomblr Notktnol Chriotlnoo T,. AIK Wloo1

tir.)~ILt:l) LOT AT THE FARM

71111.
•
NIDI 2 ITcioon" 4 112 lllil
From Golllpolle, CitY Set-,

llllll!d+tZIGIIIo. liD - · •

Mobile Homes
fOr Sale

Llcanse WV014211

r.l erchandtse

~

• - llllfllaolll"!,_ Wow F•

a.. lnlllor, -

iUndlca~lng Contractor

001•

for Rent

11111 Land1la 12dtl, hordwood
1'-', high grodo pontllng,
birch coblnoto, now lllo In kllcll
•concl.,
bot'!HUQU,
.. .!'~304-871-2321.
coiUna 1111, uc.

Opportunity

-April-

Mobile Homes

-.~.·!!"'·sa
_..., .._

32

'!'
Nw a ...
,.,.,.,_,.Willi
Cantrot.,f.t
Tile lleoll OIOolllpoflo,

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

54 . . . ......,...
Me!Chinellie

.........
~. =· :-::...:.. '!!!;

'

(RMiing Ou.lit, r,.. Since 19541

0783.

. -Talol In lllodom FIN
. """" llda. Colllonlo Hoo. 11t . . . . Orl1t 411 2IG.

Dtpoo11 R qulrod,

......_
..._..

In MASON COVN1'1'

1 ...... Ollloo lulto Wllh

••o. =.

no._

knowllngly acoep1
advertisements for real estate
'Nhich Is in vkllallon of the law.
Our rea~ers are hereby
lntonned that all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are avallal&gt;'e on an equal
opportunity basts.

muug•

Space fOr Rent

:=::'l=-

homo,

This newspaper will not

1-.
1134170 oolc tor April ., .....

Business

.-a

-.
pol8, dopooll roqulnod,
114-1124010.

42

And W1na
on-.
Ptlil
hliiOO' Wlil Bocrollco F« noo
o o, 4 llomho 01c1. 814-4411-

___ _

54 Ill c1llan80ul
Men:MIIIIII

CBRISTMAS TUIS
Hlcltcrr HIU Bock Chol• Wllh

Unlwnlohod 2 t J -

llmllal/on or discrimination
baSed on race, ooto1, rattglon,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
· make any such preference,
11mna11on or dlscnmlnatlon.•

Protl11laOII TrM 8ervlal T.
ping I Tllmllllng Hodao Tllli&gt;mtriil Stump llolllrMI F110 bllmll•l 114 311 MtS, ..._.,.

21

.

from SANTA'S JOUST

TWo """'- on povod
hlahwlly, Boolloll, E.LS.O, I I 1 CGn .......... 1ft CJII.
t22fliiWO, pluo dopooll, · - - llpalll. t:S7Itlllo.. 114·1·
'1143.
1111411711.

Real Estate

.....,_,. llodlcol 8&lt;/pply, 70
Plno 111-. Golllpollo, &lt;Ill 44131.
Noocl Bobyolllor F« Toddle&lt; 4
~ IWMIA.
alllr. C.u

pluo

.114-~

Rooms

•

:Ma40 - - luldt'&amp; l'or

Roclno -114-11112 5111

AI Loool 2 y.,. EloorlonM
w~ dommonouroto With ExDorlonco. EOE.
lioN Or Hand 0.11* Aooumo

112.21111r.

Rlolnearu..,.••••

eo.

Sunday

FUi'nllhed

pluo

MCWfty,~lA.

IIIIIIWIIIIindt, tro!Mik .........
Tltlo n -lltod, llolflo

:z,.rocuoo, Ohio 4171'1, • - ·

Ex.....,_, 11 Alllo To c::: oldllod ~ loollly.
Drf.. •
"?.:-"""~~ To EOE. CoroHo- of Pl .......nl.
AI. I, Box 321. Pl • ...._,., WV
Ex,.-,
-LPN To Bo CUolcon1r Sorvl..

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

__
....,... •
-dopoolt,no
oond.,,...
.......
!"!!!.•.!!!.

Polholaglol

' W.nlod To Buy: Junk Autoo
Or 'WIIhrul llolon. Call
: LMy Uvoly. 114 311 1101.
~ -

v...
l!lp
o --i\:onnorty
·
WllhEllloll
App"
-). N,15
Ex-..1 child ...... ..........

ll;!~'!!!!d~ZI

pully

lo
ldontlf¥,
_....
.....Cllognooo
_ ... lind
tor

E l p o - - l n d artl-,.....,_,IIUII
hovo -1111,
Cal Chilo,
IIMII· - loonl
ond - ol llonbll
ollho ..
....
County
Aolor34M -11onHipm.
dol~ol
l)lt.

,. -

1A1110 I bod,_ torm - .

Help Wanted

:• on
·114-14M21:t.
11100 ond lond
I30Q I month,
Qld c!gonlll1 ~~g-., milk bol·
tloo1_}iiunloln pono, olt...ore,
....,_., .._ . ... ~noo,
w... 1nd 81or Troli l - ;
' Ooby llollln, 1114-11141.

Elllln'l Porto • aorvtoo. za·
T1llnl Av..,..,, . _OalllpoQo, Ott

1:8

.

Ott-Point Pleasant, wv

"-cion · Cl'ook
FrontL.ooolod Rlthl 011 211, a.IIIDollt. Pod!- To: fii.OOO Or
lilt Olltr, l14o44l-a12.

Port·'llmo l.oundry Aide Noodod.
AIIIIIY AI P I - - C... Cantor,

: 77HS43 ...

• W.nl lo buy -

4 I•• oaat, I FWI latt.1 10

45

Apartment
for Rent

ac,... tsarn; • ..,. lulldtnao,

All real astate advertising In
this newspaper Is subjecllo
lhe federal Fair Housing ACI
ol 1968 wtich makes k Hiegel
to advertise ~any preference,

1111 " " - - Drive, OoiUj&gt;ollo,
Ohio.

44

Houaea tor Rent

41

; November 27,-1994

·November 27, 1994

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

II

�nme....Sentlnel
Mlece!laneoua

54

November 27,1994

Nove!Jlber 27,1994

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

~~

71 'Auloa for Sale

1 I I I 1

-_.,,... -·
-,.. ""' - -a..,,.,.,...,-...
::o.-·""'

.

} t F1 i 1I
1

0

..

11467- EXCELLENT LOCATION, DAIRY
BAR BUSINESS· All equipment stays, bldg.,
approx. 624 sq. ft., 3 half baths, elecl.
heaVcenl. air, city water.
DEBBIE DRIVE-EVERYONE SHOULD
OWN A NEW HOME AT LEAST ONCE. This
2 story beauty features 3 or 4 br's, 2 baths,
beamed callings in the LR &amp; family nn, cheny
cabinets in kitchen, 6 in. outer walls &amp; much
more. Fantastic vtew.
11482- $25,00~ Just minutes from town,
used for rental property now. 3 BAs, bath,
FA, kitchen. DR. gas heat.
story home, living room, kitchen, over sized deltacl1ed
2 car garage. FA electric furnance. Additional mobile
home hook-up. Must call today for an appointment!

64 ACRES- mil, Comer of Woods Mill and
SR 554, has a really nice homesite old bam,
.lots of privacy yet close to school and other
activities.

1558
LOOKING
FOR A HOME THAT YOU CAN
AFFORD? Then Call Cheryl to see this one! 1 1/2
story with 3 bedrooms, bath, living room, 12'x24'
detached garage, 30'x30' log building. Approx. 1 acre
lawn.
1697

EXECUTIVE BUILDING LOTS. 5 minutes
lrom Holzer, all 5 acres or more.
1427· EXTRA NICE HOME ON ST. RT. 7
SOUTH· 3 BAs, LR, FR, dining area, full
basement, garage. Call today!
'
1419- JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD- Addison
Twp., 386 acrelann, 3 ponds, tobacco base,
44x1 00 barn with concrete floors. May
consider split. (578)
14n- LARGE BUILDING WITH LOTS OF
OFFICE SPACE AND GARAGES FOR
TRUCKS .. .frontage on Third Ave. and Grapa
Street. Call for details.

Real Estate General

COURT STREET RESIDENCE· Older home
has 2 sep. units or could be converted back
to 1 family dwelling. Faces city park.

OFFICE 992-2886

BLAZER ROAD· Ranch horne, 3 BAs, 1 112
baths, LR, kitchen, 16 x 28 garage. River
Valley school district.
1429-0FFJCt;!l, OfFlC"~' OFFICES- Thafs
what this 3,000 sq/ft. building offers. Located
on SR 160 near Holzer. Ideal for many uses.
Call for more lnfonnation.

-- p
-

1452· RIO GRANDE· 1 112 story brick home
offers 4 brs, 1 112 baths, LR, FR, DR, full
finished basement, affached garage. Call for
more details.
1445- VINTON AREA ...Very nice brick v.
home, LR, FR, kitchen, DR, HP, cent. air,
garage and unattached garage. Rental
house on prop.
LIVE IN ONE AND HAVE THE INCOME
FROM THREE MORE· each unit has 2
apartments .Facing city park with all the
conveniences of in town living.
1431- Approx. 5 acres with frontage on
Raccoon. beautiful shaded lot, house has 3
BR, bath, LR, kitchen, large unattached
garage. Offers a lot of prlvacy and peace &amp;
quiet
1432· MOM &amp; POP OPERATION FOR
SALE- Small restaurant with two rental
houses. Property is located in Oak Hill, Call
for more details.
1409- Four lots, 4 BR home, reduced to
$44,000, 2 baths, LR, OR, full basement gas
heat/cent. air. Corner lots.
'
1405- NEED A NEW OFFICE + A RENTAL
APARTMENT? 250 Set Ave. Nice office
downstairs and apartment and storage up.
Convenient to banks and shOpping.

33 ACRES- MIL corner of SR 325 and
Woods Mill Road, recreational land only
$16,500.
ATTENTION
DEVELOPERS AND'
INVESTORS... EXTRA NICE PIECE OF
PROPERTY LOCATED NEAR PORTER ..
Large lake with lake front sites, mobile home
on property at present time, county water,
entire tract consists of 77 acres, mil.

NEW LISTING 1 YR OLD LOG HOME·
Sports approx. 2700 ll'l· ft of living area: solid
wood walls, floors &amp; ceilings: extra large
rooms: wrap-around deck; part basement;
anached garage &amp; 2 barns, located at gage
on a sprawling 4.2 acre tract. $165,000.

..........
!'!lolngJ, -

camperea
Molor t1ome1

For
Chester 1\vp., Pomeroy Pike, 3BR,
1 Bath, BSMT Electric heat, wood
stove in BSMT, county water on
7 ac. $80,000 (614) 286-4686.

;'._•.,:'"'I.,.:::A::R::r:r::v==E:=:I.
~ ~~:-~lete
1 _6 Ill I j I V
·.__...1_
•
.
•
•
•
you

the chuckle quoted
by filling In the mlalng words
develop from step No. 3 below.

r r r r,r r r-r r r r
~ C:l I I I I I ~H~ I I I I I
1·

- See Answer to S~ram-Lets on Page D-4tl Autoa for Sale
71 AutoS for Sale
71 Autos for Sale
odod:"'ll
Cllew)'
llalbu no.z, _,., ........... _S..,TIIIoo, ....lnlloe
lnlwlar,1.............. ~ PW, PI, - . , -~ ·-ton, Inti, Ill, ~ , _ P1ario1r tiNil, llldntl - - - .
.
!, :... lor:.
aw,.~or · . . Fill
I.L I.W.I.
30W1Htl7.

1447- OAK HILL, former clothing
store ... $27,900, corner lot. Gall tor more
infonnation.

-=----.,_,MOO.

1453- OHIO RIVER PROPERTY located at
end of White Avenue off Garfield. Several
lots $20,000.

114-

=-

-- ....
==

c

iliii.

1tlr '=Tl .... """" whoot
r:.~-~
.. ... 1210.
. ::;
...u OJL. 4 ~" : .

!'ldo.u,

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

.

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ................. 388 8828
WILMA WILLIAMSON, REALTOR .........441-o&amp;32
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR ...................446-1897

r-:\ /-=.awm

._.,tyu, - . OJ'
~ ~•

LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR .................. 446' 8808
PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR ................. 245-9575

·

~

CJP
"-::?f:eat' eJJta/e,

'

$31,500 84 acres, Morgan Twp, vacant land.
Possible fannilg land or recreational land.

Real Eatate General

..

1114t UNIOUE BEAUTY • The remar1&lt;able spaciOUS hOme
willl vtew or the county. naJian tile foyer. cathedral ceiling

Henry E. Cleland ...... 992-2259

with balcony, 3 BR . 2 1/ 2 baths . living room with

-ming fireplace . equip. kndlen. breakfast rpom has
a lg. window, stereo speakers throughout. brass light
lixtures and much more. 2 car attached garage. anic
storage , 2 acres mA. This house is maintenance 1ree o1

Brinager ...........949-2439

Kathy

ea ty, .Inc.

PRICED REDUCED! Located in Chester·
This quaint home features 2 bedrooms,
bath, basement, attic space. hardwood
ttoorlng, NGFA heat, TPC . Watar, located
on SR 248 Is close to grade school. Has
nice back yard .
ASKING $29,900

(jive V.s .9l Ca[[. ..

NICE RENTAL OR STARTER HOME,
LOCATED NEXT TO GALUPOLIS. Affordable
at $35,000. 1 112 story home with vinyl siding.
Living room, dining room, kitchen, 3 bedrooms,
1 112 baths. 2 car garage.
11720

Instruments

CHESHIRE· l'hird Street- A story frame· with
bedrooms, finished basement, one bath, front and side
porch, storage building and big lot.
$38,900

•

Fruits&amp;

:

veqeblel
Farm Supplres
&amp; Livestock

RACINE-SA 124· Wa~ till you see this 3 bedroom home
w~h beautnul hardwood floors in living room, a detached 2
ear garage w"h a one bedroom apartment over the garage
all sitting on approx. 5 acres. .
$85,000

....

10

\

Uv..todt

eo- ..... c- ..,IGO, 114-

. . 1311._ I P.M. .fP.IL
'

If

LOOK THIS ONE OVERt A very nice home
built in 1977. Full two story &amp; 2 full baths. A ·
nice setting with a yard to enloy. Mcst of the
land is tillable and will raise good crops. Has a
tobacco base and timber lot Should be a good
hunting area, as well as Wayne National Forest
owns lots of land close by. County water for
house and a strong stream for farm. Call today
for a showing.
t710

$9,900

POMEROY- Willow Creek Rd. - Just off Rt. 7 &amp; 33 close to
Pamlda. It has 3 bedrooms, ranch with 2 bath, equipped
k~chen, heat pump, and detached 2 car garage on app·,x.
2 acres.
$58,900

JDIII0--·.10·11
I 'Pl. ,... Ina I • COnllllon,

83

REDUCED PRICE ON THIS TRACT OF
LANDt $$$-10 Acres! County water available,
city schools. Nice wooded setting. Make an
offerl
1634

HEMLOCK GROVE· Approx. 6 acres with two 1970
campers- one 16 11 and one 19 ft. and 2 more hook ups.
Also has concrete block lohn, electric on sije and sitched tor

weM.

'"

133 MIL VACANT ACREAGE- wooded land, .
super hunting land. Full of wildllfel
WESTVACO
NOT RESTRICTED FOR MOBILE HOMES!
1.207 acre lot · County water available. Paved
road frontage. Call today!
11695

POMEROY· Laurel Cliff Road- Have you always wanted a
mini farm? Well, here it Is, approx. 17.34 acre farm with
1979 Holly Park t4x70 mobile home wijh 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2
baths and Barn.
$45,000

Hav&amp;Graln

Tran sport'ltlon

7t AuiOI for 9M

POMEROY· Union Avenue- Make your start in rental
property or just make it your home . With this 2 story 2-3
bedroom home. ASKING ONLY $8,000
·
SYRACUSE· River View- This 1994 Fleming 14x56 has 2
9edrocms, one beth, garden tub, skylight, cathedral ceHing
rn LR, equipped kit., patio, and niCe lot.
$28,80o

Updated &amp; W~l Malnlllnedl Extra nice 1.5
story horne thafs been extensively remodeled.
Solid oak cabinets, 4 BR, dining area. family
room, 2 BA, newer electric heat pump &amp;
Andersen windows. Large front porch. 2 car
attached garage. ·
11711

SYRACUSE· A nice 3 bedroom ranch w~h some hardwood
floors, a mostly finished lull basement, w baths, a gas
furnace with central air newer porches, 2 car garage, and a
2 bedroom apartment wi(h large living room, and dining
room. Can be all used as one large home. Agent Owned.
.
$71,000

STOPIII PAYING THOSE
RENT PAYMENTS and get this 2 story older
home at 1021 Second Ave. 3 bedrooms, living
room, qlnng room, kitchen, 2 car garage. ~ew
carpeting &amp; mere. Don't delay caU today! 40 a.
·1717

MINERSVLLE- Approx. 3 acres with a 2 story home with
equipped kitchen, newer root, double front porch, washer,
dryer.
$21,900

LOOK $15,000 or meke an offer. Vinyl siding
home consisting of 2 bedrooms, living room,
bath, kitchen. Nice front porch. Level lawn.
·

...

an&lt;!

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

REDUCED TO $49,100.00 RANCH &amp;
ACREAGE- 4 bedrooms, 1 112 baths, eat-In
kitchen, living room, basement. Newer
carpeting &amp; roof. 2.75 acre lawn. Owners want
eold, make them an offer!
11699

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker ..........................llll2-56112
~RENDA JEFFERS.....................................IIII2-3058
.JERRY SPRADUNG .......................... (304) 812-3488

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

.227 LARIAT DRIVEl Exoeptlonal 2,200 sq. ft.
ranch, vinyl siding, beautiful view. Large living
room and famHy room each with a fireplace. 3
bedrooms, 1 112 baths. Lots of cabinets in
kitchen, large dining area. Super location close
to hospital and shopping.
1715

TWO HOUSES! TWO LOTS! Situated in
Gallipolis. Live in one &amp; rent tha other. (1) 2
story home w/alum exterior, 4 BR, 2 BA, large
rooms, over 2.000 sq. ft. (2) 1 BR home. Call
for lnfonnation.
*709
REDUCED $$$- ROOMY MODERN 4 BR .
HOME· This one has plenty of extra space. 4+
acres, grassed. County water, well &amp; spring.
36'x70' barn. Extra mobile home hookup.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
1705
LOTS! TWO 4 acre tracts or owner would sale
one tract being approx. 8 acres. County water
available. Frontage along SR 325, Rio Grande
areal
11714

8 ACRES! RIVER VIEW! One story frame
home consisting of 3 bedrooms, living room,
dining room, kitchen, bath. Storage building.
Good hunting areal Call today for an
appointment! 40's.
1718
SECURrrY IS OWNING YOUR OWN HOME!
Ideally located close to Gallipolis. 712 SR 588.
Nice sized lot. Large- living room w/newer
carpeting newer roof, alum. siding, eat In
kitchen. WILL CONSIDER LANO CONTRACT
TO QUALIFIED BUYERI CALL FOR MORE
DETAILS!
1713
COMMERCIALII MULnPLE USE GALORE!
Ideal for many types of buslnessl Usting too
numerous to mention In this adl Call for more
lnfolmatton.
H83
SIMPLY BEAUTIFUU Really nice 10+ acres
(correcl amcunt of acreage to be determined
by survey), pond and 1992 14'x70' Mansion
mobile horne which conslsla of 3 bedrooms &amp; 2
bathe. City schoolS!
1686
· REDUCED PRICE TO $23,9t9.001 OVER 47
ACRES of woodland. Nice setUng to build a
rulllic llyfe home or place a mobile home on
paved ccunty road, county water avallablel

1633

OFFICE ........................................................ 812·2881

. I

I

ALL BRICK RANCH WITH GRACE &amp;
Executive. eomlortable 3 bedrms., 3 1/'2.
baths. Extr~_. large master bedrm. with bath, vanity, dressing area &amp;
closets. l~vitrng foye~ enlly, formal living rm. &amp; " ,i ning rm . Woodbuming
frreplace rn the family rm., Immaculate kitchen, Breakfast rm. with a
?JUntry _view. Also an all purpose rm. New carpet through-out, ceramic tile
tn the krtchen, new hardwood floors in the dining rm ., breakfast rm. and
fo~er. Heat: Elec. Heat Pump w/CA., also a whole house fan. Partial
finrshed basement w/shower bath and closet storage. New hot water
heater. 12.12 Acres MIL w/ a beautiful treed yard (23 Varieties) also and
Ev~rgreen Reserve for wild animals. Stocked pond for the sportsman .
Enjoy ~ wonderful new way of living in this suburban paradise. Call for
further tnformatron and pnvate showing.

Office- this home features 3
bedrooms, living room, family room, ceiling
tans CIA 'NGFA heat, front, back aM s1de
perches, basement. Some newer repairs in
home. Great starter home or a rental
i~vestmenl.
ASKING $28,000.

Don't pass up this brlckl Located at SR 588.
1.5 story home w/4 BR, 2 BA, LR, kitchen,
· large front porch. City schools! Convenient to
downtown Gallipolis.
1712

A GREAT PLACE TO SET BACK AND
RETIRE- Located in Middleport on
Hartinger Pkwy. This well kept 1. floor frame
home features 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, utility
room, fireplaces, newer FANG fumaoe.
Close to grocery store . Storage building
and fenced yard . ASKING $35,000 come
see ... May consider an offer!

ACREAGE·. 12 P.lus acres! Road frontage,
county water available. Nice homesite. te35
story ranch, 3 large bedrooms, dillng. room,
Nving room, kitchen; cathedral ceiling. 2 baltla
with skylights. Over 1 acre lawn. Electric heat
pump.
H17

-

VACANT GROUND ·in the Pomeroy areal
17 .912 acres located on Union Terrace.
Immediate posses•.'&gt;lonl This would make a
great building sltel
ASKING $25,000
LOTS OF SQUARE FOOTAGE IN THIS
HOME! Located in Longbottom. This two
story home with 1+ acre . has it all; 4 .
bedrooms, 2. baths, newer kitchen
w/appliances, sheds, bay window, dining
room, rental income !rom local Post Office.
river view, and some rlver frontage. It can
all by YOURS!
$45,000
QUIET COUNTRY SEmNGI 26.2+ acres
on Nicholson Hill Rd. 3 bedrooms, bath,
bottle gas heat, appliances, dug well,
~heds, hills, woods, large garden space.
nice pond.
$35,000
RACINE· IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
1987 Clayton modular located on a corner
lot Is close to everything! Features 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, ASKING $26,500 come
see ... make an offer.

acrils:

Low· malnten•nce home (brend new), One

OWNER WANTS AN OFFER -NOWIII MAKE
AN OFFER AND YOU JUST MIGHT BE
SURPRISED!· Great business comer of Third
Avenue and Cedar Street. 2 story brtckllrama
building, upstairs used as 2 rental· units each
consisting of 1 bedroom, llvtng room, bath &amp;
kitchen. Downstalre
U88CI
one lide
as beauty shop other lide
sq. ft. vacant. Call for
ASKING PRICE $48,900

RACINE· 2 story frame home with LOTS
OF ROOM! 4 bedrooms, bath, hardwood
floors, FANG heat, front/side porches,
garage, nice size yard, cellar. fireplace.
close to EVERYTHING ASKING $40,000

•WANT THE FEEL OF COUNTRY·
WITHOUT BEING WAY OUTI? Corne see
this property on Letart Rd. just out of
Racine· 1975 Crestwood 24 x 50 modular
has had Immaculate care, It Includes 3
bedrooms bath, added 24 x 50 room, large
front porch, newer shingle roof, some
newer windows, 2 car garage, C/A, out
biJildlngs. grape harbOr, TPC water, 1.56+
Lovely setUng, hardtop road.
,
ASKING $40,900

QUIET SEmNG FOR T.HAT NEW HOME!
Nice building lot approximately 1OO'x300'.
County water available. $7,000.00
11681

'

,.'

''
'

'r
'•

1

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! 2 story frame
home .lui approx. 1 acre. Features 3
bedl~s. bath, some newer paneling and
carpal, newlll furnace. Large front porch,
celltlr house, nice outbuilding. ASKING
$28,000 Owner want&amp; to sell before winter
10 come see and make an offer. Property
located luat out of Pomeroy.

JUST OFF SA 248 on Lick Skillet Rd. llee 230
acres with
and some hay fields. 2
homes one
m with large garage &amp; many
out biJildilgs. the Olher an Older hunting lodge
type building. This property also Includes free
gas. Owner will sell all together or will spl" 75
acres w/home. Or 155 acres with hunting
lodge. CALL US FOR DETAILS.

"::'.f!orest

TWO RIVER FRONT LOTSI Located on Third

WE NEED usnNGSII GIVE US A CALL
In Racine. ~ubllc water and sewer TODA\1! IF y01J REALLY WANT TO SELU

I ,tiiiNtclll are available.

ASKING $8,000

1155. HOME W/2 UNITS one rents 1or $275. mo . can
be reverted 'to one large home. This 'home rs in good
repair. caa VLS 388·8826.

Darf\ 2 nomes ano Dulldings Situate don 5 acres more
1964

NOTICE; ONLY 2 LOTS AVAILABLE IN

LAKEVIEW ESTATE BUY NOW TO BUILD YOUR

Move tn for the Holiday Sales

AnENTION HUNTERS! Located on Peach
Fortt Rd. Just off SR. 33. 52.41+ acres of
vacant ground! Has an old barn on the
ploperty also gas well that is currently
producing with approx. $101 .00 per month
royalties. Should be free gas on property for
one dwellilg. (The royalty could help make
the payment!) ASKING $29,900 Chock It
CJUl .. Mike 1n oflerl

FRENCH HISTORY MARKERt THIS IS ONE
OF THREE TO CHOOSE FROM. Large
beautiful homes that overlook the city park with
a view of the Ohio River. Rencvate to suit your
own lastel Call today of your own private tour
and more details!

1118. LARGE HOME IN VINTON · 5 bedrm .. 2 stones
LA . OR k~ . !am. rm ., enck:tsed ~rch , 3 building Sales
otnce, eXlra Quilding, 1encea. black1op onve &amp; palto
Great Buy $44,500

&amp; ~ratmg as ' Ktds Crossino". sellrng name brand
clot.htng. Located on 2no Ave downtown Gallipolis .
LeaSe. the store rm. &amp; buy the 1nvent&amp;y and equipment.

MODERN, ROOMY, GREAT LOCATION·
These are just some features of the 1989
modular located on Tackerville Rd . in
Racine! Additional features are 3
be9rooms, 2 112 baths, family room with
flreplac;e, some newer carpal and paneling,
edded room, large pole bam, TPC water.
ASKING $64,900

FOURTEEN Pl-US ACRES! Lots of cleared &amp;
wooded land.. Road frontage. mineral rights
Included. County water available.
11696

H30. APARTIIENT BLDG. - 7 Un"s. Well malntall\Od
&amp;-~~thoClhio-

MASTERPIECE IN TH IS OUTSTANDING
NEIGHBORHOOO 5 ACRES 1M. AlSO 2.3411 ACRES
Mi l . CLOSE TO SHOPPING AND HOLZER
HOSPITAl. All LOTS SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIVE
COVENANTS
, _ BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Stocked &amp; Equiped

OVER 83 ACRES- Wooded land. Would make
Ideal hunting ground. Call today! $21,500.00.
WESTVACO
LOOKING FOR A unLE ACREAGE? Then
consider these 3 112 acres more or less.
Owner asking $7,000.
11716

~ree.

. or less priced " 1t1e S70's

(t~t:~~~T~~~!
HOME LOCATED IN
Ill
Close to local shopping and
'

best quality. Make yoll appo~ntment and see if you don't

187C. RANCH liOME wrth full oase~enr . app. 111 0
IIVIOQ space .· gas heat. cent . arr. 2 fireplaces. 3
bempcliTI$. 2 oaths 2 car detached garage, 30x t6 s~ .
2 5lnal outbuildings , small frame home wtlh 2 BR and 1

HERE'S A GREAT HOME
WAITING
FOR YOUI Located on New Hope Rd. In
Chester- This 1988 Manufactured 24x5'2
home ·features 3 bedrooms, utility room,
extra large living room, 2 baths, deck,
blinds, appliances, all on 1+ acre.
ASKING $43,500

Russell D. Wood, Broker ................................. 446-4618
Phyllis Miller...........................2!i6-11 :!6
Martha Smith ................. 379-2651
J. Merrill Carter ...................... 379-2184
Cathy Wray .................... 446-425S
Tammie Dewltt ....... ................ 245-0022
Cindy Drongowski ........ 245-9697
Judy Dewltt ............................ 441-0262
Cheryl Lemley ............... 742-3171
Ruth Barr~ ............................... 446-0722

LANGSVILLE- Crouser Road· A nice 3 bedroom ranch
~=----------·11 style home with heat pump, anached one car garage, and
one car detached garage, above ground pool and storage
Musical
building on nice laying lot.
ONLY $45,000

Cleland ........... 992-6191

Office ........................,.992-2259

446-7101. or 1-800-585-710

NEW LISTING! MOBILE HOME- UNDER
$10,000 Bayview 14'x70' with 21' long
expando. 3 bedrooms, 1 112 baths, living room,
dining room, kitchen. FA electric
furnace/central ac. Washer, dryer &amp; front perch
included In sale!
1723

Branch Office • 446-611~
13 Locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Real Eatate General

1422· OLD CHEYY.OLDS BUILDING- 420'
Front on Second Avenue and 62' frontage on
Grapa.

OWNERS LOWERED PRICE TO $47,900
Remodeled 1 112 story home consisting of 3
bedrooms, .1 112 baths, living room, dining
room, kitchen and more. Over 41 acres, bam
and farm pond. Nice quiet place to live, call
today for an appointment!
11612

A

,_,.hall Nlw --~~ Jull

Henry E. ClelandUI992-619l

NEWLY LISTED! 2 STORY BRICK • 994
FOURTH AVENUE. Nice back lawn
approximately 46'x150'. 1 1/2 baths, living
room, dining room, kitchen, FA gas furnace.
Storage building. $43,500.00
11722

M4in Offict-388~816
958 Cbulc Cltopel Rd.
Bidw~a. Ohio 45614

rt:2/11Utt

1990 EXCEPTIONALLY
BEAIRV for the Professional or

en

Estate General
, Piton~

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

ua ....., tf4..2ll.
T- . . ,_

Real

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:,cr.;;·~~- ~.."N.~: .......... .,. AnMd.
~,..,~

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

Tfacy

tg

....

=:'me~

73 Vane &amp; 4 WD'I

"""-binoculars wculd be
, ~..._-L.--'-L-...L.....J• a great gift for Dad." the son
;,.!
C L N F H 1 I'{' informed his Mom. After look..:
L.~-'T:"'....,..--.-......~~" ing at the price tag the mom
9
:,'-. "8 I 1 ·I I I
'said,"lthinkltwouldbecheaper
. . . . . .:::to
get him seats - - - - - - the

14211- CHERRY DRIVE-just at the edge of
t~wn . 2 BAs, 1 bath, LR, kitchen. Gas heat,
c1ty water, good investment property.

==

..... &amp;..1114 ....... .....

Fen! , _ LX 4 Cv1. AT,

l-=-7

1411- LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN PEACE
AND QUIET- This could be.t!: 49.6_6 a9res,
Andrews Rd., 8 year old hplh~'I!Rs, 2
1.2 baths, Ll'l. DR, FR. heat pump, 2 car
garage plus 24x48 detached garage.

.

.

,..,.:= u. ..
-.wv,.,,,.,... ., ......~.You Don, Cl77

A-1 Conllllon,

:1~- . . ,·I~R. . . o.;.,.I_K.....,_A_I-~I

500 ACRES LOCATED ON US 35- Between
Rio Grande &amp; Centerville approx. 75 ac.
cropland &amp; the balance in woods and brushy
pasture; very nica 1 112 story brick home with
4 br's &amp; a full basement: some buildings,
$250.000

Road.

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"--.w..ta . . Fum•••a
~
71..' 8-

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114 ... 2119
~----

i =l
1473- BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY CAPE COD
offers 63.75 .acres, m/1, mostly pasture,
tobacco base, 40x60 barn, 22x44 block
mllkhouse. 750' road frontage for possible
bldg. sites.

I

114- ltllo

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1-800-585-7101

12

Edited by CLAY I. POlLAN-..,..- - - - -

~_

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

!16 Ptlta for Sale

WOlD
IAMI

·~: lr.--:-P-:E:-:-L-:-A-N-1---.1

Expemnce Makes The Difference! CaU
Cheryl Lemley, For a Full Time Meigs
County Agent For Over 17 years!

Building

~

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Rearrange the 6 scrambled
• words · below to make 6
~~ 11mple words. Print letters of
:~ each in Its . line of squares.

MEIGS COUNTY

Suppllea

C.~ 1) £\"to. I,

::~ 0

. NEW LISTINGS WANTED!

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

TUJDAilY
PUZZUI

:~

Real Estate General

Merchandl•

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

'

...

1971. LAND CONTRACT, 3 bedrm Home. Barn &amp;
garage. Also SA£. $-45,000.

1987 HOME/RECREATION/LAND Scenic Acres surround this charming
home, 30 Ft. Uving Rm., Inviting kitchen, 3 bedrms on the first floor. Full
b'asement finished in 2 large rms., 1/2 bath, ulility area closets . Enclosed
Porch . Pool w/bath house, party house overlooking a stocked pond. 2 car
garage; 21 acres more or less . The home setting is back from road for
privacy. Owner may sell on terms to a qualified buyer. Reduced For Quick
1911. GEORGEOUS HOME - Remodeled 3 bedrm
Sale.
1951 FOR THE CAMPER MINDED, this 22 ft. camper on ranch. 2 baths, ~ate foyer entry 10 the LA, famity rm .
lot is priced to sell so call us todav and get ready tor the w/WB fireplace, lovely carpet throughout. utility rm .,
1150 OWNER ANXIOUS TO MAKE A SELL OR
~ nights or camping and only SS.500 00.
petio 2 car garage, 24 ' above ground pool w/deck. This
TRADE on this 3 badroom 2 story home with full
basement and 2 car garage and a 4 room garage

apartment for extra income In the Albany area.

tl4t LOOKING FOR A IIUSIIIESS7 then look no
tanher, this 4000 square ft. commercial bfdg . with ttv"ee
phase electriC can be usect tor just aboUt any business
you'd like and also a 3 bedroom 2 1/2 bath white brick
homfl all on 4 acres and close 10 Gallipolis. call Wilma
todaY for morelnfQ.
-

, 11112 RIO GRANDE HOllE, $40,000.00 for the 3 bedrm,
2 bath 1 1/2 story, lull balernent '-"!. Gas and w00&lt;1
heat, village water &amp; - Patio &amp; 2 car garage. Also
1973 Champk&gt;n moble home &amp; tot $20,000.00 Both
$56,000. Owner wants ol!tr.

'

1133. HOllE AND INCOME • Double Home wnh
earning power. You can llwlln one unil and rent the
OCher. Close to ocltooll, 1/topping &amp; c:hiJn:IMis. tall for

full Information and an a~ntment. VL Smith 388·
8826 ·
IM1. NEW IJIT1NQ • KING 8IZE F-LY HOllE or
UN thll oupor ntco 5 bldnn. tor PRIVATE HOME
CARE 3 blthl 31C m/1 Vlflllnla L Smith 318 8826
·
'
· ·
·
·
, . . COUNTIW HOMEIOREIN 'IWP. .. bedrooms,
3
1·112 story home, g~r~ge &amp; outbuildings, 5 acres all

-- ~ ld1chon coblnets, lg. L.A &amp;
OR, ..whool pump I good roof.
.
.

1111\UT?fUI. IIOLUNG LOTS on White
Rd. 11-IYiilabll. 2 1/2 Ac. rrVt each make ywr
cltoiCI now! Bultl ywr drum home it 1he r:arrtry and
comlorl.

11M FOUR

---10

is a very neat immaculate home and is ready tor
1V53 GRANDVIEW ESTATES SECLUSION , Lovely treed
occupency.
$67 ,000.
lot for lots or priv~ this 3-4 bedroom bi-lewl, must see to
- appreciate. call now for a view.
· •·
, _ rNVESTIIENT PROPERTY all 31or$76.000 piUS
2 ac. m/1 .2 bedroom home. tull Hving room , kitchen ,
utility, 2 enclosed porches (big enough for extra
1187 BEAUTIFUL FARMLAND, with a lovely 4 bedroom
rooms) 2 garages beautiful landscaped plus 2 , 2
bi -level on 100 act8S wtth pasture land, woods and tMiat»e
bedroom rental units, pay lor your home with the
acreage. owner wants sold, you need to see this one.
rentals. ApproJC 2 miles from U~ity of Rkl Grande,
l93t COUNTRY GENTLEIIAN'S DELIGHT, 3 room log
aft blaCktOp roao. City SChOOlS. a must to see
cabin wtth 25 acres on Morgan Center Road $38,000.00.

1910 GRACIOUS UV?NG AT IT'S BEST. in 111is aA
~t31 VACANT FARMLAND WITH A 4 bedroom brick beauty willl 3 bodrcofns. 3 1/2 baltls. ,_carpet
farmhouse and 2 outbuildings in the Ew•ngton area, 50 through-ot.C, a beautiful treed lot and a large stocked
acres at $60,000 00
pond , a very nee suburban paradise that will please
you , a must to see. call Wilma tor more information
and • private showing.
PRICED RIGHT FOR YOU. this 4 bedroom home
haS tots of space and newly 18111olded willl , _ siding.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY - A 3 car ga1age and
tumace and roof, don1 heSitate to own your own home call
UMd 111 used car lot Could be mechanics WekMtrs us today and take a peek.
elec. 6. gas ana a•r compressor. Has 14 Part~; Mobite
Home atao. Wl1fl mobile home.
EL.EOAHT ALL BRICK IIEAUTV
- · COMMERCIAL BUILDING • Olive St. 16 OOOr
Two story home. fUI basement and garage has a great
&amp; celing w/ton lor storage 2 t 0 &amp; 220 elect. water &amp;
deal to otter. Destgned tor great living. First floor has
S8Waf. 6' cement to load &amp; unload in front. 30x80
lomtoJ entry wlh open stoJrway, formal lMng room willl
bullt1lng approx. 3900 sq. ft. block &amp; frame. $.45.000.
fireplace, formal dining room, Cherry cabinets line the
_
.
wall or the e&gt;&lt;1ra large kHchen Bntakfast room and
tell ROAM ON THIS RETREAT.
Acreage,
~r room. Socond 'rtoor ol!e,. lour bedrooms and
. Acreage, 1231n alto build that dream home co and
bath. Bedrooms are king size , carpet over hardwoOd
. hunt on the rest or use for farmland . Prk:ed at
fk&gt;ors. bath has a ll new fixtures and Love Tub.

$58,500.00.

Basemen! has huge lamily room w/lireptace, bedroom,
exercise area, laundry room and slorage room. This
hOme 15 of superll quality as the plumbing haS been
replaced. All new all covering, beautiful new carpet
throughoUI , ,_ windows installed. Specious kitchen
with ch8ny cabinets, Island tor Jenn-Air range. Only
privata lhowlng wti docide tho vs1ue ~ her8.
CALl. VIRGINIA L SMITH 4o48-6806 or 388-9826

lt7S OWNER WANTS THIS SOLD TODAY SO
CALL AND TAKI A LOOK. this lovely t993 1tomt on t/2 acre lot close to 1t1e c:onvenlence of town
shojlping, also hili a 2 car garage.

IMS. HOllE A INVEITIIEHT - Con be bought

IO!Itther- New 3

bldrm . . - home w/la&lt;Jje rmo.,
Whl1e brief&lt; flonl, cltormlng Lfl, tin. nn., large rms.
~W,:.ot Clblnltsln. kit., 2 car giiiQO,

'*

lt7:1. OLD PLANTATION 'HOllE - Bultt-ln 1800's
Willing tO be reo10f8d. lMV8 born &amp; shod. 117 Ac. I/JL,
crop lan&lt;J a pasture &amp; wooded. Close to Holler. ,.,

lt11. LAROE HOllE IN VINTON · 5 bedim., 2 · Lfl, OR kit. ram. rm., onctosed porc11, 3 building. S..
oftlce, lXIII I!UIItllng, lt!nced, blacklojl drive l patio.
Grill Buy $44,500
'
IMI. IR , Convenient to the r,_ay. -3
L

............~------~~~~~~·---------------

~;=~;u;;~\=.k~ !:~

&amp;:'S':.S::

'

�'nmes-Sentinel

November 27,

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

'Megafarms' vex smaller Buckeye farmers

ON TilE RANGE - Jimmy Howard, firearms Instructor for
the Soulberu Olalo Peace Omcen Training Academy, dmes stu·
dent Chrll Stout 111 GaDipolls on the Rrlng range. Stout Is one of
eipt students punulng peace oftker training at the atademy.

Gallia County school
offers police trai-n ing
By KEVIN PINSON
Tllqes-Sendnel Starr
OAIJ.IPOLIS - Law enforcemeot training is now available in
Oallipolis.
The Soulbem Ohio Peace om.
cers Training Academy, Jackson
Pike, began its first five-monlb
f basic course Sept. 12. Those who
successfully complete the training
and pass a rour·bour state examinalion will be certified to work in law
enforcement in Ohio and 33 olber
states, said SOPOTA Executive
Director Mike Martin.
"For people interested in law
enforcement, this is where you
start," be said.
· Besides lbe usual f1rearms and
. crime investigation instruction, the
basic course also emphasizes an
understanding of cultural diversity.
Swdents are !aught to respect ideals and beliefs different lban lbeir
own, Martin said.
. "I want to make all of my offi-.
cers community-oriented officers,"
Martin said.
· Martin said be bas even expelled
a couple of students who could not
deal with racial or sexual orientation issues.
The course began wilb 16 students, but half have dropped out or
been cut because lbey could not
meet the pfllllram's reguirements,
· sluden15 lire-orily alloweif to
miss 10 of the 500 to 600 hours of
instrucliOJI, Martin explained.
"It's unforwnate that we bad to
get rid of (them), but if we don't
bandle it here, they' II run into
problems out on the stree~. ·• be .

'said. "Wben they get out of here, I
wantlbem to know whatlbey're up
against"
.
Besides classroom work, the
students have also spent time on
lbe firing range and touring area
correctional facilities . Guest
instructors have included Jackson
County Sheriff Greg Kiefer and
Gallipolis Police Chief Roger
Brandeberry.
for those already in law
enforcement, the academy will
offer continuing education in areas
such as hostage negotiations and
investigative techniques.
Besides training officers, lbe
academy will also offer classes to
tbe public . A handgun safety
course for women is slated for Ibis
week and a course on safety and
self-defense techniques is planned
for early next year.
Academy instructors are also
available to businesses and or~anizations for seminars on subjects
such as domestic violence, crime
prevention and child abuse, Martin
said.
"We want to be a 'ommunity·
oriented law enforcement academy," Martin said.
Martin bas four years of law
enforcement experience and is also
employed as a part-time investigator for the GaJlia .County Sheriffs
Office. He is certified .by lbe Ohio
Peace Officer Training Council and
has been an lnsrructor for two
years.
For more information contact
Martin at 446-3332
'
_
·

Champion Industries set
to issue dividend Dec. 23
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. ton.
Champion Industries Inc.
announced a regular quarterly dividend or S cents per share to be paid
Dec. 23 to shareholders or record
onDec.2.
1be dividend is "a reaftlrmation
of our commitment that sbatebolders receive regular benefits from
the success or the comp~ny,"
Champion 'Chairman Marshall T.
Reynolds said. "Since we went
public, we've paid a dividend every
uarter"
q Cb~pion co~pleted its initial
public offering of NASDAQ-listed
common stock in January 1993.
Since lben, it bas acquired tbl'ee
fll'IIIS in Baton Rouge, l.a., includIng Bourque Printing, Strother
Forms/Printing and Spectrum
Press.
·
Champion also purchased two
companies in Jackson, Miss., Dallils Printing Co. and Premier Printing. During that period, the company acquired Garrison Brewer, an
office products firm in Marietla;
Carolina Cut Sheets in Tim~
monsvill~ S.C.: and Premier Qa1a
(lrapbics, Clarksburg, W.Va.
· Champion .is a major commercial printer,' business form manufacturer and supplier of office
products, office furniture and
&lt;lesign services in West Virginia,
eastern and central Kentucky,
&amp;Outhem Obio, Louisiana, Mississippi and the Carolinas. The company is headquartered in Hunting-

.

•

Utilities off-r .

By MITCH WEISS
Auoc:lated Pms Writer
TOLEDO - Farmer Charlie
Otte spends a many sleepless
nigbiB wondering about his future.
His main concern these days Is
''megafarms" - rural spreads
with thousands of bogs or millions
ofbens.
The 41-year-old farmer, wbo
raises bogs, cattle and dairy cows
on bis 700-acre farm near Celina in
western Obio, says be may lose bis
livelihood If a livestock company
goes lbrougb with its plan to build
a large-scale bog operation In the
area.
"I look at lbe way things are
now and I wonder if I should even
pass It along to my kids," said.
Oue, the falber of seven.
Tbe Issue of-megafarms bas
sparked debate among Ohio farmers.
Two cases in particular - a 2.S
million egg farm being built near
LaRue in Hardin County in western
Obio and a 1,200-sow operation in
Pickaway County in central Ohio
- have been contentious.
Local officials have bied to use
zoning to stop lbe IXOjects.'ln bolb
cases, lbe c::c~anies have sued,
contending I
officials were illegally restricting expansion of their
livestock operations.
Some Obio farmers believe
megafarms will put many of lbe
· state's 70,711 family farms out of
business. Tbey say lbey can't compete wilb large-scale operations
lbat have lower costs.
Rural residents worry about lbe
smell and possibility of ground
water contamination from manure
generated at the large livestock
operations.
.
"Many families who have lived
on and maintained lbeir farms for
years are being told lbe must accept
a 2.5-million cbiclcen m- 1,200-sow
operation next to their property and
take the consequences because it's
progress,'' said Charlie Nash, president of lbe Ohio Farmers Union,
which represents more lban 10,000
family farms. "Shouldn't these
people bave a say in bow their
communities develop?"
Some contend megafarms
destroy rural communities.
"Culturally, they are a disaster
because they accelerate tbe depopulation of our rural landscape,"
said Peter Jorgensen, c!Hiirector of
the Instimte !01 Agricultural Biodi·
versity. at Lulber College in Decorah. Iowa "When we replace family. farming operations wilb megallllmS. rul'lllmwns !ll'y UJf lllllii!IIIw
away."
But megafarm supporters say
lbeir operations are environmentally sound and will give Ohio lbe
chance to recapture a leadership
position in the livestock industry.
Tbey also say some family
farms wW benefit
·
Megafarin companies often con:
tract wllb local farmers to raise
their livestock. Under such qreements, lbe companies provide lbe
livestock, feed,
care and

a guaranteed market. The farmer
provides tbe buildings, equipment,
utilities and labor.
Tbe LaRue hen egg farm will
belp tbe local economy, said F.
Micbael Lorz, spokesman for
Anton Pohlman, owner of AgriGeneral Co. L.P.
"We will malce a major economic impact In lbe Hardin County
area because we are going to buy
grain lbere. We're soing to hire
people from there to run the operalions," Lon said.
' -'If the rears are about big, we
can't change tbat."
But many residents remain
opposed and Tbe Humane Society
of lbe United States bas asked Gov.
George Volnovlcb to reconsider
state policy ~- allows megafarms

· to move into Ohio.
Although megafarms are new to
.
Ohio, lbey have been around for
years, said farm bureau spokesman
Raymond Casey.
· Tbe poultry industry began
using them 40 years ago. At one
time, the Midwest was the center of
cbicken production. But lhe region
· failed to keep up Willi technology
and lbe poultry business moved to ·
the South, Casey said.
Butlbe industry is slowly coming back. The availability of new
climate-control technology and the
proximity of lbe grain markets are
attracting producers, be said.
Hog companies also Wlllil to set
up shop in Ohio. Megafarms are
new to lbe bog industry. New drugs
and technology .have only recently

madeoflbem
l'eastble. bog
Abou~::;i
cent
lbe nation's
are megafarms but that il
to jump to 40 percent by
Nasb said agreem••e:;n·;'~'~,;;~;;;•
farmers sign wilb m
"reduces lbe farmer to a serf on his'
own properly, even lbougb be
assumes tbe lion's share of the •
financial responsibility under most ;
of these sewps."
~
Megafarms hire few local con- '
tractors, wbo must borrow money
to build bigger facilities.
•
Luther Tweeten, an Ohio Slate :
University agricultural economist, ·
said small- and medium-scale bog ~
producers will not be able to com- ;
pete with large·operations.
•
But be believes megafarms are ;
here to stay.
o

Contemporary Living

:Home repair: Repainting bricks with new mortar · .
By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS

·
Work on the bricks from the bottom up. Start by brushing water into tbe
joints. This prevents the mortar from being weakened by losing its moisture to
dry bricks. Scoop some mortar onto a trowel, hold the trowel up to the joint,
and push the mortar in with the tuck pointer. Fill vertical joints first. then
horizontals. Fill deep joints in layers; allow each layer to stiffen somewhat
before apPlying the next one. After fill ing each joint, smooth lbe mortar with
the tuck pointer.
Keep Mortar Pliable By Stirring In Bucket
Stir the mortar in the bucket periodically to keep it pliable. If it gets stiff,
don 't add water, discard it for a new batch.
New mortar should match the old as closely as possible in composition, color
and joint profile. To check the color, mix a small batch of mortar, repoint an
;nconspicuous area and let it dry (it willligbten in the process). If necessary,
add a·coloring agent (available from your mortar supplier) to a new batch and
test again.
When the mortar is firm enough 10 bold an impression of your thumb, give
the joint the same finished shape as the older joints. To make a concave joint,
press the rounded end of a brick jointer into the mortar and draw it along the
center. Use the opposite end of the brick jointer to make a V-joint. Use the edge
By POPULAR MECHANICS
·
experience and the right tools to make concrete look like something it's not, of a trowel to make a sharply anl!led " weathered" joint.
For AP Speelel Features
so it makes more sense to hire a masonry contractor for the job.
Most people see concrete without noticing it. To them it's ubiquitous and,
The basic process, however, is not complicated. Masons pour and place the
worse yet, boring. They couldn't care less about its looks because it's not concrete like they would for regular concrete, using a 3,000-pound to 4,000supposed to look good.
pound psi (pounds per square inch) mix, the typical concrete for outdoor
At first, it's hard to believe that concrete can be elegant.'Worked by skilled pavements. At this point, there are several methods that cement masons use to
hands, it can be fin· shape the concrete to look like bnck, stone or slate. In one method, they pr~
ished in a variety strips of building paper or a paper stencil into the wet concrete using a float.
Why not use brick, stone or of patterns, colors For faux stone, the masons cut out strips of building paper. And for a brick
and textures, even pattern, they buy a ready-made paper stencil.
slate? Each of these is a fine tothepointoflook- Next, the masons spread colored granules over the concrete to give it the
ing like something desired shade of brick or stone.
material, but natural materials else,
including They work the granules, known as dry-shake compound, into the concrete, By POPULAR MECHANICS
flagstone,
brick with floats. Incidentally, dry-shake compound also increases .the surface For AP Special Featur"
(and to a lesser extent, brick)
and slate.This ver- hardness of the concrete.
Q: Like many bomeoners, I' ve mixed small quantities of roncrete for
dictate the color and shape you satility expands In the case of paper strips, the granules are carefully scraped off before the repair jobs, by combining portland cement, sand, gnvel1nd water. ADd,
design strips are lifted from the concrete. With paper lattice, the surface area is too like many homeowners, 1 have no idea orthe technical dynamics lavolved
must work with, and not all op- ' anyone's
options for that large to do this, so the lattice is carefully peeled from the concrete after the dry- in howthisactually creates concrete. I know 1would find this infiii'IDIIIon
pool deck, patio or shake compound has been floated in. The area underneath the paper appears interesting, ~nd I'm sure many other bomeoWDtn would also.
tions are available in all areas.
walkway.
as mortar joints, while the area between the strips is colored to look like slate,
A: Concrete consists of portland cement mixed with sand and gravel or
WhY not use stone or brick.
crushed stone. Portland cement cements the sand and gravel or crushed stone
bric~, stone br slate? Each of these is a fine material, but natural materials(and
To achieve "lhe faux finish of dry·laid stone (without contrasting-color together. The cement is made of calcium (usually finely ground limestone),
to a lesser extent, brick) dict~te the color and shape you must work with, and mortar joints), the masons use stamps, rollers and mats to press a shape into the · silica (sand), aluminum, iron ore and small amounts of other materials
not all options are available in all areas.
concrete.
(sometimes fly ash, for instance). These materials are quarried, crushed;
In one example, a sheet of polyethylene plastic is spread over the concrete. ground and blended. Then, they are fired in a kiln with an average temperature
Also, concrete is generally Jess expensiYe than quarried materials, which
often must be shipped over long distances. Decorative concrete is more This prevents the concrete from sticking to the stamp or roller. It also gives of about2700 F- hot enough to melt steel. The material emerges from the kiln
expensive than regular concrete, and its cost varies greatly by location and even nicely rounded edges to each stamped shape. To achieve faux mortar joints as marble-size pellets known as clinkers. These are ground into a fine powder,
among contractors in the same area.
with this method, the masons spread mortar over the slab and scrape off the and this is bagged or delivered in bulk as portland cement. The beauty of
Finishing concrete to make it look like brick, slate or stone is not a typical excess, so it fills in the joints between the stamped patterns.
portland cement is that, to form ·a rocklike mass, all you do is mix it with sand,
do-it-yourself project. You would have to invest in the tools and finish quite
Afterward, they use a rotary floorpolisliertoremove mortarresiduefrom the 'gravel or crushed stone and then add some water. The chemical_propenics of
a bit of experimental concrete before you pour the main pavement. It takes slab's face.
portland cement are such that it reacts with water in a process known as
hydration.
Here's how hydration works: Water and cement particles form a solution. To
the naked eye, this solution appearS as a paste that coat• each grain of sand and
each piece of gravel or stone. If you could see the paste at a molecular level,
you would notice that water molecules arrange themselves around each
particle of cement (each particle is a fraction of a millimeter in diameter). In
the process, heat is generated as the molecules rub against each other and
arrange themselves. Excess water molecules make thei r way to the slab surface
and evaporate off into the atll\osphere. Other water molecules are locked out
of the hydration process by the bonds formed by the hydrating cement
partiges.lt takes decades for this water to escape. and this is why concrete gets
harder"iiSil gets older. The water that was involved in the hydration process
remains behind indefinitely as a crystal known as water of hydration. Under
ideal circumstances, concrete takes its own sweet time arranging these cement·
watcr-ot~bydrati'Oll part~. By the-time the hydration process is essentially
complete (it takes several weeks), you have a well-organized mass of sand and
stone bonded in a matrix of cement-water-of-hydration particles. Because this
bonding takes place at a molecular level, it 's extremely thorough and very
strong. And, as an added bonus, the concrete grows stronger with age.
Q: The lop of my chimney (I bave a gas furnace) ends quite a bit below
the highest level at the top or my roof. I have beard that this could be
dangerous in the event of a moderate wind that could cause a backftow of
gasesintomybome.l wouldappreciateanycomments you might have and
suggestions for corrections if needed.
A: The fact that the top of the chimney is below the top of the roof is not
necessarily 1 problem- as long as ihe chimney is terminated properly. The
National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) Standard 211 states that chim neys for residential-type appliances must extend at least 3 feet above the
highest point where they pass through the roof of a building, and must be at
least 2 feet higher than any part of the roof within I 0 feet measured horizontally. The measurements must be made from the high side of the roofto·the side
nearest the top of the chimney. This is sometimes referred to as the 3·foot 2foot, 10-foot rule . It applies to both masonry and metalchimneys, whether the
chimney is connected to a central heating system, fireplace or stove.
PORCHES FRONT and rear expand the IMng llft8&amp;11l thla comfortable home. Lap &amp;ldlng JUid brick 1111ke a pleaiiiiDt combination.
If you need to increase the height of ~o ur chimney, you can build it up or
rious master bath is its sunny
A corner fireplace straight
ByPATWKAS
perhaps simply add a chimney pot or top vent assembly.
garden tub . Other amenities
ahead warms the spacious living
AP Newefeatures
Q: Is it relllly necessary to add yeast or chemicals to a septic tank to
room, which is enhanced by a include a separate shower, hisThe charm of early American
maintain balance and trouble-free operatioa?
'
esign F·9 has a living
and-hers vanities .and corner
high ceiling. A trio of lovely
styling stands the test of time.
A: The most important maintenance item for a septic system is periodic
room, dining room,
walk-in closets.
French doors opens to lbe cov·
Highlights of design F-9, by
pumpmg. Most health departments recommend that seJllic tanks be pumped
study, three bedrooms,
The two bedrooms on the other
HomeStyles "Source 1" Designers
ered backyard porch.
every two to three years or when the total depth of sludge and scum exceeds
two baths, a half bath and a
side of the horne share a second · foyer, totaling 2,069 square feet
The open kitchen easily serves
Network, include front and rear
one-third of the liquid depth of the tank.
bath and a linen closet.
'full
bolb lbe formal dining room and
Porches. shuttered windows, eyeHealth officials in the federal government and many state governments have
of living space. There is a garage
The home is expanded by ninecatching dormers and a pleasant the bay-windowed breakfast
found that the operation of septic tanks is not improved by the addition of
and a utility room with easy
nook. An angled snack bar and a foot ceilings in all rooms except
combination of lap siding and
chemical compounds, enzymes, or septic tank cleaners. In general, the addition
access to the kitchen .. The
the living room, where lbe ceilhandy planning desk are special
brick.
of chemicals to a septic tank is not recommended. Some products which claim
kitchen includes a dining nook
ing is 11 feet high .
. Inside, the modem floor plan of features.
to " clean" septic tanks contain compounds that may damage the pipes and
with·bay window. A door leads
A convenient half bath and a
some 2,069 square feet allows for
actually result in clogging. '
from the living room to a spa·
(For a mort detailed, scaled'plan
good-sized laundry room flank
lots of interaction, while preserv·
Q: We have well water.ls there something I can put around the water
ciovs rear porch. The overall
of
this lwiiSt, i11ciMding gMides to dimensions ot70' by 58' Include· ~ UQnge tank to keep it from sweating?
ing privacy in the secluded bedthe entrance to the two-car
estimati11g costs a11d fina11ci11g,
garage. The garage is situated
rooms and lbe quiet study.
. A:'flie"cold water storage tank is sweating because its surface temperature
the garage.
stNd
$4 to Ho11se of the Week,
clo.se to the kitchen, simplying
The inviting front porch wei·
os below the dew pomt of the aor in that room. This causes moisture in the air
P.O. Bo:t 1562, New York, N.Y.
the job of unloading groceries
coPies guests into the sidelight·
to condense on the tank. You can cover the lank with blanket insulation and
ed entry foyer, whicb includes
from the car. A few steps away, a 10116-1562. Bt surt to iNciMdt
cover the insulation with a vapor barrier of plastic sheet. Cover all joints in the
the nuMbu of the plan.)
French door provides additional
two handy closets. On the right,
vapor barrter With plastic tape . An alternative is to buy a water heater hlanket
available at home centers, and cut it to fit.
'
access to the rear porch,
a pocket door doses off the cozy
The magnificent master suite,
study, lll8king a peaceful spot for
isolated for privacy, is a retreat to
homework, office work or readenjoy. The focal point of the luxuing.
For AP Special FaetUI'II
: Even well-made mortar joints between bricks can suffer damage over time,
~specially when they are exposed to severe weather.
Cracked or crumbling joints allow moisture to penetrate the wall, where i.t
can freeze and cause even more extensive damage. Inspect exterior masonry
every few years- before &lt;;old weather makes masonry work impractical.11nd repair damaged joints as soon as possible.
Fixing mortar joints is called repointing (or tuck-pointing). It involves
chiseling out damaged mortar and replacing it. Although the process is not
difficult, you should evaluate the job carefully. lt's easy to repair small areas,
even on a chimney, if they are near the ground.
But if your task requires scaffolding or majorrebuilding of brick facing, call
a professional mason. Similarly, if your chimney lacks a liner or has holes,
large gaps, or smoke coming from anywhere but the top, call a mason.
You will need a small sledgehammer, a cold chisel and an old paint scraper

to remove the old mortar. You 'II also need a stiff-bristled wire brush, a trowel,
and a tuck pointer (a trowel with a long, narrow blade) to work the mortar into
the joints, and a brick jointer, a tool that gives a mortar joint its final shape. All
are available at hardware stores and home centers, which also sell the ready·
mix mortar you ' ll need.
.
~A UTI ON: Wear safety goggles when chiseling and cleaning out joints.
Wear goggles and protective clothing, including gloves, when working with
mortar. Mortar is mildly caustic. lf it splashes on your skin, wash it off with
water.
Tap Out LOOse Mortar With A Cbisel And Sledge
Use a chisel and sledge to lap out loose mortar in each joint to a depth ofat
least 1 inch or until you reach solid mortar. Hold the chisel at a sharp angle and
try nollo chip the bricks. Rake the joints clean, leaving a flat surface atthe back
of the cut. Brush the joints vigorously with the wire brush.
Pour some ready-mix mortar into a bucket, add a little water gradually until
the mix is a uniform stiff paste that you can change into a ball. Let it stand for

Concrete can be made to look elegant ·

Shop With

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Y

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Choose from 7, V-6 Over Drive; Tilt, Cruise,

·•

Cassette, Power Windows .....................................

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Litre, V-6 Engines, Auto, NC, nit,

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See Bob Cook, Don Carter, Brett Epling, JUn.. Pierce ·

.

~"'1..1IC:K•

:. • 1be IOlal -amount owed,' less
ibtcurreotbill.
'
• Tile clc:faulted extended pay-

~

1

IIICIIt plan li'mounl
T&gt;be cuatomer will al'd be
~uelwllbe ecist of reconnec:tion.
opt to exceed $20.
1
· for more Information, contact
CSP 01 ()lllo Pow.er at tile,ab&lt;jvc·

liated numbcn.

x-

.....
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~~ ot lbe Iowcat of these!,

•

PONTIAC.

1911 EastemAve •.

.

Gallipolis,

MAIN FLOOR
~--

lOCI diDina areal meet nicely, yet remain ..,.,.te.
t...,llace II eMily a mJ point of the room, but the Frencll doon
are IIIIo 111 aUI'IIc:dw addition.

-

......

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

II

New York. N.Y. 10116-1562.
Olp this order and rerum tabet

Encloaed Is $4.95 ..ch tor the booklet(a) _ _ _ _ _ _ __

,,

Name________________~-----------------

A SUNNY GARDEN tub Ia the '-1 point of the band8ome D*ll!r

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

Tile llvhw lndude • ICUdy,for quiet rellectloA, and the llvlntl
room 11M ec• z r to a._. pordL

Stat• ( Z I P I - ; - - - - - - - - - - - - -

bath. 1Wo dliatll IIIII •lll!lllll•lhower mea the room

I

Encloaed Is $4 for pl•n No.--- - - - - - - - - - -

.......

-

To·Qfder Study Plan

Full study plan information on this house is available in a $4 ·baby
blueprint. Four booklets are also available at$4.95 each: Your Home-How
to Build, Buy or SeN It; Ranch Homes. 24 of the most popular mxn this
feature; PractiCal Home Repairs, Which tells how to handle 35 common
problems; and, A·Fr, mes and Other Vacation Homes, a collection of 24
styles. Send check or money order payable to the Associated Press and this
label to: House of the Week, The Sunday-Times Sentinel, P.O. Box 1562,

·.-:c:...t

OW

~Cuatancra whose service ~ dis·
C:oanectecl ~;n get it resund ~pon

'

10 minutes .and stir again before using.

l\!!~f~i.§l4tm~:::

;
(Continued from Dl) _ / .
Power at 1-800-672-2231. .~Is
00 tbese plana will be provulejl b)'
i:ustomer ~rvice rep~senta!!Ves•.
~cDade said, and efforts Will be
made to arrange an alternate \lftY·
inent plan ifrthe programs outlined
IIY lbe companies are not apprbpri-

' • $175.

SectiQn E

ClCIIftlllete.

~--------------------------.

'
••

•

.'

,,

�November 27,1994

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

.Page-E2-Sunday Tlme.._,;.Sentinel

For senior dancers, age is only ·~ number ·
FRANKLINVILLE, NJ. (AP) -Every Friday, the
Young at H'eart dancers kick up their heels in a tiny studio
here where the motivational message from their 70-yearold instructor is: Age is only a number.
The group is for dancers who are at least 55 and want to
·
stay young by keeping fit. The oldest is 82, the youngest
63.
' ' When people come to me . and ask 'Are you still
dancing?' I say 'Why not? " ' says llsetraut Dinshah, a
German-born dancer who began teaching the class several
Years ago · "Dancers arc ageless ·"
Dinshah, who began dancing when she was 15, also
teaches younger students five days a week She looks
·
forward to the hourlong class with her peers.
"It'
1
·
1
"
'dD'
h
h
. sarea spec1a group, sa1 1ns a .
.
Dmshah began the sen10r dance class on a wh1m,
offering a three-month session for just $10. It quickly
caught on and about a dozen women now come regularly

io the brightly lit studio in the basement of Dinshah's
home in this rural Gloucester County community.
"I thought it would only last for a few weeks,'' says
Dinshah a former ballerina who has been teaching for 22
years "But they kept coming "
·
·
The dancers come from varied backgrounds and most
have never danced seriously before now. They became
local celebrities after they were featured on a television
program. The group performs regularly for older people
and disabled veterans groups.
"It's a lot of fun " said Daisy Buchanan 70 a retired
•
• •
nu~. " I really enjoy it. "
"I wanted the exercise " said Dot Renshaw 67. "Be'
•
'
fore I came here, if I bent down I couldn t get up on my
own."
The class is open to men and women, but Dinshah' s
husband, Cyrus, 70, is the only man who participates. He
helps newcomers or partners his wife when the group does

8

polka dane::·
..
·
.
.. ,
"It doesn I bother me, says Cyrus Dmshah. I m
comfortable.''
.
.
At the start of a recent class, D•nshah put a Scott lophn
album on an old phonograph as the dancers took their
·r n the wooden. fl oor ~n· front f a m'rrorcd
wall
1
pos1 Ions 0
·
The other walls are pamted bnght yellow.
After warm-~p exer~ises, Dinshah guid~d the class
through stretchiOg routiOes to loosen thCif JOIOts, espeClally the h•ps.
.
·
.
.. .
"When you can shll stretch you have II made, said
..
D'10 h h " It k
~
~ a ·
rna es you e_e1young._
.
Dmshah began dancmg 10 her nallve Berhn where she
rf edwithatroupee te t 'n'ngtroopsduringWorld
pe orm
n r a• 1
, .
11 y,
Warii.Whenshebecametoooldtodancepro.essiOna
.
odd ' b
.
d
1
she took
)O s as a wa1tress an asa eswoman.
In 1961, DIOshah move~ 10 the ~mted States after her
mamage. She began danc10g aga10 when she opened a

°

1 7
st~~~o ~~Je.~h
i ;~n dance
1

again "' recalled Dinshah. ·
.. . s. . . ..
'
Th•s •: ~ykh!e. the mood light while instructing her ·
Oms a e ps
.
semor ~tudents. . be ..
82 ar-old Betty Rein
" Th1s keeps me hm r, says -yc
'
a retired seamstress .. 1don 't want to get arthritis like old
.. , . ·
pe~~!~:~rs rform routines that include line dancing.
"She also tellsus to look sexy," yells Alice Fellenbaum,
teacher "It's our only chance."
··
63 • a retircd school
.
k
. 'th th . elte ,·nstructor .
The group tnes to eep up WI
eu sv
·
The S-foo 132_ und Dinshah is barely winded as she
t,
po
.
·
moves through the routmes.
"We don't want you to overdo it " cautions Dinshah.
.' ...
havew1t. h
' 'Wejustwantyoutoseewhatposs•b•hllesyou
. ..
·
yo.~~~~~~e a lot of mistakes ••said Adeline Fiocchi, 74.
.
..
'
" But 1t's fun anyway.

Companies expand pension opportunities
WASHINGTON (AP)- Many of the nation's larger
companies are expanding pension opportunities, but their
employees often do not take advantage of the new retire·
men! benefits, a study ~uggests.
A survey by the accounting firm KPMG Peat Marwick
found that 89 percent of 993 businesses with 200 or more
employees offered at least one retirement plan in 1994, up
from 78 percent a year earlier.
More than 57 percent of the businesses offering pension
benefits have two or three retirement plans, the survey
showed.
" Employers were twice as likely to have added a plan
(29percent) within the last five years as to have terminated
a plan (11 percent)," it found .
"
More significantly,the report added, even among those
employers which did drop a plan, 53 percent merely
substituted a,different plan or merged separate plans. ·-~
Roy Oliver, head of the consulting firm's compensation
and benefits practice, contended that simply offering
more plans is not enough.
.
In spite of the growing awareness that retirement plans
are becoming more and more essential in planning for the
future, employees continue to underutilize these valuable
services, he said.
" Companies must educate employees about the oppor·
tunitics which exist to help meet their retirement needs,''
Oliver said.
The firm's second annual survey, '' Retirement Benefits
in the 1990s,'' was conducted earlier this year and released this fall. Jt included a wide range of employers,
including those in manufacturing, construction and service industries. The margin of error was plus or minus 4
percentage points.
The study found that 34 percent of employers with
retirement benefits offered traditional ' 'defined benefit''
plans, down from 38 percent a year earlier.
These plans were available to 70 percent of the employees covered in the survey, up from 68 percent a year
earlier, although only 88 percent of those eligible took
advantage of the be'nefits.

The plan offered most often was a "defined contribution " 401 (k) plan, offered by 56 percent of the businesses
who employed 57 percent of the workers covered in the
survey.
These plans were available at 58 percent of the companies in 1993, representing 65 percent of the employees.
only 61 percent of eligible employees actually participated in 401 (k) plans in 1994, the same number found in ·
1993.
Sixteen percent of the surveyed businesses offer both
defined benefit and 40! (k) plans.
The survey also examined employer. attitudes toward
their employees' responsibility for retirement security.
Only 1 percent believed that employees should expect
a secure retirement income based solely on employerprovided retirement benefits.
Eleven percent thought employees should be primarily
responsible for their own retirement security and that
employer-provided benefits should serve merely as a
''supplement'' to employee-provided savings.
The survey also found only 3 percent believing employ·
ces could rely solely on employer benefits and Social
Security as sources of retirement income, down from 6
percent in 1993.
.
''The overshelming majority of employers- 85 per~
cent -subscribe to the traditional 'three-legged stool'
philosophy for retirement security: employer-provided
·benefits, Social Security and personal savings," the survey revealed.
.The survey found that of the 11 percent affirms that do
not provide retirement benefits, 62 percent J!CVer had
pension plans.
Twenty-five percent of those who previously had plans
cited costs as the reason for terminating them.
The survey found that retirement plans cost employers
about 6.75 percent of payroll in 1994, unchanged from
1993.
,
In addition, employers pay 6.45 percent of payroll in
Social Security taxes for employees earning up to the
maximum $60,000 wage base in 1994.

0

0

•

•

&lt;

/

By JAM~ E. WALTERS

PHOENIX (AP) -To select the best poinsettias and
keep them blooming through the holidays, concentrate on
healthy-appearing plants with lush, green foliage, a balanced look and fully colored, expanded bracts.
Since the colorful bracts really aren't flowers but modified leaves, seeing green around their edges means they
won 't color much more in a home environment.
Although poinsettias have for years been the country's
best-selling potted plant, most are purchased in the six
weeks before Christmas.
That factor puts a premium on the selection process this
time of year. As a general rule, the larger and more
developed the plant, the higher •he cost. Since the estimated 50 million annual sales are so concentrated in time,
bargains will he there if you select wisely.
The true flowers are the little yeliow or green berries,
calledcyathia,found in the center of the colored bracts. Be
certain a tight, fresh-looking cyathia is in each center.
The plant also 'should not appear damaged. If it looks

wilted, Ibis is a possible sign of incversible root rot~
If the growing medium seems overwet, it's safer to
make a different selection.
Stems should be strong and stiff.
Look also for an abundance of dark, rich-green foliage
that is dense, plentiful and unmarred to the soil line. This
is a good indication of healthy root systems.
Be careful of plants displayed in paper, plastic or mesh
sleeves. Plants left too long in shipping sleeves develop a
disorder characterized by contorted and droopy stems,
leaves and bracts.
About 90 percent of the world's poinsettias get their
start as cuttings inside the 35 acres of greenhouses at the
Paul Ecke Ranch in Encinatas, Calif. Paul Ecke Sr. is
credited with developing the first indoor poinsettia in the
1920s; grandson Paul Ecke III now heads the operation.
The care and selection recomme.ndations ale those of Ecke
experts.
Eckespoint Freedom Red is by far the best-selling red,
according to Ecke. It has deep-red bracts, dark-green

~llhbothgardensandcomputersflounshmgmAmen~,

'.

YOUNG AT HEART- Delores Gardella, left, practices her ballet as a member of the Young At Heart dancers.
In
from 63 to 82 attend the class.

WE HAVE EVERYTHING
FOR THE SERIOUS
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that sa hvely top1c nowadays among mouse-chckers wtth
green thumbs:
.
I sought gu1dance on the state of the art and also looked
al a few programs.
..
,
Tom Tallardy of Nornstown, Pa., an eng10eer who
monitors garden queries on CompuServe, one of the big
on· hnesery1ces, says people are lookmgfortruly encyclopedic databases and good design programs. CD· ROMs,
with their pictures, animation and huge storage capacity,
may eventually provide the best answer, Tallardy says.
"The real job (in making a program) comes in collect·
ing the data and coding it, a monumental effort when you
start talking about hundreds of thousands of entries,"
Tallardy said in a telephone interview. " When you put in
pictures or drawings, then the space requirements go up
dramatically."
I tested a database, two design applications and a CD·
ROM disk. And I interviewed a professional landscape
designer who said he relies heavily on computerized
drawings.
·
The database responded smoothly when I .asked it to
find tall shrubs for a shady area on my place.
I typed in "shrubs, ""shade,""eight feet" for the
height and " Zone 5" for my Northeastern climate. The
screen came up with "Taxus cuspidata" - a Japanese
yew - and several andromedas, with descriptions of their
looks, growing requirements and behavior.
Not only tbat, but the program, called Hortis Opis,
furnished the names and addresses of six nurseries carrying the plants. My wife then goton t~e phone and soon was
in business with a nursery that would ship them.
The $250 program for DOS llS!:rs is p_I'Qd~ by J.
Mendoza Gardens, 18 E. 16th St, New York, N.Y. !0003,
Tel. 212-989-4253. It covers 2,000 entries among trees,
shrubs, vines, grasses and bamboos. In the works, at under
$100, are diskettes on perennials, roses, bulbs, annuals
and biennials.
Anyone who wants to design a garden will find valuable

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d

,,

I

"

and water only when the growing medium feels dry to the
touch.
Poinsettias need about six hours of bright, indirect lipl
daily. A good gauge is when the room's natural lip! ia
sufficient to rea!! fine print.
. A sunny spot ncar a window is great. Avoid botafternoon sun directly on bracts. Keep plants away from drafu,
radiators and hot air registers.
It's best iftemperatures do not exceed 72 degrees in the
day and 60 degrees at night. In mild climatea, sudi as
Phoellix, they often stay outside on a sheltered patio
during the day.
The common name honors Joel R. Poinsett, U.S. ambassador to Mexico in the 1820s who found them growing
in the countryside there. The botanical name is Euphorbia
pulcherrima.
EDITOR'S NOTE - Jamee W1...,_ worbcl for the
AP 11 1 reponer and editor from 11147 until lie rlflnd
In 1984.

......

•'.

help and entertainment, too, in either LandDesigner or
;
Gardenview. These are multifaceted, sophisticated ere' I''
14'
ations, producing meticulous drawings to scale.
~,.l
You can save each design so you'll have pictorial
'
records of.your garden over time. With LandDesigner you
.,.
can gel automatic estimates of materials andcostsand plot
....,
out sprinkler·systems, too. Gardenview gives you fasci natingviews of the garden in 3-D perspective as it changes
from month to month. Mastering the commands in both
programs takes time, however.
LandDesignerfor Windows, $89, is produced by Greed
Thumb Software, 75 Manhattan Drive, Suite 100, Boul·
der, Colo. 80303, Tel. 800-336-3127. A professional
version, LandDesigaerPro, costs $395. Both programs
have DOS versions. The DOS Gardenview program,
$195, comes from Mindsun, R.D.2, Box 710, Andover,
N.J. 07821, Tel. 201-398-9557.
·
A landscaper, Sam Crimm ofTullahoma, Tenn., said in
a telephone interview he uses LandDesigner Pro con·
stantly in his business because ' ' I can't draw and this thing
makes .drawing real professional.' '
If you have a CD-ROM drive, a program called The
Exotic Garden will give you thrills galore . Say you ' re
researching gardenias. Click the mouse and the screen fills
up with the flower in gorgeous color. There are more than COWRFUL VARIETY - A colorful variety of poinsettias will be available this holiday season, iacllldlq the
500 such photographs and also a narrated time-lapse film Eckespoint. Freedom Hybrids. The Freedom group was developed at the Paul Ecke Ranch in Enclpstas, Calif.
on why plants flower. ,
The $49.95 disk, produced by VT Productions, Inc.,
P.O.Box 339, Sequel, Calif. 95073, Tel.408-464-1554, is
especially valuable for house plants. Each entry contains
excellent growing requirements and instructions.
After exploring these programs I came away thinking
any gardener would find them useful , but that they would
he especially helpful to people stt rting gardens and land·
scapes from scratch.
And even if they do nothing else with th.em. they can
have fun contemplating software Edens on a winter night
Still hidden in the future, however, is a mouse-driven
robot who'll get out there and pull the weeds.
EDITOR'S NOTE: George Brla retired from the AP In
1981 alter 40 year• that Included coverage of World
War II from Italy.

""'

',

:a

\

•

-aoc on call around-tHe world

&lt;

.c

*

EDITOR' S NOTE- Here's 66-year-old Boltoa Speaker Thomas "Tip" O;Neill dispatched him in 1979
doctor who bas never belonced to a country club, to assess the refugee situation.
' 'Our plane was one of the first to land in Phnom Penh
owned a yacht or gone on a safari. But his passport and
after
Pol Pot took over. The 'city once had a war-swollen
visaphotosarealwaysdoseathandlaauehe'saeeded
population
of 2 million, but there was no one around. We
at one or the world's trouble spots, a refupe camp or
saw about 1,000 Vietnamese soldiers, a total of two trucks
a war zone.
and eight Russian limos carrying government officials, .
By HUGH A. MULLIGAN
but no more than 20 Cambodians. An empty city, ghostly
AP Special Correspondent
BOSTON (AP)- For Boston physician Tom Durant, silent."
In those crowded camps over the next decade the silence
vacations are almost always a disaster.
was
broken by "harrowing stories we kept hearing about '
Rwanda, Bosnia, Somalia, Afghanista~ . Ethiopia,
:hekillingfields.
The horror continues. Land mines planted
Kurdistan, Cambodia, Vietnam- whenever catastrophe
years
ago
claim
1,000 new victims a mo.nth• farmers
strikes, wherever refugees flee across borders ind crowd
digging
their
fields,
kids bringing the cattle ~orne. One out
into camps, wherever hapless civilians arc starving, dying
·of
every
230
Cambodians
is an amputee."
by the roadside from cholera, mutilated by land mines,
Somalia
he
regards
as
"by
far the most dangerous.
Durant is sure to show up.
Shorily'
a
fter
we
left
in
January
four Indian doctors were
When calamity calls, he puts in for vacation time, dons
killed
at
the
hospital.
There
is
more
random gunfire than
his lucky Red Sox baseball cap and heads off to volunteer
any
place
in
the
world.
Your
rented
four-wheel drive
his clinical skills, his infectious humor and his steely
comes
equipped
with
a
15-year-oldon
the
roof w1th a .30immunity to despair built up during three decades of a
caliber
machine
gun
and
a
12-year-old
in
the
back cradli ng
unique problem practice around the globe.
an
AK-47.
You
realize
their
job
is
to
protect
the vehicle,
·House calls on the homeless and the helpless are his
prescription for anesthetizing "the Mickey Mouse of not you.
"Thousands starved to death every day 10 a schizomedical bureaucracy."
phrenic
nightmare where a mile away there was-a market
Whether in a dusty tent hospital on the border of
with
fresh
vegetables and camel meat. But the people had
Cambodia or Rwanda or in the antiseptic tiled conidors of
no
money.
Sooner or later all refugee situations deteriothe Massachusetts General Hospital, where he is assistant
rate.
The
guys
with the guns get a disproportionate share
director, this stocky, nearly bald medical missionary would
of
the
food
and
try to make a buck while the very young
never be mi~taken for Dr. Albert Schweilzer. And his Mand
the
very
elderly
die. Most of the gunmen were spaced
A-S-H-type humor and blunt vocabulary would surely
out
on
chat,
a
mind-bending
drug flown in daily from the
startle the newest of Mother Teresa's novices, as it someslopes
of
Mount
Kenya
because
it must be chewed fresh.''
times does veteran nurses ?nd high-tech lab types.
Bosnia,
Durant
says,
"was
a complelely different
Doc Durant, as he is usually called, except in Vietnam
ballgame.
Refugees
in
business
suits and sports jackets
where he gloried in the title of ' 'Tommy Tongue Depreswho
had
lost
everything:
home,
family , workplace. We
sor," looks and often sounds like a battle-scarr~d. overage
scavenged
for
usable
medical
supplies
in the ruins of
rugby player, which at 66 he still is, to the consternation of
seven
hospitals
blown
away
by
the
former
Yugoslavian
his wife Fredericka.
Army.
In
Somalia,
the
deaths
were
the
result
of chaotic
A founding member of the Beacon Hill Rugby Club, he
indifference.ln
Bosnia,
they
were
premeditated
and genostill competes in the dinosaur division, for players over
'dal • tt
.
•
Cl
age 35.
But of all his experiences, '.' n,&gt;thing matched the horror
"I'm a hooker," Doc grinningly confessed over coffee
and
magnitude of Rwanda. The number of dead in a short
and bagels in his'office at Massachusetts General. " The
time
was greater than any other place: 60,000 to 70,000
hooker is the guy in the middle who hooks the ball out of
from
cholera alone. At Goma, across the border in Zaire,
the serum, the huddle, while everyone piles on. So in
lined one side of th~ road, market slalls the other.
corpses
refugee situations you ' re u.~ed to being buried under
"If
you
were lucky enough to have a family , you got
burdens of chaos."
wrapped
in
a burial cloth. Otherwise, if you were off
The office is decorated with photographs he has taken
fetching
water
or 'firewood, you just died where you
of rice paddies in Ca~bodia, a sampan ~ the Mekong
collapsed
from
massive
dehydration. You can lose oneRiver in Southeast As1a, sunnse m Somaha, wood fires
third
of
your
body
weight
in two days to cholera's devasfront-lighting a smoldering volcano in R~anda, a stone
tating
diarrhea."
bridge recently blown away from tbe Bosman lan~pe.
In Goma, Durant witnessed his "first murder. I saw a ,
Also there's a rugby poster from the w~rld ~~~OIPIOn­
thief
hacked to death in 15 seconds in the marketplace by
ship at Twickenham, England, a helmet hner htlerated
four
strokes
of a merchant's' panga, lhc African machete.
from an Iraqi militiaman" and some lit~ature not.found
The
first
cut
his scalp off, then two ripped apart his chest
in your average dcictor' s office: a pamphlet on puttmg the
and
the
last
was
to the neck. ''
pi~ces together in _Northern lrel~nd, a trcallse on the
Far
from
Massachusetts
General's computerized scan·
proliferation of anll-personnel m1nes around the world,
ners
and
the
latest
laser
technology,
the Boston physician
lhe annual report of the American Rcfup Committee,
often
finds
himself
practicing
the
most
primitive brand of
under whose auspices he has treated the forsaken on three
preventive medicine. "Even in the grimmest situation,"
'continents over the past 15 years.
.
.
.
. Comparing tjtc catastrophes he h~ wn~essed ts.a gnm he insists, "there is always something worth doing."
Four retired firemen from San Francisco and one from
:compilation of mankind's inexhauallblc mhuma~·~ · ..
San
Diego saved more lives in Goma than all the doctors
: "Afghanistan had the most refugees, over 5 ~·~hon,
puttogcther,,
he says.1
1'
'be begins. "Many had been ~a1nled ~y the mllhoos of
loaded
two
pumper
trucks
onto
a C-5 cargo
"They
:tand mines planted by the Sov•e~. Theu planes dro~
plane,
put
their
hoses
into
Lake
Kivu,
after
clearing the
:butterfly bombs, disguised as copes of the Koran, wh1ch
corpses away from lhe intake, and brought 300,000 gal· .
:kids often picked up.
. ·.
. "K~rdistan produced nearly a m~lhon refugees. Cam: Ions offresh water a day to the CBII!P 10 miles away. Clearl
:bodia has just repatriated the last of 1ts refugeea. ~ '1~181 , drinking water was essential in replacing cholera 's 'enor!border camp became the secopd-largest c;am~an cny. mous body loss.
Durarit has made 1'4 trips to Cambod•a s10ce House
• i

.I "

foliage and is long lasting.
·
'
Nonredcolors have gained in popularity in recent years.
A lot depends on where you live, and Ecke says )JIOSI are
sold on the East or West coasts.
Pink Peppermint, a speckled pink; Lemon Drop. a
bright yellow, and Freedom lingle Bells, with ligllt pink
flecks on dark red bracts, are among the nonred favorites.
New for this season is Eckespoint Monet, named for the
French impressionist painter. It bas multicolored bracts
and received the Society of American Florists' highest
honor for a new variety. Ecke says greater quantities will
be available next year.
Protect any poinsettia when brin-ging it home. Chilling
winds or temperatures below 50 degrees Fahrenheit are
potential killers. A large paper bag is enough protection
for a short trip in .a car.
Then start with a thorough watering. Saturate the growing area until water seeps through the drain hole into a
saucer. Discard the excess water. Thereafter, check daily

~

By GEORGE BRIA
POUND RIDGE, N.Y. (AP)- Whatcanacomputerdo
for a gardener?
. . .
.

face would have stopped as well."
She shed tears, denyiOg her fate for
r-_;,___________.,..________~-----.........- - - - - - ,
MaloneyjumpedintoCreazzo'scar, ~ lime. Th~n, s~e resolved to move
D,Z'Z'D . . . ~z-•s sp·~~ A ..
her words tumbling over one another ahe~d, hop10g 10 her heart to walk
.:..DB DIll,.,. ~ ~
.:...,£ft&amp;l
· into-a horrific tale of being run off the agam someday· .
.
870
road, of being dragged from her car
Now, Cre~~ .•s lear~u~g how to
onto the frozen ground, ofbeing raped sh1ft from a hf~ wnhouthr~uts to a hfe
28 In
28
where everyth10g has hm1ts .
t dl
re~ ~re~o pulled away 10 get help, She now looks at the ~orld from a
3x9
24
she glanced in the rearview mirror permanent seated poSition, le~mmg
and saw a man get into the other car. to balance.her body all over a~~m and
The race began.
to cope w1th r,nus~le spas~s. ~en
99
99
Thetwocarsjockeyedforposition, they start, II s !!ke you re fightmg
their tires fighting for traction on the your own body, she says.
.
.1cyroad. Creazz0 swerved between
She now rolls . her wheelchalf
.
cars trying 10 stay ahead of her pur- s1ow1y, ever consc1ous of cracks and
1SPI2RS).........
Box (While ouanuttea Last)
suer: but he gradually gained ground bumps that ·could topp~e her to the
d 11 d 1
'it
ground, helpless. Cauhon has capOPEN UNTIL 8:00 P.M. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2511 AND
anC pu e a °nncedgs• e.
d
th lured her, particularly with her chi I·
reazzo g1a
up an saw e dr H
h 2 El' be h 11 d
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2611• OPEN SUNDAY, NOYEMIER.27"' 1 P.M. TO 6 P.M.
window move on thcothcrcarandthe
en, anna • 1. , •za I • . • an
OPEN UNTIL 8:00 P.M. ILL DEER SEASON WEEK.
fl h f
fi
Martha, 9. But 11 has not 1mpnsoned
as o gun lfe.
.
he ·11
Bullets smacked into her car and
r WI ·
EXTENDED HOURS FOR HUNTING SUPPLIES ONLY.
t k h . th k
th d
Recently, she and her daughters
~ ru~ B~r ~n ef neeihmou a; were leaving a grocery store when
Cac · ~e mhgt rom e wount sl, they saw a mali snatch a shopper's
reazzo .oug 1o ma10tam con ro ,
C
dh ·
h d
sparks flying as the car scraped the phurse. reafzzo anh er lgdt~ 1she ase
1 c man as ar ass e cou 10 er van,
d'
.
meSh1an ra1 1.ed h
b 1 ld n•t appre hen d h'1m.
h'
.
th
1
1 across e u' ' cou
e seer
er ve ICe
AI h h
·
medianandontothesnow frontlawn ·
t oug we went to help th1s
985·3301
of the Thornton Police ~partment woman catch the pur~e snatcher, I
ST. RT. 248
Slumped in the front seat cov
couldn'treallydoanyth10g," she says.
CHESTER
with blood and spitting ~ut ,:;~h "So especially where thev're conC
' cerned, I'm tearful about what my
1 h d th
~~~on-~K~-m
rct=fh~~clckadsc~dnd~g,hntlliilm~•~
.
,
,
ou o 1scar, oo e upan own e r · b~t~~~n~s~in~~~~~~m~a!u!·:··------------------~------------------~
call h•m a person, off the street.
street and walked toward her.
\
It's an extraordinary, selfless alii·
He dragged Maloney from the car
tude for a woman who ha~ overcom~ and threw her to the ground. When he
obstacle afte.r.~~?sta~le ~l!fi1Jg herhfe . reached back for Maloney's things,
Creazzo hall' ~ifticult ~h1ldh?'ld his eyes met Creazzo's.
W . r e pleased to announce our
a~ter her pare.nts d1~orced 10 a biller
" Neither one of us said anything,"
specialists in obstetrics and gynecology
&lt;l•spute. She hved With her mother on she recalls. ·' It was like a dead stare.
the East Coast until she was an older · ''It just seemed like it hung for an
Ltft. wright are Jack Chan, D.O., Kenneth
teen-ager. Then she moved 10 With eternity. His. eyes are so dark and so
her father and they settled 10 Colo- empty and so cold and it was, ! don't
Glimer, D.O. (Je.tted), Catherine Coats, D.O.,
rado,
.
know, something that will live with
Creazzo soon mamed, but she and me forever, probably. "
and Jac k Ramey, 0.0 For mort
h~r husband grew apart a~d reahzed
'fhe gunman grabbed Maloney's
informati on please call
th~y would be better off d1vorced, as belongings, picked her up like a rag
fnends, shanng custody of the glfls. dnll and headed for his car.
(6 14) 593-2398.
"Everything in my life has been a
It was the last time she was seen
struggle and I've l)ad to overcome alive.
it," she says. " That's what I have
WithCreazzo'shelp,policearrested
done my ~hoi~. hfe ; .. alii know •s to ·Robert E. Harlan, 29, within days. He
keep_ fight10g.
. 1
is facing tria lin January on charges«;~f
W1th sun stream10g through the first-degree murder and assault.
gtassr~taurantwal!s,ereazzospeaks Maloney's body was found in a wasoftly 10 a deep ~o1ce, recalling how ter-filled culvert on the prairie east of
~er encounter w1th Rhonda Maloney metropolitan Denver a week later.
m the pre-da~n darkness on Feb. 12.
As Creazzo fought for her life, her
changed her hfc f?rever ·
heroism captured the heart of metroOnherwaytop•ckupherfatherfor politan Denver, which dubbed her
breakfilst, Creazzo 's Cadillac rounded
" the Good Samaritan."
_
a freeway ramp curve and illuminated
Maloney's husband, Kerry, issued
with its headlights twb parked cars,
a statement that said, "She is a real
one with flashers blinking.
Thinking one vehicle had broken hero and without her, we never would
down, Creazzo inched by, but the have known what happened to
look on the face of a young, blond Rhonda."
Maloney's family also gave
woman standing by the road comCreazZo
1\ pair of golden hoop ear. pclled her to stop.
.
rings
with
guardian angels as a token
"I didn't have a choice;" Creazzo
says. "It was justli_ke there was the , of their support.
Six weeks after the incident, docneed and it was wnttcn all oyer her
tors told Cre~ she WOIJld never
'

lt•s that time again: How to find best poinsettias ·.

.

Woman lives .lesson of heroism

.•

Sunday Tim-Sentinel Pq1 · El

Of computer mice and gardens

•HUNTING CLOTHING
•SHOTGUNS AND BARRELS
•SLUGS BY REMINGTON, FEDERAL,
WINCHESTER AND BENNEKE
81
EDITOR'S NOTE- S"!lsatrl=-- lace. There-wa~n 1 ! any question;-and--"' k a~·.,~p·it.aSi!roii'dc;pinii(;i;:;ii;-l~e.
I:ICI!!NSII::·-~
··-~
llced her own safety for~ fellow 1think anybody who had been in that
She sought a
opinion: the
Iii
""
human being and now she pays the situation and seen the intensity on her results were the same..
•LURES •ALL ACCESSORIES
'I

price. But this remarkable woman
is passing a lesson on to her three
daughters that should endure for
everyone: The will to fighlis inside
you, and no number or medals for
heroism makes a hero. The heart
does
By SANDY SHORE
Auoellled PrHs Writer
DENVER (AP)- Jaquie Creazzo
cases her wheelchair slowly toward a
table at a fast-food restaurant as her
three young daughters scramble about
on its multicolored • plastic play.
ground.
Some lunchtime patrons whisper
as she passes. A few approach, shake
hands and thank Creazzo "the Good
•
Samaritan" whowasshotthreetimes
as she tried to save a young woman in
.
a desperate race agamst a gunman.
Months later Creazzo 31 ofWheat
Ridge is strugg.ing to llve 'in a body
down by a
paraly~d from. the chest
.
bullet lodged 10 her spme. . . . .
" The most frustrating th10g IS JUSt
. laywhat you 've lost personally, hke
. .
.
10gl0bedandhavmgamuscle.spasm;
your legs not domg the Simplest
things," she says.
"Thankfully, I'm still alive. Being
paralyzed is a small price to pay to get

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November 27,1994

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P•98-E4-Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

The stuff dreams are made of

The movie prop the Maltese Falcon Ia seen on display at the auction hOIUI CUlalie'J Ia London. The prop, llloag with other movie memorabUia, will be auctioned orr al Chrlalie'• Eal( In
New York on Dec. 6. Christie's estl11111tes tbe clauk: bird w11 retch aome SSO,OOO. The prop c:au be
seen In a pbotoarapb rrom lbe 1!141 movie ..l'be Maltese Falcon'' wtlll,lrom left, Humphrey Boa·
1111, Peter Lorn, Mary Astor and Sydney Greellllreet, holding tbe Maltese Falcon. In the baciC. ground are old cameras to go to auction. (AP)

Researcher unearths long-hiddentrail between Maine and Canada
By GLENN ADAMS
Associated Prell Writer
MISERY GORE, Maine First went tbe Yankee herdsmen,
driving their livesiOclc north toward
tbe CBDadian frontier BDd on to

Along tbe way, it passes dlrough
places witb such forbidding names
as Misery Gore, a hilly, dilggershaped wilderness township, tbe
logging .town of Jackman and tbe
once-bustling farm outpost of
DUII'Itcts in Quebec.
Moose River, now a bunting and
Then, heading south, came a · fishing mecca of 230 people.
stream of Canadians, routed by a
The Old Canada Road dates
b'iple curse of bad crops, a cholera back to 1817, tbree years before
eptdemic and job shoo.age.
Maine became a state. The MasNow a University of Maine sachusetts Legislature, which bad
researcher is uncovering tbe 177• autbority over what is now Maine,
year-old route, long concealed by ordered a road to Quebec, a major
forest, of tbe first significant market for livestock, crops and
French-Canadian immigration to fish.
Maine.
Workers using axes to felllrees
Along the 24 miles of the Old and sledge hammers to break rocks
Canada Road be has explored so blazed tbe !rail to tbe border. Farmfar, Barry H. Rodrigue has discov- steads and roadhouses to accomered cellar pits, stone piles from modale drovers and traders popped
collapsed ebimne~.s. stone barn up along tbe route; homes were
foundations and a few cfsteiifs. ---.. ~yally built 45 feet from tbe 15Rodrig~ dlsb'ibuted "wanted" foot wide swath.
~posters tbrougbout tbe northwestIn 1828, Maine decided to
em Maine region, seeking pictures, improve tbe road into a .carriage
-•·
'
stories, leiters and diaries. Tbey way.
yielded a wealtb of clues '" where
The traffic was heavier· norththe road meandered and helped - .bound until the early 1830s, when
pinpoilll some of the 50 sites local- tbe Irish potato fiunine sent a wave
ed so far.
of immigrants ovencas «J Quchec.
Rodrigue's work draws from Cholera carried by the immigrants
s.uch diverse disciplines as archae- triggered an epidemic.
ology, geography, genealogy, sate!- . The threat of disease, a ladt of
lite technology and computer anal-. JObs BDd poor atipa sent tboUSBDds ·
ysis. He also plans aerial surveys to of CBDadians beading to ~aine,
borne in on the zigzagging passage. where major building projects in
"Using all these technologies, tbe new capital, Aogusta, and elseyou come up witb the whole where were a powerful draw.
story,•' said Rodrigue, who wears
Fears that cholcta would he car·
an Indiana Jones-style hat as be ried into Maine b'iggcred an IDISUC·
drives ·his station wagon crammed cessful call in tbe Legislature to
with maps and boob. "It's a puz- send tbc militia 'to tbe border to
zle, and everybody bas a piece of keep refugees out
iL"
But compassion also could be
The Old Canada Road follows a found along the route.
path back BDd forth across its modElisha Hilton, who built a roadem successor, tbe two-lane U.S. house in 1831, took in penniless
Route 201, a busy tboroughfare for strangers and allowed tbe bodies of
tourists and timber haulers.
some travelers who died

buried in his family graveyard
A modern, sod-roofed bouse
now occupies the spot on a hillside
where James Jackman built a roadhouse near tbe town that was later
named for him. Today, vlsltors can
pick apples from trees that stood
next to the site of the inn, built
around 1828.
Just south of tbe section he's
explored so far, Rodrigue plans to
research a 45-mile lengtb of tbe
Old· Canada Road that was staned
in 1818. That and other frontier
roads Rodrigue also plans to
explore led to a network of 19th·
cen,tury state roadways.
Rodrigue took on the project to
find out more about his ancestor
Francois Rodrigue, who brought
his wife and children to Maine in
1835, "probably to find work."
But Rod_tia.u ~also ·wants 10
-empllas!Ze iliat immigration was a
two-way street.
Until around 1850, be said,
there was no tiOi'der checkpoint.
Maine and Quebec were perceived
as a contiguous region, unified by
strong French influence still evident today in Maine.
As many as 35,000 French
Canadians, Rodrigue noted, served
as Union troops during tbe Civil ·
War. People drifted across the border in botb directions. .
"It was not tbe French interloping on Yankee territory, as is so ·
often depicted," said Rodrisue.
who restored his original French
surname in 1989 from tbe anglicized version, Roderick.
· ''The whole region was a sort of
a pre-NAFfA free-trade zone,"
said Rodrigue, referring to the
recent North American Free Trade
Act that eases trade restrictions .
among tbe United States, Canada
and Mexico.
.

•......November 27,1994

aavaneelo .

Hollow Crafts Center, where nen: speak my inner voice,' • Denney
ney recently had a one-woman says.
show.
· Like most of her ·pieces, tbe
"They're not only visually emotion comes not from a facial
exciting, I also feel tbem when I expression- the face is amootb
look at them. They actually do and featureless - but .from its
something to me physically in a hearing and body language.
very deep way. There's an ele,liDCe
Denney works bathed in sunh
about them, a quiet elegance.'
light in a small upstairs studio. Sbe
:By NANCY SHUL~S
Denney considers them gifts first forms a stron11, lightweight .
~AP S.peclal Correspondent
from God.
skeleton from alummum wire and
MIDDLEBURY, Vt. -Lynette
She says the images · that mounts it on wood. She then meiiS
~Denney spent her youtb amid the inspired her came dur,ing medita- wax in a Crock-Pot and wraps it in
•tall trees, blue waters and Green lion, a technique she learned to layers around the wire. Sbe uses no
~Mounlains of Vermont. "I grew up help cope witb tbe prospect of los- tools other lban her fmgers.
'&lt;looking at gorgeous landscapes," ing her sight and witb it, ber ability
"Touch is the way that I see,"
she says. "I sopped tbem up witb to create art.
sbe says.
my eyes."
"I bad been losing vision, batShe prefers universal tbemes.
" She is grateful for that above all ling around tbc house," she says. "Praying Woman" depicts a
~;_ that and tbe anatomy class she •'I joined a group of women who female figure kneeling in prayer.
once took in art M:bool. "I remem- taught me to meditate. to push "Def~at" consists of a woman's
'ber having to draw every bone everything out of my mind. The body !brown backward over a log.
~_from every angle by memory. Our day went · beuer. Everything Another piece represents a blind
.;ranaJ exam was to draw a skeleton seemed to go more smootbly on the mother holding her sighted baby.
·~riding a bicycle with a balloon in days that 1did il"
The baby is smooth as silk; the
~one band and tbe otber hand on tbe
She began rising before dawn to mother highly textured.
handlebars, a tbree-quarter view· I practice while tbe house was still
Denney encourages people to
;'thank God for tbat."
quiet, before her husband, Ray, and touch her work. Hand her one of
:. Years would pass before Den- her two stepdaughters got up.
her figures and she reaches for it
'1ney would use wbat she learned in
"Images began 10 Come into my eagerly. Her long fingers slide gen-that art class to M:ulpt figures from head,'· she says,. "I began to see a dy along tbe bronze surfaces and a
•wire and wax. Sbe works by hand woman walking along tbe ~ in smile lights her face as she recog.tlnd by heart; she bas been blind for the forest, always moving in some nizes each piece by its feel.
--20 years.
beautiful environment. I would
"Some sculptors don't want
\r
A gifted painter, Denney blmed come down and make coffee and people to touch their work. They
''to sculpture after losing her sight to sit and watch her. lilce watching a say it's not good for tbe bronze, but
the diabetes sbe's lived witb since movie. I didn't tell anyone for a in a thousand years, what differc:cbildhood.
. long lime. l tbougbt they would ence wiD it make?"
··· She has produced 21 figures, tbink 1was crazy.
. Two pieces are b'ibutes to Gin·.most of tbem female, ·ranging in
"In one scene, tbere was an ger. her first guide dog . "Dia".iize from .eight inches to a couple indoor pool that seemed lit from Iogue" depicts a woman bending
of feet. Cast in bronze by area below the water. 1 looked at tbe over a sleeping dog, a nigMy ritufoundaries, they dance and grieve other end, and there was a woman al. "Ginger would sleep curled up
')lnd celebrate life witb sucb power looking down with her band on her in a ball at t)le foot of my bed, her
'and emotion they seem almost bip. I saw her'the next day, and tbe nose tucked under ber taiL Before l
•human. They're prized by collec- nexL Fmally, a friend S81d, 'Don't went to.sleep, I would kneel down
tors and exhibited in galleries and you think you should sculpt her?'" and thank her for ber work, for
·museums.
"Standing· Woman · looks being in my life."
"There's something very real much like tbe artist herself, long"Threshold" shows a woman
'lind very honest about tbem," says limbed and graceful, with a calm, with a dog under one arm, "a god;Susan Farrow, director of tbe Frog quiet air. "I like my figures 10 . dess carrying Ginger over the

(EDITOR'S NOTE- Lynette
Dellliey, • &amp;lftecl painter, lost her
•laht 10 yean ago. Rather than
illllanclon art, •be turned to sculp·
lure. She now works In wire and
J!wax, produdna powerrul, emo·
'Uional pieces •he views as girts
·~from God.)
·

bombs, tbe supposediy llllsintable
auperdreadnaugbt majestically
turned turtle and SBDk wftb balf bet
2,400-mBD crew. But Kurillllilt
bad four battleships, eight auUer.
and 11 destroym. And Halsey bad
taken tbe bait.
When . scout planes spotted
Ozawa's tempting flaltops, Halsey
took off willa his battleships BDd
carriers. "I thought AcJm. Halle!,
was making one heU of a mb•aJre, '
said Rear Adm. Gerald BOJIII. .
Left to defend the northern
approach to tbe beachhead was
Rear Adm. Clifton· ''ZifSY"
Sprague's eggshell Tarfv U 18511:
force of six small "j~f, carriers
and seven shepberdiDs.destroyers.
When Kurita appeared iD the moming mist, Sprague decided his only
recourse was 10 auact.
The destroyers darted In and out
of smote screens at the enemy, fir.
ing torpedoes as they came and in
bUD being battered by 14-illcb bat·
tleship shells "like a puppy llelng
hit by. a truck." Destroyer John·
ston, skippered by Cmdr. Erneat E.
Evans, a Cherokee lndiBD, kept
coming until she was pummeled
beneatb the waves.
Luckily Sprague's ships were so
thinly armored the Japanese &amp;belli•
crashed right tbrough them before
exploding. But two jeeps, St. Lo
and Ganibier Bay, were less fortunate and were siDik.
Witb victory at hand and the
defenseless transports just ahead,
Kurita, his battle line In disarray
from ~,charging destroyers, unaccountabfy faltered, then turned tall,
possibly unaware Halsey bad left.
"God damn it, boys, they're
gelling away!" shouted a cocky
si~ of Sprague's cracked but
sull fighting eggsheU fleet
To the SQUib, Rear Adm.
Oldendorf bad set a trap of his own
at tbe mouth of Suriago Strait. It
was sweet revenge: Five ol his six
old battleships bad risen from tbC
mud of Pearl Harbor IIi fightqaln.
Oldendorf, tactical commander
in Adm. Thomas C. Kinkaid's 7th
F~et, knew the Japanese were
coming BDd lined up his warships
across tbe moutb of tbe strait 16
bring his broadsides to bear. As tbe
enemy debouched into Leyte Gulf,
they completed tbe classic naval
maneuver of "crossins the T," /iii
Oldendorr s guns fidng asainat
onii tbe forward I!UDI or the
fiipaneie. AlifCilliy superior radar
and harrying Pr boats, the cruisers
and ~ old ladies from Peul lflr.
bor destroyed the two successive
Japanese fleets.

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By PAMELA HUEY
AS.oclnted Press Writer
MINNEAPOLIS - The musi~al str!lins of praise that fill tbe
~anctuary of the old red brick
church in Ibis racially mixed neighborhood sometimes come from
:Vivaldi or Handel and more often
fr'om tbe Soul Liberation Gospel
Choir.
·: .On ntber_Surulays, jt' &amp; a n:uLband, a brass ensemble or a blue~
glass group. On one recent Sunday,
~.cbMdren's choir ((om Africa sana.
·" At rb·~ ·front af Patk Avenue
United Methodist Church, a man
pounds tbe piano, bouncing up and ·
dowJl as be directs tbe choir BDd
occasionally tbe orchestra beside
blm. Or be stands, entbusiaslically
/ ;eliciting lively, melodious sounds
•from the swaying, clapping adult
choir.
' As Park Avenue's minister of
.mnsic, Tom Filcb is responsible for
providing tbe leadership that makes
,Ibis musical melting pot possible.
: "It's fun, it's wonderful," said ·
:Fitch. "I can't imagine going to a
~burch where you couldn't do all
•those styles, I would be very
:!Jnhappy."
\
:· A child of tbe '60s from Califor:nia, Fitch didn't have any profes•sional music training until college,
:im!J his conversion to gospel music
:came about almost by accident. His
:commilnlent to it solidified during
·~ summer of witnessing racial
:J!atred and povcny in Mississippi.
,. The Rev. Keitb Johnson, a black
:ininistcr who shares the pulpit with
) white pastor, the Rev. Mark
•Horst, said tbe music at Park
~venue gets people's anention and
:as a common language, draws people together.
• Fitch migbt seem an unlikely
4:andidate to lead the musical minbtry of a congregation tbat celeJxatcs such diversity, but Johnson
~ys Fitch is well-suited for the job.
• "II basically bas to do with his
own background," Jobnson said.
t'He's exposed himself to otber
~ultures, and be has submilled bim~~Cif to learning culturally different
music and bringing tbat smorgasbord to the table . Tbe personal
'l:boices be bas made fit into the
Jlverall big picwre."
• Fitch, 42, grew up in Berkele~.
talif.. and inq:nded to be a class1:
Cal pianist
.
: He started college in 1970, but
jlropped out for o while to work at
fbe post office.
One day after be returned to Cal
State-Hayward and was walking
!he halls of the music building, be
~a black gospel choir singing:
r The choir was part of a musac
class. Filch enrolled with some
lrepidation, wondering if ~e would
jle accepted as its only whale memjx:r.
I
• "ButJ heard them singins about
hesus fn a way that touched me
~very deeply, and that save me tbe
:courage to believe that I might
't.somehow belong witb them," be
said.
I Soon, he was playing with the
lcboir BDd one Sunday be played at
: tbe Ephesian African Methodist
1Ep!!co~Jal Chun:h in Berkeley.
J Tbe real chanse in his life's
tdlrection
several years
,
. occurred
.
"~~~ ·

I.

•

Sunday nmea-Sentlnel Pagt •

tbreshold into heaven."
·' marks on my flesh and my leg was
Her currenl dog je Flory, a yel· au shades of purple, red and green.
low Lab who wiggles witb delight An ambulance took us to tbe bospias Denney straps on her harness for · tal. Flory cried all the way, she was
a walk. Nothing dampens Flory's so frightened for me."
·
enthusiasm for tbese outings,
Though no bones were broken,
deapite an aa:ldent thR:e years ago Denney spent montbs on tbe sofa
in which she and her mistreSs were recuperating. She has yet to recover
run over by a car.
from ber fear.
''I was walking home from
The accident marked a turning
work alons the sidewalk, I was point in· her life as an artist. She
almost'home, when I could feel gave up her work as a job counsomething pressing against my selor to devote all her time to ber
thigh. I felt down, and thought M:ulpture. "! realized lbat if I went
someone must've parked too near- bact to that job, Ibis work would
tbe curb. Then l realized it was never get done."
moving."
She also visited tbe elementary
The car rolled over Denney's M:hools in Middlebury to educate
thighs."! b'ied to crawl out and it coming generations of drivers
dragged me 15 feet. Flory was about the need to watch out for disunderneath tbe car. Her harness abledpedestrians.
was twisted lilce a pretzeL She bad
"I'm athletic. l didn'tlet blindoil stains on her back. l had tire. ness Stop me. I got dogs and I ran. I

.

later when be spent a summer in
Mississippi working witb a children's choir. Since going back to
college, he bad returned to church
but felt frustrated about the
church •s role in fighting poverty
and racism.
''I started to hurt inside and

was out there. This "is different
You wouldn't believe tbe fe.k J.l
know now and · never ltaew
before." Not that it slows her down
much; she and Flory still walk two,
miles a day.
It is easy to forget that Denney
can't see. Sbe wears no dllt &amp;laases, canies no cane, &amp;lid her conversation is that of a visual artist, full
of tbe colors of everyday life: the
yeUow leaves falling from the ollk
trees behind her bc,&gt;use, tbe pwple
dress she is wearing in tbe pboto
she bad taken to record how sbe
looked before disease stole her
sight
As a sighted artist, Denney
never thought much about sculpting. At tbe Boston Museum Scbool
of Fine Arts, where she studied in
the '(i(Js, she made just one piece, a
female
!bat turned out too
to

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wonder what could be done," he
said.
·
In Mississippi, he met Jobn
Perkins, founder of Voice of Calvjll'y Missions, who was using his
Christian faitb to help blacks gain
social justice and economic inde-

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Memory, sense of.touch inspires blind sculptress.

Battle for Leyte sealed
Japan's doom in Pacific
(EDITOR'S NOTE- Wllh dreds of miles to tbe north off
Its navy a dwlndllna force, the Luzon.
Kurita's force came wilb the
Japan••• sambled on a •bowworld's
two most wwerful battledown In Leyte Gutr coincident
with the U.S. Invasion or the ships, Yamato and Musasbi, armed
PbUipplne Islands In October witb unequaled 18-iDch auns. But
1!144. It turned out 10 be a dlsas· Ozawa bad about au that remained
ter for lhe Imperial Navy, even of bis navy's air power, four carriwith tbe Introduction or a new ers witb but only 120 planes. Adm.
weapon, the suicide corps of Chester Nimitz's Padfic command
bad upward of I00 carriers of all
kamlkue pllob.)
sizes. Ozawa was close to bein&amp; a
By SID MOODY
sacrificial goat, but tbe Japanese
AP Newlfnllll'a Writer
warrior code of bushido put death
History's largest sea battle was before disbooor.
launched in desperation - by
MacArthur, In fulfilling bis
Japan. It was a cataclysmic defeat pledge 10 "return" to tbc Philip- for Japan.
pines which he had left m
The Battle of Leyte Gulf in ignominy early In tbe war as tbe
October 1944 was to have fulfiUed Japanese overran Bataan, bad
Japanese plans dating back to 1907 fought long and hard up tbe New
to annibil•te tbe American Navy in Guinea coast. His original landing
a climactic battle. The long-stand- point in the Philippines was to have
ing piBDs were conditional. The been the southern island of Minsurprise attack on Pearl Harbor danao. But a downed pilot who bad
made war between tbe two Pacific been rescued told Halsey that Leyte
powers a reality.
was almost undefended. So on Oc:L
Twice Japan tried to lure the 20. 1944, four Army divisions
U.S. fleet to its destruction. The invaded Leyte and fought inland
ftrst attempt in June 1942 at Mid- against increasingly heavy enemy
way was a disastrous defeat tbat resistance in a rain-soaked jungle
cost Japa,n four aircraft carriers baUle that lasted for months.
and, unappreciated at tbe time,
The Japanese army command
marked tbe high-water mark of was hardly on speaking terms .with
Japanese aggression in tbe Pacific.
tbe Imperial Navy, holding it
The second try, at the American responsible for failing to keep
invasion of Saip.an in June 1944, America's
island-by-islaDII
became what the Americans called advance at bay. Without closely
· tbe Great Marianas Turkey Shoot. coordinating with tbe navy, the
Japan lost two carriers and more army changed its strategy of focusthan 400 planes and tbeir irreplacc· ing on tbe defense of Luzon and
able pilots.
began moving reinforcements to
Her navy a dwindling force, tbe Leyte. SHO-GO as. revised poured
Japanese sambled on a final try 70,000 men into Leyte. Only S,OOO
coincident with the U.S. invasion survived.
of the Philippine isiBDd of Leyte
Witb fewer than 100 planes on
that October.
·
band, to Vial Adm. Taltijiro Onishi
Like the earlier Japanese efforts, of tbe 1st Air Fleet in the Philip·
the plan fatally divided the allack- pines there was only one option.
ins fleet over too vast an expanse "Conventional methods of warfare
of ocean and required almost hal· are no longer adequate. Since dealh
letlike pecision all but impossible is the inevitable fate or (our) young
under tbe conditions.
eagles, they should he allowed to
The Japanese called it SHO-GO die in the most worthwhile way."
-Operation Victory. Two fleets By crashing their bomb-laden
under vice admirals Shoji Nishlmu- planes into Allied warships.
ra and Kiyohide Shima were to sor- Kamikazes.
lie tbrougb Suriago Strait south of'
But the Battle of Leyte Gulf bad
Leyte. To the north a fleet led by already made Japan's cause desperVice Adm. Takeo Kurita would ate.
charge through San Bernardino
SHO-GO began to come
Strait. Then the combined force unglued on Oct. 22, two nights
would descend like wolves on tbe after the landing, when U.S. sub·
fold on tbe vulnerable invasion marines Darter and Dace spotted
neetotOillt'DoqluMaeArtbur. - .KudJa'aJJ~! BDd SBDk two cruis·
Key to the operation was yet ers. Kurita, resagneifin
another fleet, the carrien of Vice losing an ~peeled half of his ships,
Adm. Jisaburo Ozawa, which was pressed on. The IICllt day American
to lure the U.S. 3rd Fleet of Adm. planes aWllllllld over Musashl like
William F. "Bull" Halsey away locusts. Hit by 19 torpedcies and 17
from Leyte by maneuvering bun-

Pome~oy-Middleport-Galllpolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

~ {

November 27, 1114

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PRICES GOOD NOV. 27 THRU DEC. 3, 1994.

en tine

24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

Vol. 45, NO. 145
Copyright 1994 .

·
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COLUMBUS (AP) - Some to l.be new legislaiUre is that l.bey
env'iroomenlal activists are wonied need to develop and renew envithat Republicans who will control ronmental ethics if l.bey want to
l.be legislature will help out busi- stick around," Skeldlng said. "For
ness and industry ral.bec than watch us, l.be election sends a loud ·and
out for the environment.
clear message that we need to go
But Donald Scbregardus, direc- back where we came from and retor of the Ohio Environmental Pro- energize the grass-roots strategies
tection Agency, said sucb fears are l.bat got us here."
groundless.
·
Some envirpnmentalists are
"I don't see it as dark days for wary of Attorney General-elect
l.be environment," Schregardus Betty Montgomery, whose camtold The (Qeveland) Plain Dealer paign received at leasl $200,000
for a story published Sunday. "The from tbc campaign of Gov. George
agency is funded beuer now than it Voinovich.
has evec been, and we have specific
They don't believe Voinovich
environmental goals and agency has ljved up to earlier pledges·lo be
goals."
the "environmental governor,"
Not all environmentalists are The Plain Dealer said.
downbeat aboUI the prospect of a
"Betty Montgomery is clearly
GOP majority in lhe legislature or commined to supporting lhc ·goverin slalewide elected offices.
nor," said Richard Sahli, eKecutive
Jeff Skelding, program coordi- director of tbc Ohio Environmenlal
nator for lhe Ohio chapter of the Council. "She will operate l.bal
Sierra Club, said the Nov. 8 Repub- office so closely wilh lhe governor
lican sweep was not a rejection of lhat for all iments and purposes,
environmental regulations. And· it lhere will be no separa1ion of powcould generate new challenges for ers.··
tbe' activists.
Montgomery denounCed Sahli's
"The important message to send suggestion that she wouldn't say

280Z.

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Ial mO!Wity in Obio has risen for
lbree straight~ as smallecc:Ommmtity hoilpilals try !0 care fCI' premature babies without the neededequipment or slaff, The Plain Dealtrreponed Sunday.
The newspaper said its threemonth review found !hat Ohio's
system to ensure lhe sickest babies
and most at-rist mothets get the
best medical care isn't working,
especially in norlbem Ohio.
The Plain Dealer used a compurer to analyze more l.ban 250,000
birth and death certificates for
1992, l.be latest complete records
available.
The system is supposed to route
bigb-risk.cases 10 sophisticated,
regional hospitals. The newspaper
said the slate bas found it difficult
ty enforce care limitations because
bave recognized the limils only as
guidelines.
The newspaper, in the first of a
two-part series, said the morlality
rate among newborns in Obio has
risen to nearly siK in 1,000 live
births.· Neonalal is defined as
babic~ younger than 28 days old.
However, Mary Yost, a
spokeswoman for l.be Ohio Hospital Association, said OHA data
from hospital discharge records
show that tbe number of babies
wbo died in Ohio within 28 days of
birl.b actually declined from five
per 1,000 binhs in 199210 4.77 per
1,000 in 1993.
She said Sunday it may be diffi-

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Cbris Hoce, vice president of
Wesiern Reserve Care System, the
parent company of Northside Hospital in Youngstown, said Northside transfers lhe appropriate number of prematurely born babies to
larger bospilals.
In 1992, Nonhside delivered 31
babies who weighed between I . I '
and 3.3 pounds.

''Hospitals will do anything
IIIey can to keep patients," said Dr.
Avroy A. Fanaroff, director of
neonalology at Rainbo'l!' Babies
and Childrens Hospilal. l'he hospital is one of Ohio's 13 designated
neonatal cemer§ for llle highest-risk
A study to be released soon by
patients.
researchers in lhe state of Washington found that as the number of
"Money, lhal's what lhe whole premature binhs at lesser-equipped
llling is about,' ' Fanaroff said.
conununily hospitals grew, so did
More than 158,700 babies were the dealll rate for such cases. The
born in Ohio in 1992, and hospilals Plain Dealer said.
charged more than $769 million for
"II sbowed that when there are
financial pressures not to transfer
their delivery and care.
mothers, the survival of babies bas
The paper said compelilion over declined." said Dr. Sleven G.
newborns has led rival hospitals to Gabbe, head of obstetrics at Ohio
pay for duplicate equipment for State University Medical Center.
treating premature babies, those Gabbe was a judge at a recent medweighing 3.3 pounds or less. Such ical conference where the study
babies represent less than 2 percent was presented.
o( all binhs.
"For a hospital to deliver one
Several hospilal representatives 600- gram ( 1.3 pound) baby and
defended !heir record of treating say, 'Wow, look at what we did.'
premature binhs.
OK, that might make a nice story
for llleir newsletter, but that's not
"We're not keeping babies we what you want for the patient,"
shouldn't," said Dr. Elena Rossi. Gabbe said. ''The patient needs to
director of neonalology at S1. Eliza- · be someplace where tbey deal will!
beth
Medical Cenlcr in lhese problems every day."

White House finds fight to stop
Serb advance exercise in futility

r------

9 LIVES
cAT FOOD

ered 63 babies during 1992 wbo
weighed between I. I and 3.3

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sions about premaiUre births based
on binh and death records.
AI issue is whet! ~r hospitals
_with limited facilities for treating
premature babies should transf~r
l.bem to medical c~nters willll.be
highest level of care available.

WASHINGTON (AP)- The 70 percent of the country held by,
Clinton administration believes Serbian forces. ·
Serbian military superiority in
Senate Republican leader Bob
Bosnia may be irreversible; with Dole, R· Kan., also said on NBC
the Serbs blataolly ignoring lhe thai the international effon to end
Uniled Nations and NATO in lheir l.be strife in Bosnia had failed, and
lalest attact on oulgunned Muslim said it was time the 24,000-member
defenders.
U.N. peacekeeping force and its
Defense Secrelary William leaders withdraw.
Perry said Sunday the Muslim
"It may be time to getlhe U.N.
enclave of Bibac, a U.N. "safe protection forces out of 1here,"
area" in northwest Bosnia, Dole said, adding that Yasushi
appeared doomed even if NATO Akasbi, the top U.N. offiCial in tbc
reoews air strikes. ''They can pun- former Yugoslavia, and Lt. Gen.
ish tbe Serbs, but they cannot Michael Rose, l.be commander of
determine the outcome of the l.be U.N. forces l.bere, should be
pound allllbat. ••
replaced.
. Perry, speaking on NBC' s Meet
Dole, a barsb aitic of the U.N.
till Press, gave one of the adminis- role in Bosnia and the administra·
tration's most pessimistic assess- lion's support of l.bal role, said the
ments y.e t of the situation in new Repuj)lican majority in
Bosnia.
Congress will take a "hard look"
''II seems !bat the Serbs have at cutting U.S. fmancial support for
deimonstrated mililary superiority tbc inlernational body.
on lhe puuod,'' Perry said. He 'saw
The Penlagon bas moved 2,000
"oo JmSpeCt'' of the Bosnian gov- Marines aboard three U.S. warsbips
. enluient winning back any of the into the seas off Bosnia, but Peny
I .

Ringing in the holidays,.,

'

"no" 10 llle governor.
"I say 'phooey.' You can judge
me by my words or my ·actions,"
she said. ''I fully inlend to advise
all clients to the best of my ability.
. And when I have to say 'no,' I will
- if il is lhe governor, lhe secretary of state or an individual tax- ·
payer.''
The primary environmental
. issue next year likely will be proposed legislation eslablishing
guidelines to select a site for and a contractor to build - a lowlevel radioaclive waste storage site,
GOP leaders and environmentalists
said.
As bosl to a compact of six
Midwestern stales, Ohio will build
the first low-level waste storage
site and accept up to 2.25 million .
cubic feet of toxic waste during its
20-year operation.
It could take seven to nine years
kom the 1lli1e legislation is passed
until a storage site is ready, said
state Sen. Gary Suhadolnik, RStrongsville, chairman of lhe Senare Enecgy, Natural Resources and ,
Environment Committee.

1·

Roasts ••••••••••••••••••••~·

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newopopor :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 28, 1994

GOP control worries
environmentalists
U.S.D.A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

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WE NOW -ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Low tonlpt 1D 301, raiD.
Tuesday, pll'lly cloudy. Hlp Ia

emphasized l.bat no U.S. ground
troops wiU be senl into combat siluations in Bosnia.
He said the Marines were there
to help in rescues of downed
NATO pilots and other "contingency" events. He did 1101 address
llle possibility of participation in an ·
evacuation of U.N. peacekeepers if
llleir continued presence in Bosnia
becomes untenable.
Perry repealed lhe administra·
tion position that it would "consider more ·substantial actions"
against the Serbs, including use of
ground troops, if the war spreads
beyond Bosnian borders. A small
U.S. force is alread:~: on the ground
in Macejlonia monilllring its border
with Bosnia.
The U.N. Security Council has
refused to approve a repeat of last
week:s NATO air strikes on Serbian positions despite the Serbs'
advance on Bibac, a U.N ..&lt;Jeclared
safe haven.

Pomeroy opened the boli·
day shopping season with a
parade, spedal store hours
and other activities Sunday
afternoon. The crowds stlll
turned out to cheer on Santa
Glaus, despite--the wind and
showers. Abo:ve, T.he .Cele,
bramos, a 12-member bell
choir from First Presbyterian
Church in Parkersburg,
W.Va., entertained an audience at tbe Trinity Church.
The heiJ group has played in
the Pomeroy church for lhe
fourth year In a row - part of
its 20-concert annual tour. At
right, 2-year-old Hannah
Cleek reveals her Christmas
wishes lo Santa at an East
Main Street storefront. (Sentinel photos by Georgt Abate)

·'

"'

"". .

Unsuitable weather fails to deter
hunters on first day of gun season
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Despite warm weather, early
estimates show this year's deer seas'on yield could remain hi gh in
Meigs County, according to area
check-in points.
By 9:30a.m. today, Joe's Country Market in Rutland had tagged
10 dcir. Only two were bucks. with
one an eight-point rack, said Regi·
na Walls. a clerk at the slore.
"It's really bard to leU this early. ·
About noon they 'll come pouring
in," Walls said. "Last year·wc were
flooded ."
Mo s1 hunters don' I like the
wann wealhet, which should soar
into the mid -60s today as skie s

clear. Walls ad ded. But. the number of hunters in the woods has
keplllle deer moving.
Corne liu s Phillips of Beech
Grove Road said he bagged a fivepoinl rack about 9 a.m. as it walked
around the side of a hill on his
property.
"They're al l riled up lll is morning . There's hce n a lot of shooting." Phtllips said. "''d r•Lher sec it
a lillie cooler. bu l people are moving them."
Phillips said he had earltcr taken
a doc tlurin g this ye;rr's how sea-.
son.
Fi flccn·yc;rr-otd Jeremy Council
of Langsville shot a six·poim buck
about R:30 a.m. His falher. James,

said he look off lwo days of work
to join his son in lllc woods.
·~ 11 jusl tickles me to sec him gel
one. We' re going back out because
r vc got to show him ur... the elder
Council said. "You sec a lot before_
the season. but when the season
comes they just hunker down."
During th e last few years. the
number of hunters ha s declined
along will! lhe size of the animals.
Co uncil said. By the middle of lhe
week. moSI hunters from out side
the county have already left leav ing more deer for local residents .
Ebcr 's Gulf Service Stalion in
Racine reported 15 deer as of 10:30
(Conlinued on PaRe 3)

Treasury chief
disavows tax
credit breaks
WA SHIN GTON (AP)
Ex posing a splil in lhe Clinton
Cabinet. Treasury Secretary Lloyd
Bent se n on Sunday disavowed
Labor Sec retary Robert Reich's
plea to overhaul business tax credits lllat Reich calls " cmporate welfare."
Less than a week after President
Clinton called the concept "an
attractive idea, " Bentsen said it
was not an administration proposal.·
And he took a personal stand
againsl call s to red.ucc the tu _
breaks.
"I didn't find myself very eKcit-

LmLE CAN BE DONE - Defense Secretary WUiiam Perry,
left, accompanied by an unlc!entilled aide, spoke to reporlers Sunday outside an NBC stvdlo after appearing on "Meet the Press" In
Washington. Perry said the Serbs have effectively won the war., in
BOIIIIa and NATO air power can do little to do chanae that course.
(AP)
.
'
• '

ed about them. No, I didn\" said ·
Bentsen. the Cabinet's leading .
voice Oh economics, speaking on ·
CBS ' Face 1he Nation.
In a speech Tuesday to the centrist Democratic Leadership Coun- : ·
cit , Reich challenged Republicans ·
to match lheir call for changes in •
social welfare programs with an
(Continued on Page 3)
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="31775">
              <text>November 27, 1994</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1344">
      <name>glover</name>
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    <tag tagId="4436">
      <name>hovatter</name>
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    <tag tagId="546">
      <name>hughes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="54">
      <name>lewis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="809">
      <name>sowards</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
