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{

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NO••• 60 00~ ~ER&amp; ~
l'IQJ1V '/~ ...
7

EVENING.

6:00

•

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1· ] · 91. "

FRI., JAN. 3

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Television
Viewing

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··

11). IJl
IIJIIIIWI

(I).

TELL 1EM VOU CAN1T
STAND EITI-IER ONE OF
TI-IEM~ TELL'EM TO
GET LOST! SIC YOUR
D06' ON 'EM'.

1

'1'0lJ VE TAKEN TOO LON6
TO DECIDE, CI-IUCK, 50

WE'RE GOING I-lOME .

GO BACK TO
SLEEP..! t.tr".r''1"t
NEED I'OU ..

Sunday
O tour
Rtorriongo iotlo11 of iho
tcramblod w¢rda. t.o:
low

•

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year In
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0 ME S T
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1 1

Shooting Clime

a WOifd Today

Rln TJn Tin, K·8 Cop
Stereo. "il
·6:051D Blvtrlr Hlllbllllea
8:30 !lJa iiJI NBC Newa ~
Cll Savtd~lfle Bell
IJl (I). A NeWI
1D Wild
Cl Stereo. Q
Square One TV Stereo.
0

9

rho chuckle quolocl

NORTH

BRIDGE

+A 10 I
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+10643

c.........

91 Current Afl1lr []
llll• llllr T!t: ·'llfe Nell

PHILLIP
ALDER

G21• Er, nmenl Tonltlht
Stereo.

OMicO rQ
@ SporiiCanltir
a Moneyllne
0 MOVIE: Prince VIllani:
The Vorageto Camelot

v-JHY f) I P
you 1.-fAVf you~
. JOB ,A.J A t"CIM.At-1

t2:00) .

. ·. A f'IP

CANNON8A~/.
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ALLEYOOP
ONCE

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THI5

... I&amp; WAIT!

YA~OO UP INTO Tt-l.'
~EAVES ,

7:05 (I) Addama F1mlly
7:30 !lJ G 01 JHpardyl 0
Cll Now II Can Ia Tot-a
IJl Enle[:nmont Tonight
Stereo.
• Ma
...With Children
; Wheel of Fortune Q

e F1mlly Foud

a Ia I Star Stereo.

ALL WE. 'LL

HAVE T'OO ...

a Cro1111,.

7:351D Sanford and Son
8:00 !lJ • 01 Matlock Matlock
defends a wealthy widow
accused of murderin~er
husband. (Rl Stereo.
Cll MOVIE: Cruy M
(PGil) (2:00)

(I) • F1mlly M11t1rs
Steve undergoes hypnosis to
learn wRhe sleepwalks. tRl
Stereo.
ID (!) ilaflln~ Week In
Review Ster8!1. g . ·
91 112l. MOvoE: 'Dud
11oe11 ~· cas Flldly
Movie (PG) (3:00)
llll• AIMffcl'l Moot
W1ntld Four.International
luglllves. Stereo. []
0 Murder, She WiOte Q
a On Stage Stereo. .
@ Pro Snow Skiing From
Mt. Snow, Vt. (ll,
aPrtmeNewai;J
8:051D MOVIE: Tht Promlaa ot

IJl

Vol. 26, No. 48
Copyrighted 1992

....

'Oz' .notches 300th win at Gallipolis

I·S.IZ

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• QJ 8 2
+Q9873
SOUTH
• Q85
• K76
tAK975

Avarice
kills the contract

.A2
Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: South

By Phillip Alder

Wesl·
Pass

Soulb

I NT

Nollb

3 NT

mt.·_ili~tWHk
Stereo. 1,1
a TIXII Connection Stereo.

Easl

All pass
Many players spend their bridge
lives at the duplicate lable. There
Opening lead: • 6
overtricks and matchpoints are the or·
der of the day. If you make your con· '----------.....1
tract exactly, when you could have
netted an extra trick, you wrll probably end up with a poor ma tchpoinl
score.
When these same players turn to home lor live tncks and that the open·
rubber bridge, they will lose contracts ing spade lead is away !rom the king
that are guaranteed with the correct or K-J. He will play low from the dum·
line of play. because they want to try my at trick one. Here this leads to polor overtricks. Today's deal is a good tential disaster. East wins with the
example. How .would you play in three spade king and switches to the club
no-trump, West leading the spade six, seven. Declarer wins the second round
either at the rubber·bridge table or in of clubs and experiences a sinking
feeling. With the opponents' club
a duplicate tournament?
tricks
ready wrun, he has to bring in
You have seven top trtcks. Unless
the
diamond
suit without loss. The nat·
West has all lour diamonds, the con·
ural
play
is.
to cash the ace, with the
tract is ensured by winning trick one
hope
of
finding
either ~ 2·2 split or
with dummy's spade ace"leading a di·
West
with
a
singleton
honor. Here luck
amond and covering East's card. Here
is
out
to
lunch
and
the
contract goes
that picks up the whole diamond suit
down
though
declarer
played the di·
and, ironically, an overtrick results.
amonds
"correctly.•
However. a duplicate player will be
@ 1-. IIEWIII'I.NJIIIJI11! ....H AIIN.
worried that the diamonds are coming

In top photo,
members of the 1991-92
Blue Devils basketball
.,t~~!D ~~round G~HS ,

.
Coacli}tm Osborne (center, with plaque) after
earning.the veteran mentor his 300th career
hardwood victory at
Gallipolis. Below, Danny
Mink, right, vice president of the GAHS
Athletic Boosters Club,
presents Osborne a ·
plaque commemorating
the achievement after
Gallipolis defeated
Athens 56-49 on the
GAHS court Friday
night. (See C-2 for game
details).

1:00 !lJ. 11J Paclflc Station A

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
AND I L.lfq;. EIAVS' BEANS

WITH SHREDDED COCONLJT

AND

MA~I...LO.vo.

YOU'Re TRYII-G- TO MAKE:.
M5 &amp; IVE YOU MY L.J..li-J01,

AREN'T YOU?

j

•

BARNEY
HERE IT
COMES,
MAW I!

woman follows Richard and
then claims to be his
daug_hter. Stereo. C
IJl Clle lilly T1'l'
Romance explodes between
~ggle and J~mes . Stereo.
ij) (!) ...TIIklng With DIYid
Frolllntervlew wllh
President Bush; Anita
Hill/Clarence Thomas
hearings. Stereo. []
II]) 11 Ridden VlciiO Aman .
poses as a.Swtcllsh.
woman's husband; fashion
models don lura. (R) Stereo.
o a.rond RaaiiiJ
a Nalfwfffl Now Stereo.
@ Tht Ofrnoplael The Soviet
UniOn riHI to prominence In
the Olympic gamea.
a Lanr Klnt u..r
®Falher.Dowtlng Mylllrtet
Father Dowling lalremed by
his evll 'brothar lor a bank
heist. (R) Stereo. Q
9:30(1)• 11J DHr Jolin Two
women show up on John's
doorst~o go out wllh him.
Stereo.
IJl

(I)

The World Almanac~Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Popular
song a
5 Savage
11 Polaona
t2 Haart c:r•
13 Clare othe
t4 Cltrua fruita
t5 March
lrlumphanlly
17 Limb ·
18 Slngar Ed 1G Type ot play·
lng marble
2t T11 18cy.
24 The ( tr.) .
25 Lhaaatg br,..d)
26 all ox
27 Actreaa Ruby
28 Ch1rr1d
30 Beat
33 Slop
34 Speeda
35ToiTV

..

An1wer ta Pr11loue Puutl

37 Oetenoe
dept.
40 Bacome Ill
41 AulhenUc
42 Put on lloe
payroll
43- P1ulo
45 Former
aoldler
47 Orop
50 Work cattle
51 Hour traction
52 Ridge
53 Exparlmenl·
ed wlllo
54 Ramllnder

DOWN .
I Truckar
2 Ear bone
3 Abouhd .....
4 Ocaan liner •
~abbr.)
5 emote
8 Whore
Naploala
7 Sauagle

Ohio AP Political Analysis

8 Ropaa on

New baby a·factor in De Win~ decision

ahlp

9 Poo~ 1
ahooltr 1
· natd
10 Prlnttr'a

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a~=-~~

diiiCOII'ages Tesa and Olcky
trom "YIIlll a caaa. (R)
Stereo. "il
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(I) (I) e 20/20 Stereo. Q
.
CD (!)~M.I11Mr careor ot Ray Chllfn Ia
hiQhl. by por1ormanoa

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PREVI6ua SOLUTION: "To cor•'- • ..,;n freoly 11 t11e next thing to

·-..--

being "'-1 of II." - Pubfltlul Syrua.

.

•

f

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I

well·,known Republicans have
come forward.
DeWine has a reputation as a
GOP team playc'r. He abandoned
plans to run for governor in 1990
when the party convinced him to
run for lieutenant governor 10
strenglben what was lO be George
Voinovich's winning ticket.

Rex Elsas, stale GOP executive
dircc10r, said, '.'We're preuy sure"
DeWine will run.
He said ' Repqblicans were
encouraged by a poll publi shed
Thursday by the Akron Beacon
Journal lhat matched Glenn against
· DcWinc.
.
Glenn was supported by 37.4
pcrcenl of those surveyed, com·
: POMEROY - The Meigs Coun· of rape, wilh l.he specrllcauon lbal pared with 23.4 percenl for
•IY Grand Jury indicted two Meigs 1he lhrec'fcmale · victims named in De Wine. Abo)lt 39 percent lis led
County men last week on charges the indiclment were all under the themselves lis undecided. The teleilfrapc.ilndolberrelptedcounts.
age of 13 years atlhe time of the phone survey of 804 Ohio adults
Thomas E. Sanford, ·38, of alleged intident. Thql specification was conducted Nov. 20 to Dec. 3
:Pol)ierot, is charged with three increases the possible sentence 10 and had a margin or error of 3.5
•eoilnts o rape and anolber count of ' life if MiiJer is convicled.
.perccnlagc points, lbe Beacon Jour·
•~~~rava~ burglary relating tO' an
In addition to the rape cpllnts, ' nal said. ·
.
mctdenl tn ihc Monkey Run area,of Miller is also charged with three
''Thirty~scven percent is not
·Pomeroy in Nov~mber, 199l. All . counts of gross sexuallmposition, very good for an incumbent, "
fopr counts against Sanfofd are second-degree fel9nies. The con- Elsas said or Glenn. But Glenn aide
· fust-de~ee fclom~s. .
rtent of those charges is very similar Dale Bu~and played down the poll
•' 'The mdicunent agams~ Sanford to the tape counts in the indict. and' said l)tat like olber recent surspecifies that Sanford .has a ptevi- mcnL
veys, "!~shows the senator com·
··o~s rape co~vi~tion. That JX:evious
According to Story, Sanford is forlably ~d."
·
' ta~e · conv•cuon, acc~rdtng to , currentl_y being housed in the. . He Siid Glenn has ·no comment
~eigs C&lt;!unty ProsecubtiJ AUor- t1eigs ~Q.unly Jail' p~hdiqg h,is,. about DeWine' or olbers who may
.~ey Steven t.. SJOry, could lt\d live altalgmn~bt before Me1gs Coun!y run a~·st bim, including a recent-,
years to .the m~imtlm llelltenee i£ Common\ Pleas Court Judge Fred ly an need long shQI; Cicvcland
~anford ~ conv•cted, maldng ftr a w. Crow 111. Thai arraignll)ent is, busi ssmen ·George Rhodes.
~ble sen~ce P,f 15-2S y~ in' expected 10 take place early nexl '' W II wait until they ·put .UP .
prison, along wttll a poss•ble week. 1
,
somepne," Bulland said:
1 .
~,,000 fine.
..
Aecotding 10 .a release fN~~~ the
J
. • . ,. ,
· 'Also indieted by the pd.jury Meigs County Sheriff's DcpanCurl Siemer, Vounovuch s
oo Mondly was 27 YCI!' old 0~ · men&amp;; Millet was arrested oo Friday d~puly chief of staff, .said that _to
Miller of Long Bonom. If conVIct- niJhl by Meiss County Sheriff's · h•• knowledge, DeWme h" 110t,
.ell, Miller faces a ~ble life sen- ,. Dej)uty Jtobcl1 Beegle and ,Special advised Voinovich of ~il inicntions
· Jene~ and $10,0011 ~·.
i Deputy ltenneth Hayes.
but thai "the gov~r is guessing
.'He is clwg~ w•lh.i!UCC counlS.
·•
•
that he will run."
•

Meigs County Grand Jury
indicts two men oil charges

10: (2). 11J IIHIInlbll
Doubta A proaacutor

veals whk:h signa are romanlically per- ments yau enter lnte&lt; today will have ex·
lect lor you. Mall'le Pl.uulorrg, sell-ad- cellent chances lor survival, provided
dreased, . stamped envelope to there Is parity between negotiating par·
Matc~m6ker, 'C/O tNs newlpaper, P.O. ties. Fairness evOkealatrneas.
.BER~CE
Box
91428, Cleveland, OH 4410t·3428. LEO (Julr 23:-Aug. 221 You're extremely
- BEDEOSOL
AQUARIUS (.IM. 284tll. 11) Usually, Inventive and resourceful today, and
ct!Pai~
It's unwlaa to be lmpulslv•. but today there Is a stro_ng probability you may
B~ ~,
•
ywr first ldaaa are llkaly to be your come up with a better·method ol doing
Antellcl'l CuP '12
1?01· Don't be alrald to think and act a repetitiOus task. .
·
Setting Nl foo: Sen Otego.
llmultaneouaty.
•
VIIGO (Aug. 23-hpl.. 221 Risks that
8Wtllld Nnl
PIICEI (F~ 10-March 20) An lnler· . .are careiully cek:ulilted could work out
.a 700 Club With ....
esllng new acqualntancor may enter tas you envision them today. However.ll
lhbu!IM
your llle llthlt. time. By the way, tHia you pleas your luck too tar, the link be·
new trler]d Ia likely to be Introduced to • tween you and Dame. F'Ortune •might 10:05 (I) ~VII: lfngfl liN,
you by an old friend.
·
snap.
·
'o
lfngfl WOIIIIIi (2:00)
Alllll (lllrch 21-Aprtt 11) You're not UIIIA (lept. i3-oct. 23) An unusual 10:301 The flflllttllbt
likely to be deprived o1 rewarda or ac· day ·ooul~ be 1n the
CIM IIIII Cl-. '
........
p..... .
krlGiflldgment
rlghttulty
due
you
today.
llillng
otlavorabte:
unlq•~]5;:~:·
1
1
, •
·
JUif be patient Md let _,,. run Iheir and unex,.C.Id
'11:00
(J) . . . . .
~ ''· ·
~.I,'M 'tJI
• J;t. • oowa
,
' lrorillheput mltlht
,
• . ,
•
TAUIIUIIA!Irt4 »Mar 1111 Favorable termlnllld. • ·
ftlltiC.Q
.
'r. could • -very p11111nt 9Ur• r nlil&lt;aly for you todey. You 1!18)1 IC.,.., (Qat.',.....,, I:!) Ill pr,_.
..-tn- for you In the yew .n.d. lie able to~ I 11ft IWIJIIO eomethlng lallon II reqUired todey rog11dlng
• AINitlo Hill SWao.
norm11 roullnll might be, you've ~ . I~ • .unique t~l- IOmelhlng you're lnvoJvld
.
In wtth oth·
· ,. .,....,.
llltiNd by _,..,
,
II!OIIC? It can be applied to a prnenl era, you're lite one 111111 ahould 11ate tM
IIIOVIIt C8¥ Ill~ tAl (2:00)
c
(Dee'. IWIL 111 Ad· endeavor,
•
· ceM tor all coiieemid.
'' ••
• On ..... SWIO.
·
~of your pnonll-111 • - .IIIey 21~ 201 Be alert lor ·IAGITTAIIIUI(.-.. 2Hiec. 211 ConlcltpTIII
•1110118 ~ lodey. YuiiCIICI 111'11101 apportunlt~ your commer- , diiiOIII 1n gener11 lOOk ex1rema1y .,..
1111g111 ~ ot111r1, 11111 u. ..una c11t ~·••Ia t
. They're lpt to aourlging, ...,.. your matert8l Inter·
11MU11 lilt l'llifWinG· " - .._ lo, bt of I fiMIIn/llllll~n, and you'H heYII ' f t . coo•iold. Oalna· may be
11:aoC2JeT~ ...........
10011 tor ,
JIIU'I lnd H. The · lo qulllfy them ~ly:
geuntld from ......,llleut·IUiptCtld .
.loflnly ~ a..o.
AllrO-OniPII u tt 111111" 1n111nt1y ,., · c~ loi!M 21.Julr 221. Allr•: aourc.. , . .
'
,
'
'

joint decision " that we will make
By ROBERT E. MILLER
very soon."
Associated Press Writer
The DeWincs , who have four
'COLUMBUS - Lt. Gov.
Michael DcWin c says he's still sons and lbree daughters, indicate
considering a bid for the U.S. Sen- they .never lbou_ght much of living
ate 1his year. despite spcculalion in Washirig10n where he served as
among some Republicans that he's Ohio's 71h District congressman
already decided 10 become a candi- from 1982·1990.
However, he is the odds- on
dllte.
. DeWine, 44. said Fridlly that he favorite of leaders for the GOP
and .his wife, Fran. are ex!J!lCting a nomination lo run against I)cmo·
baby in May and this ~one of era! John Glenn, a Democrat who
many factors they are weighing in .a · will seck. a fourlb term. No other

"

meaturn

Larry and Balld are
summoned to serve on a
u . Stereo. C
lilt ollht W011t
orat publlc·acceaa
leVISIOn lhow; where not tO

ASTRO-ORAPH

Former Gallia deputy
faces shooting ·char-ge
IRONTON - A former Gallia shot twice in lhe back of her head
County sheriff's depucyj s housed with a .38-caliber handgun , authorin the Lawrence County Jail afler ilies said .
allegedly shooling hi s Mason r Aulhorilics say Varney was a
·County girlfri~end in the head while passenger in Blain's car when she
driving in Ohio early Friday.
was shol about 2:52 a.m., while ·
The Huntington Herald·D i s· driving along Slate Roule 93 near
parch reponed in its Saturdlly edi· Ironton. The car then ran off the
tio n that William F. Varney, 29, road. Varney was not injured in the
Ewington, was charged with felo- accident
.
nious assauil in the shooting of
The tleraid·Disparch 'reponed
Lisa Mashawn Blain, Apple Grove, that Varney had comacted the
during an arraignment Friday in Lawrence County Sheriff's DcpartlroniOn Municipal Court..
' ment about lhe accident
Varney is in jail in lieu of
The sheriff's depanmenl is
$100,000 cash or $200.000 proper· investigating the shooling, which
ty bond, Lawrence Coumy Prose· appears 10 be the result of a domes:
cutor J. Stewart Kaiser said.
. tic dispute, Kaiser said. There were
Blain. 26, was listed in serious no witnesses 10 the shooting and
condition Saturday al St. Mary's why Blain was shot was slill uncerHospital in Huntington. She was tain Friday,lhc prosecutor said.

Lave (2:00)

8:30 1JJ (I) • Step br Step After
Frank and Carol leave lor a
weekend, a wild party breaks

.

'J 10

.K J 6

Partly sunny. High near 50. Low
tonight In mld.JOs.

15 Section a, 116 P A Multimodio Inc. Newapaptr

Mlddleport-Pomeroy:_Galllpolls::-Polnt.·Pieasant, January 5~ 1992

EAST

,98 543

Along the river .. "' ......... 81-8
Business/Farm ............... D1·8
Classified ....................... 03· 7
Deaths..............................:.AJ
Edilorai ............................. A2
Sports .............................Cl-6
Weather ........................... A-3

mttS•

+K3

.

@Ski World

I

WEST
+J9762

r·

.

.,0 51

·

Inside

+

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
. I • l. .
Linden-Array- Glint -Bitter-RETIRING
Employee to boss, 'I didn't laugh at your joke because
it wasn't funny, it was in poor tasle, and tomorrow I'm
RETIRING.!"

W

FRANK AND ERNEST

p

by filling

I

a • cas New• Q
• Andf Cl~lftUt
OScoobr 0oo
@UpCioaa
ONawZorroQ
6:351D Andf Clrltfltfl
7:00\il.a 01 WIIHI of,Fortuna I
I Oraam of Jaannle
IJ)Inalde EdiUon []
ID
(I) ~fLei\ier
NowaHaur
Clenenrllon

Gallia settler tells how it was du'ring
Pioneer Days • James Sands-A ~

In the mlulng -cb
..__.__._,___.___,___. you develop from ..,., No. 3 below.

i

(I) • Cli

Another Meigs Countian goes to.
the top of his field -Fred Crow A-2

B-1

cle: ·oo·you have a 11en holder
on the vehicle?" Cyclist: "I
· · . . .
r-------:--, have a kickstand, Is that the

@ Sill 8hofCl•r Target

Redskirts eliminate Falcons 24'-7 - C.l

•

~-I-rj"-r.-AI~M.;. ,;I. . ,ol':'"'"is

•o rm:t:~rt Q

.

'

County

I' I I

Rllnbow Stereo.

75 cents

Galli a

form lour almplo w¢rda.

NAGJ ,EL

CllVIdloPOw
~ Squl,. One TV Stereo.
~ Raadlng

MARCIE AND PATTI'.ARE
OUTSIDE .. TI-lEY WANT ME
TO TELL TI-IEM lUI-liCI-t ONE
I LIKE 6EST .• WHAT
!--1~~1 DO?

•.

'

Several petitions of candidacy are
being circulated by Meigs Countians
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times' Senlinel StaiT
POMEROY - Several pctilions ..
of candidacy are ~eing qi rculatcd
and two have alrcad)"'b.ce!l filed .
with the Meigs County Board of
Elections, Jane Frymyer, director,
reported Friday aftomoon. •
The fim day for filing was
Thursday,the final day is Feb. 20.
Meigs Countians will vote on
candidatos for eighl county offices
lhis year. Open arc two seats on lbe
Meigs County Board of Commts·
sioncrs, and 1he offices of prosecu·
lor , clerk of courts, sher iff.
recorder, treasurer, engineer, and
coroner. Ali are four year terms.

Filing Thursday 'were Edward
W. Durst who is seeking the
Republican nominalion to run for
trcasurer. ·in ·Lhe November general
election, and Emmogcne 1Hols1cin
Congo Hami,lton , Republi ca n
incumbc'O t recorder. who is seeking
her party's nomination to run again
in lhe fall
Terms c•piring this year are
those of Dav id Koblcntz and
Richard Jones, con:tmissioncrs;
Steve Story, prosecutor; Larry
Spencer. clerk of courts; James
Soulsby, sheriff; Emmogcnc Hoistein Congo Hamilton, recorder;
Howard Frank. treasurer. who was
appointod to filllbc unexpired term

of George Collins; Phillip Roberts,
cngmeer; and Douglas Hunter,
coroner.
'· There arc no village or township
·posts to' be ·filled lhis··yca'r, the
Board of Elections direc.10r reportcd ., There will be bolh state and
nauonal ca~didatcs on lbe ballot In
May. .
To frlc for one of the county
oflicc slots, Frymyer said lhat pcti·
tions of candidacy can be picked up .........
at the Board of Elec1ions office.
Ftfty stgnaturcs of !he prospective
candidate's party or of voters who
have not declared a partY are ncccssary 10 filllhc requirements for filing. The filing fcc is $50.

Cleland will continue to serve as
Racine mayor until. new one is chosen
RACINE · Now lhat the new seck reelection 10 Lhc oflicc, he will
year is underway, 1h e question of con1inuc to serve in lbat capacity ·
who will serve as Racine's mayor at least for the foreseeable future.
(and.how lhat position is filled in
"I expect 10 be serv ing as
light of the la w) has become a Racine's may0r until I sec thai it
pressing question.
__1hould go olherwisc," Cleland said.
Incumbent Mayor Frank Clc·
Having u·ndergone four bypass .
.land did not seck rc·eicclion 10 lhe surgeries and other health probpost in last November's general lcms, Cleland remarked "another
election. and no candidalcs filed 10 fo ur years is a long time lO tack
fill lbc post. Thallcfl no names for onto all of my years." ,
voters to' choose from when the
He did emphasize, however, lhat
mayor's race was held last fall.
he will sc.ek the approval of 1he
Now, as Cleland and members new · village council before he
of village council intorprct lhc law, makes an official commitment to
Cleland will rem ain mayo r of lhat effect.
Racine until he moves, resigns or
Thai approval. Cleland hopes,
dies.
will come in Lite form of a rcsoluMayor Cleland stated Saturday tion endorsing him as the village's ...
morning that, al,hough he did. nol maxor.
'I need for lhe new co unc il •.o

confirm that litis is the right procc·
durc," Cleland said. "I want the
council to say so."
The law referred to by village
officials in Racine specificall y'
stales that the last duly elected
mayor of a village will continue 10
serve in tltat capacily until his successor is clecled and qualified, or
un1il lhc mayor moves oul of lhe
vill age's jurisdiction, or until he
resigns or dies.
In the event th ai a mayor docs
resign, move or die before his successor is ..electcd and qualified, Lhc
president pro 1cmpore of lbe coun·
cil steps in 10 serve as mayor.
The council will hold ilS organizational meeting on Monday at 7
p.m.

electorate, eco·nomy·
will shape this year's campaign
Vol~tile

WASH1NGTON (AP) - The
1992 presidential race begins a
sprint thls ,,/;cek toward the N_ew
Hampshire primary !.hat will largely 'define a•campaign that a Y.car
ag11 many joked should be called
off;~- ' •' ' '
. !l'he suatosf)her!c populru:ity t/Uil
PrCfldcnt Bush enJOyed durmg and,
im~cdiately after the Persian Gulf
W 'is a dis!ant memory. And six
maj I'•DemO&lt;; rats are jockeying for
sup~'orl in 1 a race that none
a'!JPC!Ued
cal" ,_, eager.~o
• . run
. this time ll\st

Y. T;!i
~ nauon
. enjO
. yed m
.
,.,, gIow;, ,,e

•th&lt;PW'IIr's wall!e· has l)een largely
repllicM by alxiety over .an anemic
econ~my an~rustration with"gov•
etn;nl, th surest retlipe for a
vo!JI elec te. ,
· '' ' fve V1itnessed a failed presid1tla.y ;.. a..modern·day' Herbert
H . o..1er," ¥-id Michigan Democr lie Cha}hii'IUI Gary Corbin,
so~dl'r\g oufe of hi§ party's.favorite
th es. · f 1/ .
, ~e Democratic 'contender$ nre
'·,

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'I

AccCJiding 10 the report. Gallia
Coumy.heriff Dennis Salisbury
said Varney had resigned from his
deparlmcnt on Dec . 27. His lasl
workday was Dec. 31. Varney had
worked for lhe department for a
year and nine monlhs.
"He did his job as a road ofli·. •
cer," Salisbury said. "We 've never
had any major problems with him
here."
Varney had rcccn~y applied for
a job wilb 1he Multi-County Drug
Enforcemenl Agency in soulbern
Ohio as an undercover agent,
Kaise( said .. His employment test·
ing had not been compleiCd.
,.A preliminary hearing for Varney is scheduled for Thursday in
Ironton Municipal Court, Kaiser
said. •
,

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uniled in blaming Bush for lhe
In ~oth the primari.es and the
economy's slide and for. ignoring general election ~ the overriding
domestic woes. Bul they differ issue will be the economy, with
sharp! y on a prescription ·~nd the Democrats blaming a laissez-faire!
philosophy lbcir party shoold bring Bush for lhe. prolong~ slump and
to governing.
Bush bl ~muns a blg·spending
For much of last ,year, it Dcmocrauc Congress.
~appeared Bush would have· an
Ori 1he inleroatio~al side, the
incumbent's luxury of focusing on debate over U.S. forc•gn and mili~1..,vcmber's 'general. election while
tary policy in lhe y;ake of the Spvilbe L'•.mO&lt;:raiS bloodied themselves ct Union's disintegration is sure to
in their traditional primary slugfesL fea1ure fighiS over isolationism and
But now Bush faees two chal · proiCCtionis'm.
lenges frot~ lhe right - conserva·
In sizing up the Democratic
tive cot!tmcntator Patrick fiel.d, most of the early belting is
Buchanan and former Ku Klux spin between Arkansas Gov. Bill
Klan g'rand wizard D~vid Duke.' Clinl'on and Nebraska Sen. Bob·
How B~ehan~n fares t.n the Ne~ . Kerrey. Botli are for1ysomething
Hampshue pnmary; which Duke JS • party stars who hope iheir generasilting out, will go a long way in . tiona! appeals will auract young
determining Whether challenges an~ moqeratt .vOte.rs who defected
to Bush grow to anything more totheGOP.inthe 1980s.
·
than a nuisance.
'
,Clinton l'Qdc favorable reviews.
"I'm ccnainly going into this as last fall to a $2 million.f\lnd-raising .
a dog-eat·deg fight, and I will do .. month in December, giving him
what I havt IO_do to be (C-elected," ftnanciallecway 10 try for a win 1~
Bush' said last week in an interview New Hampshire and lhe Iahti If
, wilh broadcaster David Frosl.
!he early f~t-runner.

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January 5, 1992

Commentary.and perspective
.

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A Division of

f!!-UTMEDIA, INC.
IllS Third Ave, GaiUpoHs, Ohio
(614) 446-l34l

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohlc;t
(614) '19l·ll56

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

•...,

HOBART WILSON JR.
Encullve Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
A"lstant Publkher-Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press
Ar;sociation and the Ameiicim Newspaper Publisbers Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words long. All letters are subject to editing and musl be signed with
name, address an~ lelepbone number. No unsigned letters will be
published. Letters sbou'd be in good taste, addressing issues. not
personalities.

.

1Jilsh gives U.S. automakers
.chance to lobby against imports

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~-Area

Page.:.-A2·

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WASHINGTON - The Bush
adininis.tration and the paper mill
industry have teamed up for one of
the best executed misinformation
campaigns of. recent times. They
want you to believe ihat diollin a b)'Product of toxic Agent Orange
- ts not that bad for you after all.
Seizing on an industry study ·
that Claims the chemical is not
nearly rts dangerous to humans as
once thought, misguided scientists
in obscure federal agencies have
become public relations mouthpieces for paper manufacturers.
who have a clear stake in .. the rap
dioxin gets. Dioxin is a paperbleaching byproduct thai the mills
flush into rivers. MeeJing federal
water quality' standards costs the
mills money, so anything they can
do to make dioxin more palatable is
money in the bank.
An official with the Office of
Technology Assessment, a federal
agency, recently wrote an article
for the U.S. National· Chamber
Foundation Journal. In it, he said
thai humans exposed 10 high levels
of dioxin are at no significant risk.
The basis for that opinion, and oth'
ers favorable to dioxin, is primarily
grounded in a study done by the
paper mill
themselves.
q-~~!t
say that the govern-

ment standards for dioxin are 500
times more stringent than they, ~eed
10 be.
Rep . Ted Weiss,D -N.Y., is
irked b~ the snowbalhng crede.nce
being gtven to thts mdustry hne.
·He has doggedly pursued the dioxin issue since the chemical was pinpointed as the deadly sidekick to
Agent Orange, the Vietnam War
defoliant blamed for many health
problems that afflict veterans of
that war. When Weiss saw the
Chamber of Commerce publication
wriuen by a federal employee
spreading the good news on dioxin,
he fired off a letter 10 the Office of
Technology Assessment demanding an explanation.
Weiss reminded the agency that ·
it is supposed 10 be independent so
it can be relied on for accurate
information. He said that "parlicipating in the spreading of mtsinformation by an industry organization
goes beyond mere (scientific) disagreement; it raises serious questions of propriety and casts doubts
about the ability of the OTA. 10
maintain its objectivity on the issue
of diollin."
'fl1e agency sent back 10 Weiss a
flimsy alibi, claiming that the journal failed to include a disclaimer

that said the opinions of the scten·
list were his own and not those of
OTA.
.
. ,Toolate . The.n.ewviewofdlO~tn ts already gatmng supporters 10
the Envaonmental Protecuon
Agency - always eager to find
ways to malce life easier f~r polluters. Despite the fact that there
are no credible independent studies
to support the ·conclusions of the
paper malcer~ the EPA is now reevaluating its once-fum stance on
dioxin. One congressional staffer
told our associate Jim Lynch that
many scientists at the EPA know
the industry study is flawed, but the
reassessment continues.
Before the paper industry began
defending diollin, it was considered
a' highly !ollie carcinogen. Lab te s~
shoo.ved dtoxm was a bona ftde
cause of cancer in animals. And a
recent study found a strong rei ationship betw;"'-n dioxin !md cancer
in humans . 'Th~ stu4y of people
exposed 10 dioxin in theirwork1
place showed one of the htghest
rates of cancer ever found in an
occupation-exposure study.
Y el, 10 the dismay of Weiss and
other lawmakers, the paper industry and scientists in the Bush
administration have succeeded 10

caslingdoubtontheuuedangerof
dioxin. Many maJor news pubhcalions have parroted the clatms .as
news.
.
At a House Government 0pera. ,
tions $ubeommttlee heanng, Wetss
grilled Vernon Houk, a sctcnllst ,
from the Centers for Dtsease ~ontrol. Houk had offered hts opm~on .
10 the state of Georgia, confrrm~ng
the contention of the paper mtlls.
that dioxin was not as harmful a~ .
once thought and that state wate&amp; ·
quality standards should be soft: .
en ed.
.
Under fierce question10g, Houk
then conceded .that the CDC docs.'
not have any business regulatmg :
state water quality standards. Hoult
also admitted that hts advtce 10 the ,
state contradicted the government's ·
top water qua li ty scie.nlists, and .
!hat his main source of mfonnanon .
10 back his conclusions was the ·
paper industry study. Georgia is ~ot ­
the only one getting Houk's new _
line on dioxin. He has also dehv- ,
ered the same speech 10 foreign '
governments.
.
., ·
Weiss plans to further mvesll· ·
gate the dioxin controversy this "
year.
:
MINI-EDITORIAL - The .
widow of slain Marine Lt. Col.
William Higgins summed up th.e '
semiments of a decade when hts •
body was returned to the Uni.Jed ·
States last week. Reflecting on the ·
terrorists who had kidnapped and ·
tortured her husband to death; ·
Robin Higgins, herself a Marine ·
major, said, "There's got 10 b~ ·
someone that's greater than you '
and me to judge a man who will : .
kidnap, torture and murder all ·
unarmed United Nations peace- ·
keeper ... and if I havew,l'm wii,I~ :
ing 10 watt for that JUdgment.
Americans never understood dur- '
ing the hostage-talcing heyday of
the 1980s the logtc of makmg mno-·
cem bystanders suffer because one
government hated anothe!. Why .
kidnap college professors, JOurnal·'
ists, business people and an·
unarmed soldier on a mission of
peace? Why blow up plane loadsot·
- ChrisU!las travelers or ht]ack cru•se
ships full of tourists? Mrs. Higgins:
was e~pressing the same sentiment
as the hostages themselves hav~
expressed. Retribution is unworthy'
of civilized people and Judgment ts
up to a hi~her power.

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
· • WASHINGTON - They may be part of the problem or part of the
lolution but either way, President Bush's Tokyo traveling companions
from th~ U.S. auto induslry are getting a role and a plalfonn they've never
had before.
.·
: For three days, beginning on Tuesday, the top men of the thr~ !"aJor
j'Unerican automobile manufacturers ar:e part 9f a prestdenual mtsston to
the home of their chief competitors, looking for ways 10 cut therr own dtsildvantage against imported Japanese cars and parts.
• It's a government-business blend that hasn't been tried by the White ·
House before. All !Old, the president invited 21 b~siness executivci to join
him during his 12-day, four-nation tnp to Austral13 and Asl3, a mtsston he
fll'St postponed jlld then transfonned 10 put the emphasts on trade.
• Lee A lacocca, chainnan of Chrysler Corp., Harold A. Poling of F~rd
Motor Co. and Robert C. Stempel of General Motors Corp., are JOmmg
Jlush for the final, crucial stop in Tokyo, where the president
be
p~ing
action 10 narrow a Japanese trade advantage approachmg $42
btllion a y!ar.
• Automobiles and car parts account for about three-quarters of the
i'apanese tmde advantage with the United States.
: "We are going there, into Japan, and asking for equity, fairness, fair
play," Bush said in Canberra. Au~tralia. on Thursday. " ... I want to. see
1IS get more jobs created in the Umted States, eventually, by concesstons
·lnade or by positions taken in Japan ... And we need more access 10 thetr
:markets."
' That's part of what the U.S. au10makers want, but they also~ steps
to protect their shrinking American market against Japanese ,1mports.
Bush disagrees. "Well, they know my views," h~ s~d before the trip
began, "and I'm not going 10 ... become a protecuomst, but! think we
have a common view thai we .ought to have more acct!ss 10 these foretgn
markets."
Tbe Japanese say they've already taken steps 10 do so, and more are
likely 10 be announced duiing the Bush visit. But they also comend that
u.S. auiOmakers haven't produced cars that can ·compete in the Japanese
market.
'
Iaeocca contends they haven'!'had a chance. "This is getting crazy,"
he said after the businessmen met with Bush at the White House last
month. "I sell a thousand Jeeps a year there, and they go up $12,000
when I ship them.
"So they've got to address that problem ftrSt," he said. ''I'd like 10
One of the most pleasing soing Bill Quickel instead of the Racine where we had electric lights
sell 50 000 Jeeps. Our quality is good ... They will not sell them. They announcements that I have received steer. The animal was finally and good roads. It was the first
will noi let us access their dealers, for example.''
was an inv ila tion to attend the caught when Carson, equipped electric lights we ever had. That
Poling has suggested that the U.S. trade deficit with Japan be cut by 20 "Change of Command" ceremony with an umbrella, convinced the was in 1940. We still live in the
(ien:ent in CllCh of the next five years; that's the fonnula that would be whereby Rear Admiral Arthur steer to go back home to Sonny same house.That was 51 years ago. are located. Does anyone have any ·
required by a bill proposed by congreSSional Democrats, wtth tmport Clark will be relieved from his H:tynes' barn. I didn'ttell you, Fred, I married a knowledge as to these localities? ,
The State of Ohio should be·
sanctions if it isn't done.
off ice. This even t occ urs on JanThe other members of thi s Wood girl, the las! one in the fami: That measure was proposed shonly after Stempel announced Dec. 18 uary 9, 1992 , at 11 a.m. at th e troop were scattered all over the ly. Her name is Dorothy and she is proud of the engineers who ·
~GenUa! Motors will eliminate 74,000 jobs and close 21 plants over
Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bre- country and it was quite a while 76. I am 81. We are two of the sur- designed and built the new inter.-.;
the next four years.
merton, WA.
before all returned to Sonny' s vivors from Stringbur~. We are section of state highways 7-33 and ,
: Bush called the Democratic bill "political posturing," and a crazy
I was further notified that Rear home. It should be noted that all both in. good health and enjoy life 124 at Kerr's Run. The new traffic ,
Admiral Arthur Clark's next members of this group were thor- with our 5 children and grand chil- light s1ationed at this intersection isidea.
'
d
b
h
d'
Bush and his spokesmen say they're not worn~ a .out 1 e •.ss~- assignment will be Fleet Mainte- oughly drenched by the rain. If dren. With God's help and love and an achievement that should be',
nanee."I don't believe that the Japanese or anyone wtll mtstake any mdt- nance Officer, Commander in anyone could have seen this group hard work, we still enjoy and love rewarded. This indeed is an out- .
standing fe~t. Today there is no
vidual businessman's view for those of the U.S. governmen~" said Mar- Chief, U.S. Atlantic Flee~ Norfolk, of young men in action and could each other.
longer
unneccsSJiry delays as wa1.
lin FilZW8ler, the White House press secretary.
VA.
have video taped it, I am certain
Fern Norris,
fonnerly.
, .,
There's been a defensive tone 10 administration statements on the busiFor the information of the read- that it would have been a hit on
R.D. I, SR 124 Racine,
ness delegation in the month since it was arranged but not announced, ers of this column , this is another national television. Caption - The
Congratulations
to
Directoi
·
45769
only confrrmed after businessmen disclose~\ the travel plan.
example of a Meigs Countian who Round-up at Bearwa/low Ridge.
P.S. Fred, I hope thi s gives you Dowler and the engineers who '
Tha~ and the signs of rescnlrnent in Tokyo, are ironic given the close
had gone to the top of ~is fiel~ in
a
good
idea where STRING BURG planned and engineered this traffic ,
To report on m~ Christmas, lhis
ties between Japanese governm~nt and business. ·
.
the armed services.
is 10 SlaiC thai I rccei ved many fine is and the wonderful people who control sy,slcm al Kerr's Run, •
Pomeroy.
'
, Bush was asked before the trip whether he was comfortable wtth an
Arthur Clark is the son of for- gifts from my family and friends. It li vcd there.
armngement thai could create an aP.pearance of ~ovemmem intervention .
Carry
on!
mer Common Pleas Judge ·cedric was strange for me to have
One final word 10 that I have
: "Good question," he replied. 'The answer IS no, I don't feel uncomClark and his wife, Esther Clark, received a compass and a map of contacted my origin al informant
Editor's note • Long-lime
fortable al all. I think this is long overdue."
for mer residents of Middleport, Meigs County. The sender of these pertaining to Stringburg. Further Attorney Fred W. Crow is the
The (reSident said later that the businessmen will help him drive home now deceased. His sister, Carla articles appeared 10 be one of my research is being made. The plats contributor of a weekly column
l)is message !hat the United States wants open markets, free, fair trade, but Klein and brother in law, Fritz pen-pals. ·
in the Meigs County Recorqer's for The Sunday Times-Sentinel.
··~O special benefits, no rules staCked in our favor ... "
Klein, are also natives of MiddleOffice
show Permonkey as being Readers wishing to applaud, cril- .
Along these lines, I received a
· And if the money-losing automakers want more, they can say so.
port.
letter from Fern Norris of Racine, locaiCd in the area between Min- icize or comment on any subject;
.:~Obviously, we couldn't keep them from it if we wanted," Secretary of
Our congratulations to Rear Ohio. This letter sets the record ersville and Syracuse. There have (e.cepl religion or poli,lics) are
Comrn~ Robert A. Mosbacher Said last week.
Admiral Arthur Clark for his suc- straight as to where Stringburg is been some inquiries as to where encouraged to wrile to Mf. '
cess. h is extremely gratifying to located. The contents of this letter Seldom Seen and Gobbler's Knob Crow, in care of this newspaper. .
,. EDI10R'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist sec a local boy make good in his are as follows:
f9r The Associated Press, has.reponed on Washington and national poli- cho5en field of endeavor.
Dec. 17, '91
I ',
tics for more than 25 years.
there are many stra~ge things Dear Fred:
.•
that can happen in this life. For
1 have been reading your colexample, ahout 9 o'clock Saturday umn in the Sentinel ever since you
evemng, Roland Eastman called startethV'ritiitg it and I enjoy them
Sonny Haynes and informed him _ very much. But I don' t agree where
his prize steer was loose a~d need- you say String berg is,. unless there
ed 10 be corralled tmmedtately. It are two of them. The Strihgburg I
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so
happened
that
Sonny
had
the
know
of
is
spdled
SlRijiGBURG
:;
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By The AssOciated Press
_
following guests: Judge Fred W. instead of S'tltiNGBERG ...lLis. l
:. Today is Sunday,Jan. 5, the fifth day of 1992. There arc 361 days lefl (Rick) Crow, Ill, Bruce Reed, I/2 ' miles above Apple Grove on
Mayor elect of Pomeroy, Father Route 338. It·is the home and birthjit
the year. Highl'gh
. History;
~ Today's
1 tm
Tom Reed, of Grace Episcopal place of the Sayres; Farras, PickCOUNCIL Oil
:• On Jan. 5, 1896, the Austrian newspaper Wiener Presse published the Church, !,'Carson Crow. Pomeroy ens Woods Burtons, Rhodes arf
COMfETITtVENESS .
(ICSI public account of a discovery by Gennan physicist Wilhelm Roeittattorney. Bill Quickel, noted insur· 'For~'mans, '
Fl of a form of radiation !hat became known as X-rays.
ance sp,ecialist, and of cours~.
They arc the old ones; Mona
,. On this dale:
Sonny Haynes.
.
Heiney Farra is the oldest, who is
r: In 1589, Calherine de Medici of France died at the 1!$e of 69.
' '
When word was passed among 97" and lives in Racine. The next
·: In 1781, a British naval expedition led by Benedtct Arnold burned this group, it appeared that much .one is Evcrill Pickens Leitz, 91,
.'
.Richmond, Va
•'
confusion and panic was no!¢. It· who is·in a rest home; the next one; •
:: In 1895, French Capt. Alfred Dreyfus, convicte.d ·of treason, was was reported that T9m Reed sug.· Audrey Wood Brownell, my sister' '' '
Jlripped of his rank. He was later declared innocent
•
gested an all-points bulletin be in-law who lives in Kanauga, is 87.
'
~ lri 1925, Nellie Tayloe Ross became the fll'S! female governor of a state given over the radio. Bruce 'Reed . The lasllwo arc Golda Foreman
she assumed her duties as ,chief executive of Wyoming to finish out her wanted to call the emergency res- " Heiney, who is 75 and lives back of
,• I
hulblnd's
cue squad ot 9'11.
Apple Grove and Ellea ForOIDin
' J'
Sonny objected 10 these spuea· Arrtou, who is 78 and Uvea -111
or;the;IIUnired
the ageswea.
oC 60.Calvin Coolidge, died tions
-~
and drove lhls posse to his Racine. They are the old IUI'Yivcn
. · Oeo'lle Wuhington Carver died in father-in-law's farm. From there ·of SlRINGBURG. the only way
some of them !OOk to !he hi&amp;h road you cold 101 to Slrin1bur1 in the
Union lddlaa, PrelideAt Trumin labeled 'and
'
anothel pau lOOk the low 1'0111. wjnte,r time wu on r11111 or hone
Can you illlll8ino IIlia IJOtiP of and bugy. You ille. Fred, I Uvtd
an nnmcceafvl c:udidale for the presi- dudea tralpsi~J ove~r lhe' terrain in Lelarl Falls and had 10 wallt: 10
' ''
- follld munlnd with his wife looking for a steer? Fortuna~ely, gel there. ·
Pl. .
Sonny had lassoes availablo and
After 1wo year~ I pve It up and
Su~e, a tnK:k driver later . the aroup hwled IOWII'dl Rolaftd's •
her to'miiT)' me. She finally
•
oC13women.
.- .. t
home where the 1101r bldibeen qnec1 111111 laid "Yet*. '11111- 61
lie - nomiaallq Ellnbeth spoued. One oC the 111111'111 camilla
'
aiO lUI NOYtmbtr 211h
'
oC~maldD&amp;her
out of lite caplllre of IIIli anllla1 1930). Wt UV1111111 SliDJbulf b
of 'I'raDipCndca,
wu !hal Tom Relll WOUIId up Ill- . 0 yean tben ltCt IIIII 11011d fo

:vm

rw

Events that happened during the Christmas season:
By Fred W. Crow

Berry's World

J:oday in history

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Sunny skies ,on tap for
part of Buckeye State ·.

OHIO Weather
·Sunday, Jan. 5 ·
Aceu-Weather• forecast for

co'nditions and high temperatures

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MICH.

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IToledol 44'1

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Mostly sunny skies are on tap in
western Ohio while variable
cloudiness will be the rule in the
cast. Highs today will be mainly in
the 40s.
The record high temperature for Hospital news
this date at the Columbus weather
Veterans Memorial
station was 61 degrees in 1899. The
FRIDAY ADMISSSIONS •. ·
.record low was- 10 in 1879.
Virginia Estep, Middleport:·:
Around the nation
William
Morris, Racine; and Juani&lt; ·
Rain fell over the mid-Atlimtic
ta
Chapman,
Clifton, W.Va. ·
·:
states, the Northwest and southern .
FRIDAY
DISCHARGES
•
Her:
Arizona early Saturday. Snow fell
bert
Hoover
and
Sarah
Congo.
.
over pans of Utah and Washington
state.
·
Unseasonably warm weather
continued in Minnesota, where
temperatures have been running as.
much as 40 degrees above the aver·
age for this time of year.
A storm system moving north
along lhe Atlantic coastline brought
coastal gale warnings from New
Jersey to southern New England.
A disturbance over the Gulf of
California was expected, 10 bring
rain and snow to the Southwest.
CHECK IT OUT!
Freezing light rain and snow f611
over the higher North Carolina
PREFERRED RISK
mountains Friday.
offers
nondrinkers top
Rain fell Friday from the central
A~antic states across the southern
coverages for auto and
Appalachians. Tennessee Valley
homeowners insurance.
and southern parts of the lower
Call us before you renew
Ohio Valley.
awsk about our
rcRage discount.

PA.

IND.

•I Columbus I 45' I

W VA .

Showers T-slorms Rain Flurries

Snow

Ice

It also rained over the northern . :
pan of the cenual Gulf of Mexico : ,- states and lower Michigan.
,:
The high temperature for the .;
nation f!i~ay was 79 degrees at :;
HollywOOd, Fla.
;.

By The Associated Press

Cleveland

I Mansfield I' 45'

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Sunny

Pt. CloJJcly

NOliDlUJIKIBS

Cloudy

Court news
suspension, attempted driving

GALLIPOLIS- The following
actions w e r&lt;l.fecen~y taken by the under the innuence; Jcrzy L. Bums,
Qallia Cll'Unty Common Pleas 41 , of Gallipolis, $100 plus costs,
Court: dissolution granted lo Debo- two days jail, no operators license,
rah G. and Timothy J. Scitcs, both S35 fine , no scat belt; Jeffrey L.
of Gallipoli s; decree o( divorce Sellers, -30; of Racine, SlOO plus
granted to Lisa K. and Carlos C. costs, 90 day operators license suspension, ordered 10 obtain operaCaldwell, address unreported.
The follow ing cases were pro- tors license/insurance, no operators
cessed in the Gall ipolis Municipal license, $10 plus costs, speed.
Court Friday: Larry Gilbert, 29, of
Gallipolis, S375 plus costs, 15 days
in jatl, 45 day s operators license

* AIITO *HOME* LirE* CIIURCH

MUZZLE LOADING SUPPLIES

Lottery numbers

$729

CLEVELAND (AF)- Here are
Friday night's Ohio Lottery selections:
Pick J Numbers
8-6-3
(eight, six, three)
Pick 4 !&lt;;umbers
5-3-6-4
(five, three, six, four)
Cards
10 (ten) of Hearts
6 (six) of Clubs
Q {queen) of Diamonds
4 (four) o'f Spades

LB.

Call
LES YOUNG, AGEN-T
At
245-9082

BAUM LUMBER

Divorce cases processed

248 CHESTER

STATE ROUTE

POMEROY - A divorce action
has been filed in Meigs Cou nty
Common Pleas Court by Loretta
Joy France, Pomeroy, against Larry
Ken neth France of Orlando, Fla.
A divorce has been granted in in
the co urt to Mic haelS. Braun, from
De l1a S. Braun.

1992 DOG LICENSE
GO ON.SALE DEC~ 1st
D!ADIINI FOR PURCHASE Of 1992 DOG LICINSIIS JANUAIT 20TH. FOUR DOllARS ($4.00) PINAIIY IF UaNSIIS P(II(IIASID
AFIER THAT.DAlE. FOR TOUR CONVINIINa USIIHI HANDY APPIICRION IIANK AND lUlLTO THE COUNTT AUDITOUT THE
COURTHOU51 NOW. FI£5 ARE FOUR DOLJAII$4.00) FOR EACH DOG. MAU OR FIMAU. IICINNII UaNII Plrwrt $20.00~ AlSO
II ON SALI AT THE HUMANIS~ITY LOCAIID AT IHI CORNER Of NOIIH SfCOND 51. AND WAUIU!St, IIIDDliPOII, 0110
45760.
0
MAU $4.00
FIMAJI $4.00
KINNII LICINS£ $20.00

Herbert Sayre
MIDDLEPORT - Herbert L.
Sayre, 93, of 721 Broadway Street
in Racine, died on friday, January
3, 1992 at Overbrook Center in
Middleport following a brief illness. He .was a bookkeeper and a
school teacher. He wa. a member
of Junior OUAM.
Born on April4, 1898 in Antiquity, he was the so n of the late
Martin and Emma Roush Sayre.
Surviving arc two sons, David
(Dorothy) Sayre of Antiquity and
Dean (Earnisc) Sayre of Highspire,
Pa.; a daughter-in-law, Doris
Rogers, Co lumbu s; a nephew,
George (Dorothy) Sayre ; two
grandchildren and six grcal·grandchildrcn.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, Doris; a
son. Dcrrell Sayre; four brothers
and four sisters.
Burial will be in Letart Falls
Cemetery.
Memorial services will be held
at a later date, 10 be announced by
Funeral Home in

JIM KENNEDY
AGENCY, INC.

•PYRODEX
'
•UNBREAKABLE
SUPER RODS

•BLACK POWDER

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A. P.R.

Gallipolis, · Ohio, by the Ohio Vtlley

Publiahtns Comp~~nyiMQ].ttmf.diR, Inc.

Second (]us JUUIP paid~ at. Gallipolis ,

Stop by or call any of our Star Bank locations today. If you

Ohio 45631. Enlered as aeco~ cla11

~an't. make . it during our regular hours. call1-800-274•4111

mailing matter at. P~roy, Oh1o, Poat

om'i":

Monday through Thursday from 5 until 8 p .m.

·

MembeT: The A:Nociat.ec:l Preu , lnllt.n4
Daily Preu Aaociation and thto. Ohi,o
Nttftpapet

Aaaoeltt.ion, National

Advertittna ~preaenilti•«!· BrflnhR·m
Newspa~~ S.Iu, 733 Thnd Avenue, ,
Now Yon. Now Yont00t7.
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lUNDAY ONLY
8UB8CIUPriON·RA'!'U

BY o.m.r or. Motor·Route

One w.k..............................................I!Of
One v.............................................ks.ao

·certain restrictions apply

liNGLE COPY

PRICE

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Sunclty............" "''''-'"""'''''""'"75 C11nl.i

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No aublcripliol'll by mail permitted l,n
1 nu where mol« carrier senlce , 11
avlillble.
TIM Sonda)o ,_Son.nol wtlt IIOl bO

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Sunday Times-Sentlnei-Page-A3:

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(USPS 625-800)
Published uch Sunlby, 82&amp; Third Avr..,

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&gt;

GALLIPOLIS - Frederick L.
Fellure, 49 , 34 Rock Lick Road,
Crown City, died Saturday in Holzer Medical Center.
.
He is survived by hi s wife,
Mary Fellure.
will
be
Arrangements
announced later by the Willi s
Funeral Home.

.

~

Marceila Coleman

MIDDLEPORT - Marcella M.
Coleman,. 51, of Middleport, died
on Friday, January 3, 1992 at her
residence.
She was hom on September 8,
1940 in Point Pleasan~ W.Va., the
daugther of Dorothy Jean Huddieston Rhodes of P,airit Pleasant, and
the late Charles William Rose. She
was a homemaker and a member of
Middleport Pt:esb)'lerian Church.
Besides her mother, .she is survived by her husband, Jack Colerna, of Middleport; three daugh'
ters, Mrs. David (Kathryn) Gilmore
of Pickerington, Mrs. Brell (Becky)
Ingles of Waterloo, and Mrs. Deborah Roush of Mason, W.Va.; two
brothers, Robert Rhodes of Petersburg, Fla. and William Rhodes of
Point Pleasant; two sisters, Mary
Keeler and Peggy Gardner, both of
Point Pleasant; five grandchildren
and sevetal nieces and nephews.
Besides her father, she was preceded in death by a sister, Pauletta
Rhodes and two sons-in-law, Tim
Carl W. Brickles
Roush and Brian Keessee.
Funeral services will be on
. ATHQNS - Carl W. Brick:lcs, Monday at I p.m. at Fisher Funeral
73, South Shafer Street, Athens, Home in Middleport with Rev.
Maurice Mitchell and Rev. Kris
died Saturday at his residence. ·
Born Oel. 8, 1918 in Me igs Trientong officiating. Burial will
County, son of the late Dannie and be in Meigs Memory Gard(llls.
Friends may call at the funeral
Flossie Brickles, he had been a volhome
from 2 p.m. 10 4 jJ.m. and 7
unteer for the Athens Senior Nutrip.m.
10
9 p.m. on Sunday.
tion Centerfor the last 10 years and at the time of his death was super.
iniCndent of the West Union Street John Cubbison
Cemetery in Athens.
'
COOLVILLE - John E. CubbiSurviving arc his wife, Letha son, 76, of Coolville, died at his
Patrick Brickles; a son and daugh- home on Thursday. January 2,
ter-in-law, James and Sarah Brick- 1992. He was a retired employee of
los of Athens; a daughter, Carol the General Services AdministraBethascheider of Athens; a daugh- tion Federal Building in Parkerster and son-in-law, Nancy and Tom burg, W.Va. He was a disabled vet·
Crossen of Gallipolis; five grand- eran of World War II.
.
child{en and .two great-grandchilHe was born in Reedsville, the
dren; two sisters, Estella Colborn son of the late Joseph and Della
of Shade, and Evelyn Cornelius of Cubbison.
N:ew Concord; four brothers, Earl'
Survivirlg arc his wife of 52
Rrickles of Ashland, Ky., Floyd years, Sadie Blake Cubbison; two
Brickles of Shade, Robert Brick:les daughters, Joyce Day of Amarillo,
of West Lafayette, and Jesse Brick- Texas and Norma Williamson .of
les of Athens; a sister-in-law and Vienna. W.Va.; a son, Wayne Cubher husband. Mary and Danny bison of Coolville; two sisters.
Chiki of Canton; and numerous Margaret Cubbiso~ of Phoenix ,
nieces and nephews.
Ariz., and Evelyn · Homer bf
Services will be I p.m . Monday Columbus; two grandchildren and
in the Hughes-Blower Funeral 16 great-grandchildren.
Home, 168 Morris Ave., Athens,
Besides his parents, he was prewith the Rev. Willard Love offici- ceded in death by two brothers and
ating. Burial will be in Athens two sisters. •
Coumy Memory Gardens. Friends
Services will be held on Monmay call at the tuneral home Sun- day at I p.m. at While-Blower
day from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Funeral Home in Coolville with
Rev. George Horner officiating .
Burial will be in Eden Cemetery.
Bette J. Bower
Friends may call from 2 p.ni. to
4
p.m.
and 7 p.m. 9 p.m. on Sun· DUNEDIN, Fla. - Bette Jean
Saunders Bower, 67, of Dunedin, day.
Fla., died Monday, Dec. 30, 1991
Loren Mooney
at her residence.
She was born in Gallipolis,
UMATILLA. Fla . - Loren
daughter of the late Clarence E.
Waugh
Mooney, 75, of Umatilla,
and Emily A. Saunders.
.
·
Fla.,
died
Tuesday, Dec. 31, !991,
' She was a formerly worked as a
at
his
residence.
proofer at the Gallipolis Daily TriHe was born in Gallia County,
bune, and was a bookkeeper at
·
son
of the late Dr. John T. and
Ray's Drug Store, Jackson . She
Anna
Maude Waugh Mooney.
was a member of Grac(_U nited
He
was a refired bus driver and
Methodist Church, Oallipoli~
Survivors include her hu ~band, a member of the Crown City
Lodge.
James (Jim) Bower; one daughter, Masonic
Survivors
include his wife ,
Babette Roush of Marengo, Ohw;
Hazel
Young
Mooney ; one son ,
one sisters, Polly Wallace of
Mike
Mooney
of Umatilla, Fla .;
Tampa, Fla.; and one granddaughfive
sisters,
Mary
Viola Phillips of
ter. Ashley Roush of Marengo,
Crown City, Mrs. Alva (Geneva)
Ohio.
Graveside services will be held Henderson of Florida, Mrs. Earl
10 a.m. Tuesday at Mound Hill (Virginia) Nickles of Proctorville,
Cemetery, with the Rev. Joseph Oval Beulah Doss of Proctorville,
and Mrs. William (Norma) Nickles
Hefner officiating.
· There will be no visitation. In of Columbus;' and one brother, ForMooney of Huntington, W.Va.
lieu of flowers, contributions can restHe
was preceded in death by
be made 10 the Hospices Care, Inc. two brothers,
Lawrence and ClinGreen Team, 300 East Bay Dr., ton Tyler Mooney.
·
Largo, Fla., 34640
·
Funeral services were held Friday, Jan . 3, 1992 at the Byers
Frederick L. Fellure
Funeral Home, Umatilla, Fla.

.

'~In: ~193:3t.i lhe~~=-~prw=·dtn~~~

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POMEROY - Ardith T. Bar10n,
78. of 250 Mulberry Avenue in
.Pomeroy, died on Saturday, January 4, 1992 at Pleasant Valley
Hospllal. He was a construction
worker.
·
•
. He was born on May 31, 1913
'" Rutland , the son of the late
Austin and Maude Ralph Barion.
. Surviving are his wife, Edith, of
Pomeroy; a son, Robert E. Barton
of Pomeroy; two daughters, Betty'
Reed of Pomeroy and Judy Denney
of Rutland; nine grandchildren and
eight great-grandchildren.
He attended the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
Funeral services will be held on
Monday a12 p.m. al Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy with Pastor
William Williams officiating. Burial will be Rock Springs Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Sunday from 4 p.m. to 9
p.m. and prior to services on Mooday mornmg.

By Jack And~rson1
M'lC hael Bz'nstez'n
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deaths-'__,.._

Ardith Barton

Government agencies\downplay risks ofdioxi.~ ·

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Pomeroy,-Middleport-G:alllpolls, OH-,Polnt Pleasant, WV
'·

Janua,Y 5, 1992.

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IWL IIIJiic&amp;IP110NB

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·STAR ·BANK

o..v.a.- ~o.IJ'
.._._ ........... 14Ut

There's a star within yourreach.

IIIAIL~

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January 5, 1992

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.--__;_~-----_,;,.,-. Local

briefs_......;__---:--------_;__-__--__,

forced Eblin's vehicle intO the rear of a Rural Water Association
truck driven by James M. Rolh~eb, 30, 1500 Brick School Road,
GallipOlis. Rothgeb was stopped to make a left turn, the patrol s!lid
The accident occurred around 4 p.m.
_Musser suffered minor visible injuries and was taken to HMC by
the Gama County EMS, wliere she was treated' for contusions,
according 10 a hospital spokesperson.
· .
Damage was'moderate 10 the Kraus, Musser and Eblin vehicles
and slight tO Rolhgeb's. Kraus was ciiCd for assured clear distance . .!o
Troopers cited Michelle S. Michael, 16, 2617 State Route 325,
Thurman, for failure to yield in a two-vehicle accident Friday on
U.S. 35 at the intersection or'StaiC Route 588.
.
· The patrol said Michael turned left from 588 10 go westbound on
35 at3:10 p.m. and struck an eastlround car driven by Kelly J. Saunders, 19, 0ak Hill. Damage was moderate to Saunders' car and
slight to Michael's truck.
•.
· .
CiiCd by lhe patrol for failure to control was Mark A. Edge, 21,
4366 Bula~ille Pike, Gallipolis, following a one-vehicle accident on .
Coooty Road 3 (Bulaville Pike) in Addison Township Friday.
Troopers said Edge was Southbound, 2-2/10 of a mile nonh of
State Rou~ 160, at 4:10p.m. when he went off the right side of the
road and struck a ditch. Damage to his truck was slight.

Police p~obe wallet theft
GALLIPOLIS :__ The theft of a wallet from a shopping can a1
the Kroger store in the Silver Bridge Plaza Ftiday is under investigation by Gall,ipolis City Police.
.
.
Angela Esposito, 16059 State. ~o~te 7 So'uth, Crown C1ty,
informed officers her wallet, contammg cash and personal papers,
was removed sometime around 7:50p.m. while-she was shoppi~g.
Officers also iQvcstigated two minor accidents on Friday.
A vehicle owned by Charles R. Cox, 420 Lariat Drive, Gallipolis, was struck by an unknown vehicle while p~ked on the 400
block of Third Avenue at 3:4 1 p.m. The olher vehicle leftlhe scene.
Damage was slight to Cox's car.
,
Officers said a vehicle driven by Angela M. Baud, 22, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis; was southbound on Fourth Avenue near Cedar Screet at
8:04 p.m. when a vehicle driven by Dwaine P. Beaver, 38, 556
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, backed out of a dnveway and struck
Baird's car.
Baird's vehicle was moderately damaged while 'the Beaver vehicle was slightly damaged. No citation was issued.

Deputies eye theft of computer .

County board meets Wednesday

GALLIPOLIS -Mike Justus, 12813 State Route 325 Nonh ,
Vinton, informed th~ Gallia County Sheriff's Department Friday
that his home was entered sometime between Wednesday and Fn"'·
day and a Tanya computer was removed.
Reported missing are the monitor, disk drive, keyboard and some
software disks. The incident is under investigation.

GALLIPOLIS - A reorganizational meeting of the Gallia
&lt;;::ounty Local Board of Education has been set for Wednesday, Jan.
8 at 6:30 p.m. in the central office.

Miller representative to visit -.

Pomeroy woman hurt in accident

GALLIPOLIS- A representative from U.S. Rep. Clarence
Miller's office will have an open door session on Tuesday, Jan. 7
from!! a.m.-1 p.m. in lhe Gallia County Courthouse.
Persons with· questions concerning the federal government are
encouraged to stop by.and discuss them with the representative.

GALLIPOLIS - A Pomeroy woman was treated and released
from Holzer Medical Center Friday following a four-vehicle accident on State Route 7 at the Gallia County Rural Water Association
planL·
.
·
.
.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol srud a soulhbound van driven by Michael P. Kraus, 27, Athens, and owned by
Vere Smith Audio Visuals, Athens, failed to stop in time for a
stopped vehicle ahead of him driven by Katherine J. Musser, 36,
32707 Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy, and struck the rear of 'Musser's
car.
.
The impact fo~ced Musser's car into the rear of a truck driven by
linda C. Eblin, 42, 3594~ Vance Road, Pomeroy, which in tum

Vehicle fires probed
POMEROY· The Meigs County Sheriff' s Department investigated two vehicle fires over the weekend.
All/!:05 a.m. Friday, the Racine Volumeer Fire Deparu!tent was
called for a vehtcle ftre at the_intersection of Tanners Run Road and

By·JAM!i:S SANDS
y~.
.
Special ·correspondent
, Some of the more ·interesting of
: . GALLIPOLlS ·"In \lliJ'Iy times . Smith'sreeolleetiorispenaintohuntwe only had coffee once a month and ing and th~ keeping of farm artimals,
poly a few could.afford it at all. We Smith related how wild turkeys were
:overe up at 4 in the
and so numerous lhat he once caught 28
worked until'-late
in one trap. At other times he would
.in the night All
try to shoot turkeys, He always put
~ked al . ni:ght'
cow bell around his neck so that the
'some knitting,
turkeys would think it was just a cow
8pinning, sewing,
·in the woods.
· picking ·cotton to
Turkeys were easy to hunt in the
.get the seed out
fall becau$e they would get so fat that
it· hackling flax,
theyhadtorunalongdistancebefore
~king lhe baby
they could get off lhe ground and
jn the buckeye trough; all were busy then tlley flew only about25 feet.
pntil bedtime.
"The wolves were so numerous
; Girlswerenptallowedawayfrom that a dog could not travel alone. If
home after night at all; they had to go · alone and the wolves found him, they
)o bed when the family did lhey were soon chased bini home or killed him.
P.otallowed tositupandsparkas they They often came to the house at night
'do now.
and chased the dog into or under the
l Their Sunday dresses were made house and tried to get the hogs and
:Of cotton raised, carded, spun and sheep out of the pen, Sheep ~ad to be
iwove at home and were striped in penned every night, It was the nature
;weaving. Their common or everyday of the wolf to seize the sheep by the
f!tesses were in summerplain cotton, throat and suck its blood and leave
po stripes; in winter, Lindsey or flan- the carcass as food for other ani~el. They wore homemade tinen mals."
;~prons,notcolo~and went to church
. Hogs wereraiscdthenin the woods
:mthe s?m~~rtJme barefooted; an_d - whc:,re th'ey· l'!ouldf!Jfage on blue.either «iM a hfindketclue! oo thelt' gtass arid )ll!vanes as well as nuts aM
;heads or went bareheaded.
roots. However, sometimes hogs
·. The above was written by J.A. · would become wild with tusks 4
: ~mith,an early settler in Lawrence inches long. Atbutcheringtimefarm~ounty. Smith also related ~I many ers might have to go hunt the hogs in
of the men ~ong the eB:£1Y p1oneers the woods with dogs and guns. Fallen
.wore flax shirtS,buckskin pants and hogs would be tied to a horse to be
moccas~. On~ a year a shoemaker dragged back to the farmhouse.
woul&lt;l. Vlst! vanous farms and~
Some hogs eluded capture 'for
the shoes nght on the spoL One pau years. In !840Smilhrelatedhowone
pfshoes (the nght shoe and left shoe. wildboarhadevenkilledanumberof
)Vere identical) had to last a whole ·tamer hogs. That particular wild hog

State Route 124 near Sycamore Grove. When deputies and fire personnel·arrived . on the scene, i_t was discovered that .someon~ had
tried to set fire to a Hemlock Pipeline tool·bus parked m the field.
The department was notified that thr!!C individuals were seen
around the ~us at approximaiCly 11:54 p.m. Slight damage was suS·
tained to the paint and reflectors on the bus.
_
.
Kelly Thomas of Panther Ridge Road reponed that his vehi~le
had suffered a flat tire and that he had parked lhe vehicle at the Fa~t·
play Church in Salem Township ·and had (lU(en off the nght front
tire to get repaired.
·
.
.
At4:05 a.m. a Soutliem Ohio Coal Co!llpany sccunly officer discovered the vehicle in flames. The depanmcnt reported that the
vehiCle was destroyed.

EMS units receive 8 calls
POMEROY - Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
answered eight calls for assistance Friday and early Saturday.
On Friday at 9:37 a.m., Pomeroy unit wenuo Union Avenue.
Mahlon Eblin was'laken'li&gt;'Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·
At 12:57 p.m., Middlepon squad went to Peoples Bank. Virginia
Estep was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 1 ~51 p.m.,
Pomeroy unit was sent to West Main StreeL Rick Stone was transported 10 Veterans. At 7:10p.m., Middleport iquad was dispatched
to Overbrook Center. Georgia Watson was taken to Pleasant Valley,
At 8:59 p.m., Middleport squad responded to Overbrook Center.
William Watson was transported 10 Pleasant Valley. At 10:26 p.m.,
Toppers Plains squad was sent to Woods Road for Kimberly Counncy, who was taken 10 O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
_ on Saturday at 4:12 a.m .. Salem Township Volunteer Fire
Department w~nt to an aulD fire. Cynthia and Kelly Thomas arc listed as the vehicle's owners. At 9:02 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center for Frances Hawkins,
who was taken to Ve1erans.

Ex-mayor to face drug charges

•

ATHENS (AP) - Former Ja&gt;:ksonville ·Mayor Eugene Hogue
will appear in Alhens County Common Pleas Court on Wednesday
on drug charges.
Athens County Prosecutor Michael Ward said Friday that auihorilie&gt;, acting on a tip from an infonnanl, SCl)tched Hogue's house in
Glouster and found three pounds of marijuana.
. .
Hogue, 58, has been mdictcd on three counts of trartickmg m
marijuana.
·

Rev

•

YOU PAY

ONLY

19911*

By R~BERT JABLON
Assoctated PressWrl.ter
', WESTMINSTER, Cahf. (AP)
:'- Televtsion cameras captured lhe
)fatal shooting of a murder suspect
·killed by police at a freeway exjt
when the car he was dJ'!Vlng.ran out
of gas after a 300-m!le highway
chase across California. .
Dunng the fmal miles of the
pursuit- over crowded, rain-slick
los Angeles-area freeways-: the
drtver co.uld be seen on televiSion
exchangmg fire w1th pohce and
racing over curbs, lhrough a service
station, into opposing lanes of traf·
fie, and along freeway shoulders.
The pursuit, most of. which took
place along Interstate 5 - Catifornia's main north-south artery wasn't stopped sooner, aulhorities
said, because of the danger
involved.
"Basically, what our depart~will do is ch;lse them until

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•

ACROSS
1 Card game
6 61h President
11 Experience
16 "I - II Through
the Grapevine"
21 Place for combat
22 Demon
23 Hautboys
24 Ire
25 Transgress
26 Pluck: resolution
28 Warble
30 Shrewd: colloq.
32 Peach St.
33 Compass point
34 Pedal digit
35 Hindu cymbals
36 Healthy
37 Fall behind
38 House ad dillon
40 Metal fasteners
42 Pigpen
43 Sleeveless cloak
44 Writes •
45 .:.. -arii\ed bandit
47 Part of BLT
49 Goll cry
50 Enemy
51 Rubbish
54 Soccer great
55 Locale
56 Office workers
59 Emmet
60 Military draft
agcy.
62 Loosely woven
cellon
64 vessel
65 Helium symbol
66 - absentia
67 Spigot
69 Forebodings
70 Liquefy
71 Chinese dynasty
72 Twosome
74 Biblical weeds
76 Sink In middle
77 Chair
78 Diving birds
79 Crlllcal stales
of aflairs ·
82 Tidier
84 Fam011s cow
85 Loyal
86 Want

....

88 Disturbance
89 War god
90 Large: big
92 Opening; gap
94 Threefold
98 Nobleman
99 Sly look
100 Born
102 "- Landing"
103 Rend
104 River In Germany
105 Arthur
namesakes
106 Play part
108 Tibetan gazelle
109 - Joe (doll)
110 Yes, to Carmen
111 Conduct
112 Monage
114 In favor of
116 Dry, as wine
117 More uncanny
119 Matures
120 Protective ditch
122 Vows
124 Hearing organ
125 Winter vehicle
128 Leased
128 Anllet'ed animal
129 Play leedlng role
131 Fencer's sword
132 Sodium chloride
133 Pretends
135 Moray
138 Y011ngstar
139 Kind of cheese
140 Chapeau
141 Pet'lod of time
142 Brother of Odin
143 Above
144 Give prior notice
145 Consumed
147 Commonplace
149 Hyson
150 Stair post
152 Bird on a quarter
154 Hawkeye
156 DeJroit 158 Cornered
159 Remained erect
160 Tine of a fork
161 Bullwlnkle. for
one

DOWN
l Oul of date
2 Bay window

3 Range of
knowledge
4 Printer's measure

5 Kurosaw1tllm
6 Clever
7 Grow
8 Halll
9 Note of scale
10 Crafty
11 Present lime
12 Son of Adam
13 The sun
14 Tellurium symbol
15 Flee
16 DeleSI ·
17 Chemical suHix
18 Sliver symbol
19 Daughter of King
Lear
20 Hauls wllh eHort
27 Alr11ne Info.
29 Sarge's dog
3t Rubber tree
36 - ·bOiled egg
37 Condescending
look
39 Allie
40 Promontory
41 Pintail duck
42 Emlls vapor
43 Fruit of the pine
44 Bard
46 Greek letter
48 Choir voice
49 Fish limb~
50 Level
51 Forays
52 Boredom
53 Landed property
55 Olglt
56 Y011ng horse
57 Brownish color
58 Judgment
61 Hindu garment
63 Average
64 'Smokey, for one
68 Flowers
70 Session
71 European
cavaifyman
73 Aquatic mammals
74 Tense
75 Move about
furtively
77 Long-legged bird
78 Fish seuce
80 Mountains of

~

.....

---

Europe
81 "Desk - "
83 River island
84 Goddess of
discord
87 Dull-witted
persons
89 Places for
worship
90 Web-footed birds
91 Fiber plant
92 Chief
93 Prophet
95 - out (become
exhausted)
96 Striped animal
97 Heroic events
99 Fruit
101 Glossy paint
105 Tavern drink
106 Hurried
107 Kind of collar
111 Falsifier
,112 S-shaped
molding
113 Dines
115 IS In debt
116 Japanese beer
1 18 Peruse
119 Toward sheller
121 Asian capital
t23 Spanish article
125 BackbOnes
t26 Evaluate
127 Challenging
129 Gymnastic feat
130 Candle
131 Go astray
132 Surfeited
134 Small rug
136 Smooths
137 Contract
139 Hairless
140 Nimbus
144 Tiny
145 The self
146 Pinch
147 COIIple
148 Shade tree
149 Also
151 "- lhe People"
15.3 Near
155 -Alternative word
157 Malden loved by
Zeus
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moments b;efore. .
Authonues sa1d Stroh stole a
second car about 55 miles soulh of
Los Banos after getting into an
accident. That was when the. highway patrol began its purs.uit, said
CHP spokeswoman laune Johnson.
When Stroh arrived in the Los
Angeles area, news helicopters followed the final miles of the chase
over the freeway. Their fo~ll!ge
was broadcast. on local televtston
stations and ptcked up on at least
one national network newscast.
Stroh was shot after his car ran
out of gas in Westminster, about20
miles south of Los Angeles, and
roll~d to a stop on an offramp of
Interstate 405.
The man authorities said Stroh
killed near Los Banos was idenlified as David Scott Baker, 26, of
Castle Rock, Wash.
Baker's wife, Heidi, said her

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~

The 34 asked for political asylum and were taken to the immigration service's Krome -Avenue :
Detention Center for processing.
They are expected to be released
quickly under a federal law granting special residency status tci ·
Cubans.
:
Exile groups said the risky mas&amp;
defection was another sign that ·
conditions in Cuba are deterioral- :
ing rapidly in the wake of aid cut~:
offs by Conner Cuban allies in the;·
Soviet bloc.
: ·:
"One thinjlllhink is signlflcaQt:
is we are seemg larger groups, an!l ,
we are also seeing military officials!
who are defecting and taking very•
substantial risks," said Francisco :
Hernandez, pr~ident of the Cuba)!:
American National Foundation. :•
The desperation of some to ·
leave the island was underlined last
week when a Cuban man booked a:
trapeze-like swing 10 a U.S.-bound :
charter night in a fatal escape.·
attempt.
•

DRINKS
lfi o:. Si:('

llttle Caesars·~ ~PiZza!·

~Lt•nc.

''

By RICHARD COLE
Associated Press Writer
MIAMI (AP)- Thirty-four
Cuban men, women and children
crowd~d aboard a tourist helicopter
belongmg to the-Cuban state wrline •
Friday and boldly flew to Aorida in
a carefully planned defection.
U.S . Customs Service aircraft
esconed the Russian-made Cubana
Airlines helicopter to Tarniami Airport outside Miami where the jubi·
!ant passengers met wailing relalives and immigration officials.
"Obvio_usly I'm very ha~py.
Freedom IS marvelous. I JUSt
couldn't take •t there anymore,"
said one defector who would not
giVe her name.
"Some of them had lheir luggage and everythmg. They were
unloading lheir luggage just like it
was a regular flight," said Jim
Hunter, owner of HMC Helicopter
Service Inc., who watched the
arrival at the small airpon used by
1
private planes.

sons

J

'

...rz.:ra~.

Cubans lise helicopter
to ·stage mass defection

"I want my Sert,a!"

""" walod lor 0 l"'" ltd hl'nf 011'7 ol 110"'&lt;- 119 \IOitl P&gt;i~ &lt;O&lt;IIIO'o "tci\W!' 'Coco Colo' ond ll.t {)rlom'&lt; R .~ ~~to.c~ nrr ~~l 1 ol lhe(Q(c (O&lt;o Cll""

112-1;a

husband, who-was--n-aveling to Los
Angeles to visit a brother, was
always ready to help someone in
. need •
·,-If he sa'w someone broken
down he'd stop and help, try and
fix lheir car or give them· a ride,"
she said in a telephone interview
Friday night. •'If someone called
and needed help he'd jump up and
lake care of them."
Baker's shooting was witnessed
by a hitchhiker Stroh had picked up
moments before his car broke
down said Merced County Sheriff's Deputy Rick Marshall. The
hitchhiker identified as Michael
Thomas G~am 31 of San Francisco was un~ed:
"He ~as asked if he wanted to
continue on the ride but he
declined" Marshall said.
'

for 90-days, upon enrollment and
completion of the RTP school,
$150 of fine and jail will be suspended; DQuglas Seyler, Mason,
W.Va., faifure to yield, $30 _and
costs; James K. Robinson, ·
Coolville, failure 10 yield, $10 and ·
costs; Todd Goode, Gallipolis,:
DUl, $500 and costs, six months in :
jail suspended to 30 days, opera-·
tor's license suspension for one:
year, one year probation, alcohol:
assess!Dent, no operiuor's license;
39 days in jail, concurrent with·
DUI charge, $75 and ·costs, one,
year probation; Toby Husell, Lancaster, DUI, $450 and costs, 30'
days in jail suspended to I 0 days;
operator's license suspended fo~
one year, probation of ()ne year. :
Th,omas W. Gibbs, Cheshire;
speed, $27 and costs; Shirley Jude;
Vinton, passin' bad checks, $2S.
and costs, reslltution; Melvin B:
Freeman, Racine, expired tag
decal, $50 and costs; Mary D:
Moreland, Athens, passing ba&amp;
checks, $25 and costs, restitution~
Mike T. M8nley, Racine, taking ~
deer with a gun out of season, $25():
ljpe, costs, $100 of fme suspended:
oiic: year probation; Geoffrey·A.·
Wilson, Pomeroy, failure to yield,
$10 and costs.

,..
•

Ia

1\vo great pizzas!

.cut4~

com would be boiled in clear water
untillhe com turned soft. The hominy rould be pot .away and kept for
sometime in cooler weather. In warm
wealher hominy would keep only a
few days.
The hominy was eilher prepared
by frying it in grease or by boiling it
with pork, possum, bear, raccoon,
-rabbi~ squirrel, deet, or pheasant.
Biscuits were made by mixing
ground 'j'lheat with water and salt,
and then placing in an iron vessel
called a spider. It was placed on the
coals with a lid placed over the spi·
der. Hot coals would then be shoveled on top of the spider. The real
treat for a family that had company ·
was to serve a dish similar to what we
call "cream !lf wheat" with maple
sugar and milk.

had also tom up a few hunting dogs
and had survived being shot on a
number of occasions. The wild hog
was estimated to be 13 feet long and
4 feet high. He had chased a number
of persons up trees when found in the
woods without guns. ·
"Once my sister and I were compellellio climb abig rock and there 10
remain· for 8 or 9 houts. The hog
watched us during the entire time.
When we moved, he moved. About
sundown the hog headed back to his
home in a cave and we escaped.
The main diet for many of the
early pioneers through the winter
months was meat and hominy, which
'fas made by boiling com in a weak
I ye solution until the skin of lhe com
would come off. The com_was then
washed until the lye was out. Next the

they nm out of gas," said CHP Sgt.
MarkLunn.
.
When the car finall~ d1drun out
of gas, two Cahfornm Highway
Patrol officers approached with
guns drawn and ordered the driver
not to move.
,
They opened f•re repeatedly,
CHP Officer Lyie Whitten said,
after the man pomted a 12-gauge,
sawed-off shotgun in their direction.
.
.
..
The dn ver, Identified as 22year-old Darren Michael Stroh of
Oregon, was hit several times i~
the neck and chest. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
Authorities said the four-hour
odyssey began Friday morning near
los Banos, in central California,
after Stroh shot and killed a good
Samaritan who had slOpped 10 help
him after his car had broken down.
The shooting was witnessed by a
hitchhiker Stroh had picked up just

II

CB
~1.1Sf1c_

•

Enough Food To Turn Your Family Mea! ~nto A...

~£ALI!!ifJL

Walkie
Talkie
Savt'$40

the late 19th century, J, A. Smith remembered what those pioneer
days in southern Ohio were like in an age when most or the food
(even pork) bad to be bunted in the woods.

·Good Samaritan's killer dies after high-speed chase

1141.111

LesS eoupon - ~

THE WICKLINE CABIN • T&amp;e Wickline Cabin at Bob.Evans
Farms near Rio Grande dates back to U,e early pioneer days. In

POMEROY· . Meigs County
Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien
fmed 21 defendants last week. .
Fined were: ~harles A. Martiri,
Jr., Gallipolis Fet;Y. W.Va., speed,
$24 and costs; Billy R. Goble, Jr.,
Pomeroy, DUl, $450 and costs, 30
days in .jail suspended to 10 days,
operator's license suspened for one
year, one year probauon; Robert E.
White III, Huntington, W.Va., no
medical certificate, $50 mid costs;
Mary Stein, Sun City, Ariz., speed,
$21 and costs; Brian William
~lims II, Mason, W.Va., speed,
$22. and cos~s; Dennis Bryant,
Langsville, passing bad checks,
$25 and costs and restitution;
· Shawn .Engle, Portland, speeding,
$20 and costs; Shawn T. Williams,
Logan, insecure load, $15 and
costs; Terry Ferguson, West
Columbia, W.Va., DUI, $450 and
costs, 30 days in jail suspended 10
10 days. operator's license suspended for one year, speeding, $20
and costs, left of center, costs only.
Myrna Linkous, Shade, DUI,
$450 and costs, one year operator's
license suspension, probation of
one year, 30 days in jail suspended
to 10 days; Dallas Jarrell. Racine,
DUl, $350 and costs. three days in
.iail, operator's licen~ suspended

'

SUNDAY PUZZLER

TANDY '

·21 defendants last week ·

a

•

1'11111111 Clllollll ....

N eigs ·county.Court fine$~

.
s of 'early times'
:in rural southeastern Ohio

January 5, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport...:.Oampolls, OH-flolnt Pleaiant, wv

P!'g.-A4-Sundliy nmes · Sentinel·

Sunday

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ANY SIZE

EACHFuU,
PIECE
Twin,

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''BRAND NAME FURNITURE AT PISCOUNT PRICESH .
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67S.la71 '

GALLIPOLIS FERRY, WV

•

�.. January 5,

wv

Page-AS-Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

~992

'

.

'

Along tbe RiVer
·•

.

'

.

.Qallia .County in '91;
reviewing best, worst
; GALLIPOLIS · With the new
year in full swing, it's time to take
a look back at 1991, reminding us
of Gallipolis' and Gallia County's
ups and downs.
· The war in the Middle East kept
area citizens clo&amp;e to their televi :
~ion sets, radios, and ~~s papers
during the first three months of
J991. The community joined in the
celebration of the war's end by
making its returning veterans the
focus of the 1991 River Recreation
Festival.
; • With the economy becoming a
,l!lajor concern nationally, its effect
on Gallia County was driven home·
l&gt;y the worrie s expressed over
:Southern Ohio Coal Company' s
Meigs Mines. The mines supply
poal for the general Jame s M.
Gavin Power Plant in Cheshire .
However, the Clean Air Act dictat~d that plants like Gavin must ·
~educe their sul(ur dioxide emis·
~ ion s, meaning America11, Electric

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'.

The building is owned by Mary Williamson, Tracy Stewart and
Joanne Stewart, all of Gallipolis. The struclure wa·s built on the •
site of another slr'uclure that burned down in the early 1950s.

LIDRARY EXPANSION COMPLETED - An addition to the
Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Me~orial Library, started in 1990, was
completed in 1991 and officially dedicated in September. The additioQ provided more space for books and materials, and for use of

•

•

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TEA
BAGS

PINTO
.BEANS
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the facility. While the library's .3-mill renewal levy failed at the ;
polls In November, forcing some cuts in services, the library plans l
to fo back to !be voters withil request for the same millage on Fe~. · •
4, 992 to restore those services.
~

•

..,-,..

·--

c

iuOUR ¥1111111 SAUSAGI
...S 01.
'

'

• FOCUS OF CQNGERN - The Gen. James M. Gavin general·
;ing plant, a coal-burning fatility operated by American Elecl{ic
:Power Service Corp., became a focus of concern during 1991. The
·Clean Air Act requires plants like. Cavin to reduce sulfur dioxide
:e111issions, which means AEP has to eilher instaU scrubbing tech·
'llology on the plant or switch to low·sulfur coal as an energy
~urce, which would affect 1,300 jobs at the AEP·owned Southern
: Ohio Coal Co. By year's end, AEP had not yet decided on which to
Toule to go, although construction related to scrubbers had begun
the plant.

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·.:-· .•

•

•

DIAPERS

54

.

• WELCOME HOME - Desert Storm certainly hit home for
: many Gallia Countians
as several hometown service
;,PI~,fr!':~~~~~ E;i$1. Se~ving as parade
ii
welcomed home during Galcel!~brlttioJG. Piictu1red shaking bands with a Desert
(Ret.) George Bush·.

SNUGGLE SHEET$................40 ct. 12"

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'••

DESTROYED • The Gallipolis Stockyard Company buildings
on Vinton Avenue were destroyed by fire during the early morning
hours of Frida)!, Oct. 3, 1991, with damages estimated at $610,000.

'

380Z.

20 OZ. PKG.

•••

•

c
LB.

•
•
••

Power Service Co1p0ration which
operates both Gavin and the mines,
has to decipe to either install scrub~
bing technology or switch to low
sulfur coal. Although a qecision on
the fate of the mines had not been
reached by year's end, construction
related to scrubbers had begun at
Gavin.
_
Throughout th,e year, the prob!ems faced by the financially
strapped Gallia County. Local
School District, represented a
major continuing news story. With
the failure of an operating levy and
a bond issue to build a new centralized high school, the bOard of education decided to consolidate all
four of its high schools into one
building at Kyger Creek. The
building wil.l be known as River
Valley High School starting in the
fall.
· ·
.
·
· Other events captured during
1991 are pictured below.
Where were you when? ...

.•
USDA·CHOICE BEEF
BONE·IN

"
~imts • ientitttl ·S·ection

.
ONE HIGH ·SCHOOL, BUT NOT THIS ONE- Failure of an
'

operating levy and a bond issue lo build a new, centralized high
school in the Gallia County Local SchooiJ)jstrict forced the Board
of Education to consolidate all four of its high schools into the

Kyger Creek building starting next fall. The structure will.! hen be ,·. ·
known as River Valley High School. Problems faced by the finan- •
cially-strapped.school system were a major news story throughollt :
1991
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Photos by

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·Hobart Wilson , Jr. ~

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•

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Jim Freeman ·
..
Kris Cochran

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Melinda Powers :
SWORN IN • Taklll1 the oatb of oftke bi June, Glenn Smllb,
bee._ Gallpolll' city mau1er, followln1 tile ralpatlon
I11111n. Since taldnJ omce Smith h11 addressed such Issues
1 dlltrlct lanclfld, lndustrltll Jllrk, ~!eft~' line project, and the
fluacW dlfneultles. Smith wu sworn In by City SoliCitor
Cowles, (left).

.

., '""""'"'"

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

NEW PRESIDENT JOINS UNITED WAY

~ Dr. Barry .M. Dorsey, far left,. became the

18th president oNh' University of Rio Grande
In August. He also became a member or the
board of dir,ctors or the newly·formed Gallia

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County United Way, which conducted Its nrai ·
rund·ralllnll campalliD Ia ~~~1. With Dorsey,
from left, are Unite!'; Wa'y board members "
WiiUam Medle,, Phyllli Mason, Wayne Be111011,
Paula'Tjulcker and Emelyn Scarberr~.· • ' ·

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Is, O!i-Polnt Pleasant, wv

1992
I

Inc.
,
The bride was escorted by
Clar~pce Freeman, father of the .
groom. Matron ef honor was Peggy
Holman, sister of the bride. Bodesmaids were Apnl Freeman, daugh ter of the groom and Brenda Whill,
sister of the bnde . Flowergirl was
Enn Holman.
Best man was Rodney Holman.
Ushers were Luke Holman an·d
Rick Freeman . Groomsmen were
John Holsinger and Jim Freeman,
brother of the groom.
Providing mus1c were Su san
Hayes and Lisa Starcher. A recep' . ,
tion followed.
The couple resides in Racine.

McClure's FaniUy

.
~esta~rant

SUNDAY, JAN. $-, 1992

Reel One In!

BUY ONE
AND GET ONE

MR. AND MRS. GREGORY (fRICIA) CARPENTER

r()RI SAlE
2 HOT FUDGE CAKES
'

MR. and MRS. RONALD (TAMMY) FREEMAN

, Loucks-Duffy
LONG BOTTOM - James and
Sharon Louks, Long Bottom, arc
ann ouncing the engagement of
their daughter, Lon Jean Louks, to
David Matthew Duffy, sons of Jack
and Jeannette Duffy, Syracuse.
Miss Louks is a 1984 graduate
qf Eastern High School 'and is

FOR THE PRICE
OF ONE

employed as a legal secrelary with
Fultz and Warner m Pomeroy.
Duffy is a 19 86 graduate of
Sou thern H1g h School and is
emp loyed at PDK Construction in
Pomeroy.
A May wedding in being
planned.

WILLIAM STILL and JOY SAUTERS

Sauters-Still
POMEROY - Mr . and Mrs. owner ofTiny Tech Pre-school.
Vaughn L. Sautcrs, Pomeroy, arc
Still 1s a 1980 graduate of J.H.
:{hnouncing the engagemen t of Rose High School in Greenville,
their daughter, Joy Faith Sauters, to N.C. and a 1986 graduate of East
~illiam Norwood Still Ill, sen of Carolina Universny with a BacheOr. and Mrs. William Norwood lor's Degree in H1 story . He is
S~ill Jr., Greenville, N.C.
presently completing a Master's
· Miss Sautcrs is a 1984 graduate Degree in H1story. He is employed
of Me1gs High School and a 1988 as a grad uate assistant at East Cargraduate of Kent Christian College olina Unive rsit y.
~i th a Bachelor's Degree in Mus1c.
A Feb. I wedding IS planned at
She is affiliated w it ~ the United the Middleport United Pentecostal
Pentecostul Church and is the Church.

L,;;;;;;;i6;iii14-992-5248iiiiiiiiiilii

.~81101~ 1:1

VINTON, OHIO

Pomeroy-Mason Bride

W. Main Street

992-2588

388-8603

446·2134
1·800·300·0208
!Ohio Only)

Classes To Start
Your New Year~ ••

'.

""" like Country Fried Steak, Half O'Pound Charbrolled Beef
Patty, and !'teat Loaf. Shanty's Homestyle Dinners also
"" inclu~ a choice of two side items: rjce, mashed potatoes,
~ green beans, cole slaw, or french fries. '

POMEROY, OHIO

SPRING VALLEY
PLAZA

On dean's list

~hoose from delicious, hearty Shoney's Homestyle Dinners

614-992-6292

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., Inc.

day. Jan. II at 3 p.m. in the ct1apel
of Grace United Methodist Church,
Gallipolis.

•ZENITH SALES &amp;SERVICE
•SATELLITE SALES &amp;SERVICE

POMEROY

th,e long years of-warmth and affection typical of the American family.

Thursday, 4 p.m., pnor to the date
of publication.
Photographs or Cllher the bride
or the bride and groo m may be
published with wedding swrics if
desired. Photographs may be e1ther
blac k and white or good quality _
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally , snapshots or Jnsumt·dcvcloping photos
arc not of acceptable quality.
Quesuons may be directed to the
edi Loria I department from I 10 5
p.m. Monday through Friday at
(614)446-2342

GALLIPOLIS - Shelle L. West,
daughter or William and Margaret
West of Gallipolis, was recently
named to the Marshall University
College of Education's Dean's List
with a 3.7 grade point average.
West is a freshman majoring in
Language Arts.

GALLIPOLIS

354 East Main St.

It shpuld not reflect sorrow but rather

· Rankin-Haffelt
GALLIPOLIS - Tere sa Den e
Rankin, daughter of Richard W.
Danner of Albany, and Mrs. Dean
· If. (Gloria) Evans of Gallipolis,
an noun ces her engage ment and
forth coming marriage to George
Amyl Haffelt, Jr., son Qf Mr. and
Mrs. George Amyl Haffclt of GallijJolis.
.
' Miss Rankin is a grad uate of
Gallia Academy High School and
R:io Grande College.
, Mr. Haffclt is a graduate of Gallfa Acadcm y High School and is
tile keyboard player for the group,
C'Ounlry Misfits.
•
·
: The wedding will be held Satur-

$2.99

614-446-3837

Wedding policy
The Sunday Times-Se ntinel
regards weddings of Gallia, Me1gs
and Mason counties as news and is
happy to publish wedding stories
and photographs without charge
However, wedding news must
meet general standards or timeli ness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possi ble after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wcdd1ng mu st have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received
by the editorial department by

Fishtail Sandwich
and
Medium French
Fries

479 Jackson Pike

Congo-Hami!ton
SYRACUSE - Emmogene Hol- ding were Betty and Dick Ash,
stein Congo and Charles D. Hamil- Syracuse.
A reception was held following
ton, Jr., both of Syracuse, were
the
ceremony in the church social
united in marriage on Nov. 30,
room.
1991, at 6:30p.m. at the Asbury
The couple resides in Syracuse.
United Methodist Church, SyraMrs. Hamilton has been Meigs
cuse.
The Rev. Wesley Thatcher/Per- County Recorder for the past 10
formed the ceremony. At\.(lndimts years. Her husband retired from the
for the couple at the priv:Jte wed- Royal Crown Bouling Co.

JAN. 6:12

Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
MIDDLEPORT

CHARLES and EMMOGENE HAMILTON, JR.

MR. and MRS. MICHAEL (AMY) CLELAND

..

Might-Cleland

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene was the
location for the Oct. 12 double ring
wedding ceremony of Amy Beth
Might and Michael Allen Cleland.
The Rev. Glen McClung officiated.
The bride is the daughter of
Clair Might, Middleport, and Patricia and Earl Mossman, Rutland.
The groom is the son of Dolores
and Jack Freeman, Middlepon.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a white satin
gown. The bod1ce was made of tear
drop pearl s and se quin s. The
chapel -length train which Oowcd
from a large bow at the back had
several cut-outs and a lace trim .
There was a heart shaped cut-out at
the back of the dress. The headpiece was made of a white rose
garland and netting. She carried a
large bouquet Of white roses, mums
and ribbon . The bride wore her
great grandmother's wedding band,
carried a white handkerchief, a silver dollar in her right shoe and blue
garter.
The matron of honor was Anna
Grube, cousin of the bride. She
. wore a floor-length, off-the-shoulder gown. in teal. Junior bndcsmaid was Jennifer Garey, niece of
the bri de. She wore a pink tealength gown. Both earned bouquets
made of white and pink roses and
teal ribbon.
The groom wore a black tuxedo
with tails, a vest and a white rose
. boutonniere.
Best man was Douglas Furbee.
Usher was Donald Wells, brotherin-law of the groom. They wore
black tuxedos.
Train bearers were Patricia

Garey and Rachel Garey , nieces of
the bride . They wore tea-length
gowns in hunter green and wore
white rose garlands in their hair.
The flower girl was Lola Wells,
niece of the groom. She wore a
hunter green and white gown and
carried a small flower basket. She
also wore a white rose garland in
her hair. The ring bearer was Daryl
Wells nephew of the groom. He
wore a black tuxedo and carried a
white pillow.
Daniel Wells, nephew of the
groom, handed out thank-you
scrolls. He also wore a black tuxedo.
Catina Wolfe registered guests
at the door. Laura Wells, sister of
the groom, and Catina Wolfe,
served as acolytes.
· The mother of the bride wore a
deep pmk tea-length dress. The
mother of the groom wore a light
pink knee-length dress. All flowers
were made by the bride's grandmother, Freida Mossman.
Joy Clark played the piano and
Donna Goode sang "The Rose.
A reception was held at the Old
American Legion Hall in Middleport. A four-tier white wedding
cake in white, t'!al and pink and a
chocolate sheet cake in the same
colors were served by Wanda
Mohler, Beverly Napper and Anna
Grube.
.
The bnde and groom are graduates of Meigs High School. She is
employed by Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation {:enter and Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene. He is
employed by Kroger's of Pomeroy
and the West Virginia National
Guard.

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'·

ALFRED - The Alfred United
Methodist Church was the scnmg
fo~he Nov. 9 double nng ceremony of Tricia Renee Burke and Gregory Bryan Carpenter with Rev.
Sharon Hausman officiating.
The bndc IS the daughter of
Jerry and Joyce Burke, Reedsville.
The groom is the son of Bruce and
Laura Hawley, Long Bottom, and
Roger Carpenter, Rutland.
The church was decorated with
peach and aqua flowers, candelabra
and candles in the windows.
Given in marriage by her parents and escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a white saun
dress accented w1th sequ1ns and
pearls and a bow in the back w11h a
full skut and chapel train. Her veil
was accented with pearls. She quried a cascading bouquet of white
s1lk roses, stephanotis, lily-of-thevalley, accented with pearl sprays,
drop flower and teal sweet heart
roses.
Amy Mann, Pomeroy, served as
maid of honor. She wore a tealength peach dress with a lace
bodice and pearl necklace and earrings. Lisa Lute and Sherry Burke,
sisters of the bride , served as
bridesmaids. They wore tea-length
aqua dresses and pearl necklace s
and earrings. They carried colonial

SUNDAY
CHESTER - The lzaak Walton
Club will hold a muzzle loader
shoot at the clubhouse near Chester
on Sunday at I p.m. Open s1ghts
only and prizes in r lude turkey,
bacon and cash.

port Masonic Lodge No. 363 will
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m . for a
regular business meeting. All master masons arc urged to allcnd .

The following are activities and
menus for the week of Jan. 6-10 at
the Senior Ciuzcn's"O!nter, 220
Jackson Pike.
Monday, Jan. 6
!Oa.m.- Walking club
II a.m. - Short subjects
Chorus canceled
Tuesday, Jan. 7
!0:30a.m. - STOP
10 a.m. - 3 p.m. - Quiltmg and
pool
,
!2:30p.m.- Video matinee
Wednesday,Jan.8
. 10 a.m.- Walking club
1 p.m. - Attorney Tim Forno
I p.m.- Widows gaillering
Thursday, Jan. 9
10:45 a.m. - Bible study · can-

Tuesday at 7:30p.m. A pizza party
wtll be held and all members are
urged to attend.

CHESTER - Tile Pomeroy
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- Chapter. No. 186, Order of the
port Community Association will Eastern Star, will meet Tuesday at
meet Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. at Mid- 7:30p.m. at the lod ge hall in
POMEROY - There will be a dleport Council Chambers. All Chester.
12-stcp AA meeting on Sunday at 7 members arc urged to aucnd.
WEDNESDAY
p.m . at the JTPA office, 117 West
POMEROY
The
regular
meetMIDDLEPORT
- The MiddleSecond Street in Pomeroy.
mg of the American Legion Drew port Literary Club will meet
LOTIRIDGE · There will be a Webster Post No. 39 will be held Wednesday at I :30 p.m. at the
' dinner at the Lottridge Community Tuesday at ille post home. Dinner • home of Mrs. Chester Erwin. Mrs.
Center on Sunday from noon to 2 will begin at 7 p.m. followed by Dwight Wallace will review "Murder at the Palace," and Florence
p.m. Cost1S $5 for adults and $2.50 mccting at8 p.m.
Smith will review "Nehru." Roll
fo r children under 12. Public invit'
call
is to bring a recent newspaper
POMEROY - The Ladies Auxiled.
clipping
aboutlnd1a.
iary of the Eagles Club will meet
MONDAY
LET ART - The Letart Township
Trustees will meet Monday at 6
p.m. at the township buildin,~: for an
organizational meeting.

MIDDLEPORT- Mr. and Mrs.
·bouquets of peach roses. teal carnations accented with iridescent Richard Wca ver, Keystone
baby's breath, blue and peach drop Heights, Fla., celebrated their 45th
wedding anniversary on Dec. 20.
flowers and sweet hean loses.
The couple was married m MidBest man was Bill Doczi. Ushdleport.
They are the parents of
ers were Kevin Lute and Bruce
Theresa
Van
, -N.C.,
Hawley. They all wore black tuxe- .Meter, Graham
'
,
dos and boutonnieres of teal toses.
The father of the bride wore the

same.
Marilyn Robinson provided tile
music.
Registering guests was Jancene
Wilsoq.
A reception was held in 1Jle1:1lowship hall of the church .. ~sist­
ing were Mary Robinson, Janeenc
Wilson, Ruth· Brooks and Marilyn
Robinson.
The bride' s table featured a
three-tier cake with a fountain ·
underneath and stairways leading
down both sides to a smaller cake
on each side. The cake was decorated with peach and aqua flowers
and a bride and groom figure on
top.
Bouquets and candle arrangements were made by Sondra Sexton.
Greg Burke, brother of the
bride, served as acolyte. .
The couple resides at North
Charleston, S.C.

/

- Smre 1898
1.1 I

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Ctrntl el ·Third·
Awe. &amp; Stott St.
GOlN(IIIh, Oil.
PiiOM 4U-4190
-446.4511

•Vac·Pac

Rt. 1 Boz 326 • South Point, OH. ~ 1-100·512-0973

THE CHAISE RECLINER IS HERE!
The new ·chaise rocker recliner Is different. There's no gap
between the foot -stool and chair to hurt your legs. It has
been replaced with a padded filler to give you head-to-toe
comfort.

CHAISE RECLINERS

17995 To 5449~ 5

5

ccled
II a.m.- Birthday party
Friday,, Jan . 10
10 a.m. - Walking Club
10 a.m. to noon- 1-3 p.m. -An
and craft class
Menus consist of:
Monday - Spagheui, garden
salad, rye bread, fruit cup.
Tuesday - Chicken and noodles, peas/carrots, 3-bean salad,
biSCUits, gingerbread w1th topping.
Wednesday- Ch~eseburger,
oven fries, broccoli, bun, tapioca.
Thursday - Pork chop and dressing, mashed potatoes, green beans,
cole slaw, dinner rolls, ice cream
and cake.
Friday - Ham and beans, boiled
eg, Kale, cornbread, bananas in
orange juice.
Make reservation s by calling
446-7000 before 9 a.m. on the day
you wish to attend.

and

·CALL ME.

indCholr.

Stlg. RotaifJ 334.9S W•.H'

$22995

'·

JflriOfiRY
SALE
OPEN MON. &amp; FRI. TIL 8 PM; TUES~.WED., THUR. TIL 6
SATURDAY TIL 5 PM

HOUSE
.SUPPERS
\

30

0f0

. OfF

REG •.PRICE

. . . State Fal1"
Insurance Companlcs

,I Home: Offkt~: 8k&gt;Omln~on. Illinois

'

' Uke a good neiflhbor, Slate Farm is there.

..

Paddod Flllor
Btla:;aq•F , ul

.DINETTE SET

A

RACINE ; Racine Village
Council will meet Monday at 7
p.m. 11 the council chambcls 11 Star '
Mill Park. •

&lt;·l ·nique
CHAif&lt;S INC

IIAfl fAIM

.

Equ1pl. •Weigh1ng Systems

B&amp;M SERVICE &amp;ACCESSORIES

\

, ' RACiNE South~rn Local
School Board will hold an organi·
.zational and budget meeting on
Monday tit1:30 p.m.

FACTORY AUTHORIZED
SALES • SERVICE • PARTS

•Sli cers •M1x ers •Gnnder s •Tenderizer s •rood Cu lters.

All
WOIL SNOWDEN

A-VERY SCALES

Best Pnccs tn the Tn·State on ·

Family Insqrance Checkup.''

MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport Garden Club will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Middlcpo~
·frcsbyteriaQ Church Social 'Roo111 . .
Ju'dy Arnold· will have a program
on "House Plants - Our Living
Room Landscape," from Plants Arc
Like P.eoplc by Jerry ·Baker. All,·
mef!lbers are asked· to' bring a
houseplant to show and· e~c~ange.
Roll call is "What do gardeners do
in .winter?"

and Roger Weaver ana 1\ltrs. ~usa!!
Lightfoot, Keystone Heights, Fla.
They have 10 grandohildrcn and··
one great grandson.
•.
Weaver retired in -1987 as a·
chief mate on merchants ships.

~

''Letme analyLeyour
insurarlce needs with.a free

CHESHIRE - Women Alive
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
Kyger Creek Clubhouse. There will
be. a devotional spealier ~nd a cr~ft.
Those attending bring a salad bar
item.

~

Couple celebrates 45 years

Seniors' schedule announced

·Meigs County calendar

TUESD/tiY .
MIDDI,EPORT - The Middlp-

'

MR. and MRS. RICHARD WEAVER

Burke-Carpenter

FREE-!

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Sunday Tlmes-Sentinel-Page-83 ·

Whitt-Freeman

RACINE - Tammy Lou :Whitt
and Ronald E. Freeman were united in marriage Dec. 28, 1991 in 1
Syracuse, with the Rev. Carl E.
Hicks officiating. .
The bride is the daughter of
Freeland and Irene Whiu of l..Qgan,
W.Va. She is a graduate of Chapman;.:illc High School , Chapmanville, W.Va.
,
The groom is the son of
Clarence and Evelyn Freeman,
both of Racine. He is a graduate of
N1\:rbonne High School, Harbor
City, Calif. He is a member of tile
FOE, Pomeroy and the Experimental Aircraft Pilots' Association. He
is employcd-.at Victory Express,

LORI LOUKS and DAVID DUFFY

wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpalls, OH-Polnt

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

Funerals are not the
place for youngsters

Chamber Music Series to begin at Ariel

,

,..~·-------

Dear Ann' landers: I just :
auended a funeral for a close
family member. This tragedy was
compounded by the presence of two
children •. ages 2 and 6, brought by
ANN LANDERS
tlleir pareniS, supposedly to learn
"1&amp;91, Los Anl'elee
about life and death.
'lbnes Synclcale and
During the eulogy, the toddler
Creators Syndicate."
ran hill. toy trucks up and down
the church pews, making engilljl
noises. When it became obvious
that the child's mother was not body, emotions and aciivtlle's
going to discipline the boy, a change. I am also trying 10 cope
stranger escortoo him to an adjoin- with the typical roller coaster of
ing room.
college life -- dating, studying,
At the gravcsite, the 6-year-old working, ~ving.
pleaded with her mother not to stand
My well-meaning friends have a
next 10 the coffin. The service was variety of gimmicks and new ideas
delayed 10 minutes while the mother to make me healthier. I have news
insisted that the li ttle girl obey her. for them --except for my diabetes, I
It was clear that the child was am in beuer health llwlo they arc. I
petrified. Meanwhile, !he 2-year-old eat vegetables and avoid fats. 1see
wandered away to look at workmen my doctor regularly. I exercise and
~ho were operating a bulldozer get enough sleep. I think I would
across the road. The child had 10 tx: take their advice more seriously if
chased down and brought back.
· they took better care of themselves.
After the service, the youngster
As two final pieces of advice!for
ran his toy trucks up and down the my friends who want to help me:
sides of the hearse without a word
I . Instead of wasting energy
of admon ishment from his parents. telling me how to control a disease
The final tribute to our loved one you know very litde abou~ direct
was ruined by the thoughtlessne,&gt;s that same energy to helping finance
of these parents.
a cure.
,
Please, Ann, tell your readers
2. Listen to me without judging;
to leave young children with a,. when I need to talk about my fear
sitter on the day of a funeral. -- of blindness, kidney failure, hean
ANYTOWN, U.S.A.
disease, neuropathy and early
DEAR ANYTOWN: The problem death.
you describe is one I have dealt
Diabetics need rmotional support
with several Limes in this space. It I get a lot from.my brother who has
is disrespectful to the mourners to ulcerative colitis. We calm each
~~ve the solemnity of the occasion
other in a way no therapist could.
ruined by unruly children. Thanks Thanks for letting me have my say,
for saying it again.
Ann.- TINA IN IDAHO
Dear Ann landers: I am writing
rlEAR TINA: I can undersrand
about the woman who was upset your impatience 'with your friends
because her friend with epilepsy had but their concern is rooted in their .
failed to take her medicine and then · love for you.
died.
Continue to take good care of
I've had juvenile diabetes for 14 yourself. It can make a tremendous
years. I've had problems from difference in your health. Good luck
taking too much medicine and too to you, honey. Juvenile diabetes is
lillie medicine. I try to follow not easy but it should make you feel
my ..doctor's guidelines but it is good 10 know that researchers are
ex tremely difficult because my m.aking progress toward better
medicinal needs change as my management and hopefuUy a cure.

Ann .
Landers

GALLIPOLIS • The Ariel Cui- .
tural &amp; Performing Arts Centr~ is
offering a new performance series
that will begin Jan. 18. Members of
the Ohio Valley Symphony, the
Ariel's own resident orchestra, will
be returning to"'the hsitoric theatre's
stage for 4 solo recitals.
_
Johannes Dietrich will kick off
the Ohio Valley Symphony Cham- ,
ber Music Series on Saturday, Jan.
18 at 8 p.m. with a program that
ranges from Bach to ragtime.
A native of Bozeman, Montana,
Dietrich began studying violin and
piano at an early age. He gave his
first public performance at the age
of ten and his first solo recital at
fifteen. As the winner of several
conccno competitions, Dietrich has
appeared with the Billings Sym phony and the Montana State University Chamber Orchestra. He has
also performe\1 concertos with the
String Orchestra of the Rockies and
th e St. Mann Chamber Orchestra in
Cmcinnati. He has served as Conccrtmastcr of the Bozeman Symphony , the Intermountain Opera
and the MSU Chamber Orchestra.
Local a~icnccs will recognize
Hannes, as he IS ·known to hts
friends, as the Ohio Valley Symphony's pnnc~l second violinist.
They might also remember that he
left th'at position for one number
dur ing th e September concert to
perform a Scott Joplin ragtime
piece on the piano.

No stranger to the European
scene Dietrich has studied at the
Moza~teum in Salzburg, Austria.
He graduated with highest honors
from Montana State University
with degrees in music and German
and is currently compleung a Mas,
ter of Music dcg~ee. in violin performance at the .Cmcmnau CollegeCo~servatory of Music. He is
acuve as a vwhn and vtola teacher
and is an acc_om_plished conductor
and ragllme ptan.tst. • .
Stephen Phtllips, a ht~~l¥ ver!!Itile and accomplished ptamst, wtll
be providing accompaptment. Well
respected for his work as a collaborative artist, Phillips has performed
throughout· the region as an instrumental and vocal accompamstas
well as having live performances
on public radio to his credit.
Phillips recently completed hiS
Master of .Music de~ree in accom panying at the Cmcmn~u CollegeConservatory of Music.
Percussionist, Tom Shriver, will
provide the second performance of
the series on Saturday, Jan. 25 at 8
p.m. Shriver is the timpanist forth~
Ohio Valley Symphony and hi S
performance promtses to be a
delight for the eyes as well as the
ears.
.
. . .
,March 14 will bnng viOliniSt
David Langr to the Ancl stage at 8
p.m. for the third part of the Cham·
ber Music Series. Langr was most
recen tly heard as concert master of

Shasteen receives award
Jackson ·ohio State Highway
Patrol Communication Technician
2 Joan E. Shasteen has been selected for the 1991 Ohio State Highway Patrol Achievement and
Recognition Award at the Jackson
Post.
. The selection of Shasteen, 47, is
in recognition of outstanding service during 1991 at Jackson post as
a communication technician. Post
troopers and radio dispatchers
chose Shasteen based on technical .
job knowledge and ability, enthusiastic work attitude, team work, and
information and assistance.
Communication Technician
Shasteen joined the highway patrol
in 1977 and has served at the Jackson post.
She graduated from Minford
High School. Other patrol awards
received include Jackson Dispatcher of the Year Award in 1987.
Communication Technician
Shasteen and her husband, Trooper
John Shasteen, live in Jackson. He
is a -special investigator with the.
Ohio State Highway Patrol.

January 5, 1992

January 5, 1992

Page-84-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Adam Rich jailed ·

HANNES DIETRICH
' the OVS when th ey combined
forces with the University of Rio
Grande and Shawnee State Untversity for a stirring rendition of Hanacl's "Messiah ."
The series will be rounded out
on Sunday, April 5 at 3 p.m. With
violist Bernard Di Gregorio. The
viola is slightly larger than a violin
and provides the alto voice in the
orchestra. Di Gregorio 's rich tone
and melodic style will be sure to
charm allltstencrs.
Tickets for th e Ohio Valley
Symphony's Chamber Mu sic
Scncs arc $12 for all four concerts
and arc available at Peddler's
Pantry or the Ariel box office. Discounts arc available for groups of
10 or more. Individual tickets arc
$5. Fer more information, call the
Morris &amp; Dorothy Haskins Ariel
Theatre at446-ARTS.

Most higltschool .kids e not
virgins, C·DC_survey finds

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actor
Adam Rich was jailed after
allegedly throwing himself down a
flight of stairs at a drug rchab_thtation center in an auempt to get
_, pain-killing drugs, .officials sajd.
Municipal Court Judge Nora
Manella ordered Rich, 23, of suburban Chatsworth, held Thursday
without bail.
·
After his spill down the stairs,
Rich was taken toil hospital, where
he requested a pain killer, said
Deputy City Auomey Allan Nadir.
Rich, who as a child portrayed
Nicholas Bradford in the ABC televi sion sitcom "Eight is Enough,"
Ms. Manella placed him in rehab as
part of hi s probation stemming
from a shoplifting incident.
He also faces charges he took a .
drug-filled syringe from a hospital,
broke into a pharmacy and violated
probation on a drunken driving
conviction.

. By ROBERT BYRD
!ems, CDC rcsearchers ..said.
Associated Pr~ss Writer
"We're co ncerned about basi ATLANTA (AP)- More than cally three major public health epihalf the nation's high school stu- demics here," Kolb~ said. "The
dents have had sex, including seven first is the e~idemic of pregnancy
of 10 by senior year, according to a . among teen-agers .... We're consurvey released Friday by federal cerned about sexually transmitted
health officials.
disease~ including the newer STDs
The survey of health habits like her-pes, papilloma virus,
among 11,631 high schoolers, in chlamydia. And we're very congrades 9-12, showed that 54 per- . cerned about the extent to which
cent say they have had sexual inter- these behaviors put young people
course, the national Centers for at risk for the virus which causes
Disease Control reported.
AIDS."
" We're particularly concerned
One in 25 students reported havabout the increase at each grade ing a sexually lrllnsmitted disease.
level," said Dr. Lloyd Kolbe,
Overall, boys in high school are
director of the CDC's Division of more lil(ely than girls to have had
sex, 61 percent to 48 percent, the
Adolescent and School Health.
Among ninth-graders, 40 per- survey found. And black students
cent have had sex, according to the are more likely than Hispanic stuCDC survey. At lOth grade, it's 48 den ts or white students to ha.ve had
percent. By 11th grade, it's 57 per- sex - 72 P9£Ccntto 53 percent and
cent, and by 12th grade, it's 72 per- ~2 percent, respectively.
Among the currently sex ually
cent.
The survey, conducted in 1990, active students, 78 percent said
was the first of its kind for the they had used some form of contraCDC, so exact data are not avail- ception, such as the pill, condoms
able from earlier years. But or withdrawal, during their last
researchers be'ieve high school stu- intercourse. Forty -nine percent of
dents weren't nearly as sexually males and 40 percent of females
active in earlier generations, Kolbe reponed condom usc during their
last intercourse.
said.
White students were more likely
Increasing numbers of sexually
active students mean increasing than blacks or Hispanics to usc
numbers at risk for ·health prob- condoms, the survey found.

Hocking College
Dean's List posted
The following area students
have been named 10 the fall quarter
Dean's List at Hocking College in
N~sonville.

Named were: Glen Arrowood,
Oak Hill; Leslie Gordon, Cheshire;
Beverlee Houdashelt, Gallipolis;
Larry Jackson, Bidwell; Allison
McQuatd , Gallipolis; Amy Metzler, Oak HiU; William Mills, Gal- .
lipolis; Brian Newell, Gallipolis;
Doyle Saunders, Bidwell, and Bonnie Swisher, Cheshire.

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP) _ A
former church organist has confcssedtomorethan500churchand
synagogue burglaries that may
have netted him up 10 $2.5 million
in gold and silver religious objects,
authorities said.
Oathcr James Blocker 45 , of
New York City was charged Friday in two ch~rch burglaries in
Woodbury on Long Island.
"Nothing was ever ransacked;
. even d.tstur be d"
not h mg
, sat' d
Detective unny Miller ' 'He carried this out as if he we~e showing
great respect."
.

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435 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
(614) 446-7619

Blocker confessed to lootin g
more than 500 houses of worshtp m
New York, New Jer sey, Ma ssachusctts and Connecticut over the
pas t!Oycars.poltcesrud.
.
Pol1ce satd he confes se d '"
November ,while serving a 90-day
sentence at the Passaic County Jail
for burglarizing a church in the
northern New Jersey community of
Wayne, a suburb of New York .
Blocker has been charged in only
three cases ·
Blocker may have stolen up to
$2.5 million worth of gold and silver, which he sold to others who

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
MULBERRY H_GTS.
POMEROY, OHIO
(614) 992-2104

-

t\

Dame Judith Anderson,
'Rebecca' star, dies at 93
SANTA BARBARA, Calif.
(AP ) - Dame Judith Anderson,
the actress whose icy ~ tage presence made her a Broadway legend
and a feature film villain, died Friday. She was 93.
The actress died at home in the
morning, said Patricia Canin of the
Wclch-Ryce-Haider Funeral Home.
She
had been hospitalized last year
APPRECIATION PlAQUE· Veterans Memorial Hospital
with an undisclosed ailment. Ms.
Administrator Scott lucas prese nts an appreciation plaque to
Cartin didn't know the cause of
Mrs. Abbie Stratton, Pomeroy, for her contribution of a new condeath.
sole piano for use in the hospital's Extended Care Facility. The
Best known to film audiences as
piano was presented by Mrs. Stratton in memory of her late parthe malevolent housekeeper Mrs.
ents, Ada and Robert Warner of Pomeroy. The plaque pays tribDanvers in the 1940 classic
ute to Mrs. Stratton for her work with the hospital 's Women's
" Rebecca," Miss Anderson's long
Auxiliary and expresses appreciation for the piano. It will ·hang in
career spanned stage, movibs and
th e hospital lobby. The hospital's Auxiliary, the volunteer group
television.
of the institution, is currently conducting a fund drive to raise
She was nominated for an
fund s for the purchase of fur.nishin~s for the new enclosed patio
Academy Award for her role in
which has been added to the Extended Care Facility. Contribu"Rebecca" and won an Emmy in
tions may be ·sent to the Auxiliary in care 'of Veterans Memorial
1954 for "Macbeth" on NBC's
Hospital, 115 E. Memorial Drive, Pomer~y, Ohio 4?769.
''Hallmark Hall of Fame.·'
One of her last roles was as the
grande dame in NBC's daytime
soap opera "Santa Barbara." She
starred in the serial from its debut
in 1984 until 1987.
The Austral ian -born actress had
" She tries to eat what the poor
IJy BRIGITTE GREENBERG
lived
in this coastal city about 90
Associated Press Writer
cat," Aubancl said.
Mother Teresa, who won th e miles northwest of Los Angele s
LA JOLLA, Calif. (AP) Mother Teresa's efforts to "cat Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 for her since 1950. A British subject, she
what the poor eat" caused malnu- work with beggars, orphans, lepers was given the title dame by Queen
trition that may have contributed to and other destitute people around Elizabeth II in 1960.
Miss Anderson chased an acting
her medical PIOblcms, her doctor the world, became ill while visiting
career
to this country in 1918. But
says.
'· .......
sisters of her order, the MissionarHoiiS'wood
in its silent days paid
The 81-year-old Roman ies of Charity, in Tijuana, Mexico.
Catholic nun, who has spent her
life caring for the poor of the
world remained in serious condition e~ly today at Scripps Clinic
and Research Foundation. She was
ALL PERMS
hospitalized Dec. 26 with pneumonia.
ON SALE
· Her doctors sa id she showed
signs of improvement in her lungs
Friday but developed an mcgular
heartbeat that was, treated by medication.
Tcirstein said that atrial fibrilla·
tion is a common problem among
REO. $40 to $86
the elderly and that many arc
unaware that they have the cOndition.
Pneumonia was Mother Teresa's
main problem, the doctors sai'd, and
•
WALK-.INS WE~COME ·
a chest X-ray showed preliminary
signs that her lungs were begiMing
'
to clear.
SILVER
BRIDGE PLAZA
Mother Teresa slept well and
•
446·3353
there were visible signs of overall
'
improvement, doctors ~id. ·
Aubanel said Mother' Teresa is ·
slightly anemic and suffers from (
malllutrition, which may have.contributed to her medical problems.

""

GUEST 'sPEAKER- David Shaffer, vice
president, Star Bank, N.A., Tri-State, recently
spoke to The Boys Scouts of American Troop
200, regarding the importance of credit. The
topic is one in a series needed for the scouts to
obtain the Personal -Management Merit Badge.

'

lociudel
~II

QuaOIUill

\'etllll

January Perm Savings

r-~----:-----

---------,
: SPIRAL PERM I
:

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PERM PLUS.

NowS29

•

In July, federal Department of
Health and Human Services officials put on hold plans for a larger
and more detailed survey of teen
sex habits. That study came under
fire from conservatives who called
it wasteful and intrusive , citing
among others questiuns abo ut
homosexual behavior.
The data reported Friday came
from a CDG study covering a wide
range of teen health habits, such as
smoking and exercise, parts of
which were released in earlier CDC
reports.
The section of the study released
Friday co~cred jltst three areas:
whether the teens had had sexual
intercourse, whether they used conj
traceptives and whether they had
ever had a sex ually transmiued disease.
. The federal government has set
STOWE, -VL (AP) - A city
national health goals for the year
2000 that call for fewer than 40 official here may be one of the few
percent of 17-year-olds (approxi- men in America who doesn't know
mately I I th grade) to have had sex who Julia Roberts is - but he
and at least 90 percent of sexually · doesn't believe it' s the Police
· Department's job to chauffeur the
active teen-agers to use condoms.
The CDC survey was conducted aCtress around.
Herb O'Brien , chairman of the
among high school students in all
town
Board of Selectmen, became
50 states, Washington D.C. , Pucno
Rico and the Virgin Islands. The irate after learnin.g that Stowe
overall sampling error was,plus or police drove to Burlington, about
45 mtnutes away , to pick up
minus 3 percent.
Roberts.
The 24-year-old star of "Pretty
Woman" and "Steel Magnolias"
is vacationing here with boyfriend
Jason Patrie, said her Los Angeles
agent, Nancy Seltzer.
" Town police have been chauffeuring this movie star- I don't
know who she is. Julia Roberts melted it down and resold it, police and her entourage m a town of
Sto·ve pol ice car," O'Brien said.
satd. .
.
.
,
PoliCe Chief Kenneth Libby
Miller satd poltcc had~ l yet
could
not immediately be reached
dctermmed whether Blockers co ~for
comment
Friday . Libby's wifC,
fe ss10n was true. But he sa td
reached
at
the
couple 's home, said
Blocker was the ltkely .suspect m
the
chief
was
out
for the evening.
about 40 church burglartes '"Nassau County 0 ';fc~ngJ~d. h f
NORMAN, Okla. (AP)- A
An averag .o
•
won o
national
television audience finally
10
rehgtous arucles was taken each
got
to
sec
law professor Anita Hill
of the Nassau County robbcnes,
in
an
ad
for
the University of OklaMtlllderdsahtald: The nemsd _stolen
homa
,
which
deleted her image
me
h ldu e c iCCS,trays an mcensc amid tl),c uproar over her sexual
o ers.
.
.
.
Blocker IS bemg held without harassrrl'ent char~es.
The univeESity cut out Hill's
batlm the Nassau County Correctwo-second appearance in its prouonal Faciltty.
motional spot following her testimany before the Senate Judiciary
Commiuee that she was sex ually
harassed by then-U .S . Supreme
•. Court nominee Clarence Thomas.
Thomas, who denied Hill's allegations, was confirmed to. the high
court.
The commercial, minus Hill, ran
on ABC in October. The restored
version was broadcast on the TBS
cable network when the Sooners
met the University of Virginia in
Sunday's Gator Bowl.

Names in
the news

\ !,.}
A

.

I'
.

Pictured are troop members, t'ront (L to R):
Charles Mills, Donnie Shelton, Kevin Walker,
Levi King, Walter Strafford and Rod Hojat;
Back: Jeff Mitchell, Cory Burlile, Chris Althof,
Dan Magnussen, Maxwell Bruce, and ShafTer.

GALLIPOLIS - T~ danc e
classes at the historic Ami Theatre
will resume on Thursday, Jan. 9 at
7 p.m. Classes will meet every
Thursday for eight weeks and the
cost is $32. Students are requested
to wear loose and comfortable
clothing and beginners can discuss
shoes with instructor, Trish
Zalewski, at the first class . All
classes take place on the stage of
the Ariel Theatre at 4 26 Second
Ave., Gallipolis.
These dasses have proved to be
popular with adults and children
alike. No experience is necessary
for the hour long classes and parents are encouraged to auend with
their children.
For more information, call the
Morris &amp; Dorothy Haskins Ariel
Theatre at446-ARTS .

Confidential Services:
Birth Control ·
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing

Sliding lee sale. No one refused servkes because of inability to pay.

PLANNE·D PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHic#
POMEROY
GALLIPOLIS
236 E. Main St., 2nd Floor
414 Second Ave., 2nd Flo•
992·5912
446·0166
to 5:00 Monday-Friday
8:JO to S:OO Monday·Friday 8:30
8:30 to 12 Saturday
Closed Thursday
Closed Thursday
ALSO: Jockson, Chesapeake, Athens, Chdlkothe, Logon &amp; McArthur

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(Home of Outpost)

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The CDC's proposed new defi- infected with HIV, the virus that
By ROBERT BYRD
nition would include any patient
causes the disease.
Associated Press Writer
The CDC will now receive com- whose blood shows a laboratory
ATLANTA (AP) -The national Centers for Disease Control on . ment on the proposal through Feb. count of less than 200 CD4 lymFriday postponed Its final revision 14, and issue its fin al definition phocy.te cells per cnbic millimeter,
of a new official case definition for after that. As a r~s ull . state and about one-fifth the count in a
AIDS to give patient advocates local health officials might not be healthy person. Those cells arc the
able to report eases onder the new primary target of HIV. The current
longer to have their views heard.
The CDC in November pro- definition until sometime after definition docsn 't include a lymphocyte cell criterion .
·
posed an expanded official defini- April, Taylor said.
tion of AIDS that could nearly double the number of U.S. cases by
including 160,000 people infected
with the AIDS virus but nb t yet
seriously ill.
The change is expected to mean
FAMILY PRACTICE
thousands more people with
acquired immune deficiency syndrome will qualify for disability,
eitqer from their jo])s or Medicaid.
Jhe Atlanta-base(\ agency
planned to issue its frnal oefmition
this month, so state and local health
officials coufd use it to report .
AmS cases beginni~ in April.
·
But the CDC announced' Friday
' it
allow more time for public
COI1!ment, partly at the request of
the National Commission on AIDS,
a p~idential panel.
,
''We wanted to go ahea{.l and
extend that, since they had'1Jiat 1
concern," said COC spokesman
(PO.INT PLEASANT MEDICAL_CENTER) '
· Kent Taylor. ''We do want to loolc
at these other comments that '"ay
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVt,NUE
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come in."
·
·
•Some AIDS advocates have critPOINT PLEASANT • WV.

(3, 04) 675-1675

·'

~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
- .--

'
.. --

MATIHEW O'DONNELL, P.E.

Family Planning
· It Makes Sense•••

CDC delays final action on new case definition

.

"'

COLUMBUS- Matthew T .., O'Donnell is t)le son, of Mr. and
O'Donnell, 27, of Columbus was Mrs. Francts (Odte} 0 Donnell of
among the 32 candidates who Gallipolis, is a 1982 graduate of
recently attained the status of Pro- Galha Academy and of Ohto ~tate
fe ssional Engineer in an awards Umvemty School of Engmccnng
ceremony conducted, at The Bat- in 1987. Pnor to his graduation
telle Memorial Institute by the from OSU he was employed
Ohio Society of Prpfessional Engi- Korda/Nemeth Engineering,
ncers and the Ohio State Board of an apprentice engineer in the
Regi stration for Professional Engi- and structures departments. Upon
necrs and Surveyors.
graduation he became a full time
Participating in the awards cere- employee of Korda/Nemeth at
many were officers of the boar~ 1650 Watermark Dnve m Colum;.
and the societ1 including Chairman bus. .
.
.
He IS now a bndge engmeer and
Randall Reeder, and board vice
chairman James D. Hasser. A wei- has destgned more than 30 bndges
come to membership in the society in Ohio, including the span over
was extended by Leon Winget , Raccoon Creek on State Route 7
president of the Franklin County south of Galltpohs, the relocatiOn
Chapter of the OSPE.
of State Route 325 and the adjoining bridge over Liule Raccoon
Creek near the Woods Mill Road,
plus four other bridges in Gallia
County.'

Class offered

no auention to an excruciatingly.
thin and awkward girl from Ad elaide.
So she went to New York and
pursued a theater job. On Broadway, she eventually played a muchlauded Lady Macbeth. But it was
her performance in Robinson Jeffers' "Medea" that many critics
considered her best work.
Besides "Rebecca," her films
included "King's Row" a 1941
film that featured a young Ronald
Reagan; "And Then There Were
jllone" (1945); "Salome" (1953);
"Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" (1958);
and "o'on't Bother to Knock"'
(1961).
.
Anderson ll'as briefly married
twice, many years ago. She had no
children.

Mother Teresa's irregular
heartbeat under control

·.HBfr HBPPennQ

,

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel-Page-85

0' Donnell receives engineer's. award

.Former organist confesses to
500 church, synagogue robberies

~--------------~
INTRODUCING THE ULTIMATE IN

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· P11ge-B~unday Times-sentinel

wv

romeroy-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant WV

.

January 5, 1992

designed like airplane P.ropellers.
Gerhardt's are hkc biplane
wings, with th e air pressure
between the two blades increas ing
the speed at which the mill turns.
That allows the ·windmill to generate electricity at slo wer wind
speeds.
.
The tw o·bladed windmills seen
wind tUnnel, it will allow him to in deserts and in' the Plains states
test his windmill designs efficient- need winds of at least 13 mph to
ly.
begin generating elecirieity.
The wi nd tunnel will generate in .
"Mine started generating electwo weeks the same amount of tricity in a S· mile wind, and atlO it
information it took two years to generates enough electricity to run
prod uce with natural wind, said my shop," Gerhardt sajd.
Gerhard t, 66, who began building
Gerhardt said the Shape of the
the tunnel in August 1990.
windmill airfoil appeared in his
" It's a lot easier to set it up in mind wh en he was doing fi eld
th e wi nd tunnel than to wait for approaches in an airplane while
Mother Nature," he sa1d.
working for his pilot's license in
If Gerhardt is ri ght, the tests will 1967.
tell him what he needs to know to
By !978 he was testing a scale·
beg in making his windmills with model windmill, and in May !982
their 23 patented components.
he began hoisting over.his work Gerhardt's design for windmill shop a full -sized prototype measurblades is unusual. Most wi ndmill ing 54 fee t '" diameter. But with
blades made since th e 1920s arc ju st a few feet to go. a cabl e
snapped an d the windmill wa s

~ -.

con s tant ~

Teens get maximum in tourist inurd~r

,

the tcen·agcrs Friday. "When you
By SAMUEL MAULL
run with a wolfpack such as th is, it
Associated Press Writer
NEW YOR K (AP) - In a case matters not whether you arc in the
that further tarred New York 's vanguard or the rear guard. You're
national reputation, four teen-agers in ."
Four oth ers. includmg the teen·
were sentenced to the maximum 25
ager
accused of stabbing 22-ycaryears '" prison fo r killing a Utah
old
Bri
an Watkins, of Provo, Utah.
tourist~ho had tried to protect his
arc
to
go
on trial m February.
mother rom muggers.
The
killing,
during an especially
All ding to testimony from tlie
By D EN~ELA VOlE
of six banks to rcopen ·aftcr winter Roma n Catholic school five miles vic tim' s mother, State Supreme violent summ er in New York,
Associate
ess Writer
break next week. The banks report· away in Fairfield .
Justice Edwin Torres said the stu nned many New Yorkers and
BRIDGEPOR Conn. (AP) cd an impasse Th ursday over con·
"If it Lakes more than whatever Coon
rmagc of a woma n h old ~n g her
Un ive rsity of Bridgeport trustees ditions of the loan, bu t the trustees the ha nks come through with, the dying so n. murdered before her
pledged Friday to donate $500,000 hoped their latest actions would trustees arc willing 10 back that up
eyes, " is a vi si tation the dev il himof thetr own money 1f necessary to . lead to a deal.
w1th up to $500,000 of their own self would hesitate to conjure up."
help the strugg ling private s. hool
The impasse jco p ardJzedn~ t personal mon ey," said Mi chael
The judge said he agreed wr th
stay open. They also voted to slash only the 3,900-student un•vcrSLty s Bisc iglia, a university vice prcSI ·
the
JU ry that all the youth s we re
topadminstrators'salaries. .
spri ng se mester , but also the dent. " It' s a guarantee to ge t
equa
lly gullty of th e murder
The trustees SOld they sull need pros pec ts of an eventua l m c r~cr throuJlh the spring semester."
alth
ough
non e of them ac tu all y
a 52.2 million loan from a coalition with Sacred Hea rt Univers ity , a
E1ghtto 10 of the school's 34
stabbed the victim.
trustees have pledged 10 put up the
" The sentences reflect that pari$500,000 if that beco m e~ neces- ty of guilt," he said in sentencing
sary, Bisciglia said. He and Mayor
Jose ph P. Ganim sa id the banks
planned an announcement Monday.
TWINS, BUT BORN IN ' DIFFERENT
YEARS • Paul and Susan Goddake of Mount
Clemens, Mich., hold their twin daughters, Jessica, right, and Kath erine, Thursday at St.
J osep h's Mercy Hospital in Mount Clemens .

smashed to pieces.
·
""!lost $!00,000 in abou t 10
seconds," Gerhardt recalled.
Gerhardt 'di dn' 1 give up . He
soon was experi menting with
another prototype.
He said hopes to line up a man.
ufactur-:.;ra nd beg in marketing windmills in th e Plain s states , :
where winds arc faster and mar C ~
The wind in th e 50-foot-long
tunnel, which sits in a woods ncar ·
Gerhardt's home, is powered by an
automobile engine.
Gerhardt tri ed to test the tunnel
last November, but he cou ldn't
generate enough wind speed down
th e center; the wind ru shed out
along the sides of the tunnel.
He then installed some plywood
to ·channel the wind down the cen·
tcr. But that created so much turbu lence that he couldn 't perfo rm an
ade quate test. Gerhardt' s next
move is to in stall wire mes h
sc reens to break UJl' thctu()JUiencc.
Afte r that, the windmill tesung
will begi n.

The girls were born in different years. Katherine was born at 11:56 p.m. EST Tuesday, Dec.
31, 1~91 , white Jessica arrived at 12: 14 a.m. EST
Wednesday, Jan I, 1992. (AP)

UB trustees willing to do their part

contributed to a spate of news sto·
rics questioning the qualily of life .
in New York.
Pascal Carpenter, Johnny Hin·
capie, Ricardo Nova and Emiliano
Fernandez, all 19, were convicted
Dec. 10 of felony murder and rob·
bciy in Watkin~ · death.
The defendants told police th ey
comm iued thc•robbcry to get the
SIS admission to Roseland, a ncar·
by dance hall.

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'DONATION • Allen C; Wood, (left), or Wood Realty, Inc., and
president of Southeastern Ohio Board .of Directors, recently made
a S200 donation to the Gallipolis Outreach Center Food Pantry, as
well as the J ackson County Food Pantry. Accepling the check is
Lynn E. Angell, Ouireach Center Board of Oirectors president.

By PETE ):'OST
Associated Preh Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Aging
baby boomers will transform the
nation· s health care and retirement
systems over '!he next four decades
in a " tug -of.wa r" with the
younger generation, a private group
said Friday.
The number of Americans aged
65 and older will double to 65 million by th e year 2030 and th ere
· must be. a "shifting of resources
from the young to the eld," said
Carol De Vita of the Population
Reference Bureau.
the fisk: " we can't shonchange
the young people that will be providing the resources," Ms. De Vita
told a news conference.
The key question for the 1990s
is "how do we invest in America's
future" of retiring baby boomers
"while meeting the social, economic and politi ca l needs of
today '" said Ms . De Vita, a
demographer who co-a uthored a

Gallipolis City Schools provide extra
help as part of experimental program
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Cuy School District is nol" participating in a statewide program
spo nsored by the Ohio Department
of Ed ucation, Division of Special
• Ed ucation, to evaluate ex perimental model programs fo r special education that may improve instruction
lor all children.
The program's goals arc to serve
the population of at•risk students in
the least restrictive cnviroilmcnl;
mc rcasc socia l in teraction with
peer groups in the reg ular classroo m; allow the special educator
and regular classroom teac her to
wo rk jointl y to apply academic
skills needed for employability and

Computer Balance

surviving in society; develop materials that can be provided 10 parents
to use at home; and give the special
educator the opportunity to work as
a consultant to the regular educa(or
and as a tutor to regular classroom
students.
Gallipolis City Schools are
using this experimental model at
Washington and Clay elcmcntaries.
Special education teachers Karen
Jo hnson and Robin Saum work
with handicapped and regular students who need help as needed ,
:.v here needed.
Saum work s with the sixth
g.rade class mainly as a tutor with
students requiring this extra help.
She works with students individu-

ally or in a small group in the special education classroom for certain
subjects1or activities. This is determined tiy :.vorking closely with the
homeroom teacher, Charlene Johnson, to pro.vide help where needed.
Karen John son is serving third
grad e students within the regular
classroom setting individually or in
small groups for certain subjects or
activities. She, loo, coordinates her
instruc tion with the reg ular classroo m teachers, Kelly Ours and
Vickie Powell, using a team-teach·
ing approach.
By implementing this program,
Gallipolis City Schools arc trying
to improve instructi on by providing
extra help to 'Ill children.

(frn with Purdtase al
lirn)
AligMtltll
Sulflttlsiott Work

Job Bank assists
local seniors

new report, "The Baby Boom Entering Midlife."
It's a "tug ~f war ... a balancing
out" between the young and the
old, she said.
Preserving the solvency of the
Social Security system may be
"one of the forst major tests of the
baby boom generation's political
cohesion and power," her report
concluded.
Baby 'boomers " will set the
agenda for the nation's public policy choices in education, work-farn ily policies , retirement programs
and health care."
Baby boomers are the 80 million
Americans bom from 1946 to
·
1%4. By 2030, the oldest boomers
will be 84 and the youngest65.

OALLU'OLIS • Members of the
Bethel Ladies Aid met recently at
Christ Uniied Methodist C~urcl\.for
their Christmas luncheon and gift
exchange, with 13 members and six
guests present.
·
. Dorothy Liptack gave tije open.
mg prayer and Louise Pennington
read Christmas Story from Luke
Chapter 2.
.
· .
Ann Saunders read "O n This
Side of Eternity," "The Priccress
"Gift of Christmas," was by Rose
James; and Melissa Caldwell rccit.. ed "Old Santa Claus.
Other readings were by Esther
Davis "God Always Knows," and
iJiadys Church read "Thank You
Lord."
The next meeting will be 1 p.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 8, at the home of
Rose James.
.
Opening songs were "Silent
Night," and "0 Come All Yc Faith·

'
" Given thell SIZC, perhaps
no
other generation in history has had,
or will h~ve, as much influence in
determining the course of human
events,'' said the report. :
Ms. De Vita and co-author Leon
Bouvier said baby boomers:
• Constitute two generations,
those born from 1946 to 1954 lead
different lives from those born
from 1955 to 1964.
Older baby boomers knew polit·
ical activism and optimism, and are
confronted by the high cost of college education for their children.
Younger ones knew government
retrenchment and public cynicism
and apathy. Their concerns: the
affordability of housing and child·
care arrangements.

Japanese adventurer reaches
Hepburn gives
South Pole by motorbike . hometown help
f ul."

TOKYO (AP) - A Japanese
adventurer who has already traveled to the North Pole by motorcycle has successfully biked to the
South Pol e from the coast of
· Antarctica, his Tokyo office
announced today.
· Shinji Kazama, 4!, reac hed the
South Pole at 1:30 a.m. EST Friday
after a 27-day journey across dee p
snow and rugged icc, becoming the
first person to bike to both poles,
they said.
On arrival, Kazama was greeted
by th e 120- member staff of th e
Amundscn-Scoll South Pole Sta·
tion , who were in contact with his
support team during the journey.
Kazama set out from the Patriot
Hills base cam p on the coast Dec.
8, intending' to celebrate the New
Year at the pole. But unexpected ly
deep snow and sastrugi - long,

wavelike edges of hard snow delayed his arrival.
OLD SAYBROOK, Conn. (AP)
At some points, Kazama - Katharine Hepburn donated
atlached a ski to the fro nt wheel of . $7,000 to her hometown fi.rc
his custommade Yamaha motorcy· department to buy a 1959 ladder
clc.
~
truck, responding to an appeal from
In addition to his 1987 North the fi.-e marshal .
Pole expedition, Kazama also has
Hepburn, 82, grew up in th e
biked across a glaciefOn the race town of 11,000 people and mainof Mount Everest.
tains her family' s home there.

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GAL LIPOLIS · The Job Bank,
located in the Gallia County Senior
Citizens Center, 220 Jackson Pike,
is a free employment service for
applica nts SO years of age and
older.
The Job Bank has openings for
people who arc interested to live in
w1 th the elderly or parttimc li ve ins
Wi th pay. There arc also babysitti ng
and odd jobs available.
Those interested 1n discuss ing
their employment needs can call
446· 7000 or visit the office from
ll a. m. to 3 p.m. on Wedn esday
and from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Thursday and Friday.

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HUNTJNG TON . W.Va. Ric hard G. Weinberger, son of Dr.
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1 lipolis, was recentl y received the
promotion of corpo ration officer
with Hay fl ic h &amp; Steinberg, Ccrti·
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The Gal!ia Academy Hi gh
Sc hool graduate resides in Huntington, W.Va., with his wife, Ellen.
They have two sons, Paul and Ned.

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ALMOST UP TO SPEED • Benjamin Jones works in th.e Massachusetts Turnpike Authority sign shop Friday in Weston. The
new 65-mile-per-hour speed li1,11it takes effect today on two sections
of the turnpike, from the New York state line to Weslfield, and
from Ludlow to Auburn. The limit in other areas will remain 55
mph. (AP)
.

Bethel Ladies

·Aging boome~s will demand·
greater healthcare resources

Inventor pins hopes on the wind SPRINGFJELD. Ohio (AP) The breeze is blowing these days
through some trees in so uth ern
Clark County , where Kyle Gerhardt's dream of building a better
windmill is being pushed along by
a towering homemade winp tunnel.
The retired contractor said that
once he perfec ts the 25- foot-tall

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1992 .

January

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Culprit in fatal City College
stampede was the crowd itself
,

. UPCOMING PROGRAM -Is
there a prom dress in the closet
that has only been worn once?
Why not plan to sell the dress at
the Prom Dress Exchange on Saturday, Jan . 18 at the Holiday
Inn. Each person who brings a
dress will set their owu price and
a $1 fee will be charged to each
person who offers a dress for sale
to help cover expenses. Dresses
for sale should be brought to
Holiday Inn between 8-10 a.m.
Jan. 18. Dresses will be on display from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Membe.rs
of
Kyger
Creek
FHA/HERO, event coordin~tors,
will be collecting money and
unsold dresses should lie collect-·
ed or arrangements should be
made to pick them up or profit
from the sale of the dresses. Pictured discussing plans (top, left
to right) are FHA/HERO members: Tina Russell, co-chairperson; Jodie Walters, Jamie Hill,
Emily Moor'e, co-chairperson ;
and Renee Vaughn, co-chairperson. Displaying one of many
dresses is Jodi Walters, (bottom
left) and Jamie Hill.

By RICK HAMPSON ·
·
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- Victims'
relatives blamed police, who
blamed.college administrators, who
blamed promoters, who blamed
police. But in the circle of recrimi nation that followed the deadly
stampede at City College, almost
no one pointed at another culprit: a
crowd that spawned a beast.
The beast was something more
and something less than the 3.000
to 5,000 individuals who showed
up for the rap stars' basketball
game in Harlem on Dec. 28.
The beast smashed glass doors
leading to the gym building, surged
past ticket collectors and "bumrushed" those in front, piling hundreds of innocents into a suffocating heap at the ~ottom of a staircaSe.
The beast bent a light pole in
front of the gym building; it
pestered rappers for photo ops and
autograph s in th e morgue of the
gym floor, distracting those who
were trying to help the 'injured; it
laughed and joked outside amid the
despair; it robbed the dead.
The beast was personified by the
gang of rowdy youths at its heart,
but it grew along with the panic
and terror they instigated. It
behaved disgracefully before, due-

ing and after the crush. 'It killed exits in the hallway," she said.. "I
nin~ people.
·
didn't know what lhat W~!d meant
Those who saw the beast that before, but I sure do now.
.
nightwillnevcrforget iL . . .
Latisha Johnson tned lOb~·~~~
Lyneue Delane was ~.aitmg m an unc~nscaous wbman,
. •
line outside the bmldmg. A bun~h strangers pulse faded away. Fmal.
of gurs said: ~Let's push! L~t s ly Johnson went to tell the master
push! People JUSt started falling of ceremonaes the woman was
and getting smashe~ . .. : No one dead. When she ~eturned to the
cared. They wouldn t stop push- body, the woman s shoulder bag
ing."
and l!!3ther coat were gone.
Wiltiam Kirksey was among the
As people were carried out on
rushers who fought ht s way an . stretchers, recalled Vactor Black,
behind some rap sta'rs. "Everybody "kids were going and mugging for
was ~oing, 'One, two! three- photos with the rappers. They were
push! We were getung m, we was trying to get thclf autographs while
moving."
· people were dying."
·
First the crol"d filled the lobby,
At least 100 police and sccurit~
then it pressed down on· hundreds personal were on hand, but a rap
of people waiting in the Statrway security expert said there should
leading to the gym door.
have been a guard for ·evcry 30
''1 saw peopl e climb in~. over specl;itors - a more rigorous ratio
other people to ge t tnSide, said than illat for guards and Inll!ates an
Joie Binns.
.
most units of the city jaiL .
The stampede conti~ued down"Everyone acts as af tt was a
stairs on the gym level, where Ayo cattle stampede, that these _people
Harri~gton cowered. for safe.ty m a were nothin~.more th~ ObJ~Cts to
ladaes room stall wi_th her I !-year- be managed, complamedRachard
Qld.~on and two of,has fnend,s.
· Vigilante, .editor ofThe CI}Y JourAll around, people were bum- nul. a public afrairs penodacal.
rushmg mto all the entrances and
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increase in the number of daily
newspapers pp,blishing a Sunday
edition. As the 1990s began, there
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1,084 evening newspapers.

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Children~s

well-being
falling in past 30 years
WASHINGTON (AP) - America's childrcn .ars.Jcss well off than
lhose of 30 years ago in important
areas of mental, physical and cmoiional well-being, an article in Sci:ence magazine said Friday .
Authors of the article cite statislies showing that children's rates of
suicide and homicide have risen,
and their performance on standard·ized tests has fallen over the past
three decades.
V.R. Fuchs, a professor at Stanlord University, and Diane Ricklis,'
a research assistant at the National
·Bureau of Economic Research,
·JICSUC in the article that economic
~;,j~t~Iene ~not'be blamed.
' ~ · ' Both cultural and material
;thanges have probably contributed
•to the problem of America's chi!:dren," they wrote.
; "Between 1960 and 1970 the
fall in test scores, the doubling of
"teenage suicide and homicide rates,
:Qnd the doubling share of births to
:!Jnwed mothers, cannot be attribut"ed to economic adversity," the arti•
·cle said.
; "During that decade, purchases
goods and services for children
.Jly government rose very rapidly,
jiS did real household income per
.child, and .the poveny rate of chi!-

:or

dren plummeted,'' the authors
wrote. "Thus, we must seck explanations for the rising problems of
that period in the cultural realm.''
They said possible cultural
explanations include waning iqfluence of religion, fragmentation of
famil1 through divorce and unwed
motherhood, and harmful influcnces of television.
However, they said , material
conditi\mS aid deteriorate in the
! 980s., particularly among the
poorest families.
Government purchases of goods
and services for adults have
increas:d at a faster pace.than lhQse
for chaldren, they sud, partly
because of growth in Medicare and
Medicaid.
The authors said one method of
achieving redistribution of money
to children would be to require
employers to offer benefits, which
the government does.not pay for,
such as paid parental leave or subsidized child care. But they said
such methods tend to provide
greater benefirs to less-needy chil- ·
drcn, and that a more efficient'
redistribution can be achieved
through tax credits, subsidies or
child allowances through the tax
. system.

Minister hints at decision
k&gt;n superfast magnetic train
; IIERLIN (AP) ..., Germany's
itansport minister has su~gested
lhat tests on a magnetic tram capaJ!e of uaveling 310·mph·have been
juccessful and such a train could be
1\tnning in the country by the year

'Qo(X)

--

·~ The minister. Guenther Krause,
jaid Friday that the results would
announced next week. Germany
as invested $1.3 billion in theain, Transrapid, which would
[lloet on a magnetic cushion rather
li'ILI ·run on tracks.
.

.t

Proponents _want to build a paslane before
Japanese compeutors. .
.
The Tran~P&lt;?n Mirustry lll,ld the
Research Mmastry are to dtscuss
the results of so-far secret tests an a
Thursday news conference.
" After that, the train may_be
ready t.o be developed. A farst
str.eteh coll;ld for example be Hamb.utg-Be,dtn. ExperLS !ell me l~e
fmttraan ~.ould poss~bly run .m
eaghL years, Krau~ saad.
se nger - carryan~

·KGallia County calendar
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Monday, :Jan. 6
in fifth floor classioom at Holzer
• GALUPOLIS - The Friends of Medical Center, Monday through
~d Library will hold an orga- Wednesdar from 1-4 p,m . .Call
l'.!i~onal meeting at 7 p.m. in the 446-S313 for MOIC infCtritarion: · ·
· witzer, Room al the library~ Items
ao be discussed will be commiuccs,
GALLIPOLIS - Divorce .Sup- o
j'undlai$in$, membership drive, and · port Group meeting, 7:30p.m. at .
1hc upcommg tibrary levy. Public is New Life Lutheran Church. Call
441·1516 or 446-4889. for more
:;lnvi~.
"
.
informlliOn.
-: · GALUPOL~S - Diabetic classes

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•H .....

•Bath Safety Aids
•Urinary/Ostomy
Supplies
•Insurance Claims
Processed
Medicare &amp; Medicaid
accepted)

•Sales, Rentals,
Repairs.
•Wheelchairs
•Hospital Beds
eCanes &amp; Crutches
•Commode Chairs
•Walkers
•24 Hour Service

...

881

ADemocratic Candidate For The
May 1992 Primary Election.

111•111111 Inc.

565 JACKSON P IKE • GALLIPOLIS, OH.

-

446-2206

Your Support Will Be
Greatly Appreciated.
Paid tor by the C1ndidate, 7494 Cora Mill Rd., Thurman, Oh. 45685

"Seroing the Area/or Over 14 Year•"

'~BOUNCE-BACK"

WEEKEND
ROYAL HAWAIIAN LUAU

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S.p orts

~imts • ientilttl
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Section·C
January 5, 1992

. Wa~hin·gton !ops Atlanta
2.4-7 in NFC-playoffs
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - For
the Washington Redskins, the rain
and wind were just two more ele. ments to overcome on their
!'lanned Super Bowl voyage , and
they sent Atlanta's title dreams slip
slid in ' away .
Washington reached the NFC
title game Saturday with a 24-7 win
·over the Falcons. fashioned on six
weather-aided Atlanta turnovers
and second-quarter touchdown runs
of 17 yards by Ricky Ervins and
two yards by Gerald Riggs.
Now, .the Redskins get til stay
home to play next Sunday against
the winn er of to day's Dallas·
Detroit game for a trip to the Super
Bowl in Minneapolis Jan. 26.
•. The rain and winds. gusting to
30 mph, were a lot of the differ-

ence, a helpmate for a defense that
interce~ted four passes, grabbed
two fumbles and sacked Atlanta's
Chris Miller four times.
With Eryins rushing for 104
yard s in 23 carries and Earnest
Byner running for 57 more, Washington was able to run the ball and
vary its offense against a team it
beat 56-17. during its 14-2 run in
the regular season.
Atlanta, without Steve ·Brous·
sard and Mike Rozier, couldn't prevent Washirtgton 's defense from
keying on the pass on a day not
made for passing. That sent the
Falcons home following a 10-6
regular season and a 27-20 win
over New Orleans in a wild-card
game last week.
Even though Miller, who fin ished 17 of 32 for 179 yards, was
14 of 17 in one stretch of the third

aild fourth quarters, he could get
only one score out it. And the 14th
completion was fumbled by
Michael Haynes, leading to Riggs'
one-yard TD run with 6:32 left in
the fourth quaner.
Mark Rypien was 14-of-28' for
170 yards for Washington.
After a sluggi sh, muddy first
period, the Redskins got two touchdowns in 3: I I of the second period.
But they led only 14-7 at halftime
as Chip Lohmiller, who led the
NFL in scoring with 149 points,
mi ssed three field goals - from
47, 37 and 44 yards, the last as the
half expired.
•
The first TD came on Ervins' ·
16-yard run at the end of an I I
play, 81-yard drive, the secqnd was
set up by Pat Chaffey's fumble that
was recovered by Washington's
James Geathers at. the Atlanta 39.

UNC, Indian~ post college
basl\etball wins ·Sa-t-U-r-day
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - Eighth-ranked
His Flames set a school record with 13 baskets
FUMBLE! - That must have been the cry
North Carolina's defense shut down the Colorado
from three-point range (13 of 26).
heard in !he fray on the RFK Stadium battleattack, and Hubert Davis scored 22 points in leading
Wright State's Raiders (4-5, 0-1), playing its first
field, as Washington defensive tackle Tim John-·
the Tar Heels to an 85-64 victory Saturday.
~e ever in the decade-old midwest league, led 13son (ce nter) and several Atlanta Falcons- tackDavi s has scored in double figures in each of
8 on Bill Edwards three-pointer.
Nonh Carolina's 10 games this season, and in 26 of
But the Flames (4-6, 1-0) caught up and the game
the last 27 games over two seasons. He also hit 4 of 6
remained close until the final minute of the first half.
three-pointers, raising his percentage this year to 42.8
Hughes' three-pointer put Illinois-Chicago ahead 45on 30 of 70 attempts.
34 at halftime.
The Tar Heels (9-1) had been limiting opponents
The Flames scored the first ei~ht point~f the secto 39 percent field goal shooting prior to their sec"
ond half to increase their margin to 53·3~. then built
ond-ever IJlccting with Colorado. The defense held
a 32-point advantag e, 75-43, after back-to-back
the Buffaloes to 34.3% of their shots in running up a
three-pointers by Hughes. The 85-52 score was lllibig flfst-half lead.
nois·Chicago's biggest lead- 33 points - of the
North Carolina pounded away at the interior of
game.
Colorado's defense and went on a 10-0 run spanning
Edwards and Scan Ham monds scored 14 points
four minutes.
each to lead the Raiders.
Colorado (7-4) stru gg led with its shootin g
Hallberg coached five years at the high school
throughout the first half, and was limited to one shot
level prior to stints at St. Xavier and Chicago State
on most of its trips downcourt.
.
before joining the Flames five years ago. His record
· · No. 10 Indiana 81, Cincinnati 60- At Cincinis 500-231.
nati. Eric Anderson scored a season-high 23 points.
)\avier 91, New Hampshire 54- At Durham ,
10 of them in the opening minutes of the second half
N.H., Jamie Gladden scored 27 points to lead Xavier
to rally No. 10 Indiana to an 81-60 victory Saturday
to a 91-54 victory over New Hampshire in college
over Cincinnati.
basketball on Saturday.
Anderson hit two jumpers and a pair of threeNew Hampshire, 1-8, never led in the game as
pointers as Indiana (9-2) wiped out a six-point halfTyrice Walker and Aaron Williams chipped in 14
time deficit. His three-pointer put Indiana ahead t6
and 13 respectively for the Mpsketeers, 6-4.
. .f~z
stay 44-41 with 16;16lcft.
.
Xavier took a 15-3 lead, ana UNH trailed by as ,
Cincinnati (8-2) never recovered, hitting just one
much as 32-16 before regrouping to cut the lead to
basket in a four-minute span to let Indiana stretch the
40-31 at the half. UNH got as close as 48-40 early in
lead to double digits. Both of the Bearcats' losses
the second half, but Xavier went on a 19-2 run that
have been against ranked teams: Indiana and Michimade il67-42.
gan State.
New Hampshire, which had four players foul out
Cincinnati led. by as many as nine in the first half
of the game, was led by Jose Powell with I2 points.
and held onto a 36-30 lead at the intermission .
Heidelberg 76, Mount Union 71- At Alliance,
Anderson led the 10-0 run that wiped it out and put
Ohio, Mall Adams scored 17 points to help lead Heilndiana on track for its seventh consecutive win.
delberg to a 76-71 win over Mount Union in an Ohio
Calbert Cheaney added 17 points, Pat Graham had
Conference game Saturday.
•
16 and Alan Henderson had 12 for Indiana. Corle
Darrell Russell and Adam Smith each scored 14,
Blount scored a season-high IS points and had 12
and Troy DiFranco had 12 for the Student Princes (6•
rebounds for Cincinnati, but was held to just two
5 3-1).
points and one rebound after the intermission.
Scott Gobely led the Purple Raiders (3-7 1-3) ~-- _
The Bearcats took advantage of Indiana's poor
a season high 26 points, while Chad Nigr~h d 13
'-.. HANDS OFF! -T hat's what Georgetown
shooting to go on a !three-point run midway through
and Willie Buus 12.
cen.ter Alonzo Mourning (left) seems to be tellins
the first half. The Hoosiers patien~y found the open
Mount Union closed the gap to 73-69. ith 2:45
Villanova's James Bryson (right) dufing Salurman against UC's trapping defense but couldn't conleft. But Adams made two free throws at the 1;43
vcn, hitting just three of their first 18 shots.
mark, gl'v'fiig Heidelberg a 75-69Iead.
Blount scored 13 points and had II of CincinDiFranco clinched the win with a free throw with
nati's 21 first-half rebounds. He also scored four _ 13 seconds left.
points in the 13-0 run that gave the Bearcats an.. IB-9
Willen berg 86, Case Western 57- At Springlead - their biggest of the half - with seven minfield , Ohio, freshman Chris Wolfe scored a career
utes IefL
high 16 points to help Wittenberg win its seventh
Indiana cut it tG.JI-30 with 26 seconds left before
straight game 86-57 over Case Western Saturday in
the intermission, but Allen Jackson sank a pair of
an NCAC Conference game.
free throws and Tanance Gibson hit a three-pointer
Kris Spriggs also scored 16 for the Tigers.
off a steal for the 36-30 advantage.
Rich Mueller, with 13, led scoring for Case WestAnderson scored 10 of Indiana's first 17 points
em {2-6 0-3).
after the intermission to put the Hoosiers in control.
The Spartans took an early lead, but at the 15:08
111.-Chicago 92, Wright St. 69 -Chicago. Ill.,
mark Wittenberg (8-3 4-0) went on a 13.0 run, makBrian Hill scored 23 points and Travon Hughes
ing it 15-4.
added 22 Saturday as Illinois-Chicago beat Wrigh~
Wittenberg led 53-25 at the half.
State 92-69 in a Mid-Continent Conference opener
Case Western stances Ed Saxon, Kevin Paprzycki
for both teams Saturday.
· and Ron Jezerinac were benched at lhe start of the
It was the SOOth career win for head coach Bob
game by head coach Bill Sudcck for being late for
Hallberg of Illinois-Chicago (4-6).
tbe team bus.

le BUI-Fralic (79) and running back Pal Chaffey
among them - purspe the loose ball during the
second quarter of Saturday's NFC playoff game,
which the Redskins won 24-7. (AP)

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day's Big East matchup in Landover, Md .,
which Villanova won 75-73. (AP)

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NCAA schoQls to vote on new
academic requirements this week

CINCINNATI, OHIO
JANUARY 25 &amp;: 26, '1992
_/

ONLY $149.50 PER MEMBER (DOUBLE OCCUPANCY)
($174.50 _PER NON-MEMBER)

•

Take off for a fantasy weekend with your Peoples Choice friends and attend an.authenttc Royal
Hawaiian Luau extravaganza at the La Comedia Dinner Theatre in Cincinnati. The luau will
feature songs by Hawaiian recording artist Blue Pau, the Aloha Island Dancen in beautt.fpl
.
Polynesian co8tumes, tribal dances and much. much more. All this w~e you enjoy a sumptuous
feast native to the islands at the Polynealan Paradise buffet.,You'll stay at the beuatlful Omnl
Netherland Plaza in the center of Cincinnati, conveniently connected by a skywalk t() numerous
shops.
Cost: $149.50 Double, $i45.•00 Triple, $130,00 Quad, or $170.00 Single. (There is an additional
$25.00 per person fee for non-members.)
receptiopat Peoples B~
· ~ Round trip deluxe motorcoach tr~sportation ·
~ Travel insurance, baggage handling, tips &amp; gratuities
~ "Royal . Hawallan Luau at the La Comedla Dinner Theatre
.. Ovemlght acoommldatlenwt 4he...Q~Nedatf'¢il\ti' M.'*
~ Sunday bnmch at the hotel
··
~Pre-tour

By VOUG TUCKER
AP Sports Writer
ANAHEIM, Calif.(AP) - The
most far-reaching new academic
.tyquirements in almost 10 years
wjll go before a vote of NCAA
Scllools this wcc.f. Opp~mcnts arc
bracing for what is likely to be a
(utile fight.
: · " I told the Presidents Commis·
soion to expect even more heated
debate at the 1992 convention than
wliat they experienced in 1990 or.
'91," NCAA executive director
Dick Schultz said.
~ : · ·1 think Dick's right," said
J11dy Sweet, who is completing her
fi!sl y·ear as the NCAA 's first

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'freadwell
's clutch field
:4:
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11~1
. gives Broncos win

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: : i:&gt;avid Treadwell's field goal in
· ihp:last30'seconds of Saturday's
· · ~FJ: playoff game between the
HOuslbn Oilers and the host DenVq-~roncos gave the Broncos a.26~ytctory .
· ·

.
Call Mary :Fowler at Peoples Bank at (304) 675-1121 for lnfonna~on or reservations.
Peoples Choice ls .a d1V1sion of the Peoples Bank of Polnt Pleasant, _Mem~r FDIC.

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female president. " There is no
doubt going to be more vigorous
discussion than we've experienced
in the past year or two...
No one is predicting the chief
sponsor of the toughened academic
requirements, the reform-minded
NCAA presidents Commission ,
will not get what it wants during
the NCAA's 86th annual.convenLion Jan. 6-10 in Anaheim.
There was also widespread
opposition among coaches and athletic directors to a series of measures at last year's convention cutting back playing seasons, coach in~ staffs and practice times. Bu~
wath each school's vote controlled
by its president or chancellor, the
measures all p~s.Cd overwhelmingly. ·
, • " d!
· "I would anticipate U.e acadcmic package will pass,'' Schultz said.
Oppositflln to the measures is
based chiefly on the use of standardized college aptitude tests,'
.which are thought to be 'Culturally
and racially biased.
.
. "I am very much in favor of
havins academic standards,"
· Georgetown athletic director Frank
Rienso said. "But I am no1 in favor
.of inappropriJte acade!"lc stari,

dards."
Under the presidents' plan,
NCAA athletes would face toughcncd academic requirements from
the day they enroll to the dfl~ they
finish tl!eir college ehgabalaty.
Under the present freshman cligi-·
bility rule known as Proposition 48,
freshman to be eligible !heir first
year must have a 2.00- or(: average- in II high school "core'.' or
college prepatory courses. They
must also make a minimum score
oq the ACT or SAT college
'tntrance exams.
The new rule would raise the
number of core courses to, ll and ~ ..
hike the minimum grade point in
the core from 2.00 to 2.5 . There
w.ould also be a sliding index
where a hig~er grade point in the
core offsers a lower tes~ score.
In addition, the PresidenlS Commission is seeking to toughen lhe
· continuing eligbibllhy requirements, forcihg a11 allllete to complete a progressiVe percentage of
courses in a specific degree program. In their.third, foitrth an~ ftfth
years alhletes would need to have
'AGAINST THE LAW .,.. North Carolina's
completed 25; 50 and·75 pe~nt of
George
Lynch·(34) pJays ever-lightenlng.'defense
the requir~ments for graduauon.
•.
against tbe Law '1 Colorado's Billy Law (with

.

ball) - during Saturday's colle&amp;e aame at
Chapel Hill, N.C., whk:h the Tar Heels won 85- .
64. (AP) iOo

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Page-c2-sunday Times-sentinel

. GALLIPOLIS • Gallipolis ral·
hed from a· 10-point first half
deficit Friday night to defeat visit·
ing Athens 56-49 in a Southeaslern
Ohio League basketball game on
theGAHS hardwood.
The triumph, 300th for a Jim
Osborne-coached Gallipolis learn,
kept the Blue Devils in a tie for
first place in the league as Marietta
bombed Logan 72-52 and Warren
Local, the Gallians' ne&lt;t opponent.
downed Jackson 66-51.
Coach Tim Smith's
jumped off to a 14-1first
and was on

4:09 remaining m. the rust h_alf
before Gallipolis caught fire behmd
Chad Barnes, Eric Hoffman, Bryan
Hall and Adam Blair to lr.notthe
couni 23-all just before interm!s·
sion. (Blair's three-pomt go~ wuh
two seconds left m the half ued the
score).
, , ,
•
Scott H1llktr~ s layup opened
second half scohng for the rangy
Bulldogs. Back-to-ba.clr. goals by
Barnes and Scott Jiv1de~ put the
G,allians ahead forth~ firSt tune.
27-25 (7:09). GAHS hiked 1ts lead
to
points (36-29) at the
rnll(k of t.he thud stanza

before ABS closed the gap .to one,
38~37, followmg three pertods of
acuon. .
. ',
The Blue Dev1ls full-court
press, which kept the visitors from
getting ms1de the second half,
forced severa! Athens turnovers. m
the fmal penod as G~S ralhed
from a one-pomt deftc1t to take a
54-44 lead, Wit!' 47 seconds left to
play. (Gallipolis blanked the Athe·
n•ans for more than .four minutes
after traihng 44-43 at the 4&gt;:50
mark).. .
•
Galhpohswas _ledbyBarnes 19
markers. JIVIden tossed 10 11 and
Blair added ,nme off the bench.
The Galhans shot43 percent (17
of 40) from the field and sank 19 of
29 chanty, tosses. GAHS had 16
personals, 19 reb~unds; two each
by Ryan Young, Jividen, H.oqman,
Dav1d .Hager and Blarr. Galhpohs
co!?mmed 12 turnovers, had 13
assiSts, three each by Barnes and
Hoffman. 16 steals, four each by
Nathan. M1ller and Hoffman. and
. two blocked shots.
Sunny Kalu, 6-4 sophomore
paced Athens w1th 21 pomts and 12
rebounds. Hillkirk added 10 mark·
ers.
.Athens connected on 21 of 34
field goal atlempts for 61 percent, ·
but was only six of 12 at the Hne,

had 20 personals, and was guilty of
23 costly turnovers. Athens picked
off23 rebounds.
G ll' r ·
00 4 3
all a~d~~l,si~~~~~e ~nfe~~;~:
Athens dropped to 1-7 on the year
and 1·2 in league play.
Friday, Gallipolis travels to Viii·
cent to face Warren Loc~\1. S~turday, the -B lue Devils play at Poin(
Pleasant. GAHS battled Southern
at Racine last ni ght. ,
Athens will host Chillicothe
Tuesday and Marietta Friday.
In the preliminary 'game, Larry
Howell's hot hand at the foul line
in overtime (five for five) carried
Lynn Smith's Blue Imps to a 45-39
ovenime victory over the Bullpups. ·
Athens led 12-10 afler the first
whistle, and 22·15 at halftime.
AHS was on top 31-28 going into
the final period. Mike Donnally's
two free throws tied the score at
38-all 'with 30 seconds left in reguIation flay.
'
Jef Pope led the Imps with 15
points. Donnally and \om Morgan
had eight apiece. Ben Werner led
Athens' attack with 10 points.
Quarter totaL'&gt;
Athens....... .. ....... 14 9 14 12 = 49
GalliaAcadcmv ... 716 15 18= 56
ATHENS (49). Scholl,.3·0·6,
McHugh, 0·2·2, Reed, 2-0-4; Rcpp, ·

Warren Local, Mari_etta
other SEOAL winners
1

: : BARNES DRIVES • Gallipolis guard Chad Barnes (14) drives
-past Athens' Jason Reed (32) during Friday's SEOAL basketball
;game before a packed bouse in the GAHS gym. Gallipolis won, 56·
:49. Barnes had 19 points.

Cage standings
SEO, Opponents ·
(All-Games)
.
Team
W L
P OP
Chesapeake .........8 0 598 499
F.airland ...............5 o 384 234
Waverly ............... 6 2 651 565
SOuthern ...... ....... 4 2 414 352
Qallipolis ..... ....... .4 3 357 341
Marietta ...............4 4 485 469
~nsmouth ..........4 4 600 510
t;Jgan ............... .. .3 4 409 414
la.ckson ................3 4 427 437
Warren Loca\... ...3 4 488 474
~int Pleasant...... ! 2 187 192
dteenfield ...........2 5 295 339
Wheelersburg ...... 2 5 447 461
Vinton County .... I 5 324 383
1
569
A!hens "'isF:oA'i: v1Rsi~~l
Team
W L
P OP
Warren Local ......2 1 I 96 182
Gallipotis.............2 ~ 168 162
Marietta ............... 2 I 183 168
Athens ................. ! 2 167 184
Logan .................. ! 2 186 190
Jal:kson ................ l 2 171 185
TOTALS
9 9 1071 1071
: (SEOAL RESERVES)
Ttam
W L
P OP
Legan ................ 3 0 1941&gt; 144
Jal:kson ............... 3 0 136 123
Marietta... ........... I 2 147 175
Aihens ................ I 2 122 123
G~llipolis ... ......... 1 2 130 144
Warren Local.. ... 0 3 120 140
TOTALS
9 9 849 849
Friday's results:
SEOAL Varsity
Gallipolis 56 Athens 49
Warren Local 66 Jackson 51
Ml!rietta 72 Logan 52
· SEOAL Reserves:
Gallipolis 45 Athens 39 (ot)
Jackson 42 Warren Local40
[J&gt;gan 85 Marietta 53
• Others
&lt;lesapeakc81 Buffalo 78
~rtsmouth 63 Ironton 62
Wavedy 100 Portsmouth West74
Southern 67 Symmes Valley 50
O,reenfield 53 Wilmington 47 (at)
Wheelersburg 82 Northwest 59
. Fllirland 93 Huntington SJ 46
l)imble 80 Vinton Coun\)'· 54
; Last night:
Gallipolis at Southern
Jackson at Pt. Pleasant
V(arren Local at Belpre

January 5, 1~2

Pomeroy-Middleport..:..Galllpolls, OH· Point Pleasant, wv A

· Gallip~lis rallies froni lO~point deficit to

Logan at Newark
Ironton at Wheelersburg
Tuesday's games:
Jackson at Waverly
Chillicothe at Athens
Zanesville at Logan
NORTH Gallia at Chesapeake
HuntingtOn Ross at Greenfield
South Point at Fairland
Vinton County at Nels· York
Friday's games:
Gallipolis at Warren Local
Logan at Jackson
Marietta at Athens
Pt. Pleasant at Milton
South Point at Chesapeake
Boyd Coumy at Portsmouth ..
Southern at Oak Hill
South Webster at Wheclersb urg
Coal Grove at Fairland
Alexander at Vmton County

Three teams now share first
place in the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League standings following Friday's action in which Gallia
Academy downed Athens 56-49, ,
Marietta won big at Logan 72-52,
and Wanen Local defealed visiting
Jackson 66-51. Gallipolis, Marietta
and Warren all o.wn 2-1 league
records ; while the three Friday
losers are all1-2.
··
Warren Local66, Jackson 51
The Warriors drained eight three
poim shots out of 16 attempts and
used a 23· 7. scoring advantage in
thr second period to dispose of the
lronmen. Eric Harper hit three treys
to go wjth his 13 points, Ryan Dennis and Jason Burroughs each had a
pair. and Jason,Harris canned one
trifecta.

The Warriors shot 51 percent
on 25 of 49 attempts and converted
eigh t of 16 charity tosses while
Jackson made one of four free
throws. No other statistics on the
game were available at press time.
Willie Woodard's 24 markers
led the JHS attack with Matt Wal·
burn adding 13, including three
triple goals.
In the reserve game, Jackso n
won 42-40.
·
Quarter totals
Jackson .............. 15 7 8 21 =51
Warren Local.. ... l6 23 10 17 = 66
JACKSON (51) - Matt Wal·
burn 2·3·0=13; Willie Woodard
10·1·1=24; Trent Douthett 0-0·
1=1; Brad Munn 2-0·0=4; Mike
Morgan 2.0-0=4; Brent Jewell 2·0·
(See SEOAL on C-3)

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top ·Athens 56-49 -~:
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· ' au, • • ' onus, · · ·
TOTALS 20·(1)-6-49.
~1~0L~S • (~(Z)B~et:
4· ~A~
1• • IVI en, · · · •

1 9

• ~ •'
m. '
h' 0-0-0:.
0-0-Q, Hall, 2-0-4, Mwp y,
•
00
0
~~~2'i-soi~(~j.~~S'6ell, · • ·•
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Alexa"nd'·e r gets•.72-61.
ro· ad ·w·· n over M.et'gs
By DAVE HARRIS
T-S Correspondent
ROCK SPRINGS - Alexander
jumped out to a 15 poim first quar·
ter lead and held off a furious
Meigs Marauder comeback to
defeat the Marauders 72-61 at
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium Fri·
day evening. In the rough physical
game the Spartans led by as many
as 17 p(&gt;ini.S midway into the sec·
and period, but Shawn Hawley led
a Marauder comeback th at was
able to cut the lead to five heading
imo the final period.
Meigs was playing their second
straight game without the services
of junior play maker John Bentley,
who is out with an ank).e i'njury. He
is questionable for the Marauders'
next date -a Tuesday night game
at Wellston.
Alexander opened up an 8-0
lead before Bobby Johnson made it
an 8·2 game with five minutes to
go in the quarter. Shawn Hawley
scored five of the ne&lt;t six points
for Meigs cutting the Alexander
lead to 15-8 with a long thre e
pointer with 2:18 left in the period.
But Eric Royce scored seven points
in a
for Alc_'!'n~C!· giving Jay

Rees' crew a 2:J·M lead with a
minute. to go in the period. Bryan
Johnson and Trevor Harrison trad· ,
(See SPARTANS on C-3)
••
SCMT to begin tod~y ;.' '
RIO GRANDE - The fourth :
Scott Connelley Memorial Tournament, sponsored by Holzer Clinic,
will be held today a1 2 p.m. at the
University of Rio Grande's Lyne .
Center.
Tickets wil be $4 in advance .
and at the door. Tickets will also be·
sold at Holzer Clinic.
The game will feature th C:
Cincinnati Reds traveling basket· .
ball team against an all-star le3)11 of
area basketball coaches and former ·
players.
' ;
The tournament will benefit the·
local Big Brothers/Big Sisters.
chapter.
'
:
Additional sponso~ include Dr.•
David Carman, the Gallipolis Elks:
Club, McDonald's of Gallipolis•
and Henderson, W.Va., Ohio Vat-:
ley Bank, Ohio Valley Superrnark·:
ers (Foodland), Star Bank, Saun-·
ders Insurance. The Stowaway and·
Thomas Do-It Center.
•

Simpson (12)
bows his back to take a shot in rront or
Brian Mershon
(44) and North Gama•s Ryan McCarley (20) in the forst quarter of'
Friday night's SVAC game at
which the visiting Pirad!s won·
76-55. Simpson sank five .
en route to a game-high 19point night. (Times-Sentinel
G.
.
.Spencer Osborne)
.

9

$14 ~;~.so
424 SECOND AYE.

OH.
partially obscured by Alexander's
Waggoner (10), finds himself shooting in traffic, as the Spartans' Eric Royse (40) gets into
Hawley's 'Shooting area during Friday night's TVC game at Rock

H;s~h;~'T;;~ ~ ~0sts 54-50
victory over Kyger Creek

------ SAVESOc

CHESHIRE - In a contest that
Hannan Trace mentor Mike Jenkins
described as "ugly," his Wildcats
watched their seven-poin! halftime
lead in Friday night's SV AC game
against Kyger Creek all but Qisap·
pear in the second half, but they
hung to post a 54-50 victory .
Junior center Dave Poling led
the Wildcats with 15 points and
collected eight rebounds, while fel low frontmen Jimmy Brace had II
points and 10 rebounds, and Chad
Swain had 10 points and II grabs.
Bobcat forward Phil Bradbury
led the rest of the court with 18
points, and learn male Brian David·
son scored 12 points and had five
rejections.
This week's calendar will have
Hannan Trace (2-4, 2-2) heading to
Russell, Ky. on Tuesday before
returning home on Friday to play
Eastern, while Kyger Creek (1·4,
0-3) will host. Southwestern on Fri·
day.
Quarter totals
I:Iannan Trace ..... IO 19 9 16 = 54
Kyger Creek.. ..... II II 15 13 = 50

• Stocks
Corporate Bonds
• U.S. Treasury Securities
• Mutual Funds
e IDBUred Tax·F'fte
Mualdpal Bonds
• luured Money Market
Accounu
e IRA's

e

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MANUfA(lURIR'SCOUPON I

I

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•

SEOAL action...

WARREN LOCAL (66)Jason Harris 5-1·2=15; Eric Harper
1-3-2=13; Scott Brackenridge 2-03=7; Jason Craven 4-0.0=8; Chris
Ruble 1·0-0=2; Ryan Dennis 3·2·
1=13; Jason Burroughs 0·2·0="6; ·
Aaron Merrills 1·0·0=2. TOTALS
-17-8-8·66

STAN EVANS
Ubby Hotel, Suite 100
444 Second A'l'tllue
Gallipolis, Oblo 45631

Marietta 72, Lo~ 52
At Logan, the visuing Tigers
tooli advlll)tage of the absence of 6foot-8 Eric Burris to win their second important road contest of the
season. Burris did not play as a
result of a sprained ankle he s~s. tained in the pre-game warm ups.
Despile the loss of Burris, ,
Logan Still enjoyed a 35-26
rebound advantage ·as Joe Hanning
' grabbed 11 to· go with his 21
pointS, and Tom Smith claimed 10.
Although Marietta Jed by quar·
tet scores of 17-14,30-23, and45·
37 it took a 16-3 eruption early in
the'fourdt ~uartcr to salt it away.
Chad Lt~coln scored 22 poiDts

(614) 446-lUS
1-300-776-4691

•

HANNAN TRACE (54) Poling 5-0·5=15; Brace 1·3·0=11;
Swain 4-0-2= 10; Co• 4-0-1 =9;
Unroe 3-0·2=8; Queen 0·0· 1= l.
TOTALS -17·3·11=54
Field goals- 20-58 (34.5 %)
Three-pointers - 3· 7
Free throws- 11-16 (68.75%)
Rebounds - 43 (Swain II )
Assists - l l
SteaL'&gt; -7
Turnovers- 14
KYGER CREEK (50)
Bradbury 3-4-0=18; Davidson 6-0·
0=12; Covey 1-2-0=8: Crace 3-0·
0=6 ; Kingery 2-0-0=4; Roberts I ·
0·0=2. TOTALS - 16·6·0=50
Field goals- 22· 70 (31.4%)
Three-pointers
6-18
(33.3%)
Free throws - 0-2
Rebounds- 34 (Crace 11)
Blocked shots - 8 (Davidson
5)
ASsists - 5 (Kingery 3)
SteaL'&gt; -7
Turnovers- 14
Reserve game - new date to
be announced

(COntinued from C-2)

0=4. TOTALS -20·3·1·51

Conluct;

eties. In addition, junior point
guard Aaron McCarty, the High·
landers' leading scorer th,is season,
was very silent in the first half, as
he had two points (his team's (irst
of .the game) in the ftrst three minutes of the first quarter. But senior
guard Adam Simpson, who led all
marksmen with 19 points, wasn't'
that silent, as his three-pointer - '
the first of five from his hand from the left wing with 5:56 left in
act one cut North's lead to 6-5.
But the sailors' aggressive
defense ("they dominaled the entire
game" - Southwestern interim
chief Mike Wal.ker) enabled them
to survive another threatened lead
exchange afler Highlander forward
Jamie Morse turned a McCarty
pass into a layup with 5:08 left to
cut North's three-point lead to an
8-7 margin. But the hosts would
never be so close again, as the fast
break was a principal ingredient in
1he Pirates' outscoring Southwestem 16-7 the rest of the quarter to
lead 24-14 at the end of the frame.
While North stoked the boiler
with feeling and staked itself to a
24-point lead in the latler stages of
the second quarler, the Highlanders
didn't score until Simpson canned
another trey with 2:48 left to cut
the guests' lead to 38-17. But the
Pirates kept their lead from dropo__;.(C_on_ti_nu_ed_fro_m_C_-2_)_

2-5x7

'

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Staff
GAGE - North Gallia, ahead
by 10 points heading into the second quarter of Friday night' s
SV AC game against Sou~westem,
went on a 14-point run in the first
five minutes of that frame that
hel)led the Pirates cruise to a 76-55
win over the Highlanders. ·
"We had a lot of turnovers in
our half.court press, which resulted
in a lot of lay ups," said North Gallia skipper Pat Stout, whose sailors
boosted their record to 3-4 overall
and 3-1 in the conference.
This game marked the return of
forward Darin Smith, North's
three-year letterman who injured
his left knee in the Pirates' final
football game against Kyger Creek
in November. Smitli, who had not
been able to practice with the team
until the last month, got his first
points of the season on a
turnaround jumper from the right
wing after catching a Charles Peck
pass with I:54 left in the first quar.
lcr. Smith ftnished the ni ght with
II points.
The Pirates scored the' first six
. points of the &lt;iffair in the game's
first minute, and playC(l aggressively on the boards and up the court as
they worked the paint for layup
after layup and shots of other vari-

spartans win ••

SPECIAL PRICE

TAWNEY STUDIO

OH-Polnt Pleasant,WV

to lead Marietta, and Doug Zoller
added 15. The Tigers shot 54.9 per·
cent (28-51) and made 15 of 23 at
the line. Logan finished .with just
33 percent by hitting just 19 of 57
fielders and swished ll of 17 free·
bies.
In the reserve contest, Logan,
led by Chad Zimmerman's 27
points, rolled to an 85-53 victory.
Quarter totaL'&gt;
Marietta.............. 17 13 15 27 = 72
Logan ................. l4 9 14 15 = 52 ·
. MARIETTA (72) - Mike
Smith 1·1·0=7?; Ryan Robinson ,20-3=7; Cam Mcintyre 1·0·0=2:
Chris Kimball 0·0-2=2; Chad Lin·
coin 9-04=22; Chris Gregory 2-0·
0=4; Jodie Ruffing· l-0-0,.2; Sieve •.
Boord' 4-0-0=8; Spencer Dennison
1-0-1=3. TOTALS- 27·1·15=72
LOGAN (52)- Tim Mauck 0·
1-1=4; Joe Hanning. 8·0· 5=21;
' Chris Conrad 2·2·1=11; Josh Jack·
son 0-0·2=2; Blair Steward 2·0·
0=4; Colin Mowery 2-0-()=4; Tom
Smith 2-0-0=4; Don Carpenter o:-o.
2=2. TOTALS 16-3-11=52

ed baskets in the final minute and
Alexander held a 25· 10' lead heading into the second period.
Royse and Johnson wa s the
thorn in the side of the Marauders
the first period. Royse poured in ·It
first-period points, while Johnson
added eight for 20 of the Spartans'
25 points.
In the second period, Phil Hov·
atter and Frank Blake came off the
Marauder bench to help spark the
Marauders. With .the two playint
their trademark ball-hawking
defense, Harrison and Blake was
SjWplying the offense. Meigs was
a'ble to cut the Spartan lead to 3723 at the half behind Hafjison's
seven points and Blake's si&lt;.
In the third period, Hawley went
on a scoring tear as the maroon and
gold continued their comeback.
Hawley, hitting a variety of shots
from all over the court, scored 12
third-period to lead the charge.
When Phil Hovatler drilled a three·
pointer with five seconds left in the
period, the Marauders had cut the
lead to five heading into th e final
eight minutes.
Mike Dailey's three poinler o;-ith
5·:40 left in the contest gave
Ale.ander a 10 point lead, the
Marauders were unable to get any
closer than seven Jls&gt;ints the rest of
the way. To compound problems
for the Marauders, Hawley and L.J.
Mitch fouled out in the final three
minutes. Alexander hit I 0 of 14
foul shots down the stretch with
Royce conneCting on seven of 10 to
seal the victory.
Royce proved to be one of the
top players in the area leading the
way 30 points, Rob Wilson added
II points and Bryan Johnson added
10 points. Alexander hit 22 of 57
from the floor for 39 % and won the
game a\ the foul line hitting 25 of
35 from th e line for 71%. The

Spartans grabbed 34 rebounds with
Royse and Wilson geuing 13 each.
Hawley had an outstanding
game leading Meigs with 23 points,
Harrison added 13 points and
Blake 10. Meigs hit 22 of 48 from
the floor for 48% and 13 of 17
from the line for 75%. Meigs had
35 rebounds with Blake leading the
way with eight and Mitch getting
seven.
In the re sc rv~ntest, Meigs
outscored AICJdindC"'"'l7 -8 in the
fourth period to pull away for a 48·
32 win. Jack Stanley led three
Marauders in double figures with
12 points, Chris Knight added II
and Aaron Drummer 10, Jamey
Vincent led Alc.ander with II.
Brad Anderson led the Marauders
on the boards with nine rebounds.
The win gave the Little Marauders
their fourth victory in a row after
two season-opening defeats.
In other Tri-Valley Conference
action Friday evening, Belpre
defeated Federal Hocking 80-64,
Nelsonville· York upset Wellston
76-72 for their first TVC win of the
year, and Trimble beat Vinton
County 80-53.
Quarter totals
Alexander .......... 25 12 14 21 = 72
Meigs ....... .......... 10 13 23 15 = 61
ALEXANDER (72) - Travis
Waggoner 3-0·2=8, Jeremy Merkle
0-0·4=4, Mike Dailey 0-1-1=4.
Seth Kendall 2·0·0=4, Bryan John•
son 4-0-2= 10, Eric Royce 6·2·
12=30, Rob Wilson 4-0·3=11, Matt
Rosier O·O·l=l.TOTALS- 19·3·
25=72 •
MEIGS (61)- Shawn Hawley
7-2·3=23, L. J. Mitch 0-0·2=2,
Trevor Harrison 5·0·3=13. Bobby
Johnson 1·1-3=8, Frank Blake 4-0·
2=10. Phil Hovatter 0-1-0=3, Todd
Dill 1·0·0=2. TOTALS- 18·4·
13=61

ping below 20 by edging their hosts
Field goaL'&gt;..,. 34-71 (47.9%) ·
7-5 in the last 2;30 to take a 23Three-pointers- 04
point lead into the locker room at·
Freelbro~s-8-14(57.1%) • .
halftime.
Rebounds- 46 (Canady 14)
Concentration became more of a
Assists- 25 (Peck 7) ·
prob)em for the Pirates in the secSteaL'&gt;- 15 (McCarley 5)
ond half, a trait having plenty to do
Turnovers- 24
.
with the lead they•had. As a result,
SOUTHWESTERN (~5) - .
Stout had bench players such as Simpson 1-5·2=19; McCarty 3-2, · ,
N~than Ad.ams ; Mike Campbell, 2=14; Morse 3-0·3=9; Mandeville ·
Smith and others on the court 3·0·2=8; Mershon 2-0·0=4; K . .
roughly as long as the starters Ashworth 0-0·1=1. TOTALS- ·
guards Peck and Jim Bob McClure, 12-7-10=55
Field goaL'&gt; -19-62,(30.6%) ·
and frontmen Ryan McCarley', Rob
Canady and Kevin Hunt.
Three-pointers 7-23
(30.4%)
'
:- • .
The Highlanders started playing
Free throws- 10-19 (52.6%) :0
more turnover-oriented defense and
Rebounds- 29 (Mandeville•:
shooting niore from beyond the arc
••
in the second half, which was pan '!2)
Assists- 8 (McCarty 4)
of the reason why the fourth quar·
SteaL'&gt;- 17 (Simpson 8)
ter began at the stroke of nine (the
Turnovers - 21
game started appro&lt;imatcly 8
RESERVE GAME- North .
' p.m.). But Simpson 's long bombs,
Gallia
38, South western 22
which gave the Southweslern fans
Leading
scorers - Doug ·
something to cheer about , or
McCarty's awakened offensive Miller (N. Gal.) • 9; Trevor Ash- ':
prowess (he had 12 points in the worth, Jimmy Massie &amp; David .
::
second hall) , weren't enough, as Newberry (aU SW) • 5 each
North essentially traded ba skets
with the Highlanders in the last 16
COLONY THEATRE
minutes for the win.
FRI. THRU THURS.
This week's .agenda has N~rth
Gallia heading south to tangle with
BEnE MIDLER,JAMESCAAN ·
Chesapeake on Tuesday before
'
IN
returning home to entertain
Symmes Valley on Friday, while
Southwestern will host New
ON£ IYIIIIIIG SIIOW 7:30
Boston on Tuesday before going
ADMISSlOII $1.50
northeast to face Kyger Creek on
446-0923
Friday.
Quarter totals
North Gallia ....... 24 21 15 16 = 76
Southwestern ..... 14 8 17 16 =55
SPRING VALLE YCINEMA
NORTH GALLIA (76) - .
446 4524
,,' " .
Hunt 7-0·2=16; McCarley 7·0·
IWIGAJI MTII.:ES SATYIIAY &amp; s.Dl'f,
0=14 ; Peck 7-0·0=14; Smilh 4-Q·
BAIIU!It IIIHT T\ISIIAT .
3=11; Canady 4-0-2=10; Campbell
3-0 -1=7; McClure 2·0·0=4 .
TOTALS- 34-0·8=76
·~

FOR THE BOYS

..

TAP
DAriCE
CLASSES

'.

431
275
333
368

.
(Conrerence)
Southern ...... ....... .4 0 299
Oak Hill ..............3 I 277
North Gallia ........3 I 246
Hannan Trace ......2 2 249
Eastern ................2 2 237
Symmes Valley ... ! 2 167
Kyger Creek.. ......O 3 145
Southwestern ....... ~ 4 210
TOTALS .......... l~ 15 1830

2 11
257
235
247
258
191
162
269
1830 .

PA
301
352
456

Good Luck in 1992!
· From

STA'R KING ENTERPRISES
LOCATED NEXT TO BOB EVANS FARMS
RIO GRANDE, OH.
PHONE (614) 245·9668

They played Saturday
Gallia Academy at Southern
South Webster at Oak Hill
Waterford at Eastern

French City Aviation

This week's games
Tuesday -Hannan Trace at
Rus sell (Ky.); North Gallia at
Chesapeake; New Boston at South·
western; OVCS at Symmes Valley
Friday - Eastern at Hannan
Trace; Southwestern at Kyger
Creek; Symmes Valley at North
Gallia; Southern at O~ill
Saturday - K~er Creek at
Ironton St. Joe; Hannan at South·
western

,(Reserves· SVAC only)
Team
W L PF PA
Southem ... .......... .4 0 . 220 155
Eastern ............... .3 I 169 147
Symmes Valley ... 2 1 125 133
Nonh Gallia ........ 2 2 150 150
Kyger Creek ........ ! 1 .70 73
I;Iannantracc ...... l 2 118 149
Oak Hill ."............. ! 3 171 176
Sout~westem .......O 4 118 !58
TOTALS .......... 14 14 1141 1141

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For more lnlorm•don givo Bon Rouoh • call lithe GIII'lla.Molltl AirPort
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614·221·0888
LYI.CENNAMO

Friday's scores
·
(varsity)
Onk Hill 70, Eastern 65
Hannan Trace S4, Kyger Creek 51
North Gallia 76, Southwestern 55

l'iATIIIUS

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Enterprises would like to welcome
th"e owner and employees of
Mullins Garage into the trade of
automotive estimate and repair.

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YA~·

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=BODY SHOP NEWS =

(reserves)
North Gallia 38, Southwestern 22
Southern 52, Symmes Valley 41
Eastern 43, Oak Hill 38

442

.

Monio and Dorothy Haokino
Ariel Theatre
426 2nd Avo. Galli polio, Oh.
Colt 446-ARTS lor more into

at ..CAROLINA
LUMBER
.

.

(NI

7:10,1 :10 EII\ILY.

Southern 67, Symmes Valley 50
PF
332
414
· 389
380
338
258
253
265

···~···

7;00 p.m.

- - - - - SVAC cage standings----(Overall)
Team
W L
Oak Hill ...'?.:-! ...... .4 I
Southem .............. 4 2
North Gallia ....... .3 4
Eastern ................ 2 4
Hannan Trace ...... 2 4
Kyger Creek ..... ... ! 4
SymmesValley ... l 4
Southwestern .......O 5

Ml~ml

Starting January 9

'

'

•

.Sunday

.North GaiHa beats .Southwestern 76-55

!·2-4· Blair :

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~age C4

Sunday Times Sentinel

'\January 5, 199~;'

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

Southe.rn beats Symmes Valley·67-50 to stay .unbeaten in s·vAC. .
B SCOTI WOLFE
·
·Y
T-S Correspondent
RACINE - It took a!+
00
oes ma0
Valle to blow
soveness
ymmes 67 fo F 'da
aw~ the Norsemen • n Y
4.0
mg t.
. .2 0
15
. 1
and
'"
· os
v
12 e
·
th ·ght 'th a
·ll~b~ em~n ta k ~~b dw\ 18
we. · anc at c .e Y ua
pomt effors f~m pomt g~d JEe·
my.1RousR an h p~stm~n d oy 0 0~
Bao ey . ous a so a • .g
fl~[1 g:'J ands!:ilie~ f'~nte~s,
w e a ey u
pam or h~s
bread-and-butter plays and IS
elg~tr~unds. . S ttL' 1 had
. au em senoor co os e facJUStfou: pomts,but was a bog

ton. Singleton had tour pomts on
the night.
.
Symmes had a very balanced
atulek led by Chris Blake with 13,
Fuller with 12, and Andy
Lester and Enc Wall wuh eoght
each. Blake had a double-double
game as he hit double figures in
scoring and had 13 rebounds. Wall
had six rebounds and a 4-for-4
'fiight from the line.
. .
The entire game was highlighted
by a lot of action, but not much
scoring early in the game. Despite
the lack of goals, Southern fans
ex hibited their most enthusiasm in
years something Howie Caldwell
was glad to see and folt gave his
team an extra spark.
The first scene was a Jeremy'
Roush vs. Blake scenario, where
Roush netted eight of Southern's
14 first period points, sparking
them to a 14-12 lead. Lisle ,

f~~r
~uart~rs, 1~ut ~he ~~rt~; ag~s: Jerom~

/l

1ou~~f'c st 1~r~le:J
t ~e leagu~Cct

f

~~ ~~f~~: 1 1~~~~~~:eJa:J'eef~

the team lead with Russell Single· ·•
·

Oak HI•II records 70• 65
triumph over Eastern

•

By SCOTI WOLFE
T·S Correspondent
OAK HILL - Excellent free
ohrow shoo ting by the Oak Hill
Oaks in th e final minutes of the
game erased a one point Eastern
lead with three minutes to go as the
Oaks rolled to a 70-65 SVAC vic·
oory over the trouble· plagued East·
ern Eagles.
The Eagles were coached by
reserve mentor and interim varsity
coach Greg Ullman as a result of
even ts from this past week. (See
related Times-Sentinel story)
Th 's game was literally won at
ohc Ji~e. where Oak Hill netted 22
of 30 attempts overall for 77 percent. including clutch markers fro~
the ga me 's leading scorer BenJI
Lewis. Lewis hit II of 14 overall,
and was near perfect in the last
lhrcc minutes, as he worked toward
hi s game· high total of 30 poinos.
Chris Simpson was 4 for 4 from
the line and had 16 points.
Eastern, meanwhile, hit a meacr 6 of 13 from the line, including
fwo bonus situations that resulted
·in a 46 percent noght.
Eastern was led by Tim Bissell's 23 points and JeffDurst 's 17.
Despite a 17-17 deadlock in the
f
'od the action was slow
orst pen '

and deliberate, as both teams felt
each other out as the lead changed
hands many Urnes..
OH took; ~ shght advantage
toward the moddle of the second
frame en route to a 37-33 halftome
tally. The Oaks at one ume led by
eight, but Eastern had cut that lead
in half by the buzzer.
.
The sconng took manr drastiC
changes throughout the thord quar·
ter, as the score a~aon changed
hands often, wah neother team tak·
ong command. OH led by as .much
as four poonts as dtd Eastern m the
ughtthord frame . .OH fmally took
the edge at canto's end by a 51-48
count.
. .
The stout Oaks maontaoned a
close lead much of the fourth
frame, but Eastern took the lead by.
one near the three-monute ma~k .
From that poont on, a game of mp·
and- tuck at the foullme developed
where OH oced the game."
Ullman commented, It was a
good .game and a close g~e. I fell
our kods pla~ed very well.
Eastern hit 33-64 for 52 ~rcent
overall hottong 5-10 three pomters
and 6-13 at the hne. O!'f hot 19-40,
and 3-7 treys, whole hotung 23-30
at the hne.
EHS had 27 rebounds, led by
Tim Bissell with nine, and Durst
and Charlie Bissell (seven each)..
EHS had seven steals, none
5
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FOR PETS, STABLES, LARGE &amp; SMALL
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nSJPHIERJ.C BA
and Symmes Val·
42s South;;n forward Russell Singleton (far
ley' center Chris Blake bailie for the hall while Singleton
to
shoot the layup during Friday night's SV AC contest at Racme,

trie~

Parents ·contac ted Nichols. and
asked for his resignation, allcgmg
oh at his coaching techniques were
incompetent, practices were disor~a~ozcd, and players w~rc trcaocd
o.nconslstcntly and unfaorly . Thts
contact came wtthout formal acuon
from the board of educauor. whoch
os currently on contract wllh
Nochols.
.
.
Nochols at that lime refused to
resign.
·
Complaints conceming.·players
stemmed from players being disciJllined for abusive language during
practices and games earlier in the
year and other behavior the coach
did nottolerate. At least one player
had previously quit, and others
reportedly did not practice thi s
week.
Later Monday . Nichols was
again contacted by the parents
group, which resulted in this group
proposing to "buy-out" the. men tor's co ntract. Nichols then indi·
cated a verbal resignation, but did
not submit an actual written rcsignation until after school hours Friday.
. . ·
When ·contac ted ·by tbc TiincsSentinel staff Friday evening
Nichols stated, "I thought we were
heading in the ri ght direction at

Eastern. A select group of parents
didn't accept my discipline: These
parents wanted discipline for
everyone excep t their own .kid .
Everything was okay until·ot started
hitting some families close to
home."
.. About organization of practiccs; 1 had them planned down to
the minute in 15 minute inte(Vals as
to what we would be working on. ·
Some parents, who made fal se
accusations had never even attendcd a practice."
Some players did not hustle in
practice and were ultimately
benched indicated the mentor.
. "That too, wasn ·1 accepted very
well, again because of who they
were."
"There arc many nice people at
Eastern and I thank them for their
support."
·
Although Nichols has resigned,
ohc Eastern Local Board of Education has not taken formal action to
accept it, nor has it formally
approved, nor denied the proP.(&gt;sed
"buy-out" by the parents group.
The EHS administration met
. with some mcmbcls of the parents'
group on Thursday to decide on the
fat e of Friday's game. From that
meeting it was gathered that
Nichols tendered resignation would
probably be accepted. The board
was "not" involved in seeking a
resignation and Nichols felt he had

For More laformaticin Call Our
Gallipolis Locatio•

614·446·8592 or 614·886·7357

the board and would ultil11'tcly
have to be paid by the board or
released by the board to be official.
Therefore , Nic hols indicated
that he had been given verbal support from individual board mem·
bers, and would return to finish the
seasonifaskcd. ·
·
Nichols concluded, "Regardless
of the outcome I know I have done
my job and I can keep may head
ht'gh."
~
He had been hired for his strong
di sciplinary characteristics, after ·
problems from last season under a
different coach resulted in the team
walking off the court in the closing
minutes of th e sectional touma·
mcnt.
The administration had hoped
that discipline would tum the pro·
gram around, but principal Moore
concluded thatted
Nichols'
discipline
b
"
"was not accep
Yeveryone.

.•

1991 CAVALIER R/S

I (Continued from C-41
turnovers, two blocked shots, II
a~sists, and 22 fouls. OH had 15
fauls (no other slat s were avaol-

•

a~lc).

• Eastern won the reserve game

4~-38 to push its record to 5·1 (its

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only lOSS came tO undefeated
Sputhcrn) . Jeremy Cline had 12
paints to lead the Eagles.
I Eastern is now 2-4 overall a~d
2•2 in the SVAC. Oak Hill is 4· 1
aoid 3-1.
·' Eastern hosted Waterford Satur·
day night.
Quarter Iotals
El\Stcrn ............... l7 16 15 17 = 65
Oak Hill ............. l7 20 14 19 = 70
: EASTERN (65)- Tim Bissell .
7 ~ 3-0=23, Jeff Durst 4·2·3= 17,
Terry McGuire 5-0·3=13, Jeremy
Buckley 1-0.0=2, Charlie Bissc1140•0=8. TOTALS- 22·5·6=65
: OAK HILL (10) - Mike Tumcl 2·2=4, R. Morgan 3·~ · 4 = 10,
Devin Hale 1-0·2=4, BCnJI Lcwts
5;3- 11 =30, B. Morgan 1·0-0=2,
G):nc Hall l-0·0=2, Chris Simpson
6•0-4= 16. TOTALS - 19·3·
23=70

INTEREST RATES ARE AT A

'•''

ANYONECANSeLLYOU

'

Oaks win ...

START OUT 1992;.1N.A NEW O.R USED
CAR OR TRUCK.

ba%~1~~~~~n~yundercontractto

CHESAPEAKE - Lucy Mul·
Shelly Lang and Andrea Free·
lens and Tammy Thomas combined man led 'peake with nine and eight
for 25 points to to drive Hannan · points, respectively.
Trace's girls basketball team to a Quarter totals
35-33 win over Chesapeake Thurs· Hannan Tmce ... .... 9 6 12 8 = ~5
day night, according to a report Chesapeakc .......... 8 8 10 7 = 33
received Friday afternoon.
Hannan Trace (35) - Mullens
"Lucy is improving in her 4-0·7=15; Thomas 4·0· 2=1 0;
shooting, but las t night she was Triplett 2- 1-0=7; Stephanie Staple·
forcing it," said Wildcat head ton 1·0·0=2; M. Sanders 0-0-1=1.
coach Ed Moore of Mullens, a 5· Totals -11-l-10=35
Field goals- 12-21 (57.1 %)
foot·5 junior who is four points
away from scoring 1,000 in her
Three-pointers- 1-3
career. Vegas has heavy odds that
Free throws- 10-!8 (55.6%)
she will reach the milestone in the
Rebounds- 2'1 (Thomas II)
fi rst two minutes of the first quarter
Assists- 8 (Mullens 4)
of Trace's next game, which is slat·
Steals- 1 (M&lt;lllens 3)
cd fo r Monday at home agai nso
Turnovers- 26
Kyger Creek.
Chesapeake (33) - Lang 4·0·
The Panthers erased the Gal - 1=9; Freeman 4-0-0=8; Butcher 1IJians' one-point lead at the end of 0-2=4; Morrison 2-0-0=4; Skeen 2the first quarter and took a one- 0-0=4 ; Smith 2-0-0=4. Totals 0 3-33
point lea d at ha If·wne. Th en thc IS .Fr·e-e
throws- 3-7
. Wildcats, 6·2 and wmncrs of thctr
last five games, began to take
charge in the second half, partly
because of Thomas' scoring, her
work on the boards and Mullens' 7. ..
.,..._
f~r- 10 effort at the foul line.

NEW LOCATION
NOW RENTING
Flrst.Mut•'i Rent

. •

Hannan ~. race edges 0peake
JS-33 for fifth straight win

·S...ORAGE UNITS

1988 CHEVYC-10
Auto., AC.

' ·

.

~eserves

~

POMEROY, OHIO
614·992·6614 OR 1·800·837·1 094
OUR TEAR·END CLEAJlANCE WAS SUCH A SUCCESS
THAT NOW WE ARE OVER STOCKED WITH USED CARS.
ALL CARS MUST GO!!

RIO GRANDE - The activities
sc hedule for Lyne Center is as fol·
lows:
Gymnasium hours
Sunday - closed fQr Scott
C.onnelley Memorial Tournament,
2p.m.
.
Monday - 5:30-7:30 p.m., col·
.lege recreation
Tuesday- closed for women's
basketball vs. Urbana
·
Wednesday - 5:30-7:30 p.m.,
college recreation
Thursday- 5:30-7:30 p.m.,
college recreation
Friday- 7-9 p.m., open recreation ·. .
Saturday' - 1-3 p.m ., open,
recreation
Sunda.y, Jan.· 12 -t-3 p.m.,
open reor.eation; ·6-8 p.m., college
Poolbours
Sunday- closed
· Moaday - closed
Tuesday ..._ closed
· Wednesday - 5:30·7:30 P:m.,
c9Jlege swim
Thursday- 5:30-7:30 p.m.,
college swlm .
.'
.
Friday- 7,9 p.m., open swun
Saturday - 1·3 p.m., open
swim
·
· Sunday, Jan. 12- '1·3 p. ~ ..
·, open swim; 6;8 p.m., college swun

EAST MEIGS • "Who is the
boys' varsity basketball coac h at
Eastern High School?"
That is th e 'q uc·stion of the
week' follo wing seven days of tur·
moil and deliberation in the Eastern
High basketball program, that
prompted the unofficial resignation
of Coach John Nkhols. That rcsig·
nation w•s prompted by solicitation
froi'n a parents' groqp from within
the ~.l!.\.[ict,rnot formally by lhc
EHS board a Education.
Last fall, Nichol s of Parkers·
burg, who previously had assisted
at Parkersburg Catholic High, was
hlred to lead the Eagles t)lis cage
s~ason.
.•
• Technically, Nichols is still the
,Ucntor, however, dtic to the prob·
l~ms resulting from discipline that
have dcvelopM throughout the SCJl·
s~n. and most recently the events
, of this past week, ·assistant coach
dreg Ullman guided the Eagles
F)'iday night at Oak Hill.
• According to Principal Charles
ll!oorc, "Greg Ullman will coach
t~e team interim until the situation
iHesolved."
·
''
• ·Monday evening, a. parents'
group, in part members of the East·
em Athletic Boosters, met for sev·
era! hours to discuss .the Eastern
. Coaching siouation.
'T'

DO
'AtE
OL.DS CADILLAC a·EO

Lyne Center slate

'

Reiber's game-high 15 points. S~
SYMMES VALLEY (50) was led by John Paul Patterson's"l Andy Lester 4-0-0=8, Eric Wall 214.
0-4=8 Chris Blake 6-0·)=13,
Because of Sou(hcm's two·Holi- Jerome Fuller 3-2-0=12, Rick Dil·
day tournament games, the
. ion 2-0-0=4, Jimmy Jenkins 1·0·
mossed two games and woll play 0"2, Travis Pierce 0·1 ·0=3.
Alexander at Wellston on Wedncs- ·TOTALS -18·3·5=50
day and· will .play at Trimble on
SOUTHER~'{ ' (67) - Mark
January 15. Th~ SHS reserves are Alle.n 2-2-0=10, Jeremy Roush 2-44-0overall and m the league.
2= 18, Michael Evans 2·0·2=6,
Southern h?sted Gallia Acade- Billy Davis 0·0-1= I, Roy Lee Bai·
my Sauuday rughL
Icy 9-0-0=18, Chad Wose 0.0·1=!,
Russell Singleton 2-0-0--4,Michael
Quarter totals
Russell 2-0·1=5, Scott Lisle 2-0· ,
Southem ............. l4 16 18 19 = 67 0=4. TOTALS- 21-6·7=67
Symmes Valley .. l2 8 15 15 = 50
·

I

~

·~

. Jli&amp;bt~ ill\ll,~ .~gJli,~st·hgstG~IO ·

rccreati'on

.

---w~b:;:;icb;:.::th;,:,eoiiTolioriiinaiiidiiioe;;,swiiioliiinli6io7·,;;;SO,;.,- - - - - - - - - ,

Christian
a four-point
deficit
after
th eshook
first quarter
of Friday

VJilfey Chmtoan wot6 an ·l8-peml ·
barrage in the second quaner and
stayed on top long enough to won
5!-48.
T. Gray and D. Harrison were
the prime investors on the
Ravenswood five 's fortunes, as
ohcy acco unted for all but four of
Heritage 's points. The Moun ·
lainccrs, ahead by two at halfume,
barely increased theor lead on the
third frame, but traded baskets with
their hosts in exchange for time in
the fourth quarter to secure the wi n.
The o f~nsc of Noah Sm1th (19
points, nine rebounds) and Dusty
Hill (17 points, seven steals and s1x
rebo unds) paced the Defenders,
who lost their fifth straight contest
and fell to 1-6.
Ohio Valley Christian will take
on Symmes Valley at Aid on Tuesday.
Quarter totals
Heritagc .... .. .... .....918 11 13 = 51
O.V. Christian .... I3 12 10 13 = 48
HERITAGE CHRISTIAN
(51) -'Gray 8-0-8=24; Harrison 72-3=23; Davisson 1-0-0=2; Hass F
0-0=2. TOTALS- 17·2~11=51
· Free throws -11·16 (68.75%)
OHIO VALLEY· (48)- Smith
5-1-6=19; Hill4-2-3=17; Back 1-0·
4=6· Beaver 3-0·0=6. TOTALS·
Free throws- 13-24 (54.2%) ·

Michael Evans, and Bailey each stretch.
.
·
added two in the stretch.
Caldwell then called ume out at
Blake countered with seven of the 5:55 mark. The strategy worked
his own for the Vikings, who and SHS was again off and runshowed as much hustle and !nthu· ning .. sparked by c.onsecutive insiasm as the hosts.
lane JUmpers by Baoley, led 40-31.
Early in the second frame both SV once got as close as seven, but
teams stalled theii scoring engines SHS never looked back, leading
as SHS bolted to a 24-18 l~a·d , 48·35 at the period's end.
.
which Slood idle for some tome.
In the fourth frame SHS conunFinalljl, SHS broke. out of the gate ued its pace and had a better shot
for a 16-8 spurt, ognued by fove selcc!lon enroute to qu1ckly push·
Mark Allen points. The score stood ing its lead to mar~ than 20. Hustle
30-20 at the half.
by the SV bench made some goals
Southern played fast aqd hard at the end to make the final67 -50.
the second half, but lost many
Southern hit 21-53 (40%) overJ&gt;
missed multiple scoring opponuni· all, hit6 of 19 three pointers, and
ties under the bucket. Valley's hit7·15 free throws. All Tom;odocs
intensity coupled with that fact saw action and nine broke into the
madeforaclosethirdframc.
scoring column. SV hit 19-51 for
Following a Roush drive (3~- 37 %, hit 3-1 0 treys and 5-tQ,at the
20) Jerome Fuller drilled a trey (or line.
a 32-23 score, then Bailey made it
SHS won the battle of the
34:23. Wall then had two straight boards 50-31, led by Singleton,
droves from the wmg to the base- Baolcy and Losle.
hne fora34-27 tally.
SHS had seven steals, 16
Singleton hit a follow up jumper turnovers •. six assists and 17 fouls.
on the rebound, but Lester and SV had fove steals, 15 turnovers,
Rick Dillon countered with a base- three assists and 15 fouls.
line drive and 15-foot elbow shot to
Scott Wickline's young Whirlpull SV within five at 36·3l . SV · winds claimed a 52-41 decision in
had outscored SHS 11-4 10 the
~obert
. · the..,. reserve
. ., . ..game; led.by
. . .

·Parents·force· 'unofficial'
resignation of Eastern coach

$6812:.

Let's start out 1992 with a SALES BANG
-We are Ready to Deal- We appr~iate
your business•
Thanks
to All!
.
.

t DITFIELDJEu.n STOVES .
~

1

111i1i1g yaur ..... 1o 0!11 Now !WIItiOiution Y""
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814-4!8-7400

7o1 SECOND AVENUE
. GAUIPOUS, OH!O 45631
,•

.
1616 EASTERN AVENUE ·
GAlLIPOLIS, OH.
(614) 446·3672
.

.

�-'

.

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1992

OH-Polnt ·Pleasant,_WV

•

USDA CHOICE BEEF CHUCK

'GROUND

U.S. GOVT.INSPECTED

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PIZZA

Section.D!
-

•

•'

1 ,.,

tl[

•

January 5, 1992 :

Adams, Harrison counties '!.. ·
·haye highest jobless rate ~:

SLICED FREE

-SHUR FRESH

G&amp;W

•

LB.

SLICED FREE

PEPPERONI, COMBINATION
~
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-

TEN THOUSAND truckloads of sand and
,dirt have been used for this multi -layer cover at
one of four sites the U.S. Department of Energy
is cleaning up at the Portsmouth Gaseous DiffuSion Plant. Part of this assignment is to completely enclose a former low-level radioactive
waste landfill and stop groundwater contamina-

tion. The cover , designed in accordance with
·-- Environmental Protection Agency guidelines
and the Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act, began on Nov. 30, 1990 as part of the overall environmental restoration program at the
plant.

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP)Ad ams and Harrison caamties
November unemployment rate of ·
11.4 percent was the highest in the
state for the month, the Ohio
Burea u.of Employlllent Services
said.
Franklin and G_eauga ·County
had the lowest jobless rate for the ·
month.~ t 3.7 percent, bureau figures showed Friday.
Among cities with populations
. of more thaQ 50,000, Mansfield
had the hi.ghest jobless rate in
November, 8.4 percent, while Ket&gt;
tering had the lowest at 2.6 percent.
The county and city rat~s are
unadjusted, meaning they do not
take into account seasonal adjustments in employment.
The statewide unadjusted-rate
· for No.vembcr I\' aS 5.3 percent,
compared with a U.S. rate of 6.6
. percent. The adjusted rate for Ohio
was 5.6 percent and 6.8 percent for
the nation.

..., \Mrwno~

State and national unemployment figures for December are to
be rele,ased next week.
The county ra~es :
Adams, 11.4; Allen; 6.2; Ashian~, 5.4; Ashtabula, 8'.4; Atllens,
5.5; Auglai~e . 6.0; Belmont, 6.0;
Brown, 7.9; Butler, 5.7; Carro11,
6.3; Champaign, 5.4; Clark,•4 :9;
Clermont, 5.4; Clinton, 4.8;
Columbiana: 6.0.
. Cosfiocton,-5.2; Crawford, 8.4;
Cuyahoga, 4.8; Darke, 5.6; Defiance, 6.0; Delaware, 4.0; Erie, 5.4;
Fairfield, 5.4; Fayette, 6. 7;
Franklin, 3.7; Fulton , 6.5; Gallia,
7.7; Oeauga: 3.7;_ Gree,l)e.' 4.5;
Guernsey, 9.5, Harmlton, 4.0, Hancock, 4.7; Hardin, 8.1; Harrison,
11.4; Henry, 6.3.
Highlimd, 7.6; Hocking 9.W
Holmes, (1; Huron, 7.8; Jackson.
6.8; Jefferson, 7.0, Knox, 5.6;·
Lake, 5.3; Lawrence, 6.2; Licking,
5.0; Logan, 5.7; Lor'ain, 6.9; Lucas
6.3; Madison, 4.6; Mahoning, 5.7;
Marion, 7.2; Medina, 5.0; Meigs,

•

8.8; Mercer, 5.9; Miami, 5.2; Mon- •.
roe. ILl; Montgomery, 4.7.
!:
Morgan, 7.6; Morrow, 9.0; 'Muskingum , 6.5.; Nobl e, 6.5; ' ~­
Ottawa, 7.4; Paulding, 6.2; Perry, ;
9.2; Pickaway, 4.8; Pike, 10.5; •
Portage,_4.9; Preble, 5.4; Putnam. ~ ·
6.5; Richland, 7.3; Ross, 7.0; Sandusky, 7.7; Scioto, 9.3; Seneca,
7.8; Shelby, 6.4; Stark, 5.8; Sum- •
mit, 5.0; Trumbull, 6.7.
· ·· ·'
Tu scarawas, 6.3; Union, 4.4;
Van Wert, 5.4; Vinton, 9.7; Warren, ·4.5 i WashingLOn, 5.5; Wayne,
4.9; Williams, 6.5; Wood, 5.2;
Wyandot, 6A.
· ·
,
The rates for cities of more than •
50,000:
~
-HamiltOn, 6.7; Spri_ngfield, 5.6; :
Cleveland, 7.5; Clevelapd Heights, •
3.2; Euclid, 3.4; Lakewood,- 3.2; :
Parma, 3.6; Columbus, 4.3; Cincin- ;
nati , 5.3; Elyria, 7.6;' Lorain, 6.0; 1
Toledo, 6.9; Youngs to-wn , 7.8 ; '
Dayton, 7.2; Kettering, 2.6; Mans- 1
field, 8.4; Canton, 8.0; Akron, 6.4;
Warren , 8.1. ·
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Construction of low-level landfill cap
nearing completion at energy facility

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GALLON

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PER LB.

AD GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY, JAN. II, 1992

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Quality you can be sure of,
Values you can trust.
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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
&amp; Pearl Street • 992·3471

PIKETON - After more than
10,000 lruckloads of.sand. and din,
work is nearing camp1et10n to cap .
the northern half of a low- level
r••d,·oactl·ve waste Jandf,-11 at the
U.S. .Departmen t of Energy' s
Portsm.ou th Gaseo us Diffusion
Plant ncar here. Construction of a
multi-layer cover designed.to climinate infiltration of surface water
and resirict ground water flow
beneath the buri ed waste site is
e •~pec ted to be completed by the
end Of December'
The 7-112 acre disposal facility is
. ted at the sou•'em
edge of tile
lqca
u•
-nce
the
late
1950s,
•'e
site
SI
Plantu•
w'as used for storage and disposal
of solid wastes contaminated with
Iow-Ieve I ra d-Iat.IOn and scraP mate ·
rillls, including roofing materials,
concrete, insulation and other nonburnable items. These wastes .were
P.I.aced in ·metal drums .and buried -·
h
d ·h
111 trcnc es covere Wit a com~c~~c~1~i ~~~~ies indi cated th e
c~istence of contamination in the
groundwater beneath the disposal
si'ie .. Primary contaminants were
l(ichloroethylene (TCE) and

' GALLIPOLIS - James M. Craft,

SHUR FINE

VEGETABLES
Corn, Peas,
Green Beans

MR. BEE "PARft PACK''

CALIFORNIA

PO'A,_O
C.BIPS

FRESH WHITE

14 oz.
BAG

18 oz.
CDS

ALL VARIETIES

COCA•

2Liftlco

WI!H !HI REI~IL OF
I) NEW RILIIIIIIO.JI
OR·EQUIPMIIf, II OUR-

11810

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II 01.
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DIPU,MIN'
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CAULIFLOWER

PER
BEAD

EW
YELLOW

gnl~l~ls~: ~:;'~~itially graded and

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a solid foundation bUill rom sot1
take n from another area of the
·sttn~"'·
· _, a
Plant. A vent layer const
1e rna al
combination of geotextt
.
and ventilation p1pes )VUS p1aced on
top of the borrow soil to dissipate
f
h
any buildup of gases rom t e
buned wastes. Two feet of low-pe~meable clay and a 40-mll syntheuc
hne.r were added to prevent any
moisture (ro.m entenng the clay
bel · • MSre'lll'an. - ~-00;r 5f"fi10~ow. or
one
.
sand and a second ~eotexule layer

%eili'r:~~~t~~~~~~~~~;:x:::~:Isy

45-foot-deep slurry wall constructed of clay of very low permeability
was also installed to deflect the prisource of groundwater from

of 6372 South State Route 7, Gallipolis, retired JanQary 2 from Ohio
P¢wer Co. as a transmission line
crew supervisor. He had 45 years
of seryice.
• The Gallipolis native joined tile
cQmpany as a transmission hel~r­
j(. immediately after graduaung
from Gallia Academy High School.
CA-aft advanced to transmi ssion
helper-sr. in 1948. transmission
ntan-2C in 1949, transmission
man-IC in 1951, working foreman
irt 1970 and transmission line crew
sapervisor in 1971.
~ In retirement, Craft plans to
cpncentrate on ~is horucultural
interests, gardenmg wtth flowers,
hbrbs and vegetables, as well as
lawn care and tending shrubs and
...
~s.
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1 · 1d
i ~ther retiremen~ P a~s mc ~ e
d~g some traveling, mcludt~g
v-~t~iting his children and grandchlld(en, and spending more time on
the golf course.
: Craft is a member of Christ
9'itld Meihodist Church, Galli(JO"
liEwhere he is a trustee and past
s day school superintendent. He
a 0 tends to the church's land- .
be h'
d 0 h
s . .pe nee s. t e( mem rs .1PS
i¢lude several M)somc organl1.3-

lions and the Ohio Power Veteran
Employees Association.
He and his wife, Laura, have a
son, Jim of Circleville; three
daughters, Ann Butler of Crown
City, Cindy Gilmore of Sheridan,
Ark. and Linda Tetrick of Pleasant
Hill, Calif. They have six grandchil&lt;ken and- two great-grandchildren

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corros1oa 10 e p aut s coo mg water system.
.Tbu:broliiiUDI bas been replaced by a more
eovli'oomeatally acceptable phosphate· based
corrosion. inhibitor.
.

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E0 VI•ron men taI reS t0 ra t1•0 n ·
proiect
nears
completion
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PIKETON - A significant phase
of environmental reeovery has been .
achieved at the U. S. Department of
Energy's Portsmouth Gaseous Dif·
fusion Plant in Pike County. ·
Chromium ·sludge ha s been
removed from two containment
lagoons, detoxified and placed in
special area, or monocells, of the
plant's sanitary landfJ!l.
Following excavation, the open
lagoon sites were filled witll dirt,
covered with topsoil and seeded.
Closure of the landfill monocells
will be completed this spring.
In the past, water containing
hexavalent chromium, a component
of tile chemical formerly used to

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inhibit corrosion in tht&gt; plant's process cooling water system, was
lreated and· then discharged to the
open surface lagoons, where the
sludge was formed. The chemical
has now been replaced with a more
environmentally acceptable pho1phate-based corrosion inhibitor.
The lagoons were one of four
sites at the plant identified for clo·

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sure under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, ·a federal
law which governs handling of
hazardous waste. Agreement to
close and restore the lagoon sites
also was part of a Joint Consent
Decree signed by the Energy
Deparunent and tile State of Ohio
in August r, 1989.
Continued on 0·2

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Bf JeffWetherholt,
DIStrict Technician,
GaUia SWCD

·JAMES M ·.CRAFT
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incl~ all Ohio Bell seroce areas
east of Zane§ville witllin the 614
area code.
•
A native of Springfield, Ohio,
J!leln joined Ohio Bell in his home·
town in 1947 as 'ln ·installation
craflsmatt. lfe had $I)CIIt fo\lf Yeli!'S
oil active dutl as a pilot during
World War I and"was to serve
try to customen, civic groups, gov· another 17 years in the Air Force
crnment officials and the new s Reserve.
. ,
ml:dia since 1961.
•
Dean' s career .brought him
•"Dave Dean has had a lang-and experience in many tlepanmenta or
tinguisbed career with Ohio Ohio Bell, lncludillf the network,
u,• said J'homas L. J!Uiou, Jr., marketing anll customer 5ervlccs
· Bell vice president of corpp- aieas; before he,ioine4 the corpocommunications . ."For many ·. rare COtllmitnij:adons olianizauon
ycprs bel has lldmilably ~nled in 1982. He 'transferred from
the company and has served well Sllfinificld to DaytoDin 1953, and
communities and CU$tomen in rrom ihere to Ironton in 1961.
lelritory."
Dean lives in St. Clairsville,
Based in Bridgeport-since 1978; where' his retilement ,{)laos incl\lde
OWl travel! a territory that runs pursuing a variety of crvie intereStS.
ff9tn Ironton to Steubenville and
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' BRIDGEPORT - Dave Dean,
. Bell spOkesman for this area
m'"y yean, broulbtbis 44-year ~
with the telepli()lle company ·
a:C!Ii~i~r,~lll ho-leliled Dec. 30. ·
and

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greater than 35 percent for farmers
with crop.insurance and more than
40 percent for other fanners.
The application period foo tbc
Commod ity Credit Corp.' s crop
disaster program will run from Feb.
3 through March 13, officials said.
"Producers intending to file
should begi n to assemble their
records now, so they will be ready
when the official application period
opens in February," Madigan said
in a statement.
Congress has approved $995
million in payments for producers
who had crop losses due to natural
di sasters in either 1990 or 1991.

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.No-Till meeting slated Jan. 16

d'zng 44
b. ave Dean reti•res,
en
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earS Service Wlt• h Ohl0
·B el/.
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emw
erinthg thhe area. f
f
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t
IS
type
o
cover,
sur
ace
water penetrates through the geotextile and sand layers, flows along
the synthetic liner to the outside of
h
d- d - d f
th
t e cap, an IS rame rom e
structure.
.
Water within or surrounding tile
site is being pumped to a treatment
facility where the contaminants arc .
being removed.
The final layer consists of at
least two feet of soil to support a
· cover. Th e area w1'II th en
veAetauve
be
ded d 1 bed
see
mu
to prevent
eros10n.
- Man
th anc 85 percen
- t of
ore
h
·
ha bee
t 1e ed
vegetauve cover s
n eomP et ·
J · J- Estes and Associates of
Columb us is the construction contractor fo r the project, be'!ilg complcted by Martin Marietta Energy
,
.
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Systems, Inc. which manages the
(• ,.,....,.R). A' ......y "eld 0 .... stands where
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tal
1 t f o ·the.DOE
-Pan
- -.-·--- ·-·-.- -...,... llliiomlum-ladeo s1uup.._OIIce • """ "' coo D·
·
ment lagoons at the U.S: Department or Eoer·
Time for paperwork
gy's Portsmouth Gaseous Ditrusioo Plant. In the
WASHINGTON (AP~ -Farmpast, hexavalent chromi~m was used to inhibit
crs should be_gmpreparmg paperwork on apphcaltons for crop-loss
payments under the federal 199091 agncultur~J d1saster relief pro-

Craft retires
fr;;:n
Ohio
~~~:~G!~?£Ei1;r:vec:r:
~
a::
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th
45
•
Jess than $2 m1lhon per year may
ower
WI
years
serVICe
n1e claims for losses fo r various
P .
·
crops. The losses must have been
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trichloroethane (TCA), degreasing
have
solvents. Th cse contammants
not gone offsite.
Construction of the cover,
-th E .
designed in accordance W.'
nv1ronm ental Protec tion Age ncy
guidelines and the Reso urce Conservation and Recovery Act, began
on November 30, 1990, as part of
the environmentai restoration pro-

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GALLIPOLIS - The annual NoTill meeting will be held on Thursday, January 16, at 7 p.m . The
meeting will be held at Buckeyy
Hills Career Center in the Corral,
th _, ·
· next to e cwetena. ..,. ·· ---·"·
Spbkers will be Dayid Brandt,
district technician from Fairfield
SWCD, who willtalk on No-Till,
cover crops and their. value in the
total crop rotation.
Local farmer Jim Rose will
speak on his experience witll double crop wheat and soybeans. _Ed

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Vollbom, Ag A!;.ent-OCES, will be
on hand to answer technical questions.
Jeff Wetherholt and Patty Dy\lf
Gallia SWCD will be on hand tll
answer questions on No-Till equipmentand currentfarmplanrcquirements.
The meeting is open to the genf h
·11 be
era! public. Re res ments w1
served:- '

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GARLAND PLYMALE

Attends WOTIIS
,r. h
_ on
Y

",.

PAUL WARD

Plymale, Ward retire
from Gavin Plant

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GALLIPOLIS- Sharon Moles,
job placement/public relations omcer at Southeastern Business College, attended a job placement
GALLIPOLIS • Garland I.
Paul R. Ward, of 511 Debbie
••
workshop sponsored by tile Ohio "Chic" Ply_mal~ . of 696 Debbi~. Dr., Gallipolis, retired Januil:ry·2 as
Council of Private Colleges and Dnve, Galhpohs, Janu~ 2 eon- a shift operating engineer at Ohio
Schools in Columbus on Nov. 22.'
eluded a 37•year career -,v1th Oh10 Power Co.'s Gavin Plant. He had
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Mike Kempert,job placement Po_wcr Co.. , retiring as a shift oper-. 38 years of service:
GALLIPOLIS - Th~re will be a director of Hickock T_llchnical aung engmcer at G~vm PlanL
.
Ward began his career in 1953
multiflmil rose CONrolll'liniAg ses- · Institute, dffeted infonnation about
He began his cateer 'lis' 4 blir~e at Muskingum River Plant as an
si~ Japm· (i, at 6:30 p.m. at the thp student's role in the placement attendant at Kyger Creek Pl~~t m auxiliary equipme~t .operator.
G liaS CD office .located at29 process. and presented a sample of 195_5 and advanced to auXIliary was promoted to assistant control
Jackson Pike, Room 308C.
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the. packet of information he fur- equ1pment opcratolillater m 1955 operator and then unit fgreman in
~for the pro~ will be nishes the students.
· and then held sev.al opcrauon 1957. Ward advanced to assistant
Ed .ollbom, Ag_AgenlOh!o CoopGroup discussion and idea shar- classifications before becoming engineer in 1970 and transferred to
era.uve. Extension Servtce. ~Is ing-among the placement officers. unit supervisof&gt;in. 1966. ~lymale ~vin Plant in 1972 as shift opemlflP'C will be !he uses and applica- started a networking· association to transferred to GaVIII ~t m 19?3- ing engineer. .
tlODS of clieniicali .!hat can be used continue the cooperation slariCd in and w~ prom~ to ~~Jant shift .
In retirement, golf figures
for control !If M~tiflom R~..
the session. A v.olunteer offered tor o~craung engme.er m. 1979 and prominently in Ward •5 plans. He
' ~~~will~
Ridlncdle · gather infonnation and publish a sh1ft operating engmCCI".:Jn 1988, · also hopes to enjoy some travel til
0
: fliCiiOIS an
en, · . newsletter to update the associaPlymal\I'S ~teresta mcl~de g~lf. visit family members and to coolinwho '!"ill dlscu~s .land clearing tion. ·
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· !J'IIVCI .and fishmg .. He al~ .'s acuve ue writing a family history. ; ,
~1 • He Will show 8 cle!"00• . All those in attendance felt the 10 several Mason1c organ!zat1ons,
He and his wif~. Jercsa, have
SlllliJOn tape of cleanng multiflora workshop will, help to improve lhe the Elks Lodge and the-&lt;;J~1o.Power two daughters, Shirlene of
rose, brush anchmall ~·
.
pla~ement services offered by · Veteran Emp_loy~ Assoc!Uuon. . Evanston, 111. Blld Rhonda of KctThose interested m learnm~ ·Ohio's private schools and col•
He ~nd h1s wtfe; Clar1ce, have tering, and tw.o sons, Paul 11 of
more abou' '!laltiflora rose contro . leges. ·
·
LWO children, .Shari Bergdoll and Massillon and Brian at home
or. land cleating are encouraged to
·For more information, call 446- RichardJ botll of th~ Qpllipolis There are five grandcbildre~,
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4367.
arca,anatwograndchll(!ren. _
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Training SeSSiOn
SCheduled Monday'

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January 5, 1992

January 5, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Old year ends
on a h~gh note
By JAMES M. KENNEDY
AP Business Editor
NEW YORK - Yes, you can
take heart in the stock market's
recent upsw ing. But no, don't
expect a qutck fix in the economy
Jesson of 1992's fir st business
days.
The old year ended on a high
note Tuesday with a record close in
the Dow Jones ind ustrial average
and hopes for an economic rebound
powered by lower interest rate s.
• But by the tim e th,lr nati on
returned to work on Thur~day, the
b~d news was making a comeback.
Manufacturers repo rted a big
slowdown m Dece mber, and maJor
reta il ers~ with few exccpuonstallied lackluster numbers for the
last weeks of the holiday season.
Separately, the government sa id
construcuon spending showed a
decline 10 November after four
conscc uti•c monthly increases.
On the posiuve side,- factory
orders for November were up and
productivity advanced in the thml
(BEFORE) ConJainment lagoons that once held hexavalent
Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant. The chromium, used to
quarter.
but the gains were slight.
chromium sludge were one of four areas requiring environmental
inhibit corrosion in the plant cooling water system, was replaced
The
optimists
would say not to
restoration identified by the U.S. Department or Energy at the
by a more environmentally acceptable phosphate-based corrosion
worry,
since
most
of the bad news
inhibitor.
t.hat hll the papers after New Year' s
was old. The numbers on manufacturing, rctatl sales and construction
all looked back at past months.
The stock market, by contrast.
looks ahead, and it was still cltmb·
mg 10 the new yw.
The dcvc lopmems of early 1992
were nonetheless sobering.
A surv ey fr om th e American
Business Conference found a group
WAS HINGTON (AP)- Old of exec utives re prese nting fa stnews papers may have a higher grow ing, mid-s ized compa ni es
worth than as wrappmgs for dead more pessimistiC th an th ey were
fish. A government scienti st says three months ago.
A measure of cons umer con fi :
they also can be usce to turn hardpacked din imo crumbly, nutr iem- dence released earlter m the week
showed no improvement in Decemnc h SOil .
James H. Edwards, a soil scien- ber from past months.
Campaigning Abroad for Jobs
tist with the Departmen t of AgnIn the meanu me, the president
culture' s Agricultu ra l Research
was
pursuing his clcctio n -yc~r
Service in Auburn, Ala., reports
that by com bimn g newspaper and
other mgredicms he is growing cotton, corn and soybeans in soil thai
previously had been so hard that 11
could be compared to sandstone.
"A fingernail can' t penet rate
it," Edwards said.
WASHINGTON (AP) - An
But Edwards said he has prevailed over the hard land by using Agriculture Departm en t plant
shredded back copies of the Opcli- geneticist says a long- unappreciated forage crop called birdsfool trc·
ka-~ ubum New~ combined with
f01l may become more popular in
chicken litter mixed with soil.
When cotton plants arc grown m the United States if he can equip it
the mix, roms reach four feet deep, wllh a trait common to iiS MorocRoberts sa id, Instead of the six can "cousm."
CHROMIUM sludge was completfly
in these speciaUy-built monocelli located ·at the
Paul R. Beuselin ck sai d he
inches
co mmon in the Southeast.
:removed from two containment po9ds at the
plant's sanitary landr.JI. Completion qf this pro·
found
rhizomes, or underg round
The
roots
aren't
stopped
by
the
:U.S. Department or Energy's P!)'rtsmouth
ject marks a significant phase in environmental
runners,
on wild birdsfoot trcfoiltn
hardpan
common
to
the
region,
he
recovery at the plant.
-Gaseous Diffusion Plant, detoxified, and placed
Morocco
that allow th e plant to
said .
prolifer.ate so much that it is not
continued from o-1
.
• •• _..:::.::.:::==-.:.:.:.::.:...::....:.___
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wi ped ou t by root dtseases that
damage trefoll'm this country.
:The site' s Environm ental Decree at the plant on behalf of the contained m tile two lagoons a~id
lleusclinck wants to move the
Restoration Program is designed to State, approved the plans for clos- the placement of the detoxified
rhizomes genetically into American
nrid, analyze and correct contam•- ing the contaminated lagoons and material in the landfill monocell
varieties, which look like a fine n:jJion proble ms at th e plant as placi ng the materi al in the pl ant areas.
stemmed alfalfa with yellow nowThe landfill area's were then
effectively and quickly as possible. landftll.
The
closure
project
began
in
covered
with vinyl sheciS followed
Before being implemented, plans
by
layers
of sand, gravel and then
December
1989'
when
DOE
awardfor all investigative and restoration
topsoil.
Seeding
will be done when
ed
a
contract
to
Waste
Abatement
activities meet both fed eral and
.
weather
permiiS
in
the spring. MarTcchnology,
Marietta,
Georgta,
for
stale guidelines and approval.
the
removal,
dewatcnng
and
detoxtin Marietta Energy Systems, Inc.,
·The Ohio Environmental Promanages the Portsmouth plant.
~tion Agency, which oversees the Ifying of the approximately three
administration of the Co nse nt million gallons of chromium sludge

Don't throw
those old
papers away

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Farm Flashes

cwpaign for a better economy by
doing what he does best - traveling abroad.
He laun~hcd a maJOr trade missio n across the Pacific centered
around a vtstt to Japan with 21
Ameiican bu siness leaders. The
trip was postponed late last year
when the president decided to stay
home and fend off critiCISm of -'his
handlmg of domcsuc matters.
Hoping for a fresh start m 1992,
he rescheduled, but his Japanese
gues ts weren't thrilled by the
prospec t of entertaining Bush's
travel ing band of CEOs , wh ich
mcluded the top executives of the
Big Three U.S. automakers.
The goal of the vtsllthis coming
week was to open Japan to more
U.S. products, but crit iCS said Bush
handicapped the effort by inviting
th e auto rn akcrs, whose prod ucts
have liul e chance of attracung
Japancsc mtercs t.
Russia Frees Prices
Economtc shock th era py was .
bc tn g empl oyed in Ru ss ia an·ct
other republi cs of the former Soviet
Un10n.
President Bons Yehsm !a llowed
through on his plan for a sweepmg
liberal izmion of the consum er market m Russia, inc luding big price
increases for baste foodstuffs and
Ot her neCCSSltles. The mini mum
wage a1so was rmscd, but the Russian people we re ca ut iO ned to
ex pec t several mon th s of ha rd
limes.
The plan was dcstgncd to repair
the republics' broken cconom tcs by
cxpos1ng th em to the forces of supply and demand , but in the fJr st
days , su ppli es of goods remamed
scarce.
In the United _States, shoppers
felt a mild twmge fr om th e
upheaval. Bread prices were on th e
ri se partly because mcrcascd gratn
sales to the Soviets reduced supplies in this counl!y.

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MYSTERY FARM ·This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to par!icipate
in the weekly contest may dQ so by guessing the
farm 's owner. Just mail, or drop off your guess.
off to the Daily Sentinel,lll Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, and you may

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·WASHINGTONjAP) - Th e
pi.ices farmers rece ive for raw
prod ucts dec lined 0.7 percent in
Dece mber from the previous month
and were 3.5 percent less th an a
yc.ar ago, th e Agriculture Depart·
ment reports.
:Lower prices for lettuce, cattle
and tomatoes were partially offset
by higher prtces for eggs. wheat
and hogs. the department said'M
Friday.
The department's mon thl y price
report noted that because lettuce
and tomatoes were in ample su pply , prices received for them
dropped sharply.
.
-Increases in beef production in
the final quarter of the year drove
cattle pnces down, the department
said. But It said hog prices
increased ~ ightly following the
sliarp price break from October to
November.
·The department reported grain
prices as mixed with wheat show·
mR strong month-to-month increases· corn up slightly and sqybeans
d~wn from November.
~Crop prices eoUectively dropped
2.4 percent from November but
reinained the same as a year ago.
·Vegetable prices decli.ned 23
percent from November and were
17 percent lower than at this time
laSt year, the department said. ·
:Foodgrain prices increased 5.2
pqtent in December, the. fifLh.con·
sci:utive monthly rise. Whea t
i~ 21 c~nts over November
to-$3.46 a bushel. The average
prlte received for rough rice
de~:lined 20 cerits per hundred·
wiight to $7 .56. The .depart'" eDt
n!Jed, however, that this remains
the highest December price since
19!7.
.
.
·The cotton index declined 6.9
JICi'ccntJrom l"'ovcmbcr. The aver·
a" price per pound was 57.1 cents,
dawn '4.1 cents from November,
thalowestlevci since March 1989.-

'

Public Notice

.•

l

ers.
"If successful, I expect acreage
of this perennial crop to double m
size and help pastures that arc now
planted onl y to grass or arc unim proved." said Beuselinck, who
work~ for USDA' s Agricultural
Research Service in Columbta, Mo.
Trefoil tolerates poor so1 l conditions and ab use from graZing ammats much better than alfalfa, the
leading forage fed to dwy cows.
he satd. It also is palatable to ani mals, nutritious and docs not cause
bloat that grazt ng ani'mals occa·
sionally ge t from eat in g other
legumes.
But its popularity as a forage
crop has been twmpercd by tiS susce ptibility to root di seases, .
Bcusclinck said.

resullanl contract will be In

'

.'

.

I _,

..,.,

'

.

.!...- ... .,......,,;.,....,"""', fC'

~

_._.. ~oo..:,...._

r:r
_.-,.
. "''""'"""""--""'"""""".Y~
.........- - .....-.-"'*-'
.!
~,!

I

"·'-"

approxlmately6(slx)montho 4
Giveaway
(untlt June 30, 1992). At the ..;__....:;:.;.;.;:.:.:~:_-­
conclusion ol each year the

1

i·

T'

•

Nol Chance. WrTtt: Slngltl, P.O.
Box Ul43, Gallipolis, Ohlo 45631

eJdstence for a time period of

I

•

r•sponsl ble tor any debts but
~
m"y "ow
:._n:._.- -- - - -

velopmenlaldlsabllltlea. The Moll Aroo Slnglla 8y Cholco

F • d•
air lfeCtOf
fireS SpOkesman

l'

based on the rees.onable and

for lndivlduale who have
mental retardation and/or de-

Jack Pyles
retires from
Gavin Plant

, .1

Help Wanted
'POSTAL JOBS'
YOUR AREA

Per Year Plus Benellls,
proJected noodo ol the lndl· $23,700
Postal Carri•rs, Sor1erl, Clerks.
vldualo
being
oerved,
11
well
The Gallla County Board
For An Application And Exam,
of Mental Retardation and as tho quality ol oorvlceo lnlormallon Call 1·219·736-9807
Developmental Dloabltltleo to being provided (Ohlo Re- E1t. P-6432 9 a~ To 9 p.m., 7
Days .
accepting proposals lrom vised Codo 5126 . 44) .
The aucceaalul&gt; appllcanl AVON • All areu, C1U Marilyn
lndlvlduala or agencleo for
the coordination, manage· will be expected to cooper· Weaver 304-882·2645.
ment, and pr!_vlslon of Iden - ala Iii' ill' applicable policies
Local Dental OHk:t Sttklng
tified aupporlild living oerv· and procedurn.
Full-Time Mygenlal, Part·Time
All contractuatoervlceo will May Bt Arrangtd. Send Resume
Ices tor Individuals presented herein. Seated pro· be tunded through appro·' To: CLA 104, CIO Gallipolis Dolly
pooats wlll be received at the prlallono made by ODMRIDD Tribunt, 82:. Third Avanu., Gal·
Board Office, Guiding Hand to theGalllaCounty Board of llpollo, OH 41631.
School, Cheshire, Ohio unlit MRIDD.
Aclivhy Director, are you 1
A Pre-Propooal Confer· warm compassionata ptrson
1:00 p.m. Eaatern Standard
Time fEST) on January 15, enc:e wlll be conducted on willing to work with and for
of Cart Haven ot
1992. Opening of blda will January 8, 1992, at9:30 o.m. r11ldent1
Poln1 Pltaum, lnttrtlted and
at
the
Board
Otflceo,
Guld·
follow Immediately.
outgoing 10 coordlnat1 Klndlvlduelo needing oerv· tng Hand School, Cheshire, tlvl1l•• pragnm . Certitled
Ices for lhla proposal will re- Ohio 45620 ln ordor to ettow andlor axperlenca dnlred. Send
resume to Quy Stephens, R1. 1
quire varying range of op- Interested partlea In oppor· Box
Point Pleasant, WV
tions and wlll poooeoo 1 wide tunlty to roloe queotlono, 25550326,
by Jan. 10.
range ol abllllln •• conclarity laeuea, •nd dlacu11
ADVANCED COMMISSIONS ·
tained within their Individual concern&amp;.
Paid Wttklyl Earn Up To $1001(
service profiles. Theoe proFirst Ytar. Call 1·800·129·6659
flies are available io polen· Doocember 15, 22, 29, 1991 TOOAY!
tlal applicants for purposes ,January 5, 1992
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
of review during the Pre-Pro·
FOOO SERVICE
posal Conference.
Progrt..lvt 269 Bed JCAH Ac·
Announcements
The approved appllcanl
credlttd, Acute C1r1 Hospital
wlll provldedellnedeorvlcu I, Norman ltlo~nor, om not Sttklna A~g lsltrtd Dlttlcl•n

pensive computer recordin g sysGallia Extension
tern, this class may give you, the
Agent, Agriculture
answer.
GALLIPOLIS • Parents of Gal·Wh~n the Burley Tobacco marThe ind e~ for feed grai n and hay
-,Soybeans were $5, 39 per
lipolis City School District students · ket went on break starting Decemwas up 0.9 percent over November. bushel, compa~ed with $5.48 in
are invited to attend a meeting on ber 19, it was estimated that 73 perCom, at $2.33 a bushel, was up 3 November and $5.72 in December
Wednesday , January 8, 1992, 7 cent of th e 1991 production had
cents from November. Sorghum, at 1990.
p.m., at the New Life Lutheran been sold. Gross sales for the week
$4.1 1 per hundredweig ht, moved
-Upland cotton was reponed at
Churth.
ending December 19 was averaged ,.
JACK PYLES
16 ccniS higher. Barley declined 2 57 .I cents per pound, down from
Purpose of the meeting is to $179.04 per hundred. Season aver·cents to S2.1 7 per bushel. The all 61.2 cents in November. A year
discuss enrollment in Vocational age price stands at $180.49 per
hay price declined 70 ccniS per ton earlier, cotton was 67. I cents per
Agricult.~tre and F:F.A . for the hundred. Over three-fourths of _the
to $68.40.
pound.
1992-93 School year. Involvement grade average were lower dunng
The prices fo r livestock and
- Broilers were 29 cents per
by parents of Junior High and High . the_last week of_sales. Losses were
livestock products remained the ~ live weight, compared with
School students is needed at this mamly $1t~ $2'" most cases, w•th
same from a month earlier but were 29 .6 ceniS in November and 28.8
time. F.F.A. alumni and potential the exceptiOn of m1xed grades
6.1 percent below the price level cents ·a year earlier.
Vo. Ag. Boosters are also encour- whtch decreased generally $2 to $5 •
for December 1990.
aged to attend. The meeting is per hundred..
. .
The poultry and egg index
GALLIPOLIS FERRY - JackL. being sponsored by the Gallipoli~
Just a httle over 5 mtllton
inc reased 5 percent from a month
Pyles, Box 487, 25515 Plymale F.F.A. Alumni Association.
pound~ have gone to the Burley l .
earlier and was 1.6 percent. higher
•
Road....Gallipolis Ferry, w.Va.,
The Gallia County CatUemen's Coopetallve (Pool) so far lhts year. :
than December 1990. Market eggs
retired January 2 from Ohio Power Association and the Gallia County Sal~s are scheduled to resume Jan- ,
were up 8.9 cents from the pre vi·
Co.'s Gavin Plant.
Extension Service invite everyone uary 6 at most loc ~uons. me top
ous month, averaging 63.9 cents a
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _
The Mllson County (W .Va.) to take .part in the 1992 Winter five sale average price loca!ions
dozen . Turk eys average d 40.9 · The general lllanager of the Ohio native worked at the plant as a con- Meeting Series. All sessions will are: Madison, Indiana; Ripley ,
cents, up 0.9 cents a pound fioni S
F · ·d h f ' ·
f h
tract secur. ity 'uard durln~,f.lant start at 7 p.m. in the Columbus . Ohio; Leb(lflon, Kentucky; CarrollNovember. The department said
tate 8 " sa• 1 e mng o t e
was
pan
of
his
construction,
rom 1971 · • He Southern Power Meeting Room, ton, Kentucky; and Springfield ,
fair's
spokesman
these increases more than o ffset a decision 10 go in a different dircc- joined the plant in 1974 as an opcr- 990 Second Avenue, Gallipolis. Kentucky.
decline in broiler prices of 0.6 lion in promotions and public rela· adon man-B. and was promoted to Mark your calendar for the follow·
A recent report from the Oak ,
cents a pound to 29 cents.
· tions.
operation man-A in 1975, mainte- ing dates: Janwiry 13; Febllijlry 3; Ridge National Laboratory in Ten- ;
Meat animals were down 1.2
General manager Billy Inmon nance mechanic-Din 1978, mainle· february 10; and March 9. me ftrSt nessee shows a positive energy :
cents from November and wer~ met with Shane Jenkins Thursday, nan'i9 mechanic-C later in 1978 session bn Monday, January 13, evaluation for "Ethanol". me study
14 . 1 cents below a year ago'. Jenkins' last day on the job. Inmon and maintenance mechanic-B in will feature Francis Fluhany, nutri- shows that ethanol generates at
Declines were reported for cattle was selected last month to succeed 1979.
lion researcher at O.A.R .D.C. in least a fifth more energy than is
but hog prices were reported up.
Jack Foust, who resigned .as fair · In the 1960s, Pyles served as a Wooster. His talk "Nutritional required to produce it. m e study
The report said:
manager June 30.
deputy sheriff ror Mason County ConceptS" will inclucje:.protein lev· shows that 56,000 B.T.U .'s arc
-Cattle aver.aged $,67.10 per
"I believe that I am entitled, as and as the chief of police in Pt. els for creep rations; po~ium lev· needed to produce one gallon of ,
100 pounds nationally, compared the new director and general man· . Pleasant, W.Va. .
· els in the ration; starter diets; gro;N- .fuel ethanol, but at least 76,000 .
to $67.90 in 'November.
ager, to put my own team together
In retirement Pyles plans to · ing Heifus and cow nutrition. We B.T.U.'s of energy arc produced by
-Calves were reported at to achieve the goals of the commis- , enjoy small~game hunting, fishing, are looking forward to filling the that gallon of ethanoL m c study
$86.70 per hundred pounds com- sian," ln111on said Friday. '"We're woodwor kmg and refinishing room!
also says ethanol production costs
pared to $89.50 in No9embcr.
hoping to do a betle( job cif reach· antiques. He and his wife, Lois,
We need reservations for the . will continue to decline in the next ,
- Hogs averaged $38.80 per ing out iruo the entire stale."
also will do some traveling, with · "Farm Records with Quirken Soft· several years. Corn growers and •
hu~dtcdweight, compared to
No Jinl~le for replacing Jenk· ~orida arpong the likely destina- wtire" workshop. The O.S .U. tveryone concerned about foreign
$38.00 in November.
ins has been se~ Inmon said.
bons.
·.
• Extension Service will .offer a two oil 'dependence will really like this •
-Corn, at'$2.33 per bushel, 1 Jepkiris became spokesman for
He is a veteran of.the U.S, day workshop on J.anuary 22 and srudyl · ·
t1
.
~
. compared to '$2'.30 in November the fair and the .Ohio Expositions Army, serving from from 1951·53( 23 here in Gallipolis. Dr. Richard
Protein cost for fe~ding live- ,
and to $2.22'in Dec. 1990.
Commission in October 1984. Pyles also is a member and tru~tee D'uvick, Mr. Bryson (Bud) Carter stock is alway's a major expense, ,~
- Wheat prices averaged $3.46 Jefikins, whOse salary was $40,000 of F"trSt Ch.urch of·the Nazarene in arid others wtll be teachina. According · tp "Doane's' Ag.
a bushel co mpared to $3.25 in a year, said he has no immediate Pt. Pleasant
"Quicken", originally developed Report, there ore large stocks of .1
November and $2,40 in December plans for another job.
llle Pyles' have two daughters, for pcrsonal.and sinal! businesses is soyoil. Large stocks and low prices · '
1990.
·
· Jenkiris said-Friday that some of Jacqueline Dennis of Pt. Pleasant now
by many jlgricul· could force meal prices to carry a . !
-Ricc · ~veraged $7.56 per 100 the commissioners prepared him ' and Pamela .Bumgarner of New
tuflii
rs. Call 446-7007 for larger share of tho total product r
pounds, compared with $7.76 in for his firing, saying it was a politi· ~en
.. , W.Va., and four grandchil- more information or to enroll. If value ll!ld hurt m~ demand a bit.
Noxembet and $6.08 a year earlier. cal decision.
"'"''
you arc looking tor a easy, i~x •
,

. .

PubliC Notice
11
contract will be renegotiated

A REQUEST FOR
PROPOSALS

EDWlJ.~OLLBORN

=sed

win a $5 prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
number with your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All contest entries should
be turned in to the newspaper office by 4 p.m.
each Wednesday. ln,case or a tie, the winner will
be chosen by lottery. Next week, a GaUia County
farm will be featured by the Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation District.

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

Enrollment in vo-ag, FFA
programs to be Jan. 8 topic

Farm ·prices down during December

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-03

Navy to s_!tift base to Singapore

Plant geneticist seeks
to improve forage crop

Envl·ronmental

wv

Card of Thanks

e a11yo oe.
Warner
gratefully
acknowJe?e all of their
lamlly an Irlen ds Iar the
I d flower S and
prayen, 00 '
(Grds d•lng our rectnlloss.
A special .,Thanks• to
Keilh Rader, paslor
Entertrlse United Methodist
(h Urt , Syracust Emergency
Squad, I whig Funeral Ho•e
and the friends that served
GS pallbearers.
Florence Warner

and fGII

L.,_ _ _ _...;;.._....,

Aspedalllla1ks to
Rtnrend 811&lt;1 U1rat,
Jahnsaa duo and Waugh-

lion Sklll1 Ess1nllat. Excenlnt
Salary And Fringe Benefit P•ck·
1g1. Send Resume To: Rosie

Ward, Director Ot Human
Resources, Holzer Mtdlcal Cen·
tar, 385 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,

2 pupa, ma .., 3 monthl old, blk
&amp; while, tnllnablt, 304-175-3445.

AVON I i\11 Areas ! Shirl ey
Speers, 304·675·1429.

2 Robblla, Wllh Cogo. 614-4463934.
3 Fomolo Pupplts, Part Colllo, 7

Easy Workt Excollonl Poy! As·
11mblo Produelo AI Ho,.,.. Coli
Toll FrH, 1-800-467-5566, Ext
313.

Employ11.

WHkl Old And Vary lovtabla ::-:':-::--:---:---:--Give Only to GoOd Kon'llii. '&amp;W · · t.lvt:-ln houllkMperf com·
panlon tor 91 yr. old lady, avail·
446 -4a27.
able now or near future. nursing
36 1981 to 1986 Natlon&amp;l skills not rtqulrad , call collect

Googrophlca. 304-675-3718.

:.61:.:.4·.69
:: 6:..:·":,:6;,5-:-:-::-':"::::-- - l

9 cult lillie puppies : 6 malts, 3
lemalt. 614·256-6348.

Television

.

MEDIA SALES

Advtr11slng

Salts

Rop Noodod · For Tho Go I·
Free Pupplao, Holt Colllo, 10 llpolls/Polnl Plomnl Aru.

·

Wuks Old . &amp;14-256-1621, leave
M1111gt.

Wt 'rt Staking A Candidate Who
Pos111111

Enthuaiasm

And

Glvoowoy· Rabbha, born In Oc· Wllllngnou To Work Hord.
tobtr. 304·882·2888.
S1111.. Elptritnca, Cold Calling
Sklllo,
Slrong Closing Skllla
Proforrod.
Draw ·1Comml11lon
6 Lost &amp; Found
.ICtr /Allowance /Benetltt. Stnd
Lost : 2 Malt Beagles, In Rnu'"" ln Confidence To: 2120

Rlo Grendo, Ohio 114-245-1112.

· loss of our liVId 011.

And Management Ex·
perlence Dtslrad But Not
Nece11ary. Good Gutst Rela.

OH 45631. 614-446·5105, EEO

&amp;1HW2·35n .

Wtdtmeyer'l Auction StNict,

. sypporl, ~urlttg tht rtcent

Atlatad Fltld. Pravlau• He1llh

C•re

1-male dog, mad, size, mix
bratd, api)IOI. 1·yr old, bl•ck,
tan, &amp; whitt to a good homa,

The family of Waller Pleasant Valley Orlva, ott Rt.
325, At Rio Grand•, If Found
Laweruce Shaver
Coli 614·446-7722.
would like to send their Lost: Female Schn1Ullf , 2
1
sincere lhanks In all Bushy
VIars Old, Grey Short Mllr,
Whiskers,
, efforts lp make our Vlcini1Y Eytbrows,
Loll: Burkhart Ltnt,
And Ttxll Rotd, ott Rt. 588,
time of sorrow easler. Golllpollo.
614,.46-4929.
We tha1k everyone for
Yard Sale
the food and flowers. 7
All
Vord
ltluot Bo Paid ln.
.And thank you Pleasant Advanca. Soln
DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
day -be foro tho ad La 10 run.
Valley Hospital and lhe tha
Sunday odlllon • 2:do p.m.
doctors &amp;staff for all Fridar. Monday odltlon · 2:00
.
your help. We would p.m. Saturday.
Public Sale
also lib to than~
8
&amp; Auction
Waugh·Halley·Woad
for all they have done. Rick Pearson Auc:llon Comp.~ny,
full llmt tuctlonttr, completa
Thank you ever so . auction
..rvlca. LletnNd Ohio,
Well Virginia, 304-77:1.5785.
•uch.
Tltt famly af Mlf'rm
Caltlwtll grattluHy
acknowltdJIIS all our
fainly altllrltads IDf
llttlr praprs, food,
flawtn and cards of

With IS In "food/Nutrition Or

Hlmllton!Middlttown
45011,

H1mllton, OH

Road,

NHded: Salnperson for area. ·
Plllll Mnd riiUml to: Rt. 2

Sox &amp;07 Pt. Plaasant, WV 255~.

Nuralng
Asslsllnts!Homt
Health Aids, Home Makers wan·
ltd. Various hours· available.
Top w1g11 paid. 304·n&amp;-8421.

····-----Part-time employment : apply In

per1on Monday and Tuesday,

Jan 6 a. 7. Fr001 g a.m: to 12
noon. Lltt~tYI• Furniture, '856
Third Ave., Gtlllpo/11. No phone
Cllll, pilltt.

Pan-time rtetptlonllt, mutt bl
have

telephant

tkllll, able to deal with pubUc.

and hlnllo gonorol ottlco

duli41, $4.&amp;0hr, l'omtroY area,

Mnd rttumt' to: Oahy Sentinel,

Ia&lt; 72tH , Pomeroy, OH

R-altttrtd Nurse, CMSI P1yt

Up To 1!12 000. FrH Private
Houolng. $1,000 Sign On Bonus.

1·800.423·1738.

wanted to Buy

Relall Slora Men•gar Wanted
For Local Ch1ln Stor•. Mull

Com)11olo Hou1011okl Or Eo·
tatHl' Anr "!Yilt Of Fumlluro,
AproilaMM, Antlquo'e, Etc. Also
Appralllll Aval~blof 114-14S.
5112.
Sill poylng .Ok -. for ompty
Solom ariil Camo1 clglrello
packagn buying llll Jlil. 24,
11112, f14·192·701llt82·2703.
Wanlod '" buy, Rondlng tlm'IIOf,
lab Wlllllma I Sono 'l14·11112·

Hav• 3 Y-ars Man•a•mant Ex·
perience. Sind ~etumelo : Bo1
CLA 103,' C/0 Oolllpollo Dally

9

1441.

Third Avonuo, Qaf·
llpotlo, "" 411&amp;31.
U'10"tly ntod dopondobll pot·
10 worll without ._.tllon
f04" Tun 011 oo. lloig! Co. ,,..,
wo l'l)~'-"'"" E.l. Dtckoroon,
- .,s,..PCO, Box 1111005, Fl.
Wort", TX78111
Trlt1uno&lt;~.25

Women: ·m•kl . more monayl

FIN oigltl wtOI&lt; )oil PfOfllfltlon

Top Prl- Paid: All ·Old U.S. progrem about flOnlrod.ltlonal
Colni,
Ootd Ringo, Bllvor Colno, oml&gt;lormonl (ONOW)...coll1·800.• . Halty·Woocl.
Oold ·Colno. II.T.B. Coin Sllop, 131-8501. .
Wonls CIUOt express 111 1oconc1 A-uo, Oolllpoilo. 12
Situation
01r tlttptstaJIPIIdallaa Employmrnl Srrv1crs
wantlld
Itt nr 11tH of sorrow.
Would Uko A Ptoco To UYO
MttY GoriW.ss youl
11 Help
Clooo To T....,, WH~ Roomoto
~Ca~l ~~~~~~~ To Woah Clolhol, FIK Dtnnor, Ill
__ , L
1y Jabroltlor ln · 1t1v iloml';' 2t .llotum
Poy floril.
- Coli
. . . .Witt
._
_

wanted

-

...

'-a-------..t

Ho.-Oik, I \'"- Old. 114-

441·M22.Afttrlp.ot.

ICk. ,

newer kitchen with walnut cabinets, &amp;awmill

and other equipment go with tarm. Don't delay.
Only $70,000.
11369
124 ACRE MIL FARM - Located on lin"'lln
Pike and this ranch style vinly sided home with
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, fam ily room. dining roo,m
and kitchen fireplace, 36x48 approx barn, new
tencea. tobacco .base, some implemenls .
Asking $69,900. Call lor your appomtmon!
today.
12n
MERCERVILLE AREA - Is lh1s 3 bedroom
home situated on 1 acre with county water,

gamge, 2 walk·in closets and

All for
1400
BULAYlLLE PIKE - Is this 2 bdnn. homo w! t~
bath, kitchen. large living room and laundiy,
heat with natural gas, wood or coal. lull
basement 2 car deiached garage and 16'x 20'
buildng. All on over 2 acres. Low 30's.
l~undry.

~1 .

TIRED OF RENTING? - Buy this 2 bedroom
home with LP gas tloor lurnace, vinyl siding.
and .4 of an ac18'11\J1. Ready lo move into aher
you cut the grass. You will want to lake a look
at this one.
t386
CLOSE IN - $25,000 wtll bur this 2-3 bedroom
home with partial basement and detached
garage. Call today.
1298
VACANT LAND - 4 acres of undeveloped
residential land IQ..Jackson County bordering
Appalachian Highway.
1374
CLAY SCHOOL - 3 bedroom, tamily room,
e~c . heal, attached garage, with opener, all on
5 acres rnA. Tool shed. Immediate possasston.
See il today.
1392
UPCREEK RO.\D 'II. 67 acres m(
silos. f1ural"'ll!later available
ti mber. Road 'frontage . Call for
information.
_

PHYLUS L..MILLER
Sales Agent
Eve. 256·1136

SPRINGFIELD AREA - Hare's a home tor y&lt;Su
with 2 bedrooms, living room. dining room.
kitchen, bath and utility room , two car garage.
Oil and wood heat. All on over 72 acres. Call
lor your appointment.
1394
RIO GRANDE AREA - 1680 sq. h. of ltv1ng
space in lh~ 3 bedroom, 2 bath home which
also has family rm., and lots of other amenines.
Walch the birds·and squirrels as you relax in
your family room. All elec. Only $39,000. Call l
now for appo1ntmoni
1346
ON. BULAVtLLE-PIKE - is !h1s anrac!Ne vinyl
sided home with.3 bedrooms, 2 baths, largeliv·
ing room, dining area. ki!chen and laundry, g'!"
heal and central air, a 2 car carpon wllofl. Paao
and slorage buildinqs . All this and more on
over

~

acre priced m low 40's. Call lor your

appointment today.

1398

122 ACRES MIL FARM - With tobacco ba~e.
3 large bams . home has 4 bedrooms. hv1ng
room, dining and kitchen , Ill baths. Hannan
Trace Schools. $45,000.
1397
FARMETIE - Two barns. a 3 bedroom . 2 baih
home, comes with heal oumo .and lull
basamenL ·WBik-in clpsets, ftat land woth almost
1000' road frontage 8.2 acres mn. Need to
see. Asking '53,200
1395
RIO GRANDE A.lEA - Three tracts of land . (1)
22 acres rnA; (2) 20 acres rnA: (3) 100 acres: or
buy at! three with 40x60 horse barn, 14x60
implement storage shed All have road konlage
on Tyn Rhos Rd. Various priCOS. Call lor mora
information.
1359
TWO HOUES IN ONE - Upper level hasf
bedrooms. 1 bath, ki!chen, dning room, fiving
room; lower level has 2 bedrOOIIJS, I bath,
living foom and clnlng araa. For only '47,500.
Owner will consider land contract.
1360
CHESHIRE AREA - I 2.9 acroa mn of vacant
land. Not restricted. Has two story bam. Soma_
timber and 700' road trontage on Story'S Run,
Rd. Call for dolails. Asking $16,550. •
11335

.

.

mo

"We' re goi ng th ere tQ talk
about economic opportuntty and
jobs. There's no question about
that." Bush said today in Singa pore.
Bush arri ves on Tuesday,
acco mpantcd by U.S. busin ess
leaders including the chairmen of
Ford, General Motors and Chrysler.
Miyazawa, whose party must
al so contend with parliamentary
elccuons this year, faces what has
become a routine challenge for
Japanese leaders of satisfying both
U.S. presiden ts and domestic sup.portcrs.

MARTHA L. SMITH
Sales Agent
Eve. 379-2651

Good .
Somio
more
.
\
12110 "WAITING ·FOR YOU - to lhia-liOO • aq, ft. of
1
living apace and 1985 Redman d!W. Nice lot
tn Canterville. Has heat pump. hugo livong
ARE YOU A WATER DOG? - Hero's vour
chance to own Raccoon Creek kontage at Blue room 3 bedrooms 2 baths, 3 car garage. Call ,
.
1396
lake pkls a 2 bedroom well maintained mobile
loday.'
homo with deck and lots of shrubs and t...s. 3
tots, t }I car garage, picr,ic shelter, 2 docks, one 1 • CONDO IN CITY - All brick W\th 2 badroo~s, 2
lull baths, equipped ki!chen, lNing room, dnong
mila from river. See it lodayl
1383
room laundry w/washer and dryer, heat pump,
cent.' alr, many e~uas . Very nice. Mus}seo.
OUTGROWN YOUR PRESENT HOU.E? - Yon'
11388
can aHord to move upl 5 bedroom~ . 2 balhs, Only $65,000. Call lor more info.
kitchen, laundry, patio and 2 car garare. quiet
NEW LISTING IN VINTON VILLAGE - V&amp;ty
area but yet clole to toWn . Call for mort. datailo.
t3et
nice ona story brick h6me with 2 bedrooms,
bath, dining room, livlna room Iaund7 and
NEI!TLED AMONG THE TREES' - A 3
equipped
kitchen, hardwood ltoors, car
tH!droom home with tamily room, living room,
attached
garage.
WBlk-ln attic. Nice back patio
'beth Also a llral 20K20 building with a t 2x20
and
l·shapad
covered
front porch. Asking mid
allod:Afl on 1.3110 aa'BI. t;oty OCOOOII. $53,900. $SOl.
1382
~uilding

.

the presidential palace.
• The arrangement would' in no
way approximate the massive U.S. •
mtlitarr presence at Subic Bay in::
the Phthppmes, whtch has been. :
Amenca's largest foreign naval: ,
facti tty· wtth nearly 6,000 person- ·
nel. The Philippines has ordered::
the base closed at the end of the;.
year, endmg _100 years of American :
bases m the former U.S. colony. : ·
Bush said the dissolution of the ~~
Sovtet Untofi greatly diminishes •
threats in the region.
..'
The president, who leaves Sun-::
day for Korea, the third country on- ·
a 12-day Australia 3/ld Asia trip : .
that wtll conclude in Japan, also :
announced today that the United .;
Stales will laun ch a U.S .·Asia :
Environmental Partnership.
•
The aim is to offer U.S . tcchni- ;
cal assistance to help Asian nations ·
with environmental cleanup and ;·
other program s through vanous
U.S. government agencies and pri- :
vate sector help.
:.
Bush said he was f\Ol worried : .
about a possible backlash in Japan
over his effort s to drum up more
jobs for America'!.s

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

PATRICK A. COCHBAN
Office Manager
Eve. 446·8655 •

53 ·ACRE FARM -On Rt. 160 on -edge of
Vinton County with old brick homo and mobilo
homo. Thiny:two acres tllabla with bam and
other buiklings. Asking $74,500.
me
FARM IN HARRISON TWP. - 148 acres ritll
with 4 bedrooms, t bath homo. Vinyl sided with

$26,fi00. Call today.

the war, the Amencans have helped
us out all along. We have to return
that long-term friendsh•p wuh our
own fri endship," Miyazawa told
reporters.
Although Bush and Miyazawa
have said th ey also have other,
wider issues to discuss, thw meclmg s nex t week arc ex pec ted to
focus on trade.
Bush is fac ing increased pressure to talk tough with Japan in this
election yea,r and has made it clear
that ile"ts cxpectmg help in reduc ·
ing the U.S . trade defi cit with
Japan, which totaled $41 bilhon tn
1990.

By ELAINE KURTENB~CH
Associated Press Writer
TOKYO (AP) - Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa, fa cing
increasing pressur_e from President
Bush for trade concessiOns, Saturday said Japan is obliged to take
steps to help the U.S. out of its ceonomic malatsc.
Miyazawa made the statement
after he and· other top official s
made the leadership's annual New
Year's pilgrimage to lse Shrine, the
most important place of worship in
thQindigenous Shinto religion.
"The economic situation in the
United States is very severe . Since

Real Estate General

RV$SELL D. WOOD
Owner/Broker
Eve. 446·4618

military privileges at Singapore
facilities.
.
The president said he hopes that
the mill~ arrangement wtl;h Sin;.,
gapo;e wtlllead the way-to stm1har
links .with all members of the Asso·
ciation of Southeast Asian Nations:
SinJ!apore, Malaysia, lndone_s_ia,
That land, Brunet ·and the Phthp·
pines.
During his only full day on this
tiny island-state, Bush conferred
with Goh and President Wee Kim
. Wee, as weU as former Prime Min·
ister Lee Kuan Yew, now a government minister. He also met with
· U.S. and Sin~apore business leaders and VISited the S mgapo~e
· Amencan School. Later he and hts
wtfe, Barbara, attended a state dmncr.
Details of the move of the Seventh Fleet l(lgistics command have
to be worked owl in a formal agreement, Goh said, but he asserted,
" there's no problem " in acceding
to Bush's requests.
"We· welcome the presence of
America in terms of scc unty in this
area," he &amp;aid, appearing with
~ush at a news conference ouiSidc

Leader urges support for U.S. irade

ATTN :

Rtglonll M1n1g1r.

pe,.on1bl1 1

HOUSE DVERROWING?
CLEAN UP WITH
CLASSIFifO ADS ~ ' '

By RITA BEAMISH
Associated Press Wrlttr
SJJ'ojGAPORE (AP)- President
Bush Saturday won backing to shift
an American military command
from the Philippines to Ibis tropical
island, and signaled a willingness
to put some PentagO'n sav ings
"ii\to·-yhe pockets of the American
taxpayer."
On the first visit of an American
pre~ident to Singapore, Bush also
announced he is ending a 16-yearold trade. embargo against Cambo·
dia in recognition of its move
toward democracy.
Bush and Prime Minister Goh
Chok Tong said they agreed in
principle to shift pan or the Navy
military logiStics command, being
evicted from the Philippines, to
$ingapore's military facilities.
"We will maintain a visible,
credible_presenc;e in the Asia-Pacific region with our forward
deployed forces, and through bilat·
era I defense arrangements with
nations of the region," Bush said
later in a lun cheon speech . The
new pact will expan·d upon an
existing agreement allowing U.S.

CHERYL L. LEMLEY
Meigs CQ. Agent
Eve. 742·3171

•·MEIGSCOUNTY PROPERTIES

1

YEARS OLD - I story vinyl Sided 2
bedroom, 't bath wilh lull basemenJ. gas heat,
largo L-shajied deck $18,500
1243
.
I
POMEROY AREA - Characier. style, country
charm. This home has 11 all Older homo,
completely returbished. 3 bedrooms. 2 bal!ts.
Wrap-around porch. Several bu~ding s Situated
...on approx. t and 112 acres. Rock Springs
Road. Asking $59,500. Will take MH lor down
payment
f34S
NEW LISTING ;: Sumner Rd is lhts nice 2
bedroom t bath ranch with aluminum siding,
living roOm, kitchen, family room. lull bsemonl,
2

woodbumer, one car garage, and more on.. 84

ot an acre

mn Asking only $40,000. Call lor

t3i3
MUST SEE - Eastom schools, 3 bedrooms,
ttl.! baths, Jamily mom . tKlra good condotion.
On appro&lt;. 2 acros. ASking $45,000.
1384
MAIN ST., RUTLAND -Is lhio attractive 3 bed~to

room ranch With bath , kilchen, d1n1ng room, and

living room, 2 car a!tachod gamge, liroplace,
gas heat Contra! air Only $45,5~ 1403
ST. R~ 124, LONG BOTTOM - t is 2 bedroom ranc;h on t acre mn with

ing room ,

kitchen, bath. Opan deck and more. Asking
$25,000. Call today.
1310
RUTLAND AREA - 1985 Sizzler doublowide
wilh 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, liv. rm .. kitchen and
laundry, 2 car a!tached garage. Gas ~all with

1ncome.

~nd

nome nas 11v1ng room , kttchen,

bath, and .2 bedrooms . Call tor more
intormation. Only $30,000.
t371
NEW LIMA RD. - 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, large
spacious kitchen with island range. Home has
had lots ot care. Look at this one. Only
$35,000. .
1361
NICE·HOME - In Pomeroy. This home wao built
in tho 1940's and shows tho character and
quality of the era Four bedrooms, large ivinO
room, din1ng room, hill basement with dnve-in

garoge, in-ground pool. Asking $46,000. 1371
PRICE REDUCED - Located on Sycamore
Stroot in Middleport Ranch homo with 3 bod·
rooms, ltvol lot witli atiova ground pool.

-m.ooo:-

As a CENTURY 21° Sales
Associate, you have the benefits
of unlimited earning potential
while being yow- own boss. Yet,
you're also part of a team elfort
that will support you all the way.
Turn yow- learning power into
ell1'1ninol DOwer. Call or visit our

�,.
•

•

.

Page.....-04-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

14

ARNOLD HUPP
Remembrance Is a golden
chain
Death tnesto brtale In vain;

18

Business ' .
Training

RetrJm
Nowii 1Sou1heastarn
Busmess College, Spring Valley
Plaza Call Today, 614·446-'367f!
Reglsterat1on 190-05-12749.

To have, to love, and than to

PI"

Ia th e gruiest sorrow ot
one's haar1

lh• vaara may wipe out

2

manv thlnga
Bul this thsy wipe out ne-wer,

dave

In Memory

In Loving Memory· ol
Jerry L. Shaffer who went
to be wilh the lord on
January 4, 1984.

We spent together
Sadly m1ssed by wlfe, lona
and family

Wanted to Do

Wilt Babysit In My Home Rodney Are• . Reterencas Available.
Call 614·24S.5887.

Baby sllllng In my home, behind
school, relerenets furnlahtd,
304-675-2784.

Georg11 Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to tht mill just
call 304-675-1957.

The memory at thOaa happy

The world may
change from year lo
year,
And friends from

Loving mctfler will baby1lt In
my fiome daytnight, hourly/
weekly, any agi, r1farances,

614·992·7289

Miss Paula's Day C~re Center
Safe, affordable, childcare. M·F
6 a.m · 5.30 p.m. Ages 2Y:-10
Belote, af1er school. Drop·ins
weteome 614·446·8224 New Intan! Toddler Care 614-446-6227
Mother, w1le of teacher, &amp; col·
lege grad would like to babysit
m har home, Middleport, 614·

one I love,

1992

January 5,

away;
Just when

dear (Papaw)
DON WOLFORD who
passed away 2 years ago
on Dec. 18, 1989 &amp; who

hi~ days

seemed brightest,
Just when his hopes
seemed best,

was born Jan. 1, 1917

"Happy B11thday".
The pam we fel1 the

God called him from
amongst us to his
eternal rest.
Vert sodly misud br wilt, lrtat,
Sons &amp; lumit.es, David, Vidriy I.
Brian, Pa11l, Lisa &amp; Jordtn.

day you died will alway a

live wilhm ua. But the
memones that you gave
to us , w11llast though all
our lifetime.

mossed by

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Financial

Business
Opportunity

Real Estate General

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

reccmmonds thai you de buslnass with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until yoy have lnv8sr•gated
the offering
All Type Loanslendars Specllal·
lze In Credit Problems Tell Us
Your Needs 803-293-1641

tor Sale

8363
WOLFE TANNING BEDS. Com·
meretai·Home
Units
From
$199 00 Lamps, Lotions, Acets·
sories Montttly Payments Low

As $18.00 Call Today FREE NEW

Color Catalog 1-800..228-6292

446-3636~~
HOMES. FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25. LOCUST STREET GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

New Commerelal, Home Units,
From $199 00 Lamps, Lotions,
Accessories. Monlhly Paymenls
Lew AI 118.00, Call Today FREE

ONE LOOK AND YOU'LL BE SOLD -BRICK RANCH ,
SPACIOUS HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, FULL
BASEMENT, 2 CAR GARAGE, LEVEL LAWN VERY
DESIRABLE AREA $73,500

Real Estate

OLD FASHIONED VALUE - 2 STORY HOME HAS
VINYL SIDING. 4 BEDROOMS, LA"RGE KITCHEN
FAMILY ROOM, LARGE LOT, CONVENIENT LOCATION
JUST OFF RT. 35 AT CENTERVILLE. $28,500

WOLFF TANNING BEDS

NEW Color Catalog. HI00-228·
6292.

Homes for Sale

Double Wide With 1 Acre Land
Gallipolis Ferrr,, 3 Bedrooms,
Baths, Eltclr c, Central Atr,

$37,000 304-67S-7217

FOUND:

Blonde .

Cocker Spaniel
with blue collar.
No tags. Vicinity
Holzer Clinic,

Local Vendmg Route Pr~ced
Right, Must Sen 1-800-23A·26S1

Sycamore

2 Bedroom House, Deposll And
Reference Requlrad No Pets
614 •446 •4879 .

I

AUCTIO'N

I

In
Ronnie
on
birthday, January Sth
We see your smile on
our children's laces, and
it gladdens our heart,
lor this part of you will
live on. Mere words can
not express the loss we
• all feel since your
departure. You were
loved by all who knew
you, especially those
closest to you. Your
lave touched our souls
deeply.
You once wrote:
When I was a younger
man, I wore lhe lace of
hope, Dreaming of
adventures I would
someday call my own.
We believe you are now
pursuing
your dreams.
We love you and miss
you very much.
Susan, family ond
friends

at DAV Building, Gallipolis
Every Sunday • 1:30 p.m.
Many loads New &amp; Used items
Bring a load to sell
Buy a load to go.

1976 Festival 14x70, 2br, 2
Baths, Utility Room, Underpinmng And Large Deck. AU
Electric, Air Ccndltlonlng, Excel·
lenl Condition! $8,200, Could Be
Loti On One Acre L.ol. 614·388-

883S.

WALK TO SCHOOL AND DOWNTOWN SHOPPING
FROM TH IS SECLUDED HOME ON ORCHARD HILL
HUGE LIVING ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, FAMILY
ROOM, STORAGE GALORE LOTS OF WINDOWS
NICE VIEW OF THE CITY. $79,000

1979 Clairmont 141.10, 3 bed·
rooms, 1 bath, wlunderponnlng
and front porch, gas heat,
eenlral air, musl move, $8,500.
304-El82-2341.

COME IN FROM THE COLDI YOU AND YOUR FAMILY
WILL SPEND MANY LONG WINTER EVENINGS
ENJOYING THE WARMTH OF THIS ~OME . COZY
FIREPLACE IN THE LIVING ROOM PLUS FAMILY
ROOM HAS HEARTH WITH WOODBURNER 4
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, WORKSAVER KITCHEN WITH
SNACK BAR, FORMAL DINING 2 CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE. EXTERIOR IS NATURAL REDWOOD AND
BLENDS PERFEQTLY. WITH 9 PINE STUDDED ACRES.

ROUTE 160 NEAR PORTER - 4 BEDROOM HOME
HAS VINYL SIDING. TILT OUT THERMO PANE
WINDOWS FAMILY ROOM EXCELLENT BUY AT
$30 0001

R.N.s/L.P.N.s
IMMEDIATE
OPENINGS
nme Poailiona

'Excellent Salary and
Bono fila
"Shill Differential

Lie. &amp; Bonded: State of Ohio

Meclcal Center

Oal Hil Community

3SO Charlotte Ave.,
Oak HiD, Ohio
614-682-7717
EOE

Real Estate General

Township, c1ty schools. W1th1n m1nutes of

Want to:
PIN down EX11U

(_~ 1\&amp;ll ?!!

hos-

bird seat. Capricorn, treat yoursell1o a
birthday g1ft ·Send lor Capricorn's Astro-Graph predictions for

numbers 10 the profit column today - lf
you give your most Significant flnanctal

1nteras1 the anen11on It deserves.
PISCES (Fib. 20-Morch 20) Rather
lhan trying to sway a group today 1o
your way of thlnktng, 1sota1e its key

GREAT INVESTMENT AT $24,500
S1tuated at 1030 Second Avenue, 2 bedrooms,
balh, dinm~ room, 1 car garage, nice lot, oH
street parktng. Call lor details at once! Won't
last long
.1
,
12942

approx. 1 acre lot.

OWNER WANTS TO DEAL!

$5,500.00
VIEW OF THE RIVER
W1th this 8+ tract of land. Wooded S•ta cleared
lor mobilo home or house Rural water and
olectnc avrulable. Along SR 7
12936

lass Will sell into lots Rural water and alec·
tnc avatlable Frontage along Raccoon
Creek. and along Rt 325 Call lor mora
detailsI
JUST LISTEOI
JUST WHATYOU'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR
1 acre
lot with !mprovomonts plus 24'x30'
garage with v1nyl siding, 1E'x24' room addttion.
concreto walks and parking area, above
ground pool and more. C1ty ~choola. Porloct
for mobile homo or building. Call today, won't
las11ongl
12846

3 ACRES MIL
Situated 1n Morgan TownshiP. Good home SilO
Rural water and elactnc ava1lable.
12917

mn

phone,

"" ,,,,.,,.,II-/;.,,.,,; Jlllll ,,,,,.,
n,; (:c your dtrssitied ud lOflfl)'!

WHAT MORE COULD YOU ASK FOR
AT THIS PRICE, $32,900

LOTS OF RIVER FRONTACll:
Priced at $2,800 and up Call lor more details.
12e16

"

-

are

possible

today

together benefiCially
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Pr1ch '" w11h
o1her family members today when n

2. ____ _
-· -· . ·-· - -

''·· ~----.,
r:.

•

...1

Then. all 01 you will take pride rn such
collective achievement
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Statt mak1ng

Sttuated. on 1.12
. acre, mn.

comes to tasks that requtre attention

revrsoons In plans today that have. up
until now, proven to be unworkable
You're m a resourceful frame of mind ,

and concepts you envlsoon should be
effective.

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) Take personal charge ol manag1ng 1he family's
resources loday. You'll be adroit al

lmdlng ways to both make and/ot save
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ee. 21) Wha1
you set your mrnd to 1oday can De carrled out to a successful conclusion.
Even d you have to deal wlth unlorese6n

1153. REDUCED TO $34,900 - Older
homo and 1 75 ocra mn, on No,g,borhqod
just a short distance hom 141 . 4 BFfs, kitch·
en. LR . DR, unattached garage

obstacles. you 'll remain sure·foo1ed.

Tharmopana Windows,

WOlD
GAM I

-I··- - - - -·- - -

(i. - - - - - -...:.,..---''

..

•

14,.___c______
I r,,____--..___

"·------'--

Judg Oswltf - B''*''

.(E)
...... _

---- -+--~-- -·~---~----~L-

.,

.

-

\.

~

10

gr

MIJIJ"'-li.IITINO SfRVICE

NTEDI NEW LISTINO.SI
....

r

LL TODAY!

One evening my daughter
and I.sat watching o~r favorite

• show.
to her

•

I

Feelin~ especially close

I said 'Sit closer honey."

expected her to snuggle up

to me, but'instead she got up
and sat right in front of the

---·-···--

~- H 0 R I E

446-8147

OIPOitTU•un

l

'

•

AP T 0 0 T
7'

~RAMBLE
TIERS
'

.

'1200. GREEN TWP. PORTERBROOK
SUBD., WITH VERY NICE RANCH - 3
BRo. LR, kitchon , balh &amp; hall, 2 cer garage,
firaplace.
1172. LINCOLN PIKE -NEW USTING • 3
BR ranch, fenced in yard lor pets or child·
ren. beautiful coverad deck, bam style ubl1ty
bldg , affordably priced.
t17a. STATE ROUTE 218 - 1.263 acre mn.
Very n1ce homo olers 3 BRs.1 bath, hvtng
room, kitchen range and retngerator, fire·
place, City water, basam.~t. City ,schools.

111:i. OWNER HAS I;IEDUCEO THE
PRICE BY $10,000111 Very nice h01110 of·
.,,. 3 BRa 2 baths. LR. k~chen. Thla lann
is aituatod on Sugar Croak Road . Ohio
. Township, and has a new 28x40 bam,
tobacoo base. Call tor more datails.

L-~_._..........,Q
_._.......__.

12.

I ,'J,,_ _-'-----

•

gas heal

1215. GREEN TWP. -JU![T ~TES 10
GREEN ELeMENTARY SCHOOL - All
brick homo offers 3 BAs, eat-in kitchen, LA,
attached garage. lull basement Sltuatad on •
1.25 acre

;. F ~ ~ t I P I
I
•

1154. NICE STARTER HOME - Located
'just at the edge of lown This home features
3 bedrooms, bath, l01ing room, kitchen , din·
ing room and a hJII basement. Five minute•
to downtown.
1177. FAMILY SIZE HOME • Attractive
home located at Centenary, offa11 4 BAs, 2
ba1hs, kitchen, LR Attached garage and
nice lawn

s

•

f1replaca and hvmg room wt1h fireplace .

money

-

~"T,.:......:;...6-"-rl.:......;;...l..:....,l~

• "·
·- - - - - -

·'·---------~

, ______
'} . _ ____ _ _

Pass

Pass

Openmg lead

+K

mng to ruft and r napla y West woth a
diamond. However. when East dts·
carded. Franses paused to count
West 's-hand He was known to have
started with seven spades, three
hearts and two clubs That left room
for only one diamond The dtamond
endplay couldn't work - but another
endplay would . On the spade none,
Franses discarded his penulttmate dt·
amond. West had to wm and return a
spade. Franses ruffed m the dummy
and jettisoned his last diamond loser.
Franses won both rubbers, nettmg
almost $1,800. He bought the players
champagne before takmg his bulgmg
wallet home
@ 1112, NEWSPAPD ENTEfti'NIE Allll

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

~ PRI~~ REDUCED
1540.
IN FRONT OF THE
FIREPLACE - Attracttvo homo ofors 3
BRs, bath, kitchen, 12x24 family toom wrth

I:; won/11 m · /,•sll, J days,

I ~ ------ .. -· ----..

Real Estate General

ing with an old friend might prove to be
of real signlftcance today There !s a
mutuaiJnterest the two of you can bnng

~

r

Mobile
Heme&amp; For
Rent 28R,
bath
kitchen . Newly
Refer.ence And Oeposll Re· remodeled. Ntce 1111, big yard .
quirad Call After 2p m. 614·446· $325/mo., $325 dep Days 614·
O:.:S::27~-------I 446·1157, Eve 614-894·4501

1201. PRICE REDUCED TO $55,0001- 3
BR home Situated near HMC and Rt 35
. shopping area Call tor more deta1ls .

VINTEA

1

2br Apartment, Located, 466·112
Fourth
Avenue,
Gallipolis
Stove, Refrigerator, Water Fur.
3br Tr1iler, 1200/Mo. Water Paid. nlshed. S240imo. $100 Oaposlt
Deposit Rc.qulred. 614·256·6717.
614.-446·3870.

;•

vised with your gu1dance

E RE VI G

J 11011ers.$6.UU

2br Apartn)ent For Rent , $200
Plus Deposit In Crown City,
Ohio. 614 ·256-6495.

6+

3+
Pass
Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A convivral meet·

0

3

2br Mobil• Home, Rt.588 Gal·
lloplil, $225 PIUI Uthitles,
O.poslt Required No P111. 614~
446-3968 After 6p.m

2·SR vnturnish1d, downtown
New Haven WV No pels. 614·
992·7~81, also 1500 sq ft, com·
merc1al.

3+
I NT

Nortb
I NT
Pass

good use today. An endeavor that has
been discarded by others can be re·

Rearrange the 6 scrambled
words be low to make 6
simp le wotds
Print letters of
each in tis line of squares.

$3,000.00

2br Mobile Home On Lar~e
Private Let , $215/Mo. Seeunty
Deposit, References. 614-446·
2236, 614.-446--2581.

949·2S26

Londoner Victor Franses usually
plays rubber bndge for mne cents a
pcmt But one afternoon he suffered
badly at tbe hands of a partner who,
among other things, went for two
1400-poont penalties. Franses lost a
37-point rubber. $333 to the bad guys.
Franses promptly cut into the 90·
cent table , vowong to play exactly two
rubbers. The first hand ISm today's dt·
agram. Franses arnved on sox clubs
after West made an onadvtsable - and
revealing - overcall.
Franses won West's spade-kong lead
wtth dummy's ace, ruffed a spade,
cashed the A·K of ctu~ and led a dia·
mond. queen, ace. With two apparently inescapable diamond losers, "'
Franses needed an endplay. He was
hopmg that West would fall to unblock
from kong doubleton of doamonds
When the queen appeared, he pictured
West woth the K·Q doubleton. Next,
declarer cashed his three heart win·
ners, discardong a dta'lllond from hand
Fonally he led the.spad~. nine, plan·

West

nUity and resourcefulness can be put to

Edi1td by CLAY R. POLLAN

Lo! along Clo1o R01er Callier more 1niormanon:t.
j2i2"1

2 BR mobile home, $200/mo
614·367·7802.

South

ment today After thai. maktng the right
decisions will be easy,
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) Your Inge-

':~!:t:~' S@\\~N\-l££tfS®

·'

1&amp;2-bdrm spta, In Racine OH,
unturnistlad, 614·992-6569

By Pbil(lp Alder

old stand-by who always seems to be
available when you need a spec1al favor
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) Flrs1. consod·
er what must be done m order to be lair
to all concerned 1n a cnt1ca1 mvolve-

12920

I: nil"'" ~&gt;)Jir· •• .fi•r 1111itl ;,. ntl!•nut·•• rnl•••l

1 BR furnished apartment
Upstaln on 13th St. $190 mo
plus gas &amp; elac. 304-675·2651.

Vulnerable Netther
Dealer North

rl you ap-

3 badroom ranch home Wtlh l1ving room, eat-in

k1tchen utility, and bath Ntoa lanced-in lawn
and att~chad carport. Within ITnnutes of Holzet
Hospital. Call today.
12875

2330.

• H7 4 3
, +A. KQ1082

Fight to recover
lost ground

vance your ambitious 1nterests today

LIBRA (~1. 23-0ct. 23) Play yout own
hunches today, instead of listening to
I he edvlce of o1hers, regarding the way
a critical maner should De managed
Lady Luck Is ptone 1o work along the
11nes you establish.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A lrlend of
yours who thinks on a grand scale could
Inspire you to think Uk_
ewlse today.

ACREAGE
13+ acres Gra~n Township. List~d at $10,000.
Lots of development around tho area Some
land is wooded Small stream rur.ning across
property and has a small pond. Homesite is
graded off. .Has electnc jlld rural wa1er avail·
able. Call us now.
~2927

1 bdrm baument apt , furnished, utilities paid, $200
monthly, 614·949·2526 after 6pm
1
bedroom
unfurnlshod,
upstairs apt, Ftrst Ave, utilities
included, $350. ref &amp; Clep re ·
quired, 614-446-4369 or 304-675-

woth tho assiStance ol another. It's your

w111 be unaware .

MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT NOWIII
To seo this 3 bedroom ranch Located in tho
heart of Crown C1ty 2 cer anached garage,
l1ving room, bath and more. Cozy firopla&lt;»
12934

+6

•As

example you'll set
TAURUS (Aprii20-Moy 20) You can ad·

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22) You have a
gift of perception today lot kmttrng together omportant b1ts and pieces olin·
!ormation. 11 could help you gauge the
significance of things of whiCh ottters

\

On thts acreage , approx. 5 acres more or

nlshed. $185/mo Ref &amp; dep
614·388-9686
•
2 bdrm mobile home tor rent,
~prox. 3 miles from Pomaro~ &amp;
d
id leport , Ictal electric, 14·

SOUTH

Apartm'?nt
for Rent

proach the stluation wlth a forgiving
m1nd. Your fnend w1U be 1nsp•red by the

any stones unturned regarding ways to
make or save money.

home liv1ng room , bath, forced a1(. gas heat,
newer deck, nestled among shade trees on

12x65 In country. Vinton area.
Water, trash, stove, retrig fur·

+64

lolt. 614.. 46-t279.

44

.105432
•KJ952
+3

.Q

Trailers For Rent; Also Trailer

difficult development w1th a close friend

can be resolved today -

bination lor you.
GEMINI (Mil, 21·Jun• 20) Something
rather significant may be developing tor
you at this time 1ha1 could contrlbute1o
your prospetlty and well-being A perlion of these probabilities may surlace
today.
CANCER (Juno 21-Jut, 22) Even
though you're likely to be lucky on your
own today, you could ba much more so
ma par1nership A good union serves as
a multiplier.
LEO (Jutr 23-Aug. 22) Frnancial prospects continue ta look especially promIsing lor you again today. Don't leave

WHAT IS THE SENSE IN PAYING YOUR
HARD EARNED MONEY IN RENT?
When you could be pay1ng for this remodaled

trailer, pay own
uhhlles plus daposil , 304-675·
2535.
1 BR apartma'nt &amp; f BR trailer.
614.-441·1115.

.976

EAST

+7 5

persos1en.ce.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) A seemmgly

members and talk to them on a one-toone basts. You'll be much more

BEAT THE RENT RACE!!!
With this 2 or 3 bedroom home Remodeled
vmyl stdmg, storage bu1ld1ng, IY, aCre plus
excellent garden area Tobacco allotment
Raccoon Townsh1p Unbeatable price ..$29,000
Call today
,#2895

1 . ~edroom

WEST
+KQJI0843

Luck ts extremely Interested tn your
present endeavors, and you may see a
dramalte example of thts today However, 11 wtll be up to you to pave the way
for her Ia proceed
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) The h~r •
vesl 1s at hand now , and there are
strong probab1ht1es you may begtn to
reap rewards m areas where you have
pa1d the pnce with diligence and

AQUARIUS (Jtn. 20-flb. 11) There's
no reason why you can'1 chalk up solid

+ older bam, com crib, metal butlding woth con·
crete flooring Call today!
12939

5248 anytime.

Mobil~omes

tof Rent

PHILLIP
ALDER

2 Trailers In Henderson for rent.
with washer &amp; dryer. 304·773·

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 11) Lady

su re to state your zodiac sign.

Inc heaVcontral a1r. All th1s reshng on 4 .8 acres

2602

42

qulrod. Vlnton1 !JH. 614-388·9243

1· 4-IZ

sure to state your zodiac sign

the year

ahead by mailing $1 25 plus a long. self·
addressed, s1amped envelope to AstraGraph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
91428, Cleveland. OH 44101·3428 Be

rooms, bath wlgarden tub, l1~1ng room, mea

Small Unfurnlsh•d House, 3
Rooms, Balh, Air· Condilionlng,
Carpeted, Draperies, Sereaned
Porch, Private Parklnl,j, 614·446·

1\0RTH
• ~92
.K QJ
• A 10 6
+J 9 7 5

Nice
3 Br
Mobile
Hom a,
Reference And O.posll Re·

9A.M. To 10 P.M.

.

today Mall $1.25 plus a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope to ASirO·
Graph, c/o lh1s newspaper, P 0 Box
91428, Cleveland. OH 44101·3428. Be •

cntical roles, but don 't share the cat-

srzed ktlchen equ1pped woth appliances, elec·

992·2403

deserving. MaJor changes are tahead for
Capricorn m the com1ng year. Send for
Capricorn's Astro-Graph predictions

good chances of producing the 1ypes of
results you envision Appoint o1hers to

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS
1983 Schult Mobile Home, 14'x70' w1th 3 bed·

HUNTING LODGE!
And 49 acres, has electric. septic system &amp;
SprlnQ development, 2 extra devfilciped home
sotes and sleeked pend Mos1 of th1s land is
woodlot. Localed rn Wayne Nalional Forest
area Lots of Wildlife, especially deer &amp; Wild
turkey Owners want to relocate Reasonably
priced. $36,000 00.
12e35

LOCATION IS IDEALI
Super bu1lding lots. Approx 5 acres each, lev·
el Rural wa1er available. Crty schools. 12933

ll'try ... b_y

pulses to mdlvlduals you feel are ttuly

effective.
ARIES (Morch 21·April 18) II you need
a special person 10 assiSt you with a pet
project, now 1s the t1me to ask for help

4 acre lo~, .extra large screened in porch,

Sell it ''"' eu~

charttable and compassionate today.
However, you m1ghl reslnct these tm-

ors you origmate or d1rect have very

Real Estate General

BIG REDUCTION IN PRICEI
OWNER WANTS SOLDIII
Now askrng $24,900.00 lor thos wall
m•ntained mobile home situated at Blue lake.

f'fllllt•r i11f0 I'IIS!J,

CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jon. 19) Your onnate inclina~ons are likely to be Doth

one for you socially, as well as materially lndMduals you'll be onvolved wi1h will
do 1heor best to make sure that i1 '"
CAPRICORN (Oee. 22-Jin. 19) Endeav-

INTOWNI
Sellers relocahng and must sell thos older 2
story home 3 bedrooms, nicely carpeted
throughout Vinyl s1ding. gas forced aor furnace
w1th central 81r. Low maintenance, garage . Off
street parking Exceptional value. Call today!
Pnced in the $40s.
12938

cyproso 01d1ng and underpmning, otorage
shod. Lake frontage woth iloating dock. Must
see to apprecoa1o.
12931

.f11111'

Your chart Indicates your malenal pos•tlon COUld become more secure in the
year ahea_!j Funds m1ght even become
available for you to fulfill a secret desire

c1ally involved Busmess mixed with
pleasure could prove to be a lucky com-

p•tal and town . Call for an apporntmenl
$55,000 00 ;
#2932

21)

Jon.6, 111112

through 1hose wrth whom you'll be SO·

eat-m kitChen newly remodeled, 11o2 balh
altachod 2 car garage. central aor, Green

23-0.C:.

ni

260 JACKSON PIKE - 4 ROOMS PLUS BATH NICE ·
LOT $27,000 GREATLOCATION
.

3 bedroom ranch home w1th eat-m k1lchen
bath, ubhty, and more. 1 acre lawn. lmmed•ate
possession! Cah! once lor an appo•ntmentl
#2930

(Nov.

~ga on today '

$27,500 - VERY NICE 1988 MOBILE HOME SPACIOUS 14'X70" HAS 2 BEDROOMS 11, BATHS
LARGE LIVING ROOM, AMPL1: CLOSET SPACE DECK.
STORAGE BLDG 1 55 ACRE GENTLY SLOPING LOT '

House lor rant, 2 bedrooms,

2 bdrm In Pomeroy, all utilities
furn ished, $300 per monlh, 614·

developments

ON JAY DRIVE

3 BR, 2 full baths, tp, wood
dack, patio, counlry salting, 10
min from Gall ipolis $350/mo.
Dep . &amp; 2 ref's, req'ed 614 ·4 46·
7604

You 're still in a favorable trend where

sponse may change.
TAURUS (April 211-M•r 20) Pleasant

Offers 3 bedrooms , living room, fam1ly room,

:I BR house for rent, Pl .
Pleasant. 1 112 baths, deposit
Ral raq 304-675-2088

something you hoped would make you

IT'S A SHOWPLACE - IF YOU HAVE EVER DRIVEN
OUT LINCOLN PIKE YOU HAVE ADMIRED THIS
HOME BRICK RANCH ON APPROX. 10 ACRES 2
YEAR OLD HOME WAS CUSTOM BU ILT FOR
PRESENT OWNERS. HAS TLC. 3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS, DESIGNER KITCHEN WITH LOTS OF
CABINETS. NICE FORMAL DINING AREA. REAR
DECK, ABOVE GROUND POOL. HEAT PUMP.
ATTACHED 2 CAR GARAGE REAR DECK, ABOVE
GRO UND POOL OUTBUILDINGS $113,000

REDUCED PRICEI •
YOU CAN AFFORD ITt $21,000

507 Second St, New Hsven, 304-

1'6:..75;..·3:..4.:.69"----- - -

money didn't work yesterday, try 1t

AUCTION EVERY MONDAY
Pre~ Weaned
Feeder Cattle Sale
January 8, 1992 • 12:00 noon

)

•'

Sunday Times-Sentlnei-Page-05

BRIDGE

Center, $200 mo, ref &amp; dep required, 614-446-4369 or 304·675·
2330.

If you wait too long, th1s individual's re-

HOME

3 bedroom unturnlli hed house,

your matenal affa1rs are concerned. If

•

RAP~CH

1-1-66_4:..,6_,._.._•_6·_3s..;o_o- - - -

so don't pu111m1ts on your eKpectatlons.

-

Real Estate General

2br House, 6 Miles From Gal·
llpolis, Rt 7, South. Calt 614·256·

SAGITTARIUS

'Birthday

VAN ZANT RD. • NEAR KYGER CREEK - 8 ROOM
HOME APPROX 25 AC $39,500

HILLSBORO, OHIO
PHONES 13-393·3424

·----~--'

.'1.- - ·-

wv

42 Mobile t1omes
for Rent

2 apts. In Mlddlepor1, 1 apt In
Pomeroy, call 614·992·2403
2 bdrm apt. 211 Spring Ava,
Pomeroy.

"'lOUr ·

RACCOON ROAD - 39 ACRES MOSTLY WOOD ED
WATER TAP. 2 SEPTIC TA~K S, ONE TRAILER SITE
PR.ESENTLY RENTED $20.000

1.:.::.::.________

1 aera trailer lot on Georges
Crnk Rd. Good location
$5,900 614·446 -1615or 446-1243.

ASTRO-GRAPH

REAL ESTATE IS A GREAT INVESTMENT FOR ALL
TIMESt TH IS COLONIAL STYLE .4 UNIT RENTAL
LOCATED AT 845
SECOND COULD BE THE
INVESTMENT FOR YOU' GIVE USA CALL $48,000

$6,500. NICE WOODED LOT WI TH BUILDING WOULD
MAKE EXCELLENT HUNTING CABIN

1617.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

2br House OH Allee Road, $300
Plus Utilities And Deposit. ,
Year lease. 614·388·8739.

=""""---====.[~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::;;;~;;;_[i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ::99,:&lt;:..·58:.:S.:.8_-,--,..,.-.,-.,.-,2 bedroom, unfurnished 12160,
You're tn a good WISh-fUIIIUment cycle,
112 mile plast Holzer Medical

'

HEY, IT'S A STEAL $f6,000- 2 BEDROOM 1977 DUKE
MOBI]..E HOME APPROX
25 ACRE LOT
CONVENIENT LOCATION

2br Home, Naar Gallipolis And
Gallipolis c1tv Schoots 614-446-

ler 5.00p m. 614·367-7873

The year ahead could be an exceptional

'Week.end Premium•

For Trucking Arrangements Coli
John Arrowood • 614·682-7263
Chuck Williams- 614·245-5096
Donnie Everetts, Manager

2 bdrm trailer &amp; lot , located at
360 Pearl St , Middleport, good
c:ond , &amp; w1thin walking to most
necessitiu, $16,000, 614·949·
2389 or 614·742·2211 ask lor
Dave
'
For Sa le. 60x12 Trailer, Par11y
Furnlshad, Ce111ng Fans, And
Central Air-conditfoner, Call Al-

Jln.5, 111112

Auctioneer: Jim Reedy
PRODUCERS LIVESTOCK
ASSOCIATION

446-'126.

R 1
Or en

1,--,.,.--.,---- - -

1991 8raezewood 14x70.3br, 614·

$7,900 304·T'3·S840

H.e lp Wanted

'Full

bedroom, 2 baths, double car
garago, .city water, 6.5 acres,
owner financi ng , SomeNIIII
Realty, 304·675-3030 or 675;3431.

1973 14168 Shultz, mobile homa,

446·3808
A.S.A.P.

11

For

good cond, 614·992·2111

Call

1

Ask

Houses tor Rent

Houses for renl · one In Mid·
dleport, 2 in Pomeroy, call 614·

800-466·1'611 And
Ela1ne Or Brenda

Houses f

41

304&lt;!75·S301.

Rentals

41

Gallipolis.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

198"1 Nashua mobile home,
14164, 2 BR, 1 bath, new
retrlgerator, neWly recarpeted
wasfierldryer: ~8116 front porch:
Park Lane Court 6t4·446-8732
attar 5. $9999 .

1974 Holly Park, 121.70, 1112
baths, completely remodeled ,
$10,500. lnvestmenl will sell

THIS GREAT STARTER HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS. 2
BATHS. COZY FIREPLACE WITH WOODBURNING
INSERT IN LIVING ROOM . OVER AN ACRE LAWN
$40,000

Lost &amp; Found

6

AUDREY F. CANADAY, BROKER
MARY -1'· PL0YD
REALTOR 379-2686
REALTOR 446-3383

UNDA 0: SKIDMORE

3 Acres: Old Houss And Barn,
Half Flat , Hall Hill . Swan'n Creek
Aoad Call 614·~56.o6554.
"

Umllod Tlmo Qtfar To Sal A, ::::-:-:-'=:--:-:c-:----:
Tlma To Sot Tho Homo Call 1· 1982 OakwoOd mobile home, 3

Branch area,

8

tor Sale

Quick'? No Way! But We Have A
Good, Steady, AHordabl•, Busi·
ness. Won't l•sl. 1-800·284·

naday Realty

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

32 Mobile Homes

New 1992 Oelu)ll 14x70, 2 Bath
Home Wilh A Warm, Cozy
Woodburnlng
Flreplaca. Ineludes Qulc:k Dellvery, Setup,
Skir11ng, Stepl, Blocks And Up
To 6 Months ..-.=,..... L04 Rent

Choap. 1·8:00-221-4503
VENOING ROUTE Gtt Rich

2

21

32 Mobile Homes

Real Estate General

$173 Per Monlh Will Buy You A

Grandda~ghler, Terri ;
Wife, Fam1IY S. Fnends .

'1/ 1111

1992

Private Pty Phones For Sale,

31

From memory pass
In Loving Memory of my

21

992-6936

day to day,
But never will the

-.

January 5,

..

In memroy ol

S~dly

wv ·

8

.

-

I· S

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filliny In the mlssl~g words
you develop rom step No. 3 below.

'1245. WOULD YOU UKE TO GET OUT
BY YOURSEL.F7- Thit could bo tloa place,
blautitul tog homo offtra 4 BR• (maatol
bldroom has • fireplace), 2\\ baths, LR
w!FP, kitchon, dining room, FR. Stcond old
hom• on proporty.... 112.5 acnos ,

mn.

1305. 30.5 ACRES MIL. Raccoon Twp .
Gamers Fold Rd. Pond ond bam. Jovoly
piece tor a new home.
1217. JUST THE"itOME FOR YOUII Very
nl~ all brick home located on Kathy St. ,
just ott SR 35. Ntw kitchen, 3 BRa, LR, din·
. lng! 1\\ bath.
• 112&amp;. $21,to0-.Ev•no Htljjh18, 3 BR, LR,
kitchtn, balh, lull baltmlnl.
1212. &amp;.41 A., mil, Sectian 34, Rloc:aon
Twp .. Ironia on SR '325. $25,000. •

1189. EVERYTHING YOU COULD WANT
- This oocbo,.l home is localed 1usl a few
minutes from Green Elemental)' School. 4
BAs, 2 balhs, LR, equipped kttchen, DR,
fireplace, central air, 11 Gx32 pool wlhoaler,
covered patio, 20x24 shelter house

1228. SPACIOUS BRICK wilh an 80x450'
. tot located on St. Rt. 35 neat HMC 4 BAs,
LR. OR. kitchen. balh, full basement wlout·
srde entmnce, garage, utility bldg woth car·
po~ and much mora Call lor appointment

-

1138. VILLAGE OF CENTERVIUE- NICe
2 story offe11 3 BAs , bath, LR, kitchen, DR.
gas heat, 2 fireplaces. Situated on 1 850

1209. RIO GRANDE AREA - 2.87 acres
mn , lovely 2 story home w1th 3 BAs , I y,
baths, kitchen, LR. Ideally located near new
highway.
_

acre.

~305. 30.5 AC. MIL. Raccoon Twp.
Garners Fold Rd. Pond and bam . lovely
place lor a new home.
1203. OHIO TOWNSHIP '- 53Y, acres, more

tt50. CORNER LOTS. Vary ~~Jhoma of·
ors 3 BAs, bath, kitchen . carpil;meplace, 1
car detached garage
1313. Sll,iOO- 161 Acres, mora ot lass.
Hunt1ngton Twp., Woods Mill Rd .. large
homo ofors 6 BAs , 2 baths , LR , kitchen ,
FR. etoctnc heat. Fronts on Raccoon .
tobacco basa. May be bought, w1lh loss
land or more.

or less. Ver; n1ce ranch style home offers

3/4 bedrooms, LR , kitchen , bath. full base·
ment, carpet, deck, garage, Slang. Tobacco
base and tobacco bam AdcfitJOnalland
#186 . QUIET, SECLUDED settrng fusl
minules to HMC and downtown Home
foaturas 3 BRS, krtchan w/mnge &amp; refng.,
LR. DR, catpet. fireplace , c1ty sch,ool dist

1145. BE A HOME OWNERI Ver'f n1ce
s1artar home offe11 4 BRs, 2 baths, LR. FR.
dtn~ne. full baseman!, gas heaUcent ""·
city schools

1160. NICE RANCH STYLE HOME localod
on Kinoon Ot offers 3 BAs, balh, LA. kitch·

t193. GOOD .IN-TOWN LOCATION- Jus!
a block from grocery stoto. NICe home off·
ers LR, kitchen , BAs, bath , large lronl
porch,

en , full basement, gas heat N1ce starter
home or retirement home .

1235. 00 YOU LOVE THE OLDER
HOMES IN TOWN?- ThiS one IS located
just across from GAHS. 5 BRS. 4 baths, LA,
kitchen. sun room, comer lot.

t:!'O. OFFICE BUILDING LOCATED AT
250 SECOND - Ollice down and 1 BR
apartment upstall1. Very nice buildtng. Can
lot do1ails
t1 42 S35 10011 - WHY PAY RENT? Ranci~ styl~ hQme on SR 160, 3 BRs, LA ,
kitchen, batlo, attached gamge. 1OOx300 lot.
1111. CONVENIENT LOCAtiON
cOMFORTABLE HOME- Jus1at tho edga
of lown this hom• offers 3 BRa, bath, kitch·
an, LR, DR, 24x30 garage Nice oh~de
trets. Very wtll kept
11Bi. EVERYTHING YOU COULO WANT
• This soctional home is located just a few
minutes from Green Elem. School, 4 BRo. 2
baths, LR, oqu1pped kitchen, DR, t~reptaco,
central air, 18x32 pool wlheater, covered
pabo, 20X24 sholtar house
1110. RIV'ERVIEW FROM YOUR OWN
BACK YARD- Vory niCe all bnck homo pH·
ars 3 BRS, LR wnlroplaee. equipped kltch ·
an, hJII basement •
1264. COMMERCIAL PROPERTY· 2.4 A •
mn, 249 frontage along SR 7, iUS! across
from ONo Rivor Plaza.
131&amp;. MEIGS CO .. 240 A., mn, Bodford l
Choater Twp. Old origin~! log homo w1th
1ddiHon 1ddod. Drilled wolf, county water
IVIlilable. Has boon owned'bY llmt family
tor 4goonatations.

1211. RIO GRANDE - Vo-t tat Util~laa

· avllilabfe. Juot oft SR 325 nail lfllllmtnll.
KUCKER ROAD - Lot eontaino .824 acre
mit, wettr tap and "Ptic tank on propeny..

1178. FRONTAGE ON THE RIVER - 3
BRs, LR; equippad kttchen, fuel o•llumace.
cont. air, hJII basement, anached garage.

.)

tl61. LeGRANDE BOULEVARD - All
bnck, 3 BRo, J.R, krlchen , balh, lull base·
ment, gas lorced wr. anached garage. city
schools.
1246. PRIVACY SEEK~ AS LOOK AT THIS
ONE I • Largo log home can be purchased
with 162 acres or 2 ,eras This homa offers
4 BAs, 3 baths, equipped kitchen, LA, FR,
2 fireplaces, heat pu!Tlplcent. air (backup
sys1em), oversized 2 cer enached garage.
Frontage on Raccoon Croak
1221•• 88 A. MIL (Hobart Dillon Subd.)
a1ong Raccoon Creek , great for a mobile

home. Large pine trees on 33 Sides. All
level.
1279. 17.5 A. mil, Parry Twp , Symmes
Craek bottom land, some holl, tobacco baso
$9,000.
1510. WHITE ROAD- 20 acres, mn, vacant
land, approx. 1 milo from Charolalo lako.
$20,000
1513. 5 ACRE LOTll. Green Township,
F1irlitld Vtnco Rd. and Wioon Bootie Rd.
B11utiful pi- lo bu~d a home.
LARGE FARM - 386. aero m n, 55x110
3 pondi , tobacco base. C•ll lot
dllails.
b~m.

�Page-06-Sunday Tlme&amp;'-Sentlnel

Pome~oy-Middleport-Galllpolls,

wv

OH-Polnt

'january 5, 1992
Livestock

63 :

44

Apanmenl
for Renl

lor

rent,

Spring

54 Miscellaneous

lluy or 1111. Rlverlnt.Antlqutl,
1124 E. M1ln Strttt, Pomer~.
Houri: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. lo 8:00
P·'!',_!~ndoy 1:00 1o 8:00 p.m.
11.,..., 26M.

Apt . for rerlt S'l75, hoo s.e for rent
$100, Pomeroy. Apt. for rent
Middleport $100, &amp;14-992·7511
Apt .

Antiques

53

Av•

54 Miscellaneous
56 Pete tor Salt
Merchandise
oroom ond supply lhop·P11
----------loraomlna. All twllidt, ttyltt.

Merchandise

C.B. bltl rldlo, Cobra 2000. D·
104 Millo Oocy Mllort P8L II
Ant. -4 ncllont. Tower, Co-Jx
ertrll. Exc . cond. SSOO. C'tll

AntiQUI furniture rlptlr
,.tinfthlng. (25 yrs. exp)
Whlla, S1of.245-M48.

S160mo, $100 depo~lt, f-bdrm ,
no pats, 614·667-3083

BEAUTIFUL APARTME/HS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

bttw11n 91.m. &amp; 10 p.m. &amp;14·

256·1443

54 Miscellaneous

ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pike
from $192/mo. Walk to shop &amp;
movies. Call614-446·2568. EOH.

Merchandise

Complelly Furnished Small
Housa, $250fmo. Plus Utllillts,
And Oepos11. 614·446-0338. Call
Betore7p.m.
Grac•ous Uvlng 1 and 2 bad·
room apar1 menta al Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Aparlmenls In M1ddleJirt From
$196. Call614·992-778 EOH. ,

Stair Steppar $80. Exerelst blkt
$3.5. Both lllC cond, 304-675·
4634.
.

In Mlddlapolt, Ohio. 1 and 2
bedroom furnished apl, some
with utilities paid, rtferanca and
daposil raquired, 304·882·2566.

Waterbtd Solid Oak Callfornla
King, Complete Bookcase Mir·
, Headboard. Cost : $8.50;
. $250. 614-446-3040.

New Havan, on• bedroom apt,
deposil and reference required,
304-882-2568.

Wadding gown: size 9-10, salln
&amp; laca. Good cond. 614·367-7615.

Nice 2 BR, 4·1f2 mi. tram Gal·
llpolis. Slova &amp; reftig No pels
$235Jmo. 614-446·8038.

. Building
Supplies

130.00.

Sam

Complatly Furnished mobile
homa, 1 mile below !own, over·
looking nver. No Pels, CA 614·
446-0338.

Somarvilla's Army
Surplus.by Sendyvllle Postr
Ottlc•, Jeckson County, WY,
Camflauge clothing, Carllar1s 10
percent discount, junior cam·
fJauges· regular prices. Fri.,
For sale· womens jeans, dress Sal ., Sun. Noon • 6pm. oHmr
pants &amp; skirts, alze 5 &amp; up Al so days hours call· 304·273·5655,
a r&amp;cllntr chair, good condition, Insulated Dacron eamollouge
S'IO, 614·949-:1:204 aher 4pm
coveralls ..$30,00

OFFICE 992·2886

One
and
two
bedroom
apartments tor rant 304-675·
2053 or 67.5-4109,
Un41rnist'led 2br Oarage Apart·
ment , 3:1:2 Third Avenue, Gal·
llpolis, 614·446·3748, 614·256·
1903 Before 9p m.

205 North Second Ava.

Rooms for r•nt • week or month.
Starting at $120imo. Gallia Holel.
614-441l· 9580.

Hemlock Grove-You want seclusion 1n a great area you
need to see thi s Appr01c 48 acres w1th small lrUit orchard, "'
grape vmes . workshop &amp; larg e shed for equ1pment storag e
Home rs fully carpeted and has 3 bedrooms. 1 112 batt'l s.
mce deck. screened 1n porc h equ1rped knchen d1mng
room Ander son windows , and a hal basement
$54,900

Sleepln9 rooms with cooking.
Also trailer spaca All hook-ups
Call after 2:00 p m , 304·773·
5651, Mason

MIDDLEPORT-General Hartlr~ger Parkway-C ome see
this cute 2 bedroom apartment w1th two car garage Has
natural gas floor furnace and would make a great rental

45

Furnished

Rooms

wv.

Merchandise

propeny

hots And Wormtd. Ready To

'\::717l.tf/l,

Beautiful St. B•nard puppias,
full btoodad bul no! raglsterld,
taking deposita, &amp;14·742-2025

/) CR

RESIDENTIAL ·INVESTMENTS· COMMERCIAL· FARMS

Mixed Hay Round Baln, $15
P1r Bale. ~to11d lnctoora; Hay,
soo Sq. Bal11. P.ura RH Clover.
$2.00 Per Bala. 1114·245·9460.

,.·.•

.Household
Goods

3 pc bedroom suitt $1:1:5.
Ninendo system $41 Ou11n
size waltr bad $150. 304-675-

7349.

County Appliance, Inc. Good
used appliances, TV sels Open
8 a.m to 6 p.m Mon -Sal 614·
446·1699, li27 3rd Ava Gal·
lipolis, OH
PICKENS FURNITURE
New/Used
Household furn ishing. 1/2 mi.
Jerricho Rd Pt. Pleasant, WV,
call ~04.&amp;75 - 1450
Pint
dlnet1e
'sel
$225:
washer/dryer $150 ; coffn tabla,
2 ends, 2 lamps $125. 614·446·

1062.

RENT 20WN
614·446·3158
Vl'ra Furnilurt
Sola &amp;. Chair, $1110 Waek;
Recliner, $5.47 W•ak, Swivel
Rocker, $3.63 Waak.Bunk Bed
Complat• $8.41 Wtek, 4 Drawer
Ct'lest, $3.26 Week; Post•r Bad·
room Sulll, 7 pc ,, $16.67 Week,
Includes Beddlng.Counlry Pine
Dmeltl With Banch &amp; 4 Chairs,
$10.98 W1ak.OPEN . Monday
Thru Saturday, 9a.m lo 6p.m.,
Sunday 12 Noon Till Sp.m. 4
Mil•s Ott Routt 7 On Rout• 141,
In Centenary.
Sal• On All Carpi! In Stock!
VInyl, $4.99 yd. Carpel $4 .00 Up.
Mollohan Carpals. 614·446-IU4 .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82

fam1ly room , wet bar, garden bathtub, hreplace 0 1sland 1n
k•tchen. heat pump, and a summer kitchen . All 1n good
cond111on All the land 1s fenced

WAS $55,000

RACINE AREA·SI RI124-Aimost 4 acres of mce lay1ng
lawn and garden area and a 4 bedroom home that w1tlim
the last 8 years has had a new roof, s1d1ng, cab•nets,
furnace , wmdows, satellite , steel garage, fiKtures, and new
plumb1ng •n bath

WAS $40,000

NOW $37,500

JUST ONE MILE OUT OF TUPPERS PLAINS· A beau ulul
2 year old doub!ew1de that looks hke new Has 3 bedrooms,
10 the family room , dming room, and a
cathedral cetl1ng 1n the ll vmg room A moo lay1ng 1 585 acre

2 baths , !•replace

lot. public water. and a heat pump
A DEAL AT JUST

$45,500

16011. REDUCED PRICE -3 bedrooms and room lor
more, 31ull baths, 5 fireplaces , completed basement
wllamily rm., W8 FP, &amp;quipped kitchen bath 41so an
aeldllonal rm . with gas fireplace Pos~esSio~ on the

close ofll'lelramachon

~~~~~~
- Own your own llome, 3
. ,.,, ......... dose to !own, 1111 baths, LR, kit.,

· "''~"' "

I basement w/4rms Family rrn and 1'1S'
bath down with outside enlry. Owner works on cars In
26 'x32' garage wired lar 220 alec. Owner said 'sell."
Gosh, what a buy'

175g, COMMERCIAL BUIDING. home . apaltmant .all of thi s In one bundle ol real estale. This
crooertv Is located on a C(lmer lot wilh procertv hav·
ing tho ·rtver as lis boondaty This home has a great
ooal of polenllal as a home or ofllce space ntealur99
3 BR, 1~ bath, family room, basemen! wnireplace,
lots Of storage area II also lea!Ures a 2 BA . 1 bath
apartment over a 2 car garage CaH tor an app~nt·
manito see this Interesting home

DIAN CALLAHAN. REALTOR, 446-&amp;606
EUNICE NIEtjM, REALTOR, -1897
RUTH BARR. REALTOR. 146-0722
DEBORAH SCITES, REALTOR, 446-&amp;606
LYNDAFAAI.EY, REALTOR,446-61106
MICHAEL MILLER, R~ TOR, 446-61108
PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR, 245·1575

and new wmng

1785. RIO GRANDE. Home Is priced for lmrnedlata
sale. 3 bedrm., bath, gas heat, carport Appfox. 3'1 ol
an acre. BeautHul trees and spot to boikl a new home.
loca!ed on·SR 35.

conrad. You'll go bad&lt; In lime II you t~e In this large
2 story home, 3 bedrms .. batt'l, kit., dining rm. umny
nn. ce•ar. Bam wtapprox. 'J, ol an aae. $26,000.

wMh charm gaiOfe.
smar1
couple wiU
I
wlh this 3 bedrrn ranch Cozy
llreplace In LA Nice cabinets in kMchen low gas
heat. patio, 2 car garage, new outbuilding . Prett1est
comer lot with rall·lence and some new shrubs and

3130 oq.h olspacious-eleganlhvmg COME SEE I ASKING
$79,900

~vy

.'

16151. NEW LISTING: This hOme Is located on l ac
ITVI1eaturlog 2 or 3 bdooms With lamny room, kltch10, blllh, goyefid c.wporl, tarba slorage buYdlng. T~IS
home Is an excellent: sl&amp;ner home priced In tne $30 s.
Call lor more illonnauon.

· 1710.
bam.230 ACRE

in9

For Sale: Billrttta, Ovtr And Un.
dar, 20 Gl.1 3.. Modllitd Arid lmprovad Cyhnptr. 614-416·1800.
llhaea Model 37 12 Gauge Slug
Guo. Shoals 2 314 And 3 lncfl
Magnum Shells, $250. 614·256. 1

REDUCED!
TO SALEporch
IN ~~~~~~~~~~~1~~
W/4
BR's, 2PRICED
baths· enclosed
woodwork Very nioa home that has tUJ.d newer

Is waiting for. yO&lt;J to coma seel REDUCED TO $4;i:9oiiREALLY CUTEI 1 floor plan frame homa w1th 4 roonis.
Hardwood/ carpet flooring , fireplace, wood stove on IWO

loiS. ASKING $17,000

'

POMEROY· 100 x 290 VACANT LOTs water electric &amp;
city sewer available N1ce location for 8 trailei- ASKING· ·
$6,500

1

FAR~M:,:~·:~~~=:a

Wood ~a(ty, Inc.

199( Plymoulh Lasar: 5sDd.,
AMIFM Caua111, AC, Take Over
Payments Or NagoUate Prlca.
614-245·5204, Luva Menage.

Of4s Toron1do 1877 low miltl,
sharp, asking $14515 obo, mull
sall614·9~-2471

'Statlonwegon 1979, Chenroltl
Malibu, auto, PB , PS, ntw tlr .. ,
$800, 614·992-2717
C~hl'ln Auto Cen.lerJ. 5th and
Vl a~d S!, P1 . P11 . 304·815·1!185.

1687. CEDAR RANCH HOME - Situated on 47
aCres. This nome features 5 BAs, and or, olllce,
playroom, 2Y, baths, ullllly room, calh&amp;drat ceilings
over Jiving room, dining room and kitchen,
corw.tlon pH In living room and ~one fireplace, tire,
and security aktrm system, finished family room wl1h
fireplace , heat pump and central air, 2 car garage,
covered patio, barn. slocked ponc:l. Home has approx.
3000 sq 11 living space and many more amenities
Call lor more lntorrnatlon. ·

72· Trucks for Sale
191ip Mack dump•trUck, 15ft bid,
44 fllr1. New pilnt, good lir~-.
runs good, $6500, 814·992·2478 '

1974 Ford 314 ton 4x4, 360 tn·
gina, 4 •PHd lrant.\ 1780. 114-256·1156.

1978 Chavy pick up, 350. 1uto,

1800. :104-t'75-2417.

'
1978 ~liP 1ruc~, ,yedra~ric,

./

autP, . topper, new

ro11t ·tjril,

1525 '""'· 614·1112-5305 '

~

19e's OO(jgar half lon pickup,
auto. :..MIFM 111r10. S~SOO. 614·

446'7804.

11612. QUALITY • ,LOCATION ·SAlCE -orally bIn

1916 Ford F~asa, v.a, 4x4, .-7,000

the briCk cspe Cod· homllhlt Ms a trllndl'f nome
almosptlere. n lufum 4 bedrooms, 2 battle, living •
room!wtlh llrtp•ce, ellc. heat ·p·urnp and central air.
Apprulli, 1800 sq. fl . LOCitlon 8 overlooking the Otilo
RIVer and a lllrge lake type body ol water adjoining
property boundaries...6QJWis a 36x48 metal bulking.
Perfect lor 1011'160n11iii has a bUSiness and nMds a
a'llrQIIIorlgllrn. Plus. a 141t2_. bulking lhal OCM.IId 1
b&amp; used lor* showroom Of a &amp;mall apartment. Cllllor

Milts, 'Cell Afltr Sp.m, 1114... 41-

44j';l. ,

I

•m

~,.
36fenglna 4-lpetd Alliton, r;*f
tlrll, 12ft wslk·ln ulllll~ bed,

ar.lc ,:

Up-vp •

ru~ good, 12800, 1114·912·2478

,.-

73 ·vans

,..,.•.

POMEROY· Very n~e 2 &amp;lory buSiness building 1·2 aprs
upsrairs wilh commercial room down. In very good shapei
$27,000
'

Ji 4 WD's

1082 C!l71toP1304-112·33t7. "
1186~ caravan Ui, tolded,
·~:~ ll),iOo 011101, NADA

32 Locust StrMt, Gallipolis

Tim Wllaon, Rultor- 448-2027

SPLIT IRVEL • Th,.o levolo tho! poovido

JCt tiLJ,.. ........~....................................................

•s ~til

OF'FICI........- ...............- ........- ........·..............-..1211

''--·

Ballet Call on !his one. $59,000, or $69,000
with axlra lol.
1612

water available . Owner IS ¥EHY anxious to sell
Asking $54,900, but would consider any rea·
sonabte offer.
11203

OWH YOUR OWN BUSINESS -looated on Rr. 7 (Eu·:
18 ~) 30X36 block bldg., with sloraga In ba-t, 70
fronlago on At. 7, (or runt to Ohio River, ClllllnUy
uood ao Convenient Mort 111d Carry OUt. Ali lnvontory,
olock and equipment ln. oloro goes, Including liquor
ioonoe. (C·1)
ACRES II or L on Friendly Ridge In Clay'Twp:
WaUII and illeclric available. Priced at$32,500.00.
•

and wants il sold, Unbelievably priced at
$59,90011 You put a pencil ro lha ligunn and
you'll arrive atlh' same conclusion I havo ..... a

2

i.

n.

100

.
'
FOR SALE -62 acres. lawrence County.
GOOD INVESTMENT PROPERTlf ·- A 2 story frame
double localad on Second Avonue, Gallipolia, 4 room•
and bath downltelll and 4 roomo and bath uperalrs. Cal

!Dday.

.

.

.

'

/'1

.ovonthgo

LOI A5 .322 m.l-,5~500 ·
• LOI 8 5 ocno 11'1-$34,500
f.oi.C 5 acres ....,..28,500
•
SUbcllvlolon loCo 10 8IWt i/6 of aleCirlc lnll-lon.

frontage and 180' deep, Includes a residence
with 2 or 3 business rooms and 2 mobile

TIRED OF LOOK·ALIKES?
We've gol a 'one of a kind' hO!I)o for you. This
eye appoa11n9 ruslic ~nlom~raty homo has
something lor tho enUre fam•ly. Master badroom has adjacent k)ft e.nd ample room tor lhe

MIDDLEPORT· COMMERCIAL SITE\3 commercial build·
ings lncluang_ a small 20 x 27 garage building. GREAT
INVESTMENT PROPERTY! Call lor delailsl
,

'

HENRY E. CIRLAND......... ........C........... -... 112~181
TRACY llfiNAGEA.:......................................... Mt-2431
JEAN TAUI8EIJJ.............................................. I4..2810

rooms, 1 ~
large living room 'Nith fire·
kitc.hen, lull base~.enl plus
place, nice
extra nice lot with option to buy adchllonal lot.

WITH 1o ACRES M or
LIn Harrison Twp., 3
, 1~ bath, large liv~
room and kiU:Iten. Largo potch, bam and srorago sh ,
' N~e country sening. MUST SEE !II
COUNTliY SETTING FOR THIS A FRAME HOM£ - 3
bedrooms living ·room family mom, bath localed on 2.5
acres. Green-Gallipolis school district. HURRYII CALL
TODAY FOR APPOIN'ThiENT.
uOOD LOCATION IN TOWN- 3 bedrooms, living room .
kitchen, bath. Family room, bedroom, bath In basement. 2
par garage. Homa has now roof and alum. 11dmg. CALL
NOWill.
BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME- 2800 sq. ft. of living space, 3
~rooms 11o2 baths located on 10 actes and borders
Raccoon 'creok. Green &amp; Gallipolis schools. CALL
, NOWII!
.~DBILE HOME IN COUNTRY - 3 . b~~poms , 2 baths,
largo porch aloctric heal, central a~r. 20x30 garage,
localtd on
acres m· or·l· !n Ohio Twp. CALL FOR
APPOIN'ThiENT.
1873 MOBILE HOME"- A t~x65 mobile homo on a..,,.
ed tol wa&amp;her lll)d dryer hookup in bathroom, 2 bedrooms; 13'hx 11llstonoge builclng. Priced ar $6,000.00.
!lOME 3 ACRES IN H~RISON TWP. - 3 b.cfrooml.
1 bath, dock ·on Irani and lido of ~om a, a block garage
24&gt;&lt;22. CALL ABOUT THIS O~En .
•
.
.

HOUSE IN GALUPOUS - 3 lboml and bath, walking
dlotance 10 IIOhoOI• and 1101'81. Prtc:a&lt;Ht $16,000. • ' '

1

YOU'll FIND IN
You'l lind 3 bod·

EXCELLENT BUSINESS POSSIBILITIESII
Localod in high traffic area on St. Rr. 7 with 80'

RAI~CI1 .

11110 Plymolh 'loy- lllni·Vtn,
5-&lt;:yl, pL Chrfllor tng, pi, pb,
oU)o. ~l AII(FII 111110 . o.. o
,,.,.
"-na. Cl, wry aooclllfn.
3l,locilll
FL rotillltrlllon

.. .. ,.,.. -

14~. S04.f11-53116.

· VACANT LAND MAJOR SUBOIVlstON KNOWN AS
"LAKlV1£W ESTATEI"
'
I.01112251C. Mot.. P1lco $16,500 •'
· l.ot122.:M8oc.IM.. Pllce$22,500
Lot 132.:W8oc. IM.. Pllce 116,500
OUT LOTS FOR SA~,~; ....

R&lt; .nodilled 2 bedroom houso, ,.bu~t bam and
outbuilding, pond and tobacco baso. located
on good hard· lop road. I mile off Rr. 7. Pnced
at $44,900.
1209

446·1066

AN A+ OUAUTY HOIIEI Frame spliflevel w/Q rooms 5
BR'I , 2 bathi, deck, woodbumer, garage on . ~5 acre' in
-Riggo Creol Manor. ASKING $69 500 ·
.

WE NEED USTINGSI IF YOU'RE THINKING Of SELL·
'lNG THIS IS 'THE RIGHT TIME'TO DO ITI AND OUR
OFFICE IS .THE RIGHT PLACE TO GET A.C· T·I-().Nf
GIVE US A CALLI
•

BABY FARM FOR SAIR·
Hera's a 32 acre farm that won't lake all youi
ti,., while still allowing you lo "linker" aroond,

Allen C. Wood&amp;..Au~ciriBn&gt;ker-446-4523
Ken Morgtrn; HMitoriBroker-:448.Q971
Moee Cenlerbury, RMiior-448-3408
Jeenetle Moore, RMhor-258·1745

LOCATED' IN GALUPOUS- Yl!IE STREET -4renra
units. good Income p10!J811Y. Ca!llor more Information.

...

llrwptoco, klchtn, i&gt;llh, polio""" n1Ct

1511

.

Aoklnt

'

.,

this affotdeble homo priced at $39,900.

GET SOMiEe:,:r,::~

This 3 bedroom un
on a dead-end
i
area
could ba
upward lot lha growing
family. 1
your children lo lho joys of
country lifa on
12 acre , mil, mni·fann. Get
back to basics
,500.
t510

zoned areas lor separate activities of family liv·

ing, yet combinod ~vos space with a good traf·

lie ftow. 3 bedrooms, 2YI baths, dining room.
living room, elftc1ant k1tchen and large l ·
shaped family room . Heal pump, central air, 2
car garage and storage building. Located in
Clearviaw Estates Subdivision . City schools.

homes. Drtllod will and 2 seplic lanks. Coonty

$72,500.

1408

122$. 614·446-T.ISl

11.1)15.:814-367.0274.

more delllls.

Nl"ofl

1990 GMC Short Bed 12,900
MiiH, 44.3-V-6, 5Spd., Loaded
$10,900; Remington 11·48 16 OA.
Full ' Chok•, Aulomatlc, 5 Shol,

We bu(' aell or lrada. Jim

. 1Vr baths, basement, and 1 car
garage. 'Situaled on 0.816 aae rn.1. ~er wttllrada
lor home In the country.

52 Sponlng Goods .

A MOVE IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION .

Step up to becoming a hom~ownar. Th1~ 3
b8droom ranch with desirable ln·town location
is waiting for your inspection. Call today to see

Asking

Fof Seta: 1984 FOI'd Tampa GL,

BUY? Then take a look al thls 3-4 bedroom ranch
wnn lR, eat-kl kitchen, rei ., range, FA, gas heal, ~A
on .9 ac. mil Just 11'19 home tor newlyWeds anct
ClOSE·IN, tool Call tor IOcallon and price.

1717.

lonnlt Stutes.
Broker
IIUIIIG

1990 Ford Etcort GT,

1678. NEW LISTING. 00 YOU WANT A GOOD •

turing

446·4206 or 446·2885

15,600. 814-441.0731.

wHh 2 car garaga baya. STATE APPROVED. Wired
lor 110 al\1 220 SGNice . lnvenlorv of Qaraae and
office equipment on file. Holtypark Mo!JIIe ~lome ,
65J1_., like new.•-Home and business sltualed on 4
blo. Cd lor price and locallon.

1/2 ba1hs, fireplace. woodburner. gas lleat. 1 car garage w/
workbench , shed &amp; pat1o complete with lum•ture &amp; gas grill .

850 Build Morton Rd., Gallipolis

IIIIIIII' U

Real Estate General

198'1 Mltaa RX·7 (while with
blu, Jnterior) Turbo charged
rotary , engine. Air, 5 epe.d ,
AMlFMistereo cauan•, rear
dalrottar, power
windows,
moon root, raar window touvers
and lront and cov•r included.
One owner. Ellcellenl condition.
52 ,000 mllaa . Garage kept .
$12,000. Trades negolfable. Call
614-441·1108 after 5:00pm .

Fofl salt or lrada for truek, 78
Dod;• Van, ehort whHI be...
N-* &amp; c..an lnaide. 304-675·
76~.
'

TAUL Y EXCEPTIONAL I Localed 1n M1ddlepM· 2 Slory
frame w1th 10 room s, 5 BR's 1nclud1ng carpet &amp; drapes. 2

building sire. Land has been surveyed.
PRICE - $21,500

92/100 OF AN ACRE-OWNER
place 10 build a new home I• Dream
a trailer on this lor. The Rural WaUII
S~~;'::t Electric Service is available ar lhe propeny.
2:
lronrage along Eno-Vinton Road. 1699
BUSINESS OFFICES &amp; SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2nd AVE .. CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

198g Toyota Tercel, 5 Spaad, Air
Conditioning, Sharp! SOmeone
\ To Teka Over Peymants. 61•·
256;1393.
•

176&amp;. BUSINESS FOR .SALE: 30x50 block yaragi

POMEROY, OHIO

Prftllgloue Neighborhood

5.6 Acres more or less of Woodland. Excellent

Very nice
1'h bath. utWity
menl. 2 car garage
yard. 2 ~1. In the 30's.

304 .. 82·2637.

1~ car oarage. Naa! and dean home located 507
Sycamore St.

608 EAST MAIN

we

appeiJie to succeed, have a
place for you.

510 2.. Av.., t•IUpalll, Ollla

1988 Pontlec Grand AM, sll\ler, 4
docii', 70,000 millS, good cond,
~04-675-6060 beiOJe 5:30, after

ltns e-ceptionally ]llcl ~ bedrm., 1\1. baths. 2 110ry
llorne Lov•ly new carpet, range, washer and dl)ef,

992-2259

\ \C\i\T LM\ D

543 N. -·=·.:-~

1981 Horizon Automatic With
Air,· $1.100; 15159 Edsel 81,000

I

1rees
1741, MIDDLEPORT ANYONE? 128,000 - Woll

J

Real Estate General

1987 Chevy Nova · high mileage,
needs repa ir. Good transpor'la ·
tio~ car. $1,500, For more infor·
malion Call 614·446·234:1:, Ask
tor Paul.

,..

1762.

t750. HANDYMAN ~ECIAL- MAKE OFFER. land

potenual wltJie being your
own boss . Ye1, you're also p.vt
of a team lhal w11\ support you
all ~1e way.
If you have an msal1ablc

41HIDI

1986 Nissen Pulsar, 86,000 mi,
Interior, AIC, ps, pb, 5Sp4ed , $1250 obo, 614·949-2600
9-5pm, 949-2644 after 6pm

1987 Nissan Santr~,
$1 , ~. 614·441.0731.

Real Estale General

As a CENTIJRY21® Sales
AssocinJ.e, yw have the
benefils of unlimiled earrung-

"' CIIIUIY ll il"l EaU!l'

ra~gray

111s a beaut1ful home. It iS wh1te bnck w1th 3 bedrooms. 2
baths. family room. and large kitchen on approx 1 acre
$55,000

ranch home located In tt'le
. Exten::~tve
completed as lollows new Thermo AllsiOO windows,
security doors, s1ee1siding, heavy roof, kit., ceramiC
tile enlry eilended Into the kitchen , 16x53 dack,
cement walks and pad. See thi s home and stop
looldng elsewhere.

'

99~-6119

•

OCTilE TURNER, Broker ................................. 992·5692
BRENDA JEFFERS............................................ 992·3056
DARLINE STEWART.......... ............................... 892-6365
SANDY BUTCHEA ............................................. 992·5371
SHERYL WAL TEAS. .......................................... 367 .o421

'

ADEALONTHISONEI
~~vely home -just waiting lor a nice family. Beaurnul
liVIng room, 22x24 family room and den area, 3 be~
rooms, dining room w/atrium doors lead1ng to back
deck area. Large front deck arsa. Lots ol privacy. Call
for an appoinlment.

IIG BI~D REAUY

Real Estate General

1986 Ford Rengar, small pickup,. toppar, running boards,
$24,000 act mi. 4-cyl, $2850, 614·

VESTMENT: GOod money maker IN TOWN . Large
apt . b!OII. with 3 two bedroom apts., 2 one beOm.
apts, plus a collage wlttl two apal1mants. This
property hass been well maintained. Reduced price

EAGLE RIDGE AD.·Warv Seclusion? Th1s IS one lor you

VI'RA FURNITURE

Merchandise

trr.t:.' ¥~!~:~:

1630. EXCELLENT APARTMENT BLDG. IN·

Only $24,5 00

I

r;;;:

Mllts,ll,200;.§14·256·1270.

AOD\SON·Honeyauckle Drive-Could be used for a rental
or a mce starter home Two bedrooms, 1 bath, new sept1c

Stutes Real Estate

Located at Siate Rts.• 7 &amp; 3 5

t91i16 Ford Bronco II 4 WD,
Automatic, Air, A·1 COndition,
S5,BOO; 1986 O!ds Cutlass Clara,
4 poor S.dan, AIJiomatlc, Air,
Clean. $2,200. 304-675-3708, Or
614-446-1044.

~' ~hl, ,-1'111

$11,000

month

BODY SHOP-frame, collision repairs-FREE ESTIMATES

WHY MORE
PROFESSIONALS
ARE CHANGING
PROFESSIONS.

1986 Escort $900; 1986 Horizon
S1QSO, 1986 Turlsmo, low mll11,
$1050 ; 1987 Horizon, $1650. 304·
675-2440.

RANCH- FHA· VA, a very nice 3
bedrm.,
. counlry· kit. , lR and family rm
w111replace. 1 ac ml1 $45,000 Rodney B. Rd.

HAYMAN AO.-longbonom·Approx 112 acre of land wilh
1973 Schultz mob1le hpme that ts 12X65 Has 2 bedrooms,
woodburner. furnace, central a1r, and rents for $250 per

Ileal Estate General"

1985 Nova 5 Sp..c:l, Real Good
Work Car, S1,650. 614-446-4782.

1986 Pontiac Grand Am , runs
good, looks good . Loaded.
$3,000. 614·388·8110, call altar
6:30pm.

...--·

TELEVISION.

1985 Camero Y·6, White, Air,
Now Tires, Prlc• $2,400, Call Af·
ter 7p.m. 614-446·1062.

. mo. FARMER HOME lOAN can mcwe yu Into lhls home
with very llnle money Owner will lake a mobile nome
lor part payment. Deluxe doublewlde, master
bedroom, wltll bath, lamlly bath, 3 bectrms, formal
dining, loads ol pine cabinets 1 car garage Super
buy .

.

Towing - REQUEST lAIRDS

1984 Oodgt Arin, 4 door, black,
AMIFM, casselta, 4 cyl, new ax·
haust, 614·992·1236, evening•

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 388-8826

MAK~E~

Wheel·lift and Rollback trucks.
Fully Insured for yciur P.rotection.
Accidents or Breakilowns?
Reguest BAIRD'S
.
Features ias1de storage facilities for
your valuable vehicles.
24 Hr. Recovery aad Com)llete Damage Free

1984 Camaro Z-28, T·tops, 350
eng, auto, loaded, $3000, 304675·3319

) ROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE

pa~ment

NOW $49,000

lAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complet• home furnishings.
Hours Mon-Sal, 9-5. 614·446·
0322, 3 mlltl out Bulavllla Ad.
Fr,. Delivery.

54 Miscellaneous

1984 Buick Century, 2.5 lller
Automatic, New Tires All
Around , New Paint Job, 68,000
Mfles, Sn To 8allave 1 614-379·
2409. .

Real Eslale General

King size wa111 bed, 8 drawer
padaslal, mlrrow haadbotrd,
$425 304-675--530:1.

•

Body, Runs Good, Make Exeal·
lent Second Car. 614-441.0020.

LONGBOTTOM·Hayman Ad.·This mln l·larm has approx.

GOOD USEO APPliANCES
Washers, dryers, ralrlgaratora,
.rangn Skaggs Appliances,
Up.,-r River Rd. Btslda Stone
Crest Molal. Calt 614-446·7398.

6704.

1982 VW Rabbi! 4 SpHd, Good

JUST $13,900

Oliva Sl., Galli poll a. New &amp; Used
tumilura, htalars, Wast1rn &amp;
Work boots. 614-446-3159.

614-44&amp;.3158
LIVING ROOM : Sofa &amp; Chair,
$199.00,
Reclin1r,
$149.00;
Swivel Rocker, $99.00; Coltte &amp;
End Tables, $89 00 Set DINING
ROOM : Tabla With 4 Padded
Chairs, $149.00; Country Pine
Dinette With Bench And 3
Chairs, S299Jl0; Matching 2
Door Hitch, S349; Or $589.00
Set: Oak Tab!•, 42x62 With 6
Bow
· Sack
Chtire,
$629.00 BEDROOM · Post•r Blld·
room Suilt (5 pc.), $349.00; 4
Drawer Cl1111, $44.95 ; Bunk
Bad, $2251; Complet• Full Min
Stl, 1105.00 Sol : 7 pc, Ctcllr
Badroom Suit•, $699 OO.OPEN:
Monday Thru Saturday0 9a m. to
6p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
5p.m., 4 Milas OH Route 1 On
Raute1411n.C•nlanary.

19751 Ct'lryslar Cordoba, new
paint, new tires, $1000, 304-6756955 11ter 5pm

Wanted: Used farm aquipmant , *
anything you wan! to sell. 614· ·
256 ·1~00,
614·256-6040 Attar · ·
6p.m.

7 acres with a 5yr old modular It has 3 bedrooms. 2 baths,

51

6" ·992-6'719

Jim 's Farm Equipmenl, SR. ~5, :
West Gallipolis, 614-446·9m;
Wlda selection new &amp; used farm . •
tractors &amp; lmplaments. Buy,
sell, trade, 8.00-5:00 waakdays, .
S..t. 1111 Noon.

Slw·VIc
Strvic:a,
Georges Cr11k Rd. Parts, SlApplies, pickup, end dallvery. li14·
448.(1294.

Real Estate General

!9H478

1979 Chaverol•l Ceprlca Clas·
sic ; 4dr sedan, excellen1 nice
car, avery oplion, 305 V-8, $1450,

Electrical &amp;

One evening my daughter and 1
sat watching OU( lavorlta show. Feel·
1n3 especially close to her 1said "Sit
closer honey. "I expected her to snuggle up lo me, bu11nstead she got up
and ' sat righl in front oJ the

245-e152.

DON·STEVE

1977 Chevy Camaro, ~DS aula,
honey comb megs , new tires,
S695 obo 814·992-2478

GRIEVE
NATIVE
BISHOP
UPLIFT
POTATO
HEROIC
TELEVISION

Will bUild Pllio c:overs, decks,
scrH,Md rooms, put up vinyl
- - - - - - - - - - , siding or trailer skirting. 814·

1966 Olds F·85, 4dr, V-B, -.uro,
air, 47,000 actual miles, n.ms
good, good tll'ls, $800 obo, 614·

Ford 600 Farm Tractor Just
Ovarhsuled, Equipped To u-. ~ .
Unleaded Gas . 614..j88·9916 .

23 LOCUST ST. ·

-

84

Sunday

Pl.umblng &amp;
Heating .
Clrt1r'1 Plumbing
Fourth and Pin•
Galllpolle, Ohio
814-441-36111

Compteta Mobile Home s.t.Up1,
R•pllrs; Comm~rlcal, Aasldantltl · lmproveme'nls. Including:
Plumbing, EIICirical. lnsurence
CIJim• Atctpttd. &amp;1•·256·1611.

FrHman's Plumbing And Hul·
lng, 614·256-1811.

71&lt;&lt;Autes for Bale

82

Home

lmprovamenls

Big Or Smolll614o441.0228.

Transportation

-·

Farm Supplies
&amp;Liveslock

286-15522.

.

Hay &amp; Grain

64

81

Home

Curtis Home · lmprovem•nts:
Year• Experience On Older &amp;
Nawar HanMJ. Room Additions,
Foundadon Work, Agoflng,
Kitchens And B1tt11. Frta Estlmllt.l Relarencn, No Job To

preml111, 1114~H-1079 or 11145513;64251111VI m..sage

185 Allis Ct'lalmtrl Olastl Trac. :
lor, $5,950; 0.14 AC With Loader,
$:1:,950, 0·17, AC With Plow, Cui· _ ·
Uv•uor, Grain Drill, $2,950; 614• ~

--.-------AKC registered Boxer puppies
304-ll82·3397.

f"'1l}

$650. 614·2811·11522:

61 Farm Equipment

Pels lor Sale

~ r.:;;~·

81

1:-------...:.-lng, ssoo: 8 Yur,Old Polni.Moro, 81
Home

Flah Tint!; 2-413 JaaMaan Ave.·
Point Pl1111nt, 3P.4•171·20t:S,
IIlii Uno Troplool llon blrdo,
email anlmala and euppl111.

AKC R~lstered Cockar Spaniel
Pups FOI' Sala. All Shols, Wormad. $150. 614·388·51162.

245-5121.

56

Services

2 Hom Trailer New Pal(tl, New
Tirlt; $1,195; 1910 AOHA Geld·

Musical

Real Estate General

IT'/ ..t.IJ

Middleport, OH

ru"•

Block, brick, sawar pipes, win·
dowt , linlels, ale. Claude Win·
tars, Rio Grandt, OH Call 614·

Real Estale General

Vary nice 1 BR furnished apar1·
ment on Mt. Vernon Ave.
Upstairs. Privata. S235 plua
tleclric. ,Ret. &amp; dap. 304-675·
2651.

•

Pets for Sale

ltmt Ptl Food Dltllt. Jullt
Wtbb. Coli IM~4H231 .
AKC Chocollll Labl'ldor Pup- Rat Terrier puP.Qlll, Inside or
Bttutlful, e Wttlle Old, outlida · dag, parent• on
Bt PIICidl 814-446-8'111.

Sam Somarville's Army Surplus.
Cemflauga ciOII'KAg, Carharls 10,
percent discount, junior cam·
Uauges· regular prices. New
houil artw Christmas. Fri.~ Sat.,
Sun. Noon • Bpm. other days
hours call 304·273·5655 (unlit
Christmas) !Othar days 3-6pm)
All Chrlstmu exchange• In by
January 5, 15192. lnsulat,ct
Dacron camollouge coveralls.

56

OH-PQint Pleasant, wv

VACANT LAND SURVEJEO FOR LOTS KNOWN
AS "FARMVIEW ESTATES"
Lol II 2.472oc. 11&gt;1. $16.500
LOI 12 2.4n IC, m1. 112,9011
' Loll3 2.416oc. m1. $12,9011 .
LOII4 2A16oc. m1118,500.
1131. LAKEVIEW LOTS : Cholco lolo wnh

'91diCU .... ri1W1 You .;I WWII more lhln OM. CJ;Ik,
...,It, \fOllwood oncl ..., . . , ..... mokt 1NI • .

-rban fllratllt. Alto loll IIOIIIInQ dn ijMo fld'
Frr lull poracii..U!III JO in!f11111.
••

·

.

call lor an appoinlment. You've got everyth1ng
to bain and nothing 10 losa. $125,000.
1204
HOME AND LOT FOR $29,80011
Quiet country surroundings make lh1s 3 bed·

room attractive. located closo to shoppin~.
2 full bathe, large liv1ng room, eat-1n
kitchen and lining area. Plenly of p,ali&lt;ing. Not
many places available for this price in good
condition.
1218
Features

HARD TO BEUEVEIII
,
Over Sr.ooo monthly income on tnli 3 unit
~partment plus m&lt;&gt;\'ilo homo. Aparln!ont build·
ing tomplelaly remodeled 1n ·1978. localed tn
Rio Grande near University. Owner .out oltown

great investment! _

GREAT LAND FOR DEVELOPMENT· «l-Iar~~~
1n the city lmltl of Gall~ . thack thlo one out

76; AutO Par)B &amp;

GREEN ,ACRI;S ·TWo tots; 1 Iorge level hol!lt aila, 1.0
ft. b~ ' 1&gt;48 fl. citY water. Groen achOO\. Good conditio~
Priced righUISfO,OOO.
:
WE HAVE BUILDING LOTI In Ro&lt;tr&gt;ey 1/itlagell. Call fo.

..... lhforft1111on,
·FOR YOUR COIIVIIIINCI111Y

...... ,...

OUR lOU, 1'111!1 111 . R

.1.

--

U04

•

WHERE GRANDMA USEO TO UVEII
Oloan 111.! olory homo along Aoulo.7 olforelots
of chonn. 3 btdiOOII)s,' firaplace •. dining room
and lull buof!ltnt are lull soma ol lho
foalllnn. 1.66 acrat lnciUdoo 2 car garaga·and
bam. New gas lumaee lnalalltd lkontly also.
Beautiful rivor viow to onjoy lrom tna shade of
tho m.,Pa tile$ . Priced at$59,500.
. ti1S
'

'

•

room. OutstandlnQ outdoor .area featuring
25x10 covered patJo, 38x10 sun patio, 24 rt.

above ground pool with wooden dock. ,
Gaiipois City Schools. $75,900. What more
could you wan!? Call Carolyn Wasch for addl·
tional infonnation.
KO&amp;

places. 2 car garage. l.aogt lol. Homo warranty
baeke up house components lor a full year.

Call now lor an appointment

1228

START FROM SCRATCH
And your porlecl homo can 'happon' when you

LARGE COMMERCIAL'BUILOING
ON ST. AT. 7
Located near Silver Bridge with O'Yer 5,100 sq.
H. of clean, dty space. Approx. 11.! finished. 1o2
unfinrshed. Plus 3 bedroom a'panment only 8
years old. Finished space Is healed with h1gn

build on one of these 5+ acre parcels.
Conveniently localed ·noar At. 35 in Green
Township. City schools.
1600
HAPPILY EVER AFTER
Is how you'll live in this 3 bedroom. 2 bath
h"!"• loatui\i)g ~large grtil room. lonnal din·

efficiency gas and has central ai{ Ideal lor
many uses . Call for mora information.
1200

ing room and aeparale · master su11e .
Entertaining continues, outside in the above

BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME HERE
And improve your view. Thio wooded lot ovor·
looks the lake in Charolais Lake Estates, and is

groond pool. Priced at $54,900.

1509.

DON'T SETTLE FOR A HOOSE
JUST TO LIVE IN....
From lho momo~t you stop info tho large Ioyer
you can "'eer your family ·livl~g in .this ·clasoic.-

one of the last ones remaining. Better call

today The price is only $16.500.·

Home featurws 3 mce bodrooms, 1 ~ ,baths,
IS'I'gl living room, formal d ining and eat-in
kitd)en. Full b~"menl with family room. 2·11re· .

1508

FREEDOM TO ENJOY YOUR LEISURE TIME
a mm1mum of maintenance on this 3
bedroom bi·lovel. The backyard is lonced and
you will enjoy the deck just off tho dining oH.
Priced at $39,900.
1506

Formal living ream , dining room , 'sunOy kitchen ,

There's

vo.,-Uvablo family room , 3 n1ca.bQdrooms plus
2 lull balhs. Storage galore in the large altic, 1
car garage , full basement. If that's not enough,
in lawn convenience. Priced at ~63 , 000. $609

DON'T LOOK AT TH~ PRICEII
to sea that yu can &amp;1111 own a
noma lor $33,000. You will lind this 3 bedroom,
vlhyl' sided ranch in Centenary clooo to tho

WANT A HOME AT AN AFFORDABLE'PRICE
THAT YOU CAN MOVE RIGHT INTO?
Thon you lllld to take look at this beauty.
'Largo living/dining room combination. nico
kitchen with laundry area. 3 bedrooms and 2
baths. Newly painted ceilings and axlerior.
Combine thio low rrice with low inlerosr rales
and you can lullil your homeowner's dream.
Only $32,000..
1613

It will shock you

a

convenilnce store . Smaller remade*" room

partocllor aowing room or nursary. Aemodolod
mulor bedroom. Detached 1 car garage.
Approx. 314 ac,., Cily schools. ACT NQWI!
'
' 1801

We Ne,e d Li~tings!
.

..

.

lio;506;!.aneovllto, II4-'1142·2SS~
., · Accaasorlall

most complete bedroom suite. Living room with
cathedral cel!ing and fil'lplaee will welc~me
your guests lor you. Full basement lhal JUSt
~n't quit has poss1bi1111as for a 4th bedroom
and mote. lniJ~ound pool . Large outbuilding
with potential lo btcome a guest house . 1.5
acre lot wilh a view. 4 car storage. Giva u~ a

_ EXCEPTIONAL HOME
Well kepi ranch homo has a lol morv to oHor
than Jn9SI in its class. Located in one of Galha
Counly's best soiling noighbomoods - Sprtng
Valley - lfo clooo to shopping, hospltel, ale.

THIS HOME HAS IT Allll
Blick ranch nestled in tne center of goreous
pines on 1 aqro, m~ . Fea1ures 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, formal living room , family room, lully
equipped kitchen wilh diHTH'§ ltoa, laundty

'

..Wis.eman Real·.Est.ate
'

. . (61_4), 446~364·4 '

David Wiaman, Broker, 446-9555
'

'

'

CAROLYN WAS.CH '441-1007'
--ONNY GARNES, 448-~707 ••

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