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                  <text>--·BORN LOSER

Ohio

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
J. u.
Effigy· Knoll- Steep· Jerkin· PRE-LIFE
Our te~nage daughter seemed depressed because
she dtdn t know what she wanted to do with her life.
"Gosh," she sighed, "I guess I'm having a PRE·LIFE
crisis!"

a lnalda EdiUon

®liD Wheel of Fortune r;1

1l2l Gl Family FeUd
121111e a Star Stereo.
12!1 Cro11llre
7:35 (I) Sanlord I Son
8:00 (])It iiJ Figure Skating
World Championships, men's
final lrom Oakland, Calif. (L)

fi MOYIE:
Ttnder Merclea
(2:00)
(PG)

GIVE 'IM A "-'ND! L.E.a.VE
TH'

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TO ME!

MORTY MERKLE AND WINTHROP
MY 1:\A.D 5AY8

H~'ll DOt..l&amp;.e MY

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HAVE 10 FINDANOTHE:R

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A:s ON MY NEXT
RER::lRT CARD.

WAY 10 ~T Rio-t.

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BARNEY
HOWDY,

AUNT LOWEEZ.Y··
CAN I MAKE ME
A CHAWICLET

BOSS II

MILl( FER
SUPPER?

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Mlrch 21, 111112

You might get Involved jn an enterprise
In the year lhead about which you'll ba
verY secretive. Thllls becluse you may
.,. working on aomethlng that could ba
. copied by competitors.
AIIIIS (Mirch 21·AprU 11) lnatead of
merely eoc:lallzlng today, try to mix 'with
people from whom you can learn some·: thing. You're not apt. to derive much
. jiiMiuN ependlng Umt with thOse you
CIM'I rttpeellnltllectudy. Know whaie
to lOOk few romance ltld you'll find 11.
Tht Aswo-Graph Motchmakar lnatanlly
•

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a Family Mlttara
Urkel builds a robot that
takes a liking to Laura. (R)
Stereo. C
1ZJ (!) Wiahl~n WHk In
Review Stereo. C
IIDIIID 112le Collige
lle..llblll NCAA
Tournament, regional
semlllnal from Lexington. Ky.
(Southeast) or Kansas City,
Mo. (Midwest) (l) C
llllll Amertc•'• Moet
Wanted A rap singer Is
wanted for the shootin~l a
pollee officer. Stereo.
II! Murder, She Wrote
1211 On Stage Stereo
rD Snow Skiing U.S. Alpine
Championships, super-G
from Winter Pa~ Colo. (D
12!1 PrimaNewo "'
8:05 (I) NBA Baekelblll A~anta
Hawks at Minnesota
Tlmberwolves (l)
8:30 (J) rJ (() G Step by Step
Frank and Carol taka a
hair-raising plane ride on his
birthday. Stereo. C
IZJ (!) Wall Streti'WStereo. Q
1211 T1111 Connocllon Stereo.
9:00 (]) Q IDII'II Fly Away Ully
draws attention to the town's
struggl;gver segregatiOn.
Stere&lt;l.
(J) rJ
fl Dlnouure Ea~
runs for public olflce a~lnst
B.P Alehflled. Stereo.
IZJ !Il ...Ttlkl(';lth avtd
Froat Stereo.
[J) II Hidden
Maylm
Bialik shows up In disguise
at a Blossom look-alike
contest. (A) Stere&lt;l.
II! PGA Golf Players
Championship, 2nd Round,
Jacksonville, Florida (R)
1211 Naahvtlle Now Stereo.
rD Tep Rank loxlng Light
Heavyweight bout: Tyrone
Frnler (19-4-4, 9 KOs) vs.
Kevin Watts (22·6·1, 10 KOs),
10 rounds, from Atlantic City,
N.J. (l)
II! larry King Uvet
illl Father Dowling Mytlallea
Stere&lt;l. r;1
9:30(1)8 Chttrt c
(I) 8 lleby Ttli After a
series of misunderstandings,
Maggie and James become
enga~. Stere&lt;l. C
[J) II Hidden VkiiO A
delivery man stays until a
sequestered jury reaches a
verdict. (R) Stereo. r;l
10:00 (J) e iiJ Nlahlmtre Cefa
Blaokle has ~rank help i
family deal wnh a son who Is
(I) rJ (I)

NORTH
+J 10 9

BRIDGE

Vol. 27, No. 8
Copyrighted 11192

.AKQ5
+8754

ALDER

WEST
K74
'Q10875
• J 87
+J 6

GALLIPOLIS - Computers
are playing a great part in our
lives, every day. Now the Gallia
County Jail is turning to computers 10 make the P.risoner
booking process accesstble to all
participating jails.
When the system installation
is complete, the sherifrs depart·
ment will be linked by a computer network tying upstairs
offices to the jail and the dispatch area. Jail booking wiD be
electronic as will the daily oper·
ation of the dispatch o£fice. This
will give instant access to warrants and other papers which
may need to be served within
our county, making this infor·
mation available to patrol offi·
cers With a few keystrokes.
A computerized system, the
development of which has been
underway for sometime, now
links approximately 75 percent
of the county jails in Ohio,
through a master computer in
Columbus.
Gallia County Sheriff Dennis

EAST
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SOUTH

+A QB&gt;
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Protect
the protectable

t63

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Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

By Phillip Alder
There are certain suit holdings that
are safe from attack by one opponent,
but in danger against a lead from the
other opponent. One example is king
doubleton in hand opposite low cards
in the dummy. If your left-hand oppo·
nent leads the suit, you must score a
trick with the king. But if your right·
hand opponent leads it, you will score
a trick only if he. RHO, holds the ace.
Sometimes spotting these positions
takes clear thinking. Cover the East·
West cards in the diagram and plan
the play in three no-trump. West leads
the heart seven: three, ace, four. Back
comes the heart two. Over to you.
The deal occurred during a social
rubber-bridge game. At the lime,
South finessed the heart jack at trick
two. West won with the queen andreturned the 10. Declarer won with the
king, crossed to dummy with a diamond and ran the spade jack. Howev·
er, West produced the king and cashed
two heart tricks to defeat the game.
SoutH, of coune, complained that he

Soulb
I NT

West
Pass

Nortb
3 NT

East
All pass

Opening lead: • 7

was unlucky oecause two nnesses lost.
But he had overlooked the facllhal he
was taking the spade finesse into the
dangerous hand. If he had simply won
trick two with the heart king, crossed
to dummy with a diamond and taken
the spade finesse, he would have been
safe. Since South still has jack doubleton of hearts, West cannot run the suit.
South must win nine tricks: three
spades, one heart, three"dlamonds and
two clubs.
Alternatively, South could have
played the heart sir at trick two, leav·
ing West unable to continue the suit.
South had three choices at trick two:
he should have considered them all.
Re.tdm Me Invited to """ ard·ploy qwl•
lions w l'flili/p Alder, Jn are ollllil 1&gt;1-p«:
They CID be eswered 011ly ~ the column
@ 1-. . . . .ANIINliN NU AIM

Anower to Prarloutl'uule

Madrid
40 Snake
41 Guitar play·

1 Chair
5 Give unwanted advice
11 Conductor
- Prtvln
12 Exile
13 Herb
14 Horaally
15 Stringy
17 language
aulflr
18 Pay attention
to
18 Mimicked
21 Not on
24 BlUer vetch
25 Colora
26 Author Jean

er's device

42 Decorative
•tamp
43 For (Sp.)
45 Perfume
47 Anelenlthlp
50 I ctnnolltll
51 Small alream
52 Nolet of debt
53 California
ball club
54 If not

GOV. BILL CLINTON

1'Trapa
2 Bordered
3 Territory
4 Symbol for
tellurium
5 NIW Zuland

27 Overweight
28 Coartt cloth
30 Jepeneeo
·robe

33 Little devil
34 SIOux lndltn
35 Ytrne hero
37 Mra. ln

· parrot

6 Pltnl firmly:
var.
7 Pra)udlce

RIO GRANDE - Spring quar·
tet enrollment at the University of
Rio Grande has climbed to 2,067, a
continuation of .the increase in the
institution's student population
during each quarter of the 1991-92
~cademic year.
The university's fall head count
was 1,998, which increased to
2,034 in winter, the first time in
Rio Grande's history that winter
'quanu enrollment had ever been
higher than fall's. The current num·
ber of students attending similarly

8 Offlra
8 Bl PIUI one
10 LlllltHer
(Brll.)
11 Jtcob't lOR
14 Kind
15 011 - Will
16- sooroct

reveals which signs are romantically
perfect lor you. Mall $2 plus a long, self·
addressed, stamped envelope to
Matchmaker. c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428.
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) A major
goal can be achieved over the weekend
- If you're willing lo work for it. Olsengage yourself from trivial endeavors
and foc:ua on this meaningful objective.
GEMINI (May21-June 20) Under ·most
conditions, when socializing, It's best to
avoid discussing religion or politics. But
today could be an exception. A !rank,
friendly discourse could give you a lresh
perapecllve.
CANCER (June 21 ~July 22) If you've
been thinking about making a spacial
arrangement that could financially ben·
eflt both you and aomeone·you like, this
Is the day to Initiate it.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Conditions that
Influence your mental end physlc.al well·
bel~g are rathet harmonious today.
Play things light lind easy, and try to
avoid mundane, material Involvements.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-lept. 22) Try to locus
your etrorta on labors of love today, You
could ba amazed at how much you'llacCOfi!PIIIh tnd how mUch enjoyment
~ou Uderive from doing them.
LIIIIA (lept. 23-0ct. 23) You're ,4nll·
lied 10 rtlax and let yourself go today -

..

-·-...

you've been subjected to a hectic
week. You don't need a social gathering
with lots of people, just lime atone with
your special some&lt;lne.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Bring ell·
ents you want to do business with today
· to your place rather than to a commer·
clal venue. More can ba accomplished
In a convivial, homey atmosphere.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) You
may be a bll restless today - II your
schedule Is too structured. Leave your·
sell space to be free and move around
as your Impulses dire&lt;lt.
CAPRIS:ORN (Doc. 22·Jan. 1i) Friends
who truly believe In you could aerve as
your springboard to success today.
Their advice end su110estlons on finan·
clal or car- matters should be
acknowledged.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Within
your own little group today, no one Ia
apt to have your knack for organizing
acllvltlee that are lun for all. Appoint
yourself entertainment director and gel
busy rnaklng plena.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mirch 20) II there's a
ringing In your ears loday, It could be
due to the fact that lrlends are saying
nice thlngubout you bahlnd your back.
You have more boosters than you may
reallzt.
11

•

(I)

e

marks the first time spring enroll·
mcnt has outdistanced the fall ,
when the count has iraditionally
been the largest for the year.
The spring enrollment shows a
significant increase over the same
period in 1991, when 1,778 students were enrolled. Figutes indi·
cate that 658 students arc now
enrolled in the private university,
compared to 517 in spring 1991,
and I ,263 are in the community
college, compared to I, 175 at the
same time last year.

!her

Robtrleon

10:30 (() MOVIE: Tht
DIIIFPIINRCI Of l'llght 412
(1 :30)

aemaerrNQA
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aemlflnll .lrom laxlnglon, Ky.

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IIIIHHI

T S H L· D K.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " It Is the mark ol an lnexperltnced man not 1P
baileve In luck." - Jb""''h Conrad.
.
(,

~=;::r;~

R. Arltnlo Hal Sllreo.
~-

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I(I'G13)
MOYI!: Pal'llll~dl;.
(2:00)
. -...
,. ..... ··-· .......... ' . ... - . - . . . ..

DEMOINS'TRJ\TJNG SYSTEM - Tbe Sheriff's Jail Linkage
System is a non-profit arm or the Buckeye State SberifT's Association. It links county jails in Ohio and Michigan together so
inrormation can be complied on aU persons Incarcerated In
either state. Here, Gallia County Sheriff Dennis R. Salisbury
demonstrates the system at the sherifT's department. (TimesSentinel photo)

1.'
C111U by NEA, lnO.

-- .. . . .......
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A Multimedia Inc. Newspapot:

big .. sig·nals .to people," the
Arkansas governor told about 200
people at The Jewish Museum. "I
didn't think about it as I should
have. I as a candidate and as a pub·
lie official should not have been
there.''
Brown, the only remaining
Democratic challenger, has hammered Clinton on the issue in an
effort to make inroads among black
voters. By huge margins, blacks
have supported Clinton throughout
the primary season and they will be
a pivotal constituency in New
York's April? primary election.
Campaigning Friday in Wisconsin, which votes the same day as
New York, Brown dismissed his
rival's front-runner status, saying,

By BRIAN J, REED
Times-Sentinel Starr
POMEROY - A recently·
appointed site review committee
will once again visit a proposed
prison site in Meigs County on
Monday, according to a spokespcr·
son for the Ohio Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction.
Sharon Kornegay, public information officer for the department,
conftrTDed Friday afternoon that the
seven-member Southeastern Ohio
Prison Site Selection Committee
would review the site, located at
Salem Center, on Monday after·
noon. The commillee will review
sites in Belmont and Noble counties on Monday morning.
An earlier site review was con·
ducted in late-January by a four·
member review commiuec; three of
those officials are members of the
new commiuec which will visit on

"Cl, ipttil),.i~,RPI going 10{ get. t~e . New York race virtually tied after
nommat10n. You can pu that m Brown's upset win Tuesday in

your tape reeorder and ask me in a
couple of months."
Clinton coupled his apology Fri;
day for the golfmg incident wtth an
appeal to end racial divisions. He
said his civil rights record was
"unparalleled by any public official in America" and criticized the
Reagan and Bush administrations
for deliberate racial politics.
"We have been carved up now
for more than a decade at election
time by race, by gender, by
region," Clinton said . " ... The
division of America into us and
them is, in the end, the death knell
of everything America means."
Clinton's internal polls show the

Figures released by the universi- Mark F. Abell , Executive Director
ty' s Office of Records indicate of Admissions Services and Finanthere are 107 international students cial Aid, commented.
"The university has made a con·
attending Rio Grande this spring,
while 38 were enrolled in spring certcd effort to make itself avail·
1991. There are 146 students able for a wide range of students,
enrolled in the graduate program, from those fast entering college 10
those returning to freshen their
compared ro 32 last year.
education
or receive additional
"The increase in enrollment we
have seen this academic year, pealc- training," he added.
The university has made a coming in the spring with a new record,
is very encouraging and an indica· mitment to serving the needs of
tion that Rio Grande is a viable non-ttaditionlil studeniS, which repeducational option for students," resents a significant element in the

Connecticut. Looking to reverse
Brown's momentum, Clinton is
atta-c~ing the former California
governor's proposal for a 13 percent fiat income tax and a 13 per·
cent national sales tax, saying it
would worsen the deficit and pummel the middle class and poor.
Clinton polling shows Brown,
as he did in Connecticut, making
inroads among more affluent voters
who likely would have suppor1cd
former Massachusetts Sen. Paul
Tsongas. who dropped out of th e
race.
But Clinton advisers say voter
dis cussion groups indicate that

...

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enrollment increase. Prior to spring
quarter, two nights of registration
were conducted in addition to the
traditional open registration on
March 2. Abell said 115 students
enrolled during the special hours, a
large number of them being in the
non-traditional category.
As a result, thQ university has
scheduled pro-registration for summer and the 1992-93 academic year
for all currently enrolled students
between April 20 and 24. Special·
ly-scheduled pre-registration hours
for incoming and non-traditional
students will be held on Monday,
April 27, from 3·7 p.m., in Allen
Hall.
"We feel this is a good move
and one way to meet the needs of
the adult Ieamer," Abell said. ·

River Cities
UW stands
by decision

t.

Monday. The January meeting
included review of a site near
Racine, which has since been ruled
out as a potential site for the prison.
In addition 10 reviewing Meigs
County's site, the seven members
plan to meet with county officials
and Meigs County' s development
team to discuss site-related details.
Gov. George Voinovich
announced in December that the
three southeastern Ohio counties
were being considered as potential
sites for the new medium-secutity
facility, one of several new prisons
and dormitories being built as a
part of a new building plan within
the department.
Since that time, Meigs County
officials, the county 's economic
development office and the cham '
ber of commerce have worked
toward attracting the prison to
(Continued on A-2)

~g~insiChallenger Brown

'

al .resideniS reported strong smells
of kerosene or gasoline both inside
and outside their homes. Most of
the calls were from the Rutland·
Hudson Street area
Gene McDaniel reported that
the smell inside his hon\e on Rut·
land Street became unbearable
Thutsday aftem~n an.d he finally
· had to open up some windows.
Several residents rep?rted
headaches, and one res1dent
attributed the Illness of a child ,to
the odor.
McDaniel said that IIJe smell has
been "hanging around for about six
years" and this isn't the rnt time
!oeal ,and state offteials have been
10 uymg to detetmlne the source.
Jon Jacobs, deputy health com·
missioner of The MeiJS County
Health Dep~ment, satd this has
been an ongo10g problent. and ~
the odor accms to be CotDIIIJ up tn
basements throug~ the storm leW·
en.
He said li!&amp;' 10me s10m1 sewer
~ ~t~~~qe lanka.
water testing JS bel.ng ~ 10 check
The' IY(O aacncies were called in pollutants. 1~ poin!Oit out lhat
lllc 11unday lflanoan llfler.IIVer·
• (Colillnlieil OIA•Z)
.

20/20 Stereo.

~.

By JOHN ·KINO .
AP Political Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- Bill Clinton apologized publicly and privately Ftiday for golfmg at an allwhite club as he sought to quell
voter concerns and talce the offensive in his New York showdown
with challenger Jerry Brown.
Clinton , the Democratic presidential front-runner, held a private
breakfast with black members of
the New York media and toured an
exhibit about discrimination
against blacks and Jews. The
Arkansas governor apologized at
both eveniS for golfing last week at
a Little Rock club that has no black
members.
"Small things and large send

'

Hayes discusses her long
career
personal Tile.
Stereo.
(!) Sold
of Millie:
Rottropovlcll Retumo to
RUIIII MttitiiV
Rostropovleh returns to the
country that deatroyec! his
career. (1 :40,re&lt;l. r;1
[J)I Hunter
12!1 oriel Ne .
illl700 Club Willi Pat

-~

County was among the first
counties to join the ~ystem and
has been instrumental in th e
dev elopment and implementation of the complete system
throughout the state.
The Sheriff's Jail Linkage
System is a non-profit arm of
the Buckeye State Sheriff's
Association. It links county jails
in Ohio and Michigan together
so infonnation can be compiled
on all persons incarcerated in
either state.
This infonnation, which will
be available to all county jails,
will assist investigators, prosecutors and jailers by keeping a
"track record" on individuals
who break the law and arc
jailed.
Salisbury said that this is one
of the first steps in bringing Gal·
lia County up to the standards of
many larger counties by provid·
ing a state-of-the-art system to
complement law enforcement
officers.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times·Seatlnel Sta'f
MIDDLEPORT - An odor in
upper Middlepon which residents
)lave complained about for several
7ears is fmally gelling the attention
11 deserves.
·
·· Represenlatives of both the
Ohio .Environmental Protection
"Agency and the State Fll'C Marshal
were on the scene Thursday night
and Fnday trying to determinc the
.Jourcc of the smell.
• Wliat they left town late Friday
'afternoon several areas had been
tested but 00 sOurte of the odor had
ttcen lorettA
. Robert Ha!e, an emergency
~ (:OOidinator with the State
Fire Manhal's office said he had
t.elled the soil with a 1•sniffer" severa! feet down around gasoline and
kerosene storage tanks in thai
~ghborhood but detected no problems. ·
The Stale File Marshal and the
ll,A, Halo said, regulate lln4cr,

~ AmMican Mtllerl Helen

11:GO&lt;Jle
Newt

R. Salisbury said that Gallia

:Agencies sniffing out
;pesky Middleport odor

~~~~ereo. r;1

Ill, a

17 Soctiont, 166 Pag•

R·G 's spring enrollment total shatters past records

DOWN

M.-

Rain. Highs 45 lo 55.

Salem Center
site set to get
another look

Clinton takes offensive

.'

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Along the river ..............BI-8
Business!Farm ............... D1·8
Classified ....................... D3· 7
Deaths................................ AS
Editorai .............................. A4
Sports .............................C1-8
Weather...........................A-2

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, March 29, 1992

System links jail
with others in state

1-!H%

,93

PHILLIP

Inside

•
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Gentl'lllon C
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Spacial.
12!1 Montyllne
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Eilcapeo (G) (2:ll0)
7:05 (I) I Love Lucy
7:30 (]) It iiJ Jeopardy! C
ffi Now It Cen Be Toll
(J) a E'!!frlalnmenl Tonight
Siereo. I.;J
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IZJ !Il MacNIIVLohre

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Basketball nostalgia for the early 1930s
is examined by Fred Crow- A-4

be a real jerk. People should
be done up like food packages
r-::--------, with the ingredients on the
T EL VEV
outside clearly·······.
6 17 I
I I
Compiele lhe chuckle quoted
1. _ . . . .
by fi lling in the missing words

(j'j The Jofftraona ~

Tf~MJ= C.O.D.
(\A.&gt;H ON

1

1-·

112llll CBS News r;J
G1 Andy Grflflttl
II! Scooby Doo
@UpCIOIO
illl New Zorro Stereo. r;l
6:35 (I) Andy Grflfllh
7:00 l3j D iiJ Whael ofFortune

(A.&gt;HifR
--7

-B-1

N 0 0 E L ~~~· ~ ·
Looks are deceptive.' A very
-.-,r-r.-..,--1·
handsome guy turned out to
5

MOIOWO d
12!1 World Today
illl Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop
Stereo. r;l
&amp;:05 (I) Beverly Hlllbllllea
6:30 (])It i1J NBC Ntwt ~
ffi Saved by the Bell
(i) a (() illJ AB~IW r;J
1ZJ Wild America
Square One Stareo.

(i)

Meigs, Gallia girls compete for Miss
Ohio River Valley title - B-6

;:::::::=~~!

@

;

State ba~ketball tourney action- C-1

Teachers
back to
school

/,-1v-r.f-'-ro1--ll j

CD R11dln~lnbow
r;1
rt r;J

SOMETHING ABOUT
A FANG FAIRY ..

l 1I I I
1

r - 1., . . . . .

illl Gl Nlah
II! Smurfa

l T~INK I REMEMBER

IAMI

I

BURNON

n·nt-.

won

low to fo•m four olmplo wordo.

FRI., MARCH 27 •

7~

GIVING IT THE SNIPF TEST •·Rolltrl Hate, emer1eacy
req0111e ~ wltl! dte State llln Mlnllal'a olllce, Columtile soli tar JGIIIblt coatamlnltton
bul, tiled • "allllfer" 10
around uaderarouad fUel taab oa Nortll Seeoad Ave., Middle·
port ,
.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - The
board of directors of the United
Way of the River Cities reaffinned
its decision 10 withhold its financial
suPpOrt to the National United Way
durmg i!s recent regular monthly
meeting Wednesday.
United Way of Gallia County is
an a£filiate of UWRC.
According to UWRC President
Edward 0. Boehm ir., this action
was taken as a direct result of the
local public concern and pending
invcsugation of allegations pertain·
ing to the national organi~lion and
includes the rollowing siiiCrnent:
"Only af\er a COIDpletp and SBI·
isfactory open ~ and resofulion has ltcen made by' the nation·
al Unil!'d Way Boll'tl of Governors
will a local dete.mtlnallcll) be made
as to future actions or financial
' suppon 10 United Way of Alnerica .

·-

. --·--· -...----

•

~

I

upscale liberal s tum away from
Brown when the fiat tax is
explained. The campaign plans to
air a television spot attacking the
proposal as early as this weekend.
In another new ad, filmed
Thursday night, Clinton says the
poor and middle class got "sucker
punched" in the 19~0s. ~d .promi ~­
es new econom1c pnonues. · · • · •
Clinton was forced to deal Fri·
day with a New York Tim£s article
that said the Arkansas governor
deleted provisions of a state ethics
proposal that would have rcquirC;!J
more detailed disclosure of any
decisions he made that might affect
his family finances.

Voinovich
approves
remap bill
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
George Voinovich has signed
into law a bill creatin~ 19 new
congressional districts 10 Ohio.
Voinovich acted without
comment Friday. His office said
that next week he will a companion measure postponing
Ohio' s primary election from
May 5to June 2.
Jenny Camper , Voinovich
spokeswoman, said there was no
need to act immediately on the
election bill and that it had not
been yet been sent to the gover•
nor.
The Legislature approved
both measures Thutsday, beat·
ing a deadline set by Secretary
of State Bob Taft. Taft had said
the congressional districts must
be in place by Friday to give
him enough time to prepare for
the June 2 oolloting.
Ohio's presidential primary
will also be held on June 2,
along with balloting on a myriad
of local school levies, bond
issues and other proposals that
had been set for May 5.
Stillln doubt Friday, however, was the fate of 33 Senate and
99 ,House districts approved late
last year by the Ohio Apportionment Board·, conuoUed 3·2 by
Republicans.
.House DemotniiS challenged
that plan in U.S. District. Co_un,
which ruled the new d1stne1S
· violated federal laws prohibiting'
the dilution of minority vocing
SiteDgil\.

A three·Judse federal puel
appointed a .special master to
cjraw new di-ll dllt CCIIIpliod
with feder•t atat~tea. •
,

I

£

�1 ·-

wv

OH-Polnt

March

Lottery numbers

State
ACLU mounts challenge
.
"'

.

'

t

.

Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
Fra11lc:lin County judge is being
asked to block a new abortion wait·
ing·period law from talc:ing effect
until the·U.S. .Supreme Court rules
on a similar measure from Pennsylvania.
Kevin O'Neill legal director for
the American Ci~il Liberties Union
of Ohio, asked Common Pleas
Judge Guy Reece fi Friday to delay
implementation of the Ohio law,
saying it unduly burdens a
woman's ability to oblain an abortion. The law is to go into effect
May 28
"You would then be free to
vacate that injunction, or to make it
permanent, based upon how the
court rules," O'NeiU said.
" That way you would be adhering to the law on the books, but
you would give yourself the flexibitity to·change your ruling in case
the Supreme Court upholds provisions in the Pennsylvania law sub·
sumtially identical to those at issue
here," he said.
. Kathleen O'Malley, chief coun~I for Attorney General Lee Fisher
who is defending state officials in

the case, sai&lt;l there was no guarantee when the court would rule in
thePennsylvaniacase.
.
"There's lots of spcculataon
about what tl)e court maght do,
whether the court is really willing
to issue an abortio~ decisio~ right
before a presadenual elecuon . .It
could wait another term," Ms.
O'Malley said.
"The (Ohio) statute is supposed
tog~ into effect in May, and. the
stale s posauon IS that the. LP.gaslature went thr~ugh a def!Uled _Process ... before II made _thas decasaon
... and you shouldn't 51~ around and
Willi for some eventuatity.that may
or may not occur," she Sllld.
The ACLU is seeking to overturn a law sponsored. b~ ReJ).
Jerome Lu_ebbers, D-Cancann,au,
whach requrres that wom~n wall at
least 24 hoUICS after noufymg a doctor o_f thetr mtenttOn to have an
aboruon.
. Wom~n would have to be proVIded _with state-prmled brochures
depacung a fetus at ~anous . stages
of development, outhnmg qsks of
the procedure, and alternatives to
it. , . .
.
0 Neill Sill~ the Ia~ would VIO·
late a woman s existmg nght to

abortion under the U.S. Supreme
Court's 1973 Roe vs ..wadt dect·
sion, a landma~k ruhng that he
acknowledged maght soon be over·
turned.
. .
.
"It looks tike Roe as m seno~
trouble. !think everr,one i~ thas
courtroom knows that, he saad.
"But it continues to be lhe law
of the land,'' O'Neill said, and
should be followed without antict·
paling lhepossibilityofreversal.

Oh"

10

th

wea er

'

'

~

PINK ICE ·
• • • ••

Sunday, rain tikely except for a · li~...,....~,.~-~~s~~An~IQI'0~!4A!:r_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.!c.!!•""~~~~~"'~·~
chance of rain or snow north.
...., h-. c::3
Highs45to55.
H L ~ ~ ill 0 ~ ~ ¥
~
Extended rorecast
I«1H ''"'
_ , . ,.., , .., _ nUN• a ,_., " · aa.or aowr
Monday through Wednesday
Chance of showers Monday.
Fair Tuesday and Wednesday.
Highs in the 50s, lows in the 30s.

Agencies...

(Continued rrom A-1)
fumes are light and can ~ly filter
through a system and into an
enclosed area like a house. He said
it would not be unusual for the
smell
to cause the occupants to
(Continued from A-1)
have headaches or some other ill
effects.
Meigs County.
sary sewer system to serve the
Since the smell must be consid·
: Hundreds of support letters have prison.
ered a potential health hazard, the
11cen received by the chamber, and
When Corrections Department Middleport Fire De'partment was
those letters are being forwarded to Director Reginald Wilkinson called in Thursday night. Firemen
the state for review.
announced the formation of the went door-to-door to check odor
: The land being considered in new committee in early March, he levels. They also assisted in some
Salem Center is owned by South- stated that a site would be chosen of the digging required for the soil
ern Ohio Coal Co., a division of in four to six weeks.
.
testing being done by Hale.
American Electric Power. Officials
The seven-member commat~ee
Jacobs said that his department,
of socco have expressed a will- will recommend a site I? Wilkm· the EPA and the State Fire Mar·
ingness to donate the land if it is son, who will advise Vom~vich of shal's office will continue to work
ct10sen as the prison site. In the the recommendation . Vmnovach on the problem .
meantime, grant monies have been will then be responsible for choos"There has to be an answer and
earmarked to construct the neces- ing the prison site.
we'll eventually find it," he said.

Salem Center site...

Rain, storms rumble
across U.S. mid-section

Satti'rday's forecast called for
By The Associated Press
A storm rumbled across !he cen- blustery weather in the Nonheast,
tral and southern Plains early Sat· with temperotures about I0 degrees
urday, dumping scattered showers below avernge. Snow could fall in
across the region.
New England.
Skies were cloudy across much
Forecasters called for gusty
of the Northeast, and rain fell in winds along the mid-Atlantic.
Boston and Portland, Maine.
More rain was expected in the MidFair weather was forecast for west, with heavy showers in parts
much of the West, Great Lakes of Texas.
region and Southeast.
Temperatures Saturday were
Powerful thunderstorms rum- forecast in the 30s from northern
bled across the southern Plains on New York through northern New
Friday.
.
England; in the 40s in the rest of
A tornado damaged a trailer and the Noriheast and in the Great
blew down trees and power lines in Lalc:es region; in the 50s and 60s in
the Texas Panhandle town of Far- the mid-Atlantic states; in lhe 50s
well, the National Weather Service from !he Ohio Valley through the
said.
central and nonbern Plains; in the
As much as ) inches of rain fell 70s in Southern California and
Friday in centml Texas.
south f.rizona.

AS LOW AS

$1895

.'

..

Automttlc lranaMit•lon, VI power,
AUIFII caaaetta, 11r, power wlndowa,
locltl A mirrors, tilt whMI, CNllt con-

' POMEROY - Unats
. of the

~"'"\

MANY OTHER STYLES TO
CHOOSE FROM

Tawney Jewelers
422 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

'

6 cyl. engine, ~ower steering, Power
brakes, 5 speed manual 0/D trans.,
2.73 ratio regular axle, Argent rear step
bumper, vinyl bench seat, Cabemet red
exterior, dark charcoal inlerior.

.

.

::a&lt;anllav

WAS $11,287.00

ptnce.

'
5fember : The AJiodated Pre~~a, and the
Ohio Newapaper Alsoclation, National
Adverti1ing Repre1entative, Brar\ham
Newspaper Salea, 733 T_hird Avenue,
tiew
. Yorl&lt;, New York t00t7.

Clearance Sale an .AU lew 91 Cars
and Tracks ~ Outstanding Prices
NEW 1992 NISSAN MAXIMA GXE
•

BUY THE TRUCK THAT IS BUllTTO lAST!

.

Mlftl CIACB

.......

WAS $13,995

NEW 1992 NISSAN 4x2

NOW 8II,.

'

•
''

SUBSCIUPTION RATES
By CUTler or Motor Route
One Week. ............................................. !10¢
One Year........................................ ..$46.80
''
SINGLE COPY

..

••
PRICE
SUnday..................... _...............-.. 75 Centa
.

Ao aubsttiptiona by mail permHLed in
.\teas where motor carrier service is
afailab1e.
fi.e Sunday 'l"imu-Sentinel wUI not be
raPonaible (ar advance p.ayment.l made
t.;:cmi.ers,

•

MAIL BUBSCIUPTIONB

t.,

Sundlay Only

~•

OaliT aiKlhndar
MAIL 8UBSCIUPTION8
JUde County

t!li.e Year................ .......................... S47.1W
I!" Monu. ......................................$24.79
':
;~
IS Weeb.......................................... $2l.IW
:M; Weeb ....................... ...................$43.16
11:1 Weeb .... ................ ......................$84.76

•NMAC t . . . Paymenl ftgur. $1100 down cuh or tl"'ct. plua firM month .,.yrnent, ucurily dtpotlt &amp; tax for 24 monlh
.tooodand- wlh oplion IO buy.

Suoday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-A3

Local briefs------. Emergency HEAP en:ds Wedne~day ·~
or
Turkey seminar planned
.flAP
• "b ution um~~is~;t~:t~:e~:,
F ood stamp dzstn
•
fi
A
"/
are
:m
Change lS set or pn

r---

CHES"HIRE _The 1991-92
Emergency HEAP provides
a lication period for Emerfency heating assistance to income eligi·
ends Wednesday, Apri 1.
ble households with heat-related

RIO GRANDE - Bob Evans Farms, Inc. will host the annual
"Wild Turkey Seminar" at .the Bob Evans Farm's.Shellerhouse in
Rio Grande at I p.m. Saturday, April II. Everyone is welcome and
admission is free.
The afternoon program features seminar speakern emphasizing
safety and hunting techniques. Al_so on the program !s amateur
wild turkey calling contest. There as no entry fee for !has JUSt-for-fun
contest; the only requirement. is that no contestant ~as competed
before in ail amateur or professional contest. Top wmners wall be
presented with token prizes.
For more infonnation, call the farm at 245-5305.

0

1991 and April3, 1992. ThCJefore,
those assisltd since OcL 28
not·
eligible t_o apply a11ain until the
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallia April3
1993 aPJ)hC~Uon penod.
County Departinent of Human Ser- . • 5 . third working day, Friday,
Applic~uons mly ~ mad~ at
vices is announcing a change in the April 3
the Cheshare Co~mumty Action
food stamp distribution schedule '
• 6 ·fourth working day, Mon· Agency, the Galha County C?ut· .
for April.
day, April6
reac~ O~face, 220 Jac_kson Pike,
This is being done in an effort to
• 7 ·fourth working day, Moo- Galhpohs, or .the Me1gs Cou~ty
alleviate the problem of long lines day, April6
.
Outreach Offace, 39350 Umon
and traffic congcsti~n . This applies
•.8. fifth working day, Tuesday, Avf·· ~:ec;;
all 367-7341
only to those recapaents whose Apnl7
6-06aa unty_. c
.
cases have been converted to the
• 9 ·fifth worlcing day, Tuesday, or 44
11. In Meags County, call
new CRIS-E computer sySiem.
April 7
.
992-6629 or 992-5605.
.
The last digit of the case number
These dates are the earliest that . T)te toll-f~ee number for obtatn· .
denotes which day the food stamps the food stamps can be distributed. mg mfoJl!laUon on regular HEAP ..
will be distributed. The schedule is They are available any working vou~hers. as 1·8.00-282-0880 or f~
as follows·
day during the rest of the month. the.tmpaired wath a tele-commum•o . f~st worlcing day, Wednes· The hours at the food saamp office i~~~n device (TDD) 1-800-686· .:
day, April!
are from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
·
• I - first working day, Wednesday, April I
• 2 - second working day,
Thursday, April2
• 3 • second worlc:ing. day,
Thursday, April2
• 4 • third worlcing day, Friday,

Man injured in wreck

°

GALLlPOLIS - A Gallipolis man received minor injuries in a
one-vehicle accident on County Road 97 in Clay Township about
5:10p.m. Friday.
, .
.
th S
According to a report from the Galha-Meags Post of e tale
Highway Patrol, Richard A. Green, 25, was westbound and lost
control of his 1978 Chevrolet C-20 pickup.
Green went off the left side of the road and struck a parked car
owned by Ronald L. Toland, the patrol reported. Green's truck con·
tinued on over an embankment and overturned ma field.
.
Green was b'ansported by the Gallia Counly Emergency Medtcal
Service to Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va., where
he was treated and released. .
. .
Damage to Green's truck was listed as heavy and dtsabhng.
Damage to Toland's 1989 Ford Taurus was listed as heavy and
functional.
dri ·
Green was cited by the patrol for failure to control and vmg
under suspension.

spring

Into A New job!
SPRING QUARTER
BEGINS MARCH 30, 1992

Arrests, ·citations
GALLlPOLIS - A Gallipolis man was arresled Friday evening
after attempting to flee a Gallipolis Police Departroent officer.
Jesse E. Bender, 20, was arrested by the polic~ deJl3TI!llent and
placed in the Galtia County Jail. He is charged with drivmg under
the influence, no operotorn ticense and fleeing and eluding.
John Jr. Pushak, 36, Evans City, Pa., was arrested Saturday
morning by the Gallia-Meigs Post of lhe Saale Highway Pab'ol and
charged wtth driving under the influence imd improper lane usage.
Pushalc: was released after postin$ bond.
Margie J. Long, 33, Galti~las, was cite~ by the police department Friday on a charge of drivmg under the mfiuence.

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•lndusUtal Ma1nlcnance •Office Services
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• Stocks
•
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• Mutual Funds
• Insured Tax·Free
Muoldpal Bonds
• Insured Money Market
Accounts
e IRA's

McEwen 'looking forward' to job
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Congressman Bob McEwen (R·Ohio)
expressed that he was looking forward to working with the people
of Gallia and Meigs counties, recently included in the U.S. Congressionl!l Sixth District.
·
"I look forward to being a strong voice for the southern Ohio
values of family, hard work and thrift on behalf of Gallia and Meigs
Counties," McEwen said.
·
McEwen is expected to malc:e an official announcement next
week regarding his candidacy for re-election.

Ftnenc~ A•d 1nd TUIIIOII Subltdy Mi1r 81 Availtble To Q..aliliH
ADpi!CiniSfrom AV&amp;'llty o1 Sourtes: PEU GRANTS. YETEA·
ANS BEN£ FITS. BUREAU OF VOCATIONAl RE~ITA­
TIOH . STAFFORD LOAN, SINGLE PARENTit«JJ,,EIIMKEA
GRANT.J T.PA. (COIAIUNITV ACTION AGENCIESI.

CALL, WRrTtOR

STOP II FOfl MOM
IHFOMIITICIH AIOUT

oo•PROGfWII.

Contact:
STAN EVANS
Libby Hold, Suite 100
444 Second Aveoue
Gafilpolls, Ohio 45631

Mini-van theft under investigation
POMEROY- The theft of a 1991 Dodge Mini-van from a resi·
dence on State Route 681 is being investigated by the Meigs County
Sherifrs Departroent.
According to the repon, Paula Bowen, stated the van was lalc:en
sometime between 7 and II p.m. Friday. She reported the keys were
not in the van.
Shortly before midnight Saturday, deputies were called to Sym·
cuse for a report of a fighL Talc:en into custody for aggravated men·
acing and assault were Doug E. Freeman and his brother, Donnie
Freeman.
According to the report the subjects drove into the Food Mart
and assaulteil a subject. They reportedly left the scene and then
returned. At that time, according to the repon, they pointed a shot·
gun at a subject and threatef!ed to shoot him . Both individuals were
lodged in the county jail pending hearing in Meigs County Court.
On Friday deputies transported Harold J. Howard to Orient
Reception Cen1er to begin serving his sentence imposed by the
Court of Common Pleas on drug charges.

•.
Jt.tel Outllde County
(3Week.o .... ...................................... $23.40
a&amp; Weeb ..................... ................. .... $46.~
&amp;; Weeko .. ............ ....... .....................$88.40

••

OFBF picks leader
COLUMBUS (AP) - An
Ashville hog fanner has been elect·
ed president of the Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation .
C. Ray_Noecker succeeds Fred
Finney of Wooster, who resigned
to accept an appointment to the
board of directors of Nationwide
Mutual Insurance Companies.
Noecker operates a 680-head
farrow-to-finish hog operation in
Piclc:away County. He also raised
beef, cattle, com, soybeans, wheat
and hay.
An Ohio State University gradu,
ate, he has held a variety of posi·
tions with the Pickaway County
Farm Bureau and has been a member of the farm bureau advisory
council.

utilities tha~ are .dasconnected ,or
tllreatened wath disconnect w1th
a bulk fuel supply of 10 days or
less.

·

(614) 446-lW
1-S00-776-46!11

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

..•.

$pecial
Remount
Event!

SUNDAY ONLY

•
•:

frat later lay IIIII gii loy

~= d wHh 5 opood tr-·
' mud ftapt, 134 hOrN
powr englnt, ciOih beneh
Hit, ciiJIO(Ing, t400 lb. poyload, 1~ gauge hardbocly

.

•

1983 CIEVRDLET
350 engine, P. steering &amp; brakes, auto.
trans., air cond., AM/FM stereo
cassette, tilt &amp; cruise, sleeps 4, self·
contained. Has ref., DC &amp; gas, a gas
furnace, lots of storage.

~i:nu• - ~entittet

,
(USPS 52&amp;-800)
r'
'I
'
•
P»titlohiol each Sunday, 825 Thml
h~ .
Oallipoli1, Ohio, by th.e Ohio ValJey
. ~bli1hin1 Company/Multimedia, Inc.
Second clu• FOit.aae paid at GaUipoli•,
qhio "5631. Entered as aeeond clasa
!hailing matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, ,P01t

WE RETAIN REBATE

Drive New
Every 2 Years
For Only!

rileigs County Emergency Medical
Service responded to two calls for
assisaance on Friday and early SatUrday morning.
. On Friday at 2:19p.m. the Rut·
land and Pomeroy fire departroents
were caUed to Salem Street in Rut·
l~nd for a possible structure fire.
Units returned to !hear stations at
2:26p.m.
On Saturday at 7:08 a.m. the
Middleport unit went to Bailey Run
~oad for Marie VanCooney, who
was transported to Veterans Memo·
ri!ll Hospital.

.: POMEROY - Actions for dis·
solution of marriage have been
flted in Meigs County Common
P)eas Court by Michael Patrick
O'Neil, Athens, and Melanie Kay
d'Neil, Pomeroy; and by Marian
P~nita Van Cooney, Shade, and
P!WI F. Van Cooney, also of Shade.

trol, air big and much, much monl

•

£MS lists two runs

Dissolutions filed
·.

Now 810,10B

DRIVE THE BEST FOR LESS

•

..

Smart Money Sales Event

Hurry! Only A Few Left!

POMEROY - Meigs County
Common .PieasJudge Fred W.
Crow II has announced that the
Fourt District Court of Appeals
will convene April I at the Meigs
County Courthouse.
Four cases have been scheduled
for oral arguments, beginning at
9:30a.m. The court is comprised of
Judge Earl E. Stephenson, presid·
jng judge; Judge Lawrence Grey,
r udge William H. Harsha and
ludge Peter B. Abele.
; The Court of Appeals directly
teviews all cases heard or tried in
lower courts in which a decision is
begin appealed. These cases may
bave tried in common pleas court,
~rebate or juvenile Cour~ municipal or county court, and may be
~ither civil, criminal, or domestic.
• The Fourth District Court of
Appeals is comprised of 14 counties: Adams, Athens, Galtia, High·
llmd, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
~eigs, Pickaway, Pike, Ross,
Scioto, Vinton and Washington.
: At Crow 's reques~ the Court of
~ppeals has agreed to malc:e itself
available to the students of Meigs
County for a question and answer
session at the conclusion of lhe ses·
sa•on.

''

FRONTS:

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

Court will sit
in Pomeroy

.,

CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are '
Friday night's Ohio Lottery selec· •
tions:
·
.~
Pick 3
0-5·2
(zero, five, two)
Pick 4
0-5·2·1
(zero, five, two, one)
Cards
6 (six) of Hearis
Q (queen) of Clubs
9 (mne) of Diamonds
4 (four) of Spades

to ·abortion-waiting period law
By JOHN CHALFANT

March 29, 1.992

-·

EASTERN
STAR&amp;
MASONIC

•
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•.'.
•
'·

•.

•.

•.

•

•

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\

RINGS
FROM

99 95

1

TO

45900

1

I

Tawney Jewelers
422 SECOND AVE.
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(614) 446·1677'

O,.n 9·5 Weekday" EviUgs and Saturday by 4~ntllent

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i·: commentary and perspective
815 Third Ave., GalllpoUs, Ohio

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 991-2156

(614) 446-Z342

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

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Assistant Publisher-Controller

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A MEMBER of The Associated Press , and the American
Newspaper Publishers Association.

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300 words . All letters are subject to edlting and must be signed with

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be
published. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
personalities.

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~ ;Freedom of speech
-~...~ gets in their eyes
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Chuck Stone
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WASHINGTON - The man
running North Korea's fast-track
nuclear weapons project might as
well be another· Saddam Hussein.
He is a paranoid hermit, bent on
amassing a nuclear arsenal, skilled
at hiding his progress and capable
of tragic miscalculation. And there
are signs that on April 15 he may
graduate from understudy to top
dog.
He is Kim Chong II, the 50year -old son of aging North Korean
President Kim II Sung. The father
turns 80 on April 15 and the big
publicity buildup for the son in
recent months has stirred up some
speculation in intelligence circles
that Kim II Sung !Will pass the
baton to his son that day.
The news about Kim Chong II is
all bad. He has lived a life of isolation and ib'llOrance, has never met a
foreign diplomat and has never
granted an interview to a journalist.
The only known trips he has made
out' of Nonh Korea were two brief
visits to China.
Alarm is growing in the U.S.
intelligence community that, under

Kim Chong ll's direction, North
Korea is on the verge of producing
a nuclear weapon. He is so close to
achieving his goal, that if he succeeds in stalling international disarmament inspectors, the weapon
could be a fait accompli within
months. At the very least, Kim

By Jack Anderson
and
·Michael Binstein
Chong II is buying time to hide the
key components so deep that
inspectors will never find them.
Two other factors make North
Korea the loose canon to watch this
year - increased missile sales to its
clients in the Middle East and the
ominous movement of more Scud
missiles to the border with South
Korea . The picture laid out by
intelligence sources for our associate Dale Van Alta is of a country
throwing up a defensive wall to
buy time and hide its nuclear
secrets.

The White House, Pentagon and
State Deparuncnt have been scrambling to find some way to lean on
North Korea, but to no avail. Sanctions will not work. against a country with the historical nickname
"The Herro it Kingdom." Georg~ ·
Bush has twice proved his willingness to use military force to solve
international problems - in Panama and Iraq - but a strike against
North Korea would be no cakewalk. The million-man North
!&lt;orean army is prepared and dug
m. North Korea has been flaunting
iiS disregard for what the rest of the
world thinks by selling Seuds to the
Middle East. Spy satellites have
photographed at least 20 Scud can.
isters from North Korean freighters
making their way to Iran where
they are loaded on planes bound for
Syria and other Arab nations. The
North Koreans are fulfilling what
one classified CIA report identifies
as a $250 million contract with
Syria to provide Scuds and Scud~roduction equipment and expertiSe.

Syrian President Haffcz Assad,

,.

"HHAT KIND oF TA't CUT C~N W~ GtT
FOR Till~ MIDDLE- CL~% FAN\IL'&lt;?

Our First Amendmenl - yours as much as mine -does not, in
; William Lloyd Garrison's words, "equivocate, (nor) retreat a single
• inch.' • For 200 years, it has been heard.
~
If the overzealous advocates of truth in advertising have their
,. · way, the First Amendment will momentarily fall victim to the sane• . .timonious, breast-beating opponents of Joe Camel.
:
I say, momentarily, because the First Amendment never suffers
: : .pennanent moribundity. It may get mugged and assaulted .by know. -.nothings and high-buuon-shoes prudes. But it endures with quiet
.·elegance, sometimes emerging a little scarred, but never remaining
• • pennanently disabled.
: :: Somehow, that historical grandeur has not found a comfortable
: : resting place in the ideals of the Surgeon General and the American
• ·'Medical Association. Both are demanding that the R.J. Reynolds
•.•_Tobacco Company cease using the canoon character in its advenis. ing and promotions for its Camel cigarettes.
;: "In years past, RJ. Reynolds would have us walk a mile for a
: ; Camel,' • declared Surgeon General Antonia Novello. In deadly pur·
:: :·suit of the metaphor, Novello said, "Today it's time that we invite
• • Old Joe Camel to talce a hike."
• • Novello and the AMA want to imer poor Old Joe because his
: : grotesquely caricatured features appeal strongly to children. Studies
-·released by the AMA found that children as young as 6 years old
placed Joe Caniel on the same threshold of high recognition as
Mickey Mouse.
•
When those shocking revelations hit the fan, the Surgeon Gener• al, the AMA and a phalanx of health groups called upon the Federal
Trade Commission to ban Joe Camel ads,
Their cause is unquestionably just, but their methods are egregiously misplaced. And this comes from one who has never smoked
and abhors the habit.
The Surgeon General-AMA junta's demand that RJ. Reynolds
stOJ? flooding our streets with Joe camel's ugly features is endan·
genng our freedom of choice. It is comparable to forceably buckling chastity belts around the waists of teen-agers to prevem pre·
marital sex.
Nobody today disputes the overwhelming evidence that smoking
is dangerous for one's health. But when did the National Association of Thought Police decide that we need to be protect.ell from the
First Amendment?
The framers of the Bill of Rights were specific: ''Congress shall ·
make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech or of the press ..."
Unless the Surgeon General and the AMA believe those 14 words
: do not mean what they say. then the right of RJ. Reynolds to dis: seminate Joe Camel's ugly mug all over American cannot be cir' cumscribed.
If a survey tomorrow were to reveal that the incidence of teenage sex had escalated in direct proponion to five movies, should
• those films be banned? Or should records by Madonna and Prince
: be banned if the purchase of their records showed a positive correla• tion with the incidence of teen-age pregnancy?
•
Freedom of speech and freedom of the press are not supennarket
commodities that you can pick and choose at random. Those two
bedrocks of freedom exist independent of your exercise of them.
But your exercise of them keeps those two freedoms fresh.
That's why even Joe Camel should remain in business. As par• ents, our task is to educate our children about the health problems
• caused by smoking. just as we alert them to other moral challenges
• to their existence caused by the violence and scurrilous behavior
: frequently depicted on television and in the movies.
•
John Stuart Mill summed up nicely the traditional case against
• the Surgeon General-AMA auempt at censorship: "If all mankind
minus one were of one opinion , mankind would be no more justi·
fied in silencing that one person than h~. if he had the power, would
, be justified in silencing mankind.··
•
(C)I992 NEWSPAPER ·ENTERPRISE ASSN.

POMEROY • It was 60 years
ago this month that Pomeroy High
School played in the state basket·
ball tournament in tile old coliseum
in Columbus.
In 1932 there were only two
divisions in high school basketball ,
namely, Class A and Class B divis1ons. Pomeroy High School was a
small school but was playing in
Class A division. Today this would
be classified as Division I.
Rupc, this was 60 years ago and
you and most of the readers were
not around at that time. Our record
for the 1931-32 basketball seasvn
was 25 wins and or.c loss. In shon.
we played the larger schools in the
state and were elj minatcd in the
state tournament m Columbus by
Aleron West. Akron West later
defeated Columbus North and won
the state Class A champior.ship.
There arc many memories for the
writer, some of which are as fol lows:
I) Akron West won the game
because at that time they had two
black cou sins named Andy and
Walker Averitt, both of whom were
over 6'5" in height.
2) It was the first time in the history of this season that Pomeroy
High School did not get the tip off
on the center jump.
3l This was the first time that
the writer dated Eleanor Karr who
would nine years later become his
wife.
4) This was the one and only
time thi s team stayed in a hotel
during the basketball season. The
Seneca Hotel on Broad Street was
the residence of the PHS team during the state tournament. All of our
trips away from home were made
in cars and not by bus. We did not
have the luxury of a bus or plane.
In my high school days the fans
participated, especially Chauncey
Shoemaker, Sr. and Mrs. Minnie
Scott, Mother of Ted , John and
George Scott. Each carried a set of
cow bells with them; The noise created by the cow bells made the city
boys wonder whom they were
playing.
5) The national news story for
this year was the kidnapping of the
Lindberg baby.
The coach of the PHS team was
W. R. F8J:'IIham whQ was a defen·
sive coach . All players shot with
two hands on lhe ball and many
players shot foul shots underhanded. Many shots were blocked and
all or the the games were low scoring affairs.
.
The regular season games were
as followS": PHS 30 • Tuppers .
Plains 12; PHS 17 • Chested;
PHS 16 • Marietta 9; PHS 23 •
Poinl PleasantS; PHS 11 • Stew·
an 7; PHS 26 • Point Pleasant 12;
PHS 22 Logan 12; PHS 39 •
RamtiWOOII 14; PHS 20- Middle·
port 18; PHS 16 Stewart 9; ·PHS

Today in history

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By The Associated Press
•
Today is Sunday, Manch 29, the 89th day of 1992. There are 277
days left in the year.
;
Today's Highlight in History:
•·
On March 29, !973, the last U.S. troops left South Vietnam, end;. ing America's direct involvement in the Vietnam War.
;:
On this date:
.;
In !638, Swedish colonists settled in present-day Delaware.
:1 In I790, the lOth president of the United States, John Tyler, was
;. born in Charles City County, Va .
.1
In 1792, 200 years ago, Sweden's King Gustav III died, nearly
:: two weeks after he was mortally wounded during a masquerade
••
.. party.
:.· .
In 1the867Do,the.B_ritishfPCaranadaliamenft passed the North America Act to
create
mm1on o
, e fective July 1.
1: In 1882, the Knights of Columbus was chartered ·in Connecticut.
~
In 1932, 60 years ago, a vaudeville.comedian made his radio
~ debut by saying, "Ladies and gentlemen, this is Jack Benny talking
• There will be aslight pause while you say. 'Who cares?'"
·
~
In 1943, World Wat: II meat, butter and cheese rationing began.
I; In 19SI, JuUus and Ethel R01enberg were convicted of espionage
!~ charges. (They were executed in June 1953.)
.
In 1962, 3&lt;! years Bf&gt;.Jacl: Paat hosted NBC's "Tonight" show
,
for the rma1 ume, pavmg the way for Johnny Carson's arrival the
: followifll OciDber.
·
•l1 In 1971, Army Lt. William L. Calley Jr. was convicted of mur!• dering at leasl 22 Viemamese civilians in the My Lai massacre
,. (Calley ended up spending.three years un&lt;kf house arresl)
·
~
In 1974, ei_ght Ohio National Guardsmen were Indicted on
charles mmmmg from the shooting deaiJq of fota' students at Kent
, State University. (The pardJmcn were ac:quilled the following

!i

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November.)

c;ure

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Ten years ago: "Charioll ri File" received die Academy Award
for bell
of I.981. Henry Fonda and Katharine Hepburn
~ received
ICIIll' IIICI bell~eii'OII 1mon for "On Golden Pond.··
'•
five years 1J1Y. Ineli Prime Minisltl Yitzhak Shamir was re·
~ elecled dllimiiD of die aulu·winl Hcrut Piny, lite •gest pany in
, the Likud bloc pemlnl fsntel as pan of 1 caelition.

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19 ·Gallipolis 15: PHS 31 • Hamden 26; PHS 19 Athens II; PHS 28
• Nelsonville 15; PHS 46 · Wellston 16; PHS 23 Rome II· PHS
18 · Middleport 7; PHS 21 : Gallipolis 9; PHS 26Giouster JO· PHS
37 ·Russell, KY 6;
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The following arc tranS~:ripiS of
an article wrincn by Paul "Moonbeam" Clifford, now deceased.
"Basketball in the late 20s and
early 30s was an entirely different
game than is played today. There
was no ten second rule, and no
penalty foul shots. You had the use
of the complete floor and after
each basket or successful free

FredW. Crow
throw there was a center jump at
the middle of the court.
Coach Ray Farnham had a vet·
cran team returning when the 193132 season opened. He had six players with experience in Tip Dye,
Fred Crow, Bill Grueser, Eddie
Guinther, Dick Winebrenner and
the late Bruno Pierotti.
Crow was the only big man on
the team , standing a little over
6'I ". Dick Winebrenner was an
even 6'1" and gave Fned valuable
help on the banking boards. Words
cannot describe the ball handling
ability of Tip Dye. He was a genius
at dribbling the ball. Grueser also
one of the finest two-handed set
shooters I have ever seen.
Farnham believed in defense.
He was particularly emphatic in
having his players block out on the
defensive boards. In fact, I have
seen him take a player out of a
game because he permitted his
opponent to beat him on a defenstve rebound. And so it was that the
Panthers, even without great
height, almost always managed to
conlrol the boards.
When tournament time rolled
around in Athens, Pomeroy fans
were almost frantic. They almost
filled the old OHio University gym.
· Pomeroy responded by walloping Washington Court House 27-13
in the opening round. The Panther
slipped past Nelsonville 19-10 in
the seeond round and beat Chillicothe 22-12 in the semi rtna) game.
In the final game PHS beat .Greenfield by a ~ore of 27 to 12. The
great Jimmy Hull was held to two
foul shots by Tip Dye. Jimmy Hull
was later .an all American at Ohio
Sllte.
· When the Panthers took the
flcn at the Fairground's Coliseum
in Columbus against Defiance, ihe
town of Pomeroy wai practically
deserted. Although Pomeroy was
the smallest school in the tourney,
they probably had the largest
turnout of fans willt the exception
of Columbus Nonh. The late Ben

. '

Ewing and his German Band were
on hand to provide entertainment
as every cage fan in town went to
the big city to sec the Panthers
play.
Defiance had a big center by
name of Zirkle, but Crow took care
of him and the Panthers won 17-13
to advance to the semi -finals
against powerful Aleron West. In
this game Crow had six poiniS, Dye
and Grueser five each and Guinther
one. Dye really stole tile hearts of
the crowd with his ball handling.
They had never seen anything like
that before.
Akron West had an experienced
club that had been beaten in the
semi-finals of the state tourney the
previous year. They had two huge
Negro cousins, Andy and Walker
Averitt, who were both 6'5." In
addition a fine forward in Labbe
and a good guard in Hensall. Dick
Boughner. who later played at Ohio
State was a sub on the team.
At one point in the fmal stanza
Pomeroy had cut the lead to four
points, but with a little over three
minutes to play Crow fouled out,
and the Panthers couldn't come
back. The final score was 23-14 .
Dye scored 12 points and Winebrenner two, while Andy Averitt
was high for West with nine.
Pomeroy fans were heartbroken
over the defeat. Many openly cried.
There is some consolation in that
Akron West waS the best Class A
team in the state and proved it by

POMEROY - Evelyn Mae Keyse Boggess, 63, 43276 State Route
124, Racine, died on Thursday, March 26, 1992 at her residence.
Born on May 11, 1928, she was the daughter of the late Jashua and
· Nellie New len Keyse. She was a housewife.
S_urviv_ing are her husband, Charles An~rew Boggess Sr. of Min. ersvdle; s1x daughters, Mrs. Lowell (Ann) Miller of Prescot~ Ariz., Mrs.
. · James (Esther) Wamsley and Mrs. Junior (Evelyn Louise) Mattox both of
• Leon; W.Va., Ms. Cindy Park and Mrs. David (Karen) Jones.'both of
: Pomeroy, and Mrs. Ron (Tinni) Cain of Grantsville, W.Va.; a son,
Charles Andrew Boggess Jr. of Pomeroy; two sisters, Mrs. Douglas
· (Dclons) Reese of Newport News, Va.. and Mrs. David (Kathy) Boney of
·· South Carolina; three brothers: Jim Connolly and George Connolly, both
· of Syracuse, and Gene Connolly of California; 17 grandchildren and
seven grewgrandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her brother, Russell
Connolly; two pdsons and a great-granddaughter.
Services will be Monday at II a.m. in the Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Ernest Bush officiating. Burial will be in Letart
. Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9
p.m.

_Herbert D. Coler
. ' . COOLVILLE- Herbert D. Coler, 62, Coolville, died Saturday,
.March 28, 1992 at Camden Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg
. W.Va.
'
•• Ar~angements will be announced by White's Funeral Home in
· . Coolv1lle.

. John William Craig
·· GALLIPOLIS - John William Craig, 85, 568 Swan Creek Road,
: -Crown Ctty, died Saturday, March 28, 1992 at his residence.
Born May 19, 1906 at Bladen, son or the late Frank and Ola Elliou
Craig, he was a retired Ohio Township farmer and a member of the Bethel
Methodist Church at Bladen.
· : · Survi'1nR"ll\I"'•··Nter, ~ Aaten·ffi'ances) BJYan of Gallipolis, and
. several rueces and nephews.
•.. He was preceded in death by two sisters, Orvia Craig and Modena
Craig, and by a brother, Lawrence Craig.
. Secyiccs will be I p.m. Monday in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel, with
· the Rev. J_im Chapman officiating. Burial will be in Bethel Cemetery.
'Bladen. Fnends may call at the chapel Sunday from 7-9 p.m.

Dorothy A. Notter
COLUMBUS - Services were held March 23 in the Myers Funeral
.Home, Grovepon, for Dorothy A. Nouer, 70, 4340 Thomas Place, Columbus, who died March 20 in Columbus Community Hospital.
Burial was in Franldin Hills Memory Garden.
Born Oct. 8, 1921, Mrs. Notter was a former employee of the A &amp; P
Bakery, She was a member of The Living Word Church and Groveport
. Chapter No. 440 of the Order of the Eastern Star.
Surviving are her husband, Paul E. Notter; two sons, Donald Notter of
Alabama and Marvin Notter of Westerville; two sisters. Jessie Angel of
Florida and Goldie Carrel of Plymouth; and two brothers. Leslie Lemon
and Garland Lemon, both of Huntington, W.Va.
Memorial contributions may be made to The.Living Wora Church , 145
Oberz Road, Columbus.

...

beating Columbus North the next .
evening for the Class A Champi- :
onship.
'
The names of the team members "
are: Don Holter, Dick Winebren- '
ncr, Fred Crow, Ralph Sisson.
Bruno Pierotti, Milford (Bill)
Grueser, Eddie Guinther, Tippy
Dye, Leland (Tim) Sisson and
George Clifton. Marvin Fin law was .
.the manager and Ray Farnham was
the coach. With the exception of
Dye, Crow, Ralph Sisson, George ·
Clifton and W. R. Farnham, all the ·
remaining are now deceased. Paul ,.
Lcvio Casey would have been ·
among the starters in I 932 but was ·•
unable to do so due to a hernia con- •
dition.
.
~Rupc, thts was a great basketball ·
team and really was the number ·•
two team in the state. We could :
have beaten Columbus North any ·:
day of the week. There ain't many
of us left, but those who have sur- "
vived have great memories of .
I932.
..
Rupe, tell the Racine fans to ~et ,;
me material to report on the fme .:
team that Racine had in 1932 and :
1933.
Editor's note • Long-time ,
Atlorney Fred W. Crow is th~ .:·
contribut9r or a weekly ,column.:,
for The Sunday Times-Sentinel. ~
Readers wishing to applaud, crit·icize or comment on any subject:.~
(except religion or politics) are ~
encouraged to write to M.r.
Crow, in care ortbis newspaper,

Berryls World

.Louise (Pusty) Studer

... ANP Tt\E. 6*~4'­
AWARP fOR T\-\t. 6*~4'­
Fn.. M WIT\-\ MOST FOUL.
6*~4'- ~t\NGUAGE

GOES TO ...

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Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-A5

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The United States Bankruptcy Coon entered an order authorizing
the _company to pay the real and personal property taxes due in
Me1gs County on March 18. The amount represents the tax principal and mterest only, but does not inClude any penalties for late payment on the property taxes.
. ~r.ank said that the amount will be distributed to schools and subdmsiOns. He said that about 75 percent will go to schools.

ABINGDON, Va. (AP) - Coal
mine operators and union officials
failed to reach agreement Friday on
a plan to maintain health benefits
for 120,000 retired miners and their
dependents, tossing the issue back
into court.
U.S. District Judge Glen
Williams is to decide on a plan by
Wednesday.
On March I 7, Williams ruled
that two insolvent trust funds can't
suspend benefits to relined nriners
and ordered the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association to put the
funds back in the black by increasing contributions.
He gave the group of coal companies, the United Mine Workers
union and trust fund administrators
I 0 days to agree on an amount
The funds' trustees said a com·
plete bailout would require coal
operators to increase contributions
from $2.17 to $5.03 per man-hour
for the 1950 Benefit Trust and from
33 cents to 91 cents per man-hour
for the 1974 Benefit Trust
William Poff, a lawyer for the
operators' association, said the
increase should be about half those
amounts.
Poff told the judge that a significant increase in health benefit cosiS
would force companies to close
mines and cut jobs. He said fewer
jobs means less in contributions,
which are based on hours worked
mining coal,
The association has 14 members
but negotiates union contracts for
about 300 coal companies.
The $140 million deficit in the
insurance funds developed because
of increasing health costs and a
dwindling number of contributing
companies.
Williams also may 111le Wednesday on a motion to dismiss two
attorneys who filed a class-action
lawsuit on behalf of the retired
miners.

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· MORGAN CENTER - A
brush fire burned seven acres on
: 'Morgan Center Road near Meadow
'Lane in Morgan Township Satur• day, the Vinton Volunteer Fire
· Department reported.
.
: Firefighters were t;alled at 1:18
' ·p.m. to property owned by Harold
• Kemper to combat' the fire, which
'is believed to have been caused by
a malfunctioning electric fence.
The department sent seven flrefighlers and two trucks to the
scene.

~

PO~ROY - A check for $71,123 .63 in back taxes fro111
Co1umb1a Gas Transmission Corp. was received Friday by Howard
Frank, Meigs County Treasurer,

Miner• benefit
accord fails

· Fire burns 7 acres

DAYTON (AP)- A 16-yearold boy accused of seuing a fire
that resulted in the death.of a 12~ear-old _
girl could be sentenced to
life m pnsorl.
A Montgomery County Common Pleas Coun jury on Friday
found David Clark guilty' of aggra.
vated murder, attempted aggrayat- .
. ed murder .and two counts \l&amp;Ch of
aggravated arson and aggravated
burglary.
The charges stem from a break·
in and finer April 28 that destroyed
the home of Judith Simpson. Her ,
daughter Amanda Simpson die~
from bums. A microwave oven wls
stoieri.
Clark, who was tried as an adull, ,
didn'ttestify.
' ,·
In closing arguments, prosecutors and defense attorne)';l drew
upon thr~ days of testimony 10
construct different theories surnoundins Clark alid seven child co- '
defendants. Ea!;l! of Jhc seven flu
been convicted of involuntary ·
manslaughter and aggravated but·
glay• . ' ...
,a.
·.
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."

Columbia Gas pays back
taxes to Meigs treasurer

MIDDLEPORT.:- Marie Ethel Van Cooney, 7S, Pomeroy, died Saturday. March 28, 199:tin Veteran.s Memorial Hospital.
Born Sept. II, 1916 in Middleport, daughter of the late Bowen and
Gertrude Denney Gilkey, she was a homemaker.
Surviving are her husband of 57 years, Albert Franklin Van Cooney
Sr.; five sons and daughters-in-law, Bowen Franklin and Flo Van Cooney,
and Don Edward and Paula Van Cooney, all of Orlando, Fla.,.Charles and
Jan Van Cooney, and Paul F. and Anita Van Cooney, all of Pomeroy, and
Albert Franklin Jr. and Loretta Van Cooney or Elyria: a son, Theodore
Van Cooney of Pomeroy; a daughter, Nyolca Van Cooney of Virginia;
two sisters-in-law, Hazel Van Cooney of Middleport, and Mary Van
Cooney of Pomeroy; a brother-in-law, Clyde Van Cooney of Phocni~
Ariz,; and 22 grandchildren and 20 great-grandchildren.
'
Services will be II a.m. Tuesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport, with Henry Eblin officiating. Burial will be in Middleport Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Monday.

GLOUSTER- Louise (Pusty) Swder, 77, Glouster, died Thursday ,
, Mareh 26, 1992, in an automobile aCCident near Wellston.
Born Nov. 29, 1914, in Nelsonville, she was the daughter of the late
. -Guy and Bessie Smith Huffman.
. She retired from Ohio University where she worked as a bookkeeper.
.She was a past president of ·the Gallipolis Emblem Club No. 199 and
.. member of the Eagles Auxiliary in Jacksonville.
. She is survived by her husband, John (Jack) Studer; a stepson, Edward
. Studer of Toledo; one daughter, Mrs. Ernest (Joyce) King of Deerfield,
. -and a stepdaughter, Ruth Ann Wickline of GaUipolis; four grandchildren
..and three great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by three brothers, Dwight, Rex and Francis
(Huff) Huffman, and a sister, Virginia (June) McCarty.
. Services will bel p.m. Monday in the Cardaras Funeral Home ,
. -Glouster, with Tim Seevers ·officiating. Burial will be in the Maplewood
· .Cemetery.
Friends may call Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Gallipolis Emblem Club services will be held 12:55 p.m. Monday .
. .Jacksonville Eagle Auxiliary services will be 7:30p.m. Sunday.

*
FRANniN OHIO INSURED

TAX-FREE INCOME FUND

PER MONTH

This Franklin fund invests in a portfolio of insured
municipal bonds! It delivers a range of strategic
advantages in one fund:

Youth faces life term

'

·~

Marie Ethel Van Cooney

Evelyn Mae Boggess

whoSe thuggery rivals that of Saddam Hussein, is frantically building
up his military using oil money and
more than $2 billion sent his way
by Saudi Arabia in gratitude for
Syria's help in the Persian Gulf '
War.
Syria may be first in line for
North Korea's Scud-D missile now
in production. It will have a range
of more than 625 miles . With a
Scud-D. North Korea could strike
anywhere in South Korea and most
"of Japan. In the hands of Arab
countries in the Middle East, the
Scud-D missiles could easily hit
Israel. And from Libya, a frequent
buyer of North Korean weapons, a
Scud-D could hit many cities in
Europe. The worst-case scenario is
that a Scud-D could be outfilled
with a nuclear warhead.
North Korea has been elusive
about inspections of its nuclear
research installations, particularly
the reactor at Yongbyon. Under
pressure from Japan, which threatened to cut off trade, North Korea
signed a pact with South Korea on '
Dec. 31 , banning nuclear weapons
from both countries. Since then,
North Korea has dodged all efforts
at serious inspection, leading some
intelligence sources to believe that
the pact was another way to placate
the West and buy precious time for
a nuclear production program that
is just months away from success.
In the last six months, the number of anti-aircraft baueries ringing
Yongbyon has jumped from five to
40. Camouflage netting has been
strung to disguise the worlcings at
Yongbyon from spy satellites.
Underground tunnels are being
dug. Heavy trucks are lumbering in
and ou~ either as a sijPI of steppedup production, or an mdication that
critical material is being moved out
before inspectors move in.
Meanwhile, the North Koreans
deny they are up to nuclear dirty
work. Kim II Sung personally
swore to Rep. Stephen J. Solarz, D·
N.Y ., in December that he was
adhering strictly to a policy of
nuclear non-proliferation. Either he
was lying, or his son has cut dad
out of the loop.
Copyright 1992, United Fea·
ture Syndicate, Inc.
'

Basketball nostalgia during 1931-32

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·.;.__--Area d e a t h s - - - - - - - - - - -

·March 29, 1992 :

Weapons activity in North Korea worries U.S. :

A Divtaion of

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

March 29, 1992

iunbiti ~huts· jentinel

I'

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ins~rt tht wlut of tht sham. Tilt terms ojtht insuranu art mort folly dtsmbtd in tht prosptctus. and no rrprtstniQtion is mode as 10 Dill! insurtr's
ability to mnr its commitmtnts. Tht fo nd 's shorts art nor insured by any
sratt or U.S. govtrnment ag~ncy.
'
Hf or inutstors subjw ro rht ftdt raJ ahernatiue minimum tax. a small porn'on
of rht fncome may bt subject to such tax.
Frank lfn D~srrfbutors. Inc.

•payment based on $800.00 cash or trade down plus tax &amp;title. Balance to finance
$7204.00 at 60 months at 8.75 A.P.R. with approved credit.

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

BLUNT ELLIS &amp; LOEWJ
416 s.-1 An., G II; ols, Olt.45631
446-1199
I·IOD-446.0226

Yn. I 1111111d lilt~ aim pro1ptrtlll ronrafnfng mort complete.
' "i'J[or7!tttton
on tM l'rtMJilf o.\io Inomi'Jb·Fm In~t

CHEVROLET

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infludin~ cl'lorgn ond U/Jff!lrl . I will r~gd it

ca,q,.lfll btjort I inwst or stnd money.

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'Cfi';!SI.rt/Zip - -- - " ' - - - - -

GALLIPOLIS, OH.
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1818 EASTERN AVENUE
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(814) 4464$72 .

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

Times-Sentinel
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March 29, 1992

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Win $250
Certificate
of Pepsico

1992 Is Powell_
's 18th Annivetsary.- Celebrate With Ut With

An Eckrich True oad Salefl

Name...............................
Address.......................... ,

' J8tla . ·.. '

Annlvnslar,
C::ustomn
Appreciation ·

Phone.............................
Deposit Ticket In Store
DRAWING APRIL 26,

·~··~ .
STORE HOURS' Monday thru Sunday- 8 AM· H) PM
. '.

298·Second

GROUND BEEF

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PEPSI FREE, MT•
Diet or Reguler

·

. PEPSI-COLA

WE RESERVE THE
TO
MAR.
1PRICES

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.c·

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. 10 LB. PACKAGE

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$1390
GROUND CHUCK

2 LITRE BOrnE

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USDA CHOICE BEEF

Round Stealt... . . . . . La.
USDA CHOICE BONElESS BEEF
$499
Ribeye Steak...._.ll

10 LB. PACKAGE

$1590
COUNTRY
STYLE RIBS

=iJJ
.

$158

SWIFT

SIZZLEAN ••••••••••••••••12 oz.

$

SMOKED SAUSAGE••••••LB.

188

I0 LB. PACKAGE

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$1590

$138

BULK BACON

SMOKED SAUSAGE 3 LB. PKG.

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10 LB. PACKAGE

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$1090

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CHICKEN
DRUMSTICKS

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10 Ll. PACKAGE

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$890

.

STEWED
TOMATOES
14.5 OZ. CAN

Rump .Roast......................La.

Leg QuarterL. . 39c
:
CHICKEN
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5139
.Breast. . . . . . . . . . . . ". . . . .La.
.,FRESJi"PORK BUTT
'
. $ 119
Steak/Roast. . . . . . .La•
or . 99(
oil Sausage_. . _. .ta... ·. .

14.5 OZ. CAN

-11.

s

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GEISHA
PINEAPPLE

BALLARD'S MOUNTAINEER 10 OZ. LINKS

20 OZ. CAN

s

•'

10LB. PACKAGE

'l•
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WHITNEY

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$590

STOKELY CORN
OR

GREEN BEANS .

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CHICKEN THIGHS

s

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$199

USDA CHOICE BONRESS BEEF

PORK CHOPS

$ 92
,.,........... 10 oz.

11.

ASSORnD

BUnERBALL
ECKRICH

Cheese..............-.-.. -..

$1190

STOKELY WHOLE OR

$ 89

LONGHORN COLBY

10 LB. PACKAGE
i~~·

$229

. .

PIN.K
SALMON

••

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•

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lOLB.PACKAGE

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$590

$ 92

ECKRICH

••

1
BUnERBALL
$ 52
TURKEY FRANKS•••••••• LB• 1
ECKRICH 1Lb. ROLL or 12 OZ. LINK $ 72
COUNTRY SAUSAGE••••••• 1
ECKRICH
$ 28
~---- LINKS•••••••••••••••••••••••• oz. 1
CORN DOGS................LB.

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BROUGHTON'S

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PAniES

Cottage Ctieese...24 oz.

I0 Lb. PACKAGE

DAIRY LANE. ·

' $690

GAL..

BROWN·N~SERVE

FROZEN 1

$ 42.

ECKRICH

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CoobdHam

COOKED HAM••••••••• 12 OL

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POTATO CHIPS
Reg. $1.49 Size

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298 Second St., Pomeroy, Ohio

.

MR. BEE

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ECKRICH

~=·· ~ COOKED HAM.•••••m

3

$ 19

1
99 (
Ice Cream..............~. . . ~
3
$5·
Tony s P1zza. ."···~··
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BOUNTY

PAPER
TOWELS
JUMBO ROLL ,.,·

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�•

March 29, 1992

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

says farewell
to its retiring principal
·' RACINE - Cakes, cards, flowers, balloons, and girt certifica!es
were presented Friday to J.tm
Adams, retiring Southern Htgh
School principal, by students and
staff.
Adams, who took early retirement for health reasons, has been at
Southern for 2S years, all but three
years serving as principal. He
entered the teaching profession at
Rutland High School in 1964 after
graduating from Ohio Umverstty ,
and taught there three years. . .
Adams expressed apprectauon

Coal firm
denies role
in explosion
By RAY FORMANEK Jr.
Associated Press Writer
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)
- A federal mine inspector
watched workers weld pipe over a
mine shaft on the day it exploded
and killed four men, a company
spokesman said.
The same inspector also had
checked the bottom of the shaft at
Consolidation Coal Co. before the
explosion, said Thomas Hoffman, a
spokesman for CONSOL Inc.,
owner of Pittsburgh-based Consolidation.
"He had numerous opportunities to stop the activities, but no
such action was taken," Hoffman
said Friday.
A company engineer and three
men employed by a mine consuuction company were killed March 19
at Consolidation Coal's Blacksville
No.I mine.
The cause of the explosion had
not been determined by investigators still examining the site, which
straddles the West Virginia-Pennsylvania border about 60 miles
south of Pittsburgh.
Company officials have said an
acetylene torch was being used to
weld 16-foot sections of pipe above
the mine's production shaft at the
time of the explosion.
In the weeks before the blast,
enough explosive methane gas was
being released from the 6-footthick coal seam that federal inspectors checked the mine every few
days for potential buildups, officials said.
..,
. Kathy Snyder, a spokeswoman
for the federal Mine Safety and
Health Administration, said Friday
that agency officials were awaiting
the company's revised ventilation
plans for the mine when the explosion occurred.
She said federal mine regulations require MSHA be notified of
changes made in air systems, roofbolting and other safety-related
aieas.

to the students, school personnel
and parenrs for the tributes which
made his final day at Southern .. ,
day to remember."
"Very gratifying," he said, of
the unexpected outpouring. "I came
anticipating a routine day and it
was anytl)ing but that."
Both his son, Todd, an engineer
at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
in Dayton, and his daughter, Kim, a
Wilmington High School home
economics teacher, graduated from
Southern ..
Adams and his wife, Carol Jean,
a nurse at Veterans Memorial Hospital, reside in Syracuse.
The retiring principal said that
he plans to continue his vegetable
gardening business in which he has
traditionally provided summer
employment for numerous Southem students.

PIKETON (AP) - After
months of being on strike, worlccrs
at ·a nuclear enrichment plant are
ready to report to work next week.
But officials at the Portsmouth
Gaseous Diffusion Plant say the
I OS5 strikers will not be allowed
t~ work until they are retrained.
John Knauff, president of the
Oil Chemical &amp; Atomic Workers
lnt~rnational Union, Local 3689,
said in a letter w company officials
Friday that the union "uncond~;
• tionall y offers to return to work .
as of 7:30a.m. Monday.
Clyde Hopkins, president of
Martin Marietta Energy Systems,
RETIRING - Jim Adams' final day as principal of Southern which operates the plant for the
High School was Friday. He was recognized with a variety of gifts, U.S. Department of Energy, wrote
cards and nowers from the building staff and students. Here teach· to Knauff the same day that
er Kim Phillips presents him with a packet of gift certificates, as because of the strike's duration,
" all employees. will require some
other staff members look on.

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FOOD CHAIN DISCUSSED • Learning
about the food chain at a recent insenice are

POMEROY - Meigs Local
School District has been involved
in the elementary lead teacher project for math and science the past
two years.
This program was funded by the
National Science Foundation with a
grant written by Dr. Ralph Martin
at Ohio University in Alhens.
Meigs Local committed all of
their Dwight D. Eishenhower funds
to supplement this grant and were
able to have 14 teachers in the district attend classes at Ohio University in the areas of math and science.
The purpose of the Lead Teacher project is to focus hands-on
teaching approaches to the elementary students in grades K-6. The
project trains two teachers (one in
math, one· in science) in each elementary building in the district.
They in turn train , teach, share,
support, provide materials, etc. for
all the teachers in their buildings.
The Meigs Local lead teachers
are committed to improving lhe
mathematics and science programs
for sludents K-6 in the distiict.
They believe that through the math
and science programs they can pro. vide opportunities for the students
· to help them develop problem solving sltills as well as assist them in
acquiring the knowled~e which is
: essential 10 the changmg techno. logi~ ~rl&lt;l. _ .
· During the past summer session
: at Ohio University the lead leach. ers developed an action plan for the
· entire district. Lead teachers met
: many times as a group and also in
· small groups with their individual
: building principal to determine the
· needs of the entire district and what
was essential for their particular

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PURCHASES MUST BE PAID FOR BY CASH, PERSONAL CHECKS, VISA, MASTERCARD, AND/OR ACCEPTABLE
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HOUR
SALE

OFf

UP
TO

•

s700,000.00 WORTH OF FURNITURE AND FURNITURE·RELATED ITEMS!!!
NAME BRANDS TO BE SOLD ON THIS LAST DAY . ..

Lynn McCarley, Marjorie Felly, Becky
Edwards, ·Paula Hays and Mindy Young. How

to compare prices and determining tbe best
price for each Item by looking at price per

.

poundandpernuidouncewere partol'thispro- :
Ject, just one oC many tbese teachers participat-

building.
A timeline was developed for
the district which included mdividual building inservices to stan the
year, release time for planning,
Meigs County inservice presentations at Meigs High School in conjunction with Eastern Local, Math
Make-it Take-it Workshops, Science Make-it Take-it Workshops,
grade level meetings, and science
and math fairs.
The lead teachers recently completed the grade level meetings
which consisted of teachers being
released from their classrooms to
learn about new techniques taught
this past summer at Ohio University.
Ideas presented 10 the teachers
included, for the first and second
grade sessions, a demonstration by
Lynn Bookman on malting a v~len ­
tine bird feeder and a terranum;
Becky Zurcher and Cindy Allen
demonstrating uses for tanagrams
giving the teachers a variety of differeD! displays to usc in their classrooms; Pennee Knapp tied in using
books from the library about the
moon and its surface and then having the students make a "moonrock" to complete their lesson.
Marge Feuy mentioned the video
"Tell My Why" and discussed the
magazine, Super Science Red,
which can be used in the: classroom. Mrs. Fetty also demonstrated
measurement using water and a cup
and the "dome effect."
Kathy Haler, for third and
fourth grade SCSSIOnS, demonstrated
the Geoboard, fractions and estimating with coupons. Teresa Carr
demonstrated a wide variety of
activities on problem solving.
Karen Wallccr demonstrated how to

make fossils using plaster of paris,
making coal crystals and investigating layers of lhe earth. Carolyn
Smith gave demonstrations on perception using materials that could
be readily found in anyone's home.
She also discussed how to make the
students aware of sound and waves
and a variety of activities were
demonstrated using different techniques.
Julie Hubbard, during fifth and
sixth gmde sessions, demonstrated
high density color, stalic electricity,
layering of the earth using colored
liquid with a different density in
each. Deborah Lowery gave examples of shapes that could be made
m the classroom to show geometry
in a three-dimensional shape
instead of just in the book. Julie
Randolph gave examples of probability using a variety of charts,
graphing and tallies that the teachers used during the demonstration.
Ed Bartels had the teachers complete charts on two local grocery
stores to compare prices. They
were asked to complete the worksheet to determine the best price for
each item, looking at price per
pound, per fluid ounce, etc. He also
demonstrated some mathematical
problems using mental math to
stimulate studenrs. Mary O'Brien
demonstrated density using a variety of objects and discussed the
digestion of food.
To complete lhe action plan the
lead teachers will be planning science and/or math fairs in individual
buildings for the spring.
Further infonnation on lhis program may bC obtained by contacting any of the lead teachers or
Wendy Halar, local director, at Salisbury Elementary.

IN-SERVICE DIRE&lt;;J'ED • Katb7 Haley and
Rebecca Zurcher (botb standill!) direct an

"

lnservlce at Meigs Hlgb Scltool on niath alld scl- : ·
1•
-In tile classroom.

e~ce Ideas to

'

STATEMENT OF FACTS...
Public Nollftcallon It htrtby

given that or thlt Suncloy, Morch

2tlh, 1!112, btiWton tilt llouro of 12:00 o'Clock Noon ond 8:00
P.ll. ovor $700,000.00 Worth of Furniture ond Furnn ... Rtllltd
nome will lit plactd onto tilt Public Mor1cll II up to 68% o".

•BASSETT • FLEXSTEEL • KINCAID • LEA • JIMSON
• RESTONIC • ENGLAND • CORSAIR • COROLLA CLASSICS
• SAUDER •CARLYLE • SPRING AIR •IMPERIAL

lloofa wtH remoln- lor. 811ourt only thlt 5undoy. No4hlng

will be hlkl blck r.gtrdllu or name brllnd. Thlt ttora It now
c l - ond wtll
c-.. untl112 Noon Sunday. Puror thlt ullllto Balanct lnvtntOry and lncru• Cath FkM.

,.,..In

LAST AND FINAL DAY SUNDAY!!

FLEXSTEEL RECLINERS

SPIECE BEDROOM

Rocker Recliner~, Ullllme GUI!Inlll on s..t
Spring ond Mochoniam. 3 Colofllo c"-lrom

NOT

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HEADBOARD 6 FRAioE, NIGHnABu:

$34997
SOFA and LOVESEAT

Traditional Stylo,Btue ond G5Jn Velvet

BASSETT DINING ROOM

97

NOT'I589.95 SUNDAYONIY 699
mR.GERE NOT SI99.9S sa9'7

Cherry Flniah, 1 Arm .,d 5 aide chairs, table
1nd 1-leal curio hutch w/mirrorod back.

NOT $2859.98
SUNDAY ONLY

$99'997

BRASS 6 GLASS 30'' ETEGERE, 4 SHELVES

FLEXSTEEL RECLINER
NOT $1299.95 SUNDAY ONLY 4 99

42"' HUTCH OAK FINISH

T. V. VCR CABINET

SUNDAY ONLY

SIHay~ $64997
· 6 PIECE BEDR
SWTE

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SUNDAY ONLY 21 9

conta,_.ry tlyloln otk
OrMior/lllrror,
Chllt,l Nlghnlblll. H11e rr1 A Fr11111.

SUNDAY $
ONLY 4997
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NOT S2279.l:lllay Ot~ $79997

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KINCAID OAK TABLE, 6 CHAIRS

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SUNDAY ONLY

DAYBED

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Early Amtrlcon Flock NJ1on, Florlli Ponorn.

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SUNDAY
ONLY
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SUNDAY ONLY

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97

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SOFA &amp; LOVESEA 1 Trlllltional.tyl• c11r11
g.-- with hint of -•l!or•l $
97
110T $1329.95 'SI:JNDAY ONLY
SIOilD G&amp;ASS TOP'TULE &amp;6(HAIRS

$349'7 .

THE
LAST
I
HOlliS
SUNDAY

PAUL IUNYAN lED
4PC. BEDROOM

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NOT $1799.90

SOLO IN SETS ONLY

Nors#9~lr•SI..... ;- ~ •·9r·

S•tHiayO.~

NOT S2789.9S . $999'

2MATCHING LOVESEATS

mllchlng lountllllon.
Firm
'

.:

K..,...k• by R•tonlc M1tg1c Middle.
lulnlrloua QuiiUng.

conto,_.ry O.k trim, btlgt ond pullli oovon.

a..uuru1 oonr with

,
LE~D TEACHERS • Pictured are Ro1er
; :Foster, Ed Bntels, Julie Randolph, Deborah
: : Lowery (stancllaJ), Mb lf8de teac:bef? attend·

I FULL- I QIIEN Sill

Blue Colonial wnota of oak trl
clautc otyling with a fllllr.

97

TWIN MATTRESS

NOT$1099.95
$39997
SUNDAY ONLY

ORTHOTONIC MATTRESS &amp;BOXSPRING

SOFA-LOVESEAHHAIR

Glider, Siwlvel Rtclln.r, Lumber STJ, Mluve

Tutretl beak.

Sulllay Ot~ $89997

NOT $1799.51

SUNDAY NOON 'TIL 8 P.M.

Nine indicted by

GALLIPOLIS - A divorce
action was filed Thursday in the
Gallia County Court of Common
PleaS by Angela Stephens; Patriol,
from Raymond Stepileal. Vinton.
Two dissoludoa ac:liou were
also filed. Ftlina for cliaolulioD ue
Larry G. Colfins and Anna M. ·
Collins, both
Northup, and.
Sheryl Fttch and Oeanll Flltb, bolh
ofVmron.

..

UNPRECEDENTED

•

Divorces and
dissolutions

•,

ALL MERCHANDISE IN WAREHOUSE AND/OR ON
DISPLAY WILL BE PLACED ONTO THE PUBLIC
MARKET FOR RELEASE DURING THIS .....

Court
news
•

GALLIPOLIS - Nine people
were indicted Thursday in the Gallia County Court of Common Pleas
by the March term of the Gallia
County Grand Jury.
Indicted were: Michael W.
Blankenship, breaking and entering; Wayne K. Mullins, complicity;
Debra M Daft, trafficking in drugs;
Robin T. Calhoun, trafficking in
drugs; Dwayne A. Williams, felonious assault; Melvin J. Stewart;
Acee E. Rowley, aggravated bur·
glary; Fred Cox, theft; Ernest J.
Adkins, felonious assaull
~

•

March 29, 199:Z

Meigs County teachers gO back to ""SChOol

.•

grand jury

Section B

amount of retraining andor recertification to ensure the safety of our
employees and the safe operation
of equipment and processes.''
The strike began June II.
. Hopkins wrote that labor and
management also would have to
agree on the union's term "unconditionally."
·
Hopkins said Martin Marietta
and the union should meet as soon
as possible to discuss re-entry
training.
Knauff said Friday that Hopkins' letter will be reviewed by the
union's general counsel.
"At this point and time, nothing
has changed. We are still directing
our people to return to work at 7:30
a.m. Monday, unless notified otherwise," Knauff said.

INVESTED PARTIES GIVE FINAL ORDERS ••• IT'S ALL OVER AT ONE MINUTE PAST 8:00 P.M. SUNDAY!!

..

.'• GALLIPOLIS - The following
c~ses were processed Thursday in
t)Je Gallipolis Mu~icipal Court of
Judge Joseph L. Cam:
: Arnold P. Noel, 38, Urbana,
$450 plus costs, three days jail, 90day operators license suspension,
driving under lhe influence; Jeffrey
Dunaway, 26, Vinton, $100 plus
c6sts, no operators license; Juanita
Robinette, 35, Gallipolis, $100 plus
costs, no operators license; Guy
Ferguson, 49, Gallipolis, $SO plus
costs, disorderly conduct; Robin
Calhoun, 35, Gallipolis, $SO plus
cosrs, disorderly conduct by intoxication; Niki G. Corfias, 30, Gallipolis, $100 plus costs, no operatots license.

'Along the' River

Returning Piketon staff
may undergo retraining

~outhern

I

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'

'

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Zan-

Lllld•
CII'OIJI Saltll, Mllldy Ytl!lll,
CII'OIJI laowdea, loealle Story, Ala Van
Matre aad Katlly Haley. Tlltae ladlea are

..

=-

lavolved wltb Lead Teaclltr pre,Ject to lltlp
lmproft tbe matll_. ICiall
lar Illdents Ia tile dllerld. Eaell ..
t ..., Ideal
l

l

·~ ;

�March 29, 1992

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Don't judge a boo

DAVID EBERSBACH

Chapman-Ebersbach
ANDREA RUTAN and SCOTT CANADAY

Rutan-Canaday
BIDWELL • Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Lee Rutan of Bidwell,
an nounce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Andrea Lynn, to Scott
Canaday, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall F. Canaday of Rio Grande.
Miss Rutan is a 1988 graduate
of North Gallia High School and is
currently employed by Summ er
Image Tanning Salon and Saunders
Insurance Agency.

Mr. Canaday is a 1982 graduate
of Gallia Academy High School
and is currently employed by Ohio
Valley Foodland as head manager
of the frozen and dairy food departmenL
The open church wedding will
be held May 9 at2 p.m . atlhe Vinton Baptist Church, with Rev. Marvin Sallee officiating.
A reception will follow in the
church basemenL

SYRACU.SE · Mr. and Mrs .
Ronald Chapman, Cumberland,
Md., announce lhe engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Ellen Jean, to David
Michael Ebersbach, Warrenton,
Va., son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Ebersbach, Syracuse.
Their wedding will be an event
of April II at 4:30p.m. at St.
Luke's Lutheran Church in Cumberland, Md.
Miss Chapman is a 1984 gmduate of Fort Hill High School in

Horton-Roush

Cumberland and a 19SS graduate
of West Virginia Wesleyan. She is
employed as a teacher and coach at
Fauquier County High School in
Warrenton, Va.
Ebersbach is a 1985 graduate of
Southern High School and a 1990
graduate of West Virginia Wesleyan. He is employed as a teacher
and coach at Taylor Junior High
School in Warrenton, Va. He is the
grandson of Mrs. Edna Roush,
New Haven, W.Va.

MIDDLEPORT • Mr. and Mrs.
Dewey M. Horton, Middleport ,
announce the engagement of their
daughter, Paula Grace Horton, to
Kevin James Roush, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert J. Roush, Mason,
W.Va.
Miss Horton is a graduate of

Award winner

Ohio University and is employed
by Meigs County Schools.
Roush is employed by Kokosing
Construction Company. ·
The open church wedding will
be an event ofJ une 20 at I: 30 p.m.
at the Heath United Methodist
Church in Middleport.

I,ISA HENDERSON and KENNETH RITCHIE

Henderson-Ritchie

Meigs bookmobile
schedule announced

BIDWELL • The United States
Achievement Academy recently
announced that Dawn Coffee has
been named a United States
National Award winner in history
and government and leadership

POMEROY · The Meigs County Bookmobile will make the following stops this week: TUESDAY
· Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, 11:30 a.m. to 12:30
Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT • Mr. and Mrs. Lewis,
p.m.,
Darwin, I p.m. to 2 p.m.,
An April 17 wedding at
Tommy A. Aker, Roanoke, Va.,
Burlingham,
2:30p.m. to 4:30
announce the engagement and Roanoke is being planned.
Coffee, a student at NOJth Gallia p.m., Wildwood Estates, 5 p.m. to
approaching marriage of their
High School, was nominated for 6 p.m.; WEDNESDAY • Racine,
dau~hter, Amy Louise, to Robert L.
the national award by Ron 12 noon to 4 p.m ., Letart Falls, 5
Spnnger Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Twyman, counselor. She will p.m. 10 7 p.m. ; THURSDAY· TupRobert Springer, The Woodlands,
appear in the United States pers Plains, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.,
Texas, and Marietta.
Achievement Academy Official Reedsville, 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.; FRIMiss Aker is a graduate of the
DAY • The Maples, II :30 a.m. to I
RACINE · William L: Phillis, YearboQk, published nati!J_nally.
University of Richmond and is assistant superintendent of public
p.m., Overbrook Center, 1:30 p.m.
employed by the Chesapeake instruction, will address the top
She is lhe daughter ot Luke ano to 2 p.m., Pomeroy Pike, 2:30p.m.
School System in Chesapeake, Va.
scholars from grades two through Doris Coffee; and the granddaugh- to 4:30 p.m., Baum Addition, 5
Springer auended Marietta Col- 12 at Southern Local Schools' ter of the late Gaylord and Virgie p.m. to6 p.m.; SAltJRDAY ·Rutlege and is employed by Allstate annual academic banquet on Tues- Coffee and Wilma Elliott of New land, 9 a.m. to I p.m ., Danville, 2
Insurance Company at Virginia day.
Haven, W.Va., and the late Pearl p.m. 10 3 p.m., Salem Center, 3:30
Beach, Va. He will take classes at
Elliott.
p.m. to 5:30p.m.
Dr. Phillis' background as high
Old Dominion University in Nor- school
teacher and principal, local
folk, Va., in January. He is the county and J.V.S . superintendent,
grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Eber and college professor has equipped
him in a unique way to understand
public education at all levels.
These experiences have led him
to a philosophy that promotes
among olhers, the ideas that parents
must be personally involved in
their children's education, all children have a rightiO a rigorous academic and vocational education,
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) and !hat students have an individuAn 81-year-old man has pleaded no al
responsibility for their own
contest 10 a reckless cndangennent learning. This year's honorees,
charge stemming from a car crash their parents, their teachers and
that led to the death of country other guests will hear Dr. Phillis
••
music singer Dottie West
promote these values as they relate
George W. Thackston was to the banquet theme, "The Journey
102 East Main, Pomeroy
992-6820
placed on probation Thursday for is
the Reward."
·
Open Tuesday-~aturday 10-5
II months and 29 days by Probate
Judge Jim Everett. Thackston also
was ordered 10 complete an alcohol
treatment program.
..
West, 58, was a passenger in
POMEROY - Charles R. Wright · Spaun.
Miss Wright is a 1991 graduate Thackston's car when it crashed
and Mr. and Mrs. Larry (Brenessa)
Phillips announce the engagement of Meigs High School. Spaun is a Aug. 30 en route 10 the Grand Ole
of their daughter, Brenda Lee 1989 graduate of Southern High Opry. She died five days later.
West was known for songs
HOBSON ROAD
992·6173
MIDDLEPORT
School. Both arc employed at
Wrigh~ ro Roger Lee Spaun, son or
including
"Country
Sunshine"
and
McDonald's
in
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger (S haron )
duets with Kenny Rogers.
Wedding plans arc incomplete.
Thackston suffered a severed
artery in one arm and hip and back
injuries.
••
He registered 0.08 percent on a
blood-alcohol
test
after
the
acciPOMEROY • A card shower is
Cards may be sent to: Extended
.,
being held in honor of Ella Payne's Care Veterans Memorial Hospital, dent, not enough to be considered
95th birthday on Tuesday, March 115 Memorial Dr., Pomeroy , intoxicated under state law.
UP TO
31.
456769.

Aker-Springer

Phillis to speak
during banquet

You'll Come Up Aces With
The Classifieds

Driver who killed
Dottie West gets
probation

GRAND OPENING
APRIL lst·4th

EMILY'S ATTIC

CONSIGNMENT SHOP

Ritchie is a 1990 graduate of
ALFRED - Mr. and Mrs. HMold
L, Henderson, Alfred, announce Hocking College with degree in
the engagemeill and approaching fish and wildlife management. He
marr_iage of their daugh,t.er,.Lis,a is employed by lhe Department of
Mine Henderson, to Kenneth Natural Resources; Division of
Wayne Ritchie, son of Mr. and Wildlife.
The open church wedding will
Mrs. Elton A. Ritchie, Tuppers
be an event of April24 at 7:30 p.m.
Plains.
Miss Henderson is a 1990 grad- at the Alfred United Methodist
uate of the University of Rio Church.
A reception will follow at the
Grande, School of Business. She is
Coolville
Lions Club,
employed by the Auditor of State.

RIO GRANDE • The Area
Agency on Aging District 7, Inc.,
in cooperation with the Ohio
Department of Aging will offer a
seminar titled "Wellness and the
Human Spirit," at9 a.m. Apri19, at
the Christopher Conference Center,
Comfort Inn on Bridge Street in
Chillicolhe.

WE Will BE STOCKING FIRST QUALITY WAllCOVERINGS AND
BORDERS
SAVE 50°/o, 60o/o
75% ON EVERY WALLP~PER YJE STOCK

Card shower

COLUMBUS • Robert Enyart,
17, of Gallipolis, is one of five
Ohio youth selected to represent
their state at the American DiabeteS
Association's (ADA) Ninth Annual
Youlh Leadership Congress May 14 near the nation's capitol in
Arlington, Va.
The Congress' theme, Reaching
New Heights, will emphasize promoting an exchange of ideas, information and good will among
tomorrow's leaders.
Sponsored by the American
Diabetes .Association, Ohio Affiliate, and The NutraSweet Company,
Robe~t _will receiv~ train!n~. in
orgamzmg communny acuvnies
for people affected by diabetes and
will participate in workshops
focusmg on leadership development. Youth Congress delegates
wiU also learn the latest in diabeteS
research and management techniques from experts in the medical
field.
"We believe we have the finest

-

youth in lhe country representing
Ohio at this presti~ious event," said
' ADA Ohio Affiliate Chairman of
the Board Shirley Hissrich , R.N.,
C.D.E.
"Robert and the other delegates
completed an extensive application
process to achieve !his honor, and
we are counting on them to bring
back a lot of new, refreshing
ideas," Hissrich added. Some of
these new ideas will focus on lhe
unmet needs of youth with diabetes
and ways ADA can meet these
needs. Upon returning to Ohio, lhe
delegates will participate in ADA
activities on the local and state levels in developing programs to serve
people who have diabetes. "Per·
haps most importantly, they will ·
develop useful ideas and skiDs for
helping other young adults cope
with diabetes," Hissrich said.
Robert is the son of James and
Cheryl Enyart and attends Gallia
Academy High School.

RIO GRANDE· The University
of Rio Grande through lhe Office
of Continuing Education is offering
a class on investing.
The course, "Taking the Risk
Out of Investing," will be offered
twice this spring quarter wilh the
first one on Thursday, April 2,
from 7-10 p.m. in the College of
Business, Room 107. The second
on Thursday, April 23, from 7-10
p.m . also in the College of Business, Room 107. Cost for lhe class
is $25.
Pre-registration deadlines are
Tuesday, March 31 for the first session and April 21 for lhe second,
The course will be discussing
applying modem ponfolio theory

SELBY.

DEPENDABLE, THAT'S US!
You and your family can depend on the well-trained,
professional health care staff at Veterans Memorial Your Hometown Hospital.
We're your "close to home" facility dedicated to caring
for you and about you.
.
In addition to ~mr medical and surgical units, we offer
24-hour emergency service, 365 days a year; urgent care
services., 12 hours daily; a special care ' unit, a skilled
nursing facility,. and even home health care in your own
home.
·
Depbnd on us ,for all of you,r health care needs·.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 E•..._.. Drive.
- - Ms II lsi HliiPilsl

'-~- '
992·2104

NOW YOU CAN AFFORD TO WALLPAPER EVERY ROOM
IN YOUR HOME IN FIRST QUALITY - NO SECONDS.
'

SPRING

CAI\PET
SAI,E

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

'

Gallia veterans
association meets

•

Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing
Sliding IN salt. No ane refused ltiYkts because of lnallllty to pay.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
236 LMall St,. 2ad Floor
992-5912
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Closed U1nday

SHOE CAFE
LAFAYETlE MALL
GAWPOUS, OH.-

GAUIPOLIS
414 Secolld Ave., 211d Floor
446.()166
8:30 ta 5:00 Moaday·Frlday
8:30 ta 12 Saturday
Closed Uunday

SEAt, · .
PAINT$

19W;iwl&amp;leul

OGRAPBY
IT

CLIIIC
'.

..·''
:...

.

...•

·'

~

~ .DILES HEARING _CENTER

~

-•
~

~

The Radiology Deparbnent at Holzer
Clinic's Main Facility has received the
American College of Radiology's

IIUmD

WIU.CORIIH
IOOIS

30""'

.'

OPEl lr30-5a00 MI.......IY

•

••
I

'.

;I•
t
••
••

•

Il
••
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1992 sCHEDULE
fUNCH 500 PLEA·
. ILUIEI AND lUI

SHOW

111118 C....., ..... F . . _ .

M 11 IIOLII. GHIO

U.l, .......... I

J

ltllOII Ptkt

' APRL 10, 11, 12
IIAYI, t, 10

JUNI12, 11, 14
JULY tO, 11, 12
AUQ. 21, It, 2:1
SEPT. 11, 12, 13
. OCT.
NOY. I. 7, I
Lll'elll
.............
01110.
•I AJI... IW.

31
.....

-~··1147
or(lf.,
... tift

-+

'..

If you are planning a weddinp, ttlen you should
come IH us at Haskins-Tanner.
.
You will have rNII190 stylei of tuxedos to choose

from. We have a large aelec:tion of the latest styles
and compllmorUiy acc•sorles for lhla special
occasion.
·

Q~F-•Iwt•r•t

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

&amp;....... , ... ''
GROOM TUX FREE WITH 8 OR MORE .
. IN WEDDING PARTY
. '

'

"

PRACTICING LAYUPS • Tbe St. Loall Council 335 of the .
Athons-Lancaltor-WhMiorsburg.Jackson
Knlgbts of Columbus recently splllllllrtda Special Population Bas•
ketball Free throw C0111est at the Guiding Hand Sebool ay!naasl,
Gallipolis-Logan
um. Schoolt parllclpatlniiDdlded: Hope Hav~ of JackiOII Coull•
Telephone 594-3s71V/TDD or 1~237-7716
ty, Beacon School of Alhe111, Good Sheppard MIIIOI' of Pllte County, Gallco
Workllbop
and Guldl111 Haad
..
lre._All40
participants
received
a T-slllrt.
, .ol
_Ch
_
_
__
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,..._

l

•.

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MAMMOGRAPHY ACCREDITATION

CRA.Y . •

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~

ALSO: Jackson,. Chesapeake; Athens, Chllkothe, Logan ' ·McArthur

canals. Sound too good to be true? You will have to hear!!
to believe It, and we will give you a month to prove It to
your11lf. The test Is free, all we need Is your tol"phono
call tor appointment.

•

..-,.

...._.....______.............._......

SOMEONE YOU CAN TRUST
- wl!on your hearing Is lou
· thari portoctl At Diles, we
offer a lifetime of Integrity and
experience; than add the
Incredible technology that
puts tho miracle ot hearing
help d11p Into ·your oar

·"

.

"'

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••

POMEROY

THE

Wiiiiilm Diln,

...."

condition and !hat he'll just have 10
learn lO live with iL
ANN U.NDEKS ·
Ichthyosis is an inherited skin
"IItl, Loi Aolel'"
disease !hat affects as many as one
1'lnMtl
in 250 people. Many people have it
and don't realize it. They just-think
!hey have dry skin.
·
This disease is not contagious, but or money order for $4 ,/5 (this
it can make people look repulsive. includes pOslage and handling) 10 :
One young boy I know received Friends, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
death threats at school because his JJ 562, Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
classmateS thought he had AIDS. Canada, send $5.05.)
Sufferers oflen become despondent
and suicidal.
Please tell your readers that free
information and help are .available.
Suggest !hat they send a long, self:
addressed, stamped envelope to
GALLIPOLIS • Members of the
F.I.R.S.T., The Foundation for Gallia County Veterans Associalchlhyosis and Related Skin Types, tion held their monthly meeting
P.O. Box 20921, Raleigh, N.C. recently wilh First Vice Comman27619-0921.
der Dick Roberts calling lhe meetThank you, Ann. You will be ing to order at the VFW Post 4464 ·
doing a kind and compassionate home in Gallipillis.
deed for people who have had very
Seventy eight members and
little hope up 10 now. ·· FRANCES guests attended.
Two check presentations were
MCHUGH, VICE PRESIDENT,
made to the Gallia County Veter·
F.I.R .S.T.
DEAR FRANCES: Here's the ans Memorial Fund; lhe first was in
message. I've seen the literature and of the amount of $222 by the
Ladies Auxiliary of VFW Post
it is extremely well done.
4464.
The second was made by the ,
Lonesorru!? Take charge of your
American
Post 27 for the
life and turn it around. Write for amount ofLegion
$668.50, which was
Ann Londers' new booklet, "How to raised by a recent benefit dance
Make Friends and Stop Being held by Post 27 at which the Silver ·
Lonely." Send a self-addressed, long, Wings Band donated !heir time and
business-size envelope and a check entertainment· for the memorial
fund benefit dance.
After the business lhe floor was
turned over to Attorney Doug
Cowles who introduce candidates
viduals having a religious persua- for the Gallia County offices of
sion or general belief would feel prosecutor, common pleas judge . ,
comfortable and could identify and sheriff from bolh lhe Democrat
,
with the context out of !heir every- and Republican parties.
Each spoke to lhe large crowd ..
day e,xperience.
and
gave a brief background histo· . ·,
This conference is open to the
ry
and
reasons why they wish 10 be , ·
public and professional caregivers.
elected
to the position they are '
Registration fee is $15 per person
seeking.
The
remainder of the canwhich includes refreshments, handdidates
will
be speaking at the ..
outs and lunch.
Deadline for registration is April April 27 meeting of the association .
I. Continuing education units are at the American Legion Post 27 at
available for social workers and 7:30 p.m. All candidates in atten- :
registered nurses. For more infor- dance who did not speak during ;;.
mation on this seminar, contact this meeting were introduced as ~:
Joyce Sheng, trainin~ coordinator, well as current office holders who ~
Area Agency on Agmg District 7, were present. The meeting was ?.;
adjourned.
~
Inc. at245-5306.

OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

with Comfort Flex.

SOMEONE YOU KNOW .(at least by reputation!)

-

• DECOllATOR DESIGNS
~:,rn.~~-P.AITED V1NY1.S

to reduce the risk of investing .
Building a diversified portfolio
based on lhe principles developed
by Nobel Prize winners in economics,
The instructor for lhe course is
Jim Morrison, registered invest·
ment advisor, licensed security broker and insurance broker. He is
owner of 1.E. Morrison and Associates and holds a BBA from Ohio
University in Economics.
For information and registration,
contact the Office of Continuing
Education, P.O. Box 878, University of Rio Grande, Rio Grande,
45674 or call 614-245-5353, ext.
325 or toll free in Ohio at 1-800282-7201.

in •Taupe •Navy •Black •White
•Bone •Pewter.

SACHA

......

--.11.FABRIC BACit VINTU - - -

The presenter will be Sister Bettina Mollica, O.P., M.A., of the Mt.
Carmel Medical Center in Colum •
bus. Sister Mollica is a certified
Clinical Pastoral Educator specializing in spirituality and weUness
programs for !hose in helping professions. In scope, the seminar is
ecumenical. Therefore, most indi-

URG course helps take
Area youth selected as delegate the risk out of investing

to ADA leadership congress

Ann
Landers

AAA7 offers wellness seminar April 9

Wright-Spaun

MEIGS CARPET AND DECORATI.NG
N!

y Its cover

Dear Ann Lander$: I am desper- overwhelmingly sad. I've lried to
ate for advice and hope you can count my blessings because he is
help. My husband no longer finds olhcrwise a good husband and I do .
me sexually auraclive. For the past love him. Am I bCing selfish 10 want
several years he has made love 10 more? Do you lhink I will be able
me only when l'ye asked.
to adjust 10 abstinence in lime?
I admit !hat I'm not as beautiful as What should I do? -- ZERO SELFI onee was, but I'm not repulsive, ES1EEM IN CHICAGO
eilher. I have scars from a surgery
DEAR CHICAGO: First, recogwhich I try to conceal with preuy nize the-fact that it is your husband
nightgowns and soft lights, but he who has the problem, not you.
said lhe scars don't bolher him.
Forgive me, but lhe man sounds
I've Died discussing the problem , selfish and inconsiderate, and he
but he insists !here's nothing wrong. may be deprissed in the bargain.
He says he still loves me and that he
Obviously you want to stay
finds me attractive. I've begged, married to him so I am going to
remained silent and cried. He told make a suggestion that is going to
me a while back that a woman bring in a ton of criticism, but I don't
shouldn't be aggressive, so I dec ided care. I'm here to help people and
to wait for him 10 make the fiist you need help.
move. I'm still wailing. Next month,
A woman of 48 is too young
it will be two years since we made to forget about sex. So, if your
love.
husband refuses 10 satisfy you, then
I went to a therapist who said satisfy yourself. Because AIDS has
my husband may be suffering appeared on lhe scene, I am recomfrom depression or some physical mending this alternative which can
problem. I asked my husband to be a lot better than nothing. I don't
go for a physical but he refused. want to hear from clergymen telling
When he saw the bill from the me it's a sin. Self-gratification is how
therapis~ he became angry wilh me
almost everyone discovers his or her
for discussing our personal life with sexual self. There should be nothing
"a stranger" and he refused to sp.:.ak sinful about it.
to me for three days.
Dear Ann Landers : My 6When I look in the mirror, I see year-old grandson suffers from
a 48-year-old woman who will ichthyosis. His skin blisters and
probably never again have intimau: cracks all over. His dennatologist
contact with a man. This makes me told us there is no cure for this

PAULA HORTON and KEVIN ROUSH

and ELLEN CHAPMAN

Sunday

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Leader In Women\ lleakla Ccare"

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nmea-Senttnet

OH-Potnt Pleasant, wv

1992

March

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Sunday Timea-Senttnet-Page-85 ·
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�March 29, 1992

Page-86-Sunday Times Sentinel

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

Couple exchanges vows

Abandoned Alzheimer's patierit strikes chord
among victims' families; lobby Congress for help

CHESHIRE • Carolyn Sue and
Donald Little were married in a
double ring ceremony on March 21
at a private home in Vinton.
The bride wore a light colored
suit and carried a small bouquet of
orchids which were a gift from the·
groom. The groom wore dress
auire.

A private reception was held
following the ceremony at a local
rcslauranL
Mr. and Mrs. Little are
appeared with their 3-month-old half mile away, but Mrs. Weaner
By JOHN K. WILEY
employed at Gallipolis Developsaid the incident led them to put
son
into the mid-December cold.
Associated Press Writer
"Dad
had
taken
him
outside
her father-in-law in a 24-hour-care
ment Center.
SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -Jeff
The couple plan to reside at the and Chris Weaner knew they could because he said he needed some foster home.
The Traverse City, Mich., cou~m·s home at 385 Roush Lane . no longer care for his father when
air," Mrs. Weaner said.
The
two
turned
up
unharmed
a
ple
was reminded this week of the
mCheshire.
the Alzheimer's-afflicted man disdifficulty of caring for people with
the memory-robbing disease when
an 82-year-old Alzheimer's patient
was abandoned at an Idaho dog
track.
The patient, John Kingery, was
identified by employees of a Portland, Ore., nursing home - 320
miles away - and returned there
Wednesday amid an investigation
into his abandonment.
'
On Wednesday, the Weaners
'
went to Washington to join hundreds of other families and people
who care for Alzheimer's victims
to lobby Congress for help.
"So many care givers are at the
breaking poin~" said Alzheimer's
Association spokeswoman Malia
Bergland. "They're caring for
someone that is as healthy, if not
healthier, than they arc. But they
are losing their cognitive functioning! '
Kingery's abandonment "may
typify the extremes a lot of care
SANDRA COOPER
LOVE BATEY
MELANIE QUALLS
givers feel , but few go to, " she
added.
Alzheimer's is an incurable,
wiU do a clogging routine.
untrealable disease of unknown ori·
gin that affects memory and other
Sandra Raina Cooper is a
brain functions in 4 million Amerisenior at Belpre High School and
cans. It's the nation's fourth leadplans to attend Washington State
Community College for training in
medical lab technology. After that
she hopes to enroll at Rochester
Institute for a biomedical degree.
For the past year, Sandra has
modeled for Access Photos. Her
high school honors have included
being named to the # 1 Club and
being a recipient of the Eagle
Award. In addition to training in
modeling, she has had piano, vocal,
dance, an and acting training.
Sandra, daughter of Linda Carol
Tyler, will do a contemporary
dance for her talenl

Area girls vie for title as Miss River Valley
;'

KELLY WINTER
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Seven conteslants
will vic for the title of Miss Ohio
River Valley 1992, an official Miss
America Preliminary Pageant. to be
s1aged on April 4 at Meigs High
School.
The conteslants are Kelly Winter, Love Batey, and Melanie
Qualls of Middleport; Amber Cumings and Michelle Friend of Syracuse; Stephanie Scott of Gallipolis;
and Sandra Cooper of Belpre.
The tiUe winner here will quali·
fy to compete in the Ohio Pageant
to be held in Junc at Mansfield.
The state winner will travel to
Atlantic City, N.J. in September to
compete for the Miss America title.
The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce is sponsoring the local
pageant, and Pam Newell, a Chamber employee, is director. The producer and emcee is Ann Johnson,
director of the Miss West Virginia
Pageant.
Judgi ng by Miss America
approved judges will be on the
hasis of 40 percent interview, 40
percent talent, 10 percent swim suit
and 10 percent evening wear. A
winner, first and second runners-up
wi ll be selected. A $200 scholarship provided by Bank One will be
presented to the tiUe winner.
Tickets are curr.enUy on sale at
the Chamber office, Second St.,
Pomeroy, and win also be available
at the door on pageant night. The
tickets arc SS for selective seating
and $3 for general admission.
Music will be provided by George
Hall.
_
The Contestants
Lon Batey, daughter of Andy
an d Betty Batey, Middlepon, is a
senior at Meigs High School and
plans to attend Hocking College,
Nelsonville. where she wi II pursue
a degree in nursing.
She is enrolled in the nursing
assistant program at Meigs and
works in that capac ity at Overbrook Center.
At Meigs, Love is president of
Vocationa l Industrial Clubs of
Ameri ca, its regional female
ambassador. and sec rclary of Student Co uncil. She is a member of
the American Legion and performs
regularly with the Shady River
Shufncrs.
For her talent in the pageant, she

~92

-

STEPHANIE SCOTT
Amber Cumings, a senior at
Southern High School, is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rex F.
Cumings. She plans to attend Ohio monologue.
University where she will major in
psychology.
Melanie Elaine Qualls, dau$h·
Her training has included sever- tcr of James and Marcia Qualls, IS a
al years of choral and drama along senior at Meigs High School. She
with eight years of dancing. For her is enrolled in the nurse assistant
talent Amber will do a modern program and works part-time at
dance.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She was chosen as a Universal
While her college plans are
Cheerleaders Association All-Star incomplete, she plans to pursue a
Cheerleader and traveled to Lon- career in nursing.
don, England where she participatAt Meigs High she is sccrelary
ed in the Lord Mayer of Wesunin- of the senior class, treasurer of Stuster's New Year's Day parade. dent Council, and vice president of
Amber is a cheerleader at Southern, the Vocational Industrial Clubs of
plays on the softball team, and America. She was a homecoming
attends th e Racine First Baptist q~een candidate, a delegate to
Church.
Buckeye Girls State, and was
She is employed pan-tim e at named Miss Congeniality of the
Stcrnwheel Regatta Festival in
Me Donalds.
1991.
AMBER CUMINGS
Michelle L. Friend is the reignMelanie will recite the Gettysing Meigs County Junior Fair burg Address for her talent presenQueen and the 1991 Big Bend lation in the pageanL
Sternwhecl Regatta Queen . A
Pomeroy.
senior at Southern High School,
Stephanie Dale Scott, daughter
For her !alent, Kelly will be
she is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. of Richard and Linda Scott , Gal- nresenti ng a jazz dance.
Richard L. Friend, Syracuse.
lipolis. is a graduate of the Kyger
She plans to study pre-med at Creek High School. She plans to
Ohio University. Michelle has been attend the University of Rio
active with the Ohio University Grande and work toward a degree
Upward Bound program and has in fashion and relail merchandisattended the OU Scholar Program. ing.
The fobuloo.o Flex-a·Bed
She is on the slaff of the SoutheastFor her talent in the pageant, she
uclu.siuely at:
ern Regional Teen Institute Camp will sing and dance. Stephanie has
of Ohio and is active with Teens in
had piano and dance training. At
Action.
Kyger
she was the student director
Choir, band and acting have
been among her high school inter- for a musical, a cheerleader, flag
corps co-captain, and received a
ests.
For her talent, she will do a vanety of academic awards.
She is the reigning Miss Gallia
County and the 1991 River Recreation Festival Queen, and is a volBttore you evenllink llboul an ordinary
unteer for United Way and at
nuible bed, be IUI'e to try flex ..·Bed's all
Pleasant Valley Hospital. Stephanie
new Hl·RISER with fealures like no other
bed. You owe It 10 yoonelf.
worlcs at Hills Department Store.
He noted that the study used a
non-violent TV show, "The WonKelly Winter is a senior at
der Years," and said the results Meigs High School and plans to
might have been different with enter the nursing program at Hock- . . . . . lt~lluiblfb«ousr art. ......
more action-oriented programs.
ing Technical CoUege.
You awo Hto youlllll to como In"' coM
"You can 't generalize everyShe has had training in jazz, tap,
lor po1ett tocloy.
thing that's on television based on gymnasucs, and baton, and 1s
one episode of 'The Wonder active in the school track program.
Years,'" he said.
She is the daughter of Sherry
HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY
Previous sludies have linked TV Winter of Middleport and is
7Dilotll.
......
!O obesity. The reasons probably employed pan-time at Gilmore's in
4u-nu
•1•451-tm
mclude lack of physical activity
and the influence of food commercials as weU as the apparent impact
on metabolism, he said.
The study included 31 girls who
had not reached puberty. Their
average age was about I 0, and
about half were obese. Klesges said
he suspects the effect applies to
boys toO, and that he wants to look
for it in adults.

YOU SAW IT ON TV
N'OW SEE IT HERE!

Sunday Times Sentlnei-Page-87

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, O,H-Polnt

'0 .

People in the news
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Bea
Arthur bid farewell to her fellow
" Golden Girls" during taping of
the last episode of the NBC series.
Nearly 300 people attended a
party afler the Thursday night tap·
ing. Highlights and outtakes from
the show's seven years were shown
and signed scripts were passed out.
Rue McClanahan, Betty White
and Estelle Geuy will be featured

ing cause of death among adults.
"We all occasionally forget :
where we put our keys," Ms. Berg- :
land said. "Alzheimer's is when · ·
you see your keys and forget what ·
they are for, or how 10 use them. '' -::
Mrs. Weaner said the average,
annual cost of nursing home care
for an Alzheimer's patient is · ,
$33,000. If there are other medical
complications, the costs can get . ·
bigger, she said.
·
She also spoke of the emotional
burdens on an Alzheimer's victim's
family.
"Even if they're in your home
and you're there, you have to conSiantly watch them," Mrs. Weaner
said. "At one point, I was buying
diapers for my youngest son and
my father-in-law."

&lt;

in their old roles without Anhur on
a new CBS · show, ''Golden
Palace," which is scheduled for the
fall and will have them running a
. hmel.
Saying goodbye was hard for
Arthur.
"It was bittersweet for Bea; a
tearful taping," said show
s~keswoman Pam Ruben Golum.
' It was an emotional farewell."

Pre-Easter Perm Sale!
ADD VOLUME, CURL
AND SUPPORT
WITH A NOVA PERM.

MR. and MRS. GARY (SIDRLEY) EISNAUGLE

Anniversary to be observed

Arts and
Craft Show
AprU 4, 10-S
April S, 12-S
Hannan Trace Elementary
Off St. Rt. 7 South of Gallipolis
on St. Rt. 218. Follow olgns.

Everyone Welcome/

Eftec11ve March 30-Apnl l1

JOHN AND ROSEMARY LYONS

GALLIPOLIS • Gary and
Shirley Eisnaugle of Gallipolis,
will celebrate their fifth wedding
anniversary on Saturday, Apri14.

WALK-INS WELCOME

They were married April 4,
1987 in Gallipolis by the Rev. Nyle
Bordon at the home of Lenville and
Connie Johnson.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
446.·3353

50th anniversary celebrated
MIDDLEPORT - John . and
Rosemary Lyons, Middleport. celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on March 21.
They are the parents of Johnny

Hair H8Ppentng

Lyons, Middleport; Tommy Lyo~s.
Laper, Mich .; Linda Cramer, M1d·
dlepon; and Bernard Lyons, Clarkston, Mich.
They also have 13 grandchildren
and three great-grandchildren.

~~ •

ARE YOU
REGISTERED TO
VOTE?

,6-\

•

BOWMAN'S

If Not- Please
Register and Vote
for the Candidate
of Your Choice

"Complele Medkol Eqllip""'"' for HOIIIIl U~e"

CAlL: r·1#10·411·6144

•HOME OXYGEN
•WHEELCHAIRS
•HOSPITAL BEDS
•SHOWER STOOLS
•FEEDING PUMPS
•Lin CHAIRS

PM! lor by 811 Angell
110 THna Run Rd, CroWii City, OH.

•ADULT DIAPERS
•UNDERPADS (CHUXSI
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•PAnENT UFTS
eOSTOMY
•Acc..Oecl! Ill

24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE
We Ill Medicare &amp; Mer l•s•.,.ce For Ya1
70 PINE ST
•GALUPOUS, OH.
446·7283

MR. and MRS. WILLIAM SNOUFFER

Snouffers celebrate 40 years

MR. and MRS. DALE STEARNS

Anniversary to be celebrated
••CHESTER • Mr. and Mrs. Dale

V. Steams will observe their 50th
anniversary on April 3.
'They resided near Chester for
abdut 10 years and they still have
twq daughters living in the area,
Nancy Hulse, Long Bottom, and
MatUyn Sue, Tuppers Plains. They

also have four daughters living in
northern Ohio. They have 19
grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren.
Cards may be sent to them at
3868 Girton Road, Wayne, Ohio
43466.

POMEROY · Mr. and Mrs.
William Snouffer, Wehe Terrace,
Pomeroy, celebrated their 40th
wedding anniversary on March 8
with a seven -day cruise to the
Southern Caribbean.
The couple was married in
Charleston, W.Va., by Rev. Robert
C. Boothe.

They are the parents of three
children and six grandchildren,
Dana Snouffer, McConnelsville;
Gary Snouffer and Melody Ramsburg, both of Pomeroy.
He is the owner of Blue Streak
Cab, Inc. She is a licensed social
worker with Children Services of
Athens C'nunty.

Spring Sale
ALL

I

I

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRA~TICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES

200/o OFF

TV can lower kids' metabolic
rates, may spur obesity
8y MALCOLM RITTTER

AP Science :Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- Watching
TV may promote obesity in chi!dren by maki ng them bum fewer
ca lories than they do even while
lying in bed, a new study suggests.
Obese girls showed an average
reduction in metabolism of 16.5
percent when watching television
compared to simply lying in bed,
and girls of normal weight had a
12.5 percent reduction, the study
found.
The average drop of 14.5 percent is "quite a subs1antive differ·
ence," said researcher Robert
Klesges.
The reason for the slowed
melabolism is not known, but perhaps watching television produces
"a kind of deep relaxation experience" that causes it, said Klesges.

~fLQXy\-BQO~

OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 PM

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE

POINT PLEASANT, WV.

Classes offered

'

Holland, Germany, Austria, Kal)l Swllalland, Frll'IC8 &amp; Belgium.

TUE, JUI! 1810 TUE, JUN 30
and SAT, JUI! 20 to SAT, JUL 04 0120116

MON. &amp; FRI. TIL 8 P.M.
TUES.. WED,. THUR. Tll6 P.M.
SATURDAY TIL 5 P.M.

(304) 675-1675

BOWMAN'S

H~..,.2[,~pe

z~

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

.MR. aDd MRS. JIM

GALLIPOLIS • The next session of dance classes ai the Ariel
Theatre will begin Thursday, April
2. Classes for both adults and children wiU be offered in both tap and
baUet and will be taught by Tricia
Zalewski. The one hour classes will
run for 8 weeks and the C&lt;lSt is $32
per class, per student. CliW times
are as follows: adult baUct 3 p.m.;
children's ballet! 4 p.m.; chil·
dren's ballet .n 5 p.m.; children's
tap I 6 p.m.; adult tap ll 7 p.m.;
(BEULAH) NIBERT
~nd adult tap I 8 p.m.
.. Tap students are asked to wear
comfonable clothing and bellet studenis are Jequesaed to tie back their
Mrs. Nibert is the dau,bter of . hair and wear leowds and tights.
For more information, call the
the late Charles Edward Simpkins
Morris
&amp; Dorothy Haskins Ariel
and Ivy Simpkins.
The couple bu fivo children,. Theatre at 446-ARTS
Debra Rllltl, JUles David Niben,
and Sam Nibert, all of Oalllr.:lis;
Approximately 120,000 people are
Carolyn McFann of Bidwol , and memben of Overeaten ~)'liiOIII.
Maj. Tim Nibert of Guam. They
Auto manufacturing began In Dehave six grandchjldren.
troit in 1899.

HAYNES JEWEtERS'
•

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60% OFF SALE

ouple to celebrate 40 years

:J(q!t"~~ ~~JQ46
506 MAIN
. ' STREET 675-2689 POlNT PLEASANT
HOURS: MONDAY-SATURDAY, tO AM-5 PM ,

"QUAUTY SINCE J932"

ALL

�P~ga

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OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

BB Sunday Times-Sentinel

March 29,1992

Shriver, Di Gregorio
to perform at Ariel

Sports
.

SUNDAY
. MlDDLilPORT - Middleport
~ic Lodge No. 363 will prac·
lice in fellowcraft degree for
upcoming inspection at 2:30 p.m.
All masons invited.
LONG BOTTOM - Mt. Olive
Community Church, Long Bouom,
special speaker Kenneth Nix,
Ashville, N.C., Sunday, 7 p.m. Pas·
tor Lawrence Bush invites the pub·
lie.
RtrJl.,AND · Rutland Free Will
Baptist Church, hymn sing, Sunday
2-4 p.m. Proceeds will go to build·
ing fund. Pastor Paul Taylor inviteS
the public.
REEDSVILLE · The Unity
Singers, under the direction of Sue
Matheny, will perform a spring
concert on Sunday 7 p.m. at the
Reedsville United Methodist
Church. Rev. Charles Eaton invites
the public.
POMEROY . SOLOS, a fellow·
ship of Christian adults, including
those who have been widowed,
divorced or never married, will
meet Sunday at 4 p.m. at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
New members welcome.
RACINE · Faith Hannony Boys
will sing at the Racine First Baptist
Church on Sunday at 7 p.m.

POMEROY . The Meigs Coun ·
ty Garden Club meeting will be
held at the Meigs County Museum
on Butternut Avenue in Pomeroy
on Monday at 7:30p.m.
HARRISONVILLE · The Rut·
land Garden Club wiD meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the hom e of
Mrs. Curtis Dalton in Harrisonville.
TUESDAY
MARIETTA
Buckeye
Hills/Hocking Valley Regiona l
Development District Executive
Committee will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. in the conference room
of the BH/HVRDD office in Mari ·
etta. The audit/budget and person·
nel committees will meet at 5 p.m.
in the Rufus Putnam Room of the
Lafayette Hotel. 100 Front Street,
Marietta.
PORTLAND · The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the township build·
in g.
ALBANY . District 16 grange
membership meeting Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the Albany Grange Hall.
Ohio State Grange Master and
Ohio State Grange Membership
Directors will be present. All mem·
bers urged to attend.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY . The Sali sbury
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the home
of Sarah Gibbs, Ball Run Road.

POMEROY · Jan and Kathy
will perform at the United Faith
Church in Pomeroy on Sunday.
MIDDLEPORT · The MiddleServices begin at 9:30a.m. and
port
Literary Club will meet
Sunday school and worship service
Wednesday
I :30 p.m. at the
are at 10:30 a.m. Singing and mes· home of Mrs.atRoben
Fisher. Mrs.
sa~ by Rev. Jan Lavender. Public
Roy Holter will review "Portrait of
is mvited.
a Turkish Family." Roll call is to
POMEROY -A 12-step AA name a fact recently learned about
meeting will begin Sunday at 7 Turkey.
p.m. at the JTPA office, 117 West
POMEROY - Pomeroy Village
Second Street, Pomeroy.
Council will meet in special sesMIDDLEPORT • Victory Bap· sion Wednesday at 7:30p.m. to
tist Church, Middleport, singspira· conduct personnel and regular mal·
tion beginning Sunday at 7 _p.m. ters.
Mike Coole, Rockford. Ill, wtll be
PAGEVILLE · The Scipio
the evangelist. Special music .
Township
Trustees will meet
Nursery provided. Bus service pro·
at 6 p.m. at the
Wednesday
vided. Rev. James Keesee invites
Pageville Township Building.
the public.
HOCKINGPORT - The Hock·
ingport
United Methodist Church
MONDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun· will hold revival Wednesday
ty Veterans Service Commission through Friday at 7:30p.m. nightly
will meet Monday 7:30p.m. 10 the with Rev. Wendell Stutler. Public
Veterans Service Offi ce in invited.
Pomeroy.
POMEROY · Fourth District
Court
of Appeals will convene at
POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
the
Meigs
County Courthouse at
Western Square Dance Club will
a.m. for oral arguments on
host a graduation potluck dinner at 9:30
four
local
cases. A question and
the senior citizens center in answer session
for Meigs County
Pomeroy on Monday at 6:30 p.m.
students will be included.

Sunday, March 29
BIDWELL • Layman Day Service at Ml. Carmel Church 10:45
a.m. and 2:30p.m. services. Speak·
er: Rev. Harry Scott Jr.
RIO GRANDE - "Old Fash·
ioned Get Acquainted Revival" at
Trinity Baptist Church, 10:30 a.m.
and 6 p.m. services. Monday
through Friday services at 7 p.m.
Speaker: Pastor Don Ploesser.

GALLIPOLIS • The final performances of the Ohio Valley Symphony 's Chamber Music Series
will be next weekend when ~us­
sionist, Thomas Shriver takes the
sutge on Saturday, April4 for an 8
p.m. show and violist, Bernard Di
Gregorio will be performing on
Sunday, April 5 at 3 p.m. at the
Ariel Theatre.
Shriver will be giving a percussion workshop at 4 p.m. on Saturday for area students. Registtation
for the workshop is $5 and includes
a ticket for the perfo1111ance. Students are asked to bring a practice
pad and slicks.
Shriver is currently serving his
third year as timpanist in the Ohio
Valley Symphony and is in his
eighth season as timpanist of the
West Virginia Symphony. He is the
percussion instructor for W.Va.
State College and Concord College
where he directs percussion and
marimba ensembles. He is a graduate of Ohio University where he
earned his Master of Music degree
in Applied Music in 1990 and is
currently pursuin~ another Master's degree in Mustc History.
Di Gregorio not only plays with
the OVS but is also princtpal violist
with the Roanoke Symphony and
plays with the West Virginia Symphony, the New Hampshire Symphony and the New Hampshire
Music Festival. Di Gregorio will be
performing works by Bach,
Stamitz, Webem and Schumann.
Tickets for the performances are

~imts- ~entiul

Section C
March 29,1992

.

Orrville wins first state
title; VASJ on top again

·

preparations for tbe event are HC's athletic
trainers (I to r): Roger Grimm and Lori Ward
and Dr. Daniel Black of Physical Medicine.

SPORTS CONFERENCE - Holzer Clinic wiU
host its fourth comprehensive Sports Medicine
Conference on Saturday, April 4 from 8 a.m. to
3:30 p.m. with registration at 7:30 a.m. Making
$5 each and are available at Ped·
dler's Pantry and at the door prior
to the concert. Group discounts are
available. For more information,
call the Morris &amp; Dorothy Haskins
Ariel Theatre at 446-ARTS.

MEN'S DEPARTMENT
Is Offering
An Ex,ellent Selection of
Men's Knit Shirts
by }antzen-Arrow and
Rlock Sportsuwar

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Kevin Summers
sc~red 25 points including four during a 12-0 run
mtdway through the third quarter as Orrville won its
ftrst state basketball championship with a 78-65 victory over Hamler Patrick Henry in the Division Ill
final Saturday at St.John Arena.
Orrville, ranked No. 2 in the final regular-season
poll, finished the year 27 -I. The Red Riders were
making their second trip to the final four, losing in
the semifinals in 1980.
Jermaine DeHan added 22 points, Anthony Our·
den 15 and Dee Simpson 14 as all five Orrville
staners hit double figures.
· Kent Seemann scored a Division III championship
record 28 points to lead the Patriots, who won just
four of their first 10 games while Seemann was
recovering from a broken wrist suffered in the season
opener. The Patriots, making their first trip ever
beyond the district tournament, had won 16 in a row
until the finals.
Seemann had scored a Division III tournament
record 39 points in a 70-51 victory over Casstown
Miami East in the semifmals.
Orrville broke out to 16-2 lead at the outset and
led 24-11 after a quarter and 33-28 at the half. But
Seemann scored four points and assisted on four others in an 8-1 run that pulled the Patriots even at 38 by
the 4:44 mark of the third quarter.
However, the Red Riders rattled off the next 10
points and 16 of the next 18 to take command. They
were helped along by a technical foul called on
Patrick Henry's Jason Brinkman.
Patrick Henry got as close as seven points on a 70 run at the end of the third and beginning of the
fourth quaner, but Summers hit a three-pointer to put
the lead baclc to 10 and the Patriots never got closer
than nine points again.
Seemann's 67 total points were a two-game record
for the division.
David VanKarsen added 16 points and Greg Rose-

brook II for the Patriots.
Cle. VASJ 61, St. Charles 48 - Sam Maddox
scored eight of his 18 points during a late 16-3 run as
Cleveland Villa Angela-St. Joseph won a state champiOnship for the second year in a row, beating
Columbus St. Charles 61-48 Saturday in the Division
II state championship at St.John Arena.
Chris Callender added 17 points and 10 rebounds
and Brian Hocevar chipped in with 10 points and 14
rebounds.
A year ago, the Vikings won the Division I title.
They became only the third school ever to win backto-hack titles in different divisions. DayiOn Roth won
the Class AAA crown in 1981 and the AA title in
'82, while St. Henry was the champion in Division
Ill in 1990 and in IV last year.
St. Joseph (19-9) was making its fifth visit to the
state tournament, while St. Charles (25-2), ranked
third in the final regular-season poll, was making its
first appearance.
The Vikings scored the first eight points of the
game, but a three-point shot by Chris Kitsmillcr with
five seconds left gave St. Charles a 29-28 advantage
at the half.
There were five lead changes and six tics by the
6:57 mark of the fourth quarter. With the score lied at
43, Maddox drove the right baseline and scored at the
6:00 mark and then hit a 15-fool jumper for a 47-43
lead at the 4:54 mark. After Brian Hocevar blocked a
shot by Kitsmiller, Chris Callender hit a short
turnaround to make it49-43 with 4: II left.
Maddox, a 6-foot-3 senior, later hit four free
throws to make it 59-46 inside the final minute.
Bill Cain led the Cardinals with 19 points with
Kitsmillcr adding 15.
St. Charles managed to hit just 20 of 64 shots
from the field for 31 percent, compared to VASJ's 23
of 50 for 46 percent. The Cardinals also had problems at the hoe , where they were 7 of 16 to the
Vikings' 15 of 17.

Midwest Regional title game stage
for fourth UC-Memphis State bout
2ND AYE.
BERNARDDI
GREGORIO

MIDDLEPORT, OH.
992·2351

THOMAS SHRIVER

TRAIN FOR
MONEY
MAKING
CAREER IN
COSMITOlOGY
•Financial d Available
to Those Who Qualify
•Approved By Ohio State
Board of Cos:mel:olo!~Y

CHESHIRE- Kyger Creek High
School to sponsor "Music in our
Schools," showcase at4 p.m. at the
high school featuring the KCHS
Wind Ensemble and High Edge
Band.
GALLIPOLIS • Faith Temple
Independent Church will hold a
revival through April I , 7 p.m .,
with Calvin ~ay Evans.

By OWEN CANFIELD
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)Cincinnati has proven three limes
this season that it can beat Memphis State. To prove the Bearcats
belong in the NCAA's Final Four,
they must do it a fourth time.
No. 12 Cincinnati (28-4) and
Memphis State (23-10) meet today
in the Midwest Regional final. The
Bearcats won both meetings during
the Great Midwest Conference sea. son·and.won again in the conference tournament.
"Regardless of who it is, you've
got to prepare yourself to win,"
Memphis State coach Larry Finch
said Saturday. "We're in a situa·
lion where we've lost three ball
games, but by the same token the
pressure is the other way. They're
the ones who have beaten us three
times.''
Cincinnati coach Bob Huggins
could only laugh at that remark.
"There's not any more pressure
on us than there is on them," he
said. "What's he saying, that they
don't want 10 go to Minneapolis?"
The Bearcats, seeded fourth ,
have w,on nine sttaighl games. Two
of them were against Memphis
State, 69-59 on the road and 75-63
in the fmal of the conference tour. nament. The score of the first game

was 75-66.
"You've got to go out and play
and not worry about what happened in the other three ball
games,,. Finch said. "What we're

going to try to do is address the
things that have hun us and hopefully overcome those things."
The biggest problem has been
putting the ball in the basket. Memphis State, the No. 6 seed, has yet
to shoot beuer than 43 percent
against the ,Bearcats. Aqfernee
Hardaway, the Tigers' leading
scorer at 17 points per game, has
hit ontr 13 of 39 shots.
"Its just constant movemen~"
Hardaway said of Cincinnati's
defense. " They don't let you get
set. They keep moving and trapping. They don'tlel you set up
your offense. We just need to try
and get tbe ball in the middle and
attack."
Hard&lt;tlvay said that in the previous mect1ngs, the Tigers often were
able to break Cincinnati's press but
then tried to set up their offense
instead of going to the basket.
"It hasn't been so much their
pressure, it's what we've done," he
said.
·
Finch said it will be important
for his team to relax and get good
shots. He also said it will be impor-

tant how the game is officiated.
''They're a rugged group of
young men," he said. "They play
extremely physical. If they're
allowed to hand-check and move
you around with their hands, then
you 'vc got a big problem.
"I thought the first two games
they were allowed to do that. The
last game, we just dido 't have the
legs to hang in there."
Huggins has said often during
this wurnament ,that his team does
not need to press to win. He repeated that message Saturday.
··'There are other people who
have attacked our pressure,". he
said. "We don't have to steal the
ball every lime to win. We're not a
bad halfcourt defensive team.
"We throw it on and if it works,
that's great. If it doesn't work, we
just get back in the halfcoun and
guard them."
The Beareats also present problems for opposing ~efenses. Forward Herb Jones leads Cincinnati
in scoring and rebounding, and he
had a big game Friday night with
24 points against Texas-El Paso.
But the Beareats can hurt teams
from outside as well, as Anthony
Buford and Nick Var Exel showed
by combining to hit 5 of 7 threepointers against the Miners.

Reds hand Tigers 7-2 pre-season defeat
By JOE KAY
· LAKELAND, Aa. (AP)- Out·
fielder Jacob Brumfield look another major step Saturday towards
!Raking the Cincinnati Reds' openmg-day roster.
Brumfield went 3 for 5 with a
pair of singles and a three-run
homer in the Reds' 7-2 victory over
the Detroit Tigers.
Before the game, manager Lou
Piniella was raving about Brumfield's strong arm. Afterwards, he

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with his speed, his hitting (.444)
raved about his hitting.
"Brumfield hit the ball, dido 't and his arm. He's now on the verge
he?" Piniella said, before a ques- of making the club with one week
tion was asked. "He popped the to go.
ball. It jumped off his bat. The ball
Brumfield has never played in
that went out when a long way."
the major leagues. Although
Brumfield 26 was a long shot pleased with his performance this
to make the ;oster this winter. He spring, he's resisting the tempta~on
signed with the Reds' Class AAA to get excited ahout his chances.
Nashville farm club last November
"I'm trying not to think about it
after the Kansas City organization too much," he said.
released him.
But he has impressed Piniella
Left-bander Tom Browning had
an unusual game, Browning, who
gets most of his outs on fly balls, ·
l
had 12 ground-ball outs and two
strikeouts in 6 1/3 innings against
Detroit.
His outing was the longest by a
Reds pitcher this spring.

ORRVILLE GETS IT RIGHT - Orrville
head coach Steve Smith is surrounded by his
players in their celebration or their school's first
state basketball championship following their

78-65 win over Hamler Patrick Henry in the
Division Ill title game Saturday afternoon at
Ohio State University's St. John Arena. (AP)

Detroit, Boston, New Jersey
NHL's early afternoon victors
DETROIT (AP) -Jimmy Carson scored a goal and assisted on
two others and goalie Tim Cheveldae stopped 24 shots, moving the
Detroit Red Wings closer to the
Norris Division championship with
a 3-1 victory over the Vancouver
Canuclcs Saturday.
Keith Primeau assisted on the
last two goals for Detroit (40-25·
II), which hit the 40-win mark for
the first lime since the 1987-88 season and ended a four-game losing
streak against Vancouver.
A loss or lie by Chicago on Sat·
urday night at Hartford would give
the Red Wings their first Norris
Division championship since backto-hack tides in 1987-88 and 198889.
The Red Wings also moved to
within two points of the Canucks
for the best record in the Campbell
Conference.
Detroit outshot Vancouver, 17-6
in a lopsided first period but led
just 1-0. For the game, Detroit out·
shot Vancouver, 31-25.
Paul Ysebaert got the goal, his
fourth in the last five games, on a
deflection play.
Defenseman Brad McCrim mon's shot from the right point
fll'St hit Jimmy Carson's stick at the
edge of the right faceoff circle. The
puck then caromed to Ysebaerl,
standing outside the right post, who
deflected the puck over goalie Kirk
McLean's left pad.
But that's all the Red Wings
could get in the first period. The
Canuclcs killed off a two-minute,
two-man power play by Detroit and
McLean stopped breakaway
attempts by Keith Primeau and
Steve Yzerman.
But Detroit built the lead to 3-0
in the second period. Carson sent
Kevin Miller in· alone for a break·
away goal at9:36 and then convened a pass in the left slot from
Primeau standing behind the net at
19:22.
Miller's goal was his fourth in
the last four games and Carson' s
was his third in the last three
games.
Meanwhile, Cheveldae continued to sparkle in the Detroit net,

stopping Trevor Linden's rebound
attempt off a save made on Geoff
Courtnall and then making a glove
save on Greg Adams' 25-foot slap
shot.
Greg Adams broke Chevcldac's
shutout bid with 8:34 left in th~
game with a power play goal from
the slot, his 30th.
Bruins 4, Sabres 3 (OT)
At Boston, Mass., U.S.
Olympian Steve Heinze scored his
first NHL goal at 3:59 of ovenime
Saturday as the Boston Bruins bol·
stered their hold on second place in
the Adams Division with a 4-3 vic·
tory over the Buffalo Sabres.
Set up by Canadian Olympians
Gord Hynes and Joe Juneau,
Heinze scored from a traffic jam in
front of goalie Darren Puppa
enabling the Bruins to move seven
points ahead of the third-place
Sabres with just one week left
before the playoffs barring a play·
ers' strike on Monday.
Heinze, a former Boston College star, ended a rough game in
which referee Denis Morel called
37 penalties. 19 against Boston,
includin~ six majors for fighting, a
game mtsconduct for third man in
during an altercatiion and 16 for
roughing.
Dave Hannan, another Canadian
Olympian acquired from Toronto
two weeks ago, scored a shorthanded goal midway through the third
period to rally Buffalo to a 3-3 tic
and keep alive temporarily the
Sabres' hopes of overtaking the
Bruins for home icc advantage in
the playoffs.
Hannan, who had two goals
with Toronto before joining Team
Canada, scored his first in eight
games with Buffalo, taking the
puck away from Boston defenseman Gord Murphy beyond the red
line and skating in all alone to beat
goalie Andy Moog with a short
flip.
Boston capitalized on manpower advantages for a 2-0 lead in the
first period, Vladimir Ru.zicka scoring his 38th goal on Juneau's pass
across the goalmouth at 7:42 and
Adam Oates connecting for his
17th goal on a 45-foot shot off a

pass from Ray Bourque at 14:56.
Defenscman Pctr Svoboda cut
the deficit at 16:46, scoring his first
goal in eight games for Buffalo
since being acquired from Montreal. Svoboda, who had five goals for
the Canadiens, beat goalie Andy
Moog with a 30-foot shot into the
upper left comer.
Alexander Mogilny tied the
score 2-2 with an uanssisted goal,
hts 35th, at the outset of the second
period. Mogilny picked up a loose
puck in center icc, moved down the
right wing and scored on a wrist
shot from the faceoff circle.
The deadlock lasted just 44 seconds as Steve Leach regained the
lead for the Bruins. Leach, assisted
by Hynes, unloaded a slap shot
from the right wingboards for his
30th goal.
Devils S, Nordiques 2
At East Rutherford, NJ., Claude
Vilgrain and Valeri Zclcpulcin
scored 68 seconds apart and the
New Jersey Devils got three special
teams goals Saturday 10 defeat the
Quebec Nordiques 5-2.
Kevin Todd had three assists
and 19-year-old Martin Brodeur
stopped 23 shots in helping the
Devils win their third straight and
sweep the three-game season series·
from Quebec, which has won just
once in 38 road games (1-29-8).
The victory gave the De vi Is a
club-record 85 points, surpassing
the previOus mark of 83 set in
1989-90.
The game was decided in a 23
minute, 52-second period that
resulted when referee Ron Hoggarth sent the teams to their lockers
with 3:52 left in the first period
because of poor ice conditions at
the Brendan Byrne Arena.
The con test was tied 1-1 when
the teams resumed the first period
and it almost ended that way.
With New Jersey killing off a
penalty in the closing seconds Vitgrain took a pass from R~ndy
McKay, broke in on Nordiques'
goa lie Stephane Fiset and backhanded the puck into the net. The
red light did not come on and Hogganh asked for the play to be
rev1cwed on vid,eoUtPC:

CaD today and we'D be glad to assist you.

Indiana wins
West Regional
championship

Mai'leua
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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. Indiana took advantage of 40%
field,goal shooting by UCLA in
Saturday's NCAA West Regional
championship game at The Pit to
bomb the 13ruins 106-79. ·
The Hoosiers led 44-29 at halflinJe and barely expanded their lead
toward the halfway point in the
second half, but !heir lead moved
into the 20s with eight minutes left
in the game and expanded beyond
tliat mark as the game wore on.
The Hoosiers, who wiD be one
of two Big Ten teams (Ohio State
and Michigan will battle today for
: CAUGHT IN THE ACT - The Cincinnati Reds' Reaaie the Southeast Regional title) in the
BIDden II caant at the taU ead or • steaUarrattempt by Detroit . Final Four, will take' on the winner
....., Allll 'l'rllllmell IIMCODd llue duriD1 tbe tblrd lnn1D1 of of the Duke-Kentucky {llltchup in
the East Regional championship,
~'• Gnpelrult Ltlaue 11111e In Lakellad, Fla. However, the
which was played Saturday' nighL
--7-2.(AP)

~O~JS

11el
an
ONE ON ONE - Detroit's Paul Ysebaert
(rlg~t)
one on one with Vancouver goalie
Klr.k McLean to score bls 11011 daring Salur:

roes

I

.

day's NHL game In Detroit, which the Red
WiDp woo 3-t (AP)

'

•

'

.

"

�' .
Times--Sentinel

wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt

March 29, 1992

·-March 29, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

State beats North Carolina 80-73
By RICK WARNER
AP SpOrts Writer
Play it again, man.
,, That's an appropriate theme for
•Jhe regional finals in the NCAA
~ basketball tournament, which will
feature three regular-season
rematches - Ohio State-Michigan
:in the Southeast, Cincinnati-Mem·
phis State in the Midwest and
·UCLA-Indiana in the West.
. The only regional fmal that isn 'I
_a replay is the East, where topranked Duke will play No. 6 Ken·
;tucky for the fmt ume this season.

Ohio State defeated Nonh Carolina 80·73 Friday night to set up a
third meeting with Big Ten rival
Michigan, which held off a late
rally to beat Oklahoma Slate 75-72.
The Buckeyes beat the Wolverines
twice during the regular season.
Cincinnati downed Texas ElPaso 69-67 force a founh contest
against Great Midwest Confere~ce
rival Memph1s State, wh1ch
advanced with an 83·79 overtime
victory over Georgia Tech. Cincinnati beat Memphis State three
times this season, including a victo·

ALL-TOURNAMENT HIGHLANDERS: Southwestern's representatives on the 1991-92
:. GaUia County Junior High Basketball Tourna-

ry in the final of the inaugural
Great Midwest tournament
UCLA and Indiana, which won
their regional semis on Thursday,
met in the Tip-Off Classic on Nov.
15 at Springfield, Mass. UCLA
won 87-72.
Michigan's victory over Oklahoma State eliminated the last of
the Big Eight's six tournament
teams, while the losses by North
Carolina and Georgia Tech left the
Atlantic Coast Conference with
only one school (Duke) in the fmal
eighL

ment's all-star learns were (L·R) Clinton Ash·
worth (seventh-grade boys), Jennifer Queen
(junior high girls) and Tommy Simpson (eighth·
grade boys).

Scoreboard
New Jeaey al.~adclphia , 1:35 p.m.

San J01eu WllUUpcg, l :OS p.m.
Detroi.tal N.Y, lllandcn, S:OS p.m.

NIT action

Hanford at Buffalo, ?:OS p.m.

AUanUc Division
Team
W L Ptt.
a-New Yod: ...........44 25 .638
8octOn ................. ..41
Miami ....................33
New Jersey ......... ... 31
l'hiloddphi.o .......... .ll
Washington .. ........ .22

Trwonlo .l l Chie~go, 8:35p.m.

CB

30

.577

4

38

.465

12

38

.449

13

40
49
Orlando.................. !? 53

.437
.310
.243

14
2J
27.5

Central Division
,.QU"go ..............l7 13 .814
J:·Citnland ·--"41 ll
.I%
Douoit ...................4t 30 .m
Atlanta ..................35 36 .493
lndiana ................... 35 3! .479
Mll"''*'" ............. JO 40 .429
a. ......................u 41 406

27

2a.s

NCAA Division I
men's tournament

Friday's semifinal scores

..

East Regional
Attlonal champloruhlp
They played Saturday
At The Spedrum
Philadelphia
Kenaucky (29·6) vs. Duke (31 -2), 7
p.m.

Aealonalsmlnna!J

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Frldly'aacores

M ldwa:l Dhillon

W L

Utah .......................46
San Antonio. ..........42
Hc.~~ton ................. 37
Dcnver ...... .............23

.657

28

.600

4

34

.521
.329
.239
.157

9.5

47

59

x.· Podland .....

so

20

.714

.667

H . . .. . . .

H

.. ....

.648
.563
.l43
.l36
.324

Ltlfnaton, Ky.
Ohio Sllae 10, Nonh Carollna 13
Mictuaan 7S, Ollahom~ Slate 12

23

Rfllonal championship

29.5
35

heine Division
Oold110 Statc ..........46 23
l'hoenix ................. .46 2l
Seattle ............
40 31
LA. Clippo!l ......... ll 32
L.A. Lokot~ ...... ......31 32
Sacnmcruo ............l3 48
x-c:J.inchod phyoft' betlh

AI Rupp Arena

CB

24

Dollu.................... .l1 54
MiMCIOta .............. 11

PtL

3.l
4.5
10.5
12
12.5
27.5

Friday's scores
Botton !06, 1Jdroit B1
Miami Ill. S.. Antonio I 01
CltYCliDd UJ, Charlont 115
Goldm Suae Jlj , Indiana. 117
Al.lllll.a 105,Minncsau 103
LA. I..akea I03, Ullh 92
PhoenU 117, Philadelphia 113
Seattle 96, Milwaukee 95

Today'a pmt

Cltvtland II Chkl&amp;~ 1~0 p.m.

Phoenix 1tOcnvcr, 9 p.m.
HoultOn at Pol'lland, 10 p.m.
New Yo.S It Seanle, 10 p.m.
Mihvau.kee 11 L.A. Chppen, 10:30

p.m.

Division I
Urn a Sr. 9\, CanLOn McKinley 88
W. Chester LU:oaa 71, Akron Fire·
1lone 63
Dl~ololt IV
Berlin Hiland 64, Uma Catholic: 62
Gaau Mi.UJ GiLnour S9, Cin. Coun1ry

D~y53

They played Saturday
Dlvblon I

West Chester J...akou. (23-4) vs. L.ima

SerJor (21 -5), 6 p.m.
Division U
Clcvclsnd St. Jo1c:ph (17·9 ) VI. Sa.
Otarlcs (25-l},lp.m.
Dhillon m
Pnrick Henry ('20-6) vs. Orrville (261), \ ] a.m.

Division IV

Oates Mill• Gilrnour (21 ~5) vs. Berlin
Hiland (25·2), 9 p.m.

At Rupp Arena
Lcxlnalon, Ky.
Ohio Sl (26-5) n Michigan (2)..8), 4
p.m.

Today's games
Sammerno It MinnCIO\I, 3:30p.m.
All.wa 11 Ba.Uin, 7:30p.m.
Denver It Oallu, 8 p.m.
New Yolk It Pmland.lO p.m.
Philadelphh at L.A. Laken, \0:30
p.m.

April 13, 1992
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Today'• pmt

Al Ktmpcr Arena
Karu111 Clly, Mo.
Memphis St. (23 -10) vs. Cincinnui
(28.4), I ;42 p.m,

Scope Mount

~mington.

44H923

West Regional
Realonal championship
Thty pla1ed Sahlrday
AI The Pll
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DIVISION RUNNER-UP - The Gallipolis
All Stars sixth-grade team took second place in
its division in the GalliJH!Iis Parks &amp; Recreation
Department's Rinky-Donk All-Star Tournament.
In the front row are (L·R) Nathan Cremeans,

Jimmy Gilmore, Andre HoweU and Jason John·
son. Behind them are Jeremy Cremeans, Seth
Davis, Bo Pollard, coach Rick Perdue, Ryan
Perdue and Josh Atkinson.

;.Olazabal's improbable shot puts him
;·among Players Championship leaders
By BOB GREEN
• PONTE VEDRA, Fla. (AP).Jose Maria Olazabal was in big
:trouble on the fifth hole of the TPC
-at Sawgrass.
: The young Spanish star had just
)aken a drop after bouncing a drive
-into the waler on the par-4 hole and
:was looking at a 185-yard 6-iron
)&gt;hot.
• He holed it
: The ball ran onto the green,
-curled off a slope and trickled into
l he cup for an improbable birdie
Jhat sparked Olazabal to a 7-under·
Y.ar 65 and a share of the lead Fri ·
nay at the halfway point of the $1.8
million Players Championship.
• "I think I was very lucky on
lhat shot," the 26-year-old Spanish
:star understated after he had gained
il tie for the 36-hole lead with
: mother three-name player, Billy
~ay Brown.
' Brown, who held a three-shot
~tead going into the day's play,
.could do no better than a 2-under'par 70 in the strong, gusty winds
p.nd matched Olazabal's 134 total.
• "When you get a day like this,
:mentally it just beats you down,"
·~aid Brown, a Texan now in his
· .fifth season on the PGA Tour.
: "Coming off a hi.tth like I h~d

yesterday ,'1 really iiad to work
ltard."

Nick Faldo of England and a
pair of Australians joined Olazabal
among the leaders in the tournament
Aside from Sandy Lyle's 1987
victory, the European Big Six Lyle, Faldo, Ian Woosnam, Seve
Ballesteros, Bernhard Langer and
Olazabal - have fared poorly here
the past.
.
In 31 combined starts in this
tournament, they have missed the
cut 13 Limes, and have only four
top-10 finishes.
Parry, a stocky littlC Australian
who won twice at home earlier this
year, shot a 68 and was tied for
second a single shot off the lead at
135.
He shared the position with
Davis Love Ill, who also had a second-round 68 in winds gusting to
35 mph.
Faldo, the English ace who
scored consecutive Masters viciOries in 1989-90, overcame a lack of
enthusiasm for the design of the
course; shot a 68 and was tied at
136 with Phil Blackmar, who shot
69.
Baker-Finch is the current
British Open title-holder who is

trying to work his way out of a
slump. He shot a 67 that put him in
a tic at 137 with Bob Lohr, Ed
Humenik, Mark Brooks and Scott
Simpson.

6311

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By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Canton McKinley coach Dave
Cady shrugged his shoulders.
"It seems we're kind of
snakebit down here sometimes,"
he said.
Twenty-three times the Bull '
dogs have made it to the state's
final four team. Twenty-two times
. they've staned their next season on
a one-game losing streak.
The latest in a string of disappointments for the Bulldogs came
Friday when two-time Mr. Basket·
ball Greg Simpson hit a 35-foot
shot at the buzzer to send the same
into a second overtime, then h1t the
winning free throw with 4.7 sec·
onds left as Lima Senior (21-5)
puUed out a topsy-IUrvy 91-88 vic·
tory in a Division I state semifinal.
West Chester Lakota (23-4)
earned a berth in the big-school
championship game for the second
year in a row with a 71-63 victory
over Aleron Firestone.
Saturday's 6 p.m. Litle game pit·
ted two teams from the same
league, the Greater Miami Confer·
enee. Neither won the league; they
tied for second behind Hamilton.
In other games Friday at lhe
70th boys state tournament at St.
John Arena, Gates Mills Gilmour
(21·5) beat Cincinnati Country Day
59-53 in one Division IV semifinal.
But, saving the best for last.
Berlin Hiland (25-2) overcame a
seven-point deficit in the last 27
seconds for a 64-62 victory when
Junior Raber hit three consecutive
free throws with a half-second left
on the clock.
Division I
The last time a big-school state
tournament game required 1wo
ovenimes was the Cleveland East
Tech-Columbus North game in
1958.
Simpson, who will attend Ohio
State this fall, scored 34 points but
made only 12 of 38 shots. He was 5
of 19 from lhree-point range and
also had nine rebounds and five
steals.
McKinley (24·2), the regularseason poll champion, led by as
many as 19 points in the first half
and 15 in the seoond, but still carne
up empty.
McKinley needed a full-court
pass to Corey Lipkins, who dunked
as the buzzer sounded, for a tie at
78 that forcCd the first overtime.
Two free throws by Ryan Witte
with 7.7 seconds left in the first
overtime gave McKinley an 83-80
lead, But Simpson took the
inbounds pass, dribbled just over
midcourt and, with two defenders
guarding him, rtred a three-pointer
from 35 feet that went in as the
buzzer sounded.
In the second overlime, Lima
scored all eight of its points from
the line, including one by Simpson
with 4. 7 seconds left and a pair by
Eric Watkins with less than a second remaining to seal it.
Che B')'ant led McKinley with

325

23 points, while Liplcins scored 19,
Witte had 14 and aii-Ohioan
Bryant Bowden had 11.
In the first game, Dan
Dudukovich came off the bench to
score five of his 14 points during a
late 7-0 run as Lakota eased past
Firestone.
First-team all-Ohioan Keith
Gregor scored 18 points to lead the
Thunderbirds, ranked eighth in the
final regular-season poll.
A year ago, Lakota made it to
the finals before losing to Cleveland Villa Angela·SL Joseph 76· 72
in overtime. St. Joseph has made
thermals in Division II this year.
First-team all-Ohioan Quinton
Brooks led Firestone (23-3) with
17 points, eight rebounds, three
blocks and three steals.
Division IV
In one of the wildest finishes in
tournament history, Hiland overcame deficits of 15 points in the
third quarter, 12 points in the
fourlh quarter and seven points
with just 27 seoonds lefL
Raber finished with 31 points,
including six in the final II seconds.
"In a short period of time, we
can put a lot of points on the
board," said Hiland coach Perry
Reese Jr.
Down seven, Nevin Mishler
popped in a three-pointer with 26
seconds left to pull the Hawks to
62-58 . Then, after a steal, Raber
tossed in an off-balance shot in the
lane and was fouled with 10 sec·
onds left. He hit the free throw to
cut the deficit to 62-61.
The Hawks fouled Aaron
Hutchins, who had just hit three of
four free throws over the last halfminute, but he missed the front end
of the bonus with 9.8 seconds
remaining.
.
A wild scramble ensued after
Hiland called timeout and inhounded the ball. But Raber picked up a
ball rolling on the noor and took
two dribbles toward the Thunder·
birds' basket. He was 25 feet from
the basket when Salento Boddie
was called for holding him with a
half-second remaining.
The official ruled the foul to be
in the act of taking a three-point
shot, so with the Hiland stands
hushed and the Lima side screaming. he hit all three foul shots.
Anthony Hutchins scored 24
points and Aaron Bailey had 14 for
the Thunderbirds (22-4).

Gilmour got 18 points from
Dave Pfundstein and a saving steal
by Mike Pike in the final minute to
hold off Cincinnati Country Day.
On top 54-53 with 1:23 left, the
Lancers' Chuck Riley followed his
own missed shot with a shan follow to put Gilmour on top 56-53.
Counlry Day (24-2) came down
floor with a chance to tie but Pike
stole the ball from Counlry Day's
Chris Smith in the backcourt anil
hit the layup for a 58-53 lead.
Jason Smith, another all-Ohioan
who has signed to play with Wright
State, led Country Day with 22
points.

Sports briefs
Auto racing
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) Sterling Marlin raced around the
oval in a record 30.157 seconds, or
163.067 mph, and earned his fmt
Darlington Raceway pole position
in qualifying for the TranSouth
500.

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Second in a series, receiver roll engraved on both sides with new tu rke)·
scenes for 1990 designed by Rob Kec k. WinCam stock.

ll em No.

"" L\WNMOWER
11:. . MAN

In the front row are (L-R) J, Tipton, S. Wolford
and A. Orender. Standing them are coach Ancil
Cross, N. Leali, M. ~ouse, E. Davis, R. Evans
and an unidentified coach.

SIXTH-GRADE WINNERS -Jackson's
: Red team took first place in the sixth-grade divi·
· sion in the Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation
• Department's Rinky-Dink AU-Star Toumamenl

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COLONY THEATRE

COLONY THEATRE

.C3

Lima, Berlin Hiland win squeakers
to advance to boys statetitle games

Midwest Regional

They played Saturday
Golden Suae at N~w Jersey, 7:30p.m.
~ad.~ n Wuhington, 7:30p.m.
MilrN at Orlando, 7:30p.m.

Virginia 76, New MWco 71
Ullh 84, Rhode bland 72

Prep basketball

8.S

t6.l
22.5
23.5

Frlday1 Marth 17

College basketball
'

S&lt;JutheHSt Regional
Tum

Quorterrlnols

1m Anpe~ at EdmontOn, &amp;:OS pm.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Jim JackSQn broke out of a tour·
narnent slump, SC!)ring 14 of his 18
points in the second half as third·
mnked Ohio State (26·5) beat No.
18 Nonh Carolina (23·10).
Jackson, who made only two of
seven shots in the first half, hit his
first three after intermission as the
Buckeyes overcame a five-point
deficit and wore down the Tar
Heels in the final minutes.
"We knew they were going to
go to him, but we couldn't do much
about it," North Carolina coach
Dean Smith said.
Jackson, who made only 10 of
39 from the field in the first two
rounds, made 6 of 10 in the second
half against the Tar Heels.
Lawrence Funderburke led Ohio
Slate wilh 21 points and Chris Jent
had 15. Eric Montross and Ruben
Davis each had 21 points for Nonh
Carolina, which was making its
12th straight appearance in the
final16.
Tony Madlock sank six free
throws and grabbed an important
rebound in the final 98 seconds of
overtime as Memphis State (23-10)
downed Georgia Tech (23-12).
The Tigers didn't overtake
Georgia Tech until Madlock's two
free throws with I:38 left in OT put
Memphis State ahead 78· 77. Madlock made two more free throws
with 32 seconds left and added
another pair with 16 seconds
remaining to give Memphis Slate
an 82-77 lead.
Jon Barry, son of Hall of Farner
Rick Barry, had 29 points for the
Yellow Jackets), but only one in
the final 9:44 and Tech, which beat
Southern Cal on James Forrest's
buzzer-beater in the second round,
couldn't come up with another
miraculous fmish.
Jalen Rose, picking up his foulplagued teammates, scored 25
points as No. 15 Michigan (23-8)
beat No. II Oklahoma Slate (28·8).
The outcome was in doubt until
Michigan's Jimmy King knocked
away Scan Sutton's pass into the
middle with I second left.
Michigan's Chris Webber
fouled out with $even minutes left,
but that was offset by the subpar
performance of Oklahoma State
star Byron Houston, who was limit·
ed to four points on 2-for-14 shoot·
ing. Corey Williams led the Cow·
boys (28-8) with 25 points.
No. 12 Cincinnati (28-4) made
big plays early and late to defeat
Texas-EI Paso (27· 7) and move
within a game of its fmt Final Four
since 1963.
The Bearcats outscored UTEP
JO.Q in the ftrst few minutes, then
got two crucial free throws from
Erik Manin with 20.2 seconds left
to seal the victory.

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March 29, 1992

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

C4 Sunday TlmeH8ntlnel

.

· ~· rebounds.

· ' Threatt, who finished with 19
,points, keyed an 8-2 run with lhree
: outside jumpers, giving the Lakers
.a 90.82 lead wilh 5:10 left. He then
hit a 20-footer from the baseline
.. wilh 2:49 remaining and one of two
free throws with I : 13 lcf~ keeping
!he Lakers in front 95-88.
Karl Malone had 31 points and
:-; . '15 rebounds and John Stockton
·. ·• added 17 points and 12 assisls for
.• Utah. Stockton moved into fifth
. :•: place on the NBA's career assists
: ~ : list, one ahead of Lenny Wilkens.
. ·~ · Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
·· · Boston 106, Detroit 87; Miami
: :, . 118, San Anonio 101; Cleveland

121, Charlotte 115; Golden State
125, Indiana 117; Atlanta 105,
Minneso ta 103; Pho,enix 117,
Philadelphia 113; and Seattle 96,
Milwaukee 95.
Suns 117, 76ers 113
Kevin Johnson scored 31 points
and Phoenix won despile going the
linal5:10 without a field goal.
The Suns won their third
straight, all at home, and sent the
76ers to their seventh loss in eight
games - although the last basket
for Phoenix was a shot from the
comer by Tom Chambers that put
the Suns ahead 109-106.
Philadelphia carne back to tie it
110-110 on a three-point play with
3: 10 left by Armon Gilliam, who
led the 76ers with 27 points.
The Suns then scored live con·
secutive points on free throws, and
Philadelphia didn't catch up.
Celtics 106, Pistons 87
At Boston, the Celtics edged
past Detroit for the home-court
advantage in their probable first·
round playoff series with their fifth
consecutive victory.
Boston and !he Pistons are tied
for the fourth and fifth Eastern
Conference playoff spots and are
likely to meet in the first round.
But !he Celtics have won all three
meetings, which would give them
the advantage should they finish in
a tie.
Heat 118, Spur.i 101
Glen Rice scored 35 points and
made a team-record seven threepointers as Miami took advantage
of David Robinson's absence to
win at home against San Antonio.
Robinson, who has a torn liga·
ment in his left hand, missed hi s
second consecutive game after
playing 232 straight in his pro

career. Robinson is !he only player
in the NBA to rank among the top
10 in scoring, rebounding, steals
and blocks this season.
San Antonio, trlliling 33-17 after
one quarter, closed to 75-67 in the
third period before Miami scored
II consecutive points for a 19point lead.
SuperSonics 96, Bucks 95
Milwaukee lost its 19th consec·
utive road game when Michael
Cage blocked Moses Malone's shot
wilh two seconds left, giving Seattle the victory.
Malone, who finished with 30
points and 19 rebounds, surpassed
29,000 points in his pro career, but
the Sanies outscored the Bucks 13·

6 down the stretch to overcome an

89-83 deficit.
Cavaliers 121, Hornets 115
Mark Price scored li.ve points in
the final 44 seconds as Cleveland
won at Charlotte for its fifth
straight victory.
Brad Daugherty scored 24
points and Larry Nance had 21
points and 13 rebounds for the
Cavaliers. The Hornets were led by
Kendall Gill and Dell Curry with
29 points apiece and Larry Johnson
with 26 points, including a steal
and dunk with 1:32 left !hat tied it
115-115.
After Nance missed two foul
shots, the second miss was tipped
back to Price, who broke the tie

wilh his second three-pointer of the
game.·
The Hornels turoed the ball over
on their next possession and were
forced to foul Price, who has made
96 percent of his free throws. He
made both with 20 seconds remainin g.

Warriors 125, Pacers 117
Sarunas Marciulionis scored 23
points and Tim Hardaway and
Chris Mullin had 22 each as Golden State snapped Indiana's 10·
game home winning streak.
The Warriors held off a late
threat by the Pacers, who got 27
points and 11 assists from Micheal
Williams , 25 points and 17
rebounds from Detlef Schrempf

QWS:

:·::
Gymnasium hours
· •• · Sunday- 1· 3 p.m., open recre:~; · ation; 6-8 p.m., college recreation
' •
Monday6·8 p.m., college
: .
.
,.... recreanon
; : : Tuesday - 6-8 p.m. , college
' • recreation
: : : Wednesday - 6-8 p.m., col;-: )ege recreation
•.
Thursday- closed for classes
~ ,·
Friday - 6-8 p.m., college
'~· recreation

:;. , Saturday- 1-3 p.m .. open
; ... recreation
'
Sunday, April S- 1-3 p.m .,
: : open recreation; 6-8 p.m., college
: : · recreation
~

r

..
•

•

,• .
Pool hours
;':· Sunday - 1-3 p.m ., open
·• •· swim; 6-8 p.m., college swim
Monday - closed for classes
_ •• Tuesday - 6-8 p.m., college
:: swim
Wednesday -closed for class·

Friday - 6-8 p.m. , college
swim
Saturday- closed for classes
Sunday, April S- 1-3 p.m.,
open swim; 6-8 p.m., college swim
NOTE: There will be a $1
charge per person at !he pool during open swim hours for the public.
Because of construction, please
enter Lyne Center through !he rear
doors facing the back parking lot.

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• · : Hiab series - Russ Carson
: · ~ (566) and Marlene Wilson (557)
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•:-• Hirh "lame- Rvu Carson
;.,:(214) end-Marlene Wilson (210)
.;. ;· Seet~nil-high aame - ·Bub
: ;. : stive~ (20~) 8ild Doliie Will (200}·
: ·; Team •serle~ -' Tony's carry.
::; :out·{l915) .
.,. •: . Team game ...;:... Tony's Carryout
: -: ,(690)

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POMEROY- These are the
; ~ •• results of recent action at the
:• •• Pomeroy Bowling Lanes.
•' ·
March 18
: •:·, . League- Early Wednesday
: · · Mixed
· ·
::. :: Teams- Mike· Sells (56-32),
:: : Tony's Calryout (54-34), Hackett's
, ·' Roofing. (48-40), Shammy's Carryi'~ . ; out (41·47), Banks Construction
1;,1(41-47) and Rooters Bowlers (24-

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Clendenin, R. Mullins and Z. Durback. The
coaches, who are unidentified, stand behind
them •

FINISHES SECOND ...,... Ripley's fourth·
grade leam lost to the jualot GaUipolis All Stars
In the Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Depart·
ment's Kinky-Dink All-Star Touraament. In the
'
• . rronl row are (L·R) D. Snyder, J. Steele, J .

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Swimming
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Jeff
Rouse lowered the American
record he set a day earlier in the
100-yard backstroke and Stanford
nearly doubled its lead over fourtime champion Texas in !he NCAA
men's swimming and diving cham·
pionships.
Rouse, who qualified for the
U.S. Olympic team earlier this
monlh, won !he 100 back in 46.12
seconds, bettering his day-old
American record of 46.22. He also
swam the backstroke leg of Stanford's winning 200 medley relay,
which set another American record
with a I minute, 25.88-second
clocking.
Stanford, which also won the
800 freestyle relay, virtually
wrapped up its frrst team title since
1987 with 445 points. Texas was
second with 256.
Figure skating
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Viktor Petrenko earned two perfect
6.0s during his free skate and
added his first figure skating world
c':furionship to the Olympic gold
m
he won last month . The 22year-old Ukranian, who plans to
turn professional in the next few
weeks, also received 11 5.9s.

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Same Day Service
All Parts Eltra
Includes: &lt;leaailg, Oli~g.
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Johnson, Kevin Walker, Willie DeVault, Craig
Sanders and Stephen Roderick. Standing teammates ·a re Guy Guinther, Aaron Bickle, Ian
Fenderbosch, Chris Lewis, Jermaine Jackson,
Matt White, Timmy Siders and coach Bobby
Erwin. Behind them is coach Dwain Beaver. ·

..
..
...·

POMEROY, OBIG ·
l·....ai7·1DM 01 111. .14
CHEVROLET
TRUCKS

CAPTURES SECOND - The Gallipolis AU
Stars firth-grade team captured runner-up honors in its division in the Gallipolis Parks &amp;
Recreation Department's Rlnky·Dink All·Star
Tournament. In the front row are (L·R) A.J.

.•••.

MARCH MADNESS SALE TILL 3/31/12
NEW CHEVY'S,
OLDS, CADS. &amp;
GEOS.

Dusty Cox, Chad Spradlin, Owen Garnes, Cody
Lane and Beau Shirey. Standing teammates are
Alex Saunders, Jeremy Payton, Justin Cook,
Chris Burnett and Robby Kuhn. Behind them
are coaches Danny Cox and Dick Kuhn.

Sports briefs

• D•vers1f1ed Medica I Ocru pallons
•Elcctnciry •EicctroniD ScrvicinA

1990 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX LE

Home athletic events
Sunday - baseball doubleheader vs. Wilberforce, I p.m.;
softball doubleheader vs. Umv. of
Charleston, 2 p.m.
Monday -softball vs. Otler·
bein, 3:30p.m.
Tuesday - baseball doubleheader vs. Shawnee State, I p.m.;
softball doubleheader vs. Shawnee
S~1te, 3:30p.m.
Saturday, April 4 - softball
doubleheader vs. Findlay, I p.m.

TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 12 NOON 'TIL

WINS FOURTH-GRADE CROWN- The
Gallipolis All Stars garnered first-place honors
in the rourlh-grade division in the Gallipolis
Parks &amp; Recreation Department's Rinky-Dink
All-Star Tournament. In the rront row are (L-R)

•Accounling/Comrullng •Auto Mechanic;
•Carpcntrv • Cosme tology

•
•
•

Kneeling in the front row are (L·R) J, Stover,
M. Sizemore, K. Thompson and A. Randolph.
Standing are S. Shockley, A. King, J, Wedge, L.
Salmons,J. Greene and B. Stotts.

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FIFTH-GRADE CHAMPS - Ripley's fifth.
grade squad captured the championship in its
division In the Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation
Dep~rtmenl's Kinky-Dink AU-Star Tournament

SPRING QUARTER
BEGINS MARa! 30, 1992

•

••

Sunday

and 24 points from Chuck Person.
Indiana closed an eight-point
deficit to 104-103 with 5:20 left
before Hardaway's four free throws
started a game-breaking 9-4 spurt.
Hawks 105, Timberwolves 103
Maurice Cheeks' 19-foot shot at
!he buzzer gave Atlanta a victory at
Minnesota, which lost its 15th
strllight game.
With the Hawks leading 103·
102, Cheeks fouled Minnesota's
Pooh Richardson, who missed the
first free throw and made the sec·
and to tie the score with 12 seconds
left. Cheeks took the inbounds pass
from Alexander Volkov, shook
Richardson at the top of the key
and drilled the game-winner.

Into A New job! .

5
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·• •. RIO GRANDE -The activities es
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OH-Polnt

Lakers beat Utah to get better grip on last playoff spot

By The Associated Press
; • The Los Angeles Lakers, whose
! 15-year streak of playoff appear·
: : ances leads the NBA, are making a
•: late run at another postseason
;. berth.
•: The Lakers, who appeared head;; ed for !he lottery earher this month
: . when they dropped 10 of II games,
·~ then lost James Worthy and Sam
: Perkins to injuries, handed the Utah
: Jazz a rare home loss Friday night,
•; 103-92.
•· Terry Teagle scored 23 points
·: and Sedale Threatt had nine in the
final 6:23 as Los Angeles dropped
:- Utah's record at the Delta Center to
• 31-4, still the best home mark in
: lheNBA.
• The victory solidified !he Lak •
.·: ers • hold on the eighth and final
·!; playoff spot in the Weslern Confer:•. ence. Their lhird consecutive win
::;left them a full game ahead of the
·: •Houston Rockets.
:~:
"We're fighting for a playoff
::· spot so we have to play like !his
.;:every night," said center Vlade
::; Divac, who had 10 points and 10

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�March 29, 1992

March 29, 1'992

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

:Page-CS-Sunday Times-sentinel

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

Eastern to begin title defense
Monday against Southern

Agassi le~ds Americans to victory over Czechoslovakia in Davis Cup
By STEVEN WINE
FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) Andre Agassi dressed like Axl
Rose and sounded like Lee Greenwood.
. Fortunately for tile U.S. Davis
Cup ream, he played like the Agassi of old, sweeping an erratic Petr
Korda 6-2, 6-4, 6-1 to give the
Americans a 2.0 lead in their quar·
terfinal match against Czechoslovakia.
Teammate Pete Sampras had 17
~ces as he beat Karel Novacek in
Friday's opening match at the Son·
esta Sanibel Harbour Resort, 6-3,
6-4,6-2.
Wearing a scarf over his hair,
bike shorts and facial stubble,
Agassi looked like the singer for
Guns 'n ' Roses as he rocked
, Korda. When the match ended,
: Agassi pointed botll index fingers

toward the crowd of 5,146 in gratitude for their support.
"What I was trying to say was
that playing in other countries sure
makes you appreciate home,''
Agassi said. "You thank God
you're an American .... There's
nothing in tennis that compares to
the joy of playing for your country.

sure players don't feel from anybody else. But I have the ability to
hun myself with it too, and I'm try-

ranked player hardly looked like it
with 55 unforced errors, enough to
lose 13 games.
"I tried to play my game,"
Korda said. "He was too good for
me.' '
Sampras' booming serve and
successful net charges on the hardcourt surface were too much for

ing to get it directed now."
Korda was feeling pressure from
somewhere; the world's lOth-

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Edmonton, ·
:Winnipeg win NHL contests

BETSY BERGDOLL

Bergdoll leading
Division II women
in three-point goals
: CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Queens
College's Betsy Bergdoll (Gallia
Academy '88), daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Bergdoll of Gallipolis,
was listed as theNCAA Division II
leader in three-point shots made
per game as of March 8.
At that point, the S-foot-6 junior
had made 103 in 28 games, and her
F.entage 103-234, 44%) tied her
with Molloy's Kathleen Murphy also a junior - for lOth place
among all Division II women.
• Effective shooting beyond the
arc is nothing new to the former
~io Grande eager, who followed
{ormer coach Cheryl Ficlitz to the
North Carolina college after the
Conner's freshman year. At Rio in
the 1988-89 season, Bergdoll led
all NAIA schools in three-point
field-goal percentage (54%). After
rcdshiritng in the 1989-90 season,
she finished third in treys per game
(3.4) in the 1990-9 1 season before
~urpassing the 1,000-point mark in
~er career this season.

points, the same as Vancouver.
Montreal, now winless in its last
five games, is one point behind
with a 41-26-10 record and 92
points. Vancouver is 41-23-11.
Miller assisted on Dina Ciccarelli's game-winning goal late in
the second period and was relieved
that his scoring drought ended.
"I've been struggling lately as
far as points and ¥oals go," said
Miller, who had h1s ftrst two-goal
game since March 14, 1991. "If
anything, I was due."
Mike Ridley had Washington's
otller goal while Eric Desjardins,
Gilbert Dionne and Sylvain Turgeon scored for Montreal.
The Canadiens, who have
clihched"llrst plate in the Adam!
Division, are 0-3-2 in their last five
games and 2-7-3 in their last 12 on
the road.
Oilers S, Stars 3
Joe Murphy's 31st goal of the
season was his 75th point - worth
a $50,000 contract bonus - as the
host Oilers moved within two
points of second-place Los An~eles
in the Smythe Division. The Kmgs,
who have played one more game,
take on the Oilers in Edmonton on
Sunday.
Vince Damphousse, Craig
Simpson, Dave Manson and Josef
Beranek also scored for the Oilers,
while Bernie Nicholls set up a pair
of goals.
Minnesota lost its fourth straight
game and remained four points
ahead of the Toronto Marie Leafs
in the fight for the fina playoff
spot in the Norris Division. Each
club has five games left.
Jets 6, Kings 4
The Jets stretched their lead
over the Calgary Flames to six
points in the race for the fmal playoff spot in the Smythe Division by
beating Los Angeles.
Darrin Shannon, Thomas Steen,
Luciano Borsato, Keith Tkachuk,
Phil Sykes and Troy Murray scored
for the Jets, who took a solid hold
on fourth place in the division with
a record of 29-32-15.
Luc Robitaille, Mike Donnelly
and Jari Kurri, with two, replied for
the Kings, who remain second in
the Smythe at 34-30-13.

St~te

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.,.
SLIPS IT THROUGH -Montreal's Shayne Corson (right) gets
the puck (lower left) to slip through the legs of Washington winger
John Druce (19) and behind goalie Don Beaupre (33) for the goal
during Friday night's NHL game in Landover, Md., which the Capitals won 4-3. (AP)

.,~

BEST PLAN
OF ATTACK

Bartrum solidifies
hold on Marshall
tight end position .
By DAVE HARRIS
T-S Correspondent
Mike Bartrum, 1988 graduate of
Meigs High School strengthened
his hold on the starting tight end
position for Marshall University
with an outstanding spring game
last week.
Bartrum was the game's leading
receiver with seven receptions for
18 yards and a ·touchdown. The 6foot-5, 235 pound junior gave the
White team a 13-10 lead when he
pulled in a 14-yard pass from quarterback Todd Donnan. Bartrum
broke a tackle at the two-yard ~ne
and spun into the end zone.
On the last play of the game, the
former all-state Marauder quarterback showed he still had a strong
arm when he lined up at quarterback and heaved the ball over 60
yards down the left sideline, but the
pass fell incomplete to end the
game.
Now that spring football practice is over, Bartrum is throwing
fast balls for Howard McCann's
Thundering Herd baseball team .
Bartrum also received all-state honors in baseball at Meigs, but had
not played baseball since his high
school days.
Bartrum has appeared in two
games, pitching two innings, giving
up no hits while striking out one
and picking up a save. Marshall
will play at Ohio University on
Tuesday, April? at 3 p.m.

Watch For
Our Open
House
April I
thru 4

MIKE BARTRUM

BANKRUPTCY
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•,

TORNADO LETTERMEN -The Southern
: Tornadoes, piloted by Mick Winebrenner, will
: have six lettermen ·returning for the 1992 high
school baseball campaign. Pictured are (l'ront
•
•'

94

:·

baseball team to open
$eason Monday against Eastern

By SCOTT WOLFE
:•
T-S Correspondent
• RACINE - The Southern Tor.ilado baseball squad, headed by
~ighth-year varsity coach Mick
.Winebrenner, will open tlleir sea~on against Eastern Monday at
,-uppers Plains with a healthy roso(er of 24 players.
: Last year, Southern lost seven
)ilayers to graduation; Andy Baer,
;:rood Grindstaff (.315), Marie Tay'or (.344), Michael Kincaid (.363),
-co~n Maidens (.304), Arnie Dugan
~.243) and Jamie Anderson (.292).
: Baer batted .505 on the season,
earning all-SVAC, all-District 13
'lind all-state honorS along the way.
~e is now playing and starling at
9hio Dominican University.
: · Grinstaff was also all-SVAC,
while Taylor and Kincaid were allcohference honorable-mention
~layers
·
1; Winebrenner stated that it would
hard to replace these players,
J(-ho were integral pans of a 14-IJ
(jverall season and 8-6 (fourth
place) league mark.
• "This year we hope to be comil.etitive, compete for the league
cl ampionship, and do well in the
umament. We have no dominant
, tchers like Baer or (David) Amrgey, but we do have depth with
our solid pitchers .•
Keith Jones will most likely be
~ ace for the SHS squad, while
e others ; Jeremy Dill, J.T .
orthup and Andy Grueser will
~ttle it out.for number two man.
Seniors Chris Ebershach, Scott
tisle and Ronnie Spaun join underclassmen Jones, Dill, and Kyle
Wickline as lettermen: They hope
~ provide the nwcleus aod experi~jlce to put the squad over the
fivmp this season.
}j_!inebtenner indicated that his
1:G3fO 's defense should be much im~oved over last year, and that
Qitching would also be a stiength.
}{e indicated that potential weak
ijots would be a small senior class;
~perienee with four SOPhomores·
\if the ~. lnd billing. lie noted
Olose are the biggest question

lie

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UPPER

'

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~

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I_]

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1

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pie who can steal a base," said the
veteran coach when asked about
his team's speed.
About hitting? That is Winebrenner's biggest area of concern.
He said,"! don't know if our
younger flayers can hit varsity
pitching. know they are capable,
but they arc unproven. Hopefully,
this will improve as the season pro-

grosses."
Southern looks to have a strong
infield with defense its strongest
suit, and the outfield carries some
good gloves, but lacks some speed.
The outlook for the season: "We
hope to be competitive. Eastern,
Symmes Valley, and North Gallia
should be tough. The league should
(See TORNADOES on C-8)

we get "outside." We hope to uti~
lize fundamentals Laugh! by previ';
ous coaches Wolfe and Eichinger."
Collins is looking for this year's,
challenge, which begins tomorroW:
at home against Southern at4:30. ·,:
'
;'

Eastern's 1992
baseball slate

WALK THIS WAY.
~~

.'-......,.
oLI-.

MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S
WALKING SHOE.

HS hal bee~ out just .three
u of this wrllina.
"Outfield speed II below aver·
but we have _three oc four peo-

••

6? ;·
'

A I R
Ylir 'Essen till{

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about running oul ol propane .

The Public Utilities Commission of
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No. 92-02-EL-EFC . to review the
fuel procurement praclices and
policies of Columbus Southern
Power Company, lhe operation of
its Electric Fuel Component and
related maners. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at 10:00 a.m. on
March 30. 1992. at the offices of the
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43266-0573.

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=h 30 .........................~r:~~:
Aprill ................at Symmes Valley
April 2 ............................... Oak Hill'
April6 .:.........................at Oak HilL
April 8......................... Kyger Creek,
(See EAGLES on C.S)
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said, "Our depth is
· ~~enge. Several players will have
play man: than one position. Our .
depih Is the best I've had •
S em. We need to improve
weB lllblll, but the lllitude is
illiCdllillllnlto ICI milCh IICCOIII·

,.
;'

row, L·R) Keith Jones; Jeremy Dill and Kyle
Wickline. Pictured in back are senior team
members Chris Ebersbach, Scott Lisle and Ronnie Spaun. Southern will opeo the season on the
road Monday against Eastern.

~outhern

~·Mer

~

J

i~

..

,.;

ALL

Gallia and Symmes Valley to be
difficult foes . In order for us to be
successful we must see some leadership from the seniors."
"Right now our hitting is suspect, but looked decent in the
scrimmage the other night. We
need work on hitting, because we
haven't been outside very much. "
"In the area of pitching, we have
some experience in Jeff Durst, Tim
Bissell, Wes Holter and Mike
Smith. The addition of Terry
McGuire may help in quickness in
the outfield," commented Collins.
In closing, the young mentor
said, "We need lots of work on the
defensive phases of the game when

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LOCAL CONSULTATION

By SCOTT WOLFE
T-S Correspondent
EAST MEIGS- With eight returning seniors and twelve return- ,
ing lettermen, the Eastern Eagles,
led by first-year head coach Eddie .
Collins, are looking fora very good'
season.
Last season, Eastern posted a
14-8 overall record and 10-4, second place finish in the league. Eastem captured the Division IV sectional championship last year under
Dennis Eichinger's tutelage.
Assisting Collins, an all-state
player at Eastern in 1987, will be
former reammatc Mark Griffin.
Eastern lost six players to graduation last season - all-lea$ue Jason Hager, who is now playmg for
the University of Rio Grande; Jeremy Barber, Mark Murphy, Matt
Fin law, Chris Adams and Aaron
Wilson.
Returning letter winners include
Wcs Arbaugh, Wes Holter, Tim
Bissell, Rod Newsome, Jeff Durst,
Randy Kaylor, Mike Newland, Pat
Newland, Chad Savoy, Jared Ridenour, Tyson Rose and Jeremy
Buckley. Meigs transfer Terry
McGuire, a two-year man at Meigs,
will add great depth and experience
to tllis field.
Collins said, "This year we hope
to be competitive in the SVAC
again. Our success will depend on
the amount of desire exhibited. Our
strengths tllat are noticeable, thus
far, are the coachability of the flayers and that the pitching staf has
some experience."
EHS weaknesses include. the
number of players lost to graduation, leaving areas of experience
that are hard to fill.
Collins said, "We will depend
on mostly sophomores and freshmen for any depth we might have.
We lost nearly half the starting
team via graduation. The attitude is
very good at tllis point. That is a
plus."
Collins continued, "Hopefully
the team can experience some success in the last year for the SV AC.
I expect Southern, Oak Hill, North

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Savoy, Tyson Rose, Rod Newsome, Randy Kaylor and Mike Newland. Standing are Wes
Holter, Mike Smith, Terry McGuire, Tim Bissell, Jeremy Buckley,and Philip Woods. Durst,
Newsome, Smith, Bissell, McGuire, Newland,
Holter and Woods are seniors.

INSURANCE
®

BRAND lEW

'92

VETERAN EAGLES -Eastern's baseball
team, coached this season by rormer Eagle allstater Eddie Collins, will have a strong nucleus
return_ing from last year's sectional championship team, which posted a 14-8 record. Piclured are (rront row, L-R) Jeff Durst, Chad

Like a gaxi ne1Qhb0r.

NEW FOR

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r1

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· Insurance

jWashington,

By The Associated Press
, Just because first place is out of
oreach doesn't mean the Washington
:Capitals won't do their best to fin~sh second overall.
: The Capitals, behind the first
four-point game of Kelly Miller's
eight-year career, moved into a tic
with Vancouver for second in the
overall NHL standings with a 4-3
victory over Montreal on Friday
night.
In the other games, it was:
Edmonton 5, Minnesota 3 and
Winnipeg 6, Los Angeles 4.
· Miller scored two goals and
added two assists as Washington
ill)proved to 43-26-7, good for 93

Novacek, a clay-court specialist
who came to the net just 19 times
and was inconsistent with his
ground strokes.
"His serve was the main reason
he crushed me today," Novacek
said. ''He can do anything with the
ball. It's hard to read his serve

STATE FARM

Sampras and Agassi left the
U.S. team on the verge of victory.
John McEnroe and Rick Leach will
clinch it if they beat Korda and
Cyril Suk in doubles Sarurday. Singles pairings will be reversed in
Sunday's conclusion of the best-9ffi vc tie, as Davis Cup events are
called.
" My mind is, is, is, is, is, is, is
an unbelievable weapon," Agassi
said. "If I'm focused and determined and disciplined, it's a pres-

Sunday Times Sentlnei-Page-C,'T

It's not just a truck anymore.
It's quality on the road.

TH
135 Pill SftiiT

,,

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TRUCK CENTER
GAWPOLII, 01.

•

I

.

1

�March 29, 1992

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Sentinel

By The Associated Prf!!S .
It looks like Ramon Martinez IS
ready for opening day.. . .
Earlier in spring lnltntng, tt was
reported that the Los Angeles
Dodgers suspected Martinez was
suffering from arm trouble and had
planned to ask hi~ to undergo a
magnetic resonance 1ma~mg test on
his shoulder.
.
"I don't know who sa1d I had
problems with my arm," said Mar·
tinez, refemng to the pubhshed
report, "but I'm fine. I thmk I
showed that"
In Friday's exhibition game
against Cincinnati at Vero Beach,
Fla., Martinez gave up two runs on
four hits in six innings. He struck
out four and walked three as
Dodgers won 9-2.
Kat Daniels, Darryl Strawberry
and Mike Sciascia drove in two
runs apiece as the Dodgers.
Reds ace Jose Rijo was tagged
for eight runs in four innings.
Indians 5, Padres 4
Padres 6, Indians 0
At Yuma, Ariz ., Bruce Hurst
pitched six innings of three-h1t ball

La~!~Epl~d second ;;;-the rourth-grade

B'dw
11 Porter Elemen·
1
ketbar ~~ur~a~e:~wa!re (L.~)-Jarrod Gilmore,
tary. n e on

inning.
Drabek gave up one run on four
hits. Clemens allowed five runs on
six hits, walked none and struck
eight in six innings. . .
Cardinals 3, Wh1te Sox 0
At St. Petersburg, Fla., starters
Jose DeLeon of St. Lou1s and
Charlie Hough of Chicago each
pitched six scoreless mmngs bcfo~e
consecutive wild pitches by rookie
Jeff Carter allowed two runs to
~ore.
.
DeLeon gave up six hils, and
has allowed two earned runs in 22
innings. Hough permitted two hits.

and earned his first spring victo9'
as San Diego blanked Cleveland tn
the second game of a doubleheader.
Charles Nagy scattered fi~e h1ts m
six innings as the Indtans won the
opener. t~e makeup of Thursday
mght's ramout
Pirates 6, Red Sox 3
At Bradenton,' Fla., Doug
Drabek homered off Roger
Clemens and became the frrst P!ttsburgh starter to pitch seven 1nnmgs
this spring, leadmg the Pirates past
Boston. Drabek, who has one
major league home ru~ in 380 !ll·
bats. hit a solo shot m the th1rd

By Constance Wbite
Gallla S&amp;WCD
GALLIPOLIS • The theme,
"Our Treasured Trees" presents an
excellent opportunity to get lot of
people taking part in the 1992 Soil
,and Water Stewardship Week,
-Apn'l26 • May 3.

NEW &amp; USED RIFLES &amp; PIS!OLS
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

$20995

"Ouallty r~rlrlr H•ntl11g At~t110rlt1 Anllallte•
HOURS; OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 A.M. TIL 5 P.M.

69

~.!44~6-;7~05:!9-~~:!: ~~

street

We have talked with some min·
isters in the county and the Keep
Gallipolis Beautiful committee to
make contacts with youth groups
that would like lD get involved With
tree projects.
If you are an advisor or a member of a scout group 4-H club or
church youth group, to name a few,
interested in planting trees for a
conservation project please conlaet
bur office. White and Ausman Pine
seedlings are available for planting.
• The site for planting needs to be
selected and some planning on
your part needs to be done before
. we get started. Trees would need to
·be planted before that week due lD
· :I~IUUIIJ
-

T.R.
mid·
die row are David Moody, Michael Conkle,
Brynn Sutphin, Travis Roberts and Joey Cor·
nelius. Behind them are coaches Brynn Sutphin
and Ste\'e Kelley.

planting season in southeastern
Ohio. We would like those interest·
ed to discuss your plans as to
where you would like to do the
planting and how many seedlings
would be needed with our staff.
If you don't have a site that
1 ed
tak
needs trees pant you ~an .. e
part by caring for and mamtauung
mature trees in your neighborhood.
The Gallia S&amp;WCD provides
information on the Soil and Water
Stewardship Week to fourth
graders in the schools throughout
the county during the Arbor Day
Tree presentations. We also provide materials for the churches
throughout the county to use with
theii congregations.
For more information, stop by
the Galtia S&amp;WCD at 529 Jackson
Pike Room 308C in the Spring Valley Plaza or call446-8687.
All SCS programs and services
are offered on a non-discriminatory
basis without regard to race, color
national origin, religion, sex, age,
marital status, or handicap.

_.
'liP'
~~~~~

Southern's 1992
baseball schedule
Date
Opponent
March 30 ......................... at Eastern
April! ......................... Kyger Creek
April 2 ................................Trimble
April4 ...........at Ravenswood-noon
April6 ....................... Hannan Trace
April? ........Ravenswood-4:45p.m.
April g ... .............at Symmes Valley
April 9 ................... .. at North Gallia
April!O ...........................Waterford
April ll ...................... Meigs (noon)
April13 .. .. .....................at Oak Hill
April IS ................. ............ Eastern
Aprill6 ...................... ...at Wahama
April20 .. .................at Kyger Creek
April 27.. .. .............. Symmes Valley
April 29 ............................. Wabama
April 30 ............................. at Me1gs
Max 2 ................at Alexander-noon
(Unless otherwise noted, all
games start at4:30 p.m.)

Southern's 1992
base baII rOS t er

Keith Jones-p/if ........................... Jr.
Roben Kimes-c .......................... Jr.
David Smith-if/of ............. ........... Jr.
Kyle Wickline-if.. ........................Jr.
Trent Cleland-if/of .....................So.
Andy Grueser-p/if .............. .. .... .. So.
Billy Jones-c/if ..... . .................. ... So.
Jeremy Northup-p/1f...................So.

Player
Yr.
Chris Ebcrsbach-of ..................... Sr.
Scott Lisle-of .............................. Sr.
Ronnie Spaun-of.. ....................... Sr.
John Chaney·of ...................... ..... Jr.
Jeremy Dill-p~if ........................... J_r. Head coach. Mick Winebrenner
Joey Hensler-1f/of................... .... .Jr.

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Eastern's 1992
baseball roster
Player
,Yr.
Tim Bissell-p/ss ..........................Sr.
'Jeff Durst-p/ss .............................Sr.
Wes Holter-p/of ..........................Sr.
Terry McGuire-p/of................. ...~r.
Mike Newland-of... .....................Sr.
Rod Newsome·P/of.. ...................Sr.
Mike Smith·p/lb......................... Sr.
Prullip Woods-of ........................Sr.
Jeremy Buckley-3b ..................... Jr.
Chad Savoy-3b ..... ,......................!r.
Wes Arbaugh-lb ........................ So.
David Koenig-3b/p .................... So.
Randy Kaylor-2b ....................... :So.
Pat Newland-2b....................... ...So.
Jtobut Reed-c ............................ So.
Jared R.idenour..c ........................So.
Tyson Ro.e-2b/of.......................So.
Chatlie Bissell-p/of.....................Pr.
Ryan Buc~y-p/of......................Ft.

Head COIICh ~ Eddie Colllu

•

Joins staff
GALLIPOLIS • Sherman S.
Green recently joined the staff at
Stutes Real Estate as a sales associate.
Green received his real estate
education at Hondros Career Cen·
ter in Columbus. He has been a res·
ident of Gallipolis for 27 years and
resides at !46 Woodland Dr., with
his wife of eight years, Susan. They
have a four year old daughter,
Michelle.
Green is the son of Raymond
and Lois Green of Gallipolis.

7995 ,~·~5

COLUMBUS - Bob Evans
Farms confirmed Thursday that it
has dropped its Chicago advertising
agency, citing irreconcilable differences.
According to an article in Fri·
day's Columbus Dispatch, neither
side will say what those differences
are, but Bruce Beach, chief executive officer of Campbell-MithunEsty, acknowledged that he is dis·
appointed.
·
Roger D. Williams, group vice
president of marketing at Bob
Evans, told the Dispatch that the
decision was not sudden and was
not reached lightly.
Williams said BEF plans lD con·
tinue a 4-year-old campaign devel·
oped by CME featuring pastoral
seuings.

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•• Meigs County. Individuals wishing to partlci·
~ - pate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
• the rarm's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
' guess to the Dally Seatlnel, 111 .C ourt St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, .451,9, or the Gallipolis Dally
Tribune, US Third Aye., Gallipolis, Ohio,
, 45631, and you may win a $5 pnze rrom the

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(Continued from C-7)
April9 .........................at Waterford
ApriliO ....................... North Galha
April 13 ..................... Hannan Trace
Aprill4 ................ Federal Hocking
Aprill5 .........................at Southern
Aprill6 ......... .. ........at Kyger Creek
April20 .................. Symmes Valley
April21 ......................... at Wahama
Aprii22.. ...................... ... Waterfo~
April30 ...................at Nonh Galha
Muy 4 ..... ..... ..........at Hannan Trace
May 5 ................................ Wahama

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NEW AMBULANCE SERVICE - The Portsmouth Ambulance
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lance service in Galtia County. Based on Jackson Pike in the Spring
Valley area, the ambulance orrers around the clock, seven days a
week service. Managed by Sharon Cooper and Rob Pyles, the service
bas 10 employees and· five trucks. For more lnrormation or service,
ca11446-2844 or l-800·732-6630. (Times-Sentinel Pboto)

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TRAVEL IN STYLE • Having a weddlna,
birthday, anniversary or just want someone else
to do the driving? Image Limousine Service of
Gallipolis is the place to call. Owned by Ed
Atkins, (ldt), Image provides services to resi·
dents in Gallia, Meigs, Jackson, and Mason
counties. This 5-passenger, stretch Lincoln
Town Car, reaturing a color TV, VCR, stereo,
moon roar, and wet bar, is avaUable 24-hours a

BEF drops Chicago
advertising agency

Tornado baseball.. ,_~&lt;C:=o~·~~inu~ed~rr~om:..::C:..:.-7!...,_)_ _---::-::---~
be well-balanced, but we could be
right there. The keys to the season
will be that pitching and defense
should keep us in the games, how·
ever, hitting will be the key to our
success, especially early in the season."
Besides the already mentioned
letter winners, players vyin~ for
positions are juntors Robcn K1mcs,
David Smith, John Chaney, Joey
Hensler, and sophomores Billy
Jones, Andy Gruese r, Jeremy
Nonhup and Trenton Cleland.
Probable reserve players will be
Andy Fields and Robert Reiber,
sophpomores; and freshmen, Ryan
Williams, Eric Jones, Jeremy H1ll ,
Scott Hubbard, Jimmy Randolph,
Eddie Friend, Jeremy Smith and Jason Ervin.
Winebrenner concluded, "We
have a good group of young players coming up which should add to
the strength of the program dunng
the next several seasons."
Assisting Winebrenner is assis·
tan! coach Bill Hensler.

March 29, 1992

Planting for 'Our
'Treasurer Trees'

THE GUN SHOP
870 Express

Section D

Farm/Business

Spring training action see.s L.~.
beat Reds, while Bucs, Trtbe wtn

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GALLIPOLIS - Verlin L.
Swain, chairman of the Board of
Trustees of the Holzer Hospital
Foundation, and Charles I. Adkins,
Jr., president and chief executive
officer of the Holzer Medical Cen·
ter, were recently elected to the
board of trustees of the Oak Hill
Community Medical Center, Oak .
Hill, Ohio, according to Evan E.
Davis, board chairman.
"This is another step in the joint
effort of Oak Hill Community
Medical Center and the Holzer
Medical Center to work closely
together, as a result of the formal
affiliation of these two health care
institutions last December," said
Davis. "This will not only strength·
en our relationship, but also give us
all a closer and better understanding of how these two hospitals can
grow and progress for the benefit
of the res1dents of southeastern.
Ohio."
1 •
Swain was eloctea a trustee of
foundation on Oct. 27, 1983, and
the following year became a mcm·
ber of the executive committee. He
was elected vice chairman of the
board in 1988, and became chair·
man in October, 1990.
A native of Crown City, Swain
attended North West Missouri State
College in Maryville, Mi., and then
served in the United States Air

In addiiion to daHy specials,
{1Judy's" offers a full dmner menu,
~bcluding steaks, shrimp, pork
~hops. ham and ravioli, served with
:a potato, salad, vege1able and roll;
)In extensive sandwich menu;
;

0

0

•

soups , salads ana nomemadc
desserts.
McDaniel said that the restau·
rant's 1aco sala~s and chef sa!ads
have been espec:1ally popular ~mce
the restaurant opened. In addiuon,
the pasta servt:d in ~ reslaurant is
homemade, usmg an m-house pas1a
maker.
·
"Judy's" also offers free deliv·
cry to homes and busmesses m ~e
Middlepor~omeroy area, ava1l·
able by calhng the restaurant at
992·7938. .
.
Breakfast IS served unblll a.m.

every day except Sunday. The
restaurant's hours are Monday
th~ugh Thursday, 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.;
Fnday from 6 a.m. to JO p.m.; Sat·
urday from 8 a.m. unbl 9 p.m. and
Sunday from 11:30a.m. to4 p.m.
~though the res~t is locat·
ed m the former Middleport
Lunch Room~ location, McDaniel
stressed that no alt;aho~c bev~rages
are serve&lt;!. In conJUDCb_Dn w1th ~e
rcsta~t s grand operung, a s~es
of spcctals will be offered Apnl I·
3.

1

II.

Adkins, who was named 1991
Gallia County Person of the Year
by the Gallipolis Area Chamber of
Commerce JOined Holzer Medical
Center in I970, and became the
president and chief executive offi·
cer in April, 1984. He has also
served as director of purchasing,
vice president of general. ~rvices,
vice president of profcss1onal services, and interim chief execubve
offteer.
Adkins also serves as president
of Consolidated Health Systems,
the Holzer Hospital Foundation,
Holzer Vanguard, Inc ., Holzer
Foundation for Tri-State Health
Care and Joint Ventures Pharmacy.
Inc.

A native of South Charleston ·
W.Va., Adkins attended Marshali'
Univer3ity, West Virginia Stale
College and the University of Rio ·
Grande. In June, 1990, the Univer:
sity of Rio Grande conferred upon
him a Master or Arts or Public Ser-,
vice.
In addition to the area. state amf.
national hospital organizations in,
which he is both active and an
elected leader, Adkins is very
involved in the total community.
Most recently he was named to the
board of directors of Bank One;,
Athens, and elected chairman or ·
the board of trustees of the RiO: '
Grande Community College or the'University of Rio Grande. He
served on the Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce Board for ,
six years, and as that organimtion'S
president in 1988-89.
,
Adkins and his wife Marge,
the parents of two sons, Jeff and
Brent; and a daughter, Ann.
:
"The Oak Hill Communitr ·
Medical Center feels most fonu -'
nate to have affiliated with the'
Holzer Medical Center, and now
has an added advantage with the ·
addition of Verlin Swain and Char.,
lie Adkins to our hospital's trustee'
group," said Davis. "We warmly
welcome them to our board and ·
know they will make a meaningful
conb'ibution."

are

Adkins, Jr., (right), to Oak Hill Hospital's ··
Board or Trustees. The Oak filii Commuaity
Medical Center and the Holzer Medical Center
anBODnced their rormal amnation In D«ember, .,
1991.
..

NEW TRUSTEES • Evan E. Davis (eenter),
chairman or the Board or tbe Oak HOI Ca.mu·
nlty Medical Center, Oak Hill, recently wei·
corned Verlln L. Swain (le_rt), and Charles I.

0

High yield of corn with no-till planting ·.

llog.tl.tl

LowAI,IIPe&lt;-·

WendeD Tope

• Full 5 Watts Power

Earth Team volunteer

-..uml

JUDY'S NOW OPEN • Jud)' MeDulel, left,
hee opiGid a aew r:::::!;_"ludy's", at 1!15
Nortllllectllld "Ye.,
fa atJclltJm to I
lllld-.19 ..... 1M ........... aiFin . . . .
•
I ritll dl . . tr 111111 IDd ilom.emade

deartl. Dt11Yt11 II allllavallahle Ill the Middle·
portiPollera, area. Pletured with McD.anlel Ill
cooll bollda Mooa aDd Allee Ltwborn, a walt·
~ Ia ... reetalll'aat. (TIIIIee-Sentlael Photo by
Brian J, Reed)

com planter. The.object was h!gh
population seed1ng by planung
three in place of two. We ended up
with 8 population of 32,000 plants
per acre. The company recom·
mended no more than 4,000 per

GALLIPOLIS • On my farm,
205 bushels of com per acre were
raised on 16 acres durins an
extremely dry season. This croP.
has set a new record with Carg1l ~Y using a two row planter we
Hybrid seed, purchased at Altizer swtl!d by pllnting two rows on one
Farm s~pply.
. side of the field. After we had
.The crop was planted June 10m planted the two rows we turned
the middle or a very dry season IOWIId the planted rows and Slrlld·
Hrbrid seed today are developed to · dlecllhe outside row md this put
withstand dry weather ba:ause they tlte ~Ianter discs I 9 inches from
have a root system that _goes deep eteh Jllanted row. This was fol·
into the soil to get motsture and • lowed the rut or the way ICIOSS the
plant food necessary ror vigorous field IJid ending up with a popula·
plant growth.
don ~ 3,000 P.iJa per acre and a
These seed w~re especlall~ 1111a1 yield of liule over 205 bushels
adapted to late aeediJJB; (lowever, tt _IICie.
.
was a fuii3Cas0n variety. Thla l1llP ....the trald aaoss ihO Com Belt
was planted w_!!h a two mw, no-till Is fer higher populMion. Our final

'•
I

Force from I 953-55. He is a.n
active mercban~ owning and operating the Guyan Valley General
Store in Crown City. He is also a
tobacco and caule farmer. He is the
largest tobacco farmer in the state
of Ohio.
In 1961, he was elected treasurer of Gallia County, at that time,
the youngest county treasurer in the
state, and served in that capacity
for four years. He was Gallia
County Commissioner from 1982·
1986. He and his wife, Joann, live
in Crown City, with their daughters, Amber, age 16, and Ashli, age

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone number with you~ card
or letter. No telephone calls will be acc~pted. All
contest entries should be turned in to the news·
. paper otr'ICe by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
or a tie, the winner will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Meigs County rarm will be rea·
tured by the Meigs Soil and ~ter Conservation
District.

• We Stock Over 100 Different :Types and Stzee
• Stock Up Now! We Have Battaries for Practlcelly Every Need
• Our Own ENERCELLe Satterlee Are Rated Among,the Best

IIYIU

Adkins, Swain named to Oak Hill .:
Community Medical Center board~

jRestaurant, Judy's, opens in Middleport

Sensitive Tri·Band Radar Detector

Save 1120

day with an approximate 2-hour rental limit. ··
Specials include a lunch and airport package
and the "Stork" service ror mom and the new
arrival. For more lnrormation or to set up an
appointment, call 446-4006. Atkins and Donna
Mullins, (right), chaurreurs, are sure to get you .
and your group to any destination.(Times·Sen· :
tinel photo by Krls Cochran)
.

•

yield amounted-to the filling two'
1,200 bushel and one 1.000 bushei,
com crib. The coat per bushel o(·
production was only one third ~
than com raised in previous years i,
Another item that was in fa~,
of high population is the winter ,
cover provided from the stalks and'
blades from the crop The ~rap :
residue provided an 88 perceni.
cover for erosion control
;
This crop foUowed a fourth year,
crop of alfalfa which used a Jars61
amount of nitrogen that lhct alfalfa 1
bad made This lowtled the IIIIOUIIt-~
or nitrogen we had to )lUt'ChuD.
All SCS programs and lervicea ··
arc offered on a non-discrimklatory·,
basis without reprd to lace color.;;
natiooal origin, reliaion, llex, aae,
mllrital SU!ius, et hancliclp.
'I

:t

0

~-

�Page

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

02-Sunday Tlmes-$enllnel

WV

Money Ideas

OVB pre-emptive rights

NORTH
+to7 5l
9s

BRIDGE

•w
tAK

By STAN EVANS

+ABH

PHILLIP
ALDER

GALLIPOLIS - This Wednesday lhe Ohio Valley Bank will hold
!heir annual meeting at lhe Morris
and Dorolhy Haskins Ariel Theatre.
One or the pro·
posed resolutions
to consider and act
upon is a pre-emptive rights offering
of 102,134 shares.
A pre-emptive
right is a right giv·
ing existing stock·
holders the opportunity to purchase
shares of a NEW ISSUE before it is
offered to others. Its purpose is to
proleet shareholders.from dilution of
control by mainlain their pro-rata
shares or ownership when new shares
are issued. The usual procedure is for
each existing stockholder to receive a
warrant
· how

EAST
+6 2

WEST

+3

•s o

• K Q a2
tQJ 10 9
KJ 93

• 8 '3 2
Q 10 6 5

+

+

SOUTH
. AKQJ98
• AJ 7
t 76l

.2

The days
are lengthening

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer South

By Phillip Alder
Finally. after the long wmter. there

was some warmth in the sun's rays.
The Senior Life Master recalled a deal
that he had played many springs ago.
Like all young men (he began). l was
happy when spring arrived. Baseball
returned and, like the poet, my fancy
lightly turned to thoughts of love. But l
never turned down a good bridge
game. When the club champion of·
fered to partner me in our Spring Regional. l jumped at the chance. cance l·
mg a date in the process.
As we entered the last round of the
Open Pairs, we were clearly in the
hunt. On the final board, we pushed to
a thin slam. Over the double, my two

no-trump showed a limit raise in
spades. Four clubs was a splinter bid ,

revealing a singleton or void in the
suit. Thereafter we cue-bid a lot.
West led the diamond queen. Immediately my partner saw that he could
take two heart finesses for his contract. If one worked, he would be
home. But the takeout double suggest·
ed that West would have both top

West

Norlb

East

Obi.

2 NT

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

l+

Pass
Pass

••
6+

All pass

Ope ning lead: t Q

hear ts.
My partner displayed perfect tech·
nique. After winmng trick one in the
dummy, he cashed the club ace and
ruffed a club in hand. The spade ace
and a spade to dummy's 10 were followed by another club ruff . A diamond
to dumm y's ace. a third club ruff and a
diamond ruff eliminated the minors.
Now my partner led dummy's hear t 10
and ran it, endpia ying West. West
could either return a heart into South's
tenace or concede a ruff and discard.
This result was just enough for me lo
win my first Regional title.

32
33
34
35
36
37
38

Earlh goddess
Beholdl
Bother
Individual
Compelent
Marry
Old name lor
Tokyo
40 Concoc1s
42 Sim• an
43 Feed; saliale
44 Defaces
45 Conlend
47 Relreal
49 Small valley
so Vehicle
51 Sows
54 Fale

55
56

Ta vern s
Frankness

59 Moray

60 Bright slar
62 Reduce 10 line
particles

64 Wash
65 Concerning
66 Early morn
67 Encounlered
69 Rugged mountam
crest

70
71
72
74

"- Easy Pieces"
Transgress
Tennis st roke
Nebraska city

is sun

n Spaulding -

78 Barracuda
79 Cozy places
82 More beloved
84 Slaps over a
, fence
86Row
fllj Algonquian
Indian

could be in vain.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Guard
againsl the inclination today to be over·
ly possessive ol those with whom you
have strong emotion al bonds. Even

!hough you may feel your inlenlions are
conslruclive, they may not .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You mighlleel a
bil uneasy Ieday aboul a commitment
you recen11y made. 11's besllo lry lo unwind it now before it becomes more

binding.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Don'l lei
your ego or pride get in the way and
cause you to attempt something you

really aren 't equipped 10 do today. II
you shelve the endeavor, no one will
think less of you.
LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0ct. 23) Your 11nanclal
prospects look rather encouraging at

garments

94 Guess
98 City on the Oka
99 Escape
100 Chicken
102 Hebrew least
103 Stalemate
104 Sailor: colloq .
105 Shakespearian
king
106 Imposed
monetary

penally
108 Lair
109 French article

110 Near
111 Loud noise

112 " The Last Show"
114 Paid notices

116 Rollaway
117 Becomes aware

of
119 Severs
120 Ripped
122 Spirited horses
t 24 Cobbler
125 Flying mammals
t26 Meal
t 28 Ginger 129 Attitude
131 Choir voice
132 Distanl
133 Beef animal
135 License plate
1'38 Native meta l

139 Narrow strip of
wood

140 Towel insignia
14 1 Sk ill
142 Greek letter
143 Compass point
144 Clue
145 VIew: spectacle
147 "Blue -"
149 Mature
150 TV's Morley 152 Relucl'anl
154 Heron
156 Eyes amorously
158 Dropsy
159 Be
160 Loop
161 Spheroids

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) An abratlng . II !hal 's lhe case, let everyone
sleep on it before lackling il again.
_
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ac. 21) Be
extremely carefu l loday lhal, when
deal ing with others, you do not express

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

yoursell in caustic or biting term s.

Someone you'll pul down might nol
readi ly forgive you .

L~:::!~~~=:;,-:-~;--.J

© ,..., ..........,.,.. • .,... .....

88 Hindu peasant
89 Genus of maples
90 Name
92 Women 's

sources wisely.

sive domestic issue might arise today
that may not be resoluble at the first sit·

You

Don't Hove
look For
To Spy the Best Buys In

CAPRICO.RN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) A finan-

~'Your

cial involvement wilh a friend today
should not be treated as If It were a
bu siness deal. If you do, you could lose

~'Birthday
Marth 29, 1992
The year ahead could be a very reward·
ing and profitable one for you, provided
you seek the outle ts th at have a need
f or your special skills or knowledge .

ARIES (March 21·April 19) A malarial
arrangement you're trying to resurrect
with another might not have the pot ential you assume it does. Study it more

See Answer to Puzzle on Page D-8

30 Assistant

feasi ble. If th ey aren't, all your efforts

this tim e. but they are not perfect In order to stay on the plus side of the led·

ASTRO-GRAPH

SUNDAY PUZZLER
1 Briel
6 "- in Toyland"
II Form
16 Surfeits
21 - of Lebanon
~2 "Home -"
23 Asylum
24 Slandard ol
perfection
25 Exisl
26 Shouts
28 Pen

Recent prices on other local stocks
arc: AEP 30 3/4; AKZO 40; Bank
One 46; Bob Evans 26 1/2; Chrysler
17 5/8; Federal Mogull8; Ford 391/
2; City Holding 19 1/4; GM 37 7/8;
Goodyear 66 1/4; Multimedia 28;
Star Bank 28 1/2.
!Mr. Evans is an investment
borker for The Ohio Company in
their Gallipolis office.]

this newspaper, P.O. Box 91426, Cleve·
land, OH 44101·3428. Be sure lo stale
your zodiac sign.
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) If I here Is an
imporlanl oblecllve you want to achieve
Ieday, II might be wise lo allempllo do
so independenlly ralher lhan seek allies
to assist you.
GEMINI (May 21·Juno 20) Do not al·
lempllo lmplemenl plans Ieday - un·
less you are cerlain they are sound and

ger, you'll have 10 manage your re·

,----------------------~the Closslfieds.

ACROSS

many new shares the holder is en·
titled to buy - normaUy, a proper·
tion of lhe shares he or she alresldy
holds.
Since lhe new shares would typically be priced below the market, a fi.
nancial incentive exists to exercise
the pre-emptive right.
The current market price of OVB
is 38-38 1!2.

March

DOWN
1 Weig hing d evice

2 Telrarch of
Galilee
3Poem
4 Sun god
5 Attempt
6 Having less hair
7 Permitted
8 Genus or cattle
9 Prlnler's measure
10 Slilch
11 Giislen
12 Delest
13 Haill
14 Hebrew lett er
15 Empower
16 Take one's pari
17 Fruit drink
18 Tellurium symbol

19 Ardent
20 Winter vehicles
27 Corn plant part
29 Hilchccck film
31 " - Fly Away"
36 Is in poor health
37 Political
su bdivision

39 White House
office

40 Wagers
41 Portico
42 Military
storehouse
43 Journey forth
44 Horse's neck hair
46 - .short (briefly)
48 Jot
49 Stun; dazzle
50 Cavern
51 Tolls
52 Cilrus fruit
53 " The - ol ·42"
55 Sour
56 Rough-haired
rodent
57 Bay window
58 Income In Paris
61 Approach
63 Reward
64 Falsifier
68 More dense
70 Teased; irritated
71 Enthusiasm
73 Bread spread
74 S-shaped
molding

Aries, treat yourself to a birthday gift.

Send for Aries' Astra-Graph prediC·
ti ons for the year ahead by mailing
$1.25 plus a long, sell-addressed,
st amped envelope to Astra-Graph, c/o

11

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

addressed, stamped envelope to Astra-

Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101 -3428. Be

AVON get ln on the ground floor
or Avona new umlng ttrueturt.

gives you import ant information that
you must relay to another, make notes
instead of relying on your memory. Your

recall might nol be a dependable asset
Ieday.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) When dealing in
matters of a financial nature today, do
not let your emotions dominate your

1hinking. What you feel about something might not b e in line with rea lity.

SDrlng Valley Drive, Huntington,

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) A reckless

WY, 25704i Telephone: 304-429-1'155, Ext. 2339. An Equol Op-

companion might inspire you to behave
in a similar manner today . Together,
you may do something foolish and unprofitable. Be careful.

portunHy Employer.

SALES
ThrM ropo. 104' Golllo Molgo
ond Athono Countloo. Nnt,wotl:

LIBRA (Sepl. 23·0ct. 23) ll you lry 10

groomed, mtture Individuals tor
IIIII pa.ltlon1. Abovt IYira&amp;JI
Income. Call Mr. Conley tor 1
JnftrvliW It 814-446-

pawn off on co-workers things you
should be doing today , problems are
likely . Make every effort to be industrious. not m anipulative .

ro:onll

lhings should go quite smoolhly lor you .
But if the negative elements of your personality prevail, you're likely to create
complications.

Morch 30, 1992
Your probabilities for material growth in
th e year ahead look rather strong . However, you might have to make a number
ol adjustments along the way in order to
reach your goals.

Real Es(ate General

Utrchandlatr To Stack I lnven·

likely to be achieved Ieday, but lhe tar-

Nttdsd: OTR Drlvtrl, 25

Announcements

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen. 19) You
you

I'

!honk you are today. It 's besl not to at- .

3

tempt to match wit s with someone who :
has the knowledge and expertise you "'
tack .
'·'

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19) Guard
against the inclination today to add up
your material rewards before they are
realities. Be optimiSti C, but let your .•,
common sense prevail.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) Try nollo
let your indifference put you in a posi - 7
t iOrJ today where someone else makes •
an Important decision for you that you - ...

should be making.

·- - ·Announcem11ms

Chow, Full Grown tn Porter Oh
Aroo. 114·311-01115.
Coming IIDGn In Rutland: C.rlifltd cfay Cll'll lor ages 1·1, call Loot:. Lody London Fog Roln
Coet, Nalur11 Color, 114-4o\l.
614·1112·2974, I •Vpm
0801.
I, Ronold Dolloy, will not bo
rttponslblt lor tny debts other Loat : La. ·ftmlll 11blt &amp; whitt
thtn my own
Collie, ro1t In vicinity of At 33
road side park1, c"hlld'l

MAKE A FRIEND ... FOR llfEI
Scondlnovlon, Europoon,
ScMAh
Amtrkan,
Yugoel.avlan
Joponooo High Scliool e1:
cnong• Stlldonto ... Arrlvlng
Auguot .... HOST FAMILIES
NEEDED! Amorlcon lnlorcul1urol
Studont Exchonge. Coil Bollndo
614-149-2794 Or Coil 1-aoo-s~
BLINQ,

MJIRY.J', FLOYD
REI.LTOR 440·3383.

,.,

101,000 BTU goo fumoc:o I

.

111n In Rolnbow Aldgo oroo, no
collor, 114-tl8!-3&amp;25
7
____
Y_ar_d_S_a_l_e___

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

-··

1 : Card of Thanks

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
auction

t·~,.:

"+''"·

~··
·"~ -~.

11rwlct.

571.

ia.m.-10p.m.

Tall

UcenHd

fti,Ohlo &amp; Woot Vlr&amp;~nlo, 304773-11715.
Wodemoyor'o ~uetlon Sorvlee,
Rio Orondo, Ohio 114-245-11'152.

oory. Colll-315-7341-13711. Ext. M·
OH-02, 24 Hro.
Evening Shin Suporvloor • Hoi·
ur CUnlc It SHklng A Mature,
R-olbll Ptroon With Supenl~ Exptrlanct To Ovtr·
Cortoln Poroomol And
Clinic
FociiHloo
Durlng
Evonlnge And W.okond ShlftL
Full nme Position. Allollconto
Sh0&lt;11d So DopondobiO, HIV8
Good K~ Of Cullocllol
And HoUIM
na Teehnlauet,
AbiiHy To Tro n ~nd MOCivlle
Ptroonnll And Work Woll Wllh
01horo. Send Rooume To Holar
Ctlnle Poroonnot Dope, P.O. Box
344, ClolllooUo, OH' •5e3t No
Phono Coilo P-.
HVAC controe104' hu poeKion of
urvlct
ltchnlciM/Inltetler
tvallablt. Duties conaltt oliO%

oo!Ylet, 2011. lnllollolion, mini·
mum 3yn. fllld nportonco.
comrl•t• HauMhald 0r &amp;- Send rHurne &amp; war. rolo
llloo Any Typo 01 FumKwo, pnfertnce Ia: O.ily nln..,
Applloneoo, Antlquo'o, Etc. Aloo PO IOK 121C, Pomeroy, Ohio
Approlool Avollablel 814-245- by Wod., Aprll111.
5152.
Join A Wlmlng T01m
• lllldw In U. frl"'lncLII Mr•
Don, Jonk HI Sill Uo Yciur Non- uvtctt
artn11, being 1 member of
Working Applltneoo, Col04' T'l'o,
VCA'I, Mlei'OWIVM, Power our consumer llnlnct ••m
means h.lvlng a aood pl8ce to
Toole, Elc. 114-:!!e-1231.
llert. Aro rou oil!· IMilvllod,
t.oeot looct pomry 1n . - o1 oooortlV8, ond enjoy dOlling
large fl'oozor, 114-1112·2112 .,. wfth - ? A ploooont porICI,..Ifir: .ind phcHII Ullt . . I
114'tlll·2411
muel. RooponolbllKioe lneillde
I
Wonlod To Ivy: liM PC c..,. oe1lvltloo rolllod to crociH, - · ·
•
Mildred, Delorn, pulor And SOIIwo,.., • - account
~nagement and ac1142.
counUng. For lm.;;d,.,, con' Mary Allee, Charlea
tkttl'llllon, contlct TINI ~rg~n
and famlllea.
Wonlod To loy: Jri Auloo 11
114-lt2•211t EOE, MIFIH;
Wllh 0. Wit- Mo1oro. Clll n~ omoklng ond dNg 1,.. on~--------I Lorry LIYolv. SM 3111313.
vlranrMnt.
In Memory
~

9

Wanted to Buy

.....

llar. 21, 1111.

.•
.•••
....

momoltH ollll llngor

haul w-our loge to tht mill Just

coii30UT5·1957.

Form

Do

31

Homes lot Sale

3 Unll Aportmont Rontol, hcol·
Will provldo loving cnlld coro, lont CondltlOil, lulovlllt Plko
tiJMirlenced, anv thUtJ. prtftr Rood. Roducocll Coil For ApGtfllpotll Ferry 1r11. ;,OC-875- polntmonl. 614-441-15111.
6496.
BEAU11FUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Hlolorlcol Arn Cornor Lol • 816

Mtln Sl. Pt P111unt, W. V1.
Compltlely Renov11td: 2 Full
Bath•, 3 Larg. B~rooms, New
HYAC, taw Clrp11t. Available
Junt 151514-446-~5.

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

Brick Homt, 3 Acrt )..ot, 1 112,
Mlln From N~.sz.mmet Valley...,

School, llhlo. 6
3-2130.
,
INCffiCEI
In
Mercerville
tor
salt
or
lttH
OHIO VALLEY PUBLlSHINCI CO.
recommends that you do busl·
nnt with ptOplt you ltnow1 and
NOT to ttnd monay througn lht
mall until you have lnvettigattd
tht offering.

Gain Flntnclal

Independence

by owntr: 11 roomt 4 or 5 BR1
2 both&amp; w1w control lie t hool, T

KKchono '!liP hoolc-up 2 dlolt-.·
wooho,... 200 Amp eloclrle Ill•'
viet will Cl\tMidar land contract,

PhoM 215-1114-83Cit

On rlvtr, $1000, tow down, or.
lnt tor ctah 114-141-2528

VENDING ROUTE : 011 Rich

Alggt Crest Manor, aluminum
aldlng r11nch holM, 1 112 Nths,

Now 1-800·741-44!13.

Quick? No Way! But Wt Htvt A

Good, SIHdy, Affordablo, Bu&amp;l·
ntll, WOil'l Lui. 1-800-284·

8313.

Btauty Shop Equlpmtnt, Exctl·
Sh

ltnt

!p
ape! hone: 614·384•3195.

WOLFF TANNING BEDS

Now Commoreltt, Homo Unllo,
From $199.00. Lompo Lollono,
Ac~11orlt1. Monthly Payments
Low Aa $18.00, Coli Todoy FREE
NEW Col04' Cotolog. L.aOtJ.22B·
6292.

tomlty room wt1h tlll!llaco, llrgo
kHchon whh brooklllt bor, 104'• ..

mal dining room, 3bdrma., ·
dtttchtd 2-c1r ga:,., ltorags ·
building, blm, over 2 112 terti ·
whh approximately 2 acm tin·

cod, $41,000 114- 185-43111

32

Acrtl lind, trallar, dick, porch, ., .
well, city water, Z bedrooms, ,
Jtri'YI Run, Apple Grove, 304·

576-2145.

5

31

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
. 614-949-2627
Llwn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Trae
Trimming &amp; l!etnoval
Roaldentill &amp;
Commorelol
Frn Eallmoteo

Happy Ads

Homes lor Sale

•
•

~t 1, 2700

pion 1-2-3-4 bottom.
Sealed Brg. dllc, hd box inme, ldl

25 ACRE I - .HANNAN TRACE ROAD. 515,000,
101 ACREI- HANNAN TRACE ROAD. 528,00«

...

•

SPACIOUS 14'x70' HAS 2 BEDROOMS, 1~ BATHS'
LAROE LIVING ROOI.l, AMPLE CLOSET SPACE DEC'S!
STORAGE BLDG. 1.55 ACRE GENTLY $LOPING LOT.

Elementary

School,

(Golllo Coonly). 614-I46·2VOB.

3 Bedroom, 2 bath , living
room,ramlly room witt! llrtplacl,

call614-446-6325

5

Happy Ads

Man Alive,

Look Who~
45!
At twenty you were
full of tricks
Older and wiser now
at 56.

Happy Birthday,
Merch "Dick"
Rife
Love,
Gleanda, Joe, Robin
and Tammy
Real Estate General

PREm AND PRACTICAL
Skip oxtorior painting this summer and •• , ••r -above groun pool and covorod porches
bedroom, 2 bath ranch homo. The backyard
fenced and lnoro lo an oversized 2 car·gaf89e.
And the price is $54 ,900.

AFFORDABLE BRICK RANCH
Very nico 3 bedroom home ofters much more
!han mosl at thio price. Large . livin~ room .w11h
fireplace, formal dining room wolh chona ca~nel,
eat-in kitchen, dan, plus lull basemen! wolh
family room and roc. room . Very privale
backyard with ingrnund pool and large paloo . 2
car garage, gas heal and central air. Newer
roof. Priced to movo qu&lt;:kly at $79,900.
1709

WHERE GRANDMA USED TO UVEII
Clean 1y, story home along Reule 7 offers lois
ol cha1111. 3 bedrooms, fireplace, dining room
and full baseman! are jusl some ol the loatures.
1.66 ocros includes 2
garage and bam. New

GROW
SPACE FOR TODAY'S ACTIVE UFESTYLEifl
Largo living room, largo kitchen with oaling
eraa 3 nlco aiu ~droomo , 2 bath&amp;. Plus
spa~ lor tomorrow'&amp; growing family .. 26x16
unfinishod family room. Added foatunll onclude
nice covorod pelio, attachod 2 cor garage. All .
thoHiocatod on Groen To'Mlship on 1.25 acres
al an affordable price ol only $59,000.
1&amp;15
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY IN
EXCELLENT CONDJnON
Oulslanding polential on this drlvo·thru carryout. Greallocation along SL Rt. 35. 3 bedroom
rooldenco includod in salo. Lots ~I road
lronlllge Will include invenlory and oqu1pmant.
'
1513
HAVE YOU ALWAYS WANTED 10 BUILD AT
CHARdLAIS LAKE ESTATES
Bul cou!OO't find 11111fordeblo lot? Wol .look no
more .,.... got ~. 1,2385 acra, rnA, woth lako•
pnvii~Q.a. Priced alonly$10,000.
I&amp; I&amp;

car

gas furnace installed recendy also. Beautiful riv

or view to enjoy from the shade ol tha maple
!lees. Priced al$59,500.
111&amp;
AFFORDABLE HOME IN GREEN
TOWNSHIP!
Piclura yourself in lhis 3 bedroom raneh located
in a fam ily oriented noighbomood that your kids
will loval You will liko lhe convenoence lo
shopping, hospitaol, ole. Home offers lonnal
living room , famoly room, large eal-on kiiChen,
1~. baths and 2 car garage. Call today to viaw
this homo.
1232.

WANT A BEAUTY OF A HOME WITHOUT
A BEAUTY OF A PRICE?
Then this 1988 Fai1111on1 TownshouH ( 14x70)
is lor you. Large living room, dining area with
buih-in bullet, large mas1er bedroom with buih·
in desk and drosoer, 2nd bedroom, large bath
with garden IUb. Encloud laundry ar.. with
new Whi~pool wuhor and dry•r. Outdoor area
offors nice deck, concrete block aidllwalks and'
storage building. Localed on a rented lol or
move to your own lot. Offered at a price lhal
can'l be ~al, only $15,50011
H10

YOUR "GET STARTED" HOME
.
Seltlo Into this homof thrH bedroom wolh
lanced backyard. You'll love the largo ,kolchen
and adjoining cozy lamoly room . Pnced al
$37,900.
t505
CLOSE TO T!)WNI

1•.41 acrtl, me or leu, vacant land on
Johnoon Ridge Road. Rural waler available.
Mlnerot righla tnd gas wen go wilh lhe property.
$28,500. .
.
- 1516

.

Wiseman Real Estate
(614).46·364·4 ·'

·oavld Wlsem-.n, Broker, 446·9555· ·
'.
. LORETTA McDADE; 448-7729
CAROLYN WAS.CH, 441-1001
a. J. HAIRSTON.~:~B-4240
SONNY GARNES;448-~707

Jim's Farm Equlp•nt Canter

$17,1110 - VERY NICE 11M MOBILE HOME -

GrHn

-

Pre-81110n Speclll• on Kultara 1nd Flnlahlng

110U111•- N&amp;AR NEW SHOPPING CENTER. H0M1
HAS a BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, FAMILY ROOM, LARG!

~-'

LOTS OF LOTS
We hove 9 lola In Plantz Subdlvlolon lhll hl'l:l
all kinds or possibllltlea. All utillllea ovoilable.
1214
Graallocalion lor oparlmlllt buildings.

Mo- 4 to 10 ft. 3lp *ncl pull
\
INDUSTRIAL: Cat. 131 B. D-4 E
JD 850 w/Winch, under·clfflql.
&amp;50 flwly blldl, pillar ltllr.
lllcllhwl • 110'Super E cab • 171 orlgllllil hra.

VAN ZAHT RD. '- NI!AII KYGER - 8 ROOM HOME.
APPAOX. auc. SH,liOO.
•

~

BEST UTTLE RANCH AROUND - Take a
look and you'll ~ told on this opollell 3 bed·
room , t Y, ~lh brick with one car ottachod
garage. Notlar from town on a deadend otrHI.
Tho price just $48,500.
1502

Starti It 1750

$50't, Loetltd 2236 ur1ham
School Ad., N11r Ctntinary,

Real Estate General

'"' ...,.,.:

$8,250

Lind. Col1614·256·1526.
3 Bodroom, 2 Balh Homt~ Uppor

Ridge Ave. at Weat College, Rio Grande, Ohio
Phone 245·9321
Each
Bible

OVII 50 USED TRACTORS IN STOCK

IH Cub wlcultlvldora, Super C wfl. row cuttir
J&gt;D. 2-2850 • 85 hp wlclb and 1Ir, 400 dal. 440 ga.
·
2-4/wheal drlv1 triCtora &amp;o-70 hp
Nitw Vlcon 461 bllen • HrYicecl.. •.•.$6185.00
U1td 811«1, r1u1, mow.,., hayblnaa - 7 •II ft.

OCIIft, n11r Atelllurant

Row ond goll couroee,
prlvll8 pool. Spring r1te1
IYilllbla. SSD.oo doc:ounl
for eorly booking exlendlld lo April hL
For lnformoUon oncl/or
rnervoUone, coli The
llllldlcll Shoppe, Inc., 4452201, Mondor• lhru
Frl 1 N

3 Bedroom Homt On 1 Acre Of

TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH

lb,

MF to 20-35-50-135-1&amp;o-115-175-255-:zt5.275-418t
FORD 8N-IN-&amp;01-H1·60Q0.20CJ0.550 good cond.

lor eprlng 111d oumm11,
lle1p1 I, overlooking

2 btdroom home, 3 acr11, Along
Ohio River, At. 33, Ltlan , 304"·
895-3461.

SUNDAY MORNING SERVICE ................. 10:30 A.M.
SUNDAY EVENING SERVICE.....................&amp;:OO P.M.
MONDAYTHRU FRIDAYSERVICES ......... 7:00P.M.
PASTOR DON PLOESSER-SPEAKER
Ct11t oo4 ltr't 1•1 •••••tell4 ortt~ ...~ otloor oiNI lloo Lor4.

.

IS to 90 IP

OIANNR IWliiiiNIAlS
Maw •lklll fHIIYIIIona

MARCH 29TH THRU APRIL 3RD

•ct95°0

"'oael'lll.

Announcements

MEETING:

100 cu. ln. angina, tough, relllble 1nd economlc•l

.

3

Roducod To Sill: $49,900,
Cholhlro, Ohio. 904·932·6959,
904-132-7670, 614-381-0649.

GET-

NEW SHENNI~ TRAOOR 2/2$
1 apead tr1na., 25 hp, dleaal, 31P,

HARRISON , TWP. - A-FRAME HOME HAS 3
BEDROOMS, 1:-1 BATHS1' SURROUNDED BY
BEAUTIF\JL WOODS. $27,000.

Stlta 'Aoia I&amp; Weat, Gllllpolll, Oh.

Pliant 441-em or ~13

'
•

..

abolort nontradltiontl

Announcements

•\i
'

.. ...- . .

-~

.. -· ', ..... ... - ........... . .............. , .... ...,._,
~

~

·•" .,

""

,,.....

• • • "'I I

I

....

_.._~ ··· M- ·- ---~

..

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

FrM elgf11-k job propontlon
p~ram

•'

Own Locot Pay Phonu, Call

Real Estate

615-5737.

SPRING SALE

'

AIR FURNACE, CENTRAL AIR
BASEMENT GARAGE. $85 ,000.
RIO GRANDE AREA - CONTEMPORARY STYLING,
COUNTRY SETTING. HOME FEATURES SUNKEN
LIVING ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, FORMAL DINII'IG,
WORK.SAVER KITCHEN WITH NEARBY FAMILY
ROOM AND GLASSED SUNROOM. 3 BEDROOMS, 2~
BATHS, DEN OR OFFICE. PROFESSIONALLY
DECORATED. LOTS OF SPACE FQ~ RECREATION
AND FAMILY ROOMS IN BASEMENT, BARN, OVER 7
ACRES. IDEAL FOR HORSES. NEW ON ~E MARKETI
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT.
ROUTE t&amp;O, ..SPRINGFIELD TWP. - CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED NEAR NEW SHOPPING CENTER. HOME
HAS 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, FAMILY ROOM, 75
ACRES , LOTS OF SPACE. AFFORDABLE PRICE
$35,000.

Business
Training

MuHum acctpllng applications,
kitchen
peraonntl
end/or
propoalt from organlutlont
lnltrtlltd In gtllll'ltfng Income
on percent•;• blalt. Somt
wHktnd hours rtqulrtd. Rtl·
taur~nt ••Pirltnct helpful. 304·

WANT A HOME AT AN AFFORDABLE
PRICE?
THAT YOU CAN MOVE RIGHT INTO?
you nted lo taka a look at this ~auly.
living/dining room comblnaUon , nle•
kltcnttn iWih laundry araa, 3 ~droom and 2
Newly painted ceilings and exterior.
Cornbir11 thio low price with low inloresl ralos
you can fulfill your homeowno~s dream.
$32,000.
1613

Merchandise

••

Sl1lo

NEW USTING OVERLOOKING RIVER
Channing homo localod along Rt. 7 oftoro a
pleasanl way ol life. While tho beautifu l Ohio
Rivoratrollo along in the Iron!, you can enjoy a
relaxing dip in lhe inground pool. Well
decorated inside wilh 3 bedrooms , woodwork
with character and a lull basement. Garden
spo~ wrap-around driveway. $50s.
1217

· 54 MIIIC:ellaneoua

CAPTlVATING VIEW - 3 BEDROOM, ~ BATH RANCH
HAS 1800 SO. FT. LIVING AREA. fAMilY SIZE
KITCHEN HAS NEW DISHWASHER, SNACK BAR,
LENNOX HEAT PUMP. 1 ACRE LAWN. $~,000.

Y~glnlo

Real Estate General

Rlfundll. No E)lptrilnct NacH·

Rick Pooroon Auction Compony,

, We wi1h to thank all
tha wonderful people
lor lha food, llowara,
~rayera, ate. Al10
thank• to Dr. Spencer,
kim Follrod, nuraaa at
VMH, and Ewlnga.
Special thanka to Tina
~tory of Ho 1111 Heal1h
pnd Rev. Syden·
atricker during the ill·
~·•• and death of our
I"Other, Ora Sinclair.
God Blao1 you all.

•

LOT. 535,000.

n...,,
Wol1

l::;:o:;t

Rofundod.
Elm Up To 11,!100 Por Wook
Procoalng HUu, FHA Oov't

rr-z.,,

Cute E111t1r PufJPI-a: 2 Black
Ml4tl, 1 Black Ftmalt, 7 WHkl

oond lmmedolol~

~:::C,
110 R~~- _3_A_n_n_o_u_nc_e_m_..:e_n.,;,ts:..._
vo1- To: D&amp;A So:!f.111•, Box '
"'F
M43, olrbom, OH 4 4.
• POSTAL JOBS •
YOUR AREA
Super Stru1te111 Baton
$23,700 Per Ytlr PIUI Btntlltl,
Corp. accepting new
Poltal Carrlsrs, Sontra, Cltrb.
For An Appllcatktn And Eum
membera. Meel al DAV
lnlormollon eon 1·21V.7341-N01
building Tueoday,
Ext. P-1432 1 1.m. To 9 p.m., 7
Daya.
5:30. For more
AVON • All orooo, Coil Morllyn
informallon call
Wuvtr 304-882-2045.
Teresa EMiman
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
446·9668 or
Exeelllnl
Poy,
BtM1ho,
Gina Jones 446-33n
Transportttlon,
407-2i2-4i'l7.
Ext.

waaher houuhol
lttma, whltlctlalr, Uti chllr,
ciOChlng. mloc., no chocko

CuJt pupploo • holf St. Bomord,
614-949-2861
8

Help Wanted

•••

full time aiiCI.laneer, complete

AS A4
UNIT RENTAL. WOULD MAKE LOVELY ONE FAMILY
RESIDENCE. $46,000.

fi

IOfiMMr, 614·742•2V3Z

Old 614-446-8610.

...-..:;.

lrf

11

::~:-:~---.--:-.....,,...,..,..
~~~~~=====... OOQ Thou

At Lone Stor Bonk, 110 SOu1h 3 fomiiV Vlrd 1111, Wtd., April
~In, P.O. Boxl27, Highland, TX 1•, t.glnnlng at tarn, next to
T7112.
Pomeroy eltmenlary Ghoal
Unaltochod? MHl Aroo Slngloo 3 fomlly yo1d 1111, Molen, boThrouah Our Slngloo Newolol· olde Poooloo Bonk, Thuto., Fri.,
ltr1 Ylrlta: Singlet, P,O. Box Sat., W, 'baHblll 01rd1
1043, Clolllpollo, Ohio 4513t
KARA ESTATE SALE
April 21h"' 4, M, 0742 SR 124,
4
Giveaway
Syrocuoo, onolquot, fumltlN'Iil
Wl~lr

FAST ACTION ON THIS HOME CAN SAVE
$5,000. FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY OWNERS
REDUCED THIS PROPERTY FROM $52. 000 TO
$45,000. 3 BEDROOMS, 1!-\ BATHS, FAMILY ROOM,
CARPORT. OVER AN ACRE LOT.

pet,

loll: Wolker c_, hound, 1101

bpeniQ. Trust Fund

IY~!~•bl!'

Employment Servtces

loci

Fundo A,.. Nooclod To Holp For
Fun~r1l

151 Second Awsnu1, Gtlllpotlt. '

roword, 304·372-a452, coli col·

Pasted Away Marcl1 &amp;, 1112.

v..ra

- - - - - - - - - Old, COL, Cloon Record And 2
9 Wanted 10 B
Ynrs
Experience.
Sind
___..:.;.:,.:.:..,:,:U:_Y__ Rooumo To: P.O. Box 400, Gol·
Top Pri- Plid: All Otd us I :ll:po
:::.:l::
l•:..:·OH
:.::.4::58::3c;I.. , - - - Coino, Gold Ringo, Sltv"' Colno'
Gold Coino. M.T.S. Coin Shop'

6 Lost &amp; Found
i-Lo:-:01':":-::F:O:uM~B;;;Iood~od7.Fe~mo:::l:-o::ala=-c:::k

..

•

·-

llpollt,Ohlo Bttwllln lAM and12

3

AUDREY F. CANADAY, BROKER

PRIVATE WOODED AREA - BEAUTIFUL PINE S
SURROUND THIS OUTSTANDING REDWOOD HOME.
THE COMFORTS OF THIS HOME ARE ENDLESS.
INFORMAL FAMILY ROOM/KIT CHEN AREA.
BEAUTIFUL FORMAL LIVING ROOM AND DINING
ROOM . 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, LARGE STUDY OR
HOBBY ROOM OPENS ONTO DECK ON SECOND
FLOOR .
EPLACE IN LIVING RO OM.
WO•ODIBUFINER IN FAMILY ROOM. 2 CAR GARAGE. 9

. .

hoon? AVON, ''" gift wllh
olgn-up, eotl Koy, SM·992·Tt80

encounter

134 Nice season
136 Heavenly being
137 Estimate
139 llallan currency
140 Slrikes
144 Dress border
145 Capuchin monkey
146 Decimal base
147 Full-hOuse: abbr.
148 Tennis stroke
149 Everyone
151 Iron symbol
153 Beas1 of burden
155 Proceed
157 Savannah 's sl.

317-1111-2000

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Ob·

LINDA G. SKIDMORE
REALTOR 379-2686

CITY CONVENIENCE WITH ALL OF
COUNTRY LIVING. OVER 2,000 SQ. FT. LIVING AREA
PLUS CARPORT. LIVING ROOM HAS FIREPLACE,
FAMI LY ROOM, DINING ROOM, LARGE BEDROOMS,
ONE FULL BATH, TWO HALF BATHS. ATTIC HAS WIDE
STAIRCASE ACCESS. LOTS OF STORAGE SPACE .
WALK TO DOWNTOWN SHOPPING. SCHOOLS AND
CHURCH. PRICED LOWI

14

child, contiC1 SIOVI Lltz. Any.

jectives you establish for yourseu are

or feminine
105 Palh
106 Suils
107 Let fall
111 Kind of cheese
112 Deposils
113 Periods ollime
115 Play leading role
116 Borsch!
lngredlenl
118 Church pari
119 Anolher singer
named Johnny
121 Landed
properlies
123 Spanish arl lcle
125 Confllcl
126 Bold
127 Cycllndrical
129 Armed band
130 Mountain nymph
131 Prohlbll
132 Pugilislic

couptt'a child, m1111 bt 11- 35
yro. of ogo l provlooiY hod 1

wantld 'to

tor CIFrylng I

NMd extra c11h? OWn products
at 1 diiCOunt? Work your own

© 1992 by NEA. Inc.

Nied Your Htlp: Dougla• Ua10n

HOM ES, FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 LOC UST STREET GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

Will tiki Clf'l Df tld•ly ltdy In
my homt, lkptritncld, tw.ve
rat., ratOI\Iblot, 3o.-773-D'185

omplovmont (ONOW), cttl1-800631-1508.

iii§

446-3636cA~

Coemi10Cogi&amp;C Netdocl: Geuronloocl $110 · Por Wook Pold
Voeollone, Colll-7217.
Surrog01o Mothor wontod1 ~~~

tory ln Two Loeot Storoo, Apo
prox. 8 Hro Ptr MONTH 1-8008'/Wl!ll, Coll10 A.M. To 3P.M.

but Ieday could be an exception. Be
careful you don 't put your trust in someone who isn't very trustworthy.

Real Estat.:. General

Canaday Realty

,._..,-4101,

18

Women: mtkt mOHI monty!

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24·Nov. ~~ Usually,
you 're a pretty good judge of characler,

may not be as sharp mentally

a positive attitude today,

Avon: No lorrllorloo.._loll To
Prlonde, '•mlly.

Surroallo llolhen Wantod, Foo A1tr1ln
Nowii!Southttlltm
PI• ex,.._ For CIITylng A luolnao Colloge,
Spring Valloy
Coupll'o
Child.
Muel
Bo
111-35
MEDICAL LABORATORY TECH·
Plou. Coli Todoy, 114-446-436111
NlClAN: ·lm,.dlaiO Full·Timo And Provto•tr Hod A Child. Rogl11•otlon 1110-45-127'18.
Poslllono Avollable For Modlcol Sieve Lhz. Ally., 317·1111-2000.
Loborolory Tocllnlelono AI HWI• TELEPHONE COMPANY JOBS
tlnaton, WV, DtPirlmtnt Of
17.80 • $15.71/H~., V:our
Voforono Allalro Modlcol Conlor. Slorl
Aroo. Mon And Wornon _,od: 17 Miscellaneous
Modom Loborotory In Modlcol No
Experltnct Ntcnury. For
Contor Wllh Activo Affllltlllon lnlormollon Coli: 1-DQD-'1110-4511, VIOLIN LESSONS B. Thomoo
Wl1h Tho llorolloll Unl...,hy Ell. 8432, I A.M. • 8 P.M. 7 Day&amp;, P.O. BoX 52, Rio Grandt, oH
School Of llocllclno. Ou11lllca· $12.95 FM. Mu&amp;l bo 18 or older.
451'111. Phono: 114-245-5888.
lion lloqulr...,.nt II A Minimum
Of 1 Yeor Of Spoclolfzod Ex- Tho Town of Now Hovon lo od·
18 Wanted to Do
....,_ In llodlcol Llborolory vtnlling tor pool manager tnd :~;;:;::=;::-;:-~~::":'"":'"~
Work 0. 4 Yotra 01 Educotloil ll~uaraa. '.ffvlcatlon• •r•
Abovo Tho High School Lovol lVI llblt Ntw Ytn City Bldg. : ; lr~~~e:r:~:.oz~~~~:r::
Lotdlng To Boch-'o Doaroo
In MeiiiCII Llbor1tory Itch· Vkl• Store nNdl full 1nd pan Call 114·245-5887.
tlmt help. Must: be able to work
nology, Annuli Solory Ronge dly
and evenlnga. ApDir In pere For c111nlng, wallpapering,
$17,eaf • $22,918 Wltn Exc:ellont
Fringe Btnelltl And Leave ton Monday lltrch ~.1802 It palnllno, lmtn dry Will repairs.
Polley. For Further Information Spring Vollly Video locotod 114-44a:a706 or 388-a71t
Contact Ptraonnel S.rvlct, 1540 Spring Volley Plou, R1 35 Ool· Ooorgn Ponoblo Sawmill, don't

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) lf someone

as

SHuetlon
Wanted
,,.. 11- I loopd ono lnfonl
child ""!como. M..l be cloon
IINI1Worthy 114-415-341V

'

1-801J.It2-6356..

fort and emotion might be focused on
something that won ' t improve your life.
maintain

AVON I All Areu I Shirley

Spooro, 304-615-1429.

Sunday

12

Help Wanttcl

piUI llpiftltt

sure to state your zodiac sign .
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) Frivolous
pursui ts should not be allowed to interfere with your more seriou s affairs today. Put them at the bottom of your
agenda. af1er you've attended to your
duties.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) If you are unable to achieve your objectives today,
don 't look for scapegoats. If your expectatiOns exceed your capabilities. the
fault could be yours.

gets you'll be aiming for may be of little .....
conseQuence. Plan ahead .
::

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) ll you

11

Halp wantld

Ill lod Lona Torm Coro FooiiHy
looking loOiol Worker. I .I.W.
Prolerrid. leMIM Pocklgo
Avolloble. lond AHume To Ail·
mlnlltrator Plnecmt Car1 Cent~r, 170 P1neci'HI Drive, Ott·
llpollo, OH 45131.

N~V6f. Kl~~ A CAl /MM£t&gt;tATay AfTER..
~1/M(:f AN ~NTI ~E R.oU... Qf L-!FE?AVERS

tions today. Mail $1 .25 plus along, self·

wv

OH-Polnt

ARIES !Morch 21·Apnl19) Stro&gt;e to be
astu te todai 1n your in volvement s. You
must be ~ery carelul not to get immersed in something where control is
dominateCI by others. MaJOr changes
are ahead tor Aries in th e coming year.
Send lor Aries ' Astra-Graph predic-

your pal.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Your resolve Is likely 10 inlensily as lhe day
lengthens, but , unlorlunelely, your ef·

thoroughly before gelling in loo deeply.
75 Eagle's nesl
77 Twelve dozen
78 Lei 11 sland
80 Singer Johnny 81 Indian weigh!
83 Alflrmalive vote
84 Cicalrlx
87 Moral principles
89 Repeals
90 Sum
91 Angry
92 Wasle melal
93 Dispatched
95 Menial image
96 Lubrlcaled
97 Wanls
99 Marshes
101 Nol masculine

March 29, .1892

29, 1992

. .---·-

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

Page-04-Sunday Times-sentinel

8

YEARLINGS

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Excellent Pedigrees Sire

ANTIQUE &amp; COLLEOIBLES
AUCTION

8

PARTIAL USTING:
Library table, drum table, (2) pressback rocker, china
cabinet, cha1rs, ironing board, bedroom suite, small
cabinet, Duncan Phyffe tables, light &amp; dark bed, swirl
dish pans, iron keHies, pipe bed. wooden bed, load
grinders, top for Hoosier cabin et, 5 gal. crocks, other
crocks, scales, bamboo bird cage, clocks, advertisement items, salt &amp; pepper shakers, kids lunch boxes,
cigar boxes, old telephone . Fenton, Carn1val, McCoy
glass, baby dolls, comic books, box loads items, ca rpenter boxes, floor lamp, push plow, rugs, p1ct ure
frames, brass items , pocket knives , straight razors,
more ~ems coming in too late to get in ad.
INFO CALL
AUCTIONEER RNIS ISAAC 388-9370
OR ISAAC FEED STORE 388-8880
Lie. &amp; Bonded $3na
Not Responsible for Accidents or Lost Items

44

tor Sale

Apartment
tor Rent

141165 Mobllt Home For Salt, 1 bedroom apt, ~ood location,

614·256·6898.

101 Sixth &amp; Matn Sl. Newly

1964 10X50 Vtry Good Cond. remodeled with new appliances.
Many ntw IIams. $2,800 after Utilities not Included, deposit

8:PM 614·245-9681

required, 304·675·1'131 or 675·

5936.

1969 Buon 12x65, 2br, 2 AC,

Undarplnnlng, Waahar, Oryar, 1 Bedroom, Total Electric, Be
Atfrlgerator, Stove, Part Furn ., Ready 1st Of April. $185/mo. Rio

Good Condition! 614·446-2871 Grande, Ohio. 614-388-9946.
After 5p.m.
2 bedroom apt, utilities paid,
1i16 Concord, 12x60, furnished Hud approved, 304-67S.2n2 .
wfnaw furniture, Wisher &amp; dryer, 2 BR unfurnished, no pets,

air concl, $7,900. Daro 304-675· downtown Naw Haven, WV.,
7870.
HUD approved 614·992-~81

197i Clairmont, 3 bedrooms 3 room effeclertcy apt., 1 bdrm.,
gas heat I central air, washer &amp; nice location , utilities Included,

dryor, $8,000. 304.075-7294.

614·992·5949
1983 Nashua, 3 bedroom, 14x70 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
with 7x12 11p.1ndo, CA, Ouun BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

waterbad, garden tub, all ap·
pllancas, 10120 deck, $14,500.

Must move, 304-675-7860 or 675·

3594.

ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pike
from $192/mo. Walk to shop &amp;
movies. Caii614-446·256S. EOH.

Complatly Fumistlad Small
1i85 Shultz, 14x60, untumlshad,
vinyl underpennlng, porch, 2 House, $250/mo. Plu1 Utilities,
calling tan1, sat up on rantod
lot, will lake payoff, $10,000.

anytime 304-675-1~7.

Ancl Oopaslt. 614-446-4338. Call
Before 7p.m.

19Si Schullz mobile home, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths, 304-675·

Furnished Apar1ment 1 Bed·
room,~. Utililles Paid, $260/mo.
920 t"our1h Avenue Gallipolis
Ohio, 614-446-4416 After 7p.m.

19i'l Sunshine 14x65, 2br, 2
Baths, Now On Rented Lot, 614·

FumlsMad Apanmont, 1br, nal1
to Library, parking, central heat,
air, references. 614-446-0338,

1883.

441·1016.

Before ?p.m.

2 bdr., 8145, $3000 or rent $250

per mo.1 all utllilies furnished,

614-9411-2586

33 Farms tor Sale
75
acre
tum,
modem
housa;t065 Lb Tobacco base,
bam &amp; ohod. 4V2 ml ~om town.

614-446-9436

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
10 acrea, 35 x 50 commercial
building, city walar available,

681 Rd. fronlogo, $15,000, 614·
6!16-13n
20 Acres, 15 Wooded, 5 Cleared,

And Watar, Electric.

Saptlc

112,000
9!198.

Nogotlablo. 614·388·

3 Nice Homeslln. St. Rl. 35 W.
Ownor Financing 614·245-9448
Building thu for sale: 1 to 5
acrn on Bidwell Mount Olive

Rcacl. 614-388-8794.

Lots tor sail, traliert accep-

table. 304-e75-27'22.
Lcto In Galllpollo Forry • 100%

owner financing at $98.64 per

month, 1ny one of four lots
available; 304-675-2722.

Loll In New Hav1n - 100%
owner financing at $101.46 per
month buys all tnraa lots, 1304-

675-2122.

Lott joining Point • 100% owntr

financing at $101.46 per mant n
buys all """ loll. 304-675·
2722.

36

Real Estate
Wanted

Walllod: Rooldonllol Building
Let Or Acr01go Fer Ouallty
t-lom... Mutt 81 Within 5 Miles
Of Holz1r HotpHal On Blacktop

Rood. 1-304-273-2140.

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·

room apartments

at

Manor
and
Rivtr&amp;lae
Apartmenttln Middleport From
S196. Call614·992-7787. EOH.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

for signs.

AUCTION
Thursday, April 2, 1992 al 7:00 P.M.
Mrs. P. A. Sayre, having moved from her horne al
Arbuckle, W. Va. to a smaller house in Point
Pleasant, W. Va. sell the following household
goods, antiques, workshop Items and personal
effects of the late P. A. Sayre.
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTABLES
Drop front secretary, brass kettles, potbelly stove,
mantel clocks, kitchen clocks , church pew, ice tongs,
blacksmith tools, wash boiler, milk can , washboard,
picture frames, apple butter stirrers, old chairs, lanterns, rockers, cow bell, baby toys , side saddle, sola
table, beer si gns, crocke r tin , organ stool, nail keg,
wood boxes, stone jars, Coca-Cola box, chest, cran·
berry hobnail lamp, ironware, egg basket, player pia·
no with rolls, general store biscuit case marked
Dayton Biscu~ Co., Laurel Band crackers and cakes,
Dayton. Ohio, butter churn, Wagoner skillets, doilies,
wooden wagon, and much, much more.
HOUSEHOLD
Panasonic microwave, re1rigerator, air conditioners,
lamps, office desk and chair, baskets, utility stand,
several chest of drawers, many chairs, bar stool,
group end and stand tables, set ol dishes, glass·
ware, set of flatware, Corningware, alum. cookware,
card tables, sweepers , Sylvania console color TV.
mirrors, pictures, electrical kitchen appliances, pots
and pans, dishes, 1olding bed, lamps, upright freez er. many, many boxes o1 assorted hou sehold goods
and home ca re items.
MISC.
P1pe cuner, le al blower, lawn chairs, bug light. child's
wagon , bird cage, ladder, ice cream 1reezer, lawn
garden tools , seeder, wash tub , hand tools. weight
bench , exerciser. cigarene machine, 4 drawer file
cabinet, books, tractor seats, wire stretcher, pu sh
lawn mower, meat sl1cer. fern stand, and much,
much more .

OWNER, LOUISE SAYRE
Cash Positive

Eats

3 bedroom 2 ttory nome,
refrllrtnet I depolil required,

3 Btdroom Duplex, Water Pakl,

Public Auction Sale

3br

Hacno In Uon:orvlllo.
Ao1oNnco And Dopoolt. 114-441·
1151.
Avoltcoblo April lit: 2 BR mobile
homo, GIMC1 ochool aroa; 2 BR
city ac:hool aroo. 814-256·

14111.

E. Soconcl St., P-Of, 3bdrm.,
1 112 blth, llrg~o ll¥1ng· room,
&lt;fi~-.
ldtchon 1•11Y
carpilod, no poll, rol. I. clop.
~· $3001 mon., 814·985-

'

HouN for Nnl In Syracu•, 614--

1112'1"1

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 - - HIICI
oU accoptod,
- · Aohlon
~cl,
3042 ledroom MobUa Hame, You

~~~

Utlllloo, DopoaH Ro-

m ·'" -

Ano. 814-311-

3 lcd 00111. Total Eltctrtc, No
Drufl Or Orlnlclng, 114-

-J:;
31'1-

'

-----=-Re-a-:-1::-Es-t-at_e_G_e-ne-r-al--~---1 44

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION

ESTATE AUCTION
REAL ESTATE &amp; PERSONAL PROPERTY
SAT., APRIL 4, 1992-1 0A.M.
This Is lhe auction of the late Dorothy M. Garnes.
Located on St. Rt. 33 between New Haven end
Ripley, W. Va.
"GREENHOUSES"
1-40'x50' double hoop and two 24'x50' single Hoop.
"GREENHOUSE EQUIPMENT"
4 furnaces, vent lans, thermostats, B'x45' seed
staning heating bed, plant tables, dirt bin . plast ic
water line for inflating top &amp; side of greenhouse, pots,
llats and all kinds ol misc. lor greenhouse.
"REAL ESTATE"
3 acres of flat ground with 2 story garage like
structure, excellent home bui lding site. ·Real estate to
be auctioned at 12:30 P.M&gt;
MOBILE HOME
1973 Holley Park 14'x70', 3bedroom, 1 bath .
"HOUSEHOLD "
Duncan Phyfe drop-leaf table, sofa, chairs, coffee &amp;
end tables, recliner, blonde double bed, window air
condition er, dining able &amp; 4 chairs, table lamps,
antique picture, small roll top desk, office chair,
Maytag washer. Kelvinator relrigerator, chest deep
lreeze r, Sunray gas stove (green}, Kenmore dryer,
marble telephone stand, marble top stand, misc .
dishes, pots, pans and lin en.
"FARM EQUIP., LAWN &amp; GARDEN AND TOOLS"
135 D.M.F. tractor, 3 pl. disk, scraper blade. 3 pt. subsailer, cement mixer w/electric motor, IH Cub Cab
lawn tractor, cu ltivators, 8 H.P. Troybuilt tiller, 3 pt.
fertilizer spreader, 3j pt. sprayer, 12 hp 608 A.C. 5
speed riding mower, MTD mower, horse drawn plant
setter, Low Boy, Farney arch welder, gas weedeater,
torches, hoses &amp; gauges, welding rod box, tool boxes,
table work bench, shop vac, shop table , Homelite
55,000 watt. 120/240 V. generator, approx. 10·20,000
6' oak tomato stakes, Gravely tractor pans . lawn
roller, approx. 200' irrigation pipe, vice, tools, 2 walk-in
coolers and lots more.
"VEHICLES"
1984 Mazda 82,000 Pickup, Chevy II Nova 1968, 1
ton 1946 Ford truck, 1971 Dat sun truck for parts, 1972
Datsun truck, 1977 Dodge paneVcub van truck.
RETA \l ROUSH-ADMINISTRATRIX
DAN SMITH-AUCTIONEER-W.VA. *515
Phone 614-949·2033
Terms : Cash
Positive ID
Refreshments
TERMS ON REAL ESTATE
$3,000.00 day of auction In cash or Certified
check. ~alance due in lull al closing within 30
days. Sale of real eelale aubjecllo approval of
ADMINISTRATRIX- RITA V. ROUSH
Announcements by auctioneer take precedence
over printed maller.

·THURSDAY EVE., APRIL 16, 1992
6:00P.M••
This is an inventory reduction for the Water
Dist. Located on St. Rt. 124 outside ol
Rutland, Ohio.
TRUCKS
1987 Fold Custom 150 4X4 aut.
1987 Fold Custom 150 4X4 aut.
1986 Fold Bronco II 4 speed, 4X4 w/radio and air, 80,915
miles.

1977 Fold F250XLT Ranger 2 whoel aut.
TRACTOR &amp; MISC.
1983 Mitsubishi 4 wheel drive Buck tractor.
Wood 3 pl. Billy Goat mower w/chains.
Fiberglass camper top.
Canon 270 Fax machine.
OWNERS-LEADING CREEK WATER DIST.
DAN SMITH-AUCTIONEER 949-2033
Ucenu J57-68-1314
JOHN SMITH-APPRENTICE License 5518
Cash
PositivoiD
Viewing to be held Mon.· Thurs . office hours lhru salt
timeAp~il13thru 16.

45

STEPPING
beautilul it will lake your breath awayl 2 story
contemporary surrounded by pines outsido, designed with
pine walls &amp; trim inside. Features 4 bedrooms, 211 balhs,
fireplace, bay window, basement on 3Y, acres. NOW
$104.900.

SATURDAY, APRIL 4, 1991-10:00 A.M.

Also traller IPICI. All hook-ups.

haru molar, $400, &amp;14·742·2bo1

ca.u after 2:00 p.m., 304·773·
5851, Mason

.wv.

46 Space for Rent
next to

P.P.H.S. EKe vlalbUUy, ovallablo
lmmodlatoly, 304-675-67111 .
For Lease

Second Floor Apartment For
Loaoo: LR., Ono B.R., Both,

KUchon WI Stovo &amp; Rohfg.

Water Fumlshtd. No Pets. Cor·

nor Sacond &amp; Pin~ Galllpclla.
$230. Por Mcnlh; uopoolt Roqulrod. Coli 614-446-4249, 614446·2325, Or 614-4411-4425.

machines, 7' 3 pt. scraper blade, 2-1 2" tuming plows, MF
Sunllower hay rake, 2 wheel lann trailer, flat bed wagon,
rototiller, push mower. some older HD equipment, horse sui·

NEW
- 'How aboul a pleasanl I
frama homo with 6 rooms, 2·3 badrooms, 1 beth,
plaster/panel· walls, wood/carpet flooring, gas F.A. heal,
lull basament w/garago, unit air, cable hookup on paved
street. All for only $28,000.

ky, hay conveyor, Craftsman 8 hp riding mowar wf36" mowing deck, air compre ssor, Marquette cutting torch w/gauges
&amp; hoses, Craftsman 11 hp ricing mower (4 speed) with 36"
mowing deck (used one season), one lot of hay, one lot of

used lumber.

POMEROY - Hera is a nice 2 bedroom 1Y, story home
with carpal, built-in book shelves, patio and rear balcony
lor enjoying spring afternoons viowing the Ohio River.
Also a 1y, car garage. ASKING $23,500. Owner would
like to seii ...Make an offe~
·

VEHICLES: 1974 Ford 250 Pickup Truck wnopper, 1977
Dodge car, two 1979 LTD Fo.g automobiles.
HOUSEHOLD: Gibson ralrigerator, Speed Queen dryer, ·
Kenmore electric range, dmette set w/4 chairs, small writing
desk, recliner, cot and chair, Wann Moming fuel oil stove,
L.A. suite , chest of drawers, two sewing machines , Hot

Point cites! type deep freeze, lloor lamps, electric heaters,

NOT 1 BUT 3 COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS- in a PRIME
location in Middleport' Includes a small 201&lt;27 garage. If

kitchen cabinet, porch glider, lawn tumiture, pots &amp; pans.

ANTIQUES AND MISCELLANEOUS: Handmade baskats,
kerosene lamps, iron kettle, old lanterns, 2 mantel clocks,
old irons, wooden boM, one lot of hand tools, stoneware,

you're looking for an investmenL .Here It is! Call for

deleils'

and other relics, one lot of mtscelianeous items.

MAJOR REDUCTIONI - This 60x 100 vacant lot on Main
Street in Pomeroy has been reduced lrom $3,900 to
$1,900. Come in quick on this ... It won't last longl

TERMS: Cash
Lunch Available
Auction by request: D. Dean Evan1, Executor of the
Ealalo
Lee Johnson

COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Pomeroy - Good location
with Main Street access. Lots of storage space! Reduced
to $15,000. Make an Offe~

AUCTIONEER
Crown City, Ohio
2~-6740

WE NEED USTINGSI SPRING IS THE BEGINNING OF
HOUSE HUNTING SEASON. MANY HUNTERS HAVE
THEIR SITE SET ON CLELANO REALTY! THEY'RE
LOOKING TO BAG THE HOME OF THEIR DREAMS. IF
YOU'RE SERIOUS ABOUT SELLING....CALL TODAY I

For Accidentl or Loaa

Real Estate General

HENRY E. CLELAND.........................................992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER.......... :................................949-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL................. ,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,949·2660
O&lt;FICE ...............................................................992-2259

ANSWER: He buys more shoes.

51

chain, $750, 614-992-71153

Large air comPrettor, 80 ga]:.o 5
Lawn Mower

Rep~lrs,

gal tuned

up lor oprlng. Sldoro Equipmont, 304~75-JI42t
Lowroy Cor.olo organ $300 An·
tlquo Dining Room Sol $8()0.
614-446-GlQJ
Murray Riding Llwn MoWir
11H.P.M. 3Sin llko Now 814-4461288
Patio tumHure, all solid red·
tabln, 2 ch1lr1

wood, 2 end

picnic

table

wtsaperatt

benchn, chase lounge, 2 Mit &amp;

537·9528.

Early

tlind-made

American

china cabinet. SlOO. 304·6757209 or 304-675-7554.
G.E. Refrlge111tor Frllltr On
Top $125; Whirlpool Dlohwaohor
Orig. Prlc:1 $450, Saerallca For

1150i Good Condlllon, And
Gauran111d To Wortl.l Also: AKC

Chlh•ahua P•pploa. 814·387·
1'109.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES

can

Located on Greer Road,
6 miles northeast of Point Pleasant,
off Rt. 2. Watch for signa.

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO.
LUNCH

TEA WS:Cuh or c:htc:kwlth 1.0.
Not Responsiblt !or ac::ident1 or lOss d ptope~
Ll:ensed and Bonded tn Ohio. Kentucky. &amp; W•l Vllglnla f66

men1ion.

1 Pickup step bumper, boat tra iler rollers, used 3 HP
Johnson boat motor. miscellaneous engine pans,
1975 VW camper, 9N Ford tractor. 6' disc, single
plow, and all w~h 3 point hitches .
THE OWNER HAS A RESERVE BID ON THE 1975
VW CAMPER AND THE 9N FORD TRACTOR.
AUCTIONEER: FINIS ("Ike") ISAAC
TELEPHONE: (614) 388-9370, 388-8880,669-6151
or 245·5939
TERMS: CASH OR LOCAL CHECK ONLY
Not responsible lor loss ol property or accidents.
LICENSED AND BONDED.

Real Estate General

"

,,

•

Real Estate General

fA~/_'
. .
rOP'. 17"'/ ..• J# ?Ji:') /) CR~!.J PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE
'-"tvtil
~, \::f/17UUJ,. ~ (,::JtJaUe
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER,3B8·8826
RESIDENTIAL· INVESTMENTS· COMMERCIAL· FARMS

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

614-446-TJSS,

-~cr.~.~

OIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR, 446-1806
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR, 446-1887
RUTH BARR, REALTOR, 446-0722
DEBORAH SCITES, REALTOR, 446-6806
LYNDA FRALEY, REAL TOR, 446-6806
MICHAEL MILLER,

~EAL TOR,

«e-6806

PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR, 245-9575

Complete home furnlstlings.
Hours! Mon-Sat, 9-5. 614·446·
0322, 3 mlltl out Bulevfllt Rd.
Free Delivery.
Nice 8 pc. living room tulle:
Early American, t)rawnj orange,
gold. $225; Recliner 50. 6t4-

1768. CEDAR RANCH HOME: SluBlect on 47 aaes

367-7264.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uald

ctous home located in an exclusive area .
Elavan total rooms with three bathrooms .
Foyer with open stairway, largo living room Wlth

Household furnishing. 112 mi.

woodbuming fireplace, lormal dining room ,

Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. PINaanl, WV,
eall304-675 -1450.
Aefrlgaralor, Sears, Frost Free,
Harveot Gold, $100. 814-256·
12:i8.
=::__-,...sw_A..,.IN_ __
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62

HELP!
WE'VE SOLD, SOLD, SOLD
IN THE RECENT MONTHS
AND WE NEED LISTINGS!

BEDROOM: Bunk Bods $99
(2r6); 4 Drawor Choot 01

gourmet kitchen, family room and game room

share an open lireplace. Solarium will let you
enjoy Four Seasons. Four oversized bed·
rooms. Master bedroom has cathedral ceiling ,
whirlpool bath and beautilul arched windows .

mil . Th is home features 5 BAs, and or, offloa,

pLayroom, 2'1, balhs, uiUity room, cathedral ceilings
over living room, din ing room and kitchen,
conversallon pltln ltvlng room wlstono fireplace .· Fire
1¥1d securlty alarm syslem. Finished fanity room Wllh
fireplace, heat pump and central air, 2 car garage,
covered pauo, bam wllh 2 horse stalls and tack room,
stockod pond. Home has Bpprox . 3000 sq. ft . liVing
space and many more amenities. Call lor more
lnlormallon

First floor laundry. Atta ched 2 car garage . Two
heat
with backup. 5.441 Ac. MIL If you

like
boK.

I your name can be on the mail·

BRICK BEAUTY wllh c:l!arm galOre. Tile SC!\111
couple wlllal In love wlh litis 3 bo&lt;i'm. ranc:l!. Cozy
!Oeplace In LA. Nice cablnelll In ldtc:hen. Lew goa
1r12. HIDDEN TREASURE - Sunxtslnalv loW pete&amp;
o1 $110,000. More than 5,000 sq . ft . of Nvlng space
and large rms. throughoUt Thll welt constructed
home orfers 4 bedrms., 2 baths, ~r and lower
living 2 ..to llroptcocu, llmlty rm., bulft·ln ldtchen
w.t&gt;..becue, 2 car gorago, 1st lloor laundry. ir!iJOUncl
pool and 40 oc. cr&gt;'1 ·.

Drawers $44.15; Twin MaHrtll

$11!1 Sat.

· Middleport, OH
CHESTER - AI. 7.- 1990 Total electric Spruce Ridge
t4x70 mobile home with 3 bedrooms, hoat pump, vinyl
underpinning, and two nics size decks. Sitting on 2X acr••·
ALL FOR $25,800

n3-5785

PARTIAL USTING:
King woodburner wlblower, small Norge washer, gas
stove, metal lawn cha irs, kerosene heaters, metal
shelves, metal cabinets, RCA 25" floor model tale·
vision, portable electric fireplace and mantel with
buitt-in stereo and bar.
Acryl ic car pa int (new), 5-1 gallon cans, miscellane·
ous car and house paint, windows, 1-20 fool plastic
awning, 2-8 foot plastic awnings, 1-10 fool metal
awning, cedar shingles,.4lrawer assortment cabinet,
painting equipment, transit level, hardwood flooring,
pickup side tool boxes, mill run 1" and 2" black walnut lumber, grease guns, 2-20 lbs. propane lanks,
steel pipe lining, 10 loot metal siding brake, miscella·
neous name brand hand, electric, mechanic, and ca[·
penter tools . Log chains, jig saw, sand blaster, 225
amp Lincoln welder, portable air compressor, creeper, jacks, Sears MIG welder w/cart (tank or electric},
15" Crager wheels and tires, hub caps, beauty rings , ~
fire helmet, electric wire , lawn mower, fishing equip· .,
ment, and many other items too numerous to

1·800-499-3499.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

LIVING ROOM: Sofa And Chair
$179 And Up: Coffoo And End
Tobin 179 And Up; Swlval
Roekoro $79.

205 North Seoond Ave.

MASON,WV

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
EXECUmiX: ELSA ROACH

Work booiO. 614-446-3159.
VI'RA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALORE I
614-446·3158

OFFICE 992·2886

wv,

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

furniture, hHtlr., Wntern &amp;

ANSWER: They get more listings.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

LOCATION:Take Eastern Ave. (Rt. 7) to
Lincoln Ave. and watch for sale signs. The
Circle Motel Is on the corner ol Lincoln Ave.
OWNER: VIrginia Kirby, owner of Klrby'e br
Kare, will be offering the following for auction
due to the closing of the butlneao.

THE ESTATE OF THE LATE
JEAN R. SAUER WILL BE SOLD.
HOUSEHOLD &amp; AN11QUES: maple tabla and 6 chairs,
round 09k bible cut to coffeo bible, bookcase, king size
bed, maple cltos~ desk, comer cabine~ several bibles,
coffeo table, roc:liner, swivel roclcer, old organ stool,
poctabla bladt Bl!d white lV's, Whirlpool cishwasher,
Whirlpool sido-by-side refrigerator, 30" eleclric range,
Whirlpool washer &amp; rtyer,dehumidifier, 4 stack 8 drawer
file cabinet, etch bowls, large etch pitcher, goblets,
several pirues, sets of dishes, large tau rene, collection of
roosiBrs, roosiBr cookie jar, blue willa.v type cishes,
vases, candlehotders, trivets, oil lamps, stone jars, beskets, goodokl dinner bell on pole, old dolls, gulled mirror,
costume jewelry, 2 cast iron frogs, lamps, pictures,
classical record albums and other records, old army
helmet, cream can, lully jointed Teddy Bear, Sears AW
FM siBrao, flatware, VCR movies, home spa, blankets,
Tupperware, BOO 1o 1,000 book6, poetry books, okl
magazines, collection of WV magazines.encyclopedias,
Eurel&lt;a sweeper, hand tools, 8&amp;0 jig saw, yard tools,
Dynamark 11 HP 36" cut ricing lawn mower, 22" self
propelled lawn ma.ver and mora.

- - - - - -Real
-- - - - - - - - - -1
Estale General
-------------------1 Olive Sl., Gallipolis. N1w &amp; Uud

QUESTION: What does a real estate firm do when they are low on houses to sell?

Senti

SATURDAY, APRIL 4, 1992
SALE BEGINS AT 10 A.M.

Saturday, April 4, 1992 ·1 0:00a.m.

Real Estate General

W11hars, dryer•, retrlgtrllora,
rangu. Skaggo Appllancoo,
Upper Rllflr RCI. Beside Ston1
Crest Molal.

8

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

AUCTION

$299. Free

tic lottoro $47.110 bo•. 1-800-5333453, onytlmo.
1920'1 Dining room IUIII. EXc:ll· R65 Ditch Witch Tronchor With
lont condlllcn. 304-f75-6f53.
Hoe Anachmant &amp; CaM 1740
Big Savlngo On All Corpol tn Uniloadtr Skid St11r, C•ll 614·
Stock. C.oh And Caory, ,.Mol- 694·7842.
lohan Carpota, 114-446-1'144,

Sunday Times

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO.

Portable changubll litter elgn
latters/dlllv~ry. Pin·

Household
Goods

wv

PUBLIC AUOION

tablo ooo1M, $350. 30'4-e75-1731.
Ploatlc And Modo! Culvort 8Inch
Thru 60 Inch In Slcc1c. Ron

Event, Jackson, Ohio. 1·800-

Merchandise

OINETIES: Wood Bar S1oola
$14.85 {26") Tablo And 4 Plddod
Cholro $129.
OPEN: 7 Dayo A Wook, 9 A.M. • 6
P.M. Sunday 12 Neon· 5 P.M.
Rt 141 4 Mlloo Off Rt. 7 tn Cln·

heat, palo, 2 car garage , new ou1bulldlng . Prenillt

comet' lot with raM lence and 101M new shrUbs and
lr981 . $65,000.

1538. LAKEVIEW LOTS: Choice lets with

speclacular view. You will want more than one. Oak,
maple, doQwood ard everRreen trees make !his 1
suburban paradise Also tots fronting on White Rd.

l:.asy access to al out lois and subdivision lOis v1a
Lakeview Court on approvecl township owned and
mairtla lnod road . Utilities available . REDUCED
PRICE.

tenary,

MIDDLEPORT -NORTH Second -A common:ial building with 2 businasses downstairs, and appro•. 23 rooms,
and 10 baths on tho 2nd and 31d floors. Could be converta~ inla aparbnents. Call or your

WOO&lt;f.Bumlng lnstr1 tor a 44 In'
flrpltcl. Bttter-n-Bans, good

condHicn, 814-388~313

52 Sporting Goods
870 Wlngmo11or 12 ga. Good
CondHicn, $225. 114·25tl:eaar.
Blcyclu, matching hlo &amp; horo,
12 apood, llko now, only 30 mlloo
en ooch, $200. 304-t?S-1731.
Romlngtan modol 700 BDL 222110 with 12X ocopo, $400. 304·
675-3158.

53

Under tho authority of Internal Rovonu• Code Section
6331, lho property described below haa been aelzod !Of
nonpayment of In tarnal rov.,uolu:M duo from:
GEORGE TAYLOR
NOMINEE OF JOHNNIE TAYLOR
AT. 2, BOX 517
SOUTH POINT,OH. 45680
Tho proporly will be sold 11 public auction aak provided
by Internal Revenue Codo Section &amp;335 and rolatod

-St. RL 124- A beautilul brick ranch , 3 bed·
rooms, 11\ balh home. Has full basement and ~nached 2
car garage.
A STEAL AT JUST $36,800
PQATLAND- B•rlngor Ridge Road- Hera's a nica 3
bedroom home with 2 lull balhs with a whlnpool tub in
one ol thom . Beaulilul oak cabinets in tho kitch;n and.a
vory large living room. This horne has free gas and sits on
2 acres of alllevalland.
FOR JUST $50,000

Date ol Salo: March 31, 1H2
nme of Sal•: 10:00 a.m.
Ploco of Solo: A~ 2, Box 517
South Poln~ Oh. 45680
Tided Oftorod: Only the rfgh~ IIIIo, and lnloroal of tho
lu:payor lloled above, In and 1o' tho property will bo
offorod lor oalo. If roquoolod, the lnlornal Rovonuo
Sorvlca will furnish lnlormallon about paulblo
oncumbron-, which may be UMfulln dotermlnlng lho
voluo of th•lnle,.l being sold.
'
Detcrlption ol Property: Lot 11: A r•ldonlial dwelling
with olx bedrooms, two lull baths, olx hall bathe, lull
b•om.,t and a llroploco allualod an 63.85 acroa. This
homo lo Ill brick •d contains ovor 5,000 aquaro loot of
living apaoe. Located approx. 10 mlnuloo from
downtown HunUnglon •.

Antiques

Buy or 1111. Riverine Antlql.ltl,

I?Afi.$7, .

regula tiona.

p.m., Sunday 1:DO to 8:00 p.m.

814-892·2526.

54.. Miscellaneous
Merchandise

'""

bedrm. hOme wlapplianees, ful

I
.....:-~-~----..11'
..
w
•

'

1

'

2 BR home w/great room. tiroplace , kftchen,
oa~•,,~~;ancl nice bad!yard.

'

.'

'cc
I

II

'•
'c'

'

David Wiseman;. Broker, 446~9555
LORETTA McDADE, 446·7729
B. J . HAIRSTON,.448-4240
.
.
:

d

. TREES, TREES I MORE TREESII 12 aetas

c

'

(614) 446-364·4 '

'

$20s.

1784 BUILDING LOTS: 5 acre tract with !)am ose
to toW, and city S&lt;:hools. 9 acre lracl wilh bam close
to town ancl dt)' achOOis. Cal lor locBllon anc1 price.
1761. FOR SALE OR TRADE: Ow""' wll trade lor a
home tocated In the c:ourtry. t-I ll hOme IS a 3 bedroom
brick ranch. 1 car garage, 1Yt baths, basemenl .
stluated on 0.816 ol an aae ~·

A&lt;ldlllonalac:roage aladdlt~nal prk:e. Low 60.

Wiseman Real Esta.te

Form ol Ptymenl: All ptym•ll must be by ouh,
o.Uflod aheak, aahlir'a tw lr_u,.,•a check, tw by 1
Unllld SlaM poalll, benk,' GPfHI, or telegraph money
order. Make check or money order payable lo tho
'lnlornll A - • S.VIce".

1621 . PRICE REDUCED : Oreal starter home
lealurlng 3 bdrm , ba1h, kitchen , Uv. rm . with approx .
1000 sq. n. oll~ng space . Call tor appt. Pnced In loo

batn, eal-ln kitchen, FA , endosed porch, lumace and
hot water tank (new~. 2 car garage on 1.87 ac. mn.

liVE BUYERS!!!!

Ptymltll Tenna: Dtlllred Pl)'lll.,l • lallowo: $10,000
upon .CCIJ*IICI ol hlgheat bid, bolanc:o In 30 dlyt,

ranch home and carport, outbUildings, garden spot. 1

ac. mil. $24,000.

moner mal&lt;lng proposlt~n. Call lor appolnimelll.
t763. VERY NICE SPACIOUS BRICK wlh 4 BAs.

Spring is coming up.
Interest rates are low.
And the best part is
.

advantage of

1786. KYGER CR. AREA - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.

1124 E. Main St,.lt, Pomeroy.
Hours : M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00

WE ·HAVE BUYERS!
WE NEED SELLERS!

Proporly may be lnapeclod It: AL 2, Box 517, Soulil
Poln~ OH. 4HIO, lhrch II, 18H from 10:00 8.m. 1o 2:00
p.m.

For luriMr lnlomillllon conllcl: George lllck
1534 Norll lkfdplliMI, Ch-.othe, Oh. 45101
Till phon• t: (114)77UU.

Gravely mow1r, walk behind,
7112 hp,, tiiCtrlc atart, niW bat·
tery, dual whttlt,ntw tires,

disc, 6' King Kutter rotary mower, 2 sickle bar mowing

Real Estate General

Tho Nlo war to dlot.

Aooma for rent • wtlk or month.
Star11ng at St201mo. GaiUa Hot11.

49

LOCATION: From Gallipolis, Ohio follow Route 7 north
approximately 3 miles, turn lefl on George• Crnk and
go approximately 2 mileo.
To settle the Estate of Arthur I. Johnaon (Probate Case
Number 19725) the following will be sold:
EQUIPMENT: Ford 3000 w/Freeman Loader, Ford 80·0
tractor, Shaver post driver, Ford 532 baler, New Idea
manure spreader, Ford 2-way d1rt scoop, 3 pl. 6' pickup

Phone

burner rormuflt. Available IX•
elusively at Rite Aid Pharmacy.

Furnished
Rooms

Commercial Space,

8

Merchandise

814-44U510.
SIHplna rooms wHh cooltlng.

ESTATE AUCTION

"Not respontible for accident. or los• of property."

54 Miscellaneous

Apartment
for Rent

Modam 2-lldrm opon. In Mid·
dloport, 2·batha, w/d hoolc..,p,
oqulppod
kltchono. Electric WhoOIChllr With Chlr·
RoforonclliDooaolt
roqulfod. gor, Llko Howl $1,000. For Mora
Phone
61&lt;M85-4448
1ft1r fnformotlon, 614-446-3040.
1:00pm.
For Sato • Rod motol bunk bod•
Newly - o d oHicloncy, rot complata w..twln mallrHHI,
&amp; clOp roqulrld, no poll, 304- Uko now, coll814-245-5all7.
675-5112.
OuHn Si.. Watorbod Wllh A
Nlctly Fumlahod z Bedroom Semi WaYIIHI lhttrHs, Baok
Go- Aparimant. $285 Por Caoo Hoodboard, 1275. Call 614Month. Depotll And R1terenca. 441-0628.
114-448-2404.
FREE INSTALLATION
SWIMMING POOLS
Campiotly Fumlahod mobllo
nome, 1 milt below town over· Only $82.111/Mo. • For 12 Uontho.
looking rivor. No Poll, Cl614· 1h31K4 Poot lncludn Flltor,
Ladd1rt, Huge Dick Etc.
441-4338.
{'Baaod On Sailing Prlco Of
Ocean Front COndo, G1rden $899. $14.45 APR, Tctal Datorrod
City Buchil SC \12 Ulln South Prlco: $754.921 Don't Botlovo ~?
01 Mynlo ooch 2 Bodtoom, 2 C.tl BPI
Both"J __Camploto Khchon And
1-1100·546-19~
Lounary, C.ll 114-448-4249 For
Dot olio.
GenHII NutrHion Product•
One bodraom lpj Hondo100n, INtunng Amino Acid 8ody
304-e75-1V7Z .... 5:00.
Building, weight loll and lat

QUESTION: What does a shoe salesman do when he runs low on shoes to sell?

FARM EQUIPMENT-TOLLS -TRACTORS
2341 Oakland Rd., Jackson, Ohio.
Oft Route 35 west of Jackson. Signa pasted.
Owner, Edwin Grow, has sold the farm and will
offer the following items for sale lo . the highest
bidder.
M-F 255 diesel tractor w/new rear tires (3300 hrs.),
International 7' haybine , M-F square baler, 3 bottom
plow, 3 pt. posthole digge r. 3 pt. disc, 10' wheeled
disc, hay wagon, 3 pt. blade, New Idea side delivery
rake , 6' bush hog, grain elevator, 1-H manure spreader
w/PTO, Ford 7' rear mower (as is), 2 platform scales,
pipe treader, 3 pt. grass seed &amp; lertilizer spreader. 3
pt. po le boom, grain box, 3 pt. hay point, 2 wheeled
trail er, draw bar, top link, 2 bags clover seed, chains,
come-a-long. power take-off pulley, lg . belt, cut-off
saw, carpent ers box , several block planes, cast iron
dinner bell w/yoke, Tokheim gasoline pump (wh it e)
boh s, nail s, l~tings , hand tools , anvil, 2 wagon loads ol
misc. rtems too numerous to mention.
Terms: Cash or Ohio Check with 1.0.
Refreshments Available
TERRY L. LOYD, AUCTIONEER
284 Webb Pierce Rd., Jackson, Ohio 45640
(614) 286·1229
Licensed and Bonded In Ohio
"Not responsible for ion of properly."
Department ollhe Treasury
Internal Revenue Service
Notice Of

3 IR, H/2 blth, llmlly room, no
poll. Point -ont. f350 por
month I dopaolt. 114-446-9278.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

te General

SAT., APRIL 4, 1992-1 0:30 A.M.

304-e75-3278.

1.0.

MARLIN WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER
Lie. 3615
614-245-5152
Not Responsible lor Accidenla or Loaa ol Property.

PUBLIC AUCTION

2 Bd.c lumlohod hccloo, Lincoln
Hill, ~omoroy, $250 mo., 614985-4256

Prlvato Yard, I Mlln From Gol·
llpollo, $300/mo. Roloronccoo.
114-44&amp;-3017.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

From Gallipolis, take Rt. 141, lurn left onto
Rt. 775, turn right onto Patriot Road. Watch

Village

8

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

and Dam

Very Corred, Well Grown, lndlvk:Juals
PRICED FROM *1500 &amp; UP
Coi(304J675-3030 DAY • (30) 675·3431 NIGHT

APRIL 4, 1992- 7 P.M.
ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE
VINTON, OHIO

32 Mobile Homes

8

Registered Thoroughbreds

March 29, 1992

March 29, 1992'

WV

.

CAROLYN WA$CH, 441·1007 .
SONNY GARN,ES, 448 ' ~707 .' '

l
l
.'
''
I

l

.J

li[IDLEP&lt;lAT- High S~ - Tired ol aoan:hlng through

1!je h•wapeper7 weu; Han:h no lurther. Thlt 3 bedroom

liouH haa oontril olr,

LAnno• pulse GFA lumaoo, ·1 car

1781. NEW LISTING: A SUPER 8UY II whot thll
IOVIiy IU brick, 2·3 BR r!IC!Ch 10 wtlh 811-in ldtchon .
ClfPCII, 1Y. batns, luol oil heal.' AJC, shingled root:

pee. oqulp~ kilchan, privacy f.,.. in bac\'Yird, and

ll!,belorn.,l
j

. S31,800

carport, 1ull bamt . on 1 ac. Mi\. In a quie1

'

.,aLEPORT - Brownell Av8. -A n11t illle 3 bod~

hilml with beHmtnl and genoge, equipped kitchen, and
air.

$24,000

Concnlo I Ploatlc So!ttlc
Tanko, .JCI1 Aeration Tonko. Aon
Ev1111 lnt-'- Jac:lcacn, OH

1-537-NH.

.

.

-•t•

Drtao alii t/10, Bri- '
nld/Pram1 pile pink,
ootln, tM 'ttitath. 141. 104-1'111- '
~~ 10:00Aif.3:00PM, 7:00PY.

e;-u.

loriJ ' luohllno
I I - 1to11. Wllh Clutlr, t121.
Col 114:MUDd Morllp.m.

nelghbolhood. Call fer locBllon. S54,1100.oo.
1768. VERY NICE HOME Lccatoct In Clloll*t T
this home !••lures app. 13« sq. fl .., 3 Ia;
bedrooms, 1h bail!s, lull bUIIT!OIIIInd 1 car 111r1Q1
MaNe appoilllm&amp;lt IO ... lhillftroc:tlvo homo.
'
!662. QUALITY-LOCATION-iw.CE -1'1111 flclrN 1111
alt lhe qual~ies c1 a friendlY homo atmoaplwo. 3
IBige bedcoome, otflce, 21utfbalha, living room Wl1h
llreplace, Eloc. heat pu!f41 ancl cont.llr. T1!111111c11
Cape Cod homt hu app. 18110 oq, ft. ond o'Miloolli
the Ohio Rlvor oftuatod en 2Y. . _ mit. Propooty,
also, f111turo1 1 HK41 n.lll building lrtCI 1 14x24
b•lldlng lor 1 small buslnMO. PRICE REDUCED.
- ~,aiiOI moro lnlonnauon,

.

,•

,•'

. ...

~

'' ...
.,.,
~

~ t·

.,

\ -!

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

nmes-Sentlnel

1992 .

wv

March

29, 1992

72· Trucks for sale
54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
Reconditioned
washer.
&amp;
dryers, each $100 and up. We
service all makee. The Washer &amp;
Dryer Shoppe. 614·446·2944.
Ru:aurant Equipment, lea Ma·
chine, BxB Walk In Cooler, Gas
Criddle, 2 Compartment Slnk 1
Tables And Chairs, Hatco Fooo
Warmer, Hood &amp; Sprinkler System, Upright FrHur, Plus Other
Items. 61(-446-8157 Aftlr 5p.m.

63

61 Fann
For Slit: Ntw Holand Aaket,
Baltl'l, Mowtrt, And Hay Binds.
2 And 4 Row Com Planltrl,

Model 770 two row narro~ New
Holland com htad. Model 117
New Holland hay head . $1,000.
bottl or will sell seperata. 304·
882-2247.
Oliver tractor &amp; farm machlnary
parts, II nol in s tock will gat.
Call "The Olie Man ". 614·388·

Sam Somerville'• Army Surplus;
Fri, Sat, Sun; noon-6:00 PM.
Other days hours. 304·2TJ.5655,
five
milts
East
1-77
Ravenswood, WV. By Sandyvilkl
Post Office. Gear up tor wild
turfl;ey uason. Gray GrHn Leaf 9684.
Treebark Army pallern clolhing.
Wanttd: Used farm equlpmanl,
Satolllte Dis h For Salo, Com- anything you want to sail. Call
plate! 614-446-1756.
614·256-1308, 256--6040 ahar 6
Unique books good prices on p.m.
books unavaltabla In storH

covering tho following toplcs:6c.:3--7L::Iv:...e;:s:;to-7:-c::k::-;;;:::;:
Mall Order, Bualnns, Anance,
Harbs &amp; Haaltl!, Genarallntarest
and othtra. Send $1. cheek or
moneyh ordar to Nu Llta En·
terprlsts, 137 Ounn Road,
Clendenin, WV 25045-9203.

-:
Angus And Chi·Angus Blaek
Bulls~. Reasonably Prlcad. Slata
Run !'"InTIS, Jackson, Ohio, 614286-5395.

11 Autos for Sale

Autos for Sale

Transportation
1968 Chn.roltt lmpalt, 307, 3
Speed, Rune Good! $500 Firm.

2600, l-5pm
1990 9-10 2.5, 5 Spoocf, l-28

1913 C.maro Vol, I speed, new
u,.., txha&amp;~~t, one owntr, vary
clean, aharp, $2~00 . 304ol~
20111.

Wtllelt,
Ourabrtd
Maroon, 81
AMIFM CnHUe;-Ciean!t Asking
$5,500. Evenlngt: 614·682~73~.
Days: 814-882-6825.

614-+t&amp;-8332.

73 vans &amp; 4 wo·s

1973 Cadillac, good cond., ntW
Pllnt, ntwly waxtd, good 111
around, und.,. 10,0DOMI.L. 1~
tlrtt, must Ht, 1368 vo
Rd., SyracuH, Oh., 614- •

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROORNQ

Will build PltiO COVII"', dtckS,
tcrttn.ci room1, put up vinvt
siding or trailer aklrtlng. &amp;14·

Unconditional 1/leUme ·guarantM. Local retaranctl furnlalltd .
Frae ntlmataa. Call collect 1·
614·237-o488, day or night.
Aogera Bailment Watarptoo-

flng.

1976 Grand Prix, T·Top, Good
Running Condition! 814·446271)6.

CurU• Home Improvements:
Yaars Experitnca On Oldw &amp;
Newar HortM~s. Room Addllions
Foundation Work
Rooting'
Kltchtna And Batha. Frtt E.:
tlmates! Refarancn, No Job To
Big Or Small! 614-44Ht225.

1m Thunderbird, Towne Landau, 400 CID, lq~dN, sharp,
good lirll, brown, 614-985-3511
altar 5:30pm

ANSWERS

TO

$@\\4}~-~c!fS

1991 Full Size Blazer, 4x4.J
Loaded, 7,800 MIIH, Ertendeo
Warranty, Llkt New, Priced To

J - l~

S.lll Ooy: 514-446-1675, Night:
614-448-8127.

1985 Oodlll Trtamo, 4 Cy!t. At,
88,000 Mlfn, Make Good work
Carl $900 Bill Otter. 814·3677019.
1985 Escort, 4dr., statlonwagon,
auto, 72000MI, sterto, luggage

rack, new tlru, blue/ blutlnter~

MATRIX
ALKALI
KETTLE
HELIUM
UNLESS
REGIME
LIKING THEM

1188 Olda Flrtnza, I apeed, air,
ami tm
lUI whHI, 814·
012-6529 can after lpm

••r.o.

11188 Ranger, I Spaad, 1085 112
Eacon Wagon: 11156 Chivy
Belalrt, GoOd Condhionl 614·
689-4623.
1187 Cavalier, 2 door, 4 cyl, 4

lor, h"dllghtf fender damage, IPHd, runs &amp; looks exc. 304·
6'15-1408.
$750, 614-949-2600, 9-!ipm

As a kid we moved frequently.
Making new friends was always the
hardest part of going to a new schopl.
One teacher helped by telling me that
getting people to like you is only the
other side of LIKING THEM .

Woodburner, $35; cottea tabla,

$10; 614-992-7102

Ytal"'expertence. 614·388-8M4.

for Sale

JET

245-9152.

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Real Estate General

David Atha, 115 Acres, 76 acres tillable, 14,000 + lb. tobacco base, pond,
barn, silo and unloader, bunk feeder,
new fencing. 8 room house, large new
family room with balcony, 2 full baths,
new furnact~ with CA. Located on State
High.w ay. Perfect place to raise children!
Shown by appointment only.

J.

·814-37NII9

84

wlrlng, ntw Hrvlct or repairs.
Masttt Ucanltd electrlclan.
RldtnCMJr Electrleat, WV000306,
304-e75-1768.

Blaek Pomeranian, Ready To Go
2·3 W11ks, 814-446·1159.

5

three sides and approx. 500 feet of fronlage on Raccoon
Ck. Aftoroabf&amp;. Call for an appointment
5.6 ACRES MORE OR LESS of Woodland . Exeellonl
building site. land has been surveyed.
WHAT A VEWI 34 acres, more or less, of woodland .
Great view. Excellent building sites. Several dogwood
trees. Green Township.

'llonnu ~tuu.s

7

8

S L UN E S
9

Slitrman qrun,

'lJro tr
446-4 06

co~lffod.

.ilssoaatt
446-8273

MI GE R E
10

351W, &amp; FMX tm~a., 1250 OBO,
197! Chtvrollt lmptla, $500,
614-985-3958

8

4 Tlrea, Q 78 • 11 LT, Wldt Mud·

dor"-0;0. J1'\'\!.W;16·.

.

Du~tlntr trud liner, fits 1989·111

&amp;hart" bad Chav truck, $50. 304·
675-3153.

BUSINESS OFFICE 6 SALESROOII FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2nd AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

fOe~·

parta only, 1976 Camaro
Z28r304-875-20"1111.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

l' :• l\91 indtptnden;

\mY . Uunking about real t:s~ue

""" un:llliZ.1Uons. which ooe \\ould
sn' ""' do tht moo 10 help
"'meone like rw sell a home?" The ·
CE\TCRY 21 ' ''"""' Clme in ne:nil
~ i 10 i rJ\'er me ntx~ cloieg rea1 estale
100

RT. 160 - Across from North Gallia High
School. Buill in 1989, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,

w~~~~!~~:ol!nc.

grea t room, kitcl"len with ch1rry cabinets,

plus 2 car garage. Asking $63,900.00. 1405
NEW LISTING -2 or 3 bedroom, I story

446·1066

house with kitchen, living rm., bath, laundry
area. On 1.53 acres mil . Good garden area .

Allen C. Wood, ReeMor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgen, Redor/Broker--446.097t
Canterbury, ReaMor-446-3408
Moore, Realtor-256-1745
We:lsoti,,Realtor- 446-2027

Asking only $26,000.

acre,

8 miles from Gallipolis,

Topper Fiberglass Itt. Long
w1.- Bod Sliding Wlndowo:
Froftt End .olh Sid11, $250. 814367-1898.

su~·ey."

nnto?. Tlt"''S n:IUOn\\'ide ,,.ere asked.
Real Estate General

Over

$8,000

As a kid we moved frequently.
Making new friends was always the
hardest part of going to a new school.
One teacher helped by telling me that
geHing people to like you is only the
other side of ------ ----.
J -1 1

0

Complele fhe chuckle quoled
by filling in lhe, missing word!
you develop from step No. 3 below.

P~INT
NUMBEREO
L TTERS

Stutes Real Estate
850 'Bulil ?dorton 'R!- ya((ipo{is

446-4206 or 446-2885

Real Estate General

::4io o~niz.1tion

paved road.

6

E MH U L I

Accessories

6 t4-s~-46n

614-594-46n

ETKELT

76: Auto Parts &amp;

AKC Cocker Spaniel puppies,
ready lo go, 1st shots &amp; wor·
mtd, he an h guaranteed, $125,

AKC Scottish Terrier pupplet,
now
taking
non-shedding,
deposits, 3 ten, ready for Enter,

AKILLA

bedroom horna nastlad in pines, surrounded by woods on

259-111171.

Pets lor Sale

PM .

2

1

00 YOU LIKE WATER FRONTAGE, BOATING,
FISHING, SWIMMING - This home has it all. Cozy 3

Mobile. Wt come fo you. 114·

30~~:40x10 10x 12
sliding door $5699.00, 24K40x10
10x10 sliding door $4900.00,
Precision Post Frame Builders,
614·992·3541 .

AKC
registered
Golden
Retriever pups, all light to
medium golden color, 4 mates, 3
tamales, ready Mareh 23, $200.
each. 304-!182-3487 after 5:00

T R I MA X

BOATERS

,,..faflst. Morcury

Utilily Building,

AKC Registered Cairn Tarrier
Pups, Cute Easter Pats! $150.
614·367-7700.

words below lo make 6
simple words . Prinl lellers of
eoch in ils line of squares.

NESTLED IN THE PINES ...

GuiJ!na Mwcury Marine Sarvlc1.
Mariner, Mercruiur

Special· Two car garag11,
24x24.:9: $3995, 24x27x9=
$4199 , 27x32K9: $4699, Presl·
sion Post Frame Builders, 614·
992·3541

3 Month Old, Black Lab Puppies. 614-245-5501.

O Rearrange lhe 6 scrambled

We need llatinga. Several good buyera. Now Ia the
time to sell beforeln.~r•t rates atart to move up.
M1o;ury,

GAME

Edited by CLAY R. POLLAN

Real Estate General

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
Resldantlal or commarclal

58

,

WORD

614-4411-3668

Building
Supplies

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All bfeeds, slylu.
lams Pel Food Dealar. Julia
Webb . Call 614-446.(1231.

':;~:~:~v S©R~~-l££!.fS®

FIRM FOR SALE

Cart•'• Plumbing
Fourth and Plna
Gallipolis, Ohkl

14ft. Fibtll!laaa Fish/Ski Boat, Aaratlon Motorw, rapalrtd. Ntw
40 Horu Johnson, Traltar, Push &amp; re-built motora In atock RON
Button Control, Good Condl· ~~:: ~ .JACKSON, OH. \-aoo87
11•1\ 614-446-4920.
___
u_,_p_h_o_lst_e_,.ry.:....---,Ron '• TV Servlee, tpeclalltlng
1974 11Ft board Ski 8011 85- In Zenith also urvlclna moal Mowray'l Upholt11rtng urvh:·
HPM $1,400 atter 5:PM 814258- other brands. HouH Cllll, alae lng trl county area 2t yeara. The
1754
some appliance repairs. WV beat In fumllura ~o~pholetering.
304-57&amp;-2398 Ohio 614-448-24&amp;4. C.ll 304-675-4154 for frH II·
20
Foot
Ban
Bott614-448-8874
and tralttr.~~::::========~tl~m~at~"-:__ _ _ _ __
tOHp
molor,
$1,000.
AHer S:PM

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Hick's Roofing, Ptlntlng &amp; Dtck

Building. Fr11 ootlmot11. 10

75 Boats &amp; Motors

Block, brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, ate. Claude Winters, Rio Granda , OH Call 614·
245-5121.

56

Davll
Stw·VIC
Service,
Georg" Creek Rd. Parts, suppll•, pickup, and delivery. 614·
448.0294.

2800

1971 Corvett.e, 2!1tl! annlvarury
adillon. 1987 Ford XLT Aangar.
304-e75-22911.
1981 Buick Riviera, runa &amp; looks
good, high miluga, $1,200. 304-

Home
Improvements

J~kson, OH 1-aoo-ams28.

Services

drlvtrl door, $5100, 814-941-

Autos for sale

81

Co. RON EVANS ENTERP•ISES,

v.e, needs

1989 Chevy 0::.1500,

Flashy 19119 Gray AOHA Filly by 895-3014.
Upright fraazer, working, $75, Reynolds Rap. Flashy Sorrell
Snapper riding mowar $250, 1990 !Uiy by tht ln,lmidator &amp; a 1982 Volkswagon Quantum slaalso rooms for rent $10 night, used 2 llorse Bumper Trailer tlon wagon, 4' cyl., auto., good
cond., $1,000. 814-256-6867.
614-949·2528
614·286-6522
White, full size canopy bed,
mattress &amp; boK springs incl..
Real Estate General
614·992·5231 evenings

55

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

eondHion $2,1100. 1883 FuUtldt
Forcf, Bronco 4 whMI Drive, 1m Ttrry 27fi. camPtr, many
Soptlo Tonk Pumping 190"Galfla
Runl good ; $11900. 614-258-6251 tll1111, 814.-041-3087 attar Spm

row•· "'Farrowed- 2!11192, 814·

11

79

1917 ~ ·a-eo Plcll-up good

m.e324

Manurt Spread.rt, Ftrtlllzt
Spraadars Wheat Drills, Oll'llr

614-266-5944.

11

AutOI for Slit

Fair plga tor lilt· Duroc• Bar·

Wh..l Disks, Pick-Up OlaJts,

Field Ready Equipment, Howe's
Farm Machinery, At. 124 &amp;
Mayhew Road, Jackson Ohio.

Livestock

71

wv

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real

Ellate General

BEECH ST. -Approx. 24 acres with a boautilul

JCST TELL US
. WliAT YOL" WAI\i..
ITS AI GOOD AS DONE""

two story colonial home overtooking Pomeroy.
Executive style home with formal entry, family
room wffireplace, formal dining room,
basement has rec. room wilh slana fireplace,
in·ground pool, 2 car garage .
amenities. Reduced to a low prioe

1431

PRICE REDUCED! to $49,900 on this nice 3
bedroom vinyl sidod home with 2 baths, living

rm., dining rm., lam ily rm., den, heat pump,
central air, basement, 2 barns and much mora.
On 8.2 acres m~- CaH today for appointment

Female Baagle Pup Spada,
Shots and wormtd $40.00 614446·7923
Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson An.
Point Pleasant, 304-675-2063,
full line Tropical llsh, birds,
small animals and supplies.

1426
NEW LISTING
overtooking the

bedrooms, beth.

Poodlas adults AKC breading
stoc:kl, also cagas, grooming
tubt, olhar aqulp., for u11,
Coolville, 614-867-3404
~lstertd

Border Colllt Puppin, Father Was Gallla County
Fair Champion For 3 Yurt,
Working Cattla Dogs, t125 Each.
614-256·1061.

57

Musical
Instruments

FOR SALE: SPINET-CONSOLE
PIANO BARGAIN Wan!od:

Responsible Party To Make Low
Monthly Payments On Plano.
Can Ba Sean Locally. CIU Mr.
WhitaAt : 1·800-327-3345 Ext. 101.

STDPIII New on the market 3 BR homo in

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
61 Farm Equipment
65 MF Tractor &amp; B~o~stl Hog
$3250 Lata Model, 3000 Ford
Oiesed $,4850, 4000 Ford tractor
$4850, Big Vermtara Round
Baltr $2850 614·286·6522
Cat 040 dozer has AOPS,
wlneh, good cond, $'12,900. Brillion 9910 ltn ft packar sNdar,
pull with l"lydroUe tlntport new
$5,700. Used Holland 2 row
tobacco 11ttar $1,350. Ustd 1
row tobacco seller $550. Used
16 H Harrogalor $750. Kefhlrs
Sarvlce cantar, St. AI. 87, Pt.
Pleasant and Riply Rd. 3C4-1195-38'JI$.
UtiiHy Bldg. SpttCial: 30'x40"x9',
1·15'x8' Slfdlng Door, 1·3' Walk
Ooorl Palntac:f SIMI Siding 1
Roo! ng. $5190. Iron Horst
Btdra. 1·800-352·1045
International Cub, CuUivatOft,
Bally Mowarl
lnt•matlonal
P1owt, Oisks, Btad11, Mora
New Paint, 614-44&amp;-4920 After
5p.m.
Jim's Farm Equipment, SA. 35,
West Gallipolis, 614-44&amp;-!ln7;
Wida aaltc:tlon new &amp; ulld !arm
tractol"' a implamtnta. Buy,
sail, trade, 8:()0..5:00 wltkdays,
Sat. till Noon.

;;.~.;;,;;,,~ '-'itiio•:';

. Second old
. m~.

BRICK HOME - Located on Bulavlilo Road - 3
bedroom, living room , kitchen with dining aru, 1 bath ,
util ity room, and a 2 car garage unattached. TV. Satellite .

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT&gt;
OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS - Located on Rt. 7
(EUreka). 30'x36' block building with storago in :
basement 70 ft. frontage on Rt 7. Lot runs to Ohio River.
Was used as convenient mart. DRASTICALLY
REDUCED. NOW ONLY $34,900.00.

IN CITY SCHOOLS is this attractive ranch
home sitting on .80 of an acre. Has lamily rm.
and dining rm. combo, living rm, 2 bedrooms,
lg. balh. custom btJi~ kitchan with oak cabinets,
baseman! has large badroom on ground level.
Beautiful interior and landscaped grounds,
good gardan area.
N15

HOME AND 2 ACRES M or L - 3 bedroom s, t bath,
living room, kitchen, fireplace, and unfinished basement.
PRir.Fn AT 536.500.

A-FRAME l~ ted in Green Township on 2 .5 acre lot, 2
bedrooms. hvmg room, balh, with a bedroom fii'Tiily room
and utility room in basamanl. CALL' FOR AP·

POINTMENT.

Bridgeport
lamily rm. , IMng

HOME IN CROWN CITY - 3 bedrooms. living room.
kitchen, bath, full basement, central heat and a ir condi-

walar and other
acre m/t Asking only

tion, 2 car garage. Rented mobile home on back of lot.

l.a2

CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION .
- 2800 sq. ft . of living space, 3

looa•ted on 10 acres and borders
Gallipolis schools. CALL

400 SQ. FL COMMERCIAL BUILDING on
.BOO ae. m~ lot with oflice and storage room.
Presently u11d lor suto sales . Lots ol
pos~bllitlea. Only $29,900.
1411

CLOSE TO TOWN - 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
living, dining, fam iy rooms, natural gas heat,
1424
central air. Asking $74,900.
64 AC. FARM on Clay Lick Rd. and a 2BK60'
modular with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, hvrng room.
family nx&gt;m with fillpfact, a 24X4Q bam 5 yrs.
old plus 30x40 garage 2 months old. Tobacco
ba... Asking $69,800.00.
1404

NO Wi ll
WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE OF CITY POOL - 3 bed·
roo ms, living room, kitchen, bath, with a lamily room,
bedroom and bath in baseiTI8nt. Two car garage, lencad-

in baekyar&lt;l. MUST SEEIII

COUNTRY UVING - 3 bedrooms. 1~ baths,
all brick oiluatld on 4.7 ac11, bam. ~d. largo

FOR SALE - 40 acres farm located 9 miles o~ Slalo

bladlbtrrlts. For only $57,900.

tobacco baM, fNil ti'HI , raspbarn•• 1nd

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Routa 141 on Lincoln Pika . Tha homa has 7 room• and
bath. There is a bam and ather outbUildings. Also a larm
pond ahd tobaco base.

100 ACRES M or Lon Fri9ndly Ridge in Clay Twp. Walor
and eleetne available. Priced at 532,500.00.
FOR SALE - 62 acres in Lawnlll¢8 County.
HOME ' ACREAGE IN WALNUT TWP. - 2 bedroomo,

D. C••lllllles1 11c.
c.nnelbt.rg, Inc. 4li719
~in Pole
IIUkilgs.
Dee gned to meet your

CHO~tn~ORS

living room, kitCMn and bath . Houa• r.madelld 11 y.ara
ago, al.ctric B.Brl'lla,, 78 acres m or I with tobacct'

base. CALL FOR APPO,INTMENT.
LOCATED IN GALLII!!)UB - 'lint BlrMt - 4 rontll
units, good lncomt prOJ)trty. Cal for mo11 infonnalion. .
HOUlE IN GALUPOLIS - 3 roome and beth, welking
diotance to 1Choo11 tnd otq,.., Priced ol $18,000.00.

FREE ESTIMATES ON
1'!081 Bt.ildinga fllld.
Package DeU. SaYe
Hoodteds, even Thousands

GREAT LAND FOR DEVELOPMENT - «l OCIIO for Nit
in tho clly »mill ol GoiUpolio. Chock thio ono outll

ol Dollars.
Local Sales~

"~· r""c BUILDING LOTI in Ro&lt;Ny V~logo II. can for
mo informolkln.

DONNA CRISENBERY
Rt7
OH.

GET OUT
bo the place,
4 BRs (master
firotplac:o), __~2~ baths, LR

town. Kitchen, LA, OR, large 2 car garage,
gas heat. cen t air. Call lor more details .

GREEfU-'KES- TWII lois, 11oog.!Ovol homo olio.

FOR YOUR COIIVEIIIIICI TRY~

·-··-

. OUA'I'OLLFIIIIII~RR
..

Ilk
.

good condi1ion
gtntgt
IOdly.
NEW LISTING - BEAUnFUL ALL BRICK
HOME siluolld on 50 &amp;CliO mA with 3
bedrooms, living rm .. dining lnd family rm., 3
batho ond full baMmtnl. Heal pump and
conlntl air, 2 cor allached lnd 4 C8l dttoched
gorago. Asking $124,800.
1412

..

1422

COUNTRY LIVING - In thl~ rimodeled 3
bednx&gt;m counttY homo IMtunng hoat pump,
largo lamily and dining room combo. 1Yi bath,
smaU room for nursery or •awing room, lots of

storage rural wator and much much more.
Slruottd on 20 blautiiUI railing acres mn. Also
hoost bam.
1375
Phyllis L. Miller

&amp;aiel Agent

Eve. 268-1131

Marthll Smith .

&amp;8181 Agent
Eve.37N6&amp;1

NEW LISTING -

- 7

yaar old home with 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 2 car

garage, 33 ac11s, bam and sheds. Asking only
$45,000.
1401
MAIN ST., RUTLAND - Is lhia anraclive 3
bedroom ranch with bath, ~tchon, dining room,
and living room, 2 car attached garage,

fifll)laeo, gas heat. Central air. Only $45,500.
1403

.---------,

•
•

On The Move, ·
But Not On Your Own.

part of the CENTURY 21'
VIP' Referral Network, our office
is linked to thousands or other
·tEi\TURY 21 offices nalionwide.
So ' 'Ou don"t have to feel alone
when you move 10 a new area.
JUST TEll VS WHAT YOUWAI\11 ..
IT'~ AS GOOD AS DOl'&lt;"E."
!IS

HAPPY HOLLOW RO. - lo this 1Y. otory log
hDIIIO ~th ba~tmonl, 3 bedroomo, 2Yr both,
lamdy room. living room, kltcllen, laundry oraa,
t kyllghl oaltlllr. oyotlm. eov.red porch, Mot
pump, C.nlntl air, 12'x12' building ~nd much
moll. calfor dttlio.
1421 .

Wrlfl

Cathy A.
S1le1 Agent

Eve.~H&amp;

1201, PRICE REDUCED TO $55,0001 - 3
BR homo siluatod noar HMC and Rt. 35
ohOpplng arwa. Call lor mono dtlails.

1140. QET COZY IN FRONT OF THE
FIREPLACE - AttJKiivt home oltro 3 BRs,
balh, kilehtn, 121124 lomlly room with fintplace
lnd IMng homo with fl11placo .. Silualed on
1.12acnt,mn.
1111. LaGRANDE BQULEVARD- Alii brief&lt;, 3 .
BRo, LR, kllc~on 1 both, full boaomtnl, gae
fo!ttd air, ollocnta gorage, city ochoals.

,_ -

1142. $35,10011 - WHY PAY RENT? Ranch style hOI11f on SR 160, 3 BRa, LR,
kltr:l\en, ....,, altochtd gorl!gt, 100x300 lot

Chtolir Twp. Old original log homo w•th
addition .qdtd. Drilltd well. county wotar
H••llHn owned by, oamt lomily lor

EXCILLINT INYEI'MNT PROPI!ATY •
4 IALI - U Atllll, ... In lht olty ol
Goftlpollo. F - on Vlnllln a, Ntol Av.. &amp;
SR 110 (1o1m« olio or
oalo~ Homo on
proporty a1 pntoent ...,. 7 ftM., 2 botho,

.....ntliono.

new ldlahin, ftiW ••••· Call tor. mo ..

Hll. MEIGS CO,, 240 A., mil, Bodford ~d

..-lablt.

......

•'"'*

PRI,rACY SEEKERS LOOK AT ntiS
REDUCED THE PRICE
DIEI -Largo
homo can be pu~thastd
na
homo oWero 3 BRa, 2
with 182 act'ls
acres. Thlt hom• on,rs
. This larm io sltualed on
4 BAs, 3 b&amp;lho, equipped kitchen, LA, FR.
Sugar Crook Aoed, Ohio Township, lnd has a
2 fireplaces, hoot pumpleont. arr (backup
now 28x40 bam, tobacco but. Call"lor moro
system), ovorolzed 2 cer attached garage.
dolUs.
·
·
Fronlage on Raccoon Creek.
1200. GREEN TWP. PORTEABROOK SU8D.,
1150. CORNER LOTI - ·Very nice homa ofers WITH VERY NICE RANCH - 3 BAs, LR,
'3 BRo. bath, kltchon, carpet, li11plaeo, 1 ear kitchen, bath and hail, 2 C8l gorage, fi"f''act.
dttlchod garago.
1571. LARGE FARII - :lee .Cra 11111, 55xi10
1292. Ut A., mil, sfotion 34. Raccoon· Twp., b1111, 3 poneto, lobocca but. Call for dtti~a:
fronts on sR 32$. t25,000.

1221.... A. 11/L. (Htllirt Dt ............. IXTIIoUIICI •1n1 Ia. FOil SALE .:.
RICCOon Cnoek. Gnoal lor a -lit - · • Hroll; ..... 14m; t 1111, LR, kitchtn, DR,
La'1it pint - ori 3 oldto. Allltril.
-llrllllllllllal•trhf'tt.
HID. WHITE ROAD- 20 acnoo, ml!. v-1
,..__.,..,.,"''"" .824actt
tohd, approx. 1 mUe from Choralalt LMt. . . .
$20,000.

.

lllfl.- 111111111• 11111t on property.

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

llmes-Sentlnel

Star Bane
Corporation
wins honor
from state

CINCINNATI - Star Bane
Corporation was recent! y honored
by Ohio Gov. George Voinovich·
for participating in a special business expansion and development
promotion.
The promotion entitled "The
bottom line leads to Ohio" was featured in the Wall Street Journal.
The campaign highlighted Star
Bane Corporation's importance to
business across the state. A special
citation presented by Voinovich
ciled Star Bane Corporation as an
"innovator in the field of banking."
Oliver W. Waddell, president of
the Star Bane Corporation, along
with executive vice presidents
Samuel M. Cassidy, Gary N.
Kocher and John S. Yeager accepted the award at a ceremony held at
the Queen City Club in Cincinnati.

STAR BANC HONORED- Tbe Star Bane
Corporation was honored recently by Obio Governor George Voinovich with a special citation
for its involvement in a program to encourage
business expansion and development in Ohio.

Governor Voinovicb (center) made the presentation at the Queen City Club, Cincinnati, to Oeft
to right) Samuel Cassidy, John Yeager, Oliver
Waddell and Gary Kocher of Star Bane.

Average dropped 1.25 percent.
That left the widely watched index
at 19,636.99, its lowest level in five
years.
Many U.S. market analysts say
the fortunes or the Tokyo and New
York stock markets are only distantly linked. There's a nagging
fear that a poor performance in
Tokyo stocks will prompt Ja.J13!1ese
investors to sell invesbnent m U.S.
markets in order to cover losses at
home.
Many investors saw less sinister
motives at work on Friday. They
said the drop in the Nikl:ei simply
gave traders an excuse to sell
stocks and cash in profits.
Leading the decline were computer and technology firms .
Hewlett Packard fell 3/8 at 80;
IBM, down 7/8 at 83-1/4; Digital
Equipment, which received an
unfavorable analyst report, down 23/8 at 54-3/8.
The declines were more pronounced in the over-the-counter

market. Microsoft fell3-3/4 at 1211/4; Borland International, off 23/4 at 54; Intel, off 3-1/1 at 55-1/4;
and Apple Computer, down 3 at 61.
All of this occurred despite new
government reports showing personal incomes gained 1.1 percent
and spending rose 1.0 percent in
February. The Commerce Department said the gains compared with
a 0.2 percent drop in incomes in
January, while spending that month
was up 0.9 percent.
Active issues on the NYSE
included RJR Nabisco, down 3/8

at 9-3/8; Pepsi Co, up 1-1/8 at 343/8; Catalina Marketing Corp., a
new issue, unchanged at 28; American Express, down 3/4 at 23-1/4;
and Citicorp, unchanged at 17-3/8.
Household
International
plunged 9-1/4 at 46-3/4 in heavy
trading after the financial services
company said Thursday its first
quarter earnings may be half of
analysts' predictions. Donald C.
Clark, Household's chief executive, blamed the outlook on weak
economies in Australia, Canada
and Britain.

See Puzzle on Page D-2

Friday showing a 1.1 percent rise
in personal incomes and a 0.9 percent gain in consumer spending last
month.
Meantime, reports indicated
U.S. corporations had their worst
annual profits since I 987, and in
mid-March, nearly a half-million
more Americans joined the unemployment line for the first time.

Just In time For Spring

1990 CHEVROLET
C1500
PICKUP 4 WD.
1990 DODGE
SHADOW
ES 2 DR.
1990
CADILLAC
SEVILLE

17,000 low mllea, auto., AJC,
Silverado Pkg., 16" aluminum
wheela, red &amp; while 2-tone, 5.7
liter V8. Great for towing.
Expect a super clean truck!

White with std. shift. Sharp!
A/C .
WAS $7995.00
SPECIAL AT

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
three-year moratorium would be
placed on the construction of commercial hazardous waste Incinerators under a bill heading for a vote
in the House this week.
Industry opponents contend the
building ban would be unconstirutional.
But sponsoring Rep. Katherine
Walsh, D-Vermilion, said the measure was carefully crafted to comply with a long series or court rulings on such matters.

The House will vote on the bill
Tuesday to begin a legislative work
week in which opponents of cuts in
the General Assistance welfare program will rally at the Statehouse to
underscore demands for restoration
of benefits.
Ms. Walsh said the incinerator
moratorium would not apply to the
Waste Technologies Industries
plant nearing completion in East
Liverpool. The plant has been a target of a series of demonstrations by
groups opposed to its co~~truction.

AG

THE DEPENDABILITY PEOPLE

REDUCEOTO

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Columbus Southern Power customers would pay $2 of every $10
in a proposed 28.4 rate increase for
environmental costs, including
reducing air pollution and moving
5,000 mussels in the Ohio River, a
newspaper reported Sunday.
Columbus Southern, Cincinnati
Gas &amp; Electric and Dayton Power
&amp; Light, owners of the Zimmer
pow~r plant in Moscow, Ohio,
must' pay $1.4 billion for the conversion of the plant from nuclear
power to coal-burning.
The utilities had to pay
$650,000 to relocate 5,000 unionid
mussels found in the Ohio River
ncar the plant. A trust fund was set
up tci monitor the mollusks.
• Ra~payers 'al»may be •paying
for archaeological studies that
unearthed evidence of Indians who
lived 10,000 years ago and for preserving a 166-year-old house once
owned by a second cousin or James
Buchanan, the 15th president

$15,500

Chooae from 2 local lradea.
Loaded with options and low
mllea. One ruby red &amp; one
silver.

1988 JEEP
EAGLE
4 WHEEL DRIVE

Just traded. Extra clean.

*6495

Burgundy.

Navy blue, loaded, local
one owner. New
Roadmaster trade.

1986 BUICK
REGAL 2 DR.

1986 BUICK ·
PARK AVENUE

Jerry ·nrown, tbe Arkansas governor said he
brieny experimented with marijuana while
attempting Oxford University as a Rhodes
Scholar. (AP)

White, only 37,000 low
miles.

Extra clean, 1 owner,
silver interior like new!

1987 RANGER
1987
BONNEVILLE SE
PICKUP
4 cyl., 4 speed, 21,000
low miles.

Aluminum wheels, 45-45
interior, loaded. Drives
like new!

1987 CHEV.
CELEBRITY
EUROSPORT

1985 LESABRE
LIMITED 4 DR.

Shows T.L.C. 4 Dr:, clean.

White w/maroon trim. We
sold it new. Lady driven.

1985 BUICK
REGAL 2 DR.

1986 PONTIAC
FIERO

Brown. Looks and
drives good • .

Red, standard shift.
Sporty.

WAGON,
8 Pus., good condition.

'

1986 DODGE
D50 PICKUP
· Economy truck with
topper, std. shift.

Clinton later said he answered
the question because "no one had
ever asked me the direct question
before ... and I really do believe
that public people really do have a
right to some privacy."
Asked if he knew he was breaking English law when he sm·oked
marijuana, Clinton said, "I
assumed it was against the law, but
when we got there they told us that
as long as we did it inside our
apartments or whatever nobody
would hassle us .... But I was not
into that."
The 1992 campaign is the second presidential race to have candidates who went to college in the
1960s, when marijuana use became
common on many college campuses.
In the 1988 campaign, Tennessee Sen. Albert Gore Jr. and former Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt
acknowledged smoking marijuana
in their youths. Other candidates
denied ever trying the drug, but the
revelations had little impact on the
campaign.
Their admissions followed the
withdrawal of federal appellate
Judge Douglas Ginsburg's
Supreme Court nomination when
he disclosed he had smoked marijuana with his students at Harvard

--Local briefs--...
Reedsville man found dead
A Reedsville man died on Saturday, the victim of an apparent
•· suicide, according to infonnation released oo Monday morning by
•· the Meigs County Sheriffs Dcpanment.
Delmar W. "Jake" Swain, 70, was found dead on Saturday afternoon at his residence on Eden Ridge Road by Rose Yoho, also of
· . Reedsville. Deputies investigating the incident alsQ found a S.C.
'1:. Higgens 20-gauge shotgUn and a spent shell at the scene• .
Meigs County Coroner Qouglas Hunter, who was ' also at the
· •
scene, confltmed on Monday that the gunshot wound was selfinflicted.

Two vehicles damaged in wreck

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

•
7t18RU

Two vehicles were damaged in a three-car accident on East Main
S~t, Pomeroy,late Saturday morning. .
Police repo~ that Patsy Prater, 47, Racine, who failed to stop
her 1988 Ford van in a line of ttaff'IC, was cited for failure to maintain assured clear distance.
·•
The van hit the rear of a 1987 fonl driven by Senna L. Arnott, 42,
' Racine, pushing it into the 1984 Ford in front of her. Driver of that .
·
Contlaued on pqe 3 .
·

..

~
.

)._~_

,

..

'

with physical or mental disabilities
arc expected to qualify for a new
Disability Assistance program that
will provide $115 cash grants
monthly , along with continued
medical care.
Groups marching from Cleveland and Cincinnati are expected to
be among several hundred people
demonstrating Wednesday on
behalf of about 90,000 recipients
who have exhausted their eligibility
and will not receive checks April 1.

The archaeological studies on
the Zimmer site and research and
preservation of the Buchanan home
cost nearly SJJ5 million, all of
which the utilities seek to recover
by rate increases, The Columbus
Dispatch reported.
The three projects will account
for $2 million of the $450 million
in environmental costs for the Zimmer power plant, the newspaper
said.
"If we're causing an impact on
the Earth, we should pay for it,"
said Richard C. Sahli, executive
director of the Ohio Environmental
Council. " We have to be fair to the
next generation and pay for what
we ' re doing to the environment
today."
·'The things that are best for the
environment are the cheapest,''
said Ned Ford of the Cincinnati
chapter of the Ohio Sierra Club. He
believes utilities should have to
push energy conservation programs, thus reducing the need for

more power plants and more pollution conb'Ol equipment.
Columbus Southern customers
can expect to pay $3.24 of a projected $I 6.21 increase per month
for pollution control , Amcncan
Electric Power Controller Henry
Fayne said.
The environmental bill for
ratepayers could go much higher if
AEP, parent of Columbus Southern
and Ohio Power, decides to install
air-cleaning scrubbers at its power
plant in Cheshire to comply with
the Federal Clean Air Act.
AEP's alternative is to switch to
low-sulfur, out-of-stale coal. That
would cost more than 1,000 jobs at
the company's coal mines in Meigs
County.
About $450 million, or 32 percent or the $1.4 billion conversion
cos~ went for equipment to capture
and dispose of ash from burning
coal and scrubbers to remove airborne contaminants, The Dispatch
said.
·

Picket lines down at Piketon

PIKETON, Ohio (AP)- Picket
lines were down and union leaders
said a strike was over but workers
at the Portsmouth Gaseous Dirfusion Plant still wercn 'ton the job.
University.
However, contract negotiations
Clinton's acknowledgment previously scheduled for April 7
seemed to have little immediate and 8 were still planned, said Sohn
impact on this year's race.
Knauff, president of Local 3689 of
Brown, who has waged vicious the Oil, Chemical and Atomic
attacks against what he called a Workers Union.
"scandal-a-week" candidate,
The union on Friday offered to
refused to engage on the drug issue return to work unconditionally
while saying he never broke any today, and pickets were taken
drug laws.
down.
But Martin Marietta Energy
Brown himself faced a news
account criticizing his past political Systems and the union could not
and business dealings. He con- agree on the terms of the return of
firmed a Washington Post story 1,055 workers at the government
about his role as a director of a uranium processing plant
biomedical fmn whose parent comKnaurf said Sunday that union
members
would comply with the
pany paid a $400,000 penalty to
settle charges that it falsely pro- company's order not to report to
moted an anti-AIDS drug.
work today. The offer stands, howBrown interceded with Rep. ever, and the company could
Henry Waxman, D-Calif., over a choose to accept it at any time, he
dispute between the head of the said.
company, a longtime Brown supHe said the strike ended Friday
porter, and the Food and Drug when the union first made the
Administration.
offer.
"Yeah, you're right," he said
Knauff said pickets would not
when asked if his call to Waxman be resumed in an effort to avoid
represented the kind or special confrontations. Pickets had been
posted since the suike began June
interest lobbying he criticizes.
Campaiguing in Vermont for its II.
Tuesday caucuses on environmenMartin Marieua spokesman Tim
tal themes, Brown criticized people Matchett said Sunday the company
"digging back 20 years" looking was willing to reach an understandfor issues to use against candidates. ing of the union'sproposal. He said
Brown rapped Clinton for pro- the picket lines had been calm durmoting a federal conservation corps ing most of the strike.
when he hadn't created one as govOrficials of Martin Marietta,
which runs the plant for the U.S.
ernor of Arkansas.
"It's very easy for a candidate Department of Energy, wanted the
for president to say let's have a union to provide details of the offer
conservation corp$ when you've to return to work.
had the opportunity for I I years ....
The two sides met for about two
There is a California Conservation hours Saturday, when union offiCorps," the former California gov- cials said strikers would return to
ernor said. ·
work as long as there we~e no

Clinton acknowledges marijuana use
By WENDY BENJAMINSON
Associated Press Writer
Democratic front-runner Bill
Clinton acknowledged that he tried
marijuana while at Oxford University, but it caused little furor on the
campaign trail. Rival Jerry Brown
steered clear of the latest personal
news about Clinton and focused on
the environment in Vermont and
Wisconsin.
GOP challenger Patrick
Buchanan scheduled a speech outside the Capitol today to outline a
plan to overhaul Congress. He then
planned to fly to Wisconsin and
Minnesota for a full day of campaigning Tuesday. .
. .
Clinton made hts admtsston
about marijuana during a televised
debate Sunday with Brown, who
appeared on the New York show
from Wisconsin.
A questioner noted that Clinton
had always answered questions
about drug usc by saying he had
never broken state or federal law.
Asked if he had broken any international drug laws, Clinton said:
"When I was in En~land I
experimented with mariJuana a
time or two and dido 't like it. I
didn't inhale and I didn't try it
again." Clinton was at Oxford as a
Rhodes scholar from 1968 to 1970..

" So this bill will get the presumption of constitutionality, and
the mdustry will have to show in
what way it isn't constitutional,"
she said.
The current state budget sliced
monthly GA payments from Sl48
to $100 effective last Oct. 1, and
limited them to six months out of a
12-month period. Medical and prescription coverage also would be
lost after six months.
However, about 20,000 people

Part of rate increase goes
to environmental cares

White with leather trim. New
Road master trade.
WAS $17,900

1988
GRAND AM
2 DR.

1985 PONTIAC
·sAFARI ST.

He said the measure also would
David Case of the Hazardous
Waste Treatment Council, an conflict with authority of the U.S.
indumy group whose members Environmental Protection Agency
include WTI, said "there's a high to issue permits for incinerators.
Ms. Walsh said supporters
likelihood" the association would
try to overturn the moratorium if it worked for two months to produce
a bill that would pass constitutional
was enacted.
Case said the bill was designed muster.
"It's easy to say something' s
to prevent waste from coming into
unconstitutional,
but the courts in
Ohio from out-of-state, a violation
this
country
presume
that legislaof constitutional powers granted to
tors
pass
constirutional
acts," Ms.
Congress to regulate commerce
Walsh
said
in
an
interview.
among states. " '"

$6500

nOM IU!LIND FURNitURE AND

m.

1 Secllon, 10 Paget 25 cen11
AMulllmedla Inc:. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 30', 1992

THE MARIJUANA ISSUE • Democratic
presidential hopeful Gov. Bill Clinton talks to
reporters outside CBS- TV studios in New York
Sunday, During an earlier televised debate with

Hospital news .
PRIDA Y DISCHARGES •
ROIOila Secoy, Wlllilm Qaivey,
Lail r.ley Md Ella Dell WIIIOII.

Super Lollo:
20-29-31-34·37 -44
Kicker: 517774

Low tonight in mid 30s.
Tuesday, mostly sunny . High in
upper 50s.

House set to vote on incinerator moratorium

1988 BUICK
LESABRE
LIMITED

The aystal ball on the economy
remlins anything but crystal clear.
Economic growth pretty much
CllllC 10 a halt during the last three
months of I 991, according to ·
revised Commerce Department
suWtics.
Initially, an 0.8 pereent gain in
poll domestic product had been
Ctlillattd. but the real figure turned
out 10 be a 0.4 percent gain, the
p Cflllllellt said this week.
8al Americans are malting more
IIIOIIeJ, and spending it, which
llloald llelp me economy. That's
ICCDI..,tllllddllll 10 a gov.entment report

Hole.

10-H; A·C; 2·D;

Vol. 42, No. 234
Copyrlghled 1V92

'

ECONOMY:
More Muddy Waters

VetmDI Me~t~orlal Hospital
PRIDA Y ADMISSIONS -

Cards:

Page4

SEC investigates error
in massive stock sale
By DIRK BEVERIDGE
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Warren
Buffett may be relldy to clean out
his desk at Salomon Brothers and
bead baclc to Omaha, Neb., but il's
apparent all is not running smoothly at the scandalized Wall Street
powerhouse.
A red-faced Salomon was quick
to acknowledge this week that a
clerk's error - mistakenly ordering up the sale of I I million shares
or stock instead or the Sll million
sale that a customer intended pounded the stock market
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials plunged from positive
ground to a loss in a flurry of trading late Wednesday, as other com,puters picked up on Solly's blunder
and started selhng.
The New York Stoclc Exchange
and the Securities and Exchange
Commission are looking into the
matter, which again raised questions about the vulnerability of
Wall Street in the computer age.
Some traders said they were sur.sed this kind or problem doesn't
n more often.
till, Salomon was credited for
quickly admitting things went
wrong.
That could be a result of Buffett's efforts to clean up Salomon,
which was devastated by revelations last year that it had bought
more than its fair share of securities
in Treasury auctions, at times by
submitting bogus bids in the names
of cusromcrs. Top management sat
on the information for months
without temng regulators.
As soon as Salomon's legal
trOubles play out, Buffett says he
will leave, returning to his job running Berkshire Hathaway Inc. He
hopes that will be soon.
Unfonunately for Salomon, the
company's statement to that effect
came out just as the embarrassing
stoelc market error was sending
shock waves through the financial
community.

Pick 3: 981
Pick 4: 9698

4·S

Japanese market decline triggers stock price drop
By ROB WELLS
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Stock
prices dropped Friday in a muchfnticipated sell-off that followed a
sharp decline in the Japanese stock
market.
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials fell 36.23 to 3,231.44.
The selling was broad-based, with
declining issues outnumbering
advances by l I to 4 on the New
York Stock Exchange.
Volume was moderate, with
166.01 million shares changing
hands on the Big Board as of 4
p.m., down from I76.69 million in
Thursday's session.
·
For several weeks, market analysts have been expecting stock
prices to fall abf!l)Jtly, which would
bring prices in hne with a slowly
growing economy.
The Tokyo stock market's performance Friday gave investors the
excuse, when the Nikkei Stock

Ohio Lottery

OSU ousted;
UC advances
to Final Four

strings attached.
" We made an unconditional
offer to go to work. and we don' t
define that," Jeannie Cisco, the
local's negotiations secretary, said.
" They basically wanted to ncgountc it.''
In a news release Saturday,
company officials said they repeat-

edly asked the umon to explain its
offer, but " the union was unwilling
to further clarify its offer and chose
not to answer questions about the
specifics of the offer."
The company says employees
must be retrained before they
return to work, which the union
said is unacceptable.

SnOUJfer seeks Democratic
•
•
•
•
nomtnatzon zn pnmary
William "Bill" Snouffer of 121 Snouffer belongs to Drew Webster
Wehc Terrace, Pomeroy, will seck Post· 39, American Legion, and the
the Democratic nomination for the VFW Post 9926, Mason, W;Va. He
Jan. 2 tenn of Meigs County Com- is affiliated with the First Baptist
missioner in the June 2 primary.
Church of Pomeroy, and in the past
Snouffer served one term on was active with Boy Scout Troop
Pomeroy Village Council and after 248 of Pomeroy.
that was elected village clerk. He
Before coming to Pomeroy in
served in that capacity before start- 1960, Snouffer was employed by
ing the Blue Streak Cab Co. which the AEP construction force. After
he and his son, Gary, operate.
moving here he worked 22 years
A veteran of World War II with with Midwest Corp. of Pomeroy.
a tour of duty in the South Pacific,
He and his wife, Jane, a licensed
social worker for the Athens County Children's Services, have three
children, Dana of McConnelsville,
Gary and Melody of Pomeroy.
Snouffer said that if elected he
will be a full-time commissioner,
devoting his time and energy to
better Meigs County.
"For too long Meigs County
has been at the bottom of the list of
Ohio counties for state and federal
aid for much needed improve ments," Snouffer said. "I believe
that the 'squeaky wheel gets the
grease' and I will do whatever it
takes to restore Meigs County to
the thriving county that it once

was."'

WILLIAM SNOUFFER

"Meigs County has a work
roree, water transportation, rail and
truck transportation and land everythin~ that is needed to attract
industry,' he concluded.

Drive to limit terms of politicians gaining momentum
A statewide petition drive to put
a term limitation amendment to the
Ohio Constitution on the November ballot is gaining momentum
due to the efforts of Ohioans for
Term Limits.
The organization started as a
grass-roots group about 18 months
ago 'and now has almost 3,000 volunteers worlclng on the term limits
issue statewide.
Don Mullen of .Middleport is a

local volunteer working to solicit
signatures in Meigs County. The
goal for Meigs County is 600 signatureS, according to Mullen.
. John Sazwa, one of the leaders
or the sta1ewide petition 'drive says
that about nine out of ten people
questioned support term limtts. But. .
Jazwa, a Westlake resident who
owns and runs a busineb on Cleveland's west side, says people cannot assume
that overWhelming sup,

port for tenn limits will guarantee
that this issue will go on the ballot
in November.
In order to put the proposed
term limit amendment before voters this year, Ohioans for Term
Limits must .collect the signatures
of more th'lln 360,000 registered
voters on their petitions.
.
If the drive is successful,
Ohioans will voll: in November on
proposed amendment to limit the

a

terms of both state and federal officials. The amendment would:
-Allow no more than four consecutive two year terms for Ohio's .
U. S. Con 2ressmen and no more
than two con~utive si~ year terms
for U.S. Senators;
-Al'l!lw no more than two con- ·
secutive four year tenns for state
senators and no more than four
consecuiive two year terms for·
CI!Diinued on page 3
~

.

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