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••••
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Television
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FILLED WIT~ MILLIONS
OF WORMS !

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Ed MI:Mahon't Sial

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marriage
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8:36 ()) Andy Qriffllh

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8:00 m8 liJI MOVIE: 'The Herd

Wey' NBC Movie of the .
Week(R) (2:00) S~reo . C
(!) MOVIE: Magnum Force
(R) (2:00)
CIJ D (JJ 8 Famllf Maners
Urkel's 1,OOOth time to ask
Laura .lor a date causes a
, commotion. Stereo. C ·
&lt;lJ (I) Woahln~ Wnk In
Review Stereo. C
·
lllliiD IDle .Qoiftn Palace.
Blanche gives a gigolo a free
place to live and showers .
him with love. Stereo. Q
illl. Amertce'l Moat
Wonted A professor abducu
a woman: a paychic detective
unmasks a killer. Steieo. Q
tiJ MOVIE: Friday the 13tli·
(R) (2:00)
.
Clll C:.O. end Chaae
a PrlmeNewe E;J
·-cO MoviE: I'd RSthe; &amp;;t
Rich (2:00)
8:05 ()) MOVIE: The T~al of Lh .
Hervey Oaweld (4:00)
8:30(1)0 (JJ8 Step by Step
Trouble occurs when both
Dana and J.T. run lor
studlnt!'y president.
Stereo.
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•
1118 • Major Oed
Gunny works undercover to
protect ulaltlng dlgnHary.
Stereo. L,ll
9:00 C1J D (JJ 11 Olnoaaura
Robbio falls in love w~h
Ea~'s boss' daughter.

~~~-AN::D~I~T=H7,1~N=K~l~VE~~----~

Mnatro The IHe and
career of Lorin Maazel Is
examined through
photographs, archival films,
performances and Interviews.
(1:00)
1118 1121e Designing
Women Anthony marries a
shcwgi~; Julia and Mary Jo
win big. (PI 2 of 2) Stereo.
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monster of Lake
Champlain. Stereo. Q
Clll Neohvll.. Now
a Lorry King Uvel
9:30 CIJ D (JJ II Camp Wilder
Ricky turns l~to a l)erty
animal when he meets·a
free-spirited woman. Stereo.
the

BARNEY
FER BONES,
SILAS?

SOUP BONES
ARE A DIME AN'
DOGGIE BONES
ARE A NICKEL

IT'S FER

DL' BULLET'S
BIRTHDAY II

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SOUTH
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A useful aid
at the table

tQ2
. +B 73

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

By Phillip Alder
The computer industry has progressed more than any other in the
last 10 years. The latest gizmo is
called a Personal Digital A¥istant
(Pl&gt;o\), which is due to be marketed by
Apple early next year under t~~e codename of Newton. Presumably this is a
tribute to Sir Isaac rather than Wayne
or Fig.
It would be useful to have your own
programmed PDA at the bridge table.
If you weren't sure of the relative odds
of two plays; you could look them up.
today's deal. You reach four
hearts and West leads the club king.
Which is the best llne of play?
You are faced with three losers: one
spade and two clubs. If you lose a
trump trick as weU, you will go down,
.of course. The percentage play to
a heart loser is to cub the ace,
allowing for West's bavlnc a singleton
queen, and , then to finesse twice
through East. I am no great mathematician, but I make your chances In the
suit alone just under $1 percent.
However, there's an alternative.

Stull!

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ACROSS

33

Diligence

35 Put ou of
light
38 Fl'llhwater

lire

WriterRogera St.
John a
g Firat12 lira. In
Madrid
13 Climbing
pllnll
14 Coin of
Fronce
15 Fun .
4

porpoiH

37 ore..
38 Endured
4111Hd
covering
42 Vetch
43 Angllllh
45 Carvtcl gem
41 Before Dec.
50 laUalylng tor

17 Woo~

waahlng
realduo
18 Foded
11 LHI up
21 Runner
S.baeUan23 Ortver'a compartmenll
24 Relaxed
27 Coli typt
30 Sediment
31 Oeaplcablt
one

1 Pronto
(abbr.)

2- LIDouce

3 Handle
routhly

4 Fnhlon pho- .

DOWN

1ograjlhtr
Richard-

iIa InDjeopardy
11218
Alby's job
when he
lob

leaves a page out of the
comic book. Sterec. C
Ukelf Suapecti
Marshak investigates New
Wo~d astrology when a
~hie Is murdered~ Stereo.

II] •

10:00 Ill e l!JII'n· Fly Awar
,. '
Forrest risks his career to
get Information about a •
murder. Stereo. Q .
(!) Newa C
\1! • &lt;ll lit 20/20 Stereo.
CIJ In Concart at the
United Nollone 1112 The
United NatiOna celebril~s Its
47th anniversary wllh a
special mualcal . . _
commemorating the
quincantennial of Columbus'
voyage to America. (1 :00)
Stereo.
~8 IIUt Plctlet Fencea

ASTRO-GRAPH ·
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Nov. 14, 11112

,,

Major Improvements In your aoc141 life
are Indicated In the year ahead . This
could all begin when you make a new
friend, who will introduce 'you to a new

~~PIO (OCL

z4:Nov.

22) Usually, '
YJIU're a pragmatic peraon, but today
y0u could be more of a daydreamer
1 vlalon8tY· Rely more on your log·
1c than your Imagination. ~!'ow wllere to
took tor romance and you II flnd 11. The

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Aab1r11on

10:30 Clll Auetin Encore·

1121 IHRA R-a Scotchgard
Automotive Protectors Fall
Nationals from Bristol, Tenn.
(T)

a The'Keya to .... VICtory
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7 votes
push levy
for school
.
to victory
'

MRIDD board looks
to fill vacated slots ·
NEW SIDEWALK -Work continued Friday on the new sidewalk project along the 100
block or Fourth Avenue io Gallipolis; The. city
received a $21,300 Community Development

Biock Grant for t11e project. Holley ~roth~rs
Construction has the contract. Work IS bemg
performed by Sherman Johnson's crew.

Clinton: don't expect . 'overnight miracles'
, ByMIKEFEINSILBER
Associated Press Writer
WASlllNGTON -It was just a
cautionary word or two, but Bill
Clinton put a bit of distance
between ·himself and his campaign
rhetoric last week.
He still spoke of "aggressive
and prompt action" to get \be
American economy out of the s1ck:
bay, but warned as well against
expecting "overnight miracles."
He stopped shy of reafftnning his
call for middle-class tax relief, saying only thai he had "not made any
decision to change."
He did reaffirm his pledge to
pem_lil acknowledged homosexuals
1n the arm.e d forces - despite
opposition from military leaders but said he would first "consult
withJilOt of people about what our
options are."
None of this was a takeb'lck
from his campaign promises but it
reflected the realities of preparing
to take omce vs. the zeal of trying
to get elected.
Clinton, at 1he end of his firs!

fishing vacation, Clinton discussed
a ·visit to the Oval Office, to take
place Wednesday.
.
He also arranged two meet1~gs
with Democratic leaders: the f1rst
in Little Rock Sunday evening and
breakfast Thursday in Washington
with congressional leaders. He a!so
planned a Thursday lunch w1th
leaders from both parties.
.
Clinton also laid plans to meet
with economists, businessmen and
labor leaders. The session could
give him the opportunity to reframe
his economic promises and rccon·
sider his tax cut proposal.
.
Washington provided him With
pleasing news: a report that reta1l
sales rose a healthy 0.9 percent m
October, a sign that the economy
may finally be shakmg the dol·
drums.
Clinton appointed 48 people to
help him plan his government
takeover. The group _had all the
diversity he has promtsed for his
administration.

BILL CLINTON
full week of preparing for his presidency, also said ~; was "ha~ing a
wonderful time - even 1f the
thought of taking office was at

By BRIAN J. REED
Times-Sentinel Starr
POMEROY -The thrill of victory became a reality on Saturday
morning for the Meigs Board of
Mental Retardation and Develope
mental Disabilities, after the official county of ballots cast on election day put lhe MR/DD levy over
the top.
.
.
Along with the official counr of
ballots tabulated on election night, ~­
ballots cast by those who moved
within the county and failed to
change their address with the lxiard
of elections before the deadline
were also counted. A seven-vote
margin, 4,989 against to 4,996 for
the levy, spelled victory for the
levy committee. Ironically, it took
seven tries before the levy passed.
The 1.8-mill additional levy will
provide general operating funds f~
the program, WhiCh provides ser;
vices for school-aged children and
adults with mental retardation and
disabilities: Executive DirectOr.
Steve Beha said that the board Win
begin to fill staff positions thll.t
were vacated dlle to lack of OJlCI'QI·,
ing funds, with special emphw
placed on the speech therapy':
deparunem.
,• :
The Village of Pomeroy's 1.9,
mill, five-mill levy renewal request
remains defeated, with 439 votes
cast for the levy, and 453 against.
No other races were close enough:
to be effected by Saturday's count. :

•

. t3 ''
~-

--

-

,,-

·~

-·~

l

. The Options program is a ~
pilot projecl· which has ~en !n ·
effect for tlrie yean. ServiCes m
that program are provided on a
sliding fee scale which makes ,.·
many mic!dle income f1111ilics eligi-

_,,. ... ,..1' ,. .• .,.. ·-~- ,.... '

.t

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work with this budget."
replacement project filed by the
In addition to dwindling funds Village of Rutland (ranked fourth)
for the remainder of this year, the and a drainage project filed by the
new board which lakes over in Jan- Village of Middleport, which
uary will face a proposed deficit of received nolocal pnority rating,
nearly a half-million dollars. Tradi- were approved for fundil.g.
·: •
tionally, the county has operated
A point system is assigned ·to
wi1h a balanced budget, so across the projects by the Issue II Execulhe board cuts seem inevitable .
li ve Committee, and the relevanCY.
of assigning priorities on a local
Issue II program
·
Only two Issue II applications basis was discussed.
.
Board of Elections
filed by Meigs County agencies
The Meigs C,ounty Board of
were approved for funding during
Round Six, announced Friday, and Elections plans to move from iis
the commissioners and Thacker Mechanic Street location into the
discussed the ·prioritization process former liquor store site on Mnlber·
ry Avenue, directly above its curused in the program.
.
Neither of the county's top two rent location.
The building is owned by
projects, both paving projects, were
(Continued on A-2)
approved .. How~ver, a water lin~

1993.

GNMIJIYX.'
CTIWI
AIIIIIIIFJ,
:
·PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "My job It to make jokes lbcUt the newa. 1 daai
with t~o "me ·llorlea as Nlghtllne." - Joy Leno. .

end M'.'. King.
· - · - - ·· ·

The board tabled the request
pending discussion with the budget
commission and an overview of the
county's finances.
Spending freeze
The commissioners placed a
spending freeze on all . county
offices. and agencies within their
jurisdiction for the remainder of the
year in view of the county's tight
budget. All purchases over $100
must be approved by the board
before they are incurred.
"I think it's important to take
whatever action is necessary lo
curb the county's expenses," Com·
missioner Richard E. Jones said.
"We're going to need to monitor
the budget on a weekly basis. It's
going to be a tight ball game to

rear

m

Astro-Graph Matchmaker Instantly re-! day. which could lead to poor judgnwlt.
veals which signs are romantically l)er· Try to take the ''me'' out of the picture. .
feet for you. Mall $2 phisa long, Hlf·ad· T~URUS (April · :IMHI8f 20} Your
dressed, stamped envelope to doubts nigardlng -her aomaone you
Matchmak.., c/o this newspaper, P.O. hlivo a close relationship with really apBox 91428, Cleveland. OH 4410 t-3428. proclatea you could be eliminated today
SAQinAIIIUS (-. 23-Dec. 21} Buill· by thlalndlvldual'alincere behavior.
ness conditions are rather tricky today, GEMINI (Mar 21""- 20) lri order to
but you should still be able to come out achieve two important objeCtjvettoday,
on the profit lide of the ledgs - 11 you rely on yourself Instead of others. You
conduct your aHalra In a methodical can succeed unaided - If you try.
manner.
~ANCIII (June 21-.lulf 22} Be pr•
CAPRICORN (U.C. 22-.lan. 11) Some- pared to play the assertive role in a
one you're not particularly fond 01 might partnership today. II you provide the
be the Instrument that leado you to leaderlhlp, your cohort will prov~ the
&amp;omethlng -cial today. Don't let b,ackup.
'
your prejudice or your emotiOns LEO (Julf, 23-AII\1. 22) Don't jump to
Interfere.
.
concluliO!II today; your first AQUARIUS (olali. :i0-feb.11) Your IUC· · ment might not be your beai on.. II you
ceaa today could be predicated upon take time to analyze things lhoroughly, ·
the ante Involved. If the stakes are high you can avoid any.mlacalculationa.
enough, drtve and motivation could VIRGO (A.., 23-Sepl. 22) Do not ••·
overwhelm lear end Mil-doubt.
peel more from lrlendatoday then they
PIICIS (Feb. !I!LMarc1120) Try not to hove a right to ·~peel from you. Ev.yunlavorllbly prejudge those you meet body may prelef to be a recel- In·
lor the flrst lime today. 11 gl- hell a llead of a glvw.
chanca, they might turn oul to be nice UIIIA (lepl. 23-0ct. D) Intangibles
- like yourself.
might confuse you today; because you
Alllll (lllnlh 21•Aprll 11) False pride ' may not be Mile to grasp their dll'*'·
and ego might exert a strong lntluMce Ilona. Howev.. you shOUld tare well
on your decili~·maklng proceeoea to- 1 with anylhlng you can touch &lt;ir feel.

-~

POMEROY - The need for
more money so that home-ba'sed'
commuqity care for the elderly can
be expanded was discussed by
Judith Y. Brachman, director of the
Ohio Department of A~ng, at the
annilal Advisory Counctl on Aging
meeting Friday at the Sportsman
Restaurant in Athens.
.,
The Council, which operates
under Buckeye Hills-Hockin~ Val·
ley Regional Developnent D1stric~,
serves the needs of elderly res•·
dents· in Meigs and seven other
counties, including Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Noble, ~rry
and Washington.

ble (or services.
Passport, which will be the only
in-Mine' elder assistance program
in Meigs CO!IJity once the Options
program is·'jihased' out, is available
only 10 ~. wh&lt;i ate indigent or
· Medicaid elig1ble. ·
Oliver said that B,.:hman of the
Ohio De.partrilenl of Agiit_g is
.spearheading a drive. to get the
Community Care Ch~ices ~gh
the legislature. and !"Ill be asking
residents to wnte theu legiSlators.

Representing Meigs County at
that meeting were Susan Oliver,
director of the Meigs County Council on Aging; Beth Theiss, and
Alice Wamsley, Senior Citizens
Center staff members; and Cindy
Oliveri, C E. Blakeslee and Jane
Walton of the Council on Aging.
Brachman presented facets of
Gov. George Voinovich's proposed
Community Care Choices legislation. The legislation is proposing
changes in Ohio's long tenn"care
system that wiU increase the opportunity to choose community inhome care over institutional care.
Community Care Choices would
be a new program geared to
expanding community-based services such as nutrition, houscl:eeping and in-home medical care
which would allow elders to remain
safely in their own homes rather
than go to a nursing home.
The legislation would also
expand the passport program so
that there would be open enrollment all
long instead of just at .
certain umes. and w.ould increase
fupding for additional in-home services,
According to Oliver, Ohio currently spends 96 percent of its
long-term care resources on nun- ·
ing home care. Recent surveys
have shown thal.95 percent of older
Ohioans would prefer to stay in
their own homes.
The surveys also show that I 0
percent of those in nursing homes
could live in their own homes or
outside the institution setting if
adequate community services were
provided.
Statistics also show· that in·
horne care is much less expensive
than nursing home care.
'Oliver said thatp;ettinp; Community Care Choices through the legislature is extremely important particularly in view of the phasing out
·of the Options program on June 30,

moment
54 Exlal

55 Runnet"'lp
51 SaultIll....
57 Range of
light
58 FormerYP
-Agnew
58 llahop'e
province

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Starr

a. ....

34 Emptor•

1 Prepare to

15 Sectlono, 138 Pageo
A Multimedia Inc. Nliwepap«

State aging director
.makes pitch to boost
funds for programs

plait You could cash the A·K of hearts·
and then play .on diamonda. Tile con·
tract will make if either opponent bas
a singleton or doubleton heart queen,
or if the opponent with queen-third of
hearts has at least two diamonds. (U
an opponent holds queen-fourth In
hearts, you can wave goodbye to your
contract with this liae.)
I calculate the probability of success to be almoet 57 pen:eot.lt Is clear
which is the better liDe of play, but It
would bave ' - mudl ealer If I bad
bad a PDA at my fiJI&amp;er~.
What do you tltlak Is my middle
iniUal?
·

Tbe World Abnanac(l Cro•aword Puzde ·

w-

Stereo.~
&lt;lJ (I) Mu•ell A Profile of

.75 .

• Q62 .
t9 4

Jaopardyw. .

C1J D Entertainment onlghl
Stereo. I;!
(1)8 You lal Your Ule ,
IDle W"'"l of Fortune Q
11218 Fllllliy Feud
•
1121 NHL Hockey Pittsburgh
Penguins at Detroit Red
Wings (L)

The commissioners, villages, provide the funds . However,
townships, ulility companies and Thacker said she was hesitant to
banks have provided primary fund· borrow the money for fear of
ing of the office si.nce its 1991 another deficit in 1993.
establishment According 1o Thack·
Although member-driven fund·
By BRIAN J, REED
er, the office's extensive effons to raising effons have been more sucTimes-Sentinel Staff
attract a state prison in the county, cessful than anticipated this year,
· POMEROY -· A deficit in the along with work to save coal min· Thacker said that fund-raisers budget of the Meigs County Cham· . ing jobs in light of the Clean Air such as dinner/dances and the P.A.
ber of Commerce/Economic Devel- Act of 1990, cost the office several Denny cruise - will take a back
. opment Office was discussed when thousand dollars. Additionally, the scat next year to more lucrative
the Meigs County Commissioners ViUage'of Syracuse, Columbia Gas income sources. For example,
met in regular session on Friday of Ohio and Columbus Southern Thacker said that she would invesPower failed to renew their 1991 . tigate the possibility of administermorning.
Chamber Executive Director contributions for 1992.
.
ing grant applications, so that the
Paula Thacker requested from the
Thacker said that the chamber's economic development office
board additional funding in the boar4 of directors had authorized a could benefit from administration
amount of $5,000 to cover payroll, 90-day loan from one of two local fees that are traditionally paid to
utilities and supplies for ·the banks to cover the deficit if the the agency.which administers grant
remainder of the year.
commissioners were unwilling to funds.

County imposes
spending freeze

EAST
.AKIOU

+9 732

Cloudy. Hlgh near 40. Low In
lower lOs.

Commissioners table chamber funding request

+AU
. WEST

Editoral ....... - ...--...........A-4
Sports! .............................c1.. 6
Weather ............................A·2

'

••tAKJ105S

PHILLIP

Along the river ..............8 1·8
Business/Farni ............... Dl-8
Classified ---HOoMoouooooooDl-7
Deaths. .............................. A-3

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Galllpolls--:Polnt
Pleasant, November 1~. 1992
. .

Capyr1t~~tod..J 992.

•Du

ALDER

(!) The oletfiNORI•

Vol. 21, No. 31

u.~a-n

NORTH

.

aM-Y*a
0 llg llolher Jake Q
7:05 ()) Iaverty Hlllbllllel
7:30 m8 liJI

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

I I I I I I. I

BRIDGE

Inside

•
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'

1121~

£

of Gallia County women in 1912
election important- Sands- Page A-6·

THESE SQUARES

Oitl••tlon
11218 E r .
Tonight
Stereo.
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Leap Sterec. Q

SOA/Cer&gt;t

Rol~

PR INT NUMBERED LETTERS I

SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
" • •t..
Unsold • Tweak • Youm • Hoofed· DOES 100·
Man to trooper: "'t's a.good thing I wasn't driving a .
company. car. They frown on speeding." The trooper
replied, "The company I work for DOES' root• .
•

7:00 11j8 liJI Wheel of Fortune

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Complete the chuckie quoted

6 ~ic:~~~~~ LETTERS 10 I

,. 8 l!JI8 CBS Newa Q
illl8 Roaeilnne Starec. Q

TIZIC/C l&gt;Ovt 1'1
MUST iNOfl",--J.'M . GETTING

Sign of the times: The best things in
life cost money~ Fred W. Crow- A-4

bv filling In the rt:~iai"g words
L.-1.-J..-1...-1.-J..,_~·. yov develop
from step ~· 3 b•low.

(!J WheN

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Amanconlldedtoacoworker, "My wife and I argued

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laarch

HOW MUCH
DO YOU CHARGE

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1:05 ()) Thnoe'a c:amp.ny
8:30 me liJI NBC N-·Q
(!)

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Illinois ties Michigan 22-22 - Page - C-1

·1

WHYOS

llwortc1Tod8J

.

Tips for
turkey day
dinners

be.

I I .I I I -1

e:oo me CIJ • &lt;lle • •

THE WORLD IS 'r'OUR5..
A SKv TO FL'r' IN ...

the ~-

wcrdo.

I

7~

SuiHbn

E N. N U R G

EVENING

PEANIITS

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lime"

~Sales

"Our problems are great,"
Stricli:l:anil SJid, "and Southern
Ohio has many needS, but we are
now in a position to move the
cbuntl')' lbnllrd. with l Democrat
in the White HoUSII and • Democancratimcalaklye-conadi~-Srpeop;:::
""'~-

lives. If we don't, "'C need to suffer
tbe consequences.·
As pledged during the campaign, Strickland targeted cornprehensive health care as 8 ma.JOC goal
for his fust term in Congress.
"When I'm an old man, I want
••·t
to look back at· 1993 an d say u..
d
h · health
we ma e com pre enslve
care available to every man ,
woman
an d ·child• who call them •
1 Am
se ves . encans.
John R. L.entes, wh_o was elected
Meigs County prosecuting attorney, co_mmended fellow Democrat,

no~ e~ohug~d about ~e orm'

said
.
This fiscal year's 10tal appropriation for the Ohio Department of
Education and Ohio Board of
Re ents was about $6.71 billion, so
an \Soo million boost would reprent an increase of Jess than 12 perse t
..
cenLe islators could submit the tax
hike ro voters as a constitutio~al
amendment orbecauseofasecuon
already in 'me state constitution,

Volnovtc SBI •
ha
. "A great deal depend&lt;! on w t
kmd of reform !l3Ckage comes o~t
of tbe sta~ Leglsiah!re. _That Will
make a b1g dete~mtnaUC?~. as to
wheth~r or not I d be Wll _mg to
e~~ the tho_ught of ask!".g tbe
Citizen.~ of OhiO for additional
money.
.
.
M_any count~es and regional
tranSit systems p1ggyback taxes on
the state Sllles tax. For example,,the
total rate 10 Cuyahoga County 1s 7
percent.
A tax referendum :would let
GALLIPOLIS_ The following
•
·
Voinovich and state leg1~lators off
couples
have
appli~
,or
mamage
the _political hoo_k by letung voters
decide the quesuon, tbe newspaper · licencses in tbe Gallia· County Probate ourt:
u t C Hill 25 and Nina M
t••on ui botJi of 703 Viand St.:
Duncan, • W Va.
.
Po~
~
~!=~Rankin, 19, 2150
POMEROY • A judgment State Route 533 Crown City• and
action has been filed in Meigs
'lnb 1 J L~ngfellow 19 64
County Common Pleas Coun by K1 er Y •
· -·
'
'
General Motors Acceptance Corporation, Charleston, W.Va., against
Gary L. Fife, Rutland, and others,
South-Centnt Oblo
in the amount of$4,013.37.
Sunday, monty cloudy with
widely scallered flurries. The high
·near·4o. The chance of snow is 30
percent. Sunday 'ni&amp;ht, decreaSing
cloudiness. The low in the lower
20s. Monday, mostly sunny. The
high around 45.
Extended forecasts:
daughter.
Births Nov. 12- Mr. and Mrs.
Tuesday through Thursday:
Dave Wooldridge, son, Bidwell:
Tuesday, chance of rain or snow
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Norvell, north. Fair soutb. Lows upper 20s
daughter, Leon. W.Va.
to lower 30s. Highs upper 30s_to .
VETERANS MEMORIAL
upper 40s. Wednesday, chance of
Friday admissions - Cora rain or snow . Lows upper 20s to
lower 30s. Highs in the 40s. ThursWolfe, Long Bottom.
·
Friday discharges - Greg day, fair. Lows mid-20s to lower
30s. Highs mid-30s to mid-40s. .
Hibbs.

Court issues marriage licenses

Judgment sought

Weather

l

'

Hospital News

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Nov. 12- Paula
Camden, Richard Marhoover,
Eugene Adkins, Alberta Callloun,
Crystal Shank, Harry Odell, Vema
Lucas, George Kelley, Donna ~ra­
zier, Kevin Tabor. James Haskins,
. Donna Matteson, April Masters,
Dewey Birchfreld, Sara Hutchinson
and Mrs. Steven Norvell and

could simply pass a tax hike to
benefit schools, contingent on voter
approval.
·
Should legislatbrs balk at even
asking a tax question, Voi~ovich
could propose a ballot 1ssue,
bypassing tbe Legislature, by gatbering 347,765 voter signatures.
. Voinoyich ~iscu~ the deficit
10 a meellng Fnday Wltb t)le LegiS·
lature's top Democrat, House
Speaker Vern Riffe of Wheelers-

Com missi 0 ners table ... _

I

during construction of that portion
of the Capital Corridor (State
· Route 124/U.S. Route 33);
• Agreed to write a letter in support of Planned Parenthood -of
Soutbeastern Ohio to be submitted
witb an application for Title X Public Healtb Services funding.
Present, in addition to Jones,
were Commissioners Manning K.
Rousli and David Koblentz: Clerk
Mary Hobstetter, and Commission.er-elect Robert Harten bach.

•
COLONY THEATRE
FilL THALl lHURI.
LAAA'I DRAKE IN
DR. GIGGLES A
SHOW TIMEt:

Bruce B. McDonald

~~~~E~~~~;~~]:

A

nnOUnCeS
OPEN HOUSE

REVIVAL

and

DEDICATION OF RECREATIONAL
COMPLEX

Ira G. Roach Jr.

Heather SL, Crown t:1ty .
Sunday, November 22, 1992
Douglas E. Tawney, 20, 2981
State Route 588, Gallipolis, and
·. 2 IJ.IIl.-41 IJ.IIl.
Sandra D. Robens, 20. 86 Pine St.,
Cheshire, Ohio
G II'1 I'15
a ~ •
23
N1cholas S. N&lt;;!lan.- 21, 11 .
Refreshments
Laurel Road, Galhpohs, and :lyha
EVER'\;'ONEWELCOME!
D. Rando!ph,_21, 430 BulavllleRoad, GallipoliS.
Marcus E. S~ee~s. 30, 41 ~----------------------,
Garfield Ave., Gallipolis, and Mary
B. Hennessey, 26, 428 Charolais
,(
. l
Lake Drive, Gallipolis.
J.W. Scott Slone, 27, and Christine L. Kertulis, 28, both of 314
White Road, Gallipolis.
Charles M..Tackett, 40, 12 Hillcrest Drive, Gallipolis, and Cinda
i... Mink, 33, 57 Jay Drive, Lot 13,
Gallipolis.
. .
Michael L. W1ckhne, 24, 182
Gavin St., Bidwell, and Susan L.
Bing, 20, 3146 Kriner Road, Gal_lipolis.

. Ev••r·

BIRCHFIELD
FUNERAL
HOME
MAIN ST.,

FAI. tAT.,-· 7:JO,I:30

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-EVE-IHOW
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ONE
-IIIIIOIUUO

Wound self-inflicud
PORTLAND - Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported
Saturday that Ira Roach, Jr., Valley
Belle Road near Portland was
'killed by a self-inflicted gilnshot
wound on Friday aftcmOOn.
Dr. Douglas Hunter, coroner,
was on the scene of tbe shooting,
and Roach's body was taken to
Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy.

New Homestyle Dinners like Meatloaf, Country Fried Steak,
Barbecued Chicken . H~m Steak and Pot Roast. New
Homestyle vegetable ~ such as Baked Sweet . Potatoes,
·Green Beans, Mashed Potatoes·, Broccoli and Cheese and

ra~~~s ~~~~:~~a~:.p~les
. WuhileobrNead Eand~Sh~oney' s
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omesty e mners . .
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BAUROOM PACKAGE

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INCLUDES:
3 PJI. chlcll: In Dec. 31 • 5 p.m. chaclr.ol• Jln. 1

Enllrlllnmant providld br "1M Rlndll U111 Bind"
Prlmt Rlb lkMII b two liiMd fran 7 p.m. to I p.m.
Compll"**lliy Cocldllla 'WIIIIrinllt lind Beer" from 8 p.m. to 1 1.m. .

PqF•-

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Gollipollo, Obio, by lho •Ohio VoDoy
l'llbllobi., CCnyl)(altlmeclia. lac.
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lop poid ot GIIHpollo,
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mailiDf matlm' at Pomeroy, Ohio, Palt

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No Cancellations After 1mS/92

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out of 112 Buick dealers in the Charlotte,
North Carolina Buick Zone by their customers.
The ranking is Q result of customer -surveys,
pertaining to key measures of customer
satisfaction. The survey questions include
.customer evaluations ab.out their sales and
service experience at the various dealerships~
The surveys include dealers in the Charlotte ·
Zone,which includes parts of Ohio, West
Virginia, Tennessee, Virginia, North Carolina
,
and South Carolina.

c.,....,...•.,.,.,.
Relervlltlons
Llmltld ·

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in Gal_lipolis, Ohio is ranked

··.

H

lfir~~~ib_1 _~~~§~~~i-~r1

Smith .auick·Pontiac

received
a call
ondumped
Fr1day a)ong
mght • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...
about trash
being
Rowe Road in Letart Township.
Deputies found what appeared
to be at least three pickqp truck ·
loads of junk and light green bags
of trash along the berm. Anyone

IsG

' To-Eat Soup, Salad &amp;
Fruit Bar may seem like
gravy, they're really the
icing on the cake.
:

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71

Texas, said a vast majority ofRNC
members agree with 'the lettq.
"We've been screaming behi~
closed doors for tbree years. Th1s IS
no news," be said Friday.
Also signing the l~tter were
Ernest Angelo Jr., a nauonal com;
mitteeman from Texas: Cllllg Btn.-•
man, chairman of the Oregon.
Republican Party; and Evely«
McPha_il, chairwomen of the Mis•
S1Ss1pp1 Republican Party.
·-As the infighting surfaced,
many of the state officials were•
receiving telephone calls and letters
from the crowded field of candi~ .
dates running to be chainnan of the:
RNC.
'
Bond is leaving tbe post in Jan-·
uary. The GOP meets in SL Loui§
on Jan. 28-29to pick his successor. '
AmO,ng the candidates cam ' ·
paigning hard are Labor Secretary:
Lynn Martin, who, according to·
some Republican officials, has
Bond's backing, an~ Spencer Abra;ham, the co-chauman of the·
National Repubhcan CongressiOnal
· Committee who once worked for
Vice President Dan Quayle and haS
his support
•

Buick Motor Division has iust announced that

Deputies probe dumping complaint

~inti out more 6y ca{[ing...

tention tbat tbe organiZ~~tion has
grown too big and has too many
consul!&amp;nts, -and points out that a
number of staff people have been
laid off.
.
"~ile we can all pomt_ fmgers
or ~SSign blam~ after losmg the
Wh1te House, It serves no purr.!se," said Bond, who later added:
'Frankly, l~tter.s sue~ as yours
accomplis~ httle, especially when
based on httle fact and less com,passion."
_
.
.
Bond wa:&gt; _traveling and unavw~able for addiuonal comment on Fnday.
.
-Per.ry Hooper Sr., a national
committeeman from Alabama, swd
he regrets that Bonil took the letter
as a personal offense. "My concem
is for the future of tbe Republican
Party . We have to get back to
basics," he said.
Welch _said tbe Jetter'~ intent
was to pomt out tbe party s prob!ems. "No _o_n~ likes ~ have wh~
they d~ ,cntlclz_ed. while on the1r
watch, he satd m a telephone
interview. .
Anoti!er s1gner, Fred )\feyer, the
Republican Party chauman of

Nellie Scarberry

Prnldllig Plly8ical ft••PY F• Dv• • Yeara!

'

Accidents reported

Nellie Isabelle Rainey

GUl'd'IDg H and SCh001/Ga11CO I DdUS t nes
•

·· ' • .Phyllcll Thenlpy '
, , 'oSporta Medicine Progl'llll
· •Work R1cavery
oBick Rehlbllllllllon
. . _:· •• oC1rdlllc Relulbllltltlcn
·. •AdultFIMA

t

P.wJ

Court~onsultants
new-S

burg and Senate President Stan tian School as listed in the Daily
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati.
Tribune.

·•

Sunday Times

GALLIPOLIS - Bruce B. McDonald, 84, 25 Vanco Rd., Gallipolis, ·
care Center.
Services will be beld I p.m. Monday at Willis Funeral Home, with the
Rev. Joseeh Hefner and the Rev. Greg Swann officiating. Burial will be in
MOund Hill Cemetery.
Friend&lt;! may call at the,funeril home on Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
In lieu of floivel:s, oontributions ~ail be made to the Office oflnstitu· of dollars on
and County
POMEROY
_ Department
The Meigs
Sheriff's
tiona! Adyancemenl; University of Rio Grande, and Grace United
investigated tbree deer accidents on ·
Methodist Church.
Pallbearers will be Bruce William McDonald, Frank Poner Jr., Jack
Malpractice suit rded .
Thursday and Friday.
GALLIPOLIS _ Earl and ,
Ralph D . Spencer, Rutland,
Dabney Bob Burlile, Gerald Wells and Lawrence Chevalier. Honorary
reported
tbat he struck a deer on
patl~rs wiU be Charles Carmichael, Smitb Runyan, Lloyd Blazer and .
0 ~orthup Rd., State Route
Nell!&amp;
q.ldwell,
92
124 near Hilltop GroCecil Chevalier.
~allltx?lr.:;. filed a fl'!edical malpmc: eery. Moderate damage was listed
uce smt m the GalliB &lt;;ounty G?m to his 1987 Volkswagen. The deer
mon Pleas Court Fnday agw_nst ran away but was later found and
Diane Gillis M.D., Holzer Medical disposed ~f
Center,
~olzer Clin~c and the Hoi~On Friru;y at 1:30 a.m., Richard
POINT PLEASANT - NeUie Isabelle ·Plants Rainey, 61, of. West
er
H95111tal
Fopndabon.
Garfield
of Pooler Road, Pomeroy,
. Columbia, died Friday, November 13, 1992, at Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal
~h~
C~ldwells
alledge
thatj
struck
a
deer while traveling east
following a long .illness.
·
1987, ~ on Texas Road. Damage to his
begmnmg
m
No_vember
BorR April 13. 1931 in Ambrosia, she was a daughter of the late Emerson B. and Fannie (Stevens) Plants. She was a member of the Un!t~ Caldwel\ was Improperly dlag- vehicle was moderate.
On Friday night, Wanda Rizer
MethOdist Church in West Columbia and had worked for the West V.rgmiB no~ and_tt:eated for a fracture. to
~~s
nght
bb~
and
f!bula
resultmg
of
Pomeroy struclo one of three
Deparunent of Resources in West ColumbiB.
.
~~
seve~~
pam,
anxiety
and
emodeer
that ran into the patb of her
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Homer Rainey, and a
uonal distreSS.
. . pickup truck near Syracuse. Heavy
son, Ronald L. Plants.
. .
·
OH· r · d
Survivon include a brotber, Chnsuan B. Plants of L1ma,
, a nen , mare Caldwells requested ~JUry damage was sustained by the truck.
Myrtle Ghe01ghiu of Point Pleasant: several nieces and ~phews. .
(A lawsuit Is only an allegation
Service will be Monday, November 16,. at 1:~0 p.m. at_ the ~ilcoxen or guilt made by the complainant
Funeral Home with_Rev. Herman Jordan Qfficyumg. Bunal will be m until a trial or bearing is beld in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
·
t
.
the matter.)
MERCERVILLE
Friends may call at tbe funeral home on Sunday from 7-9 p.m.
. Dissolutions filed
The following dissolutions were MISSIONARY BAPTIST
filed recently in tbe Gallia County
CHURCH
Common Pleas Court of Judge
NOV. 1.6·21
Joseph L. Cain:
POMEROY- Ira G. Roach Jr., 33, of Valley Bell Road in Racine,
Nov.
12
Sonja
Sue
Ritchie
curtis
died on Friday, Nov. 13, 1992 8t his residence.
He was bOrn on Dec. 23, 1958 in Parks, W.Va., the son of ~m.erta and Merrill O'Brian .Ritchie, botb
of Gallipolis: Wilbert Matthew · Specie Si•ti•t lliglltly
Eddy and the late Ira G. Roach, Sr. He was~ we_ll tend~ for J.D. Dril1mg.
SERVICE IEGII 7:30 PM
Besides his mother, he is survived by hiS wife, April Hayman R~h. White and Catby Lynn White, botb
·
Pulalic is Welco•
Racine• IWO daughters Erin and Mallory Roach, botlJ Of RaciJ!e; tlJree SIS· of Gallipolis: ·
Nov.
13Krystal
L,
Patterson,
tees: ·Edn. Abels, Arle~e Gibson, and Elsie Roush, all of Rae~: a brother, Danny Roach of Wooster: and several aunts, uncles, meces and Vinton, and Billy J. Patterson Jr.,
Gallipolis.
nephews. ·
·
·
· F ra1 H
··•
The following divorces were
Services will be Monday at 1 p.m. in the EWing ~ne
_orne, Wlua
granted
Thursday: Donna M.
the Rev. Tom Gates officiating. Burial 'will follow In Memls Chapel
Boster,
Crown
City, from Carroll
Cemetery in Mineral Wells, W.Va. ·
.
Dwayne
Boster,
Gallipolis, and
Friends may call at the funeral home on SU)Iday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Sherman M. Kirby from~ ElizContributions may be made in the name of Mr. Roach's daughters.
abetb Kirby, botb of Gallipolis.
.
M unlci)lal court news
The following cases were processed Friday in the Gallipolis
Municipal Court of Judge Joseph
GALLIPOLIS- Nellie Scarberry, a former resident. of 114 First Ave., L.Cain:
'
Gallipolis, died Saturday afternoon, Nov. 14, 1992 at Pinecrest Care CenSheila K. Hutchinson, 28, Galter
·
lipolis, $50 plus costs, no operators
'Arrangements will be announced by Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral license: Melvin Stewart, 20, GalHome.
lipolis, $50 plus costs, public intoxication, $50 plus costs, intoxicated
while walking on roadway.
A charge of underage consumption against William Goody, age
unreported, Gallipoli~. was
POMEROY - The Meigs with knowledge of the incident is dropped at the request of tbe state.
. County ' Sheriff's D~partfl'!ent asked IOcontactthedepar\ment.
eli~ Friday, Nov. 13, 1992, at Scenic Hills

'i (Physician Referral By Appointment)

,,

unsuccl)!lsfuJ programs, and believe
·a grassroots effort that includes
WASHINGTON- State GOP teachi~g- and t~aining of local
officials are accusing the national groups IS 1mperattvc;.
an ·1 bigwigs of treating them
"Republican organizations
mushrooms" as Republicans should be taught 10 fish, !lot ~ted
squam off against Republicans in a as seals and thrown an occasiOnal
post-eloction struggle for tl)e party fish," the sixmembers said.
chainnanship.
·
The letter comes after ihe
"The inside-the-Beltway, non- Republicans lost tbe White House
elected Republicans have taken on in the _presidential .ele~liO':f and
all the characteristics of the tbeu disappomung showmg m the
Democrats" said six Republican Senate and House races compared
National cOmmittee members. · .
to the high hopes they had last
In their Nov. 6 letter, ·the SIX year. ·
.
·
members from Alabama, MississipThe state GOP officials who
· pi, Oregon, Tennessee an_d T~xas sign~ tbe letter be\ieve the presisaid the national organizatton IS an denual defeat contributed to RNC
arrogant bureaucracy that has Chairman Richard Bond's angry
grown too big. The rank-and-file · res~ to their_ letter.
members believe it is time-for them
'YO!IC letter IS loaded with inacto reclaim the~committee.
curacies, myths and old truths,"
"All those m the real world out· Bond said in a letter dated Nov. 10
side tl)e.Beltway, including Repub- and ~nt to Ted Welch, a national
lican volunteers. Republican l'arty comm1tteeman from Tennes~ and
workers, Re~ublican Party offi· one of the six who si&amp;!led th~ letter.
cials, Republican elected officials
Bon~ de!:nded_the RNC,f&lt;?r
and Republican voters are treated performmg amazmgly well 10
like mushrooms," the letter said
trying ti_mes , disputes th.e conTh~ six criticized the national
organization fQr spending millions

~ted Press Writer

·

MIDPLEPORT- Robert L. Lewis Sr., 6S, Middleport, died unexpectedly on Friday, Nov. 13, 1992 at Velt.ranS Mcmcrial Holpital.
He wu born m Gallia County on April22, 1927, the 1011 of lbe late
Charles and J111111y Mae Wise Lewis. He was a steelworker with Midwest
Steel and wu employed by the Holzer Clinic In Middleport as a janitc.-.
He wu a member of q,e Middlewrt First 'B~ Church.
Surviving are his wife, Anna Mae Lew1s of Middleport; two sons,
Robert ~egay) Lewis Jr. of Middleport, and Daniel (Grace) Lewis of
LanasvUle; 1 brother, Charles Lewis, Jr. of Langsville: a sister, Julia
Boyles of Middl~ tbree grandsons, Danny Lewis Jr., Tmuny Lewis
and Matlhcw Lewis. all of Langsville; tlvee granddaughterS, Penny, Ellen
and Cindy Lewis, all of Middleplrt: his father-In-law, Ben Batey of Mid·
dleport; and sevcnl nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by two brothers, James ·
and Richard. .
..
.
.
, Services will be Tuesday at 2 p.m . in the Fisher Funeral Home, Mid- ·
dleport, with the Rev. James Seddon and tbe Rev. James Keesee·officiat·
ing. Burial will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friend&lt;! may call at tbe funeral home on Monday from 2- 4 and 7-9 p.m.

_:_:&lt;C--on--tin--ued..:.._f_ro_m_;A:....:.l)-:-------

Warner said that 310 tons of
blacktop will be applied to County
Road 36 near Chester to repair
damages incurred because of
bridge repair on State Route 7.
Two hundred tons of that blackiOp
will be provided by the Ohio
Department of Transportation to
repair damage caused by detouring
traffic.
Striping of roads recently paved
will get underway shortly at county
expense. That includes roads paved
through the Issue II program, as
well as otbers.
Other business
The commissioners also: .
• Announced a regional meeting
to 'be held in the Meigs County
Common Pleas courtroom about
availability of grant money for tbe
construction of minimum security
jails on Nov. 23 at 10 a.m.:
• Appropriated a $6,000 certification into tbe Meigs County Common Pleas Court budget, representing portions of fiqes earmarked for
deposit in the county ~eneral f~;
• Passed a resoluuon requesung
the construction of a welcome center near the Ravenswopd

B DONNA CASSATA

Robert L. Lewis·Sr.

COrreCfiOD
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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleuant, WV

--Area deaths-- State GOP leaders blast national · organization ·: _

GALLIPOLIS - I t has- now
become more expensive to ride
unbuckled, Lt. Woodford of the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol said Friday.
"Drivers and -passengers· that
choose to ignore tl)e law and are
. cited for a safety belt violation can
' no longer view an informational
movie to avoid a fine. The safety
belt film option, which was available in all 88 counties prior to Nov.
12, has been eliminated," Wood·
ford said.
·
Charles D. Shipley, director of
tbe Ohio Department of Highway
Safety said "J;ducational progranis, ~uch as tbe safety belt film,
have helped Ohio reach the current
53 percent safety belt use rate, but
to reach a higher rate of compliance, we must combine increased
DEMOCRATS CELEBRATE - MeiJS . Leates; Commissioner-elect Janet Howard,
'Jaw
enforcement
witb. public
. . .effons
."
County Chairman Sue Maison, CongressmanCqunty's Democratic vlc(Ors celebrated the "hiSawareness
acuv1ues.
.
elect Ted Strickland and Sheriff James Soulsby.
toric" victory at a dinner oa Friday aigbt. Pic·
"Troopers from_ the Gallipolis
lured are, lert to right, Prosecutor-elect Joba
Post will continue to actively
enforce safety belt violations in an
attempt to further reduce needless
Sheriff James M. Souls_by,' who.
"
anotber."
t
injUries and deatbs !)lat occur as a
al_so spo
· keto the crowd, and said groL'entes also thanked the other · Janet Howard, who defeated re_sult of traffic crashes," ~!XJdford
tbat the two would work closely local Democratic candidates, Richard E. Jones to become the said. . ·
·
d'da
county's fi·~t woman commissionDriver cited for the violation
together·
·
including commissiOner
u•
d can 1 te e·r,m
· dicated
·•at she would spend a
will now be fined $25 plus court
"A lot of things were said in this William Snouffer an treasurer
u•
campaign that were not true," candidate Maureen Hennessy, who great deal of time in tbe office.
costs and passengers will be fined
were de'eated.
"It will be a hard 1·ob, but I'll be $15
plus court costs.
,Lentes said. "Jim Soulsby has run
"
the sheriff's office with integrity
"We were good, strong cand'1- work1'ng 'or
'' all of you," Howard
dates who worked. together," said. "If you have any qu~lions or
and honesty. 4w eoforce~ent will
bl
b ,,_
urth us
be done eff~vely and .fan-ly, and ..Lentes said. "When we. !ISked for pro ems, come Y ...e co o e.
GALLIPOLIS • The Galli a
togetber, well help Me1gs County votes, we asked for.votes for one .·.I'll probably be there." _
Christian School Marching Bells

of nine children 10 graduate from
high school, and tl)e fust. to gntduate from college. To thmk that_ I
have a chance to serve you 10
Congress is a wonderful !bing." .
"But I want to be a humble congressman. I'm not going to pretend
that 1 have all of the answers,
because 1 d.on 't. I want to learn
from the people here, There's a lot
of wisdo.m in this room, and
throllgboul Sootbern Obio."

f

November 15,11192

r

tax ·hike talk is prem-a ture, Vo•novich says ·

:.
-: CLEVELAND (AP) - Gov.
C,eorge Voinovich said Friday it
~as premature to speculate whether
11e would ask voters to raise Ohio's
iales tax to raise another SliOO m1lJion a year for education.
.-· The Plain Dealer reported that
liie decision whether to ask voters
(or an in~rel\Se of 5 ~rcent to 6
ilercent hmged on leglsiauve lead·
and reports Volnovich expected
!0ersreceive
next mQntb from a study
of Ohio's education needs.
·: The state must erase a projected
!3oo million budget deficit before
.lpne 30 but the additional sales tax
~venu~s would not be applied to
t(le red ink, the newspaper report·
ed. The money would go solely for
$Chools and colleges in tbe 19931~5 state ~udget .
..
:• Voinov1ch sau! additiOnal
rioncy was needed to provide qual,
iry education in the state, but no
· decision had been made on how to
raise the funds. He said he would
· first consider reforming tbe state'_s
edUcation system.
"We have.spent too much time
in Ohio talking about funding and

1992

·State toughening
up on safety belts

Meigs Democrats
:celebrate victories
B1 BRIAN J, REED
.
Times-Sentinel Stair . .
. POMEROY · - The Me1gs
Countv Democratic Party cele~rat­
ed a ,rhistoric'' victory on Fr1day
night at a potluck dinne~ held at the
Meigs County Seruor CU1zens Center.
. Ted Strickland, co~gr~ssman­
e)ect for the Sixth Dutnct, and
tiuee local.victors spoke to approximately 150 people about the1r
plans for the months ahead, and
thanked tbem for their support and
campaign work.
.
_
, Strickland, who won 10 ~e1gs
County by 52 percent. ~was mtroduced by County C~a.rma~ Sue
Maison, who descnbed ~1m as
being "just like you and me.
. Stricldand admitted tbat he was
surpriseP by his viciory in Meigs
County.
.
. "Early in my campaign, I spo~e
to a Republican attorney m
P.ortsmouth, who told me the~e
were two counties I could not wm
_ Washington and Me_igs,"_ Stricl_c·
la.'nd said. He was v1ctonous m
·• th
botb counties, as well as u•e o er
three which had been in Clarence
·
'"Her's IOtb DistriCt
M1
1·
;: " You've helped me rea 1ze a
liream that I've had for a long
he said, "ahd now I'm going
... for you. 1 was the second
10 W:.'-""'

November

OH-Polnt Pleaeant, WV

Times Sentinel

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Commentary and perspective

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A DttUioa of

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ROBERT L WINGETI'
Pllblloher

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HOBARTWIUON JR•.
EDcttiiYO Jldltor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Alllolaal Pllblloher-Coalnlllor

A MEMBER of lbe Associated Preis, aQd lite Americ1111

t Newspoper Publilbers Associalioo ..

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LETII!RS OF OPINION ue welcome: They obould be le11· lb1111
: 300 words. Allletten ue subject lo editing and muot be oigoed with
' name, addre11 and telephone number. No unsigned _lette.n will be
published. Letten· should be in good lute; addre..mg JIIUes, not
penonalitiea.

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Letters to the editor
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TO'"- 'T'.OWn
don·a·tiOnS needed
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.•Once again this year the Key tions. churches and individ,uals
Ct.ub of Gallia Academy High from throughout the county, we
• School will be sponsoring i~ "Toy- will not be able to meet our goals
1'own" project. Through the pro; for this holiday season. We are ask·
ingfilr your help. Please think
j oc ~ we plan to distribute new toys
about
all the needy families this
t&amp;·over 1000 children and hope 10 ·
. provide coats and food boxes 10 holiday season and hell! us in helpneedy families. Last year we were ing them by donating nmt, money,
fortunate enough 10 purchase toys effort or coats. Donations may be
flit over 1000 children, distributed sent to "ToyTown," P.O. Box
I coats io nearly 250 individuals,and 1183, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Thank you in advance for all
I fOOd boxes tb 175 families.
·&gt;lfhis project is a large undertak· your help.
Kelli Smith,co-chair
ill! an~ without the generous J:lelp
Jared Ford,co-c hair
o!lbusanesses, groups, orgamza·
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Light in the dark

•

area events, cookouts, and sporung
reonding the Gallia County School events are just a few of the many
system, there is a light in the dark. activities that this school particiIn•.Gallia County there is a school · pates in. These activities are. as
that tends a hand 10 all children . richly important to the learm~g
who neell that hand. This school ~ as well as class room acUv·
di&gt;es not get the recognition is so Ities, to teach our children to
rightly deserves. 1 would like to become involved with our commuta'ke the opportunity to describe the nity.
·
· ajtributeS of this school.
Most importantly, this school
LThis school promotes learning helps children who neC(i assistance
and a "can do" attitude. Participa- with speech, mo10r, occupational or
tion and enthusiasm are attributes mental abilities through . the
of the staff and administration. The preschool program and upper edu·
staff fosters an atmosphere that is cation program. With the help of
conducive to teaming and, most this school the children can go on
·
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If into our county school system and
importan tl y, to tncrease •he se
cOmmunities to become effective
esteem of the children. This pro· members in soc:icty. This school is
eess is enhanced by communicating 1 Ouidin Hands School ill Cheshile,
closely with the parents through Ohio. ~uiding Hands School assist
daily notes home and a monthly children 10 achieve their potential
newsletter.
"Along with communication 10 and reach for their dreams. I would
the parents, this school communi- like to thank this wonderful school
cjlteS to the community by invotv. for the helping hand that has been
ilag the children in many activities extended to my daughter and my
,C.ithin the community. Skating family.
· · · fro local fi
Rebecca
Swmp
!fips, vJSitabon
m
tre111en,
6668
St. RL
554
!lips to the post office, field trips to
Bidwell, Ohio

WASIUNGTON - Ev~n the
Mr. qean of Am.erican politics
someumes has had to dtrty his
han&lt;!J in the cause-of constituent
servJCC.
Vice President-elect AI Gore
· boasts one of the most spotless
records in Coogress. Hailed for his
won: OR ·L. ---t and arms
...., cnv•~-·~·
control, Gore has also been the
consummate constituent politician.
The candidate President Bush
~.eetubbedfinnltheyplan
.. ~onManearth" hadregardhis_
"
..,..
Jn~•.:.?..ncerns touching .Ten~...
Let··~·· Gore wrote to federal
bureauc-ts
•• whi' le I·n the Senate ,
which
were
obtai"ned under the
F eedo
r
m of fnformation Ac~ illustrate how he tertded after all Tenn~SCIJ!S- he they_horse breeders,
setnrs.P mmers or conYICle\1 drug dealConsider the case of Crosstown
Drugs of Nashv'"·,. Tenn. In 1988,
""'
the drugstore's owner experienced
trouble getting his regislrtltion reinstated by the Drug Enforcement
Administration, and so he wrote
Gore a letter. Go•c •orwarded ·a
•· •·
copy, along with a leuer of his
own, to the DEA on Dec. 2, 1981.
·
A Dec. 11 DEA reply to Gore
offe~ a c?.mpelling reaso'! fo/ the
r~JeCtlDn: ..• The DEA reg1stralion of Cross!own Drugs was
revoked effective .'~ug. ~. 1986,
purs,uant !'&gt; 8!1 admm1stra~ve hearm~ m which 11 was deterrnmed that

I! . Aesthetically unappealing?

Dlt:JIT?
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Gore, on March 22, 1989, wrote
another teller 10 DEA on behalf ,of
Cross10Wn Drugs, askilig for· "any
assisrance you may be able to provide," which would be "greatly
·ated ·" ThiS
. n·me, Go.~
- was
appreci
·se
·
d
that
the
appl"cant
was
appn .
I
. a
convicted felon and had "materilltly falsified applications for DE,A
registration on two occasions." ·
Store owner Lonnie Maze Jr.
told us that be "sure appreciates all
the effort Sen. Gore and others"
d
h. behalf
Jl)aTeheon !5 f the
. · ,._,__ ·
pomt o
._•.,.srown correspondence is not that Gore is soft
on crime and drugs, because quite
the opposite is true. However, 'it
illustrates that constituent activism
.
.
ff"
m any congresstana1 o ICe can
often get switched on automatic
pilo~ even for those constituents ·.
with questionable btlcqrounds.
The Crosstown correspondence
aiso points out a less publicized
side of Gore's public character, one
whichtl)any observers also believe
is a prime stren~: Gore's ability
to champion nauonal issues white

Burglary reported at SWHS
• GALLIPOLIS- Gallia County sheriffs deputies investigated a
burglary complaint at the old Southwestern High School building
on State Route 325 Friday morning.
·
·
Someone entered the building and srole a vacuum pump~ lthree
bell jars and base plates and a wood planer saw and '· motor: The
items were valued at a total of $2,700.
According to the report, there.were no sigr15 of forced entry and
the building's alarm did not go off.
.
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Food stamps taken
GALIJPOLJS - A Crown City woman told Gallia County sheriffs deputies an acquaintance picked up her $156 worth of food
stamps Nov. 6 at the welfare offtee without her permission. Robin
Sparks, 2139 Clay Chapel Road, ftled a complaint with the sherifrs depanment Friday.

. GALLIPOLIS- A Racine couple ftled a stolen check ·complaint
with the GaUipolis Police Depar)ment.
According to the report, Raymond and Leigh Canter, 45950 State •
Route 124, told police they were expecting a check in-the mail and
when it did not arrive the contacted the bank in Racine where they
were info~ed that the chec:k had already been cashed at Subway
Sandwiches, 303 Upper River Rond, Gallipolis.
I '

Man taken into custody ·
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man was taken into custody early
Sawrday by Galli&amp; County sheriffs deputies. Harold E. Harmon,
43, waS charged with intoxicated P.edestrian on a highway and
released on a summons to appear in court.

Boosters' club to meet

Police issue four citations
GALLIPOLIS - " Gallipolis police issued four citations Friday.
William L. Cofer, 23, Eurelca State Route, Gallipolis, was cited for
speeding; Gary D. Tenant, 44, 4050 Gei'lrges Creek Road, Gallipolis, was cited for no operator's license; Julie A. Jarrell, 24, 2805
Mill Creelc Road, Gallipolis, was cited for left of center and no seat
belt and Jeffrey A. McElroy, 22, 38216 State Route 143, Pomeroy,
was cited for driving under the influence.
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Wants scenic river preserved

mar

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struclt a truck owned by Chemlawn
Services Corp., Columbui, which
was parlced curbside facing north.
Jarrell 10ld the responding officer her brakes failed, causing her to
swerve to avoid striking the car in
front of her. She was cited for left
of center and no seat belt
Jarre~l's _vehicle sustained
heavy, disabling damage and was
towed from the scene. The Chemlawn uuck sustained moderate
damage and wns driven from the
scene. ,
.
_ACibwnCitywoman 'scarsus!Jilned moderate damage after striltIng a ~eer on. Ohio 7 in Ohio
Township :r'hur541aY around 9 p.m.
Accordmg to the Oalha-Meigs
Post of the State Highway ·Pa!fOI,
Judy R. Cardwell,47, was north-

bound on Ohio 7 driving a 1988
Plymouth Sundance and struck the
deer when it ran onto the roadway.
The deer left the scene of the
accident
An Athens County man was
cited after a two-vehicle wreck at
the intersection of Ohio 681 and
Bedford Township Road 247 in
Meigs County Friday around 6:30
p.m.
John H. Mitchell, 49, Coolville,
w~ eislbound on 681, the Gallia·
Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol ·reported. A pickup truck
driven by Roger D. McCulloch Jr.,
31, Nelsonville, pulled from T-247
onto Ohio 681 and into the path of
Mitchell's car.
No injuries were (eportec\.
Damage to Mitchell's 1984 Fold

Crown ViCtoria and McCullough' a
1992 CbcVIQiet Silverado was Jist.
ed as moderate. Botll vdlicles were~:
driven from the scene.
;•
McCullough was cited for fail-· ;
. . ld , .
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Ute10YJC
.,
An Albany man was cited after: •
a two-car wreck on Ohio 7 in Qa1.. :
lipolis Township Friday.around
I
p.m.
•
Acc:oiding to the Gallia-Mcigs. :
Post or the State Highway Patrol, a, :
southbound car driven by Dianna·.
L. Beaver, 30, Gallipolis, was::
stoppe(l f.or traffic. A following;:
southbound car, driven by Timothy•,
A. See, 25, failed to stop and::
struck the rear of Beaver's car.
:•
No injuries were reported,
:
Damage to See's 1986 Ford:•
Tempo was listed as light Damage;;
to Beaver's 1988 Pontiac Sunbird;!
was listed as moderate. Both
were driven from the scene.
;
and
Lynn
Tucker,
See was cited by the patrol for ·;
environmental/natural resources.
~!:;to maintain assured clear::

s::

ov,nc to unveil its strategic plan

PORTSMOt)TH - The Ohio
Valley Regional DcvclopmeQt
Commlsaioft (OVRDC) is bostin~ a
Special presentation Cor the official
release of its final strategic action
pian, "A New Southern Ohio: A
Stratcgic plan for 1996 and
Beyond..," at 1 p.m. Wednesday at
the OSU Piketon Research and
Extension Center.
The plan will set the overall
regional development priorities for
OVRDC for the next several years,
according to a press release.
These tqional priorities are listed under m11jor major strategic
issues classified under each of five
SC{latllte Uislc force subcommittees:
(1) economic development, (2)
community services, (3) infmstruc·
lure/transportation,
(4)
education/teChnology and (5) envi·
ronmentaiJnatural resources.

The plan is the result of more
than two years of intensive work by
volunteer loc:al community leaders
and officials meeting regularly in
each of the five task forces.
The special presentation will
also recognize the work and effort
given by the .volunteer task force
members in developing this plan.
The OVRDC staff -liaison person for each task force will present
a special certiflCite of recognition
to each of the chair and vice chairs
for each task force. These persons
(by task force) include: Gary
Haines and Matt Vansant, economic development; Alvin Norris and
Jerry f'ruiu, community services:
Denny Salisbury and. Ty Pell,
infrastructure/transportation; James
Hart and Dr. Larry Meredith, education/technology; David Sheets

cars:•

"I went from a ske 1.8 to ii

ske 8 in just 8 weeks!"
. ~: -~
- Nora Nichols
Nora Nichols' weight problem hit .
home. "My husband complained about
my weight constantly, yet I couldn't stop ·
eat. :~ . I knew I needed profe$' ,
sional help.~:
That's when Nora called Phy~ ·.
cians WEIGHT LOSS Centers. ~I.,
was always tired and out oi,.
breath, and the professionalsupervlsion was just as important.:

·to me as losing weight/ ,1
Our trained counselors ao4, •
professional staff gave Nora,~ ,
sound nutritional diet, regular·~
agement. "They kept me fro!Jt. ,
cheating. They were there to help, :
And they kept me motivated.~
Nora lost 35 pounds and 49'h
inches in 8 short weeks . "Now my
husban&lt;t buys me swim suits .. .I
love my new body! "Let PhysiciansWEIGHT LOSS Centers help yot,a·
to love your body. tooo:

i .OBERT M: HOlLEY, M.D.
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FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

rs~a·--9--~~~~;.:J·~
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wt~n.,...othlrotr..

:SYSTEM I

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L~-~~v.~!li!2

JACKSON - A 70-year-old Jackson County man who gunned
down a
in a dispurc over a cbainsaw in 1990 was sentenced to
10-to-25 years for manslaughter by Jackson County Judge William
C. Manin last weelt.
William Donta adntitled to voluntary manslaughter in the shooting death of Rickie Dale Ratliff. Aecording to an article in Wednesday~s Journai·H~rald, on March 21, 1990, Donta re~y drove
lil'Ratlifrs residence near Oak Hill, brandished a large-frame hand·
gunandftredoneroundintoRatliffsc~
.
· The dispUte Starred When Ratliff failed to return ll ChainsaW he

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man

441-11 1
7

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(POINT P. LEASANT MEDICAl. CENTER)
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON A VENUE
POINT PLEASANT, wv. ·
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OHIO RIVER ' .
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WBGHrlOSS PLAZA
Ceuters.
·· -.

wtthyoueveryday,everypoundoftheway.••

304 {6 75 -ll 675

Eac• conhlr lndlpendenllv ownod and operoled .

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::had:::~::IT:OW:ed::&amp;::om::Do::n:~::::::::::::::::::,::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~==,=·=-:·~:·:II:OI:M:•~:l:~:·~::IC:l:·:C:·:~::~:·:II:M:M:IGH:f:WS:S:CoM:m::~~::~:··:·K:.-:..:~:.~:·:~~~::

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AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONEI

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Berry's World

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Holzer Health Hotline
'1- 800-462-5255
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"Sure, we're running behind In educ.tlon
comparn to 10me other countries, but IIWI're
WAY AHEAD IN FOOTBALL/"

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' The old axiom tbal money buys
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electloDIII DOt always true. It Will
reporlad that one ca~dldal&amp; for · 1----..,...~---..,...
. ~----..,...------..J

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I PDIIM Dll¥'1 .,. at ,..a. pr1ta No1 'lllllid J · 1

The Answers You Need ...

national office spent over rural counties on where garbage :
$475,000.00 and lost the election. may be dumped. This wiU be due '
Do you ever won!ler why this hap- to the strict EPA regulations.
:
pened? One other thing is CCNin. ' One other predicament, the :
There is no sure thins as a winner expense of hauling garbage will •
until after lhC ballots are counted.
soon become too prohibitive, :
Rather than wait to be axed dur- unless the EPA regulations are :
ing the recession, thousands of relaxed or we learn to recycle. To
office workers are accepting early- haul garbage thirty or forty miles :
retirement offers. 'As a result, the may become too expensive for the ;
averqe
at the water cooler has average householder.
•
fallen from 55 to 39. Or maybe it
Rupe, lhe world will keep turn- l
ju$1 seems that way. For the most ing whether or not.
·•
part. these retired employees do not , Carry on.
•
· wish to sit home CUlling grass, etc.
Editor's note • Loag-tlme ~
Most of them will•be out seeking Attoraey Fred W. Crow Is tbe ,
and obtaining other good paying contributor or 1 weekly columa •
ror The Sunday Times-Seatiael. ;
jobs.
. l"f
The best th"mgs m
I e cost Readers Wishing to applaud, c:rlt· :
money.~ can be pwthased by
iciu or commeDt OD aDy subject I
credit card, if yilu're willing 10 pay ,(uc:ept religion or politics) are t
the annual interest of 19.8 pucenL
encoura1ed to write to Mr.
Before tD long it appears that Crow, in care oftbis newspaper. 1,
there wiU be an emergency crisis in
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The requtleG llh'/IIOiln't con.

IUI..tlorund MILI&amp;IIcln and ,

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Donta gets 10-to-25 years in jail

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health care system, but they can't
agree on how to do it
,
One child_in five Jives in poverty.
I.
The poorest children with !he
most severe learning problems go
to the worst schools. Affluent children with the feweSt learning pi-Qb..
Jems go 10 !be best schools. • I
The higher the aalaries paidi 10
major league baseball players, the
more likely they are to lnak a leg,
dislocate I elbow or bat .226 ltie
following years. There are exceptions, but not many.
Bankers rutalty have learned 10
say NO 10 real estate developers.
It's a little late. fn some cities, we
could house all the homeless in
Qlllpty office buildings and aban· ·
donee! shopping centers.
.
Americans complain bitterly
about unfair trading· tactics by the
Japanese. Then they drive out to
auto row and buy a Japanese car.
Some of oor elite universities
have been using fedef!ll research
money for parties, flowers ~nd
country club fees, not 10 menuon
uplceep on the collegedachL
Have you notice that every
time a umversity has its budget .cui
that tuition fees are raised? It won't
be too long .till only the wealthy
can attend a University.
·
On the other hand, everyone in
the cities demands two garbage
colleciions a week, beuer police
protection and plenty of (free) stu•
dent parking spaces at tho local
high school.
.
If interest rates sink low enough,
millions or Americ:a:ns will refi·
nance their ltomet. No one moves
anymore. Fantilies simply take 'out
a home equity loan ltld add a room
ortwo.
.
Interest ratcs have gone so low
that the savers are now penalized
with the low amount ot interest
!hey now receive on their CD'sind
savinss accounta. On tho other
band is It beuer 10 have bigh iDler·
est rates attached 10 inflation? It
dependa on which side that you!~
on. Loot for lntae~t ntcs to mse
durin&amp; the corning year.
Did you IIOiice !bat the price of
gasoline immediately - - up after
the Oulf War? Have you also
IIOiiced that the price of gasOline In
Meigs lltd Ollila Counties is higher than 111011 other counties in the

GALLIPOLIS - Loci1 authoritics investisated four accidents
between Thursday night and Friday
evening, Only one injury resulted
from the accidents.
A Gallipolis woman was injured
Friday aftern0011 when the brakes
on her vehicle 1eportedly failed and
she struCk a parkecl"truclc.
. ·
Julie A. }arrell, 24, 2805 Mill
Creek Road, was transported to
Holzer Medical Center by the Gal·
lia County Emergency Medical
Servillt. A hospital spokesperson
said Jarrell was treated ' and
released for acute strain.
According 10 the repon, Jwrell
was southbound in the 800 bloc:k of
Second Avenue wben she swerved
into the northbound lane to avoid
hitting a vehicle in front of her and

supervision, and constant encour-

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City Schools Academic Boo~ters'
Club will hold its general meeting? p.m. Tuesday at the Rio Grande
Elementary School. A program will be presented by the Rio elementary students for all Pl!fCRIS and teachers of the district

-

At:&gt;rn,.
•TELY
E&gt;';:"&amp;.V

.

Couple reports check stolen

Sign of the times._.....:·:.....--~F_re_d_w._c_ro_w_ _ __

r

•'

.GALLIPOLIS - A Mercerville woman was arraigned Friday in ·
the GalliJ)O)is Municipal Court on a charge of theft. .
Brenda K. Cremeens, a long·time Ohio Valley Bank employee
was charged for allegedly embezzling $177,500 from the bank
'
Bank offiCials, who uncovered the alleged scheme, said ,.; customer accounts were involved lind full recovery is expeercd through
the bank's insurance coverage and other means.
Cremeen~ bad been employed with the bank since 1970 and was
promorcd thiS summer to manager of the OVB mini-bank.
.
A preliminary hearing has 'been set for Dec. 3 at 3 p m.
Cremeens remains free on her own recognizance. '

•

needs, which, in the vast majority leagues to protest a lawsuit by the ;
of cases. dealt with more mundane American Horse Prolcction Associ· l
matten, IUCh as lost Soc:ial Securi- ation over an anti-cruelty regula- •
ty checks.
tion, The AHPA was sumg Agri- l
· "He received a great deal of culture for failin~ to enforce a law j
publicity and nation&amp;~ recognition prohibiting "sortng" _a pmctice :
· for Iikins on some issues that were · n h~ ·d
!her ·rr"tat"ng
I w If ICI
or .o on Ia horse's
I I ,~
reaIly tough to argue with," says chenti
are rubbed
George Korda, who served on the front leg just above the hoof. Hors· '
campaign ot (jere's 1984 cpponent es are then filled with six-oonce '
for the Senate. "But at the same m.etal chains that rub against the .
time, be was back almost every sore area and produce a hi~ gait ;
weekend, holding these various that scores beuer in cornpeutions. ;
meetings ill his district"
S!)ririg was, made illegal by the ·
.Norman Ornstein of the Ameri· · H
p 1 11 Act b 1 th
orse
ro ec don
u c
can Ente~rise· Institute admires AHPA eta·
the reg• u lat"o
G
Ime
I ns
. ore's ba ancJ.ng act of. national w·ere not bei· ng adequ•tely
·
"
and constituent issues. "It's poSsi- enforced. Gcre's letter rejec:ted the '
blc as a.senator. to be both a nation- AHPA's argument. Ultimately, the
a1 and mternabonallegislator and horse rights group nrevailed in ~
someone who takes care of the court over the politically potent :
follcs at home," he,,rold, our assoc
. . i- ... wallcing horse industry..
t 1 M 11
H
1
a e an o er.
~ s certa,I,n Y
One apparent anomaly in Gore's
been able~ do that fatrly '(t'eil.
constituent case-load concerned .
Go~e·s mterests often proved Rith EnerJY, a strip-mining compaeclecuc. In 1989, ho adoprcd the ny seelring a permit to do business
cause of cats after a_group of doc:- in Tennessee. In this case, the Set'!·
to o posed to an mal
h
•
1
rs ~
I
res~
ate s leading environment&amp; ist
wro~ Im ~~ a.n Army research fought to give strip m.iners their
proJect usmg fehnes to res~h day in court.
human head wounds. Gore wrote
Rith Energy owner William
two lellerB 10 tl!e Secre~ of the Ring wrote 10 Gore and another
Army, demandmg more mforma. Democratic senator from Tention on how the deaths of "hun- nessee Jim Sasser complainin~
deeds of cats" was contributing 10 that th~ permit was' bottled up by
hulli8Itlcnowledge of head'A(()Uilds. · the Interior Department's Office of
G'?re was l)O bleedmg heart con· Surface Mining. Rith's owners
cermng horses . .He wr'?le the thought the OSM was stalling 1
Department of Agnculture In 1987 unfairly, althou~ federal. offic~s , .
noted that the mformauon R1th .!
~~~
supplied in its applicatio~ had ~
,
.. proved to be "not representabve of •
.
the site."
:
~wr-• Gore-and Sasser wrote OSMon 1'
'
Dec. 15, 1988, asking why a sched·
uled public hearing had been pos_t· ~
paned. "Because of the economic ,
hardships faced by Mr. Rmg lD :
these matters, we urge your expedi- '
tious handling of these queStions," :
they wrote. "Both Mr. Ring's '
interest and the public's interest
.\..
would be best served by quickly
rescheduling this public hearin~." i
Gore's stance eventually shafted ,
somewhat after local residents !
grew vocal about Rith and its plans ~
for handling the toxic by-products
of stripmining. Gore wrote back to ·
OSM- this time asking that the
EPA be allowed to review and .
comment on the OSM's assessment ;
of the latest Rith plan for handling ·
the toxic materials. He cited inter· ;
est by "environmental protec.tion ~
groups." Rith . was eventually
deniecfits operating pe~iL
'
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Gallipolis woman suffers.injuries in ·auto accident }

Woman a"aigned on theft charge

·······~

f

ol

Jack Anderson, .
Mz'chael Bz'nstez'n

IT'£ THAT ~IMPLE _
[' -=nf.IAJI'\ r11MEnlllll:.
I'V~ rvU.11"'""" '" 11"
u."NEY lU'INIT
BlJY.•••
rRf
""

Some observations made by
writers including the following:
In politics, don't sawrate the airwaves
by having the same comPublic Notice No. 92-81 reiaro- and water pollution from diesel
t,Jg the proposed barge· fleeting fuels, cleaning compounds, etc. mercial read every five minutes
lacility on the Ohio River just used or discarded al the site? over a span of three days. Eve~
·elow Gallipolis leaves several Would this facility require future · your greatest supportet IU8Y decide
uestions unanswered:
expansion?
. that too much is too much. Es{'C·
What'is a barge fleeting facility?
Where is the nearest fleeting cially if the commercial contams
hat is its function and how does facility to this area now in exis- mud-slingiog about your opponent.
During the past election one person
operate?
tence7
: Is this particular fleeting facility
Gallipolis is an historical site told me he heard one commercial
~ssential for the operation and/or
and if possible, the surrounding so often that he voted for the oppo'anaintenance of the boats and area should remain as natural as nent.
Going banlcrupt is no longer a
darges that ply the river? If so, how possible.
~ave they been serviced in the
Having fmally obtained re~ula- disgrace. Neither is having a child
t?
tions to prevent tiuering and Junk· out of wedlock. Both are considAreas to be occupied by the ing the highways, we must not ered optional, like power steering,
ility are diagramed. How much allow 'our waterways to become air conditioning or au101118tic tranS·
missions.
4f this would be exposed (i.e. cluttered and unsightly.
College graduates, even busi4bove water level) and what would
Any man-made change inflicted
ness
majors, are having a hard time
~its general ap~?
on a nver diminishes it aestheticaland
are
living with their ~nts.
l Would noise be crearcd by the ly and, to some degree, environSome
take
"rcmporary" Jl!IS!tions in .
'lperation of this facility and if so, mentally. Canada ~eese frequently
book
s19tes
and fc;m bars.
hat would be the nature or it and · sojourn in this patbcular area of the
Buying
a
house to make a fmanhat would be the noise level?
river. It is also the closest the highciallcilling
when
you re-sell it in
How many days per week way gets to the river between Galsix
or
seven
years
is no longer a
would the facmty operate and how lipolis and Huntington and has the
great idea. Hot markets bave
aJlany hours per day?
least obstructed view.
• How many full time, pe~anent
Susan K. Clarke cooled off. Buying 1 house 10 live
cirnployees will be hired. f~ this
Spruce Knoll in makes more sense.
The relationship between the
ca?
Gallipolis, Ohio
What would be the extent of air
stock martel and lhe U. S. economy is tertuous at best The market
always thinks things will get better,
even when they seem to be getting
EditOr:
scenic river beauty of not only the wo::ftie.collar workers lost jobs in
' There they go again.
city park area, but of the entire the last (1982) recession. White·
! The Chamber of Commerce and river valley. We don' t need a barge
collar workers are losing jobs this
e Community Improvement Cor- fleeting located in any residential time. That
help to explain why
ration worked out a compromise area along the Ohio River.
economic wntera are so gloomy
th the Point Towing and FleetI am concerned about the issue abOut the future.
g. Inc. to construct a barge fleet· of safety for boaters and riShermen .
In many occupations, women
i~g facility directly across fmn the who utilize the Ohio River and the
are still undelpaid. But the pay gap
Qallipolis Bliat Club entrance. This Gallipolis Boat Club. We don't between man and women is shrinkfas a "compromise" to Point Tow· need more barge traffiC in this con- .ing, especially amons younger
· 's initial request to construct gested, recreational area of the w........
_....._ .
fleeting facility directly across river and we certainly don't need
. a
RiJinS medical COSII.and 1ac1t of
the Gallip()lis City Park!
facility which extends well in10 the . hea.lth insurance covera_ge arc a
don't remember the Gallipolis Obio River from the West VirJinia · national scandal. Politicians talk
amber of Commerce or CIC ask- shore. We don't need the addibcnal earnestly abQut improving the
ir.g the residents of First Avenue or erosion thia would prod!lte 10 the
cil Route 7 South of the city limits Ohio shoreline due 10 the allerllion
w they felt about a barge fleeting of river barge traffic navlgetlon
.
i.Jity before tlley endorsed this along the area of )he fleeting facili- of the ()JIIo River wiJI benefit the
citizens of OaUipolis.
~t. '
'
ty. '
As a past president of the city
Plea~e join me In aeeldng 10 preI am a former member or the
mmission and member of the Community lmproverncnt Corpora- serve tlte ICenic ri- beauty of our
aliipolis .B.oat. Cl~b, I .urg~ your .tion and do support.their cffortl to valley ltld tlte -unuatloil ot lhe
tive parllclpabOn m te.JCCb!!g the brin~ jobs 10 our 1re1. However, I many, I'CCre8donal benefi11 of the
a!Jplieation of Point Towmg. Pleaae don 1 undersi8Jid tbe blanUI sup- beautiful Ohio Rl-. Pleue write
o,frirc the u.s. Army Corps ofEngi- pan offered to busineases such as the U.S. Army COI)II of Enginecq
I!WS .502 Ei~hth Street, Hunting- Point Towing by lhe Chamber and today!
Sincerely,
tl&gt;n, West Vuginia 2"01-2070 the COmmunity Improvement CorDow W. Saunders,
poration. I don't understand how
~~
· mediately! ·
1 cenalnly believe the .· residents the construction of this facility
11 Court Slreet,
OalllpoliJ, Ohio 45631
o 'o\Jr area desire to .preserve the along the residential, scenic areas

t:

trolled substances and had been
· convicted in 1983 of felonies relating 10 controlled substances."

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleaeant, WV

Local News in Brief:

(tliC owner) had illegally sold con- ' itayiog attuned to constituent ahing with congressional col ~ ;

OK••• FINE- liIt:AIR El1111It:.ll
.
""""""'"

· :'In the midst of the siblation sur-

.

November
15, 19921
.
Pag1 A4 :
••

Constituent service always important to Gore

..

November 15, 1992

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·.·. •·• . . -.-.4 ....' ~

--,~-- - ~ - --~.~ ~!'

. ".· . . -. ,._ . . -..-. -.......

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleeeant, wv

Page A6 Sunday nm11 Sentinel

November 15, 1192:

By JAMES SANDS

Spec181 COI'I'C!IpGIIdel!t
GALLIPOLIS - Probably the
mo5t exeidag election in Gallia
County hislory was in 1912 when .
Wilson bell Taft and ~oosevelt Not
only were tba"c 3
signific:ant major
parties (Rcpubli·
can, Democratic
and Progressive),
but there- 2
· strong minor parties (Prohibition
and Soc:ialisl).
In addition Ohio voters got to ca-;t
a ballot for 42 eonslitutional amendments, not the 6 or 7 that are usually
on the ballot In fact there were so
many amendments that there was an
election on 8ept. 10, 1912, just .to
vote on amendments such as abolition of capital Jl!lllishment,.li!nlting
veto power of the govmnor. establishing workman's compensation,
establishing initiative and referendlllll. 8S well as issues relaling to
women voting and holding office.
Gallians voted qainst the abolition· of capital punishment 1482 to

989. Gallians voted forwOtkman's
compenlllltion. the eight-hour wcri:
day (public w&lt;lic), having primary
elections,establishingastatedepartment of natural resources and civil
service reform.
The!XlWltyvotedagainstmunlci,
pal home rule and the use of voting
machines. On the issue of women
getting the vote those who did not
want to give women the vote won
1330 to 1296. But by a margin of
1177to 1134, Gallians voted 10 give
women the right 10 holll office.
The role of women in the ]912
elec~on. sUx:e they could not vote, is
very cn~tmg. The strategy w~ to
n:nt a building close to the S~J?Pmg
d1Sb1CI. They called the bwlding a
"women's public rest room.".Hence
no men were allowed. And Since all
news)lllper reporters in Gallipolis iri
1912 were men, it is just speculation
what cranspi~ there. SOllie of the
women later admiucd that it was at
the "women's public rest room" that
ladies gatheleclto talk politics.
In 1912 it was ''un5ee111ly" for
women to discuss politics in public.
It must be·noted that even wo'"en

Tuppers Plains teacher
faces charge of assault ·
TIJPPERS PLAINS • A Tuppers
Plains Elemenwy School teacher
w8S charJed with assault following
an incident at the school on Thursday.
According to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Jon Perine of Belpre allegedly struck the
school's principal, :&gt;r. Donald
Shue in a classroom during schooi
hours.
Students in the classroom at th~

time were sent to the school cafeteria until officers· could arrive to
investigate the matter. A voluillary
sean:h of Perine's vehicle resulted
in the discovery of two unloaded
guns, which Soulsby said were not
being transported illegally.
Perine was brought to the sher·iff's department, where he posted
$295 bond, and was released. He is
scheduled to appear in Meigs
County Court
("

MIDDLEPORT - Totnmy L.•.
Lyons, 32, of Middleport tlltaed a;
pica of guiky to sroa ~exuai imP9t.
sition F"riday afternoon wben 6C
appeared on a bill of information•
before Judge F~erick W. "Crow
In in the Meigs County Comm011.1
Pleas Court ,
Assistant Prosecutor Linda•
,Warner said that Lyons w8S sen •
tenced to two yem in" prison. The;
Court ordered that Lyons be given;
a psychological evaluation by
Woodland Centers before being'
tnlllsported to the Orimt Rccepli()ll.,
Center.
·.
'.
Following the hearing, LyorisW8S returned to the Meigs County:
Jail.
·:

· were dividedontheftanchise. Many
older women who controlled the
·various women's clubs and organizations were against women's franchise." Thls meant younger women
had to fmd a private place 10 talk
politics away from their mothers,
grandmothers, auniS, and husbands.
It w8S in the "public rest room" that
women plannecl Slrategies to inlluence t!tc male vote.
·
Women did openly panicipate in
rallies held by the vario~ parties.
Some women even auendcd lectures
givenattheOpeniHousebythenoted
Socialist Rev. Fredrick Slrickland. ·
Socialists hl!d long favored giving
women the right to vote. The Social'.
ist l'lrty of Gallia County had eVal
beenllblc rogetbr. Miller of Centerville nominated for congress till the
Socialist tickcL
It should benoted·that in i911 the
Socialist Party had elected mayors in
Barberton Canton Cuyahqga Falls
Fostoria,
LOrain ML"Vemo~
and Martins Felty
10 mention
1317 IIONTAGHE/1111
councilmen in Waverly StigarGrove
WOMEN'S &amp; MEN'S
Dayton; Bridgeport, F.;.dlay, Hamil:
CASUALS
ton and Sayre. So there was real fear
by the major parties of the Socialist
success.
Many women also openly worked
for the Prohibition Pany. This party
· was aclually born out of the woman's
1317 CLASSIC HOUOAY /II
movement in the 1870's 10 run the
saloons out of the Midwest
Probably the moit exciting night
MEN'S
in Gallia County political hisiOry
TALKED POLmCS AT THIS LOCATION- In 19U there
came on theeveningofNov.4,l912.
wu
an old building wllere lixll:r there Is a buk on the 300 block
The Democrats organized a parade
or
Second
Avenue. In that building women bad a "public rest
startingat7p.m.onCounStroet The
where
tlle:r could gat!!er and talk politics even though they
room"
ProgjeSSive Pany, or Bullmoosers,
could
not
vote.
·
1711 UK lRAIL/11 ta
began a parade at 7:30 p.m. at the
party headquarters (Gallipolis Opem .
House).
OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 5
ThepartybackingTeddyRoosevelthadthe town;s2 best bands, Goens
MIDDLEPORT - Investigation· at 6:20 a.m. on Nov. 4 by an
Comet Band and Maguet's OldReliis
continuing
into the brealcing and employee. The office had been ranableDrumCorps,andfreefoodatthe
entering
at
Delta
Metal Fabrication, sacked and an unknown amount of
end of the parade.
Logan
Street,
Middlepon.
cash taken, he said. Currently Swift
The Republicans usual claim that
Qffice
Bruce
Swift
reported
Frisaid
his department which has no
Democrats got votes by free "booze"
day
that
the
breaking
and
entering
suspects
is waiting for information
·didn't apply in 1912 8S Gallipolis
from
the
BCI.
was
re_poc:ted
~
~
M.id~lep&lt;&gt;~
police
·was dry and the notorious contraband
boat that carried booze up and down ,
the Ohio River S1U\k just two weeks
before the election. Along the parade
route there were counter demonstrations by Republicans, Progressives,
Socialists and women. At one point
the two parades intersected but without incident
Whether those 4,000 free sandwiches made thedifference or not we
do not know, but in Gallul County
R001evelt prevailed with 40 percent
of the vote. Wilson got33 percent of
the vote and Taft 23 percent. The
minor parties had very little impact
Gallians voted the Progressive can3.8 V-6 eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., AMIFM
didate foe governor but the Republi- '
atereo caaaette, air cond., P. win., P. locka,
can candidate for congress. With the
P. seat, rear window defroater, 1plM front
turmoil of the 1912 election many
seats, air bag drlver'l aide, anti-lock
men concluded they didn't want to
brakea.
throwthewomen'svoteintothcmix.
WAS
IICWDING REBATE
Women fmally voted for the firSt
time nationally in 1920. But women
$11,9$5 . . .
slillplayedanimportantroleinpou'
tics even before they got the vote.
.· James Sands Is a special eorre302 V-8 eng.. PS, PB; auto .. trans. ,
spondentoflbeSundayTimes-Sen·
AMIFM stereo casselta, P. windOws, P.
tine!. His address Is: 65 WiUow
Drive, Springboro OH 4~
locks, convenience group, speed .
controi,""-Prerilium sound, manual air
cond., 4-way power driver seal, rear
window defroster. INCWIIINa REBATE

Lima,

·t4.Iong the River

Lyons pleads guilty•

They couldn't vote, but women
;played critical role in election

3

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•

Flushots available Divorce granted
PoMERov - Additional flu ·
vaccine h8S been obtained and is
availablc through the Meigs County Health Department
Nonna Torres, nursing director,
advised Friday that an additional
100 doses is now available.
Tile vaccine wiU be available foe
$Ito t!iose 55 years of age or older
and for $2 for those who are under
55 years old. Again, al_l will be
given on a first come, f1rst serve
basis at the Senior Citizens Center
at 8:30a.m. on Thursday.
The Health Department has
ordered pneumonia vaccine. That
·will be available sometime in
December. The cost will be $3 with
the balance of the cost to be handled with money from the levy
passed this month.

Officials to meet Nov. 24
POMEROY - A meeting of the
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development Dislrict will
be held Nov. 24 at 7 p.m. in the
conference room of the Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development Dislrict offices located on Washington County, Route
9. Marietta.
·
At 6:30 p.m. the audit-budget
committee ·will meet and at 6:45
p.m. the personnel committee will
meet. Meigs County's representative on the audit-budget committee"
is Eleanor Thomas, Pomeroy. Fred
Hoffman, Middleport, is on the
personnel committee.
Highlights of the agenda include
· a review of the administrative
audit, the proposed 1993 aging and
public works budgetS; extension of
the 1993 aging block grant programs, and an amendment to the
ARC project pack;lge.

Marriage licenses

~

POMEROY - MarriiiJle licenses
have been issued in Me1gs County
Probate Court to: Michael Montgomery, 21, Lucasville, and Jen-.
, nifer Ann Masters, 1~, . Coolville;
Ralph Frederick Gucltig, Jr., 38,
Pomeroy, and Elaine Louise Ellis,
3S, Pomeroy; and Larry Alan Cowdery, 26, Long Bottom, and Kimberly Kay Kithas, 23, Long Bottom.
'
·

POMEROY - An action for
, divorce has been granted in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to
Debra Meadows from Mitch Meadows.

=

nl'kw' day of ~via&amp; "willt
lnttlq to GrandniJ'a . loved oaea lllld IICil dlmmi d, lite
lloulo. Ow ca mille had Jllll!l!t:s ol time llld d'" u mean
t the bebertrer putdledof :_~ilee,t tl!ll _ , ~of all 1 enor
e·1- ..... y t lions celelnte wilh l'riCidllt

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~lillny liliJa -y. Often, ber idea
, of celclnting ThanksJiving is ·to
• entertaiD ber friends 1 and Dot do
;_~.the. cooltina for the dinner hei-...
_ While the custom of sharing the

· COIIPifll STOOlUifS

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WRANGLERS

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LEVI'S JEANS

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2• , _ 5 . fee ~ .... Buaer FIIIYOr Crilco and brown
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~loveS

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UsuaUy it is the host who 1113kes
the cookmg assignments. One or
two guests can be assigned the
dessert segment of the meal. and
another can be asked to bake up
some ~vory snac.ks to sel'le before
the mam event. Since Thanksgiving dinner usually includes many
sumptuous side dishes, there is no

'

:;..; HOLIDAY GOODIES. neae pl1tefal or.
; "Joodlei: 8ft lllll'e to ..... IDJ Tbal"''i"¥111; D:ly
DD the left reat•ra dleddar
: ~eese
111111 Panatllll prlk lwJsts. T-

- a-11. .!!:J!IIte
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$l2.0G

need for heavy bon d'ocuvres.
Now that the stan and fmish of
the nlta1 have been ~C~;QW~red for
think about the dishes that come
between. If the host makes the
turkey and sets the table, the guests
can be assigned dishes from the
following categories·
'
Salads and veg~tables - there
shoulcl be something green on the
table, ~hcther it is a crispy tossed
salad or a casserole of green beans
or Brussels sproutS.

SomethinJ cranberry • serve:
either a traditional Clallbmy ·
or a molded salad made wilb cran- '
berry sauce.
.
Poouocs - maybe you ·wiD Willi:
two different kinds - there are r- •
of mashed potatoes and faas of .
swect.polatocs in any cnnvd.
'
With a cooperative dinner, ·. ·
everyone feels they have done their ,
part, and no. one feels they hive .
spent the entire holiday in t~e
ltiiChen.

If you.believe the cook who has
all the d1shes for a Thanksgiving
dmne~ ready for the table at the
same Ume IS one 6f the seven wonders of the world and has more
arms than ~ octopus, read on. The
secret to bemg cool and calm as a
c~umber mousse is advance planmng and a wrinen plan.
·
Many ~anksgiving hosts today
are workmg in tande~ wi~ their
guests to have COOperative dinners;
howev_er, this does not solve the
pote!!ll~ l _problems of organizing
servmg d1shes and flatware, doing
a seating plan, and re-hea!ing dishes and servmg them all sunulcancously.
_A shopp!ng, servjng and prepamuon plan •s a key to SOICCCSS. Try
to shop a few days in advance, and
plan a comprehensive list so that
one trip is all you will have to
make.
: If you a.re cooking the entire
dmner yourself, start a few weeks
in advance and make a menu plan .
Jn the fii'Jt column list all the dishes you plan on serving. Next to
that, list the method for cooking the
diSh - m the oven, on a surface
burner, in the microwave. After·
that, list the cooking times.
On a second sheet of paper, use
the cooking times to begin a plan
of the Steps for the various disllcs
and the order in which they should
be done. It wiii save time if you

plate Gil the rJalltsllowllhree deserll, (dock"wbe

frGIIIower ,ceater), llducllq pumpldn cookies,
apple munb
. . ban,
. peesn diamGIIds.

look It ~ recipes in ad~ and
counl things like the 101a1 number into the oven . Foods such a!(
of cups of chopped onion, stalks of mashed potatoes can be made in
celery, or cloves of prlic that are advance and reheated in the top ot
double boiler or in a mic•owm
ncoded for the mlire meal. Do all . aoven
.
of this preparatory work all at once.
Much of the chaos surrounding
It saves a lot of time at the end of
.Thanksgiving
dinner seems 10 be
the dsy.
connected
with
the last-minute
If you don' t have two ovens
~ing
of
the
turkey
and the makassume that your oven will be fully
mg
of
gravy.
One
alternative
is to
occupied by the turkey for most of
reverse
the
Procedure
ll1d
c&lt;d
l,hc.
the hohday. That means dishes
turkey
the
day
bef!lre,
carve
it
from"
requiring the oven should be made
a day ahead of lime and reheated the carcass, remove the stuffing,
once the turkey is out of the oven make the gravy, and thm cook all
and awaiting carving. Of course, the side dishes on Thanksgiving
another alternative is to·cook the day. reheating the turkey and gravy
turkey on the griD which frees up right befor11 dinner. Doing it this:
way means that you can't parade
the oven for other Wks.
the
beautifully {Oasted whole bird
To reduce over re-heating time
past
the guCSIS, but it does 1csseri
certain foods such 8S sweet ~
the
amount
of last minute work.
casseroles can be removed from the
Another
time-saving idea is to
refrigerator a few hours before dinmake
the
gravy
ahead of time by
ner time. Perishable foods such as
purchasing
some
turkey parts, ~
scalloped oysters, however, should
freeze
.the
gravy
until
you are ready
be chiUed until the manent they go
10 use It

Glamorizing leftover turkey
. No one can be sure if Benjamin
Franklin was aware of just how
venatile the turkey can be when he
suggested that the wattle-necked
native fowl be named out fledgling
country's national bird.
Even if Franklin didn't know,
however, savvy cooks will prove
just how versatile turkey is during
Thanksgiving weekend. The meat
mnelnin1 on what - lhe eemerpiece of the holiday meal can be
enjoyed in so many interesting
ways - all of them based on regional American concepts.
And with tender, flaky pie crusts
what used to be considered leftovers are actually exciting menu
options made easier, since the
twkey meat is already cooked.
Most people count of having
leftover turkey from Thanksgiving
dinner.lt wouldn't be a weekend of
feasting if there wasn't a turkey leg
10 gnaw on for Friday IWICh or perhaps a repeat of the entire meal for
Friday dinner. ·
But by Saturday, the thought of
yet another meal of leftovers is .
usuaUy leSs than welcome and frequently the amoun.1 of meat
remaining must be stretched to feed

the family or guesls.
One alternative to a third rught·
of poultry is to cut up the meat and
freeze it for future iiSC. CUlling the
meat into one-inch pieces and
freezing the pieces on a cootie
sheet before transfening them 10 a·
plastic bag makes it C8SY to pull out:
exactly the amount needed for • ·
recipe. The frozen meat wiD a11o:
deftoot 1111n quickly If it is
into•
smaller pieces.
:
Keeping pre-cooked turkey in:
the freezer is now becoming 1110re'
commonplace. For decades Americans enjoyed their "Thanksgiving
turkey" and seldom sa:vcd the bind
other than on bolidays. But in the
ten years between 1980 and 1990
turkey consumption rose from 10.4
pounds to 18.5 pounds per capira
according to the National Turkey
Fedelation.
A good rule of thumb for estimating servings of turkey is that .
one pound of cooked turkey equals .
about three cups of diced meat By
combining the meat with vegetables and a complex carbohydrate
such as pastry, biscuits or com bread, one pound of meat will
probably feed up to six people.
.,..··

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FROM 'rHI! CRISCO KrTCHENS
TURN COIIL8R

Eillil&amp;
6
7

2
I

302 Eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., air
cond., AWFM Slereo cassette, til &amp;
cruise, rear Slep bumper. All IIIITIIin
tires, low mileage, 1Xt111 clean, local
6wner.

~~~

IOiolcspooi• Duaer Flavor Crisc:o"
..... . _ . ll~purpooe flour
lllrkcy or chictcen - k or brolh
cup hllf-llld-hllf

l/4
$ Dlllak
111 W ~a D4'l whi&amp;e pepper, or 10 lade
Is

'

low'll

-

3

2
I

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2
IMinp c &gt;ns f•ly chopped panJey
2
liM!: Ill 001111 ftnely chopped chives
112 It r c COli poultry seuoning

coqlo:ed lllrby

..... -

pounds)

(lloout I Ill

medium ciii'OIS, Peeled, cubed and cooked
(...... I 114 cups)
fmh or I ,...kaac (10 ...,.., frozm )
..WI while onions, ~ookcd
cup (loolf of to.-... ,.......,., frozen pcao

•

Cobbler Toppin•
I l/4 cup1 Ill-purpose flow
I
lllrbp a Ni Nkin&amp; powdn'

300 6 cyl. eng., power steering, power
b~kes,

5 speed trans., long bed, rear
step bumper, AMIFM stereo casseHe,
new tires, one local owner.
WAS
56495
·
lOW

112

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4

lllr'np

6
tables_. Bun.r Flovor Crisco
Ill cup whippins ......,
I
c~~obcolcn

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Parmesan ehetse, divtded

I. Hnl oven lo 400 deptes F. Cfttlst 13 x 9-inch pass blkin&amp; di'sh 'with Buntr Fluor Cri5co.
2. f!LJllu. Mdt Buaer Flavor Cristo in 1.-ge saucq»an on medium heal. Sp~klr in flour.
and
tdr about 3 minutes, but do not brown. Alllllf stock. hllf-ancJ..half. sah lfJd pepper. \V•IIk or llir sauce UMil
lhtck and smooth. A•• turke y. carrou, oniofls. pcil, panlcy. ~hives and pouhry K asoning. MIJ well. P•r
in1o bakioa dish.

Cook

'1281

_....., _

.,

$20''

1

V6 eng., PS, PB. auto. trans., dual
air cond. and heat, AMIFM sterllo
cassette w/controls In back with ear
phones, tilt &amp; cruise, rear defroster
with wiper and washer
'

MEN'S
SOCKS ·
RIG. $-US PAll

:~~

3,.,.,s8"

10•

lOW

TURKEy .CQJ!Btt:R CONl'D

'II,781

3. ftr &lt;MNrr tHNs ...... llour, bikini pawder. ad ond 3 loblespoono Pumcun chcctc in _....,
bowl. 011 in Crioco ,.inl Jlllll1l blctodct (or 2 bi&gt;w)- oil flow io blended in lo form pc•·•ize ........
.W. en-. T-liai&gt;UY '""il .....,bly.

oa a N.w Quo er Tuek aH we

will t17 to 'meet 01' Blat tb• DuL
FOA A GOOD DUI ..
lEE JACK BOUIB.or 808 BOll
Our Service Departm!Nit Ia Open Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Set. 8-12
Muffler Shop Mon..fli. 8-5; Sat. 8-12

&lt;t. s,....._ m~mb mixnn over fill~&amp;- Drtnle wilh ea. SprW&amp;Je with remainWia one talllup Dll . . . _
or CNIIbo inlo boll. Rellqe enoup 10 f~ Over mlinJ ond 10 edlfS of boltin1 dioh. wilh
beotcn cu. Sprlnlllr wilh mnoinins ooc tablcspoqn P - chccsc. Place dilh .on larJc bakina ......_

•

.S. a.ke 11 400 clepes F. for l .S to .CO minUiel tit until

Open F~dlly

. 6s.tunt.y
dll P.lo(
'

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Reaching the finish line: How
to time Thanksgiving dinner

•

JACKETS

FREUIAN

14 OL SliAIGIIJ liG &amp;

!;&amp;il

(

wort - and all the expense,

70

COMPLETE STOO
MIN'S WIMTIR

IIUIIING STOCI

AUWWIIO

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FORD
F-180
414 ID
'
.

20o/ooFF 15°/o oFF 20%on
"

'

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11,113

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· DICESS SHIRT·&amp; llE •\ ·

JACKnS

1iace It it lite 1110111 diffiCUlt item "OR
the menu to coot in advance and
bWI$pOIL
.
J
BuJ!I;,IfaiCbaaaed, Too.
Tile kiDill of baked JIO(ids bcin1
mado by conremporary ~ ha_ve

liCeatylca - from the tndilional routine of flmiliellillina down to eat
two or even three meals a day
togclher 10 the modem pnctiec of
inilivi&lt;IIW fal,nily mcmbell "81"*'ing".on the run.
PuJtlag Together a Cooperative
DIDDer
.
Cooperative cliruvl - where all
the guests bring aome part of the
m~l - are bccominc more com-

'II 411•
'
•n ••• n11 osftla n

PWtllili 1 •iltfr~lll our lllecllo• o
filciiMI .. ~recehea

LEATHER

ehanpd drlmarintlly over the put . mon. It encourages a s en~ of
dccaile. Thia it ]ltim!lrily • reflee. belongin1 and contn"butin~. and no
tion of changes in American one person is burdened w1lh all the

=.

!~.:uWOIIWI
=m'::;:ti
~~ i: ' =~.:.di~n:.:·.=:a
and thll she liva holtcu ••u-'IY doea the turkey

ill

ONE DIY ONLY- MONDAY, NOVEMBER II

SWEATERS

t

•

Middleport police investigate B &amp; E

... 1270 Cfi"'§'C9 ...

COMPliTI STOCK
MEN'S

Nov1111ber 15, 1112

I

:f!_Ia PMl genawlnns, 'lblllksgiv-

noi

~~~

COIIPim STOO
lUN'S

5

:Celebrating Thallksgiving with ·cooperative dinners

s

DONATES UNIFORMS- The River Valley High S~hoo1 Mar~hing Band received $300 toward the pure base of new band uniforms
Wednesday. Gary L. Jarvis, CPA, and G. Ronald Atkinson, CPA, of
AtkiDSOn and Jarvis, CPAs, Gallipolis, also pledged to donate $300
each year ror three more years. Shown are, from left, Vikki Lieving,
RVHS band treasurer, Tom PbiUips, RVHS band direcior, Jarvis and
Atkinson. ·
·

Section:B ·

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Turk;ey cobbler
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il browntd. ~rve immediately.
i 0 TO Ii St:RVINOS

�Wovember 15, 1992

OH-Polnt

ZsaZsa says she
wasn't notified

.

"I have never failed to aaend
any trial and would have lltended
thiS if I had known," she said Friday.
.
A federal jury in San Antonio
this week awarded the $3 million
judJment to businessman Len
Saftr. who claimed Miss Gabor
ruined his Hollywood Fantasy
VIICIIIion company when she failed
. to show up at an event in San Anto. nio ' - )iear.
·
Safir said he wu forced to
refund money to people wbo h.ad
paid $7 ,SOO ~h to mingle with
stars in San Antonio. He said the
actreas beclced out when be refused
to pay her an additional $5,000 she ·

:TAUC

Gabor said .her contract with
Saftr included a cancellation clause
if she got a movie deal and that she
was working on the film "'Naked
Gun 2 1(1." at the time.
She· told reporters she would
seek a new lrial

HARTFORD, W.Va. -Mr. and
Mrs. Howard W. Brewer Jr., Hartford. W.Va., announce the engage·
ment and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Crystal Kay, to
Howard Donald Myers II, son of
Mr. and Mrs . Howard Donald
Myers, Hartford, W.Va.
Miss Brewer is a 1990 graduate
of American School, Chicago, Ill,
and is currently employed at Health
Aid Pharmacy in New Haven,

W.Va.
Myers is a 1979 graduate of
Wahama High School and is currently employed by the Mason
County Board of Education, maintenance department
An opeo wedding ceremony will
be observed Dec. 19 at 1:30 p.m. at
The Fathers House in Hartford,
W.Va., with' a reception immediately following at the Hartford
Communi!)' Building.

Olk HDJ, &amp;me ,Vorell ol
Albany, ad ROll Kemper
Shan Carroll ol WellstoD,
llpolis, R_, Davill of
ot Alliar; Sieve Smith
WlttmaD of VIDtoD.

PLACE SECOND • Me• lien of tile BuckeJe
Hills Char.,... of lll.e Future Parmen fll Allerlca'a Pari ameatarr Procedure lea• reeeatlr
piaced second at the s'ab·dlatrlet •eetlnc at
River Valley Hlch School. Plcllimlue, troat, (I
to r): Mark Hammoad of Oak HID, Kea Reed of

demanded.

Brewer-Myers

MHS to compete
in quiz t~urnament
.

\

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
High School quiz team will com·
pete against eiJht schools in the
Class AA Divtsion of the Ohio
University Bobcat Buzz-In quiz
toum~ent for high school stu·
dents.
The event will take place on the
Athens Campus Friday.

Tell '11lem B~ and Larry Sent Yout

7

.,_'""' 93'1'on11'·150 XL
Rar "'P - · Aio, AIJ• Sl)led.
~
S11! ll021

•
Three divisions set up according
to lOlBl cnrollmcat in the top four
grades in each of the schools will

e

participate in the toumamenL

Four students per team, with one
alternate, will compete by answering questions posed by a model1tor. Team and individual awards
will be given 10 the first and liCCOIId
place teams in each division. All
panicipants will receive a distinctive T-shirt with the BobcAt BuzzIn logo on it.
.
Competing in the Class AA
Division will be Meigs, Vinton,
Waverly, South Point, Jackson,
Ironton, Logan, and Philo.

AJ.URol.--

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~ ~To,.... Plckop

\;I Only one left .I thia Price!

'•
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''=!:'

93 GMCS.O.a
V6, Ail, SI..B Trioa, AMJI'M
~Till, Cnoioe

114

10 prior Mia I credit ipproval.
prtoe lnciiNIM let time louyer diiAIIInoenllv• 10 clelller _ , Illite
.._ . . . . .tooiL

«Where Better Real_ly Matters"

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. and Mrs. A.
Keith Sheets of Gallipolis,
announce the engagement and
approaching m.arriage of their
daughter, Lies! Marie, to Douglas
Alan Wright, son of Dr. and Mrs.
Frank C. Wright II of Upper
Arlin~toO.

· Mus Sheets graduated· from
Gallia Academy High School in
1986. She received her B.S. in
Speech and Hearing Science in
1990 frrim The·Ollio Slate University, and her Mafter's in Speech-

Language Pathology from OSU in
1992. She is employed by Hickory
Knoll School in Delaware.
Mr. Wright is a 1985 graduate
of Upper. Arlington High School.
He received his B.S. in Chemistry
from Denison University in 1989,
and is currently completing his
fourth year of medical school at
The Ohio State University College
of Medicine.
The wedding will be held Dec.
19 at the First Community Church
in Columbus.

IE IT ~~

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Christmas"?

return

fMijVETERANS .MEMORIAL
M1

HOSPITAL

~

CONCENTUTORS
•Ba'

t

11lli&lt;a . [iYjl&lt;a~H~w~ $lli®[p[J)&lt;a O[j)~Q

.

A NEW CAR ••• A NEW RATE ~

565 JACKSON PIKE • GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
"JUST MINUTES FROM HOLZER"

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446·2206
For Over 15 Yean"

Princess Diana visits France
PARIS (AP) -Princess Diana
Diana will be in France for
smiled broadly Friday as she Charles' 44th birtbda)' on Saturday.
arrived for a three-day solo visit to
This week •s Parts Match feaFrance.
tured excerpts ·from a biography
· The trip began the day the Daily depicting the princess as lonely,
Mirror in London Sllid it obtained sutcidal and suffering from an eatdetails of a recorded telephone con- ing disorder.
versation in 1989 in which Prince
The couple have been separated
Charles tells a married friend, unofficially for several months, but
Camilla Parker Bowles, he loves . recently traveled together to South
and adores her.
Korea.

Seniers' schedule announced
GALLIPOLIS · The following bottle basket
Menus consist of:
are activities and menus for Nov.
Monday: Cheeseburger, fries,
16-20 at the Gallia County Senior
broccoli, bananas in orange juice.
Citizen's Center, 220 Jackson Pike.
Tuesday - Beef with onions,
Monday, Nov. 16
whipped potatoes, peas, bread,
10 a.m. - Walking club
I 0 a.m. to noon - Rag rugs
dump cake.
.Wednelday - Meat loaf, scalI 1 a.m.- Legislative Info
1 p.m. - Chorus
loped potatoes, IOSse!l salad, bread,
Tuesday, Nov. 17
peaches. •
10:30 a.m. - STOP/Exercise
· . Thursday - Ham/beans with
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. -Quilting
onions, boiled egg, spinach com10:30 a.m. - Video matinee bread, pears.
(JFK}
Friday - Turkey/dressing,
·
Wednesday, Nov. 18
whipped potatoes, srcen beans,
10 a.m. -Walking club
cranberry sauce, !iil)ner rolla,
10 a.m.to noon- Crochet circle
pumpkin pie.
10 a.m. 10 noon- Blood pressure
Make reservations by calling
health department
446-7000 before 9 a.m. on the day
· 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Adult Day you wish to llllend.
·
Care available
Thandar, Nov. 19
10:45 a.m. -Bible stu&lt;!y
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. -Quilting
12:45 p.m. - Short subjects
1:30 p.m. - Board of Trustees
meeting
GALLIPOLIS • Jodi Jones 111C1
Friday, Nov. 20
Donald O'Rourke, both of G•llipBlO a.m. - Walking club
lis, WeniiiiKIIIg the 1,()48 litUdeniJ
10 a.m. to noon - An class
11 a.m. - Thanksgiving program named to the dean's list for the
1992 summer quarter at the Uniand dinner '
.
1-3 p.m. - Craft class (bleach versity of Ciricinnat

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·~a BtnecfG.Iil

APR*
THE SAME BANK YOq'VE -~oME TO TRUST.
The Farmers lank and Savlnas .Company of Pomeroy
and Tuppers Pl•lns, Ohio Is offering three .year fixed
rate auto loans at ,,75 APR*. ·
Before y.u buy, would you like qu,llfled, oblective
opinion on your new lnvestntent?·See us first•.We'll·be
glad to ~elp. See ••at we're doln1 to bee•••···

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Mell'.cer

~.o.r.c.'

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'•DDt'l PIO Ill.

61•1992-2136

614 oe7-Jte•

@
... --. '·

7
P 0 lo• ll9.
OM •5783

liiiiOI~i' '

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SANTA Fn. N.M. (AP)- Get

it works in Tom Fiorina's COUrt·
room each Thanksgiving.
:
The municipal judge plans
: entertainment at tho courthouac on
• the Tuesday before the holiday
: while parking violators who !lut otT,
;: paying tickets &amp;ring on food lot the
• needy in exchange for reduced
Efines.
f For about eight yean, Fiorina
i hu offered motOrilll tho chance
: for reduced fmea b owrdue park" ing tickets if they mab food for
: the needy at 'Ibanksgiving.
: Friday WU the day those IUm•
:mooed to court for failing .to pay
• tickets were ab o plead their ·
:cues before Fiorina. ·
a

!

.FB ·FarmersBank
&amp; Savings Company
~Oule

.,

I a ticket, coot a turkey. That's how

Youi. B~lkfo1t~... .
2t t wesr s.cor~o s''"'
PO. IOI626
Pomeroy, 0~ •5709

.
Judge offers

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Gifts wiil be wrapped and delivered by the Gold
Winaen. Barrels for donations or good used. and
new toys are located in business tltroughoul the
area. Cash donations niay be sent to Larry
DeWitt AR, 12 Nell Ave., Gallipolis•

SANTA'S WINGS AT WORK· Memben of
the Gold Wing Road Riden AlliOciatloa Chapter C-1 of Gaillpolls, recendy shopped for clfts
for 140 children and 74 senior dlizens at Hnls
Department Store. Pictured are Bob and Karel'
Donnally as they pick out the necessary Rifts •

·
: turkey amnesty for
: parking scofflaws
~

•to.r-y. . uw •• r•ie .- 7.00" API .11~. . • • c1r file • 7.25" API

I

ww-mst;overdraft p~ for your checking account.

...••
•..•

a

Named to dean's list

.

..

STOP AT ANY AREA NEW CAR DEAlER AND ASK ABOUT
OUR li.ITED TIME OFFER.
'

"Beary

•For 1M
of
respiratory proble•s :

TILL SPRING?
.

Will You have A

NEBULIZERS

•

Sheets-Wright

~is

•StaHonary

Athens

OLD ClUNKE·R·

WON'T

· GALLIPOUS ·For savers with
most of their funds tied up in lowtntcrest-rate accounts, such as certificates of deposit (COs) and
money market accounts, the plunge
in ~nterest rateS has been nothing
short of "sticker shock." The temptation may be to jump into highpaying but riskier junk bonds or
other unfamiliar, aggressively pitched, high-risk investinents, Yet
there are sensible alternatives.
Govemmen! secuqties. Treasury
notes .uc paying roughly one to
two percent in ore. than CDs of
comparable maturity . (lellgth of
time before the principal _becomes
due). Ill addition, Treasuries
(unlike COs) are exempt from state
and local taxes, and can be sold
before maturity without a penalty.
The risk with Treasuries, as with
any type of bond, is that as interest
rates rise, the undei'lying price of
the bond (principal) faDs (and vice
versa). Quality_ ~hortterm municipal ~nds, though someti!lles hard
to fmd, can be good cho1ces, too,
with the added advantage of ~ing
free of federal tax and posstbly
state tax.
Short-Term Bond funds. For
many peopl~. it's easier to !nvest in
bond funds mstead of buytng .sovemment or COJ)Xlmte bonds ~~ly. Because mterest rates wtll
almost inevitably rise, most financia! planners ar~ recommending
that mvestors sttck wtth short~rterm bond funds whose portfoltos
mature in five years or less. These
bond funds may be government
bond funds or high-quality corporate funds, most of which are
returning around five to seven percent. While more of a stretch for
CD lovers, short-term international
bond funds (look for dollar-hedged

. TANKS

593-6641"

East State

I,.OS ANGELES (AP) - Eliza.
beth Taylor, confined to her Be!• .
Air home bilcanse of a acveJe re~P·
ratory infection, was responding
well to medication, her doctllf llit1
Friday
Earlier this week, Dr. Michael
Roth said Miss Taylor was suffer·
ing from a "recurrence of a severe
upper respiratory tract ipfcction
with spil.;in~ fevers, ,verging on
pneumonia;'
Miss Taylor, 60, urged to stay '
home for several weeks, canceled
appearances and activities to the
end of the year.

Meigs County calendar of events

•

DONWOOID
• Buick, Otds, Pontiac, Cadillac, GMC Truck
• Ford, Lincoln-Mercury
• Toyota

'

.

funds) are yielding well because need the money, whether you need
foreign interest rates generally have current income, tax bracket, lind
been higher than in the United how much risk you are willing to
States.
·
· You may also want to consider
column is P.roduccd by the
funds that combine government, Institute of Certtfied Financial
U.S. corporate, and foreign bonds. Planners, a national association
Tbese combination funds 11re yield- representing the top financial planing as much as eight to nine per· ners in the country, and is provided
cent. ·
·
.
by Mark Curry of the Wiseman
ARM funds. These relatively Agency in Gallipolis, a local niemnew funds invest in govemment- ber in good standing of the instibacked adjustable-rate home 1110r!- 'tute,
gages. Because the interest rates
float, the share prices don't fluctuate as much as ftxed-m!e mortgage
funds such as Ginnie Mae funds.
Yields have declined with interest
rates, however, to around five to
six percent.
.Ladder bon&lt;! funds or COs. One
way to minimize interest-rate risk
is to ladder your fixed-income
investments. For example, you
might buy bonds that mature from
one year up to five years. A,t the
end of year one, t\qoolly reinvest
the funds from th_e one-year bonds
Veterans Memorial - Your Hometown Hospital - will
iniO the longer-term bonds and new
help l2lucky people have.a "Beru'Y' Christm"as".
•
five-year bonds. Repeat this each
The hospital will be awarding 12 attractively costumed
year. If you need cash, sell the
short-term bonds since the ·longteddy bears this upcoming holiday season. All you do to
term bonds have the greater
·enter the hospital's "Beary Christmas" program is com(if held to maturity).
pie!!: and send in an entry blank which will be included in
·Equities. For people accustomed
to CDs the move into stocks and
the hospital's advertisements in the Sunday Ttmes-Sentinel
stock
f~nds
can
be
intimidating.
over the next few weeks.
ROBERT AND GENEVIEVE BURDETTE .
1
The advantage of having some
Let us help you not only with all of your health care
equities is that they tra~ition~lly
needs but also to have a "Beary Christmas".
·have stayed ahead of tnflatton
much better than fixed-income
POMEROY - Robert and. . Tbe couple was married iu Galinvestments. With people living 20
Genevieve Burdette, Pomeroy, will . Jipolis by Earl Moore, Justice of
or 30 years aft.er retirement, staying
celebrate their 50th wedding the Peace, on Nov. 21. 1942. They
ahead of inflation is -critical. One
anniversary with an open house have a son, Bob, daughter-in-law,
way to ease into·them is go intO a
and reception on Nov. 22 from 2-4 Sharon, and three granddaughters,
balanced fund composed of stocks
Veterans Membfial Hospital
p.m. at the Rock Springs United Beverly, Stephanie and Andrea,
' 115 E. Me110rlal Drive
and bonds (say, 66 percent bonds
Metltodist Church, Rock Springs Naylors Run, Pomeroy.
and 40 percent stocks). Older
.Po•roy
Road, Pomeroy.
investornequiring income might
992·2104 .
consider a balanced fund with an
annual average total return of say
ten percent, then systematically
withdraw six to seven percent of
meet on Tucksday at 1:30 p .m. principal. The overall yield will be
Community Calendar items Park.
Plans wiD be made for the-christ- about the saine as a government
J
appear two days be(ore an event .
POMEROY - Last chance for mas party on December II.
bond fund, but the stock compoand tbe day or that' event. Items
nent should provide for growth.
must be received weD hi advance hunter education class stariing
WEDNESDAY
Which ones are best for you will
to assure publication in the cal- Monday. Call992-631110 pre-reg·
POMEROY - Pomeroy Mer- depend upon how soon you will
·
endar.
·
. ister.
chants Association, Wednesday.
'
RUTLAND- Leading Creek 8:30a.m., Bank One conference ----------------~··
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buff- Conservancy District will hold its room. All members attend.
Mariner 9, wbicb wu launched by
•Portable (Reliable)
regular
meeting
Monday
at
7
p.m.
tbe
United States on May 30, 1971,
ington, Gallipolis, will preach at
POMEROY - The Middleport wu tbe fint craft to orbit Man (Nov.
Naomi Baptist Church in POIIICI'QY Public invited.
Literary
Club will meet Wednesday 13, 11171). The unmanned spacecraft .
on Sunday at 10:45 a.m. Public
at
2
p.m.
at the M~igs County Pub- sent back over 7,000 photos.
STIVERSVILLE • Stiversville
invited.
lic
Library
in Pomeroy with Mrs.
Word' of Faith Church wi'll hold
Daniel
Thomas,
hostess. Mrs. Roy
• KINGSBURY - Carleto·n revival Monday through Wedneslleat.elt
Holter
will
review
"A Thousand
IThun:h, Kingsbury road, will hold day at 7:30 p.m. nightly with.
b)' Jane S'miley. Roll call
: special Sunday evening services at Brother Tommy Carpenter. Pastor Acres"
be
"a personal farm experiwill
• David Dailey invites the public.
M 7 p.m. Sister Jan Lavender will be
1
ence."
(As..lla, BriacWtls)
: guest speaker. Special singing by
TUESDAY
: Jan and Kathy. Rev. Clyde HenderSYRACUSE
The Third
GALLIPOLIS • Lafayette
: son invites the public.
Wednesday
Homemakers
Club will
Shrine No. 44, White Shrine of
meet
Wednesday
at
the
Syracuse
:
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- Jerusalem, Gallipolis, supreme
•Sales, Re~tals,
Safety Ails
: ty Genealogical Society will meet inspection, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. Municipal Building. All are welcome. Bring old Christmas cards
eUrl•ry/OsttllfrJ
Repah
: Sunday. at 2 p.m. at the Meigs Catered dinner at 6 p.m. ·
and
scissors.
County Museum in Pomeroy.
S1pplles
•VAet. .lrs
POMEROY - Regular meeting,
.. Guest speakers will be Mary Bow•IIIII'IIICI CWnui
•Hospital Beds
MIDDLEPORT - Jim Oliphant
: man, Ohio State Geneafogical Drew Webster Post No. 39, AmeriProcessed .
eCues' Cnt(hJ
: Society President. and Pat Green, can Legion, Tuesday. Thanksgiv- will conduct a bible study class
at
7
p.m.
at
the
First
Wednesday
ing
dinner
at
7
p.m.
and
meeting
at
: district trustee. Public invited.
(Meclcare &amp; Medicaid
eCGauade c•alrs
8 p.m. All members urged to Baptist Church in Middlepon.
...
accepted)
•Walkers
MONDAY
aUcnd.
'
'
POMEROY - Alzheimers Sup.
•24 Hotr Sei'Yke
'::
RACINE - Racine Village .
port
Group, Wednesday, 1-3 p.m.,
. POMEROY - Ladies AuxiliafY.,
:0 Council will meet in recessed sesCounty Senior Citizens CenEsion Monday at 7 p.m. at Star Mill Veterans ~emorial Hospital, wtll . Meigs
tcr.

BU:f:dette open house slated

I

LIESL SHEETS and DOUGLAS WJUGliT

Liz Taylor recovers

·Sensible investment alternatives to ·
the sticker shock of low interest rates

LOS ANGELES (AP) Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor said she
was never notified of a trial Ia
T - that le"ltcd iD a $3 million
civil judgmenltgainst her.

HOWARDMYERSand CRYSTALBREWER

wv

Mistakes in arithmetic, de~ys iJi getting deposits in on time•• .it can happen
to anyone--after all, you're only human. ·
.
Overdraft fees, settlement
details and embanassing phone calls
f
can be minimized or altogether avoided with a PLC Account.
from Peoples Bank. Checks that overdraw your account
will automllically be paid up 10 your
pre-approved line of credit, your account
will be ~ llld all activity will
appear on your monthly statement.
AskPeoplesBankabout PLC-it'sthe
Peoples advantage.

p·-·------------------~--~

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••

Confidential Services:
Birth Control
•
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening

Pregnancy Tilting
5. . . . . . . . - .............. "Jdllly to pay.

. PLIIIED PARENTHOOD
OF.SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
MIDDLEPOu
509 S. Snllvt.
992·5912
1:30ttS.-ot
MHt LLI.u
· . AltiJ ,_,
O.ltl ftlflllar

GAWPOUS

414511Gtlllvt. 2111 Flotr

446-0166
1:10"
Ma•darfrlllay
1:30 tt 5:00
12 Salw•r
Outd TltwHay

....

M'jltput

·AUO:u... a...,•...,.,_cee~llle,....,. &amp;McArlllw
·'

'•

,

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753-1955

�November 15, 111Q

Ott Point Plerun( wv

Program to Seminar focuses on ·
be present~d those who are grieving

'

. WEEK.END HIKE - Roy Scouts rrom Troop

21)0 ~ Gllllpolls stop for a rest Oct. 31 after bik-

ing the first lq or the K.wiwba Trace TraiL Pic·
lured are (left 1o rigb t) Sitting - Maxwell Bruce,
Kevin Walker, and Corey Burlile. Standinl! •

Levi Kin1, Jere•7 E•toll, Waller Sturrord,
Rod Hojat, Kyle Clark, Bob MapiUSetl, James
Standish aDd John Elch-. Not pictured are
Charlie Huba' and Scoutmaster Dave Walker.

Scout news: Troop 200 takes hike
GALLIPOLIS · . Boy Scout
Troop 200 of Gallipolis partjcipat·
ed in a number or activities during
the month of October, including a
31-mile hike on the Kanawha
Trace Trail in West Virginia.
Eleven scouts from the troop
spent Halloween weekend hiking
the winding trail from Barbowsville to Fraziers Bonom. The
.: -trail runs through Cabell and
:·~ Mason counties.
: : In honor of the trail's 30th
· •anniversary, a number of troops
;..'from the tri-state area participated
.; in the weekend hike. Troop 200

·.•

.

began the trail early Oct. 31 and
hiked 20 miles to a camping spot
near an old .one-room schoolhouse.
An army reserve unit ~'rcparcd
breakfast for the scout trOOPS the
next morning before the boys completed the finat 11-milc leg of tbc
trail.
Two scouts from the troop were
also awarded thc .rank of Eagle
Scout during the month of Octoba".
Bob Magnussen and Kyle Clark
both ascended to Boy Scout's high·
est rant in special ceremonies held
in October.
The srouts also panicipated in
disuict-wide popcorn sales and

MICHELLE OURS

HEATIJER SPRAGUE

sold 170 units~ earning more lhan
$300 for the troop.
Troop 200 is chartered by the
First Presbylerian Church of Gallipolis. The scoutmaster is Dave
Walker.
(Nort: SeoUl news is a new ftiJIW't
of rhe Tribune thai will r1111 the second Sunday of tach month. Any
ScoU1i11g orgQIIiziJlion. which wish-·
u til sub/IUt to tht column miLft
tur11 111 the Information to, Kevi11
Pinson by the first Monday of tach
month. Items will bt liiiUttd to
evt11ts happening duri11g the past
lriOIIIIt}

. TINA PRICE

~Ours,

Sprague, ·Price among
~Rees scholarship recipients
,..

.

I'

I

GALLIPOLIS • Tile Robert place [or the fair talents contest. ~n
I;;Rces Memorial Scholarship has addition, she won an expense DWd
been awarded for t])e 1992-93 trip to the national capital for a.per·
, school year. Twenty-four Universi- feet score on the state American
: ty of Rio Grande continuing stu- Legion test.
She hopes to remain active in
' dents will receive nearly $35,000 in
singing and plans to become a
~ financial suppon for the u]lCO!Iling
nurse professionally.
·, school year.
·~ ' In addition, 18 new freshmen
Tina Price, 1992 graduate of
~ will receive .$13.500 in scholarsbip
Gallia
Academy High School, has
~ monies. The amount awarded to the
been
awarded
the Robert Rees
·. recipients ranges from $SOO to
Scholarship
for,
the
1992-93 school
:. $3,000 per year.
year.
.
·: The Robert Rees Scholarship
While
at
Gallia
Academy,
she
::.,Fund was founded .in 1972 follow. ing the death of Robert E. Rees. participated in French club, ch!)ir,
: Through the years this endowment solo and ensemble contests, choir
fund has supported more than 150 contest, and the academic boosters
· students with nearly $550,000 in sales team. In addition, she was a
member of the high school Nation&gt;scholarship monies.
: The scholarship fund is a lasting
: memorial to the keen interest in
~ and dedication to education held by
·• Roben Rees. As one of the area's
" most prominent businessmen, he
·• contribuled considerable rcsqurccs
into the establishment of the Scholarship fund named in his honor.
Rees owned and operated the
Bob Rees Pontiac dealership for 37
: years in Gallipolis. He was a mcm. ber of the board of dircclors of the
: First National Bank of Gallipolis '·
•(now Bank One). He was the prin: cipal orF.izcr and stockholder of
· the Gallipolis Holiday Inn.
At the time of his death, Sept.
· 22, 1972, he was involved in the
·development of the Greenacres
:Subdivision in Gallipolis and was a ·
:partner in the Iron City Lincoln
; Mercury dealership in lronton.
, . The scholarship fund requires·
·all reci)lients to prove their need for
financ1al assistance. Priority con •.
, sideration is Jiven to students
·enrolled n the nursing pro$ram.
:TheSe applicants must place m the
; upper one-half of their high school
:graduation class and reside in
either Jackson or Gallia county.
The remaining monies a~blc is
awarded to students from Gallia
.County who place in the upper one' fourth of their graduation class.
.
: Michelle Ours, daughter of
:Roger and Virgie Ours, has been
:awarded the Roben RCCI Scholar- ,
'
'ship for the lm-93 school year.
t . She graduated in 1992 from
· Hannan 1iaee High School, where
she participated in 4-H • .French
;club, and SADD.
,
.
· She held numerous offices dur:ing this time including II'C8SIIrel' for
cl~. library club, Beta Club,
·and Right-To-Life. She also ltlVed
:as secretarY of tbc FHA and RightTo-Life, and president of the high
,school band.
CHEml
· Ours has won awards for
'linpg, band, and she won second
~

al Honor Society.
.
Price has taken honors language
arts and honors mathematics classes. She is a regioqal scholar and
has won the foreign language
award.
.
Price is undecided for a major.

POMEROY - "The Mt'ql'use
and ·Beyond; a program to separate myth from reality, will be pre-red at the Meigs County Seaior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy cin
Thursday at 7 p.m. by Dan Marazoo, D.O.
The program is sponsored by
~A-GEIGY Corporation and the
Xi Gamma Mli Chapter, Beta
Sigma Pili Sorority.
According to Physicians
Encouraging Awareness and
Knowledge (PEAK), rri8Jil women
have liUie, or faulty ~edge of
menopause.
· Even in today's world of instani
communication and much-touted
openness, certain topics arc shroud·
ed in myth and misconception.
Among these: menopause.
Althou~h about a third of a
woman's lafc may be spent in the
postmenopausal period, many
women anticipate this event with
dread, sadness, and even embar·
. rassmentiKnl of ignor.mce.
Some· sec menopause as the
beginning of old age, as a door
closing oo their vitality and sexuality, as an illness.
A clear explanation can make all
the lliffettnce.
Understanding the P.hysiolo~y
of menopause, its significance, 1ts ·
impact on the body, its potential
problems and the means availabl~
to deal with them, can free a
woman from the old wives' tales
that pervade this time of liie.
Self-knowledge, an insistent
!.heme in IOday's world, can hardly
be accomplished without basic
knowledge of one"s own body and
what to expect from iL
·
During the hour long program
there will be a lecture and slide
show covering the physiology of
menopause, its impact on a
woman's life. its relationship to
otbcr midlife events and changes,
early menopausal symptoms such
as hot Hashes, long term consequences, such ·as osteoporOsis. and
. trcauncnt options available.· ·
Following the presentation the
lecturer will .cntertain questions
from the audience. Cards and pencils will be provided so your members can record any questions ihey
want addressed by the speaker.
L~raturc on various ·aspects of
the menopause and its treatment
will be distributed to members of
the audience providing them with a
permanent refettnce source.
The public is invited and
enCOIIfl!ged 10 participate in this
program.

"Who's Who Among American
High School StudentsM, and for the
national honor roll. She was also ·
selected for the aH-star volleyball
team.
"
Sprague plans to pursue a bachelor degree followed by the master's degrct.

GALLIPOLIS - The Family
Service Center, McCoy-Moore
f:uncnl Home. Inc., Gallipolis and
vinioo. will sponsor a spcci•l grief
recovery seminar, "Help for the
Holidays; oa Saturday. Nov. 21
from 10 Lm. 10 110011 in the dining
room of Grace United Methodist
Church, Gallipolis. .
The presentation, focusing on
"Living with a Loss,~ will be led
by SIIZIIUIC Miller Of ijuntingtOII.
W.Va. She is a graduate of MarShall University with a degree in
Connsdillg and Rehabilitation. · ·
For d)C past 3 1/2 YC!IIl. Milia'
has been the bereavement and vol·
untccr coordinator for Hospice of
Huntington. She began the Growing Through Grief Bereavement
Suppon Group in 1989 for Hospice, which runs three support
groups a year for the community.
Miller has been conducting Loss
and Grief seminars for the past 2
1/2
.
~(shared is. grief diminished; said Miller. The seminar
will also focus on constructive
ways of meeting saressful situation~
following the loss of a loved one.
For more information call 3888321 or 446-0852. The seminar is
free and open 10 the public.

Ne•~-

c..·
. istkF.:a ~: •::»-'N';.l

:s
•

- ------

••

AI bll willl Tilp40-*.. a
_.,,...... Iii.
.,
... il 16+ I willa a KW -.y~
tllisfnD
· I love just about everything second shopping 51RC and )'Oil' D i:c lliL 1i if •
have
the
_
...
_
""m
the
illllide
I
·
willl
Ow
. . - - - ---oJ _..
~
about the Christmas season. ••except
shopping. ·Besides agonizing over of a deparUnca SIOR ~ IWc:k.c Amy W101C lhe
what to get my father, who is lowccn and New YC~R"s. It's liz a
; rnpossib]e to shop for (I don ' t Wrcstlemania free-for-aU widl .......... 4dalal,_slfA,
"
i
-.cMaptijcllediD
lhint he has ever worn the Simp- shoppingcans.
Whether they're in .. bllll'}' 10 · "'tw+¥ lk •-41 N t Reia~
: sons boxer shorts I got him last
• ,year), there'• the tonurc of having jusr: get it over with (lib me:) CIC' . deer" • a:cup rtl234..11iaes
iacoay
: to deal with a stom crammed full of yYing against every DlJier shtljiti _ , .. P;
m
the
stom
for
a
black
bdt
ill
bw~
r
·
Ina
,,
"J 10
holiday shllppciS. ·
So last Sunday I decided to get gain hunting, the cu~ ICICd "W 'Die Gilly • • • I a . -•1
llcaniiD da, ....a: God, is up.
my Christmas shopping out of the as if the world was comillg 10 •
end
in
the
ncxtlllu
and
dlcy
_._
(hly -.e F y.P • R}ILJ?)
way a liUic early. I was willing to
Tllis ....,ma ~ of
sacrifice those post-Thanksgiving ed to buy God a welcome prr •
l
could.
n
't
help
but
woJlder
•t Vv* Wjcs JS ••al
Day sales j'ust 10 miss out on the

Golll ,_,. ~· "'Class lilp
Free 0pt1oas • AI Sfylesl ·

TAWNEY JEWELERS

'

CHESlER

holiday madness that infects millions of shoppers and retailers
natiooWi.de.
·
But it didn't wort. The theory
that Christmas comes earlier every
year is absolutely true. With almost
60 days standing between me and
Christmas, I walked into stoms that
· looked lite Hurricane Andrew
. Meets Santa's Sccmt Workshop.
: And like pre-pubescent girls at a
· New Kids on the Block appear. ancc, wild-eyed shoppers were
· attracted to the decked halls in
droves. Large women in small
. sweat suits blocked the aisles,
' screaming kids climbed the toy
. shelves and -cusromcr service
employees hid in fear in the bact
room as I roamed the SlorC looking
for those perfect gifts that best
' re.flect my personality (shopper's
note: there are no department stores
in Gallipolis that sciJ faltc vomit).
Picture a couple hundred ~le
simultaneously competing in a 61).

for the mosa pan, m:JIIrlccd7 ....
mal 10 months out of the yell' •
turn into the Richaril Pcllys of
shopping cart demolilion ~
I pondcre!lthis quandary fcx
many,manySI"£l!!ldsbcloreOOf 1
the answer right over my bead. Ia
the ceiling. betvoccn the 0~
lights and the black plastir;
r
thai conlain video cameras ~.,
one knows they contain C8IIICIU
beCause they arc hiddea in inooaspicuous 4-foot black bubbles)
were speatm issoil\g ,fMh Olristmas carols.
Yep, Christmas carols. NIUlll
Christmas carols.
Have you ever heard 'l lllftllfJ-.
ing song on the radio that. ror a
reason that escapes even ·the brilliant psychologists .xl soriDiogists, iS so popular that it ~eiS

...I

Marietta
373-3155

Atbens
593-7761

413-7516

,;,

1196-1369

~·

w-a't·*

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Country music star Hank Williams
Jr. needs room for some additions
to• his private museum, so he's
unloading 18 of his collectible cars

Cn:dil Clwt •

die Clwt She
W":D Write Vel)'. Verr Slowly'

Jiac.
Bd: .._,I~ tile i11as in
die • •
_. a- .., feet ap to
m• :a
ally
a h &lt;I 1m
Jat 1duie I En :II iiiD llliaful
- •
i:
•11, 1:
l!m:d a
c:CiiiiJic ol P «&lt;I* I illadvalndy
ldiaft'- .......
lila.
·
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......
...._
~. DOl
.
1
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and trucks.

r- • ..-_...,.

Kruse International, which is
conducting the !flassic car auction
today at Opryland, said Williams
wants,other. country fans and car
buffs to have a chance to "enjoy
the '&lt;chicles he's enjoyed so

c.._

5

I

..,._

High school students compete in
American history contest at OU
October.

ATHENS - The final round in
Ohio University's 46th annual
American History Contest is scbcd·
uled for Dec. 3 on the Athens campus, with the first-place winner
receiving a four"ycar, full tuition
Ohio University scholarship and
$100.
More than 18,000 .students in
440 Ohio high schools took the
preliminary multiple choice cumination at their local schools in

winners Angela Cantre~ River Valle)
High School•.and I(aral Se•nlhs
of Gallia Academy High :Sdwd
In the preliminary rood.
Matthew
Sbephcrd
froa
Columbian Higb School in Tiflil
was the top scorer, IUISWcOq 1l
out of 80 qDCSlions WliecdJ'. Be
will receiv.c the Carl G - . Boot Awant. ~in 11aaorm•

Local .prelim'

&lt;llioUIIIioeuilj J)iRiNg • 7 ......
faa.- EwrifM af Hislaly. Tllis

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or·~a~~arar•

ANGELTREEPROJECT-

__.

Meigs County Department ofHuman Sctvia:s
To be returned to the Meigs County Dcpiitment «
· Human Services.- Children $ervices, Box 191,
Middlepon, Ohio, by Dec. 7, orcall992-2lt7.

wJedjs;wm

*ljhnali- ad its CUUcaccs
rm. FDR ID Ball,· by Alo:Do
Ullliwusil) ft•44 agw

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.

STAiE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) A police lodge whose members
were ordcmito provide security at
a concert by lliP singer Icc-T, who
performs ··cop Killer,'' is urging
the public to boycQttthe event.
Ice-T, .whose songs include
tyrics aboul killing police, killing
mothers and raping w
. omen, is· to
22
perform Nov.
at Penn State Univcrsity.
.
"We're lioping that people will
·
,ooyCOil the concerL
At least ·f
~ we
doo't have a run house, we will be
somewhat successful," L. Stewart
Neff, president of the Bald Eagle
Lod ge o f th e FraternaI 0 rder o f
Police, said Thursday.
First-day ticket sales were the
bigllest at the school in thrcc years,
Pl:nn State. spokesman Bill Mahon
.:... Thursda
--'
y. cif the university's
The director
black cultural center said "Cop
Killer'' was written as a response
10 police brutality toward blacks.·
"instllad of trying to slop "Cop
Killer," more effort should go into
stopping tiller cbps." Lawrence
Young wrote in a leucr to The Col. lcgian, Penn State's student news-

b.r OliiD
Ul:iorI Ads
... ~

Orpni2en for the projcc:it IDaS
wm;..- Gmy of Hartflllll.
· MEIGS COUNTY ·The"An~!
thai
any
item
is
a:c
:po"""'
..t
.,
0
Ja:eiw:d
ia 1189
Tree Project," a_program 10 provide
items
will
be
IUiillld
away.
'11lole
for ace( · t •
christmas to needy families in the
llowie dinaal"
llill:llarea. will again be a focus this year mating l"ffKWt-y OWFIHw . . ~
ad:was
....
ialll99ill_..
urged
10
ICI•IO'Iher
tbll
.
d
lis
•
J
at the Meigs County DepilniCnt of
fliiRKC N"a:lti:l~ tk
Human Services duoulh Childrens c:aa also be used tbrotls1Joat tk
year to provide ileiiiS Cllllcr tllaD • ••Cif• I - &amp;dirdilt
Sci-vices.
l . . . . ill91q,
Last year the project provided Just for CIDillmu.
fQr ss·families. Through the giving
efforts of individuals, clubs,
.
.
churches and other organizations,
many needy people in die county
can have a Christmas that WC!Uid
()therwise not be possible.
Last year the pogram provided
mainly for children. This year t1 ts
hoped that more adults will· also
· benefit. In addition to providing
much needed items, monetary
· ~~onationi are also being aought to
' purchase items not received that
are needed by the Ylrious families.
If a group or individual would
lle intereSied in tpOMOrill&amp; a fenily
1
or families contact the Meigs
of AaM ulll:•-,_ a '
III&amp;=L~:':::I=·:
County Dqlarlment of HIIIIIMI ScrgruJiw WlutllcM , _
_ , ...
yice;~~~~-11 ~ fttdifMallllfi_..
T.
.. ............... __ _ _
Ilk
on., -.. 111urs. Fri. !G! ...._ . .
ey staff will provide you with
Other
a11 1 7
7 .__.
• 4'11w~
information needed lo C1btain gift
~
itenls for the service familiq and
,.....;
. . _ . . . . . . , _1 •

a,_.
''ZiJ:I]

797-4547

•

arrange
to pi(:k up the iiCiiiS
prior
to~fordelivery.
.
.

'

$900

In presentation case.

.fllcquisitions
!JitJ/:f, J'E/WEI/R!Y .
-MTS URE COIN COMPANYcoRNER SECOND AT GRAPE STREET
(Tope's Fumnu,. Building)

GALUPOLIS

il•z:

•FREE PARKING
•FREE 90 DAY FINANCING
•FREE GIFT WRAPPING

I

While you're at our store dropping off your qonation, be sure to
enter our FREE Holiday Drawings.
It's our way of saying, "Thsnk
you for helping those In

need."

,

.

Z9 OHIO RIVER PLAZA
GALUPOUS, OH. 45631
PHONE 44S:.~525

"In the Spirit of Giving"

~ney Catabgsrov~l

a
ST•.. sry A. .,._.....
l.J~S~I~II~...
~~,.~~~"'~-.!~~~!!--!·~-~·~~J
2 b
'

ONLY

Enter Our Two, Special Drawings!

1 _,.

.

I OZ. SOLID SILVEI
15 DiHertll Styl11

to children in need. When you drop off a new toy for
distribution to children in our community, we'll give you
a $10 Catalog Merchandise Certiflc~te good on your
next holiday order. Kids who drop off toys will receive
a FREE coloring book and crayons.

UIGE S8IC1IOII

ThePIIins

CHRISTMAS
BARS

MAKE CHRISTMAS
WISHES COME TRUE
F0R A CHILD IN NEED.!
Help us m~ke this abetter holiday !Ieason, by giving .

h

Nelsonville
753-1955

JUST ARRIVED

paper.

JII;,D ) _• ~~
~ diat:a:U by P'IUf~ or Hi1loly

Roell
v"" .fto1n.,

Ola11111nd pun:huaa are d!Hiculll No matter wh.. p~e you lind
- aomeone alee h•• the aame alze for leaa; Dla11111nde priced buecl on not only alze but elao purity, cut,end color. We
.. Acqulelllona uk you to compare our new dle11111ncll wllll
enyone'e. You wltl-the diUerence- Your DiamOnd Dollar will
buy you more .. Acqulaltlona. We price Meh dlemond with a
euggeeted retail price and our price - Compere ue juat once'You wltl -the IIIVIngal

Williams' hits include "All My
Rowdy Friends (Arc Coming Over
Tooight)" and "Born to Boogie.''

jJS,J993or-.eeh ol dlcir CSI&amp;J n •· · • Tile
is IJ'
:a!litJ•s 0 r 0

It Certainly Does Make A Difference
Where You Buy Your Diamonds!

The cars will be among about
250 on display or auctioiled at the
show.
.
Among ·the cars Williams will
be selling ate a 1955 Jaguar XK140
RQidstcr, a 1955 Buick Roadmas•
ter Series 70 two-door hardtop, five
vintage Cadillacs and eight classic

ila- wrilcr
·

~"

-ACQUISITIONS·FINE JEWELRY-

much."

,_.C.. V*7 P 157 • 1

slate .law prohibits mentioning the

1

Middleport

~

Names in
the news

.'Angel Tree Project' provides lla:wiaF
Christmas trees for needy · News notes

$127,072.80

Lowell

meatal Disabilities (MR/DD)
teceaUy celebrated the 2Sth
anniverSary of the enactment of
S&lt;mse Bill 169, which established
savic:cs Cor ~ with developmental disabilities • the community levd in each county in Ohio.
Gov. George V. Voinovich prescnled each county with a formal
pnx:lamalion honoring them for 2S
~ of service as part of the ceremonies It the banquet Qf'thc ninth
annual convention ot the Ohio
AJsoc:iation of County Boards: of
Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities (OACBMRDD)
on·OcL 27,1992 in Dublin. '
Gov. Voinovich praised county
MRJDD boards for the great strides
that have been made in the quality
and quantity of services that are
now being provided at the community level and expressed inspiration
aa the material presented in the prc·mier of the OACBMRDD video '
production "Changes", a 25 year
documentary of county MR/DD
boards and the people they serve.
Also attending were Je~me C.
Manuel. director of the Ohio
·Department of MRIDD, State Budget Director .Greg Browning, and
Executive Assistant to the Governor Jacqui Sensky.

I

~!!'tddcf~·~ e!:cpj~~b!i,'t!!

.

··

. Belpre

I

•••-or..md
-.,.....atitk-b •*•

~

00

ConmctPe~0•"•~------~------1

"These examples are baled on the fixed rates shOwn below:
• 30 Year Loan: 9.00% plus a 2% origination faa.
• 15 Year~: 7.75'1'. plus a 2% originltlon faa.

915-2201

Sentinel-Page

Meatal Retardation and Develop-

I* . lilr tile laR c I F I'W£11
doll• -.elide
I - ..a:r r cd .... I fiD.
isllcd
•
• _.rlodrdOUI
o.Iy- 10
lll:al ar Lal"::: If far -.e Lillie
Old l.adt ;a Frt.l af YCN wilh
Two :&amp;I. Cauls ,.,.., Will Need a

w••:

•:'

Increasing your monthly payment $102.49 will
.save you $98,176.40 and 15 years! Decreasing.the
term of your loan builds equity faster and drastically
reduces total repayment. As shown above, cutting the
term of the loan in half willllQl doub~ the monthly
payment! Get the facts on fixed rates and repayment
costs-that's the Peoples advantage and the American

Meml;ler FDIC

I

:.-

dri'UII:s•u

exactlywhatcausesJXq~le,..,

Phon•'""'-----------'-~...,.--..,.-- :

Decide on a term, lock in a rate, you can own your
home soOner than you think! Here's a comparison
that may open your eyes!
·

Gl
tlllll

-

I

Name of organization{mdividu.~4J...I_'----:----

'

e.

•I
sr.:e

'.'.•

Dream.

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915·3307

9.23%
$603.47
$217,249.20

;

&lt;

SUZANNE MiuER

'wU:It c:aa IUb de
. . "pafcwdie a., City
'

·-._..lib

•

.

$75,000.00
8.08%
$705.96

1,

_...sg;

Adruress'--------~-------------------

BAUM

~

...

•di

SEE US FO~ ~OME, FARM;
BUSINESS
AND, INDUSTRY
.

15 Year Loan*

)

.-.y aft'il;llir..

•COOKING

$75,000.00

.... ~· ia a

1

~

•HOT WATER

30 Year Loan•

4

fisd'llls a( ......... ,0.: kad
wJiilc 1lyils II) . . . . p&gt; 'iC
e•a•Luu . . .llelllliaap2-

..

Amoum of Loan
Annual Percentage Rate
Monthly Payment
Total of Payments

Sunday

Nl C SJUM• Ott Point PIIIUnt, WV

~

--lk a- JUU llalf-:r
By
dill a' _,_
m. .,-ac
= . , ........

Heather Sprague, daughter of
Herman and Aliena Sprague, has
beeR awarded the Robert Rccs
Scholarship for the 1992-93 school
year.
.
She is a l992 gllduatc of North
Gallia High School where she participated in choir, national Beta
Club, SADD. survey team, band, 4H, youth group, volleyball, softball,
and baskcthall.
. She has been recognized in

They'll Leave lbu Pu.rrillg.

'8~1

..

Introducing 1iger River Spas.

:her

0,

DUBLIN • County boards of

Gibbons and Tesh
join summer lineup
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A talk
show featuring LeeZa Gibbons and
John Tesh ' of "Entertainment
Tonight" will join NBC's da)'lim!:
lineup next summer.
. The hour-long, u~titled program
ts scheduled to begm June 14. the
network said Thursday.
Miss Gibbons will continue
reponing for "Entertainment
Tonight" and stay on as weclcend
host. NBC said. Tesh will remain
as weekday co-host with Mary Han
but drop weekend chores.
NBC said it had yet to decide
which program the Gibbons-Tesh
show will rcplal;e.

nmes
......
Christmas.shopping.season: Gallia Cou_nty MRIDD board
An exercise in insanity .· honored during annual convention

'Novem.ber 15, 1992

~sEam

.•

LOCAL FILL

•

�•

1

..
Pomeroy-Middlepon-Galllpolla, O~olnt Plaaunt, WV

' Page-86-Sunday nmea Seritlnel

-

has abeady been shaving under bet ,
anns for several monlhs. ·
It seems to me that 10 is an
unusually young age for a girl to
stan shaving her legs. Or am I
mistaken?
ANNL.\NDDI
.
rve IOid my claugliter 1 need to
"Ut2, Loo Al1ploo
think about It ind thai I will let bet
n..s,w·
c.-.n Sp:lliUJj~
know what I decide soon. Thanks
for )'0\11' help, Ann. - STOCKTON,
slick opcrato/S. Their lawyers know CALIF.
the law backward and •forward, and · DEAR STOCKTON: I agree that
they know exactly what kind of 10 is awfully young 10 stan shavmg
language to use to avoid getting legs. but~· are in a better position
to evaliiiiC the powth than I am. ·
arrcstl:d.
I doubt thai the girl would be
Please, Ann, tell your readers not
io fall for things that look too shaving if lhae was nothing there
good to be true. I'm a senior citizen to fake off. Meanwhile, ask your
and feel like a fool for not having dermatologist to recommend a
known better. I hope you will depila!D'Y instead. It is safer than a
print my letter so that others might razor and the hair will not grow back
benefit from my experience. ·· F.B., so rapidly.
I hope you wiU insist on supervisFONTANA, CALIF. .
DEAR FONTANA: That over- ing the procedure, at least for a
night service gimmick is a dead while. It's nice that your daughter
giveaway. That's often how those asked. Most wouldn~.
Gem of the Day: Funny how
crooks avoid being charged with
people doll't have time to do it right.
mail frau,d .
Here's a message to all my · but tliey fllld ~ to do it over.
~alcohol problem? How can you
readers: Nobody is waiting 10.give
you a lot of money or a valuable help youself or someolll! you love?
gift just because they are philantlud- "Alcoholism: How to Recognize It,
10 YEAR EMPLOYEES· Employees of Mid·
pists. There is no such thing as a How /1) Deal With It, How · to
dleton Estates display certificates l'rom the Ohio
Conquer It" will give. you rhe
free lunch.
.
Senate recognizing their 10 years of service to
Dear Ann Landers: I have a .answers. Send a self-addressed,
the facility. Seven or the estate's employees have
problem, and I hope you won't- long, busilll!ss-size envelope and a
worked there since the opening 10 years ago.
think it's too silly to prinL I need an chec/c.or molll!y order for $3.65 (this
The employees were gathered Friday at the Hoi·
includes pos/JJge and handling) 10:
outside opinion, and I value yours.
iday Inn to honor Charles Burgey on bis retire·
My daughter, a mature tO-year- Alcohol, c/o Ann Lantkrs, P.O. Box
ment Pictured are (left to right): Sitting. Habit;
itation Records Assistant Rhonda Ball and Proold, has asked me for permission to 11$62, Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
shave her legs. She told me that she Callllda, send $4.45.)

Ann

By JERI WATERS
AIIOCieted l'rsl Wriler
, COLUMBUS - A statewide
~ telephone aervlee thai allows deaf
,ancf speech-impaired Ohioans to
communicate with anyone by
: ~ ~ impovc -~~~uality of
. life, aiel a man who IS
•
Richard Huebner of ~ Ohio
• School of the DrM' said Friday thai
: the Ohio Relay Service was the
•most imJIM!IIt new mtans or c:ommunic:abOII for the deaf community
since the Telotypcw.riter or the.
, Telecommunications Device for
' the Deaf, whil;h was introduced in
• the 1960s.
"The relay is more than a new
• means of communication. It has
dramatic potential for increasing
: inljividual privacy, fostering per" sonal indepcadenee, and, thereby,
~ : enhancing the quality of life of all
: OhiOans who are ~munlcativcly
J impaired," he iaid
• 'The relay savicc, a joint effort
: by the state, Ohio Bell Telephone
• Co. and the Public Utilities Cqmmission of Ohio, becomes availilble
statewide at 8 "'m~ Sunday, PUCO

u_.

..._.
--·

A:~ta?~1J;!!~Jter

two studies. I'd be careful about affect treatment because naltreximmediately applying the medica- one, manufactured by DuPont
lion. The fmal word isn't in yet."
Pharma as Trexan in the United
The studies also emphasized the States and Europe, may be pre~
·drug should not be considered the scribed by doctors for uses other
sole treatment for alcoholism.
. than heroin addiction. Industry
Naltrexone. used in combination sources said !he drug's annual sales
with behavioral treatment, rcducip · are less than SIS million.
relapse from 54 percent to 2l perBut Volpicelli agreed with
cent, according to one of the Fuller, saying he would need to
reports.
study the drug for few more years
It blocks release of the brain's before prescnbing it to treat alcopleasure-producing- chemicals holies.
known as Clldorphins that produce
Fuller said long-term studies
the
"high"
alcoholics
feel.
using
more patients were needed.
:: try.
. .
Dr.·
Joseph
Volpicelli,
a
UniverThe
NIAAA
already has funded
"T~is is ve~r ewtmg •. very
sity
of
Pennsylvania
psychiatrist,
three
additional
studies, two of
promismg work, wd Dr. Richard
said
his
study
found
the
drug
also
which
will
extend
the work being
11ullcr, director of clinieal prevenreduces
an
alcoholic's
craving
of
a
published
today.
tion of the National Institute on
Physicians now use the drug
Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. drink.
The
fmdings
could
immediately
Antabuse
to treat recovering alco.· '"On the other hand, these are just
holics. The drug causes severe nausea and vomiting when alcoholics
drink, but docs little to stop the
craving.
Volpicelli's study followed 70
male patients in a detoxification
unit for three months. Patients
treated with naltrexone slipped and
had a drink about as frequently as
patients given a placebo. But those
on naltrexone could stop drinking
sooner and fewer had a total
relapse.
"Ordinarily, in alcoholics, even
one or two drinks stimulates the
body'~ craving for more," Volpicelli sl\id. But with the drug, "the
cycle of craving was broken."
.
. In the second study, conducted
mdependently at Yale University,
39 percent of the patients taking
naltrexone re)l!psed, compilred with
79 percent of those who received
just counseling. The study followed
97 patients for three months.
Both research groups stressed
that the drug by itself was not a
cure and must be supplemented.
''The medicine works in conjunction with psychosocial ueat·
ment," Volpicelli s!Ud. "Medica·
uon alone doesn't work."

-·
By AJ. HOSTETLER
·""' .·
Associated Press Writer
,..
• • PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A
~ug used io fight drug addiction
... -also was found to reduce the crav;:: ing for alcoh~l in alcoholic~. but
.. ientists cauuoned more tes""~ IS
-ceded before it is prescribed for
atpurpose. ·
•·: -. Naltrexonc also apparently helps
· • ·keep up to four in five recovering
!~alcoholics from suffering a relapse,
"' according to two reports in Satur·
:: ; Clay'~ Archives of General Psychia·

a

...

gram Director Joann Hill. Sta•ding • VOCA
South Central Ohio Regional Operations Man·
ager George Heller, retired Provam Diredor
Charles Burgey, Habilitation D1rector Nancy
Burgey and Maintenance Coordinator Marvin
Skaggs. Two IO·year employees, Roberta VanGundy and Jean Kingery, are not pictured.
(Times-Sentinel photo by Kevin Pinson) ·

. L-INDIANAPOUS
.. - A bOy ~
tie dubb~d the ~ah-hum bug
may spod
the holidays
for some
' ' ak
Ch
·
t
tr
Grea t ,_
growers. es-area ns mas ee
Th e U·S· Departm en I f Agrl. •
culture imposed a quarantine Friday on the movement of Christmas
trees and pine products from 42
counties in six states where the
European pine shoot beetle has
been found
The Indiana Department of Nat·
ural Resources has estimated that a
quarantine could cost Indiana tree
growers $5 million to $6 million
this year.
However, David McKay, who
runs the plant protection and quarantine program for the USDA in
Michigan, predicted the economic
impact will not be severe this year
because most large commercial
Christmas tree growers already'
have cut and sold their product.
"For this year, I d.on 't think tliat
there will be a severe economic
impact. That's not to address later
years. I have no idea how this is
going to work as time develops,"
McKay said. .·
The quarantine, which takes
effeq immediately, resuicts the
movement of pine products from
infested counties in Indiana, Ohio,
Michigan, Pennsy.tvania, New
York and Illinois, the USDA said.
Trees, nursery stock, logs and
lumber may be moved to noninfested areas if they pass inspection, McKay said.
Agri~ulture officials are worried
that without the quarantine, the
. be.etle might spread into pine
forests in the South and West,
where it could stunt growth of
valuable timber.
"This action will significantly
reduce the risk of the beetle spreading to other regions of the country
while allowing most producers to
move their product," said B. Glen
Lee, deputy administrator with the

°

USDA'.s Anim~ and Plant Health
Inspecuon Semce.
The quarantine requires a certificate or limited permit for the
mov·ement· of pine Christmas trees. •
nursery
stock and bark-covered
.
pme, spruce, t:u-ch or fu log~ and
lumber Lee sa1d
T.h 'beet! T. .
. . da
e
e, omlc.us plmper •

By MIKEGLOVER
Assoc:iated Press Writer
DES MOINES, Iowa - The
Equal Rights All)endment was
leading in the public: opinion ·pous
and had the surcport of popular
poGliticiarulobcrtlikc ormcr Republican
ov. R
Ray.
Bill c:omc Elcc:tioa Day, vote/S
rejec:tad the amendment by a margin of 52 percent to 48 percent.
What happened?
Conservatives like Phyllis
Schlafly and Pat'Robertson joined
the fray, telling voters that the
amendment would broaden ac:ccss
to abortion and bolster gay rights.
· ERAopponcntssaythcirvic:tory
provided unportanttactic:allessons
, at a time when some had hoped to
~revive the effort to write an ERA
•into the U.S. Constitutioo.
! "The pro-family movement has
l developed a very powerful infrastructure at the grassroots level,"
: said Ralph Reed, executive director
; of the Virginia-based Christian
bCoslilic:in, fouildedby Robmson.

is ~elieved to have come to the
Umted States about four years ago'
aboard ships unloading in the Great
Lakes. Nicknamed the "bah·hum
bug, .. 1't has been.ou
• nd · 8
ml coonu·~ If!
· Indiana,
· I4. 111
· Oh'
·
10, ••Our 10
.M1ch1gan, three 10 Pennsylvania
· N ·
·
·' ·
tw~ m ew York and one m llh· ,
noiS.
·

'.

RIVER CJdFS SPEECH
and LANGUAGE

SERVICES

THERAPY SERVICES AVAILABLE FOR:

435 S.co•tl Awe.

'

,

Sunday,Nov.15
CENTENARY· Rev. Ralph
•Workman wiU be the guest speaker
cat New Hope Baptist Olapcl at II
a.m. and 7 p.m.

•.

G•llpoU1

BIDWELL • Stapleton Family
· at Prospect Baptist
Church, =.m.

446 9449

wiU be ·

;: CENTEN.UY ·Short Family
•: Singers will }le at the Centenary
:: United Christian ehurch, 7 p.m.
'.
'
•: CADMUS - Backwoodsmen
:; Muzzle Loading Club annual slug
:• shot 111 Cadmus. Open sights oaly.
, Slugs available.

roNLY-ifcoimi&amp;-siroiiFuiiliiul

I ' L\IERRY .CHRISTMAS
1 •

50. I1

BERKLINE
TO YOU
$50 DISCOUNT COUPON

I 50
II ·(Coupon

I

FROM
•

Good On An'/

telephone call to Robcn Lankenau,
former executive secretary of the
. Ohio Association of the Deaf.
Lankenau talked to the governOr .
using a keyboard-activated lDD.
He said the relay service would
open many doors of opportunity for ·
the deaf.
Voinovic:h said the relay service
would provide a m~s of communication taken for granted by many.
"1'11e Ohio Relay Service represents a leap forward for the Slate. It
brings together the eommunic:ativc·
ly impaired and the hearing e'ommunity through advanced technology," he said.
Individuals and businesses using
TI'Y-TDDs may be listed in the
White Pages or the lTY -1DD section of the ielephone directory.
Glazer said a bill was pending in
the House to protect operators that
are using the service so they may
not be forced to testify on what was
. said betwcc:n parties during a privare·call.
The toll-free number for the
Ohio Relay Service is 1-800-7500750.

"We attribute it to the dedicalion of our workers and the inter·
v~tion of Gnd," said D9nna Leportc, head of the Iowa chapter of
Sc:hlafly's Eagle Forum.
Cynthia Terrell, leader of the
Iowa Women's Equality Campaign, had another CJ~planation.
"People voted out of fear,"
Tenell said. "The lies have worked ·
again."
• ·
The fllinois-based Eagle Forum
helped banlcroll the ERA opposition, which Reed estimated called
43,000 Iowa voters. The day-to-day ·
campaign was managed by longtime Robertson associate Marlene
Elwell.
The campaign included advertiscmcnts por)raying openly affec:tionate homosexuals. Catholic bish·
ops issued a statement of alarm
over the ERA.
Robertson weighed in with a
fund-raising letter accusing "radi·
c:al feminists" or pushing a hidden
agenda that "encourages women to
leave their husbands, kill their chit-

I

dren, practice witchcraft, ¢suoy
capitalism and become lesbiahs.''
The evangelist and former prcsi·
dential candidate .later denied writ·
ing the letter, saying an aide was
the author, but he aff11111ed iiS sentiments.
Sixteen states have equal ri!!hts
provisions in their state consututions, including Wyoming, which
enacted one in 1890. Massachusetts
was the last state to add an ERA, in
1976.
The Iowa amendment was modeled on the national Equal Ril!hts
Amendment. which narrowly failed
10 get the needed support to
become part of the U.S. Constitution. The time limit to ratify the
· a1 ERA
1 10
~~~:e 3o, 19~~ ou . years ago,
Iowa's proposed state amendment would have added ''and
women" to Section I of the· state
constitution !hat says " AU men are,
by nature, free and equal, and have
cenain inalienable rights." ,
.

f•

'

;i

-

GALLIPOLIS • Gary Warner
.; will be preaching at Mina Chapel
:• Church, Neighborhood Rd., 7 p.m.
·:: Everyone welcome.

I
In Stock Recliner 'Til Nov. 30, tM2) I

L---------------~~--------~

-

.'

;:Monday, Nov.l6
,: EWINGTON • Legion Post No.
'; 161 will meet at the American
::Legion Hall, beginning at I p.m.

·•

&gt;

•

••:
'

74pv$J2'JS
Portrait Value Ever!

GALLIPOUS ·Diabetic: Educa·
:· tion classes Mooday, Wednesday,
':Friday, at Holzer Medical Center
~; from 6-9 p.m. in the fifth floor
:·clas!room. For 11101e information or
;; to register, call446-5313.

.

.

r~

......,;o,;.."

..
GALLIPOL-IS • Episcopal
Church Women meeting, noon luncheon and the Arts of Making
Bows with guest·Carolyn Smeltzer
Bctz. '

MERCER VILLE - Revival at
Mercerville Missionary Baptist
Church Nov. 16-21 with Curtis
Sheets. ~ce beginS at 7:30 p.m.
Tu~y,

Nov. 17
GALLIP.OLIS • Lafayette White
Shriqc offx:ial inspection by Jean·
nic Walls, SWHP, 7:30 p.m.
Catered dinner at Masonic Temple,
6 p.m. Reservations only.
GALLIPOLIS • Operation
Liftoff of Ohio meeting, 7:30 p.m.
at Columbus Southern Power Co•
offx:cs.

•

that can be built from a kit for $17,300. The
plane Is part of a Toys for Adults Show that
runs through Sunday In Cincinnati. (AP photo)

HIGH PRICED TOY • Wes De'Vries of the
Malcolm Airplane C9., In Muskegon, Mich.,
stands next to an airplane on display ai the
Cincinnati Convention Center Friday afternoon

Cars to airplane kits, feast fo~ cabin.:. bound

lGallia County calendar.of events

.COnaultatlon
&gt;For.lgn Dlalacl
&gt;Speech/Language Ev•IIMlllon -ct.tt Pilla
&gt;Speech/Language Scrwnlnp •Aug-ntatlV• Col!llnunlctltlon
•Artlculllllon Dlaordera
&gt;Language DH!vad
&gt;Stuttering
•Aph••la
&gt;Br•ln InJured
tHNrlng lmpalr.d

DEBU LONG, IU,. CCC·SLP

Chairman Craig Glazer said at a
new1 conference.
The system, which uses a TrY.
TDD, will be available 24 hours a
day.
The service allows those who
aro deaf, hearing- or speech~
impaired to communicate by telephone with a lDD - whether the
recipient of the call has such a
devic:c or DOl, Glazer Slid.
Before, those using a TDD
could c:ommunic:atD only with others who had the device.
By dialing a toll-free number for
the relay service, the caller can
rcc:civc or send a message through
an ~rator, who will relay it by
readmg it to a non-impaired recipient or by TDD to those who have
the cquipmcnL
Tbele is no extra charge for the
service and long-distance i'ates will
be red•lffll, Glazer said.
'Fhe federal Americ.ans with
Disabilities Act of 1990 requires
every siate to have a telecomniuni. cation relay service by July t993.
Gov; George Voioovich demonsuatcd the service by placing a

Anti-abortion forces claim
tact~cal win .in ERA defeat

Some Great Lakes-area
Christmas trees quarantine,d

to prevent relapse of
:=itlcoholism, according to reports

.

;

Landers

~rug ~ppears

Sunday Tlmes-SenUnei-Page-87

\Telephone ~ervice available
jtO speech impaired and deaf

Would-be winners, beware

Dell' ADD Laaden: ~ rUn
this in your column under the
heading, "Would··Be Winners,
Beware."
I was gypped out of $395 ··by
a company that fooled me into
believing I was going to win a lot of
money. The name of this compmy
sounded official, like it was pan
of the U.S. government, but of
course, there .was no coimcc:tion. I
should have known the company
was in Qusincss to seU somethirig. It
entices people by claiming they arc
sure to win a lot of money or some
valuabl~ prize.
I was led to believe that I would
win one of live prizeS - a Cadillac,
a trip to Hawaii, $5,000, a home
ent.enainment center, or $2.500 in
cash. AU I had to do was buy a
· beautiful scul~ worth $1,000 ••
at a bargain price of only $395.
'!bey even promised to refund my
$395 if I was not satisfied with the
sculpture. WcU,I wasn't satisfied. It
wasjunk. 1
..
.!{ow dumb of me not to suspect
something was fiShy when Oley said
I had to send the chcclc by a private
overnight delivery service. I called
and wrote leuers trying to get my
money back, but I got nowhese. No
one answers my lette/S, and I get
the runaround when I call on the
phone.
I reponed this company to my
local posunaster and was told the
Poslal Service can't do anything.
· t~bout-thcse crooks without mncrete
evidence. Apparently, they are very

Pomeroy-Middlepon-Galllpolla, OH Point ~eaunt, wv

November 15,1882

. November 15, 1892

it is worth "something in the
· By TERRY KINNEY
seven-figure
range.''
Associated Press Writer
The
high-ticket
toys line the
CINCINNATI- For some ,
cabin fever sets in even before the
snow flies . A "Toys for Adults
Show" this weekend at the Cincinnati Convention Center has exotic
· cars, boats and electronics for winter musings.
Gary Kirschner, who has been
putting on the annual show for 10
years, expects about 35,000 people
to come and daydream during the
three-day.' show, which ends Sunday.
Some things are for sale -r
there are $3,400 pinball machines,
$17,300 airplane kits, pianos and
jewelry - but the featured display
is on loan. Kirschner has put
together the complete Corvette collection, one of every model year
from the stan in 1953 through the
1993.
"I don't think anybody's ever
Sug. Rtlail $309
pulled that off," Kirschner said
Friday. "It's something I've
always wanted to do, and this year
we just did it."
A Grand Spon model on display
is one of only five built when
Chevrolet briefly considered a
plunge into racing. Kirschner said

aisles. There are camjlers, boatS,
exercise equipment, even a heli·
copter.

,~

5199

p.m., in the llandroom.
C92-3

RIO GRANDE • GaUipolis City
Schools. Academy Boosters Club
general meeting at Rio Grande Ele·
mentary at 7 p.m. A program will
be presented by the Rio Elementary
students for all parents and teachers
of the diStrict. ·.

(Items for lilt community cal·
endtlr apptJJr two days prior to an
ewent. Tiley must be received by
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune in
adWIIICI for pub/leal/on)

l

We apologize, but due to
unforeseen demand the
Holiday Carousel advertised
on page 16 of our Nov. 15
cifi:ular may not be in stock
nor will rainchecks be
available. ·

~~!a~-~~~~

PHOTOGRAPHER,

I
I
I
I

GALLIPOUS • Gallipolis Atea
Christian Women's Oub "A Quilt·
ing Bee", noon at Holiday Inn. Program: Scraps to Heirlooms with
Mary Lee Fabrics; Log Cabin
Tones with Nlllicy James; Homespun Words with Marilyn Yoder of
SufP~!Crcck. Cost is $7. For rescr·, .
vauons caU 367·7fKI, 367.()583, or
446-0761.

CHESHIRE. River Vall~y High
School ~~ B?&lt;JSters meeting, 7

Just

Arrivelll
OUR FILL
BIRD FEEDEIS lOW 01
DISPLAY.

:,
GATOR ROUNJ)UP ·Ron Hatcher aecures tbe muzzle ot an
"""· American alligator •s otber Columbus Zoo employees hold onto
;;- the body while mov~ It to Its Indoor winter qull'ters this week.
•,. Tbtee gators were moved indoors alter drainlngtbelr pond for tbe
· ~, winter. (AP photo)
·

..

.,. .•. .

f?

,I,

Includes ~it
klenti6cation Card ..
SUU£1. ~ 1 SM~odi'I!RPI'I!RS\)N. PGr&gt;b!o, when partrolh "'" 1okon1 ""' included In odollfiood
pi'M:I. ,._.
r.qu~r . 01e1 lUI' odollrti..u ~ott colltctlor~ our ..~lion - on )'OV'. choke ol
background. Your faVOfilt Pf9P• wek:om.d. Up to flw additional po111 taken fat ~ po(lralt
calleCtio:n wilt. no. obligatiOn fOr purcho ... Nol ~ld with ony oihef offer. OM od~tbed Pod!age
~ fom,ly. Porrto1t sizes ~o~timale. Chd1111ua •r h. . . . •• d t1 at,.. eJdnl cMrpa.

Women's Annie Oakley

11URRYI TIMIIS RuNNING Ot!rl

Black, Teal and Red

The Shoe Cafe
LafaJtttt Mall • hlllpolls

•

Jl
f

anclltl lilce

Nl OlfrsTAHoiNG CHAIR lhalluly- io
look
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BCEIYI 5 LIS. Of
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....._...,11_..M
ladllllr .......
GAOUP PICT\11111 11 .00 PIA IUIIJECf. PAY wltEN TAKEN.

CHRISTMAS ITEMS

R&amp;G FEED and

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lalllpolls, Oh~ 45631
Ph. 446·1171

955 Second Ave. ·

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

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,Uiwal .... ' I k,a.-aa.• I

CHRISTMAS CARD&amp;, SUTTONS
PHOTO lUJG8 I woop,PLAQUE

GALLIPOLIS THIRD AYE.- MON.;. NOV. 16 - Hp.i
GALLIPOLIS OHIO VAUlT-wED., NOV. 11-11·7,.
PT. PLEASAIT JACKSON AVE.-THURS.. NOV.19-11·7p•
POMEROY IIG IEND-fRI., NOV. 2~UH,.
PT. PLEASUI 1WIN RIVERs-SAT., NOV. 2~1 H,.

-

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NOW $9!~LIVEAY
ONLY $1.85 DEPOSIT

1110 SllllliO llf ATS Ollfl CHR I STM/\S SP£C IAI

I'OB '"JILT ...D CIMJ'OMUI
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REG. PRICE $18.115

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give• 'IOU exact~ that- The Cut Plua.
·
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w

�•

NovemNI'

Sports
osu·rom.ps; Illinois ties

CALENDAR
COUPONS
A•••lutely Must

STORE HOURS
. Moftday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Have Coupon •

(Lim(J 1 nem Per
Coupon)
Coupona Good on
Dealgnatecl Day Only

No. 19 Obio State 27,
Indiana 10
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) Visiting Ohio State defeated Indiana 27-10 in a Big 10 football
matchup at Memorial Stadium Sat·
urday.
The victory left the Buckeyes 82 overall and 5-2 in league play,
heading into this Saturday's ~arne
against Big 10 champion Michtgan,
which w.as held to a 22·22 tie by
Illinois yesterday.
Indiana dropped to 5-5 overall
and 3-4 inside the conference.

.

'

I
.-------------,
GOOD SUNDAY,
NOV. 1&amp;, 1812 ONLY

1

1

CARROTS
2 LB. BAG

c

Rump Roast........~-....,La.

$ .89

1

L------------~
QOOD MONDAY,
NOV. 11, 1812 ONLY

KELLY'S 15 OZ.

CAN CHILl

U$DA' CHOI~E .BONELESS 'BEEF BOnOM .

5219
R·ound Steak...............LB.

(

LONGHORN ·cOLBY

.(
Leg Quarters................La.3
· 9,
Pic
0 Chick..............u. 89c
fLAVORilE GRADE A1
lb.
Tur~eys---·--·~. -u. 59
.
. (
Bacon ..;__.:_.2oL69
CHICKEN

..

.

Sausage.-....._...

79

SWEET ·suE

1

CHICKEN

(

1

0~22

avg

By Tbe Associated Press
How tbe top 25 teams in tbe Associated Press' college rootball poll rared this week:
.
·
1. Miami (9·0.0) beat Temple 48-0. Next: at No. 10 Syracuse. .
2. Alabama (9·0·0) at No. 16 Mississippi State. Next: vs.
Auburn, Nov. 263. Michigan (8·0·2) tied Illinois 22-22. Next: at No. 19 Ohio
State.
4. Texas A&amp;M (10·0.0) beat Houston 38·30, Thursday.(llext:
vs. Texas Christian.
.
5. Flo~ida State (9·1·0) ·beat Tulane 70·7. Next: v~. Florida,
Nov. 28.
6. Washington (9·1-0) beat. Oregon State 45-16. Next: at No.
21 Wasbington State.
7. Nebraska (7·2-0) lost to Iowa State 19-10. Next: at Okla·
hom a, Nov. 27.
8. Notre Dame (8·1-1) beat No. 22 Penn State 17·16. Next: at
No. 18 Soatlaem Cal, Nov. 28.
9. ArizoiUI (6·3·1) lost to-No:' 18 Southern Call4-7. Next: vs.
Arizona State. .
·
10. Syracuse (9·1.0) beat No. 17 Boston CoUege 2.7-10. Next:
vs. No. 1 Miami.
.
11. Florida (7·2.0) beat South Carolina 14-9. Next: at Van·
derbilt.
'
12. Georgia (8·2·0) beat Auburn 14·10. Next: vs. Georgia
·
Tech, Nov. 28.
13. Colorado (8-1-1) beat No. 20 Kansas 25·18. Next: vs. lowa
State.
14. North Carolina State (8-2-1) beat Duke 45·27. Next: vs;
Wake Forest.
.
·
IS. Stanford (7·3·0) vs. No. 21 Washington State. Next: at
California.
·.
· 16. Mississippi State (7·2.0) vs. No.2 Alabama. Next: at Mississippi, Nov. 28.
·
17. Boston CoUege (7·2-1)lost to No. 10 Syracuse 27-10. Next:
at Army.
· ·
1
18. Southern Cal (6·2·1)beat. No. 9 .trlzona 1'4-7. Next: at
UCLA.
19. Ohio State (8-2·0) beat Indiana 2.7-10. Next: vs. No. 3
Michigan.
20. Kansas (7·3·0) lost to. No. 13 Colorado 25-!8. Next: at
·
Missouri.
21. Washington State (7·2.0) at No. IS Stanrord. Next: vs. Nci.
6 Washington.
22. Penn State (6·4-0) lost to No. 8 Notre Dame.17·16. Next:
vs. Pittsburgh.
23. Tennessee (6·3·0) beat Memphis Stale 26·21. Next: vs.
Kentucky • .
24. Hawaii (7-1·0) at San Diego State. Next: vs. Wyoming.
25. North CaroUna (7·3.0) was idle. Next: at Duke.

GOOD TUESDAY,
NOV.17, 11192 ONLY

ECKRICH BRATWURST or ITALIAN $
;_...;._ta. ·.

14Y.

oz.

·(

· LIMIT 1

r------------.,

1
I

GOOD WEDNESDAY,
NOV. 18, 1812 ONLY

1
1

I
BOLOGNA or I
HOTDOGS I
I
( I
BALLARDS

J~ESTOWN

12 I
oz. I}

LIMIT 1

.

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I

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NOV. 18, 1812 ONLY

I

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20 I
OZ. 1I

GAY 90's

BREAD

P~a~:es---~·. ·- $1

VA~EY BELL.

.

2 ~ Mllk. . . . . .". . . . .GAL

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19

$ 18~

149
P1e Crust.. . . .-.~-. . . . . a. ·
59
(
•
.
'
Sugar--~--.. ·us 89· PIZZG...................... .....7 oz.
. (
BIRDS·EYE
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7~U B·O··"·····L·E·················..········"··- 89c Cool WhJP::--::~oz. 8__9_
PIL!SBURY ·

FLAYORITE LT. BROWN or-. POWDERED ,

SUGAR

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$

FOX FROZEN ·

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$269

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SHOPPUS VALUE

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BATH TISSUE
$269 PIG
12.ROll
• .

L------------.J

November 15, 1992

Stewan into a stunning 19-10 up~t
of No.7 Nebraska on Saturday.
The Cyclones (4-6 overall. 2-4
Big Eight) shut d&lt;lwn a Nebraska
team that led the nation in rushing ·
and scoring. Iowa State ran for 373
yards itself against a defense that
had stuffed nationally ranked teams
in its two previous games.
Iowa State broke a 14-game losing streali; to Nebraska (7-2, 4~1)
and held the Cornhuskers to 192
yards rushing - 159 below their
average. Nebrasb had been averagin_g 43 ·points a game and was
commg off routs of Colorado (527) and Kansas (49.7).
Hundreds of Iowa State fans in
the crowd of 42,008 swanned onto
the field when the game ended and
tore down both goalposts~ ,. ··
No. 5 Florida St. 70,
Tulane 7

TALL~SSEE, Fla. (AP)Charlie Ward threw four touchdown passes before halftime and
Clifton Abraham scored twice on
defensive plays as fifth-ranked
Florida State crushed Tulane 70-7
Saturday. ·
Ward only played the fmt half,
in which his team opened a 56-7
lead. Coach Bobby Bowden emp·
tied the bench in the second half
for the second straight week.
The Seminoles have scored 139
points in their last two games·sinCe
turning Ward loose in the sho!!!un
offense. They have won ftve
straight since a 19-16 loss Oct. 3 at
top-ranked Miami.

Marshall 52,•
Tennessee Tech 14
· HUNTINGTON. W.Va. (AP)
- Quarterback Michael Payton
threwfor206yardsandtwoscores
in the first half to help Marshall
snap a two-game losing streak with

WHEATLEY SCORFS ·Michigan tailback
ing first quarter action !iaturday in Ann Arbor, .
Tyrone Wheatley (6) breaks. away from IUinois'
Mich. IUinois surprised the Big Ten leaders witli '
cornerback Robert Crumpton (18) and beads
a 22-22 tie. (AP)
for the end zone to scor~ on a .50-)lard pass dur·
a 52-14 win over Tennessee Tech one of four completions for 69 · ed West Virginia to three field
on Saturday.
yards by Payton on the drive.
goals Saturday as the Scarlet
The Herd then scored two Knights ended years of f!ljstrntion
Marshall (7-3) also got 100
yards rushing from Glenn Pedro.
touchdowns within 3 minutes at the with a 13-9 victory over the Moun•
Tennessee Tech (7 -3) was led end of the first period.
taineers.
by Willie Queen, who scored two
On the first of those scores,
The victory ended a seven-&amp;llflle
touchdowns and rushed for 88 Pedro finished a four-play, 63-yard losing streak against West Virginia
yards in his team's first loss in drive with a 4-yard run. Pedro also (4-4 -2) and kept alive Scarlet
seven games.
had a 45-yard run_in the '!rlve.
Knights (6-4) hopes for their fir.;t
Payton capped off the Herd"s
bowl bid since 1978.
·• ·
initial drive with a 5-yard touch- Rutgers 13, West Virginia 9
·
A representative from the Indcdown pass to tight end Mike
PISCATAWAY; N.J. (AP) _
pendence Bowl was on hand,
Bartrum. Orlando Hatchett's 45- Swprise starter Ray Lucas threw a although he tenncd Rutgers a lo~
yard reception during the drive was touchdown pass and. Rutgers limit- shot for the Dec. 31 game.
•

Bengals eye third straight NFL
victory
..

By BARRY WILNER
, AP Sports Writer
EASTRUTIIERFORD.NJ. Somewhere in the sea of green at
Giants Stadium, among the 70,000
Jets fans lit Sunday's game, will be
Boomer Esiason"s personal rQOting
section.
They are there each time Esiason comes back to New Y.ork with
the Cincinnati Bengals. He gets
them tickets and expects some loyalty from them.
'Til probably have anywhere
from 70 to 100 people out for the
game,"" said Esiason. a native of
East Islip on Long Island. "I call
my buddies back home and they all
seem to come out of the woodwar!&lt;. They always give me the old,
'We hope you play well, but we're
rooting for the Jets to win.' I say
that when I'm paying for the tickets. I want you rooting for me."'
Esiason and the Bengals have
had a bumpy year. They won their
first two games, then went into a
five-game slide in which Boomer
was a bust.
But the Bengals have won two
straight and, at 4-5. actually are in
the playoff race. albeit as an ·out·
sider. Esiason ' s play has been
markedly improved in victories
over Cleveland and Chicago.
"I said after one of those
games," Esiason recalled. ·'that
the game I love got the better of

me. i had to get back to where I felt
I had confidence in myself and the
guys around me.
"By no means have we arrived,
but we:re fighting and not giving
up.;_: .
'
·tsy his own evaluation. Esiason·
sees himself as more than a quarterback at this juncture of his
career.
.
''With so many young people in
this offensive system, a lot of it is
being a quarterback, some of it is
coaching. other of it is .counseling;• he said, ''I'm a little bit a
psychiatrisL I've added a few more
hats to my repenoire. but basically

I'm the same quanerback.
working hard
Jets coach Bruce Coslet knows
" Boomer will be Boomer, but
all about Esiason's contributions. this week tor three hours, he'll be
Coslet was the offensive coordina· Norman.''
tor in Cincinnati during Esiason' s
Esiason and Cosle.t S\ill get
fonnative years with the team. By together in the offseason. mostly to
1988, the Bengals were AFC cham- play golf. And Coslet. ever the
pions and Esiason was the league· s coach, still tries to instrUCt his former pupiL
most valuable player.
"He's a· good guy, a very self·
" I have great admiration and
asserted person and competitive respect for Bruce ... Esiason said.
guy, with a little cocltincss in him, "I totally bel.ieve the success early
which all good quanerbacks need. in my career I can attribute to him
without being overboard so you and Sam (Wyche, then Cincinnati's
can"t talk to him.'" Coslet said. head coach). My acceleration as a
"He's a pretty down-to-earth guy, player was enhanced because they
Continued on C-2
·
likes to have his fun but likes

Browns host Chargers today..
By' CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND - The trouble
with San Diego linebacker Junior
Seau isn't just blocking him . First
you have to fmd him.
"Best player l"ve seen on
defense this. year," says Cleveland
coach Bill Belichick. "Seau just
makes every tackle. It doesn "t
make _any difference whether it's a
run. pass. inside, outsi(!e. He must
be in on· 20, 25 tackles a game ...
Cenlinly that"s an exaggeration
- Seau leads the Chargers (4-5)
with 53 tackles. 43 of them solos

-but Belichick made his poinL At
age 23. Seau has developed into the
best player on the best defense in
the American Football Conference.
First against the run. first against
the pass.
"The biggest thing is. they're
just playing real good, team
defense," said Belichick:, whose
Browns (5-4) host the Chargers on
Sunday. "There might be other
teams that, if you look player by
player, might have a little more. talent. I;lut as a team. they're really
playing well."
And Seau, Belichick said. is a

all by himself.
"It seems as if everything some' '
how ends up in Seau's arms.' '
Belichick said. ··when the play· ~
over, he's tackled the guy with the
balL It doesn "t matter where he is;
He •s all over the place."
;
Belichick wasn' t the fir st ta
notice. Seau's own teammates tell a
story about how he once nearlY,
sacked a quarterback, then got
downfield quickly enough to make
the tackle - on a 45-yard pas!(
completion. ·
•
"He's got great speed and
Continued on C-2
:
team

't hose who were there recall basketball legend in his heyday
RIO GRANDE - If one talks 20-21 at Rio Grande with a 40th
to the huge number o( people who anniversary celebration that will
knew Clarence "Bevo" Francis, his reunite Francis. Oliver and survivcoach Newt Oliver and members of ing teammates in special activities
the famous Rio Grande College built around the lOth Bevo Frailcis
basketball team of the wly 1950s. Classic. a small college basketball
a picture forms of a squad that tournament held each year.
combined talent with humility, a
Amon~ those who recently
penchant for publicity backed up shared the1r memories of the period
by hard 'fo'Ork, and an ability to were...
mabl believers out of the most
Roy Moses. was a sophomore 6hardened of scoffers.
.
foot·O guard from Upper Sandusky
It was a team that caught the for the Redmen when Newt Oliver
nation •s fi!ncy, and those who took the reins of the program in
remember the era weD have never 19 52. He graduated from Rio
seen anything like it again. The Grande in 1955 and taught for 27
. pers~tive of 40 years, mixed with years, 25 of them at Oak HiU High
a WIStfulness for what could have School. from which he recently
been, have left many with the feel- retired. He resides in Centerville
ing that the Redmen would have with his w,ife, Josine Thomas.
been a major college powerhouse Moses.
·had they continued for a full four
Moses recalled that Francis "bad
years.
.
.
a lot talent, and he didn't seem to
If that had occurred, it's any- be egotistical or big-headed about
body's guess where Francis, Oliver iL YOII never heard. him boast, he
and the team could have gone after was just one of the boys.
1956. But what is known to those
"A lot of the time it almost
witnesses, panicularly those who seemed to us· he didn't want to be
live in and around the village of in the position he was. that he"d
Rio Grande, where the small col· just lot everyone else on the team
leJe has become the University of score," he continued. "But we
R10 Grande and Rio Grande Com- knew 'he was putting us on the front
munity College, a modern campus · pages of newspapers and in magi·
of 2,160 students. is that a remark· zincs around .the countrY,." .
Moses wd that tho Red men's
able piece of hr2
'sto exis~ there
game plan was usually tho same for a two-year . · .
The era wil be celebrated Nov. effecuve defense and getting the

STOKELY

P-UMPKIN
(

Section ·c

Memories of Bevo

I

LIMIT 1

•

29

oz.

CATSUP

79(

son.
The third-ranked .Wolverin·es
commiued six turnovers. Yet they
claimed their SCCQnd straight Big
Ten champi~Jnship as Peter Elei:ovic lcicked a 39~yard field goal
with 16 seconds remaining for a
22-22 tie with Illinois.
· Michigan (8-0-2 ovemll. 6-0-1
Big Ten) will plat in the Rose
Bowl on New Yejlr s Day no matter what happens in the final game
a1 Ohio State next week because all
tile other Jij,g Ten contenders have
lost at least two conference games.
Illinois (5-4·1. 3·3·1). which
had been hoping for a btd to the
Independence Bowl, intercepted
two of Elvis Grbac •s passes and
recovered four of Michigan"s 10
fumbles:
Michigan"s record for futility is
12 fumbles in a 1946 game with
the Fighting Illini. The six
turrTOvers were the Wolverines'
mOSt since giving the ball up seven
times against Michigan State in
1987.

How top 25 fared

LIMIT 1

·Cheese........................... ta.

prove(! Satl!rday that there 'is no

better team in the Big Ten this sea-

No. 1 Miaml48,
TempleO
.
. MIAMI (AP) - The· Miami
Hurricanes were supposed to win
easily, and Gino Torretta made sure
they did.
Continuing his late charge in the
Reisman Trophy race, Torretta
threw for 221 yards and two toUChdowns Saturday to help top-ranked
Miami beat lowly Temple, 48.{},
A six-touchdown favorite. the
Hurricanes (9-0) extended the
nation"s longest winning streak to
27 games and won their 51st in a
Iowa St.19,
row at the Orange Bowl.
No. 7 Nebraska 10
AMES. Iowa (AP) - Iowa
No. 3 Michigan 22,
State
turned a brilliant defensive
Illinois 2l
effon.
quarterback Marv Seiler's
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) running
and four field goals by Ty
Michigan. at its absolute worst.

LIMIT 1

USDA CHOICE BONELESS. BEEF

1timts - ~entiattl

Michigan; Nebraska upset

loHIB Store

·298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
.
WE RESERVE IHE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUDnYIES
PRICES GOOD . SUN., NOV. 15 THRU NOV. 21, 1992

'

•

280Z.

I

/'I

ball 'to francis - so it was the do with it," Mrs. Greer said from
memories of being with the team her home in Miami, Fla. "Of
that have stayed with Moses. "If course. Bevo became very well·
you'd ever been in Communitv known and he did a great job. I've
Hall. you"d be amazed at how well seen Bevo quite a number of times .
we did ... It wasn't the place for our since, and I've always been a
get~go ltind of game.
·
friend of his. I think he"s a mighty
"A lot of the guys, especially fine person."
•
Newt, remember details of the . Because the Aliens had such a
games,"' Moses added . "I don't close connection with the school,
remember a lot about what hap· they followed the exploits of Franpened during the games because cis and the team and were thrilled
everything on the floor was pretty by the attention the team brought to
routine. 1 was more impressed by the small campus. "You'd better
our riding down Main Street in believe it," she said.
Miami, sitting on top of the back
The Aliens' support and gen·
seats of five open convenibles. We erosity were felt in other ways. A
were in heaven. For a farm boy newspaper account of the period
who hadn'ttraveled very much. detailed Don Allen's offer to pay
those kind of things stick in my legal fees for the school to fight the
mind."
NCAA's so-called "anti-Bevo
•we looked sharp'
Francis" rule. and it he and his wife
A longtime benefactor of the who helped the team look great off
coUege, Esther Allen Greer,.played the coun Its well as on. sparking
a large role with her rust husband. another memory for Moses.
the late Don Allen, in sha~~!J the
"I can still remember those grey
fonurtes of the team. As re
by flannel suits and black and white
Newt Oliver in his book One Bas- knit ties," he said. "We also wore
kerba/1 a11d Glory, Don Allen, a pegged pants. We lool&lt;ed sluup."
1921 Rio Grande graduate and one
'l"'alr was exciting'
of the most successful Chevrolet
John Wickline was basketball
dealers in the country. met with coach at Rio Grande High School
Oliver and agreed to help finance · from 1946 until 196 I. and had
scholarships for players, in addition Francis for two classes during his
to presenung the college with a pair first year at the college so Francis
of new stationwagons for travehng. . could complete ~is credits for ·a
••My husband had a great deal.to •
Continued on C·2

..

••

TEAMMATES REUNITED~ Clar.ence ''Bevo" Francis, 1950s
scoring seasatlon ror the Rio Grande College Redmen team
coached by ·Newt Oliver, watches a ball game with former team.
mate Roy Moses durin&amp; tbe 1991 Bevo Francis Classic at Rio
Grande. The University or Rio Grande and ~o Grande Community College wUl bonor FrancB, Oliver and his teammates next week·
end io a series or special activities built around the tournament
named In Francis' honor.
' \1

.

,

�wv

OH Point

November

Clippers rout lakers; Cavs lose to Portlan·d
By The Asloclated Press
The Magic Johnson era is over
in Los Angeles. The Lakers' consistent domination or their
crosstown riva)s may be, too.
The Los Angeles ClipPers rang
up their most lopsided VICtory ever
against the Laken on Friday night,
· winning 124-98 In a pme that was
decided in the ftrst half.
It was only the Clippers' second
win at the Forum in their last 32
· visits. Kiki Vllfl(lewqhe came off
the bench 10 lead the Clippers with
24 poirits, while Danny Manning
added 20.
In other NBA action, Indiana
nipped Charlotte 110-109. Washington topped New York 106-104,
Philadelphia beat Boston 126-115
and Portland held off Cleveland
115.109 and Chicago defeated Mil"
waukee 101-96.

The Lakers (2·3), who beat the
Clippers (2·3) by two in ovenime
last Friday night, were out of this
one almost from the stan.
They missed nine or their ftrst
10 shots, shot 39 perce.nt from the
(ield in the fiiJl half and trailed 62·
44 at balflime.
Pacers 110, ilorHts 109
The Alonw Mourning era began
with a loss for Charlotte. Mourning
scored 12 points in 19 minutes in
his NBA debut, but a free throw by
Dale Davis with 27 seconds left
gave lndiapa the win at home. .
Mourning scored Charlotte's
. first 'basket on a IS-footer, but
missi:d badly on a hook shot, had a
turnaround blocked by Davis and
was charged wllh two fouls in the
first two minutes.
Detlef Schrempf scored 23
points for the Pacers (2-2) , Rik
.

Smits added 18 and Reigie 'Miller throughout the game. at Memorial
had 15. Kendall Gill scored 19 Coliseurnbutcouldn'tgetthewin.
points for Charlotte (2-3) and Larry
Kevin Duckworth scaled four of
Johnson bad 17.
his 26 points in the final 1:~1 and
BullelllOtl; Knlcks 104
. pulled down 11 rebopnds to lead
Washington got its fii'SI win and Portland. Daugherty's replacement
New Yorli: took its ftist loss when in the st•rting lineup, John
Pervis Ellison's dunk with 18.8 Willianis, Jed .Cieveland with 25
seconds left capped a foul'lh-quar- points; .
ter comeback and dealt the Knicks
Portland, which improved to 3their fii'SIIos8 at the Capitol Centre 0, never led by more than 10.
since December 1990.
Cleveland dropped to 3·2.
Rex Chapman scored 27 points 76ers 126, Celtics 115
for the Bullets (1-4), who trailed by
Jeff Hornacek scored a careersix points with 3':21 left. Patrick high 39 points as Philadelphia won
Ewing had 24 points for New York its fll'st game of the .season, rooting
(3-1).
lhe Celtics at Boston Garden.
Trail Bla•ers 115, Cavaliers 109
Hornacek, obtained in the off.
The Cavaliers, playing wilhout season trade that sent Charles
Brad Daugherty just one, night after Barkley to Phoenix, made 12 of 18
a dou)lle-overume victory at Gold- shots, and was 12 for 12 from the
en State, stayed with the Blazers freecthrow line. He added nine
assists, five rebounds and two
steals.
The 76ers (1-3) led 71-55 at
halftime and 93-82 after three quarters, then had to repel a mild lhreat
from Boston (2' 3);
.
Bulls 101, Bucks 96
Michael Jordan scored 34 points
numerical ll?n sequitur~. leaving Midwestern Collegiate along with and Scottie Pippen added 22 as visthe Atlantic 10 along with La Salle, which left the Metro iting Chicago used a.24-5 run midway through the second half to
Duquesne, which moved to the Atlantic.
1
defeat the Bucks.
Continued from C-1
Eric Murdock scored a seasonhigh. 25 points for the Bucks (3·2)
were here.
the 31-year-old Esiason, who is too and Blue Edwards added 23. The
" Even now when I play golf good to sit on lhe bench?
Bulls have a one-game lead in the
with him·; he tries to teach me
"Well, I don't want to teach Central Division.
mechanics."
anybody around a bunch of young
The Jets have had a rough sea· guys that, quite frankly, don't have
son and Esiason feels for his old the ex~rience to get to the Super
coach and forever friend. New Bowl, ' Esiason said. "For me,
York is 2-7 after making the play- I've been speculated to go to the
offs last year.
Jets or Buccaneers or wherever ...
"It's been difficult for him," he it's purely speculation.
said.- :•1 know the expectations in
"I do~ 't consider the Jets not a
New York were high. He is a terrif· wiqning team. I think yQu've got to
ic friend and exceptionally loyal. I take into account that they had a
know that is difficult for a coach in boatload of injurjes, their schedule
!his league.
is not easy. I. think they're one of
"I never like to see friends go .the more talented teams that is past
through things like this, especially the young stage, except maybe at
when I've been through them quarterback. But at other places ,
myself. But I'd love to add to his · they are a very talented team, espemJSery this week, to be honest with cially in the skill positions.
.
you.
"I know that I would look good
Rumors circulated earlier this · in gree!l. But whether I'd be there
312 6th Street
season in Cincinnati and New York or not, I dnn'tlcnow."
that the Jets were interested in
He'.ll be there on Sunday, in
Point Pleasant, WV
ac~uiring Esiason. That seems
Bengals' white and orange, trying
Phone: 675·1160
unlikely considering how Coslet is 10 add to a friend's long year.
'Everything
To BuiKJ kiything'
'
committed to 24-year-old Browning Nagle. Why would he bring in
;t
St11ttmtnt fJJrJe

..-

Duke, Michigan hope to pick
up where they left off in April
•• •'

·

:: •; KNOCKING IT AWAY· Cleveland Cavaliers' Larry Nance
·: llnocks the ball away from' Portland Trail Blazers' Clyde Drexler
;•)s they. battle for possession during their NBA game Friday night
•! ib Portland. Portland defeated Cleveland 115-109, to remain unde·
!~ated. (AP)
·
·: • ·

!

!:

iami, Bowling Green
•
: './'l.A c pre-season Ch ozces
M
:···
.
_
M:_ _
.
·

• .

•• • •

::: :TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Miami who averaged 15 points a game.
pf. Ohio was picked as the men's
Third was Central Michigan,
qm to beat Thursday and Bowling foUowed by Kent, Miami of Ohio,
~n was selected as the women's · Ohio U., Western Michigan, Ball
~1eseason favorite in the Mid· State, Eastern Michigan and Aleron.
'Mlerican Conference in balloting
!bf: media.
.
•:• :Miami, the defending MAC reg- FOOTBALL
:oTQr-season and tournament cham·
· ~wn, received 29 of a possible 40
MEMPIDS, Tenn. (AP) -In 8
;fiist-place votes. Miami, 23-8 a sudden reversal, Johnny Majors
:y~ ago, returns four starters.
announced his resignation as Ten·
h
'II
:.;. Coac h Jo by Wng t w1 count nessee coach after this season.
•On: 6-foot-6 Craig Michaelis, 6-10 · University president Joe John.~i~n McKenna, 6-7 Mau -Kr.amer son said Tennessee will pay
6-1 Scott Belyeu. M1am1 lost "between
$500,000
and
!Dtfee of its top '5e9re~ to gradua· $600,000" to buy out the remain~; David Scali, Mike Williams ing two years of Majors' conuact.
,inil Jamie Mercurio.
Majors addressed two com!· :•Ball State, coming off a 24-9 ,plaints of disgruntled boosters: he
·~8son, was picked second with six returned too quickly from heart
:riist-place votes and 320 points. bypass surgery this season, and was
'1'Le Cardinals, who lost in the fust toQ,Jjald on assistant coaches.
He will coach the team's final
;rgun d or th e N aU.ona IInv1'tat'ton
!l1tlurnament. Ie111111two staners.
three games and any bowl match up
~·:· Rounding out the balloting for the S-3 Vols. It will be up to
•;..ere: Western Michigan. Bowling Majors whether to coach if they
!preen, Eastern Michigan, Toledo, play a Jan. 1 bowl game.
:central Michigan, Akron, Ohio U.
The settlement closes a 16-year
Kent.
stint for Majors at his alma mater,
:·-: Akron is participating in MAC the longest uninterrupted coaching
:~ketball for the first time. Kent is career in school history.
•led by first-year head coach Dave
He left Pittsburgh to return
•&lt;Jiube
home in 1977 and led the Vols to
•. . . I'
G
' .
f'
three SEC championships since
:·:-Bow mg reen s women 10·
•I shed second a year ago in the 1985, and 11 bowl games in I 5
:MAc wilh a 14-2 record, one game years.
: bl;hind Toledo.
In 25 years as coach at Iowa
•i·: But the Falcons return three State, Pitt and Tennessee, his
:siarters: 5-4SusieCasseii,6-0Judit record is 170-105-10, including
• - d vay an d 6 - 1•Ad
•L:an
n rea N. ord . 113-62-8atTennessee.
:J)l~nn, who combined to score 36
:pbintsagame.
.
CINCINNATI (AP)- Four
•. ·• Bawling Green received 14 more present or former Cincinnati
:(trst-place votes and 194 total Bengals players countersued a
::J!!&gt;ints,
Washington woman who claims
•. ··. Second was Toledo with six she was gang raped by several
!first-place votes and 169 points. players two years ago in Seaule.
:~Rockets lost all but one starter
Al~ge}her, 11 of. the 20 men
•from a year ago, 5-6 Dana Drew accus o rape or wttn~ssmg the
•. .
rape have filed counterclauns.
:•.: .
•

Sports briefs

iaOd

•ana

;~emones
..

of Bevo...

By JIM O'CONNELL
AP BasketbaU Writer
There is an entire first-grade
class out there that thinks the Final
Four can't be l!eld without Duke.
They've seen the Blue Devils make
it to the NCAA semifinals five
straight times·and six. out of the last
seven years.

Bengals...

try~~wu,C:::o~~~;~h~

Wooden and his UCLA powerhouse teams have done - Win the
NCAA title three consecutive
years. The ·Bruins, of course, made
It seven in a row through 1.973.
But these are different times aiJd
this is a different, deeper, more dif.
ficult tournament than in the days
of Wooden. In Duke's seven-year
run, UNLvis the only other school
to make it to the semllinals in consecutive years.
What .Duke has already accomplished in this age of parity is
amazing. Winning three straight
would be astounding. .
The only Final Four Duke
missed during its impressive run
was held in New Orleans, the same
site as this year's national semifinal
get-together. Coach K has every·
one back but player of the year
Christian Laettner and forward
Brian Davis.
Michigan, however, has everyone back from the Fab Five that
Continued from C-1
was blown out by Duke in the tide
game, and Indiana returns all but quickness and explosion,"
one player from the team Duke Bel'1ch'1ck said. "If you d on 't block
beat m·the semifmals.
him, he m¥es the tackle. They
. Even though Shaquille O'Neal, don'tjust put him in one spot. They
Jimmy Jackson, Harold Miner and use him 10 different places. He
Tracy Murray headed for the NBA shoots different gaps. We need to
early, there is still a load of lalel)ted find him and block him."
players ready to stake claim to All·
The .Chargers list the 6-3, 250America teams and Duke has .two pounder as an inside linebacker, ,
of them -'-point guard Bobby Hur- · because he usually lines up inside
ley, who has never ended a season the defensive tackle. In their 4-3
be~
Ia · ·
NCM ham scheme. however, ,Seau and Henry
.
ore p ymg 10 an
c
• R II'
I
pionship game, and swingman
o mg are leehical y the outside
Grant Htll, the son of NFL great . lfnebackers, with Gary Plummer
Calvin Hill and a player ready to playing the middle.
make his own name.
"I'm having a good time, but l
Among other teams capable of have to give credit to lhe folks up
winning it all are Kansas, wilh its in front, my front four. Th~'re
· a great JO
· b as we II"
exceptional Jiackcourt of Adonis domg
•
eau
Jordan and Rex Walters; Seton said. "I'm used in ljl&amp;ny situations
Hall, with a veteran crew led by atdifferentpositions.''
shooter Terry Dehere; Kentucky,
Because he has the freedom to
wilh lhe versatile Jamal Mashburil', roam, Seau is able to keep offenses
and North Carolina, with ready·to- guessing.
.
.
emerge center Eric Montross.
"I think it disrupts them ·preuy
The conference movements con- weD," he said. "I think it confuses
. tinued wilh the Big Ten now hav- a lot of 9ffensive linemen. They
ing 11 teams and !the Atlantic 10 don ' t know what to prepare for
read
th
'th . h
because they never know where
01
Penny to
State
involved
botht.
stanwase season
WI in etg
_ _.,._ _ _

Brown$...

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for the

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LUMBER &amp;
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November

1892

Ohio SportUght

Deer season opens Nov. 30

Penguins
blanked by
Red-Wi'ngs

BJJOHNWISSE
4,075; Jefferson, 3,819; Tus..,
Dlvilloll oiWIIdllle
carn•as, 3.679: and Muskingum,
COLUMBUS-r Tho state's 3,395, counties. ·
. .
flreamls deer hunting season Nov.
The buck harvest last year was
30 through Dec. 6 will likely pro- · highest in Geurnsey, Jefferson,
duce a record harvest of nearly Coshocton, Muskingum and Gallia
By KEN RAPPOPORT
100,000 deer, certainly not to the counties.
AP Hockey Writer
dismay of more than 350,000
Ohio's six major metropolitan
so· nobody's ·perfect, not even
hunun who- expected to partie- counties (Cuyahoga , Franklin, the Pittsburgh Penguins.
ipatc. Abo11t one m three hunters Hamilton, Lucas, Montgomery and
Actually, they looked perfectly
wiD take a deer during the fuearms Summit) BCCO\IIIted for less than 2 awful while losing 8-(l to the
·season.
percent of Ohio's tolal legal deer ' Detroit Red Wings on Friday nighL
Reaulatlons this year were liber- harvest, but ll.l percent of the
"We ' ve just played a lot Qf
llizecfsomewhat to allow archery state's20,215~dcer-vehicle games, and we've got a lot of
hunters to panicipateduring the collisions. Wildlife offteials say the mjuries," Penguins coach Scouy
fii'Car'llls season and to permit the higher a~cident rates occur in Bowman said.
statewide harvest of deer of either metrop&lt;?lltan counties which have
Among the missing for the
sex. In previous years, regulations very liUio buntin~ pressure.
defending Stanley Cup champions
llpplying to 21 northweu Ohio
Those counues which had !he were Kevin Stevens and Rick Toecounties limited the harvest of deer lowest deer harvest figures 'last chet, who usually skate on Pitts·
to bucks' only f6r all or part of the year included Cuyahoga, 68;
burgh's top line with Mario ·
. six-~y firearms season. Archery Onawa, 192; Lucas, 224; Mont- Lemieux. The Penguins also lost
'•
equtpment was not permitted for 11omery, 241; and Van Wert, 269.
Lemieux, who left the game at
'
use 10 firearms season until this
Nino of ten deer legally harvest· 15:16 of the second period with a
year.
ed in Obio are taken on private bruised heel.
•• .Jft
•
T~o state wildlife agency has land, though hunters have access to · . Lightning 1, Senators 0
LUNGING SAVE - Pittsburgh Penguins
rasso, the Red Wings ~ould have scored· more
also usued 59,778 bonus deer P!lt· more than 700,000 acres of public
Pat )ablonski's goaltending and
goalie Tom Barrasso makes 1 lunging save or a
goals as they ended up taking 51 shots, the most
mits l!lhich allow for the harvest of hunting ireas. The counties with · Brian Bradley's power-play goal in
shot by Detroit Red Wings Dino Ciccarelli (22)
, by one team in any NIIL game this season. The
an a'!tlerless deer in one of 67 the largest amounts of p!iblic hunt- the fii'St period gave the Lightning
during rU"st period action Friday in Detriot. If it
Red Wings defeated the Penguins 8-0. (AP
counues.
· ing lands are in the heart of the a victory over the Senators in the
·wasn•t for several fine savllS like this one by Bar·
PhotO)
A review of laSt year's total deer whlte-tltilild deer range in southeast fii'St meeting of the NHL's two new
harvest figures for all methods and. Ohio.
expansion teams.
'
special seasons produced few surDuring the 1991 firearms sea·
The victory was the Lighming's Meadowlands.
prises. The four-county .a rea of son, nearly half (46.6 percent) of fourth straight and helped Tampa Sabres 8, Whalers 2
Coshocton, Tuscarawas, Guernsey the week's deer harvest occurred Bay (9·8·2) regain fust place in the
Dave Andreychuk scored four
and Mu.skingum counties was the on Monday and Tuesday. The best Norris · DiVision by one point over goals and Dale Hawerchuk notched
hottest cort area for deer hunters days to take deer during the six-day idle Chicago, which has played two his 700th NHL assist as the Sabres
last year where one of evr:ry eight firearms season, based upon last · less games. Tampa Bay is 5.0-1 in pounded the Whalers.
legally harvested deer iri 01110 were year's harvest figures, are Monday, its last six games after dropping
The Sabres scored four times in ·
taken.
Saturday, Tuesday, Wednesday, four straight.
the second period to break a 2·2 tie.
Another top deer harvest region Th111Jday and Friday. .
Devils 3, Capitals 0
Alexan&lt;!er Mogilny Had a breakis found along the Ohio River in
·ohio's estimated deer ·populaThe Devils scored three first- away goal just 21 seconds into the
southeast Ohio and includes JetTer- tion ·this fall ranges between period goals and rode the gO&lt;IItenti- period. Andreychuk followed at
.,
son, Belmont, Monroe, Washint~· 230,000 and 335,000, according to mg of Craig Billington io victory 16:12 when he knocked a rebound
ton, Athens, Meigs and Galha · the Division of Wildlife. The Divi· ove.r the Capilals.
past Whalers goalie Sean Burke,
counties. The area of Ross, Hock- sioil estimates as many· as 126,000
Randy McKay, Bobby Holik with Hawerchuk picking up his
ing, Vinton and Jackson counties will be taken du.ring the various and Bruce Driver scored in the fll'st milestone assist on · the play.
"We DeUver and Spread Umestone"
represents a secondary core harvest deer seasons !his fall and winter. period against Jim Hrivnak, and it ~~6~. ~eachardd
wbes~:~.:~
area.
Ohio's archery deer season began was more than enough for Billing•Mason Sand
•Top Soil
Smaller core areas where a sig- October 3 and continues through ton, who made 32 saves to post his a 25-foot slap shot past Burke, and
nificant deer harvest occurred last January 30.
fust shutout of lhe season and the Andreychuk got his third of the
•Fill Dirt
•Concrete Sand
year include Licking, Knox and
·
~
third of his career. Billington is JJ. game on a power play with 53 sec4-1 in his last 16 starts at The o,ndsleftintheperiod.
Holmes counties; Noble, Morgan
•Pit Run
•Shredded
and Perry counties; and Carroll and
-...;...;,;..;.;..;.......;_ _,__ _ _ _ _ _...__ _ _ _'""

-.
...

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS .RIP RAP

52

S

b, •

ports rietS

Columbiana counties.
.PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Last year, hunters took a total of · Third-seeded Arantxa Sanchez119,215 deer daring the firearms;
Vicario of Spain and fourth-seeded
archery and primitive seasons, a Jennifer Capriati won quarterfinal
21.1 percent increase over the matches at the Virginia Slims of
98,468 deer taken during t!le 1990- Philadelphia.
91' hunting season. From 1981Capriati defeated eighth-seeded
1991, Ohio's legal deer harvest has Lori McNeil6-2, 6-l and wiD meet .
increased 150 percent from a level top-seedM Steffi Graf, while
of 47,634 recorded in 1981.
San.chez- Vicario topped Natalia
· The total deer harvest for all Zvereva of Belarus 6-2, 6-1, and
seasons in 1991 was highest in will face second-seeded Gabriela
Coshocton, 4,262; Guernsey, Sabatini in the semfmals.

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•lli;h school diploma. Wiclcllne was "I didn't go to too many games the NCAA today," he added.
:rmncipal for two years when the away from home, because lhe team "Newt put together a team with
:building was transformed into an was so weii-publicized you could some very good players."
~l~mentary school, and then fin·
alwaysfindoutinthemominghow
·Hobart Wilson Jr., currently
:Jslled his educational C8JeC2' wilh a · they did," he said.
.
executive editor of the Gallipolis
:I2~year stint at Kyger Creek High .
While at Rio Grande, Francis, Daily TribUM, was a part-time stu::SChool and severa'l years on the his wire and their newborn, as well dent at Rio. Grande and part-time
;:Calli polis City Board of Education.
as Oliver, lived in a house on West sportswriter for the Tribuu during
•7·'Wickline felt Francis was an College Street owned by his Wick- Francis' heyday, and saw him play
Z~exceptionally good shot, which is
line's brother Dana and his wife in a dozen games over two years.
.
;.'!hY he made so many points. He Edna.
"He was a pure shooter," Wil''That's where 'the news media . son said, "but I always thought it
, ,.as not noted as a great rebounder,
; lllld he did his share on the. defen- would calf to find out how Bevo was the whole dam team that was
:ijve,end, but when he shot you did in a game," Wickline 11oted. great Newt put together the best
;Jiicln t .h~ve to havecthat much of an ..They would call all the time to get small ~ollea;c team ever with
.offenstve game.
•
information from Newt"
Wayne Wiseman, Roy Moses, Bill
:~. "The kids .who liv~d in town
'Whole darn team great'
· Ripperger, Dick Barr and the oth·
,~uld play w11h Bevo 10 the sumSome of the media crush that ers. Some of them were freshmen,
:ll}er, and I think his influence followed the Redmen in that periOd and if they had stayed together,
;eaused them to play better ball," he included local sportswriters and they wo~d have been the greatest
;jlllded.
.,
.
reporters, including Ed Clark, who team ~o ever come out of the
•. , . One you~ at lhe ~'!'e w~o was retired a few years ago as editor of wood~.
. ·
Wllso~ remembered the hoopla
:1J!tpressed w11h FranciS ability was the Jackson Jownal-Htrald.
,l9hn Lawhorn 1 who has coached
Clark was a reporter-photogrn- ~urrounding the team wei! becai!SC
ilhe Redmen s1~ce .1980 and le~ pher for the newspal?er, "doing
II was one of those thmgs that
;~m to three Dtstrtct 22 champ!· about all of it," he satd, when he drew crowds. They were real good
,ensh1ps. Lawhorn recallC!I that hts covered the Rio Grande-Hillsdale ball playe!s and whe'! they got
. :brother ~k h1m to see Rio Grande (Mich.) matchup at Jackson High ahead they II pot on thell' show. If
• :Pl~y M~ms ~ey College (now School on Feb. 2, 1954. It was the . they cam.e to tow~ •. people would
,lbe Untversuy of C.harleston, night Francis scored 113 points, be skeptical, saymg they had no
:Y!·":fa.) at the C1pcmnau Gardens." which remains the all-time NCM ~lent and play~ weak competi·
··· : He h~d the flu, I guess:
and NAIA record for the most uon, but when 11 was over, th?se
:l.11whorn JOked, ~ca~se FranciS points notched by a player in a sin· ' same p~ple. .w!!uld be c~eermg
•)c!lfed only 26 pomts 10 the con- gle game.
·
them -JUSt like m the movJCS.
:~st. "However, Bevo was unbe- , ''The place was packed There
"I went down 10 Manhall to see
:I!,c!vabl~. It was the first college wasn't a seat to be found,~ Clark !!'em pl.ay ~alem," Wilson n:called.
.~e I d ever. seen, and I was n:called. "It was excitin because . The ftel~houso ~as three . years
;1ftipressed, bet.ng a guard, that when people Jot lhe dril of what old and 11 was jammed to the
:)~lards were be10g u~ ~ move was happening, every time Bevo rafters. W~en they pl.ayed the
.jlle. ball, becau~ you dido t always would make a basket they'd go March ?f D1m~ ~fitm January
:see that at lhe ume. .
.
. wild."
•
of '53 m Gal~polis, the game was ·
Hillsdale didn't give the game
in the 'Yashmgton EleJ!lentary
;: • ·"Just the w~ole flair of the th~~
••
excu:ing, Lawhorn added. I to Rio Grande and rrancis' shots
gymnastum. Life magaz10e was
:tejnembe,r tho~ uniforms. It was were mostly cOnservative, nothing
doing a fllat.u re on Bev~ and the
'·~ ~IIJt ume I d ever seen Sllii'S.on oui!Jgeo'IS, Clark noted.
·
team at the ume, and their photog:a.uniform, and that was fmusual.
"Bevo was a fine athlete and raphers were hanging from the
;: Wickline said . h~ followed .the ahead of his time because he - beams to take their pictures."
.1ledmen clcsely dunng that ,period. played a [ot like the way they do In
i

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~e

C4 Sunday Tlmee Sentinel

--

"
Bartrum wins Buck Harless Lawsu~t against S~hott goe~ to trial Monday

November 15, 1992

November 15, 198~"'.
-----~------

Bowe new heavyweight champion :
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Rlcldlclt
Bowe co11ld prove 10 be a 111011
imereatln&amp; hoavyweialu cba~.
After taking Bvuder olyfield's crown wiib a IUtanhnoUI.
arueJi 12-round clr!cWon Friday
night,
p8111Cd on his WIY OUI
of the rill&amp; ., JOt in Lennol Lowia'
face, challengin1 him to ao 12
rounds- ' 'right now."
Later, the 25-year-old Bowe
.came on like Muhammad All, •Y·
ing or ·Lewis, ••He'• 1 big, ugly
bum and I don't care if lie aets
niad; he can't whup nobody."
And still later, Bowe, his right
eye puffy, donned dark glasses 10
do one of his assortment or Impressions, a mdible Stevie WO!Idel'.
Bowc, from the same Broc*lyn
neighborhoc!d as Mike Tylon, may
make his ftrst title defenle in London against Lewis, who beat him in
th~lgold medal round of the 1988
Olympics. Or it may be against 43year-old George Foreman. In
Bejing.
One impression Bowe put to.
rest Friday night was that be was a
quitter. That tag has hounded him
since a referee at · the Seoul
Olympics SlOpped his fight aaainst
Lewis in the second round. Some
critiCs thought Bowe qljit He says
the refme shOuldn't have stopped
the fighL
He most certainly did not qllit
against Holyfteld.
The lOth round was a classic, a
test of coura.\le which both fighters
passed.
.
Early in the round, Bowe buckled Holyfield's lrnees with several
hard shots 10 the head. As Holy:
field staggered arourid the ring, his
anns and legs flailing, Bowe continued to pound him.
,
At one point, Holyfield staggered into the ropes, reeled into the
comer, bounced off and somehow
managed to remain on his feeL
"Wasn't that amazing?" Bowe
said. stin fmding it hard 10 believe
that Holyfield could stay up. "I
thought he was crazy: or something.
I was thinking, 'Go down, go
down.'
"You have to.give Evander a lot
of c~edit. He has the heart of a
lion."
1 ·
Not only did Holyfield not go
down, he rallied, somehow reaching back for a reserve or sueng)h 10
go on the offensive. Suddenly,
·Bowe looked listless and Holyfu:ld
began landing hard shots 10 the
head.
It was Bowe's turn to show
detennination. He took all Holyfield's punches, stood fmnly ud
landed a few punches of his own as
the lOth was endina:.

Student Athlete Award

. '

plonshlp away by a uaanimous decision. It was
Holyf~eld's first defeat In 19 proressiooal fights.
Bowe Is undefeated in his 32 bouts. (AP Photo)

r~

Scorcboar·d
Leape
01Satunla,..a-

Natloaol Football

!
q
l

.

BDfiGD uN• YGik, 7:30p.:m.

AIAGI•-

Odlo&lt;lo
Ioney, 7:30pm.
MiAmi at Q•rlcqe 7:30p.m.
lndUn&amp; .. Doomd, 7:30 .....
Pbocnd. • MinneMLI. r p.m.

.

lyTIIa.u-latod .....
All 11m• EST

~ AMERICAN CONFERENCE

'

o---~.I :JOp.m.

~~

AllooiO at Dollu, 1:30 p.m.

W L T l'ct. PFPA
1 2 o .m234149
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...• 1 2 o .m230m
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2 1 0 .2221~181
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t&gt; Buff"alo

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Sundly'1 a.-

WuhiqtanatNcwleney, 7p.m.
l&gt;en\W It Milwaukee. 1:!0 p.m.

6 3 0 .6671'1912S

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BASEBALL
Ltape
CHICAOO Wlll11l SOX-Cloimed
Shawn OiJbat. infielder, off waivcn fn:wn
dle Miruacu Twins.
Na&amp;Joula...ut
PHILAOl!LPHIA PHILLIESN&amp;mrd Gtaae Odvm ~D~Ma« ~ Scan·
ton·Wi.Jiallane; of the Intemational
Amaie~~n

0 .333132168
0 .111 S6l74

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

East
Oolloo
P1UiodelpiUo

L T l'ct. PFPA
I 0 .8119224 12S
3 0 .6671114107
3 o .667159 132

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Ross to direct
Chargers Sunday

.•.'
.
• HUNTINGTON • The winner of

lhe Buck Harless Student Aihlete
award for 1991-92 is Michael
Bartrum. "Bart" is a football student athlele from Pomeroy, Ohio.
A student in the CoUege of Education at Marshall, Bart will ~uale
in May, 1993 with a Special Education degree in teaching the Men-··'
tally Impaired.
·
~ Bartrum was selected from an
\1Utstandiitg group of nominees for
this award which included: b&amp;Seball
PJayer .Chris Childers, girls baskel·
t!all player Tracy Krueger, volleyball player Jane Mitchell, soccer
tilayer Tim Pribe, boys track team
~ember Darrell Wells, girls track.
IUm member Sarah Crandall, and ·
t!nnis team rriem bet Paige Pence.
; Bart came to Marshall as a
1reshman in 1988. He is a dedicat~ student and definile leader on
l\nd off the football field. lnstructDrs throughout the years at Mar$&amp;11 have commented on Bart's
positive influence in class, that he
is
OUtstanding young man With
an excellent auitude and ·work
habits. In addition to course work
and football, Banrum also se~ved
as a pitcher on the Marshall base·

-

~cb.

and Dave Bialas

BASUTIIALL

l 0 A44 207224

National 8Mkdha11 Ailoca.tlln \

3 6 0 .3!31:14191

HOUSTON ROCK.ETS-Siancd

3 6 0 .3!3164210
2 1 0 .222163199

Milk ACRII,

CG!Ier.

.

Waivod Tom Copa,

SACRAMENTO KINGS - Placed
Spud Webb, JU&amp;td, cm lho injured lilt.

2 . 0 .778171111
2 0 .n82111S2
6 0 .333166:148

.

s...eo~ ston Kimbroup, .....,..

FOOTBALL
Natlooal FootbaU ~aue
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERSPlloed ,Rob Taylor, artcsive tackle. oa

6 0 .333163 Ill

injwDcl~

10
Miami 2l,ledialapollo 0
Mmoo&lt;u 3:1, T..,pa Boy 1
Now Odmoo 31, N.,. Eopnd 14
Dc:nver n. New Yrd: Jdll6
Pb...U. 20. 1M AoaeJoo Romo 14

Ohio grid ·scores
Ohio Hlall Sdloal Foolball
By TH Allclclaled PreM
Reak»n..ISanm•all
J'rklly'a R.ulll
DIVISIOND
AICa_J_ _
Loulovlllo 21, ....... 14
At Warn~~ MGIMatoof Sta.dlu•

llul!olo21.~
x.-0.,16,1ooi ·. lA
Wuhlnp&gt;n 16,Seoale

cinoinaoli !I, au..,. 21. or
MoHar'• Game .

Y011111- CluMy 11,Aiual Bucluol6
At fnmont Hanaen: Stadium

San Franc:i.co 41, Atl&amp;nu 3
suftda1, N.... l5

FOAOri.t 31, Vormilim 0

Cincinnati at New YOlk Ids, I p.m. .
O.....U •l'iuobmah. I p.m.
Homtcllat Minn.CIIOLI,l p.m.
Now EnJiand atlndianapolil,l p.m.
Philadelphian. Orca!. Bay, 1t Milwau·
koo, I p.m.
JlhOCIIli.a at Atlan\a, 1 p.m.
Sill Di.et,o at Clew:land. 1 p.m.

At Lorain Dtn&amp;et Stadium

Elyrio W.l9, Amhaa 10
AI UJII'W
Col. Brookhaven 22, Wonhinacon
ICilboamo IS
At Gallanna UMOln J1eld
Cal Wautnon 2A, Col. Walnut Ridp
6
AI DaJIA&gt;II Wolcomo Slodlom .
D1y. Qaminlde-Julienne 31. HUll·

Arii•-

W~atKar.aCUy,lp.m.

Lot""'""" Ramo .. Dollu;4 p.m.

ban&gt;14
At T~ !'femorlll Stadium
SL~6l , Cftoenvillol4

DIVISIONm
AIA•-Flktt
y
lhoilino45 ............. 0
At N l : t Rein Memorial S..dlum
Lob Colli. • 1. y...,.. Mooney :14
.U Mllllll!oW Artlo Field
Limo Bolio 17, Ormlle 0
A&amp;Mulllt&amp;dR••Field
W. Ho1moo ~ Olon""'Y 0
AI P~th Sparlu Stadium
Iron1on 14. Nelsonville-Yolk 0
AI Newark
Sheridon 21. Ooymont 14
AI Xenia
l.illlo Mionn :IIi, Londcn 20
AI Trotwood Bob Drivu SUdium
·· VolleyV-31,lta...... Ailc-21

Nollonoi..,Utboii-U...
.UAGianc.

ByTioe"'-''olod,_
AU 11m• EST

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantle Dlwllllll

W~Pet.CB

N•w Ycd. ·....... ~ I
Orlando
3 I
Miami
•.•..•... 2 2
Booton
..•.•.... 2 3
NCw Jeney ~..... l J
Philodelj&gt;llio •·••·•· 1 3
' Wultinpn ...... I 4
Central DlviiSoft
Chic:oao
......... 4 1
Clewlond ...••.• 3 2
Milw•u.kee
.~... 3
2
Atlarna
, Deuoit
~ Indiana
: Chulotlo

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

.7SO .750 .500
I
.400 I 1/2
.2SO
Z
.250
2
.200 2 1/2

.100
.600
.600

-

DIVISION V

AI Alhland Conmtu•ltJ Slldlunt
Oolloo 2:3, M"""""""' 6
At ...... ,_ .... Sladl111111
lnde:radeoc:e 20, S•ndu1ky St.

I
l

2

2

.!00 1 Ill

2

2

.500 1 Ill

2
2

2
3

.500 1 Ill
.400
2

Mon'ol
At tlndt.J Doud SUdlu•
Uba&lt;y c-7. Columbuo Otovo 6
AI Bellevue lhwiMII Sladhml
,
FremOit SL Jc.eph. 21, Smeea E. 0
At M•at V«n011 t'ellow Jatktt StacU·

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw•t Dttllloft

Minoclct.a

Utoh
Don.,.

H""""

W
2

...•......• 2
.......... I

.......• I

L

2
2
2

2

Pet.

.sro

GB

I

LA Clippon •..... 2

3

1/2
1
JIIO I Ill
.4110
2

LA LaiCII

l

.o&amp;OO

Gol4at S10to •..••. 2
.......

rr~J 1 1 GIIMI

2

~

Chiclao 101. Milwlukee96
Ponlond Ill, O.Vclond 1119
LA Clippon 124. LA LMm 98

~

'l"

CINCINNATI (AP)- Four other attorneys who have filed .
more present or former Cincinnati counlersuits to take Vicwria C.'s
Bengals players have countersued a deposition on Dec. 9.
Washington woman who claims
"I'll ask her questions," Ferraro
she was gang I'BpCd by several Ben- SBid. "Obviously,lhe identification
gals players two years BgQ in Scat- issue is going 10 be raised. I 1mow I
tie.
·
ca~ poke ·h11les in· her s10ry very :
.
.
Altogether, 11 of the 20 men easily.''
accused Of rape or witnessing the
Other players who have flied ,
rape have filed counterclaims.
. counter.suits against Victoria C.
Safeties David Fulcher and ' include Tim McGee, Barney
Rickey Dixon and former corner- Bussey, Eric Ball, James Francis,
back Lewis Billups jointly filed Reggie Remben. Eric Thomas and
their countersuit Thursday .in Scat- Harold Green.
tie, The Cincinnati Enquirer report·
Those who - have not yet
ed. Former running back Ickey responded include Rodney HoiWoods filed a sep;u:ate counter: man, Mitchell Price, Craig Ogle,
claim.
' tree, Carl Carter, Craig Taylor, :
"We're goinF 10 ask for what- Bernard Clark, Leo Barker,
ever money she s asking from the Solomon Wilcots and Eddie ,
P,layers," said ~oo~s;, allorney, Brown.
Jim Ferraro, of Miamt. Frankly, I r------!""""--'"1
doubt i.t's colleclable. But we.' II ask
for a jl!(lgment It's the principle. •'
A woman identified only as
Victoria C. in coun documents haS
614-221-G... · ;
alleged in a civil lawsuit that 20
,..L L W. CEIINAMO ·.
present or fonner BengalS playtrs
raped her or observed the gang rape
AnORNEY AT lAW
and did nothing to stop it on Oct. 3,
8 EMt Broasl St1111,
1990, while the team was staying at
•
a hotelln Seattle.
SubiOO
•
'I'I!e woman never filed aiminal
COiumbue, Ohio
~~
charges against 81JY of the men she
1~LAW
:~
alleged wen: involved.
Ferraro said he. plans to join L-....;..&lt;1_-80CJs886s05
___
_ 29
......
) ~~

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S.•flllllllllflltll

ltlirtl!a IS low • $1.15G.

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....•

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INSURANCE

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·Like a gOod neighbor,
State Farm is there.

State Farm Insurance Compan1es • Home Otltees. 8loomu1g1on. Illinois

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870 Express w/

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185/80 R13 46.55
185/75 R14 48.50
193/75 R14 49.65
205/75 R14
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225/75 R15 . 59.65
235/75 R15 62.35

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P21 ~/10R l4 ~6U5 P250/10111 ~HW UJ6
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See Pmzle on Page D-2
b -::-r::-r=r::-r-=

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NEW STORE HOURS: MONDAY-FRIDAY, i:30 Alloi'.PII
SATURDAY, 9:30 AMs5 Pll; SUNDAY, 11 Alt-6,. '

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.'

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uuas

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Hollow Point
Rifled Slugs
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llcno(9-I)YL-(9· 1), 7p.m.
At LIIM StadiUII
Piqua (1-2) vt. Toledo SL F.....U (I·
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c.At..,_ a.a.. rtnnlt Stadlura

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CAROLL SNOWDEN
Phone.446-4l!IO
Home 446-4518

Diocounl priooo

IN STOCK

BUNTING

'•

GdlpoU., o•to

Tawney Studio

• Steel beltad

.~

341 Secoad Ave.

e5 Year Warranty
efrae Batteries
efraeCase
efrae Film

IIGdlllll

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•

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STAU FARM

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. fOr nexl-lllllll'nlfllll82 Low
Dl8caunl Pricaa $100 Haldl YOAII PurchaM.

·

POMEROY - It will be the
Home Nationi\1.Bank Mustangs and
the Veterans Memorial Hospital
Dolphins for the Big Bend Youth
League Championship Sunday
af1erntion at Bob Roberts Field in
Pomeroy.
Both teams advanced to the title
game with exciting overtime wins
played in heavy downpours and
heavy winds Thursday evening.
Jeremiah Bentley scored on
fourth down in the ftrst ovenime to
give the Dolphins" a 6·0 win over
the Browns, 11 was the first lo~ of
the year for the Browns. In the second contest David Tennant scored
10 give the Mustangs 6-0 win over
the Eagles in overtime.
The Browns and the Eagles will
square off for thir&lt;) place honors on
S.und~y afternoon at 2 with the
Dolphins and the Mustangs meeting for the championship at3:30.

ball team in his "spare time". A
frequent and welcome visiiOr in
local school sys1ems, Michael
Barttum works with young people
as a role model. Children respond
to him because his love for them is
genuine-according to teachers of
the class rooms where Bart has ~­
iled.
Michael Bartrum has been the
nominee from Marshall for many
academic and leadership awards
through the NCAA and was nominated for the National Football
Foundation CoUege Hall of Fame..
A Dean's list member for five
semest.ers at Marshall, Bartrurn has
been on the Souti\ern Conference
Honor Roll for the years 1989-90,
1990-91 and 1991-92.
The Buck Harless Award is presenled to the student a1hle1e who
best exemplifies the phil050phy of
tbe Student Athlete Program-which
is dedication to reaching his/her
maximum polential in academics,
athletics, leadership, and personal
developiJient. The award will be
presented by James "Buck" Harless, for whom the award and the
Student Athlete Program · are
named. Presentation was made at
halftime in Saturdays game with
Tennessee Tech.
The staff of the Buck Harless
Student Athlete Program is proud
to present this award 10 Michael W.
Barttum and congratulates him on
an his many achievements.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)"
"If that happens, it's only fair
·-Backers of Tampa Bay 's effort those ~eople ~hould be reimto land a major league franchise bursed, ' said St. Petersburg City
once called for fans 10 "Join the Attorney Mike Davis, who
Team."
declined further commenL
The new slogan is "Join the
BackersoftheTampatlaybaseFight"
•
ball effort also said a fonnull' has
· Nearly 31,000 people who put yet 10 be worked out~n how the
down $50 each 10 reserve season legal costs will be divided between
ticlcets Cor a prospective "team are the stale - which has volunteered
beina asked 10 put that money into its resources - the city and the
the legal battle over the rejected wealthy investors who tried 10 pur·
relocation of the San Francisco chase the Giants.
·
Giants.
"In order for our lawsuits to be
"We're testing the watelS 10 see effective, we had 10 act quickly and
what the will of the area· is,'' St. work out the details later,l' said
Petersburg mayo~ David Fischer Jack Critchfield, the Florida
said during a news conference Fri- Progress Corp. chairman, who
day in the empty Florida Suncoast organized the private effort 10 purDome. ·:we're gearing up and bat- sue the team.
tening down the hatches for a
major legal battle."
The ·move came a day after
Tampa Bay fired its first in a
promised blitzard of legal salvos.
Vincent Naimoli, head of the
spurned Tampa Ba.Y ownership
group, said Thursday that lawsuits
eventually filed in the case could
seek damages totaling about $3 .5
biUion.
.
Fans who contribule their $50
ticket deposits 10 a legal defense
fund would give up their rightiO a
refund but remain a reservation
holder and receive credil toward .
season tickets if the area ever gets a
team.
City officials stressed that those .
who put their money iniO the legal
fund could lose it all. However,
they had little 10 sar whel) asked
what WQuld happen 1f the lawsuits
resulted in a large monetary award.

S.hlrdaY'•
DIVISION I

.667

Phllodelph;. 126, llootoalll
Indiana 110, Charloae 1~
W11hinpln 106, New YOlk 104

t-d --~~~,!:!•
an--·
·
-ltili·-·-

Championship
game Sunday ·

Bartrum ·

Sunday Times Sentinel~-

tends Sabo wrole himself checks recall .one black penon, .Tony
wtaling $46,1194 without her autho- Swain, head of tile ground crew,
rization. She also said Sabo owes · being hired in the Reds front offiCe.
$52,571 fo~ health insurance pre·
Roger Blaemire, the former vice
miums negligently paid 10 reured president of bus in~ ss operations.
front-()ffice employees and that he testified that he also heard Schou
should pay $25,000 for defaming make racial rem;uts, the newspaher.
· per said.
Schott did not answer a teleHe also said Schott did not wint
phone ca1110 her home early today. blacks 10 have front-office jobs.
Sabo's lawyer, Stephen Imm ,
" NotiO my knowledge did she
has taken sworn statements from ever come o~t and say 'Don' t hire
former Reds executives, some of blacks,' but it was pretty much
whom described Schott as a racial- understood that Mrs. SchoU's feel·
ly insenSitive person.
in~s were not kind toward putting
Charles Levy, the Reds' fonner mmorities in a day.IO-day working
direciOr of'marketing, testified ljur- basis," Blaemire said in his deposiing a Feb. 19 ~ilion that Schott tion.
f ormer general manager Bob
referred to former players Dave
Parker and Eric DaVIS in derogaiO- Quinn testified in his deposition
ry terms, 11le Enquirer said.
· that he never heard Schou use
Levy
also
tesufied
that
he
could
racial slurs,
the newspaper
said.
.
.
.

former chief financial officer, filed
the suit alleging he was f ired in
August 1991 in part beCause he
oppose&lt;) what he called' Scholl's
racially discriminatory hiring.
Sabo also said he was fired in
retaliation for giving a courtordered deposition 10 Reds limiled
partners, who sued Schou oVc:r the
distribution of profits. That lawsuil
was settled out of court in May
1991.
.Sabo seeks unspecified dam·
ages.
Schott has filed a countersuit,
de~ying the allegations. She con-

Backers' new slogan at
Tampa Bay: './._'!in the Fight'

E. Kno1 7. Plou..mt 6
At Folrllold Hlall Scheal
Cedonillo 32, Lcd:lond 26
AI Ctllaa Slldhlnt
SL!Iauy7,Minolu0

-

......... 2

Prev•·ew ·No". 21

Four more Bengals countersue:

·

A~

1/2
,)3]
1/2
.250
l
.000 I Ill

San AnkXIio ,_... 1 3
Oollu
..••..•..• 0 3
PadRe Dlvillofl
Ponland • .......... 3 (I 1.000
Solnlc
3 0 1.000
So&lt;:nmano ...... 3 I .750

Ph...U.

NIIWadt Codl. 14, Doa.W. 0
"'"Mll'loll
HanU.. Stadbam

.SOO
.333

CLEVELAND (AP) - Bobby
Ross, who dropped out of con·
tention for the Cleveland coaching
job in 1991, will be directing the
San Diego Chargers from the other
side of the field when the teams
meet Sunday In CJe\.-eland.
Cleveland beads intO the game
at 5-4 and the Chargers are 4-5.
Ross inlerviewcd with Browns
owner An Modell for Cleveland'S
head coaching job in 1991, shortly
after Ross's Georgia Tech learn·
had gone 11-0-1 and contended for
a national championship.
Within days of Ross's decision
10 drop out, Bill Belichick, then the
defensive coordinator of. the New
York Giants, was mentioned as a
possible successor 10 Bud Carson
m Cleveland. Soon after the Giants
won the Super Bowl, Belichick was
hired.
A year latel, Ross's pecsonal sit·
uation had changed enough 10 let
him eonsider a ml\iOr career move
- accepting the San Diego job.
"My mother's health was dif·
ferent, and it just seemed like, if I
was ever going 10 do it, now was
the time," he said.
the~::S~~b. w~ never offered
•'I visited him (Modell) at his
home with some other people, and
it was very nice," Ross said.
"They ttealed me very nicely and
very wannly. I enjoyed it an 11wful
loL But before anything got to any ·
stage or any level, ! Just withdrew
because
of the
situaudn
regarding
my mother.
I just
feltlilce
I could
,. .
·not do that at that time.''
He said he never considered
ROCK SPRINGS • The first
himself the lOp candidate for the annual Meigs Marauder girls bas·
Cleveland job, although repons at ketball preview will be played on
the time suggested he may have Saturday, November 21st at Lany
R. Monison Gymnasium.
bee.~i doubt if I was," Ross said.
The evenings tint coolest will
·
f
put Warren Local up against East·
"I thmk I was probably one o a ern at 6. At 7, Southern will meet
~~bet of people they were talking the Meigs junior vusity team, and
ModeU was looking for a head the host Marauden will play River
coach because the Browns were Valley at 8.
'
coming off the worst season in . .Admission price is S2 for adults
their hisiOry.
and $1 for Sludents.

an

HEART OF A UON • Riddick Bowe puts his hand on ·Evander
, Holyfield's head at the conclusion of Friday night's chl!mpioasbip
heavyweight fight iD Las Vegas. Bowe won the grueling 12-round ,.
fight by a unanimous c!eclslon. Arter the fight, Bowe said, "You
have to give Evander a lot of crediL He has the heart of a non." .,
(AP)

CINCINNATI (AP) - · Two forme~ Cincinnati Reds executives
testified iD depositipns for a lawsuit
that teain President Marge Schou
didn.' t want to hire black~ in the
front office, a pewspaper reponed
today.
.
.
But other fonnec Reds employees testified in depositions that they
never heard Schott make racial
remarks, said The Cine innati
Enquirer, citing documents filed
rea:nlly in Han)ilton CoWlty Common Pleas Coun.
The lawsuit against Schott goes
10 trial Monday before Judge Fred
Cartolano . .Tim Sabo. the Reds'

.

.

~.

c

.
RIGHT ON T"RGET- Riddick Bowe
• delivers a blow to the bead rl Evuder Holyfield
r during Friday night's championship heavy~ weight fight in Las Vegas. Bowe took the c:ham·

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Oti-Polnt Pleasant, wv..

. BY MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
POINT PLEASANTj WV

,,

675-3930
426,Viand Street
Poi~t

Pleasant, WV

'

�P~~ge

C6

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

--.

..

•

-

November 15,1892

fFarnl/ISusine·ss

'1

''

'f!imes

•,

,,

s

''·I·.J.\~
l A
,,

..

'•

over 16 yean .o r 11aa ·lmtaDatiOn experience, is
e•ployed lly tile firm. Deal, Pt. Pleasant Mayor
Rusaell Holland and W!!lle are pictured above
as HoDand welcomes the business to tbe area;

NEW BUSINESS OPENS • Cluslc Auto
aew buslnesa located at 1111 Vlaad Sa.,
~ Pt. Pleasant, opened recently. Owned by Kip
•: Blake and Tom Wolle, MarsbaD Deal, who has
~ Glass, a

&lt;t '

;"'

,,

.

,
•· POINT PLEASANT- A new
:glass shop recently opened in Point
~Pleasant, owned by Kip Blake and
•:rom Wolfe. The business is locatied at 1111 Via!l4 SL
1.: ~c Auto Glus is offering
·• vanety of glass services to the
:iCsidcnts and businesses of

·.

'

The Gallipolis Ferry Plant

I! '
~-

-

And Its Employees Proudly Celebrate

10 Years·Without A Lost time Away From Work Accident
.

.

•
'

'

(from Sept. 17, 1982 Thru Oct. 19, 1992)
I .

CONGRATULATIONS.,.YOU MA:DE 'IT POSSI'BLEI

WI~J.BECKNER

VAN W. BERNARD
FREDDIE R BIAS
PAUL E. BlACK
KEVIN J. BLAIN
CHARLES W..·BLESSING
KEilli D. BONECUTIER
SHELLY G. BONECUITER
MICHAEL R BOOTH
BILL L. BRADY
MICHAE~ D. BRAGG
WILMER W. BREWER
KENNEni A. BROWN
JOHN H. BUMGARNER
ROGER L. BUMGARNER
•
JONA E. BURRIS
ROGER L. CAMPBELL
HOWARD L. CARR
DAVID J . CASSELL
ARIHUR W. CASTO
JASPER L. CASTO
JEFFERY A. CHAMBERS
DEBBIE L. CHEVALIER
GERALD E. CLARK, JR .
' CHARLES E. CLARKE
OSCAR E. CUCK
GARY L. COCHRAN
TIMCYmY D. COCHRAN
JERRYM. COE
FINlAY J . COLES
PAUL B. CONNER
CURTIS A. COSSIN
CHARLEs K. CRAFT
JAMES L. CUNNINGHAM
LARRY A. DAVIS
JERRY M. DEAN
HOWARD R DESKINS
JOSEPH L. DICKENS
MIKE DUNCAN
LARRY W. EADS
. ROG~R D. EDWARDS
CAROLYN FICHINER

.I

'

(

CLYDE R FISHER
THOMAS A FISHER
JACKO. FOX
H. 0. FRANCES
DAVID E. FRAZIER
PAULINE L. FREEMAN
WILLIAM J. FREEMAN
MELVIN R FRY ·
WILLIAM 0. GARNES
RHONDA S. GASKINS
BILLY R GEORGE
RICHARD D. GILKEY
BROOKS C. GLOVER
RALPH B. GREENLEE
MASON E. GRIMM
RICHARP L. GRIMM
PATRICK L. HARBOUR
GORDON P. HARLOW
CHARlES M. HARMON. JR
MARILYN E. HARPER
MARK A HARJ'ER
JEFFERY L. HA'IFIELD
JAMES E. HATIEN
KELSEY L. HENRY
ANNA M. HERDMAN
GREGORY K. HILL
LINDA L. HILL
JOHN V:. HIP~
JILL M. HOBBS
LEE A HOLCOMB
WILLIAM H. HOLCOMB
WILLIAM R HOLLEY
ROGER L. HOPSON
CHARLES M. HUDSON
ELAINE HUNT
CHARLES R HYSELL
ANDY A JABBARPOUR
RICHARD T. JACKSON
RICHARD D. JAMES
CHARLES M. JOHNSON
OTIS J. JOHNSON
CHARLES R JONES
JOSEPH J . JORDAN, JR.
WILBUR E. JORDAN
RICHARD KAZMIERSKI
EMMAJ. KEARNS
JAMES M. KING
RICHARD L. KINNARD
CARL C. KNAPP
JASON T. KNIGHT
JOHN D. KRIMM
RICHARD KUHN
ROBEKI' A LAW
CHARLES R LEPOKI'
CATiiY A. LOGAN

c.

LARRY W. LONG
CARL W. LOOMIS
WILLIAM E. MAYES
VICfOR E. MCCLOUD
CIAUDETfA MCCREEDY
JEFFERY R MCKNIGHT
MEWDY J . MCKNIGHT
CHARLES W. MEADOWS
NICHOLS B. MEAIGE
ROBEKI' E. MESSICK
JOHN W. METZGER
GREG M. MEYERS
DONALD R MILLER
GARY A MILLER
JACKIE K. MOLLETI
JOHN D. MONEYPENNY
STEPHEN L. MORSE
MII.toRD M. MOWREY
CONNIE M: MULFORD
WILLIAM C. NEASE
STEPHEN L. NEWELL
BOB)3Y NIBERT
STEVEN A NIBERT
ROBERT L. NORTHUP
ClAYTON N. O'DELL
MARION W. OHUNGER
CHARLES D. OLIVER
ClARENCE R. OSHE&amp;
BILLY W. PAINTER
ROBERT L. PATIERSON
WILLIAM C. PATIERSON
CHARLES F. PENICK
JUDY A PERRY
MARCUS A. PHILUPS
OSCAR I. PHILUPS
JOE E. PICKENS
NICK L. PICKENS
CHARLES C. PLANTS
WALTER K. PLANTS
MILTON J : PLANTZ
-cLIFTON W. PRINCE
ROGER W . fUTNEY
. FREDRICK A. PYLES
VIRGIL R QUEEN
EARNEST W. RAINEY
ELIZABETif A. RAYBURN
. DOUGI.AS C. REES
STEPIMNIE L. REYNOLDS
MERVIN R ·RICE
JOSEPH R RIFE
LEONARD F. RIFFLE
DANNY E. RIZER
CECIL E. ROACH
TERRY S. ROSS

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JAMIE L. ROUSH
MARY C. ROUSH
JOYCE F. RUSS
SCOIT L. RUSSELL
ROBERT C. SANDERS
JOHN R. SAUER
RUSSELLL.SAUNDERS
LARRY R. SAYRE
LEWIS E. SAYRE
ANGElA D. SCARBERRY
FRANClS M. SCHAFER
ROBEKI' 0. SCHOPIS
DAVE S. SEAMON ·
LEONARD D. SERGENT
RALPH D. SHAIN
CARL E. SIBLEY
CHARLES W. SIBLEY
DON L. SIDERS
DELVIN S. SIMMS
RICKY L. SIMPKINS
JOHN H. SMITH
CHARLES T. SMTIH, JR
RICHARD C. SNYDER
JAMES M; SPENCER
JOE R SPENCER
PANSY L. SPENCER
MARY L. SPURLOCK
CUNToN E. STANLEY
ELMER V. STAPLETON
ROGER D. STEELE
TERRY W. STEVENS
CHARLES D. STEWARr
WILLIAM J. STRICKLEN
CHARLES M. TAYLOR
RICK G. TENCH
MICHAEL L. TERRY
SHERRY Y. THOMAS
·WANDA D. TOLLIVER
JAMES B. TIJCKER
LYNN 'fllPES
SANDRA.K. WALlACE.
TERRY o, WAlLIS
GREG W. WAMSLEY
CHARLES L. WEAVER
KENNETii V. WHITED
HAROLD E. WHriT
BERNARD A Wll.SON
UNDA S. WILSON
WILLIAM L. Wll.SON
FRANKLIN A, WOLFE
ERIEL. WOOD
RONNA L. WOOD
BRENDA S. WRIGHT
BEVERLY YOUNG
ELVIS W. ZERKLE

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in complete auto glass service,
both foreign and domestic,
either in-shop or mobile.
Other servicca include mirrors, table and cleslr; !CpS, ~pain
on SIOrm windows, laminated
safety glass, ilw•le!td units and
' plexiglass. Acccxding 10 the

Money.Jdeas
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Wai-Mart Stores, Inc.

$44 billion and 4 percent of total
'•'
BySTANEVANS
... GALLIPOLIS- We continue to sales in 1991. That projection has
believe that Wai-Mart's focus on negative , connotations for nearly
P¢ection, its cosi advantage and its every discount, Specialty and depart·
Jllerchandise expertise will aDaw the ment store retailer.
• Discount store sales, including
company to mainthe discount portion cl the supercen·
:tain a 20 percent"
plus growth rate
ter, are ex~ to exe:eed $93 bjllion- or about the size of the indus·
,throughout th~
try today 1997. With industry growth
1990s.
. · likely to be minimal, this implies a
, :, Thecompanyis
transfet of market share from exist1ess than halfway
ing discounterS.
through its dis• Wal·Mart'sgrowth win also have
l:ount store expen·
) ion, can expand warehouse clubs a negative impact on the pacbged
tnore than 2S percent a year over the food and consume~ product compa·
ijext five years wiihout problems, nies, and we would expect to see
)lnd is only starting out in whatprom- lower margins and 11101e consolida1scs to be the biggest dirJslon in the tion in that industry in the 1990s.
chain, ihe supercentcr. Add to that Over the last 20 years. consumer
McLane's and ·the potential repre. product companiea beneliled from
)ented by Mexico and Europe and it the highly l'ragmented nature rJ rej&amp;CiiffiCult to visualize a slowdown in tailing and the lack rJ sophiltlcatcd
Wai·Man'sgrowthralllinthe 19901. buying techniques on the pan of the
:: This report explores throe IJsues: large~ retailen.
,
~1) Wai-Mart's growth pOtential,
• Woprojectthatsupercentenales
Colllpeiitive advantage and profita· willriaeto.-ly$34blllionby 1997.
allity expccrati0111 by segment;
The food c:DIIIJIOD&amp;It rJ I typical unit
' (2) Which segments of lelliling isplallled at2S-33 peaceilt,implying
be most vulnerable to Wai-Man's that Wai·Mart will be selling more
~ion (with an attempt to JllC8&amp;·
ihan $10 billion in food, not includqre the likely impact);
ing the $4-S billion from the traditional discounI stcllel.
•
~ (3) what factors could slow down
.
Wai-Mart expreSS.
• In terms rlvaluation, atiiS cur' We see no concepts on the horizon rentlevcl-thestoekistradil!gatthe
thatarelikelytoslowWai-Mart.CMr high end of its hlsuxi&lt;:a1 pricie,lcamGme, weloolcforihesheernumberof ings range- we continue 10 view
lt!w employee~ diat Wai-Mart is WMT IS lllahtly too expeuive 10
....... _ D lite ,,_
PJanning to add to retard acoelem- rec:DIIIIINIId ..-.r F
(lon, aa well as the UU!ibooc! tblt, at thisstoclt:shouldbepartof• lfallo
ji certain aize, the company will be for invesiOI'I who Want oxp eo
retailera. Our~ilecled
ifower to react !0 llllaller, 11101e llile lllllual
110Ck '
•-'""- f
Campedron,
.
...,.._..... 0
·• 'Ibo ralioliale behind our moder- 15·18 puiS WMT ~n ahead of the
iJe!y lttraedve ratinj is outlined sharel. of ~ cyelical retallen, ~
~low':
·
~behindlhose.ofeo.o.Car·
:, • We estimate that, in five years, CIDt City and some other specialty
!1Ytheendoffiacall997, Wai-Mart's growth retailcn. ·
lbncstW sales wUJ exceed $1 SO bil·
(Mr.~llaalau l¥•t~
lion and ICCOUDI for 14 pereent cl ller IGr ne Olilo C-pay Ia Its
.llil,at U.S. retail sales, compared 10 GaiHpolll ollkt.)
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owners, aD insurance claims are
honored.
. ~oining the staff at Classic is
Marshall ·Deal, a lifelong resident of the ua, who has 16
yean experience in glass installation.
Hours for lhc business are
Monday lhrough Friday, 8 a.m.
to p.m.

Market 20()0: .Everyone
has an idea for the SEC
BySTEFANFATSIS ..
-AP Busina~ Writer
NEW YORK - Market 20007
They should probably call it Mar·
ket 200,000, because ihat's how
many pages of advice federal regulaton stand to get in their study of
the nation's stock markets.
The verbiage already is flooding
the Securities·and Exchange Commission, which is em~ on the
most ambitious look a the IIICreiS·
ingly fractured and competitive
U.S . equity mmets in more than
20 years.
While Wall S~t arcana like
upstain trading and hidden limit
orders may seem exceedingly boring to ihe average American, the
· stakes in the SEC study are enorm!)US)y high. ·
With a new Democratic administration, and the likelihood of a
new SEC chairman, Market 2000
could -shape the direction of the
U.S. equity markets ·for the new
millenium and spur policy fracases
on Wall Street and in WashingtOn.
"There are a lot of people wiih
vested interests in this," said
Junius W. Pealce, a financial mar·
kets consultant who, wiih University of Pennsylvania l'rofessor Mor-

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Co., meanwhile, promcxed Aleun- •
(jer l . .Trotman to president of
worldwide auto operations, posi· •
tioning him as the company's next .;
chief executive . ... Breaking with ;
tradition
·
•4
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Sears, Roebuck and Co. said •.
some of its Sears stores would ~
begin accepting credit c;~Jds other •
than its own on a leSt basis. ... Air ,
~anada and a group of U . S. ~
mvestors agreed to pay $450 mil- .
lion for a majority stake in :
bankruptcy-bound Coptinehtal :
Airlines .... The Supreme Court ·
refused to review a ruling thai ;
allowed self-insured compBJJics to '
10 reduce health inSU11111(C OO;oerage :
for workers with AIDS. ,
'
COMING UP:
Numbers, Courts.
:
A court hearing is set for ·.
Wednesday on an bid by Washing- :
ton lawyer Robert Alunan to dis- ;
miss his New York indictment in ~
the BCCI case.... Wall'SIRlet nwn- ~·
bers cruncllers digest a slew of cc:o- •
nomic reports, among them indus·
trl!!l jlroduction and business in~- :
tones on Monday, September mer· •
chandise bade on Wednesday and ;
October.housing starts on
··
Thursday.

ris Mendelson, tossed a 52-page
cornmentle1117 at the SEC.
"We have a new adminislration
that wants to mate sure we have
markets that are internationally
competitive," Peate said: "There
are some critics, including me, who
believe our ml!rl&lt;ets have become
so severely fragmented that we
have lost some of our efficiency."
Market organizatipn, the impact
of regulation, the relationship of
primary markets like the NYSE
l!Jld other exchanges, trading oosts
and stock pricing in different markets - all are fodder for Market
2000.
The SEC hopes to collect comments by the end of the month and
produce a repoit by next summer.
The regula10rs could recommend
changes in the securities laws, mar·
ket rules and exchange opemtions.
The SEC even could wind up calling for deregulation that would
reduce its own power.
TICKER:
Big Cban'es oa die Way?
Followmg its boardroom coup,
bedraggled General Motors Corp•
tried 10 reassure analysts, saying it
expects to break even in North
America next year .... Ford Motor

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Winners from the Vinton County .
Local School District include:
• Dale B . Whitt of Vinton
County High School. Wl)itt plans
to use his mini-grant to purchase a
•'
laser printer for the combined Journalism/Yearbook class'es at the
.,~ .
high school. The classes work
j
together to proyide t~e entire .
. ·'
,·t
school system w1th var1ous compuler-generated materials.
•
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• Saundra Allman of Hamden
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~· •.• . . ;~ ,: -: ~·-.. -.. ·,c,. . .
Elementary Schooi. Her project,
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"Homework Is Different Now!"
...
··.,
consists of homework activities
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that inClude a variety of math mate.M;YSTERY FARM- 11111 week'aaJilery
45631, and you may win 11 $5 prize from tbe ~
rials. The program's objective i' 10 farm,
featured
by
tile
Gall
Ia
Soli
aad
Water
Ohio Valley Pablisbi•l Co. Leave ,o•r UJH, •:
extend a pleasant learning activity
Coasenatloa
District,
Is
located
IOIIeWIIere
In
address
ud telepboae •-ber with ycitar card .:
to the home, where parents can
Gallla·
C011nty.
Iadlvlduals
wlsblag
to
partld·
or
Jetter.
No Celephc.e calls will be atcepted. All . •,
observe and assist the sixth-grade
pate
In
lbe
weekly
c:oalelt
••
,.
do
10 by paslng
I:GIItest
entries
sho.ld be turned Ia to llle ,,
siOdents.
the
farm's
OWIIer.
Just
or
drop
olr
)'Oar
paper
olllce
by4
p.m.
each
Wcdnesdly.Ja
c:ae
I
• Joann Adkins of Wilton Ele1uess
to
tile
Dall7:
Seatlael,lll
Court
St.,
or
a
tie,
the
wl
..
er
will
be
c:llosn
by
lottery.
t
mentary School. In "Science NatuPomeroy,
Ohio,
4576,,
or
the
Gallipolis
Dally
Next
week,
a
Melp
Couaty
farm
wiU
be
rea·
nlly," Adkins hopes to provide
lured by the Melp Sol and Water C011aen•
secondgrade students with science Tribune, 825 Third A_ve.,. ~_alllpolls.' Ohio,
tioD
District.
·
projects and activities that will
motivate and. excite them, as well
as improve their self-confidence.
• John Shimko of Vinron Coun•.,•
~
ty High Schoot .Shimko plans to
use his grant to purchase a washer
,I
and dlyer as an addition 10 the Life
..
Skills curriculum and instruction in
the school's Multi-Handicapped
By EDWARD VOLLBORN
believe ihat our area has a very who helped make the Grazing :•
Program. ~ applian~ wiii help
GALLIPOLIS -The Ohio week- high quality crop that could aaract Seminar (November 7) a produc- ::
swdents develop daily living skills. , ly crop-weather summary on Mon- the top dollad hope everyone wiD tive learning session. I think every- .;
• Susan Payne of Zaleski Ele- day (November '9) indicated that try to main lain that image as the one in attendance was supportive ~
of the program focus of extending :•
mentary School. Her project, only one-third of the Ohio com has marketing season progresses.
"Counting Connections," combines been harvested. This puts the Ohio
The Annual Agriculture .Policy the grazing season with the ulti- ~
the reinforcement of kindergarten com harvest three weeks behind and Outlook meeting for our dis- mate goal of year-round grazing for ~
concepts with parent involvement average. At the same time the aver- trict will be held on Wednesday, beef cows. Some people in atten- .•
and reading at home. The p t win age moisture of com being harvest- · November 18, starting at :S p,m. dance were also learning ways to r;
be used 10 purchase activity pack- eel was 26 percent Elevator delays The event win be held at the Holi·
ets for kindergarten students.
in central Ohio due 10 the length of day Inn in Chillicothe. The Ohio
• Jo Anna Tahyi of McArthur time for drying and railroad car State University Agricultural Eco- troversial topic was the role of ~
~
Elementary School. Tahyi 's project availl,lbility are slowing harvest. ·nomics teach10g team includes warm season grasses.
The group was pretty well split ~
will give severely handicapped Much of the northern one-third of Norm Rask, Allan Lines, and
children some control over their Qhio had surplus soil moisture Luther Tweeter. Late rescrvatioiis on their final analysis. The 25, one ~
environment by providing adapted going into this wedc's rain.
may be made by calling ihe Ross pound, free samples of "switch- ~
electrical switches and batteryMoist wet weather does bring County Extension office at 614- grass" seed provided by the ,
operated toys.
·
with it the humidity needed b talc- 775-3200. This program is always O.DN.R. were grabbed up ral&gt;idJY •
The winner from the Alexander ing cured IObacco down to strip and a good source of technical informs- at the end of the meeting w1th a -:
Local School District is:
bale for market The 1992 Burley "h ion for a range cllllpics from the line still remaining. Another 1f0UP ~
• Kurt Nostrant of Alexander Tobacco marketipg season will Nationai.Economy to outlook for of those in"attendance seemed 10 : ·
Junior High School. Nostrani's begin on Monday, November 23. the commodity ml!rl&lt;ets (meat ani- leave the meeting with the determi- :~
nalion 10 do a better job inanaging ;.
project, entitled "Alex's Weather The September 1 estimated U.S. . mala and crops).
the
species that they abady know ::
Station," involves the development Burley production is forecast at
Attention vegetable growers!
how
10 grow (fescue, orchardgrass, :
. of a meteorology unit that would 711 million poOJnds, up 8 percent The Meigs/Washington county
bluegrass,
and clover). The nearly ~
·help students think like a scientist from last year. Many believe that grower meeting is scheduled for
80
panicipants
could bring about a .;
and take them through the scientif- the 1992 crop will sell on a Wednesday, December 9, fro~
.
majOr
change
in
the cattle produc- :·
ic process of collecting and inter- "Buyer's Market". Market proce· 9:30 Lm. • ·2:3Q p.m. at the Amm·
tion
in
our
~gion.
•
preting data.
dure will be very much like last can Legion Hall (Post 602) in
We have the potential to double ·~
Southern Ohio Coal Company is year. It is very important that you Racine. Speakers for the day .will
a mining subsidiary of Ohio Power establish a good relationship with include Bob Precheur, Sally Miller, our beef and dairy caUie nlimbers if ;.
Company, one ot seven electric the warehouse of your choice. I and Kelso Weasel from O.S.U. and manageme!lt systems can make ::
·
·
Carl Cantatuppi from Piketon them profitable. The increase in '\
utility companies in the American
Electric Power System. AEP is one
Research and Extension Center. numbers would certainly help ~
of the nation's largest consumers of
FQr more details or to mate lunch attract feedlots, stockyards, and •
~
coal.
·
reservations, please eall Hal Kneen slaughter facili~.
Ed Vollborn Is the Gallla •
at the Meigs County Extension
County Extension Agent, A1r1. ~
office (992-6696).
Satterfield promoted
•j
A special thanks to evetyone culture.

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Farm Flashes

One-third of Ohio's corn
crop has been harvested

~~r :::~~=;ff ~:u~~~

. CHESHIRE • lack Satterfield,
Jr., was recently promoted from
maintenance mechanic-A to maintenance supervisor in the. mainteIIII1CC department at ihe Ohio Valley Electric Corporation's Kyger
planL
........
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Satterfield JOIDed OVEC 10
1967 as a laborer in the labor
depltUIICIO•L In 1969 he transferred
to the 111111nrenance department IS a ·
maintenance helper and advanced
to maintenance mechanic-C the fol·
Jowin1 year. In 1972 he was~
moted to maintenance mcchaniC·B
and in 1983, to maintenance
methanic-A. Jack and his' wife,
Charlotte, realde in Pomeroy, and
he is the parent of two daughters:

Ponderosa crew to help needy Nov. 26

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Mason, Gallia, Meigs and surrounding COIUitics, !!pe!Cializiljg

•; ALBANY • For the seventh High School. Hughes plans to t.eaeh
. ~ ear in a row,. students in the developmentally handicapped stu·AJexander, Meigs Local and Vin- dents geography through a program
Jton County school districts will · titleil "Travel the U.S.A. (without
\benefit from special learning pro- ever leaving room 206!),"
~ects funded by Southern Ohio
• Jo Ann Hays of Rutland Ele(Coal Company's Meigs Division. mentary School. Hays' project,
The Meigs Division awarded more "Hands-On Math," will explor.;
~han $4,500 this year to fund 12 · math concepts by manual manipu'projects.
Jatioo of physical objects.
r, The winners were chosen from
. • Carolyn L. Smith of Middle·
;33 applications submitted by area port Elementary School. Smith's
~chers, up from 27 in 19,91.
__fquJt!t-gr~ . stude~~ .will partie!• According tO Dave Baker, pate 1n SCICOCe 8CIIV11les, read SCI·
,lluman resources manager for the ence books. and prep.ilre summary
Meigs Division Southern Ohio reports dunng a project she calls
~oal has contrib~ted over $28,SOO "Write About Science."
'f&gt;Jr the funding of 11 creative and
• S uzy Carpenter of Pomeroy
rnnovative learning JlCOjects during . Elemen!ary School. Carpenter •
lhe seven years of the proqram. plans to IOCre8se the self-esteem of
,.~is year's winners were selected sec:oo&lt;'grade st~~ts through study
.by a review committee consisting skdls and !"OIIvatlonal toolS:· The
of three Southern Ohio Coal students WJU also learn. Spamsh to
~mploy,ees and a representative help ihcm i~tcract with local high
(rom each school district. "This sch~ S!Bnish students.
~ear's selection process was the
luhe Randolph of Rutland
most diffiCult ever due to the over- Eleme!ltary School. Her program,
~I quality of the P.rojects." said "J:Ian,ds-On-Minds On,-Sciene~.·
;Baker. Winners ot 1992 Meigs wdlmv.olve students m .lear~mg
!!livision mini -grants from the ~ew sk11ls, under~tandmg ~~w
:&amp;feigs Local SchoOl District are:
1 1d~as and dcvelop10g a posu,ve
' • Vicki Hughes of Meigs Junior au1tudc to~ sc1ence.
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3,500,000 SAFE HOURS WORI(ED
WENDELL W. ALFORD
LEWIS A. AlLEN .
JOSEPH M. ANrAL; JR.
JOEF. ANZENBERGER
DAVID ARRINGTON
MICHAEL G. ARRINGTON
DAVID C. ATKINSON, JR
JERRY L. BAIN
GARY A. BALlARD
JOHN S. BARNEIT, JR
JOHN M. BEAVER
GARLAND E. BECH1LE

Di

troalfirm awards $4,500 tofund
f12
projects
for
area
students
.
? .

(From Sept. 17, 1982 thru Sept. 17, 1992) .
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tNew
glass shop opens in ~oint .Pleasant
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A RESPONSIBLE CARE COMPANY

~

~entia.a · · Section

November 15, 1992:

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GALLIPOLIS • The Ponderosa
Restaurant in Gallipolis will be
closed to the public on Thanksgiv·
ing
(Nov. 26}, but crew members will pepare, and deli-.
· meals 10 indigent famllics this year.
For many ~ the l'llint Creek
Baptist Church of Gallipolis has
had 10 carry this project alone, and
Ponderosa crew memben recog·
nizcd the need for thu valuable SCI'·
vice provided by the church members, and want to assist them in
their endeavor.

Dar.

JACK SATIERFIELD

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The restaurant crew will
'

pale, serve and deliver meals to ~
those in need. The management ;.
will be accepting referrals from •i
local churches, civic ~zations '•
and law enforcement onK:ials.
:•
Organizations with referrals ;;
should contact Ponderosa 1111111gers ~
at 446-1,101 between 9 a.m. and 9 .
p.m. Monday through Friday.
i
Groups or individuals wishing '.
to assist in the delivery of meals :
should also contact restaurant offl· :
cials.
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Pomeroy-lllddleport-Galllpolla, OH Point fll1811nt,

Page •02--Sunday 11miS-Sentlnel

lP eruvian gov~rnment
'

• LIMA, Peru (AP) - A small
group of army officers tried to
seize army headquarters and the
national palace in a plot to kill
President Alberto Fuj1mori early
Friday, but the auempt f1zzled, the
'government said. ·
About 250 loyalist soldiers and
1S annored personnel carriers were
deployed in front of the government palace to prevent the CO!Jp,
then withdrawn at dawn, witnesses
said. By afternoon activity on the
streets of the capital was normal.
The auempt may have been precipitated by a decree published Friday that gives Fujimori control
over the firing and assignment of
all military Officers above the rank
of lieutenant Previously,. officers
could be removed only at retirement age or for misconducL
A government statement said

.

.

the military plott~s. led by tbree
retired generals. had been ~
and would lie tried immediately .
'There was no immediate word on
how many soldiers or units. might
have been involved.
The retired commanders
charged with leading the revolt .
deny uy alternpliO overthrow the
government, and an op~sitlon
member called it a farce mtended
to boost Fujimori 's standing a
week before e~tions.
.
Fujimori gave a ·detailed
descrijllion of the aborted coup in a
seven-minute speech ·broadcast
nationwide late Friday.
He said coup '!cadets- mainly
retired militacy officers- met late
ThurSday to plan 10 assassinate him
and to capture the head of the
anny, Nicolas de Bari Hennoza. ·
Retired generals Jaime Salinas
Sedo, Jose Pastor Vives and Luis

wv

NOvember 15,1882

blocks ·coup attempt

Palomino Rodriluez wm: ~
as conspirators, alona with 11111y
commuder Marcos Zarlt.o Roca,
who tbe 1wement uicl - lllldu
in~OII for drv&amp; IJ1!ffickioJ.
M&amp;Jor Hugo Ormeno, second.
in-Command of tbe military police
in c~ge of..._ security, took
35 men and auempeed 10 enter the
palace at 3 am., tbe hour the palace
guard changed, Fujimori said.
He said the I:OUP attempt failed .
because 110 0111et aoldiers joined iL .
But Pasi« Vivca insisted lhere
was no coup attempl. .
..
"This 11 madness," he told
reponm befOJe being detained by
police. "Both the palice ud the
army headquarters are surrounded

bY. massive security agaillst which
a group of officers would have
been able to do ab!;.olutely noth·
ing."

It was not immediately clear
how many otben were taken into
custo4y, but at leait aome of the
retired geaeqJs wm: arreiiCd.
"It's I faree, I moc:kery 10 boost
Fujlmori's JIIIDdings on thC eve or
the elections," said Jorge Del
Castlllo, a former conaressmu
whose /..prista party is boycotting
the elecuons, claiming they will
merely serve to legitimize a dicta·
10
~F
·: . 'dhe was warned of
UJJIIIOR Sill
the plot beforehand, and secretly
left the palace and arranged to trap
the plouers.
"The most importailt thing the
authors of this mad adventure
achieved was to come out of their
discreet anonymity," Fujimori·
said. "This occurrence would be
much less imporlillt than it seems
if we weren't in an electoral process, which some SCCI9J'S are trying

to i*bm\1. all COlli..,

Fujimori laid the coup attempt
tried 10 block the Nov. 22 elections
of a COOiliiUCitt
that will
replace the COngress FuJunori shut
down in April.
Experts on tbe l'mlviiD military
said there was a jJerception that
Fujimori had crespasaed on the tra·
ditional autonomy of the aimed
forces.
Pastor Vives, Del Castillo IDd
diplomatic soureea said the third
general, Jaime Salinas, was stiU in
the United States. This contradicts
a claim by Fujimori that all alleged
coup leaden had been~
Fujimori ltppalelttly wu warned
of the plot duriag 1 three-hour
' meedng with
and left
the preSidential palau in central
Lima -"out 3 am. lllllkr the guard
ofloyal.troops.
·
Reporters SJ w his motorcade
. leaving the palau and followed it
to anny headquarten in the suburb

-bJx

-r omcm

J
t •
. · •
•
•'
1e . SID says Russian economy Improving ~F~~~~~ediOthewhO

V.

.

MOSCOW (AP) - President refonns, which have 1¢ to inflation
Boris Yeltsin wid leading industri- · of more than 1,000 percent, have
alists Saturday the ·ecpnomy is vowed to seek Yeltsin's ouster,
showing signs of imprOvement, but change his Cabinet, and block a
warned a¥ainst hard-liners who renewal of his power to appoint
want to ' sow panic and destroy ministers and rule by decree.
A hard-line lawmaker caused a
refonns," news agencies reported.
furor
on Friday I?)' accusing Yeltsin
"The ftrst signs of chanlle for
the better, albeit small ones,' have of planning 10 disaolve the parliaappeared in the economy, Yeltsin ment and declare emergency rule.
Yeltsin's spokesman, Vyach·
Jold members of the Russian Union
of Induslrialists and Entrepreneurs. eslav Kostikov, said lawmaker Iona
The industrialists ~ suppon of Andronov's statement represented
Yeltsin could be crucial when the "the highest degree of hysterics to
Communist-dominated Congress of which certain parliamentary circles
.
People's Deputies convenes on have fallen prey.''
But
Parliamentary
speaker
Rus·
Dec, I.
Hard-liners opposed to the

Ian Khasblilatov said Saiurday any ·grain, compared with 97 million
attempt by Yeltsin 10 inlroduce a tons last year. That means Russia
state of emergency without law- will have 10 import only 7 mi~ion
makers' approval would be consid- to 9 million tans of grain, he saiil.
ered high treason, the Interfax news
agency repolled.
~NSWIRS TO
Yeltsin said that in ~ past year
Russia's cash shortalle has .been
SCRAM-LETS
overcome and I rise ID industrial
DEFINE
My husband and lllllnM!d to allow
production was visible, the ITAROUrselves
only to lmolie OUIIide lhe
UPHOLD
Tass and lnterfax news agencies
house,
The
only trouble with that 1a
FUTILE
reported.
.
~·re
gettlng
tired of~ televi·
REPOSE
However, he said "tlie spell of
&amp;1011 ,lhrouglllhe PATIO
RSI
HOLDER
storms and squalls hasn't passed
. QUAKER
yet."
'
PATIO DOORS
He said this year's harvest
amounted to 118 million tons of

SUNDAY

card for misusing tho ·word
.'kudos.,,
•'I g01 a nice letter b~k from
her," Ms. Yocom said.

i,OOO members.

Jn return for annual dues,
SPELLers also receive a monthly
newsleuer.
"People write in to the. newslet··•
ter 'and [1:11 of the goofs they have
noticed," said Ms. Yocom, a piano
teacher in the suburb of Hilltop.·
'
"J even sent a correction to lhe
CHESTER· The Ken Amsbary
newsletter once. J believe they used
Chapter
of the Isaac Walton
an adverb instead of ID adjective.''
League,
Scout
Camp Road, near
William S. Penn, SPELL vice
Chesler,
will
hold
a slug shoot on
president, said the society that
Sunday
at
I
p.m.
Shoots
will also
"defends what's left of the English
be
held
Nov.
22
and
29.
language ~ · was started in 1980.
Various bench and free hand
Penn, a retired professor who
shoots
will be beld for' shotgun slug
lives in the San Francisco area, also
matches
(open sights and scopes
sends at least one goof card a week.
"I just send a card off to the will not be shot in the same class).
reporter that says, 'Tut-tut. Clean · · Free-hand 22-riflc matches will
also be held with various prizes of
up your act.'"
Ms. Yocom said most people money, turkey, bacon and sausage
to be given away. Awards for sec·
are graleful for the corrections. .
She sent syndicated newspaper ond places wiU be in matches of 25
columnist Ellen Goodman a goof shoots.

ACROSS

Slug shoots slated

t,Actor Whitaker
iPamphlet
12 Bedroom Items
17 WI HI am or John
21 Poker play
22 lndlln prince
23 Pope's cape
24 Roman road
25 Sun god
28 A Martin
28 Peeled
30 Characteristics
32 AI i11 as

33 "Nightm•e"

Street
35 Altitude
~7 "The Sun Alao
39 "MOd Squad"
character
40 Type ot'crosa
41 Printer's measure
43 Oail
45 Ptrl)lex; harass
47 Tellurium symbol

~

SENTRAS, MAXIMAS AND TRUCKS IN STOCK

..

48 Veaael
49
52
54
56
57

Poker stakes
Coneplracy
Wanders .
F11ne Tree State
Cake mix
sil HeBrlng organs
61 Irritate
62 Principal
63 Unemployed
64 Alternative word
66 Inlet
67 Washington bill
68 Invoice word
69 Bridget Fonda's
dad: lnlts.
7t " - H11d"
72 Encourage
74 Frolics
76 Foray
77 Hawaiian wreath
78 Teutonic deity
79 Baseball throw
81 Sight organ
82 Trade lor money
83 "For Pate's - ' '
84 Mint
85 Short steep
87 Builds
89 Wading bird
90 Playful tricks

NISSAN MOTOR COR~.- In U.S.A.4003
11H1 SOUYH IIIGUIIOA IT. • CAliON, CAW. ttt.. •

:U-IT-:U
Tt\~

ICJICIW
... ·0,· lOT?

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(IIJ) IU·I111

L.JfiCN I"AYMINT 01 AMOUNt ITA TID lllOW '01 fH(
AC.CX)I..INJ Cf NIUNotMOTOI ~fiQHIN t.I.S.A. ,
::;.~~ ~' 10 MlltMAHDIII DOCt*.

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OAft 09/2f/92

-T~

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ICIICMI

1077

CIH-

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3110.00

NO GIMMICKS
YOU SEE
THE INVOICE

IQQI

" FOR CUSTOMER SA'TISFACTION

•

92 Winter vehicle

94 "-.Trek"
95 Paid attention
96 "Home on the
97 Ate to lose
weight
99 Baseball stat
100 U.S. engln'(1820-87)
101 War god
102 God ot love
103 Hog
105 Hasten briskly
107 "Magnum, - ..
109 " - I Can"
· 1 10 Facial expression
111 Giver of gilt
113 Jog
1 14 Baker's product
115 Grad-to-be
·116 Kind ol .l ock .
1 17 Hockey great
118Bue
120 Neon symbol
121 F8rm building
122 Evaluate
123 Unyielding
courage
124 Shape
126 Thinly scattered
128 Dinnerware piece
130 Domains
132 Cravats
134 A~uatlc mammal
' 135 Camara part ,
136 FuHIII
137 Slumber
139 River duck
141 That man
142 Dine
143 Morsels
145 Entanglement
147 Bound
149 L.A. lootballar
152 Commerc:lal
153 Standards ol
pertectlqn
155 Groups ot three
157 Country of Asia
159 "Let It - "
160 Scorch
182 Sedate ,
164 k:elandlc writings
168 Shore bird
168 Sea eagles
169 Ctens

wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolll, OH--Polnt

Catholic -..
catechism .
revised
~

PARIS (AP)- After !DDre than
six years of work, the Roman
Catholic Church has completed its
first new catechism in four ceo~
turies.
The 67.6-page document is
intended as a basic guide on'Uipicl
ranging from angels and hell to.
abortion and homosexuality.
.Th'e work, labored over lJZ
3,000 bishops, is to be formal!!:
presen~ in Paris on Monday aiiit
put on Sale Wednesday.
'
The universal cateellism for
world's 900 million Cat)lolics
appearing first in French, theil ,.
Italian and Spuish in
Next year, it will be publiallocl
English ud German and
in Latin, considered tile chu(dl
officiallanguage.
·
:
Some samples of the casrhiqt
include:
'
.,..
Abortion: "Human life DIDit it
respected and ptorected aba:almetr
from the moment ·of coJ'IIlOllllcl!l ...
Cooperation in an abortion il pt!!l•
·ished by ... excommuoicatbl.' •
Heaven: "The ultimaiC cad lllld
the realization of !he dcepeflll,ilpoe
of man, the state of suprea~e ll!)jl
definitive happiness."
i:.
Hell: " .The state of definitive .
auto-eXclusion of coriumJI!IOII with
God and with the blessed:"
·
Homosexuality: ••Acts or 1\oma;.:
sexuality are intnnsically dipolull;:
contrary to nat11ral law .. ; B11 ~,
homosexuals should be· receive§.;
with respect, compassion and dell: ..
cacy. We-shall a~oid all signs of
unjust discriminption againtt .

=:

1
§i

them.' '

PUZZLE~

,.
••

170 Acts
171 Lawmaking body

DOWN
1 Golf cry
2 Semi-precious
slone
3 C()fl(;8rnlng
4 Terminate
5 Al)lle8r
6 Spoor
7 Roosevelt ID
8 Type of music
9 Slightly open
10 South American
Indian
11 Essays
12 Beholdl
13 TV's Carney
14 Clayey earth
15 Folds
16 Paris's river
. 17 Towel Insignia
18 Guido's low nota
19 Keep
20 Theater group
27- tide
29 ·Naval ships
31 Curtis ID
34 Courage
36 River In Africa
38 European !Inches
40 Lean
42 Apportion
44 Bellow
46,Story
48 Declared
49 Dwell; sojourn
50 Lo-t point
51 Selenium symbol
53 Stumble ·
55 Old pronoun
56 Servant
58 Givens and
Williams
6o Transaction
62 Post
65 Mr. Buttons
68 Buddies
69 Black tea
70 Demon
72 Similar
73 Nervous anxiety
75 Altlrmatlve vote
76 Recant; disavow
77 'Gre1181l8
79 Melodies

80 Abnormal sounds
trom the chest
82 Marks lett by
wounds
83 Run-down
84 Walking sticks
88 Fondle
88 Summer: Fr.
89 VItal organ
90 Supplicates
91 More unusual
93 Behavior
95 "Hogan's - "
97 Fallin drops

-"
... "

98N102 Gaelic
104 Links game
106Vase ·
107 Pocketbook
108 Interior
110 Opening In fence
·11 1 Boring
Instruments
112-beer
114 Exchange goods
without money
116 Chapeaus
117 Openings
1,19 Court order
121 A washing
122 Rage
123 Earth goddess
125 Encounter
· 127 italian river
128 Gratify
129 " - ol the Pack "
130 Spin
131 Scorched
133 Go by water
136 Frock
138 Sell-esteem
140 Jumps
· 143 Davis ID
144 Strike hard
146 Mine vein
148 Distribute
150 Encourage
151 Simple
153 Fed. agcy.
154 Pose tor portrait
156 Moumlul
15il Offspring
161 Article
163 Susskind ID
185 Struthers ID
167 Richmond's st.

'

8

.
..•

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•

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..."

...

1-

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Guywl U.. Gitto Alo Wdlna

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~

ED. 1341, SUI Por lin. Be 11 YIL UnloW Co. (102) 131·
0815.

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No huntinG on our p; ;

llo...., DiGclo

Sollora

lion PrvHitt.

IIIII Ul'

Nollce no '"'ntlna or tr

lng
11

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on the Lowlio Form, CW.

PGI'- Fwrw. wv. ..,._ .,...

.... ... 'loki.

. " PEACEFUL MARCH- Demonstratori hold
, a banner during a march In Bonn, Saturday, In
. the second huge demonstration within a week
~frolestina neo-Nazi violence, anti-semitism and

plans to tighten 111ylum laws. The banner depicts
a dove of peace crushing a 5Wastlka • The sen. tence on the poster reads: ''Stop the entry of the
fourth reich." (AP Photo)

for tolerance
..Protestors demonstrate
see!'ers:
.

.

••
· ·BONN, Germany (AP) - . for asylum
Last Sunday, 350,000 people
About 150,000 people marched
rallied
in Berlin at a 11overnment·
peacefully through Bonn today in
sponsored
demonsttauon that was
· t~t;e ~econd huge demonstration
W
J.thm a week to prote~t nco-Nazi \lisrupted by several hundred leftist
V.Jolence, anti-Semitism and plans radicals who hurled eggs at Presi·
dent Richard von Weizsaecker.
tc)'tighlen asylum laws.
There was no trouble at today's
·:Foreigners joined the mostly
derman crowd that carried signs protest, although several hundred
and banners denouncing three leftist were in the crowd, estimated
.months o~ vinually daily attacks by by organizers at about 150,000.
The marchers, many wearing ·
;neo-Naus and other rightist
~~tremists on foreigners and homes

headbands reading "Nazis out,"
held banners ~jecting government
plans to change the constitutional
guarantee of political asylum. A
big red banner showed a fist
smashing through a Nazi swastika.
The demonstration was staged
by a collection of peace and church
groups, labor umons and-human
rights organizations . Man-y
protesters were students and came
from across Oennany.

..

~

:·D ealers, prostitutes stay out;
neighborhood fighting back
By MITCH WEISS
Associated Press Writer
TOLEDO - Ray Simoni was
angry. Prostitutes and drug dealers
had taken over his neighborhood.
Prostitutes were having sex with
customers in front of children.
Women who weren't prostitutes
were being solicited as they wallced
down the streeL
Simoni, SO, watched people
from the suburbs drive up m their
BMW and Mercedes cars to buy
sex and drugs, then go home to
their families.
11 At night, there were drive-by
shootings as pimps and dealers

fought over turf, Condoms and
drug needles were tossed in the
streets.
.
It was all happening in full view
of residenis in the north-side neighborhood every day and night
Simoni formed a citizens gmup,
the North Corridor ,Coalition, 10 do
something about it ·
"I just go_t fed up," he said.
"Every day, I'd see these businessmen from affluent areas coming
into our neighborhood, picking up
these women, buying drugs, doing
things they wouldn't tolerate in'
their own neighborhoods. It was
ridiculous.''

Simoni went door-to-door, talk·
ing to neighbors. Many said they
would help.
The group began meeting reguIarly. Residents marched to the
city's municipal building twice
dliring the summer to ask lhe City
Council for more police protection.
Members of the group took
down license plate numbers and
videotape4 prostitutes and their
customers. They gave the information to police.
The city responded. Under a
police program that started in
September, officers are seizing the
cars of prostitutes' customers they
arrest.
.
The citizens group, which has
more than 300 members, has a new
weapon of its own. It tries to
embarrass customers who are
arrested by circulating fliers reveal'
jog
their name, address, telephone
Congress 10 take a separate vote on
number
and status of their case.
an appropriation biii item.
.
Spokeswoman
Mary Baumgart·
Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, called
ncr
said
the
fliers
are being passed
a balanced budget amendment '.'a
out
in
the
city
and
at neighborhood
political gimmick supported by two
presidents who had no specifics or meetings.
The gmup circulated fliers with
real plans for dealing with the
the
names of eight men arrested
deficit." Oilier objectors noted thal
l~st
month for trying to solicit
it would be years before such· an
police
officers who posed as prosti·
amendment could take effect; they
tutes. Six of the eight lived outside
called it a co)i-out.
On the other hand, Ernest Jim the Fity; one lived in the exclusive
Istook, R-Okla., called a vole on an subUrb of Wacerville.
"We believe that if we want to
amendment "the best indication of
whether the new freshman class is eliminate the problem, we have to
serious about fundamental eliminate the demand," said Joey
refonn." And a line-item veto, he Crawford, a community organizer.
Prostitutes and drug dealers
said, is "the best line of defense
againstporkbarrelspending."
come to the north side because it's
"We have to make a mark on near Interstate 280. They also
the budget deficit, but we've got to believe Jli:Ople in the community
do it in a way that does not stop .won't f1ght back, Ms. Crawford
economic growth,'' said Don John- said.
"But they're wrong about that,"
son, D' &lt;la., in words that echo
she sai.d.
Clinton's.
The group has been using as
Some othez approaches:
· · -Henry l!onilll, R-Texas, pro- guidance a book titled "Fighting
posed tying congressional pay to Back," written by Michael Levine,
congressional success in fighting a former Drug Enforcement Agendeficits. He'd give Congress five cy officer. It is a primer for groups
years 10 slice the deficit in half, and trying to fight crime.
S1moni said residents learned
slash congressional pay that much
how
to find out where customers
if it fails.
live
by
running checks on their
-Nathan Deal, D-Ga., said he
license
pbites.
In one survey, they
would suppon the line-item veto
found
that
85
~t
of the people
with the caveat that a president
coming
to
the
north
side for sex
could use it only if he submits a
and
drugs
were
from
"so-called
balanced budget 10 Congr11ss ~areas,"
he
said
.
.
something that has not happened
Ms. Crawford sees irony in the
for years.
.
·statistics.
"These are the same peo-Joseph Knollenberg, R-Mich.,
ple
that
look
do\vn on these neighsaid. he wants 10 jJCt a handle on
borhoods,
who
say, 'How can you
spending, even if It meus voting
live
there?"'
against projects that would help his
She said some people in affluent
state. "I don't see my role as one
neighborhoods
have criticized the
of bringing pork back to Michigan,
group's
efforts
by calling the
but as holding the pork from going
offenses
victimless
crime.
out," he said.
"Prostitutes
are
victims. The
As for taxes, these new lawmakresidents
are
victims,''
Ms. Crawers are singularly cool about raising
ford
·said.
"I
don't
catc
ir you're
them.
nine
months'
pregnant,.
60
years
"I have pledged in writing that I
old,
pushing
your
baby
carriage
will not support any tax increase,''
said Milce Crapo, R-ldaho, a Har· down the street, there are guys
vard-edocated lawyer. "The prob- ' driving through this neighborhood
lem is not under-taxation, the prob- all the time just s~inll and asking you, 'How much? It sa humilIem is over-sJJ!Cndin&amp;."
But Martin Meehan, D- Mass., is iating kind of thing."
One poslitute was,kiUed in July
not so dogmatic.
by
a man police say was stalking
"If it would reduce the deficit,
or provide money for infrastruc· C:titutes. Other prostitutes have
beaten and robbed.
' ture, I would favor an increase in
Ms. Crawford said \)Oiice have
the gasoline tax, cigarette tax and
alcohol taX, as well as a tax on · been making progress m stopping
those things that hurt the environ· crime in the area, l!ut more needs to
be done.
ment," he said.

They're death on the deficit,
but cool on new taxes
WASHINGTON (AP) - If the
llO men and women who will take
their seats as new congressmen
next January are agreed on anything, it seems'' IO be a detennina·
lion to fight the deficit
But they're not eager to do so
by raising taxc;s. If tax they must,
they say, they would tax the rich
fusL
By and large, in home state
interviews with The AP. the new
lawmakerS seem willing to listen 10
the economic ideas tliat helped
elect Bill Clinton.
'
"He is the person who ha~ a
mandate," said Democrat Melvin
Watt of North Carolina.
But the new congressmenone of 1/lC biggest freshman classes
ever, one fourth of the House-·
have ideas of their own, 100.
In addition:
-They
.somewhat sympa·
thetic toward giving Clinton the
ability to veto individual items in
an appropriations bill.
- They are deeply divided over
amending the Constitution to
require Congress to pasa only bal·
anced budgets except in dire emergencies.' That proposal fell nine
votes short of the required twothirds House majority last June. .
-The theme that resounds is
this: They 5eem determin~ ':0 do
something about the def1cu -:which rear,hed a record $290 bli·
lion last year and was the 23rd consecutive annual 'deficit.
•'Every decision we make has ~
take into consideration the defic1~
and debt,". said Rep.-elect Karan
English of Arlzpna, a Conner ~te
senator. "I don't. have a plan lilce
Clinton has, but every waking
moment should go to plan on the
deficit.' '
Another Arizonan, Democrat
Sam Coopersmith, said, "People,
afler seeing 12 years of borrow IDd
spend, have finally linked the
deficit with their job," . .
Some dissent. Earl H1lliard, DAla., ranking priorities on a sc~e
of one to 10, put deficit reducuon
. atsix. "I've got double di~t un~ployment in my district,' he lll!'d•
and gave greater urgency to .JOb
creation health care, educatton;
fighting drugs and crime.
Some of those who oppos~ a
line-item veto would go along w1th
a halfway measure favqred by
House Speaker Tom Foley "enhanced recision," throuj!h
which a president could requtre

are

'""

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Rio Orondo, Ohio 114-24Nt52.
llonoyl114-3111-4658,
eo.toe lull tlmo ouctlan0oo1
•........ ' bondod ...... 01 .HolD Wontocl: Nood To K,_
Ohio &amp; ~ Vlrgln!O, 304-131' IDle Mcountlng, Bookkup
lng, Laluo. Apply lo: CLA 248
Z2ll Of 131'2128.
elo Galllpollo Dolly T~buno, 12'1
Third ,.•.,.... Clolll_.· OH
9 Wanted to Buy
45131.
....... •

3 Announcemlnll

.

;:

See Amwer to Puzzle on .P age .C-4

INVOICE SALE ON ALL NISSAN
·

-

'

Grammarian fights word by wo_rd
COLUMBUS, (AP) - Grammarians are using "goor• cards to
try to save the English language
word by word.
Sally Yocom, a member of the
Society for the Preservation of
English Language and Literature,
sends out a card whenever she sees
· or hears incorrect grammar.
That's at least once a week.
" I have always been interested
in proper English," · said Ms.
Yocom, 61. "More people should
be concerned about the misuses of
the language.''
11!e cards have space Ill explain
a mistake and offer a correction.
They are soot to newspaper
rcponen, magazine writers. people ·
1.wlio appear on television and anyone else who uses the language
incorrectly.
SPELL, an international nonprofit grammar watchdog group,
provides the cards to its nearly

. Two weeks ago Fujimori,
was elected in 1990, named a new
general10 head the tank division u
part of a lhalte-up or t)Je military
command that analysts said had
cauaed di!icontenL

November 15, 1992

~

."""''

·~

·-

.";

('

... ~ . . . •.

' "''" '

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

..

~. -

. . ' . ,. .......
·

Glvaawa.Y.

4

2 bill &amp; whi" male colo to
owoy, 1 &amp; I moniM old,

2 kltt•ns, 4 month old, bam or

oulaldo colo, Mohhy. o30U1117851.
3 llonth . · Old Small Doaa,
Dooooratly Neod Homol 514-4{e:
488?.

5 PIIPPI• 111 female, 8 wkl old.

304.ns.ssstl.
1~

aooglo puppleo, :J04.451.
.

PuJit&gt;y, Eokimo Spitz, 4 _,..,.

,old, IOmala, to good homo, 304882-'~432·

'
Good Homo: llola 8 llonlh
Olcl Dog, Bonlor Colle &amp;
t.obrodor lllxod. llllc:tl Wllh

To

Whllollortlngo.l14-4-17.

TV &amp; lrMZor !Of pono, do no1
Work, :J04.675-371t.
.

Fow 7 wk old port SlomoH ldl·
..... 2 blk ' giay, 304-17U340.
6 Lost&amp; Found
Found: kep on Second StrMt,
Pame~oy. S1hardly, . Now. 7th;
114-m-6114 to ldontlly.

IIIIo 8t-or col 3JM-11S.IUS.
Point
- · · zoo
WANTED: F....Time Pooltlon
Avollabto AI A Comntunlly
~rII -tleoWllhIn
00..
aou
. Houro: 11 P.M...,30
A.ll. Sun -~ 2 -&amp;ur
WWI.Iy ·Stoff -fng· Or a.
01-ao . llchodu~ . Hl~h
-;;;;j;j;i;:""H;;;;;";Qid&amp;-ie; Hood two poroono, oppro•. 10 so- llo9M. Volld Driver o
UcenM, 1fvM YMI'I Driving
Comllloto
Hoorooh!&gt;id Or Eotot•l
Any ~po Of F....,huro, •yo, cloon... p oncl point In tire , Expo-.
Good , Driving
App&amp;lancM, AnUque•a. Etc. Alao lob- Appty In poroon ot 121 Mot~ R-.1, Goacl Communlcotlon
AVIlla~! 114-245- bln'j, lloiMrOy. '
And
Oopnlzotlon
Slclllo,
Punctual
Aild
Alllo
To
Work
M
Noodocl: 100 "-lo To Looo ·Part 01 A Tooow Requkocl; b·
WoiQhl - · No Wll Powor - - Working With 1'11000o
I Or 10 Ft. Wide Houa1 Tl'llller Neeaed.
Brend New, 100'.4
With - ..... And
3Q' Long. - W t l 5.
Notu7~~~ Gaurantood. Cal OO..Iopmontot
Dlaobllltloo
3
Prelotrld. ~: SS.OO Mr, To
-Icon Flyer tralno, porg &amp; ~
·
IOCenorl• 304-171-1712.
Needell: ,.....;M1 to cleln alftlll Stort. R - To Coclllo
Boirar, P.O. 11o1! 104, .tockaon
Don' Junk II Sol U. Your u
oHico
In
Hovon
•
1 dly ott Ul40. Deadline For Ap! •
- · por-. Call an T..odoy HoY.
Wortdng IIIIo! Appllonc.,.,
17 - n 12:00 &amp; 3:00. 304- ptlowtta: 11120112. Equll Oppcir.
lunlty Emptoyw.
eo.o,
TV'e
A•~•r•torw, 8824123
Froo!"ro1 YCA'a, llloiowavoa, 1::-::-::--::':-:--:-,-,---Air 1.i0&lt;1Gillotwra, Gullal Ampo, O.T.R. llotbod d~vora W11ntocl, 14
Business
Ela.114-216-1231.
goacl ':,"A, homo - - .
frtnpe,
581-ZO!l ·
Training
Good _.t triodrrll. Coli 814PARK RANGERS
Rotnoln
NowiiiSouthoootom
,.114-571111:-::--:
• ..,
· --::--..,...,,..,-- 081111
W1rden1,
S.c:urity Buotnooo Collap, Spring Volloy .
Uood Mobllo """'"· Call 114- llllnlononco• Etc, No Exp.
441-0tla.
•or info Call 21i- Ploza. Call Todoy, 814-448-431711
111.._1 Ext. 1710 I A.M. To I Rog.l90.05-t2J4B.
W.IUd To lluy: .J ...k Autoo P.ll. 1 Payo.
With Or WlthoUI llol- Call
15
Scllools &amp;
Llny u..tr. 114 3U 1301.
Poot·n - LPN 8 Hr Wook Pluo
Instruction
Call-ln. Nollly: Po&lt;othy " - ·
Top Poicl: All Old U.S. 114-146-2213.
cotna,- Rlnae. S - Colna,
Holiy'o Oolly'o 11-lng Sluclio
PORTRAIT 8TUOIO HIRING
will bogln . winter Colao. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
111 - A - Qolllpollo.
WILL TRAIN
Novemboi 21. Call ,_ 1o ragt.
FTIPT
. ter, 814-112·2134.
.
W.nlod to bur. uood rlcllng Seaeon~l Applk:anta
WtlcotM
mc•••a. Calt I Lni.· 5 p.m., Loom
POrtooh
Slucllo 18 Wanted to Do
lion. • let.114-ZM-1410.
Oporotloow Wllh Our Succontul

Fat-·

--oy.

Employment Serv1ces

Horae lliaoing on St... AOUio
211'
R814-441l.ats4.
o - CrHk 448-8427,

mil-.

Jl: :&amp;r.'lul

67!1-1288.

I port

Sporte corn1p ~ ndel.t ·to Itt...
I wotlo Honilon H!;h bnblbotl go-. Pild "' ,.._
ortlclo, ptuo
111101 ....
aood kitowttd. Of . . . ....
c-ot lllftdJ KMrno E - .

COmpany. Ful And Part-Tim•
PMIIoM AVIIIable. R11111
IPromol~l BaMd On Pertor·

Anen~Uont:

Snlng I Mending,

114-441-1134.

'

EKp. Holplul, Not Nee. II Certlllocl Nu..tng Auiatont
Vou Love thldren, Are People IMklng to e~r• for •kl•rty or
Orlontod &amp; Prolwolonal, You hanplcoppod In your ""'""·
Con Be Suo-lui With PCA. day• or 1h1moon1, Mlddlt..,.,
Pel Training, lenefhs For Full Rutland, or PCNnaroy area; &amp;1...
'
Time. PIIIIM Bring Driver~ 992·5430.
Ucen•, Proof Of Auto In· Do you nHd your houM
au,.nc• a ~ S.C. Card To In·
eltane(l tor tha holldaye? It'•
l.,..low. Call Or Arol&gt;iy In P.,..n 1e1m
work. &amp;14--317·7'133 or 317lion 10-4:00 At K'lliot Portnolt
lliiDCO.

· 114-

11 Help Wanted
lool: molo Booglo~ bloc\ and 'AVOII"ALLAREASIShoroyour
whll~ b""'n ~~~- h Orovo t.lmo wnh ... You'll ton ,._
Rd., utlond; 114' 2-2738.
-pony. 1--1351.
10 phono coli- nOoclod ,_,
7
Yard Sale
- - - - - - - - wiH train, lor Point Pi000111t Studio, 115 Uppor Rlvor Ad, Bt.. 0415.
448-4455. EOE.
- - - · 304-87S-6111.
E&amp; R TREE ·sERVICE. Toooing,
Applclllona .,. now ~
Proporty /Cu,.tty Uconood Trlmml~, TrH Remov11, Hildge
toUn lor pool limo nu..tng . Gallipolis
lluot ... ovoiloloio lor oil iltlfto. Aglnt: lluot - Compony Ro- Trimmlhg. FrH Eatim1t11l' tf4&amp; VIcinity
Nume lldl ciiM will lie oHilnld qukwnlnl .. s.nd RMUml To: 367·7!15TAftor•p.m,
w/ omplofmonl. .._ ot Bor CLA 241, elo Gallipolis G110rgH Pon•bl• S.wmlll don't
ALL Yonl Soloo lluat Bo Poid In -oy llinlna ' ROhibllloTribut"'!'r 8215 Third Avenue, hau1 Ktir loge to the mlll iult
Advonoo. DEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m. tlon Cenlor, :1179 Rocklprlngo
polio, "" 45131.
coli 3 75·1~57.
IM cloy be- IM ocl 1o 1o run. Rd. -.... Ohio. Ho piiOI10
SOCIAL
WORK
POSinON:
Sunday odltlon • 2:00 p.m. aollo,-..EOE.
·
Miss .P eull't D1y Clre Center 1
Program Coordln11ar Poaltlan
frldiJ. - y ocllllon • 2:00
West Ot HMC On Jackaon
AVON I AI - o I Shlotoy Available For Two Residential Block
p.m. Saturday.
Plko ll.f 6 A.ll. -5:30 P.M. II
Proaramt For People With Man- Quality And Experi1nc1 It The
Spoeoa, HW15-1421..
llotordotlon And DovolopConcern For Your Child's
EARN IIQ IIIICKS FOR tot
montll Dloolllillleo In Galllo 11
Care.
Call Us For A Vlalt. lnflnt
CHRIITIIAS
CountY, Ohio. RooponolbllMioo IToddlerw
614--446-&amp;Ul P.....
Pomeroy,
Sell Mon. l14 ... 3351.
ineludii TM Doy ·To -!loy Su- chooloro /School
Ago 114-448pervlelon Of The Programs. 8224.
Middleport
Mull Have One ·Year Ex·
porto- And A Four •YNr Po&amp; VICinity
NOTICE
_In AHumon hMcoo Flold. Wo likln, cut l wrop door. S30. a
All Yon! Soleo Bo Pold In
'lolltl Drlvlna Roquirod. $35. Crawlordo a~, ......
.......... Ooldlno: 1:00llm the
.
Lin br Be Willing To Uraon, WV ~J5..
Eooy
·
Exoollont
Poyl
»
ciiiJ bolon tM oct lo lo 010, - P M - A I - . Call R-IO To Within 30 llllolo /30
Troo
topping
&amp;
t~mmlng
u.
Sundly oclft..... 1:CIIIpm Foldoy, Toll F-, ~ Ext. lllnuloo 01 Glllpolia, Ohio.
llondoy
ociMion IO:OOO.m. 313.
Floxlblo Hoora. Uborot hnoiM perience, tria Htimat•, 304SoUdoy.
Po~looy: $18,000 /Yoor 8D5-3488.
Pl
..1 ::::; lng On Ex ......nco. Will Po BobyaiUing My Home.
Gorop Mlo, lolo o1 clotMa,
All· """' toni lluot Bo Pool D1ya, Evenlnga, WHkanda,
ovwy dor, 3:Yp ....:00pm.
By 11120/V2. Sind
School Di~rlet Or loc11
Down RI.Tio I~ 01-o 'N
Rooumo To Ceclllo Bokor, P.O. Graen
Stotlon, rlghl on s._ Ron Rd,
llol!104, Jockoon, OH 4584G. E· Are1, 614-446-1955.
quol Opporunhy Employer.
112m1., ttouoo on loft wtth o olgn;
Will
do baby,altllng; ax.

r.ur.

·-

perlenced, certlf td d1y care
provldar, call anytlm1 614·H2·

SOCIAL WORKER

PiooontNu..tng
Hll -focllhy,
· A 201
·loci 2861.
Stdilod
to SHk·
lngA lclolol - T o Join Our Will do hou•• ci11nlng, axExlotlrlg Boolol Sorvlce Tum. porloncocl, 304-875·7115,
lluot lie
Or Bo In Tho
Pr- 01 Pnoporlng For Soclol WIU do weekly houMcle~nlng,

-or u.W.,
· 11 a 17,nln
1u1 - " ' 11112. 1n
• atalnli. Nut ••
U.L TIN Bom;-.-.

Lie-

Long •Tiflll
A Piuo. Soncl
Rou- To: hncly Ruggl•, SoWork

In Memory

2

'

Coro

---·wlth=

IN MEMORY
OF THE
BIRTHDAYS
OF
MARGARET
EICHINGER

... .,....•ator_,_or
Ifill• lfw.in

to

·1317
Oftlfl
-j&gt;.lll.
- liN.

. FOR RENT

.

11-20-18
(01-11-85)

' Lllrge hlgh-&lt;*Ding

~­
"""*'
building In

AND
BILL
EICHINGER

brou my hellt to
PfOVIJiom•

A....... .._.n·~·:hd

446-9786.

•P-

November 141, 1882
Two lhlnillll .,_ cloMCI
lorML

God

... only'*-lhe beet

e~~ra

for
light
heM• a:us k I cooking 304 ..77J.

_,

aont .....n.

5045,_ go to nnot opt l,;;tcto ol
VFW llo-, oot on loft lnoldo of
· -otlding "-·
11 Help Wanted

OVERBROOK CENTER

99~-6472

' Recendy remodeled office
for rent In · '
iPom!lroy. 1200 to
30110 equare fest
I
available.
Good loc:lldon.
Cllll 62-6637 or

A hurl of gold etopped
IIMllntl

Somione lo Uv. In &amp;

Bidwell-Porter PTO vs.
WTCR Radio at the
School Tuesday, Nov. 17,
7:30 in Baskelbal

446-8788.

FOR RENT

In Memory of my

cial
Service
COofdiNIIor,
P I - HIU llor!.'!.'1 P.O. Bor
334, Pluton, OH 4oao1.

he8111G-foot doon
C.ll1182.e837 or

orncu. llnllover-

Dad, E. MAURICE
•DICKIE" PAYNE .
Who Pal lad Awly

experienced, 614-02·7555.

Has Part-Time 7:00 to 3:00 and
3:00-11:00 Openings for
State Tested Nurse's Aides.
Salary based on experience.
For More Information
Contact Karla Hunter

lllddlapllrl
ApproxiiNtely 3,000
....-.fMt.Two

11-08-13
(03-23-90)

~.

E~noo

AUTOMOTIVE SALES
1. Must want to ma~e excellent money unlimited Income potential!
2. Must want a permanent job wltll
an aggressive organization.
3. Must desire advancement.
4:0pen Floor · $ell 8&lt;5111 NeW and Pre.Owned

you,

A nlllllollllmee I orlod,

'FOR RENT

It love oould ...,. uvec1

you Dad,
You nwer ..,uld hllV•

COMMERCIAL
OFFICE
BUILDING
In Gallipolis.

. chcl.

lllllrokamrhurllil"-

you,

But you cl..,'t 110 11-,

For part of • -

wt.,

you Dad,
The c!8Y God took you

Good Locatlc;m.

._

can 112-6637 or

Very ...., lllleMd br
lon, .......... "-llr·
:,;.,.

...,

..... .

.,.

·~~- ·

446 8786.
-

.

~- ..;

~

......... ..

Must llave professional atfltucht and
appearance.

•

6. Must be willing to leam and
follow lnstrucllons.
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED APPLY TO

GALI.,IPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
BOX
CD 102- 825 THIRD
.
. AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, ~HIO 45631
i
' -,

.

'

r .

�18

wanted to Do

44

42 Moblll Homll
foi'Renl

-

II

I'll

8

Public Sale ·
&amp;

A4ctlon

HUTCHINSON AUOION INC.
· ..
AITIQUIIUCTION,
.
SUNDAt NOVEMBER 22 AT I 0:00 A.M.

1'9
..... .,

ALBANY, OHIO
4&amp; MILES EAST OF CHILLICOTHE
Locnt• d tt mu.. - . t of AIMM, Ohio. r-. &amp;O
and 32 .... of ~ Md llldt onto &amp;o w...
to..W llaArthur. Auction Ia. a ...,....., cr1 a mile
on the left. 81gne wAI be poet8d.
·

.aMI ....

5

'

.... Clllll:lt.·

7

'"

NorthOollo .S ahoOIAIM,I-.

--

Tnooh
Pold,
-Wolor,
-·
Rohlgoi:ZTo
RiMa Cll,
Dlpoell,
...._.

23

Professional
Services

----c:
........

Piono Tuning- Llno DonWoflclng unemploymonl? Loam
. _ , llld ¥J " tlon "' ......

'"'*"·

-

114-1112-2111.

1or .....

-.

~

Real Estate

.----. 31 Homes tor 5ale

44

Aplnment
for Rent

IIDIIIIe Homes
forRenl

BOGGS

•~ ·1""-;i;;;;;;;-u;;;'i~lldrMm ~ - Ro

Aa lo:

• : $10,000.114-441'

.... Ft., .11 ....... lllll
Will. I OOITI!IJ'• ....... ......

: -

•

·, ._..,Ina room,-.,-

.. .. -.,...., ........... 2_
:· .._ oloalrlc - . IC, -

Nll'r-.-.

..v

........ -

AUaiON

...........

~
- 2210.

CIH. ~
.

-·-

.,

!I\Odo!1l Hoi-.

NEW DEALERS AUCTION

Public 5ale
&amp;Auction

8

1114. 4

: I lo*w;o,

r

TIME: 12:00 Nov~ 17,1992

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

.Ja• St¥ Y"llloa, Ollio
SPKIAI. SALE

-

Tte5dar, Ntv1 •., 17, 1992

Lot ....
Va.
Ful

w.
z

7p.IL
Dolls, Knives. lamps. Tups, Toots, Cars,
Trudl's, 1rMI, lllny .... n.ns to numorous to
menllon. .U ...._eon. Wid! tile tetwns wtt11 us
&amp; '*'tile Audlon. ,

DOORPIHZFS

CHUNEL
MIRIER
•
CONDOS

LOCATION: 3.MILES WEST OF
GALUPOUS ON OHIO RT.I35 AT
BOGGS AUCTION BARN.

ALL KINDS OF NEW MERCHANDISE

Naitlt .,... ...... 5(.

Fell ....n•tlo••
.....i......
For lefo....lo•:
446-2206
9 to5 ·

Auctioneer: Rnes (Ike) Isaac

EVERYONE WELCOME
. Tenn11: Check or Ca•h with proper ID.
Not teaponalble lor 8CCidenta or
of property;

lo••

AUCTIONEER, DAVID BOGGS
PHONE (614) 446-n50
Lie. 14585.

Llceneed 8lld Bonded In State crl Ohio

Real Estate General

For morelntwneUon call (614) 3889370, 388 8880, 669-6151, 24s;.5939
Cash or approved check
Not rnprc Ne tor • cldents orloslltems

.. . . . . For .... In a......

~ loaO. • - . ............

...

1'111

.J• 1.01
lly--~-114:10 P.ll
PIIono: - . . . M o r 3 ; •
~

.......- - .

C

E.._

·: IIUIT SELL TO SETTLE ES• TATE • Thrw I J cuss lll8ncll
• Slyte - . ..,. lld!nl.
~,_ Fuel

• Ful I

01 ftli.

• Wotor,
nace, On
Aunl • - Allll . . .
A Sl- , _ ·_ Crown

CI:IJ'. 1; t

I -

•. Bam. w ., 4D' :. Bulldlna, Anil 22' It
. Cor 111.._ , _

Will
....,

a-·-

·: •.-.333-H1o
:·rwo
aoroao. .,. --.
• locotld In ...... c:-,, ...
·. Bono.
otory,

..·-'=':-.._
........
-::-::-::----: llldw

_

nolo.

SATURDAY,

.

:: 32 Mobile Homes
:
for Sale
___;_.;;.;.,;.:___

··t1'n per mcdh II cl 'ding I
. • monlho ,_ lol ..... 1411'10,
: _.lvorod • oo4 up, okkllna.

• otopo, onty I7DO - . 1-eaJI;
· 117-.e25.

EO 33 MILES SOUTH OF POINt PLEASANT, ~.
Wv, ON RT. 2 IN LESAGE, WV.
TURN RIGHT COX LANDING ROAD,
WATCH FOR SIGNS. THE ESTATE OF THE LATE
ALBERT H. NIBERT WILL BE SOLD •

and and IIlias, 25'0uasarcclorcansoio TV, IIWlg room suita, Sony 19"
fllff!Ota caniDI cclor TV, h~·bod, 3 pc. bookcase, 5 pc. dinane, Hoi
Poinlwashar &amp;dryer, 12 place complele sal oiWarwick.chireold Abboy
panern plus 116"1iog ~. Rose~ile vasa. McCoy taapoi.OO ma1cli~
beskel, sugar &amp;creamer, 6ruby glasses, alch slamware, asst glassware,
11 cup and S81/C8t seiS, Ber~ay Rose, Ramblin Rose' &amp; olllers, Fosloria
pair candleholders, bow~. di~ded dish, 2 Blinko pil&lt;:hars, vases, goose
planter, 2 handpainled lamps, milk glass, Fenlon Cranberry Coin Col
pilcher, Hotlnai beske~ Coin Dol pill:her {whita), FenlOn whita lnm in blue
vase, lamps, large collection Boy Seoul cups, Comingware, Slipa MoDi~
plate flaiWar&amp;stl in c::ase, small kilchon appiances, radios, &amp;BWilg mad1ine,
KirbJ ~. firepla"" tools ilnd dog irons, slllreo, Noralco dean air
syslan, lUI. inons, nic:a doilias,1DWels, quilts, rod &amp;reels, fshirrg equip,
boob, polS &amp;pans, ll)'namarl&lt; Hornalile chain saw, largo asst Craftsman
power IDOls &amp;hand IOOis, sandefl, SI!WS, planes, vise, drils, miter box,
Claltsman 112' dril, lool boxes loaded, portable compressor, Tsquares,
- . drilbitl,gBiden tools,hedgelrimmars, flllotiliaf, alum.laddBf, 11 HP
llynanartl ri&lt;ing laymmower, wheelbarrow, Sthi FS 36 weadBI!IBf, push
mower &amp;men.
VAN: 1988FOid Aaroslarwindowvan 28,718 miles, V-6, auto., au$e, PW,
POl slarao, clolli inlerior, garage kepi.
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: THIS IS AGOOOC!.EAN OUAUTY NJCT!O!f • OONT lASS ffl

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RICK-PEARSON AUCTION CO.
:.. ·· AVC'EIONEER: RIC::It.PEARSON ... EXECUTOR: FRED NIBERT
LUNCH
MASON, WV
773·157815
TERMS: Caoh or Check wllh ID.
Not Responsible for ecciden!S or loss ol property
. Ucensad and Bonde&lt;lln Ohio, KenlliCky, and West VwQinla-

Real Estate General

---·

~ nntM»I&amp;t

.....

· for ..... 1171,... UdMCIIIIII

...

Can,lll llllus ih• an IIIII pi party IIIII be
obtJin•d at tile allice of 1M T~- of tile
Ba•rtl of Edliclllan at 230 Shll-. lane,
a Olllo. -.
.
Theao.daf E• •••· ..... rs we tile right
to ~~e:apl or ..... .., or.alllida at tile rwgullr
8olid ........ 11111118 Da:olilt.r, 1112. The
-'lslg wll lie 111111 at 230 St-WIIM lane,
......... OIIID.
. . . Cow.. LAical .... of Edtlc.
Js; • • •
a, T~

c•• nr.

.... -

PUBUC AUOION~
~We
Every Frilay Nlgld 7:00

.,......

Int ..... fiOta tO:CIO ID 1:00

......
- . :. ......
11111111nt&lt;II!!IIL.IIJ-.

~ ......

I u.Aif II"Din
, ............. 1211.
I

IIW\CiWaSE ·

T._: c.tlorclaM:kwlltPfOPD
DoorPttw
Aucllllnur David Bogg1 Lie. No..._
G •eaii,Ohlo,11U.7750
~ Clfli
wa I Ll .. ..._afOhio.

·-l~L:~~~~:-~~~~;·~~;E::~J
'-411

1111p

1

f

~

Furnished
Rooms

For_, ....._ _ _

••w

~7.

-

Fom, WY. 30W111-4335.

Chrlotmoo r-. toa .-,
cui 111• .ckig 110. Thomoo Troo

47 Wanted to Rent

111m Or Building For Storogo. r~m~,RI.211o&lt;th,l-aut
-Churcll, _
!rom ,Good
-nd, 114-}51.1238.
_ Bhophont
Wonlocl To - : Motor Homo
F.« W- Trip To South
Sind, ~ Nov 13-11. Coli Pot 11444H?OI.
c:color Whirlpool """
and-nlrlgonetor, dlolol
d'.n wOrking condf.
Merchandise
..... otllar ftOO; 1114-~15.

5I

DlolnnooiM!. Far

Household .

~~~~.

· Goods

s.to

at. eM-

footcoly · llodt
Houndomon
Oolun Doa Box Far Ptck·Up

4 " S.ddlo Ook llnloh bedroom Truok. 114-87-1114.
oube. llottrooo • opr!ngo. Hot·
IYWood MMII lrlmo • cuton.
SoUd Pec~n I dr.ww cheat. 2
HNdboordo twin olzo, 30W75fl01,

-,_,ur._

TheiOI*WOfiOdlot.

D.C. .... ~LIIc•
Camelbum, Inc. 45719
Speciali!Tng il Pole
Sl.tiigf.
.
Designed ID meet your

c.blnolo, Stelling At: 1175.
River Vltloy Dolt FumhiO'o, 614- FlrNood Far Solo: Big loldo,
....,.311.
141 Oollvorod 7 StocUd. 114-

,.ti,..

I;';r.•;•;;m;;re;;;;;;;;iiii;i;i;O;;d,
Real E$1ate General

WiWith!;=================:;-!
th

Floor modot color TV $150. :MM-

rolrlgorotor

'"""'"' ~·"'· .

IIIII? I

lhtDr•c"
kor
'
I

175.

'

.

OFFICE 992·2886

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

10Hfiii.S4n.
Kiftg 8111 Wotorllod With Dark

POMEROY - Mulberry An. - A 1Ya lloiY home wilh
new roof ond guttero, new pon:h, fmllly Jllllnlld inlidl
and oul, full baoamanl. Owner will lake LAND
CONTRACT '111111 $5,000 down for 7 years at10% Interall with a monthly .-ymenl ol$182.13.
$16,000

Plno Flnloh And Poddocl Rollo,
~
1200;
FURNITURE

fumlahlngl.
t-1. 614-4411-

Bulovllle Rd.

MO. PLANT BUBDIYIBION - Nice atarter
home oloro 3 BAt, 1~ ..... LR, kil., -.1 baM..,, wloullldl enlry, catport,
heal, c""
utiliha.
..,

oe•

1711. P~TIIOT AREA - Quiet neighborhood,

•.Y living. home o"e,. 3 &amp;Ro, LA, eat-In
ldtchorl, nice..,..~ llllached.goflllll.
,.

iNVESTORS :.. 4-PUX FOR SALE •

Gooll

" -· ..... unit hll 2 8$1. LA. lcitoMn and
...,. Cal lor rncnlnlon!lllloto.

tfl4. 821,000- 3 loll + older home. Bldwll. 3 .
BRa, balh, LA, ldlchen, worlclllop and Qlflllll.

ATTENTION HOAIIE ErmtUIIASTJI~ 27
farm 011 WoclcM MIN Road ofltt~34xeo
bam wllh 5 ltoiW Illite Mel 2 IMdntj .,..,,

ICN

Home on plllPifiY IM!unoo 3 BRa, ·balh, LR,
kllchen, FP, liectrtc heal, naw toOl.
1512. 101 ACRES 11/L • Guyan Townll\ip,
OWMr financing to queHflld buyer with 20'Jo
down ..ymenl.
,.., 1121.000- Cheny Drtv•, edge o! lown o"
SA teo. Small home and .Ill ocno mA.

.
'
lilt. 71 ACRES 11/L Iugar c-k IIMdWalorttopMdbam on property. 832,000. ,

t24.UI ACRES MIL, GREEN 1nd
SPAINQFIELD TWPI. - Juat oil St At 35, al
- I land. tdlallor dlvetopmenl.

EVEAY1'HING FOR lltE FAMILY - 3 &amp;Ro, 2
balho, LA, DR, FR, 2 fi...,._o, hMI pump
abcM gmund pool. Call for mo.. info.
'

'

.

I'

12t4. COMMERCIAL PROPERlY - 1.4 A. ·
m/1, 2o4t !non!age srlollg SR 7, juot 1CR100 from
Ohio~ Plaza.

'

17.1 ACRES tlrVL, RACCOON

Raccoon Townahip....·...... 80 acreL;....$45,000
Harrison Twp ....... ........... .31 acres ........S21,500
Huntinglon Twp ...............62 ac.. o........S25,000
Huntinglon Twp ............... 12 acras ........$10,700

OWNER SAYS MAKE OFFER! IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION - Juol waiting for you! 3 bodroom ranch style home, living room, family
fOO!Il, 1 c:ar garage with aulo. door o~r and
more. Excellenllocatianl
1411

503 CIRCLE AVENUE- DUPLEX- EICh unit
has 2 bedfOO!Ils, living room and ltildlen plua 1
car garage. Low maintenan... Good ..ntei
income, excellenllocallon. Calllxldayl
Met

171;
E~ $10; lrooo I
~T-$50,114-441·

.........- ...-'*"·
.....
, •

ON DURGAN ROAD - 3 bedroom m•lll
aided ·I'IIICh wilh 2 balhs, laundry living fOO!Il
dining orea, 2 car alfached ga.;.g., Con ~
oold wolh I acno mil or s acres mil and bam
Cailloday lor mono information.
Mri

PICKENII'IRHITURE
'

112 ml:
•"Jirrlclllo Ad. Pt. .......... WV,
"' .... . . 1Q4.111.MIO.

;

~fii..,;;;~ijj;oti!!~;i~;;ifinro;;:";.,.....;;;..,:-;-~c;hol;:o;
:----=aw=AIII::::;----

&gt;AUCmON • I'URHITURE. 12
'-Olio •• GoMtpollo. - • . . ' tumlttn, -~. . . . . . . .
:Waft boola. 1111• ltll.
. 'Wo-1 •ll!Jono ftOO • Up. All
llold- ......,., Coll-r

CHESTER - T - ANIII - n-•a moN to I
•
drive wan, tal. lnaldllha houM lhtN Ia a toodrooma, 2
balho . aauna family room, n..pl-, okyliglt~ ~~
day de lrrlha kilchen. Oulllde to • aaubo - ·
and privacy fenCe, which .n would ...
178,000

(CALL US ANYTIME) ·
446-7101

Meld.;..,

7

A Dryer lboppe 114 111 1144.

••

or
1-800-585-7101

®

BIG lEND REALft, INC.

.

510 SICOID AVENUE, IILLIPOLIS
RUSSELL WOOD
BROKER/OWNER
'446-4118

.

1WP.- Fnmti

on SR 325 N. neer Rio Grwlde. Nice home

•••

CARMEL ROAD - 4 mi. N. ol Rio Grwtde,
AI!Ptox. 24 acnoa of aurveyed viCMI land. ·
ldiaJ for new home. •18,000.
·

LAND FOR SALE IN VINTON , VI LUGE Fronlage on Rt, 35 and Raccoon C.. llk.
Asking $16,500, o-r will go land conlract.
Call lor more intannatianl
,.74

•llapl•

tllle. LOOK! NG FOR A PU.CI! FOR A
NEW BUSINESS - SR 110 nestr Bulavllle
Pika, Approx. 200'1200' lot, all ulilitleo

IV8lleble.

OFFICE -1·8D0-585-7101
CHERYL .LEMLEY -742·3171
SHERYL WALTERS - 367·0421/992·6583

MIDDLEPORT- Co"* of HMCiey
SINello Have you always WMI8d 1o live in a nice ~I~··
hood. Well hire Ilia. A 3 bodroom, 2 olory 1\omt wllh 2
batha. The home hal bHn .-ntly romo dalad. II haa •
double lot v.ilh cMin Ink flonca. WAS t48,000. NOW

litO. WHITE ROAD - 20 acnoa, m/1, v-..1

lentj no1 far from Chan:&gt;laia LIM. $20,000.

NEW USnNGI - STATE ROUTE 581 $36,000.00 - 2 bedrooms, lYing room, kilt:Mn,
dining room and bath. Call loday. lmmedlale
posaslionl
M•

COlY l CUTE I St 8,800.00 - Whether otarting out or rotiring this horne is foryout 2 boidrooms, living room , kitchen, balh, alum. aiding.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
t4l}

..T.11... Elo. t;4.iie:1231.

t0111Xt50' LOT ON DEBBY DRIVE -Owner
wanta 1 quick lifo. Call ~ and alart
bulking ~ghlaway.

.,.m

NEW LISTING! 10 ACRES - RACCOON
TOWNSHIP- Counly utiiliea available. Pwlect
building spollor 1hal new home. Excalllnl loce·
lion.
' ...

BIDWELL AREA - Well kepi oozy twa tood·
· room ranch wilh twa extl8 latgt too. 1 car
all8ched garage, t car detached Qlfllllll· New
heat pump, Partial baaoment. Asking
539.500.00.
..71

POMEROY - W. Main SlrMl - A vlow olllio beluUful
Ohio River coma• wllh .lhlo 4 bedroom home wlllch hila
F.A.N.G. fum-. oily waltr Mel oowage, 1 .., gatage,
and new ti~ ou1 windowllhroughoYI.
$18,000.
LANGSVILLE· You'll love It&gt; come hornell&gt; roiG In !he
counlry. In lhio 2 bodroom rsnch wilt equipped kitchen
litllng an 13 act.._ ~ yOOJ enjoy hun~ng lhiola !he plorc:e
for you.
$42.500

-1-W-- . . . . .
-·-2124.

AEUSTEDI PRICE REDUCED FOR A
QUICK SALE- Uolod 81 .1e5,000.00:0n• of
the !Jell Ianna and modem counlly hornet In
the aru. Four bedroomo, 2 .balho, powder
room, Iaili- walk In doNI and new 22'X28'
lamlly tilom, ell oodlr WOOd wilh balcony ond
IIICIN. l.alge niOdem
v.ilh lito and IM&lt;Ing ·
equipmenl. 115 ..... riGh boiiDm land and luoh
........ and good lonoel. latgt lobOO"O baM
-Can ba putdtiiiOd '111.. 01' v.ilhoul. Cameo and
- !he crope. IAaU ua on ollerl
· ,.72

ON IIECOND AVE. - lo lhio atarter or
ment home With 5 roomo and balh, largo IMng
room , has fireplace with gu heat. Cov•nMI
patio In back wilh ni.. backyani $30'o. ·Mil

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTIES

Goo Rongo 150, 114-2411-5637 AI•
tori P.M.
.
, GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wo~rywo, nlolgorotor_!11
Appllo.-o, 111
¥lni·
SII'IOiu olll"-4411·7398,
I·

"

,..

FREE ESTIMATES ON
Poet l!uidin!ll and
Package o.fa. Save
Htn:'reds, ~~ Thc!US8llds I
of ...........

VI:RA I'UANITUIIE AND ,.,._
•·
PUAHCU
Fl---•
114-44&amp;.44211
OR 114-44f.3158
rwwuuu Sr ·anN ....~
.._,
u.ot. Slocke&lt;llnPick.Up Looct,
Enlorlllninont c.ntor'o 1141 Or Dol- With " - 140,

,171-Z?ZZ.
• rrlgld.olre

t:iOII. REDUCED
TO
··~~!®"
BEAUTIFUL COLONIAL STYLE !tUllE . et
Fto Grctndl. 2.87 - • mil, 3 BAa, 1112 ......
LA. kllchen, FR. ,M1 oil , . . _ , Valey Rd.

pricedWr.

PRICE REDUCED SS,SOO.OO - OWNER
MOVED OUT OF STATE Aim WANTS
spLOi 3 toodroom ranch a!yle home with bam,
32' x 48' garage, oman 3 room ond balh houM
aleo Included. Approx. 22 ac..a. lmrnedlat.
pooaoalian.
,.71

needs. Ally size.

c

, ~nw~~'"='"~n~a~~~.-~~~11.==~~

mar

NEW ON IIAAKETI - A RARE AND Wllhin
minuleo of new couniY high tldlooll 3 bed·
room a, 2 .._, balha, living room, family room,
· privalely alttlng on apptox. 5. 78 acNa. low

CHOICE OF 10 COLORS

411" Round Dolt T - 'With Z
LNYM Ancl4 Arrowback Chalra
1?10, CUtviCI Olou Chino

; 1-1422. We Buy And Soli
'Good . . - Fumlturo, Uonday

·er spill

· Real Estate General

t-

: ;;
.co=uNT~A,;,Y~FU"'R:-:NITU=;;;AE;-A:-:N::::D
·, •
CRAFTS

1WP• ., 386 .ae fsum, 3 pondo, IOIMcco 1ue
55xl 00 bam, v.ilh cone..to flooro,
con ~itt

'Rio

J4l.ll21.

....... ....

Cloucto Win•
Orondo, 011 Coli 114-

luldlnti. -Avollolllo
lot
U•
Oluoivoty ot Alto Aid _ . , _

Up. llotlohon Fumburo,
•, tit4-441-)144.

1571. JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD -ADDISON

·-

.

Complete tho chuckle quoted
by filling In tho mlulng wordi
• you dOYelop from atop No. 3 below.

-looturlng Amino
NulrlllonAold
Ptoclucto
llodv

Troller ¥0001 lor ronl Goltlpollo

· 'ss.oo

TUAN YOUR FAII/LY LOOIIE IEAE - 4.41
- · · mil, with fRIIIIalll ... new SR 100 Mel
old SA 100 at Ponor. Older home ollero 4 BRo,
· .,... , LR. dlnelle, ldlt:Mn, bam on plllf*IY.

brick, -. . - . llnleto,
etc.

Q

,, .,..

46 Space for Rent
Mobile homo lol tor rent In
Choohlro. lt4-4411-f7111, 114-HZ-

•'9orloet
h12 seo; Ylnr ••12 "''·
Solo On All Carpo In Slock

NICE PLACE TO PUT YOUR IIUSINESB Formerly 1.canomic buna located on SR 7.
Moble home on property for income.

•

Building
Supplies

55

Real Estate General

: ~ Olpoolt On Ront·Z-Own;
. ;Nothing Evor Proownod.

1141. OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE
TO $33,11001 - Oldar home wilh loll ol polln·
11a1 •: c 1 d In lown juot a few btockl from all
IloNa. Home o".,. LR, DR, ldlchen, 1112
balho, 3 &amp;Ro, gee hM~ letgt altio.

I0

noAn.--ao

staltomi-,SIO.IooAI llano: llgMod ""'"
:IIIS..-hA...,Mid.; 0:. 1211.
- - · ,_ -.rv.
Ploo41o - . . $47.10 tool, 1-100Fow
c.•..,. bed . . . . la
.2411
..·
1:nwn ~1d. a
11UI211al.

.au.

through lhe ••••• .....,

.--r-r.r-'-r.....;;,....;;_,.,...-1
E ·

And • t a ariM,"-- c.ttocl: CluJ __.AI: tit4-441- lara 1 n d d Are Wood Oilk. bhil ·
_ . . , - . . . 11Wt7-41411r
Z711.

till

COHVEN!ENT DOWNtOWN LOCATION Owner hu reUNCI and want. 110malhlng
omahr. Thlo 4 or 5 8R home hll 2 balM,
modem ltildlen, central air Md mud! mo...
LacaUdel414 3rdAva. S&amp;2,800.

'::~~~===~:::: outside the house, The only
r- E L R H 0 0
trouble with that is we're getting
t-"'Ti-T...;.;,.rT.:..,.~. tired of watching television

~

Thea..Cou trlAicalao.dafEdt :&lt;,..will
hold a Pulll: All:llu ID ' f n• of tile NOIIlH
GN I lA 11GH SCHOOL, S1ltle RL 110, vmton,
Olllo. The pllbllc •clloli ehell be held on

r

l
I
:;::'::!
I
I

R0 S E E
1--r-1.P-,-1
-~r.&amp;~l'::...lr--1 , My husband and I agreed to
. .
. .
allow ourselves only to smoke

cd: 304-175-

ForTo
Thel4lthoo4
1
......
c:.io W1lh- c..-

'·Dooro
~i And
I' Ta!oto
I
' -;CoHoe
End
••Cholno ~I
woodl; Waohoro,
: 1)ry.._
.., Retrlaerator'l
, at&amp;;_Howo:
ey -lloturdoy
,M; 1tolow Sltvor Bridge Plaia
' Or 4 Mlloo 0.. 141 On Lincoln

NOOO OF PUBUC AUCTION

fiEWMDU

• .,;,•,_.---==*~b~t::-:=~-= ·

-

742-3MI- Ohio Lie. 14311

Conal••

, ,_......,

'lltllolllo stooo Form
II icootollna _..,
loldo lor o .,_ l WlohM to
oo4L
-24th. too
by
..........
,..rooehocl
tr.ller ..,.

Tho -

AUCTIOIEER: COL W. KEITH IIOlDEN

LOcation: Rt 35.

,:33 Fll'llll for Sale

dip-~ .

-~~r.!i..Aoc~'7" g21.,~J;

ml r 12. 111112 at10:011 LIIL on ihe

I

HUDLOP

Sol, .... -:OOPII, olhor

Outs""""- 4 pc. mahogany Honradan Sarp. bedroom sui», mahogany

do,.,...

:-~ aIR--·
-.poo~
OONl. 14.000. 114 ...

:: ....... 111:11. .............
' - · otr, """""'· ......- .

'aaaaa;r.... sam .....,.. . .

IUZ Wook; - • • lllorl• 11+241-1033.

SEClUSION - II you Mn1 Ia juot get ~Way bv
yau,..., haw I privelt oool!itM, woelk It&gt; I llh·
IIIli opal or juot enjov .....,,., !hen don't t.1 1t1a
OIMID gel away. 4.5 - · m/1, 3 BAt, .... , LA,
R, kllc:Mn, ...,.., 1o boating on ~
Cleek, city IChoolo. Cal Rulh for IliON dltallt.

~.

-~PootOIIIco,
Eut ...77 ........od. Only Frt,

'·:1231 Slolo Route 14\ Gotllllollo,

011 ... lllaue ..._ lntawl d p rt'm rnu.t

JUnior . ~

Clk!Chln&amp; Wa a dland

MBER. 21, 1992 • 10:00 Mil

Real Estate General

I

=·
.,,.,_

Trelblrk,

I

NIFEED

~~~a~~=;:;~~~

Po en ill golD the Fh Dlpwbo•IL Only 33
. ,.... • alltsb• , •
shopping
while .UW N. . . JOia' tb . . . . bi•ll This
wila.- oniJ ctndti Aeidk&gt;ft lhls JMI'.

......., D

I
I

··~~e

·.

IUaiOII

....

words. Print totters of
each In Its line ol squares.

AUG,.I

:: ~.!i
irz::.V Coi -'~========!:::=======::
zse-121'1,~1:!..
Or
·' Coole. No Polnlo. ~ APR. Cell
Alii Far: ·• •

slmpl~

........ Arllly Ooolgn .....,

ES,.A,.E

..-wl Ill tuys, tools,
lnCI .. lciiids af Clllilllt&amp;l lfiiDdlll
Sonl H:tlngtllr-yane.

·-1-- '•

....

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

IeDAy?

mo~o

,.._. ...._dlwbol'oM
Oftor ........
Haw. . . w ... 1.--.
"'* ....... t·:
............ ,.

..,.
1131

T~ Gf .. -

Ill

:. Rutlai'ICI1 _OH: • 81 Ire
_J
1
, Bath!, LOCotiCI on a ......
.o ~ ,_, Poymont, No CIMinll

............ ., , ••• 2204 ....

........

0 wqrds
Reo~an~e the 6 ocrambled
below to
6

,.

too
_ , . ·~
Fttdoy~=..:.o 2:ooPU. F"or

RUTLAND, OHIO

•• HO,OOO.OO;
~
·: Coutor, Aulo, /11:, PM'~
· Lit• ..,500; 11711-

....

~

IWMAN

- - - - - - Edllod .... CLAY I. POlLAN

;r~~ble,..~

Conalgnrnenw wll be taken

IT IWIUIID fmE IIMSE

.,.ar,......n .
,. 1110.

~()l)i(.

S@\\Q\\lA-lt"EtfS•

Merchandise

Frldlly I A.M.-4 P.M. Md S.- A.M.
Rel-hmenw by lluJ.n I ectlel Aux.
C.h
Poeltlve 1.0..
AUCnONEER DANS~
"
11344 ~114!1-2033
JOHN SMITH, Api!Nntlce 15518
"Not rMponalillelor eccldenta 01' 1oM of pn~perty.•

FRIDAt NOVEMBER 20,1992

k lnl z .....
, ,_.In
Mil A/C
• ~ Lot eui!ielll. •
1 • mo

• -lr, Golllp!'llo Fo!Ty ono,
; 111,1100. 304~11114 .. 111-

1-\1\~" Y~ ANNoYEJ)

: -~ko.

~ ..... Or In¥

; ::...,.:..:;._=..
~h=:..,=--.-:-....
-:--:-

,..

Down river.from Porlland,Ohlo oi' IPJ)IOX. 4
miiM up river from lhe Ritchie Brtdge.
Tiaelor I. equipment, E3 Co-q) lnlctor, PTO cut·
off saw, new gates, bale ringa, feeders, misc.
woodbumer, lots of misc.

Sunday

54 Miscellaneous

rr'? 11 p.M.

l,lcensed ..SIIondad In Ohio 13728) and
. . . VIrginia 11030)
•

___
_
...................... __ ...........
..............
.
_
....
--.-·..... .......,._
;-- ....,.fool:
........

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlcht

Aplotment
torRent

c:odarcla~ nlnulcining room suha, droplaaltabla ilnd 6chaR ilnd china
c:abine~ l,awsan 2 pc. con18mpa111ry living room suilll, 3 pc. coffee table

~ ,-=- AUCTIONI
~ ,
AUCTION!
~
AUCTIONI

- -~-·-­

: GOOd

Tiger llllple galaleg drop-leaf tabla, unopeMd
48X19.5; CJpiMd 541.5: laney o0 knockdown Wit'·
drobt, walnut and cheatnut Wlldrobe, large claw foot·
~ lldeboarcl wiltt double beveled mirror top, dr....,.
with mirrors, oak a!ancla and other a!ancla, many
amall1. See lull ad ln.Nov. 18 Antique Week.
TerrM: C.h or check with poaltlveiD. OUt crllllde
buyeN need benk letter for check acceptance.. ·
. . Food Avllhble
AUCTIONEER MARK HUTCHIIISON, 114-69N706
Llceneed llld Bondld In Ohio
Aloaoc. Ft:~~nk Hutchln- 114-1112-4340

~~-~~

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

1992

SATURDAt NOV. 21, 1992
10:00 A.M.

Business
Opportunity

...........
------.--.
.........,. ··- -

CONSIGNMENT AUOION

for Rent

&amp;'""''

November

44

Aplnmertt

r ·= =--'=
1• ,

21•*'
21

November 15,1992

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page D4 SUnday 11me1 Sl dlllll

CINDY DRONOGOWSKI

245-116117
POIEROY._ Pncook Ave.· Appro~, 3~ ICNI ol vac·
ant land wllh city-rand MOorage available.
$7,500
DOllE ~i:':ls~ol!.ir... ,,..~,.,.., ,...... 1112
IIAENDA JE
,..................,.........,.,,. ._..
DAALIE S'TEWAAT..........., ........., fo ....-,..111 1311
IAfl)'f

at.rrCtEA.....-...................................-.112-U71

JERRY IPIWIUHG-,..." .... - . ..- ..(304) 11244•

OFFICEoooHo....-•~··O..-•o••••••- 0 "'' 0 '-•"-:--""''-·1111'5

'

TAMMIE DEWITT

PHYLLIS MILLER

441·1514

25&amp;-1136 .

CATHY WRAY.
448 4255

J. MERRILL CARTER
371-3184

MARTHA SMITH
379-2651
PATRICK COCHRAN
446 8855

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71 Autos for Sale
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111t rod

71

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Autos tor Sale

71

a...oao, • ..-.1,

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- 080, 11711.

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1. . - · Corto

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oil., gray pluoll Int.,tool
:1!0 v... ..
v.e. •...... 1117 DDclao, 0U10, PS, PI
outo., 00, All Ojlllono.
·Alum. whoolo, now lifo!... ond 'II,DODI!L!'""' ::".ld.,a- ~
...100. 1117 p._.-h .
ollilpe,-. mor cc
...,..
tune-up. ueoo.
tlol trade, l,...»zur ollar. ~~mpg,AIC,~. -

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Real Estate General

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• 23 LOCUST ST.

7-

• 17 ........ 0141 .......... llolo
Old -torod

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- Two tr
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Good
HomO
l)nlyl
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:. AKC lo1ola Coo... Sponlo~ lull,
1 liZ Yooro Old. S7S.OII Fernolo

• AKC - - Femolo lcoton

2Tor
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Poodloo. Puppy-.. .......
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. 0404.
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AKC Pug. llolo, 10

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Wooko

: Adorahlo -r.1210. ,,...

·~ 446-0810.

. AKC Realll-

eoc.... Sponlol

mont, approx.
from .Gallipolis. Ideal IOClaiJo,n.
Excellent condition, ove~oo.ks Blue Lake ond Raccoon
Creek, 23 ft. travel trailer. sundeck, rur'al water, 11ptic
system , and ojoctric fishing, boating, hunllng or Just
rvlaxing.
1584
VACANT LOT 921100 OF AN ACRE-OWNER
ANANCING. Grvat placa to, build a new homo (a Dream
Homo) or place a troller on is lot. Tho RuriiJ Wal8r
Systam·and Electric Service is available at the property.
27Q feet frontage along Eno&gt;Vinton Road.
1691
'
BUSINESS OFACES I SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

Real Estate General

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.

-· LAND

•

DO YOU WANT IT All-- BUT - CAN'T

fill

a

- lor doaO
....• a1 ~ t•anrht!&amp;.
11 •• doa -Feed

.~ llolo . . . . s liZ wo- old!

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. ·~ IUM good. J0M15.1511.
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Whlto . Gormon -~- Pup-.
• piM For Solo, IIWN-:1771.

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Then you mull ...
aa you alep Into the
1t10m and dining room
!amity room, kltchan and bath.
find 2-3 bedrooma, plua a large
whirlpool tub. Ampla outdoor area featuring
tarva ocreanad In porch, oun patiO, 2 car
garage witllhod and 2 ho,. alllla. CaiJIDday
for your c:hanca tl o.., your "Mini Tare". Priced
at only $72,000.
1601

Musl~l

•

lnstNments

;: 21 Quont- Amp. With
:· -1-EioctricOultor
114 311 1107 No Sundlr

::$225.

- Colo.

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, ••••: 446·1423
Or e~~• le•v•
Real Estate General

1M2 Dodao ~r Von,•Cioon, Will EaUIDDOd, IElleollonl
-Cor :IHk.,, Wllh- _ _ , Prlco:

::::0: 114417-o..? Or

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'11113 f'ord -.... ....... ....
Jllt_!'iw Vrw, ,_ mufllor,
73,- Jaw ....... 12300 080,

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1110 f'ord F-1111 ••4 Autoc

Wooa !B&amp;a{tu, Inc ..

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IIIOIAI!I.IIILLER, lEALTOll, - PA~ IIOA, lEALlOA, :Mioll7l
ITI.VE.N .WORDI, 24H1ot

32 Locust St~. Ga'fu~us'

446·1066

1614. LARGE C,OIIIIIERCIAL BUILDING on
Stale Roul8. 2 bodrm. apt. on tat floor.
Pallllible 3 ....... . ...
' '

1630. EXCELLENT APARTMENT BLDG.
INVESTMENT: Good money maker IN
TOWN: Large apt. bldg. with 3 two bodroom
apll.; 2 one badrm. apto., plus a co11aga wilh
two IIJ'."rtmento. Thia property haa been wal
mamiBinod. Raduced price.

tM1. HARRIIOH TWP. - eo ac. mil, mineral
righta. Laka, pondt and woods and older
home. l.Dcat.d on Hannan Trace Rd.
.
1802. CLOSE TO RIO GRANDE - Neat
cloan conag. ohring 2 bodrms., 1 bath, good
insulation. matlll siding, na»iy decorated, t
outbuiking. ;.n:t.n ~~ 1.51 ac. m~. Hookup
for mobile home. Thia ia for ma and my gal .
Great locallonl $45,000.

.

Allin
c. w~~~=~~ l~k•~M&amp;~
KenMo~~

Moae Cilnterbury, R•ltor 441 3401
JeaMtt• Moo..., R•ltor-258-1745
Wataon, Alaoc.- 446-2027

f834, BI·LEVEL HOME - 3 badnno., •t-in
kil, lg. LR. 2~ baths, 1 ac. m~ . lmmadiata

nm

poaooulon.

Aaor w-.
1'111.~--­

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1712. FOUl! BEDROOM HOME, 2 BATHS 'Roomy raneh horne located ~lhaounlly.
Ex18nsive WOlle completed •• 1o1 a: new
Thonno Allalde window., OICUrfly · , 111M! ,
lklng, heavy root, lcitehan, ce
1c .title enlly
exlandad iniD ldtchon, 1exs3
, cement
walka and pad. S.. this home a otop looking
el..wltore.

~731. FOR RENT - $325 Mo. - Prime ioca·
tion. Eaatom Ava. OpportUnity to combine
h~a and bulinau. Ohio River lrunllga. Yef'o/
nw:e 3 badnn. home with \'l'pllancaa, full bue·
ment ~· rs a money maldng proposition. Call
for appcontmenl

1631. A SCENIC QUIET PLACE TO UVE - 3 Iota in Lakaviaw Court Subclvlllon l'lalrlctod
residential_only. CioN to Holzer Madlcai
eant.r. Dnvo ID Whill Rd., to Charolais take
Dr., to lakeview Ct. All .utilities available.
$17,400.00.
tat. LAND CONTRACT- L.oclking lor 6 ac.
mn. ·large cloublawida, atoraga building?
Located on old SA 160, Porter. Call for
appoinlmanl $40,000.

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' l.lnor... _.,.,.-

:.:'":"n!."'~"=~.~~~

oil:.
family nn. c:omll., 2 betho, .n.chod garage
in~und pool. Tht lot Neb up to a wooded
liN and offers prlvtlty.
· ·
1832.. FAIIY HOME with llbow room 1D S·P·
R·E·A·D O-U·T•.4 b.clrooms, bath, kil DR
LR, t.m. ml., tot laor badrm. &amp; 3 up. Encioo.ci
front and back porch, lull basamenl, altachod
garaga. t ac. rnJI; REDUCED $42,500.

~-e806.

•2UIOO lllloo, A.~~-.
In Calor, caal:
....,1011 -~ Wll Soli For
•$12.101. Will rolte Cor Or Truclt
1AI TrHeln. Calll14 441 OMO.

1817. SWEET I LOW- Comfortable small 3
bedll'(l. homo. Lot e6xt66', rural water, b. gas
heat on atalt roult. $15,000.

t717. PAlE DEVELOPIENT LAND - Land
lays Will. Oldtr 2 llory brick home with 4 bad·
room• and home in nHCI of rwpair. 121 ac. mil.
011 SA cioN 1o Pinacreat Nuralng Homa.

18011. BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN with con·
alllnt income. Lovely reel home plus saperata
living quartera. ~naad for tO residents. All
fumilure and equipment includod, alao 2 badroom Fairmont home, wlgardan tub and
fumiture. 3 ac. MIL.

1753. HOME, CABIN I RIVER BOTTOM
overlooking Ohio River. $37,000. 3 bodrm.
ranch, lull dividod boaman~ I ~ baths, building.
City.

1754. SECWDED COTTAGE FOR TWO- 2
bedrooms, large LR, lull bath, eat-in ldtohon, 2
po~hao, new repaira hava baon modo to maka
this a comfortable home. 120.000.
PRICE REDUCED: Great otartor homo foatur·
ing 3 BR, bath, kilehen, living room with app.
1000 aq. fl. of Jiving space. Can lor appl Pric:ad
in. 120'1.
.

Lat .. """' you lha lola in lhia
wao dad 0111ing. tu7

qule~

1144. QUICK POI8E8810N -

Vacant 3
badrm., vinyl rench, lg. lving rm .. •t·ln kit.,
carport and" bldg, l.Dcat.d on Neighborhood
Rd. Low, low price. MOVE IN BEFORE
CHRISTMAS. All elool~g cooll ond clown
peymant can ba fi111111C41d. Call for inlonnalfon.

1713. BRICK RANCH - Sltuatad on t ac rnA
upper Rt. 7 clo.. to oltopping ceoter. This
home feature• 3 badrooma, 2 lull baths,
kitchen ond dining area, 2 badtooms, utilty
room; lamily room, ldlehon in beOimenl 3 car
garage ond a e car dlltachad garage. Call for
1110111 informdon.

2 Row PI•'*'· IIF ·'12 rt. Dllc.
. o.- lllnr, IIF 12 Bolor, 114-

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11182

P.ll. AlonG Whh Aoautor Ioiii:

• Calv-. Y"Mrll~, S"uU CIIVH
Accoplod.
All - · Coltlo To
Bo Braughl In Doy 01 Solo.
TrucldnjJ Sorvlc:e AvoUIEllrty
Cone-do
Apo
proclotlcl For U..rtllllng Pur·

992-2259
608 EAST MAIN
. POMEROY, OHIO
NEW

Oak lhadad lot. CloOI 10 loWII location: Roomy
.. bHavel homa. Family room atarted 111 low•n
ltval (not much to llnleh), 3 ~&gt;.c~rooma, eat-in
kitdlen, living room. Priced ID MM ~ $49,e:o.

,

SALE COIIPANYIIorlollo, Olllo,
Phone IM-373-0M7Donold L
Hart, Jr. llgr,
; Conlo
Houllng:
Anvtlmo,
• Antwh•re. Chuck Wllflamt.

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=~ CrMk Trucking. 8,...245-

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. _ Training Winter '-lot
$150 Brando "Wright, fM.381Mfl,

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Low ChotolloroJ 8ool GoJ-.,.
(Or.., Cowo) Dr..o 10 To 1211.
Drlv.. (Old VInton Glen-Summh
Rood) 8M-38NS12, VInton.

Aealll•ed I yr old T.nn•••

W.1Jcer Mar~, well brokt,
wlpapera, call •ft•r 5:00 PM,
• :104..71-2001.

NEW USTING - GIBSON RD. - Near Albany, 8.35 acrea
with beautiful aplit foyer home. Fealurea • bedrooms, 2
batho, carpel throughout, 1 car g&amp;f'lll!l. decking,
appliancas, llaclric 8.8. hoal, buamant wit1t workehop,
oullllda motion l9lting, fru~ t,.., thad, wood MUCH TOO MUCH TO USTl MUST SEE THISII54,1100.

Regllt•red Llmoutln _cattle fQr

: •I•:"l*lers. t800 and upi butl1,

$101111 ond · up;_ coil after 5pm,
,14-M2-It90. Hrloul lnqul~ll

Two oollocl Horaford holfors:
,.....1112·- ·

Hay &amp; Grain

Transportation

~.=.~o~·B~0b;\'.~:

I&gt;4-441.QDII9.
.
)m COdlltoc, 45,000 Actltol

'IIJJoo. Ga._ Kool, A-1 Cond~
tlonf lluol To """'oclotol
....... 4385.

1111 Old1mobll• Orneoa 47,500
1111-. AJC, Ster.o, AuTo Trane,

olloll-7 Anytime.
'1114 llordtl C•rto, AJr, .TUt,
·~.

TMI, AMIFII, NeWlht,
a Polnl, Dorr..t 114-441-

•z.

.

llablllt 4 Door, Good Con411ton. SlOG-

--1003.

' 11M Topaz, ...,. aootl, looko
diM, SibO, 614-140.

l:'.'t· ,_

1184 Toyota SuptiJ I cyl1 I
epeed, new tlrM a batl..,.t.
'84,2011. fkm. 304-8'11-te21.

11!!:__
- PW,
z:z• c=
sos oute, Nl,
I
. A..,. jiOCCI,
~; .....J112.2f71.

U~~~~~;:E~~IIAH'~
FARM
24.8 a&lt;
Knoll top view. Excellent
sunoats.
trw• galore. 1750 aq. ll rench In
move~n condition. 3 larva 1&gt;.c110oma, 2 full
batht, living ruom with atona fireplace ond
lnMrt. 22 fl.~ room, 18x1&amp; in-ground pool
with aldmy clppon' privacy. Hunt, 1111• 4-tl
Pftll&amp;ll. W
ptaco lo·bulkf a big boncfl Fnit
treae, gan1on apot Grean ochoola. $1011,8011.
Oon'lhl '+I
'
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120 ACRES - Thia 'MMikf toe an axcallent
ID hunt, ftlh, or juat relax. You hava •
alockad pond, pasture, timber and 3 bad·
room living lodgll. Oldar bem, !ruM treai and
more. Located on Law Jones RDMI. Coli for
prtca.
1700
JNCOIIE PRDDUCM PROPERTY
Ovar •1.200 par month tncom• Is piOducad
from thia ftva unit apartment building. Good
location In town. Good renllll hiatory. Very nloo
lol wt1h - · " ' tMick alay. $511,800 . 1201
BUIIN&amp;II OPPORlUNITY IN EXCELLENT
LOCATION - Oulotandlng pollntiol on thio
driva thN oany out G-locallon along St. At
35. 3 b I dJIODITI ......._ inctudld in oale. lola&gt;
of road IIOntolga. Will Include inventory and
equipmanl.
1511

=

oquaro blleo 12. I $2.50.
_,.,nd blloo 120. uch. Satur·
";.dor pick up anly. - . - .
•.t~~y,

Autos for Sale.

ntE PRICE IS NICEI
$49,500 buya thlt 3 bodroom, 1 bath ranch .
with altached gore;.. Replacement »indoW11
and vinyl siding kMp malnlln....,. Ia a mini·
Ilium. Tho overall condlllon of thlo home 11
excellent and fllmaca lsleaa than a year oid.
Bellar calllodayl
tS02.

NEW UlllNG - IIIOOI.EPORT - F10nt 8L - t '.(, atooy
home with • '*"-no, 1 bath, on lot of 75x1011+ , hllrd~rpet flooring, F.A.N.G. hoo~ paved 111M~ relax·
lllg nvarvitow. $39.VOO.
NEW UBTING - CR 20 - 2+ aerei with okfar 1 floor
frame hou.. with 2-3 bodrooma, lhed and older bam.
~· apace heat, panoling, caopat &amp; hardwood flooring.
,500.
.
•
SHARON HOLLOW RD. - HUNTERS DON'T PAll
lliiS UPI 20.05 acrea ol prime hunting ground with
40&gt;28 cabin. Very ruatlc and aoctudacl. Juat what tha
grMt ouldoora man nMdtll17,000.
BAUM IIJBDtVIIION - Ranch ·~~y~e home wittt 3 bad- '
rooma, lui baaaman~ 26lc14 garaga lreplaoo cantril air
GC!Od localion...Nice home. $49,750:
'
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COME IN AND SEE OUR BELECllON OF MEIGS
,
COUNTY HOMESI
HENRY E. CLELAND.
.
TRACY BRINAGER - ..................- ............ -112..etl1
JEAN
............,....................... - ..141-201
OFFI~IIELL- ................... __ .. ,, ...,.... _ ....2110

Home
" __lm....:proveme,;.;;nt::.•_

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OREAT NEIOHIIORSI -

en, utility room. Priced 11128.800.00.
LOCATED IN GALUPOUS - Vine Sinal - 4 rental

-

unill. good income property. Cal for more i111ormallon.

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOL.L FREE NtiiiBER
UOOIM10M

Real

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FOR A 3 BEDROOM
BRICK?- Thla home has full basemen~ 1l\
baths, Uving room, dining room, kitehen, in·
ground pool, city oc:hools. Calf lor details.

'

tal. aeon IKlHOOL ROAD io lha loca·
lion on thlo 12'x65' (Dotroitar) mobile homa
with LR, oat-in kill:han, ath, gas fumaca, 2 BR.
All lumilure goes with mobile home axcopt TV
and lllareq.

trsa. IF YOU

WANT SPACE, THIS IS THE
PROPERTY FOR YOU - 3 BR modular with 2
bltha, aquippad kitc:han, elac. haat, IVC, lg.
LR. DR. kitchan with dining area, Vef'o/ lg. FR.
18'x36' awimmlng pool .off encloMd patio.
WoodburMr heal&amp; entire hou ... 1 1110re iloo.

Real

Gen.eral

CHESIIRE TOWNSIIP - APPROX. 25 ACRES WITH
LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOME . NICE COUNTRY
SETTING. $39,500.

COME IN FROII THE COLD! YOU AND YOUR FAMILY
WILL SPEND MANY LONG WINTER EVENINGS
ENJOYING THE WARMTH OF THIS HOME . COZY
FIREPLACE IN THE LIVING ROOM PLUS FAMILY
ROOM HAS HEARTH WITH WOOD -BURNER. 4
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, WORKSAVER KITCHEN WITH
. SNACK BAR,' FORMAL DINING, 2 CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE. EXTERIOR IS NATURAL REOWOOD AND
BLENDS PERFECTLY,WITH 9 PINE S.T\JDDED ACRES.

ANY HOUR

AUDREY F. CANADAY
REALTOR 4•6-3636
NARY P. FLOYD
HEA~TOR 446- 3l83

1833. LOOKING

ntiS SPACIOUS HOUlE lETS ON 4 CITY LOTS - 3 •
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, SUPER LARGE UVING ROOM
WITH FIREPLACE, FORMAL DINING, DEN, KITCHEN
EQUIPPED·WITH RANG~. TRASH COMPACTOR AND
DISHWASHER, FULL BASEMENT, 15'xt0' CONCRETE
BASKETBALL COURT, GAS FURNACE, CENTRAL AIR
CDND ., APPLE, PLUM AND CHERRY TREES,
GARDEN AREA. EXCELLENT BUY AT $49,800. .

i;::::::::::::f711..:._____

.' . .

Real Estate General

'.

446•3636

Refrigeration

.:es General Hauling

1125. CLOSE IN. Frva acnos of roiling land.

· Realty

i.l.n&amp;lll •
OORUMI'CW
f-!OIJinl, ., ,_....
,-= Uatnnd
.....,._, .._.rlollft.
WVC!Q03111,

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER - 446·9555
Loretta McDade- _446-7729
Carolyn Wasch- 441·1007
B. J. Hairston .... 446·4240
Sonny Games - 446-2707
,

"'

4'

1712. CHECK 1H18 PRICE "OUT 132,000.00 - Cozy 3 bedroom, 1 bath, 1::.
room, dining/kitchen combined, vinyl ai
,
oanln!IIVC. Greall,ocation.

Canaday

'
• A 'h "Ill,~
_-.; 114411-1111.
' ,'

REAL FS ll\1 E Il\C
446 t£44 . -\
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IF YOU;RE PICKY - PICKY - PICKY. we've
fiOI tha h - lqr yout Located
of
IDwn, 11111 brick ranch ofltra 3 b.clrooma ll\
balha, lvtng room, kilchan with tlni!'Q .,..: 'iul
baOimant wflh huga lamily room, 2nd ld~
!ldllly room,, enclolld 141124 patio, 4 car
garage. Thia home hu bean taoltftoly ~t­
ed wllft naw carpa~ paint and -tlpapar •
thJ0091oul You muot - to balave INa out.......,..III&lt;Pirty. Celforyourprivalt~.

Real Estate General

General

..

And l'l&lt;llcad lila prtca on lhla channing older
ctaaofc ID ln,OOO. Thla home ollere 3
" badiooma, 2 betha, livlnll room, dining room,
t.rnlly room, targa aot-tn ~. 2 car garage,
alluated on a picture""' 3 IICI'II, rnA, wooded
Mlllng with acoau to lalgatilhilgpond. Seller
,_,. """'-· No nouonabfa ohr l'lfuaad. ,
c.ll Carolyn loday.
tiCD

.

1123. PRETTY AS A PICTURE when you
walk into lhio 3 BR, 1 bath, large Fr. LR and
Ml-in lcilchan, with garage and baoomant and
5 acrea mn. $401. Take a look. Can ba
pun:haaod·with 10 IIICreS rnA ofoo,
I~L
BI-LEVEI BRICK I~AlppUedM.
wilh 3
cherTY cabinata in ... ·

WE HAVE BUILDING LOT&amp; in Rodney Village II. Coli for
men infonnMon.

WE'VE ITOPPED FOOLING AROUND.-

a friendly homo atmoaphare. It featurea 4
bedoooma, 2 balha, living room wilh flr~~palce,
alae. heat' pump and oonl. oir, appro•. 1800 aq.
ll LDcallon 11 overlooking tho Ohio River and a
Iorge lakalypa body cl water a4oininll the Dropertlv boundlriaa. Space ia a 36X48 metal
building. Perfect for eomeone that has a
busin... and naad• a large atoraga area. Plus,
a 14x24 building that could ba uaad for a
showroom or a· small apartment Call for more
detail.

t777. NE·W UBTING. HANNAN TRACE
ROAD - Cozy 3 BR raneh will oat-in kilehen,
LR, DR, beth, fuel oil heat, new roof. Just right
lor nawtywadl or retiraes.

1845. UNUSUAL BRICK RANCH in tip·lop
condition with 3 BR, 2 batha, fuM b..mon~ LR,
DR. •t-ln kitehen, FR, 2 car garage, @nd if,lhat
Is not enough, altac:had Is a 2 BR apar)mant
with LR eat-in kill:han, bath. Also 1~ car unattllehed g.,.ga. All !Ilia on 9.42 ac'- m~ .

REOJIIAN DOUBLEWIDE IN QUAIL CREEK - 6 ye&amp;ll

tltO

1803. QUAUTY - LOCATION - SPACE Ouofily II in tho brick Cope Cod home thll hao

.

old. 3 bedroom. 2 balho, living room, clning lOOm, kileh·

1HE CONDITION CAN'T BE IUAPAB8ED
- In thia remarkable 3 bodrocim, 2 balh brick
and vinyl ranch. Ito apo~••• oondHion 11
evidanoa at loVIng calli try a partiaular - ·
. Pretty 10011 II wil have a new owner, and It
could bayou. Pricad ati84,50Q. ·
1601

···-· ......... ,

1804. ENJOYABLE 10 LOOK AT, fun to live
in, haa apace lor lamiy antartalnmant in a aun·
ken rae-lion room with lerge fira palce, 3-4
bldrooma, opaciout acreenod In patio off
ldlehen. Thil homo aWIIita you and your tamWy.
II onticipalts your n -. Si\lalod on 1 ac. m~.
PRICED REDUCED. Cal for on appointmonl
to - this apacloua homa.
·

HOUSE AND S ACRES Ill OR L - Located on Stall
Roult 688. Hou.. hao 5 rooma, 2 b.clrooms, 1 bath.
PRICED AH 15,000.00.

- - - - - - - - · ·..--·····-..11:2·2211
I

FOR SALE ~ 40 ,ac;, farm located 8 milas off State
Roult 141 on Uncofn Pika. Tht home haa 7 room• and
bell. Thtre it a bern and other outbuldinga. Aloo a fann
pond and tobacco baa.
IN GAWPOU8 - 3 bodroomt, bath, kitchan, fiving
room, baaemant, 2 Iota, 20xi50 and 37x150. Call for
appointmanl $14,800.00.

·p,Wacy Ia preMrved In thia brick ranc:h.
Oflaring 4 badrooma, 2~ beths, fortnll living
and dining rooma, large famliv room with
firepalce inMrt, ltrge lildwl will Clning aiM.
Ovaroizod 2 ""r altachad garage, 2 hor11 lllllll,
larva wol1clhop, atora111 building, fel!cad
praprty. Ita prelly.,as a pnvalo park! •103,800.

-

•

onl)'.

TfiEEa IIIAKE

PROPERTY LOCAlED ·WOODSIDE ROAD- 2 mobile
homaa, ona a 1978 Alan, ona badroom, one 1973
Caatla, threa b.clrooms on a 150'x455' lot. Call tor
inlormallon.

Serv1ces

CITY lOY, COUNTRY GIRLI

IIARIETTA UVESTOCK

Uvo Wolght. 4 Bulla Thlo Yoor,
Gollowoy Ploco, ,.51 Sconlo

:"79

Hare:o a houM that will Mtiefy both. Within
;::ong ~atanca to downtown, lhla homa'o
tion 11 great Whlla at lha aama lima w1
locatad rn • Cllliallocatfon backacl
by
and acrea ol. woocttand. large :r~
horna W!th over 2100 .aq. ft., 2l\ betha, living
.1'0011!· dining room, Ml-in llltcMn and t.mlly
Screened In porch, larva patio anil abov~
ground pool. 2 car bullt~n garage. Good :
llorago StiS,OOO.
1217

located on 0.&amp;40 1110. millol Pric:ad In tho $&lt;10'1.

RP'OOELED ONE All) OlE-HALF ITOJY HOlE Lo I d on Slala 1;1au1t 7 at Elftka. 3 b.clroomt, living
room, dining room, kilchan and bath located on 32.8
-rnA. CALL TO SEEII
BUILDING FOR BALE IN JACKIOH - Put bulineu
clownallllra and h hao a 3 baclroom apartment upotaira.
Stall your own buoinau 111td liva upstairs. CALL ABOUT
ntiSONEI.
.

"
17 ACRE
TRACT OF .
VACANT LAND
. Rlcllc:ed in price from
$89,800 lo $78,500. Aioce..
fmm u. s. Rt. 35 and
Towna!llp Road. Exooflanl
location to build.
1231.

Livestock

FALL SPECIAL SALE
'fi.\Mdor • Nonrnbor 17 - 1:1111

, t840. NEW UBTINCI - 4 bedroom, 2 ba~
ranch home with Miahad baMIIIIIll Homo 11

1517

• -- - · Or :104-87!1-3701.

..
G

Run Ro!ld and 8L RL 218
lt!xne .... 16·18
IICI'IS tiHable. 85 1110rea
,.,_,, Approx. 2,000 lba.
lobeiloo baaa. Mineral J91ta.
Some limber. Oullllndlng
bam lor lobacco, oallle, hen·
ae, 101118 beys with ........te.
•Concreta drive through. GOod
water
aupplyl
180,000.

DON'T IIIAKE ANOlHER IIOVE•••
wmtOUT IEEING ntl8 HOlE FIRSTI .
Locat.d In a quia! family oriant.cl nalghborhood, lhia 3 b.clroom home ohre a lot without
aaklng for a lot. Large kildlanlfamily room area
with cethedral calling · and akyflghte, living
room, 2 lui balh1, 10......d in porch, atlached
garage. llrge lol City IChoolt. $59,900. 1200

.

~

.

QUAUTY BUILDING IITEI ' ,
Gently rollng tendo Some
woods. ·eto.. to Rio Greilde.
5 1o11 rrom 18.800 to
$12,800. Oaad relllicllorll. 11207 .

Belli.._

' Int. 1 Plckor -Gntvhy ~
• Hydrollo Unlolcllng Auaor,

"71

-

IOACRE FARII

;: ::Fcc-nl.,..-,.:10,-,Ft.:::-:Pu,..:,.l.,:llehl..,..,.nd-:-:DII.,....c,
: &amp;oela.nl Concllionl uoo. 114:IIUm.

;s4

...,000. - · 0311.

FIVE LOTi FOR tW.E
Located on Rl 36 and oid Rl
35, thia propelly Ia privalland
eonwnienl Prfcea 11att at
~-=: Good lor mo~lnfor-

Guy• Townahtp-

61 Farm Equipment

-

. 1811. NEGOTIABLE PRICE - Sharp .
Tastefully dacoralld. 11 total nns. , 4/5
badrooma, 3 bathe, LR, Or, kit., utility rm., full
divided buamant with family nn., 2 car garaga,
pool and patio. 1 ac. m~.
ATTENllON HOllE BUYERS - EQUAL
·OPPORTUNIT'{ - NO DOWN PA\'IIENBT LOW INTEREST LOANS quolily lor thi1 pro·
grain and maka you landlord. MQdlalincome
can buy In saos rari;.. Don't miu out. Coli

Jdaal location near· college.

EASY TO LOVE KITCHEN
Ia juat ono of the foatu,.. you will appreciate in
thi1 3 bodroom ranch on 8:.1 acres, mil. Olhara
inctuda new carpel)~, electric hM~ump, 2
car garaga ond eateiUta dilh. Call
y. This
. .••
• .
1508
pnca:
..,11,900.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

: 63

.iust

1830. NEW USTJNG -LOCATED
OFF
lA • - Immaculata ranch will new improve·
manta. Lovely new carpal throughout. naw
dick, raof 3 yeara old, 2 b.clnna .. LR, cln. nn.,
kit., ancloood front pofCh olflea rm. or otudy
and beoamenl
'

'!\'OODED LOTS
Just
off
Rio G!Wide
Canllrpoint Road. 2.5 8Cr81 ' •
Ill 5 11101'81. Prolacli&gt;'a rellltQtlons. AI 11M COVIII'Id loll.

Sooolrar'o, :JJ00 Wotta OUIIIUI
$ll58lC IIIIIM I Slond'o With
loom Adpl. 1111 Fl. ~ .....

.

N,_led in the middle cl 5 acm, this beaut~ul 2 11ory
bnck &amp; Qedar house oilers the lollowing.
3800 Sq. Ft.
.
Central air fliatunng two heat pumps
4badrooma
·
3~ batha, 3 showers, 2 tubs
Large foyer with Bruce hardwood flooring
L,R., D ..R. , Den ~kh woodbuming fireplace
· Large ~nchen wnh aotid oak (Schmidt) cabinets
Featunng the Super Pantry
Jenn·Aira cook top," double ovens trash compaCtor
Khcheri Aide diahwaaher
'
Completely flniahad bastment area wHh full bath and
brick woodbuming fireplace, co~lete 2nd kitchen,
great for aummer canning , or lamily gathering•:
Tastefully landscaped front and back featuring large
pallo area.
CHy schools - Waahington Elem. Must see to appre·
ciate. Qualnied, &amp; Serio~• buyer only pl8ase.

.

)a
- -···poJfool,looiii:tiiQ.
...
--......
a..,
: - Ia !""'! ... ponoiL

1601

.·

.

:Pll;~.

Y'"'l'llied to butld. S2Q,OOO.

p - .... Sllop.
Jn G.C.IIurplw Co. Qil.

'

....-,114UI4013
' 111D F2IO Fon1 Van, lcrJ., autG.,
-4111: 14 112' dual ulo Jawlioy,
'15111; llohlnd Grovoly,

.

- a n d Wllltr ..... "you
"'"'-· hare lo ...._

AFFORD IT ALL? - This home II for you. 4
badroOma, 1 beth, large living room, .family
room, kltehan with dining area, utility room
locat.cl in a great neighborhood on an
al.iad lot gr.etlor kidll. Priced at only 143,500.

: ;::HAI:,::D:::,P:;;t_:;,JA;::CK:::-::CE::;Do:;A;:::A=Cil::,IE:,:::_,-,-

'

i!'·

.

·.-~-ChMII•••·
v.e,
bo I •
Candllon,

BECOIE OlE Wl11f
NAlURE
lha
' NNIIa your home
- o n lhla 24.m waodld
lo~ rnA. A 32X32 bern will loft
hal al~ bean built lor you,

-~~~• . - 3 .

~. lpiJ.~.

•'73 Vana &amp; 4 WD'a

-nu

; 1111 1no Traploal ·=•bl...

W

..

s.

'

twa

&lt;1/4 TOf!, floor End All For $310

'I"M411'13110

IIGHWAY EXPOIUIE'
Need a pi- of ground with
good fll 35 axpoMire and
IICI'II? Hare'a I 4.2 acrea, rnA,
right along u.
35. Good
acceaa to lha h~y. Good
road fruntaga 1110 (townlhlp).
ProcUcing gu wei on properly.
.
1211

'• FiohTonl,:M13.....,_Avo.

:::r.

ioni
TniCII Enalne 311 llodHiocl
With 4 SlaiiCI Trau.ntllllan 1 &amp;

RIVER VALLEY IICIH

Collooy: C,FA ,P..
'. ..... • ~- Kltlono. 114.... Ul 314t Aft• 7:00 p.m.

t1or1 auto, ncollorit

SIIOO;e~:

' Fonl, .,.... plcloU
long. NO

.
IKlHOOUI
Two amllll IIICJMga fall on
blacklop IOIId. 1Walor aveifebfe. 16,8011 each. P.rtectlor
mobile homo. Boll lor
$10,000. Cel for ....... dalalla.

1214

bluo,
72,0110

.~or

•

, l- Dra-rnd

t

.

. CLOSE 1Q GAVIN I

or 446·9539

Call

.......
.,....._,
·t.,=.
............... ......,_
~

propelly. Bam. IMxptnliYe
. propelly. P.rt.ct lor rnoblla
horne 011 up. 1111,500.&lt; 1212

~.. liM.

: ...,. dr

1'410 . _
Jluollr,- 7.1 . w; -

ttn.bla, belance
and·woodland.
Utllty~re
P.Ote.
eeptlc IYI!Im and dug Will on

: Blue 11o11 coon Dog, 1*311'1-

--·nd•

-

GETAWAY, HllEAWAYI
Here'a an out of lla .,_, 32
- · of ground. Appnlx. 8 '

• AKC Roalol- Siberian Huoky,
; male; ll+lU-2577.
• IINcllo P - Fun BIOocllcl 135
~ caM~.... 4 P.II. IU 1t1 DZn.
· IIJuo Point Hlmolmon kllion1 11
~ ,...a old, vwy lovable; 114. llt2-2DI.
.

: -

RUnt IIAAII,IEALTOII, ~
II&amp;OIWIICIIU,IEALTOII,--

.

FOR SALE

VACANT

LEADINGHAM REAL EMATE
PH.

EUNICE IIEI1II, REALTOR, .....1.7

Real Estate General

.

, Pupa, fl"oodr To Got IM-ZU-

' - l i m ! , IIAOIIEII.--

tm ..=r.1

tog home. Large hont ponoh ID e11joy cool
summer brwzel; altNcli¥e woodbumer and
hell'lh tb wenn your .,... an lho01 cold winltr
nlghla. Approx. 2,300 aq. fl. of comlortllble llv·
lng ..,_ including·3 bedroom• (room tor 411),
very allnlctiW country kilcMn. living room iwlh
pine ..;ting, newly finilhod t.rnlly room and 2~
balls. Large 2 car garage with ov.m.ad otor·
old. $89,8011.
1211

, -. Col~

PROF£SSIONA( SlRVICE MAillS THl DIFFIRlN(£

RE$1DENTIAL • INVESTMENTS -COMMERCIAL , FARMS

VERY PAIVAlE I WOODED!
Pert.cl MttinO to e!!lll'i Ilia newly oonatrucl8d

:• . -=~.:"'AM~:frll~
Pol Food Dool&lt;lr. Julio
.,

cr~
.

..... -. ....

0141- ........, ..

$llq, coM .,....._2110
• Allor ....

-w.-.

·.· (}!. ·((2/'7/'litt ~ ~~

Auloo for Sale

•

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

.......

Real Estate General

Peta for S8le

58

11

Real Estate General

--· ·=
~-::

loedod,

ss.
-.o.....

Real Estate General

.;....;...._

A!!tos for Sale

wv

OH-Polnt

November1

1. . CW. CIIIIIM . . . , _

cond, :IOU71o

Solllt14oi51-IZM.

____

wv

OH-Polnt

November 15, 1992

OFFICE : 2~ LOCUST ST.
' GIILLIPOLIS, 0 ·15631

CAMP AND FISH IN YOUR OWN BACKYARD - AND
WHEN YOU ARE TIRED OF ROUGHING IT; WALK
ACROSS THE PASTURE TO . YOUR VERY
COMFORTABLE 3 BEDROOM, 2.BATH RANCH 11QME.
FAMILY ROOM HAS FIREPLACE, NICE KITCHEN, 2
CAR GARAGE, APPROX. 24 ACRES, NEAR CITY.

UpbOiatery

.,

RESIDENcE All) MOBLE HOllE PARK- VERY NICE
4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH COUNTRY HOME ON APPROX.
' 23 ACRES. BACK PORCHES, 2 CAR GARAGE. 8
MOBILE HOME LOTS. WITH MOBILE HOMES AND 5
MOBILE LOTS. ALL PRESENTLY REN.TED.
EXCELLENT LOCATION. CALL FOR COMPLETE
DETAILS.
FRAME RANCH -ON NICE LEVEL LOT WITH FENCED
BACK YARD. 2 BEDROOMS, 1 BATH, UVING ROOM
AND KITCHEN, GREAT STARTER HOME OR
INVESTMENTPROPTY. EXCELLENT BUY AT $30,000.
WATCtl THE BOAT11 ONE THE OHIO RIVER . FRO.M
THE DECK OF THIS HOME. 3 BEDROOM HOME 2
BATHS, FAMILY ROOM, KITCHEN EQUIPPED
RANGE ANO REFRIGERATOf'l. VINYL SIDING.
PATIO/CARPORT. ABOVE GROUNI) POOL. $52,000.

wt'n!

�.
Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolle, OH-Polnt ~t. wv

undey nmee 'Sentinel

ittomologists say·gout
medicine combats roaches
I

; WASHINGTON (AP) - Agri·
ure Department researchers
they have found a solution to
pesky problem of coclcroaches:
JOUt medicine called allopurinol
lb8t wipes out entire roach populajionJ in four 10 six weeks.
', Agricultural Research Service
~ntomologists say the medication
prevents the 'blanufacture of uric
tad in both humans and ri:Jaches.
·t n humans, the l!()id contributes .to
the painful joint condition . In
:ioaches; it is needed by inseminat·
)d females to develop embryos.
' "Without the crucial uric acid,
females simply can't reproduce,"
.laid Daniel R. Sliiter, who works at
lhe AAS Medical and Veterinary
J;ntomology Laboratory in
Gainesville Fla ·
" ~e and 'coliea~ues ha~e con·

.

dueled ICSts on thOusands of Ger·
man cockroaches, "the type city
dweUers know so weU," according
to a USDA announcement of their
fmdings.
·
The coclaoaches were fed plain
rat chow and chow laced with the
druJ~. In four 10 six weeks, the populauon feeding on the treated rat
chow diejl off, Suiter said
ARS and the Univ1,1rsity of
Florida share a patent on the new
use for allopurinol, l)everal compa·
nies have exp~essed interest in
developing a commercial cock·
roach exterminator using their tech·
nology.
The drug hu been used safely
by people for over 30 years. so a
company interesh led in markell'ng it
as a cockroac contro1 can re1y on
the toxicological studies that ~ave

.iParts and functions ·
·of the old flint mills
~

.

.

•

~

~ GALLIPOLIS • The balance was harder on the stones than
1)'11d was a curved iron bar sunk to wheat. The Dansal cr,mlc, the pur·
.a precise position in the center of pose of the Dansal was 10 shake the
~e capstone eye. II balances the shoe and regulate the flow of grain
:PJlstone to provide running accu· into the milL Also, the descender
18Cy while grinding wheat 10 make 'was a covered machine built with
llower. Bedstone. the bottom stone. one end rower than the other to
~as sometimes referred 10 as the
move grain .in a mill by a motion
:,neither stone. It was placed 'in a produced by gmvicy. ·
ifued posil)on.
.
SubmiJted by Wendell Tope,
1. The bees wiilgs rough particles Earth
Team volunteer.
• r bran liulls from buckwheat or
!lmylhinJ or anything that could tear
'II holo m the bolting silks. Bolting
die process of separating flour
Clli!CINNATI (AP)- Dennis '
:{rom bran, or wlieat by using fine Sullivan Jr. is retiring April 1 as
cloth to save as silk. A. bolt· executive vice president and chief
~eel was usually a six or ei~hl financial officer of Cincinnati Bell
frames covered with boltmg Inc.
~loth and as they revolved, the
Sullivan, 60, joined the cc:impa~und product passed ·through and ny in 1983 as executive vice presi ·
~e flour was separated from the dent and assumed his current posi ·
· 5«an. Brayer, the beam supporting tion in 1987.
'»e bridge tree which serves as a
Sullivan said Friday he will join
:tever, was used to raise or lower a Cincinnati public relations firm
, •:jhc capstone breast wheel.
as an investment consultant
-' As water struck the breast
., :iwheel below its axle, the wheel
HAMILTON; Ohio (AP) - A
·;turned against the current. The lawsuit against Champion· Inlerna·
.water srayed in the bucketS for only donal Corp. alleging theft of trade
· :On~ quarte.r revolution then the secrets .was settled after two days
~eight of the waler caused them to of testimony in Butler County
."Cmpcy.
Common Pleas Court. ·
:,. Bridge Tree, the heavy wooden
Fairfield business executive
~'cross piece under the bedstone Wendell Judd had said Champion
:.::Which supported the lower end of stole his pro~ess for recycling
·lhe spindle, could be moved up or papermaking wastes, which he
·~wn by action of the brayer to demonstrated to the company in
ildjust the action of the captstone March 1988.
,...hen grinding. Buhrstone rock was Defensl} lawyers liaid the proused in making millstones.
.cess used by Champion was the
~ CapSIORe, the runner or revolv· result of 25 years of research.
Terms of the seUlcment weren't
jnj millstone, was on top of the
S~IRdle, and the carding mill on the · disclosed.
machines was used to clean, sepa·
talC, and process wool, and to chop
LEBANON; Ohio (AP)- A.
porn, wheat, oats, and barley.
. former accountant sentenced last
, , All this was ground together month for taking $510,000 of his
and used to feed horses, cattle, clients • money, is facing similar
hogs, and chickens. Cockeye, the charges.
Robert McComas, 53, of
;octet in the middle of the balance
IJ.Rd, and cockhead the upper end Mason, was indicted last week by a
jjf the spindle w~ made 10 fit the Warren County grand jury on
charges alleging he tOQk $10,800
~ye conveyer, a device made
ind inserted in any part of the from the owner of the Pure Joy
Jhrist mill 10 convey any product RestauranL
The money was to go to the
of the mill.
I The fine lines cracked between state for $ales taxes, but wasn't forthe furrows on the surface of the warded, Prosecutor Tim Oliver
jnillstones were made with a facing said. McComas was indicted on
pr cracking pick when redoing the charges of grand theft, failure to
groves in the ghrist wheel. A crack· file sales tax receipts and failure 10
ing pick was used 10 dress the cut· remit sales taxes.
McComas previously was con· g edge of a mill wheel in order
make the fine while flo~r for victed of taking $510,000 from
ing bread, cakes, and p1es. It Imperial Temporary Services of
was very .essential that the buhr Fairfield and from a client, Carol
ttones be dressed ill least every two Parker, wbo had given hill'! money
10 pay tax bills from 1990. He was
jlleeks or more often.
, Some ghrits were harder on the sentenced to five to 15 years in
Slcne than others, for instance corn prison in that case.

Business briefs

:was

.

already been conducted. tile
announcement said.
" When you're looting at the
development of a new compound,
one of the biggest costs is toxicological data," Suiter said
·
But additional studies proving
environmental safety may be needed for Environmental Protection
Agency approval for the new use of
allopilrinol, he said.
.
Removed rrom survey .
The Agriculture Department is
removing some parts of Florida
from the list of citrus canker survey
areas.
Regular inspections for citrus
canker will no longer be required
of trees, plants and groves producing regulated fruit in the areas
removed from the list, the depart·
ment announced this.month.
Florida is the only state where
citrus canker currenlly exists. To
p.J:Cvent the disease from spreading,
certain areas have been placed
under quarantin'e, and regulated
articles are subject to interstate
movement restrictions.
Survey areas are outside the
quarantine areas and serve as con·
tainment or buffer zones.
Removed from the survey areas
are parts of Hillsborough and Man·
atee counties and all of Sarasota
County.
"We are pleased that no infestations have been found in these
areas since they were placed under
observatLon," said B. Glen Lee,
deputy administrator for plant protection and quarantine with the
.Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service.
"There has been a ~ignificant
reduction in new citrus canter. out·
breaks in recent years," he ' said·.
No citrus canter has been detected
in Florida since January.

Rice imports should
reach new record

/

Ndvember 15,1992

u.·. s. op_ens agricultural

Bengals,
Browns
lose again

trade office aewIn Mexico City
bakery

WASHINGTON {AP)- A
sunflower seods for use in
qricullUrll U'lde office has been products ot as a snack food.
opened in Mexico City to help
"Since coofectionary lllllfiower
American farmers and exporters · seed Is virtually unknown in
tap the ~owing market for U.S. France, penetrallng the market
produCts m thai country.
would require long-term and
"U.S. agricultural exports to aggressive promotionllaetions,"
Mexico in 1992 are expected to saysa report in the November issue
swpass $3.5 billion, more than 20 ofUSDA'sAgExportermapzine.
percent abQve..last year's record
There also are marketing opporand about triple the level of $1.2 tunities there for peanuts, tlie rqlOit
• billion in 198-7," said Ann M. Ven· said.
·
eman, deputy secretary of a¢.cul"The French are snacking more
· ture~ who participated in a nbbo!l· · and, aecording .to research studies, .
cuttmg ceremony for the office this . nuts are a popular snilc!t among
..
·
. French customers," it said
· week.
,She said that by the end of the . "Per capita consumption of
15-year transition period called for snack products in France is low
under the recently negotiated North . vis-i-vts other European Cornmu- ·
CERTIFIED • Steve Rime
American Free Trade Agreement. nity countries," it said "'lbere ill
or Racine bas reached the sta· ·~nn"!!ll U.S . agricultUral e~~rts room for growth and peanu·ts
tus of certified sales manacer
will htely be $1.S to $2 billion shailld benefit from any expansion,
at Taylor Motors Chrysler,
higher than without NAFI'A."
in this food sector."
Plymouth, Dodge, 1nd Nlssan,
.. Theagrecment has yet to be ratThe report added: ''It is also ,
under Chrysler Corp.'s sales
•f•~d ~Y Congress, where critics important 10 emphasize the distinc· ~
certirleallon
program .
chum ·!t could cost. Ame':ican jobs tive quality of U.S. peanuts, com- .
Requirements lnilude comple·
and bnng products mto thiS councry pared to other origins, 10 counter
lion or tralnlnc seminars, · th~t hav~ not been subjected to the competition from other supplymaintaining a certified sales
stnn~ent health and environmental ing countries, particularly China."
stan, and exceeding customer . requ1l'CIIIents. .
·
~tlsfactlon standards.
Veneman said much of the Butter production up
·
.recent growth in U.S. tann exports
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. '
to Mexico results from Mexican butter production during September
trade liberalization that began jn was 90. million pou~. 10 percent :
1987,. and 10 economjc benefits for . above the same month last year and
Mexico from those reforms.
6 percent above August of this ·
.
The office, operated by USDNs year.
.
Foreign Agricultural Service, will
pro~ote sal.es of U.S. farm products m Mexico and !JCfVC as a contact point for Mexican importers
· IND I.D.
seekmg 10 buy products from the
I
United States.
The FAS now opemte..s 15 agricultural trade offices in major mar,;
RtadLia
kets ~~ Europe, .Latin AmeriC!l,.
Africa, Asia and the Middle·East.
5
TES

Page4

Yol. 43, No. 144

Clinton, Democrat

424 SECOND IVE. ·
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

JOINS STAFF· Dallal
Sayre hu joined Uae stair at
Mark's Auto Sales u a sales·
man. He was formerly a Iiles·
man at Taylor Motors In
Atheas and Pat Hill Cbrysler
in Middleport. He resides In
Middleport with his wire,
Anita and son, AUJtln. He may
be contacted at 992-3011.

GREETS LEADERS • Hillary Clinton
greets House Majority Leader Richard
Gephardt, of Missouri, right, and House Speak·.
er Tom Foley, or Washington as president-elect
Clinton, len looks on late Sunday at the Gonr·

The Ohio .Department of Transportation is taking jiiiOther Slep Orl
the way to building the fll'St section
or a connector road that will eventually run from Rock Springs to
Great Bend and the RiiChie Bridge
at Ravenswood, W.Va.
Starting today, ODOT employees began walking the proposed
·path for the road .from Rock
Springs to Five Points, and selecting sites for soil testing. John
Dowler, deputy director of District
10 of ODOT, and Tom Hedrick,
head of District IO's location and
design department. report that area
residents may even see a bulldozer
on.site this week, clearing the way

O'DELl lUMBER·
E. MAIN ST.

REGAL

1992BUICK
SKYLARK

1992 'PONTIAC
SUNBIRI) SE

.,_ t.ntaatic gu
aopp!Kiate ... atyto
'...! dllign. Ene!VY tlfident. big,
BTU, llld dMn bumil)g. Styt..
i11c:1u$ r.mote cont.,.led, ~fee.
ejlnding, 2 and 3·1idad, MIO•
hpiOCN lo

olt"Tncl and in...ta.

... lhllll -

at II O'Dell loca-

1992BUICK

CENTURY
The warmth of wood ...
the convenience of gas..

Cozy Glo
Ceramic

---Local Briefs-----.

179• 95 NAT •

Ofjici(,!,ls urged to attend meeting

2111.1&amp; LP

11" &amp; 30" allo avalllble
'

J99.95 NAT

.

Glo flreDelux•
311.116 LP Frtoe!Aid Oak ,
IIVIIW!Ie ' 24" s.t

229.95 NAT
. LP
Ul.tl

.1992 PONTIAC
TRANSPORT VAN

1992 PONTIAC
LEMANS

O'DELL LUMBER CO.
I

' -

'!BEST LITTLE LUMBER YARD IN TOWN"
: 134 E. IIIAif IT.

VINE STREET AT THIRD AVE.
QAWPOU8 441-127.1 .

'

for the rigs that ·will drill for the
soil samples.
Hedrick said that property owners along the road alignment were
notified by leller that work would
begin this week.
"I undersrand that many residents are still skep~ical that the
connector road frot11 Rock Springs
10 the bridge will be built, because
of the number of ·years the project
)las been discussed but no action
taken," Dowler said. "However,
Gov.Cf!lor George V. Voinovich is
commllled 10 using ODOT and the
building of highways as a iool for
economic development in south· ··
eastern Ohio. Because of the gover-

Trailers to be used as rental properties, such things as cieaning
units outside of those placed in a up weeds and disposing of trash .
trailer park can no longer he locat- The -Mayor was asked by Counci.l
ed in Racine, according 10 an ordi- to evaluate thq problem and take
nance passed by Racine Village whatever ac'tion is necessary
against property owners.
Council.
Glenn Rizer, maintenance
At last week's meeting of counsupervisor,
reported that the co,mcil, the ordinance was adopted after
pactor
truck
is workin~ 10 advanthe required third reading deSPite a
llille
in
the
village
but that there is
protest from Mrs~ Shirley Miller,
sttll
space
for
more
trash cusCross Street, who charged it distomers.
He
also
reminded
residents
criminates against trailer owners.
that
leaves,
old
tires,
furniture,
bat·
·council explained that trailers
teries
and
used
motor
oil
cannot
be
now in place and used as rental
hauled
10
the
landfill.
units are not affected by the new
• Mayor Frank Cleland reported
Iegisliltion. It was.also noted that it
that
the street paving has been
does not apply to anyone who
coinpleled.
Council Jtecessed until 7
wants 10 establish a trailer park in
accordance with state regulations. ·
p.m. toni~ht (Monday). Mrs. Miller
The ordinance wa,s passed in ,m her discussion before council
response to a complaint from a del- said. that some residents think that
egation of citizens, Council told recessed sessions are closed. Coun·
Mrs. Miller.
cil eniphasiud that all meetings are
Mrs. Miller also lodged com- open to the public, be they regular,
plaints against several l'roperty recessed or special.
owners for not maintainmg their

y... muet -

...

nor's Mansioa in Little Rock, Ark" The democratic leaders held their rJCSt m~ting over din·
ner to 'discuss ways to break tbe Washington
gridlock and push through a quick-action agen·
da. (AP)

Racine Council adopts
new trailer ordinance

O'DELLS
•

map plan to end gridlock
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) President-elect Clinton emerged
from his fll'St post-election meeting
with Democratic leaders of
Congress with what his spokesman
called their "general strong commitment" to move quicldy on his
domestic agenda and end the leg·
islative gridlock in Washington.
The House and Senate leaders
spent more than 3 hours with Clin·
ton at the Arkansas governor' s
mansion Sunday night, discussing
over dinner a wide range of issues
where Clinton needs congressional
action 10 make good on his promis·
es.
, Senate Majority Leader George
MiiChell of Maine said the meeting ·
was "informative and helpful,"
centered around "plans and hopes
for the new year and a new beginning."
House Speaker Thomas S.
Foley, D-Wash., said he had high
hopes, and the ,aroup.would begin
to lay out some details at a news
conference today.
''I think that everybody's ready
10 move forward on the same prior. ities," said George Stephanopoulos; Ciinton's chief spokesman.
"The details are always going 10 be
worked out but I think we have a
general strong commjtment to

move forward on those priorities."
Beyond any specific agreements
that may come out of the meetings
in Little Rock and another, broader
set of discussions between Clinton
and congressional leaders of both
parties· later this week in Washington , Stephanopoulos said the feel·
ing and the symbolism of the meet·
ing was important.
"I think tonight the leaders and
the president got together and
cemented their relationship and are
ready 10 worl: together," he said.
Before the mee ting, Clinton
said, "We've got a big job 10 do
and we've got 10 do it together."
In addition 10 Clinton, Mitchell
and Foley, House Majority Leader
Richard Gephardt of Missouri ,
Vice President-elect AI Gore, and
Clinton' s wife Hillary allended the
private dinner: Aides joined them
afterward for coffee.
·Clinton is almost certain to get
strong congressional cooperation
for his top priority, an economic
stimulus package which includes
iax breaks for new investment.
Congress passed similar legislation
last year, only 10 see it vetoed by
President Bush because. it also
included a tax increase on th e
wealthy to offset the costs.
The president-elect is also looking to Congress to increase spend·

ing $20 billion a year on road,
bridges, communications systems
and other infrastructure projects,
offset by cuts in military spending.
Congress will have no trouble
delivering a·family leave bill for
Clinton 10 sign, guaranteeing peo·
pie can get their jobs back if they
have to take unpaid time off for
new babies or family medical
emergencies. It also passed in tlie
last Congress but Democrats failed
to override Bush' s veto.
·
Health care, ethics law reform,
and a higher education spending
program - tied to a commitment
from student recipients to perform
public service work in their communities - also are high on Clinton 's list But those initiatives may
wait well beyond · Clinton's
promised initi31 100-day legislative
thrust

And there is no guaranlee that
Clinton, like some new presidents;
will enjoy a honeymoon period
with the loyal opposition. Senate
Republican Leader Bob Dole of
Kansas served notice in a television
interview Sunday that GOP members are " not going to be patsies
and floor mats and rubber stamps: ~
"We're going 10 try to be help·
ful, but at the same time, we are a
national party," Dole said.

·'t'retiminary workfo·r first -se-ctionof connector ro~d to bridge.begins

NEW AT

1992 BUICK

A Multimedia Inc. Ne-p.oper

Senate Majority Leader Mitchell
says meeting 'informative, helpful'

'

Colftlflil
He•fitg Detig•

le~ders

TAWNEY STUDIO

Correction

ltrolutlo•ary

1 Sectton, 1o Pegea,25 e&lt;i1!t.

_Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 16, 1992

-Coj&gt;Yrlghted 1992

~HOTOS
MIN

Potential market
WASHINGTON (AP)- Amer·
ican trade experts say there is a
potential market in France for U.S.

Low ton ight in upper 30s.
Tuesday, partly cloudy. High In
50s.

....

Lottery numbers

••

Pick 3:
984
Pick 4:
9860
Super Lotto:
16-18-24-26-37-45
Kicker :
379867

PASSPORT

WASHINGTON (AP)- Peru's
rice imports should reaeh a record
400,000 tons this year and U.S.
exports are expeeled·to rise accord,
ingly, say trade spCcialists.
The U.S. market share is about
25 ~ri;ent of Peruvian .rice imports
and IS valued at $30 million, says a
report in this month's issue of
'
USDKs AgExporter·magazine.
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
"This represents a doublin¥ of ~riday night's Ohio Lottery selecthe S4,000 tons (worth $15 million) tions:
of U.S. rice exported 10 Peru in Pick 3 Numbers
1991," it said. "Peru is Latin
. 2-6·7
America's third largest rice iniport
(two, six, seven)
market, after Mexico and Brazil. •• ' Pick 4 Numbers
8-5-8-4
{eight, five. eight, four)
Buckeye 5
GALLIPOLIS • Sheryl Walters
15-17-19-34-37
has joined the sales staff of Russell
(fifteen, seventeen, nineteen
Wpod's 'fum in Gallipolis, and not thirty-four, thirty-seven)
'
Sheryl Waters as reported in last
The Super LotiO jackpot is $4
week's Sunday Times-Sentinel.
million.

1992 PONTIAC
GRANDAM

Ohio Lottery

\

POMEROY 112~

Township Truslees fnim Gallia and Meigs Counties are encouraged to attend the Co111munity Housing Improvement Strategy
Meeting on Thursday at the following locations.
·
In Gallia County the meeting is scheduled for 9 a.m. in the com·
missioners' office.
In Meigs County the meeting is at 1:30 p.m. in the Common ·
Pleas Coun Room.
·
'
The meeting pertains to housing for low-moderate income citi·
zens in all townships and the citY of Gallipolis.
Further information may be obtained by contact Sid Edwards,
executive director, Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency, at
992-6629 or 367-7341.
Continued on Pille 3

I'

I'

nor's commitment, area residents
may see the first section of highway under construction by 1994."
"Also because of the governor's
commitment to highways in o'ur
part of the state," Dowler said,
"District 10 took a calculated risk
and is designing the plans for the
highway before an environmental
study on the project is finished."
Several years.agQ, under the
Celeste Administration, ODOT
hired a consulting firm, Woodruff
and Associates, to prepare an environment study, but the fmal document was never compiled. That
firm was later let gn, and ODOT is
now negotiating with a Columbus
fmn, which will be responsible for
compiling the environmental docu·
ment

Regional
·m eeting set
November 23

been collected for the community. The distribu·
ITEMS COLLECTED • The Meigs County
lion
of the goods is the responsibility of the Ohio
Chiropractic: Clinic in Middleport again this
Eta
Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. Picyear sponsored the "Doctors With a Heart" protured,
1-r,
are Russ Bergdoll, office manager;
gram. Through this program the clinic traded .
Kim
Dent,
Ohio Eta Phi vice-president; Becky
chiropractic services for non-perishable food
Triplett,
Ohio
Eta Phi president; Dr. Nancy
items tliat will be given to needy families over
Kime
and
Dr
•.
Nick
Robinson holding their son,
the holidays. Bf the end of the day on Saturday
Ben Robinson.
a total of 773 p1eces or non-perishable items had

A regional meeting for local
officials interested in applying for
mi!limum security misdemeanant
jail funds will be held at the Meigs
County Courthouse on November
23 from 10 a.m. 10 noon.
The meeting was announced by
Lt. Governor Mike De Wine and
Gary C. Mohr, director of the GovCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ernor's Office of Criminal Justice Secretary of State Bob Taft says
Services.
some changes he wants would
Minimum security misde · strengthen the agency that handles
meanant jails are designed 10 house allegations of election law viola·
non-violent. sentenced misde- tions.
meanants convicted of minor
But the pam\1 still might not be
crimes. primarily drunk driving.
able to resolve last-minute charges
"It is important fo~ the ·state to before an election.
work closely with local communiT;lft said he is working with the
ties on inllovativ.e programs such as · Ohio Elections Commission on legthis in order 10 help solve Ohio's islation that would make the fivecritical prison crowding problem," member panel more independent,
said DeWine.
.
and provide it with staff support
"We hope these regional meet· apart from his office.
.ings will encourage counties and
The commission acted last week
municipalities in applying for mini- on several complaints of unfair
mum security misdemeanant jail practices filed by candidates or
funds. ~ Mohr said. "We look forgroups. The election wa s over
ward to working creatively with before the allegations were heard,
them 10 secure funding fiJI' new or and Taft said he doubts it would be
renovated facilities 10 ease their feasible to create a system th at
overcrowding problems. We urge would work in advance of ballot·
all qualifying entities to attend a
in g.
"Whether it could hear matters
regional meetinj!." ·
Space is limtled for the meeting, l'rior to an election, it seems to me
to be held in the Meigs County 11 would have 10 meet ... every day,
Common Pleas Courtroon!. Those and it would have 10 be a permainterested in attending are asked to nent standing body, at least for a
contact Economic· Development period of time before the election,"
Director Paula Thacker at 992Taft said in an interview.
5005 before Friday. The Meigs
"I don't know if that's practical,
County meeting is one of five
I don'tlcnow if that's affordable in
meetings to be hel'd across t~e
terms of paying elections commis·
Stale.
sioners on a full· time basis;" he

Taft seeks stronger elections commission

'

'

. said.
Taft said charges fil ed in the
heat of a campaign may or may not
be justified , and are difficult to sort
ouL

" In some cases someone may
derive an unfair benefit from making a charge that is not adjudicated
Continued on page 3

Ten weekend.fatalities
recorded on Ohio highways
By The Associated Press
The deaths of a father and son in
a crash on a rural Fulton County
road on Sunday increased Ohio's
weekend traffic fatality count to 10,
the State Highway Patrol said
The patrol counted traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Frid ay to midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
WAUSEON -· John E. Wilson,
38, and son, Roy L. Wilson, 20, of
Delta, when theor car collided with ·
a truck on a Fulton Councy road
LANCASTER - Helen L.
Rouse, 80, of Lancaster, in a two·
car accident on a Lancaster street
RAVENNA - John Mcintyre,
32, hometown unavailable , in a
one-car crash on Oh io · 59 in
Portage County.
SATURDAY
GREENVILLE - Eugene R.

Selander, 62, of Greenville, when
two trucks collided on U.S. 36 in
Darke County.
NEW PHILAD ELPHIA ·James M. Foulk, 19, of Warren, a
passenger of a car that struck a disabled vehicle parked along Interstate: 77 in Tuscarawas County.
SPRINGFIELD - Jennifer A.
Coop~r. 18, of Alexandria, Ind 1,
driver of a car in a two-car accident
on Interstate 70 in Clark County.
CHILLICOTHE Larry
Howsman, 25, hometown unavail- ·
able, in a one-car crash on Ohio
I04 in Ross County.
YOUNGSTOWN - Shelby J.
Linden, 9, of Niles, a pedestrian hit
by a ttuck on a street in Austintown
in Mahoning County.
CIRCLEVILLE - Angela K.
Stephens, 18, of Kingston, driver of
a car in a two-car crash on a Pick.
away County road.

,..

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