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                  <text>••

BORN LOSER

Television
Viewing
•

M

FRI .. NOV. 27

..
...

·0 four
Rearrange 1ett.n of
ocrambled wordo
low to form four

the
bewordo.

~mpla

e (J) e
aeiiJNewa

r. 11·

L, A R J E I

-·-... .

e

·9

(I)

Meet the FlilllaiOI- (2:00)
~ Square One TV Stereo.

I DON'T
KNOW ..TO ME, .
''LAD'( OF SPAIN"
JUST DOE:SN'T
SOUND VERI'
CHRI5TMA551'

BC~~Q

ro.a'?

121 World

1111 ~ Vafllni
8:30(2)
11J Niic-. D
(J) Ed McMIIhon'l St8f

e

lellrch .
'
wa (J)eABC-.Q
(Il WIIMI fn liMt World Ia ·

E

a.ndlego?

Stereo.

I

aeeaaNewaa

1111 That'• My Dog

11J Wheal o1 Fortuna

7:001Jl•

{j\'
Oetting women
Stereo.
~
(1)8 Ina
Edfllon Q
(Il (f) MecNell/lahre;

NewallowQ

(J) e Mllnie"d ... With

1 I I

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s

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.
•
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by fi lling in the missing words

IN THESE SQUARES

Qua

a

VoL 27, No. 41

PHILLIP
ALDER

lllllllg lkothar Jak~
7:30 (2J. IIJI JIIOflllrdyl
(J) The Jatlenona

CllD EIJ!fiUIIftmant Tonlflht

Stereo. 101

EAST
.A853
•to gat

WEST

.KQJ92
.KJ6
t852

.H

tKH

121 CroaafiN

1111 Manlec Mllnaton J:;l
8:00 (2J
0 MOVII!: 'laved by
..
the Bel Hawafllln IIIJie' NBC
Movie olthe Week (2:00)

e

Ill MOYIE: A Love Affair:

The Eleanw and Lou Gehrig

ALLEYOOP

Story

(2:00)

(]) How the Orlnch Stoia

THAT'6 L.INDSE~HI WHAT'&amp;
H• IIOINIH!,•.Ck HERE?

Chrl~e Miserly Grlnch
tries to erase Christmas from
Whovllle by stelring all the
material symbols, ontv to
discover he can't dampen
the spirit. (Animated) (0:30)

iIIHudaon
MOYIE: M- on
(2:00)
the

(R)

In
Review Stereo. D
(J)e FamiiJ' Ma"&amp;ra Eddie's
tea;:her makes a surprise
vistt to the WinslOw hOuse.
Stereo. D
a~~e G'"e GoldM PaThree WOI1lfl'l become
parthers in the hotel
business. (R) Stereo. Q
11D e Stlllitwomen: Wcirld
Tour The nation's top
stuntwomen perlr;&gt;rm nine
death-defylhg acts from
around the world. Hosts:
Cindy Crawford, Tlmoth8
Branttay. (1 :00) Stereo.

(Il (!) WUhlngtlln WHk

OMurcler,SiteW,_

a

Crook

and Chll..

121PrlnMNewaQ

1111 MOVIE: Partners 'n Love
(2 :00)
1:30 (]) MOVIE: A Chrl-1
Story (PG) (2:00)

WaH $treel Waak
stereo. J:;1
(J) e Step 11r Step Dana
gats the results of her S.A.T.
teat. (R) Stereo. D
I!PJ e a • tt'• ~hrl­
r~me Again, Charlie aCharlie Brown trial to raise
money to buy his girlfriend a
gilt; Peppermint Patty ·
attempts to do her
homework; Sally rehearses
lor a play. (Animated) (0:30)
1:00 Cll (!) ... Tafii!!!P With Davtcl
Froat Stereo. 1;11
(J) D Dinouura Ethyl
shocks the Sinclair&amp; when
she has a near-death
experiencs. (R) Stereo. Q
(!I) e IIJ e AH New Clrcua
of the Sill,. I Side lhow
XVII Loni Anderson, Alan
Thlcke, Julie Brown and
Meshach Taylor join a cast
of performers in lively stunts,
dangerous animalS acts and
, magic tricks. (2:00) Stereo.
(Il (!)

BARNEY
YORE UNCLE SNUFFY'S
GONE FLOAT FISHIN'
FER TWO
WEEKS .
JUGHAib,

AN' .

YO'IfE
MAN
OF TH'

HOUSE

Ir-..;:.,...,o.

DON'T STAND THAR
GAWKfN' AT ME It
GIT ON WITH

CHORES I

H

Thinking
is the key

tQJ96

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

By PWIIIpft)der

t• 2•

t•

Soalll

West

Nortb

ACROSS

.

" fl •

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36

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Here, be takt11 requtiiU from AprU Neal, 5, or

Indian
7 Atlaoted
13 Similar

COIIIjiOund

14 Cracked

t&amp;T-..owln

.

lleltlc:O

~~=dablt
44 Seawaecl

,.,..

=ucl
45
man
48 GI8Cial epoch
(2 wdl.)

180= '
17 Ra
·than

53..,.

(-t.)

50 Drlnlt

18 Back ol the
neck

54 Chllttarecl
55 laparata Into
clasea
56 Property

20Agnut-

21 Cta'lent
source

24 Dftlenetl to
conform

'.

DOWN

27 Attdaco
lltutlr81or '
3 t Iliad• pigeon
nola.

32 Willie p!Kipflatlont

33 Sea..-cl•
34 Author-

r:::,:.,:-t
2 Gravel rlclgea

3 Whit
4 IIIII' fi'OIIP

Nln

Judith-

7
8

Prolelled
Downy tluck

1811 , .....,

12 llanciiHdef

e--mv
keeper?

Amu
111 Conaurned

charch

21- ..

brother'•

5 Skin prOblem

8 Nowellat

Robertaon
10:30 (]) ~1: Oh, Qadi (PG)
• (2:00)
I»AIIIIInE,_.
121 The Keya ID the Vlcloty
.What went rtgllt/Wrong lor
candidates (0:30J

n:aoC2le me Clle a•
oe IIJNewa
ONat

a:DOidlbtlrl. S..,...

ad JGiba Lambert, 3, Welt
C -bla, Vf.Va.
Nick wiD be at the store
througboat the llloppiDI. seasoa. (Tiaes-Seatiael Photo by Brlaa J, Reed)

Mission statement completed
.in strategic planning process

· r.blewlna

load

· 10 Cra.tln a

,eel

22 Helper
23 Longed (si.)
24 llllemlth

11 Anctentrlll-

25 Lacquered
metalware
28 EaerciH
aplain
28 LauglltoudtY
211 c-tarpart

30,!1datance
32 Glut

1111 700 Club With Pllt

.s,...

SANTA VISITS • Saata ClsDa visited wltk
shoppenat Bll WlleeiiD Pa• 1101 oa
u
· the CbriJtmu tdloppiDg IIU80II cot uderwa:,. •

ncotorecl

Sightlnga ResHess
spirits walk the cella of
Alcatraz. (R) Stereo. D
0 MOVIE: The Oauntlet (RI

~
~=
Ama.tcan Whoppar,

z•

35=up

1NewYork

38 Wlaeat

121 l.8rry King Uval 1;1
1:30 (J) e Camp Wilder Ricky Is

'

East

Wben you come down to it, the key
Pass 3 •
Pass
trait of a good defender is that he 3 t
•
Pass
Pass
Pass
5
thinks. He counts ~th sides' tricks;
keeps tract&lt; of the trumps and remem·
Opening lead:·• K
ben the bigh-card points that have
been accounted'lot. But above all else,
he never forgets the goal: the number ......__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _---:~.
of tricks needed to defeat the contract.
On toclay's deal, a tournament player sitting East would ·bid a pre-emp- . heart 10, but declarer won with his ace
tive three spades on the ·fint round, and ran the diamonds, discarding
which would have made it harder for dwnmy's heart loser. South's 11 tricks
North·Soutb. (With enough for a full- were tbree ·top trumps, three dlavalue high-card raise to three spades, monds, the heart ace, two spade ruffs
East would make a cue-bid of three in hand and two heart ruffs in the
clubs.)
dummy.
.
West shook his head ruefully. "\Vhy
After South was given the space to
reverse with three diamonds, North didn't you overtake my opening lead
evaluated his band well. He had a use- with your ace and switch to the heart
lui fUth trump and the working dia- 10? You can see two tricks: one spade
lliODd ace. He conveyed his enthusi· and one diamond. From the bidding,
asm with a three-spade eue-bld.
the third trick bas to come from
West led the spade king, East en- hearts. And it has to be eatabliabed becouraging yrith the eigltt. West contin- (ore the diamond l!lng is dislodged."
ued with a low spade. Declarer ruffed,
"You're right, partner. I wasn't
drew trwnps and tried the diamond li· thinking."
nesse. It lost and East switched to the
®-- - owtau ••...:

The World A1manac 11 Crossword Puzzle

37 Macaw genua

36 Not rtadJ lor
eating
.tO EnthUalaiUc
•tleanlng

Tower alia ,
•2NewTaate.

men! booll·
43 Alftrmallolll
45- -11111•

48 Help In crime
47 Adv1H
411 From- -z

,
GALLIPOLIS - Volunteers ra1 resources.
• .To explore; expand and proworking on the Galliil County
Strategic Plan developed a mission mote value-added products to both
statement as part of dte strategic .· protect and improye the agriculturplanning process.
· · · al industry.
o To be progressive in developThe mission swement is as foling
and implementing comprehen·
lows;
sive
healdt, social and civic pro"Gallia County, a soudteaslem
~s.
.
Ohio River community, is rich in
•
To
provide
the
necessary
human, natural and cultural
.resources. As a progressive infrastructure sys1ems and suppon
Appalachian regional community, services that will promote economour mission is to improve dte quali· ic development. •
The mission statement identifies
ty of life for present and future
dte
county's philosophy of operagenerations. Our guiding principals
while expressing commiiDient
tion
are:
to
our
people, businesses, instilu• To assure a high quality ed
tions,
culture
D,Dd values. The statelion for all, and to enhance public
ment
also
describes
lhe nature and
appreciation of education.
concept
envisioned
for Gallia
o To contribute 10 lhe enrichCounty's
future.
ment of our lives by providing
Since August of this year, a
opportunities for parks, recreation,
group
of local citizens has volun·
artS, cultural and spiritual developteered
time
and effort 10 dte task of
ment for all.
·
developing
a
sttalegic plan for Gal. o To promote and enhance Gallia
County.
This
"Blueprint for dte
lia County as a destination for
Future"
ts
a,long-range
committowism.
ment
to
progress
spons&lt;nd
by the
• To attract new busiaess and
Gallia
County
Chamber
of
Comindustry while reraining and
merce
·and
the
Community
expandiog the current economic
Improvement Corporation in coo~­
base.
eration
widt the University of Rto
o To establish a level of acceptGrande.
able environmental quality;
James B. Radebl!ugh, group vice
improve and wisely manage the
president
of corpcn1e development
renowable and non-renewable natu-

for Bob Evans Farms, Inc., has
been functioning as leader and consuliBIIt for dte steering commitlee.
This group is comprised of dte various subcommittee chairpersons
who are working with appro ximately 104 local residents 10 form
a representative mission stalement
for Gallia County growth and
progress, and dten strive for the
positive outcome.
The individual task-oriented
commi.ttees are concen.trating in
these areas: education and technology, Sheller Haskin8; agriculture,
Joe Foster; mdusttial development,
John Thomas; tourism, Kim
Sheets; infrastructure and. transportation, Wayne King; quality ol
life,
Josette
Baker;
environmental(narural resources,
Kingsley Meyer; community services, Sara Johnson Davis; economic development, Dr. Barry
Dorsey and Jerry Gust; marketing
and promotion, Tom Gooch.
Jack Fowler, executive vice
president of . the Community
Improvement Corporation, serves
as facilitator of the sleering commillee members.
·
Fowler. !IBid a sttalegic analysis,
outlining why selected issUes are .
considered imponallt, should be
completed in the next few wceb.

-··Utlt

51 Mantad

'

52 ,lying

IUI!llilal

. __'" . .--.. --.--It-T.
CELEBRITY CIPHER

~Cipt.-o;pl e••••...-.ci•QtDI II 4IIY-PICIIMt.PIItii'ICI,...,..

VILLP'D
I J I ,

U J

! 0

ITDil

JOPX

IZD

'KUDZD

•rD

XJY'ZD

' ZJIDZK

r

P X G .I J L.

I 0 L:

·xJ

Y K U,

. . . ....

T D D,

PJJMEOT

COMPLETE MISSION STATEMENT...:. A

TJJL.'

AJZRKDZ .

• PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "My whole Nit has been QOVernetl
monumental bunch of good fortune." - Jimmy Stewart.

by

a

Disbrow noled tbatlhe plan was
developed as ·a least-cost measure
for all sevetl operating companies
of the AEP syslem. "That adherence to least-cost medtocls should
help us to remain a low-cost
provider of electricity in all seven
states we serve," he said. "We have
restrucrured.our }ieigs mines to

Early sales
encourage
retailers

.AK963

(2:00)

maker instantly reveals Which signs are on the other.
romantically perfect lor you. Mall $2 GEMINI (MaJ 21-June 20) Trying to cut
plus a long, sell-addressed , stamped a business deal that's too one-sided
BERNICE
envelope to Matchmaker, c/o this Isn't apt to work today. II you want to
BEDE OSOL
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, get a lot, you're going to have to give a
OH 44101-3428.
lot.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22....... 11) Part- CANCER (June 21-July 22) Try to avoid
nenhlp arrangements might not work llituatlons today where you feel impelled
out too welt lor you today, so Instead of to take a pcSBitlon diametriCally opteaming Ul! with someone to accom- posed to.your mete's way· of thinking.
pllsh a purpose, try to do It unllided. · Be ttexlbla.
AQUARIUS (Jan. Ill-Feb. 111 If you LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're not likely
think of It first you're likely to be willing to perform as competently as you
to aallist others teday. Conversely, should If you feel self-Imposed preaaure
when people make demands, you're apt to get a job done. Don't add any straws
to become r_,tful and reelatant.
to the camel's back.
PIICEI (FR. 20-Malall 20) You may VIRGO (Aug. 23-lepl. 22) Go along
. not be too comfortable In actlvttlea to- wllh the group today lnatead of atNov. 2t, 1tr.l
.day where you feel you mull comply to . tempting to delegate aaalgnmenta to
Your earning potential could be a few social diCtates. You'll have more tun do- your peers. If you do, they'll vote you .
levels higher In the year IIIMiad than It ing thlnga that aren't too lltructured.
out of the office.
-•temot
,_been 1n the put H~. as you Alll!l (Man:h 21·Aprif 11) You'H be UIIRA (lept. 23-0ct. ~~If you a1
atert matdng more money, you also more effective today 11 vou IU'e less as- . to do aomething and IIIII today,
could become more extravagant.
aertlve or aggreulve. Trying to bully start looldng around for ~oats. I
IAIIITTAIIIUS (11011. 21-Deo. 21) Your your way through a situation could : stead, review your mlatakes eo you
...... l'8lillance might be at a _.y tow evoke a hostile resporlse.
won't r - t them next time.
1111:1 today. You muat be careful that a . TAURUS (April 20-llar 10) Today vou SCORPIO (Oct. :14 llau. 22) Generanv
amooth peddler doean't coerce you Into might have t~ deal
a person whose speaking, most friends welcomed your
parting with funds you shouldn't lose. , baste Ideas )VIII
ct with yours. This advice or crltlclam yellerdav. but today
K - .....,.. to loot&lt; tor romance and , could turn lnt
ugly development II the opposite could be true. Try to l&lt;eop
W'(iu'll ftnd 11. The Astro-Graph Match- either party. lea to Impose their view~ your commentalo yourself.

"The cotbmission's actions reaf.
flfiD our conclusion that building.
scrubbers at Gavin represents a
crucial pan of the long-1enn lowest-cost compliance sttalegy for dte
AEP system and our customers,"
said AEP(Ohio Power chairman
and chief executive officer Richard
E. Disbrow.

•AQ!

~e

accused of lacking
supervision over the kids. (R)
, Stereo. D
I1J) • Slglltrnga A Dallas
family is tormented by a
ghost; gro]eincarnatlon.,
(R) Stereo.
a College aklllbell Great
Alaska Shootout, semifllilf
from Anchorage, Alaska (L)
10:00(2). 11J I'll Fly A-J
Forrest makes a deal with a
prisoner: Walter and tis
fiancee vtaH. Stereo. Q
())NewaC
~ • (J) • 20/20 Stereo.
/fi (f) Oarrfaon Kelflor'l
Home Archival film and new
material highlight a 'IIBit
home for the holidays for the
creater of APrairie Home
Companion. (1:00) Stereo.
IDlettunt.rD
8WootdNftl .

· had much to be rhanld'ul for on
Thanksgi~ Day.
•
Followmg the announcement
tbat the $117 million project was
approved, AEP and several elected
officials issued statements on the
plan, which is expected to save
JObs at the Southern Obio Coal
Company's Meigs Mines.

l .6

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

NOW··

3

SOUTH

e

iD Cottege ll..klllbeil
' National Invitation
Tournament, championship
(L)

TuDes-SeatiDel Stan
POMEROY · Witb Wedne~­
day's approval by the Public Utilitics Commission of Ohio of i,mm·
can Electric Power's scrubber propo~l for the General James M.
Gavin Plant in Gallia Coun~
coal
and community
. .minem
.

•to

(J) a You Bel Yow' Ule
(!I)
Wheal ol Fortune Q

a e 1'-lly Feud

Bf BRIAN J, REED

.Q8742

llpoftaCentar

•

18 Secllona, 182 Pagea
A Multtmailla Inc. ~·pll~

AEP, area miners; leaders react to scrubber project·

•

.70
t

Sports. .....- .....................Cl-8
Weatber. _ .........- ...........A-2

_ Mlddleport~omeroy-Galllpoii&amp;-Polnt Pleasant, November 29, 1992

.

U-1'1-tl

Along .the river -----Bl-8
Business/Fann..- ---...Dl-8
Classified
1
Deaths. · -..- ....- ............A-3

nn.es-

Copyrlghtecl1012

A 103

121.._,....

FRANK AND ERNEST

NORTH

•toH

Tonlglll
Leap Stereo. Q

· Stereo.
0

BRIDGE

Inside

•

•

..
'

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
'' . ,r
Peahen - Unwed - Robot - Ironic • UP NORTH
Holding up a hush puppy, the fellow said to the waitress. "Northerners don't know what this is." "Really?"
the waitres$ smiled, "What would they look like UP ·
NORTH'?"
.

r::t. &amp;, Na~

-

I• ' I. I nfAT I

. ... UNSCRAMBLE FORI
V ANSWER
,
•

routs EKU 44-0 - Page- ~-1

.Centerville Masoriic Lodge dedicated
in 1926 ·James Sands· Page,A-7
(

you develop from step No. 3 below:

l..'l'llh

----------D:Z..

Complete tho chuckle q uoted

P~INT NUMBERED lETTERS 1

=i:::n
llllr

underway

Pomeroy, Middleport football battles
recalled· Fred W. Crow· Page A-4

· -B-1

I had put on two different
shoes in order to decide which
. to wear. Ask.1ng my .hus14 Is ·I I ~ patr
'--..t...-L.....J'-.~.J. ~
band his opinion he peered
1"'----,.----.,_.., over his paper and said, "Well ,
K I L N U E ~ --- that ----."

C"hlld':£

II

Mars~all

3

N0 p 0

lquaN ~TV Stereo.

• R - Stenao. l:jll

~

t--,;:-r.·:-""1~T--I

•

Red Ribbon

•
campatgn

.. .

FONIT-1

(j) laved ..,. ......
(J) MOVIE: Till Jetaana

75

j

EVINIHQ
I:GO (2J e

Sunda.'

-·..••

mlssloD atatemeat, part ot the lltnltqk.pl,_mll
,procas for Glllla Couaty, wu reteatly compler-ecl. Here, Jamea Radebaugk, or Bob Evau
.Far_,, lac., IJ sbOWII acldreuiDg the strategic
:-plaaalag project's steerlag eommltt~ •. qock:

"

wtae, fro• Radebaugh, are: Joba Tbomas,
WaJIIe Kl•l• JOlette Baker, Klagsle7 Meyer,
Jack Fowler, Sara Davis aad Shelley Hasldu.
Not sbowa are: Joe Pelster, Dr. Barry Doney,
Jerry Gust and Tjllll Gooch •

From staff aad wire reports
GALLIPOLIS · For many retail·
ers across the country, a good
Christmas would be a marked
chant~e after thiee str11ight disappointmg holiday seasons. 'I)tere are
some encouraging signs litis ,year
- overall bUsiness has·gradually
improved since January, and the
release of stronger October sales
figures brightened eq&gt;eelalions for
the season.
But dte outl~k remains cautious. While malls in lhe New York
area have been busy~ not ·a n retailers elsewhere have shareil in that
jood fortune.
· "Sales have been slightly sluggish since the election," said Sieve
Marotta, an analyst at Johnson
R.edbook Service, which analyzes
rerail sales on a weekly basis.
Overall sales have been down so
far in November from OciOber levels, he said,
Janet Mangano, an analyst widt
Burnham Securities Inc., described
business as ''spotty by region,
sporty by retailer," allhough OV!lfall, consumer traffic is up at the big
malls and smaller neighborhood
shopping cenlers. She said dte season might produce dte same kind of

supply about 75 percent of Gavin's
6.5 million tons of coal annually,
preserving about 800 jobs at the
Meigs mines. The rest of dte coal
will likely come from .other Ohio
mines, preserving other mining
jobs.~'

"The PUCO's approval of the
I : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ::.:.

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

~ : :::::::~: : ~ ·. ::::: :: :: : :: :
!'.

STOCKING UP· Delores Donnet, bead or the seasonal departmeat at Hills Department Store, Upper River Road, Gallipolis,
stocks the shelves Saturday ror the rusb or Christmas shoppers
expected for the (U'St weekend of shopping season, which traditionally begiu tbe day after ThanksgiviDg (Tribune pboto by Kevin
· PiDsoo).

erraSno\~!1 ~~·ustry analysts and

have been a little' better dtan last
ear
economisrs had predicted that con- Y He said the economy seems to
sumers, who have spent gingerly ' be affecting how much shoppers
during the recession and weak buy, as well as lhe way they shop.
recovery, would feel betler about
"I&gt;Prnl
b ·
1
~ -'" e are uymg 1ess, peop e
shopping when the uncertainty of
the presidential campaign was are buymg more specialty items,"
he said.
ov~~tailers and analysts will be
Shoppers are also making more
waiChing dte first weekend of dte conservative purchases, Hood said.
season closely for clues about con- They tend to buy things their loved
sumers' willingness to spend.
ones need.
Locally, Gallipolis relailers are
"People aren't being wasteful of
seeing a slight increase in early- dteir money," he said.
Managers of local depanment
season sales, but are predicting
things to level orr and mirror last stores are expecting sales to be
comparable to last Chrisunas sea~b Hood, a salesman at The son's.
Haskins-Tanner Clothiers CompaRoger Buck, a manager at

~;l~sr:'i'"c~~~n~~~lirr~~
1992 Chrislmas shopping season

Pomeroy
woman held in
shooting death

plan deserves to be recognized as
lhe product of a thorough process
on a crucial issue for Ohioans,"
Disbrow continued. "We also
appreciale the efforts of Gov-.
George Voinovich and the Ohio·
General Assembly for enacting leg-.
Continued on A-2
·

Kmart Department Store , 18'5 .
Upper River Road, Gallipolis, said ·.
the first 1wo days of the season
have been quite busy. He said 311
improving economy and an addi~·
tiOna! two days of shopping
between Thanksgiving and Christmas will help sales.
"I suppose they (shoppers) will
be spending more, but it's too early
to tell," he said.
AI Hills Department Store,
Upper River Road, Gallipolis, manager Dean Murphy said he is
expecting a 10 to 15 perc.e nt
increase in sales over the holiday
season. He added that sales have
been up about 15 percent since dte
swt of the shopping season Friday.

Lindeman waives jury trial;
.·J·udges to hear case Dec. 2i

POMEROY • A Long Bottom
man accused in the June robbery
and murder of Howard Lawrence
of Long Bottom has waived his
right to a jury trial and asked dtat
his case be tried by a three-judge
POMEROY - A Pomeroy panel.
woman is being held in the Alhens
Donald L. Lindeman, 28, is
Counly Jail, in connection wilh dte charged with aggravated robbery
shooting deadt of her husband
and aggravaled murder in Meigs
Michael D. Harman, 50, was County Common Pleas Court. The
shot lale Friday at the Kingsbury aggravated munler charge carries a
Road residence where he and his death penalty specification.
wife, Linda, 38, have resided since
Lindeman's jury lrial had been
May. .
set for Wednesday, bot he appeared
Herman Henry, an agent with in coun last week with his attorthe Ohio Bureau of Crimiluil Inves- neys, Public Defenders Michael
tigation and Identification; County Westfall of Athens and Robert
Coroner Douglas Hunler; Sheriff Head of Columbus, and asked for
James M. Soulsby •and Michael dtechange.
·
Canan, investigator for dte Mel~
Common Pleas Court Judge
County Prosecutins Attorney s · Fred W. Crow lll permitted Linde• office were at the scene, along wilh man 10 waive his right 10 a trial by
deputiC'8 and a Pomeroy Emergen- · jury and proceeded to have two
cy Services uniL
·
odt!:r judges appointed by lhe Ohio
Hannan's.body will be taken 10 Supreme Coun. Those two addithe Franklin County Coroner's . tional judgea are Dan W. Favreau,
office for an autopsy. Mrs. Har· a Common Pleas Court Juclge in
man. meanwhile, is beinJ housed Morgan County, and .Robert G.
in the Athens County Jail, since Tague, ·a retired Common Pleas
Me~ Coonty's jllil doea not have
coun Judge from Perry County .
facilitiC'8 for bousinJ female prisonAs a reiUit of Lindeman's waiv·ers.
er
of
his
a jury trial, those
Funeral arrangemeniS ate undei
who
have
lerved
1 notice 10
the dircction ·of Ewing Funeral
appear
on
December
2
and 3 as
Home, and will be artJIOIJI.ICed later,
prospective
jurors
do
not
need 10
according to a funeral home
appear,
according
to
Crimin ~ l
·spokesman.

Bailiff Paul Gerard.
A pre-trial conference was held
on Fridar with Westfall, Head,
Prosecuung Attorney Steve n L.
Story and Assistant Prosecutor
George McCanhy. At that confer- ·
ence , Lindeman re-affirmed his
desire, in writing, to waive his right
to a jury trial and have dte dtree; ·
judge panel hear dte case.
'
The trial was set for Monday, ·
Dec. 21 at 9 a.m.

26

rie!r:o

.,

f\
)

�W

Aclcu-111

By TM AIIOdllted l'NI
ClCluds II'C expec:led PO demuc
over western Ohio counties Sunday. while the east stays cloudr.
Highs IIOUIId the szate should be m
rbe40s.
An inch of snow was expected
over northc:ut Ohio IJeitR it rapers
zo 111111ia, but liule SDOWfall aa:u·
mutation was expected eiJewbete.
Highs !Ddar were going zo range
from rbe mid 30s zo near 40, wi!h
light winds.
Roads were expected zo be slippery mainly over IIDI1he8st Ohio.
An area of snow mo"cd into
sou!hwesl Ohio Friday night and
. moved into ·northeast Ohio just
before sunrise. Snowfall accumula-

fuecut far

MICH.

•

IToledo !43" I

dons WCiftl P.J1111111y 10 incb or less 11111 expected from the eastern
wi!h liUic if any IIIDW ICCumula· . Great Latea 7D the Ap{'llachians
lion over PIOitbwest and southeast and in rbe IIOithcm llni:lries

Ohio.
One PO three inches feU in Clermont County easz of CinciMali,
with 10 inch • Columbus and the

A cold front stalled off the
AtlaPtic Coast wu expected to
bring scattered rain along the
seabOard from Florida to North
C.Oiina.
Friday evening, rain fn)m the
cold front extended from 1011zbem
Florida to the middle Arlantic
Cout. UJht IIIDW fell from Zlllldteastern Artanaaa zo the Midwest
Showers wereiCIIIaod ov« Wahingzon, ~gonllld Idaho.
.
High lemperatures were ooly in
rbe 3(&amp; and 40s in zbe lower Mississippi Valley on Friday. Shreve~ La., reached only 38 degrees,

Akron 1R1L

. AI'OI7IId Ole u b
Soow feU over J*1S of the Midwest 17111 the Rockies early Saturday, while rain showers mat«~ the
PacifiC Nonllwest.
U"""'"IIIIJIY cold tempc:ra!UICS
were forecast along the nonhem
Gulf Coast - frOm Teus 7D zzartbwest Florida - IS a Canadien high
pressure system drifts eastward
t!uough the region. Scaamd snow

eaths--------------------~-·
Mary Etta Carr
Effie J. Mayes
Clarence N. Worley
~· :

the coldest high ~or rbe dare Iince
1880, whep the high was 41
de&amp;JeeS.
•
"remperatures Saturday were
ex~ted zo reach !he 30. iD the
Midwest, Appalachianl, northern
Plains and rurbem Rockies; 401 in
the Norrbeu&amp;. much of rbe Southeast, !he Pacific Northwest. the
Great Lakes regicn. rbe rear of rbe
Plains and the southern Rockies; .
. SOs along the ·AIIanric lelboarw:l, in
mos!,of--Texas and nortlrem Cali- ,
forma; 60s in the IOIIrbem JliZfll d
Flori~ Texas and California; and
70s in rbe SouthwesL
. The high for the natiQn Friday
was 86 degrees at West Palm
Beach, Fla.

. PO~ PLEASANT- Mary Eua (Thomas) Carr, S7, ~f Point Pleaaant,
died Fnday, November 27, 1992, at Pleasant VaHey Hospital in Point
~t.
.
She had been employed wi!h L.A. Joe as a cleric and previously with
Hcclc:'s for 15 years.
Janua.y 21, 1935 in Buffalo, she was a daughter of Myrtle
of Pomt Pleasant and the .Jnte Marion Thomas. In addition ~o her
father, she was also preceded in death by one brother Bobby Joe Thomas
Sr. ·
·
'
·
'
In lddition 7D her mother, she is survived by her husband, ROben R.
Carr; one daughter, Rosita Sue Hoffman of Poinl Pleasant; one son Roben
~ Carr of GalliJ?Oiis; three sisters, Laeua M. Wamsley of GStlipolis
IT}'~ Anna Marie IWI of Point Pleasant and Be!ty L. Williams · of
W~gtllll Court ·House, Ohio; two brothers, Charles R. Thomas of
~ashingtllll9oun House, Ohio, and William C. Thomas of Point Pleasant;
aour grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
Funeml service will be held at 1 p.m. Sunday, NQvember 29, at zbe
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant with Rev. Tim Siders
offici~g. Burial ~ill be in Forrest HiUs Cemetery at Flatrock. ·
VisJbng hours will be held at the funeral home on Sunday starting at 11
a.m.
·

n!:s

JVSD.Board approves substitute personnel .
• Al:cepted a doolri011-of a 1992
RIO GRANDE -. Personnel son, secretary.
Cadillac Eldoradq from the Genrnl
and procedural JllatterS were acted
In other actiop, the board:
upon by the Gallia-Jactson-Vinron
• Approved consultant CODtracl'l Moton Cup., zo be used for classJoint Vocational Board of Educa- for the Depanment or Highway room pwposes, and a couch from
lion in its November meeting at Safety, Youth Satellite Project, for Empire Furniture Co., zo be used
Buclceye Hills Career Center.
· Pabiclc p. Amrine, project direczor, for rbe leCher's lounge.
1n personnel matters. the board and Sandra K. Hickey, secretary
• Approved the Advisory Commiuee membets and their renns of
employed the foUowing as substi- services.
totes: John Milhoan. Gallipolis, 10d
• Granted permission for the service.
Linda Specht, WellsPOn, instruc- vocational cchool zo collaborate ·
In the Adult Division, rbe board:
zors: Pat Pinons, Vintllll, bus driv- with the Scioto County JVSD for
• Approved the following pro- •
er; David Harless, Vinton, and the Eisenhower Fiscal Year 1993 grams: Basic Volunteer Fire,
beginning Nov. 15, and First
JaJ'(lCS Wright, Gallipolis, custodi- inservice gzaU.
Res,PDnder/Breathing
Apparatus,
ans; Margaret Allen, Jac~. and
• Granted pennissioo for the disbeginning
Dec.
5.
Penny Newsom, Jacbon, educa' Zrict 7D apply for a mini-teacher
• Employed !he following
tiona! aides; Sherry Bums, Point inservice grant through the South
Pleasanz. cafeteria; and Anita Law- Cenrral Regional Training Center.

W.VA.

Weather

Emaded roncast:
;. Sunday; decreasing clouds with
~ay tlar'oqii.Wecbletday:
. ··:0·'"11 in tL:, lower40s.
Fair.l..m!s mid :205. zo mid 30s
.
and highs mid 30s 10 nud40s.
. ,.,..,

' . Soatlz-Cotral o.io

~ll:·m-ad-ec-;~-~-::-from-y's_A_:_ve_some_ne_pb-·ve_clli_cc_tfor_lbose_ Former 0 if jo~rnalism director dies

....,.,..,.., ruling possible."
employed at Central Ohio Coal
· Voinovich said that the action Company, which serves rbe plant in
by rbe PUC0 was "b~"
Beverly and the Windsor plant in
&gt; "Regreuablr, Ohioans will be West Virginia, buJ.ir's ~ertainly
blliiCI 7D pay higher costs ..x:iat- · good news for the mmers m Soothed with the iiiCicf llin provisions of em Ohio."
die 1990 Clean Air Act amendSrrictland said his tesrimony at
ments, which were unnecessary a PUCO hearing on the scrubber
1llled 011 the final ~ by Narion- proposal in Canton this summer
II Acidic ~pirabon Assessment emphasized the "human factors"
Association," Voiriovich said. "I involved in the issue.
~ ihese JmVisions for many . " 1.have felt all &amp;~ong that the
tears. On rhe .other hand, the PUCO should faczor m rbe cost of
PUCO's clecisi011 deals fairlT with rbe energy and environmeiMal dccidlc set's mandates by·scWng, zo sioos, but slzould also considenhe
die maximum extent possible, rbe human aspccts,-couidering the
~ of Ohio coal mincts' jobs of Southan Ohio families that
~; 1',1'1 m,ose people who 1'100: in would be lllversely affected if rbe
iodustries that .dy hesyity on elec- sazi~!~ers were DOt insrallccl. That's
~
and by keeping down the ki_nd of fac:zor rhat .egularory
utility rates for consumers, espc- qencJCS scmet1~ ~c:rkd. Dol·
dillY IICIIiar ciriD:as."
Jan and c:aziS fiZ'C I7IIJlOI187Il, but the
:; "TTre ••omc is a belOit zo our human coasiclcntioos are perhaps
lidminiltnlioo's ooaoiZII eliCits PO even ZZ101e importanL It's good PO
iPI!Iabout new economic devel- sec that JeiSOD prevailed and the
-¥•1Ml CfPO"•mities In Southeut- right cJ;ecilion was made."
an Obio.
Strtckland also noted that the
\ Swo Rep s:malive Mary Abel scrubber construction process
(b-Atbena) also zapl7l6ed zo rbe should he1p the economy right

~·'!;:;;;:c- !.t"':en an

awa-1be

A~

r

COLONY TH Ell TRE
FRIDAY THIU THURSDAY

an associate professor of journal- zo bachelor's and· mas!Cr's degree
THE lAST OF THE
ism
and
was
named
tbe
second
...
.
f the 0U
rDgii!U
.
.
.
MOHICANS R
director o
School of Jour- . . At OU, wl!ere Hortin was granrIHOW ,_8:
nalism in 1952. While at' OU, he ed emeritus status, the E.W.
FrL.a.t.-lun. 7:»6 1:30
directed the OU Publications Scripps School of Journalism now
IIIDn. Zhru Thura. One Ev.lnt
Zl'-7:10
WorkshO(I. which grew into the ofTen the LJ. Hmtin DiszinJ!Iished
AdnliMion
t1.10. ' . III2J
country's JaJ:Fill!ld most aucceas- Alumni Award each spring at its
ful worbhop, ltllacling mare than annual journalism IIWII'ds blnqueL
2,000 high school editors and
advisers.
He~ from the post in 1967
and' retum~d to MSU where he
upgraded the Journalism program
zory.
· zo departmental status and aealcd a
Following his educarion, Hortin minor in the clilciDllnc, which lead
spent six years as a rural high
school lt:acher and principal in Dlinois. He ~n joined MStJ in 1928
as the head o(joumalislil program.
HmiE ..
He was also the school's debate .
coach, director of ~ll_licity and cdi.\1.0\l'~
.
zor-advisar of rbe College News.
Horlin Clllle zo OU in 1947 as

Lotto numbers

By ERIC HOFFMAN
GALLIPOLIS - Christmas is a
special lime for children throughout the world.
Small children look forward
with great enthusiasm to the
moment when !hey can lear !he
wrapping paper off !he gifzs Sanra
Claus left under their Christmas
tree. The excitement of Chriszmas
· mornirig is unmatched by any other
event a child will experience.
· Some families in·Gallia County
would lack the excitement if it
weren'f far' the ~lfonsQf thc Gallia
Aca\leq~y Key Club. This is !he
fifth anniversary of the Key Club's
ToyTown project.
ToyTown ~vides gifzs zo Gallia County children whose families
are facing fmancial hardsbip. The
Key Club also provides winter
coats and food boxes zo some of
!hese families.
Toy,Town has been recognized
as one of rbe top service projects in
the world at the Key Club International Convention. The project was
also selected by President George
Bush as his fifly-second 'point of
light,
Last year, ToyTowri provided
gifts for more than 1,000 childn;n.
distributed nearly 200 food boxes
and gave away more than 2~Q winter coats.
.
According to ToyTown chairpersons Kelli Smith and Jared
Ford, the monetary goal for this
year's ToyTown project bss been
set at $40,000 in caah, coats, food
and other donations.
. Ford said the Key Club was
planning on reaching even more
children this Christmas and providing a greater number of food boxes
to Gallia Counry families.
Donations zo the ToyTown projeer can be made in many wa}'S&lt;
Cash conbibutions can be made
in donation bolles located in many
area restaurants or can be mailed
zo: ToyTown, P.O. Box 1183, Gallipolis OH 45631.
Winter coats can be dropped off
at Cardinal Dry Cleaners ~ted in

.,

a.

t:HRIITMAI t:D/11
OlE OZ. PURE SILVERI

'

-m--

CcapuJ'IIIlll~

lac.
"Ollie
·---~a&amp;
41131. •
.. _ Qalllpotia,
.......

·P 77

.

.
""'-led-·
:.w.-.
a...-..
·M

~

' Oiaio Now~

aa41bo
-lloD. Had_.

.N-~

, 783 Tbbd - - .

New 1111k10017.

·JM~r

..

~lalln,

·. .,.c-.----- .
.. _
IIIJIIDA1' OIILY

~&amp;ATII

14 Diff...... S.lectio•• '
Soe •• ell iewelry et

Hospital news

:_.... - - at - . . , , Ohio, Poot

.a-.

ONLY

Vete..- Memorial

.

.,00

Tawney Jewelry

FRIDAY APMISSIONS - Lola ·
Bolin, Syracuse, and Mark Goeglein, CooiYille.
422 SECOND lYE.
FRIDAY DISCHARGES
GIWPOUS, 01.
Arthur ShiiiPiway.
.....~ . . - . . . . . . . . . -ni~Q

•

·«:»-.' Y..,..................
- ............-OUCOPY

,.Ne

7

(fdiM by ..!1 pol'111iu.! Ia

*

carrior _ . _ Ia

·~--

:n. .....,. ft S•IIDol wt7l oat bo
,, 5 0'1 ........... ..,
••

7

;eacilfttln.
..
IL\ZIIIVIIICmTJOIC8

.,Glib'
'o.o - ..................- ................:::...

t

....

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

;..........
. -.. . . . . . . . . . . . . .... ..=.11
:~~a

.

;.iJ

711

lUlL~-=
......c..tr

Hurry, offer tH!ds December 15, 1992.

Call ·675-3398
1-SOQ-766~0553

Jatreah.l 3 _.trN:h Is tf tllnl ..... M tim:
paiR 11~ 60 ........ 50 ttrfll, VI, HI, LT's
AT PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD!

NOncE: Opening Soon 3nlloc1110n
.
Mnon, W. YL .crou from Poll Qfftce
Clwck Our Pllcw Before
Buy or We Bolh LoN!
Open D8ilr I AIN:311 Pll; Thurs. &amp; Sit. Claud II 3:00PM

I

'.

.

GALLIPOLIS - The Galiipolis
Volunreer Fire Department
responded to two false alarms
overnight Friday and also provided
assistance zo fbe Vinzon VolUnteer
Fire DepartmenL
.
Eighteen fire fighters responded
early Saturday morning zo the false
alarm at Holzer Clinic, J,ackson
Pike, Gallipolis. According zo the
repon, the alann was probably set
off by a faulty panel board. It was
the 2261h call of the year.
Sixteen fire fighters also
responded PO a report of a vehicle
fii'C Friday evening on State Route
7, Gallipolis, neil!' the Kanauga
Drive-ln. The problem was actually
steam from an overheated radiazor. ·
It was the 224!h call of !he year.
The department also assisted !he
VVFD in a structure fire early
urday
(See related

.

R y Sayre·

I

M
. •
. red
1d

Rose Watson

J

r

-ACQllSITIONS FI~ JEWELRY-.·.·•_-" . .

fr Christmas
Sale!
.
.

r We Have lowered the Prices of Our
{ 14K Gold Chains &amp;Bracelets - Again!

I OUR LOWEST PRICES ON
c 14K GOLD CHAINS IN
I OVER 10 YEARS!

~

PENTAIIQ ~OOM .
CAME US
· ·Auto Focus
·~uto Raeh
•Auto Rim Advance··
•Auto Rewind
•Auto zoom
-s Year Warranty
•Free Batteries

•liree Case
•Free Film

'i

· Tawney Studio

-choose from Rope,Herrlngbone,
Box, Figaro Diamond - Cut Rope,
Flexible Herringbone -

424 5ecHcl Ave. Gr..••

446-1615

~--------------------_. ,
Graphllte Pro-Mid
~ ~~ ~!!I Cross Traina•·~

SHOP TODAY fOR BEST SElECTION
Over 500 Chains and
Bracelets in Stock!

REG. $89.95

$5995
.'Ihe Slioe Cafe

lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, OH.

Medical Shoppe
"Seming the patknt and phy•icianfor
0!/er 30 yean."

~hysical

Therapy Servlccts Available For:

oConsuHatlon
•Physical Capacity
oCybex Tutlng
•P,...mployrnlflt ttsllng
•Adult Fitness
•Pain Control (TENS)
•Work Recovery

HERMANL.
DILLON .

oBackiNack Injuria
•Arthritis/Bursitis
•Athletic Injun..
•Strokt R•habllltallon
.Cardiac Rthablltt.uon
•Joint R•pli!C•mllnl
Rehabilitation

MARGARET
JOHNSON

MICHAELL.
HEMPHILL
AT

BOC

PT

.

. I
I'

BOWMAN'S

HOME OXYGEN SERVICE
HCempl1tt

Yau

See our 200 year Did French Buhr MOnM In operation grlnclng
flour. Welcome O.Cember 5th .ncl 8th -12:00 tD 8:00
Vl81t CJWII 1nd !Sat. Room, Mmple Jnel Evana Flmlly Fooda
. line produeta&gt;and- hancknlfted country glfte.
W• will be highlighting Jew.l Ev•n• Chrlatmu gift bDxM
·
•ndbuklla.
·
.
lire ....ell-•lrltl.. . . . . .. , _ .........

MECHANIC ON DUTY

Offer 0o&lt;x1 lor stanc!alll instaHalion in callle serviceablo.areas lor a ~miled time only. Some restrictions may awfy.

-

.

,...IPJ

., U. I. II, Wllk. elllt1 Hie lodMJ Pl..; St. II. 150

r
••
1

•

,·

DlamDnd purc:h••• are dlfflcultl No llllllter what dl1mDnd you . ·
lind - another Jeweler IH'!I-• to have the Mme alze for leaa. ' ,
Dlllmonds are priced baud an not only alze but alao (purity) ..
Cld and &lt;:oiDr. We It AcqultlltiDna aek you tD cornp~~re our new
diamond• with •nyone'a. You will HI th~ difference - Your
DlamDnd Dollar will buy you more 1/t AcqulaltiDna. We prl&lt;:e
eiiCh diamond with a auggeated retail price 1111d our price Compare ua juat once -You will HI the aavlngal You cannot
llfford to ahop •nywhere elael

CHRISTMAS
COINS

l
\

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

.

more.

At less than a doll~ a day, cable is a great entertainment value.
So ... if you've been toying wilh !he idea of getting cable or adding premium services,
here's your chance' to give a little this holiday season ... and get great ca,ble entertainment!

'

i
l

HOMECARE'MEDICAL SUPPLY

!II • .._...............~.................. ....

w-.-.. .-.. . . . . . . .. . . . .

G~LIS ~ Services for Effi~ J. Mayes, 75, 1029 State Route ' POINT PLEASANT- Clarence N. Worley. 62, West Columbia, diql~
141, who.died Nov. 25, 1992, will be 2 p.m. Sunday in rbe Willis Funml Friday, Nov. 27, 1992 at Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal.
1
Home, with the Rev. Eugene Harmon offiCiating. Burial will be in Ohio
·
-j
'Born July 9, 1930, son of rbe late Dallie 8nd Lillie (RichardaonV) V(oiVlill.ey Memmy Oardens. t
1
. Pallbearers will be Rodger Bostic, Kenneth Bostic, Charles Bostic, ey. he was a retired law enforcement offiCer with the West ir11ma
Chad Mayes, Ray Malone and Joe Malone.
Department of Natural Resources and a former sheriff of Raleigh County.
A Ko~ War veteran, he was a member of Brecldnridge Missionary ,
·0
Baptist Church, Bolt, W.Va. , and was a graduare of Trap Hill Higl(' ;
School.
•
' j
POMEROY R
Surviving are his·wife, Rebecca (Creed) Vfarley; a daughter and a son- ·
died Thursda- oy Allen Sayre, 64, of Tuclcerville Road in Racine in-law, Bev and Paul Randolph of Gallipolls Ferry; a daughter, Kenberly
on
· y, ~overnber 26, 1992 in Ruslcin, Fla.
' . Worley of Point Pleasant; a son and daughter-in-law, Wesley and Neaira
Anangemenrs will be announced by Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy; Worley of Memphis, Tenn.; a sister, Jane Cantabury of Daniels, W.Va.; 1
two bro!hers, Jack Worley of Pratt, W.Va. and Franlc Worley of L9IJCh- •
1.
burg. Va.; five grandchildrenandonestep-granddaughter.
I
··
•
Graveside services will be Monday at 1 p.m. in the Forrest Hills Ceme- l
POINT PLEASANT - Mildred Rose Lee Watson, 80, Henderson, tcry, Flatroclc. with the Rev. James H. Lewis and the Rev. Gilbert Craig •
died Friday, Nov. 27, 1992 in the Charlestllll Area Medical Center-Gener- officiating. Friends may call at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home Mondiil'·
ai Division.
from noon until I p.m.
Born February. 28, 1912. in Henderson, she was a daughter of the late
Charles L. and V1rg1e (Jeffers) Lee. She was also preceded in dea!h by a
bro!her, a sister, and several nieces and nephews.
~~~~Q•c•Q•a•a••~~~~q~•••v~·~·~~~~Q~
Survivors iQclude her husband, Arnold Watson, Sr. of Henderson; a
daughter and SOil· in-law, Peggy and Darrell Clark of Gallipolis Ferry; two
~s and a daughter-in-law, Jack "Micky" Wa~n and Arnold "Spuds" and
VJOia Warson, all of Henderson; a sister, Freda Oliver of Dayton, Ohio;
two brothers, Wesley Lee of Henderson and Smoolcie Mott K. Lee of Gallipolis; two special nieces. Lana "Jodie'' German and Gena Gennan, both
of Point Pleasant; five grandchildren, sill great-grandchildren and several
meces and nephews.
..
·
Service will be Monday, November 30, at 1:30 p.m. at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home with Minister Lloyd Sam Gwinn and Rev. Glenn Rowe
. officiating. Burial will be in Henderson Cemetery.
'
Calling hours will be held at the funeral home on Sunday from 7-9 p.m.
.
·--·- - - ---.

GVFD respond to
two false alarms

•

Wellll.-~.. ,.................................... lM

.78
.·
..-odoWoc.ul;r
·11
~.40
• " . . _.... -................................
.10
• " . . ._...................................
.40

!he Ohio River Plaza. Food barrels
have been placed in moSt Gallipolis
area grocery swes PO coUect nonperishable food items.
Applications for ToyTown are
available at all area elementary
schools, Hills Department Store;
Cardinal Dry Cleaners, Carl's Shoe
Szore, the Outreach Center and at
!he Gallia County Welfare Depanment
Applications need 7D be returned
to rbe ~ey Club by Dec. 5. ,
Christmas is a time zo give and
receive. Fo.r the p~ _f!!ur years,
the Gallia' Academy *ey Club and
all those individuals and businesses
which contributed to ToyTown
have given a joyous Chrisunas zo
some of the less fortWI3te families
in GaUia County.
As Ebenezer Scrooge found out
ar !he end of "A ChrisbDaS Carol,"
there is no beuer feeling than. the
feeling you get when you give joy
and ~s to another person at
Christmas time. .
I Erk Hoffman is a student
reporter for tbe Sunday TimesSenti!Jel.

CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE
December S,th
. - 6th
JEWEL EVANS FAMILY
MILL

DONATE A TOY TO OUR HOLIDAY TOY DRIVE AND GET
FREE INSTALLATION OF CABLE OR PREMIUM SERVICES.

.

..t48.10

·:
nJCa
•.....,.,_.......--.......- .......... -.76 C..ta

•

~itt must be new, un~ and valued at $10.00 or

eo,

•()De . - ..........., •• _ ................. ............

•

'

o~.~rway

of saying
than~. we've got
a special cable offer
Just for you!

'

(V---

,.

}

.
fhis season, contribute
a gift to our toy drive
and tnake a child's
holiday brighter.
As

.
A. Gordon Thevenir, 76, Rt. 2 Mineral

ToyTown makes Christmas
possible for indigent families

scrubbers

approval of the
is also good news bccanse it will
tbelc delilwuiww," Abelllid. "In provide an alm01t umzzec!i.,.. stimlaeaiin81ieldby rbe1epl•n•eand ul~s 7D the economy," Strickland
die POCO, other parties and I UJd. "As much as $800 million
ia 1 rbe poiDilhll evety mizring could go inzo the construction of
jOb IIUjiJIUIII a number of related · tbe scrubbers, which will be an
jobs. 111DIIIa'ZIIlive PO scrubbing immediate benefit in that it will
t(le p1111t - more unemployment povide construcrion jobs IS well as
..-1 Ji0W1tY lilr our wea."
save our mining jobs. I'm sure that
·: Abelldded rhat in addition zo a lot of mining families in SouthP,b potection, the order offered · ~ Ol1io .-e breathing a sigh o(
&lt;ltherlie•erJts.
.eiJCf."
•: "Whiie in•llingiCI'ubbers will
Paula Thactt'r, Meigs County's .
linclonJwcdly be expensive, rbe fact economic development director,
~ IIW rbe costs of zmnsport- said Vfednesday that she was
Hig low-sulfur coal from out of "ecstatic" abou! rbe PUCO's delciCID . . OIICC utilities commir sioo.
!li it • !heir ooly fueliDUfCe," Abel
''We've been workiJi&amp; hard with
~ "..t while IIClllbbing still Jft- rbe five-CD~~Dty roalitioo and we're
SCZIZI eaviroamental&lt;:oncems, ir very happy with the PUCO deci*'uld lieniwobcrccl that burning sion.~ 1baCbr said.. "We feel that
irj:rubbed coal releases less sulfur it will be most beneficial zo the
4ioxide in!D the air than burning economic climate in Southeastern
oPII zoiDccl in weslem states."
Ohio."
·' Ted Strictland (D-Lucasville),
"I was unable to 10 to the ·
. ij.S. Coogeasman-decl far Ohio's PUCO hearing (on Wcclnesday),
Sixth district, Jlid he was pleased but I know that a lot of coal miners
(or the coal mining families went, and I'm sure that rbe miners
idvolved.
and their families are very happy. It
·· "t 1171 very very pleased with rbe was a gzea Thlntsgiving JRSCIIL"
IICcision," Szrictli!M! said. "I think
The compliance plan had
tlllt it's wonderful news for the drawn opposition from the Ohio
men 17111 women who wort far rbe Siem Club 10d lndUJirial Eoergy
Soutbem _Ohio Coal Company. I Co.ns~mers .. They favored fuellzive feelings of concern for the . swuching over use of ICIIIbbcrs.
liiiDers who .-e likely PO lole their
. Samuel RandazzO, a lawyer repj!iblu a ICSult Qf the switch else- resenting the industry group, said
Where. I !hink the decision will rbe Older would be .eviewed.
"It sounds ·lite It's basically
what
AEP aslted for, and to the
·'
~
jieu:tbit.l
extent we strongly objected I
"'••
WOuld expect that those objections
'
would continue," he said.
'j. ,, w Melt Scmda7i au Tbird ln.,
.o.lll~ Obio, bJ' lbo Olaio v.u.,.

-

•

OHIO VALLEY
SY.PHONY

Gordon Thevenir

MINERAL WElLS, W.Va. Yfells, W.Va. , died Friday, November '/.7, 1992 at camden Clark Hospital
m Parkersburg, W.Va. He was a retired dry cleaner and a member of the
Minaal Wells Baptist Fellowship Church. He was also a member of the
Thevcnir Quartet for many years.
.·
He was born June 16, 1916 in Winfield W.Va. zo the late Harry G. and
Ada Boggs Thevenir. He was a graduate of Gallia Academy High School
in Gallipolis.
Survivors include his wife, Dorothy N. Thevenir; two daughters,
Dorothy L. Druid of SL Petersburg, Fla. and Donna J. Crites of Mineral
Wells, W.Va; one brother, Howard F. Thevenir of Gallipolis; three grandsons'and three great-grandsOns.
·
He,was preceded in death by his parents, one infant son, William G.
Thev~'!ir; one sisrer Lilly M. Thevenir and one brother, Cecil G.
TheVCOif.
.
.Friends may caD 5 zo 9 p.m. Sunday at the Leavitt Funeral Horne, 403
SeventhStteet,Parlcersburg, W.Va.
.
Services will be held 2:30 p.m. Monday 81 the funeral home with !he
Rev. Lon Chenowith, Dr..Jerry Neal and the Rev. Robert Alfred officiating. Burial will be in the Mt Zion Cemetery in Min~ WeUs, W.Va
.

MURitAY, Kt. - LJ. Horlin,
88, a fonner direczor of the School
of Journalism at Ohio University,
diedFriday at his residence in Murray, Ky. His careec as a journalism
educa7Dr covezed 46 years at Murray Stare University and OU.
Horlin received his bachelor's
degree at McKendree College in
Lebanon, Ill. He graduated with
straighl As in all of his ~uate and grad worlc - the highest
homr in the college's 132-year his-

po-.

..ipOZ'IIIil c-•J!IIioa lhnlqhout

hourly adult: Roy Jonea, Chris ·
Rhodes, and Steve Wallis, First
Responder: and Richard Eubanks
and Marvin Deck, ~ Volunteer ·
F"lre.
• Granted permission 7D apply
for the foUOWUIJ grants: Enrolling
and Retaining Smgle Plwents, Dis- .
placed Homemalcers, and Single :
Pregnant Women In Non-rrsdirional Vocational Occupalional Training Programs; Adull Lifa119' _Edu- .
calion Planning and Coonlmari011 ·
Grant; ABLE Math: A Compecency
Model; and Appalachi,an Conferenoe o~ Adult B.asic and Literacy ,
Edncat'O"'.

Sunday nmea Sentinel-Page-

Local

Northern Ohio roads will remain slick with snow, ice

. . . . No¥.29

Pomeroy-Middleport Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleaaant, wv

November 28, 1892

0H Point PIUMnt, WV

H~tplflf Sapp~llt

Fer Heme

u....

24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE-7 DAYS AWEEK
FREE DELIVERY &amp; SET UP
1·.100·451·6144
446·7213
011.
3RD &amp; PINE ST.
'·

Jtcq·uisitions

HOURS

!JJ(lfrr
JT/WELt]{9"
J'{P

w
Men.-FrL
W Saturday

CORNER SECOND AT GRAPE STREET
1...:30 Sunday
(TOJII'• Furniture Building) •FREE PARKING

I....

-ALLIPOL~

~

·

•fREE 90 DAY fiNANCING
•fREE GIFT WRAPPING

�..
November 21, 1112
I

A4

:rr=~====~===F~==~~~~========~~
:
'

Woman jailed for theft

A history of PHS, MHS f~otball

••
ADitllloaof

~two
We have previously reported the

111 Coul1 St., Pom...,., Oblo
(614) 992-2.156

i

I

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pll1111111or
HOIAitT WILSON JR.
ll:.eull" l!dltor

hutory of football for the years
1925· 1932. From 1933 through
1950 an games were played on the
MHSfleld. From 19Sl through the
football year 1959 the football

g~es ~~~~~~i~r ~s

PAT WIUTEHBAD
Alolltant Pllblslle...CO.Iroller

Cn
fJelds. After 19S9 throt!gb
1966the games were played during

the regular foot~all. schedule: In
1967 the consolidation of Me1gs,
A MEMBER of The Auociat.ed Presa. and the American
and RuUand ended ~he
Pomeroy
•
Newwpaper Publilben Aaaocillloa •
MHS • PHS annual game. ~e1gs
High School took over at that tune.
J.El"IBRS OP OPINION aze welcome They should ~ lesa lh.an
From 1929 through 1936 ~he
300 won11 All 1etten aze subject to od•llll&amp; led muat be 11gaed wtlh
Pomero~ fans sat on tbe West sule
name, ldlbu, mel relepboae number. No uaoizood letters will be
, publilbod. Letters should be 10 &amp;ood tute, addresaing issueo, not
of the field and MHS fans were
seated on~ East side.~ 1937 the
MHS stadium was butlt ,an.d the
MHS fans sat on tbe West Side of
' •'
the fie.ld and.PHS fans sat on the
East ~1de. ~ddleport was !&gt;ne of
t~e ftrst h~gh schools. to mstall
. hghts for mght games m the state
'
of Of11o
F · 1925 th gh the 1952
rom
ro~
.
f~ddle season. ~~~~Pf~
•
port was.eJ
on or co-champ1on of the SEOAL.
•' Editor's aote • John C.
WJ~hich Middleport won in 1929, 1930,
t' Mallaaey, Jr., prnldeat of the topaThcyi~rsoof~:n'.
....1933, 1934, I935, 1942, 1945 and
; Ohio Couadl of Retail Mer· you like to compare Ohio, does not 1949.
This record is really out·
• ellaab, 18JI it is appareat that have personal property tax on standing
and phenomenal. Out of
; GoY. VolaoYich, Ia Ills coatacts either equipment or inYCntory. In 27 ears MJiS won the cham pi; with tile press, hu heea teUIDg light of this fact, Governor, do you on4 eight times.
• oaly Ills side of
really believe that Ohio merchants
Dr Ed Lewis one of the players
: Inc tlte supposed "tall breaks" enJoy tall breaks compared with of thiS era is
one of lhe most
' that retailers han. In order to Illinois?
·
prominent' Protestant mm1sters in
; ht tile record straight, he has
In addition 10 lllinois, both New the United States. He is the same
: wrlttea to the governor glvla1 York and Pennsylvania exempt guy they used to call "War.ennel·
• the rest or the 1tory. A eopy of personal property from taxation. In on" His life story is truly remark: that letter follows:
the states of Caltforma, Flonda, abie Dave Diles could not play
•
Michigan
and New Jersey invento- football because of a heart condi•• Dear Governor VoinovJCb:
ry is exempr.ed. The tax on personal tion. Later he became a national
: In your sta~ements to tbe press, PI~Y in other states sunounding sports figure for ABC TV and is a
• tbe Jcgislehne, llld die public:, you Jhio is lower and less burdensome renowned author. Many of his sto: ha'YC ,.,......~Jiy claimed dial retail·
nes refer to his background in
; ers hive certain unwarranted tall thanInOhio's.
this example I have used a sports at MHS. Lloyd Moore and
• breaks in Ohio that should be "superstore", however the ~xample Bill Wilson were outstanding base·
! repealed. The JlUIIlOSC of Ibis lc~ applies equally and proportionately ' ball players. There are so many
• is to make you aware of certaJn to. all merchants large and small more success stories which the
! fiiCIOI'S which you do not acknowl· alike,
~ess of the IYJ?C of m~rh writer, because of space, has been
: edge.
chandise or IIXIble semce whlc
unable to lisL
• First of all, in relation to the tbey may sell.
.
Which was the greatest team
: retail Sales tall direct use exemp· - . If Y!&gt;U, want refam and fauness that MHS ever had? The writer did
~ lion, ~ .-e absolutely COI'RJCt that m Oh10 s ~ax C'!dc perhaps we not see all of these teams perform.
• Ohio 1 is broeder than most other shot¥ be discussmg repeal of the but in spite of this hand1cap the
! StaleS.
tang1ble personal property tar ~n wrir.er wo!lld have to pick die MHS
' However the SliDe is true for ~en coupled~~ repeal 0 e teams or 1929 and 1930. Coa~h
: most other se~tl of tbe busi· direct use ~pllon.
. .
Jim Clatworthy, former athleuc
: ness commuruty. Utilities, manuIn addiuo~ to the retatl dtrect director at Bradbury Tech, stated
' factumS, agricuiiUre and newspa- use exempuon you have also that the 1933, 19~. 1935 were the
~ pen all have similar exemptions re:;~~&amp;'lled for rehi~ ~the best, next to the 1930 team. LfoneU
, for ltemalhey buy 1D provide aoods ve .
~ w c re ers Boggs rates tbe 1943 team as the
• aild servieea to the public. These rece1ve to partially compensate most outstanding. Lionell was the
i exemptions keep pnces down by tbem for ac~ as the age~t for the star of this team and also was the
• not hiving die 181es tall on them
m collectmg and remttllllg the assistant drum major of the MHS
:become put of die price at multiple stale
tax.
di
d .AA band.
ileYCis of production .!ftC~ dislribu·
In~pen~nt stu ~ con uc~
Shorty Hackett thought his
' lion
both
m
Ohi?
and nauo~lly have team was the best. Many spons
' Specifically you have said that shown !hat It costs retailers more fans ·regard the 1949 MHS team as
~ Ohio retailers have exemptions than tWice tbe I 1/2% allowance to
. the most dramauc. Th at
r.e 11ect and
't the tall
certamly
: IIICJit surrounding states, liiCiuding
co 1 ask rerru ha 0~ was the fmal. year of coaching for
•Dlinoi• donothave.
overnor,
t, you
~~ fo Coach Bachr.el. He was a VJCnm of
loy
: In Clider to put JO!II' swement in
00
emp
~·
~
or
and as a result he was forced to
i penpeo:ti~ I will mate die follow· ~~late 15t~~ lcssa r 1 r MS
retire.
His inspiration caused the
1
' Jill CXIIIIJ*IIOil.
MHS team of 1949 to defeat .the
o s cos or r enng
If a ne~:!f:C !u~rmar~e!, to die stalle?
. . ·
·league favorite, Athens H1gh
commoaly
a superstore , tS
\Yh~
are
you~
SIDgling
out
by a seore of 33-14. Don
l Ufl SIC d ill Ohio, lbe purchase of die retailer ~eng::~ llikl'!"ar:; ~= School,
Payne
ran
wild that day and h1s
:eQIIiJinleltl aed directly in making ev~ o r smess m t
perfamance
was one of the great•r;;D lila il exempt. This equip- which acts as an. agent ?f the state est ever achieved
by a MRS foot·
: 1110111 inc:ludel counters, shelving,
15
to
collect
an
~xcJse
I!IX
comJ:ball
player.
TbtS
victory
had to go
: refriprllled cases, scanners, comsated'!'
Jl&amp;n!al~y
reJm~urse
em
downinhistoryasoneoflhegreat' pulel'l, checkout equipment, etc. for !hell' semce: These JJtClude_the -est upsets in MHS history.
~ We .e told Ibis eqwpment for one e~~;c1se tax on Cigarettes, gasoline,
1'iuly Coach Bachtel's 1nspira1"supentore" costs in excess of
WlllC and beer.
tion
tbe primary factor in this
(51,100.000 IIIII if 111 average state . ~!her eX81l_lple ~ compe~- win. was
One
final note on this team
.and local sales tax rate were
10
~g
indiVIduals
~v~~:~
was
that
the
center weighmg 135
;applied. die tax on this equipment or acnng as an apen sal
'd
pounds
was
Charles
Stoban, now
•would be more than $62,000. In th e percen~~;ge 0 gross es pat
the
head
coach
at
Memphis
;Ohio die equipment is exempt, in to agency liquor store ~rat'!rs. University. To commemorar.eState
this
•Illinois il is taxable.
'fe
comrnedind
ythio_ur
admwstrahou~n
team
the
writer
lists
the
following
; Howe\'er, in an fairness you can •or expan n~ s program,
:11111 stop die comparison there.
ever is a retailer's work in collect• • In Ohio this store equipment, ing and remitting the sales tax that
: top~~tet with the inventory items
much different in your mind, than
'displayed for sale, are annually when the same relailer acts as your
:subject to the tangible ~rsonal agent in selling a bottle of liquor
;propeny tax asses~ at 2~% of and collects and remits tbe money
, ~ value. This tax valualiOD or mventhe commission allowed?
,
:101)' and equipment is subject to die lessGovernor,
if retailing has been
Dear Sir
~same tall rate as real property in
singled out by your admirustranon
I don't know Ms. Gilmore, but I
~ that taxing dislrict Under this for.
as a target for tax increases, so he can sympathize with her. I was
• mula a typical "superstore" located it But don't try to justify this shocked to read where the school
: in Ohio pays more than $52,000 in action by trying to convince legis- board upheld the deciSion to P.unish
: penonal poperty tax DD its inven- lators, newspapers and the public a small second grade child by
. IOIY ~ eqwpment every year.
that the reason is that we now putting him on a sttange bus, talc; . With net profit m die grocery enJOY unwarranted tax breaks.
mg him to a strange school, and
; itJduatry averaging around I% of
Sincerely, making him sit for three hours with
: gross sales, th1s means an Ohio
John C. Mahaney, Jr. students twice htS age. This had to
.
President be a very traumatic experience for
"superstore" must sell $100,000
a child.
;dollars of merchandise weeldy just
In our judicial system lhe age of
'.,
the offender, is always taken il)to
consideration. This the school
•
board failed to do. A just punishment would have been losing a
think that Amenca wants to have recess or two. Did the other child
• Dear Mr. Hodding Caner m...
: I hcpe you m:eive a copy of Ibis their tax dollars going to kill or children involved get the same
' and I hope I come across very babies, or suspend them alive to punishment? I am sure this child
:clearty. Your a1ic:le in tbe Moodsy take live brain tissue u they need
)Nov. 23rd rec~laimecl that Mr. it? Or how about aborti0111 tor ~
•CiiniGD was
ted becluiC of his poor, ,nd rape IJid ~t· that IS
only 3., of aJ!IIboltiODIIIICformed.' Dear Editor,
: ~ (J)Io..choice) stand. You
This letter is in a sort of reply to
'claimed Mr. Clinton wu eleeted You are justifying tilling over
Hodding Carter III article appear:because a m.,.ty or America is 4,000 babies a ~ for dial 3t.. .
Abortion is being used as a birth ing in the tribune Monday; Nov.
;~ (pro-abortion) - ' wantcontrol
method and may won be 23, 1992 entitled "The election's
•ect thl• pro-death mesuae sent to
paid for by tax. dollan. pro-choice message".
:wuhlnpln. Mr. Carter. only_4 out •com~.
The
one aided media oulled
It does not seem lite a mandate
!oflO people voted for Mr. Clinton.
&lt;Comlctme lfl'm wrong, but that is a slick one on America-You forgot for Clinton when he won only 43%
4Jt alll8jorll)'. Your lrlicle wu a to menlion these facts, Mr. Clrltl. of all votes cast, not a landslide as
)erfecl wmple of what joumaliJm Only 4 0111 of 10 Americans voted the pro-abortion mo®i claims.
Hooding Carter says that Clin·
;Jbauld 1101 be. Not only was YO\U' for Mr. Bill "Pro-Death"Ciinton
•IDlY blued M4 one-aided, but It and now we haYC to live with that ton intends to lift the "gaf rule.
ins lull of lliltludll M4 misleJtding for 4 yean. Don't make it worse This so call "gag" rule 11 only
wilb more bad journalism.
information supplied by a doctor to
tt
lo
i' ·Tbe
· - VOI«&lt; of America
'
T'JDIIMerry
h1s
patient. How come It is not a
did not
Thurman,
Ohio
"gag"
rule when a doctor tells his
~ a majority pro-death (pro·
patient about a cancer op«ati~?
choice) mess-,.e. Do you really
'
.

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· =======:!I
.:. ~P"-="'ol:::lrieo=

r-Letters to the editor
The rest of the story

Mi

•

tH......, _,._

m:w

cor:fo: •

':v fe

i

°

Players, managers and coaches who
were on the MHS 1949 sq. uad .
Harold Hi kl
:William Swisher,
n e,
Edward Bowyer, ~cNud Walters,

Fred w.' Crow
Charles Stobart. Don Payne, Roger
Dillard, Woodrow Call, Bracky
Wood, James Lloyd, James ~anborn, Robert Ashley. Gene Oi!er,
Eugene Coleman, Isaac ~1lt,
Lester Ye~uger, Ro~coe W1se,
Robert Dav1s, ROO:rt Pierce, Frank
Gothard, Don ~VIS, Ed Kennedy •
Larry H~rry R1ce,James Buell ,
James Smger, Gerald 'Yarren ,
Andy Batey, Harry Ke1g, Jon
. Sch~. Roben Russell, Lawrence

. .:

9!

ct•Int on must deaI

WI• th

-

a testy 1ran
By

-

and · ·
Michael Binstein
the:

auF- :

sen&amp;- :

naugh'- :

A lot of double talk?

Not a majority

Not a mandate!

I

0

,)

ur
nOman

..

.

.

~

.tiel

It d • Ji. h
QSSaU e Jn :g t

GALLIPOLIS - 0a1Jia County lherift's deputies Jei)Oifed a Gallipolis woman was aaaulr.ed d~~n~~~a f!Pt at Baiid'strailer Court,
s~~~e Route 1, Clalllpo1is, early Salilrday mom~ns. Acconling to lhe
report, Sheila Moore, 872 State Route 7, Oallipolis, was beaten up
by a male IUbjeeL

refused ueaunent.

~~e~ ~e~;:;~=~ ~~{dlegltostsof~Som~!

Letters to the editor

.

-~·A.

there were the Pickens Bennett, cocty wben you know that m tle ,
Wilson Allensworth, N~. Casei, there is •'MO"C 11'0111111 die cortllf
Dye and many other families who who is u good or beder IbiD JOI!.
had ore than• one fOOiball player The competition or matinJ! yop ·
atPm orMHS
· want to excel is what life 1s at
~g ~ Theodore Lehew about. 1 feel dial I learned my teSo;
F
B ht I oached in son well on both ends of this~~:
=~in :~~d~astbeMHS
F¥1y, ~h year sin~e ~:tl~
head coach from 1944 to !949. !he~~ :~M;exc:epuonsflei" '

PHS General James Hartinger was of you might think dial I may hi~
~terback for MHS in 1940, lost my marbles, but nevenheless, I.
1
1 1 aild 1942 MHS played for ~et the same exotic feeling in visit-•
die league ch~pionship in 1943.- mg tbe sc:enc of the many baUies~
The final score m the 1943 game which have occ:umd on this field.·
was MHS 7 and PHS 6. Bob In on1er to convene with the ghoats ~
Hamm missed a field goal attempt one has to be on the same wave ·
in the lasueconda of that game.
length.
Rupe 1 must apologize to you
Not everybody can enjoy this •
for not having a more complete luxury. If you hlven't had some"'
DavulsonandJ~sRoller.
football history of these two expenence with one of tbe former.
. The onifQteam 10 PH.S hlS!Ory to schools. I was going to give you a players, now ghosts, on this field,~
WID the S
ALchamp1onship was list of an scores, coaches for both you may as well stay at home.·•
th.c 1955.squad coached by Alex schoolsandacompler.elistofplay· Rupe , l hope you and Rupeue ;
Ctlo. T~IS team had a record ?f , ers for you to digest Sorry.
understand this feeling. I would:·
seven wms, two I~ and one Jle.
Finally in a very short time one describe it as revisi~· mie of the
To commemorate thlS team the •Ol·
.• .
· throu h 42
.
lowing players were on the 19SS can see his life PJ!ISUig
.gn
homes you preVIO'!S Y occupied:
b 11
d· Kenneth McCul- years offootball history. In 1929, 1 many yean ago or if you go to &amp; •
f:tg: ~~~~Y Morris Rodney was 16 }ears of age, I40 ~'!nds cemetery and visit the graves ~f .
•
.
• G
and 6'4 tall. I was a long Skinny your deceased loved ones. There tS~
Sp~ncer, 1Im Hems 1ey, eorse arm and leg player with no body something in die air which is very •
Smllh, Jerry Welker, C~!l, attached. Today, this writer is a real and you can catclt it if you are'
1
Wehrung. Don Smtth,
couch potato age 77 24S pounds in tbe
frame of mind
0
Woodard •. Paul Folmer, ave of blubber birety abk to walk up
Beat~
Yellow Jack~. See '
Kunze , Bmgham _Kres~ . 1er~y , ~
•
. r .
r. .
od
•
Davis, Philip Werry, Glen Cee1l,
~the statts, ~VJDg com on
you at the field. IIi 0 we trust
Ted Beegle, Larry Wildermuth, ~ly !Jl S~, Ohio. Where has
Carry on. '
;
Sam Russell, Keith Reuter, Mike ~sUm~~ · Many fond memEditor's note • Lon&amp;·tlme ~
Harman, John Handley • John ones sull exJst of .!be ~nt ~ Attorney Fred W. Crow Is th-=
Young, Bill Sheridan, Wilford Tay· 1929/1932: One thm~l discove
contributor of a weekly eolumn..
lor, William Qualls, Earl Smith, early playmg ~ootb · ~ooner or for The Sunday Times-Sentinel,',
Gene Harman, Harold Brown, lateryouare.:g.~~mtoli~e Readerswishlagtoapplaud,crit ••
Junior Hawthorne, Milton Lamben, player who
your rams lclr.e or comment oa any subject
Mitchell Johnson, Richlrd Barn- out and tea'l:h you_respect. What (except reliclon or politics) are .
han, Bob Wilson and Gene Mitch. makes you a man IS that Yllll take encouraged to write to Mr,
Junior Hawthorne laiN played for y~ur ~umps and later le!'J"I them Crow,ln care of this newspaper. ;:
the University of Kentucky and w1th mterest. You can t get too
made All S.E.C. Ted Beegle .was
I
the engineer in charge of Ameriflora, Columbus. Ohio, 1992.
At this stage of this artie!~ I
,
should like to thank the folloWIIIg
·•
"
who helped gat!'er the information
""
gathered herem: When you are
•
attempting Jo ·get a history of 41
years of foolball games and mern'
bers of the teams, you discover that
WASHINGTON - Three U.S. lion went beyond the ceremonial ~
you do not hive sufficient time to presidents have gone down in calls made to dozeD$ of world lead· :
complete this project Most of the flames in a fecldeJs pursuit of elu- eB.
~
material was taken from high sive "moderates" in the medieval
Even though Clinton is playing ..
school yearbOOks, newspaper ani- mullah government of Iran. It cost
cles, and many other soun:es. The Jimmy' Carter re-eleetion, Ronald
in!iividuals who collaborated are: Reagan die most senous SCJndal of
J~k Anderso~ ..:
Nonga Roberts, 1uamta Bachtel, his administration ancJ George
...
Mrs. j..ce McComas, Thco(lore BUlb a fatal political CODtroYCrsy
~.·
,,.,
1 ' \ I •
.. .ft),..., (.1 -:
Lehew, Tom Riley, Lloyd "Dinty" on ele'ction~.
Moore, Bob Byer, Ralph Graves,
~•
How can President-elect Bill
Paul Casci, Lionel Boggs, Earl Clinton avoid watching his admmKnight, Jun' Clatwonhy and Hindu istration ship-wreck in that part of --------~-----------·
his foreign I_JOlicy cards close to
Henderson. 1banlcS again, folks.
the world? Iran is already launch· vest,
spokesman
George :
The LewiS family of Middleport ing verbal torpedoes, marking the Stephanopoulos later revealed that ~
had the following brothers playmg: Clinton victory with "death to Clinton told Fahd he is "commit- ~
Art, Harold "Tuff," Ed "War.ermel- America" demonstrations, and ted 10 die security of die Gulf and ,
"Goat," Lewis . The
on, " and Larry
.
. shooting one across the bow of tbe Saudi Arabia." Defendmg U.S. ~
interests in the Gulf w1fl be :
Crow family has also been prom1· in-coming president
Iran's spiritual leader, Ayatollah infinitely more difficult as Iran :
nent. Judge Rick Cr~w. made all
Southeastern three times. Carson Khamene1, over Teheran radio, grows more menacing as a militarY •
Crow won all league honors for condemned Clinton's support of power, one bent on acquiring :
two years and later was a.three .Year human rights as the "creation of nuclear arms.
:
starling center on the Ohio Uruver- the mmds of die wicked analysts
There are other tea leaves
sity tell!" in 1968/1970, '!"here he and political activists of the World ing a sea change •in U.S. pohcy. :
played m the 1968 Tangerme Bowl Arrogance." Khamenei lashed out, 1ust a week pnor to the general .
game, wh1ch is now known as the saying: "In a few days, tbe world election, Gore signed a letter urg- •
Citrus Bowl. In 1970 Carson was will willless a repetition of Ibis pre- illg such a shift in U.S. policy. 1'll_e .
named the most valuable player by posterous scene, with the new letter, dated Oct. 28, to the U.N.
h1s OU teammates. My brother, American president charging others Secfetllry General Boutro,s ~
~chard Crow, was an outstanding with violations of human rights.''
Boutros-Ghali, was signed by a •
center for three yean. My son-.inA variety of early signs point to whopping 62 or the 100 u.s.
law, Ted Beegle. was outstanding the fact that Clinton i!ncl Vice Pres· tors m which IIIey stated that previident-elec:t AI Gore appear ready to ous condemnation of human rights ~
player for three years.
· · tbe battle. Their admlnislration
abuses in Iran had been for
The writer also played and JOID
f" .
received all fust team league hon- will suffer no shortage o tnsntu- and more needed to be done. Cfore •
ors three years. Rupe, I guess I am tional memory regarding Iranian is a key member of the Ointon for·
bragging a little bit but I had to say mullahs masked as IIIClderar.es. The eign policy brain trust.
, "
it (After all it is my story). Then foreign policy transiUon shop is
" The Rafsanjani government ~
stocked with former State Depart· has failed to change," the lettc:f' ,
ment offtcJals from the Carter reads. ''Instead, despite intern~· :
administration who bear deep scars tiona! pressure, it has sr.epped up its '
from the 1979 U.S . Embassy pursuit of these policies, conflnD • •
hostage
ordealadm. ..
· mtg
· ht mg that this reg1me's claims of :
A Clinton
m1stranon
'moderation' ~but a myth .... w'e o,
start by canceling the diplomatic are co11vinced that the time has ~
search parties that haY~? ~ hunt- come for -the free world to join :
'
was not fighting alone.
ing for the elusive Iranian moder• together against the human rights :
Wake up Meigs County parents. ates" for more than a decade, by abuses of the Iranian regime. :
The only thing your children are hlrboring no illusions about con· Recently, a majority of the mem'-·•
learning m these schools are to va1ing radicala into IIIClderates, and bers of the U.S. House 'of Reprecurse and fight and that they are by extendin~ a hand to Iran's grow- sentatives, and 1,300 parliamentarinot going to get fair treatment from ing _OJ!PC?!IiUon group, tbe People's ans from other countries issued
this school system unless they ore Mojahedin.
statements condemning the vio'-considered to be "someone speAdvisers to Clinton and Gore tions of human rights in Iran, ~
cial."
have conferred with People's supporting the Iranian People's
The only thing parents are get· Mojahedin officials to cxl'lore Reststance (Mojahedin)." .
,
ung is a lot of double tall: and alternatives to die failed polkaes Of
A reverse compliment has been
fence riding. It is time for the peo- their American predecessors, paid for some time now by lhe Rae"
ple of Meigs County to stop letting sources told our associate Dale Van sanjani government They impri1
our children be vicnmized by those Alta. A Clinton official confirm! and 1011ure Mojahedin supporte ,
who are supposed to teach and pro- the contacts, but minimizes their inveigh against die organization i
tee! them.
meaning. He explains that the Cllll- govemment broadcasts and publi·
Patricia Wehrung paign was lloocfecl with .phone ~ catiDDs and break internadonallaw
Pomeroy. from attention-clamonng opposi- by reaching into Iraq last AJll:il and
tion groups from practically every bombmg one of the MoJahedin
country in the world, including the bases. The attenuon attests to the
People's Mojabedin.
regime's fears that IIIey ~facing a
S'till, the fact tha.t Iran has formidable resistance movemenL
undertaken an aggresatve rearma,
With Iran on what seems to be
The Freedom of Choice Act is a ment etlort has apparenlly alarmed war-footing - acquiring scores of
bill to l'rohibit virtually all state Clinton more than any other inter· fighr.er lircrafi, bombers and tanks
limitations on abortion. In an
development, if his rela- from the fmner Soviets as wetl as
August IOth letter, Clinton said, "I national
tive
outspOkenness
an omen. He North Korea and China - few'
will make passage of the Freedom ~ by !deJihoneisafrN
his elec- other countries in tbe world have so
of Choice Act one of my top priori- uon, for example, with Saudi
Ara- much potential to menace Western
ties".
.
bia's
King
Fahd
and
shared
his interesiS.
It is critical that all representa· concerns that "new hostile powJack
Anderson
and
Michael
tives and senators hear now from ers" could represent a reg1onal, Binstela are writers for United
large numbers of pro-life Ameri·
cans that you do not want such an threat. The Clinton-Fahd conversa· Feature Syndlc:ate, lac.
extreme policy of abortion on
demand in all SO states.
Sincerely,
Thought lor Today: " I am not sure that God always knows who are Mr. and Mrs. James L. Davison Hia ~t·men; He is SO very careless Of What happens to them while tbey
Galbpolis live. '- Mary Hunter Austin, American novelist and playwright (11168-o
19~).
'

'./

GALLIPOLIS • A Ypsilanti, MK:h. woman was jailed Friday
night' by Oallia County sberlfra
followin\!us~lifting
~~t from an employee at SuperAmaica, State te North,
Bledsoe, 39,221 Sr.evens Dri'le, Ypsilanti, Mich., was
amsted far thefl and dilorderJy ccnduct after a warning.

j

•

Sunday nmes SenUnel Page A5

r--------~ocal bn·e»~s---------------F-.da------.------A~s--~da----~-~~~~-c~Nud~~E~Kin~.-s-4~s~~~--~in~gton
-::.~w~as~~:::::oo~w~hen~he::Hnll::;.k~the~.~;;~~~.------------,

November 21,118a

Page

PomeroY-Middleport Galllpolla, OH Point Pleuant, WV

Moore was takell to Holzer Medical Center. but

Police issue two citDtions

.\

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis police issued two citations between

n Y mornmg
8llu atur Ymommg.
'
Vinton
Stteet, Gallipolis,
was cited for speeding and. Barry 'G. Halley, 35, Second Stteet, Crown City was ciled foc driving under the
influence and failure to use headlights when required.

Two-car accident probed .

GALl.IPOLIS - Gallipolis police investigated a two-car accident
Friday night at die intersection of Second A"Yenue and Olive
Aerording to the report, Robert A. Sommerville, 33, 136 Graham
Drive, Bidwell, bllcked into a parked vehicle owned by Diana M.
France,lljiC unreponed, 381 BuctridgeRoad, Bidwell.
No inJuries were reponed and no citations were issued. Both
vehicles sustained light damage.

S~t

Patrol reports deer-vehicle wreck

GAUJPOLIS • A Convington man escaped injury Friday af!Nnoon when his vehicle struck a deer on U.S. 35 m Raccoon Townshitcording to the report from the GaJ!ia-Meigs Post of lhe State
Highway Patrol, Lester H. Sides, 76, 7610 W. Meyers Road, Cov·

S'!des' vehJ'cle sustam
' ed moderate, disabung damage and was
towed from the scene.

Pair begin -sentence

POMEROY.- MeJgS County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported
that deputies have transproled Gary B. Norman, 38, of-eomeroy,
and Tommy E. Lyons, 32, of
have
to
Orient Reception Center to begin servmg sentences unposed by
Meigs County Common Pleas Court. •
Norman was senr.enced on a rape charge and Lyons on a charge
of gross sexual unpos1tion.

Middlepo~

been~

Bowles a"ested on wa"ant

POMEROY - Elmer Bowles, 61, of Harrisonville was arrested
on Wednesday and charged w1th aggravated burglary.
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Bowles
was arraigned on the charge and released from custody on a 10,000
recognizance bond pending further court action.

:.Meigs lawmen
.recover stolen
")'truck, .9 guns;
?our a"ested
. POMEROY • Meigs County
"authorities spent most of the day
. Frillay investigating the recovery of
~~ stolen pickup truc:k from Athens
,,County and the recovery of nine
guns taken from an Athens County
:residence.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby
reported that the department
:received information shortly after 1
a.m. on Friday or the location of
the truclc, which had been burned
·and was reportedly stolen from
Athens County. The same informant also advised of the stolen
.,guns.
' Souls by, Investigator Robert
,,Beegle and Deputy Harry Lyons
!located die truck in a f~eld off Har. •mon Road in Columbia Township.
, LaiN. they went to a nearby resi·
,dence and picked up two subjects
allegedly involved in the incident
Soulsby and Beegle also met with
two Athens County d = r and
went to a residence on
· Rock
Road and picked up two individuals alleged seen driving the vehicle.
Arrestet;l were two Athens
Cotmty juveniles as well as Keith
Dou~las and Alva G. J,obinson.
Robmson and Douglas were
charged in Meigs County Coun
with two counts of receiving stolen
property and one count of arson •.
They will be represented by the
Meigs Coupty Public Defender's
'Office. Douglas was released on a
·ss ,000 recognizance bond, and
Robinson's bond was ICt at $5,000,
with 10 ~nt cash pmnitted.
The Juveniles were transferred
to Adlens County for prosecution,
and will be charged in Meigs
_County Juvenile Court, as well:'

~Vinton

firemen
'battle two
:structure fires
: VINTON - The Vinton Volun·
"teer Fire Department baUied two
'structure fires overnight Friday.
; The fust occurred at g:so p.m.
at the residence of Donna Perry.
4178 Coal Valley Road, in HuntIngton Township. According to a
depaJUIIent spokesman, the fue
·started in the chimney and was
'f onfined to the attic and one wall.
Fourteen fJrefigh!Ns responded
'with two trucks. Damage to tbe res·
" dence was listed as miitimal. •
} A Vinton ftrefighter was injured
while while battling a blaze early
·:;aturday morning at the Charles
Berry retidence, 44 Airline Road,
Sprinlfield Towrtship.
Firelighter Eric Kemper was
taken by private vehicle to Holzer
'Medical Center after he ran a nail
1hrough his boot. A hospital
~woman said Saturday mom'ing he was treated and released.
The structuR fue was called in
'by troopers of the State Highway
J&gt;atrol at 2: 1S a.m. Saturday.
According to the fue department
$pol:esperSOn, the two-story struc-,
'lure was totally involved when ruefighters amVed.
. Eleven VVFD fJrefighters and
two trucb responded to tbe blaze.
Mutual aid was provided by the
'Oaflipolis Volunteer Fire Depan,ment, which responded with 19
fuefighters and one truck.
' The house was reported as a
complete loss. An oud!ltilding was
'also damaged by heat and fire. The
fue is still under investigation Md
'tbe state fue marshal has been noti·
lied.
I

'rue

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,Appeals murder conviction

~

PAINESVILLE, Ohio (AP) ,Lawyers for a cult•leader's son
:Convicted of aggrsvated murder
=and kidnappingliav~ appealed on
the grounds that publicity and
I nsufficient evidence denied the
son a fair trial.
, Damon P. Lundgren, 21, was
:Convicted in September 1990 of
four counts each of aggravated !'
'morder a11d kidnapping in the
shootina dealha of lhe Dennis
,f. very fainUy in a Kirtland barn in
April1989.
· Ltllldp wu -tenced to 120

In •

~un~ lawyer, Alben L.

Purola, asld Ia die - - ft1ed Friday in Late CountY Oxnmon Pleas
Court that more than I,786 news
accounts of the Kirtland case
reached jurors bellile tbe lrial.

404 SECOND AVENUE
DOWIIIOWN GIWPOUS

�..

I

TlmN Sentinel

1992'

OH-Polnt PINeant, WV

C~nterville Masonic Lodge dedicated in 1926
.

By JAMES SANDS
Spedll Col'lftpoadeat

CENTERVILLE- ThebiJcvet~t

•

TRIM YO

in 1926 It Cenlervi1le wu the dedi·
c.aioool~MMonitioc!Pbailding.

Olberaipdjcaqt~n•nptbllyear

11

FOOD BILLS HERE

•'

•

ilnPor-

arn

.11571
•
I LI.IDI

•••••• •

II&amp;-

4PICK

PEPSI

Nllft.E'S
QUICK

,: DISCUSS DONATION· Fans attendbls tbe Gallla Academy·

; )Vellsk!D ~ preview basketllaJI same Tuesday iligbt wUI uve a

c

.....

LOTSA
POP

BEEP UVIDLI 8
CB«A£ UIIDLI

14CUI
au,FLIIOIS

c

,!.,
'

II 01.

:~:::.ielievingboredomwedo

Centerville had a respectable basketball team that year, but Cadmus .
was Jhe county's best. Centerville
lost to Cadmus by nine and 20 points
in the two meetinls- By conttast
dead on arrival, Linda Harmon, CadmWibeatCheshi(e62..0and42·2·
lreated not transported; 8:18 a.m., • Centerville abo bid a girls team.
Pomeroy 10 the Maples, Leo S10ry FOOiball was discontinued due to a
to Veterans.
shortapofplayers:From the 1890's

J ,.

POMEROY - Units or Meigs
Emergency Services answered the
rollowing calls over lbe weekend:
11:56 a.m. on Friday, Syracuse Wlit
~ Sixth Street, Lola Bolin to Vet·
erans Memorial. Hospital; 10:28
a.m., Rutlind $quad to Snowville,
Normao Mills 10 Veterans; 10:37
a.m., Syracuse squad to Wells Run
:S.oad, Dallas Barber to Pleilsant
Valley Hospital; 11:32 ·a.m.,
llacine unit to Plants Road, Opal
Cummins to Pleasant Valley; 12:19
p .m., Middleport and Pomeroy
units went to a struetute fire on
County ROad 18 aathe Ralph Carl
resi(lence, Carl taken to Vetetans;
~: l 0 p.m., RaciDe squad to Bald
~ob Road, f0D1thao Friedley to
Veterans; 4:'22 p.m ., Tuppers
Jl'lains unit 10 Long Bottom, Donald
~yers to Holzer Medical Cen!er;
12:02 a.m. Saturday, Ppmeroy to
· Jingsbury Road, Michael Harmon.

BEEF

co•••·
s

na.

··-

Ll.

H:I

'

:~

Ll.

I!UIOunced in 1926 thai

Ceaterville_bldproducaltncn~~ ~ Clplla !ban any other village
m Ohio.~ wac 27 practicing

tachen including: Frank Redmond,
Neil, Stan and Herb Jones, John
Miller!McrvDavis,NelleRllff,Amy
and Elinor Jones, Clyde, Hannah and
Lu1a Clark, Eli•aheth, Trevtr, Mason and LiDY: Jones, Evelyn and
S!"''geon DaviS, Charles M~.
BCIOOD and Thomas Owens, Stella
Cooper, Gladys Lloyd, Hattie Cher·
ington; Avanelle Morgan, Hazel and
BlodwenWiUiams.
.
lrooically the same year Center·
ville gained the preceding distinclion, the village school w~ flfSt
condemned by the Slate and then
switchedfrombeingasecondgrade
schooiiOathinignldeschool.Efforts
led by Sen. Beman got a levy in place
to build a new school thai would be
ready in 1929..
The first project of the Centerville
PI'A was the homecoming set for
July 4, 1926. That first eoient was ·
small but by 1927 there were more
than 3,000 JRSCDL The· 10vm had
also produced a number of professional musicians and they made up
the program for homecoming over
..-· _ _
. -------.

••••!1111••••••••••••'
·OPTOMETRIC
PHYSICIANS
DRS. NIBERT&amp;: MATUSIEWICZ

NEW OFFICE HOURS

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Monday 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

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*Tuesday 9:00a.m. -7:00p.m.

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Color Prints

Thursday 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Friday 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

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TAWNEY STUDIO

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GAWPOUS, OHIO

SALE STARTS TODAY: ENDS 12/8/92

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446-0RUG

90 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, OH.·
·

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Specializing In Prompt, Profaalonal Prwcripllon Service

(;hild killed by gunshot

CBUCKIIUr

schools.
It -

sons wbo joined in the march Is well ~
as such notable guests as Congrea- :
Williams,andF!ip!WhEhrmanwe~e man Jenkins, Judge Benoer JOIICi l
Chalauqua oc Keith Cilcuit Singers. and Grand Master Earl SteWiri of
In charge of the FIIIIIICill Instiwte . Ironton.
~
we~~~: J.W. Davis, EJ. Jones, T.H.
The program was fQUowcd by a:
Allison,J.B.Walker,LloydHughes, banquctonthefJtStfloor. Themeou •
Dave Davis, Wilmer Jones and Leslie included: chiclcen, baked beans, po- :
Alban. Included on the bill roc !he 1a10 salad, com on !he rob, lliced :
firSt time at sui:h a "male bonding- IOmatoea,hotrolls,pickles,jelly;iced 11
type event" we~e women like Mrs. . tea, coffee, apple-pie and ice cream.
J.B. Walker, Elizabeth Jones, and The oldest person )XCSCIIt was TJ.
Mrs. Hendrix (state leader) all of Clark who was 82. He became a
whom spoke about the importance of Mason in 1872 which was but6 yean : ·
maintaining the schools.
after the lodge was organized. c;.A. ~
The dedication of the Masonic Clark WI!S the master of the lodge in t
Temple was held in l3te summer. A , 1926.
· ~
band was fortned of Masons from.a
James Sallds iu special correnumber of communities and they led spoodealoftheSWidayn-~·
the procession from the oid lodge 10 tine!. His address Is: 65 Willow
the new. There wtm over 300 Ma· Drive, Spriogboro OH 45066
•

...EMS units answer several weekend calls

101.

CIEF-110¥ ''·DEE
m 'CIOMPIILft

I

:fhance to •elp lletdy families tWa holiday seuoo. Aliyone·brinlinR
. ·a toy, to be dooated to GAHS's Key Club ToyTown project, wlli be .
~dmltted free. Toys wiU be cllstrlbuted Dec. 18~20. Pictured is
Coach Jim Osboroe as be Ialka wltb Key Club members Jean New&amp;lome,left, aod Jeonifer Stover, ceoler.
•
.•
.

(Magaall .......)

8

included: orpoi·
ZllioB of lhe tint
PI'A.lhemqani·
ZlliooolaJuly41h ·
homccomina. the
-hostina &lt;1f lbe
F!lliiiCi's Institute
and school problema.
Of coune for lhe farmers of the
Clrftmunity lliere were other
tantdevelopments.ltwasdiscovered
that yw thlt lime gmuly aided the
growth of clover. Seq~ beans had
' become a luxury, going from 6¢ a
pound 10 8¢ a pound. Turkeys could
aomedmes be had for only 11¢ a
polllllhnd hamburF ftr 10¢. As 10
turkeys,IIOIDe farmers were !~linking
about raising "IUI'kins", a newly
developed cross between a .turkey
and a~ Island Red chicken. The
male "lUfkin" could crow like a
roosterbutals()gobblelikeaturtey.
Farmers didn't like the weather
thatyeareilberas there was an esrly
frost in the fall and it snowed.on Oct.
25, which meant eccording to "tradi·
tion"thltitwouldsnow2Stimesthat
winter. Fanners in Meigs County
·decided to bold a beauty pageant that
year 10 help them pass the time
through !he long winter, but the father of the second place ''beauty"
consideled the eoptest fixed and so
he went after the father of the "winning besuty" with a shotgun. Had
CentetVillians considered sueh an

to 1920 Celltetville UJuaUy !lad the the ~t two decades. Arthur Folden,
best,fOOiball team among the county Ruth Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Emerson

342 S &amp; ned ~Ye.
GaWpoiii,Oblo
l'b.- '"'-4190

;: LEEDS, Ala. (AP) - A gun·
ihot fired into a pickup ttuclc driv,tng down an· interSIBIC ldlied a 22inonlb-old girl seated between her
parents, authorities said.
• Police said Ashley Ramage was
Shot in the back of the bead about
:40 p.m. Friday as her parents
east on Inters• 20 em~t of
~irming!laiiJI- The bullet pierced the
·lhe truck cab, passed
·111e child's restrainer seat
in her head, witnesses

.........

Home 446-4518

$$$ AT FAMILY PHARMACY~~***

UUUIANCI

•

CAUME.

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H(H11(' ()fficc:s: Bltx,mington. lllinnis

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drive off in your new car from Athens Honda and remember- "no pay~
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LB.

There is no cure for the common cold .
Nonprescription medicines may be just as
helpful as prescription medicines. Nonpre•
scription medicines have ingredients which
decrease cold symptoms such as runny nose,
nasal congestion, sneezing, watery ey~s,
cough, or so re throat. Depending on
symptoms, som~ products should be more
beneficial than others. Aslc your Far11ily .
Pharmacist to help select a product that is
best based on specific symptoms - a product
that contains no unneeded ingredients.

COMTUX

..

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r.••,Pha.....,.

The Common Cold

. .

IDt

4 02.

·aEWAILE

BDLOIII

ILl.

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TAKE AIM

AG 1 1NST WINTER CO• "5

IIATI PUM

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Good At Ho!Dr

239

�•

P11g1

1\.l~ng
.

November 29, 1~

'8 .Sunday 11m• Slnllnel

.

November 21, 1112 ;:
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Section B ..

the River

$afe holiday driving focus of Red Ribbon Campaign. .

..

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1e!" to IIIia ia ~D'a eft'ons !'J . Obio Departm~nt of Highway

·: •r JUUE E. DILLON

bought fresh and. kept watered in before •r;t::Ogto piclc up a large lines.
•
elimiallc cn.t &amp;i- from Ohio . Safety (ODHS) Directlll', Charles stand lhat won't up ove~. Use only or heavy
tge. ·
Th&gt;s ror A Safe PvtJ
:~
l
·
I'Oidwaya. Y••na lbd hia f~ Shipley, cal!Bd for the need for indoor J!P~ts on the tree and avoid
Tips for Sare Shopping
• Don'Tt drink and driYe. If plan- ::
· ~MilROY the 1991 were !ictims of • .~ drivilla con~ law enforcement and the ~crloading the ~ wilh an exces- . • Dol!'t Dash cash or credit cards ning 10 drink, IIIJilOint a d"Jlp , 1 •
ho~ - n . 86 Oh10111s lost ClUb tn.1~. ~IDJ hil fiancee public: I IUJJP.IR 1!"1. awMCness of stve ""ount of hl!ht strands lhat tn pubhc. Carry only what you driver.
·
In aJcahol-rellted tramc and 1cav111g ililll ~
· !)le dangers tn drivtng under the can c.Jse an electrical short. Keep ~ 10 make purchases. Store your
, If you do consume ak::ohol, cat :•
1'llll is the same number
"llle¥et reattud bow bad lhe infi!Jence.
tree away from all heat soun:cs and receiptS safely away and make sure plenty of food to slow
dealha u In 1990 ~ drunk ~i¥ina pr~blem WIJ i.n
"To reduce·. tb;e number .o~ peo- exits routes.
.
you get lhe carbon' from charge If you overdo it, call a cabot hive ; .
llfety expens ~looting Ohio,"aid YQIIIII. It tot* a uapc · pie who ar.o kt!le4 o~ InJUred
• Man-made trees should be card tnnsactions.
friends drive you home•
•
to femMe tbat DIJI!Iber this year.
silulllon In my life 10 set Involved because of tmpurad dnvers, we made from fii'C-retardant materials.
• Park your car In a weD-lighted
• Try Non-alCoholic drinklauch :
I'Be Alc:ohe;ll Free Beforo You In MADD. 1 urge C.Ch person 10 must ~e 19ughe~ enfo~- Oteclc lhe tree tag carefully.
area. Lock your car and take your as fruit juices, non-alcohol :
tiJe Key" !' the theme of dds get involved before a senseless ~t. -:x~ unif~ S;llDieiiC~
Tips Regarding Holidlly
key~. Checlc around the Inside and sparkling wines, non-alcohol bei:t ~
'a Red Rtbbon Campaign, tnpdy beCmn your retllJO!II. The ~}
mcreas h
Gll1s and J'ackapl
outside of your care before entering or flavored coffee in lieu of a1c:o- ,
cliaated by Motbers Against Reel Ribbon Camjllign is the per· yuu- ~ programs. sue.
• If you plan 10 be away, make in case someone is hiding nearby.
hoiic beverages.
1·
t.qll.l DrivlnJ ~D), tbe Oh!o
feet place 10 SIIJ1.
as the R.cd Rtbbon Campatgn,
~ 10 make urangemeniS wid! a·
• Walk on busy or wCll-ligh!C'I
• If you host a party,~ plea- :
ranee Institute, tile Ohto
Y'ouna added. "I also ask eYC~Y- stated Shipley. .
.
netgbbor to check your home daily streets. Know where you are gmng ty of food and be aware tf any :
~=~of Highway Safety and one 10 1upp~r!!dADD's effortl for
Tbe. Red Rtbbon Campatgn for paclcages and mail. Deliveries and wallc confidenUy. Keep a sharp guests are drinking too heavily. •
/1 . • Oreednp Coqxntion.
111a1pr tegisiCon so that~ j.-- began m 1986.10 .generate 8!-'~etend to Increase during Ibis period: eye and ear open 10 what is going Offer to drive lhem home, caD a :·
)'his is lbe· aevenlh y- for the tico ayatem will see a need for nes~ about dn~kmg and drivm.g . • Lock .all gifts and packages 10 on around you at all times. ·
cal1 or have them sray OV«.
,
c19paian which seek:J to create IOil{her laws 10 deal wjth offend· dun~g the h~h~ay season. Thts your trunk. Keeping them exposed
• When buying toys for children,
• Keep in mind when drivin•
·
year s theme ts Be Alcohol Free in the front or back seat of your check labels for fire-retard1\nts that safety belts are r.our best, :1
awareness of lhe traaic crime of ers.
dnlllk driving. A reef ribbon tied · Dan Kelso, president of the Bef~ You Turn The Key." The vehicle c111 invite a car break-in.
materials. Be careful of electrical defense against alcoho -impaitecl ·
around a vehicle's •tenna. outside · Ohio t:nsur..ce Inslilllte, adtllcssed camp111gn runs lhrougb New Year's .
• Bend your knees and stoop toys and check all safety guide- drivel'l!.
.
tb6 111irro'r C)r driver door handle lhe need for business and indus- Day.
.
.
I
•'
~ 11 a' reminder io motorisiS 10 IJ:y's support of lhe Clilllpaign and
~ADD Obto expects to du""'IIIF.Z¥•
.~
•
•
not drink aild dri~ capecially dur- acknowledged tile efforts of lhe tribl!te ~ive million red r.ibbons
v:·:'"'f:c.C "i"-#, .. ' . •, '
inj the holiday seaaon from media 10 inc:reasc awareness of the lhn?Dilh msurance compan,tes, ~e
. , •
tn.tnJcsgiving 10 New Years.
drinking and driving problem. The Ohio Farm Bureau, Ma~~ ~t
J'
· •
·
on, 1 trade association •qa sent- Centers, .ODHS and paru~tiJI!ling
·'•
; It'• nme 10 Get MADDI
ing Ohio· property/casualty insur- local businesses and orgaruzabOIIs.
••
Stalewide Red Rl'*IIICC induslry has~ the
American Greetings contributed
•
Campalp Kk:ko4111' Promotes
Red Ribbon eampeign for the past SOO. miles ~f red !ibbon lhlt w~re
. : SariHolld11 Drivbq:
three ysrs
cut mto 22-mcb pteces by Hocking
•
' ·
"Public 'aWiftneiS of the ~n- Correctional inmates earlier this
•· Mothers Against Drunk Driving tiaJ devutating harm of drinking fall.
· (loft\DD) held its seventh annual and driving can only be achieved
ftatewide kick-off f the Red Rib- lhropgh a successful team effort
Holiday Safety Tips orrered
on · Campaign~ encouraging that includes the. support of news
The holiday season is here.
t(l.oans 10 not drlltlc and drive, media .and business. 1 encourage From Thallbgiving 10 New Year's
~. ially during lhe holiday sea-. every Ohio business to join wilh Day; people oftentjmes fmd lhem·
?""; ,
the inlunnce indUStry in lbe distri- selves in a panic over holiday party
'ohn "Rusty" Young, MADD . bution of red ribbons to your preparations, shoppin~ for gifts and
state vice chair, called for inaeuecl elbployeiciS and customers, 10 pro- planning trips 10 visll friends and
eGlcatiocl, legislation and coopt~~- mole a life and lOber holiday sea· relatives.
.
·
~ from the criminal justice sysson," said Kelso.
"People who don't have lime 10
think about safety, but they
should," said KelSo. "As much as
they would like 10 avoid lhinlcing
about it, the holidays bring an
'
entirely new set o( problems con·
••
ceming safety."
For example, winter holidays
often include boutS of severe win•,•
ter weather. Snow, ice, frigid tem·
•'
peratures and wind chill can affect
•
•
. the body, your home and car. Taking p11pet stepS now can belp you
.•
avoid serious problems later.
.,
Provided are a variety of tips
from the on 10 ensure a safe and
happy holiday season:
·• .
.
Home Saftty Tips
for Holiday Decorations
• Keep candles away from
flammable materials and never
place them ill windows booanse of
sudden drafts. Keep a drip contain·
Cl under each candle 10 catch melt·
ing wax and place them out of
mteh of small children. Rernem ber
10 extinguish flames before leaving
home or going 10 bed.
• Use only safety-lab approved
•
(UL listings) indoor or outdoor
'
lights. Checlc lights for wire wear,
loose connections and burnBd·out
bulbs.
Drivers (MADD) as tbey add the nnal touches
THE RED RIBBON TREE - Ashley Hamil• Never use indoor lights out·
the
Red Ribbon Tree outside Swisher and Lohse
ton,
a
third
grader
In
Becky
Triplett's
class
at
side. Don't overload electrical out· .
in
Pomeroy.
The class made the bows and the
Pomeroy
Elementary,
Is
pictured
with
Pat
lets. Always tum liptts off before
tree
was
decorated
by Jamie Blaettnar and
Thoma
and
Ellen
Roug!lt,
members
of
lbe
Meigs
leaving home or going to bed.
Becky
Trent.
·
County
Chapter
of
Mothers
Aga~nst
Drunk
• Christmas trees should be
•

S•lf d News SUfr

Durin•

abeoi.. :

c:our:·

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"

All across America, home healtla providers bring high·quality health care
and supportive services Into people's homes. Whether it's for a si•ple or complex condition,
needing.short·ter~or long·
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term care,
.

HOLZER MEDICAL CE TER'S HOME HEALTH SERVICES

•

•'

HAS THE SOLUTION! '

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NATIONAL HO

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HEALTH WEEK

29 • DECEMBER 5, 1992

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'

FOR MORE IIFOIMIDOM CALL HOME HEALTH SIRVICES AT THE

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446··5301

local Red Rl.ltH Campalp, II pictllred ltere
wltlt .'-I'OJ Pollee Cltlef Jerry Rou1ht and
Polke 0111cer DII.W Ha~ • alae ties a red

ribbon on the antenna of one of Pomeroy's
. pollee cniHr. "Be Alcohol Free Before You

Tum the Key" Is tbe theme of this year's C.•
patp.
.

•

�nm•

November 21,

Pomeroy-Middleport Gllllpolll, OH

Sentinel

1112.._

21,11182

Lemley-Woodard

Vinton honor
roll announced

GALLIPOLIS • Mr. and Mrs. 10n, Tenn., and CherrY Point, N.C.,
Ronnie L. Lemley" of G-'lipolis, and is now srationed at die Mlrine. '
announce the engagement and Corp Air Sralion In Yuma, Ariz.
Mr. Woodard is a 1990 graduate
approaching marriage. of their
daughter, Lance Corporal Laura of DuncanviUe ~h School and a
Renea Lemley 10 Lance Corporal graduate of Manne Corp Boot
Michael Dean Woodard Jr., son of Camp in San Dieao. Calif. He comMr. and Mrs. Michael Dean pleted his training in Millington,
Tenn., and did a tour in Iwakuni,
Woodard rL DuncanviDe, Tex&amp;'l.
Japan.
He is now sr.alioned at the
Miss Lemley is a 1991 graduate
Marine
Corp Air 'Siation in Yuma,
of Kyger Creek HiBh School and a
Ariz.
graduate of Manne Corp Boot
A June, · 1993 wedding is
Camp in' Parris Island, S.C. She
planned.
completed her training in Milling·

VINTON • The following stu·

g~:: ::ueatb~~!i;:~ie~~~

School ("Dcnoles all As)
Fourth grade • Garaleah Bai·
ley•, Jonathan Darnell, Devin
George, Jennifer lson, Thomas
Lambert, Justin Mulholand•. Craig
Payne", Justin, Rice, Jesse
Stephen~, Jamie Welllng10n, Cami

Justice.

.

Fifth grade · Kyle Deet•, Aman·

da Harcfer, Jeremiah Harkins•,
Joshua Harkins, Justin Holcomb,
Krislie Preston, Laura Ring, Keith
SIOUt.
· Sixth grade • Roger Bush,
Daniellc Carlisle. Amamda Davis,
Julie Hall, Jamie Harless, Jennifer
Yonts.
Seventh grade ·Vickie B_oyer,
Keli DodriO, Jamie Isaac, Mary
Beth Lively*.
Seventh grade • Donnie Hotcomb, Angela Keeton, Mary Lou
Marcum, Brandy Metheney.
Eighth ~adc · Standelta Man·
dell, JesSica Roberts, Rebecca
Tucker.
Eighth grade • f'ric Burris,Jessi·
caWood.

Aquatic prograin ·
slated

LORI RITCIUE and ALLEN MORRISON

Ritchie-Morrison
CALPWELL • Lori
Ritchie Jim and Elaine Morrison, Belle

K.
and Allen Morrison ; Caldwell, Valley. He is employed by Crock
•
.announce their engagement and Construction.
The
open
church
wedding
will
approaching marriage.
'
be
Dec.
27
at4:30
p.m,
at
t.Oe
Cald·
She is lhe daughter Wilbur and
Marilyn Robinson, Coolville. She well United MedKidist Church.
is employed by Caldwell Exelnpted · . A reception will follow the cere,
mony at the Caldwell Community
Village
Schools, He
.
. is the son of Center.

..

•

••••'•
~'·:Mr.

LAURA LEM,LEY and MICHAEL WOODARD JR.

Arnold- Daniels
.
be an event of Saturday, Dec. 5 at 7
.

MIDDLEPORT • Mr. and Mrs.
Dan C. Arnold announce the p.m. at the Middleport Ch~h of
engagement and approaching mar· Christ. Music will begin at 6:30
riage of their daughter, MeiJlnie p.m. A reception will follow at
Sue, to Edward Lee Daniels, son of CarleiOn School in Syracuse immediately following die ceremony.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Daniels.
The open church wedding will

.

~mergency and regular

.f!EAP
programs
continue
.
' CHESHIRE • The application

~od for both emergency and reg·
War HEAP programs continues for

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

HOOVE~229
futwa®

Slldllg f11 salt. No one rtlwstd services llecause of taa•Jity to pay.

• VINTON • Mr. and Mrs. Amol
F. Weaver of Vinton, annotlnce the
engagement and approaching mar·
riage of their daughter, Cheri K.. 10
Scott A. Davis. son of Merrill E.
Davis of Gallipolis, and Jane A.
Davis of Gallipolis.
Miss Weaver is a 1991 graduate
of North Gallia High School and is
majoring in Secondary Education
at the University of Rio Grande.
Mr. Davis is a 1919 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
is currently employed by Saxon

Senior's schedule
announced

GALLIPOLIS • The following
are activities and menus for Nov.
30 through Dec. 4 at the Gallia
County Senior Citizen's Center,
220 Jackson Pike.
Monday, Nov. 30
10 a.m. • Walking club
10 a.m. 10 noon ·Rag rugs
l p.m. • CholJ!S
Tuesdly, Dec. I
10:30 a.m. • STOP/Exercise
10 a.m. ao'3 p.m. · Quitting
11 a.m. • Advent service
12:30 a.m. • Yidoo matinee
Wednesday, Dec. 2
10 a.m. • Walldng club
10 a.m. 10 noon ·Crochet circle·
10:30 a.m. • Herbs class
' 11:30 a.m. · EMS blood pres·
sare
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Adult Day
Care available
1-4 p.m•• CPR/First aid
No afternoon transportation
Thursday, Dec. 3
10 a.m.· Walking club
10:4S a.m.· Bible study
10 a.m. 10 3 p.m. • Quilting
10 a.m. 10 nO!»&gt; • Blood pressure ·
vollllteer.

Conslnlction.
The open church ceremopy will
be held Saturday, Dec. 19 at 1:30
p.m. at the Vinton Baptist Church,
ViniOn. A reception will immedi·
ately follow the ceremony at the
church.

.

·'

• Swivel hole tor maximum m~~neuverablllty

GALLIPOLIS ·
.
414 Secollll Ave., 2•d Floor

• Powerm.ntcTM nozzle

• 8nolhed odge cl•nlng on both lidos
• CQnvenlent tool ~o- .
• R.tr.cUble 25' cord with loot
'
' contnJI podool
·

~~~ ~00 Molday-frlday

.;30 to 12Sat•rday .
Closed l'llmday
ALSO: Jack1011, Cht~kt, Athens, Chllbcotht, Logan r. McArthw

• Headlight

r.~YER®
3&amp;0Uprlght

ONE PRICE!·SERTA
FIRM

•

•Ughtweight
• BRIIhod odge cl..nlng
botholciM
• Top-flU -Y change bag
• 2.- outo,.tic height

King, Queen or Full for the Cost of ATwin.
SERTA
GENTLE
FIRM

sa995'

Cleaner

•

edjustm.m

$79
$119
159
199

\

SERTAPEDIC $
EXTRA
FIRM

SERTAPEDIC$
LUXURY

• Headlight

EACH 'PIECE

~ MIDDl-EPORT • First Baplist

211 tt. cord/quick.-....

~hurch

of Middleport will present
die mm, Eye of the Storm, on Sun·
IP-Y at 7 p.!ll. The public is invited.
•
;. MIDDLEPORT • Hope 'Baptist
qhurch of Middleport will hold a
pPtluck Sunday at the fellowship
h,a1l after services.
'
: POMEROY • SOLOS, a Meigs
County singles group, will meet
o.. d
f m 4 6 p m at the
~un ay ro
•
· • Church
Pomeroy United Methodist
r'lir a pizza supper.
,
. .
' TUPfERS .PLNNS • A puppet
'll be held
Sunday at 7 p•m•
W WI .
·
St. Paul United Methodist
urch in Tuppers Plains. Refresh·
~ents ~ill foUow.
·
.

• FumltuNgUIIrd

.ANY SIZE!

lncludee attllchmentt,l

$189

EACH PIUE

ANY SIZE!

95

nma.111ca:n•r~~~~~
I

..........

.

CII •

-UIIIIIII

EACH PIECE

ANY SIZE!

• SelptQFIIId ,

·~~

""'baill-

t

EACH PIECE

"'

ANY SIZE!

'

· MONDAY
f RACINE
• Special meeting of

Racine Village Council, Monday; 7
P,m.. 10 open bids. for Racine water .
Sj!PPIY sysltm proJecL

SOLD IN SETS ONLY! ·

•

CPOMEROY • Meigs County
~RI will meet Thursday ~t 1 P:~·

~OW,

Ill the Meigs County Semor. Ctti·

THAT'S A SAI.E! AND IT'S ONLY AT•••

FRENCH. CITY MATTRESS
MILL CREEIC &amp; I Sl ARNUE • OLD WATERWORKS ILDG.
GALUPOliS, OHIO
(614) 446·6226 :
&lt;'·

zens Center in Pomeroy. All mem·
b&amp;s urged 10 attend.

••

•

I.NGELS FURNITURE
106 NORTH 2ND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
992·263S

: MIDDLEPORT • ~:f:line
ahapter No. 172. OES, .
pon,
-AiD meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. AU
rbers urged to attend.
' POMEROY • Meigs County
'oleterans Service Commission,
IIJonday, 7:30 f;'.ID., at the Veterans
S!ervice Office m Pomeroy.
•
f
TUESDAY
!·POMEROY · FOE Ladies .AWI·

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Gallipolis Monday through Friday
from 9 a.m. to noon and 1-3:30
p.m.
The Meigs Outreach Office,
3935.0 Union Ave ., Pomeroy
accepts applications · Monday
throufh Friday from 9 a.m. to noon
and -3:30 p.m . The Cheshire
office application hour are 9:30
a.m. 10 noon and 1-3:30 p.m. Mon·
day through Thursday. No applica·
tions are taken at the Cheshire
WILKESVILLE
The
office on Fridays, but apjllicants
Wilkesville
United
Methodist
may go 10 the Outreach office in
Church ·will bold its annual
their county.
spaghetti
dinner and bake sale on
The telephone number f9r the
Friday,
Dec.
4. The dinner will
Cheshire Office is 367· 7341 for
begin
at
4
p.m.
in the social room
6allia county and 992·6620 or
of
the
church,
loeated on State
992-6629 for Meigs CoQnty. The
Route
160.
Gallia County Outreach office tele·
phone number is 446-0611 and the
Meigs Cciunty Outreach number is .
992-S605. The toll•free holllne
number for inqQires on Regular
HEAP applications is 1·800-282· L Y' · ·
c;
0880.

Dinner, sale set

THE RARELY HERD

Local ·b and takes recording honors
MISSOURI • Area band and
Pinecastle Records recording
artists, The Rarely Herd, were
recently nominated by the organi•
zation Society for the Preservation
of Bluegrass Music in America
SPBGMA for 11 awards to be
given at their Midw~st Convention
which will be held at Lake Ozark,
Mi., on Dec. 11-13.
Members of The Rarely Herd
are Jim Stack of Albany; Alan
Stack of The Plains; Dan Brooks of
Albany; Calvin Le!&gt;ort of Henderson, W.Va.; and Jeff Weaver of
Athens.
The Rarely Herd received nomi·
nations in the following 11 cate·
gories: ALBUM OF THE YEAR •
"Midnight Loneliness"; BANJO
PLAYER OF THE YEAR • Calvin
Leport; DOBRO PLAYER ' OF
THE YEAR • Dan Brooks; SONG·

Michelle Michae l named B&amp;PW
1\Tovemb"'r Gz'rl oif.the Month

c
1
d
'
en
Melgs Ounty Ca

5.0 Peak HP•

Ll SIZES

POMEROY • An arthritis aquat·
ic program will be held at the
Royal Oak Resort in Pomeroy
beginnirlg Tuesday. The program is
open to people in the community
with arthritis lind includes gentle
exercise activities in the swimming
pool. No swimmin$ experience is
necessary and teamed personnel
conducts the sessions.
Sessions will be held twice a
week on Tuesdays and Thursdays
from 10 to 11 a.m. for nine weeks.
The fee for those able to pay is
$20.
· Program registration will. be
held during class time .the first
week at Royal Oalc, although it is
possible 10 register at any time dur·
ing the program. The arthritis
aquatic program is sponsored by
the Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine's Arthritis
Program.
. .
More information may be
obr.ained by calling Sarah McGrew
at S93-2S18.

club congress, Citizenship WashingiOn Focus, excellent ratings at
solo
and ensemble contests, Farm
o
lipolis Business and Professional
Bureau
State School, National
afwomen's ~ovember Girl of the
Achievement
Academy, and Who's
.
Month. She IS the daughter of Kay .
Who
Among
American High
•
.
·
B. Michael of Thunnan.
Students.
i1' Community Calendar Items iliary No. 217'1 Christmas dinner·
Michael _i$ a senior at Gallia School
Michael's volunteer work
'
c1a .. _.
· t pan Tuesda '
Academy H1gh Sch90l. She has a
y, ·
Y·
3.852 grade point average and is includes Adopt·a·Highway pro·
appear two Yl ...,ore an evea
ud the day of tbit event. Items
active in marching and concert gram, Fund nusers for Big Broth·
must be 'received weD In advance
MIDDLEPORT • Middleport
er{Big Sisters, president of the Gal·
tO assure publlcadon In tbe cal· . Community Association will meet band, choir, show choir, (Madri· lia County Farm Bureau Youth,
e)ldai'."
Tuesday 81 7 p.m. at the Peoples gal~), SADP, Junior Classical primary Sunday school teacher,
.;.
SUNDAY
Bank conference room 10 discuss League, National Honor Society, and church choir.
Science O~mpiad, Model United
; RACINE. • Faith Harm 01w the Christmas parade on Thursday.
She plans to attend 6hio Nonh·
Quartet will perform Sunday at 7
~~:~~~: ey Club, and spring em University and major in Phar·
p'}ll. at the Racine Baplist Church.
POMEROY • Salvation ARmy
She has won numerous 4-H macy and/or Electrical Engineer·
will be taking applications for food
,
ing.
· ; MIDDLEPORT· Middleport baskets and tqys on Tuesday and awards in the ·areas of sewing ,
_,;rts Council will host an open Wednesday from- 10 a.m. to noon cooking, and achievement, 4-H
hOuse and a.counuy gift shop. ·
and 1-4 p.m. each day.

Powlll'ful

'

1-4 p.m. • CPR/First aid
No af~emoon lrliiiSporlation
Friday, Det. 4
10 am. • Walking club
10 a.m. 10 noon· Art class
1·3 p.m. · Craft class
Menus consist of:
Monday : Spaghetti, cheese
cube, tossed salad, rye bread,
applesauce.
Tueaday • Homemade vegelable
soup, boiled egg cole slaw, crack·
ers, peaches.
·
Wednesday ..... Podcettes, sweet
potatoeS, beets. bread, gingerbread
with ropping.
Thursday • Sauerkraut with
wieners, whipped potatoes, broccoli, bread, fruit cup.
Friday· Tuna patty with clieese,
rice pilaf, brus~el sprouts, pea
salad, braKI, coolties,
Make reservations by calling
446-7000 before 9 a.m. on the day
you wish 10 attend.
·

9

Total Sy•tllm
PerformanceTM860

OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

Weaver-Davis

Ole 1992•93 heating ~son.· .Both
programs offer one-time assistance
per heating season tO income eligi·
lite households.
·
·
·: Emergency HEAP is a crisis
iptervention program designed to
{Ciieve heat-related emerjlencies
I'Or households experiencmg dis·
c!'onnection, threat rL disconnection,
~ bulk fuel that will last no longer
.!ban 10 days. Emergency HEAP
application can be accepted
tJuough Apri12, 1993.
; Regular HEAP is additional
IIICIIting assistance available to low·
iitcome Ohioans. Assistance in
cl'ompleting these applications can
lijso be proVided by HEAP staff at
\11..~. Community Action Cheshire
office and/or Outreach ·offices in
OalliaandMeigseounty;
.;: Applications for both programs
ean be made at the Gallia County
Outteach Office, 220 Jackson Pike,

Canister Vacuwn Cleaner

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
MIDD!JPORT
509 5. 3nl Ave.
992-5912
.
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Closed l'llnrsday

Martin-Pierce

and Mr$. Charlie (Bubby) · Pleasant and Mr. and Mrs. Jim
~n of Gallipolis Ferry an· . Pierce of Gallipolis.
!jounce the engagement of tlleir
The wedding will take place
ctau~hltr, Teresa Lynn Martin, to
December 12, at 6:30 p.m., at the
1itm1e R. ~ierce, son of Mr. and Grace Methodist Church in. Gal·
~- . Kenneth Pridemore of Point lipolis.

Family Planning
It Makes Sense••• .

SCOTT DAVIS and CHERI WEAVER

TERESA MARTIN and JAMIE PIERCE

••••

'

•

Mi~~~~~; ~edM~~hG~:

WRITER OF THR YEAR • Jeff
Weaver; FIDDLE PLAYER OF
THE YEAR • Alan Stack; CONTEMPORARY MALE VOCAL·
IST OF THE YEAR • Jim Stack;
ENTERTAINING BAND OF THE
YEAR • The Rarely Herd; VOCAL

BAND OF THE YEAR • The
Rarely Herd; CONTEMPORARY
BAND OF THE YEAR • The
Rarel~ Herd; OVERALL BAND
OF THE YEAR ·The Rarely Herd;
and ENTERTAINER OF THE
YEAR · Jeff Weaver.

NEW STORE HOURS!
BEGINNING DEC. 1

8 AM·8PM
8 AM·SPM
IAM·SPM
8AM·5 PM
I AM·IPM
9 AM·3 PM

OPEN MONDAY
OPEN TUESDAY
OPEN WEDNESDAY
OPEN THURSDAY .
OPEN FRIDAY
OPEN SATURDAY

.

I·.

'

HAFFELT'S MILL.OUTLET, INC.
4247 STATE RT.160
GALUPOUS, OH.
(614) 446-2107

~------------------------~1 ,

POMEROY • Post 1942, Meigs port Literary Club will meet at 1:30
County Am Vets and VVA will p.m. Wednesday at the home of
meet Tuesday a! 7 .(l.!ll. at Sinitty' s. Mrs. Bef!lard Fultz. Mrs. Eldred
Parsons will review "The Girls in
All veterans IDVJted.
·
POMEROY • Meigs United the Balcony" by Nan Robertson.
Methodist Cooperative Parish will Roll call will be 10 clip a column ·
be taking applications for Christ· by a woman journalist.
mas food baskets Tuesday tbrou~h
Friday from 9 a.m. to noon at us
POMEROY • Dr. J. Wilmer
office at 311 Condor Street in Lambert, former district superin·
Pomeroy.
tendent of the Centtal Ohio Dislrict
POMEROY • The Amert' can Churchh of the Nazarene, will spealc
at t e Pomeroy Church of the
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39 Nazarene Wednesday throl!gh Sunwi 111 meet Tuesday at the post day at 7 p.m. nightly and Sunday at
home. Dinner will be at 7 p.m. and 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Scott and
meeting at.8 p.m.
Patty Anderson with Lenny the
Puppet will .......
~~.. and sing. Other
·WEDNESDAY
"~""'""
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle· special singing also. PasiOr Glen
MICHELLE MICHAEL
•••••------M•c•C•lun.;g;.in•VJ•'•tes-the.;.pu;;;b.;;li.;;c._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"\1
1

Occasion.

•

If you are planning a wedding, then you should
come see us at Haskins· Tanner.
You will have over 190 styles of tuxedos to choose
from. We llave a large selection ofthe lalesl styles
· and complimentary accessories for this spec11l
·
occasion.

Quality ForMalwHr at
Affor.altl• Prices

.

· GROOM TUX FREE WITH 6 OR MORE
IN WEDDING PARTY .

ff you believe a haircut Is morethan just a haircut, Fantastic Sam'l!t
giYea you exactly that - The Cut Plus.
.
Wrth alhaf11100, condhionlng rinae, precision cut, and style, h'a not
jull a haircut, h'a everything you'want,ln on! _low price.
You don' ~..d an appointment, we re wafting for you now.
11 Ohio Rlv8r Pltza
Mon. tllru Frt. t to I
a.tw Mft 111111'. BigS.. . . . .•
laturclay I to I
.
441-SAM ,
...
luncllly tl to 5

f"'PEiiiifJius'. .~
$595 I~~ $2495 !!

r·iin~s-ciifPius·l
·Shan1&gt;00

•Cond!&lt;&gt;rungRinse
• Precision Cut
.
• 5tyt1

~..:,:.i iof'no'llonCut

I I ....ten Curta Penn

C011p11

a.-

I

•~
,
•-s.oo '
li:piRII21JJI2 • .u~.n. oanLS I I
.,.,...~lirJJastic 8atq5•_!
____________________________
_______ J l __ __ ______________________________

1l.Sryt.

at SIO.OO

COli*,.,.._,;.,. c_o._.., .• , ,

l

'

-

1........

J

�·November 21, 11182

'nm11 81ntlnel

Doctorate quite a birthday .
present for 74-year-old

.

DAYTON (AP) -Julian Peas·
ant Jr. hu become the oldest per·

offic:o.
His cleairc to improve himself
son to receive a doctorate from · pushed him to ptlilue a master's
Ohio Univenity.
dogree In American history and
reu.t; of Dayton, turned 74 archival administration from
on Wodllelday and received his WrilbtSwe Uniwni!f.
'·
docuntc in comparative arts the
lie said his age didn't matter
same day.
much once he llll1ed at Ohio UniHis wifo Chrisline says he will versity.
never slow down.
But his seven years at the uni"He's never going to.rctire," versity wen:n't easy. As a telehina
she said.
•
associate during his first three
Among Peasant's goalt is to years, Peuat remembers driving
work as a researcher for an art home every weekend to visit 'his
foundation or a university. That is, family. toting his lesson plans for
unleas he goes to Africa farst. or the week and lea~ at S a.m.
to the uniwritea a book expanding the Monday to make it
resean:h in his dis.sertation about versity for claas. ·
the an. music, liturgy and an:hitec·
He remembers being lonely. He
ture of black chuiches.
said he couldn't associale comfort" I'm loolring forward to the ably with the undergraduates or
change of pace, participating in a some of the y~ graduate studiffetent world than theeone I ini- dents, and he wasn t part of the factially started 'OUt in," Peasant said. ulty social life because he wasn 'l
"I hope I survive, healthf• so I can an II:Cndited profes!lOt.
.
enjoy some of the fruits.' ·
But Peasant says the sacrifices
l'easlmt retired in 1982 as a·spe· Were w«th iL
.
cialiat from the .Equal Employment . "This is the &amp;e~~demic prize,''
Opportunity ~ommission 's Dayton he said.

•,

MR.udMRS.

·Observe 55th anniversary
POMEROY • Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Eblen observed their 55th
wedding anniversary recently.
They were married in Pomeroy on

HIRAM ud MAXINE STUfES

Stutes reception planned
GALLIPOLIS • Hiram and
Maxine Stutes will celebrate their
golden wedding anniversary with a
reception on Sunday. Dec. 13 from
24 p.m. at Grace United Methodist
Church. Gallipolis.
·

They were married Dec. 5.
1942. They have. three sons and
five grandchildren.
The ·open receetion is being
given by their famaly. The couple
requests that gifts be omitted.

Nov. 4, 1937 by Earl R. Titus, Juslice of the Peace. They are the parents of three children.

Courses offered througiJ,
continuing education office .
RIO GRANDE • The Rio
Grande Community College
through the Office of Continuing
Education wiD be offering classes
during December.

requirements for both Standard
First Aid and CPR certification
cards. This course is especially
important for persons taking the
Lifeguard Training course which
requires all participants to hold
valid certification cards. Participants must be at least 13 years of
age or to have completed the sevl
en.th grade. The course involves
demonstration films and practice
sessions. The workbOok iequired is
the American Red Cross workbook
(#0-86536·1320) and is available
from the Rio Grande Booll:sldre at
an additional cost

Chris Duddy, 31, clawed his
way out of a ctlla" of Kilauea Volcano on Sunday, the "day after a
helicopter carryinJ him and two
other men crashed 11,1 the Pu'u O'o
vent
· ."What went. through my mind
was that I was either going to make
it or I waa going to die trying,"
Duddy said Friday.
·
Duddy and P&amp;n~~~~ount Pictures
cametanJan Michael Benson, 49,
were shooting scenes for a movie
when the helicopter piloted by
Craig Hoskin!! crashed in Hawaii
VoiCI~ Nl![ional Park.
· · Hoakiilg waa resell¢ promr.\Y·
but Duddy and Benson couldn t be
located because they had started to
.climb the waD of the cra~r. which
was shrouded ~Y volcantc smoke
and gases. By rupifall, Duddy and
Benson had become separated.
. " It felt.reaDy lonely and scary,"
Puddy said. "You couldn't see
.much. But l do remember a lot of
ktrange sounds from the volcano.
W c could hear the lava pool bubbling 811d malting gurgling sounds,
and 'it w~ld get louder at times
:!Jnd then at would quiet down. It
.waa 'a very frigll)ening sound."
: Duddy said thoughts of his chi!:!~ten. ages 7 and 5, his parents and
'llirlfriend gave him courage to
:SCale the sheer rock face so that he
pould be rescued. ·
• "I kind of started to panic ... 1
,didn't want .to die in there," he
said. •'I wanted 'to die being an old
11!an with my family around."
Duddy was elated when he
made il to the top and saw the
, members ofa rescue party.
"I didn't think I could ever feel
as happy as 1 did at that moment, to
· see them and to know that they saw

ty Senior Citizens Center will hold

an open house Thursday from 3-5
ji.m.

· Music will be provided by The
Classics and refreshments "will be

Served.

' The memorial tree honoring
deceased members of the center
wiU be lit at dark. The inside trees
lbuuring ornaments to honor relatives and friends will be trimmed
and lit for the holiday .season. Donations of $5 per ornament can
ile made at the senior center or sent
10-Box 722,Pomcroy, Ohio 45769.
:: The public is invated.

...'
'

•.,

rescue bclicopler.

·

"The las&amp; nipt I heard and aaw

'

GALLIPOLIS • F'anal derails f~
the lhird annual Craft Show, sponsored by the Holzer Medical CCnter
Employee Activity Association,
have been announced by Dawn
Meadows, presideD! and event
chairman.
The show will be Saturday, Dec.
5 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday, Dec. 6 from noon ·to 4 p.m. in
Davis Hall, the former Holzer
School of Nursing, located on the
~00 block of First Avenue, Gallipolis.

•

.

Over 60 crafters will be participating in the show, displaying their
~Ients, according to Meadows.
Admission is free and open to the
public.
· "This is the perfect season for a
craft show," said Meadows.
"Everyone is looking for unique
and affordable gifts for Cluistmas."
"Items will include baskets of
all sizes and shapes, wreaths, Santu and stuffed bears, along with
numerous other appealing items,"
she added.
Crafters will be coming from

Roc;k or A&amp;es is !be only nationally
known brand or memorials. As an
Authorized Roc:k or Ales Dealer. we

or oUr unmatched reputation
= = r l ' : ~k or Aaes

*proud

:S

Attends semiiUlrs

GALLIPOLIS • Randy E.
Houdashclt. owner of 1be lmqe
Gallery professional porni&amp; studio'
in the Sjl'ing Valley Plaza. Gallipolis, recently attended a two-day
annual meeting II. the lndianiDolis
Professiorial Photographers c;y!ld
in French Lick. Ind. •
Guest speaker at the COIIference
was nationally-known photographer Duane Sauro of New York.
He spoke and gave dernprascnlioli
on contemporary ponraitilrc.
Later in November, Jloov!eshtJt
attended the fall meeting of the
Professional Photo~ II. Ohio
in Columbus. Dunng the meeting,
Houdashclt had the chance to study
with the husband and wife -.a II.
Bruce and Sue Hudson. They presented an educational and enter·
taining pro~ on image building
and markctmg for the '90s.
·

PHARMACY
POMEROY, OHIO

SALE PRICES GOOD TODAY, NOV. 29 ONLY!

JEWELRY••••• ~~~~~.E.:!!!~~...... ~ PRICE
COMPLETE 1/
CHRISTMAS CARDS ••~~~~!&lt;.•••• /2 PRICE
CHRISTMAS WRAPPING PAPEI

~PRICE .

· fl ag to R•lVer

.1. ·

Youngstown, Chillicothe,. Bain bridge, Athens. and Lenca•ter, said
Meadows.

SWISHER-LOHSE

Cable 'z.sz·on announces
TOYS fior TO(S. Campa z·gn

MEN'S&amp;

BILLFOLDS •••~~~~~~ ••

I

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
Is lOW Opel for tile
O.ristmas Seas01.
9 to 5 MoL·Sat.
1 to 5 Sullllay
· Featuril_g Poilsettfas II 7
colors, Polllsettia Hanglag

Baskets, Holly Trees, Folage
Baskets, Uve aad Cut Trees.
For departed loved ones: grave
hloalcets, wreaths, sprays and
vase.s.

HUBIDD'S, SJracuse, Oh.
992·5 76

REGISTER TO WIN
CANDY GIVEAWAY DRAWING
SUNDAY, NOV. 29 - 4:30 P.M.
2 llls. Whitman's Sa111pler
·
. 2 lbs. Russell Stover Assorted Chocolates
1 lb. Russell Stover Miniature Chocolates .
··..- .

IEIGI COUNTY
DISPLAY YARD NEAR
POIEROY.-AIOM MDGIE
JAIIEI A.IIUIH, llgr.
PHONE 11112-2. .

==
STATERT.t•

JMIEI A. BUSH, llgr.
PHONE t• 1101

·

LOGAN MONUMENT CO.

No Place Like Home!
As the saying goes, "There's No Place Like Home" and did you

::efficient Home Health Service which enables you to stay in your

Now thru December 31st

•

:Jtorne
andstill receive care?
.,
: If you feel you're a candidate for the service,. check with your
••
~physicial or give us a call.

Christmas Speefals
Storewide .

;.

25%

FREE GIPT

WRAPPINQI
HOURS:

Beary Christmas Contest
Pl.... enter my name In the drawing for the 12 costumed Taddy
a..rs you are giving away at Vatarans Memorial Hospital.

OFF ..

Monday-s.turdlly
8:30 am-e:oo pm
Suncl.y H ·pm

.

l.uminam.r-Memorial.r

"

7.:00 p.m. Mon., Nov. JO
Chrutmas Parade
Dec. 5, 2:00p.m. '
Christma.r Stroll
Dec. 10, 5:00p.m.

' '

30 Year Loan•

15 Year Loan•

$75,000.00
9.23%
$60347
$217.249.20

$75,000.00
8.08%
$705.96
$127,072.80

Amount of Loan
Ann~al Percentage Rate
Monthly Payment
To1al ol Payments

Increasing your monthly payment $102.49 will
save you $90,176.40 and 15 years! Decreasin~ lhe
term of your loan builds equity faster and dtasttcally
reduces total repayment. As shown above, cutting the
tenn of the,loan in half will not double the momhly
payment! Get the facts on fixed rates and repaym~nt
costs- that's the Peoples advantage and the Amencan
Dream.
'These examples are based on the fixed rates shownb!llaw:
• 30 Year Loan: 9.00%plus a2% origination fee.
• 15 Year Loan: 7.75% plus a2% origination lee.

P H O N E - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -

(MaU to Vatarsna Memorl1l Hoapltal Bur Conteat, 115 E. Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy; Ohio, 45718 by Dec. 11 or dapoalt In hospital lobby

- ~~~---------~-------~------~
•

•'
•

Gdlpa., OIL

'

,.

NAME---------------------------------_ _ __

ADDRESS-------~-...;._

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

boX.)

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
·"'

u;

~ 'know . that Veterans Mernoqal Hospital has a long-established,

Bake and craft sale set .

Ph. -44.·2127

WI$

every face or every person I've
ever known," said Benson who
spent the two nights on a - w
perch 60 feec below the rim of the
600-foot high cinder cone. He
spoke in a whisper because of
laryngitis caused by volcanic
fumes. ·
·
"Everyone told me I'm a fighter
and would survive," he said of his
wife, Stephanie; his two grown
children; and his brothers.
Benson said that during his
ordeal he ~ke def110tly to Pele,
the Hawaiian volcano goddess,
who appeared to him in a rock formation
"It :....as absolutely her. I wasn't
halhaciqating," lie said. "It was
just like being in the I!IOvies."
.
The Federal Aviation AdminisSANTA SIGNS • Pam Lyons, {left), Dawn Meadows, (ceater)
tration is investigating the cause of
eftal cbalrm1111, aod Fred Helms, (right), llaish lip some sigliS for
the accident.
tile third anaual Craft Show, spoasored by the Holzer Medical
Authorities· said the three-day. · Center Employee Activity Assocaatioa. The show will be held Dec.
two-night rescue mission, estimat·
5 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Dec. 6 from noon to 4 p.m.
cd to have cost tens of thousands of
dollars, may have been the m0st
1
expensive,-escue ever launched on
Hawaii Island, the state•s "Big
V4
Island." They were loolring into
whether Paramount could be made
to pay part of the bill.
1«
1«
"I think they were negligent for
going into the pit," Hawaii County
CableVision has announced that connection charge, a savings of up
Fire Department Chief Daniel its. annual Toys for TOIS program to $29.95 for our customers. We
Ayala said
.
.
will begin Nov, 30 in an effort to will distribute the toys this year
Paramount spokesman . Don provide toys to the needy children through various local organizations
Levy couldn't be reached at his an our four-county area.
including "Mason County Toys For
· California office to comment FriGeneral Manager Lester Errett Tots," "Meigs County Bikers Asday. But he had defended the com. said, "CableVision will provide a sociation," "Adopt-A-Family'~ of
pany's actions earlier in me week.
free cable TV connection to new Ravenswood and Ripley respec"Nothing is done without care- customers who donate a new toy lively and "Toy .Town" of Gallia
Cui planning and consideration in valued at $10 or more."
Academy Key Club."
advance," he said.
· He continued by saying, "Cur"We donated over 500 toys last
rent subscribers wiD be offered an year, and hope to exceed that
opportunity to add any Cable ser- amount this yesr. Should residents
p~esents
vace free during the Christinas wish to donate to the program
.l '
.
Season. All they have to do is without participating CableV'tsion 's
'\ T. }}
donate a new toy, valued at $10 or offer, we will be happy to accept
moreandwewillwaiveournormal toysatourof6celocatedat1410
: GALLIPOLIS • The French
French Colony shows its sup- May resume burning waste ~::nc~~~;i. Point Pleasant, "
XENIA, Ohio (~)-.AeonCableVision's Toys for Toas
: Colmiy Chapter National Society pon of the ruational committee by
·;Daughters of the American Revolu- annually presenting a new flag to a troversal cement lcaln tn Bath campaign will continue through
:'lion took part in the Veterans Day local school; In attendance from Township may resume burning liq- Dec 15
:Pro&amp;ram held Nov. 1J at River Val- French Colony was Regent Roberta uid hazardous waste by Monday, a ..-.-·..;.;.·. .__ _ _ _.,..._...,

'~ POMEROY - The Meigs Coun-

'

IJ11hlnl AYI.

and lhat

over." .
·
But it W8$n 't over for Benson
who had to spend i second nisht
the crater before being pulled out
Monday in a net dropped from a

Senior Citizens Center
open house planned .

Gallia County calendar

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Peace

through.

valley High School. It will be used
·in their scllool gymnasium. The
~ flag waa accompanied by a cenifi.
.cate that states it was flown over
the u.s. Capitol at the request of
.U.S. Sen. John Glenn for River
Valley High School

...J..

--

technician who spent 27 houu
stranded inside the world's most
activ~ vol~ said it was his ~oor-d1e attitude that pulled h1m

:~orJcn
then JXCSCDted the flag to p
· ~o~essiona
•
}
P'atrick Stout, principal of River

.m

SILECTION

he-m{ln
film
come
to
life
.
·
lULO, Hawaii (AP)- A film me
the mleai
finally

·ley·High School.
Roush. She was also there as companY, official said
The flag of the United States of OSDAR State Chairman of ComThe 'southwest~rn Portland
:America NSDAR Chainnan Cindy memorative Events. All chaplen in. ce/nent Co.. which has not burned
· Oraham, presented an American the United States have been asked hazardous waste in its kiln since
.f1aa to John Jeffers, former POW to mark the 50th anniversary of last year, has liquid fuel on site and
:Of World war n. He accepted the World War II with special obser· is ready to go, plant manager St¢ve
· flag in memory and in honor of all vances over the next four years.
Cunis said Friday.
.
.World War II POWs of Gallia ·;.·_...;;-.._ _ _ _ _""'"':,....--.. ~.;...-.;......;;;;;;;

BUIIUP!CY ·

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Phil
Collins doesn't like awards shows,
but that isn't keeping him from
being host of the upcoming Billboard Music Awards.
"To be honest, I've been asked
·LARGE
to do similar projects and said it's ·
not really my thing," the rock
singer said in a tcleJl!Kme interview
from London on Frida~.
·
He said he had miXed feelings
about the way the Billboard awards
are selected, put,ting quantity ahead
of quality. Winners are selected
baaed on worldwide record sales,
radio play and mlllkelplilce !allies.
Collins himself won three Billboard awards in 1990:..
"The best-selling is of course
.·--~
not the best\" Collins said
.
Colli. .who also will perform
Rock of Agttt offer• you • chol01 of II different colored
with his 11M Genesis 011 the Dec. · granltat.
Whatever your requirements may be, complete
9 live broadca!ll, cho!ie to holt the
.tatllfectlcm.J•JIIMired
with Rl¥1!c_ of 'A•· - --~-.
show because "the timing was
Op!n
Mon.,
Tues.,
Thurs.
&amp;· Fri. 9:00 a.m. 'tU 4:00 p.m:
right." While in town he plans to
Other
Houre
by
Appoliltment-1193-lsliBil
or'•oOM6-.:lJ27
work on remodeling a new h9use
he bou&amp;bt here.

Employee association
gears up for craft show

•

Ballards. to hold qpen ·house

POMEROY • There will be a
bake,
craft and ceramics bazaar at
activist Jerry Rubin launched a the Mei~s
County Senior Citizens
. campaign urging children to return Center m Pomeroy
on Thursday
toy guns and other war toys from
I
0
a.m.
to
2
p.m.
·
including-popular Wfll:et pistols.

. Movie maker's survival a

Sunday nmes Sentinel Pa,3a 85

.DAR
• ceremony
. va ey dunng

This Christmas Wreath one
evening workshop will be held on
Wednesday, Dec. 9 from 6:30-9
p.m. in Aniliversary ,Hall, room
102. Pre-registration _.ad payment
is required due to limited space.
Instructor for the workshop is
Helen Armslrollg of Jackson.
This one evening w~op will
allow participants to use many of
the fantasies of Christmas to create
their wreath. All materials are fur- ·
A non-credit paintiiag on sweatnished by the instructor.
shirts workshop is sch'eduled
Thursdays, Dec. 3 and 10 from
An American Red Cross course 6:30-9 p.m. in Anniversary Hall,
in Standard First Aid will be room 102. Cost for the ·course is
offered. The course is deSiJined tli s2o. The instructor is Helen Armcover bacic life saving farst aid strong ofJackson.
.
techniques and CPR.
· Participants will learn how to
The course is scheduled for use a variety of painting tech·
Tuesdays, Dec. 8 and 15 from 6 niques. A variety of paints and
a.m.-10 p.m. in Wood Hall room methods will be used to create a
106. Cost for the ~oursc i.s $25. winter scene. participants are
Instructor is Usa Wens. Pre-regis- required to bring a sweatshirt The
tration is required. The deadline is sweatshirts need to be white ot
Tbursday,Dec.3.
•
paste color, made of 50 percent
Participants will fulfill the polyester and SO percent cotton,
requirements for both Standard washed with no fabric softener. All
First Aid and CPR certification other materials are furnished by the
cards. This course is especially instructor.
· imponant for persons taking the
For more information about the
Life~uard Training course which courses, or to register, contact the
llALPH AN1&gt; WILMA BALLARD
requares all participants to hold Office of Continuing Education,
valid certification cards. Partici- PO Box 878, University of Rio
pants niust be at least 13 years of Grande, Rio ·(Jrande, Ohio 45674
age or to have completed the sev- or caD 614-245-5353 extension 325
They were married Dec. 25, enth grade. The· course involves or toll free in Ohio at 1-800282- ·
POMEROY • Ralph H. and
Wilma M. (White) Ballard, Long 1942 at the Meigs County Coun demonstration films and practice 7201.
Bottom, will celebrate their 50th House. They have three children: sessions. The workbool; required is
wedding anniversary Saturday, Butch Ballard, Galion: Brenda the American Red Cross workbook
Dec. 5 with an open house at the VanDyke, Kansas City, Mo.; and (#0-865 3~·1320) and is available
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy David Ballard, Pomeroy. They also from the Rio Grande Bookstore at ·
have four grandson and two grand- an additional cost.
from 24 p.m.
614·221..0888 .
daughters.
Rio Grande Community College
L W, CENIWIO
through the Office of Continuing
ArrGRNEY AT lAW
Education is offering an American
8 E11t Broad Sb~,
Red Cross course in Staaldant First
Aid. The course is designed to
. Sulte800
.
Sunday, Nov. 29
will be singing at Bell Chapel at 7 ·cover basic life saving first aid
Columbus, Ohio
techniques and CPR.
GALLIPOLIS • Dean Warner
p.m.
1-IOD-886-0LAW
The coune is scheduled for Satwill be preaching at' Mina Chapel
(1-IQ0-886-0529)
Church, 7 p.m.
CROWN CITY • Melvin Mock urday, Dec. 5 from 8:30a.m. - 5:30
will be the guest speaker at Provi- p.m. in Wood HaD room 106. Cost
CENTENARY - The Greene dence Missionary Baptist Church, for the course is $25. Instructor is
Lisa Werts. Pre-registration is
Family Singers will he at Cente- 6:30p.m.
required. The deadline is Thursday. ·
nary United Christian Church, 7
Dec.
3.
.
· p.m. Rev. Jack Holley will be
BIDWELL • Layman Day SetParticipants
'will fulfill the
preaching.
vices at Mt Carmel Church, 10:45
Rev. Harry McNeil will be the ·
•
' ' a.m.
GALLIPOLIS • Copley family'
2 p.m. speaker.

Names in the news

. Pomet oy Middleport Gllllpolll, Ott-Point Pl8818nt, WV

.

••'•
·''

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 I. Mt•rlal Drive

Po•roy
992·2104

.,

Gl
--

Member FDIC

• Marietta
373-3155

Athens
593-7761

LiNDEll.

Belpre'
423-7516

Lowell
896-2369

Middleport

992-6661

Nelsonville

' 753-1955

The Plains
797-4547

�•

NoMmblr28,1882

llmee Sentinel

.,_. .U. I 7711 L My lniiiiIIIOIIIIr .lift 11e a copy cil dlil
pea~ a few • • " 110- No 111111er
1
• . . , ....
telld1be
u.audtor
I•
liwlyllaCMCI
ID 111111.
iJ I,ealuel T. Wild Pleue pdlt it,

LOS ANGELES (AP) _: Fans Sam.").
.
aUowed. Even
love between a
of the 1943 classic "Casablanca"
Mrs. "-rmctz, a former film husbaad and wife could not be ·
lmow that Humphrey Bof.U1 never reporter for The New Yrot Times, shown; if tbcy were in bed togeth·
said, "Play it again, Sam. •
·
viewed tbc film more than a dozen er. one of them had to keep a foot
But do they know that a 1940s times during her research. She on the floor," Mrs. Harmetz said.
Warner Bros. publicity release doesn'tremcmberthe fust time She
She said "Casablanca" would
announced the stars would be saw "Casablanca."
· have included a sex scene if it were ·
~onald Reagan, Ann Sheridan and
"What I remember very vividly made today. "You know what?
Dennis Morgan?
·
as a small child was listening to the The movie wouldn't have some of
That is one or the little-lcnown· radio on that Academy Award the ambiguity and sexual tension
facts disclosed in the new book night in 1944 and wanting dcsper· that it has now," she said.
"Round Up the Usual Suspects: ately for Humphrey Bogart 10 win
. The fmal 'We wU1 always have
The Making .of 'Cas11blanca'- and being so unhappy when he Paris' speech was filmed on Stage
Bogart, Bergman and World War didn't."
•
· tdliringaJulyheatwave.
·
II" by Aljean Hannetz.
Paul Lukas was named best
A heavy spray of movie. ~og
Of the publicity release, the actor for "Watch on the Rhine." · obscured the fact that the wwtmg
FIRST IN LINE - Shoppers line up before
author says: "They did think they
The lasting success of airplane was a wooden cutout. To
sunrile at tile ntraace to a -Westerville mall
could put Ann .Sheridan in th·e · "Casablanca" has long been ana· give the plane a proper peJSpective,
departmeat ltore Friday. Mauy store~ In the
movie, but they knew they couldn't lyzed. The author believes the assistant director Lee Katz 'had die
cast Ronald Reagan." lbc ~aS~~n: nature of the scriptwriting was a · inspiration of hiring midgets to
Reagan had already been scheduled m~ element.
• • portray mechanics around the
for active duty in~ Army.
'Howard Koch, who was a very · plane.
Bogart had been slated to play serious playwrigh~ wrote it serious. ;-~---:;iii":~::&amp;:-----,
Rick from the beginning, but .prO- .He gave Rick Blaine (Bogan) a
ducer Hal Wallis wuted Hedy bac_kg~ound of r_unning guns to .
Lamarr as. Usa. Louis B. Mayer ¥tbi&lt;;JPI8 and fig~bng f~ lbe loyal·
wouldn't lend his glamor star to tsts m the Sparush Ctvil War. He
rival warner Bros.
deepened the politics of it.
. Wallis' next choice was the · "I think the movie intrigues us
.
·
.
French impon Michelle Morgan. today partly because of its ambigu·
At
But she wanted $55,000, and Ingrid ity. People still argue. whether '!gwne~
Bergman was available from David Ingrid Bergman was really in love
11
0. Selznick at $25,000.
with Paul Henreid and only pred
All of the casting seems tending wit!' Bogl!fl. 0~ wh7ther
On iamon S,
inspired. Conrad Veldt, Peter Bogart was JUSI a liute btl relieved
Watches, Diamond
Lorre, s.z. Sakal!, Marcel Dalio, whenshewentoffwithHenreid."
Earrings, Necklace
Helmet Dantine and many lesser
And did the characters portrayed ·
1t
players were themselves refugees by 'Bogart and Bergman sleep
and Tennis Brace e •
rromNaziGermany.
together in Paris?
cross Pen Sets, Black
"Round Up the Usual Sus"~lutelyl Not. only in PD,ris.
Hills Gold, One Lot of
peels" discloses that producer They slept together m Casablan.ca,
Birthstone Necklaces
Wallis was unhappy with one I am quite SlU'e. But the ~ucnon
% Off, K Gold
14
50
member or the cas~ Dooley Wilson Code was extremely vtgorous lit
(to whmn Bergman said, "Play it, that time. Impure love was not
Chains and Bracelets

Aim. - NBW YORX STATE
DBAJt NBW YORK: n..t you

Cor tbll_. bua diiiQibina poem.
lgy "dblwbiq" ......... it it Ill tlllb CW11Y bini hunl« who lads

·'

•.

itiiiiP far a lllOIMII and 'qiiCIIiaft
!he ipCIII.. I WOIIdel how 111111y ~
will ~~wow their suns mh bay. H=

Jo. HIIUCr'a Paem
A hw!ter lhot • a floclt cJ &amp;eese
lhlt flew wilhin bia reach.
Two stopped in their npid
OigbtandfoU on the sandy beaclr.
The 1lll1e bird lay at tbc water's
edae II!Jd, jull before be died,
He faiildy called to his wounded
liiMO IIIII the dJigged herself to his
side.
She beat her bead and CIDOilled to
bim iD • .way dislressed and wild,
CIRaina her one and only mate
is a JDOdlor would a child
. Th~ covering bim with her
. brokell win&amp; and gasping with
Caillnsbnlllh,
She Wd .her head against his
bniUt, 1 fooble honk ... then death.

Great
Christmas
Sav"lngs

Jewelers

·
rromen blast p ac.kw
· oo dfior blammg
allegedharassment on alcohol

POR'ILAND, Ore. (AP)- A
woman who says Sen. Bob Packwood once made an unwelcome
sexual advance said it's disingenuous for him to claim he can't
remember grabbing at her clothes
and 10 blame his behavior on alechol use.
·.. rn the situation I was in, there
was no alcohol involved," Julie
Williamson, 53, said·Friday.
But Maura C. Roche, 26, said
she didn't know if Packwood had
been drinkinB .~fore he ~d h~r
sexually expliCit JOkes one ni$htm
19&amp;9 while she was worltitig m his
office as an intern.
"It wasn't uncommon for lhere
to be alcohol in the office, so it
may have been a factor." Roche
said.
The Oregon ~epublican said
Friday that drinking may partially
explain his alleged unwanted sexuat advances in.volving 10 women.
He promised to undergo tests for
alcohol dependency.
·
Williamson has said Packwood
kissed her on the back on the neck
in 1969 in his Portland office. She
said she told him not to do it again,
but on another occasion, he stood
on her toes, pulled her hair and
tried to pull off her clothe$.
"He says he didn't remember"
the incident, she said. "I don't
believe that"
Both women said Packwood
should resign.
"I don't think that somebody
who behaves lhis way deserves to
hold the office Packwood holds,"
Roche said.
Packwood, 60, said in a state·
ment that when The Washington
Post initially interviewed him Oct.
29 about the women's allegations,
he denied it beclluse "I honestly
believed these events had never
occurred."
· Packwood noted that some of
the women who had made allegations made references to "execs·
sive alcohol used by me when the

'

incidents occurred."
He "never consciously intended
to offend any women," his state·
ment said. "I, therefore, offer my
deepest apologie·s to all those
involved."
He said he takes full responsibility for his conduct and is confident he can resolve his problems
while remaining a senator.
But while he no longer denies
the allegations, Packwood is not
admitting that he made sexual
advances, nor is he admitting that
he has a problem with alcohol, said
Packwood spokesman MaU ~vans.
"This shows how difficult it ·
would be for just one person to
come forward alone agamst a person who is so powerful," Roche
said.
Betty RobertS, leader or Oregoo's Women's Rights CoNition of
70 women's groups in the state,
called Packwood's statement "an
affront 10 the voters of Oregon."
"Using alcohol as a motivating
factor, an excuse or a defense just
doesn't wash," said, Roberts, a for·
mer justice of die Oregon Supreme
Court who ran against Packwood in
1974. "Further, alcohol is noi a
motivating factor in his denial to
The Washington Post an(! his
attempts to discredit the victims.''
The alleged inCidents started in
1969, a year after Packwood's eleclion to the Senate. The Post ran a ·
story on the women's allegations
lastSunday.
Packwood. has been a leading
advocate of women's rights during
his 24 years in the Senate. One of
his ac.cusers is Mary Heffernan,
founder of the Oregon chapter of
the abortion rights group NARAI..
She told the Post that Packwood
grabbed her and kissed her during a
visit to his office.
Eli7,;lbeth Furse, a.newly elected
congresswoman from Oregon, said
she intends to inttoduce legislation.
forbidding sexual harassment by
members of Congress.

:. The Gallipolis
Retail Merchants
.
: Association will hold their annual Home
.. Decorating Contest on Saturday, Dec.
: 12, from 6:30 to 10:30.
Residents of Gallia County may enter
the contest ,by returning the entry form or
' by calling. the Chamber Office at 446: 0596.
:.Contestants who have won first place for ·
: two consecutive years will not be eligible
: for prizes, but may receive honorable
: mention for -their entries.
Entry Blank
Home Decorating Contest
: Name_______________
:Address_ _...,..__ __
:Telephone._______
to Dec. 7,
.: Please return entry form prior
.
: ~:

~

Gallipolis Retail Mercha.nts Association
P.O,Box 465 Gallipolis, 45631

RAVENNA, Ohio (AP) - The
mother or an ex-soldier who served
in the Persian Gulf ssys she thinks
the government has stonewalled
her inquiries about the risks to the
healtlt of Desei't Storm participants.
Dale Mizer m, 22, served in tbc
Gulf W• and is now in remission
afler bei!lg diagnosed with acute T.
celll}'lllphoblastic leukemia.
H11 molher, Mary Kay Mizer,
says an Akron General Hospital
doctor suggested to her that her
son's leukemia could have been
~ by his contacl wilh radioactive materiab in Saudi Arabia.
According to a recent U.S.
Department of Defense report,

IN ..OD'•Y!
· •' n •

T'•WNEY
.M
JEWELERS .

•

&lt;

-

I. 100, - • )'01111 finD wife. but
un1ie "Part WrjDe," I .,.t my
lDe iD die field, l1ilt die lio! I ,
Wit~ you've beell out on tltat
ANNUNDDS
IIIICfllr or OCIII!biDe lilll:e 1:00 LID.
"ltt2,Loo.bploo
~f&lt;p'
by J'l*ldf. by you Willi •
c......s,.· ...
Jialeu•c••,.t• tinc10ea
A cold ..twidlloob J1RUY pd.
tot. people don't !mow how lwd
This lkliy iltn!e, t!n'fb crudely
a
flmlcr
Wlllb. He il rue- !ICing
told. 1 - die iillil in dlia Cia.
as
inM lime l!ld ~. When he
I itood heNicc:P ill and pllniiii!CI t. oallllis aops, tbcre
cold, - tbc hot laUs bumed my
is alWIIJI P" I !1C to beat the flin,
flee.
and lll)'llting else that might
I l&gt;uriecl the bink ill d!c lllid w'-lbey lay, w•;ppcd iD my ~!ant- cut l!ia plllfill. He *-t't have time
nw COIL
to sit down and enjoy a Jal meal
. ,And I lbrew my JU11 a belt in when die douds CClii!C nilling in.
My advice lo "Fcxt Wayrc" is this:
lite,_, when I croued in ......
....-~·
.
.....opeo lnsleld of "hot and attractive,' make
it quiet and simple. Drive to a
11u1111n will
111e a rilbl poor
flll·foocl 1C111!!1111t for a CIII)'OIII.
lpOit- tmff. - dliDa f did,
But lhlt day IOIIIethia&amp; broke in or dwow qed!er a Sl1ldwicl! a
my helrt, and Jhoot again? God cbipl.lfbc *-t'tlike it, be doesn't
forllid.
.
.
. have Ill ell it, but 111 bet be wOn't
Dear Aa I ,eec!en: This is for COJIIpllin. -INDIANA
DEAR INDY: You're ri&amp;bt.
"Fort Wayrc Rader,• tbc firm wife
wbo hila to like her llunnd's 'OIII!b for the wisdom from ~
IIIICh to tbc field. I couldn't.believe ~ .
hcrleact. Yoar-waso'tmucb · Dar u•: Heie's another IOOd
beeler. She said her llusblnd alw""" poll office SIDfY: Our llOII in o.tlas
• makes her wait and tbc ilod ~ sent aleaa' to a friald in Ovedlnd
cold. You said, "Put his lii!!Cit 011 Padt, Kan. The teuer was ~
tbc kild!en llble and let him come Slllllped "Insufficient Postage for
Canada • Our llOII had a good laugh
and put a sticker 011 the envelope
saying, "Kansas is not in C..acto
Please try again." Would you
~ve it came back a second time
with his sticker still auachedl LrOOJ?S were exposed to depleted
urantum - from which virtually BJ.H.
DEAR BJ.H.: Jbanks for the
all the radioactive material has
laugh. Someone should do I book
been removed - in several ways:
"friendly fire" · accidents; crew on these pffes.
members in relatively close contact
Ail alcoltol problem? Huw CQ/1 ~"
with ammunition 11sing depleted help ~urself or someoM ~·love?
uranium; or by wearing amulets "Alcoholism: Huw to Recoglliu It,
made wilh the metal.
How to Deal With It, How to
Mizer was a Hawk missile han· Conquer II" will give you the
dler with the 7th Corp in Saudi •answers. Sefid o self-odd~ened, .
Arabia from December 1990 to /011g, biiSU!ess-siu envelope IJIId o
May 1991, and was ill close contact cited: or money order for $3.65 (litis
with missiles having projectiles
incllllks [IOsiiJge IJIId lttutdlillg) 10:
made from depleted wanium.
Alcohol,
c/o A1111 Lluttkrs, P.O. BOJ:
Veterans Adminisuation·offiJl562,
ClticiJgo,IU.
6061 UJ562. (In
cials say it's an Army problem.
CIJIIDda, sefid $4.45.)

I_.

c.a

The 1992 Santa and His Reindeer
Ornament Collection

KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) - City
officiais expreiiO(l ouuaae over a
ruling dial allows homeless ~
to sleep 011 dlia towist town I publie beach - ·. located between two
luxury holds.
"It's disgraceful," said City
Mapager Felix Cooper. "It's just
not right that things like this can
happen to a nice city that's WOiked
real hard to develop nice facilities
for lbe tourists and lbe people that
live here.''
·
Last week Monroe County
Judge Susan Vernon declared
unconstitutional a city ordinance
·closing beaches at 11 p.m.
Vernon said her order was based
partly on a federal judge's ruling
this month in a lawsuit brought
against Miami by homeless people. .
They su~cessfully challenged the
city's right to arrest them for
bathing and sleeping in paib.

1'

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DAVIS HALL BUILDING

•

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•

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(For. .r Sc.oolof llursi•l) ·

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FIRST AYEIIUE · '
DOWIITOWI, GALUPOUS, OHIO

•

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Saturday, December S, 1992
9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m•
Sunday, December 6, 1992
12:00 noon-4:00 p.m.

•
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Dasher and Dancer,,Nourmber 14 · 20.

•

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t••
HMC .
Employee Activity AssocillfiH

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$42~

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Suntfay, !J{pvem6er 29, 1992 .
1:00 p.m.-5:00p.m.

rtope !furniture (jafkries
.9lcquisitions !fine Jewelry

Td ani ~r&gt;is "'au prrstnto
ilMJ tu1m of o6lJe IUUf fulrp fur !JDIU' /isunine pkllsun,

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HASKINS·TANNER'S

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SELLABRATION
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Stop by for some ref!resltments ·and good tidings! The Rutland
Elementary Kindergarten c:lasies will be in the lobby singing
ChristmaS Carols Thursday, December 3 at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m.

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Gallipolis .
Full House of. Cards .
Ohio River Plaza
446-7330

Special Music

,

.,

Answered 24 ho,ur~

Comer 2ni &amp; (jrape
(jd!Upofis, Ofiio

Cltri-.••

'
• •••

for the store nearest you

424 SECOND AYE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

Rutland Office

,. '•

••
Check the listing or call

TAWNEY STUDIO

Customer Appreciation.

•' -.

Collect all five. A~ifferent ornament each week.

5 MINUTES ..

'

Santa and his Sleigh, December !2 ·!8 ' •

Collect all five of these be~utifully handcrafted ornaments.
Each week you can get a different ornament for just $4.95 each
with each $5 Hallmark purchase. This collection is not available at all
.HaUmark locations, so check the listings or calll-800-HALLMARK
for the store nearest you. But hurry, supplies are limited
and, as everyone knows, Santa's sleigh goes fast.

Really I•

~

wiih each $5
Hallmark purchase

An.offer like this comes along
· · only once!

PASSPORT
IIID I.D.
PHOTOS

Christmas Open :J{ouse
.

Sp01110red

••

POMEROY • EJoilc White, fat·
merly of Liacoln Terrace,
Pomeroy, who now reaides at
Lut11enn SeDior City ill Colamhus.
recently had ~ee reg:emel!t
• SllrF'Y at Mt. Carmel
Holpi·
tal and is JeCUprnliDg well, IICCOtd·
iag ro her claulbter, Baib White, ·
also of Colum6us. Carda may be
sent to Mrs. While, in care of her
daughter, SS North James Road,
Columbus, Ohio43213.
·

Pfease join u.s for a

3rd Annual Bolida~
.
Craft Show

•

'1-1100-425-5627

ted.

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Comet and Cupid. Nourmber 28 • Decembrr 4

TO TURN 80 • The cbUdreu
of Marpret J, SmiJb Wagp will
be h01tiq I I!U')Iriat opeD retep·
tiou Ia hnuor ot her 80th birth·
day. Tbe evtl!t will be beld Dec. 6
from :Z-4 p.m. at tlte Maaoaic
Hall, Secalld Avenue, GaiUpolls.
It Is requested that gifts be limit·

•

•

'

ptiL" .

·' Mother ofGuJfvet blames war
for her son's leukemia

50% to 60% Off, ·
Many Other Items All
At20%to50%0ff.
Also Christmas Coins.

.SNP

.

~~

Ann
Lan·ders

Recovers from surgery

Homeless ruling
overturned

Ann shares poem with readers

New book reveals little-known
facts about 'Casablanca' Pure

u'

Sunday nme• Sentinel ha• B7 .

Pomeroy llldcllepot1 Ol'llpolla, OH Point Plerunt, WV

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II Sunday nmes SenUnel

Pomeroy .. ddllpiN't Gt'llpolla. Oft Point Pill lEnt, WV

The

~:

• Miss School, Miss Out (IUCII·
• Loaie'aAilu-.ShopliAilll Mel; ..._ been benefiting from one of dance)
.
sqe
die - y pJognuns sponsored by
• OuiBtllnding Citizen (bdJavior . The lllldenll bave been npoeed
Hi1Ja_~twtmvedent ~~relhes. ,R11io is and academicSuppl• )School
Dri
to die pm"e~~doa n11G"u'¢ • llH~ll
1
ca._y 111\10
Wlu•
•O ow•
ya
ve from 0111' loc:a a ~~~
1 1
SIOie.. H ...... Dean
.....
ventiaa Mlnlaer Tooy iley, IIIII
Janel Slllfcr baw been visiting die
school for lhe pasl four weeks.
Their JIUIPOIIC to ltacb elementary school children what shoplifting is, lhe reMOII not Ill 00 it, 111111
the J"lllliflcalioa of being c:augbt.
The program is d~i-ned not to
instill fear OJ anxiety m children,
but to encourage them to have
enough confidence to resist peer
pressure and not participate in
shoplifliilg aciivilies. .
The program consisted of an
appearance by "Lassie," Hills loss
prevention mascot; 11 five minute
videotape entitled • A Day To
Remember"; a 25-minute open discussion will! the stude.nts; each
child is given a frisbee; 111 optional
ADDRESS STUDENTS • Pictured are &amp;tudenll at Rio Gl'lll!de
poster ccntest; and four Hills Girl
~ u they eajoy the preSentation from the Hills preven·
Certificates are awarded.
b a-. 'nte7ne, from il:ft to rigbl, Dean Murphy, Tony Wiley,
.
ud Jaaet Shafer. .
.
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o1 JUo Grande Elementary Scbool

1

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•,- ByJOHNRABY ·
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - Troy Brown
scored on a 71-yard punt return and caughl two
toucbdown pssaes while Mlnhall shut down aU-time
Division I·AA rushin leader Marlata Tholnu in a
44-0 rust-round playoi rout of Eastern KentuCky on
·Saturday.
" Eastern Kentuck (9-3) did not get iiS initial first
down unlil 4:53
in the rust half. Thomas, who
entered the ~e wilh S,SS6 yards and 54 lOIICh'downs for h1s career, was held to minus-4 yards
rushing on nine carries.
.
~ (9-3) led 14-0 when Brown took a pass
at the Eastern Kentucky 22-:Jlllllline and scampered
·uiltouched into the end zone to cap~ . 58-yard, four·
.ptar:;ve with 11:S2Iefl in lhe rii'Sl half.
.
than tWp minutes later, Brown fielded a punt
at his own 29, took off up .the middle, stt:pped down
.the right sideline and went untouched into the end
zone for a 24..() lead.
·
· ·
·
On Marsball's fust possession of the second half,
Paytoli hit Brown on a short pass and the 5-foot-9,
"184-pound senior split end raced down lhe 'right
. :sideline for a 44-yanl touclidown to make it 41-0.
Brown caught 10 passes for 188 yards. Payton
completed 26 of ·34 passes for 353 yards. Both

played only !luce quarterS.
. Tailback Orlando Hatchett and 33Q-pound offensive tackle Johnny McKee sco~ on short runs in
the rust half. David Menick kicked field goels or 34,
33 and 24 yards.
·
~. Carter caught six passes for 138. yards for
Eastern Kentucky managed just 11 rust downs
and could get no cloSer than Marshall's 20-yard line.
Quarterback Joey Cren~haw completed 10 of 25
passes for 98 yards. .
Quarter totals
Eastern Kenmcty.....................o o o oo
Marshall. ................................ ! 0 24 7 3 - 44

t::h

aad how tlli two I"JUPI came toaetber to etlebrate the nrst TbankqlvlnF. Tbe school will
sp011801' "Donuts Wllh Saata' OD Satlll'day, Dee.
11, from !I a.m. to .._ to raise moaey for toys
for tile sdlool. The Chrlllmu PI'OIJ'IIIII for .both
groups .of parents will be Wednesday, Dec. 16, at
10 a,m. Both even II will he beld Ia the fellowlblp
room or the c:hurcb.

LITI'LE PILGRIMS - De CCBmunlty Nlll'!lery Scllool held Ill aanUII nuklglviDa Feast
oa Moaday, Nov. 13, at the Presbyterlaa
Church, with aU the trlmmlap. The children
have speat November studylna about Tballks·
givlna, il:anlq how ~ IDcllus helped the i&gt;u.
grims durin~~: that first bard winter In A!Qerica, ·

' CANTON (AP)- A Richmond
: family kne'!' !"hen. they sal down
for Thantspvm$. dinner !hey had a
winning $16 million Super Lotto
:Jackpot tictet to be cashed.
· Marie and Jerry McCallister
: filed the jackpot claim Friday at the
" Obio Louery' s regional office in
Canton. They were aware tha"t they
, had won the prize from Wednesday
. night's drawing when they cele·
; braled Thanksgiving.
~
The couple will receive
~ $470,769.23 a year after taxes for
· 26 yen
• · McCallister,
49, works for. ·
.

RIO GRANDE - The' Rio
Grande Communiversily Symphonic Band will present a Winter Concert on Thursday, Dec. I 0, at 8
p.m., in lhe ChriStensen Thc!alre of
the Fine and Performing Arts Center.

:

·

Band Director David Phillips
describes the performance as a
"traditional" concert, featuring
marches, show tunes, and conremporary band music. The concert is
free and open to the public.

74flv$J
Biggest Portrait Value Ever!

Scoring summary
Mar-Hattheu 2 run (D. Merrick kick)
Mar-FG D. Merrick 34
Mar- T, Brown 37 pass from Payton (D. Merrick .
kick)
Mar-T. Brown 71 punt return (D. Merrick kick)
Mar-McKee I run (D. Menick kick)
TIPPED AWAY- Florida State safety~
Mar-FG D. Merrick 33
Fowler (right) tips away this Shane Matthews
Mar-T. Brown 44 pass from Payton (D. Menick
pass in leaded for Florida receiver Jack Jackson
kick)
Mar-FG D. Merrick 24
A-16,598

Statistics

See Puzzle on ~~;::

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Good Evening Friend,
Did you become one of my senior friends for
1992?
. Did you receive a Sam's Senior Friend card so
your pet could visit a Gallia County veterinarian?
Did your pet receive its free physical ·and vaccinations for 1992?
·
The Gallia County Animal Welfare League, Inc.
reminds seniors that this monetary assistance
expires November 30, 1992
.
.
Your Best
, Friend,
Sam

Department
, · EKU
First downs................................................11
Rushing ati.-yds. .................. .-...............30-70
Passing yards .......................................... 122
Return ·yards ................................................o
Comp.-an. ...........,......... :....... " ............. l2-31
Interceptions lhrown ... ......... ....................... l
Sacked·yards lost........... ....... :......:.........3-23
Punts ...................................................... 8-36
Fumbles·lost ............................................ I-0
Penalties-yurds .........................................6-4
Time of possession ............................ .. 28:43

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lOW OPEl lVI. tlWI
Till AIU I IIAU lAS A HIMIIIEIR IIIDIO OPIIII
••••., .......,, 10.00 .....JdJO ,...

o............._
'

'

. . . . . P·Ill~or.IL:

't'"' ...".tv-'lr.• ' ""•!oN

C~.-\fomt'

.:t:•··

1111

5t'IYitt'

11117 ....
.

MIKE BARTRtiM, Mlinball

C.JIJ! 800 .JJH 8Sof

5 eatc~ 60 yards

fn today's AFC Central bout with Steekrs,
\

AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONEI

Mar.

.

Bengals to see Klingler's debut
as exercise in·handoffs to Green
-

'Pitt hires 'Sunseri to replace
Hackett as head football coach

Holzer Health
Hotline
.
1-800-462-5255

will

season

~~r~·s

Other .college scores

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Florida State tops Florida 45-~4;
Y'town State, Mount Union win

34-~~

'
~-By JOE KAY
have a weak offensive line and can be efficient and productive."
It was neither last week in a 19CINCINNATI (~)-Here's inexperienced receivers. Their best
wbat to look for in quarterback weapon is Green, who has rushed 13 loss to Detroit, managing just 9S
total yards. It didn't oo much better
David Klingler's debut: Harold fOJ714 yards.
·Green left, Harold Green risht,
"If the coaches came in and Oct. 19 in Pittsburgh, when the
Harold Green up the middle.
said we're going to throw the ball Steelers shut Cincinnati out20-0.
The BeQgals managed just 118
. Passes? Oh, well, there will be a 90 times, I'd be pleased," he said.
few of those. Mainly high-ptrcent· "But I might throw 86 intercep- total yards in Piusburgh, 48 rushing
'age, dump-off stuff. And a few lions. Who knows?"
and 70 passing. Esiason threw for
long ones, just to remind the Pitts·
The Steejers (8-3) would love to just 86 yards and was relieved in
burgh Steelers that Kliitgler has a see Klingler throw a lot in his rust the fourth quarter by Donald HoiNFL ·appearance. That would mean las.
lnagniticent arm.
But the Cincinnati Ben$als' plenty of chances to pad their
The Bengals know it's. not
quarterback of the future tsi)' L league-leading takaway total.
exacdy a good setting to ease in
expecting to do much more than'
The Steelers have 20 intercep- Klingler, but ther figure he might
. their quarterback of the past, lions- second by one to Minneso- as well start learmng.
"Is ,there a good team, a good
Boomer Esiason. He's pretty much ta - and 14 fumble recoveries.
going to geL the llellto people and They'd love to see Klinsler run· time? Who knows?" coach Dave
.get out of the way today at River- ning around and forcing passes.
Shula said. "This is the game."
front Stadium.
There's agreement on this point:
Klingler will have lillie margin
' He's not going LO try to be a the Bengals~ best chance to win is for error against a secondary
hero.
to run the ball and play great known for iLS ability to get to lhe
. "M[ job is to go out, not turn defense. Klin~lcr can give the ball.
'the bal over, and put us in pOsition game away w1th turnovers, but
"Our defensive line. and
to have a chance to win," Klingler can't win itsingle-handedly.
linebackers are fast, and our defensaid. "We're JOinS to run the ball.
. "We've got to be able to stop sive backs - some of them are
We're still gomg to be a team that · the Cincinnati Bengals offense," world-class sprinters," Steelers
wins by~ the ball."
. Steelers coach Bill Cowher said. quartrzbaclt Bobby Brister said. "If
And that swts Klingler jusl flllC "Klingler is just Ill th of that. I played against them, I'd be worfor now. The Bengals' to~ draft Obviously,lhey've had some ptobC ried about their~- ..
Brister, the Steelers' third draft
Pick threw for 9,340 yMds m four Iems puttine points on the board
years at the University of Houston. and being productive. B11t it's an pick in 1986, can empathize with
But he's expecting a mod;est beJin· offense that has proven that when it Klingler's situation. Brister also ·
ning wilh the Bengals (4-7), who runs sUc:cessfully, it can do thaL It wound up starting u a rookie, fill••
ing in for the injured Mark Malone
dur~~: Monday night game at
Riv
nt Stadium. Brister threw
for 191 yards; but Cincinnati won
24-22.
"I was reaDy JICl\'OUS," Brister
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Piu associated wilh lhe Pitt tootbaU said. "I had a decent game, but
assistant head cl)8cb Sal Sunseri on proaram fOJ 13 years. He played back then we had a great defen'Se
friday was named the school's from 1979 to,l981 and later served - like we do now - and we had
.as a graduate assistant. He has been
interim head football coach.
some pretty gond running backs.
. Sunseri, also the school's inside an assistant coacb fll" lhe past eight
That lOde a lot of ~..-c off me.
linebaclrers COicb, will serve until a years.,__
.
s
.
' 'I think that s the key when
A &amp;Ulmer team caplaln, unsen
successor fOJ fOJmer coach Paul ·
·you're
a young quarterback. Let
~ett is appointed, said athletic , was promote&lt;tto assistant head·
. your players help you and hopefulqirector Oval1a)'!IC8.
first priority ly !hey play good defense·and the
• A game IICllt Salllrday at Hawaii ·
special teams have a gond day and
end, Pitt's WOJSt
in 20 was to prepare the team for the you can f_Ct into lhe flow of things.
Hawaii game.
~ears.
Sunseri, a ~ttsburgh native, was · YQu don Lhave 'to pre5s or do any• On Wednesday, Pitt .ousted
5ackeu after his third year as head ' drafted by the Pittsburah Steelers thing o~t of th~ ordinary.''
ooach. It wu the third tirile since in 1982, but his career ended when
(.98' that Pitt hu fired a football he hun his knee durina his first
summer training camp. .
·
~oach slishtly more than a year
Hackett, 4S, was 13-20· 1 in
after extending his CC!Itnct.
; The Panlhen' lalt three COIChes three seasons, including a 3-8
In otber .a fternoon eolle1~
.... Haclr.elt, Mite Oottfried (1986- record Ibis season. The Panlhers
1989) aDd Fop Fazio (1982-85).:.... were 3·7-1 in 1991 and 6-5 a year football action, No. 111 Tennesaee
iJI were forced otlt less than 18 ago, when they lost five of !heir ed~ VanderbUt 19·15, and No.
month• after. aian!ng, contract last six. Their 57-14 loss 11 Penn 24 iSI'Isoippl beat No. 16 Mlssll·
utensinu.
. Stile lut Saturday was their 131h sippi State 1'7·10.
. .
S11111Cri. 33, a former Pitt All· in ~lr last 17 games.
Amorlcan linebacker, has been
'

In the lleCOnd quarter or SaturdaJ'S S•nshlne
State grudge matcb in Tallahassee, Fla., which
the bost Seminoles won 45-24. (AP)

Youngstown SL 23
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)- .
Charlie Ward passed for 331 yards
Villanova 20
~ and ran for 70 Saturday as third- · At Youngstown, Ohio, Darnell
ranked Florida state overwhelmed
31-4 3 No. 6 Florida 45-24 to snap the Clark scOJed two touchdowns off
two Villanova fumbles, and
1_g Gators'. seven-game winning Youngstown State took advantage
3·34 streak.
of two more to hold their 23-20
·
Tamarick
Vanover
caught
a
3•1 · seven-yard touchdown pass and set lead and wiit lhe fust round of the
NCAA Division 1-AA play Satur7 7
31- 1~ up two other sccres with long kick· day.
off returns as the Atlantic Coast
:
Harold Hart caught an II -yard
Conference champions won their pass from Tom Columbo to pull
Individual leaders
sixth straight game. The Seminoles
• lone loss came Oct. 3 to top·J'IIlked Villanova within three in the fourth
quarter. But the Wildcats' fourth
RUSHING- E: Kentucky, Penman 4-27, Me· Miami, 1!)-16.
fumble, with 2:36 to play, set up a
Cullum, 1-15, Jones 3-14, Crenshaw 11-13, DiclcerFlorida State (10· I) has .aver· one-yard run by Clark and allowed
son 1-3. Stallings l-2,"Thomas 9-(minus 4). Mar· aj!ed 6L3 poin~ in the last three Youngstown State Lo hold their
shall, Pedro 10·28, Paylon 6-20, Hatche~t 6-16, games smce gomg almost exclulead.
Chapman 2-12, Parker S-8, T. Brown 1-4, McKee 2- sively to the shotgun offense.
Clark also scored a 32-yard
3, Donnan l·(minus 5), O'Shea.1-(minus 6).
·
The Seminoles, who had 38 touchdown off a Villanova rumble
PASSINO - E. Kentucky: Crenshaw 10-25-0- points by halftime Saturday, made
second quarter.
100 J. Thomas 1-1-0-15, Jones 1-5-0-7. Marshall: coach Bobby Bowden the first in the
The
Penguins (9·2- I) also
Payion 26-35-2-353, Donnan 4-7-0-83, O'Shea 1-1- major college coach to win 10
games in six consecutive seasons. scored on a 23-yard field goal by
0-8.
RECEIVING - E. Kelt LUcky: B-urney 4-52, Mc- He had shared the record with Jeff Wilkins in the third quarter
Cullum 2-31, Diclcerson 2-13, J. Thomas 2-4, Cren- Alabama's Bear BryanLIU)d Okla- that was set up by a Villanova fumble.
shaw 1-15, Penman 1-7. Marshall: T. Brown 10-188, homa's Bud Wilkinson.
R. Caner 6-138, Burtrum 5-60, Hatchett 5-30, Pe·
dro 3-9, W. Brown 1-11, Parker 1·8.

v, " ., '

1,""

The Answers You Need ...

November 29, 1992

Marshall.han·ds Eastern
·Kentucky 44-0 defeat

- - - -·. Concert set ·

.

Section C

-In NCAA 1-AA playoffs,

=

iCouple wins $16 million in lottery
Weirton Steel Corp. in West Vir·
ginia.
.
Their wiruung numbers - 1, 5,
i4 25, 38 and 43 - were selected
nudomly by Iottezy computer. Last
week the McCallisters ·had four of
the six Super Lotto numbers.
The WJnning ticket was sold at ·
.K&amp;P Liquor Agency in Win·
tersVille.
•
The jackpot for Saturday's
drawing will be $4 million. A player must have all six numbers drawn
from oqe to 47 to win the Super ·
Lotto jackpot. .

"linus- ~e.mua

Sports

·.Lossie delivers. anti -shoplifting message
• RIO GRANDE students tng
(ploYideiMiV •)

' 1:.

•

.'

Mount Union 49
•
llliDols Wesleyan 27
AI Alliance, Ohio, Jim Ballard
passed for five touchdowns· and a
record 454 yards as Mount Union
defeated Illinois Wesl~yan 49-27
Salurday in an NCAA Division 1U
quarterfinal game.
One touchdown came on a 40yard pass to Sean McCrate at II :I 0
in the second quarter.
.
Ballard completed a record 26
passes of 33 auempts for Mouru
Union (12-0).
,
Mount Union scored three
touchdowns before illinois We&amp;leyan scored on a 12-yard pass
from Tom Monken to Kirk Lies,
imer at 12:49 in the second quartet ·
Monken also \brew TD passe~
or 34, one and six yards for Illinois
Wesleyan~l!hl). He ccmpleted 23
of 35 attempts. ~
McCrate had 51 yards in six carries, while J.,nthony Houston had
33 yards in eight canies.

Qilgenberg to s-ee old teammates
for first time as a Brown today

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Jay
Hilgenberg enjoyed working for
Mike Ditlca, teamed a lot from the
coach during dleir decade toJUilher
in Chicago. Even sb, Hilgeiiberg
always dreaded Mondays.
"In Chicago, you watch films
Monday morning, and there's
fear," says Hilgenberg, a seven. e Pro Bowl center traded to lhe
urn
Cleveland Browns a week before
this season began. "Ditka tends to
put pressure on you. He wears his
emotions out !here on his sleeve. ••
&lt;:1
Reviews of game films can also
be painful in Cleveland, Hilgenberg said, but onlr because he is
his own harshest entic.
•'There are plays you hate tp
see. You mess up one play, you
should feel bad," he said.

needed help- Hilgenberg was
traded for an undisclosed future
draft pick.
.
He signe4 atw6-year deal worth
about $2.2&gt;million.
Any regreLS? None, says Hilgen·
berg, panicularly in light of the
way lhe Bears' season has gone.

today 's game the same as any
other, but he admits losing to some
of his closest friends would be
tough to swallow.
"The whole thing in football is
that you're respected by the people
you play against, and I'm going to
see these guys in the offseason all
the time," he said. "! want them to
respect me during the offseason
and know that I blocked them

- 'I miss my friends on the teanl
there, but I talk to them," he said.
''I'm a Cleveland Brown, and very good."
happy and proud to be ·one. IL's a
Bolh teams have changed qll8J;pleasure to come to work here. In terbacks for the pme. Kosar, who
Chicago, at times it geLS very nega- missed the last nJI)e games because
Live. I know what those guys are of a broken ankle, replaces Mike
going through. Those guys are mis- Tomczak, who went 4-4 as the
ersble right now. This is just a very Browns' starter; Peter Tom Willis,
positive place. lt'U be more fun in mating his fii'Sl NFL stan, replaces
the future, because this team's Jim Harbaugh for Chicago as Ditka
goin!lto win."
searches for ways to revive the
H1lgenberg would like to treat · B~.

enJ!:~:r~:~~
~~u~e~~
and to Cleveland coach Bill

Bowe wants first title
~;~::i~~3-~) ~;ns &lt;s-6&gt;·defense on Supe.r Sunday
"I have great respect for Jay,"

Ditta said. "He's gone in there and
become an anchor for that line, and
their line has improved as the
games have gone on." ·
Statistics ce.ttainly seem to indicate Hilgenberg is making a difference. In Cleveland's season opener
at Indianapolis, before Hilgenberg
had time to learn the Browns' play·
book, Bernie Kosar was.sacked II
times. One week later, as Hilgenberg began to sellle in, Kosar was
sacked twice.
Cleveland has allowed only 12
sacks in the nine games since;
"I thinlc we've done a good j&lt;ib
coming back," Hilgenberg said.
"It's noqusL one person. On Ibis
line,·there s a lot of pide.''
Belichick says Hilgenberg
deserves more credit for lhe line's
progress than he's claiming.
"Jay's very demanding of him-.
. self," Qelichick said. ' 'They spend
a lot of time togelher watching
film. Jay's been to lhe Pro Bowl
however 111811Y times, but he's real
hard oo himself. Olher players look
at him and say, 'Gee, that didn't
look like lhat bad of a play; but
he's upset that he didn't do better.'
Then the other players maybe
demand a lillle'higher performance
level of themselves.''
Hilgenberg in a way orcbestrlt·
ed his departure from Chicago by
·holdina out during the preseason.
When lhe Bears determined lhey
were unwilling to meet his terms
- and when the Browns realized
their offensive line desperate~y

·.
ByHALBOCK
NEW YORK (AP) - Riddick
Bowe's first defense of the world
heavyweight championship could
be staged as a Super Bowl halftime
alternative programming spectacular, manager Roct Newman said
SallU'day.
.
"ItS a possibility, a real ccnsideration at this point,'' Newman
said. " It's an interesting prospect.
II would be the most widely
watched fight in history.' '
The plan would be to have
Bowe defend against one or anum·
ber of secondarY contenders on the
Fox Television Network with the
bout 10 Start alfhe end of the rust
half or the Super Bowl. The Jan. 31
NFL championship gaine is sched·
uled to start ar6 p.m. EST on NBC
television with approximately 32
minutes devoted to halftime.
Fox used alternative programming to attract a large halftime
audience during last year's Super
Bowl and sees Bowe as the comerstone of another raid on a rival network •s foothall viewers. .
· "The kind of blowout promotion Fox is talking about, it would
be a monster promotion," Newman
said.
Pan of the auraetion for Bowe
and Newman would be staging the
fight in Washin~ D.C.. near the
new champion s home. "We've
always said we'd try to do something in Washinaton," Newman
said. "Riddick wants to fight in
Washington and New York,. too.
.

•.

We'd like to take one of the bigger
fights to Madison Square Garden."
• Bowe •s manager said he had a
list of about six potential opponents
ror a Super Bowl fight. "They are
not lhe most major names," he
said. "Those fights would be pay-

per-view."

Meanwhile, Newman said negotiations for fights with ex-champion George Foreman and Lennox ·
Lewis had cooled. Tallcs with Bob
Arum, Foreman's promoter, and
Frank Maloney, Lewis' manager;
have not gone smoothly.
..
"It seems George wanted to
fight Bowe," Newman said. "I
don't think Arum wanted it. I think
Arum thought he could ·do beuer
against olher people. .
"Lewis and his people yelled
from the rooftops that !hey wanted
to fight Riddick nex1. The offer is
squarely on the table for the first
· fight or part of a two-fight package.
We g111111111teed a ·minimum or $12
million. When it was put out !here,
we called !heir bluff.
"They're confiilent Lewis
would ·beat Bowe, so we offered
$12 million u a $CCOnd opponent
or, if,lhey're really confident. $3
million to fight rust and a guaraq•
teed SIS million as a rtrst defense
against Bowe.
•
"They turned it down, Lucked .
their heads behind their tails and·
ran back to London. All thelc:
yelling, it .wu like Shakes~o .
wrote - Sound and ~ signifying
a whole lot of nothin!!.'
••

•

•

�Pomeroy ·~DI1 Ollllpolla, Oft Point PI

.

ways.._-.

SEASON OPENER THURSDAY- GaUia .
-AednJ'spril' ftnlly hsketbd' lam, ader
::tile dlreetloa or rooli:le had eoaelt Reaee
Alaraa, will COIUitiiCe itlltUOII Tlnmday at
·. :Yilleeat apl• Wll'l'tll LuaiL Pk:tured are var·
·litJ aad retene pla,m. KaeeliD&amp;la l'toat are
·(L·R) Leaaae Saadersl.!la•aotlla Dodsoa,
M1aJ Saaden, Rebeeca
Geule Toe·

111--.

O'DILLS

c1ay • • w-Local's....
'11111 Aapll uve ODiy 011C 10·
Diar ill fcuad Amy Ha!tby (13
1'118Aaeeb' dllee
"'-ea ud two 10plloaores
- ' t be ..n. ·aud 111 lil..t Wild!,
C'll Wly .,... taller Milly
Col-u
"!;!fame), who
-lllld laa ,_-,
10J1bomore
fi:c wad ' ' pm K'*'- {22 pes.),
who- plclll:y mac:riOil in vanity

C:!-,_).

rs

.

·AQUARIUM
ONLY

gray 1111111!MI
blue?

20%

Chtlllmll, T11/

·· 2.29

ON ALL

BIRD FEEDERS
AND HUMMING
BIRD FEEDERS

992-2164
399 W.IIAIN

Bld:.llld~

20%0FF
EXCLUDING AQUARIUM
BET UP 8PECIAUI.&amp;ND
DOGHOU8E8

'

•

..
325

· 'L: : .
POMERO't OH. ·~ iL ~t·

n.s...
•·• ~~~~s.u..- r. Pit\.
Lap&amp;s.l• · \lnls&amp;..._

·

·'t: ·

-·

'

1992 OLDS ACHIRA

II LOW II

1992 CAVALIER R/S
Auto., air, aterao, 4 cyl.

ONLY2 LEn
AT THill PRICE

*7,444 01 $159 DOWN, $159 PIIIIO.

._~.. 1992 CHEVY
CAVALIER

5 Speed, 4 cyl., P.
loeka, anti-lack bnlkea.
.
..
'174DOWN •
1174 PIIIIO.

1992 CIM COISICA LT ·
AUlD., air, ecyt., aPr Illig, ateno. .

Auto., air, Quad engine, .terao.

$10,999

•

1992 OLDS 98 REGENCY

.

Auto., air, V-e, loldad.

lion wa:dle • • 7

facc ,·MmcaaM
'
.

loaded.

*14,521·

859

Nieltie Meade, Shtlly Metqer, Cindy Armstead,
Elisha Meadows, Beth S11lisbury, Becky
McCormick and aqistant coaeb Tom Weaver.
. Not pictllred is teammate Alicia Ward. (TimesSentinel photo)

SEYIW
Unbelievable, but true.

ONLY

•29I 829.

SJ

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

.

fiiiiCIII AS LOW as5.9"

·•

~··

Jr.

5«,
JL

Jr.
So.
So..
S.:.

&lt;II

-

.IU SIZES LIMESTONE
PlUS RIP RAP

--~· O.Btw aad Spread Umestone"
"non Sand

-concrete Sand
-PII Run
-Drainage Gravel
•Pea Gravel

"*

CATCHES PASS IN TRAFFIC -Meigs IUII"II Trevor Harrison
(middle) catches a pass In tralf!c created by t:'ecleral Hockillg eapn
Brian Benneu (left) and Grant SchaUer durin11 Fridliy night's prese.ason preview at Athens High School, which the Marauders won
30~21.

Meigs hands Federal Hocking
30-2lloss in Shrine Preview
poured in 15 points to lead all scorers. Chad Zimmerman led Logan
with ll.
,
In the evening's third contest,
Trimble jumped out 10'a 19-2 lead
after one periOd and defeated Nelsonville-York 30-19. Tom Hardy
led the TQmcats with nine points,
Justin Day added eight. Randy
Cline .and Jason. Gail scored five
each 10 lead the Buckeyes. , ·
the nighu:ap, Athens defeated
the Alexander Spartans 32-26.
Justin Scholl led the BuUdogs with
10, and Sunny Klilu added eight.
Bryan Johnson led Alex with 10.
Meigs will open the season next
Friday evening when they travel 10
Alexander.

.

.Orainage Tile
.CUlvert.Tile (all sizes up to 5")
•Block and Mortar Mix

I

,(AU Muday . . . Ta1sdaJ
II 4£ i&amp;Jilj 7 "
headers dial . . . . . . S:ll ....
resen.e ca•a. All Tlwa 7 J
dates are a
se sa.,
7'
bendeiosdsll._. . . . , , _ _ .
serve...-sl
7

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(ling bolinle, ' q IF

wh...•• lnciNCtlltil.,

a...._
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I Za

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Ill &amp; CHAIN OIL

2.99

--,.,__........'8,988

·IUY
THIIIR
•
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...................-..

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ca1.1nlng,
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ID Nduae tiiiOW41

.,.P,w ••Ill II moet ..-we.

\.'

·· ·---··---

..

1
1 ·1

'

Pilose

WE HAVE QUALIFIED nmALlERS AND SALES PERSONNEL.

ExWncled boclr. P

.

••st of ell,

•• .. I I . . . . . . . . ..
•••'IICIIftS ..... PI:ea;,IIC 3101 ·let Pilose,

20TQ •C itOQE . . .

' 011101
~Ill&amp; CUll

·. ·

s•tD AND SERVICE!

. · _,,, PS, PB, AIIIFM-., . . a 7 L P..

Lilli Pr1De. ...... - ••- ..............J11,411

··.

CELLULARONE®

Quarter totals ·
Meigs-· 9-21=30
Federal Hocking- 12-9=21
MEIGS (30) - Jay Cremeans
2-0-0=4, John Bentley 1-2-1=9,
Trevor Harrison 1-0·5=7, Todd
Dill 0-0-4=4, Brad Andedon 1·0· .
0=2, Jack Stanley 1-0-0=2, Aaron
· Drummer1-0-0=2. TOTALS 7-2·
10=30
'
,
FEDERAL HOCKING (21)
- Chad Nelson 1-0·0=2, Brian
sennett 1-2-2=10, Grant Schaller
2-0-0=4, Myron Hart 1-0·0=2,
Keith McFee 1-0-1=3. TOTALS
6-2·3=21

CIIIC .F111111oJ ,.,,.,
-to

. ·. .. . . .

.··BOB'S ELEaRONICS IS OFFERING·. ·

m

added
seven
and Dill
had four. Jack
Stanley,
Aaron
Drummer
and
Anderson eached added two.
Bennett led all scorers with 10
points, and Schaller added four .
In the evening's frrst game, Vinton County outscored Logan 27·10 ·
in the second periOd and went to
post a 41·29 win over the Chieftains. Jason Snider, a 6-3 junior,

Teafo•d'• DOll A

Jan.
J~. 25
28 .........
~·--···-==~~==
•F
•
.Feb. l......... _ _ _....
. _la::ll
Feb. 2 ·····------ Solillall
Feb. 8 ............--.....;)0~
Feb. 9 ········-·--·--•
Feb. U. ····~·• Faii:P

•Top Soil
•Fill Dirt
•Shredded
Top Soil
•Straw

dates :are i

Date
Opponent!
Dec. 3 .................... at Warren Local
Dec. S ....••••.•..••••South Point-1 p.m.
Dec. 7 ...............al Rock Hill-6 p.m.
Dec. 10 ................................ .Athens
By DAVE HARRIS
Dec. 14 .............•................ .Fairland
. THE PLAINS Mei~s
1'7 •....',..........
,
.............
.atLoz
outscored
Fede
.
ml
Hoelting
21-9m
., ' ~ R
. ' V ey the second periOd and went on 10
r•UI:t. I .................... at 1ver
,....,.,.,. 28 ..... .at Chillicothe-6:30p.m.
defeat the Lancers 30-21 in the
•••n ·' ..................................Marlena annual Shrine PrevieW at Athens
ll ........................ .River VaDey
High School Friday ev(:lling.
14 ..................... :····:····.-Jackson . The Lancers used lbe scoring of
16 ...... .......Rock Hill-6:30p.m. · Brian Bennett and jumped Otll 10 a
18 ... ...............at Vinton County _ 10-2 advantage after three and half
21 ............. :.........W~ .Local · minutes of playing time. Bennett
25 .._. .........................Chillicothe fueled the qu1ck start with two
28 ...............:..............at Athens
three pointers.
.'l'e:n. 4 .......................... ..........Logan
John Bentley got the Marauders
_,.,.,," 8 ............... ,............. at Marietta started when he hit a long three
=- n;u. 1-1 ............................ at Jackson pointer and was fouled. Bentley hit
13 .. .at G'field McClain· I p.m. the free throw to cOIRpiC\C the four
point play and cut the Lancer lead
to four. Bennett's bucket with SO
seconds to go in the first periOd
gave the Lancers a 12-91ead at the
buzzer.
Meigs tied the game at 17 when
PBL results
TreYOI' Harrison hit tWo free throws
These are the results of recent with 3:491eft in the second quarter.
ort;,,n at the Pomeroy Bowling
Harrison's spinning layup 28 sec'
onds later gave Meigs the lead for
good at 19-17.
13entley hitanotherthreepointer
with 2:35 lefl in the contest ·and
Meigs increased the lead to 22-17.
Brad Anderson gave Meigs their
biggest lead (28-19) of the ni~ht
with 45 seconds left when he.hil a
(202) ond DGo
foUow-up bucker in 1be painL After
Grant Schaller hit a IS-footer 10 cut
the Meigs lead back 10 seven (2821), TOdd Dill hit two free throws
to close o.ut the scoring with 19
seconds remaining.
Bentley led the Marauders in
scoring w1th nine J??ints. Harrison

(1131)

POMEROY

Clalfi!.

Jr.

Jan.
...........=~~~-~":':
Jan. 47 ........••.
Jan. H . ...........a G1Dia AI • J
Jan. 14.-......
•W 7 a
Jan. 18 ·--·
M
Jan. 21.......
• Saoilll'\iiia:

•H

31 799

of lhe six fCXliiC'r Nonh

~ 011 die I'OIIcr, lillY see ~
u juanls. But Mooce is intetes~

L::Vas

s.. s.:.
~2 fi:.
14-Beth Saticbwy~_56 s.:.

0

Gallia.Academy's
1992-93 girls'
basketball slate

-

twO

•

-·

IlL Yr.
H Jr.

. 24-Cbcii.cJ11a.(;IF
~s
25-Dania T..,........
Hi
32-Nictio Mra+-1'
~1
34-Cindy Ana$ I.C
60
42-Becky Mc('lw • 1:fi.CS6
45-Eiilihd' ' . s liiC...S.ll
Head c:oadl- Dawid i11111M:

-•1
packages with
Oiiio .... lie teaaue

•ics ,.....,.

:::::~0~757~~7

·se::~\!7r.,-·JabnTooford(l93)1114

1992 HYUNDAISCOUPf, lie new, sporty........................$7999
1992 Otm FULL SIZE STEPS.IDE 414 PU, all aplions....$18, 999
1986 OIYY CAPIIa O.ASSIC BROUGHAM, laaded ......". $5990
1989 FOlD lANGEI XLI, 2wheel driYe, Ike new... $7990
•"•1993 CADILLAC 1988 OIYY miSIO, aulD., IIi, stereo, mare.~.....:....... $3981
1988 OIM RILL SIZE PICIUP SII.YWDO, 2WD .........:.$4812
SEDANDEYIW 1990 OJTIA55 SUPIEME 2DL extra dean, law mJes ..... $7499
UghtBelge,
19.8t WIICE 4Dl.sllarp____............................$7999
Loadlcl.
$ ·
1988 DODGE DmOIIA, auto., ai ...- .............-............. $3995
1988FOIDESCOnMusl5eeL................................... S2995
1
.________,_,J..:1..:..;,f91 Otm S-10, lcnr niles, hu"JL-..:.......................$6995

'•'

1' ' 7 -

21-Erica~---S-4

•

Nov. 30 .........
•" DaR
Dec. 3 .......-a " ,
Dec. 7··-···
Dec. s..........
• w-~.a::~~
. Dec. I4 ......-. •
5 7
Dec. l7........Sc n •
Dec. :U •....... ...:...,...G6a Ao A 7

Doa!a

···k·~
c..........,n .

308 EAST MAIN

..-. . . .

....,.
a-.-

22-DrcamaGilbm-F __s...s

K?Zd

~

River Vallejr~ ·
1992.;93 gUfr
baskttballiiiiU

u .......

._(t ·1992 CADILLAC

CIA-

It sa-w . . . ~• ...JU$
haven't ICell •dale _.
before.
.

~~~~~~~~:::·::

Laeded, cl11llc luxury.

TBhoe,V-&amp;,a~c.

.

•ow'7,995

WAS

.1992 CHm LUMINA
. EURO

~min
5-1 0 414

tiwa' V...

~alnnd-.mltflL-pcti-

f

510 CHOOSE FROII

-will

~David M

7

••'•

.a&amp;..__'"

.... G.-.

ley s gidd I 7 •

(Continued from C-2)
' More about Dames
Barnes is a· 1984 GaUia Acade·
my graduate who lettered in each
of her four years on the varsity An~els, She was an aD·SEOAL player
m three of those years.
A~ Rio Grande College, from
where she graduated in 1988 with a
baChelor's depe in physical education, she lettered in each of her .
.four seasons there, earning all-MidOhio ·conference honors as .a senior.
. She continued her education at
.the University of Dayton, where ·he
received her master's de~ree in
guidance counseling earlier this
year; ,Involved in her fourth year of
teaching in the Gallipolis City
School District, she is a physical
education teacher for grades K-6 at
Rio Grande and Green Elemenlaries..
'

COMPLETE UNE OF
PET SUPPliES

Sllih~t,

.•

.

.-s ..... 1!1liitc . .

Headcld bf '

·

DEER SEASON
SPECIAL

-• •

Academy, Logan,
aad . . . . LociL Other in try':f.,~ 1W0 al fiWWifll f~
In
'lion 10 Mcmk and ~..
, _., P"*IV' include
bury,
senion
Dreama Gilbert ....
n
z 4r, Reedsville Eastern.
Shelly
Metzger
(she transfc~
011; llill. llaciae Sou.tbern and
from
Eastern)
and
juniors Che!i
Sa.ill ftiilt. At ao lime are there
Clagg
(4
pts.),
Erica
Mollohan
cu.tivebomeor
pts.)
and
Dama
Twyman
(ll'li'
twe litld:-aa.bak away games
7 7 'p I
pts./gamc) arc expected to s~ .
•
"'De SIOAL.is a very compcti- some time at forward.
At
center,
6,foot-O
sopho~~
liwl: ' zc as fu as girls' sports
.c. • cnc·l"' ·saidl Moore, wbo Cindy Armslad is lbe hands..........
._ r - IJi~ Creek mentor choice to rule the sk):!ln~· thooi1!
Tall Warta ISIIis: a•sjstM' coach. senior Beck¥ ~ick (79 ~
""We'.ep-wat:cua out for us, and junior Elisha Meadows &lt;sl
h .
il"s a SICp up,.but we'll be · pts;) can play cen~ as T(Cll as f~
ward.
,_,,
MI • "saiidllie's: SlreSSin~ manTeamwork and work habi)4
Ill
*fi r and sprading ~ were the things Moore said were~
. . - •Ilk ad•~ of seams abundance in his camp. '"'bey ddt
..
. ~4rf (
job of coll)plementing eaclt
a.:en~g on ju- good
0~.
.
.a Alicia Wlrll (88. points last "However, this is a learning
ex,_, ..S fi'!'slp• Amber Staton perience for all of us," he addecl.
ill 1111: ~with Ward the Jiow much these Raiders put wlfat
• li'C deice to· ruo the floor. they learned from their many days
8 aewa. senior ll'eth Salisbury in o'pcn gym and summer baskot·
(9.1 pls./PJIIC} and sophomore ball camps will be seen 'Mon"*y
Nidic M 1c. (Jl.l pu•./game), night. .
.;

parllpa!, ..._,... . . . . . .

Blue Angels ...

$795

.

II

s.

Wbel1 YQII . . . . . . ,... . . . . "

FIRST LADY RAIDERS -River Valley's
first varsity girls' basketbaU
led by David
night at
Moore, will begin Its season
Marietta. In tile front row are
Dreama
GObert, Dama 'fwy!nan, Eriea
Cheri
Clagz and Alnber Staton. Standing

IOGAtLOI

:.; TQQETHER AGAIN -:-- GaWa Aeademy llrls' head basketbaU

AUlD., air, lterao, ¥-1, PW, Pl., crul•, Ult, loadacl.

· '* .

13-Amber'SW- G

R&amp;G .Feed &amp; Supply Co.

1992 CHM LUMINA SEDAN

7..-r

10-Aiicia WMHJ
12-Sbclly Mmr-E

SPECIAL PIKES 01 COIIPLEIE AQUARIUMS

~

By·G•.SPIIINC:IIiU
•w
11
s a
&lt;CHESHIRE-.,._tiD,_. .

No.-~.,...

IQUIIIUlL..•s.t '' te 1o•

&gt;

~·,,~~'i7;~~

River Vallq roJu

551'"•WOOIIUII

..•..

OH Piillu• F

On~:3Lj

,,,, ,,,,

•:eoaellltnee .Bal'lltl (rlpt) Wlltellel her players 10 through pre: ·jJndlee -dM!oeia&amp; with =Want eoadl Jackie Knight, wbo was
::!aer YIIJ'IItJ eoadlat GAHS darla&amp; the earl7 1980s. Al ·the Blue
~b&amp;ell' Wrd c:oadl ctl tile m01le1 o era, Barnes, 26, Jueeeedl Gordon
. • .Baker, wlao nwlp:ud earler tbllmoath. (Tiaes-Seatillel photo)

GJI~Ipolls,

10th 1 .., pmes last,.:.
A pouible firlt·IIDIC lineup
may loolt lih this: junior Amy
Morris (56 ptl.) and freshman
Whitney Hallwell in lhe hr"nN!t,
XolcuD ..t Hemby a die f01ww ·
111011 IIIII O&gt;b•.., in die'Jilin!. But
tliis iso't wam. in ltaiC, a frclb.
man Mindy Pope may tot some
time in the 1Jiiall or 011 die wlnp.
(See ANGELS oa C-3)
.

SAVE

20 ga. • 12 ga. 2W' Rifled Sluga

Pomeroy Middleport

River Valley's girls' basketball season to begin Monday night

Gallia Academy girls to commence
season Thursday vs. ·Warren Local.
By G. SPENCER 0SB08N1t
1111• S I 'I el Sfllr
GAU.IPOLIS - Gallir .&amp;c:e!e.
my's &amp;iris' bukctllall teaa is
YOUIII ill men
Gone Is Oonloll ..... wliil piIOied die Blue AJWC~~•!J p 111111t
or the 1980s, three Sov•Ma"'n
Ohio Athletic Leatne cltaaapionlbips and a pair of Divilim U
di5!rict titles. In biJ place II ReaDe
Barnes, hired as !be Aqcls' bou
after spellding thlee yean u lbe
kademy'Sl'CIICI ve coecb.
Bul the 26-year-old Barnes,
. whose •ssi!!h!nt coach is nonc oilier
1han Jackie Knight, her varsity
. coach from die days when lbe former's last name- Hilley, illl't
lbe only )'OUihful oae 0111bis ,.:'s
eerl, AJD7 Morn., Wllltaey HutweU aDd Sara team, which wiD -.t acdoa 'Ibws·
Walker. Slalldlq are Banes, Stepbule Space,
Kim Taekett, K:arl Bron, Carrie Holeskl, Gallia Academy roster
Mindy Pope, OJ' H-by, Meglum Koleoa aod
asslstaat eoadl Jackie Knl&amp;hL Not pletared II
No.-player-pos.
Ht. Yr.
teammate Misty Coleman. (Times-Sentinel
11-Sara
Walter-0
........
:
...
S-7 Fr.
. photo)
IS-Whimey Hascwell-0 ...S-6 Fr.
20-A!IIy Morris-0 ..........,.S-6 Jr.
The original Woodbine track 23-Misty ColemanoC ........6-0 So.
was loca1ed on the outskirts of 35-Amy Hemby-F ....;.......S-9 Sr.
Toronto, property now considered 41-Mindy Pope-F,C .5·11 1/l Fr.
virtually down10wn.
43-Meghan Kolcun-F .......S-9 So.
44-Kail Brown-F ..............S-8 Jr.
President U.S. Grant frequently SO-Gennie Tuccai-0 .......S-1 Jr.
attended the races at Monmouth
Park, NJ., in the early i970s.
Head CMdt- R1111ec Barnes

November 211,1992

Ncmmber21,1112

nt,WY

'

�·.:

~! ·p

I

C4 SUINMy Tlm11 Sentinel
----~-

.,.,_m_
r -,..._
_,_Doc. p.m.

(I~I~-,.Doo.4,1 ....

AIN

.

--Lake Cllllalio (13-0) ... """"
... (lU),
5, 1

WeeklJ.te
TodaJ ·

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K.NOQ,.aN.Y.Mo,lp&amp;

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LA.Jtoldoio •S.Illoeo-1 ......

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MoadaJ

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---

WALES ElONnUNCE

*' . __

-

WLT .... GPGA
1
16 6 '
:15 109 tl
N.Y. ~-- II 9 3 25 92 U
_ , . , . , ___ 1110 0 22 65 11
w ::
10 12 2 22 " .,
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r

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----~ -------·-hlrolo... .. -.....

."

llaai..............
a.... ...........

16 5
13 6
13 6
9 10
5 16
2 21

3
5
2
4
I
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South
AmaJao 30, LSU 6

35 106 71

31
21
22
IL
5

Nelnlb 33. Cl:l*

( ' ollq~e

'

ha~kd hall

..
Prne..oa NIT

S.ylllo16 6 2 34 110 .,
&lt;:alaUJ ···- ··· 14 I 2 30 99 , II
v -........ 13 9 2 21106 77
Wlnalpoa........... 1 13 2 II II M
......,.. .......... 7 12 4 II 61 99
S...Jooe.._......... 5 15 I II 63Hll

•

11II!;P"' WOLPI
T'nnSg_, •lean.,twdea
. RAC~ - First~year head
... coach Jenn1 Couch wdl lead the
.c Southern .,.;..~g&gt;
'

1

rl'laJer-pc&amp;
Ht. Yr.
JermiferCror.s-G• .............. 5-3 Sr.
.· Cecilia Nilssen-G ...............5-3 Sr.
. ShaTieSf~?ver-&lt;: ................5-9 Sr.
•Heather Hill"'
5 • Sr.
----v ................... ..,
1A.imeeM11Js.G• .................5-3 J
Amber Ohlinp:r-G• ...........S-3 /'
ClJriJiie COoper-G• ............S-5 /'
Ancn~Mooi'c-FIC" ...........5·8 ~
1euilca COdner-F"
S 7 So
'· • 1eaer winner .............. •
·
.Head
- _ . .Jcnnit: Couc .

· Federal Hocld
Jan.
ng
Jan. 14 ..........., .............11 Alexandllr
Jan. 20 ...................;.......at Southern
Jan. 21... ...............11 Vinton Coonty
Jan.2S ................ .Nelsonville-York
Jan. 28 ...................................Miller
Feb. I ................................at Belpre
Feb. 4 , ...........................at WeDston
Feb. 8 ......... :......,.................Trimble
Feb. 11 ............................
.&amp;1 Eastern
.
.

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

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4

aac:ed out to allow ·the Marauders
• to
an up-tempo bnmd of ball.
: • 'Quite a few kids should see
: plenty Of playing time", Logan said
:• bf this year'S"leam. "We
have
.: j)lle full time starter back (Vema .
:•.l:ompsron), and our lack of height
;! Jnemis that we arc really going to
•: bave to 1m QUI on die boards." .
~ : Logan feels that Belpre, which
':lost only one senior, and Nel!:~ville-Ycirli: arc the teams to beat.
!,!With Miller, Alexander, Federal
,, HockinJ and the Marauders willi a

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shot to compete for the troWn. Be-

sides the TVC schedule, the marauders will play both Southern and
Eastern in a p8l1' of COIIICSL SOUthem is cOI!Cbed by Jennl Couch, a
star point guard for Logan's team
that went to the regional rtnals in
1987. Couch WitS the MVP for the
University or Rio Grande two years

ago · ·

Logan

11

~

.

·Good&lt;Md

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ol ho:Jwoar for WorkiiiCIIl·
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36.95 P2ll&gt;l75 Rl5 411
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13&amp; 33&amp;
Athans - 594-3528
Home 949-2394

Will be aatering his ninth
· year as the Lady Marauders head
coach and his 16th year of coachlog overall., The three-time TVC .

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ARMY SURPLUS

·~

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coach of the year owns a 1()()..17
record in the TVC and an overall
girls' reconl of 133-50. Ron also is
a two time district coach of the
year. .
Logan is assisted this year by
Daryl Owens, who will. also coach
the reserve team. ·

Loc1t~d 2 .U.s .. ..... . . . ~·· F.a.,,..•• •• lt•
33 4-LIIH ..,. ........ Co. ... 19, ApproL y. • •

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CELEBRITY

.

ontr

lllrioi..,Q
foltoria 4S,I..ouilvillo 7
•
· St Mary'• Memorial 27, Columbu1

s-..... u

.

1986 CHEVROLET

~: ~amuders ... _..:..&lt;Con_un_·ucd
__
rro_m_C.;..-4....:)-~-----------:---....,---

II ..... l'oothall

Frtdoy'$ ""orH

-

.

~

I

8-:....................4 I
"'llllinpn.···-····--4 I

.

..,~

'\II\

NlJ'~sea. ·standlag are bead toatb Jennifer
CIJIICb, Bea Lllle, J - Manuel, Sammi Sisson,
Sberrl Stover, Andrea Moote, Jesslka Codaer,
Becky Moore, Amy Weaver and assistant coach
Jobn ManueL ·

1!192-93 SOUTHERN TORNADOES .;_ Tbe
. 1!192-93 Sell~ Toraadoettel opea lllelr bu, 'kelball •1111011 Monday, Nav•ber 30 Ia Racine
Eastern. flctured are (froat l'OW, ~R)
:,~ AllBee MUla,.Amber ObUnaer, Heather Hill,
't~ J_e aniler Cross, Cbrlalle Cooper aad Cecilia

COLilloiiiUS, Obio (AI') - !lao on
tbD me. eenifinek md.liull pai8Dp few
lbe 21R Oblo HiP Sdlool A1hlot·
"'Aooodalinn ..... foacholl pl.oyol&amp;,

T-

METRO LSI

...._t

mJr~"="'~
Ca1tUJ
.1'-s.12&lt;&lt;m

'

Strong pomts o~ thls_yeai's
Southern ~eam arc 1 ~ qulcknc;ss
and defensive ~~s. The
T&lt;Xftl!dOettes wtll be runrung an lggresslve m~-10-m~ defense IIJat
C~h describes as '94 feet of hilS·
tle.S th , f~ . ' h •
. ou em s o .ensJve sc eme
Will be to~ the defense ~ 1 •
cgometponegoo~.~P!~~g· a..nOurdk~?e:
. "'
·
.
1.5 a motion
offense,
Where
we
p&amp;$5,
c0 t, and screen a lot," says Couch
.-.
• •
~ouch mcbcated that~ club, IS
a litt!e slow on the U:!IDSIU?n! ~ut
~ IS a result of~~ teams mexpenence and speed.
·
(See TORNADOES on C-6) •

1989 GEO

Rodlers E-Z Ride
Auto-Rentals
. .

Yr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.

f~lals &lt;?fthe aame:

$3995

Loo ~ S,lloooill
8ull'llo4, O..wa I
N.Y. ...... 4,l!!
"'·'"'

Clbt..teo I, 5

h

club poSitd a t-20 overall, tllld 1Foreign exchange student Cecil13 Southern Valley Athletic Con- ia Nilssen and seniors Sherrie
ference mark last season with a Stover and' Heather Hill are out aftheir skilla.
team that consisted mostly of fresh· ter sitting out a couple of seasons.
· Couch will be.in her first varsity men and sophomoreS'.
Couch indicated she is looldng
season after a one-year stint at
Couch was a st1mdout player at forward to a good season, but a
Southern Junior High. She takes Meigs, where she earned all-TVC season that will consist of learning
the reigns from David Gaul, whose and all·District 13 honors before the game and improving as the sea·
excelling 13 a playu at the Univer· son progresses.
Soutlurm girls' baskttballschedule
sityofRioGillllde.
She said, "We' ll win some
Date
Opponent Jan 14
at w··-..rord
Returning from last year's club galtes. but most of all, we're going
Nov. 30................................Eastcm
· .........................
"'"''' .
ar~ all-SVAC nominee Aimee !D learn a lot this year. Hopefully.
20 ...................................MeigS Mills and SVAC honorabl•-men- m the next year or two we'll begm
Dec 7
N
·
Jan.
•
elsonville-York J1111 21
.at N I
ill Y _,_
•
·
~
Dec t4"""" " " '""
•
............
e sonv ~ 0 '"· tion candidates Amber Ohlinger to be compelitive."
Dec. 17 ....... :.......... ~ ......._.Witerford Jan. 27 ................................Tnmble and Jennifer Cross. In addition,
Like many of the teams in the
Dec: 2l ......_. .............at River Valley Jan. 28 ....................Sym~es Valley Christi Coopec, a junior, and so~ area Couch liSts "lack of experiDec. •....................... .at~Frye , Feb. 2 ......................... .RiverValley homores Andrea MooreandJessika ence" as her team' s main wea.lcDec. ~ ...........................• Tnmblc Feb. 4 ..........................at Waterford Codner return.
·
ness Couch is also stressing the
• ..........,.............at Alexander Feb. 6 ............... .at Federal Hocking
.
·
I~~t. 7 .................................at ~i.,.
Feb
15
·
.at
Symmes
Valley
.... . . ............. .
1a II ... :. ........................at.._tcm
rer winnen 'were IOpbomorcl and
~.still WQddng to improve

mi., oxc:.ll8nt fuel economy.

-S.-4((1Jl

••

. er

or an illDca llllllthe remaining~-

:

Auto., air, AM/AI -~ 48,000

n.i1adolphla 6, I-I.Y. blmdon 3

••

-

So11thera Totllldo 1irla' variity
Wecblll.qllld into die 1992-93
CliO '0!11011 widl'lix JeiUriliDg letrer winnen 011 the roaer.
Despite rennina six letter win!ICI'I• Slllllller!t wi1f face a rebuildIDJ year. Sellior Jeallifer Cross
milled much or l a s t - hecan"'

..

Frlday'ai&lt;Oftil

•

5w'

·· baskttbtdl roster

u •
• ''"' b k b l''
l~~e1gs
lflTw
. as rt a • sch'edule .

Date
Oppoaent
N!)v. 30 ............ .at Federalliocking
Dec. 3............................. .Alexandu
Dec. 7 ...................,..Vinton County
Dec lO ............ .atNelsonville-Yorlt
Dec. 14 ..............;...............81 Miller
Dec. l7 ..................................Belpre
Dec. 2l.. ............................Wellston
Jan. 4 ...............................at Trimble
Jan. 7 ..,..............................Southern

sunday llmes Sentinel Plge C5

Pomeroy Middleport Glllllpotla, OH Point PI-nt, WV

Southern girls .to begin cage season Monday against Eastern .

steals llllll•ssists
the team after settiag out her
Loaan welcomes back letter sophomore year. Joy O'Brien,
wi11Den 5-7,1C11ior,l.«i Xe1ly (5.0 Headier H~. Mindy Findlay,
pu), 5-4 junior Lee Haldenoa a,2 Amber Blackwell and Vanessa ·
pu), 5-7 JeDior Melisll Sissoo (2.2 Compston am ~ rrom an oulllandpes), 5-7 senior KalriDa Twner (3.2 ing tvC champion rue~e team.
pu) and 5-5, aenior Ginga- Fmdlay All arc IIUihina for playing time. .
(1.4 l*&gt;· All fi~ received valuable
One of the MaJauders weakness
play1ng time last season. Kelly is the licit of heighL Taylor is the
CIDle on saong the second half or Lady Marauders ta1lelt playu at 5·
the ye..
8. But the rostu is 1fttty well balJun}or Chrissy Taylor returns to
(See MARAUDERS on c-~

Jm. 9 ...................................Eastern

No.-player
Ht.
33· Verna Compston ........... 5-4
12-Gin~ Findlay .. :..:..... ~ .. S-5
10-Lori.Kell&gt;: ............._. ...,...S-7
20-Melissa Sisson .............. S-7
42-Kalrina Turner ....... ~...... 5-7
21-Mindy F'mdlay .............. 5-7
11-Lee Henderson .............. 5-4
14-Hea!bcr Hudson ............ 5-6
15-Joy O'Brien ..................S-4
44-Chrissy Taylor .............. 5-8
31-Amber Blacltwell ..........5-4
22-V811CSS8 Compston .......5-7

.... Allloloo---

I
.I

By DAVI liAiuus
n-SeatilleiCCII'Hip.-1
ROCKSPRINGS -MeipMaraudcl girls buketblll COICh Roo 1
Logan welcomes blck one 111ner
and six letter wiaaen whaa the
Marauders open the 1992-93 basketball seiiOII at always too&amp;h Federa! Hocking Monday. . .
Gone from last ye~r's Tri-VIlley Conference championship team
that finished with a 19-3 mark ,
overaU
and a 15-llllldt
in die tvC
arc
all&lt;anference
performers
'l'ricia Baer, Reva Mullen and Kim
liaoning. Also not retuniing this
year are Mary Cremeans and
Danielle Scou.
The one returning slarttt is S-4
senior Vema Compston, who wts
secood on the team in sc•a an
average of 11.2 points a contest.
S'le was also seccnd onlhe team in

; N«hUiblr 21, 11112

November 21, 11112

Plnnnt. WV

Meigs girls'
basketball roster

Soutlnfesl

109 16
19 75
1117 16
5I 91
50116

,._
WL'J' .... GFGA
. _ ___ _ .. 14 10 0 21 Ill 91
M1
I. ... II 9 3 25 U'M
~
·--- .... 10
II 10
25 •II 65
73
_
____
' 33 23
T_Bo, ....... 1014 2 22 90 93
S.. ....., ___ _ 112 3 19 IZIOO

'•

( olll'gl' loot hall

19 10 II

C~ELLCONFBRENCE

'

'="'
Meigs _girls to·start cage season
Monday vs. Federal Hocking.

PPolomm••-n:ol!fy'---llllldddldiiPOIIIDOrlr1-ClGIIIIIIIpolle, Ott
------------------

ER

.CIISnR·

~

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915·3301
.

I •

.,

Now II the Time to Buy At.;.
'e GEO

•

OLDSMOBILE

�.

.

.
·considering the Eagles' luck oflll.U,

Philly s~re· bet to fall in today's
game against San Francisco·

has put togedler the NFL's third
By DAVE GOLDBERG
best defense statistically. He
AP FCJOtNII Writer
Two 1110111ba 1110. S. FIIJICUCo moved 111 a 4·3 and moved Junior
and Phi'~i• wer-e !be two best Seau, rapidly beconliq one of the
teams h(~ NFL, and Steve NFL' s &amp;est linebackers, outside
Yo110g 1111d RandaU Cunningham and has turned roolde Chris Mims
were 1·2 in die Qllll1eltl«k ratings. into a sacker.
Jay Schroeder will start once
When they play ~Y at Candlestick, II will be less than than the again for the Raiders, who beat up
monumcnllll m.lehup. envisioned. on John Elwayless Denver 24.0 on
But it'slllill enough cl1111lllrllelion Sunday.
Tampa Bay (4-7)
·
that ~ 011 the winning team .
is likely to say of the losers: at Green Bay (5-li) (Milwaukee)
This is an "if only" game for
"We'll meet them somewhere
the
Packers who actually have a
,along the line in the_playoffs."
shot
at an NFc wild~ spot11te
• The 49as II'C rolling along at 9·
"what
ir' is the second game of
:2,110p die NFC West and~ to
the
season
when die BUcs were hot
isllly there. Their main concern
and
the
P~ck
was not and Tampa
&gt;now: a fint·round playoff il)'e and
won,
31·3
;home-field in the pfayaffs.
•
Now the Packers have beaten
: . In fact, die Ninels Cllll clinch a
the
Eagles and Bears in consecu·wild-card spot wilh a win, and they
~remain a game and a tie-breaker live weeks.- Mike Holmgren, who
•ahead cl New Orleans in their divi· tutored Joe Montana, has turned
'l sion. There's also a major Bien Favre into one of the NFi..'s
sideshow. Jerry Rice is ·one TD up-and-coming quarterbacks and
•catch away froiD his lOO!h career e~en created a running game.
:reception, which would tie Steve Vmce Workman and Edgar Bennett
have 100-yard gimes this season
:l.a'Jent's career rec:ord.
after
no .Packer had run for three
• But the Eagles, who started 4.0,
digits
since 1989. ·
:II'C now 7-4, safely ensconced in
Tampa
Bay has reverted to form
;wild-card land but stwnbling along
six
losses
in seven games after a
•at about three-quarters throttle,
[largely because Cunningham has 3·1 swt. Has Sam Wyche's novel·
•been inconsistent or worse for the ty worn off or is it the orange
:past seven games. .H e's now pants?
Minnesota (8·3)
~slipped to seventh in th;,%uanerat L.A. Rams (4-7)
'back ratings, and he's ac y been
Despite the record and the
:worse than that. Even. in last
;week's craz
. EY· 47-34 win over the chance to clinch the division early,
,New Yol1c Oil\nts, he threw three die Vikings are changing qll&amp;l'ler·
backs - S~n Siijsbury. for Rich
interceptions.
Ga.nnon. In fact, Dennis Green
' Young?
: He's still No. 1, and even the made the change last week as .the
•shadow of Joe Mootana joining the Vikings mllied from a 13.0 dertcit
piiCiice squad doesn't daunt him.
to beat Cleveland 17·13.
"Their quartelback is probably
One reason for the quarterback
playing beatr than anybody in the change: The Vikings' defensc has
league," says Eagles' coach Rich been its offense. Minnesota has
Kotite, who cmcedes that his quar- seven defensive touchdowns this
tt.rblck is slill feeling his way out· season, all in the laSt five games,
of his slump.
and it was Audray McMilfum's 25, · "You have to have containment yard interception return that won
and good pressure up the middle, the Cleveland game. ·
Phoenix (3-8)
;get people in his face. If contain· .
at Wasbin~ (6-5)
;ment breaks \fown, he Cllll run as
Can the Redskins rmd enough
1fast as most running .backs.''
: The same use~ to !le said of bodies to play? If they do, they .
Cunningham, but last week he ·have a fCliSOII for revenge, .a 27-24
:scrambled five times for just 14 loss in Phoenix after they held a
24-6lead in die fourth quarter.
iyards apinst the Gian!S.
One Washington casualty is
' Nor is the Philadelphia's
' ;defense what it was early. In the back. Darrell Green was activated
Iwin over die Giants and a loss to for last weet's 20·3 loas in New
•Green Bay tbe previous week, it Orleans, the Skins' third in four
,surrendered 61 p!)in ts and 765 games. Tunm Rosenbach, who lost
if~Cds. not fi~ you v.:ant going his starting job for the Cards
through injury, has regained it the
:mJO Candleslick.
-I
same
way after Cluis Chandler was
I
• Even with five weeks left in die carried off in last week's loss to
. .
:season, three team·s can clinch Dallas.
Despite their injuries and th~
/playoff belths if they win. In addilosing
streak, Washington would
ltion to S1111 Francisco, Dallas Call
still
be
playoffs if they start·
Iget in if it.beats the Giants Thurs- ed now.in the
In
five weeks? Who
lday and Green Bay and Washingknows?
JIOR lose, and MinDesoca ~ clinch
Dover (7-4) at Seattle
•the NFC Central if it beats the
(1·10) (Monday nigl!t)
:Rams and Green Bay loses to
The
TV people II'C uncloubtedly
Tam~Bay.
·
ecstatic
about getting the Seahawks
It s alao a week of quarterback
switches. No less than five teams on prime time for the second
,_ the Gillllts, Vikings, Bengals,
Jets. Cards and Browns will change
quarterbacks this week and the
(Continued from c.5)
· Stoelers and Bears might
Aimee Mills was cited as the
• The weekend opened with two team's
top shooter and ·as one of
Thllllksgiving games, Houston at the team's top defensive prospects.
Detroit and the Giants at Dallas. · Southern hopes to utilize its quic)c;
In odlet games today, Chicago ness to its advanlllge both offen.
Ia at Clevclaad; Kansas City at die si~ly and defensively.
:New York Jets; Miami at New
Oblinger is tbe team's top ball
Orleans; New England at Atlanta; ( handler on a team tbat is improving
Phoenix at Washingtoo; PitiSburgh in this area every day. Ohlin&amp;et can
· at Cincinnati; Tampa Bay vs. conttol the ball out front and is a
Green Bay at Milwaukee; Buffalo good penetrllor.
Couch lidded, ''We telld to rush
at Indianapolis; Minnesota at the
Los An\el! Rams and the Los our shots, but we have a few good
'Angeles · rs at San Diego.
shooters. On the boards we are
strong and aggressive. Sophomore
Denver is at Seaule tonight
Jessika CodDer is very strong and
Mlull (8-3) at New Orle1111s (8"3) really ~ive inside."
Both these teams are headed forf ( "Were goin!f to
12
the playoffs, but this is a mUSt for players every mght,
· g on
both if they want to win a division. how m.ny quanen we have left
Tbe Dolphins are a .game 1,11us a from the reserve games. I could
tiebreaker behind Buffalo an the play about nij;,.fll'le a lot every
AFC East; the Saints and 49ers ni&amp;flt, but we
a lot of depth in
have the same relationship in the .:1· the post. We have an overabiiD·
NFC West.
.
v Idance of guanls."
Jim Mora. who rarely says anyCouch credits Ohlinger and scthing publicly beyond the bland, nior Jennifer Cross with great leadcalled Monday mght's 20-3 win enhip. The SHS coach says they
over Washinpon perhaps die best are both aggressive and do not like
pme the Samts have played this to lose.
ICIJOII, Miami's 19-16 win over
"Jennifer's (Cross) experience
the Oilen on Pete Stoyanovich's is a plus ... she really knows the
S2·yard field g~ last w~ was game."
.
banlly ~ but at WI!S a wm, only
"Right now, we like to play
Its second m rafth games after a 6-0 barnyard' ball, but they're finding
Sllrl.
• .
•
out that. setting up and running
This IS just the SIXth time theie Plafl wdl get them· open better,
teams have met and the DoJpblu We ve got to wallt belen we Cllll
have !"~n five. The concern for run. We'll wia .,.. JIIICI, but
Miama ~e N~w Orlean• pu1 I'm l&lt;dlng for hliijAGu till every
1'Uib - ,_. Marino, nni"QQ88IP'ed lime out,• concluded Couch.
to being sacked, went down four
In evaluating the competition
limel tpin• Houston lalt week.
Couch said, "' think Me~ will bC
L.A. Ralclen (U)
tough. Verna Comp110n IS a great
at Saa Dlelo (6-5) (ao.llllt)
player and lhe'll help lead them.
SpeaklnJ of the playoffs, the River Valley could 1e1 and be
Cbargets seem .on course to good. They have a tough freahman
become the fint team ever Ill over- &amp;IWd in Amber SIIIOD. AI always,
come 1111 ()..4 ltlrt and make it to die 6oth games with Eutem will bC
pc~~~m r:111.
competitive 1111d byped ·up. This
The Raiders ue their bi&amp;&amp;est will be a~ !lvalr71"
bardlo. Tboy play Loa Aa1o101
Ia clni'l Cod 1 ·, "(her.
&amp;Wice IJid a l(llk llloa14 be IO(NI Ill, ...... Nllll1 1 rial ..._ 1M
CIIIOIIP- dlllr ........... ~ I II I We ............. .
. . - (Phc raw, I 1 1111 = Ill
M* we'l .... I 111U P ....
IJIII}-8-25f4ll'!lllnrd
We're juatlootlal r.jatlme
Credit die CU'JW.I' comeblck thiJWIIO hofiai."
in part to 6S-yeai-old dofentive
SOathem will open Monday 11
coonlillllllr Bill AmiJI JC1, who bomupi...tllastrm.

Sunday llmn Sentinel

Pea• CT.

ails.for Schott's exit as Reds' owner reaching fever pitch
'

BJTIRRY KINNEY .

~ CINCINNATI {AP) :-. The

llldlld out bed for Cincinnati
~ Marge Scbolt. Then- it

wonc.

, straight week. But at least they
Sc:ored two touchdowns last week,
which is one more than they 'had

.

\ Monda)!'• m~ wi~ NaliC?D·

scored in die previous six and two
m~ thllll Denver IICOied in ils 24·
0 lOIS !!l ~ Raiden.
.
Buffalo (9·2) at JDC!!enapolil (4-7)
Four straight losses and COIIDt·
ing for the Colts, who started going

Leaauc pres1dent B1ll Whate
htlllll a crescendo of calls for
league bneball !0 investigate
k~:; alleged raca~ and anti·
I
slurs.lly weeks end, sevgroups were clamoring for

Hew 1993 Dodge Shadow

,.....,,_etrrrlng,AIR BAG.

7799

5

south when Steve Emtman and
Quentin Coryau were lost to the
defense and continued the slide
without Jeff Geonze at g,uarterback.
K-n• City (7-4}
at N.Y. Jets (3-8)
~ dangero.us g~me ~or the
C~fs, who II'C now tied w1th Denver mwhat is a three-way race with
Sll!l Di~o (or four-way with the.
Raiders} ·m the NFC West. The Jets
play. decentl~ at home and were
embarrassed m New England last
w~: ~ they lost .24·3. So Ken
9 Bnen will 5'-1 agam for Brownmg Nagle at Quarterback.
New Eapd (2·9)
The ~~=h14-~t to start
.w
over and start the season when
Scon ZOiak took over as quarter·
bact - o.r al least when. Da~te
Scsmecchia ~ ov~ as mtenm
ailing Dick MacJiher•
2·0 IIDder Zolak and

· Yates, wllO is black, llid Pridl'- b,. Jews."
that Sc~ should not be allowed
. be natio.nal director of the
to funct1011 as D'll'll« ot' a bnetlll . Anli·Defamatlon League, Abraham
Club ~ she hirca mon1 blacb in Fox man, said Friday that Schott
die Reds front office. One member should be suspended and baseball
of die 45-J!CIIIOIIIIIIff is b1act..
had been " s!lllied and tainted" by

baseball to throw her out.
· "At a minim!IJII•. ~I OWJ!·
ers have an obbgatiOo to Jovesli·
C~ J!!is ma~ on a very quick
IS, councilm1111 Tyrone YIICJ
said. "Then, based on all the evidence, Mrs. Schott ~ be sus·
pended from OWIICI!bip of lbe Reds
IIDiil we get a full reCIIIIt from her
?f these remaJ1cs and some changes
10 the front office and II{! and down
through the Reds' orpmzation."

AlleP'i!"'~ that~ ~uenf;

ly relemd 10 blacks as naggers,
as some. former ~eds C!!ll!loyees
alleged 10 ~positions, likely are
true, Yllla said.
. "I don't~ there is any doubt
an 1PIYOIIC's mind tbat Mrs: Schon
mlde thole remarks," he wd. '
Former !teds ~mploye~ C~l
Levy •. '!"ho 1s Jewash, wd 10 has
depolit1011 tbat he once saw a Nazi
armband at Schou's.~. and that
Schott alluded to money-grub·

AFTER

hcr,~ents.
If in fact these sllltements are
true, I l;hin1t suspension would be
appropnate," Foxman said.
,

Alan Katchen, the league s

re~onal director in Columbus, and

C10cinnati businessman Melvin
Sch~ noJeased a S18tement Friday ~ymg the.alleg~d comments
were deeply disturbmg and offen·
sive to so miiiiY Americans."
"Major league ba~eball must
make It clear that scnuments such

as those reportedly expressed by
Schott~ not "' ~ble pan c1
our national pastime " the state,
ment resd.
'
Baseball's executive council
which is scheduled to meet Dec. 7
at Louisville, Ky., has the power to
suspend Schou or fine her up to
S2SO,OOO.
.
"If the Slatements attributed to
Marge Schott are accurate I
believe Mrs. Schon should resign
as chief executive officer of the
Cincinnati Reds, •• Los Angeles
Dodgers president Peter O'Malley
said in Saturday's Los Angeles
Times. ·
·
·
Jackie Autry, ellecutive vice
president of the California Angels

and a member of baseball's exec:u-

live council, ~ ~ council will
examine the slluallon and "take
ex1rll0rdina?' measures to deal wid!
(Schott)" af her statements are
accurate, The Times said.
"If, indeed, thole •tementsaccurate the COIIIICil will!BkeiOIDC
t~ of disciplinary IICiion," 1..-ry
wd. "There is no place for ~
ments and attitudes of that type aa
baseball, but I don't want to hang
her until I know the facls."
The rii'CSIO!III started two weeb
ago when lawyers suing Schott 011
behalf of a former Reds IICCOiilllml
made public the depositions taken
in the lawsuit ·

,_.,.,.._.I
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;~p seconds left, Southern
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' ·lS-16. Meigs and Southern traded
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.POAA GOOD Da.tt. ••
I a .JACK BOU88 01' 108 ROSS

the rli'St quarter as 'l;loth teams ran
numerous pla)'ers in and out of the
game.
Jay McKelvey added four for
Southern, Ryan Hill had three,
while John Harmon,Jamey Nelson,
and Chris Proffill added two each,
and Paul Chapman had one.
.
Gene Wise's Meigs club was led
by Trsvis Abbott's seven points.
Herby Bush ~ five, and Gary
· Stanley had four, while Steve

Eastern -11-20-31
Southern-· 26-24:50 .
EASTERN (31) - Chad
Savoy 2-3:7; Jeremy Buclcley 3.·
~6. Wes Arballgh 0-3=3, Charlie ,
Bissell 2-0-4. Pat Newland 3-2=8, '.
Jeremy Cline 0-3=.3. TOTALS 10..0·11=31
.
SOUTHERN (50) ..._ Mark
Allen 3-0..0..9, Ryan Williams 2·
0=4,Jeremy Dilll-1·2=7. Michael
Evans I ~..0..3, Andy Grueser 1·
0=2 Trenton Cleland 2-3:7,
Ro~ Reiber 2~. Mason Fisher
2-0-4, Jamey Smith 2-0-4, I,t~ll
Singleton 2-0=4, Tlacker Walliams
:~)lack.
1-0=2. TOTALS- 5-15-5=50
'I" • Both clubs played wide open
;r:offenses and both utilized the fast
l:.)lreak almost ellclusively. South· ·
t :ern's isuccess ~in its ability to
'hit the fust shot. or in the esse of a
~·!l'liss, get the second and third
~ ~pts 011 the rebound.
,• :. At the end of the first quarter .
-~~outhcrn led 26-11 . Eastern had a
I tDUCh better second frame, scoring
"';20 points cl its own.
.
.
Allen led Southern wath nane
jloiniS. Dill had seven. and several
pther Tornadoes had four points
each. For Eastern, Pat Newland led
the team with eight points. Savoy
._·~ seven, and Jeremy Buckley had .

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By SCOTI WOLFE
Times-Selldnel Correspoadent
RACINE - The· Southern Torr'nadoes boys' varsity basketball
.~· team rolled to a 5()..31 two-quarter
~iumph over the Eastern Eagles
";(Friday night in the preview in
:!!·southern High S.ch~l's Charles
$'}V. Haym.n G)'IDIIIIS1um.
Southern's freshman team
,lcored a 20-18 come-froni-behind
"':'}via! qyer MeiiS in the preliminary.
· •1 Eastern and Southern had been a
part of die Southern Valley Athlet·
1c Conference preview, but the
,' :demise of that league left the two
~eigs C0110ty .schools without a
league or a prevrew. ·
I' Prior to eslllblishing the preview
lfate, both Southern and Eastern's
reserve squads had committed t9
~Abe Shrine preview at Alexander,
thus did not ~laJ' F!'iday.
.,..,, Greg UUtnan s Eagles rook a 2·
.. 0 lead on a driVing lay-up by senior
...,Chad Savoy, but Southern's Jere·
:O:IIIY Dill tied die score. MaJ1c Allen
~·drilled a three-pointer and Howie
~Caldwell's troops never looked

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weight or die equipment necc•s•ry
to harvest. As of November 23,
only an ~IIIOd 47 pelllCIII of the
Ohio com crop had been haMsled.
AttcnliOa Beef Producers! Mart
your calendar for December 9. A
satellite JIIOII1Illl will be iired from
the Ohio Sllle University.
The program ,.,m be down
linked 10 Wood Hall onlhc campus
of the University of Rio Grande.
The ~·"· 10 be aired natiooally, will IIIClude local participation
and camera footage from Gallia
County. Plan to auend f,he 7:30
p.m. session.
Edwud M. Vollbora Ia the
Gallla Coa•ty extension agnt,

•

.$

•

..
'

RED . GOLD~
TOMATOES~

!

..·
2% Milk. . . . . . .~. . . . 1
69·
.
(
Lg. ·Eggs. . . . . . . . . . .~. . .~ooz.
GAL .

.

GRADE A

69(
Tomato Juice. . . . . . . . . oz.
(
Crackers....................... La. 99
.
STOKELY

46

ZESTA SALTINE

CLOROX BLEACH

79(

'

'

I

KEMPS

·

Ice Cream...........3 aT. PAIL
NORTHERN
'

---

BATHROOM TISSUE

89c
r .

..

.

Frozen Pizza. . . .-.7 oz. aox
.

GAL

$ 99

'

CHEF BOY·AR·DEE

I

4ROLL

PAl

14.5 OZ. CANS

s

$ 8'9

GROUND ·
BEEF '

.

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

---,turvl--..;.,.._""1.
CARNATION

HOT COCOA MIX
I

99(
•
',

lOENV.

•arkulture.

10 LB. PACKAGE I

2 s
59 (

.

'

'

·.

Average rate pild on bank

lit lnoNIV-tn&amp;rkAIIIICCOUIIII

99

GROUND
CHUCK

Bush

·

A Commerce Depanment report that the economy
grew by 3.9 percent in the third quarter ~ too 1ale
to help President Bush prove his campaign ·assertion
that the nation has conquered the recession.
"The Bush recovery is coming on strong," Mlrlin Fitzwater, the White House spokesman, said after ·
the release of the report, which showed the strongest
three months of growth since Bush took office.
The report was a surprisingly large upward reVision of its previous third-quarter estim~ of 2.7 percent, announced the week before lhc presidental dec- :
lion.
.
•
The department often revises initial estimates of .:
Continued on D-8

.

await better prices close to Christmas. Also, over the past decade,
with the increase of women in the
workforce, consumers have postponed shopping.
The bulk of a retailer's business
usually is done between Thanks·
giving and Chrisbnas. A slow start
can send shivers through the industty and lead 10 profit-cutting price ; '!
markdowns.
Retailers don't expect any significant slowdown in the shopping
momentum leading up to Christ·
mas. The season is slightly longer .
this year; there are two more days
between Thanksgiving 811d Christmas than in 1991.

(Bank

I

99

2.7804

2.78%

4.70%

3.22%

3.26%

4.56%

7.58%

7.53%

202.84

202.91

821.55

r:s.t~P500

.

WIIIIIIN 5000
vakil olliOOO IIOCkl)

213.47

821.114

3,282.20

3,227.38

2,114.11

430.15'

421.85

375.22

$4.208.482

$4,170.085

$3,155.741

billon

Friday. (AP)

Tips for preparing venison: a health red meat
2 teaspoons salt
GALLIPOLIS • For avid deer remove debris from the body cavi· chunks
112 teaspoon thyme leaves
hunters looking for yet another ty, If you don't have access to
8 medium potatoes, cut in
'
2
pounds ground venisoD
excuse 10 justify their favorite pas· water, wipe off the cavity with a chunks
·
• 112 pound ground beef
time, here i I is:
1 20-ounce bag lrozea green
clean cloth or paper towel.
About 2_hours ahead or early in •
Everyone, it seems, is conscious
Hanging can help improve the beans, partiaDy thawed
day:
of healthful eating habits these tenderness and flavor of the meat.
About four hours before serv·
Preheat oven 10 350"F. In 8-inch
days, and· according to the Ohio but you often have to butcher deer ing:
skillet
over medium heat, in hot
Department or Natural Resources· immediately due 10 weadler condiTrim any excess fat from meat.
butter
or
margarine, cook onion .
Division of Wildlife, you may be tions ot time limitations. The car- On waxed paper, coat meat with
and
celery
until tender, about 5 .
able 10 squeeze in a few extra days cass can hang for five to seven flour. In 8-quart Dutch oven over
minutes.
Meanwhile,
in large howl,
of hunting once you realize you're days at 34 10 38 degrees. Leave the medium heat. in hoi shortening,
not just out there having fun. ·
hide on to prevent moisture loss cook meat until browned on all with fort. beat eggs slightly. Stir in ·
In fact, according 10 the Divi- afld crusting, If the temperature sides. Add I cup water, onion, 1 bread cnunbs and next three ingresion of Wildlife, whai you're doing reaches 40 degrees, skin the ani· IeaSpoon salt, pepper and bay leaf; dients. Add venison, beef and
is sacrif'ICiDJ your hard-earned days mal, quarter and refrigerate iL
heat 10 boiling. Reduce heat to low; onion mixture:· mix well. Place
off 10 prpvide
family with one
Ensuring that deer meat will be cover and simmer 3 hours ot until mixture in 9-by· 5 inch loaf pan llld
of the healthtest, most valuable great on lhc table talc:es a little extra fork-tender, adding additional bake I 1/2 hours. Pour off pan •
juices. Serve hot or cold. Makes 8 ,
fotms of red meat available - l&lt;iw care that's not required when pur· water if needed.
fat, low cholesterol venison.
chasing meat from the grocery, but
About 45 minutes before meat is to 10 servings.
• Proper venison preparation think of it as part of the reason for done, add carrots, potatoes and
VENISON BURGERS
should siart immediatelY. after'a taking pride in the finished producL beans; sprinkle them with I tea·
About
25 minutes before servdeer hits the ground. For the best
Following are some venison spoon salt; heat 10 boiling. Reduce
flavor, venison should be field· recipes provided by the Gallia heat and coolc until meat and veg· · ing:
Shape 1 j)ound .ground venison
dressed as quickly and cleanly as County Cooperative Extension Ser· etables are tender, stirring vegeta·
into
4 patties. In 10-inch skillet
posSible.
• bles occasionally. Makes 8 to 10
vice:
over
medium heal, in 2 tablespoons
Opening the body cavity and
VENISON POT ROAST
servings.
hot
butter
or margarine, cook pat· '
removing entrails allows the meat
1 three-pound venison sboul·
ties
until
well browned on· both
to cool at a much faster raie, pre· der roast
VENISON MEAT LOAF
sides;
sprinkle
lightly with ~arlic
venting the possibility of SPOilage.
1 tablespoon butter or mar·
114 cup all-purpose flour
salt
and
pepper.
Makes 4 servmgs.
If you plan 10 use the liver and
ltahlespoons shortmiag
gar iDe
heart. place them in a plastic bay
112 cup minced oaion
1largt ODion, c:utiD cbuaks ·
Venison should not be over·
~arried along with yotlr hunting
114 cup minced celery
Salt
coolmd.
Plan 10 serve it medium 10
gear.
114 teaspoon pepper
leggs
.
well
done,
never rare or over-done. :
Hang the deer by its legs and
1 cup fresh bread crumbs
1 bay leal ·
Venison
has
a dark surface when ;
make sure the chest is propped
112cupmilk
8 medium carrots, cut in
open. aean water can be used 10
roasted and may appear 10 be done •
before it acrually is.
:

.

rour

Adams ·county has highest jobless rate

l.tonllor)

91.0.V TNIIUI)I 911 yield

I

-

.
~ARLY BARGAIN HUNT· BiD Cunniagbam looks lor toys
for his grandchildren Thursday at a Columbus .department store.
Cunningham was one of many ~pie lookin• for bargains before
post·Tbanksgiviag Day shoppers crowded stores and parking lots

•

Galliajigure 8.8 percent; Meigs 11.7

10 LB. PACKAGE

s

off, but Nikki Richardson, a spokeswoman for the
Maynard, Mass.·based, company said that waso't '
true,
Digilal employed about 108,500 woddwide at the
end of its flfSl quarla' in September.
.
ECONOMY: Good Ntws Arrives Too Lak for

J

•

·

prompted stores to drastically
reduce prices to move merchan·
disc.
"They're saying lhc economy's
getting better and people are
reflecting that. They're buying
more, but they're real conservative
buyers," said Wendy Griffm, assis·
tant manager at the Casual Corner
women's clothing store in Des
Moines, Iowa. "They loot around
fJrSt because they want to get the
best value for therr money."
The days immediately following
ThanksgiYin~ historically have
been · the bus1est of the year for
retailers. But recently shoppers
have learned 10 bide their lime and

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) 'Appalachian Power Co.; coal pui· part or the Cincinnati·based Ameri·
- West Virginia should beware of chaser Appalachian Power Co.; and can Financial Corp.
Caperton said he recognizes the
all the oornpanies in w~ Virginia health insurance provider Mountain
necessity or out-of-state ownership
that Ohio interesU are buying, the State Blue Cross.
In addition, plans are in the for some _businesses..
. .
the sprawling malls in president of the West Virginia
worts for two Ohio bank holding , • "Obvtously, the 1deal sotuabon
~~b11tbia to lhe tony boutiques in At:L-CIO said. ·
emc:s, many shoppers inrerviewed
"The further away you get from compaliies to buy Key Centurion - is a business that is _comm11~ity
random ex~ greater faith a community, the less likely your Bancshares and CB&amp;T Financial owned. But we reoogruze there IS a
lheir economic futures. Some decision will be colored by what's Corp. Bane One Corp. and Hunt- necessary evolution brought on by
'
the outcome of the election going on in that community," Joe ini!IOD Bancshares Inc. will contrOl competition," Caperton said.
21: percent of West Virginia's bank
Powell, however. wonders what
Ulfl•~enced lheir holiday purchase Powell said.
·
"I'll) ~ the local people will assets if the deals are approved.
will ,happen if ~h.io. c~ntinues to
Even the insurance company buy mtO West Vuguua industry.
"I'm happier, I'm healthier, I do their bela, but they will be one
·~vou have .to be very concerned
a beUer job. I bouahu ·housc - level removcd-li'om decisloas they owned until recently Jly GoY. GaS• ~
ton Caperton is now Ohio-owned. about what wtll happen an~ what
year and thought I should 1\,UI are 110:" ~tilled 10 make."
but then I ~hi. 'Whal the
Ohto Interests control JC'roger, McDonough-Capcrton Insurance their attitude Will ~· ~~ill they
it's Cbrislmas, " said Mary the Slate's 1autest relailer, shoooing Group is conuolled by American ~ about West Vrrgllllll7 Powell
. malls such as the Charleston 't'own Business Insurance Inc., which is said.
Center: electric
company

s

VALLEY BELL

operation.
.
.
Grumman's cutback of 500 management and
administrative jobs is part or a reorganization in
which the Bethpage, N.Y., company. once one of thc
nalion's biggest defemc contractors, is consolidating
iiS airplane manufacturing group with its space and
elec'-"'ics group. Gll!mman has been cutting jobs
for years.
·
Grumman also .said it had finished closing its
Bethpage airplane plant, where Grumman made mill·
..-y _planes dating back 10 World War II. Grumman
collunues to mate airplanes in Calverton, N.Y.
Maynard, Mass,-based Digital Equipment, the
second ~est computu milta- in the coun!l'Y behind
IBM, said 1t expects to slash as many as 6,000 jobs in
the quaner that ends in Deq:mber.
.
Some of the layoffs already have occurred at Digilal, hit by heavy losses. The New York Times, citing
unnamed Digital insiders, reported Friday that at
least 7,500 and up to 8,800 workers would be laid

firms are making
inroads in W.Va. state industries

20 OZ. CAN

5
Lettuce. . . . . . . . . . . .HEAD · 2· 1·

fmancialaavlca business 10 l'IIIC money. The Pitts·
burgh-based company will alao cut dividend pay·
menlll and llhlkc up ICIIior Dl8li8(CIIICIIL
Wea_lnghoule pllns to~ •. fourth.quarter pretaX
~11111 c~ d. S2.6S billion 10 co~er loSses in
C:manciai ~ &gt;ICCB ~the c:o,lll of opcranng the divi·
Stoll !UIIilll can ~ liqulda!ecl ·
. .
• • .
:nat's _In add1tion to $2.~ bilh4?n In }!reva~us
wn~smYO!ving the financial serviCeS urut, ':"h1ch
came IIIOIIIy from bad real tstate loans made m the
198011. . '
, .
.
.
We~~i!~Jbouse alao said 11 ~ sclliWo .indus~al opmuonsl ~ ~makes electncal conll'!&gt;l eqwpmen~ and a dislribauon company, as weD ~.'IS. office
furru~ and real CS!IIC dc~nt su~~es.
. The .-ares will cut Westinghouse s soze by a
third. The c:ooapany ~ts to focus 0!1 more successful sectors: electroniC systems, envuonmenlal s~s·
terns, and power systems. It would also keep 1ts

Thermo King Coporalion and Group w, the broadast

1
I

Ohio~ based

PINEAPPLE

$199

Ha

c
3 DIAMOND

LB.
.

. "

2 LB. JAR

12

.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS B.EEF

'

. '

Maron Marieaa bolrd. ·
· W~gboUie lllic! it would_lhut down its ai!ing

Lucas, who was shopPing Friday at
the Fairlane Town- Center in the
· DetrOit suburb of Dealbom.
Judy Dunn of Conway, Ark.,
said: "I have a little more money.
I'm a liuJe more confident aboUt
job !ICCUrity and all dial, for myself
and my husband."
Consumers' cautious optimism
that a genuine ecqnomic rCC~&gt;very
is under way could uanslate into
sales gains of anywhere li'om 5 per·
cent to more than 10 percent over
last~year, indUSII'y analysts believe.
But unlike ~ shoppers of the
free-spending '80s, today's shop·
)lers are bargain hunters, a habit
ilevelopcd during recent years that

0

$ 69

.

NOVember 21, 1112

tidings for retailers: Hordes of holiday shoppers

~

CENTER CUT LOIN

Section D~

.orporate theme of the week: Smaller is better

WITH DIPU VEIDOI
COUPOI BELOW

STORE HOURS

·1timts - i'entin.el

bllon

bllon '

COLUMBUS; Ohio (AP), 7.2 percent, and for the nation 7.4 6·2·• "Monroe ' 12.0; Montgomery,·
61
Adams County's October 11nem- percent.
· Morgan 9 4· Morrow 6 3·
ploymcnt rate of 15.7 pcn;ent was
The county rates:
Muskingum,
'7.'8: Noble: 9:4:
the hiahest in the state for the
Adams, 15.7; Allen, 6.7; Ash·
Ottawa,
7.4:
Paulding,
5.8; Perry,
month the Ohio Bureau of land, 6.4: Ashtabula, 9.8: Athens.
10.0;
Pickaway,
5.1;
Pike,
10.0:
EmploYment Services said.
· 5.7: Auglaize, 7.3; Belmont, 6.9;
Portage,
7.0;
Preble,
6.1;
Putnam,
Gallia County's ftgUre was 8.8 ' Brown, 11.0;, Butler, 7.4; Carroll.
while Meigs County reported. a 8.7; Champwgn, 6.5;, Clark, 6.6; · 6.7; Richland, 7.7; Ross, 7.8; San·
11.7 r..,.re.
Clermont, 6.0; Chnton, 5.9; dusty, 6.6; Scioto, 9.3 ; Seneca,
8.2; Shelby, 7.1; Stark, 7.2; SumHolmes and Union counties had Columbiana, 8.1.
·
the lowest jobless rate for the
CoshociOn, 5.7; Cra""ford, 11.2; mit, 6.4: Tll!mbull, 10.4.
Tuscarawas, 6.8; Union, 4.2:
month at 4.2 percent, bureau fig· Cuyahoga, 6.7; Da,rke, 6.5; Dcfi·
van
wen. 6.7: Vintcn, 11 .8; War·
urea showed Friday.
ancc, 5.5: Delaware. 4.9; Eric, 9.3;
reo,
5.8;
Washington, 7.6; Wayne,
Among c;iliea. with populations Fairfi~ld, 5.7; Fayette, 6.8;
of more ihan 50,000, Lorain bad Franklm, 5.1: Fulton, 6.6; Gallla, SA; Williams, 5.9: Wood, 5.3;
'
lho highclt jobless 11110 in October 8.8; Geauga, 4.9; Greene, 5. I; Wyandot. 8,0.
The
ratps
for
cities
of
more
than
at 14.6 percent, while Kettetini Guernsey, 1~ . ~; H~mllton, 5.~:
SO()()()·
.
hadtheiowatat3.4 peaallt.
Hancock, 5.2; Hardlll, 9.Q; Harri·
'Hatliuton, 8.?; Springfield, 7.8;
The county and city rates are son, !0.4; Henry, 5.0.
.
10 4· Cleveland
unad!uated mllllling thOy do not
Htghland, 8.2; Hoctmg17. 7: Cleveland
.
'
: !
·
lake mto .CCount ICUOnal lllljust· Holmc4. 4.2; Huron. 11.3: Jacbon, He1ghtos, 4o6; Euchd, 4.8: Lake·
· .9.4; Jefferson, 7.8, Knol\, ~.8; wood, 4.5; Parma. 5.2; Columbus,
ments in employmeDL
The statewide unadjusted rate Lake, 6.5; Lawn;nce, 7.7: L1cldng, 5.9; Cincinnati, 6.8; Elyria, 14.0;
for October was 6.8 percent, the 5.3.; Logan, 7.2; Lorain, 12.8; Lorain, 14.6; Toledo, 7.6:
- a s the national rate. The-- Lucas 7.0; ~lson, 5.9; ~on· Younastown: 12.2: Dayton: 9.3;
aonally ldjuslllll rate for Ohio was
ing, 8.9; Marion, 7.8; Medina. 6.~; Kettering, 3.4, Mansfield, 8.8, Can·
'
Mel~&amp;, 11.7; Mercer, 7.6; Miamt, ton, 9:9; Akron, 8.1; Warren, 12.5.
I

Attends convention

:

. POMEROY· Karl Keblcr,INI!'· :
ager of the H&amp;R Block office an •
Pomeroy, recently attended the '
annual H&amp;R Block convention in
Columbus.
.
The three-day ~o!'venb~ w~ ;
g~ toWI!JiproVIding ~gm :
busmess '!'anagemcnt, dtsplay .of •
, new supp~1es and computer eqwp. ,
"!ent,des1gned t&lt;~ward accurale, :
Simplified proc:essmg of lilt fOI'IIII, •.
as weD as S!liJim&amp;rs and~
on tax cJ:!anies and u~. ~Fed­
era!, ~io~ ~IIICty, Vtrg~~~~~llld ,
Wef ViJIII~IIretm:"S·
,__.
;
, :1~ ,e
IS ~ P - C. •
Making a
ill Older 10 ;
accommodate the cxpeciiOd iaftax ,
or clients due to .the wide ICClepo
tance of electronic flliDg IIIII 1f1e
Rapid Refund
O
200 nT!'Bt.:..L . ._ I
vcr
'"'
"""' .,.ll.ne• .,
owners and. employees were ;
ti~'J~~~ ll ;
er,
.
,
.....__,
,
0 uslllla, &amp;Ulstant
6 lb. •

,
1

rtgional c!irector'. and.:'&amp; 2;.
re....,_

,.

�•.

•

'-a• D2 SUndroy nmaa

Sentinel

Min~rities
WASHINGTON (AP) - · Wheli
Congress returns, two black congressmen will fight to lead the
Congressional Blac.k Caucus, the
fust contest for chairman in more
than a decade and a sign of
unprecedented influence for minority lawmakers.
The new Congress will have the
largest number of black and Hispan ic members ever, just as
Democrats regain the White House.
Rep. Kweisi Mfume, P-Md..

Pomeroy Middleport Ge!Jipolla, OH-Polnt P-.nt, WV

see

e~hanced

who lias worked his way up the
caucus leadership ladder, is being
challenged for chairman by Rep.
Craig Washington, D-Texas, a second-term maverick.
Mfume, who adopted an African
name as a young man, is considered the favorite in the vote next
month. But the very fact thai he has
Opposition reflects the transformation of the black caucus , long
derided as ineffective, into something worth ftghting over.

Former gang member ·
now works against crime
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)Terrence McKelvy knew his life
might end early when he dec.ided at
the age of 14 to join a gang.
But the attraction of easy cash
from selling crack' cocaine and the
camaraderie of membership in the
" Bloods" outweiJhed ll)at risk.
"As quick as I made the money,
I spent it on clothes, girls and
liquor," recalled McKelvy, now
17. ···1 wasn't too much worried
about getting shot because I knew
it would happen eventually.'.' ·
That didn't tate long in the turf
wars of his east Kansas City neighborhood.
While he and his brother were
walking home after a, piclrup basketball game a year ago, a passing
car paused long enough for some,
one to squeeze off several rounds
from a .22-caliber gun, striking
McKelvy in !he leg and back.
·.
He still carries one slug because
it was too close to his spine for
doctors to remove.
The close call prompted McKelvy to tiU11 his.life around.
"It opened my eyes up," he
said. " I could have been paralyzed
or killed."
Today, McKelvy works ,two
jobs, plans to go to colleae and volunteers with the Ad Hoc Group
Against Crime to encourage other
youths not to make the same mis-.
takes he did.
He speaks to classes of sixth,
seventh and eighth graders about
his own gang experiences and tries
to prepate them to resist the power-

ful lure of fast money, drugs and
guns.
" I'm trying 'to help other toung
people because I didn't really !)ave
too many people 111 that age to look
up to," McKelvy said. "I WaS only
thinking about bein$ the class '
clown. Maybe they wtll listen to
me before they'll listen to someone
older."
or this year's more than 140
homicides in Kansas City, many
were gang-related, according to 01e
Ad Hoc Group.
Th~t trent:( let:l the anti-crime
group to target youths ages 9
through 19 who already are in
gangs or are likely recruits. With
the help of people like McKelvy
who know the hazart:ls of gang
~f!embership, Ad Hoc hopes to provtde alternatives for young men
and women.
It isn't easy. McKelvy is often
ridiculed by his former companions. But he shrugs it off.
"I emphasize those were my socalled friends. A friend is not
som&lt;'OIIC who lries to persuade· me
to shoot someone else," he said.
''Because of the drugs and the
gold. they think thai's cool.
"They know what they're doing
is wrong," he said. "But they
think, 'I'm going to die anyway, so ·
it might as well be now. It's kill or
be killed."'
McKelvy says he has a new outlook: "If I can save one life or
keep one person out of a gang', that
will make it w01;thwhile.' •

Law students volunteer for Haitians seeking political
asylum
..
.

'

'

"For the black members of
Congress, this is potentially a
watershed year," siid David Bositia of the Joint Cenla' Cot Politic:al
and Economical ·Studies, a think
tank on black issues.
"Being part of the Congressional Black caucus should be a fairly
exciting place to be, and where
there arc blacks moving up into
positions of power .in Congress,
real power," he said.
Veteran black lawmakers are
moving up the seniority ladder.
None head the most powerful~mittees, but Rep. Ron Dellunis, DCalif., could become chairman of
the Armed Services Committee if
Rep. Les Aspin were to take a Cli~tton adminisuation job.
Others includ~ Rep. William
Clay, D-Mo., who heads the Post

MOSCOW (AP) - When the
CongressofPeopie:s Deputies convenes Tuesday, the 'fate of RuSsia's
reforms and possibly its president
will hinge on the emgmatlC parliament speaker, R.uslail Khasbulatov.
Khasbqlatov himself professes
no major disa$reement with the
reforms of Prestdent Boris Yeltsin.
But Yeluin's closest allies count
Khasbulatov as their main foe,
}lehind whom Communists and
nationalists are uniting for a "con:
stih!tionalcoup"tosiopreforms.
•' Khasbulatov is the biggest
threat to the president," said Lev
Ponomaryev, leader of Democratic
Russia, one of the most reformist
of the 13 major factions in the
I 046-member Congress - Russia·s higbestlcgislativc bod
, As evidence of the ~hreat
reformers · cite _Khasbulato'!''s'
5.ooo-man security force, whtch

~~~=~~~~t~~.;::~~~ ·

clirll the presi!lent's powers; and
the refuSjl! of lawmakers to enact
basic reforms, such as the deccillectivization of land.
Many hard-liners, however, aiso
distrust Khasbulatov. They accuse
him of secretly being in league
with Yeltsin, part of a Byzantine
Kremlin conspli'IICy.
"'His loud statements are merely
camouflage," said Dya Konstantinov, a lender of the Russian Unity
bloc of lawmakers.
·.
Despite the criticism, a solid
majority of the Con~ess and its
smaller standing Jegtslature, the
Supreme Soviet, view Khasbulatov
as the defender of the legislative
branch against what they see as
Yeltsin's authoritarian streak.
At first glance, Khasbulatov
seems an unlikely focus for this
debate. Dark-haired and boyish, the
50-year-old speaker smokes a pipe,
wears rumpled, tweedy clothes, and
frequently reminds listeners that he
taught economics on the university
level for 11 years.
He is more cautious about
telling listeners that the economics
he taught were Marxist, and that
for the seven preceding years he
was a Senior official in the Communist Youth League.
Like many Russian Communists, Khasbulatov became dissaf-

Carjacking
thwarted

Brooks Brothers are
accused of discrimination

clout in new Congress

Olftc:e and-Civil Service Committee, and Rep. Lcilais· Stokes, 0Ohio, head of the House ethics
committee, but eager 10 leave that
uncomfortable job. Blacks also
have a seat on the powaful Rulea
Committee and one deputy whip
job
Nevertheless, one of the most
visible blacb is litdy to be freshman Carol Mosley Braun, D-IlL,
the ftrst black woman elected to the
·Senate.
Change also iJ in store for Congressional Hispanic Caucus, a
smaller group whose infiuence has
been diminished by political, etlmic
and geographic divisions.
Rep. Jose SCITJUlO, D-N.Y., is
expected to succeed Rep. Solomon
Ortiz, D-Texas, as chairman.

Ia a sense, Serrano '• rise
refleCIIa abift of powu from Mexicln-"-icansaflbeSoutbwestto
Pueno Ricau-Americaas aad
CubiO-~ of the East.
Tho - ·Congress will have 39
black members, aside from nonvoting delqates. That is up from
2S House.members, and includes
Braun, the only black in the Senate.
Sis more Hi!lpllllics were elected, bringing their number ID 17. No
Hispwti • acne in the Senate. ·
Tbe Voting Ri&amp;bts Act forced
new cliatricu COIJCellttating minority VOICn to be drawn in 13 states,
aiding the cleclioa of the fint black
House memben since Reconstruction from Alabama, Florida, South
Carolina, Virginia and North Carolina, ftbicb elccted two.
.

fected with the party in tht~ late
1980s. When' the Collgress elected
Yeltsin chairman in 1~,- Khasbulatov was chosen as hts deputy
because of his reformist economic
theories.
When Yeltsin was elected JnSident the fo_IIowing year, _Khasbulatov was ptcked as parbamenwy
cha!Jman because: be SU{IPOlled the
radical Democr811C Russta.
And when hard-line Communists siaged an abortive coup in
August 1991, Khasbul'aiOv stood
shoulder-to-shoulder with Yeltsin
at the Russian White House in
defense of reform.
Yeltsin's alliance with KhasbuIatov also w115 seen as a means of
appealing to Russia's sizable Muslim 'population. Khasbulatov was
born in Grozny, capital of the
· of southem Rus~echen republic
sta.
:r

That gesture backfired, however, as Khasbotlatov emerged as one
of them~ outspoken~ of
ChechenUI's declarauon of mdependence a year ago•.Air# Yeltsin
withdrew Russian troopS from the
region, Khasbulatov ordere.d
Moscow hotels t!' ~xpel all_lheu
. Checben guests wtthm 24 hours.
Si!'ce then 1 Khasbulatov an_d
Yeltsan have differed on econonuc
refor_m. Khasbulatov has urged
Yeltsm to S:~ow the_ ~ of change,
to.re-establish some pnce ~trois,
11I1SC benefits for the neediest, and
continue subsidizing state-owned
enterpises to ensure the&gt;: don't go
bankrupt and create lll8SS1Ve unemploymcnL
Khasbulalov still views himself
as a retormer, and on occasion has
defended YeJtsin's Cabinet from its
hard-line cnncs.
··

1•
en:The
':'
black cauclil's effectheness •

"My ,diff~ with tllenlg~~ ~

no_~nents of ~ .~~u~n.1to a~
m!"o.el econ~my, .
~ u a'!'v
Sllld 1't!esdaY m an _mtervtew wtth -~
the datly Nezavistmara Gazeta ;:
~~nt~wspaper). .
"
. The mam pomt of~~· he ":
said, was the ~o~ent s e orts •
to bypas~. the &amp;!l~uve t;nch, to assume extra ng ts theran
!Kl'~,byanyo
inet
m the~~~.
. . ,,
~eltsm, s. powers t~ appomt • :,
Cabt_net mtmster~ and tss'!e ~- .• 1:
nomtc decrees. wtthout Iegtslauve ·
approval exptre Tuesday, when "~
C'!llgress opens. But Khasbulatov ' •
thts .weet offered I? extend ' '
'!deltsm's decreeld powcedrsl if ~r.:es; ' .:
1 ent wou
cone e aw .........rs • · •·,
rightstoapproveCabinctministers:
·
.. ,

PUZZLER
su N D AY
.
.
.

for victims

",

,

7

f.
'

See Answer to Puzzle on Page B-8
ACROSS
1 Got up
6 Fish sauce
10 Bad
14 Detecllve Sam · 19 Deduce
21 Two oltwo
22 Temporary
shelter
23 Moves ahead ·
steadily
24 "- Summer"
26 Grinds the teeth
In anger
28 Supplications
29 Edible seed
30 Knocks
32 Essence
33 Seven days
34 Falsehood

35 .. _Peaks'·'
37 Vases

39 Number ollingers
- 40 Hollywood and 41 Beatty film
42 Supercilious
person
44- Stadium
46 Orient
47 Gypsy - Lee
48 Trade lor money
50 MattresS of straw
52 Vessels
53 Mr. T role
55 Milk In Paris
57 Proceed
56 L0011t1on
59 TV reality series
60 As far as
62 Part of ETA
64 Concoct
66 Therefore
68 Compass point
69 Medicine portion
70 Animal's root
71 Walk unsteadily
73 State lor
"Northern

Exposure"
'75 Citrus fruits
77 Simple
78 City In
Switzerland

. 80 Be

81 Large bird

82 Kind of hats
84 lntoetent 81! Tho8e defeated
87 More dexterous
89092 Choir voice
95 Loop
98 Emmet•
99 Pretentious home
101 Establllhed
103 Phoebe-

1 CleVer person
2 Renovates
· 3 Predestines •
4 YeiiO!V ocher
5 WHhout end
6 Hebrew month
7.Ship's record
8 Sldllan volcano
9 Stave; bondman
10 A Wayne

104 Part ol TGIF

11

principles

105 Sleevalaas cloak

1116 Rullnlng
107 Above
·108 Timid
110 Petition
111 Concerning
112 Long, deep cut 1
113 Allowance lor
waste
115 Sommer 10
111 Great119 Roberts 10
120 CIVIl injury
121 Pac:ts
124 Run easily
126 Cut; trim
127 OodleS
128 Landed property
130 Hurl
132 Winter Wllllcle
133 Small lumps
134 Slender .finial
135 Prickly envelopes
. of fruit
137 Cook slowly
139 Scot1isll cap .
140 Foundation
141 Stigmatize
143- tube
145 Mountain on
Craie
146 Ralngear
148 More trite: slang
150 Jackal parts
152 Slumbering
153 Masculine
154 Metailastenar
156 Leave
157 Nolte film
1561mHated
159 Island In
Mediterranean
160 Imitation

•

12 Those hOlding
office
13 Army off.
14 Saturate
15 Ult with lever
16 Timeless
17 Mock
18 Kinds of curves
20 Brother of Jacob
23 Liberate
25 Agile ·
27 Author Danlelle's
family :
28 Shut up
31 Fastener
33 Sagacious
36 Christmas
38 Projecting tooth
40 Urn
41Decays
43 Tattle
45 Structures used
as newsstand
t

'

79 H8WIIIan wreath
83 Lair
•
~5 Meal ·
86 Weaving machine
87 Filament
88 Potcer stake
89 Aalalre ID
90 Fri.olts of the oak
91 0oc1nrie
92 Type ol cross
93 LOok forward to
94 ~~el symbol
96 Dinner COUI'M
97 Pitcher
100 French article .
102 Fur-belrlng
ani mat,
105 cavil ·
109 Difficulty
1U Considerable
113 Small children
114 Surglcai18W
118Pierce
118 Epic poetry
120 Shake with lear
121 Secret writing
122 Simple
123 Blunt end
.125 Belonging to
tile aummer
126 Part ol contrac:t
127 Young girl
129 God of love
131 Hebrew festlv•ts
132 Slpper
133 Twist out of shape
134 Sinned
136 Auction word
438 SqUIInder
1401nMcts
141 Treatrunk
142 Transaction

--·...
'

•

,.

•..

..

.....
- ....

...."

.'
'

'

t

.'
ll

...

-144 Rout-

147 "The Burning -"
148 Headgear
149 Bone ol body
151 Fed. agcy.
153 Mothet
155 Armatrong 10

•.

'

.. .

Moslems .

s_....

46 HOld.In high
regard
47 Lasso
49 Italian currency
51 PIISli8Q8Way
52 Armed bands
53 Cutting remark
54 Raglon
56 Communication
apparatus
59 Adapted
60 GWTW estate
61 II in debt
63 Feels Indignant
at
65 VisCid; adhesive
67 Grain
69 Fulfill
70 Individuals

.

72 Granll use of
74 Yes: Sp.
76 Greel&lt; tetter
77 Philippine

DOWN

"'...,."''

•

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•

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applr

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•
••

sniperS and holdout rebels.
ccn were believed in charge of FriTen city police were arrested day's rebellion, which was joined
Saturday at the palace and led away by civilians upset with growing
barefoot by loyalist soldiers. Some poverty and smpers allegedly of the
police had swollen faces and leftist Red Flag ~uerrilla group. ·
showed signs of being beaten,
The rebels satd they were acting '
according to an AP reporter at the for the poor in this oil-producing _
scene.
nation, the No. 3 exporter in the •
The involvement of city police OPEC cartel, when they 'born~
in the rebellion appeared to con- the presidential palace and took
fum the wide scope of the uprisin~, over a government-owned TV stathe second this year against Prest- lion and two airfields.
dent Carlos Andres Perez. A FebruOne of lhe leaders of the uprisary coup attempt, in which dozens ing, Air Brig. Gen. Francisco Vis. Antonio~.
Sporadic gunfue also broke out of army officers died, was limited . conti, and up to 100 supporters fled
near the presidential palace and in to Bm!y rebels. Both atiempts have Fridsy in a Flercules air force transport plane to Iquitos, Peru, where
the middle-class January 23 neigh- · had brqad popJ)Iar sympalhy.
Government
officials
and
newsthey requesled political asylum.
borhood,
and
an
AP
photographer
,
LOOTERS •
carry baga with food
Guanre .broke out In Caracas a day after a
pa~rs
say
about
100
people
died
Visconti refused to make any
saw
at
least
two
people
wounded
in
from a IOOjed supermarket past a burued bas
failed c:oup aaalnst President Carlos Andres
Fnday
and
Saturday
when
air
statements
.Saturday to a reporter
the
shooting.
The
government,
Saturday In downtown Caracas, Venezuela.
Perez.(AP)
which declared the rebellion over force, navy and police officers. for ~eni's Radioprogramas radio
Friday, blamed the shooting on including the No. 3 man in the . station, sayin~ he had not yet met
Venezuelan military, staged the with any mirustry offiCialS. Radioinsurrection. Forty-two of the pro~ramas said the rebels were
deaths came w_hen inmates rebelled staymg in a tourist hotel. · ,
at Caracas' Reten de Calia prison.
Visconti led the takeover of the ,
Perez, whose five-year term Libenador airfield in Maracay, 50 ,.
expires in Febi-uary 1994, is widely miles southwest of Caracas. He
unpopular because of his austere commanded an elite air unit in
economic policies. A test of his charge of Venezuela's 12 French
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- An happen if Eldridge opens his class- all peoples, not just the elite,"
support could come in elections Mirage jets.
,
Ohio State University associate es to people who have not paid. '
Eldridge said. .''Some may never ·
scheduled Dec. 6 for state goverForces in Maiacay and Caracas ,~
professor of social wort said FriEldridge said he would offer his have been on a college campus. It
nors, mayors and city councils.
went into rebellion Friday . The '
day he intends to let poor people classes to poor people next quarter, is opening our apns and sayin~.
HAMBURG, Germany (AP) In a statement Saturdsy, Perez, Generalissimo Francisco de Miranaltend his classes free of charge .
"I fully intend to do that," he 'Welcome. This ts your state umeven if the university objects.
said.
. versity, and you can come here and A Cabinet minister, who joined the 70, called for.the political p;uties 10 ds metropolitan airfield in Caracas
10,000 mourners at a service for continue their campaigns. Other- also was briefly taken over.
""I'm going to test it and .see
He said he thinks the univenity learn."
·
the
three victims of reunited Ger- wise he remained silent, meeting
The two other main rebel leadwhat happens,·· William 0. ultinlately could terminale his conBoettcher said Jiriday the unimany's
worst
nco-Nazi
attack,
with Cabinet ministers and aides in ers, Adm. German Gruber and
Eidridge Sllld in a telephone inter- tract if he defies the policy.
versity allows invitation of guests
Adm. Luis Enrique Contreras, who
view.
Eldridge said the program to lectures but only for enrichment vowed the government wnuld fight the palace.
Although Venezuela is ·one of · staged the takeover of gQvernment
·.Eldridge said he sees no reasoti wouldn't cost the university any purposes and not as a way to obtain the resurgence of rightist violence.
The Gennan government, which Latin America's longest-standing TV station Channel 8, were capwhy poor people could not sit in money. .
a degree.
has
come under intense criticism democracies it has been beset by tured and are being held with about
seats that go empty. He said stu"The system has to open the
He said there is a program that
for
not
quelling neo-Nazis, on Fri- economic troubles stemming from 100 other rebels at the military'$
~ts would benefit from lalking to doors and let in poor people, even
allows people who are Ill least 65
dsy
banned
an extremist grou_p and a downturn in oil prices. Riots in main garrison in southwestern .•
JlllOI!Ie !hey nonnally would never if they don't get a degree," years old to attend courses at the
announced
several
arrests in mves- 1989 over a cutoff in food subsi- Caracas, Fuerte Tiona, the governmeet
Eldridge said. "Some may not like univet)&gt;ity.
tigations
into
right'wing
violence.
dies left 300 people dead.
ment said.
Richard Boettcher, dean of my lectures and ffii!Y not stay, but
'Tm not aware of any regulaAI
lhe
memorial
service
Friday,
Per C8J?ita income in this nstion
. G_ruber is third in ~c;&gt;mmand •
lions being violated by such prac- Labor Minister Norbert Bluem
social work, said he could not they' should have the opportunity."
was of 20 mtllion is about $2,600 a wtthin the Venezuelan mtlitary.
approve of such an idea.
. Eldridge teaches Social Work lice" he said.
The independent newspaper El
"The policy ·is _that people in 230: Individual Need and Societal
Earlier this year, Eldridge asked applauded when he said the gov- year down from $3 000 since the
attendance are expected to pay Response every quarter to about the university to cut his annual ernment would carry on the fight early 198oS. But mo~l workers earn Nacional reported ~urday that the
''this new barbarism.''
the minimum wage of $115 a leader of the Iefust Red Flag, "
tuition," Boettcher said in an inter- 100 to 120 students. But 15 to 20 salary $1,000 and give the money against
"We
want no old Nazis, we month.
Gabriel Puena Aponte, was killed
view publishe!l Friday in The sc:&amp;ts are usually empty. The class to the school's general fund to help want no new
Nazis,
we
don't
want
Ten top air force and navy offi- in the lighting at Maracay.
Columbus Dispatch. "If this hap- dt~usses l!lenta! h~alth, poverty, prevent layoffs and cuts in academ- any Nazis at all," Bluem said.
pened, it would have a devastating cru~e, meum, sextsm and other tc programs. The university
Foreign Minister Klaus Kinkel
effect on lhe fmancial structure of social problems.
obliged, trimming Eldridae's salary also attended Friday's memorial
ASTRO-GRAPH
BRIDGE
the university."
"This is a land-grant university, to $49,380, from . $50.3''76 a year Service.
Boettcher told the newspaper he and it has an obligation to educ~ ago.
But Chancellor Helmut Kohl
could not specUlate on what would
,
stayed away, despite, calls by Turkish leaders and German politicians
BER,NICE
PHILLIP
to attend the service for Bahide
Arslan, 51, her granddaughter
.BEDE OSOL
ALDER
'
Veliz Arslan, 10, and Iter J4:yearold niece Ayse Yilmaz, a visitor
from Turkey.
The three died wben suspected
neo-Nazis threw firebombs early
Monday into · their apartment
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) plunder of thousands of tons of government, he said.
NORTH
U·%1·1!
If necessary, Ali Mahdi said, the MoeUn, 25 miles east of Hamburg.
+98 6~
-The warlord who conuols north- . donaled food to guarantee the loy1096 .~
Mrs. Arslan came to Germany
ern Mogadishu welcomed Saturday . ally of troops, and U.N. llltempts to U.S. soldiers should also be willing
Nav. 21, 1982
.AQI
•
a proposal to send 30,000 Ameri- deploy the first 500 of a planned to fight Aidid, who controls south- from Turkey 25 years ago, and her
+3
granddaughter was born in- this Joint endeavors could prove to be fi·
can troops to Son\alia to help relief 3,500 troops to guard aid have been em Mogadishu.
severely hobbled.
country.
workers ftght the nstion's famine.
EAST
nanclally ben.eliclal for you in the year WEST
· The United Nations is expected
I
• Q J 10 2
Most of those at the memorial ahead, and they can provide you with a tA K 3
Ali Mahdi Mohamed approved . Washington on Wednesday to consider the American proposal
.7 3
the plan one day after hu arch- offered to send 30,000 American this week. A U.N. task force on service were Turlcs. More than 1.6 real sense of achievement It looks like .10 9 7
I
• KJ 6 3
enemy, the warlord who controls trOOpS under a U.S. commander or Somalia was meeting in New Y.ork million Turks are Germany's you may become involved In two ar· +Q76512
+K
10 9
rangements
of
this
ilk.
•'
southern Mogadishu,. gave it his as part of a larger U.N. force: In over the weekend to discuss the largest foreign group. Many were SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 Don't
Kennebunkport, Maine, National American offer and other plans to recruited to work in labor-short give up on your wisJles and expec.1aSOUTH
bJessiRjl.
+71
Germany in the early 1960s.
Theil cooperation could reduce Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft deliver humanitarian aid.
tlons at this time, because things could
•AKQ12
The memorial service was held take a turn lor ihe betler today. What
the risks the soldiers face if they said Slllurday the proposal was still
Ali Mahdi criticized the U.N.'s ·
• 8~2
occupy the capital's ports to guard being discussed with the U.N. and 500 Pakistani soliders, who took in a working-class Hamburg dis- once was unatlainable Is presently
tAJB
..•
incoming aid and stop looters from U.S. allies. "We're going to see months to reach Somalia, spent trict of red-brick aparlll!ent build- reachable. Sagittarius, treat yourself to
Vulnerable: Easl-.West
birthday gilt. Send lor your Astrohijacking relief trucks going to what we can do to help," several more month_s negotiating ings, from which neighbors peered ·aGraph
Dealer:
South
predictions
for
the
year
ahead
by
'
towns where hundreds starve to Scowcroft said after brjefmg Presi- with clan warlords and elders and at the crowd•
mailing
$1.25 plus a long. sell-addent Bush.
Because the mosque was small, dressed, ~tamped envelope to Astra~ S...tb
death each day.
Weot
Nortb
Eut
eventually took over Mogadishu's
However,
Ali
Mahdi
and
Aidid
the
service was conducted outside Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box I •
Pass
I•
• All pass
But both warlords may be motiairport. but not its port.
vated more by a desire to take con- appear to be misreading WashingFor more than a week, clansmen by an im'dm, who read from the 9t428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be
Opening lead: +K
ton's
intent.
They
seem
to
have
sure to state your zodiac sign.
trol of the nation with U.S. help
have been firing shells from the ' Koran using a bullhorn. Men knelt · CAPRICORN
(Dec.
22-Jan.
111
You
misconstrued
it
as
su~
for
their
on
their
coats
or
carpets
to
prayed.
than to end the famine and chaos.
shore of northern Mogadishu to
could be luckier than usual today in two
At the end of the scrvi~e. the critical
.American uoops could end up fac- factions in Somalia's ctvil war.
prevent ships carrying food and
One pertains to your fi"I was so happy to hear that the medicine from ~ and unload- coffins, draped in red Turkish flags nances,areas.
ing as much opposition as 500 U.N.
tho
other
to your reputation. DiU.S. has decided 10 save the soul of ing at the port, whtch remains with the white star and crescent, rect your efforts and
soldiers do now.
Intellect to these Be prepared
were carried high for several venues.
Since
former
dictator the Somali people," Ali Mahdi under Aidid's control.
·
Mohammed Siad Barre was ousted said in an interview.
Ali Mahdi denied thai his men bloclcs by wailing men through the AQUARIUS (J..,, 20-Feb. 111 Your per- to be flexible
"I
would
be
very
happy
to
welsOnal touch enhances the poS.iblllti""
nearly two years ago, Ali Mahdi 's
had opened fue on the ships, but he llag~ng crowd.
for
success: in your endeavors today.
come
the
U.S.
forCes,
because
I
am
\Veepmg relatives of .the victims
rivalry with Gen. Mohamed Farrah
has been frustrated by the fact that
Not only are you assertive and effective, By Phillip Alder
sure
they
will
help
us
to
dislribute
accompanied
the
coffins,
which
Aidid has desl!llyed central authorthe airport and port are both in
you are also wise In your method of
ity and helped to turn a severe food and make Somalia a secure Aidid's part of the city. Conse- were taken to hearses that look performance.
. Some bridge players are imaginathem10
the
airport.
The
victims
tive;
others less so. The imaginative
PISCES
(FR.
20-Morch
201
Greater
drought into a catastrophic famine place to live ~·'' he said.
quently, it is often diffteult for peoThe Amertcan troops should ple in northern Mogadishu to gel a wiD be buried in Turkey.
opportunities for gains are likely lor you player works out who has which cards, ..
thai has killed at least 300,000 and
Earlier Friday, the federal prose- today from resources you seldom tap, sometimes relying heavily on table
left 2 million on the verge of star- come iliUJiedi•Wy, assist the relief fair share of the donated food and
agencies,
and
help
clans
hold
a
cutor's office said eight teen-aglrs instead of your usual areas of strength. presence, and bases his plays 011 that •
vation.
medicine.
Don't put limitations on yourself, how- foundation. He is less concerned about ~
peace
conference
and
form
a
new
had been arrested, in addition to a ever.
Both warlords have allowed the
Use both. .
•
25-year-old man whose .rest was ARIES (Morch 21•Aprll 111 Involve- percentages.
The
unimaginative
"rote•
player
·announced-Thursday, for member- menlo you have today with people who
ship in a right-wing extremist have treated you_well in the past should who relies on the textbook, will actual:
ly get II!OSt deals right. But every now :_
group that allegedly set fire 10 work out equally well now. Turn on the and
then one will come along that will
·
ditto
machine.
refugee shelters in northern Gertrip
him up - today',s deal, for •
TAURUS (April 20-M•J 201 An Impormany.
.
example.
.,..
tant
objsctlve
you've
already
estapThe group was also being inves- llslled can be expanded upon to proAgainst four hearts, West led the .:
tigated for possible ties to the rue- duce aven greater .benetits. A spade king. East signaled with the ' .
bombing that killed Mrs. Arslan, olgnlllcant .break might develop today. queen, the textbook play to show the "'
Veliz and Ayse.
. . , (M•r 21-.1-201 Try to partic- Q-J (or a singleton queen). West con- ;. ;
In another move against' right- Ipate in social activities today that have tinued with the spade ace and another .:
wing exttemists Friday, the govern- elemenll of competition. You should do spade, declarer rufflng East's spade ,,.
You might even outshine one who jack (a harmless false-card). South
ment banned the Niuionalistic , well.
ueullly
gets the better of you.
Front. Interior Minister Rudolf CANCER
(.11111121-.luiJ 221 Auctuatlng cashed the club ace, ruffed a club in
Seiters said front leader Meinolf .conditions over which we have no con- the dummy, played a trump to hand '
,
Schoenborn had begun to build a trol olton put us at a disadvantage. ruffed the club jack high and caabeci _
the
heart
jack,
Now
came
the
key
.,
this pattern shouldn't be true
"nationalistic task force" for '
play:
Dummy's
spade
nine
wu
led,
,.
In
ytJAJir
case
when
encountering
change
actions against foreigners.
·
and,
when
East
produced
the
10,
detoday.
According to the 1991 report
LEO (JuiJ 23-AUI. 221 You have all the clarer didn't ruff. Instead, be tossed
from the Office for the Protection .attributes
ala good sal_.,on today.
of his diamond losers onto the •
of the Consti.tution, Germany's You~ "' both a good opener and a strong one
table.
'' ·
.anti-terrorism unit, the seven-year- Closer. Try to use theM gilts lor a good · This left East endplayed. He could -.:old organization had about 130 cause.
either lead a diamond into dumrn.y•·
YIIIGO (Alii• 23-llpt. 22) Economic A.- Q tonace or concede a ruff-and-dla-11 .
members.
·
' Seiters said other organizations trends should begin Improving for YO\I card. Whichever be chooe, declarer '· •
as of today. Sltuetlons thai once yielded
were being scrutinized.
nothing of consequence could now be- had no diamond • r and 10 tricb. , ·.•
'Why didn't you switch to a dla- · '
coma pi'od..-a.
mond
at Irick three?" demaaded Blat. ;:;
LtMA (lept. 23-0ct. Dl Y011'ra not
·u 1s true. Probably 1 lllould IIRft :, ·
only good company today, .you lloo
know how to -ate edvant-aeons done that, • replied WesL "But wi!J did ~,
111u411ona that could be benelfelal to you encourage .1 spade CGntlnuatlaa? · ,
BERLIN (AP) - Police raided you and those whom you'll be InvOlved Vou 120 see the advantage ID a dJa.. ,
mond switch, so just play the lpl1de ••
dozens of homes of right-.wing with.
ICOII'IO (Oct. :14-Now. 221 Strive to two at trick one.'
' ·'
extremists
across
Germany
and
detendlag die ...U IOinl of T1ll1le wlletl .aac:lt · found explosives, weapons and wr~ up lltuationa you deem to be perAlways
COilllider
the
whole
tiNl.
liCit
,,r,_
MouRNING • row Mwle - • c:ry at
aonllly Important today. Your probablllbylbe Serlllu _ , .. tile 1111 feW dayL (AP)
'
..
tile 1'11ar•ll ol-ea M.._IIOidlen .. Tnwlk,
neo-Nazi prop.ganda. omcials said tleo lor -rable end raaulto look .-y just one suit at a time.
. Saturday. Tile 101dlen were laid to llave beta
good at thla time.
Saturday.

Professor says poor people
10,000 join
should be allowed to attend class in memorial

r;ers."":

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~taila, but_ not liS esaence, beca""'
m the parliament there s~ly are .

Sunday nmes Sentinel Page Q3

Pl....nt, WV

CARACAS, Venezuela. (AP) -·
An army gunship shot down an
unmarked helicopter that had been
strafin.ll the ~dential palace Sat-'
urday, offiCials said, and the government considered its next step
after a failed
.
·
Four poli~cers who def~t­
ed ·to the rebel side were killed
when the helicopter crashed Saturdsy morning in the Los Flores de
Catia neighborhood on the west
side of Caracas, said LL Col. Jose

has been limited by internal clivi-....
sions, ill opposition 10 Republican ::
adminislrltions, and a JlCI1Cha.!lt for :
doomed symbolic causes, Jib its
annual altemative federal budget. • •
A key to success now may be ,.
whether the minority ~ps can.~
work together -IIIII perhlpl with _
the strengthened roster of women ;:lawmalters.
•
.
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P~nt

Army downs copter
strafing presidential
_palace; 100 sai(l .dead

The · neftcomers .may prowo
more 'politically skilled thaD some
ofthelrpredeceaon.
• 'Th~ new pe!'t&gt;le comi~g Ia
aten 't JUSt pohucal novtcca. •
They'to really fairly ex~aced •
politicll typea,'' said Bosidl. "Not .,.
only were they allte Ic;,t=·
'"""were chalnnen and · ~, •

Enigmatic speaker of Russian pf.lrliament 'key to future ·:

"Imagine completing a formfor
political asylum if you can't speak
the language," said Mike Ryan,
who organized an earlier phase of
the project
Ryan, a law cleric for U.S. District Judge Kenneth Ryskamp, said
the refugees stand a much better
chance of qualifying for political
asylum if they have legal assistance
during the application process.
Interviewing the refugees and
~ urn.
.
hearin~ their reports of persecution
"In g~neral everyone under- in Hatti can be an emotioqally
stands that the political oppression wrenching experience.
"There were grown people crythese people were fleeing is very '
real," said Mary Beth Moy Ian, a ing from a day that was almost too
law student at Case Western difl"tcult to imagine," Ryan said of
one round of interviews last sum,
Reserve University in Cleveland.
Tens of thousands of Haitians mer. "Nothing could really-prepare
have fled the impoverished the shldents for these stories.''
The students, with support from
Caribbean nstion since last year's
the
National Lawyers Guild,
army ousler of Jean-Bertrand Arislaunched
thelr relief effort last
tide, Haiti's first freely elected
About
40 students joined
spring.
president.
.
with
the
Haitian Refugee
forces
Since the coup, the Coast Guard
in
Miami,
and a second
Center
has intercepted more than 38,000
wave
of
about
200
sh!dents
visited
VALLEY STREAM, N.Y. (AP)
people fleeing Haiti. Most have
-A feisty 73-year-old widow who
been sent back. The Bush adminis- Miami during the summer.
This lime, most of the students .foil~ a carjacking by driving like a
tration rejects them as economic
refugees, but Haitians say they're will be based in West Palm Beach movte stunt woman says she was
because so many of the 8,000 to frighlelled but determined not to let
fleeing political terror.
President-elect
Clinton •s 10,000 refugees settled in Palm her assailants win.
Anne Stem zoonied over lawns,
promise to change Bush's policy to Beach County.
• "This is definitely a lifesaving rammed lhe car driven by her two
tum back boats at sea has raised
hopes among would-be refugees in effort," said Dexter Orange, who assailants and slanimed her car in
Haiti, where offtcials predict a new runs the Haitian Resettlement Pro- · q:vcrse when one of them reached
surge of boat people after Clinton gram. ''If you do not make it in through lhe window - dra8ging
takes off'JCe. · ·
'
through this process you will be him unUI he fUially let go.
Those who reach the United deported, and· we have known that
"''m just swprised and amazed
States face a daunting application some have been killed once they that I did what I did," she said Friday.
arrived back on their shores."
process.
Stern, a retired school secretary
from New Yorlt City, was driving
to a Thanksgiving gathering Thursday when two men pulled in front
of her in this Long Island suburb
and lried to stop bet, police said.
"All of a sudden they stopp¢
BOSTON ' (AP) - Brooks denies that there is any factual or and blocked me,so I couldn't pass
Brothers faces allegations of dis- legal basis to the Massachusetts them," she continued. "And one
crimination after a sling operation commission's charge of discrimi- of' them comes running over and
found two job applicants - one nation," the company said in a starts banging on my window to get
biaCk, one white - were treated statement. "The finding made by oul''
But she gunned her car over lhe
differently on the&lt;;S~~~~C day by the the commission was only a prelimisame manager,•the SIJite said Fri- nary one, and we are confident thai curb and onto lawns. They pursued
it ultiinstely will be established thai her.
.
day.
"They sideswiped her and she
The two well-groomed young there was no wron,doing on the
apparently gave it right back," said
men walked into one c:J the exclu- part of the company. '
In
its
wri
uen
response
to
the
Police OlfiCCI' Tom Maksym. "She
sive clothier's stores on
7 in
search ·of lhe same job,
offi- commission' s complaint, which sideswiped them and then drove
cials said. The manager encouraged was filed in October, Brooks into them again to run them off the
the white man to
for a vacant Ilrothers said neither applicant was road. They were banging off each
other from side to side. ••
assistant manager s position, hired.
The clothier also said the black
By the time they blocked her
according to a complaint, but told
the bllck applicant no jobs were applicant, who lacked managerial again, she had the window down
experience, had inquired .only . and was yening for belp. One of
avall•Ne.
Both men were undercover about a sales position and wasn' 1 them carne up, • e d mside and
agencs with the Massachusetts qualified for the assistant manag- · grabbed for the steering wheel.
"I sbot into reverae," she said.
Commislion Against Diacrimina- ' er's'job that was open.
Brooks
Brothers
was
one
of
two
tion. On Friday, tbe commission
"~e didn't let ~and I hoped he
said the evidence gathered was businesses cited in a sweep of wouldn't let go cause I wanted to
stron&amp; enough to proceed with a dozens of establishments around kill him, I was trying to kill him."
Fmally the man bad enough. He
case against the national clothing. the city .. The other store was a
western
apparel
outlet.
•
dropped
off, fiR blck to the call and
~hain.
Neither
siore
faces
fines
over
fled
with
his companion. Tbey
Brook&amp; Brothers said it was conthe
complaints,
but
the
coml)liSsion
hadn
'I
been
caught by Friday afterfident it would be cleared of
could
assess
them
the
tens
of
thounoon.
wrongdoing. A public hearing on
sands of dollars it cost to run the
Stern, said damage 10 her car
the ntatta' is pendlnJ.
"Brooks Brothers strongly ·SURf operation, said Commission included a bashed front fender,.broChairman MichaeiJ. Duffy.
· ken headliJhts and a flat tile.
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
(AP) - Law students from iround
the COURII)' will spend their Olrist•
mas vacallon in South FlOrida helping expatriated Haitians pursue
immigration claims as political
refugees.
The volunteer effort, expecled to
draw about 120 students from 20
law schools, is designed to accelerate the process of qualifYing thousands of 'Haitians for political asy-

Pomeroy Mlddieport-GmllpoUa, OH

,

Second.warlord welcomes
U.S. troops proposal

A
'Your
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Plga D4 Sundav 11m11 Sanllnel

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November 21, 1182

\

Clinton inherits spy community looking for a role

tually no clues about his views on
The Clinton administtation like' ligenc:e officials tell of a. roo~­ the future of U.S: spy operations. ly will oversee the completion of
' t.ainccr who falls off a chff. Is Unlib: George Bush, who served the reorgaaization, more than half
, anything broken? " shouts his ~ CIA direcior, Ointon h~ dis- of which is dcne, and will have to
: friend. "No!" the mount.ainccr played no personal fascination with figure out how to carry out a con· shouiS back. "Then why don't you. ·the inu:lligcnc:c CCHmlltmity.
gressionally ordered 18 percent
"History shows us that it would personnel cut in the intelligence
: climb back? " asks his friend .
; "Because I'm Slill falling," comes be mOSl unusual for a president 10 community over four years.
be int=sted in intelligence unless
: back the faint echo. .
The government had hoped to
·
That's the SLaiC of the U.S. inrcl- he's confronted with an immediale make many of the cuts through
~ ligence community llill Clint~n threat," suggested Roy Godson, early retirements and other forms
: inherits, a dozen agencies sull who II:BChe$ national security sub· of volunt.ary depanures, but has
• shirting UIICOI1lfonably to fmd their jects at Georgetown University,
been lhwarted by the lackluster job
; post-Cold War role, anxious tllat
Thus far, say aides and outside nunet, said a senior congressional
: falling budgeiS and a more domes- eXperts, Clinton has given the .mat· official.
' •
. tically minded president might rele- tet li.Ule thoughL That might suit
The official, speaking ·on the
. gale them 10 a ~nign oblivion.
intelligenc:e professionals just flllC, condition of anonymity, said the
.
Some of the anxiety comes from given the signifJCant reorganization Clinton administration also will
this year's 6 percent reduction in the community has unllergone in . have to pare a list of new intelli·
• the intelligence budget - the first the last Ylllll under CIA Director gence missions compiled for the
major cut in I 0 years. Deeper cuts Robert Gates.
president last year.
The reorganization has merged
• are expcc:ted.
That list, based on suggestions
·:
And some of the concern comes several milil$1)' intelligence a$en- from various government agencies,
from a rear or the unknown. In a cies to elimtnate duplicauon , has grown 10 include requests for
campaign where foreign policy was putting under one roof several economic and environmental intel·
rareI y discussed, out of deference functions of sarellite espionage illld ligcncc, as wc.-11 as for such things
10 voters' preoccupation with JXQb- tightening the management of intel• as AIDS information.
: !ems at home, Clinton offered vir- ligencc analysis.
"Should the CIA be. the Central
1WASHINGTON (AP) -

Inrcl-

Information Alency?" asked Jillm
Keliber, sLaff dlrecior of the Rouse

A handful of uttcranc:es sugges1
Clinton envisions focusing attenIntelligence Committee. Serious tion on an increased effort to
thought must be given to letting underst.and the political,
other govcmmeut agencies, as wc11 · and cultural conditions that might
as think tanks and private institutions, collect information that is not
Jets run into trouble
5ecret. be said.
Other probable culbacks inc:ludc at Kentucky airport
limiting lhe number of limes satellites ~ certain largets and · HEBRON,. Ky. (AP) - Two
saapping CSjlKIRBge programs that Delta Air Lines jeiS ran into trouble
arc obsolete m the aftqrmath of the at ·CincinnaliNorthem Kentucky
Cold War, said congressional offi. Intematiollal Airport Friday - one
cials.
.
before landing, the .other during
The number of coven activlties routine maintenance.
..
- secret operations designed to
7f~Je';J with 04 people
aboard
safely at the airport
affect political situations abroad is also ljkel.y to decline further afte1 although officials had feared a
being cut by Bush from its heyday landing gear lire had .blown soon
in the Reagan administration, Keli- after it left Miami, said Wayne
Goswick, the airport's air traffic
her said.
manager.
Clinton, like other presidents,
That idea was based on the
will ·be caught between competing
repon that he heard a loud
pilot's
p.-essures to cut spending but retain
explosion
in the nose-gear comenough intelligence capability to
partment
while
at 11,000 feet and
give the United States an early
35
miles
nonh
of
Miami.
·
warning of troublci.

economic

A

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'::~~:~'· S©'R~~~
GAME
Eoliled by CLAY I. I'OUAN - - - - - - - - -

President Sad·

said a c:ongressional official familr
iar with his tbinlr:inJ.
·
The Bush admmistration con·
cedes it was wrong about Sadt!•m,
but argues thll even hiS alliea in the
Arab world believed he wouldn't

FOR RENT
remo- .
deled Oftlce apece
Reew~tly

torrent In
Pomeroy. 1200 to
3000 aquere f..t

P H l AS S

I I I ·I 12 I
C A R C UE
I I~ I I I
I NS 0 V I
I ] I I· I I I
c L u·Ho s I
I· I I I I I,
LARBER
I Ia I I I I I
1

all.aCk Kuwait.

Bnpedaeletlaaceeu

IVellable,
Good loceUon.
Call 992-6637 or
446-9786.

I

3

1 .I

A~ to The lids' Wor'\d AI· .
IIWIIC of lilusle, Elton Jolm hal blld
20 yean of bib, from 'Goodbye Vel·
low Bridt Road' to 'I Doa't Wuna
Go 0a Wltb You Like That" He DO
loaaer needs jeweled, fea~ and

0

..

roll -a...tcs: waa tbe first popular
ainaer to wear ordinary gl•m on

stage. His no-lrllls, four-eyed look got.
blm · nicluwned the m•ical Clark

••'

Kent

••
I

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•

'
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Good Location.
Call 992·6637 or
446-9786.

FOR RENT

II · 1,

0

Lara• high-ceiling

Complele lhe chuckle quoled
by filling in lhe missing words
you develop from .step No. 3 below.

11

gerag..type com·
merclal building In
Middleport.
Approximately 3,000
aqu.a 1111. l'No
olllcu. Thl'll over~ ·
htacl10.1oot cloorl
Call 62.-37 or
. 446-9786.

r r r r 1· r I' r 1' r 1

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·..

COMMERCIAL
OFFICE
BUILDING
In Gallipolis.

Our dog is not too bright so
after his second failure at
obedience school the instructor offered the third try free.
"Gee," my wife gushed, "our
dog has been offered a ---·-··-·
··I"

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_______
Public Notice
PUBUC.NOTICE .
NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIV·
EN: to .U ln._llod partl•.
On Nov-bet 2, 1~ lho
Orenge Townt~hlp Tft!8ol llolgo County vole!! to
ln(orm lho public lhat thor

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A-•::rt ~... Trt~·--.
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Thl A¥..,.., Golllpotla,
OH
-

• . 1112 Chmolat C10 Pup

: : 1171GMC T-Trllilar
- Ilia Chwrolal PT CKI
-~ . The tarma of lha ula ara

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Tha Homo .......... Bank
·,,' any
ra••rv•
lha riFt to rofoct
or ..1bide o t t o -

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In ordlr to lnapeot any of
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(11)21; (12) •• 1_1, 311:

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ND hunUng or b 11111 nina. dly

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1hm :your clutter into ctUh,
Sd if rlae·equ &amp;Day.. •by phone,
no need to leave your home.
PWee y9yr clguj6ed qd todqyl
15 1110rtla or le11, 3 dqp,
3 pqpen. 15.4Q paid in advance.

1-------------------3 •. __________________

N1c1uary.

For

71HMI Ell
P.M. 7 Daya.

Info c.tl 211A.ll. To I

mo I

A...... ,.. Aldt -lon At Dr.
SlmUII ·L
Llbn!ry Atlllnlmum
7 · -. ......
III&gt;UIIo.
Wage. Qal.
1:1
t1oura P• w..k. At ..-. 11

Com- ac....a.,

y..,. Old. -

Drlentld.

Knawl1dga

Yandlng Roulo: Loco!. W. Hovo GOIIERNIIENT - E S From f1
T11a N - -.Making A (U Ropolr~ Ooll::1r11 Tu
Nlcla St.....,
- • Cooh I_,.. 1· Propertr. R•. p c11ona. Your
Arao (1) IIOMU-8000 Eat. QH.

·100411-ouc.

H-IM, And Alto. Ed.....
tlonll llequl-a: cDialed 10th Ao CUrnnt
~~~- &lt;lr l!ltl! ..._,
Orocluata Or Q.E.D. IIK!uinlo11
Requlra-: 8Mic 111ochai11-

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4 . __________________

THERAPY

TECHNICIAN

41 Houses for Rent

1110,--WIN
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c-- Lind Con-

lor -

Nlcl 2bclnn. homo In Pomeroy
ur 111- wl option to ·
troct. 15 lllnut• Frono Kytor, ~! S3001
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1143MIIN.
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Top PrieM P11d: All Old U.S.

Colno, Gold Rlnat. Sliver Colna,
Gold Col- ·II.T.S. Coin llllop,
111 Second Avenue. GllllpaiiL

Employ111 011 1 SPI' ICCS

uptolla.Mpor--

lna ,. dod m ago ,...lo
dilala. . . 14J •••.
.

81• ,..,. Tu Milia Clwlat.,..
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Will114lloNivl
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441 aas 0r

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WE'LL PAY YOU To Ty.. NoAnd Add- F.- Humol

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Golllojlllo. lnl-ed Pa.......
PI- lloODGMI To: CLA lux
210; olo o.•lpolla Dilly Trtbu~,
la5 Thlnl A...UI, Galdpollo, ""
W31.
VENDING ROUTE: Gat Rich
Quick? No Woyl lui Wo lll!va A
Good, Stood¥, Allonloblo, . Buolo

In the mldat of our aorrOw we
wish to express our heartfelt

thanks and _..;atlon tq,our
friends for tho funeral and
atr1/lc:ealor John A. Slmmoni.

Vll"(llnla Roberts. mother.
Loretla Jones. sisllir

The tamily
Robert . Lewi.o,
who paued away
&amp;uddenly Nov. 13,
1 card Ol Thanks
1992 ar work.
Wi&amp;he&amp;
to 1honk
to
everyone
who
IA~'AIV•on" that helped us
remembered
them
lebrate our 5
wilh their prayers,
IW~1ddi1ng Anniversary and
Ho•oa, flower•, l5ift 's
gilts ·&amp;· cards
of money, cordi,
eelephoru! ca/.l$.
Special thanks to
Special !hanks
lla1mil~ and close friends
the men at work
helped at the church
galle him C.
all that attenclad.
rhe E.M.S. 'Sq1•ad,
Robell &amp; Gen1evie•vell Dr. Parrerson
I he
v~·~Mnol
Memorial 11&lt;,.P&amp;tall
and the nurse&amp;
Words canno.t express
rhei.r kindruJu. And,
my appreciation tor the
the Holser. Clinic
oympethy and klndneu
Staff for thf!ir
extended to me and my
thoushefuJruJil
and,
fam~y during the death ol
1he family Pl'&lt;Jetice I
my husband. I would
ph•rsic)itJIU.
And,
especially like 1o think my
thank&amp;
eo
Rev.
neighbors In Falrview and
Hartson for
Spring Valley Addllon.
former neighbors and
close friends In Point
Pleasant, WVa, and
Waverly Ohio for rood,
flowers, card1. Alao. my
pallOr and hla wife, Pastor
Joseph Godwin, our
church, Fellowihip Baptllt
Church and all the
mambera, tha McCoy
Moore Funeral Home Mel
the many otha,.1hat _,.
with axpranlona of
sympathy. May God bless
each and ev•ryone of
you. ·
Annabel Hagens and
family

worda .

thanks to
Bruce and Tony and
Tom of Fi1her
Funeral home. And,
olao we wanr
rhanlc. ehe Ameril:onl

1 ,..,... ,

Feeny Benrulll Pnotl
128 of Muldleporll

rhe Milirary
service~ . Thank•
oho
rhe
who
were paU bel].rers.
Sadly mi.o.sed
Wife, Soru

: ~~lao;,.~..~or;=:;lrl;_;,;;,..,;n;t'i2!ii;B111:d:

=. . .

~ '!.'""'-~

lon4; • aagd0•; /"lluro lind 1111111. 'I'M!

' , _ In' Ewlntton With AIC
lor
·111141,AthOM.
; !.-. Lol ..... - 0 CaN
• Or f14-tlll-71112.

Rentals
41 Houses tor Rent

card of Thanks

The family ol
THEODORE (TEO)
RILEY,
want to thank • the
doctors and nurses, at
Holzer Hospital, the
staff and nurses, at
In Loving Memory·
Arcadia Nursing home.
Of
The doctors, nurses
ROBERT W.
and staff at Overbrook
LOUCKS
,
Nursing home, and
on November 28
also 10 the doctor,
When I come to the
nursas and staff at
end ol the roecl
Veterans Extended
. And the iun 11M HC
Care Un~. for the
tor me.
I Wllllt 110 rlu. In II
io~ing care they gave
gloom tilled room,
Tad, during his long
Why
cry tor e IOUI
illness. We also want
utfne.
to thank an the
.
I
Ministers. who
·MIA me e little - but
comforted us, and was
not too long
there when ·we need,ad
And not wfth yow
liNd bowed low. •
them must. Thanks to
the love
Remllliblr
·all those for prayers,
thllt
once
WH
flowers, food, any
ehllnd,
.
othar acts of kindness,
MIA me but~ me
d~ring our time olloss
IJO•
of our dear one.
Thanks also to The
For this Ia • JourneY
-muahltakt
Fisher Funeral Home,
And
· each mutt
for their part of ihis.
elone.
.
They did a lovely job.
ltleda~oltht
Also than!&lt;a to tha
.......... pten,
.
ladles at Mkldlepoll
A lllep on the l'lllld to
Church ol Christ, lor
home.
•'
· the fine meals, they
••
When you ..,. IoneiJ;
had fpr ua, after the
.tct elck hNrt ~ •
Servial. We sinc:arely•: l
Qo to frlentle ...
apprec:illle you. ona
know.
·:
and all. And will never
And
burY ·yoU(
forget your kindn.....
1011'0WI In ~
He Ia gona, but not
good dlllll,
•
· forgotten.
MIA me- but ~ 1111J
The Family of Tad
go.
~t
Alley Sr.
MIIMdby~
W~e. Sons,
Daughters, and
Grandchildren, and
Grell•
Great Grandchildren
GllnCic:hlltiMi

&gt;

or

oranc:ll::1
'

,.
'

8

In
oltor

Real Estate General

4 Bedroom Log Sided
home, 2 b,.,m, larp
declt, 2 cor detruhed
gorap ""4.6 acre
lot 152,000.
Call 3 79-2948

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Saturday, Dece11ber 5, 1992 7:00 p.m.
Due to the holiday, most items will not be here

Ads

.Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

CHRISTMAS AUOION
Scit. Dec. 5, 1992 7:00p.m.
Tr~ekloads

Consignment Sale
Every Friday Night 7:00

••w

of all
Nmntllse, toys, tools.
s....t~llg for everyolt.
Terms (ask or cHck w~ pn1per I. D.
Door prizes

Audioneer David.Boggs
Uc. No. 4596
Galhpohs, Ohio
614·446·7750
B&lt;ensed oad llollllad " state of o•io
Not responsible for oeckleats or loss of property

:--Now- 12180.

in time to list. But if this sale is anything like
pr!'Vious antique auctions, we should have from
4 to 5 hours of merchanclisa. We have antique
furniture, old crocks, 2 antique telephones, 2
blallket chests, and other items already here.
We will be taking anlique and collectible ~ems
from 12:()()-5:00 on 12·3 &amp; 12·5-92.
For lnfonnation call (614)388-9370, 388-8880,
245-5939 or 669-6151.

• .11441H71Uitor 5 P.ll.
: :llldrm.,
llll12,
lumloiNII,
• -rol. air, oldrllng, wtll flnonco,
• MOO ..... $1:11/ mon., ltt.tlll2·
: :t1t1; 114 3ol LZ
• ·LAioklng For A Dial? Conoldar A
: ~

........

..1-

-.~.~

•• ,
-_
l eBot-4lltAnd
n , ' - Doll¥ery.
llonlly - ·
IIIN7IO.

.

Not Respoaslllle For Accklelh or LostlleiiiS.
. . . . . te ..
. . . . . . . . .....

NOlO .... hmdq
4lWiler
c....

l~~~~~~~~l ~==~====

lt*oam
:" lx40
35 2LOts
&amp; TniWII Trailer,
• And 1 Aoro Lol. 114 311 UGI.
'' Building .lola In -own
..

·uc. &amp; Bonded•

$4,000.

~,

can

a....=

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

....,_;

" mob" homl lola In Polnlnw.
: -

..... .....,.,....... 1111

• lrlh llllltrlolty. AIIO can rwlt.
• Lata tar • - In Olivo

:~-·taltlp. .....

County, -

Coli
•
Craw - - .•
114-1112-27211 .. ew;

• ond turllay hunl!ng -

• O'lrton

Pur.-.
: ;MQ=·==~~·-----------i

•

CHANNEL
'MARIER
CONDOS

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

llri lyrda .... sc.
F•ll lanrntlo••

for l.to....tio•:

. 446-2206
.9to 5

,.L - - - - - . . 1

·: S'

Happy Ads

, .;....._-.:....:~---

1urearea
' h.andaome GUY
rww B.K .
Happy 20th
Birthday Brun1
Fondly&amp;:

She maybe
only41
But shes .
still our
ontrary little

Sherry!
Love
M&amp;

PubliC Sale
&amp;Auction

PUBLIC AUaiON
Location: At. 35.
Con•lgnrnent taken from 10:00 to 6:00
dayotule.
NEW AND USED MERCHANDISE
Terma; Caah or eheck with prop ID

DoorPrlzea

,

Auctioneer David Bogga Lie. No. 4506
Gallipolis, Ohio, 614 446
Llcenllld and bonded In Stata of Ohio.
Not Reaponelble tor Accldanta or
Loaa of Property

nso

NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUOION

BOGGS
~ ,
~

AUCTION
AUCTION!
AUCTION!

NEW DEALERS AUCTION
TIME: 12:00 DEC.1 , 1992
LOCATION; 3 MILES WEST OF GALUPOUS ON
OHIO AT. 135 AT BOGGS AUCTION BARN.
ALL KINDS OF NEW MERCHANDISE
EVERYONE WELCOME
Tarma: Chack or Caoh with·propar 10.
Not r.ponalblo lor accldanta or loaa of property.
AUCTIONEER, DAVID BOGGS
PHONE (614) 446-7750
Uc. 14595.
Llcenaed and Bonded In Stata ol Ohio

The Gallla County Local Bo•rd of EdUCfllion wll
hold a Public: Auction to .dlapoM of the NORTH
GALUA HIGH SCHOOL, State At. 160, VInton,
Ohio, The public auction ahell be held on
Saturday, December 12, 1992 at 10:00 a.m. on the
aile.
On tho above dato, lnteroated partie• mu•t
attend.
Complete Information on the property may be
obtained at the office of tha TntMuntr of the
Board of Education at 230 ShawnH L..na,
Galllpoll•, Ohio.
The Board of Education ahall roHrve lila right
' to accept or rejoc:t any or all blda et the 1'111JUier
Board Maetlng held In December, 111112. The
maatlng will ba held at 230 ShawnM L..ne,
Galllpoll•, Ohio.
Gallle County Local Board of Educ.
Jewell Saundara, T.....

UPCOMING CHRISTMAS AUOIONS
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1992 7:00P.M.
Youth Center In Point Pleasant, W. Va.
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1992
-1:00 P.M.
Saturday, December 19,1992
7:00P.M.,
.
Isaac's Auction House in Vinlon, Oh.
These are al l large Christmas sales and will contain
a big assollmant of great Christmas gift ideas.
Remember, ·IQ stretch your Christmas dollar to the
fullest, do .all your Christmas shopping at Isaac's
Christmas AuCtions. You owe nto yourselto get the
bast buy for your money and that will always be at
an honest auction price. Don't pay too much, shop
with Ul at i~&amp;ac's Auction House.
UPCOMING REGULAR AUCTIONS
Saturday, December 5, 1992
Antiquo and Colloc:tlble Sale
Saturday, December 12, 11192
Regular Conaignment Auction
Saturday, December 26, 1992
Regular Conalgninent Auction
Saturday, January 2, 18Q3
Antique and Collectible Auction
AUCTIONEER; FINIS "IKE" ISAAC
wv. 11030
Telephone: (614) 388-9370~ 388-8860 or 245·5939
Good Food and Drlnka are Alwaya Available
MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR
FROM EVERYONE AT
ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE.

LAKE FRONTAGE
Nice 6 rooms, 3 bedroom col!age IQcated with lrontaga
on BLUE LAKE in Clay Twp. GaUia :OUnty. 'I',. acnt,
Boat, Fish and enjoy tho lake. You II.UST - lhi1 beautiful collage and location.
noo
BUSINESS OFRCES' SALESROOM FOR LEAliE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

LEADINGHAM RHL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539
Real Estate General

Wood ~a{ty, Inc.
32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

446-1066

Allen C. Wood, Aealtor/Brokar 446 4523
Ken Morgan, Raaltor/B10kar 446 o0871
Contalbury, A•ltor 446 3408
Jea1nette Moore, R•ltor~56-1745
Aaaoc:. - 448-2027

Auctioneer: Finis "Ike* Isaac

•

u0

houM

114-1112·'1811

Sundlly Tlmn Sentlnal Pega D5

Real Estate General

Isaac's Audion House
Vinton, Ohio
.Antique and Colledible Sale

mo~~t-a-doup.

lso . lhe bit.f hugs
hen you wtmled me
to fix you mashed
otoloes and gravy. ;'
I mi.os you .so much
at T4ank&amp;giving and
Chri&amp;tmaa becaw·e
ou loued lo eol and
njoy ehia eime of 1
ear 10 much. You
re one of ehe love&amp;
of my life anti ca,B
never lie reploced .
God only knows how
much I love and mii&amp;
ou.
Mom-G-doup w'
always love yo11.

bodrourn

Syricuoo,
· ,_.,..._ Spm.

ould flip me on lhe
behind and soy I love

2210.

naaa. Won'f Lall. 1-214-

12
___________________
11~~---------------

,•

Homea for sale
1111 Sq. Ft., .:11 ..,. lot,, 2d
walla, 2 -plot• bltlw, CMnlng
3t

- . ft¥1na - · 3bdrm., .... ~.
.. lul!r carpolld, 2 por•
Wll
do bobroltllng.
... In
......
-rto
- · !'C.......
par~a.-, -lllod diy .... ,.~.,, ll.,.o.wna, Hom•
Not'flank.
AlCina,
OH. 114-Mf.
114-lii:NI4113 anytime.

pro•-·

ln Memory of Rick"
Layne born Nov, 29,
1960 and p011-t ·
away May 10, 1983
My beloved son I've
missed
your
mischieviow grin
when you hod ~n
inlo somel~ing and
our black eyes
would sparkle and
mommy alway.s knew
ou hod oomelhintf 10
lell
me before

Nlcl SnooD - . Ill T....,,
Haona Fur Salll !n Chlolllro ·VI~
AvanUI, - ·· 114-1112·
.
GOod Ne&amp;ghborhc: d, lncludlng
• IAa. I Flooml, ' both, Lg. Fill :lt12.
• t.oit . ly OW.., W:!O P.ll.
R•!rit•llur • ~ 12711'. •
• Phone: lt4 411 1171 After 3:30 SEVERAL 7- ACRE MRCELS: Roloionce R-lrod, Coli Eail
• P.II.I14-441-o421.
Tope 114-441-011\

someone else diJ. ' :
After you grown I
mi.,ed rhe way you

RrJI Esla1e

Rtl.

10..___ _;_________

·446-2342

La11on1,

'"""'
loa. Coli Oclay
"·~·
Low
Ao $11.00,
FREE
Colar Cotalag. t-im-

11"'11:

~- coli,
N11111
~
lnl&lt;irmatlon
1144111
3131.lor
RESPIRATORY

$111.00.=

=
F.-

Ul•at•.

0t

qulolftNillll T... Will
Be -INII To Aaallcallon
Which Con It Plcllid Up At
- ·For
-ADoak.
A""~
oblo
Ono 111111
-Oay Be
Trolnlng
S.nlan Dec. 2141. No Phoni
Collo. Cloalng Dolo No¥. 30. 1

'----------------87.~
•. ________________
__
· -----------------

Wll-caro lor oldorty In my homo,

Bo Peopla

2 •. ___________________

s. ________________________

....

Nollecurhy
Exp.

MONEY -IIONiY -MONEY
$400 Wk. Dr IIOh lllaHing Cordo•. Stufllna ........ At
Hoona. RUlli If •
'M d .._,... Envoi-: ou
luppiiM, lox 11, Hlllebcao, OH
411:13.

(

NOTICE
Wo akin, cut 6 wr~ -

~-·

13·~----------------

~

tllchool Age 114-44f.

azzc.

~To t.oee ::....era~,..._..

9. _____________

...

.;

-·•

flu dad: 100

........... D1oomber121h

"

!~~~~t:~~

Ilia P1ula'a Dov Corw Cent• 1 \'Mdlng Routo: Local. Wo Have 4112 Foi CUrronl Ropo U.l.
Block Wool 01 HIIC On ollcbon Tlla N - llaohlnal, llaklng A
Plu ·IW' I A.M. -1:30 P.M. H Nlcla Stoocly Cooh " - ' . 1• ·- - - - - - - - -

Wllahl - · No Will P-r
,._ lopping ' trimming ...
Naoilocl.
·Now, 1001.
Natural, 1001.
Cllu-Nd.
Coli
:103-415 1213.
411.
I
MRK IIANGIRS

PUBUC NOTICE

:; 1•1' Nluan Sentn

I

.1 004..-.
.2
In Memory
Coonllllllor,
Tho
~Db
Wllr....
cara.
Coli
U.
For
A
VIIN.
Infant
w-T"""'~
BEDS
~===~==::::::;
qulrl 30 Houri A Waoll. A /Tocldlln 114 4411227. ·p ....,.. _......,.
P
-Salary And No hoolola
Now Cunwnamol,
Humo Unll1,
0

Pub~

Sarlll No.
I FABN03.111tl8783.

Polloblo Sa•niH, _ ,

~""=~~.!;.: ~~ EtM.::" ~

Notice
. _...:....::::.:;;;:...;.;.;;;.:;.;;:;..___

.

.~

w..-.. ;,;.:-"=-"7'7-=--=--:::--:,......,.

:..'1..;;1);;:ri;;:,;;:28,::;;_30,_Stc
_ _ _:...

~

FOR

V_,IOmo GaurontHd
114-44f.'l287.
llult~Aita Cenlor lo ._.,_ An

W31.

..·· at 10:00 AM, Tha Homa
,. National Bank, Raolna,
:;:: Ohio, will oller for ula at
• • Public Auolon, on lha a.nk
! Parldng Lot, lhalollowlng:
.~ •11111 Ford Hatohbeck
~ . 11111 Pontleo Rreblrd
:· •1•1 Ford lhu'*lllrd

BUCKS

·
~ lago to tho 111111 juat
Eaar Wotkl Excoilonl
Payl ,.._ · hlul
Olli30W'I5·11167.
IMilllo Producto At H-. Coli
Toll F-, 1oiOQ.487.6SM Eat. Hlndyman, Odcl .lobo, lndow
:111.
'
IOul- lllacoHanaoua Er·
u • .__...,_
ronda. $4.00 P• Hour. 114-246~ • .,,,_
d:
Paid 1443.

IM;

:t

. BIQ

CHRISTIIAS
SeN A_,. Ill 4•1311.

DISCON-

; TINIJED EFFECTIVE
, MEDIATELY.

35 Lots a Acreage

Lol lor ..... 200 - -

·': WATER on townahlp roada.
:-, SURFACE
APPUCATION
·:. ~~ SA~Ls~R1Nf..DWA-m~
;;, CONTROL

dQu_..,,

I . IR

8

46 Space for Rent

words bolow to make 6 · ,-,.~~---._....,._.1111111io.
I simple words. Prinl leiters of
each In its line of squares.

d8m Hussein would invade Kuwait,

fur-trimmed eyabadea to aet at ten··
lion. but people aure noticed tbem
wben be atarted out. Baddy Holly,
whoee aonp "That'll Be tbe Day" and
"PeaY Sue" became earl:J rock 'n'

WOlD

0 Rearrange lhe 6 scrambled

!ntereSts

endanger U.S.
abrold. ·•
Clinton'S VIeWS were shaped m
part by the U.S. intelligence failure
10 prcdtct that Iraqi

Pom.erov-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH Point Pleuant, wv

,.,.mblr 21, 1182

PUBLIC AUcriON

ANTIQUE AUOION
SUNDAt DECEMBER 6.AT 10:00 A.M.

FIRST ANNUAL RADIO SHACK DWER
CHRISTMAS AUOION
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 6TH
10:00 A.M.

45 MILES EAST OF CHILLICOTHE
Located 11 mile• weal of Alhon•,Ohlo. Taka US
50 and 32 -•t of Athena 11nd ult onto 50 we•t
towarde McArthur. Auction Ia a quarter on lelt.
Sign• will be poated.
Oak 60 ln. high S roll top desk, 3 pc. Eastlake bed·
room au~e. oak 4 drawer filing cabinet, oak secretary
with claw feet, 8 pc. dining room su~e. oak flatwall,
oak kitchen cabinet with zinc top, watalfall seNer, 4
preaa back chairs, 4 and 5 drawer cheat of drawers,
1332 brass cash register, mahogany chest on chest,
oak square t!lble, round oak tabla, lg. Spinet desk,
ga• leg table, washstands, pie sale whh tins in sides,
walnut four pc. parior set, walnut malble tqp dresser
base, Diamond dye cabinet with tin front~ dressers
· with mirrors, 2 drawer ac:rub table, small mahogany
desk heavily calVed. other desk. early walnut bed, 2
oak chlfforobee In orig. finish, ona with buih·in secretary, floor model victrola in orig. finiah works, oak
spindle back double preaa back rocker, ·other rockers,
early child's rocker, tool cheat, llat trunk, primfiive
wool wheel, fancy whatnot shen, fern stand end other
at.ands, chlld'a primitive push sleigh.
QUILTS: Glass churn, Skookum Indian doll, clothing
damega, Aemco Tipping tumbles In or~. box, other
doUs, Indian grass basket. Fiesta and RIVera dishes,
rug beater, 1950'1 doll house wilh lumitura, children's
books. advertising tins.- bee amoker, kitchen items.
Roman flgurea , pic:tures and pic:tur• frames, other
antique anc;l collectible&amp;.
RUGS OF NEWER !1ATES; Royal Aubusson Bx10,
l1111•rlal Chlneae Aubusson 8x9, Super Chinese All
Doc:o 4x5, Super Chinese Art Deco 2x4, Aubusaon
2x3, Imperial Chinese Art Deco 9x12, Royal
Aubu.. on 5x8, SUper Chlnoae Peking 2.8x14,
Imperial SUk Chinos• 2x4, 11111erial All Ooc:o Chinese
5.3x8, Fine Indian Ohurri 6x9, Super Art Doc:o 4x6,
Fine Indo Persian Bldjar 8x1 0, Fina Indo Peraian
Htril .cxe, Silk Quom 4x7, Antiqu• Caucaaian Kozak
4.5x7.1, older Shi!Van 3x8, Indo Persian H•rlz 7x10,
2x4, Royal Pak Bokara 4x8.
· .
TERM•: C.h or eheok with P.O•itlva 10. Out of
etata buyer• naad a bank latter for check
IICc:eptance.
Nota: Thl• will be en lnt•raatlng auction with
m11ny quellty iteme pntHnt. ltam11 errlvlng too
lata to be advertl•ad. Food available. .
·
Auctlo-: Mark Hutohlnaon 614-Ua.-706
Ucanllad tllld Bonded In Ohio
Aaaoc. Frank Hutohlnaon 61USI2-4348

DOORS OPEN 8:00AM DAY OF SALE
Location: VInton County Fair Grounds ~
McArthur, Ohio
Directlone: From Atheno tako At. 50 W. to At. 93
In McArthur, go North on 113 approx. 1 mile to
aala. From Chillicothe take At. 50 E. to At. 83 In
McArthur, go Nonh on ·93 epprox. 1 mile to aale.
Froni Columbu• taka AL 33 E. to At. 93 S. In
Logan, go approx. 25 mllea to aale. Signa will ba
' •ted.
•
.
t::RCHANDISE USTING: Several C01111uter aystema (new &amp; .used), scannera, CB radios, car ater·
aos, home stereo COill&gt;onent aystems, toys for child·
ran and aduhs alike, over $20,000 in toys, lots of
radio controlled vehic:les, c:o~uter monnors to
include CGA, E,GA, VGA, keyboard!!. casN, ant•n·
nas, cellular phones, CB radios; telephones, car ster·
eos, $1,000.00's in DOS ~o~atible software to
include Lotus Works, ALF educational, Family Fun
packs, Indian ·Jonas, Rocket Ranger, Wr~er Rabbit,
Wah Disney &amp; Sesame Street software, Paradox,
and hundreds of dollara worth ol Color Co~uter
Software, Camcorder, VCR's, CD playare, tape
. decks, 8' glass display case, steel shelving and
many, many more hems still to come bel oro aale day
w/too many hema to list.
TRUCK &amp; MINI VAN: 1979 Ford, Grummond body
'bread truck" and a 1984 Dodge Mini Van, LE series
to be sold 'w/slight reseNe at t :OO Pf,1..
·
DOOR PRIZES: Co1111lete co1111uter system. Cellular
telephone, telephone, stereos, CB radio and much,
.much more all day long!!
·
Juat tha ula you hevo baon looking for, . .y
•hopping tor tha whole l•mlly and juet In tl11111lor
Chrl•tmaa tool!
TheM ltema ant coming from th- (3) different
atorea with plenty ol variety
.Homa Cooked Lunch Available
MMMMGOOOODIII.
TERMS: Caah or check with poaltlva ID, Traveler•
Chaeica &amp; MCIVIse Accaptad_
.AuctlonMr: Rodney Howery, Ath•n•, Ohio
. 614-6118-7231, 814-684-3780
Appntntlce AuotlonMr: Tim Handaraon, Jackaan,
Ohio 814-288-7104 altar 4:00PM
Llcan•ad and bonded by the State of Ohio.
!PLENTY OF COMFORTABLE SEATING AtlD
CLEAN REST ROOMSIII
.
DONT MISS TtiS SALEIII
SAVE THIS AOIII

HUTCHINSON AiJOION INC.

ONE-HALl' STORY HOME·
on State Route 7 at Eulllka. 3 bedrooma.
living room, cining room, kitchen and bath locat8d on

Located

32.9 acre rnA. CALL TO SEE II

BUILDING FOR SALE IN JACKSON· Pu1 buoinesa
downstairs and it has a 3 bedroom apanmenl upllairl.
Start your own business and live upslairs. CALL
ABOUT THIS ONE I
REDMAN DOUBLE WIDE IN QUAIL CREEK · 6 years
old. 3 bedroom, 2 balh&amp;. living room, cfining room ,
kilchen, utility room. Priced at $2i,IIOO.
HOUSE AND .5 ACRES II OR L Located on Sllla
Roula 588 'House ha&amp; 5 rooms, 2 bedrooma, 1 ball,
PRICED AT $25,000.
NICE LOCAnON FOR A HOllE· 12 acres M or L.
Approx 1 t/2 milo from new River Valley High School,
on blad.top road. Rural water available. Prided at
$15,000.

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS- Located on At 7
(Eureka ) 30'x36' block building with •toraoe In
basement. 70 IL fronlage on RL 7. Lot runo 10 Ohio
River. Was used as convenient mart. DRASTICALLY
REDUCED. NOW ONLY $32,000.
LOCATED IN GALUPOUS,. VIne sreet · 4renlll units,

good income property. ean tor mora inlonnatlon.

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney 'lillge II. Cal
lor more infonnation.
I

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
___
o.u,..R TDL~ FREE NUIIBER ,
1-800-S94-11111.

=

t:'\

�11m• Sentlrwl
42 Mobile Homee
torRent

wv

Ott Point

c:y~

HOUHhold

Goods

(}!. Q/m)d ~~~

WI~MTM, IIIOICE....:__III-

446·6806

1630 EXCELLENT APARTMENT BLDd. INVEST-

urva

TO'NN.
llpl.
bldg. wlh 31WO bedroom apiS.; 2 0111 bodnll. apiS., .
piUO I COftagl wlh two oparlmontl. Tbll....,.lly hu
boan wol molnlalnod. Rodueod price.

M3t. LAND CONTRACT - Looking lor I ac. mit,
Iorge doublewldo, storage buUdtng? Localod on old
Sfl t60, Porter. Call for appointment. $40,000.

coll114.fll:2-37t1 EOH.

BEAIJTIFUL APAATIENTS AT
BUDGET PRICEI AT .IACKIOH

1813. NEW LISTING- 3 bodroo. ., ranch homo wilt
2 blllhl, flllnly ""'"'· loealed on Y. 10. rnll. Porloctlor

'

2bdrm. • • • total -trio, .....

pllancol fum-,.....,...
room faciiHioo to ecltocii
lntown.~
..... - 11: vutac~Aifiiilii A,... - • or

ESTATES

131 -

=:tt.:r •,.,

..... · - ............. Ottlo,
Cloal\, - · . - . n o
.....
II _
&amp;I til_
New_
Hllnn,
W't.Aioo
or

1011, 11WIZ•llltf.

.. y .,... -.th.
...... pold; 1 BR S2ll -.th,
, utllliM paid. 114-t4f.MCI or

u •••,

.

==
·=..:1 t:...n&amp;
= a.::::...:ht .::,,
.... wlh -

11883 ..- 317-1201.

52 Sporting GOOds
.._Ina

MOO

Aut-ro ~ Wlt6 Slug Bar-

:.S::..'='&amp;~":;~aoge,

oa. -yor
With 111tr1t aarrat 1118; lltaori 12

"-!!Uri

12

Go-llnwU21;•• 10.01 8ol Aotlon 1118;
~ Small -AroFim.Phone:IM-441~
~':.4: me Aak For Larry.

-

- ; :"...

ComfiiiiiJ F - mo111to

11omo, , .,.11 .....,. _ , - -

=
0no....,_"""-aport.

. and .......
no pell;
11t •-2117.
.Two II adroon; ...,.1111111 on

11-.v
tltll-llfiL- · flortwor;
. 114-

45

Fumllhecl
ROOina

_...,

.tt .... -

__ __
-

""!'~dna-

- •••
a:oo pJit., :104-7'/s.
......
_wv.
Q Wanted to Rent

=--,. .

Wlllllf To Rant: llalot Hootta
For Wntmd Tltp To ._...

-Pal 1M-

r.1erchand1se
5I

bedroom~,

1803. DUALITY - LOCATION - SPACE - Qually IS
In tho brlck Cllpe Cod homo thai has a lffenlly homo
atmosphere.' ft foaturea 4 bodrooma~ 2 batho, lYing
room with flrapalc:o, - · holt pu"" and control air,
lljlpiOX. 1800 sq. ft. Locallon 11 overlooking tho Ohio
River and .• largo lake type body of wator adlolno
property bOundalloo. Space lo a 36'x48 metal buldlng.
Porfoc:llor..._,.lhol hoo ab-• and,_ a
· largo IIOIIQO .... Plus, a 14a24 building thot OOUid
ulld tor a showroom or llmBIIplltrnenl. Cal tor
meord81ala.

t)ei

BEDROOMS, 1 bath, Uvlng room, lornMy room, oatofiHa dloh wKh oqul_..., t40o, .

lla
54 Mlsce neoua

f-.&amp;.:

D. t Mefll Sllts1 11c.

' Camelbu~,

Inc. 45719
Specializing in Pole

,
-Buildings.
Designed 1o meel your
needs. Arrv size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREEESTIMATESON
Poet Buidings and
Package Deale. Sava

H ._."

...

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

unc•;....., evan .,......., ...

ol Dolans.

Local Sales Reoresenlative
DONNA CR:~ENBERY
11366 S. St Rt 7
GallillOis,

®.

BIG BEND REALlY, INC.

1804. ENJOYABLE TQ LOOK AT - Fun to 11vo In,
hso 11&gt;100 for family entertainment In 1 au-n
racrelllon room with larva flraploco, :1'4 bodooomo,
tPIICioul ·In potlo oil · Thill homo
awalll you and your family. I llllclpal10 yow - ·
SNultod on t ac. ftVI. Price Roclucod. Col lw an
appollm.- to - thlll.,.... homo.
1111. LOCATION - LOCATION - LOCATION · Suceeu ot a · bcMJn~u II ~n. Thtl COITWMI'CIIf
prof)orty Ilea 158•150 o1 lfiiOO- on Eutom
Ave. Occupying thll property II I 4 bay, blocf(
constructed, car wllh. FO&lt; mo detllll on prtco and
oqulpmont ... of4e.e806.

(CALL US ANYTIME·)
446·7101
or
1·800·585·7101 Gl

~.

,._

-

..... 2

calllnt ........

_
l!!f!'-:
.._ .........

·
-llaltlllt, .... ~ 4 .......

,_ · - Cil -

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tilt.
~............. -tal Dodao ...,.__ Nar&gt;tfahtid Nil- .t311. - · t1llil. ~.
... -

Ughtod

dottvwy.

W.'ra Talking T1.rloovl

rc.nnn

Aulo ~~ au, A Cir: Ractlve
A , _ ~. 1111 ulll'l\ ,_

lOOt•-·

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...

....-

iliiDt t - lor lull .... ahort ~ ~~ ~ :n.&amp;:.tlor...~:.~

lignl

~

=.~.::.:.:: ~.::
~

Good Wollo ·Truoll, suo,· 114-...
.
1m~112 Ton Truc11, t2

bod ~- lied
PI; · - .-11nhr••
o~ng~o '"' a:m.
w.t!

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...•.

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......

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r

c:-•:,r ~'=

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air, crufoe, -

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.
.
_.
·= :&amp;::".lr.!a.
-,.,,. -

til, llut body - · ·
----.CaNif4.448.atsl.
T-11,, Tuo11o Coui1o. II~ ~ olt
~~
-/Citaraoal, ~
·-lUll ..-rALDETECTOAS - -,--·13,DOO.I1t
. 1111.

=
·-·-·~··

. l2tGOhio,
·- 114Goltlpatla,

A

..

.

55 ,

BUIIc:llng

'

1111 -

..

en::.r -- Motorcycles

·-.low-..·tNt KawoaftlltiO Bayou, -

condition. t2100 llnil, fl4.ll2..
JIIOS.

.

CUl
l.. HolM licllfftt•••nle=
y.,. ~- on 01c1or 1
--Raorn
.._...
- . Addltlona,
!'oall!.1i
101..... Anct ..... ,,..

"'*"·

t.... ........ -

- a n d troNa- ._.,., -~~­
.... pit

OUR PRICE

'

oiET

Ao- .................... 1 . . . - - - I n otock, RON
~~·~. DH. 1.f00.

$45 $49
&amp;

·· REG. $79.00

4

•

Air, •- -.n1 ~
Fr
n1 .Con

llllaa, IWY D •: 'alta, 14

_

~- Tuallo&lt;
.

- S' •,
b
ooltont -

fo.1110,WloWrdrtva,
4d, lui -•.·
,..a.

-4114.
-

•••n, $3110G. 114-

Forll fo.1110, tl4, 302 v..t,

: . :.PI, lla,IIDO - · 3114Cho•IGiot, Ford, Dodge, plokup
- . ShOrt or tong: NO Nat.
3tl4.a7M28I
•

Real Estate General

. Pets for Sale

OAK lttAOED LOT- cto•to _,
.
Roomy bl-level homo. Fomily room lllarlod 111
lower leva! (not much to finiah), 3 be&lt;lrooml.
oat-ln kitchen, living 100111. Priced to aell at
$41,QOO.
.

OFFICE · 992·2886

BOY, COUNTRY GIRLI
Hel8'a a houM that wil aatialy both. Wtthin
walking dilllanco to downtown, thla home'•
localion Ia grul While at the aama time ifa
loCallltlln • quiet location backed up_by - ···
and· aCIII of woodland. laflltl • bedroom
homo with over 2100 aq. ft., 2¥. batha, living
room, dining room, Mt&lt;n
and family.
SC:narid In porch, lafll• patio and above
ground poot. 2 car buiHn gafliQIO. Good otor·

OUR PRICE

s40oo.s50oo
SIZES 1 THRU 15
INSUlATED &amp; REGUlAR

.&amp;wm

•

'

CAROUNA

•

·

•

AMERICAN
SPORTSMAN

Reduced to $17,5001

.
.

'

LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS!

........

~·.

'•

NEW USTIHG -VA ASSUIIIABLE
3 badruom doWiklwitla llituated on 1.511 -

1217

' ':.:-

lot

locatecl 3 inllea from town. Lorge dlltachod
~room. Priced at $55,000.
1701

••'

••
...,

aiL~- .

Settle into thia homey thnae bedroom with
lonced backyald. ·You'l lava tha larga kitdlan
and adjoining oozy lainily room. Priced Ill
$37,1100.
lltiGI

..,
.. r·

..

~ ,..

&amp;==--:=
Dra'"
wwncl Clllbly: CFA P-..

DO YOU

....,

WANT

IT ALL BUT
hotN II lor you .• •
AFFORD IT AU1 - This livl
,_,. lamily
bedroom•. 1 bath, large ng util'ity' 100111
room kitchen with dining araa.
loca~ in • great noighboohood on on overalzed lot gnaallor kids. f&gt;riced at only

..... ltltl-. 114• ••• UAftwT:OO~.m.

&gt;

-...
120 ACRES. , .THIS WOULD BE
EXCELLENT PLACE to hun~ fish or
relax. You have a large llocked· pond,
lin, timber and 3 bedroom living lodgo.
bam, ltuH lrMI and moll. l.oCetecf on
Jonoo Road. Collorprica.

OAK STREET - $13,000.00 - I &gt;I atory

~:,· with 3 badrooma, living room, dning

1

back lawn approx. 100'1184'. Front
aide porches. Immediate pououion. 1485

MIDDLEPORT - S. BeoOnclo A roomy executw type 9
room home with 4 bedrooma, and 3 lull baths. The
modem kitchen Ia every womana dream with lolid cheny
cabinets Jenn-alr range corian counteltOpa dishwasher,
and lslarld wor1&lt; ..... How on 1o lhe fllmly room wilh its
skylight&amp;, c:alhachtl ceilings, peach lree doon &amp; wlndowt,
and beautilulllr8fll- wlih a buck stave inoert. The man
ol the house wit en101 liNt 2 car garage with storage .over
top, liNt ,_ wiring and lui baoemenl. Bring rhe lamily ta
aee thia t&gt;ome today.
$71,100

-,,.

. . 1,

'

...
. .
..

..•'

A UTTI.E souTHERN
ELEGANCE IN YOUR UFE1
Then ou muot thia hom&amp;. Bt lmpnaaaed
Info the ov.araized lonna! ~':!!
81 yo~
room and dining room Wtlh 2 firaplacaa. """''
family room, kitchen and balh. Upatai:r"
flnd 2-3 bedroom•. plua a large ba1h .
pool tub. Ample outdoor ~rea laatumg Ia~
ac1H11&lt;1dln poroll, aun palio, 2 car garage 1111
shed i1nd 2 harM ·atalls. Call toclaY lor your
chenoa to own your 'Mini Tara•. Priced at~
$72,000

IUPEM CONDITION - BMutiful ranch
immaculata canclition. Overtooldng liNt
thio 2700 aq, IL plu1 ._,. ollera
room lor llolamly.
oat-ln kitchen, large '*'!'IIY . -. plua
room, 2 lowplacoa. beautilrliiving room.
hu lnaround pool, large patio araa.
ecro Tot. Call lor an appoin..,ent t.vilovt
$13-1,800•

atap

'.... t

,__lncludll

w:r,.

HIGHWAY EXPOSURE - NM&lt;I a pi• .. of
ground with good Rt. 35 IIIIPOIUIII and ACIIlt?
H-'1 14.2 acraa,. m.t, light along U. S. 35.
Good tiCctlll to the hi~ny. Good toad
frontage atao (townllltip). Producing gu wall
on proparty.
· 1211

Radne- Family Needed- For'thia 1 ~12 story, 3-4 ~
home with 4 porches, hall buamant, dinning 10011), lamily
room, and email OUibuldlng. Good sized loL $21,500
I

--

•

•

NEW USTIHG II SPRING VALLEY

:11 WOODED ACRES in SouthMotem .School
al8a. Already has walar tap. Six mllea to Rio
Grande. Call now.
1428

view

CLOSE INI - Enjoy a
of tha river from tha
great room th11 lovely II y•r old, 3 badloom, 3
bath home wl1h family room and ftnllhed buement, nino clo•ll, 2 .,. watk-lna. Tllll InN lor
nine year.. Too many amenltlel to mention
ho11. ea11or motwlnlonnation. AlkinQ ~:

IN VINTON VILLAGE! - Hare you will find
thia 3 bedmom lt12 bath ono atory hoi1NI wi1h
living room kitchen, laundry and don. A
detached o~a car garage blown-in insulation
and mora. On a 127x115 comer lot. Asking
only $30,000. can today lor your appointment.

1481
MODERN, PEACEFUL. COUNTRY HOME Two atory, 2518 oq. ft. of Uvlng space ind a law
acf81 to be detennlned by au!Vey. The homo
has bean extensively remodeled for your
convenience and happlnoao. Four bedrooma,
two batha, large walk in cloNt, powder 100111,
large now family room. All cedar and a te,rge
country kitchen. Rural wahlr, central heating
and cooking. Located on Slate Highway. You
may have any pell your children ,may~~~~~ or
evan NCreational vehicles. I can I expl•n 11 811
In this ad. Tho aal&lt;ing prica is $75,000.00. Wa
wiN ba waiting lor your caU. •
1472
'. COMMERCIAL - 470 JACKSON PIKE - 1
acra lot approx ••38'x58' building with two bay
ga111Q8, aiphatt patlling lol
1486

71

COZV I CUTEI Sl8,800.00- Whether lllart- .
ing out or 11tiring thia home ia k&gt;l'fOUI 2 bedroomt, living room, kitchen, bath, alum. llidlng.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
1487

ON DURGAN ROAD Ia this 3 bedroo~ metal
'dad ranch with 2 bathe, laundry, 11v1ng tm. ,
~ning area, 2 car attached garage. Can be
sold with 1 acra m~ or 5 a_
cras mn and bam.
Call today lor mol8 1nlonnabon.
VACANT LAND ON UNCOLN PIKE. - 66
ac111, email pond, plus 18X24 lhower houN.
1471
Mldng $28,500.
BUY NOW AT $35,500.00 OR MAKE
OWNER AN OFFERI - 1Y. atory home. with
vinyl aiding, 4 bedroom•, living 100111, dimng
10om kllchen IO'xl20' lot, baaemani and
mo111: Within
dlatanca of UnlvoraiJa~
RioGIWtdll.
•

-Icing

. RUSSELL WOOD, BrokBr
PHYLUS MILLER
MARTHA SMITH
PATRICK COCHRAN
'

II FIHG VALLEY HOlE

Super noighborhood, g - location. Colonial 2
lilly laM olleis. bednloma, 2~ ballta, lonul ·
living room and cllr*tg 100111, dlln and large
lamly 100111. Stontge ailed. Extra large lot

IUICh"'

age $11G,OOO.

aq~

-

..
.•;\
.'

4 ..... haunde'Two t9 month
old&amp;""" I .,_old, one 7 yeor

ST ,.•• Musical
•:&gt; Instruments

JUST L18TEDI JUST RIGHT FOR YOUR
F,.AMILYI 3, bedroom ranch otyle home
consisting of full basement, 2 baths, Uvlng
room dining 10om, lamlly room and mona,
app~x. 1.8 I1CI8 lawn, dlltilched 24'X32' 11"111Q8
with concrete flooring. Call today lor your
showing!
·
1500

GOLDEN
RETRIEVER

QAEAJ IN' TOWN LOcAllONI
l.ooldng lor • utiii1y buildna In • handy location? ....,, to atarl a ama11 bullinMo or IIIOVO
your~ one? Got good vlaabllty with thie
loc:alion Willout
. " ' nonnal ~ ..._
. priceal 1224
wilh 2 llnlahed
rooma and bath. Lorge worl&lt;ahop and aupply
room.' S3e,800. Owner will00111ider aelllng u
~alto. Call Cavol
1201

205 l.jorth · s~cond Av,. ·
MlddJeporl, OH

REDUCED!
WHATVOU
22 acna mn mini
with pond •. bam, 3
bedroom home with Avlng room, dlntng room,
I Yt batha and mona. 32'x48' detached ga~age.
PLUS a 3 100111 and bath apartment. Ownera
moved and want aoldl $50's.
1471

REDUCED AQAINI HOW $55,000.00 - WAS
ASKING $14,000.00111 - OWNE,R WANTS
OLDI - Gqod lnwotment property altualod at
3td Avenue. • bed100111a, 2 ba1ha, new.r gu
lumaco. Mobile home alao lndudlld. Good
18nlal incorno. 1412.

-cat 104471-11$4
'" up-.lfna,
....... -

CRAVING

1477

WORK BOOTS
BY WALKER

t--

!na trl ~ · - 'D- Tho

YOUR "GET STARTED" HOllE

ON FRANK RD. - Apartial btlck ranch on
1.034 ac. mil will 3 bedroom a I )I bath a, living_
dl111ng room and kilchen. One car Q8111Q8
atta1ched. Asking only $52,500. Call today.

.

Upholstery

$43=

1

l

rr

c:."a 'r.':"'· - """ out; ;:.......,,;:;.:;;:.;:.:,:::;.!..
___-:_,.,•• Uftholltorlng -

.:.f~

CHESHIRE VILLAGE Ia thla well ottabllshed
used car businaao on Rt. 7 _With !)NO bay
garage and offica. A mobile home INti has 2
bedrooms, 1 Dam, IIVInQ.fTII·• lllntng nn. ana
kitchen. Aal&lt;ing $99,500. Wllh\IUI mobHe home.
$89,500.
1473

.

'

Elactltcal &amp;
RelrlgaratiOI'I

.,.,_ Clooitar lloflalr, FrM
~ And Dlttvw!. Qeargaa
Crook~ Itt

•

. REGULAR PRICE $8,9.00

Ei! 84

,..._. Ralaa• , No Jail
ToolltOr-fl~l.
o.vta ~ ila'Hna And

•

'

WELLSTON, OHIO
BUYOUTS • CLOSEOUTS • SECONDS
CLAD DOUBLE HUNG AND CASEMENT
WINDOWS. Year's End Oeanup. Very law
prites, or make offer. .
TREATED STRUCTURAL LUMBER
(2"146 18'-$1.90) (2"14"112'-$2.75)
55 GAL PLASTIC BARRELS.......$7.95 ea.
Two for S15.00 Four for $28.00
FIBERGLASS BRICK AND STONE SIDING

Plumbing &amp;
Healing

lmiiiiC, COb OVor, Cunlmlno
11172 t2ft.
Homo
Nal'l
11an1t, Aaolno, Ot.iO• . _

Aocard OX Auto, 2210.

Cllda lupr•1•
1- , brlclt, .._, wJn. ....,..., - · blUe, frio
- . ....... ClaUd.' Win- - . uo, air, ..
t... lifo - , DH Coli 114- - - · " " ' - .........
:MWtat.
-I7WIIt.
tlroa, S3,3tll. llotil !'OOflng and aiding, 301~

.

'"""'!""~

-r -.

fo.tiiO 414 ....... !JrJ

82

Int..-., ·---;

Or Iiiii Oftlr. ., " ' . . .

Supplies

••

t177 Clllvy 112 Tan I Ft. led,

11M,.__ u• . _ I'JWII.
lop~...... ...Ill 1221. - · .... - ·
::"~:~': .... ~-, 11M Ot•n lit Dda II,

.-·•-·-

..•

72 Tl'uckaforSale

-

11tt,
LkWJ,..::'"
~~ 8 Undor Wananly,
21.000 lllloo, Rod In ColtW, Caoll:
111,100 Nou!,. Wll Bait For
tta.IIOO. Wlft 11M Cor Or Tluall
AI 'r... tn. - I t t t II 0140

74

.......'rEI:!:.::=
:':;:!!:,_,_
1~ZI

D,QITU.Il'f

PENN'S
WAREHOUSE

111
ea:__

l'onl
XLT, V.a, i&gt;ll,
PI, PW, POL, AlliN aa rs,
-1111 ...
roof,2015
rod and - · 4WD;

Good

~- kltot.n Iallie V-I,I11110,•1Ml1:2-47tt.

31WOtL

MEIGS C.OUNTY PROPERnES

OWNER SAYS MAKE OFFERI IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION - Just waiting lor you I 3 bed· .
room ranch style home, living room, family
room, 1 car garage with auto. door opener and
mol8. Excellent location!
1418

. ..'

rua

euu.aa.

loptloTri--C..-EVANIINTEI.~ lEI,
....hJan.OH1.-.aSP 1111

111M 111111111

510 SECOND AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS

1

~

-~

·· · - ......_, Ohfo. t.fOO.

a-

=
~ ~ :==~ii"dft:=~
.... -.-.--.
1m ••• tn

=":'«'..::"'~C.:::."/1::: -,
... -~-··

'

'

111,115, 114-

!!..1!!..~
- I'll.loopt, ,,_,.
allor 1:00

~·

CHERYt. LEMLEY
742-3171
SHERYL WALTERS 317o042111182.ell3

INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR PREHUNG
DOORS AND ENTRANCE SETS.
Big Savings.
614·384·3645

r.terchandiN

--~-...

.'•.

'

WATliflPAQOANQ
Ut-oltl nal lllllrno _....
LoOIII ......rw:. tumlahad.
cat t - . - J I .Or , _
0411
R~ '"'
I
u;wlt

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

•..o. c.i. Etc.

.-... .
..

b...._,., 3 car garago and a B. . &lt;totachod - ·
Cal for morolnfomtollon.

OH.

NOW $3.95 PC. OR 50 PC, $1 . u uu

54 ·Miscellaneous

11117 CIIHy Cuolom Aotra Vail,
Cwombd 4 Capt. C;hMw.

"'

3

....,.....Ohio~····

IAIEIIEHT

..-.'"

utNity room, llrnlly room, klcllen In

'

Home

"•
•

'

'
17U. BRICK RANCH - Sluatod on 1 ac 1W1 Rt. 7 c:f010 to .-_tng•contor. Thill homo -

--- ....... = ··WY
.....

lion.. TV - . S'~

Improvements

·.

'

bomno., 2 fuU ballll, kitchen and dining - · 2

.fl1llll. 2 or 3

IO"x48" pes. Colors (wlllte, red, ta11, gray).
Reg. $15.95 pr.

HouHhold
Goods

..•.

. .•

..... ..•,

1831. SCOTT SCHOOL ROAD 18 t1tt location on
thll12'&gt;&lt;86' (Ooln&gt;llor) moblollomo ·wlth LR, oat-ln
kitchen, bath, 1101 turnaco, 2 BR. Allurnlturo gooo
wlh moblo homo UC1fJ1 TV and ot-.

. ,...... __,

Serv1ces

••

1731. UNIQUE BI-LEVEL BRICK I ALUM.
wl1h 3 BR, 2 bathe, c:heny cablnetaln equipped
kitchon. cto• lo IOWn and wl1h 4 ..,.,_

=r-r·No-· a: I*I.::=Me=rc=ha=nd=l=se==!.::=~PH~.~~1~4-4-~2256-:::;1633~·~

One ....,,_ , - - - . . . . . llrd d11 ullllllea. t100
dopoolt, no pM; 114-

'
-.·
. ...

. -.

for nowlywede or ,.,,..,,

1825. CLOSE IN. - Five aau of rolllrtli land.

Vans&amp;4WD'I

...... lloll

=:;: T""~L ~ ~;i".u~
~

l •. •

•'.

'

oqulpmont ln&lt;:ludod, aloo 2 badroom· Fairmont
wlgardon tub ondlu-. 3 ... '"-

1717, NEW · LI8TINQ, HANNAH TRACE
ROAD - Cozy 3 BR rinch with eat-in ldlchon,
LR, DR, both, lull oil hoa~ no., roof. Juot righl

SHIP!"

•••

•'

tncomo. Lovoly raot homo ptuo ooparato lvfng
quorforo. t.Jconood for 10 .... AI lvfnltuno and

wlh dining aroa, very lg. FR, t8'x36' awtmmtng pool
oft encloood patio. Woodbumor hoall ontl"' house. 1
aaelllo.

178&amp;. GREAT INVESTMENT 3 1·bedroom
apartments. Ful botho, IMng ""'"'· ldtcllen, lotal oq.
ft. IPI&gt;n&gt;a. 1440. Enjoy tho lfHdom ot owning your
own homo along with a ranllltnoomo. CaiiiO&lt; mont
lnlonnallon.

-~--~~~~rwqufrod,

TQ

fBOtl. BUSINEII OF YOUR OWN wlh conotont

equipped klehon, olec. holt, AIC, lg. LA, DR, lcltcllen

someone wanting Close to ·town and a country
atmosphoro combination. Prtc:od In the $tO's and
loealod lnAddloon Townohll&gt;.

PIU

1rom ttiZiniO. Walfl to ehotl I
movlle. calf 114 441 2111. EOH.

.

rno and mr gal. G!NIIocatlonl S4S.ooo.

t762. IF YOU WANT SPACE, TIIS IS THE
PROPERTY FOR YOU - 3 Bfl ._..... wlh 2 baths,

1787. PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND - Und lllylnd
wal. Older 2 story brtclc homo with • bodroorno a
homo In nood ol rapalr. 12t ac. mil. Oft SR dose to
f'tnocN!I Nuootng Homo.
1823. PRETTY AS A PICTURE whon you Wll&lt; Into
IIIIo ~ BR, 1 balh, large FA, LR and eal·ln klcllen,
with garage and boemonl and 5 acras rnll. StO'o. Taka
a look. Con bo pun:huod wlh 10 ocreo rnllallo.

'

RIO GRANDE - Noll cloan
cattaoa ollomg 2 boctmo., 1 bath, gooc1 lnoulaaon, .
mo~~~-,.. nowty clocor-, 1 ..-ldhl. genion ·
apot, 1.81 IC. IM Hoolwp lor rnob!lahomo. Tltio II lor

1145. UNUSUAL BRICK RANCH In tlp·top
condition with 3 BR, 2 batho, lull boemont, ·LR, DR,
eat·ln kitchen, FR, 2 car gorage, and Jf tllet lo
notnough, IBachod II a 2 BR oparlnwnl wlh LA, oal·
In ldcllen, both. Alao IX . . unaltachod!IIIOUI'. All
thll on 8.42 ace. rnll.

Mt7. SWEET l LOW- COtnfortal&gt;l8 lrllll 3 -.n.
homo. Lot 66xt66', rural wate&lt;, b. gas hoot on ltato
route. $15,000.

Apanment
for Rent

1102. CLOSE

1141. NEW LlilnNG. QOOD, LOCATION- Nlco 3
BR ranch with 2 baths, LA, FA, oal·ln kitchen. Can
- have a bualnass rtgl'lln your homo. Cal lor more
dotalo todlyl .

····-··$t7,400.00.

.

Mt1 . HARRISON, lWP. - 61110 . ...,, -~~~ rCihli.
Lakl , pondt o n d - and otdlr homo. Localod on
Hannan r .... Ad.
·

ATTENTION HOllE BUYERS ~
EQ U A L
OPPORTUNITY - NO DOWN PAYMENT - LOW
IITEREIT LOANS . qualify for thiS program and
"'""" you r.ndlonl. MlodaSIInoomo can buy In $60s
oango. Doni miss out. cal 44&amp;-6606.

f63t. A SCENIC aun;T PLACE TO LIVE - 3 1o11 .
In Uk8YieW Court Subdivision, rootrfeled 10-1
only Clolllo Holzer Medical Canlor. Drive to While
Rd .." to Chlrota~ l.ll&lt;a Or. to Lakeview ct. AI utUioo

44

..,u.

olD nn. or Aldy .nd bMJFT11f11.

Eastern Ava . Opportunlly 1o combl~ home and
busiiiOSI . Ohio Rtvar frontage. Vory oleo 3 bodnrl.
homo wlh applane8S. full basanwnl. Thll loa monoy
rnoJ&lt;k1g prvposllon. Col lor appolnlmonl.

81-SQI, Or 114 Ul 3210.

1414. LARGE COMMERCIAL BUILDIHG on Slalo ,
floulo. 2 -...opt. on 111 ttoor. P - 3 .,.,. -

lR 15-"""-llleranchwlthnow...,_.mOrlt,
l.oMiy now aupot throughout, now - . fVIll 3 Yllll
·old, 2 boctmo., LA, cln. rm., 1&lt;1., onclolod fronlpo!Oit,

1736. FOR RENT - SS21 Mo. - Prlmo loCation.

· 1 ac. rnll.

lui . . _ , dachecl REOUCED $42,500.

1111 IPECIAL NOnCE - PRICE REDUCED- I
ACAU IIIII.- Taotolully-11 totalrmo.,ol.o5
- · 3 bathe, LA, DR,Idt.,ldty rm., lullciYtdod
buomertt wftlt famtly room, 2 .., geroge, pool and
patio.
'
- · CHARMING HOME - LOCATED JUST OFF

looNng-whoro.

Unlurnlahod, Prfvalo Lot, 114-

-h.

Our dog is not too bright ao after
his second failure at obedience
school ~ instruCtor offered the third
try free. "Gee," my wile gushed, •our
·dog has been offered a SCHOLAR-

- IIIIJini,
llo!IOI - , Cltar.111
N, ~ 4114,
AC,
.......
1t11,114-.
•.

•.

IQ2, FAIIILY HOllEto 11-141E-A-0 O.lJ.T. • - . , - . .... DR, LA,,_
nn., tllttoor-.n. a 3up. ~-and­

-n.

comont walks ond pod. SH thlll homo ond llop

MOO - Good monoy maker IN

.

' '

Will-_,

flU. IELL NOW - BARGAIN NEAR RIO
- D E - Spoco 18 oonooti•IQ your family-· 3
.. 2 lui baiN and very largo IIYfng rm. and
oountryfamily rm. - · utllty
tm., 2 · ........ bulldilg; pool 7 - m.1,- . All t1tto fof a very low price. $45,000.

COfl1l-

Truc:b for Sale

''

PA'IRCL\IIDU, AEAI.TDIL-ltllm
ITE1IEN IWORDI-·-·----.2tloltDI

1712. FOUR 11E0110011 HOME. 2 BATHS- Roomr
ranch homi loCated tn 1111 country. Ell1t.- WOlle
U follows: IIIW Thormo- - ·
MCurly doors otool siding, heavy """· k"cllen.
111o ontly Oldondld lnlo ldlchon. 181&lt;53 do&lt;:k.

72

•

1W111CE-, AULTCR.til 1117
RUTH lAM, MALTeR.-- 141 17D
.._ICITES, AULTOR.....-t!lllll
L'INMFRALEY, IEALTOR.-- 111 W
IKHoiiL 11LLEA. IIUI.toR...-t• 1101

-Ilion. .

Livestock

nmee Sentinel PIIJI 07 ,.

PROFISSIONAL SlRVICl MAKlS THl DIFHRIN(£

23 LOCUST ST• .

1134. BH.EVEL HOME - 3 bodnno., Ml-ln kll ., lg.
LA, 2~ llllhl, tac.IM 1...-o

OH Paint Pleaunt, WV
63

1\ESIDENTIAL -INVESTMENTS- COMMERCIAL· FARMS

.

November a, 1112

• November

446-4618
256-1136
.379-2651
446-8655

, ........ DX-7 . , . _ and

toa......ta;......,....,.or
- """"'";!

IOftii!IOI_NIO;-,c.•.

·-----;
........ •

HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD - Ia thla 114 ato7. ,
log home with baNmenl, 3 bed100111a, 2~
bathe family room, living 100111, kild1en, laun•
a;..., akyligh~ aatellite ayatem, covered .,":
porch, Ileal pump, central
12'xl2' building
and much tn0n1. Call lor dlltaila.
1421 ·

•r·

......... llllpll"!~-·

- · ....
tl'll;
!"!fttl.!a
IIX-11
- - .rnaohlno,
f~GtCall11il Ul iiUI

BIDWELL AREA - Well u'pt oozy two bed- , , :
room ranch with two axtna large Iota. 1 car
'
attached garage, 1 car dlltacltod Qll!IIQ8· New
..
h. .t pump. Partial baMment.
$39,500.00.
'

":71 ;

vacan: ".'

PICTURE YOUR HOUSE HE REI land 0 J White Road. 2.382 acres; loll o '
tnaes. GOod builcing alllalor SI1,QOO.
1482

81 :Farm Equipment
zoat ~D DleNI Traclor, Croom

Putt 11,110; IN IIF Dloool
..,.,. ........ 1144.1"

. . . . . . -lt:J-_

.. ......, ....._ _ llolo

no ,Ill _ , ......... AC 101

~--r-.~

~=--=..~

-.CrrY

IF
UVING IS FOR YOU, THATS
WHAT YOU'LL GET with thia wll maintained
two bedroom homt will alum. llidlttg, lenotld In
back ya!d, a lt!Q8 ancloHCI back POrdl for
those wann summer n~ta or enjoy tilt ctntral
air. Onli car garage w/atonagt, walking
dislance to clinic and much motw. RacltiOid to
$48,000. Cal lor your appoinlmont.
M44

TAMr.IJIE D!!Wm
J. MERRILL CARTER
CATHY WRAY
CINDY DRONOGWSKI

ThM~I

Fctrn Suppllc~
&amp; L1vestock

410 RIM.~
"s'INo1ot
hiiW:

TOIIO ~ nn " -

S3 •

'

'

v .

•

'
'

Livestock

. .

·&amp;h:-:f'Rt.-=::-.': rA'
A la:=.,.ch• Ha:alonl
bull." t1
old. lOt 111

2

Willa Hill Road- A amall home that can.be bought asia
or owner will finish. Hao a cathedral oethng, large Uvlng
room dining araa, kilchen, one bednlom, utility 8188. New
heat' pump, moatly drywailctd, all new wiring, and
plumbing.
$33,000 llnlehod. $21,000 unflnlahod
Mlddlaport· S. Second' A large older brick home with
big living room, dining tom with built-In hutch, o4
bedroom&amp;, 1 112 batha, wrap-around porch. 3 lmptacea,
and nioa big lot l*lch paten.-!.
SZII,OOO
Chealer Twp. Rd. 223- o- Huntllra Paradlae- ~~I
1pprcx. 81 acm of tlmbartand Ia Ioaded with wldilt of.
kinds. Eute,n School Ciltrlcl Poul&gt;le

Buldl,;:-,ioo

POMEROY- Union Av• .Latg8 rooms and a baaudlul
ltalrway come wilh ·thla ~&gt;orne. It allo hal 3-4 badlooma,
forced air natural ga&amp; lumanoa and t 112 bathe. Wu

i:t!~.:'o!r.~

448-4255
245-86W

••

&amp;ftltill Cow •

ma.

Colt
eo..
iiiiii!IIIWAIUllll Ill 41111.

1...::::;.:;

till

'

.'

I
.,

•

j;

.•

•

•

"""

garag.

•

·-.......,.
-.."'•
_.,
~

a-

HM

~

p-y,' RoM .... Thia home Ia )Uit what tha family
wants and naacla. Wllh aplh entry brick front, ~·· a gmat
looking home. Hu loll of apace lor all tho ~ with 3
bacfrooma up, a nk:tt big kllchen, dining 1118&amp;, wl1h a big
&amp;vlng room. The buament could ba fixed up·lor what_.
you need It aa. The baiement con.- to.the .two car
garage pluo there Ia aloo an in-ground twll'llmlng pool
with patio. All till on about an lla'e ol ground. $58,1100

441-1514
37~2184

1HE KIDS AND YOUR POCKEIBDOK
will thank you when vou baeomo tha proud
owners at lhia otllotdable baaUIY. 3 bldnnL, 1
bath large living mom and kitl:hen, 1 car
huge dllc1c and largllanced ,n. The
price ~a' light at _.11,500.
Bem.IG.A.H.S.

ARE YOU LOOKING TO GET BACK TO
NATURE? - Thon you must - lhia property.
Naatlad on 4.223 ae~~~s, mil, 3 badrooma, 2
bathe, lonnal living and cining rooml, lafl!o
lamly room with fi11place, 1 car ga!IIQ8 With
· ahed. We have all this hidden In Gl8en

"""""'·
t9 band
llorao
'11!( Yamaha
DJ.tDO
loel/it1.~
a

BUY ON LAND CONTAACn - 3
bath, living room, k1tchon, .11-;50;:_, ,-o,;•
$351100. Owner. aay make an
-·-· •
soU 'on land cOntract with $5,000

· OWNER DESPERATE AND AHXIOUI
TO BELL thla 3 badroom ranch hotNI Noeda
1 little lfltueing up. Nice liad lot 72'111110'.
Attached 1 car carpott. Make owner an olftr
lodllyl Rlduced to $30,800.
1412

ttall

Your family will enjoy al the apace thia
badnlonl haa to oller. lncludlle extra
family 100111 will woodbumer, living
warm firaplace. IDrmal dning 100111
ltltchen, 2 lui baiiL 0uta1c1o amenitiea lndudll
large deck and patio. Good liza
OUIIuilding. Priced 1o ool at $711,800.

_.,.

S75,000.
uplllira.

WE'VE ITDPPED FOOliNG AROUHD••-

And llldllced the price on this Chatmlng oldllr
daaaic to $77 ,ooo. Thia home ofta11 3 bedroom a. 2 balha, hlng room. dning room, flintily
room, lerge Mlin ldlehert, 2 car Q8111Q8, '"'-led on a piclutwlqUe 3 acrea, mil, wooded aatting with accoa• to 11111• fiahg pond. Soller
moana bullinou. No oauonablct oller !OiuMd,
Cal Carolyn today.
11103

~

SUNDAY .. THE CCMITA'fldnclcflla .11
"-'aabrUk..way..,_
Every-.._
ranch on ~~- Col ~
thll 3 bedti10nt
- - · ........ _.___
lor an appointment to-,,.·- - ·- •
Interior lnclucing lhe oulltalldlng ~~~~
Ptlold M $58,800.

FOR A LOT OF "U1llE REASONS",
CHOOIE Till CLASSIC
1. In tDwn convanience- kid1 can walk to
achoola and acftoitiM.
2. Ample living apace - formal living room,,
dning room , 3 _ _ , , , 2 bathe, IUMy
tdlclwl,lllmlly room (.,..r 2,000 "~' II.)
3. Ample atorege ep- - large attic and
' - - ! , tcargaoege.
• . RocltiOid price.
AI Ilia lor llo apa:ial paoplo In your lifo. 11011

•

:r.J
·'...

"•

'

REAL FStroE Ire .·
446Z644

, .

.

1~1

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER· 446·9555
Loretta McDade...; 446-7729
Carolyn Wasch-441·1007
B. J. Hairston- 446·4240
Sonny Garnes - 448-2707

-----

•

..
..

•I

_,

�-

r 91
!Jumper
citrus
..
~rop predicted .

Nowmber 29,1882

D8 8undey 11m• Sentinel

S&amp; WCD contest open to all Gallia ·high school students
B:rCONSTANCES.WHrn . dooliiiOWo.
GALLIPOLIS • lt's time for
Now ill ilsllidi ,ea-. lk _ ,
high scbool lludeDII dmHJpo.t o• M lfiiCb ID &lt;+ 1 M I ,...,
Oa1lia r .....ov10 .a.rpeulleir ~ adoiiiiD •
-~• ....,._for

Ciis ...u .......... ....,..

I

••~

•

. . -4£
__.
.

iM'
-

**
· •
.
.~~lilllw...-..

Eaays are judled on the county,
-...a IIIIIC!evel Five- willDell from aFIIId the SIIIC wiJlsh.
be awdtcl $200. from.. these 8lell
wiuers, one overall winner will
Ja:eite - additional $300. On the
• • ty level, the top essay winner
wiD be awadot SSO.
•
AR:a and State awards will he .
lllllde Ill tbe OFSWCD's Summer
Me Ji•c iD ~wood (eteveland)
aeu Jllly. Cash awards are made
possible by the Support of Farm
ud Dairy DIIJIZine. Robert W.
Teater and the Ohio Farmers
U•ion. We encourage all high
ICIIOol Eagl!sh, Science and Vo-Ag
· ~Ds~nK:IDrl to make this informatiOn IYiilable to their Sllldents and
to IKe a la'ious loot at this excel-

·-·

GM to

=-. •. ·;::;6 ; ;.

SOOjobs in

Defiance

Browns top
Bears 27-14;
Bengals lose

lent prop8IIL
This year's conteSt asks IIUdenll
10 dilcuss who should pay • «!!Il
of IJ8riculmr.l polllllioo peO"CDtiOII
and cleanup and why they think
their's is the right solution. The
deadline for submitting essays is
March 1. 1993.
Conservation Essay enuy. forms
and complete contest details can be
6blained li:om Connie White at the
Oallia Soil and W~~« Conaervlllion
District office. at our new address
of 111 JackscmPike. Suite 1569
(next to lhe Fair Grounds) or call

cw ill -.a w
&amp;
from 1991·'92 and prices of fresh- to earn cub. aw..ts iD 1M wads ..a •
in
the
1993
~
&amp;.y
iq
IIJdr
adiJI'I*ICmarket oranges will remain
Conlelt.•
lila
lower," it said. ·
SJIO.IIIOn'd
by
tbe
Ohio
Fbkaa-,
AcconliJJ&amp; 10 PMJ »--.
Near-record production of Florition
of
Soil
and
Wilier
On
I ta• c-.. cl lk (jel!ia SoilMd
da glllpefruit is eltpected to boost
wllliua o· id. de
U.S. production and lower prices, tion Dislricii{OFSWCD)7dieCOD- Waa C
test is ~ ID all Sh"' nes ClllOIIcd o
.
_
.
aa
Ill ..,... • oldie
the report said.
in
grades
9-12
for
the
1992-93
..,...
he •*• '"Dis f*UiiW
The lemon crop is forecast up school year ill 111y public or pi¥111: rc ,.- J
10 u.aase dJeir
12 percent from 1991•92, the report
Q.
. .....
~Yiic:al
said.
.
446-8687.
add
.
It also said favorable weather
Constance S. White Is pro·
also olfen aiiDI:Iift a:asli
increased U.S. apple. pear and
; Cl1itomia
citrus
production
was
gram
admiDistrator for tile Gal· ·
'
!ill Couaty Soli aDd Water Coa,
:Jonx;ast ~ 4" pen:ent. it said. Texas grape crops ill 1992, puttin~ downD'_._.ct.
.
·.eillus OUI(!Ut was expecled to be the ward.pressurc on grower pnces.
servadon "'"'
"The
fmal
foecast
of
the
1992
e.hipest S1DCe the December 1989
1~_ _ _ _ _____:_ _~
' " - . but the forecast was only 25 U.S. apple crop was 4 percent more
~c~-~i
~·~rr-~o.~
than
1991
production
.
.'
'
Appl~
:pen:eot ci pre(Ieeze production.
DEFIANCE, Ohio {AP) ;. "Citrus fruit prices, at both prices were at record highs unul
DevelopmenL
.
.
dampened
br,
the
new
crop,
the
General
Molars Cxp. willllld SOO
•power and retail levels, have been. report said. ' Large 1992-93 crops
On 'rliursclay, the Labor .Department reports
jobs at il$ local J)luJt om' lbe Dexl
.. well below year-earlier prices for
weekly jobless claims and productivity for the third .
are
eltpecled
to
provide
ample
fruit
ihree years, 1 bcf~ance Couty
'AIIIIIlci 1992," lbe report said.
quarttt,
Commcn;e reportS factory onjels for Octoand lower prices.''
development official said.
', Florida's orange crop is forecast supplies
ber,
and
North American automakers report NovemHowever, decreased peach proTbe auimiW,. has applied for a
,up 33 percent, the report said.
ber
sales.
·
duction in the Easrem and Southern tax break on $30.8 miDjm .in po.;-''Lqer IUPPlies will move prices parts
On
Friday,
Labor
reports
on
November
employof the country reduced the posed improvements 10 it14S-~­
iof p•caasin~ oranges and orange 1992 crop.
menl
And suawberry produc- old Powea bain Division pilllt just ·
ijvice Iowa',' it added.
TICKER:
tion
was
expected
be .dowa 7 east of the nort1astem OWn city,
; Plentiful supplies of fresh-mar· percent from lhe 1991torecord.
E1115t &amp;. Young agreed 10 pay a record $400 milRon Kusina, the~ oo••11ic
lion to seu1e charges that the accoiUJiing firm inade1lcel oranges are expecled, the repolt
development
director, said Friday.
;Slid, due to an 8 percent larger CaJ.
quately audiltd four S&amp;Ls that later failed at a cost .
Probatiotl removed
Tbe new jobs are CXJ]CCICd ID be
:ifomia oavel crop. Valencia pro·
of
$6.6 billion ... Moody's Investors Service Inc.
WASHINGTON (AP)- The offered to thole laid OffiliileCOIIIf h01klii, however, is expecred to be Agriculture
downgraded
about $70 million worth-of General
Department has pany's national restructwing, be
'down 3 percenL
Motors
Corp.'s
dcbL ..Sales of U.S. built cars and
1 · "Overall, 1992-93 California removed a prohibition on importing said. Tbe plant now employs 3.870
trucks
rose
4.8
percent
in mid-November... Boeing
;&lt;nnge output will he up slightly seed potatoes from Prince Edward people.
Co.
is
cutting
prcxllietion
of its 757 and 767 jets by a
Island and Omario, Canad!L
GM 111110U11CCC1 earlier tblt lad
' third and may lay off as many as 2,500
castings work from Saginaw,
workers ...Russia repaid its overdue loans after _the
Mich., would be shifted 10 Defi·
AgriculUtre Department suspended it from a governance by the summer of 1994, and
ment eltport proglllm for nonpa)UIIent... Dcbt-mired
work from a castings plant iD SL
real estate developer Olympia &amp; York's U.S. unit
Catherinescq, Ontario, would be
struck a deal with a creditor... Honda Motor Co. was
uansfened by 1995, when that
evicted by U.S. car makers from the Motor Vehicle
plant cloees.
•
Manufacturers AssoCiation, their main trade.
Kusina
said
the
lias bcciJ
;.. · WASHINOTON (AP) - The
The response overwhelmed the
· gmup...Tbe FAA fined Delta Airlines $2 million for
:Apulture Department was del- agency. Johnson said. The lottery negotiating with G~ for
faili11g to follow proper maintenance
:u1ed with applications when it had to be postponed for more than several months over the t.erms of
proccdures. .. OPEC ministers agreed to cut the car·
·announced a louery to select 13 a month 10 allow the applications to · the proposed talt breaks, whic:b
tel's oil oroduction by 400.000 barrels a day, with
would c:ut the COIRJlllly's tax bur:new facilities for the importation . be ~essed properly.
most of tfJc reduction apparently coming from lllln.
den
on the improvcmcnu by 75
;and quarantine of ostriches and
'Each applicant could bid on
'limi1ar birds;
each of the available 13 openings, percent over 10 years.
~ "The response doubtlessly was so about 2,000 persons were
:Cueled by the current boomlet in responsible for the 20,000-plus Key Centurion annnounces January dividend
lEW AT
uading of eggs of osuiches and · applications received.'' the servic;e
CHARLESTON - Tbe Iloanl of .the c• 11iJ•J7 c:aJCIIIly .-b lint
Directors of Key Cenlllrion Bane- or SCCODd in awht slaare or
;ocher large, flightless birds, known said.
u ralites," said Billy Johnson,
When additional stations are shares, Inc:. (NASDAQJKEYC) • dqnsi!S iD fiw: cl Was V"qim's
dqluty administrator for veterinary needed, APHIS plans to use a less West Virginea's largest bank hold- six larJest cowuies ruled by
lCI'Yices in the Animal and Plant cumbersome selection system. ing company, has declared a quar. dqnsi15
Health Inspection Service.
Johnson said.
terly dividend of 17 cents per
Privately run, government· share. Tbe dividend, declared at the
:. Importers and traders believe
there is a developing market for supervised q~tine stations were Board's November 23 monthly
ostrich meat and hides. .
instjtuled when demand for import· meeting, will be paid on JanU8}' 1,
. Tlte inspection
service ed pets and exotjc birds far out- 1993, 10 shardlolders of record on
IIIIIIOUIICed plans for the 13 private- stripped available government December 11. 1992.
llnlutc gu
ly run, government-inspected facilities about 15 years ago. About
Key Centurion, with $3 billion
Import l!ld quarantine facilities in 30 stations are operating. The 13 in assets and $314 million in share81U, ..cl dMn
S!ytM
tbe 1u_ly 29 Fodera! Register.
new stations approved will be in holder equity at September 30,
~ .... lllclod, he.....,.. 2 ..cl 3-tldlcl, .....
Florida, Texas, California, New 1992, bas a market capillllization
_
Jersey, Arizona; Oklah.oma and exceeding $490 million. ~.
c'1 • • IMIIMefta.
.
. .... .... 0'0111 toe.
New York.
:- W ASHINOTON (AP) - Tbe
· cilrul crop for 1992-93 is expecled
·.40 be lhe largest in 13 years, the
~Department says.
FIOOda citrus productioo is projected to increase 31 percent
because ci favontble weail!er and a
larJer number of bearing trees,
;jccmliog to a rea:nt situation and
:"'!"J!Ioo!r SWIIIIIIr)' on fruit and tree

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

191
Pick 4:
1035
Super Lotto:
11-12-lS-30-3144
Kicker:
417766

PageS

•
•
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday; November 30, 1992

Vol. 43, No. 153
Copyrlghl8d 1H2

Corporate...

Sonle fear Clinton presidency will doom ARC
PIKEVILLE, Ky. - A Democratic president created the
'Appalachian Jl.egional ComiOission
21-years ago. And the last two
Republican administrations have
'tried to either cut or kill the agency.
: For the first lime in 12 years, the
".country has another Democrat in
·the White Hoose - Arkansas Gov.
Bill Clinton. But instead of tcviv·:ing the 13-state agency, ·Clinton
.might end .up finishing it Off, a for'

!USDA ostrich farm lottery
;draws heavy response

mer top ARC offiCial says.
"What is Gov. Clinton, who
really has very limited resources, ...
going to do about a commission
that certainly never did anything
for Arkansas?" asked Kentuckian
AI Smith, who was federal cochairman of the agency for three
years under the Carter and Reagan
administratiolls.
"A Democratic p~~~~:,
tum out to be
il

ARC ... than the two Republican
presidents."
The ARC was created in 1965
as part of President Lyndon B.
Johnson's War on Poverty to build
an infrasbUcture in the mountainous regions of 13 Appalachian

states.

Since then, the agency has
pumped about $6 billion into 399
coumies in portions of Alabama,
Georgia, Kentucky, Maryland,

....,.,
....
,
c..,...

...lba--...
,,,..,,.

: · MARIETTA - The Board of
' Dbeclon of ~les Bailcorp Inc.
;decllred a quarterly dividend in the
:. .ount of $0.26 per share for
~ Stock. The dividend will
1;c paid on January 4, 1993, to
- ~"'lkkm of record on December 15, 1992.
, ·~ ~ BIIIICOIP has two major
, ~ projects: a seven-lane
·llli*Jr bloking facility in Marietta
:aM 111 addition to the historic
w.riella Office on Putnam Street.
Tile automobile office was com. __, in mid.october and opened
· ~fo£ business October 26, 1992.
: Cc 1 1 iiCtion of the Marietta Office
: •MifMI!JI is progressing according to
· ' jldledule, with the outer strucrure
"iilollly fmisbcd and interior work
: iecelldy beginning. The addition
; *"1M be compleled in mid-1993.
• • ~ Bancorp Inc. is a South: jj n m Oliio bank holding compa: n.y with headquarters in Marietta.
: Brii'lli offJCeS are also in Athens,
: Jcpe.Caldwell, Chesterhill, Low·
· ell, McConnelsville and Nel: IOIWille.

...
,. '.

!.!',..."==-=

Milk production up
WASHINGTON (AP) - Milk
production in the 21 major states
during Octolx7 totaled 10.6 billion
pounds, 3 percent more than pro·
duction in the same states during
the same monlh last year.
There were 8.25 miUJon cows,
98,000 less than in October 1991.
The 21 major states produced 32
billion pounds of mille during the
July-September period.

PARKERSBURG LIVESTOCK. MARKET, INC.
Mineral WeDs, WV
'
November 21, 1992
, 'S'IOCK STEERS:
80.00-105.00
. 300-under
70.00-98.00
300-SOO
- S()0-700
. 65.00-84.00
; II(Xk)ver
70.00-77 .so

•HEATING
•HOT WATER
•COOKING

\

The WMIIllh Of wood.,.
the convenltnce ot gu.

=:m~

179.95NAT
281.86 LP .

.

18" &amp; 30" •llo available

SEE US FOR
FUll,
BUSINESS·AND IIDISTIY·

•d
IV &amp; IPPLIIIICI
R1 enours •• a111a ·
985·3307

CIISIEI

199•95 NAT

Glo Fire Deluxe
f~ Oak
24 Set

318.115 LP
11" ........ .

69.00-89.00
68.00-84.00
56.00-77.00
S4.00-72.00

; S()0-700

• . II(Xk)ver

- 'STOCK BULLS:
300-under

90.00-107.00
70.00-100,00
. 62.00-82.00
47.00-56.00
425.00-870.00
40.()().61 .00
350.00-5700.00

·~soo

'S()0-7()()

'Slaughter Bulls
Cows &amp; Calves BH
:Bled Cows By II
Bftld Cows BH
Slaughter Cows:
• Hi~ Dressing
Utliily

44.00-50.00
40.00-44.00
33.0041.00

CI!IDer &amp; Cutler

VEAL:
. ·. Oioice
Medium

91.00-116.00
87.00-94.00
70.00-86.00

O'DELL LUMBER CO.
"BEST LITTLE LUMBER YARD IN TOWN"

AT

AVE.

•

STREET THIRD
GALUPOUS 446-1276

ST.

634 E. MAIN
POMEROY 1182-66011

HERE COMES THE PARADE· Hundreds
or people turned out ror the annual Christmas
parade In Pomeroy on Sunday aheraoon. The
theme or the parade, spoasored by !be Pomeroy
Merchants Association, was "Home Along lbe

-()ood

,LAMBS:

Ewes
-811Gb
'Peel'tn

25.00-31.00
22.00-32.00
S4 .()().61.00

45.00-130.00
46.00-60.00

·Biby Calves BH
-HORSEScwt
Panies B.H.

·HOGS:
••200-250
:300-SOO
· Male Hogs

I:Pt,s .

75.00-210.00
38.00-SO.OQ
27.0049.00
22.00-33.00 .
5.00-30.00
25.00-65.00

.

•ao.ts
.
'J1Jerc will boa sale November 28, 1992.

92 ROADMASTER STATION WAGON wwtewilhwoodgraii..-SAVE $4382
'

$

92 BUKK REGAL 4 DR. i.I.,•---·------..SAVE 3000
92 ROADMASTER SEDAN..._,..~
- - - ·....-.....--....-..SAVE s4095
92 PARK AVENUE ea..,.,..
, •o '~•••• ..........;; .......---··--SAVE $8000
\

...,..,.,.estl• ¥••

'
$
Pkg.-.- ..........SAVE

3800

River "92" and several of the entries created
theme related noats. Also duriDg the aflernOCHJ
shoppers enjoyed browsing throuah their
favorite dowutowu businesses which were
observing open bouse.

::Retailers encouraged
:by,Jirst weekend results
,'

:. NEW YORK (AP)- Ameri; cans shopped enthusiastically at
· malls and stores during the Thanksgiving weekend, showing signs or

And the man whose ideas led 10 the
ARC says the agency's approach
migh~st t1Je toollhe president·
elecJtohn D. . Whisman ,. 12 • of
Winchester, Ky., fli'SI broached the
idea of a regional development program for Appalachia in the late
1950s. His plan led to the 1960
ConferenCe of Appalachian Oovernors, which helped develop the legContinued on page 3
.

'

'

The approval of an $8,800 Issue
Two water project application was
discussed recently when Racine
Village Council· met in recessed
session.
The project will allow the village to raise its water well casings
above the ·flood plain and for construction of a well house. Environmental Protection Agency regula- .
lions require that the well casings
to be above the flood plain so that
ground water cannot enter the supply. Othe:rWise, the viUage would
be classified as having ground
water as a source aod a treatment
plant would be required.
The villalle matching share in
lhe project will be $5,100. Bids on
the project will be opened at a spe·
cial meeting Monday. ·
Discussion on the sewer project
manholes needing attenJion was
held in light-of the completion of a
paving project. Cooncil feels that
the sewer district should be respon, sible for raising the manholes, and
Mayor Frank Cleland reported that
the district supervisor has b.een
notified that the work would be
done.
Olen Rizer, street commissioner, reported that the Community
Development Block Grant project
of tying in water lines from Vine 10
Main and to the water main on
State Route 124 by lhe high school

.

has been completed, with ·minor
clean-up being the only work
remaining.
Several new fire hydrants were
installed in the project and some
residents could rece~ve a reduction
in their fire insurance now thai they
are closer 10 a hydrant. Residents
are urged to check with lheir insur-

anceagenl
Cleland discussed a recent meeting he attended at the courthouse
concerning money available for
misdemeanant jail facilities. He
reported lhat because of lhe lack of
jail space, he is having a difficult
time m enforcing the law, especially charges of driving under the
influence, where a three-day jail
sentence is required.
Council approved the renewal of
a fife protection contract with ~ut·
ton Township for (hree years.
Accrirding tp the terms of the cootract, Racine and Syracuse both
received 40·perccnt of the townShip
fire funds, while Bashan Fire
Department received 20 percent.
Lebanon Township's fire contract
is also up for renewal and action is
expecled in December. A five-year
contract with Letart Township is
not up for renewal at lhis time.
Council passed an emergency
measure authorizing the Board of
Public Affairs 10 spend money over
$1,000 for cleaning and emergency

repairs to the water well.
Council also approved a measure authorizing the Board or Public Affairs to have work done on
the aerator building, replace piping,
and other work. in the amount of
$3,500.
Councilmen Ron Clarl&lt; and Jeff
Thornton will contact the residents
who live along a private road running from Main Sueet to John
Dudding's residence. 10 see if they
will deed their sections of the roadway to tbe village. With the village
not owning the roadway, it is illegal for the village to spend tax
money oli maintaining and/or
paving the private property.
It was noted that all of the village streets have been paved with
hot mix with Issue Two and viUage
street maintenance funds since ·
1989. Cleland reportecj, that since
t!Je village first recelved_lssue Two
funds in 1988, the v11Iage has
received $97,013 in state money
while matching it with $41,319.39
in viUage money to hot mix village
streets. Total paving funds spent
are $138,332.39.
Cutrently, lhe village expects 10
receive $8,800 in Issue Two money
· and match it with $5,100 to lllise
the well casings and construct a .
well house on each casing. This
makes a ootal of $105,813 received ·
Continued on page 3

'

Chester teaching staff discusses
programs with Eastern board
Meeting in regular session last
week the Eastern Local Board of
EduCiilion heard presentations from
the teaching staff of Chester Elementary School regarding various
progwns IDICicrway there.
Ron Hill, head teacher, introduced members of the staff, who
then gave presentations to the
board. Pat Shrivers, fifth grade
teacher, discussed the school's
involvement wilh lhe Martha Holden Jennings Ocant, as well as olher
programs, such as book club, student council, parent volunteer propam and a writing and mathematICS grant.
Joyce Hill, first grade teacher,
discussed programs develo11ed
from the Rural Demonstrauon
Model Project Grant. Among the
programs discussed were the 100
Percent Club, Chester Pride, computer U'aini~g. ~irthday recognition,
and upcommg m-seMCe programs.

Mike Will, sixth grade teacher,
presented information regarding
lhe Lead Teacher Project, and the
attendance of staff at the National
Council of Teachers of Mathematics Conference. Superintendent
Richard Smith praised the Chester
staff for taking a "proactive leadership role" in the programs.
Smith mentioned the State
Financial Conference on December
9 at Veterans Memorial Auditorium in Columbus. He discussed the
pessibilities of the superintendent
and any board members interesred
in attending the conference; ·smith ·
also discussed the "real potential"
for state funding cuts in January.
Dorothy Bentz and D. Michael
Mullen were employed as sqbstitute teachers 10 be used on an asneeded basis only for lhe remainder
of the school year.
The board approved the notice
of commendation resolutions for

the students who have made the
honor roll for the first nine-week
grading period.
The disposal and/or sale of an
old well pump IJld water soflening
tank at Tuppers Plains Elementary
School was approved. The board
also approved amendments to
appropnations and transfers into
the lunchroom fund and uniform
supply flUid.
The board passed a resolution
employing the firm or Means,
Bichimer, Burkholder and Baker
Co., L.P.A., as special counsel
regarding a personnel issue.
The date of December 17 at
6:30 p.m., was set as the date and
time of the next regular meeting of
the board, to he held at the high
school.
Present, in addition to Smith,
were Board President Ray Karr.
Vice President Jim Smith, and
members Ron Eastman, Bill Hannum and Mike Martin.

'

ending their long Christmas
drought and giving retailers an
encouraging start to the holiday
season.
·
.
Several big storeowners said
Sunday their business lhis weekend
was up sharPly from the depressed
levels of a year ago. But they also
noted that sales remained weak in
California, which has lagged
.behind the rest of the country in
recovering from the recession.
"We expecled strong sales for
tl!e post-Thanksgiving weekend
and 11 was Stronjl. with the exception of CalifOFII," said Kenneth
Macke, chairman of Dayton Hud-·
son Corp.
At Sears, Roebuck and Co ..
"The. buying mood was more
upbeat than It was the last two
years," said Mau Howard, senior
vice p!eSident for nwtcllng. 'JWe
were quite pleased wilh the busi·
ne8s. It was a very Aood kickoff for
tbe holiday season.
And Duncan Muir, a J.C. Penney Co. Inc. spokcS111BD, said slore
managers he spoke to were pleased

with their results.
Yet despite the season's auspicious start, the refailers remained
wary, perhaps remembering the
disappointing holiday seasons of
1989, 1990 and 1991. "At this
point, we're still cautiously optimistic about lhe balance of the season," Howard said.
That caution is understandable
- there are still signs that many
consumers, while feeling bet.ter
about the economy and shopping
this Christmas, are again working
within a tight budget:
. Dayt"n Hudson's strongest
business was at its lower-priced
Target
discount
Stores,
spokeswoman Ann Bartelew said.
The company's Mervyn's clothing
stores did not fare as well, but its
most popular items included gifts
within a specific price range, such
as under $10 or IDICicr $20.
There also were signs that
augured well for the season.
Sears had good s81es in most of
its merchandise lines, including
" big-ticket" items·
·

MADD KICK OFF • Tbe Meigs Count7
Chapter of Motbers Alalnst Drunlr; Driving
kicked off MADD'au1ual red ribbon campalp
on Saturday. Here, R111 Flsller, MADD Vice
President,
to ollk:lall, law enforcement
omcersaod memllera rl !be publk wbo attended

speau

•

'
I

\

92 BUKK SKYLARK 2 DR. Wlilsw/.-rocce~tpaint.~---..SAVE s250Q

92 LeSAIRE CUSTOM

1992 Heritage Queen for tl!e Pomeroy Mer·
chants Assoclatloa. The tblldreu visited Mr.
Claus Ia tbe mial-park oa Court .Street. (See
additional parade pictures ou page 10).

348.115 LP

~;

STOCK HEIFERS:
·300-onder
: -300-soo •

A VISIT WITH SANTA - Greg MU5Ser was

nrst ID !IDe to sit on Santa's lap 'QQ Sunday •fter·

:noon rollowina I be Cbrist~as parade In
:Pomeroy. Santa Was asslstfll by April Hudson,

229o95 NAT

gan and Bush administrations.
When Smith took office in
1979, the ARC had a $381 million
budget. But Reagan consistently
refused to include money for the
ARC in his budgets, and Bush tried
to cut it almost in half.
The last two years, the commission has operated on $190 million.
clinton has talked about
rebuilding the countty's infmbUctore and ''investing in growth.''

Racine council reviews progress
on Issue 2 grant applications

.

O'DEll$

Farm wages up
WASHINGTON (AP) - Average wages paid by U.S. farm operators this year were $6.06 per hour,
compared wilh $5.79 during 1991.
There were 3.25 million people
working on the nation's farms and
ranches durin$ the week or Oct.
11-17, the Agriculture Department
said in a report this month on farm
labor. That compares with 3.29
million during lhe October survey
week last year.
Benefits such as housing and
meals were provided to 39 percent
of the hired workers during the survey week, compared with 37 percent in October 1991.

Mississippi, New York, North Carolina, Ohio. Pennsylvania, South
Carolina, Tennessee, Virjlinia and
West Virgiriia. West Virgmia is the
only _SUite fully within lhe climmission's cove111fie area.
Tbe ARC has helped build miles
of badly needed roads, sewer and
water lines. and clinics, in addition
to educational and other programs.
But the ageney has had to fight for
its very existence during the Rea'

..

....

1 Section, 10 P'l!" Z5 C.Cta
A MuiUmedU. Inc. ...._peper

',

.

..Peoples Bancorp
InC. annOUnCeS
quarterly dividend

La.. tonlgblln upper 201.
Tuesday, cloudy. Hlgb uou.cl
40.

the ceremony, held al tbe Pomeroy parkiD!llot.
Tbe tradltiOD of ''tyiol oae 011 for safet)'" begin
In 1986. The reel rlbbool are tied ollto car aerial
anteDDie ill snpport or sober drlviDg durin&amp; the
holidays and throughout the year.
. .

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