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Paga 10-The Deily Sentital

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WEATHER MAP - lkonn IJIIelllll alq llle C•D!•ian bOrder
aad aloq llle Glllf c;:ou&amp; will br•l preciJ!IIalloa 1o 111e aorlbera

c
I

ud -~~sen

frlllaw olllle udoa, willie qulel wealher prevalll
eiNwhere. Hlp Jll -re frtm lbe frtm lbe Grell Buill 1o the
.mld-AIIaDIIc 1t1te1 wUI provide ceae.rally fair wellllier ud
Jl'leiiiDIIemperlt-. (VPI)

I

snow again Monday and fair
weather Tuesday. Hl&amp;h temperatures In the 30s wtll fall into the 20S Sunday, with hl&amp;hs ranrtnr
from the teens to the n~ l!D
Monday and 'fuesday. OVernight
lows will be In the 30s early
Sunday and ran&amp;ini from five to
15 Monday and Tuesday
mornings.

and an F-15-e Strike Eagle. No
other details were available.
A British Tornado warplane
went dolll'llln Iraq with an engine
fire, and sell'Cbers were looking
for the missing pilot and navlga.
tor. Tbe MinistrY or Defense said
. a second Royal Alr Force Tor·
nado fighter bOmber and Its crew
·of two failed · to return ~te
Thuraday.
Italy reported .one of Its ·Tor·
nado f!gbter·bombers failed to
return from a night mlaslonearty
Friday. There were no details on
the two crewmen.
. .
Kuwait said one of Its planes
also was sbot down.
Tbe French Defense Minis try
said a squadron of Jaguar
fighter-bombers attacked an
Iraqi munitions depot In Kuwait
Friday an&lt;! returned safely to
base. There was" no report on
damages.
· · ·
Iraq said Friday It was dlstrl·
bu tlng hundreds of thousands of
rifles to citizens In Baghdad and
other ~Illes to help the army fight
the war.
"Baghdad has tilrned Into a
forest lull of fighters, whose
weapons will force the enemy
planes to fiy at high altitudes In
the sky," Iraqi. Paruament
Spea"'r Saadl Mabdi Saleb satd
In remarks 1carrled by Baghdad '
Radio, . monitored In Cairo,
Egypt. . ,
Iraqi Information MIIJlster
Latif Nasslm Jasslm said, "The
war will not be easy and may not
be short because no one can
predict the will of the Iraqi
people."
Jordan, Iran and Syria braced
for returees fieelng from the war
In the gulf.

3

~eigs .

announcements

Eutera BOIII'd -as
: The Easlaa Local Board of
EducaliOn, meeting in regular session on ~.IIJlPioved the sellDig of Olie used bus. ADyonc illter·
• ·• eStcd may submit a bid to the
~·s office by Feb. 14.
- .
.

..

RiverYiew Gardea Cl.. to meet
: The Riverview Gilden Club will
!l)eel Jan. 24 at the bome of Mrs.
Grace Weber at 7:30 p.m. Gladys
~ will serve as co-hostess. ·

'
'

,.HHVRDD comlllittee to meet

.

The n:gw. monlhly Jllfetjng of
the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District Bx·
eculive Commiaee will be beld Jan.
29 at 7:30 p.m. ill the confcmlce
room of the BH-HVRDD offices
lcx:aled on Washiagton County
Road 9. The J:'sonnel commiaee
will meet ill
offices of the elt•
eculive din:ctor at6;30 p.m. .

BOOIIters to •eet
The Meigs JuniCI'
High
Academic Boostm will meet
TuesdaY at 7:30 p.m. ill the Meigs
Junior High cafereria.

:!~~te=:.b

monitored In
"So let America hear the
wa!Ung of ber daughter, planted
In 11\e heart of the Arab nation,
after America tried to spare her
tbe hardships and losses of war
and .tried to compensate for the
losses of agrresslon by spllllng
tbe blood of the American people
and other naUons."
The Emuan Clblnet and
~ATO ambassadors held emerrency meetings to dlacu11 , the
attack.
Britain strongly condemned
tbe attack but called on Israel to
refrain from responding In order
to preserve the anti·Iraq
-coalition.
. ·
. ·

. : Emma Wea¥17 Lcdlie, 74, of
I;angsville, died Thlll'lda
. •
J~uary. 17, 1991 It ~~­
Cal Celiter. She WU 1 homemaker.
She wu born Aug. 6, 1916 in
S ton Mo •'- .........,,_ of •'u Homa'
'
·• ""'
and
Alice Waver.
· · She wu a member of the
Langsville Chrislian Olureb and a
. member of the Harrisonville Order
of Eas1an Star No. 2.55.
; She is survived by ber Husband,
Wdliam Bc:m1nt Lcdlie, LangsYil·
te; two dauabrm. Clrol Ritter,
Cbesbire, ancf Mrs. 11m (Shirley)
u......._.., Col..-'-- 1 "'"'-

-&amp;-·- """

I•

M";;"~. of'~ Pie;".;~

W.Va.; two blolhen, Hcrbeit
Weaver, Lady Lake, Fla., and Mar·
ellS W&lt;eave~: ' ~ ""'""

a-

~ M:;:.,~··u~)
Bays, IDd Jodi Riller, bolh of
Chcshin:, and Chrislllpber Merrill,
u_.___.. ....... .,- 1immy ...,.WUIIII
...
..........
Hac:iwortb, all of Columbus; IJid a
sister-in-law, Dmothy Woodard,

U.S. officials said the U.S.jets
lost Included an F-18C, piloted by
Lt. Cmdr. Michael S. Speicher,
Ccmecery.
. 33, assigned to the USS Saratoga.
The family will n:c:eive friends No hometown was released because Speicher Is listed as
one bour_priCI' to the service.
mlssln&amp;ln action.
Pentaron spokesman Claude
RoDin Wolf~
Young said two other U.S.
aircraft failed to return to 'their
· RolliD L. 'Wolfe, 76, of 377 Lin· home base and were declared
coln SL, Middleport, died Thursday
missing - a Navy A~ Intruder
Jan. 17, 1991 at'Vetr-·
_orial
.... ... ..
....,.
..
Hospillll following a brief illness.
· Born on Nov. 23, 1914 at
Minenville, he wu the son or the
GAU.iPOUII'niCIIYAIIDS
!ale Waver and Delta Cmoll
Wolfe. He n:linld aeveral years ago
from the Americao Agn:gates,
Mm
Frame lA IlNers:
................................. ll .... lU...
Columbus. He wu a Jllelllb« of
. . . . . . . ......................... IJ.If.lU..
Masonic J...Odge 164, F. and A.M.,
tt....J••
-.vt' ................................ . . . . ..
Pomeroy fCI' 3"5 years.
,:
• • • • Pnme 161Belfen:
Mr. Wolfe is survived by hls
wife, Margan:lba Wolfe, Mid·
.:.,.
dlcport; fo..- sons. Jim Wolfe of
....,..,,... !'" ''" '''""''' ' ' " " " ' · · · ·
Milwaukee, "W'JS.,. FIM Wolfe of
.................................ll.lf.'JI.II
Middleport, John 'Wolfe of
D f1D•Cew•
Pomeroy, and Hllold Wolfe of
tllltltloo ••·•Nt.M: c••••, 1c...·. ,
If: LlaM ....... low IT'- COWl
Phoenix, Ariz.; three dluldtters, ......
Pauline Reuter of · Middleport, • • ...uw llilf..............
Cathy r:-~- Of CDIC';,Ot; - A
tllWIIoo IUI'It.M: Caaaor/C
""' ...,
. ..Ier
Deln Milia' of Columbus; two llisVeoiC..._,
.
.
ten, Roaeua Dreaer and Beatrice
Cillolee/frlme ll.lt-lN.M; llotlam
Vetel'llll Mem«&lt;aa B111pltaJ
l'ollldwale, bolh of Columbus; a
51.:.:-ar.~: ~ c-C.../Call
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS •
1J1.1t- .. YVODDe ·Reltmlre,
Syncase;
.
~f-c!,~=l :_
- · lloWo: .
·
· Clarenc:e Gntellel', Rac:bte; Helea
10 grandchildren, IJid four great·
A.· wnu...., Mlddleport; ud

J.:angsville.

.

; Berlcles 11er pants, she

was

.,.eceded ill 4eadl by I • • Helen
servilii will be beld

.&lt;tt:na:laJ

War ...

l Livestock ·report 1
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--lloL . ... . . . . . . . . . ..
- ........ ..... .......... ..,.. ................
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.................................... .•
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Hospt"taJ
_ news

.....

Stocks
Qall11toet pdcel
••·.II a.m.)
(-•- of ..
~.::: : : :

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may eall at the funeral
home Friday from 7 to 9 and SaJur.
dsy from 2 10 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Muonic riles will be caidlJcted It
. 7 p.m. Salunlay.

~ Eiectrlc Power .. ~ .(JblaDd 011 ........ ,...............30)1

.

~

Organizational
ATII'f ..... ~ ................
31%
·
~ Evw ....... ;............. ,.... l5% meeting slated

=r=.:1~~=
-~.

A local board made up 011 Meigs
County citi2ena will determine bow
the funds awarded 10 the county an:
to be distribUted ainong !he geney food
.
and shelter JX08111111S
run by local service
· ·
ill the ·are&amp;. The local~
also be ~nsible for recommendiitg agencies to receive these funds

oo.d.
· · g
have a. voluntary
.
organiZIItonS are urged to apply.
Meigs Qlunty has disll'ibuted
emergency food and shelter funds
. previouslv with !he Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency. Fur·
-~ information on the program
may be obtained by cqntact!ng Sidney Edwards, Executive Din:c!CI',
Gallia·Meigs Community Action
Agency. :

Treasurel" Buck releases
Middleport
financial report
,,
.
Ballllces iii all Middleport Vii!age funds at the end of , 1990
· totaled $246,087.30, according ,to
the montbly report of Jon Buck,
clert-IIWuret.
Total reCeipts fCI' the month, illeluding some fund 11'811sfen, IDtaled
388,015.39 with disbursements
totaling $297,856.60.
The bala~ ill the general fund
was $2,976.08 with n:c:eipls beillg
$174,693.91 and disbursemeniS of
. $153,1195.75. Then: . wen: no
receiptS into the police fund fer the
income tax fund but disbanemeniS
wen: $20,970.24 from the ~lice
and safety fund. and $2, 74ii3
from the income tax fund.
In the .street maintenance fund,'
receipiS totaled $40,609.41 with
disbursements ''"'""nw
~... 27 oJ~79•34 .
leavin~ a halance of $126.30 at the
end 0 the year. The mini-JI(IIf fund
had receip!S of $!,200 'Nidi disbur·
semenu or $340.90 and becauae of
a deftcit in November showed only

'

~ Mason · Family
Rt. 33

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Restaurant
Mason,

WV

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Internal Medicine

_ ,

Ray Karr 'Will elected preeident
and
OWiea Knigbl, vice Jinljdenl,
Qood)'ear TAR ............... ....18"
Qf
the
Butan Local llcllnl of
~ CeDturloD .,.,,,,.,, .. ,, ....... 11 ,
MrMjcmat•~
Ittncll' J!Dd.........................15"
t:lml1ed IJie........................ 20~ mec:cing bel4 Tuelday niabt •
.
)JuJUmec!ll IDe...................59)1 Eulem HiP Scbool.
The bolrd let the dllnl WednesJllx ~ta.IIJ'Uitl ................. 'n
day of •
111011111 at 6:30 p.lll. •
Flolablllllr ...,.,. ········~···· .... 20 !be daliD IDd time for lbe reaular
!llolll)''alae....................... 12~
.9ta.r Baat............................ l? · meeting. The next mud:\,will be
WeildY'• Iat1. ...................... 6% beld • 6:30 p.m on Feb. in tile
high scllool cafeteria.
WortiiiJlltODIDd.......... ;,,,,,22%

Office Hours: ·
Monday through friday

· 9 a.m .. ~ p.m.
· Suite 13, PVH Medical

MoruA~·IiuoAY, 8 .ui-Il.u.

Featuring: Fresh.Scrambled Eggs,
Homestyle Biscuits, Dani.sh,
Muffins, Pancakes, ~nd
'
~ M~ch, Much Morel

.

omce BuiiCIIng

(304) 675-7700

.

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lid 'PlEASANT VAll E.Y HOSPII'AL

. . . . Tlta family ol,.,._,

ONLY

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75 et!nts

College basketball results

Famlly
roots are
traced in
- Ireland

JaJilftl
. Sands:
-

*2.99

Rt. 33

(804) 773-5821

Muon, WV

(NEXT TO MASON EXXON)

. ·,

"·

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C-1
\

Inside:

Opera houee was once IOt'Jded in buDding
whieh houae&amp; Central Supply Co. - B-5

Aloaclbe River ......... Bl-7
B u i -.................... Dl-8
Comics· .............. ~ .... Ia.ert
. Claulfleda ................. Dt-7
Death• ....... ........ .......... AS
Edltorlalo onooo onooooo oooooooA2
Farm ........................ Ql-8
Sporllt ....................... Cl·6

I Area hoop action: · .
· ·
. Southern, Hann~ Tl'ace and l.osan cagen
·' lnaintain respeetive loop l~s - C section

.

Cloud)'. mp !11 mid
Chance ol preclpltat ton 50 .
cent.

ts
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Vol. 26 No. 150

14 leatl6no, 14 Pogn
A MultiiMdle Inc . N-op-r ·

Middleport-PQnta'OY-Gallipou.-Point Plaaaaut. January 20, ,1991

Copyriglltlcl 1991

Bush ·confers . with aides, reassures Israel
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Pres!dent Bush twice reassured Israe! Saturday that the United ·
States was working furiously to
halt further Iraqi missile attacks
and apparently won an Israeli
pledge to hold offtor the moment
on any retaliation.
Closely monlfortng the .tense
developments In the Persian Gulf
corifllct, Bush met at midday
wlth his top diplomatic and

national security' advisers to · the Jewish state would continue ·
to hold ott from any reprisal
assess the J.day-old war, which
was greatly complicated near action.
Tbat remained condiUonai;
dawn by a second missile attack
however, on whether there were
against IsraeL
further Iraqi attacks.
But. heartened In part by the
The United States tears an
limited extent of the second
Israeli
reprlsahvould jeopardize
attack and ,by the two "very .
the
28nation alliance
positive" phone calls trom Bush
Saddam
Hussein, which
to Israeli Prime Mlnls~r Yltzsome
Arab
states
hak Shamlr, admlnlstratloJ! ortlIsrael,
clals expressed optimism tbat

Egypt.
Shortly after Bush sum,noned
his top advisers to his Camp
David mountain retreat to confer
on the war against Iraq, Bush
telephoned Shamir for a second
time to convey the ·massive,
around-the-clock U.S. effort to
' 'seek out and destroy the missile
launchers." "
White House press secretary
Marlin Fitzwater declined to

Ohioans· back attack
CLEVELAND (UP!)- A poll hit one of the aircraft carrlers.out
conducted on the evening of the there and It went down, It could
second day of the war In, the change very quickly," said Gor·
Middle East showed four out or don s. 'Black. ''People at · this
every five Ohioans In favor . of point don't believe It's going to be
President Bush's decision to a very long war,"
The telephone poll of 81,8 ·
attack.
Results of the Gordon Black Ohioans had a margin of error of
. poll . published ·in Saturday's plus or minus 3;5 percentage
Cleveland Plain Dealer said 81.9 points. That means, according to
percent of the Ohioans surveyed . the pollster, support for Pres!·
favored the attack, 11.8 percent dent aush's actions could be as
opposed It, 5.9 percent said they high as 85.4 percent or as low as
..
didn't know and 0.2 percent 78.4 percent.
the
attack was
Support
for
refused comment.
·
strongest
among
males
and
The pollster, however, cautinon-blacks.
Among
males,
89.2
oned that such public opinion
percent favored the attack, CQm·
polla could change rapidly.
(Stle OHIOANS, on All)
.
"If we have an ExOcet missile

characterize .Shamir's response. to suppress and destroy the
''1just can'tspeaktothequesUon mobile Scuds," and pressed him
of assurances." Sut he did add, In both calls to continue to
"It was a very positive remain outside the conflict now
conversation.' '
under way In the Persian Gulf.
And another official 5ald, ."We • Asked If Bush was able to tell
have ·always asked for restraint the Israeli how many or the
and they (Israel ) have been very mobile missile launchers had
forthcoming."
been taken out, the spokesman
According to Fitzwater, Bush declined to be specific .
assured the prime minister: "We
" The president obviously
will -use every resource possible talked to the . prime minister
"a bout the ... amount of successes
and achievements that We've had
and he obviously talked to him
about showing restraint," said
Fitzwater.
While the presidential diplomacy was under way at Camp
.. Oavld, an Iraqi diplomat was ·
summoned for the first time
since the conflict began Wednesday to the State Departmeilt to be
reminded of the Geneva Convention accords on the treatment of
.· (See BUSH, pace A3l _

fordan's king

. ·
warns agalnst
'

• •
•
alr
lnvaswn
•

Gallia· school ·butlget
shows money problem
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Schools budget released
recently for the 1991-92 school
year is representative of the
district's financial problems .
The budget, released Jan. 15,
all~r $11,794,200 In revenue
co~to the school district.
This figure Includes the $1
million loan the district received
recently to tide It over unUIIt can
collect revenue from .the 3.75-mlll
levy passed In November; How·ever, the budget calls for expen- .
dltures of $12,573,430.
The 1990-91 budget Included .
$10,517,939 In the gener;ll fund,
which also Included a $1 miiUon
loan, and expenditures or
$12,500,887. This deficit necessitated going Into the State Loan
Fund, administered by the State
Department or Education, last
spring to 5e!! the district through
the end ur the fiscal year. .

•

AMMAI'f, Jordan ( UPI) -::- A
solemn. Klftll, Hussein or Jordan
warned agalnat the rerlons's
"slide Into darkliess" Saturday,
but reiterated a warning that the
· Jordanian military would defend
the ktnrdoin' s air space from
both Israel and Iraq.
The Jordanlall king, who has
deplored the air strtkes on Iraq
by the U.S. -Ied force attempting.
to oust Iraq from Kuwait, said In
a news conference he believed
' 'the effort that was put Into the ·
mUitary option was Infinitely :
greater than anythln&amp; that happened In the diplomatic realm." .
Hussein called for a ileacetut .
end to the fighting without ·
offering a specific plan · fol' :
negotiations.
Calling the situation "a slide

According to Gailla County
Local Schools Superintendent
Robert Lanning, the $1 mllllon
loan just obialned was borrowed
against andclpated revenue
from the new levy. lle said he
expects the district may ·have to
stnc:e September. Tbe twln1 are .resldlng wltb
borrow more than $1.8 mllUon
TYING YELLOW RIBBONS • Josb)ll and
tbelr IP'andparenll, Rev. and Mn. KeDDetb
from the state between Aprtl 1'
Jam~ Baker, l·r, remember their rather, Sgt.
Baker
of Raclae. They are
tying yellow
and May I to again see the
Ricky Bilker or 10llt Alrb0111e Divlson, wbo Is
to
tbe
fill
pole
at
e
Elemeatai'J'
in
ribbons
district through the fiscal year. · servin11 with Operatloa Desert Storm in tbe
boaor
or
their
rather
who
will
be
ooe
or
tbe
fir~
The payback to the state comes . Middle East. Sgt. Baker, wbo has been Ia tbe
ground troops to adyance witb tbe Marines tr
out or the district's monthly
. servl~ for nine years, has been ill Saudi Arabia
any
II'Oillld ac:tlon is taken.
allotment from the State Found a·
·
don Subsidy Payment, which ·
leaves the district with little or no
money from the state to continue
0'
how, by some miracle, we will
Its day-to-day operations, he
said.
! _J..:.. .
turn the - comer away from
res~n
hatred and destruction '" toShrinking tax revenue, partie·
wards peace."
ularly from the John M. Gavin
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
safe return home. In addition tile
His leuer reads:
He called tor the ·battle to be
and Kyger Creek power plants,
Tlmes-8entlnel News Starr
legionnaires are usillg yellow rib"Hello from Saudia Arabia!
pu~ " on hold for a period of time
and Infiatlon, are being blamed
POMEROY
Flying the bons on trees and other locations .. I am writing · this letter to thank to enable all people qf goodwill to ·
for the financial faclnr the
American
tlag,
putting
a lighled around their homes to show their the people of Meigs County ~for try what has not .been tried yet
district.
1
candle in the wmdow, displayillg suppon. Numerous schools and writing me.
adequately, the approach of
Unfol'JWIIItely I do not have the dialogue and quiet diplomacy .•. ".
yellow ribbons, even wriung the otlier organizations in Meigs
·troops, ~ all ways of showing COiinty have joilled in the yellow time to answer all of the leiterS.
When questioned by reporters;
support for those servillg in Opera- ribbon campaign,
Things in Saudia 1llll goillg alright Hussein reiterated that white •
lion DesenStorm.
On Feb. 3, ·the Auxiliary and We'~:e all anxious to get this ovo- Jordan wanted .no part of the.:
Syracuse resident Joann Smith Llgion will observe Four Chaplains with soon!
current confliCt, It would defend •
says that she"will fly her flag until Sunday combininl it with a special
I hope your support for us is still Itself from Incursions Into Its ;
the war in the Middle East is ovo- service of prayer for those serving high. We all prormse to do our.very territory.
••
and
~other
n:sideniS
ID
joill
her
in
Operation
Desert
Storm
at
the
best
for
the
U.
S.
and
all
of
you.
I
"
...
this
Is
a
sovereign
cQuntry
la!Jor charges and put them Into
one charge," Chapman said. as a show of support for the: scr- Middleport Fint Baptist Church, hope to Jetum to Meigs County af. · arid we will d,etend. our terrttocy •
· comer of Sixth and Palmer. ·.
ler all of this is over and visit all of -and air space from .Incursions ·
"We're going 'to reflle It as one· vicemen and w.omen then:.
Members
of
the·
Auxiliary
of
The
imponance
of
contacts
froni
you that have ~ time 10 write. from any side, " the king said." .
charge surroundln&amp; everythlnr's
Feeney-Bennett..
Post
128,
home
is
emphasized
in
this
letter
to
Once
againyou all.
"Our ,means are limited, but •
that happened with the talks."
Your friend in the Desen.
we are determined to do whaAbout 1, 700 union workers at American Legion, are burning the: editor received Friday from
has spent the
Spc. CunisJones, 294 ' 27"9175
tever we can .to ensure our air.· .
RAC have been out of work since electric candles ill the windows of Cunis Jones,
HHB 2-18FA .212th BOG, space Is not violated fr'om any •,
Nov. 1.- the day after their their homes. As explained by Mrs. past several lnonths in Saudi
..
side, In any conflict that may btl:
contract with management ex· Virgil Parsons the candles burning Arabia. Jones is the grandson. of · Operation Desert Shield
AP() NY, NY 90218.()()()6·
part or this very, very difficult'
plfed. The . union claims It has .24 hours a dsy an: symbolic of a Ayward and Mae Jones of Racille.
been locked out, while managesituation ... he said.
: •
men t said the workers are on
strike.
Some additional 750 replacewar began, woundlnl at least 22 ,
ment workers have been hired at
e
people, and It Is believed the&gt;
RAC ·since the ·dispute l;legan.
Since the contract expiration,
both sides have met five 'times.
any Jordanian action to counter~.Here are the new call-up the missile attacks.
;: ~
The latest barralnlng session
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pres- reservists and National Guard
numbers
by
service,
under
old.
While
Jordan,
flanked
by
rs~
:
was Wednesday, and after Its
melllbers
lor
one
year.
Under
ld~nt Bush has au thorlzed the
rae! and Iraq, has publicly':
failure to · reach accord, no · military to call up 170,000 more current authority, 189,250 reser- and under new authority:
-Army: 115,000 under old supported the U.N. resoh,adons ••
further talks have been reservists and National Guard to vls ts and Guard members may
authority;
·220,000 ·under new aimed at Iraq tor Its Aug. 2
scheduled.
be
called
up
for
180
days.
serve In the Persian Gulf for one
Rather than go to. the next authority.
lnv:aslon or Kuwait, Iraqi Prest·. ' ,
Chapman told. the .AP the year, the Pentagon announced
-Navr:
30,000
under
old
audent
Saddam Huaaeln Is very-.
higher
authority
permltwel
company's actlona at the talks Saturday.
.
.
would
have
permitted
1
·
thOr!
t-y:
44,000
under
new
popular
-among tlie Jordanlaq• ~
which
prompted the union's attorneys
"We are runnln&amp; outoltlme for
million people to be called up tor authority.
population which Includes many·
to drop th~ original charge&amp; and some critical skills In reservists
-Marl~ Corps: 23,000 under
Palestinians.
: ·
two years- the presldeflt signed
retlle .
and Guard members who have
Saddam haa repeatedly linked ,
an executive otder that calls tor a . old authority; 44,000 under new
"The federal mediator said been deployed to the Persian
more limited' Increase.
there was nothing on the table to Gull. We need to keep them for a
authority.
. any resolution of, the confilct to
-Air Force: ·20,000 under old resolving the lssue of Israel's
The people called up under the
discuss," Chapman said. "He IQDger time and 're may also '
new order would be on active authority; 52,000 under new occupation of. Pal~tlnlan Iandi.
said the company had withdrawn ' need &amp;llihtly higher numbers,"
status tor one year. The one-year authority.
all . their . proposals, they'ce ll&amp;ld Pentsgon spokesman Pete
Observen feat that Jordan .
term
is
also
true
for
those
-Coast
Guard:
1,250
under
old
would
enter the war If Israel
cleaned the table.
.Williams.
·
already In the gulf. Individuals authority: TransportatlonSeere- retallalel agalnat 1raq for two
"In 24 years of being a tabor
The new execu tlve order gives · whO began serving In August, for tary .s amuel Skinner has not set aalvos of inlsllle attacks, cross.
representative, that's the first
example, would be enUtled to } he new level yet.
lng Jordanian airspace to attack ·
time I'Ve had that happen," Defense Secretary Dick Cheney
the authortt_Y, t&lt;! call up 360,®0
relief In August 1991.
·
' Chapman added.
1\8 targets.

=red

Writinu, disnlay.s
r
. unt"ty 0 if
shO'W

candles
t s j or t roo)ns
r

ol
11,.-s,
'J J "'-'6'

~:S:!'~d:~~:e~:a:o~~~~~~~

·steelwQrkeJ;s droP..
·._ ·charge_s~ may refde .

"This basically clears the air
of any union alleratlons claiming
that RAC has barralned Improperly,:• Earl SChick, RAC's vice
president for labor relations,
said.
.
.
"Even If the union flies add!·
tloruil charges ' based on subse·
quent Incidents, the NLRB's
decision on this Impasse will not
change," Schick said ~
Tbe AP reported that Joe
Chapman, the USWA s tatr representative for District 23, was
unaware the NLRB planned to
drop the charges.
"We'll take all of the unfair

Mason Fami1y Res~atirant

Valley Drive,.Point Pleaaanl, W.Va. 25550

!-~.-

I. '

.

. RAVENSWOOD,W.Va. -Des·
plte Its dropping of cttarges or
ul)falr bar-gaining against Ra· ·
veriswood Aluminum Corp,, the
United Steelworkers of Americamay reflle the cttarges next week
as one consolidated complaint.
RAC otllclals said Friday the ·
union drQpped the charges, because the National Labor Relations Board told both sides In the
contlnutnr labor dispute It
planned to dismiss them, the
Associated P~ess reported.
The union had chargeil that
RAC Improperly declared an
Impasse In negodatlons after the
latest attempt to come to agree. ment on a contract tailed In
Pittsburgh.

THURSDAY ADMISSION •

Randall
F. Hawkins, M.D.
.

·

Oharmllll Shoppel .. ,... ,.......u~
City BoldiJII Co .......... :.......le&gt;,i
F.ederal Mopl .................... 13%

!

Ill&lt;&gt;£••· ·

funds under this phase of the
10 supplement emerpncy food and
Under the ~s of
grant
shelter progulins ill the area.
from the National Board, local
The selection 'NBS made ~a Na- governmental or private vohallary ,
tionalllc8d COIIIpOICCI of!iatr:s ~ons chosen to receive
.o f national volun...., cqanizations funds must: 1) be IIOII·pl08t, 2)
and cbailecl by the Federal Emer, have an !ICCOUDting system and '
~)' . . Manaaemc:nt
AgenCy CC!Iduct an lllinual audit, 3) .,...O:tiee
(FEMA). Unitecl Way of America IIOihdiscrimination,
4) · have
will )IIOVide the admint!llftlive Slafl' demonstrated the capability to
and function u ftac:al ~t. The deliver emergency food andlor
Board is tbaipl wilh dislributillg shelter programs, and S) if they an:
a private volunllr}' ~·
· ·,

Lltlns Sayre.

! • •••••• • ••

,..._

Mei$J County bas been selecttid and any additional funds available

10 teeeiYe $21,915 in fedaal

Avuelle 8111, Pomii'O)';

Funeral services will be bcld "a t I
p.. m. SWiday ltlbe Ewing Funenil
Home. Mr. AI Hartson will officiate
and burial will be ill the Minersville

Ccm

.

-•.................. . ...............,u..

- · ~ ••-•·
~~J.!-~ J:~~ gn;~.L~ (amiS, Mr. Wolfe :t=r:_
................................71.
Pastor~ Musser ofticiatlag.
was ~eded ill death by a brother.
Pip IIJ ...., ..........
.Interment will be in Robinson

Meigs to receive $21,9l5
in federal e~ergency fUnds

. "'·••tt:

:S!w!=..

·-.. . .

"

Suncldy

over Missouri and a Weak extension of this system will move Into l
the state by Friday ntrbt aa 11 .
travels east and then off tile
South Carolina coast Saturday.
A cold front approacblnt the
Upper Great Lakes. will move ,
southeaa t tbro1111b tbe eaatern :
Great Lakes and off the New
En&amp;land coast on Saturday. A
low presaure system developing
over texaa will move northeast
Into the Tennessee Valley by
Saturclay nl&amp;bt. A low and cold
front will drop soutlleaat out of
Cailada Into the Upper ·Midwest '
on Saturday.

balance was $90,142.67 with
receipts of $3,500 and disbur·
sements of $4,676,25.
~ipts· or b'ansl'er of funds,
disbursemeniS and balances ill tile
other funds as shown on tile
monthly statement from Bud:;, listed first, second and third n:&amp;pee·
lively, ~ as follo\vs.:
Ecoaomic
development,
$791.95, $5,267.65, and $5,377.69:
. public b'anSpOrlalion, $24,924.50,
$18,025.29, $3,153.65: 'Miler syS·
tern improvements, no receipts,
Conlin~ from page 1
$15,189.14 disbmsements, and
Frankfurt airport.
$45,547.29
MJ"''";
water,
At Fernald, Onto, where the
$23.581.46, $21,658.59, with a
·
balance of $3,798.98; $8Ditary · ..
federal government stores rasewei, ·sll,651.91, $15,828.96,
. dloactlve waste from uranium
balance, $4,451.13; swimmillg
processtn1,
security
has
been
stepped up. Security also has
poo1• $19•800• $ I,956.65, balance,
~!@en tightened at a General
$69.01.
. .·
Electrtc jet engtile factory In
Cemetery, $15339.08, $3,493.66,
balance. $4,631.60; water meter
Cincinnati, where enrlnes tor ,
trusts, 5315, ~s. balance,
r
many m illtary PIan es a e rnade·
$18,716.63;
Middleport
Arts
Securtty guards at tbe federal 1 ~·--of $62 02.
·
c
il $1 "99 3• $233
bulldln&amp; In Cleveland have 11·
.,.........,
·
ounc •
"" · J, •
.75 •
mlted public access by closing all
Balance in the fire equipment balance, $93.99; ARC Housing, no
but one entrance and have fund at the end of December wu - receipiS,
$2.005.14,
~.
started sell'Chlng handbags.
$23,551.58, wi£!1 receipts of $605.51; and the R~olving .Loan
Michael W. Sprtn,er, director $22,000 and disbursemeniS of Fund. $42,783.17 wtth no disbur· ,
of bulldfnll faciUUes, said the , $634.65. In the fire truck fund the semenrs.
procedures "are not a normal
poUcy" but declined to say how
long they would stay In effect.

----Area deaths-Emma I edlie'

_.,.

.,

The mee~lng, called In Pittsburgh by Carmon Newell of the

Casualties mount ...

EMS has seven calls

•

'

Currently, Ravenswood Alum!· · still available. ·
num hss no offer on ihe table.
The USWA made no new offer
Federal Medl!ltlon and .Cancilla· PrevioUs offers had Included and the economic gap between
tlon Service, did result In tbe deadlines, which 11ave long since what RAC bas offered and the
clarification of some non- . expired. T.h e comparty does re- union requested Is still about $70
economic Issues. However, the affirm Its offer. that members of million.
No future talks have been
seemingly Insurmountable eco- Local. !5668 are welcome to return
nomic dlf(erences between RAC to work. If appropriate jobs are scheduled.
and the union continue to exist.

Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation (J'tAC) recently reported
that no real progress was made
durtnr Thursday's meetinr between the company and representatives of the United Steelworkers of American (USWA),
Local 5668.

Continued from page 1
·landed at sites Including the
clUes of Tel Aviv and Haifa.
Tbe air attack was the first
Meigs County Emagency Mecfi. Etiubeth ·Beaumont to Pleasant agalnstlsraelslncethe1973Yom
cal Services lllSIYeRid seven calls Valley Hospillll. Pomeroy squad as- Kippur War.
f~ assistlnc::C on Thursday and on sisk!d. At 3:45 p.m., Pomeroy _yeis:~:~~:s""ur~octe~teda from
Fridsy monung.
squad went to Ball ROD· Road.
On Thursday at 9:21 a.m., Tup- Connie Scholden:r WIS taken 10 using a Jtas mask. Medical
pers Plains sqJIId went to State . Holzer Medical Center. At 7:29 · workers reported at least 74
Route 681 East fot _I,elia Cremeans. p.m., Pomeroy fire department and · cases of shock, some as a result
She w~ . labn, to Camden C1aJk squad went to. Mechariic Street for of people Injecting themselves
Memorii1 Hospillll.
.
Wiley Phelps. wbo was treated·bul with atropine, an antidote to
~t 1:04 p.m., Syracuse sqJIId not tnlnsporled. At 9 :21 p.m., polson ras but toxic when used
went to Neue Hollow Road for Racille squad·went to DeWitt's Run prematurely.
Jljmcs Patterson. wbci wu &amp;ranspor· Road fCI' Howanl Lawmace, who
Tbe ~aql news arency quoted
ted ID ~ I At 1:16_ _p.m., was talcen to Veterans Memcrial a government communique as
Pomeroy sqUid went to Liberty Hospillll.
saying Iraq fel'arded the war
Avenue fCI' Avanelle Bass. Bass
At 7:09 a.m., Syracuse squad zone'asstretchlngfromWaahinr·
went to ~ At 3:20 p.m., was dispaldled to Spring Avenue in ton to Tel Aviv.
J!ippers .Plains squad wu IICIIt to POIMIO)' for Audrela::Old, who "Our st:ru.Qllng missile forces
Sliver Ridge Road and transported . was taken to p
t Valley hit their political, economic and
Hospital
. scientific targets In Tel Aviv,
Halfll and other places In Israel,"

'

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...

RAC says no progress with union representatives

--------~--1VN~r--------Soalb Ceab'al Ohio
Partly cloudy Friday night,
~th a low near 30. Becoming
cloudy Saturday, with a chance
of rain, and highs !&gt;e!Ween 45 and
50. Chance Of ralpls 40 percent
Exleaded Foreeut
S.ndaylbroqh TMida,Sndw, or rain chan&amp;lng to snow
likely Sunday, with a chance of

'

Buckeye State

By Ualled Pre. lalerDitlollal
Is on tap for the first part of next
Early morning temperatures
A brief warm-up Is In store for week aloag witb a rood chance were In the middle 20s to near 30
Oblo this weekend before much fopnow .
·
degrees.
colder air Invades the region on
Partial clearing waa expected
Sunday.
.
Temperatures are expected to over much of the 1tate Friday,
Saturday Is expected. to begin drop Into tbe 20s Sunday after- except considerable cloudiness
with partly BUDDY sties, but noon, and hi&amp;hs will ranae trom
waa to remain In the northeast.
clouds wllllncreue throuahout the teens to tbe near 20 Monday HlgiJS were to be In the 30s to near
_ the day. Rain cou!d develop over and Tuesday. Ovel'lll&amp;bt low1 wtll
40.
extreme southera Oblo by late In raDII!fromflveto15Mondayand
Mostly clear to partly cloudy
the day Saturday and hl&amp;ba will Tuesday mornings.
skies are In the forecaat for •
ranae from the 40a to aear 50.
· Snow waa widespread pver Friday night. Lows lVIII be In the
The mild · temperature~ on northern and ~en~ Ohio Tburs- . 25 to 00 degne ranre. ·
Saturday lVIII be· sbort:Uve4, . day -nllbt, but It was ienerally ··
On the latest weather map, a.
however. A strong cold trout Is very light. Tbe exception was
trough of lo)W" presaure over Ohio
forecast to .crOBS the state on over the lakeshore counues east was to move southeast of "the
Sunday, sending the mercury of Cleveland, where 1 ro211lehes region Ft:Jday. High presSU!'I!
plummeting. Very cold weather of snow accumulated overnight.
.

-.!:,)· -

c

t

h~ding 'for

Colder air

.

,

Friday. J....V 18, 1991

Pomaoy-Middaport. Ohio

•

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't

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w!-'

•
u
·
·
·
·
II
,
Whlte ouse ca 8 ' up more

•
·
N
al
G
d
.resenr~sl$, ation
uar

·-....... --

m~:~~~~~~~~i:~a~~~:~~~~e~f

~~~~~its::=a:ola:o~~r·

�: ·'

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Jai\UIIy

(:Ommentary and ·perspective

..

~im,s.
.

' 8211 Third Ave., Glllllpolls, Ohio
•:
(614) 44&amp;-2341

WASHINGTON- As violence
unabated In South
Africa, U.S. officials are lnvestt. gating whether shotguns from
America have found their way
Into South Africa, VIolating the
spirit of"·sanctlons against that
country .
Authorities are looking at some
American companies that have
been shipping shotguns and ac·
cessorles
to South Africa.
A 1986
.
.
contlnu~

i

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Oldo ;
(814) 88!-!158

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
•-'HOBART WILSON JR. ·
• 'Executive Editor

.

PAT WBITI!:BEAD
Aaslstaat Publlsher-Coatroller

U.S. law prohibits the shipment
of guns,, among other things, to
South Africa as a prot~t of
apartheid.
.
Reports of 1990 U.S. exports
show that at leaJt three com pan· ·
I~ shipped guns or accessories to
South Africa - Jonas Aircraft
and Arms of New York, Nosier
Bullets of Oregon and Mossberg
International of Connecticut. Jo.
nas and Mossberg manufacture

guns. Nosier makes · bullets for
sporting rifles . .All three have
told federal authorities that the
guns were shipped through Cape
Town, but that the final destlna· ·
tlons were other countries.
Nosier and Jonas told us their
shipments went to Zimbabwe.
Moss berg officials were not
available for comment; .
In .the past four years, various
U.S. manufacturers have

A ~EMBER of The United Pret.l International, Inland Dally Preu Auocta·
ttoq and th,e American Newspap.,- Publllbera Association.

.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Th(l)' should be las than ;n) Words
long. AU lettersaresubje(!t toedltiJW an.d mustbeslped with name. address and
number. No unstcaed letters wlll be pu~llabed. Letters should be In

: tel~ne

,goQd taste, addressing Issues, not

~onalltles.

:
l

utters to the ·e ditor
.- - - - - - - - - - - - - ;Family history wught; deadline set

Dj!ar Editor:
you were serious, 1 could have
~ have been compiling a Sayre
sent so much more.'' Sad, but It
genealogy tor 25-years, but more happens. Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
Sl!rJ,ously during the past ten
(Ada Ruth) Sayre and I have ·
y~ars. Many people have been
been working together. lf ihe
asking me how It Is coming. Some Information hasn't been given to
~pie have asked me to hold up
one of us, It should be sent now.
until they could get more InforFor those who do not know me or
mation for me, but I feel thst I
what I am attempting to do, I am
sl!ould try tO complete It
I only updating descendants of
IIJ!l making 1991 · the "j;ut-cff" DaVId and. Hannah (Frazier)
point.
· Sayre. I am especially Interested
:X have several published
In all of those carrying the Sayre
coilnty histories and census renam~o .
pOfts as well as the SAYRE
I know that there are many
Fr,MIL Y published In 1901 by · Sayre descendants among your
Theodore M. 81\nta, I use these readers. I have done research by
foi: reference and am trying to man and In person at many
g~t everything as complete and
various libraries and court·
cotrect as possible, but lnforma·
houses. After January 1991, I do
tkin from the various family not plan to continue the personal
b~anches always helps.
correspondence and research
WARNING! Some family
trips. Every "spare" moment
groups will be lett out If I do not will be dedicated to arranging
l!ave their Information soon.
what Information that I now have
~-her I published, Some
Into some "finished" torm ready
lltanches of THE WORKMAN tor print.
.
:r!tEE, a cousin wrote to me
Sincerely
4!&amp;ylng, "If I had only known that
Ralph Sayre

now.

I measured the outmi.g ration of East CQast cities by measuring the
·
·
up-and-down migration of the New York subway." .

,, .

..-

.

"

·.'

~ar Editor:
: '·{! Is strongly hoped that our

be "dumped on" by more attlu·
ent states.
·
;Gallia County commissioners
Garbage accepted from Pen·
)Vi)l not agree to enlarge our nsylvanla may well have ortg(·
(iJldtUI to accept 1000 tons of · nated ' In New Jersey or New
~rbage per day. This would be
York, where there are tar more
~ :umes more trash than Gallla
jobs, much higher wages, and
9Junty generates each day.
employen who hire fulltlme and
: .. :such an expansion would:
proVIde heaetlts. The eastern
·: ::t Put 20 times as many states have largeted Appalachia
J.afbage trucks on our roads each
tor their dumping. We do not
jllj.y, especially on Rt. 554 beshare the benefits of their. econ~ween Rt. 160 and Rt. 7.
omy, and we certainly do not
I· ·'2. Create 20 times the foul odors want their garbage.
li.~il germs that could seep from
Insult wouJc1 be added to Injury
~etrucks.
If our commissioners give up
,. ·::t. Produce 20 times the llkell· management and contol of our
~qOd that hazardous wastes
county-owned landfill by signing
{m.edlcal, chemical, and lndusIt over to Mid-American Waste a
lt'lal) might creep undetected
multi-million dollar corp(,ratl~n
jittO our landfill and then Into the seeking to make enormous profand ground water.
Its at our expense.
, . ;.._. Make monitoring and In·
Our pride Is In our friendly
~peeling 20 times more difficult
people, their wholesome childadd 20 times less efficient.
ren, and the Incredible beauty of
f ~' Increase the county's llabll· Gallla County. Please do not
ltY ~or the landfill opetatlon by 20 damage our environment or our
ilihes.
self-esteem because both are
~ p: ·Remove all Incentive to
critically Important to the future
~S&gt;ntlnue odr recycling efforts,
of our children and our
8l(d
grandchildren.
·; !· Takl! unfair advantage of a
James and Margie B~rtee
IJlPulatlon which already suffers
.
Mt. Olive Rd.
~ effects of an economically
Bidwell, Ohio
depressed area by forcing ui to ·

p!

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;..··Berry s World
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"Why can't WE be a fun, dysfunctional family

..•'
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like the SIMPSON$?" ·

·:· ..,
•'

shipped more than !50 'tons of
arms through Cape Town, claimIng that all the shipments were
headed tor Zimbabwe.
Anti-apartheid activists suspect that the shotguns, designed
for game· hunting, are turned
against South Africa's oppressed
blacks. Recent VIolence has
justified their fears . In No·
vember, reports surfaced of an
attack by white extremists on
black mine workers near Johan·
nesburg. TJie whites ·used a
variety of weapons, InCluding
shotguns.
"Wl! think It would be tragic for
people who have survived apartheid to stand the risk of being
killed by American .arms," Dumlsanl Kumalo ol the American
Committee on Africa told 'us.
Our associate Scott Sleek has
learned that export enforcers at
the Commerce Department are
· Investigating - Where the guns
.
ended up.
Vague language In the sanctions Jaw and lax enforcement
have allowed the United States to
remain one of South Africa's
biggest trading partners.
· That's not likely to change. The
glob31 criticism of South Atl'lca Is
abating. · The European Com·
munlty recently voted to start
l~tlng Its sanctions, and the
United States could follow suit.
The reason for the new attitude
Is President Frederlk De Klerk
who has vowed to eliminate
racism In South Africa. But so
far, apartheid has only been
modified, not dismantled. It Is
too soon to start rewarding the
government In a big way for
small steps. And guns should be
the last export that .the Bush
administration allows Into South
Africa.

By J!i'ed Crow .
Linda of Wortliington- spoke, "I
~ve reviewed y~ writings with
mteresL However\ I 1111) somewhat
hurt that you call each of your
readers, Rupe. t feel that this
downgrades. your feminine readers
Stn~ there are as many women
reading your column as men." Sincerely YOIII'S, Linda.
.
·
Comment: - ~ Linda, I sure
will do somedung about this. I
therefore am going to call each
lady, Rupette..
Lionel of Bald Knob wrote on a
Christmas card, "Jesus loves you
but everyone else thinks you ·are a

horse's-."
~mment: Dear Lionel, I ap-

preciate your remarlc that Jesus
loves me. As to the Iauer part of
your lettec, my only comment is, "it
takes one to know one." .
. .Grandma Eagle, another of my
readers, wrote ani1 stated that- I
should write something pertaining
to ~ old dsr.s. She is quoted as
saymg that, :When she went to
school the toilet facilities for
students were outside. One building
was for the boys and one for the
girls. She stated that the boys
would snowball the outhouse when

!he girls were using it."

f

missoners may aueinpt to have it
Comment: This WIJS a dastardly placed ·on the ballot at the next
trick !llld the boys should have beCn election: Before requesting this
horse whi)lpe(l. However, there Jack, have some idea as to the inwere some· episodes which occilr- signili on the llag. Perhaps it will
red in my lifetime. One of them in· take a legislative act to approve
volved the Mystic Knights ·of the same.
,_
Sea of the Sea 8l the Shakespeare
Rupe of Gallipolis ' wrote tbat,
Club meeting 81 Harry. Ohlinger's "Bill Jenkins is a dead ringer for
home in 1932. I will report later on Hulk Hogan."
this subject.
·
·Comment: 'Ru(le, I would dis,
Julia of Gallia County wrote me · agree since Bill has black hair and
a letter ststin~ that, "sh~ did n?l . ·the Hulk has long white hair. ·
want any Rhino farm . m Gallia
Vern of Racine wrote that '"Tom
County." Funher she explained that Wolfe of Racine looks like Dan
her neighbor's cattle were .a
nuisance and Rhinos would make Quayle."
things even worse."
· Comment: Tom looks more like
. Comment: Julia, I woultl like to · Dan Quayle than Bill looks like
stste that Rhinos do make good Hulk Hogan.
Rype of Athens County wrote
house pets and I am certain that if
you got a baby Rhino you would be and asked my comment on the
the l8lk of Gallia County. There isa EPA's investi~ation on whether the
possibility tbat lour story might methane gas m cow manure would
appe_ar in Reade!' s Digest.
be·bad for the environmenL
Jack of Gallipolis wro~ that he
Comment: I will report later after
was pleased with the idea of allag I have discussed this matter in
for each counl)'.
depth with Professors Bob Marchi
Comment: I would suggest that and Joe Fenderbosch of Gallia
the proponents of this idea contaCt County and also Charles Goeglein
the Gallia County Commisosners, of Meigs County.
George Pope, Kail Burleson ·and · Oley of .Middleport wrote that
HarOld Montgomery. These ~om- "he considered my columns trnsh

and too long winded.": I do ·agree
that ·my columns are too lpng winded but if you do not like them,,you
can use the paper to start a fire.
Then Oley, you will be in' bOuble
with the EPA and the fire departmenL Or maybe you should confine
your reading to 1ack Anderson or
Sarah Overstreet. I doubt that you
would be able to undersland their
writings.
To Rupe and Rupeue, we are
preparing to write on many subjects
and if you have any serious
questions or matters to discuss,
please write. In the futw"e, we are
going to devote time to "niclcnames
such as Frog, Tqad and others.
Also, we would like to know who is
a look alike for Ronald Reagan or
other leading citizens. You may be
surprised at sqme of the answers.
Carry. On!
.
(Fred W. Crow, longtime
P?meroy attorney, is a regular con· ·
!ftbutor of oolumns for publication
m the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Readers wishing to criticize, appla'!d or voice an ~inion about any
subject, except politics or religion,
are inviled to write Mr. Crow in
care of this newspaper.)

~and America's 'Third Awakening'
'

Chuck Stone

You have no Idea how relieved
A·i986 Washingtonian maga•
The capacity of children for
God Is.
zlne-cover answered Time cov· unquestioning and unqualified
Until this month's publication
er's question with pompous finallove that stirred the hearts of attend church or temple. Not
of Lite magazine, U.S. News &amp;
tty. Just a,s Dolltoyevsky used his both the Old ana New Testa·
everyone Is worshipping at Ma·
Worl\1 Report and Newsweek,
novel to bring Christ back during ments' prophets may be the
donna's
video shrine.
God was on shaky ground. God
the Inquisition In "The Brothers same ,faith currently leading the
·
Historically,
a decrease In
may not have thought so, butthat
Karamazov," the magazine dis- families of young Americans
·
social
activism
has meant an
wasn't unusual. Men and women
covered that families had rediS· .back to churcll.
.
Increase
In
~ellglous
partlglpa·
have alwa~s anointed. · them- · · covered that tainutes hail redls· .. Churcl) -'dropouts are return·
tlon.
·The
current
trend·
may be
selve8 · hfglier authorities on
covered Gild In that heathenish lng, ·and 43 million people - 57
the
only
decent
thing
to
come
out
God's existence.
·
cesspool, the nation's capital.
percent of the popula lion - now of the Reagan-Bush eras .
The recent burst of ~meneut- · "GodJ s Back,". pompously conIcal energy In the mtlces of
firmed the Washington cover.
ntlonal publications has been
But New York City's VIllage
re-examining the Word and the
Voice was stubborney unconexlstence of God.
Vlnced. A year after the Washing·
"WJ!.O Is God?" asked the
tonlan magazine had reassured
By UnKed Press lnterna&amp;..;nal
'
.
December cover ot Lite
us that the Holy Spirit had
Today Is Sunday, Jan. 20, the 20th day of 1991 with 345 to follow .
magazine.
returned, the Voice persisted In
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
"Who wrote the Bible?" querIts unbelief wtth a 1987/I'Ont-page
The morning stars are Mercury and Venus .
led a December cover of U.S.
headline asking once again: "Is
The evening star Is Jupiter.
·
News &amp; World Report.
God Dead?"
Those
born
on
1hls
date
are
under
the
sign
of Capricorn. They
"And the Children Shall Lead
I mention these headlines
lnclud~. Haro~ Gray, creator of the comic strip "Little Orphan
Them: Young Amer1c11ns Return
about God merely to demon·
Annie,.
In 1894, comedian George Burns !n 1896 (age 95); Italian !lim
to God," proclaimed the .Dec. 17
strate the media's recurrb!g
director Federico Felllnlln 1920 (age 71); astronaut Edwin "Buzz"
cover of Newsweek.
foolishness with their cut-and- Aldrin, the second man to set foot on the moon, In 1930 (age 61); actor
ls this part of a new media fad, - paste treatment of our salvlflc
DeForest Kelley In 1920 (age 71 , and actress Patricia Neal In 1926
or does It symbolize the posslbllf'lth. "The foolishness of God Is
(age 65). .
'
lty of a "Third Great Awaken· , wiser than men; and the wealng" of America's theological
kiJess of God Is stronger than ' On this date In history:
spirit?
,
.
men," wrote Paul In his first
In 1265, Britain's House of Commons, which became a model for
You may recall the faddish · Jetter to the Cor,lnthl&amp;ns .
parliamentary bodies, met for the first time. ·
We may be a witness to a
foolishness of the 1960s. "Is fJod
In 1892, the first offlcll\lly recognized basketball game was played
Dead?" asked a 1966 Time cover.
deepening and widening of reiiat
the YMCA gym In Springfield, Mass. 'The game was Invented by
"God Is Not Dead," shot back a
glnus faith In America, not
·
Dr. James Naismith.
U.S. News &amp; World Report cover
because of any series of maga.
In 1981, Ro~ld Reagan was Inaugurated as the 40th president of the
Interview two weeks later with
zlne covers, but because of the
United
States. That same day, 52 American hostages were released
tl¥! Rev. Billy Graham.
human family's relentless
by Iran after 444 days !n capUvtty.
Three yean later, Time edl·
search for the meaning of God's
In 1990, at least 62 ciVIlians were ktlled and more than 200 wounded
tors apparently underwent a
love In Its life.
the SoVIet army stormed In to Baku to end what Soviet President
when
coavenlon In their offices slmIn this last decade of the 20th
Mikhail
Gorbachev called fratricidal kllUng between Moslem
liar to Paul's on the road to
century, Americana seem to be
Azerbaijanis and Christian Armenians. - - Damucua. "It God Coming
hungering for a isplrltual rebirth
A thought for the day: Comedian George Burns said "I 00 •t
Back to Life?" asked a 1969 Time
-or else the mellla are running a . believe In dying. It's beendone.J'm working on a new exit Beside: I
cover.
&lt; olrculallon con game on us.
can't die now·- I'm booked."
·
•

Today in history

,,•.

•'

Jack Anderson
•

·LetterS, letterS and.letterS __A_t....::...ty._F1_red_W_._C_row_·

,' ...,
1/idwell
family against landfill expansion
.

...._---~-...,..,......::j...----------'
.v

,)

-·-Area deaths------- B·•.,_a•h
'
John BurUle
Jr.

,Violence continue{ in South America

j-eutia"J

A Division of

.

.

Janu-v 20. 1991

.

·; ciunhq

.

· Paga A-2

G ltliJII, Ohk: ,.._Pin II ... W. Ve.
--------------

20, 1991

and Chester Sealey of Lubbock.
Texas; one slater, Hartle Ran·
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. -John dolph ot Galllpolls; tour Jl'&amp;nd· • W. Burllle Jr., 40, of Huntington, . chlldren; and four great·
W.Va., died Friday, Jan. 18,1991 grandchildren.
at St . Mary's Hospital. He was
Funeral services will be con· . ·
vice preslde~t and an attorney . d'!Cied 2 p.m. Sunday at Wlllls
for Burllle 011 Co. , Inc.
,Fil"heral Home, with Rev. Wen·
Born July 6, '1950 In Ga!Upolls, dell Roberts officiating. Burial
he was a son of John W. Burllle will be In CeDtenary Cemetery,_
Sr. and Wanda Hat rtson Burllle
of Galllpolls.
Jed Will Sr.
Survl'(lng are his wife, carolyn
Stokes BurWe and three child·
POMEROY- Jed Will, Sr., 78,
ren, Travis Evans Burme, Lind· Nye Avenue, Pomeroy, died early
say Elizabeth Burllle and Court· Saturday morning, Jan. 19, 1991 81
ney Alexandra BurUle. Atso Veterans Memorial Hospilal.
surviving Is a brother, Robert. H .
Born Nov. 22, 1912 in Rock
• Burllle, and several nelceS and Springs, he was a 1011 of the laic
nephews.
J09eph llld Carrie Katherine Smith
A~duate of Gallla Academy
·
Will.
High School," he received a
Mr. 'Will ldired from . the
Bachelor's degree from Ohlo . Parkersburg Rig and R~ ComState University, and his law puny. He also warted for the VJI..
·degree from Ohio Northern !age of Pomeroy and the Glllipolia
University.
Vault Company. He wu a member
He was a . member of First · of the Fmternal Order of Eagles
Presbyterian Church In HunUng- No. 2171, a SO-,emember the
~on; .the Ohlo State Bar Assocla·
Pomeroy _Fire Depmbuent and an ··
tlon, whe!'e be was a member o~ hoiiOI'ary member of the Intemathe Board of Governors; the West tiona! Molders Union.
'VIrginia Petroleum Marketers
He is survived by his wife, Va- '
Association, where he was a ginia Young Will, Pomeroy; Mrs.
member of the Board of Dlrec· James (Clara Sue) Soulsby,
tors; and the Ohio State Univer- Pomeroy; a son and daughter-insity·Alumni Association.
law, Jed Jr. and VICici Wilf. Safety
Services will be conducted Harbor, Fla.; five . grandchildren,
Monday, 11 a.m. at Klingel· eight peat-grandc!iildren
and
Carpenter Mortuary, by the Rev. several meces and nephews.
Karl D. Gustafson and the Rev.
Besides his parents he was
Don Wetgleln. Entombment will preceded in death by ·five brothers
be In Forestlawn Cemetery, and five sisters.
Huntington.
Services wiU be held ~y ll
Frlen~s may call ai the mortU·
I p.Di. at Ewing Funeral Home with
ary on Sunday, 4 !O 7 p.m. · · Rev.
·William
Middleswarth
Those who wish may make officialing. B'Urial will be in Beech
expressions of sympathy to the Grove Cemetery.
American Cancer Society.
Friends may call at the funml
home on Monday from 2 to 4 p.m.
and 7 to 9 p.m:
Donald C. Riffle

or

&lt;"'-au-.,... All

···----~~--.:--.
prtaoaen at war.
of Staff. Gen. COllll Poftll,.aad
Till' ltatemellt handed to the Bush akltl Brlllt !lc:oWa'oft,
Iraqi cblrpl d'affalr, Khalld John SUnunu u4 Robert Gatel

Sundly Tin u l1111it111 . hat

Americans had .been taken caplive, several pilots whose planes
have been shot down are believed
mluiJIIIn actlo!l.
And from the Pentaaon, Detense Secretary Dick CII!!MY
broughtBuahdetallsonthe .t bree
mlu!Jes that were launched In
the non·lethal strlke from west·
ern Iraq toward Israel soon after
dayllgbt broke.
Returning to the Pentaaon,
Cheney told reporters that ''the .
continuing concern 11 with the
Scudthreat"blltt)latthereduced
size of the second attack seemed •
to show the U.S. eftortl to knock
out the launchers were effective.
' ''We've seen a decline In their
capability to launch Scudt,"
Cheney said, "butlt continues to
be a threat and one that we're
wotklng very hard to
over~ome." ·
Awoken by word of the limited
strike, the president first telephonedShaml_rabout3a.m.EST.
The second call was made as
the pr~ldent was updated on,
Operation ·nesert Storm, at this
stage sHU a massive air attack
with more than 2, 000 mlssiQns a
day, 80 percent of them
successful.
·
Bush was tolcl"that although It
Is early In the conflict, many of
the strategic obJ~tlves have
·been achieved, Including thOse
related to Iraq's . air defense,''
said FitzWater. ·
The president also was pleased
that the U.S. effort was "on
schedule or ahead" at this point.

maklna made.
But admlnlatraUon altien Uon
and dlplomaUc aetlvtty rematned foeuaed tor the moat part
on the twtn mllllle attac~
a1atnat brae);
In Iraq's.flratiattackonlsrael,
Baghdad la\IIICblld leYen "llcu11
mlulles Into Tel AVIv and Haifa
-on .Friday, caulln&amp; bijurlel llut
no deatllt. 1be IIICOIId attack
stepped uptbefurlousdlplomatlc
and mllltary effort by the United
States to k - til• J ......1h , ....
outofthe' -.';r"b.;anw.nd'a';
to liberate Kuwait from Iraqi
mWtary coatrol.
Fitzwater also contlimed that
Bulb had ordered more Patriot
surface- to-air mlllllel .ent to ·
Iarael u an additiOnal precau·
tlon, whlcb Clleaey A .ld would be
operational later Saturday.
"We are Ukllll them 10 use
restraint and certainly feel we
have an oblllatlon to try every
way, both to 1et the mllllle
launchers and provide some
defense," he Ald.
The saoo,OOO.a·PIIce Patriots,
which have 1JKc1mt the centll!r·
piece of themllltary'aalrdefenle
system, were auccslfllUy ultd
to destroy .. two SoVIet-made
Scuds launched by Iraq. The
missiles dll(lltched to Inael
were .,.JIIr'
_' handled by u.s.personll@'f; ihe flnt Ume Amerl·
cans have been po~ted 1n I&amp;rae!.
Bush planned to mnaln at
Camp DaVId unUI mid-afternoon
Monday since thelederaliOWI'n·
mentwlllbecl.edtortheMarUn
Luther King holiday.
But, Fitzwater Aid, a hellcopter Aid ready ahO!IId Buill need
to return. "He' 1 alway a able to
come back on a mlnutel nouce."

-Committee, ·Caperton
meet ,concerniDg rOads

----------.- VVeailier-----------

Waste db eetor hired

l'llbllllled elch Sullllay, 825 ThlrdAw.,
GaUipdll. Ohio, by llleOblo VaUeyl'llbllo~nl COmpony/MuiUrnodla, Ill&lt;. Secoad &lt;laa pootaee Plld al Golllpoll•.
Ohio &amp;!1. Eatered 11 seeond clua
moillnl mattor al PomorO)I, Ohio, Poet

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Member: UnJtlid Pret• IntematiODal,
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parecl wttn '/a.a percent females.
And onlY 56.1 percent of the
blacks surveyed favored the
attack, c;ompared with U.3 per·
cent of the non-black people
surveyed.
'
The aurvey lhowed an extreme
dlstsatll! for Sacldam Huueln,
with M.3 percent Aylng one of
America's objectives should be
to remove , him ·as the Iraq's
leader.
The pollahowed extreme contl·
dence In the American mllllary
machine, with 75.7 percent belleVInl the war · would 1ut no
more than alx monthl - 6. 7
percent Aid a week or lela, 21.3
percent aald mor. tban a nek
bu I less than a month and .0.7
percent Aid ·mor. than a month
but less than l1x montbl.
Among thOM aurwyed, 43.4
percent Aid they bad a cloae
friend or family member ~erVIng
In the Middle East.

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Sen. Olhel Cral~ and Sen. Bob
Dltbnar were also present at the
meeting.
~·we were pleased with the
meeting, and think things are
headed In the right dlrectioa,"
Lanham coacluded.
Going to Charleston from Point
Pleasant were Lanham, Jack
Fruth, Gus Douglasa, Becky
Stein, Frank Lee, Jim Lewla, Joe
Ellison and Lannv Wllllam10n.

CD SPECIAL

The' Sunday Tlmn-Sentbttl..al not be
rHjKrlJibte for ldYuce parment.
made to carrier•.

-.

Shewaytab, narlfted Iraq that the
atwaded the meet:nl,
coaliUOn forcet In the Persian · · Fitzwater, wbo a1ao AI Ia oli
Glllf bad captured 12 Iraqi
tilt two-bour-lloD, aaJ4 PoWell
prtsonen aad uaured Iraq that
led moat of the dtJelluton. wblch
the wiU be treated ))qn1811ely.
he Aid wu larJeiY a 1taiU1 ·
While It wu 1101 clear that any
briefing with little decision·

Besides the defense secretary,
RACINE - Donald 'C. Riffle, Kenneth WUt
VIce
.President Dan Quayle;
55, of Racine, died Friday, Jan.
MIDDLEPORT
Kenneth
Secretary
of State James Baker,
18, 1991 at Pike Colll1l)unlty
Wilt,
70,
of
Middleport,
died
the
cbalrman
of the Joint Chiefs
Hospital, Waverly.
'
Friday,
Jan.18,1991
at
Veterans
He was born Nov. 19, 1935, In
Letart Falls, son of the Ia te Floyd Memorial Hospital In Pomeroy.
He was a laborer and farmer. He
and Lela Cook Rittle.
He was a U.S. Marine veteran was a member of American
Legion Post 602 I~ Racine.
of the Korean conflict.
A World War II Army veteran,
Survivors Include a daughter,
be
was· born In Middleport, on
Mrs. Tim (Melissa) Conley of
Aug.
8, 1920 to the late Isaac and
POINT . PLEASANT - The
Portsmouth; two sons, Donald R.
Lyda
Jones
Wilt.
.
Roads
Committee of the Mason
· Riffle -Jr., of Portsmouth and
SurviVIng
are
Ills
wife,
Doris,
County
Chamber of Commerce
Monte Riffle of South Webster;
·
Evelyn
.
Cramlet
Wilt;
three
met
with
Gov. Gaston C&amp;perton
three sisters, Sarab Spangler of
daughters,
DotUe
Jones,
Tuscon,
earlier
this
week •to discuss the
Peterstown, W.Va., DorthsRiffe
Ariz.,
Linda
Hubbard
of
Syra·
htgtiway
regional COl!·
four-lane
of Racine and Peggy Payne of
cuse
and
Kathy
Burke
of
Nevada,
.
cept,
and
to
also
thank the
North Ridgeville; five brothers,
Ohio;
two
sons,
Rick
Wilt
of
his
efforts
on the
governor
for
Rudy and James Riffle, both of
North
Lawrence,
Ohio
and
Kencounty's
behalf.
.
Sy.racuse, Roy Frank Rime of
Long ~ttom, Daniel Rime of neth R. Wilt Jr. of Harrisonville; · Charles Lanham, one of those
.Racine and Dale Rittle of Letart four sisters, Kathryn Hysell, traveling to Charleston, reported
• FallS; and several nieces and· Marcella Durst and Eileen Sea- · the group asked the governor If
rles all of Middleport. and Julta he could give an Idea as to when
' nephews.
Hysell
of Syracuse; four broth· the three-mUe ex.tenston of U.S.
One brother, Joey, preceded
ers,
Chester
and Dale Wilt of 35, between the 'Shadle Bridge
him In death.
Middleport,
Jackie
Wilt of Point and the Coast Guard Station
Funeral services will be con·
Pleasant
and
Isaac
Wilt of would begin.
duc.ted 1 p.m.-,J'donday at the
Columbus:
14
grandchildren
and
The roal;l Improvement was a ·
Ewing Funeral Home, with Rev.
13
great
grandchildren.
part of the study completed by
James Satterfield officiating . .
He was pr.-:ceded In death by the West VIrginia Department of
Burial will be In Letart Falls
his
parents, a son Larry, an Highways aild serit to the federal
Cemetery.
lnfanl
daughter, a brother Cllt· highway commission.
Frlendsma"ycallat the funeral
ford
and
a grandson.
The committee also qu~tloned
home from 3 to 9 today.
SerVIces
will
be
Monday,
2
Caperton
concerning the Shadle
Graveside military rites will
at
Fisher
Funeral
J:[ome
In
p.m.
and Salt 'Creek bridges. .
be conducted by the Racine
Middleport, with Rev. O'Qulnn
The governor iald the projects
American Legion.
Kelly officiating. Burial follows were high agenda Items, Lan·
In Letart · Falls Cemetery. ham said, did not define a
Friends may call at the funeral Umetable as to when they would
Brice M. Sealey
home Sunday, 5 to 9 p.m.
begin.
GALLIPOLIS - Brice M.
Sealey, 77, of 335 Green Terrace
Court, Gallipolis, died Thursday,
snow likely, lows 10 to 15 and ·
South Central Olllo
Jan. 17, 1991 at Holzer Medical
Cloudy. Scattered showers, ·highs mid teens to lower 20s. Fair
Center. He was a retired cable rain probably changing to snow Tuesday and qutte cold, except
splicer for AT&amp;T. ·
In the afternoon. An early high lmgerlng flurries possible In the
He was born Jan. I, 1914 In from 40 to 45, then falling hi to the northeast, lows zero to 10 above.
GalHpolls, son of the late Rue ben 30s. The chance of pteclpltatloD Hllhl 15 to 20. A chance of snow
R. and Goldie J. Sheets Sealey.
Wednesday and not quite as_s:olil,
Is 50 percent.
Survl•ors Include Immediate
Exteaded Forecast
lows In the teens and highs fn the
family, W. Sealey, N. Sealey and Monday throqh Wro-day
20s.
B. Parson; special companion
Much c lder · Mondau with
and friend, VIrginia Maxine
Roark; three brothers, Kenneth
Sealey of San Antonio. Texas,
Floyd Sealey of Spokane, Wash.,

No tublcrlptloDS by mall permlttH. In
aree1 where mot&lt;r -earner 14!f'VI~ Ja
available.
.

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Januerv 20. 1991 -..
.

Pomerov-Midcleport-Galtpalil. Ohio Puio1t Pleat •t. W.Va.

EMS answers calls for assistance
•

POMEROY - Units of the Meigs
COIDity llm_erseocy Medical Ser·
vice responcled 10 12 calls fur ISSis-

!allce on Friday and early Salunlay
.morning.

·

On Friday at 7:09 a.m. tile
· SytaCuse unit responded to SprinJ
Avenue in Pomeroy far .Audrey Arnold who was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospiral.
At 3:05p.m. the Middleport unit
was called to' South Third Stteet for

· News

Ruby Bowling who was taken 10
Vctr.rans Memorial Hospillll. At
5:59 p.m. the unit was called to Ash
Street for Robert McDaniel who
was ll'8IISpOI1ed to Holzer Medical ·
Centet. .At 9:22 p.m. the unit
reSpondtid 10 Page street
Joan
Keys who was tabn to Vecerans.
The Rutland
Department
and emergency squads at I 0:17
· p.m. were called 10 Smith Run
Road on a motor vehicle accident.

for

rae

at a glarwG-,-----,

TUNIS, Tunesla - The Palestine Liberation Organization,
saying Iraq had been hit witli more than 23,000 tons of bombs
during the past 48 hours, asked the U.N Security Council Saturday
to end the Persian Gulf War.
BEIRUT, Lebanon - Western captives held by prG-Iranlan
fundamentalist Muslims may be hurt or executed as a result of the
U.S.-Ied operation against Iraq, a Lebanese newspaper said
Saturday. The Ad-Diyar newspaper said the Islamic Jihad
. extremist group "may tlireaten within the coming 24 hours to
execute a foreign hostage In case American forces and their allles
·
continued to strike Iraq."
011 tumbled more than $2 a barrel - to a six-month Jaw - In a
selloff brought on when buyers fled the trading pits, frightened by
the market's wild swings·on confusing news 'from the Middle East
war. "The market was behaving too much like a casinO, " said Kirk
Kinnear, trading director of SQlOinom Brothers' PhlbroDivlslonof
Greenwich, Conn.
WASHINGTON - The heads of the Episcopal Church and the
Evangelical Lutheran Church In America have endorsed
proposals atmed at establishing full communion between the two
denominations. The proposals would bring the two churches as
~lose tO(Iether as possible without an actual merger. ·
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.- A female drifter suspected ln the
serial kUllngs of at least eight men was described as a man-hater
and "predator." Pollee said, "Her hating men, that's what seems
to be the only motive for the kllllnp."
·
.
WASHINGTON- Hispanics are the fastest growing minority
group In the United States but their future ls bleak because they are
less likely than other minorities or whites to attend prescltool
programs, · pursue high school diplomas or flnlsl\ Cl)llege,
'according to a study released Sunday.
·
·
MOSCOW - The KGB sent agents to the Lithuanian capital
VIlnius before the military crackdown and one of 14 people kUled In
the storming of Llthuanla's .televlslon center was a secret agent,
·the official Soviet government newspaper said.
M;iAMI - Financially troubled Eastern Airlines suspended
operations at midnight Friday, stranding passengers at airports
throughout the United States. The shut-down ended the carrier's
22·month battle for survival under Chapter ·n of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code.
·
CHICAGO- A winter storm whipped up blinding clouds of snow ·
In Montana Saturday, whUe thick morning fog rolled across parts
of the Midwest, Northeast and southern Plains. Early morning
temperatures ranged from the 20s In the northern Plains and New
England, to the 60s In southern Florida.

Homer Welch, Dan Leonard llld
Tom Smith were llaliSpOl1ed to

VCICIIIIS.
.
At 10:37 p.m. the Middlepon .
unit went 10 South Second Street
for Tonya Keen whd was taken 10
VCICIIIIS.
The Rutland unit at II :18 p.m.
went 10 Salem Center far Edward
Brown whO was traii.'lpOI'ted 10
Ho1zer. At 11:34 p.m: a Rutland
unit too1t lim McDaniel from
Stewart Road 10 Veterans. .
At ll:S3 ·p.m. die Middlepqrt
unit responded to Fisl)er Street for ·
Sherry Might who was taken to
VCICIIJIS.
On Satutclar at 12:24 a.m •. the
· Middleport umt was called 10 South
Second for Brandon Keen who was
taken to VCICIIIIS. At 12:33 a.m. ·a
Middleport unit rr.spunded 10 Coal
Street far CJuis Rayburn, also taken
to Velerans, and at 2:32 a.m. the ·
unit responded
to the for
Middleport
Pulice
Department
Doug
Freeman wlio was transported to
Veteram.

·

Januay 20; 1991

Man aJ'I ested in Meigs County·;
for assault, cJiminal dam~ )
Jbe

POMEROY- DnpeJd L: V~. 1D lmlt
~t, with26, Allllny, was a1 1 lillie Friday belcl pendinJ die !11inJ of clllqes,
night on chlqea of lgiavared as- was also JqJO!kld to haw been insault anil criminal dm!eglng fol- YOJved in 1D illcidcnt in Vinlllil
lowing an incident in Columbia · County prior to die Dyesville iociTownship at the Jim McDaniel denL It was Jtpouecl lhat he bad
residence, according to Meigs gone 10 a midcncc in Vmlllll
County Sheriff James M. ~- County locking for die female and
According 10 the .report, Mci&gt;lmiel ISIIUitecl a U!ject at . that
was injlm:cl. VJCtroy was Jod&amp;ed in ,..,jclepc4o ~ lllbject is being held
the COWity jaiL
at 1M Alheas Colmty JaiL
. ~
Felonious assault chaqes are to
In Olher malla'l, Jollll Manley, ·
he 6Iell against a Dyesvillc 111111 Route 33, JqUted Satunlay,mcmfollowing 1!11 incident that occumcl ing
sometime
die night,
late Friday evening in which he is . a vehicle 1'111 duoulh bis yarcL ·
alleged to have lired aevem1 sbotll
~urcher Brinbr,
Salisbury ·
at a member of his buuaeholcl. Ac- Townlhip Thll~ee, repttk'.d to the
carding 10 the repttt die female clepar1ment that a "No Outlet" sign
was not injured and escaped but die was allegedly stolen from Caimen
suspect later spoiled her in a Road.

ll!ll

clurl!t&amp;

Finally, !he sheriff reports !hal
Billy J. Thompson, Columbus, was
am:siCd on a bench warrant and
WliiDIIIS cbarJing Jittering lhat occurred in OciOber and November.
Thompson posted bond and was
released from custody. He was ·

·. Underage liquor sale

GALLIPOLJS - A Gallla Collilty youth was
cited tor ullderage purchase of alcohol and on an
GALLIPOLIS - Carolyn VIckers, Rt. 3,..
. outataildlng out-of-county warranfFrlday , Galll- Galllpolls, Informed the Gallla County Sheriff's
· poUs City Pollee reported.
Department Friday that a cable television -Qolt
Officers were called to Marchi's carryout, 144
had been removed from her prevloua resldenc~
ThlrdAve.,was7:49p.m.toasslstagentsfromthe . sometime after she moved from there ln
Ohio Department of Liquor Control. .Agen1S said ~ovember. The Incident Is Wider Investigation.
JasonD. Massle, 19,Rt.1, Patrlot,allegedlymade
Deputies were also Informed that Hannan
the Illegal alcohol purchase, according to pollee. Trace High SchQOl had been entered sometime
The agents also Issued a summons .to the clerk,
Tuesday night or early WedneS&lt;l;~y , but nothing
Joyce Tarbett,. for making an Illegal sale to an
was mtsslng.
underaee person, pollee said.
Entry was apparently gained by removing a
Officers discovered Massie Is sought . In pane of glass from a window ln th.e school library,
Plckaway County on a traf!lc offense. He was deputies sald.
~
taken to the pollee deparlment and he posted $100
Booked Into the Gallla County Jail at 8: 15a.m.
· bond, pollee sald.
· Saturday was Thomas D. Hill, 29, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
on a bench warrant for fallul'li! to appear. Hill
posted bond and was released. at 9: 30 a.m.,
deputies said.
Also plaCed In jail at 7:15 a.m ~ Saturday was
Po~ice
Bobby G. Chapman, 29, Rt. 1. Proctorville, on a
GALLIPOLIS - Gall!polls City Pollee were Gallla County Common Pleas Court Indictment
called to the Garfield Bar &amp; Grill, 89 Garfield for trafficking In drugs.
Ave., at 10: 30 p.m. Friday to Investigate a report
of a bomb threat.
· Officers were Informed that an unknown male
POMEROY - Ewings Chapter Sons of the
: had called the es~bllshment, Informed the American Revolutit'n will meet Thursday, Jan. 24
·management; ''There Is a bomb ln the ba- at tlie Meigs County M11seum. Dinner by
. throom," and hung up. P611ce were also Informed ·reservation only begins at 6: 30 p.m., followed by
• a stmllar call was received at the bar and grUI the program and business meeting at 7: 30p.m.
' 'rhursday.
·
Speaker for the evening will be Michael Struble,
. Pollee checked the bathroom and adjoining Syracuse, nationally-known speaker and writer
•"rooms, bu tfound ·no bomb.
· ·
on Welsh heritage.
Cited by pollee Friday and early Saturday were
Discussion will be conducted on a payment plan ·
SonJa G. Casto, 37, Rt. 5, Galllpolls, theft, and tbe for life membership and a prepaid life member·
following Galllpolls residents for disorderly ship for minor sons, grandsons and nephews of
conduct: Richard D. Ferguson, 36; 56 MIU Creek SAR and DAR members.
Road; Leonard Jeff Maynard, 31, 342 Spruce St.;
Reservations for the dinner mustberecelvedno
and Paul B. Morris, 19, 39~ Court St . .
later than Tuesday, Jan. 22, by calling 992-7874.

,
&lt;

Hosn.
ital new.s
Y
VE
. TERANS MEMORIAL

~J,.~,~MISSIONS • Joan •
:ys, MA........
Y D.,....ISC.HARGES .·David ;

FRIO
NeiiiZiing, Freda Bryant, Ric
' hard
F"mlaw, Edgar BreweJ, 8 uena
ChapmanGrueser,~ Gilli:&amp;"d and Martin

,

,

probe bomb threat ·

,

·;
.

vehicle
headed north
011 Route
and
allegedJy
attempllld
10 I43
run . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , •~
them off ihe roadway. They slOPPed
~
at a deputy's raidence in Alb8ny . ,
and Athens COIIIty officas tnaile
:

MC(LURE IS

·Com1 ·riews
GALLIPOLIS - In GalllpoUs
Municipal Court Thu"rsday, the
foUowing fines were handed
down: Ronald J. I:.lvely, 33,
Galllpolls, $35, failure to wear
safety belt; Clarence M. Tyree,
$78, possession of marijuana:.
Richard P. Stitt, 21, Crown City,
$46, speeding; William L. Kuhn, ·
36, Gallipolis, $35, failure to wear
safety belt; Melvin B. Freeman,
29, Gallipolis, $450 plus costs and
three days ln fall, driving under
the lllfiuence; Noah D. Lamm,
19, Addison, $48, Improper display of registration; Steve
George, Galllpolls, $100 plus
costs, menacing; Brenda D.
Mulholand, 37, Bidwell, $450 plus
costs and. three days ln jail,
driving under the Influence, S12
plus costs, driving left of center;
Kevin Higginbotham, 23, Southside, W.Va., $450 plus costs and
three days In j all, driving under
the Influence, $12 plus costs,
failure to control

.:

SPECIALS MONDAYI JANUARY 21
THRU SUNDAY, JANUARY ~7, 1991

HOMEMADE

ALL YOU CAN EAT

SOUPS

SALAD BAR
ONLY $2 59
llnsidt Orders Only)

.•,

DON'T LET YOUR FAMILY
HISTORY FADE AWAYI .

,...---~-,

Bring your orlglnel pllotog,.pht tG

llcClRrS

far p,. con.,-., ltld HtiINitn. No obllgolloll, of

cou-.

i

..•
•••'

•

ONLY Sl 09

-'

FIIIILY

FAMILY
liSTl .IIIAJIT

4'18 J8cllson Pice

354 bit Mein St.
POMEROY

814-448·3837

814-992-8292

IISII.IIII
GALLIPOLIS

814-182-11248

GALLIPOLIS. OH.

lion project . devoted to the
exploration of the historical,
cultural, environmental and economic development of the Ohio
River region. • ·
The exhibition-on-a-barge ts
the main ·component of the
project and will travel from
Pittsburgh, Penn., to Ca iro, lll.,
with twenty stops In between

Dr. Joey D. lVilcoxon

Auditions set

Spring· comes early in the
· South, filled with fragrant anc;J .colorful- chertY "blossoms~ Join' escort .
Ava Chab9udy and welcome ~e arrival of Spring in
lovely Macon, Georgia.
Marclll0-14, 1991
Escorted by Ava Cbaboudy
by AM today!
4411-0f89
~a..-,.,.--~

•

w.l/a owiMmll•ra.

Dance, Rufus P'utnam Hall, Ohio
University, Athens, 45701.

. . .C LEVELAND {UPI) . - Frl·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Plck-3

"

$41,600.
Cilrds
Queen of hearts.
Jack of clubs. ·

.;

431.

0067.

, Ticket sales: $254,189. Payoff:
")

City building closed

.

.GALLIPOLIS -The Galllpolls
qty Building will be closed
Mpnday to observe Martin
Luther King Day. It will reopen

,,

REPORT OF CONoiTlON
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of lhe Star Bank, N.A., Tri-State
of Ironton in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on December
31, 1990, published in response to call made by Comptroller of the
urrency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161. Charter
Numbor 16607 Comptroller of the Currency 4th Qistrict.
tatemelll ot Resources and UabiUiies:
aaJrltles .... . ,.••.•• .. .. .. .•...•...••.......•.. .•.... . ......
Fedorol lund• sold ...... .. ...... ... . . .. ...... ....... ......... .

,

-Cholrmon

Commt!OIIIA Slmgo Bonk

Roilod-

.........,
Cllonlng..,, e..... • _,.,.

Ro~,...­

W. H. ford

_

PhiiiJ?,.:;.,:,ope
AgrHWsii'I8$S Pwtnership
J. Cr~lg Stratford, M.D.
President

-P.Do-

..

~ ~'t.t:....,

&amp;at Dink. N;', Tri.SII.tl

Holzer C~nic, Inc.

Clltrtoo E. Holur, Jr., M.D.

Supertnl8r&lt;lent

-toiMI&lt;I&lt;aiS1an .
Pawson•BrYIWU .
~IIIRinlan
LOCDI School Di&amp;lricl
Modlc:ll COntor
Directors Ellllrltus---:,_Holzer
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

A. G. Shotmaker

D•.P. D•Y••

C.E.IIIyno

W. P. Chontngton

General Counaei--------.....,.~~:-:-:::-:----CMrrlnaton, Evan• &amp;

Kloln, Smllh I Kloln

..ou11on

mmon !:":uc.K ••• , •• • ••••• •••• : • ••• ••• •••• •• •• •• . •• .'.. . .. •• .

s.ooo.ooo.oO

the correctness of this stallmenr of
ri!IOUI'CII and li~i11. WI dldart that
~ hal been examined by us, and to the
best of our knowledge and bellaf has
bien pflpartd in conlorm~nee whh the
lnstructions ·ana Is true and correct.

James L. Heald

1,

Vict(Pral~lil
~~~vo~

.....

Wayne F. While

Connie S. Fttem•n
Senior Va PIMident
Retail and Marketing

D1'ttd L Shiffer

Assis:ll:nt Vi&lt;:e Prv&amp;icienl
Loan Adminit tration

Douglas R. Daniel

·',.•

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---011(&gt;1
L.andng Ollaor '

DoMII M. W.ugh
llrwndiMmlnlon,.Ofl&lt;or

DoMIIIIL-1

.

$3ft!!•

\

Dariei J . Ctance, M~er

Deborah L Thomas, Manager
702 Fourth Street Easl
South Point, Ohio 45680 ··

- 2301 Sou11t Third S!retl
Ironton, OhiO 45638

(614)532·1&amp;42

(B14)3n-433s

.......

K-MART OFFICE

CHESAPEAKE OFFICE

ROME-OFFICE

L. Jeannie Malone, Manager
K-Mart Plaza ·
Chesapeake. Ohio 45619
~614) 894·3000·

Aoo R. Dennison, Manager
.
353 Third Ave..,a

Tertf L. Taylor, Manager
Sllle Route 7
·
Proctotviile, OhiO 45689

CheSIPIIkl, ohio o4561 9
. {!114) 887-3101

COURT STREET OFFICE

SILVER BRIDGE OFFICE

i!arbra F. Coleman, Manager
25 Court Street
Ga!!ipois, OhiO 45631

OoMa M. Waugh, Mlf1llger
3SO~r River Road
G
, Ohio 45831

'

(61 41 446-0662

(814) 886-5678

( 14) .U6-9300

Sheila G. WOOd, Manager

481 JICkson Pike
Gailllols, Ohio 45631

.

(&amp;14) 446-1399

Stations now at aU
iocdons
Marmer of Money SlaUon
ltld ~~ System

'Te!le~fic

ThOmas M. Meadows
BulinaA Development
(6141532-0383
. .
(814 448-01162

RiCIIIIII L. Cuey
Landmalk RIIIIICial SeMces, Inc.
(6141 ~-0363
'
(814 448 08~

Merrber FDIC

Fun 20·20,000 Hz
Comfort-

'

139.95

'

• l

Low AI 115 Per Month •

LowAti'IIPOI-•

Ready to use on ali 40
channels. N2'1-1e&amp;l

Push·tractor. Up to 100
cpa. 1126·2821

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Beef Tips.

S.Ve

Choice

'100

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Available at
. Participating Locations.
;

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Dle-Cest2-Way
Shelf Speaker

Reg. 138.15

Cut
· 4ftG5
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38

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low Ao SIS
Ptr llonth•

Rtg. 79.95

Emergency
buttons.
Tone/

Catch the

Handl8s watts!
Black, N-40-2054: While ,

action!
1120-t39

pulse.
. *.:!·567

'40·2055

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286-Based Home/Office PC Compatible
With 20MB SmartDrlve'" Hard Drive

Meatloaf

Save
'511 ·

Hearty. homestyle meatloaf:Served with mashed potatoes
and green beans.

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Rta-

. With case and accessories. Hi-fl mono audiO.

r--~~ ­
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LOW At 121 Por - l h •

Lightly breaded and topped with
.
count!)' milk grnvy. Served with mashed
potatoes and green ,be_ans.

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· Light, Cornpaet
8mm Camcorder

Sauieed with green peppers and
onions. Served with mashed
d
be
potaJoes an green ans .

· · J~IJ,!Jfl~: Country Fried Steak

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~hed potatoes and green beans.

_,. ·x/:11 / l
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$1188

LowAaAIPor-o
Reg. Seperilte n.m. 18H.85

Includes DeskMat.-10-in-1 software.
of25-1eo2/104311045

Prices May Vary.

•'
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..
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. FINANCIAL SERVICES

·1915 :Is

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Save'40 Save •100 .
.••.'
95 Rfa,• '.
.
99
179152~~ . .
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$PRING VALLEY OFFICE
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SOUTH POINT OFFICE

Cut33~

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40-Channel CB
Walkie·Talkie

mike. 1114·1054

Tln'l L 'rl)'lof
BrllnCtl AdminillralN• Olfic:er

Slllllo G. Wood

•.

Llghtwelght
Headphones

Auto-level, buih-in

W11t1ki-H. Wny
c ..mmer Service omcer

Brlnch Adminisnllvt Oft\01

Dot-Matrix
Compact Printer

Compact Tape
Recorder

1995 Nls

••

Morgo V. Swtoho!
CutiOmer Sel"'iot Gl'licer

L ·J-Ie Molono

January 20, 11191

Home Offices: Bloomington, Illinois

,•'

~&amp;;!

Douglas R. Daniel

STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES'

Gallipolis

..

SW,hen P. Jenkin•

knowledge ll1d bale!. _

Phillip L. Pope

422 Stcond ln.

•

W. R•.ndy M•y•
Assistlltll Vico Pro1kion1
· Loan Actminlstralion

- F. ShOrldMI

,.,346,571 .29
9,992,493.20
19,339,014.49

of the above-named bank dO hereby
declare that this Report of Concliion
is tru~ and correct to the bell of my

120 South Third S!reet
Ironton, Ohio 45638
(614) 532-0363

,,

.

President and CEO

Jodi A. Rows, Manager ·

••

o.nlel H. Wiley
Stnlot VICII Prasidenl
A Senior t.onclng otker

t,745,234.47

olal equity cop•al . . . ........ , , .. .. .. , , ... , ... . . , ... , . , . . .. ..
ololllabiRiao,!imked-J~o prolerred stod&lt;, and oquky caplal .... . .... . 260,126,197.Bt

MAIN OFFICE

am.

lleg.11t.l5

State Fann Sells Life Insurance.

~

728,597.5t
.. ,,., ' ... ' ..... . ............. ,..... ·' .. . ....... . ...... 240,787,133.32

u~l~s .. . . · .· . , . . , •• ... , , .. ............. , .............•. : . .
n wided profits and capl1al rese~es . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . .

TAWNEY JEWELERS

,•'

•

335,000.00

2,833.~2e.25

·:

:·

Wayne F. While

-

.........
A"
.......

"' 1

Klein, SJnifl &amp; Klein
Dean F. Maa.!•, M.D.
Pr~eticing Physician
Obotelrics &amp; Gyrocology

Fold lln&gt;lhm. Inc.
JamM L tt.kl
Clllinn.., of tie Boara

Sonlor-Star Bonk, NA, Tri-soioiO

Self·Pro~~ Mower

Tile StOll wlih "AIIIOndl of Stuff" ·
For Pell, Stalllel. Urlll •
Alllmll1. &amp;..Will • Garclen1.

7985

Corner of lhinl bo. &amp; Stah St.
Golli!IGIIo, Oh.
Phant 446-42f0, HCIIilt 446-4511

Charln C. K~ln

Re-Pmldonl

-Lo.IDn,~

t2,475,000.00

...

Oougloo R. Donlol
P_,ondCEO
Slor Bank. N.A.. Tit-Slate
0. 0.1n E'llna

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ecuritits sold under agreements to repurchase , .•.. , .•... , ...•... ,
hor llobllftles . . . . • • . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . . .. . .. . . . . • . . • •
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•

Ticket sales: $1 , 406,398 .
Payoff: $832,293.
Plck-4

There's a star within your reach.

Loans and leasos, not of unearned if'!,come , • . •. • . . . 153,785,003.06
LESS: Allowance tor loan and lease losses . •• ; . • . . . 1,95 7,314.75
.. Loans and ltuts, net of unearnH lncome, albwanc:a, and reserve •.. 15t,827,66a.31
remises and fixed assets (including capilaized !.lases) •..•...•..•...
4, 1~,059.&lt;12
her naal estate owned ••.. ••.....••••• . , .• • , • .•• . . •••.••.••..
96,500.00
her assets ... .. .· ', . ... . .. .. .. ........ . . . . . .. . ...... . .. .... . 3,206,397.-40
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•

••

Four of diamonds. .
Jack of spades.
. . Ticket sales: $64,551. Payoff:
$50,800.

N.A.

oana and'iouollnancing rtcelvoblos:

I

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AT
722 SECOND AVENUE
. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
TELEPHONE: (614) 441 "0200

Speaker, 30-mamory speed-dial. 1117-1076

.

·

GALLIPOLIS
CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC

ATHENS - The Ohio University
of Dance is holding audirions for
dance llllent scholarships at 1 p.m.
on Saturday, Feb. 2.
The scholarships are for incoming freshmen and are applied 10 the
199I-92 academic year. Far inforinalion, call the School of Dance at
593-1826 or write to: School of ·

'100

Tri-State

"
•
•.

ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF
HIS NEW OFFICE

~ave

Cherry Blossom Time
in Macon, Georgia

Galllpolls Is one of five stops for
tbe exhibit In Ohlo.
·
The exhibit will be open 10 the
public. Admissions fees and
hours ar!! not known at thts time.
U you would like to be Involved In
tl\e Always a River project ,
please call the Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce at 4460596.

. Lottery numbers--~----

McCLUIE'S

.C. .I'S

GALLIPOLIS ...; The steering
committee for Always A River
has announced GalllpoUs has
been added to the scheduled of
stopping sites for the Always A
River Exhibition-On-A-Barge,
Galllpolts will play boat to the
lloatlng museum Monday Julyl
and Tuesday, July 2, 1991:
. Always a River Is a multifaceted project organized by the
staie humanities councils of
Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West
· Vlrglnta . These humanltiescounells have joined together to
develop l!)llajor regional educa~. '\..-/

............_--~-_____,·

-------. ------...,

-Gen. HM'tlnter Pltwy
MIDDLEPORT

TAWNEY
STUDIO
424 SECOND AVE.

..'
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•
}

...

IISTA.AIIT

See the profusionall·at ...

.,

FEATURED THIS WEEK FOR
ChoQM from homem~d•
bee~ soup whh cornb,..d.
veget1ble eoup, or-chill soup
(we melle ou,. IIIIey "hot" I).

(SAVE 60C)

ut

SAR meeting set for Jan. 24

FAMILY RESTAURANT t

IEnOIE YOUI
HE11LOM

Deputies eye ooble t!_teft

'

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•

1i. W. Ve.

Local News in Brief:·--------.~ways a River exhibit to vi$it.

•

located in Portland-

Pomeloy-MidclaPAt-Gdlpolil, Ohio Point Plnn

••••
•~ .

1----llllitttoliilt-~---------~~----~-1.·.,

•

Salad&amp;

•

r

Shoney's welcomes •he

American' Express• Card.

•
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._,.

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�...

•

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~----'""' ·

~

.,

-~

.. ... ·-,,

...

-

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-

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..........______ .,.. _ ___,.._ .,, _ _ __ _ ___ _
.._

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Pllga A-8-Sunday lin
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11

Punwov- Mllldlapart-c;Jr''pall, Ohio

Sentinel

Voinovich .trys to block oommutations
· COLU~BUS, Ohio (UPI)
Gov. George V, Votnovich will ·
seek meaas'1D "potentially stop·
\he commutations' • of elghl,conVIcted killers granted by Gov.
Richard F. Celeste ~two days
before he lett office.
"The governor Is very upset
about !he timing of thecoriunutations and .Js certainly n.ot c(ln·
vinced !hat Ibis was jhe proper
course of action," said Curt
' Steiner, Volnovich~sdeputy"chlef .

....

'
of staff.
Stetner said ' Volnovich . has
directed his legal staff, the Ohio
Adult Parole' Aulhorlty and the
Department of ftebabllltatlon
and Correetlon to study. the Issue.

tq

•••

24 HOURS
7 DAYS
A WEEK.
.SERVICE ·

565 Jackan Pike • Galipolis
Toll fr• 1.100-445
614-446-2206

·
6

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'
. New E•rly Anric'an 2

Liv. ·tm. Suite

519995

Saturday, January 26th, 1991
2:00PM to 5:00PM
Learn ebout our 1991 Tours end Vaca...Allu.,
...
tion
peckegeal Deposh on eny Group·
SA¥1111

IECUNERS

2 FOil

IIYMIICU. .
GITMfiB

Tour at our Open House and save en edditlonel $.10.001
.. .
t'-1 5'- If ,.. .... S.·
*Gift
Certlficetes•
*Door
Prizes•
nior Cltizlfl.
· *Trevel Presentetlons* *Refreshments*

Sen 5'- with •• Earlr

rw ........nadoll·

.

·•
•

Scotchguard. Fabric Protection
Into Seats and Door T
Fabrics .
'

2.2 Liter 4 Cyl.

~nglne
•

•'

Sport Mirrors

J

Composite
Halogen Beacll•mps ·

5-MPBBum~

· BodY Color
...... Gtlllp~el

FrOnt and Rear~
'

•

l

Stainless Steel
Ezhaust System

•'
'
·'

Black Bumper Fac~
'
and Body Moulding
Full C&amp;rpetlng
'

5 Speed Floor-Mounted
Transmtsalon ·

•
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THE EW 1111

•

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•I

Power Rack and Pinion
Steering

Pl85/75Rl4
Black aadlal Tires
14" Styled Wheels

Power Front Disc/
Rear Dnun Brakes ·

.'

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I

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CHEVROLET CAl liB.VL COUPE
.

DELIVERED!
~

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ON THE SPOT FINANCING TQ QUALIFIED BUYERS

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'lime5- jentintl Section

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8

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Jenu.y 20, 1991.

,1

Fan1ily histOry comes alive in trip 'home'
'

America.
After lui!Ch, and a short walk, ·
discovered that.there are at least
Our hotel, the historic Great
ladles In the group loved them!
' '( Herman and Dee DU!on reWe
then
VIsited
the
unique
1000
Dillon
famllles
residing
In
we
arrived at St. Patrick's '
Soulhern,
located
In
Killarney
After
lunch,
It
was
.
on
to
cently returned from a tour of
Ireland.
.
Irish
National
llerttage
Park
Cathedral.
Legend has It that St. c~
Town.
This
hotel
Is
venerable
Fermoy
loc~ted
upwater
on
the
Ireland where they attended tlte
located
In
Ferry'carrtg
where
we
Atter
our
meeting
With·
the
Patrick
baptized
many converts •.
lovely
18!14-buUt
railroad
hole!
set
on
40
Blackwat~r
River.
We
saw
Grand Reunion In Ireland. The
saw
life
as
lt
was
In
Ireland
over
Chief
Herald,
we
visited
Trinity
on
this
sltelil
A.D.
450. Itwasalsl}..
.
acres
of
lawns
and
gardens
and
Is
.
Myrtle
Grove,
an
Elizabethan
purpose of !he tour was to trace
tile'
past
~.000
years.
We
lunched
·
College
where
wesaw
the
famo.us
home
to
!he
great
writer, Jona-.•
t.he
epitome
of
"VIctorian
·
where
In
1588
Sir
mansion,
ancestral roots and the 39 perIn
the
ancient
town
of
Wexford
Book
of
Kei!J,
which
consists
of
than
Swift.
,
Swank".
Walter
Raleigh
planted
Europe's
sons on the tour .were all
·
where
Hel!fY
II
did
penance
for
.340
pages
of
parchment,
h·
a
ndw·
That
evening,
we
gatllered
at·:
·
the
Old
first
potato
and
smoked
After
a
much·
needed
night
of
~sh·Amerlcans who were very
murder
of
Thomas
Beckett.
the
ritten
and
lllustrated
by
Irish
•
the
elegant
l'ttzpatrlck
Castle
for
•
we
set
out
!he
first
day
,
World's
first
plpe
of
tobacco
upon
sleep;
proud of their herltaee)
After lunch, we traveled on liP monks IIi the 8th Century. This the reunion banquet.
his triUmphant return from
bound for the Ring of Kerry
: By BERMAN DILLON
•
81111
the
coast to the Vale Of Avoca, Latin copy for the Four Gospels
The followina morning, we set
VIrginia.·
which Is, quite simply, about 100
home
of
poet
Thomas
Moore
and,
lsireland'smostpreclousrelicof
out
tor Connemara, where we
We then turned Inland, heading
mUes of the most beautiful
DEE DILLON
•
Giendalougb-the
Glen
of
the
Two
Golden
Age.
wended
our way across the·· •
her
coilntry on this Earth.
· across the Knockmealdown
Lakes.
·
We
a!Jo
saw
Phoenix
Park,
breadth
of
Ireland and saw a •
Mountal!!s, around the corks·
En route, we saw the Gap of
; After arriving In ShaMon and
Here,
among
the
mountains,
nearly
2!100
acres
profound
change.
cOmprising
crew road and through the Vee ·
a brief trip through Customs, we Dunloe, a wild four mlle gorge
St. Kevin !he Hermit made his
wblch lsoneoftheftnestenclosed
Hea41ng weat. we saw msny ·
Gap to the'Rock of Cashel. Here,
which Is so rugged It Is accessible
were greeted by our glllde,
dwelling
place In !he 6th Century parks In the world. Wllhln reminders of European history. •
St. Patrick used the Shamrock to
only by · horseback or horsePaddy Ryan, an affable Irish·
where he founded one of the most Phoenix Park are the residence Followlni ihe coul'l(! of the River
drawn carriages.
Illustrate the Holy Trinity and
man whom. we all liked
We visited Derrynane, the
converted the pagan High King, . renowned centers or learning In of the President of Ireland, the . Llffey, wepas&amp;edthroughLllcan,.'
!mmedla tely. .
.
Europe. We saw the ruins of his American Ambassador's resl·
Maynooth, Kllbeggan, Athlone, ,
!lnd with him, I.reland.
Our first stop of the morning ancestral home of Daniel
· Upland we reached Clonmel, . seven churches and the almost dence . and at the far end, tlletl Balllnaaloe and ~~ressed on to till;!
was Dromoland Castle where we O'Connell·"Tbe Liberator" of
perfect Round Tower, aq.exam· famous · Phoe n 1x Park h!IIOrlc hamlet of Cong. Coor Is •
Ireland-the first Irtsh·Cathollc · the acknowledged capital or !he
had a delicious and
"Irish
pie of the early shelters from the Racecourse.
. I See FAMILY, page 9~)
Norse raiders, rtstnc ninety-two
feet With Jts high pitched roof of
stone.
We concluded the visit there at
Gienda!Ogb Center for a look at
life In the monastic center a
thousand years ago.
We ended this day In Dublin.
Dublin IS another Irelaad within
Ireland. This "strumpet city"
was built by the VIkings on a
Celtic site, "dubh linn," or black
pool. Henceforth .It was the
capital .c ity for succeeding
conquerors.'
·u Is a fascinating city with
castles, Georgian buildings,
great parks and ordered squares,
museums, racecourses and of
course, PUBS! Americans are
welcomed here as In no other city
In the world. It Is Impossible to be
a stranger In Dublin for more
than a few hours.
In Dubltn; the pubs are the
center of social activity - so
much so that from 2: 30 to 3: 30
p.m .. by law they must shutdown
for "Tb¢ Holy Hour," so
•
dawdlers wfil return to work!
., .
Our first night In Dublin, we
breakfast" to start the day.
member of the British
kingdom ol the greyhound.
· journeyed to the famous Abbey
Dromoland Castle Is a famous Parliament.
.
we ended the day In Waterford, ' Tavern. which Is hard by the
baronial castle which has been
We continued on through Wa·
another town steeped In Irish
ruins of the lllh·Century Hpwth
fully restored and 111 the home of tervUle and Sneem, and arrived
History. Waterford was estabAbbey-and dates back to the 15th
one of the few native Gjltl!C-Irlsh at a remarkable hotel, The
lished In the lOth Century A.I!. by
Century.
families of royal blood, dating Parknasma, for lunch. It ts a
:VIking warriors. This· town Is
After a five-course feast, we
'lllck to the High Kina . Brl~n stately 191h·Century mansion set', noted for Its world·lamous Wa- settled back and listened to the
~ru.
...... -•. .•.,~ .. , .. pn more.tbaii,.IOO acri!Hf .,uttne
terfoJ:d crystal. We wered;Odged
world-famous Ab~ Tavern sin· ·
, Following· breakfast . and a
parklands, Wl!ds and gardens qn'. tn the. Ardree Hotel here over·
gers and musiCians.
lovely drive through Limerick Kenmare Bay. Georp Bernard
Early . the next ll)ornlng, we
looking.the town. · · ·
and · adjacent countryside, we Shaw and Queen Jullanna of the
The next D)Ornlng, we followed
inet with Chief Herald Donal
a.rrlved at . Castlematr!Ji In Netherlands are among many
the quaint flngerposts to New
Begley, the Republic of Ireland's
ftathkeale.
who have enjoyed vacations
top man In the field of geneolOIY.
Ross, the original Kennedy horou. •o BLARNEY - No fooUn1, Bennan Olilon klaled the
• We were greeted by the owner, ' here.
mestead whence Patrick · Here, we delved further Into the
Blarney
Slooe dnrln1 a lrlp lo En1land 1111d Ireland !ale In liM.
Colonel Sean O'Drlscoll, who Is
After a beautiful drive through
geneology study and learned of
Kennedy, great-grandfather of
You
mQ
lblall this looks fuDDY, bul DIUon said lo kiss Ute alone,
also head oft he Heraldry Society the remaining Ring ol Kerry, we
John . F. Kennedy l~ft lor
th~ Dillon ramQy lineage. We
you
lay
on
your back 1111d 100ot aptlde down.
of Ireland. He Is a walking returned to ou.r h.o tel In
encyclopedia of Irish history and Killarney.
heritage.
·
The next morn g, we set out
through
: Castlematrlx was owned In the on a leisurely jou
•
lfith Century by Sir Walter Macroom and Co
which Is
•
~leigh and has been lovingly
easily the most frlen y of Irish
•
restored by O'Drlscoll. From the cities. The people of Cork claim
Matrix keep, one can look out klilshlp with everybOdy! Our
After arriving at Heathrow paintings, drawfpgs, sculpture,
We concluded our day In York ties and buildings and unique
Direr four eounttes-Llmerlck, Tip· first stop of the day was at nearby
Airport. we departed from our sliver, porcelalit and other
by visiting the world famous shops. Tblllllocated on the coast
perary, Clare and Kerry.
Blarney . Castle where Herman
'
traveling companions and took . curiosities. .
York Minster, the largest Medle· across the channel from France
: Attl'r visiting Matrix, we fol·
had to kiss the Blarney Stone,
The beautiful adjacent Garden
the "Tube" or the underground
val Cathedral In ~orthern Eu- and Is a very popular vacation
lowed the Inland road through The Blarney Castle dates back to
subway to the St. Pancras train provides many delights with
rope. It stands on the site of the spot.
A::bbeyfeal, a market ·town and
the lOth Century.
.
statlon.'I'hls system Is compara- spectacular fountains and cas·
headquarters of the Roman le·
After a leisurely driVe through •
arrived In Killarney, the gateThe keep of the castle was. ble to the subway system In N.ew cades, rare shrubs and forest
gionary fortress of Ehoracum. It many lovely villages and beautiway city for the lakes of ~lllar- erected In 1466 and towers some
trees, rose gardens and rocks. It
York and just as busy!
dates back to the 131h Century. ful countryside, we arrived back
ney and the Ring of Kerry,
12q feet over the River Martin.
The ralli·oad system or "Brit consists of 1.000 acres of beautiand Is unique In construction. U In Sheffield. The highways or
MacGillycuddy Reeks the high- The world-renowned Blarney
Rail" as 11 Is affectionately ful, terraced lawns and statuary.
holds a fine col~lon of medie- "motorways" are excellent In
eit mountain range 1~ Ireland,
Woolen Mills are hard by the
The following day, we toured
ki10wn In England, Is a very
val stone carvings and the that area, but a novice would
Castle. These mills date ~ack to
q)Ugh Leane, Killarney's largest
m®ern, speedy means of trans· the clty of York where we saw
windows contain 14th Century have difficulty with the
lake and the majestic Gap of 1750andareoneoflreland smost
port In the United Kingdom: The Clifford's Tower, the keep of !he
roadstgn! ,
·
glasa. ·
Ohnloe.
worlhwhlle shopping stops. The
trains are modern, spacious and York Castle, which was built In
We set out on the third day,
On our final day In England, we
are run In . a very efficient 1190 bY Henry In. It provides one. cross country, to visit two well· traveled lhrough the area near
manner with excellent conneb· of the finest views of York and
known seaside resorts. We drove Sheffield known as the "York·
surrounding countryside.
lions and schedules.
across . the Humber Bridge, a
shire Dales". It Is here that
The· York Castle Museum, . new, modern bridge which spans James He,rrlot, the writer, writes
Our· next destination Is Sheffield. We are being met there by England's mO!Jt popular museum · the Humber River, on the way to of and lives.
•
of everyday IUe,,ts also located In
Maureen and Thomas Timmins.
Bric!llneton.
·
We ftrat went to Clumber Park ••
, ~ and Maureen have been York. It Is an amazing museum
· Brldltngton Is a noted fishing In Notttnghamshlre where we :
pen-pals since bolh were In the where one can relive shopping
port and seaside resort where walked through lovely gardens •
6th grade, a period of 42 years, days as It used to be on the
many Britalns vacation each and a park, and saw a magnlfl·
and this was the first meeting of Vlctorl!ln and Edwardian
year. After dlninl on "fish and cant old church, still In use. From
Streets. view period rooms, anthe two. They recoplzed each
chips" for lunch, we then headed !here, we drove througb Sherother Immediately at the train ' tique furnishings and a vast
to Scarborough, another lovely wood Forest and saw the MaJor . ,
station and whAt a reunion! She collection of . Items, Including
well-known aeulde resort, with · Oak or "RObin Hood's
'l'ree" a •
.
and her husband are.delightful, . cOstumes ind arms.
quaint winding streets, old cu- hugh, old Oak tree so large Ills •
friendly and very hospitable and
now propped up to prevent ••.
we felt at home with !hem and
brealctng.
:
their family right away.
Sherwood Forest was given Its. •
They live In a su~rb of
name In ·the Middle Ages, when
Sheffield, which Is a moderatelythe word "forest" applied to an
sized city which was once known
area of countryside wl)ere a
for Its sliver manufacturing. It II
special code of laws operated to •
stU! ·considered an Industrial
control and preserve the "vent- •
area but many of the local
son and vert." (the game and the •
Industries and plants have been
trees).
:
closed .
Foretts In those days consisted
After a much· needed night of '
not only of woodland, but also of
rest and.a hearty English breakgrasay glades, agricultural land,
rut, complete ~th tea, we
vDiqes and even whole towns.
headed for Bakewell, a quaint
While the Forest Laws served to •
aaclent vDlage where we saw
benefit the klnga and olhers who :
many unique shops, open·alr
were permitted to ~nt game•
markets, ' the Bakewell Parish
they were very unpopular witb
Church and visited an antique
·the common people and' many
Fair wblch was very Interesting.
noblemen as well · because of
We then journeyed through the
their harsh nature. It wu against
English moors and lovely coun·
such a baCkgroJ,Ind thai the •
try side, to Bastow where we
. legend of Robin Jfood developed. ~
lOured the Chataworih House.
We returned to London that ·
The Cballwortb Houae Is the
evening In order to ny to
home of Duke and Duchess of
Shannon, Ireland the next mornDevonshire and was .bUilt beIng. From Shannon, we departed
l"leen 1686 and 1708. It II
tor home, bringing wtth us many
furnllhed and decorated
wonderful memories and expe- .:
tbroqhout with pain ted wai!J
rtences. We heartily recommend
and relllnaa, wooclcarvtnp, elabPEN PALl - Dee IIIIM,
... - a visit to Ireland and Enaland for •••.
... IUI¥er me&amp;
orate Inlay furniture and wall . 11mmiDI, rtpt, ball beea pn
those who njoy lovely country.
banglngs of tapestry aad leatl!er.
In penon uiU lliM 1111 wlllll a. DUJo• Ylll&amp;ed EIIIIUd ud
side, quaint villages, delleloua
h'elud. Allo plctlll1d 1ft the 1111111 ..... ftn Tlmm.... left, lllld
It has a m.~!llllftCant 11\lrll'Y and
focid and wonderfully charming
.a world-famous collection !If
Bermu Dillon. .
.
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peQple.

a

Lifetime ·friends finally meet

Self-Allping Feature
Stt,erllng Wheel

Re-De.lped
Rear Tall I:amps ~

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BakeweO Antique Fair ·

Serving the general public
u well as our members.

YOU DECIDE!

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SALES
&amp; RENTAlS: OXYGEN, HOSPITAL BEDS, .
WHEElCHAIRS, WALKERS, UFT CHAIRS.
Full line of Medical &amp; Surgical Supplies

OPEN HOUSE

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TO OUR

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from. ~er husband's shooting death
have not contacted her for
ques tlonlng and denied she was
uncooperati.Ye.
· ''The reason we're trying for
this Is because we didn't have
any Insurance," she said. "We
are a victim of that crime."
Pollee" said theY confiscated
1~ pounds of marijuana from
their home after !he husband's
death.

.

'A long th,e River

State clairD.s woJJiall ·wants to profit
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Ohio attorney · general~s
office says a woman who Is a
suspect In the kUling of her
husband dO!!S not desel"ie money
fr.o m the state's crime victims
fund.
The opinion was Issued against
. Beth Anne Boucher and submit·
ted by Assistant Attorney General Mark J. Zemba !he Ohio
Court of Claims.
'
"Evidence obtatnea by the
attorney general . supports a
flndinl by a preponderance of
.evidence that Beth Anne Boucher
was either l!l.e offender or an
accomplice ol'lbe offender," said
Zemba.
.
"Her Incriminating statements 10 others, her Inconsistent
versions or the crime, and the
lack · of evidentiary support for
her statemenls all ·lend to- support the official conclusion that
she played an active role In her
husband's dealh," Zem'ba wrote.
Boucher, 31, wsshot mthe back
of the head Wllh his !Ml gauge
shotaun about 6 a.m. on Dec. 19,
1988.
Mrs. Boucher, who has since
remarried to Tom McManus and .
goes by her married Jlame, told
Mount . Vernon Pollee that
Boucher grabbed his shotgun
when an Intruder entered their ·
. bedroom.
She said Boucher was shot In a
.struggle ·wtth tlte Intruder who
fled With a bag of money from a
· carl'yout which she still operates.
Mrs. McManus, 34, said J:!Ollce

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L.eonard Jenldni kWed a Cleve- witti AltOn eoii!man was accused
land pollee officer during a bank 'of participating In a series of
robbery tWo days atter the death murders and olher crimes In !he
penalty was reinstated In 1981. Midwest.
WIIJte Jester kllled an oft-duty
Six of the eight sentences were
pollee officer who was working reduced to life wilhoutposslblllty
as a bank guard.
of parole but two female prllon·
The death sentences of Jen- ers eventully coula be eligible
kins, Jester and six olhers on for parole. ·•
Death Row, Including . four
John W. Shoemaker, chief of
women, were commuted by · the Adult· Parole Aulhorlty, said
Celeste. Among those given a life &lt;;:eles te failed to file !he proper
sentence was Debra Brown, who commutation requests wtlh lbe
board so his 1,1ction may be
Invalid.
· However, Ohio ' Public De·
fender Randall M. Dana, wbo
asked Celesete to commnte the
death sentences. of all105 people
on Death Row, says the governor
"She remains a suspeet and . has unlimited legal authority to
stU! remains uncooperative, In grant clemency and commutapari on the advice of her tion wllhout !he apwoval of the
attorney," said Mount Vernon parole bard.
POllee Chief Thomas Bartlett.
Celeste said most of the eight
Bartlettsald'he Is notsurprlsed whose sentences were commuted
Mrs. McManus applied for the were mentally retarded, had low
money.
. . . .
lntellegence and suffered from
•'It's not unusual for·somebody • drug and alcohol problems:
to participate In a crime and try · Celeste also noted !hat six of
to profit," be said.
. .
!he eight prisoners are blac)t.

Votnovich, who supports capital punls!Unent, when mayor of
Cleveland attended the funerals
of two pollee officers slain by
prisoners whose sentences were
commuted.

Januery 20, .1991

Point Plnu 1t. W. Ve.

'TAX AND TITLE EXTRA

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*REBATE AND 1or TIME BUYER
INCLUDED IN SALe PRICE!

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Page-B-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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PT. PLEASANT, W.Va. -The
engagement and forthcoming
wedding of Diane Mary Schenavar and Thomas Jeffrey Molloban Is proudly announced by
their parents.
Diane Is the daughter of Grlfflp
and Mary Boggess of Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., and the late Stanley
J, Schenavar. Thomas Is the son
of John Thomas and
Gall

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WHEELING, W.VA. - Mr.
_.. aad Mrs. Carl L. Breeden of
•. ' Wheeling, W.Va. announce the
enaagement of tbelr daughter,
:. SheiTY Lynn to David H. Sanson,
• son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
: Sanson of St. Albans, W.Va.
.
Mba Breeden Is a graduate of
. ; ' Jolui ~hall High School,
• • •Marshall Unlvenlty and of The
1
UDiverstty of West Vlrltnta Col·

GALLIPOLIS- Lylin Conley,
lege of Graduat~ Studies with a daughter of Mr. and Mrs, 8arlan
B. Conley, Route 2, Galllpol!J,
Masters degree In Psychology.
She Is· employed by Gallipolis wUI be performing In the West
Developmental Center as a Psy· VIrginia University at Parkers·
• burg's production of "Weat Side
chology Autstant.
Story." Conley wtU be playlna
Sanson Is a graduate of St.
the role of "A nits, a l&amp;J'II! dance
Albans High School and Is
role
and the aecond female lead.
self-employed In auto body reThis
Is Conley' 1 tbtrd produc·
pair and sales IIi GallJpoUs.
tlon
In
the
Parkenburg area. She
An AprU 6, wedcltng IS planned
wu
teen
u "Lucy Smythe" In
tn Wheeling, W. Vi.
the outdoor mu1tcal drama
"Eden on the River" during the
1989 and 1990 aea10ns. Lpcally;
abe wu Jaat 1ee11 as "Marta Von
Trapp'' In the Rio Grande Col·
lege production Qf "The Sound of
Mualc" In 1988.
•Since then, Conley luis per·
formed with tile Oblo University
. opera Thester, Ohio Valley
Summer Theater, Athens Child·
ren's Theater, and the Blenner·

~edding -policy

.
SHERBY BREEDEN, DAVIJ) SANSON

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· lendar
Communl'ty ca

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards weddings of. Gallla,
Meigs and Mason counties as
news and Is btppy to publiSh
wedding slorles and photographs
withOUt charge. · · ·
However, wedding news moat
meei general standards oftlmell·
ness. The newspaper prefers to
publiSh accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after tbe event.
To be published In the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior
to the publication, and may be up
ID 6QO warda In length. Material·
for Alana the River must be
recfeved by the editorial depart·
ment by Thul'Bday, 4 p.m., prior
to the date of publication.
Photogrepba of either t!le bride
or the bride and groom· may be
published with weddtng stortes,
If desired. Photographa may be
either black ,and white or good
q uallty color, billfold size or

:=
~=========~========== ..larger.
Poor quality photoeraphs will

. (Community Calendar lte11111
. ;appear two day• before im event
ud lbe day of thaC event. Ite11111
:...t be reeelved Ia advance for'
.·pllbllclilon Ia lbe calendar.)

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SUNDAY
;. CENTENARY - , Centenary
•Unlted.Chrlsdan Church has the
.:Gospel Tones singing and Rev.
•flocky Jeffers pre!lchlng; Sunpay, 7 p.m. ·.

lng, for personnel and. a board
appointment matters.

KYGER - Cheshire Township
trustees meet · Tuesday, 5:30
p.m., township building 111
Kyger.

'·'' EUREKA -Eureka Church of
a.1 .baa Pat Easton speaking,
•

--rvESDAY

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VINTON - American Legion

·. .- m

JMtta Tuesday, 7: 30
~,JIWittiiOil.Academy . .
IUD Qlt,UIDE - Special vllJapD#ll, Tuelday, 7p.m.,ln
the RIO Grande municipal bulld·

OF SOUTIIEAmiN OHIO

,c

POIIIOY:

216 E. Mai11 St., 21111

f._

H2-S912
1:30 to 5:00 MoRIIay-Fn.y
CleHtl Thunday

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not be accepted .•Generally, snap- ·
shots or Instant-developing photos are not of acceptable quality,
Ques dons may be directed to
the editorial departrnent from 1
to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
at (614) 446-2342;

PLANNED PA.NTHOOD

RIO 'GRANDE - Open Gate

GirdeD Club ~11 meet January·
22 at 7:30p.m. at Nancy Skaggs'

AlSO: •••"
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Ohio Point Piau r. W. Va.

bassett Drama Association. She
Is a senior maJoring In vocal
music education at Ohio
University.
Dates·tor the performance are
Feb. 1 and 2 at 8·p.m. and Feb. 3
at2 p.m. There wUl also be a Gala
Preview on Jan. 31 at 8 p.m. The
preview wlll be a black tie affair
and proceeds will benefit the
WVU-PTheater Department.
The tickets for tbe Gala Preview are $15 single and $25
couple.
Tickets for tbe performances
are $5 adults, and $3 senior
citizens and students.
All performances will be beld
In the College Activities Center
multi-purpose room. Tickets and
lit forma tlon can be obtained by
calling the WVU·P Business . .
Office at (304) 424-8223.

Announcement
MIDDLEPOIIT • Feeney-Ben~
nea Post 128, American Legion,
and the Auxiliary, will meet Wednesday at 6:30p.m. for a dinner fol·
lowing regular meetings or the two
groups at 7:30p.m. ' .
~

Now You Know
By United Press International
Cher Ami, a carrier pigeon for
the famed World War I 77th
"Stat11e of Liberty" Division, lost
an eye and leg while flying
through enemy llnes to deliver a
message. l'he feathered hero
won a Dlsdngulshed Service
Cross and was later stuffed and
·displayed at the Smithsonian
Insdtutlon.

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au ;nb, All-.

UWPOUS

.

414 Sen u• A-. 2nll Flier

446-tiM
.
NO .. SaGO lldiJ·Fn.y
. . . . .2 s.t.nlly

a..t 1112 ••• ,

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CENTRAL STATE UN1VERSI1Y CHORUS
-\ . .

Mr. and Mrs. Dwaln (Aimee) Hendrick
r

ALL PERMS
ON SALE ·

' Mr. and Mrs. Perry (Sylvia) Curtis

Curtis anniversary
.. · .REEDSyn.LE • Perry and .Walker-Parkersburg (formally Rig
' SyiV18 C1111';S, Reedsvill~1 will and Reel).
.c~lebralli "their SOih "'!edillng anThey are the parents of Charles
mversary on Saturday ft:om 2 to 4 . Curtis; · Springboro; C8rolyn Bis·
P·~ · at the VFW Hall m Tuppers . Sell, Tuppers Plains; Paul Curtis,
.
Plains. .
_
Pomeroy; Marilyn Pooler, Miamis·
The couple was mamed Dec. 28, burg: David Seals, Miamisburg;
1940 at Long Bottom ,tly the late Sandra Mi1cl&gt;onald, Fainnont and
W.O.
Chambers,
Curtis' :Y~ginia Reynolds Parkersburg
grandfather. She is the daughrer of W.va
'
.
'
the late Aaron "Davis" and Maude
They have 16 grandsons one
;.; : Seals, Rockpon, W.Va. and Tuppers &lt;. deceased,
and
'lhree
~ Plains. He is the son .of the late .AI· granddaughters. They also have one
• ban and Hazel &lt;;ur11s, Reedsville. great granddaughter, Brittany Bis. They auend Whites ~pel Wes- sell, whose father is in Saudi
~: ' leyan Church . of Coolville. He' Anlbia .
·
; . •.: retired in 1977 afrer 32 years with

.NdW

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REG. $40 to S85

Effective January 7-31

WALK-INS WELCOME
446-3353
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

··~ - Job
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WE HAVE
SOMETHING
· TO CROW ABOUT!

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. After having undergone an under-the·
magnifying glaas on·Jite survey by the Joint
Commission on Accreditation ofHealthcare
Organizations, accreditation at Veterans
Memorial Hospital haa b"n r•newed.
requested the· on-site survey of our facility by
the Joint Comminlon which Ia composed of mem· ·
bera from the Amerlc,n College qf Surgeons, the
American College of Physicians, the American Dental Aeaociation. the American Medical Asaociation
and the American Hospital Association. our accreditation was awarded following the intensive on-site
survey.
·
· ~ The Joint· Commission judges every facility it vilita
on a sat of criteria w~ich has been approved by the
· Col'{lmisaio.n:
·
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Our Joint Comminion accreditation is firm avi·
dance that Veterans Memorial ' Hospital . provides
quality health care.
·
We are proud of this prestigious endorsement.
Yes - Wa do have something to crow about!

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11 S East Memorial Driwe
Poineroy

Jutss Ho'~
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992·2104

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vo _, ·- L

GALLIPOLIS ~ The widely- 'university's centennial obser·
acclaimed Central State Unlver· vance 1n 198'7 In ·19118 the chorus
slty Chorus ~ In concert on performed fo~ President George
SalJ:trday, Feb. 2, at the Paint Blish. The chorus has recorded
Creek Baptist Church, 833 Third an album of classiCal, spiritual,
Avenue, GalllpoUs. The concert anli goapel selections.
Philip Armatrong, a 1989 grad·
begins at 7 p.m.
The chorus Is under the dlrec· uate of North Gallla High School,
tlon of William H. Caldwell, and Is a Sophomore at Central State
has a repertoire encompassing and also a member oftbe chorus.
all ·perlods and Styles, The ·tour
rd
.
Wef .•
chorus Is selected by audition _
from the 125 member Central
There will be a card shower for
.State Choir.
Elizabeth Cardwell who will be 93
The Chorua hu the distinction years old on Feb. 3. Her address
of being tile first and only choral Is Route 2, Box 205, VInton, Ohio,
group to pe11form ln. the 4!5686.
~hambers of the Ohio House of
Representatives 81Jd the Ohio
Senate. The ehorus has per·
For Consistent Quality
formed for the Ohio Mualc
You Can Count
Educators Association and
members of the chorus have
traveled throughout the State of
Ohio, t¥ Mlan!l Valley, and the
Midwestern United States.
· The group has performed with
Stevie Wonder. Albertina
Walker, Tramatne Hawkins,
'
Vaclac Nelhybel, and performed
a .special concert for Its most
famous graduate, opera stare,
Leontyne Price, as part of the
(
. :a

sho·

On,

Trust Your Film
to the Experts.

Money seminar set·

POMEROY • A Christian money
management seminar will be held
at the First Southem Baptist
Church, 41872 Pomeroy' Pike on
Fridl!y and, Saturday, Jan. 25 and
26. Tun Morrison of South Pomt
will conduct die seminar.
· As'explained by the Rev. Lamar
O'Bryant, pastor•. the prcdic!ed
recession and just good stewardship
demands that we use SOWJd prin·
ciple in .our JlCfSOII!I1 ~- Tun
Morrison is first vice-president of
First HunlingtOD National Bank of
Huntington, W. Va. He leads money ·
management seminars in Southern
Ohio. .
.
.
There is a material charge or $5
Per person £or lb,e seminar and the
pu!&gt;fic is inviied to awmd.
· · The seminar is being ~ilsored
by the young adult department of
the First Southern Baptist Church.
Friday. The Friday 'session will be
held from '7:30 to 9 p.m. and the
Saturday session will be from 9
a.m. to noon. The minister said thai
any family cr persrin can benefit
from the information provided in
the seminar.

...

HOSPITAL .

Mernot-. Hospital

Bank provides
winter
jobs
·
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GALLIPOLIS · The Job Bank, -doors, · leaking pipes, painting,
located "in the Senior Citizens Cen- babysillirig, someone to live-in, or
ter, 220·Jackson Pike, has full and on a pan-lime live-in basis widl the
pan-time, or temporary help tO fill elderly.' If you 119..-lbe Job Bank
will try 'to till your needs.
·
your winter job needs.
The Job Bank is open Wednes·
Applicants ages 50 and older
have a beuer stability and a beuer day from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.: and
. 'day from 7 a.m. 10
record or continued acceptance by Thursday and Fri
3
p.m.
Call
446-7000
and ask 10
once they are hired.
speak
to
the
person
in
the
Job Bank
you need someone to do
·and
a
senior
citizen
to
work.
fix YOIII' broken storm

·(MD · VETERANS MEMORIAL ·
Velerans

~

Paint Creek Baptist. welcomes CSU chorus · ··. ·

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Penn Savings!

He received a Presidential Scholarsblp In 1987 from Dr. Arthur
Tho m a s , the U n tv e r sIt y

President.
d
t.
The concert Is free an open
the public·

°

011 GIEAT

2 FOR 1 SALE!
BUY THE 1ST PAIR AT REGULAR PRICE
FROM SALE GROUP AND GO THE 2ND
PAll OF EQUAL 01 LESSER.VALUE•••

FREE
ALASKA

·THE GREAT LAND

1991

•

Cruisefl'our
Packages

.$1off
'$2off
$3off

12 "15 Expoeure Rolla

Glacier Route Cruise
on the sr RDitlrdom

Inside Passage Cruise
on the ms NNuw Amst1rdDm

June 2-10, 1991
Hosted by Ginny &amp; Sam Hunt

July 9-16, 1991
Hosted by Karen Rathburn

Classic Alaska Tour &amp;: .Cruise
on the ms Wtsterdom

24 Eipoture Rolla

36 EXposure Rolla

Developing &amp; Printing
of Color Print Film:

Augustll-24, 1991
Hosted by SbirleY. &amp; Karl Meyers

De sit Now and Savel

~

If you make your deposit on any one ofthe above tours before
u can save up to $100 per person.

January 31, 1991

America Line .

TAWNEY STUDIOS

422 Second Awe.

Gallipolis

310

,.VE:
tit• r•111rlll pllblic iu w•llas oi&lt;r 'nwll/&gt;m.

·s

YOU C~N WJN
~ .~i 17

~rayer.

ALLELUIA

•·

llliday,?p.m.

IJGIIIe, Proeram: Terrt Belville,
Cailla County Utter Control.

flowen, ribbon and bows.
·
Debby Searls, dsugbtcr of Keith
and Carolyn Sea-ls. Middleport,
was lhe flower girl. She wore a realengdl dless.of ivary and lace. She
cmied silk pelals in a crystal ·IJas,
ket.
. Brandon Gagnon, son · of Karl
and nna G~ W.est Columbia,
W.Va, was the ring bearel'. He car·
ricd a pillow of ivory lace with a
flowmd mauve ~gn.
•
· Jeff Heruy, Mason, W.Va., was
the best man. Ushers were Rex
Hendrick, brother of the .groom, .
Kevin .Roush and AI Rose, all of
··Mason, W.Va
.
.
The mother of bride wore a beige
suit trimmed in lace: The rilolher of
the groom wore a blue pleated
flowcrecl dress trimmed with lace.
A recep!ion was .held follo)Ying
the ceremony. . The rQOm was
decorated With iVOIY and deep
mauve sueamers. with balkions at
the ceiling. Gracie Wilson, aunt of
the bride, made the two-tier ivory
cake connected by a ladder 10 a
base fOIDIIain !meier tine more
tiers. The flowing founlllin was ac·
cented by mauve, jade and wine
flowels and ribbons as was the top
which was hand crafted by Pam
Wilson s.Iey in a special design
of SIIICkcd blown glass bells inside
two hoops covered wit!l ivory ribbon and pearls on a pedestal base.
Preaiding at the table were Gracie
Wilson, Andrea Pqwell; Joyee .
Blake and Carolyn Searls. Amy ·
SeMis registered the guesu.
· The bride is a graduate or Meigs
Higb School The groom is a
graduate of Wahama High School.
He is employed with Cable Vision
in Point Pleasant. W.Va

Confidential Servicea:
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening J
Pregnancy Teltlng

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which were used 10 light !he unity

Family Planning
It Makes Sense...

, CHESHIRE - The Grubb
Family Singers wlU be at Old
J(yJer Freewill Baptist Church, 7
p.m. Sunday, Jan. 20.Rev. Bob
Grubb will be preaching.

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candle. They were accented with

'·Local woman featured in play

Breeden-Sanson ·

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p-:7(1"

Mo llo'han of Gallipolis.
MIDDLEPORT • Aimee Cbcr
The future bride, a graduate of Rupe and Dwlin Eric Hendrick
Pt. Pleasant High School, Is . were united iD marriqe on Dec. 7
currently enrolled In elementary at the New Ufe Coveaant t')wtrr
e ducation at Marshall Cbun:h of. God widl Gary Hines
Unt"erslty,
officiating the double ring
The groom to be Is a graduate cezemony.
of Marsh Fork High School and Is
The bride is the daughter or
also attending Marshall Unlver· ~ and Beverly R..,e. .Mid·
stty, purs.ulng'a degree In Coun- . dleport. The groom is the son of
sellng and
Robert and Janice Hendrick. 'Letart,
W.Va. ,
For the candlelight caemony the
church pews were decorlted allcrnately with candelabra and bows.
An ivory, wiDe llld jade color
scheme was c:mied out with brass
and aySIII BIXessories. 'Ibele were
also poinsettias and pine greenery.
Gtven in nwriage by bet father
the bride W&lt;n a gown of an iVU')'
VM:torian design. 1111 slim lines Wele
enhanced with inlricatc detailing o(
a sweethean nectline, embroidered
applique covering the neck to the
basque waist and litted bodice
trimmed wi,dl pra-ls. ~ applique IIK:e bordel'ed . l above the
fmnt close-pleated skirt as boufi'BIIl
sleeves extended to lllpcrcd wrisu
encircled with lace. A low :--·back
fitted to a candy box bow flowed .
into a chajlel length IJllin. The-bride
llso W&lt;n an ivory pleated pridal
hat trimmed wilh simulated pearls.
Fabric and flowers graced the
bride's counrenance. Scallmd
pearls highligh!ed her complete atlire. Sbe carried a silk bouquet of
ivory roses sprinkled with a profusion of wine and jade flowers, ribbons and bells. .
Amy Epple, Middleport, bridesmaid, W&lt;n a wine colored tea·
length
and Emily Johnson,
Mason, W.Va., wore a jade colon:d
diesa or the same design. Both ca-·
ricd the bide. and groom Cllld1cs

DIANE SCIIENAVAR, THOMAS ·MOLLOHAN

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&amp;pe-Hendrick

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Schenava~~olwhan

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1991

;; --Engagements- --Weddings~­
,..~

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Ohio-Point Ph •Mt. W. Va.

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·PRAisE GoD
ALL You PEoPLES!
- - - - Ps 117----

Service for Christian
Unity celebrating the Chair
· of Unity Octave will be held
•, this year on Sunday, January
20, 1991 with a candlelight
. walk ,at 5:30 p.m. The
service begins at St• Louis
Catholic Church, 4th i State
Sts. proceeds to First
Presbyterian; 51 State St.;
then to St. Peters Episcopal,
541 Second Ave.; and
conclu~es at Gra.ce Uni'ted
Methodist, 600 Second Ave.
The service is open to the
public and refreshments will
be served at ·Grace United ·
Methodist. In the event of
inclement· weathe; preventing
the walk, the entire service
will be hild at ·Grace United
Methodist.

I

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CONTEST WINNER - C&amp;ra Rolllb
waa
• winner ol the M6M doD In the recent lllx-weekconteatli tbe8prln1 ·
. Valley Cinema In GaiUpolls. Over $,000 people ~ to pesa bow
• mail)' M6M'a were-In a Jar and Rouab'apeu of 1,1188 wujnst four
of the actual
of 1,...
·

When you I--~
~fi.ij:.,~~
want a
,.,,...~~-~
' perm without all the extras,
we·have the pertectcholcefor ,.._~ ~..":!,
~·· -~ · .,.__
.you . The Perm Plus.'" A
-~~&lt;~
'/ii;f
great Helene-Curtis• perm. . /Ab,.,fr;;;-~.,
· · You don't need an appoint· /~ " 1 (/lciiT -~
ment, we'rewaltlngforyou now. /:::0..::'-!ofo... $
J

I:;::;

J:::::::....::: IJ9'1Sj7

..

THERE'S STILL TIME TO. SAVE
BIG AND THE SELECTION
IS GOOD!"'

..

DUliNG OUR... . .
"GOING OUT OF BUSINESS"

SALE

.

/~c.,--.

(.' ,...,.•

L~

9'IS

"w,

446-SAMS
OHIO RIVER PLAZA
Be~n Hilla Ill Big Bear
. OALLIPOUS. OHIO

'JJ

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,~ _L.._tlc um•ts• . ~~~~,~~ """' .'
tlleOIIP.. FamilyHailtutte&lt;s•
.
&lt;f~~:J
c;J;l,ftho"' •

"·

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liON. &amp; F1L 9 TO 9 P.M.

SAT. 9 TO 6 P.M.
SUflllY 12 TO 5 P.M.

-

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~B

.

B-4-Sundey Tm6e Senti Mil

~-Midci~-Gallpolil, Ohio

Pui1t Pin

'

. J......, 20. 199\

JenuirY 20, 18ft

Itt W. V•.

Pomeroy-Midcleport-Gelllpolll, Ohio Pui1t Plamnt W. v ••

, Several musicals.
.perlormed in local
man's opera house

'

&lt;.

Grief seminar open to public
·'

'

When the Civil War to ~ly bullet, eggs,
that today houses Cen- frui~ beans, maple sugar. l)ceswax,
tral Supply Co. was completed In cc.m meal and cheese. ,.t;nd more
1863, the second
ofren that not, Robinson's ads
noor was Iisee!
st81ed !hal he would pay the bigheit
as the town's
-cash price llfOWid from farmers •. for
opera house
the items Robinson had promised
with a number
10 sell 10 the govemmenL ·
.
of traveling ·.
As 10 his relliil ~ry store_m
shows perform- ··
that same building m 1864, Robm·
lng here.
son advertised he had Rio coffee,
New Orleans molasses and sugar,
John. A. Robinson was the BoSIOD syrup, Hysson and IJIIpaial
builder and owner and hence the ~. and both palm and German
upstairs was refmed 10 as Robin- . soap.
son's Opem House.
Robinson_ also was the reporter
One of the first : performances of the weekly riwket rares for
here was on Feb. 3, 1864 by the buying and sell.jng produce and
famous "S~mmerfield's Minstrel ~eats. Each Week ~ob!Jison would
Show."lbe show was pa{onned iJi . ~ for tile two Gall1pal1S papers the
its entirety four limes, Monday, ~mg market whole~ and re_tail
Wednesda and S81Ulday evenings pnces_.for coffee, sugar. nee,
neso&amp;)' aftenioOn
molasses, sorgbum,hams, lard,
· and ~Y
· ·
·
hominy and Oour. He also lisled the
'

GALUPOLIS -

bUUdlng

.

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.•
'

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'•

. '. At BankOne
are pleased with .not for us. w~ know that in '
'
·becoming one
our bank. In
order to keep winning new
'
ofthemost
the past, that customersevery~wehave. .
talked about
attitude has to keep raising the bar .
banks in the
· If this sounds like atypiGll .·
..
industry has
thinking, We plead guilty.
taken a lot of
innovations in
. Because along with the
.
..
.
.
hard work from
American banking. .new products and services, ..... ..••.
.·.lots of different people.
Back in 1966, we were plus the conveni~nce and . .. . "'"
..
... . ...
And through the years, one ofthebanks that pioneered stabilityo~ one ofthe nation's ..&lt;-. . ..r
••,•
there's alwaysbeen something conswner credit auds, givil}g.. .mostsutGessful banks, this · .•
all those-people have shared: our customers unheard of. · ·unusual attitude Js w~ setsAno-nonsense approach to _ convenience in shopping and . usapan
..
.
·doing their jobs, based on a .cash management: ·
To find o1:1t exactly what
pretty simple idea.
And in 1972,24-hour
we mean, contact_the nearest . •
The idea that in order.to ·_ banking machines seemed Bank One. Our bankers are
live up to our name, we have like a pretty good idea. So we · ready.to do something that's
'
to ~~rk a little harder' and a 'installed the first one in the pretty rare these days.
.
little smarter
·
United States.
..',
Whatever it takeS.
'
•
'
· We have to do whatever it
Thoseareprobablyenough
BANKEONE .
I• •
j
Whatever it takes."
takes to make sure.customers laurels for some banks. But
'
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'

grief counselOr, die ~ of the ·
seminar wiD be offer 10sight iniO
the grief process and to address •
other related topics.
The seminar, open to the public,
is sponsored by the McCoy-Moore
Family Service Centers, located in
Gallipalis and Vm10n.

GALLIPOUS - Ail "Arterloss"
seminar aititled, "Living With a
•Loss," will be conducted Saturday,
Feb. 26 at 10 a.m., in the dining
room of the · Grace United
Methodist Churcll, 600 Second
Ave.
According 10 SlWIIII1C MiUer.

MOMENTs To REMEMBER!

Let · HASIUN8-TANNJ!;R help you 'mak~
thne apecial momenta. You wUI have over
1• atylea of tuxedos _to choose from, We
have a 1ar1e seleclloa of lhe latest olyiea
and compllrileolary accessories lo make
lhls your special al&amp;hl. •
$
S
.
,
PIICIS STAll Al

299

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JIORMER OPERA HOUSE • Tile Central Supply building dales

~ by Jolin A. Roblnsoa wllo used tile seiond
Door as the town's opera bouse (from 1863-1865). The 8rst Boor
W8S home to R'obiiiiOD'S Other, business veahins; ifocerles,
produee eoll!mlss!ou llcnue, boat store md sllip duuullery.

to 11163 wllen

1bC Iast:penonnance was desig- . bu&gt;1og and selling prices _for com,
ned for woruen and children. Ad- powoes, beans. oats, oruons, apmission for the former was 2S cents pies, peaches, hams and that a perand for the llitter, IS cents. The son could mate a 33 pen:ent profit
other perfonnances were attended on butter.
.
.
mosdy by men who wen~ charged . By 1866, Robinson be~ wnt50 cents. Many of the attenders mg comments _concemmg the
were Union soldiers as the Old market. ~or example, 10 the Jtm. 26,
French City was hOst to hundreds · 186f? Dispalch we ~: 'T~
· of soldierS throughout th
. e war.
· contml!es v~ ~II o~ng 10..the IO·
Staled the Gallipalis Di~ .terrupllon ~f naVlgaUon by ~&lt;:C and
about this · performance: 'The the 8lmost unpassable ~diuon of
Summeifietd Minstrels· made their our roads. Flour dull at pnces rangdebut in Gallipolis Monday at ing from $~.25 for low exttal 10
Robinson's JWL The house was $11 for chou~ fam1ly, and $12 for
crowded and the performances f~J!.CY b~ds.
.
.
· were really excellent We were
Hay ught pressed, will bnng
especially blessed 10 find that the $13 a ton !foro ~ s10re. Exacdy
indelicate jokes wen~ avoided.
ooe y_ear pnor 10 t!!1s date hay was
This course will commend itself bringmg ~ a ton.
10 the public and render the
"Com m demand at 40 cents for
minstrels favor with the com- ear and 45 centers (or sh~lled. The
munity. It will draw to their support year before, com ~as sellmg for $1
an those who advocare popular per bushel. The pnce of_.oats went
amusemen~ as a necessary recrea- from 85 _cents a bushel 10 1865 10
lion to the mind." ·,
33 cents m·1866.
. ,
.
At that .time · tickets were nOt
The butter m8J;ket dnipPed. from
sold, ooe had to apply flir reserved 40 cents a pound 10 15 cents. 'L8J;d
seats prior 10 the perfcinnance at finds ready sale at 15 cents and
Onderdonk's Book Store. The ads hogs ~ for the pac!er are
always reminded pateiuial patrons: averagmg 10 cents a pou~d .
"Strict order enforced."
In the tare 1860s, Robmson sold
The first ooor of the Robinson 17 Court Street 10 ~ Mauck
building was used as a. grocery Brothers Grocery, who 10 turn gave
store, produce commission house, way 10 the Stoclcboff Brothers who
boat store and ship chandlery. were also wholesale grocers.
About that last enrerprise. we note .
·
in Robinson's ad for ~h. IB!i4 •
that he sold the foUow10g: mamla
cordage, oakum, sheet lead, emery,
PORTSMOUTH • Mary Durey
caulking irons, monkey wre,nches, of Gallipalis was recendy named 10
mops, buckets, marlin spikes, the Shawnee State University's
caulking mallets, deck brooms, bell · President's List for the fall quarter.
rope, packing yam and . coal
1b be named to the
den 'IS
shovels.
Robinson had several contracts list, students must be fu ·time and
with the Union army during the allllin a 4.0.

Open

Muoll!at lA I P.M.

4 TILT SWIVEL CHAIRS
Of&amp;Y $69995

Net IU99.9S

SS U president's list·

'

Sunday limee-s.rtinei-Page-B-6

TABLE &amp; 4 CHAIRS

· BALL HALL TREE

Nofl499.95

$19995

ONlY S1999S

ROLLTOP

c·

Not 1139U5

IROWN BIG CHAIR
ONlY

Beige. Mauve. S11foam
Not
.
ONLY $39995

'

--···

Hot 11199.95

BASSET SLEfP SOFA
Full Size
Not 1799.95
ONLY $39995

SLEEP SOFA
a. .Blue Strlpea

FLEXSTm QUEEN
Eerthtonea
Not 1975.95

ONLY $49995

FULL or QUEEN Blue ar Beige

ENGLAND SLEEPERS

. ONLY

Not '699.95 .

ONLY $34995

OAII FINISH CO,NER HUTCH

. BROWN VELVET

WING CHAIR
Not f349.95

ONLY $15 995

BROWN VELVET

CHAIR &amp; OTTOMAN
Noti34U5

ONlY $15995

ONLY $44995

Not '199.95

'

9995

'"'
•••

~~

fo • • :

• ••I'

jo • •

4 .. ~ ..

..• Jr

~

. W/RECUNERS

~

$899 95

~

.'

SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR
Ruat, Beige Colonial

Not '1199.95

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. C~ntral )"rust is a participating lender in the
Ohio Energy Action Program. This program
enables you to apply for Energy Conservation
Improvement Loans that can.be interest free.
Items such as insulation and furnaces. are
eligible for funding , C1ll or visit vour nearest ··
Cc!rltral Trust Offic-e today to see you qualify,

$99995

.

.

GAWPOLIS
354 s.c..d

•

IIi

"'

•

•

I'

lv•.

Not f49t.9$

ONlY $29995

.

ONlY $24995

ROCKERS
ONLY $14995

TO
ONLY $)995

70°/o 'SAVINGS::.---1

1----::=

- '

•

992-6661

s. ..&lt;l4! .....
Ph••• U6·UOI
Cotli,olls

APNCBANK

I

'j

ONLY $9995

Not'299.95

CENTRAL TRIJST

.

,j

Not IJ9U5

Not f249.95

MIDDLIPOIT
97 N. Second lwt.

446-0902 '

r

-FDIC.

'

~.t~!~or Mauve
SWIVEL TOP TV, VCR
STAND OAK

' '

,

·.

Not f39.95

~

'

On OMAN. As Is.

Beige. Mauve, Blue

l'

'

. SO~A, CHAIR and !12

FULL SIZE WHITE
POSTER BED

Jr

'

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•

You May Qualify lor aInterest
Free En•IY Conservadon.
.H.oma Improvement Loan

9995 '

M&lt;ml&gt;rrFDIC

.

• ..J

IJ

(

.,
'.;.

•

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�...

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-·.

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Page B-6-Sunday Tmee-Sentinal

leisurely trip thl'(lugb Connem·
the site of one of Ireland's most
ara, an ancient Gaelic Klqdom
magnltlcant castle estates .
Ashford Castle - where w.e of boglandl, rugged _mountalna
and l'(llrlng rivera tumbling
stopped for Iuncb.
·
Ashford Castle stands at tbe down to the fierce AUantlc. [t Is
tbe largest area In Ireland wblch
gateway of Glilway and Con·
naught. The grounds extend for spew the Irish language or
·
over 27,000 acres and are known Gaelic.
Theresldentscuttbelrownturf
as one of the premier shoota In
Europe. It Is ai80 renowned for or peat by band and ' many are
Its fishing-there are over Sf skilled In renewing the thatch on
the cottages. They sbea_r sheep
square miles of lake where
salmon, pllte ,_perch, eel and trout by band and collect seaweed for
their land. Sheep dot every
abound.
hillside In Ireland. The beautifUl
Inside, AShford . Castie Is all
and
praCtical AJ-an Isle aweatera
comfort. Form and function are .
originate
1n CO!IDRnara.
fused In the spectacular band·
Nearby
Is our hotel, Renvyle
craftmanablp of stonemaaons
Houae,
nestled
between looming
and ' wood-carven of long ago.
crags
and
the
white sand of
Fine paintings, sculpture, an·
KIUary
Harbor.
It
1s a charming
llque armor and gleaming Wavacation
bouae
which
eaten to
terford crystal chandeliers
the
visitor.
There
Is
command·
create an unparalleled
8
lng vtew of Klllary Harbor from
ambience. ·
Mter lunch, we continued on a . tbli sea lounge. The aboreline IS

]an..

25,
a special da."J'-1_1 .
.

·
JV
·
~ ·
+if/
.
.
nurs1n0
s
{,Ia
HMC
.
0

GALLIPOLIS - On Jan. 25,
Holzer Medical Center wtll observe IV (Intravenous) Nurse
Day, as a part of the national
proiP'am to call attention to theImportance and function of IV
NIU'ses, according to Charles
Adkins. Jr., chief executive of·
fleer ol the hospital.

for members.of tlle department
to succeutully complete venl·
puncturea and monitor the sites
to minimize Infections and other
venipuncture complications."
An additional responslbllty of
the IV Therapy Department Is
the lnatructlon of proper vealpuncture methods for EMTs ancl

~~~::r:~~l~~=: re~tered
~tgra::~:~:~~~!UJ

In recent years this: particular

nurses on the hospl· '

:r;t~,:~~ =::fiY~g!llzed , ta~ ~:::::,~is out

nles of alpine plilltts.
.
We theQ journeyed to the curoi
Of Moher, olie oflreland's naiU·
raJ wonders five miles of .sheer
.cliff face looming 700 feet over
the aea. The'Aran Ililands can be
Seen from bere. Unfortunately, It
wu raining and extremely hazy
wbUe we were there 80 we were
unable to see the cliffs clearly.
We checked Into tbe hotel at
Sbanilon Airport for our last
nlfbt In Ireland. After aettJinK In

Nurse Manager at Holzer, "A
high degree of lklll II required

Ginger Evana1 R.N., llnd Patty
Snyder R N

.

,,

c~et~~~N~u\vbyT~~~~~ =~ :.:,~e~.NriHt.a~~~ ~

111 VINE STREET, GALLIPOLIS
446-6751 OR 446•7604

.

~\ ~'iii!;

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AM presentS 'its 12th annual tour toWashingtonD.C.
and the Cherry Blossom Festival !IJld Parade. Travel by
Amtrak to our nation's c;apital for five days of excitement.
OJll or srop by AM .for

Pll)'slcll Medicine Dept.
· Rolaer Clinic .

more iliformation!

?';

FACTOIY AUTHORIZED SERVIa
I;;::::.J

Gohkt• .
Samsung

F...al
Synlphonic

it
it ·

E1111r1011
.
.

Sy!tailia .

..~...,._,..
Shintam
Multi TeCh
GE
ScoH
RCA

m

Soundesiga
I IIIith

Philco

WE REPAIR ALL MAlES
HoME ENIERTAINMENT CENTER :~

391 Wm. MAIN ST&amp;T
992-3524

~llf)~~)~).~~L=.J

i

I'ORIEIOY, OHIO .·

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HMC N1JB8E8 - IV Tberapy Nane Day wiD be oblened on
Jan. II, 1111 a&amp; Holzer Medical Center. Pictured (I tor) are tbe four
full-&amp;bne membenof the HMC IV Therapy Team, Conale Carle&amp;oa,
R.N., aurae maaar;er; Bonnie Barker, R.N.; Jacki)'DIUDea, R.N.;
and Andrea Wrlr;b&amp;, R.N.

...

....

.

heat
anyone

i

.,.........

.!

··!····

j

.!..

!

. . +"

CHILDREN'S

L.A. GEAR

..

NOW $3991

WAS S31.00

COOLVII..LE · The CoolVille

~--t40W $2491

VFW Post 9053 will hold a hunter
safetY course Monday .and Wednes·
day and Jan. 28 and 30 from 6-9
p.m. at the Coolville Lions Club

Third Saeet in
Coolviilc:. For more information
call Bob Pullins, 667·3831, Ed
building

011

l.!;;;;~~~;;;;;;;:O:P:EN~M:ON:D:A:Y!N:IG:HT=S~T~IL~I~P~.M:J·

1991 MOTORCOACH TOURS
:!f81etorlc
Olrden we...·In Wlllllm1burg, Apr. 19·21
lrdetown, Ky .. June 14·18
:July 4th Celebretlon In N- York City, July 3·8
A lurprlu Ohio Amleh Tour, July 19·20
::•~,..~ ~ Ora:c::Ole 0pry, Aug. 1·4 'P•nn. Cr•ft Daya, Sept . .6·8
• ...;...._ · F
ge
• • 8cenlc R•llwily, Oct. 12·13
~- 111111 -lv•l bf Ughte. Nov. 28
'Wheeling F-lvll of Ughta • Jemborae USA. Dec.B-9

Soft warm breezes... beautiful, white sand beaches...
crystal-clear temperate waters... this is Hawaii.
Visit America's own paradise for one week .in
Honolulu, Hawaii. Roundtrip airfare, seven nights
hotel accommodations at the Outrigger Waikiki
Tower, and more is included.
·

'Cinclnn•tl Wlnterleet. Dec. 14·11

Limited space available.
Call or stop l1y AM. today I

IAUIPOLIS
Agr
.

:ncr

417 Second Avtt.
01lllpolle

44e-om

Slninf lhl

WTHER &amp; SUEDE
WAS S47.00

Sky Fire Low

,.,..u

C1ll 4411·8448 or

1·800·172·2292

:::':'A~NEW CONCEPT I:N:::sc:T:R:A:V:E~L~·~·:::~

_________________

310 SECOND BYE.
plfblic IU OHU Ill""'-·~'~·

THESE BIG SAVINGS••••THEY WON'T LAST FOREVER!
c

'

...j ....

TAKE AN
ADDITIONAL

'

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.,...

;.

SPECIAL

MONDAY
LETARI' - The Letart Township
'rrQsttJe$ will meet Monday a1 6
p.J11. to discuss the appop1iations
. for 1991. .
·

April 4-U, 1991
Hosted by Lois Litteral

.' ...
..•' ' ..•
.&lt;·
..
"' ..
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i

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~--~:::~~-----------"'""!'--.,

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+

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runior

.:·•.
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·+ . . .

....

. POMEROY • The Meigs County
Genealogical Society will meet
Sunday a1 2 p.m. a1 the Meigs
County Museum on Mulberry
A - . The program wiH be an in·
trodiiCiion to the Liller' Day SainiS
gmealogical m:onls 011 microfisbe
· 6y Lloya Blactwood.

Chapter, Beta Sigmc Phi Sorority
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
TUESDAY
Meigs. County Public Library in
MIDDLEPORT • The Meigs Pomeroy. Debbie Evans and Julie
High Academic Boosters Dillon will have the culwral report .
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in and rerreshmeniS.
~Meigs Junior High cafeteria.

~

"''"

' ....

Theofsecond
session
of POMEROY.
a 12·step series
meetings
for
the Pomaoy group of A.A. and AJ.
Anon will be held Sunday a1 7 p.m.
a1 the J.T.P.A. office. 117 West
S~ SL in Polneroy.

POMEROY - The Obio Eta Phl

.

SUNDAY 12·6

(
·,

.. ,.... ·

SUNDAY

6348.

FURNITURE'S
..•
OPEN MOI\l.-SAT. 10-8

•

l

_ , . pablicatloa ID tile c:alen·
dar.

HAWAII

IT'S VALUE.CITY
'

..:. ..

appell' two
before u ewat
ud llle day tllat eveaL Items
• • lie recel..ed ID advance to

though symptoms may be very
-mild and Intermittent, they also
may be severe and chroniCally
debllltatlng. Symptoms may be
easily treated wtth a mild arthrl. t!s medicine and exerclae or may
be recalcitrant to treatment at
alllevels. ·
The primary treatment for this
disease syudrome .IS an active
aerobl~ tr~lnlng . program to
Increase tbe patient's feeling of
· well-being and decrease the
symptoms of Immobility. For the
chroniC . aches and pains, the
patient must literally work
"through the pain." Mild ar·
SOLDIER DEPLOYED LCPL VlclorL CbevallerJr.,
thrltlc medlcatlona are helpful
son of Mr. and Mra. VIctor
wtth this. OccaslollfliY In 1)1e
more severe cases, trigger point
Chevalier Sr., bas beea deInjections wtth Cortisone may be
ployed to the Peralaa Gulf.
help(ul and the use of tricyclic
The 1888 Eaalen Hlp Bcbool
graduale wu ltattoDed a&amp;
antl-depreasant medications for
camp Pendi4!Wn, Calli., In the
sleep m9dltlcatlon may be beneBSSG·5 Mala&amp;. Det.
.
ficiaL Physical modalities, such
as pliyslcal exerclae, b.ot packs,
C(lld · packs, electrical stlmllla.'
Uon, etc., help In the early course coming to · a rheumatolOgist's
of recovery.
·
., .
office carry this diagnosis.
Finally. psycbosoclallnterven·
The negatlv!! side of the coin In
tlon for stress management and .. this disease syndrome Is that It Is
pain behavior are a key to the chronic, long-term and unremll·
treatment process as well. It has tlng, hut the good side Is that
been noted that approximately 15 there Is no mortality nd the
to 40 percent of all patients morbidity Is usually low.

TAKE ADVANTAGE

•

'

. Comm~Caltlldar Items Wipl, 667-66~7. or Ed Rood, «&gt;1·

·· r-~~-----~---...._

.•

·''

Sentinel Calendar

.

b)' Dr. Daatel a. Black

~ GALLIPOLIS . - In today 's
, world of modern medicine, fancy
:· tests and high technology, there
•. Is a new and elusive disease
;· syndrome. It Is very ·dlfflcult for
:1physicians to diagnose, treat and
{ understand, ,'
:• I am speaking about a disease
~ called fibroSitis or flbromyal~a.
.: This Is , a chronic museu lar
~ syndrome of aches and pains. It
·, cannot be proven by any dlagnos:; tic medical tesdng and· can be
:; very dlfflcull to . treat with
., modern medical techniques.
:; This disease was first des·
&gt; crlbed In 1904 when the term
·; "fll!rosllls" was coined.
·-- • Recently the Mayo Clinic bas
:"-;~rlbed It as a chronic muscu~ia!' arthritis but locally It may be
!£~~ ~s .. •'rheumatlz." This
:r.l ltagnosll' Is' made by exclusion
:~ J'fhlcll. ineaqs that !111 other
~ ~jmllar disease Is characterized
:,;. ~ a symptom. .complex of
:~!ll:!:onlc muscular aches and
:V'.p,!ns · wblch 1 occur predoml·
~:iWIUy In YO!lllg females and Is
!.•often post-trauma.
;.!Jt may result In .a syndrome of
,..!ileeplessness- or poor quality
t:•PleP which causes patients to
J:t a~aden fatlqued In the morning.
'-: This easy fatigability may ex·
::; tend throughout the day, adding
-. to a poor endurance. The symp:::;toms may be aggravated by
~ acute changes In the weather,
.,.chlllbig breezes, psychosocial
"-stressors or repetitive activities.
~ There Is a localized syndrom
.,which may aggravate only cer·
:(tala areas, such as the neck and
~upper shoulders or low back, or a
....more generalized variety which
:~effects the·enttre muscular sys:;tem lit the body. On a clinical
.•evaluation by the physician, the
-:unddlngs may be described as
::.lender points In the muscles
. ::Which . can . be · pal~ted and
' ·.quantitated. They are described
::asa nodule under the skin which
··llll!.Y create localized severe pain
·or a "jump" slgrt noted In the
patient's reaction when pushed.
The COI]UIIOD areas of trigger
points are In the neck, upper
shoulders, mid-back, low back,
buttocks, thighs and knees. AI-

Apri13-7,
. 1991
Escorted by Lois Jones

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(UPJ) - Cbeech Marin formerly of the Cheech and Chong
· com.edy t~am, has signed to
make television shows for 20th
Century Fox. Marin and Stan
Coleman wtll be execudve producers ol the abows ·and Mal'ln
wtll contribute as a writer
dlreclor and occasional per:
former. The first show Is a
halt-hour sitcom titled "Culture
Club" that wt11 be ready for the
1990·91 TV season.
·

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b
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~~~e: 1~-::-~b ~~~~~~-::;.~:~0~

IVnunesbavetberesponslbll·
lty of starting IVs along with
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chemotherapy In the hospital,
and maintaining central lines for
patients for whom Ills necessary
to bave subclavian catheters,
Hickman catheters and
lnfusaports.

'

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:-. :;~~~an~·~~;·v~~20~,~1g9~9~1~~~==~~~~==========~p~~~m=•~ftU~~M~kd-~
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fS.heumatism -·diffirult
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covered wtth large, oval, per·
and trelldng up, we departed for
fectly amoolh stones o_
f varloila
Knappocue Castle where we
colon,addiDgtQtbebeautyoltbe
enjoyed an autbentlc Medieval
'"llrea.
Buquet. We were greeted by
After a reatful nlfbt, Ilawntna
beautiful, velvet·IOWDed ."serv·
to the Atlantic pound ~shore- • lng weacbe!l" wilD III!I'Ved us
line, we set out to explore Galway
"~" lmmedlataly upon our
City wtth Its quaint winding
arrival.
·
•trl\ets and medieval houses.
"Mead" i. a vfle.taatlng con·
Ambling lbl'(lagb pretty towns
coctlon wblcb appeared to be
and sleepy villages we passed • made from elder, vtnepr and
tbroua'b Oaddagb, a ' flabtng
crushed apples. Legend baa lt .
village, borne of the UI!IQIII!
tbat thla drink po11eeses apeclal
Claddagb wedding ring, de·
"medicinal qualities", espe·
slped by a Galway goldamlth 1n
clally fpr young brldqrooms!
the 15th Century.
,
Upon our arrival back· at the '
, _Hea~lng aouth, we lunched at
hotel, we bad one Jut gathering
- Moran • on the Weir, a storied
of the tow' jroup where fond
,pub right on the water, noted for
farewelli were exchanged. It
their seafood. The Moran family
wu a dellghtflll group to travel
baa owned thll pub for more than
with and many new friendships
two centurfel and Michael Mo-were cemented during our time
ran,thepresentOWDer,llthel2th
together.
~
In this pl'(lud line ol publicans.
We left the group, along with
He's a famous singer In Ireland.
three other couples, · the next ·
After lunch, we traveled
morning on the next leg of the
through the unique moonscape
trip. Destination .... London!
scenery of tbe Burren Country, a
_ limestone wilderness of vaniSh·
r -}

"Holzer
Medleal center 1s pte~ arid ~~7
proud to be In the forefront
reglonaiiy .lnprovldlngtblivery ~
Important nuralng apeclalty .for
our patients.". ~
Memben of the IV Therapy ~
Department at Holzer Include, In
addlttontoMs.CarletonaaNurse
Manager, Andrea Wright, R.N.,

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C

Jan':*¥ 20. 1991

Ohio University hands
Kent··State 60-59 loss
KENT, Ohio (UPI) - Fresh· with 1:42 to play In the first half
Into overtlme.
man Rush Floyd's three,polnt and added a free throw 43
Derrick Daniels scored 18
field goal with one second re- seconds later to bring Arizona
points, Byron Smith finished with
malnlng, his only points · of the within 29·28 at halttlme.
16 and Mickens added 13 as the
Cougars Improved to 11-5 overall
game, lifted Ohio University to~ · VIllanova took a 12-9 lead on
and 3·2 In the SWC with their 16th
60·59 Mid-American Conference ~ two free throws by Byrd and,
win over Kent State Saturday after Arizqna wentahead13-12on
straight victory at . Hofhel.nz
atternoon.
•
a jumper by Reeves, VIllanova
Pavilion. The victory also
snapped a two-game losing
Floyd's basket was set up by assumed a 19·13 advantage on a
streak.
sophomore Chad Estis, who hit a basket by Byrd with 10:48 to play
three-pointer to puU the Bobcats In the first half.
Oklahoma 76, Oklahoma St. 72
Walker hit a three· pointer fora
to within 59-57, then stole a Kent
At Nonnan, Okla., Jeff Webs·
State pass near mid-court and 25-18 Villanova lead but Mills, ter's free throwing shooting In
fed Floyd for the game-winner.
who hail ·13 first-half points,
the llnal minutes helped Okla·.
Kent State, led by Tony Banks scored on a fast.break layup to · homa fight off an upset bid ·
with 19. points and Mike Klinzing bring Arizona within 27-25 with Saturday and brought the lith· '
with 14 held a 32-21 margin at 3:08 to go.
ranked Sooners a 76-72 victory
halftlm~. But the Bobcats came
.-·Kentuckj 18, Vanderbilt 50
·
over Oklahoma State.
back In the seeond half, mostly on
At Lexington, Ky., freshman
Oklahoma avoided Its second
the strength of hitting seven ofl5 Jamal Mashburn scored all his 17 straight loss, Improving Its Big
three-point field goal tries.
points In the second half Satur· Eight Conference record to 3·1
Lewis Geter's 22 points paced day to lead the K~!ntucky Wild· and Its season mark to 14·3. The
Ohio University, now 2-3 In the cats to a 58-50 victory over Cowboys dropped to 1·2 and 11-4.
MAC and 9·7 overall. Torn Vanderbilt.
The Sooners owned as much as
Jamerson added 12 for the
Mashburn scored nine of his a 10.polnt lead In the second half
Bobcats.
points In one stretch as kentucky only to have the Cowboys rally
Arizona '72, VIllanova 114
rallied back from a six-point and go In front with less than
At VIllanova, Pa. , Chris Mills deficit and opened up a seven· seven minutes remaining. Okla·
· scored 26 points Saturday to lead point lead. John Pelphrey added homa, however, regained the
sixth-ranked Arizona to a 72-64 12 poll).ts for the Wildcats ..
advantage on four straight free
victory over Villanova.
Kentucky, 14·2 and 6-0 tn the throws from Webster.
Brian Williams, KhalldReeves So11theastern Conference, _ won
Florida 811, Ml881aalppl St. 82
and Matt Muehlebach each . Its ·ninth straight game. Scott
At Gainesville, Fla., senior .
added 11 points as Arizona, 15·2. Dra11d led Vanderbilt, 10-7, 4·3,
guard Renaldo Garcia scored 16
won Its fifth · ~tralght game. with 15 points and Kevin Anglin
points Saturday to lead Florida to
,
VIllanova, 9-7, got 21 points from contributed 12.
an 85-82 victory over Mississippi
· Lance Miller and 11 from Chris
Cent. Michigan 73, Toledo 18
State In Southeastern Conference
Walker.
At Toledo, Ohio, hot·shootlng action.
Mills hit a jumper to give
Darlan McKinney scored 26
Florida, 7-8, 3-3 In the SEC,
Arizona a 62-58 lead and, after
points and Sean Waters added 16
never
trailed after taking a 36-35
VIllanova closed within 62·60 on a
to lead Central Michigan to a
LOOKS FOR ROUTE - Texas AA:M guard
lead
with
47 seconds left· In the
basket by Calvin Byrd. Williams
73·56 Mld·Amerlcan Co~erence
Isaac
Brown (left) looks for a route to the basket
scored on a tip-In and added two
win over Toledo Saturday first half on a layup by Garcia.
around
Baylor pard David Wesley In Saturday's
The Bulldogs made a run late
free throws for a 66-60 lead with
afternoon .
·
Southwest.
Conference giune at College station,
the game, but Garcia made
1:30 left.
.
Central, now 9-6 o~ralland 3·2 In
.
Texas,
which
the vlaltlng Beari won 90-85. The
Marc Dowdell brought V!Uan·
In the MAC, held a 32-26 halftime two free throws w1 th 24 seconds ·
mli.-n
ova within 66'62 with a pair of
margin after leading by as many left,staklngtheGatorstoan85·79
lead. Mississippi State guard .
Q
.
free throws butMuehlebach hit a
as 10 points late In the half.
, . free throw and added a layup for
The Chippewas quickly pulled Tony Watts made a three-point
a69-62advantagewlth37seconds
away In the second half, taking fleldgoalwlthelghtsecondsleft, ·.
Florida was able to hold the
to go.
their biggest lead of the game at but
ball
until the final buzier.
57-38 with 11:18 remaining.
Miller Scored tocuttheArizona
lead to69·64 but Mills added three Toledo never got .closer than 11
Wake Forest 9'7, N.C. State 76
free tjlrows In the last 19 seconds
points the rest of the way .
At Wlnston·Salem, N.C., fresh·
for the final margin.
McKinney, a '6-foot·6 junior
man Rodney Rogers scored 23
Walker made two free throws forward, hit 10 of 14 field goal
points and grabbed 15 rebounds
ByROBERTJ.MURPRY
to draw V!Uanova within 60-58 attempts and was perfect In siX
Saturday as Wake Forest rolled
UPI Sp_oJ1B Wrller
with 3· 28 to play after VIllanova- trle&amp;lrom- ~ free lll1'o\l'·lb!e ~ ·· over North Carolina ·~ 97·76.
·-CHICAGO (UPI) - Vincent Damphousse,
had ciosed within 57·56 on two
Houston ,3,·Texu Tech 70 .
- Rogers, who was one · of five
playing In his 'first AU-Star game, scored four
free throws by AIJthOny Pelle and
· At Houston, Texas, Alvaro
Demon Deacons to score In
times Saturday to power the Campbell Confer·
5049 on a dunk by Pelle.
· Teheran and Darrell Mickens · doubl~t figures, helped Wake
en"ce to an 11·5 blowout of the Wales Conterence.ln
· Arizona used~ 15·5 run to take each scored baskets In the f!JI8] . Forest slowly pull ahead of ~he
the 42nd NHL AU-Star Game at Chicago Stadium.
a 47-41lead on a free throws by 1:35 Saturda:,o afternoon, llttlng
Wolfpack early In the second half
Darilphousse, a Toronto Maple Leafs left
Ed Stokes. -Muehlebach had two
th,e Houston Cougars to a 73·70
to extend their record to 8-5 and
winger selected as a reserve and the lone
three-point plays during the
Southwest Conference victory
3-2 In the Atlantic Coast Confer·
representative from his team, scored once In the
scoring spurt.
over the Texas Tech
ence. The Wolfpack fell to 8-4 and
first periOd and three more times In the final
Greg Woodard scored on a
Raiders.
.
.-2-1.
frame to equal the All·Star mark set by Wayne
drive to the basket to give . Houston's Derrick Smith
Chris King had 18, Robert Siler
Gretzky and Marlo Lemieux. ~e four-goal
. VIllanova a 36·32 lead with 16:42 missed a free throw with siX
added 16 and Randolph Childress
performance netted him MVP honors.
&gt; to play after Arizona had tied the
seconds left, but Texas Tech's 15 for the the Deacons. Wake
Adam Oates, a last-minute replacement for St.
score at 32·32 on ·a jumpl;'r by
Steve Miles could not hit a
Forest shot 52.9 percent from the
Louts Blues teammate and top-votegetter Brett
Ml'lls
three·polnt jumper at the buzzer field for the game while North
Hull, scored a goal and set up four others. Oates
Wlilfams scored on a hook shot
that would have sent the game Caronna State shot just 37.8.
found out on Friday he would make his fllrst
All·Star appearance In place of· Hull, who Is
recovering from an ankle Injury, .
· .Oates' tally came during a four·goal outburst by

Amerlcaa fll,g patches lhat Brown and the reel o,
the Tel&lt;u AA:M players have ·aewed oa their
jeraeya are In place lo show support for the U.s •
troopi.lnvolved In the Peril an Gulf war. (UPI) .

camp be l.l c.onJeren,.e .hands
.
1 N
. HL All-Star e-··e Saturday'

I "'-''

·Wales Conference 11-5 loss

Rj.

In today's AFC chqmpionship game,

the Campbell Conference squad midway through
the second periOd that broke open a 2·2.game.. He
assisted on three Damphousse goals and .another
by Chicago's Jeremy Roenlck.
The Los Angeles Kings' Wayne Gretzky also
score(! during the second· period flurry, establiSh·
lng an All-Star record with his 11th goal In 11
games. Gordie Howe had 10 In 23 contests. ,
The 16 combined &amp;Qals ranked second only to
last year's 19. The total 82 shots on goal also
ranked as the second most, only behind the 87 or a
year ago.
For the second straight year, the NI{L
broadcast the game nationally on network
television. The contest was carried live by NB,C
and picked up by the Armed Forces network,
despite cogcerns the game or telecast might be
canceled because of the Persian Gulf war. The
telecast was Interrupted during the third periOd
with news ·from the war front.
·
•'

·Raiders-Bills battle could make all-time title..clash· list
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By DICK USIAK
•
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (UPI) - It has the
makings of a classic American Football Conference clash, along the lines of the memorable 1981
San Dlego·Miaml playoff confrontation or the
vintage 1971 Miami-Kansas City matchup.
The Buffalo Bills and Los Angeles Rald~rs, two
of the' original franchises In the AFL, the
maverick league founded In 196!1 before merging
with the NFL In 1966, face off tOday In the AFC
championship ,cohlest at· Rich Stadium. the
winner getting a berth In Super Bowl XV.
The Raiders have progressed a little better than
the Bills since the AFL was founded , going 1o four
Super Bowls and winning three. A Bills victory
would give them their first trip to the big game In
the JO.year history .of the franchise.
•'We were the two division winners with the best
re·cord, " Bills head coach Marv Levy noted, "so · .
maybe It's appropriate we do face each other.
''They are extremely well balanced, extremely
talented, with outstanding defense, good special·
tsts and good special teams," Levy said of the
Raiders. "In saying that, I hope I described us as

well."
If regular-season records mean anything, the
game may he one for the record books, slmllar to
the Dolphins' 27·24 double-overtime playoff win .
over the Chiefs on Christmas Day 1971. Or maybe ·
It will come close to San Diego's 41·38 overtime
victory over the Dolphins Jan. 2, 1981 - stlll an
NFL playoff record for most points.
·
· Both teams will obviously be thinking about
their first meeting back on Oct. 7, when the .
·Raiders led by 10 points In the fourth quarter only
to see the Bills score 24 points In a 6: 03 span of the
fourth quarter to post a 38-24 triUmph.
"We felt we had the game under control for
about three quarters and they came up with the
big plays," Raiders bead coach Art Shell recalled.
''You have
.. to give.them credit for making things
happen.
. .
..
· ·· The offensive possibilities In · this game are
enormous. The Bills, with Jim Kelly at the ·
controls of a potent no-huddle offense, rolled up
493 offensive yards and scored 44 points on a
snow-covered field In their playoff ·win over

Mlam.llast weekend.
"What you saw (against Mlatnl) will come out
again (against the Raiders)," said Bills running
back Thurman Thomas. ''We won't change it."
The Raiders scored 20 points In their playoff win
over Cincinnati, but had 389 net yards, Including
235 on the ground. Their quarterback, Jay
Schroeder, fired 19 touchdown passes during the
·_regular season, with just nine Interceptions. .
They have an able receiving corps, led by
Mervin Fernandez, Wlllle Gault and tight end
Ethan Horton. .
"I think we can put points on board when we
have to," Shell said. ·'The object of.the thing is to
win. If It means scoring three points, fine. If It
takes 40 points, then you have to get it."
One of the Raiders' offensive weapons could be
riltsslng. · Powerful running back
Jackson
suffered a left hlp Injury against Clnclllllltl, and Is
.officially listed as doubtful for fhe title game. ·
Shell said a decision on his avallabllty may not be
made until just before kickoff,' and the Raiders
might activate former Bills running back Greg
Bell for the game.

·ao

.To make third _straight Super Bowl,

"We won't change offensive strategy (wlthollt
Jackson)," Schroeder said. ''The players we have
are here because they fit Into the offensive
strategy that we have. Whether he can or cannqt
go; we're going to go out and do basically the
:
things we've been doing all year."
While the offensive potential Is great, neither
team Is a slouch on defense. The Bills 11re led by
defensive end Bruce Srnlth, whose 19 sacks were
second best In the NFL this season. A strong
Unebacklng corps of Cornelius Bennett, Darryl
Talley and ShJ!ne Conlan provide added strength. ·
"Mr. Smith, and notice I say Mr. Smith because
he Is outstanding," Shell said. "He's one of the
greatest players I've ever seen In the game as far
as a defensive player goes. As he goes, they go.
.'l'rY to take him away and they've got a lot of other
players to make the. plays."
. ·
The Raiders' 4·3 defense Is led by Its down
linemen, Greg TownSend, Hpwie Long, .Bob Gollc
and Scott Davis. Golfe had nine tackles against
the Raiders and was second on.the team with 91
stops during the season.
·

.

-Niners must -knock -off Giants -in NF9 championship bout
By WILLIAM D. MUR~Y
UPI SportJI Writer .
~
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The Immediate goal for the San
Francisco 49ers tOday when they, meet the New York Giants In the ·
NFC Championship game Is to qualify for.their third straight Super
Bowl.
·
·.
Their ultimate goal is to become the first team to win three straight
Super Bowls.
.
.
.
·
If one believes Las Vegas Oddsmakers, the 49ers are a lock to play In
super Bowl XXV. The Nlners are solid elght·polnt favorites, but the
Giants will show up nonetheless.
. ·
"I thlilk It's good we're underdogs," said New York fullback
Maurlce Carthon. "I think from here on out, we'll be the underdog In
whatever situation' we come up against. I think that's good
sometimes. especially against this team because I don't think they're
·seven points better than us."
.
The two teamJ met Dec. 3 with the 49ers preva!Ung7-3in the lowest
Scoring NFL game this year.
"It (the victory over the Giants) was the lli!st (game) I've been
Involved In," said 49ers bead coach George Seifert, who formerly was
the team's defensive coordinator. "I cap remember distinctly the
excitement I felt. It would rate right up there with the Dallas game
(after the 1981 season) Wh!!n we won the first (NFC) championship."

The 49ers will face a new challenge because quarterback .Jeff
Hos teller will be starting In place of the l~u_re(! Ph II S.l mms. Hos teller
adds lhe dimension of a runnlng.q uarter ack to the New York attack.
That ·wlll force San Francisco to lje patient on defense.
''I consider us a dlsclpUned defense as well as I do New York," said
Seifert, who has a 32-4 record as head coach. •'We may have to be even
more so In this game because ofthe style.of quarterback we're facing.
They have used him (Hostetler) to attack the corners more· (on
rollouts) . With a p18y·actlon pass, he can drop back and find the
crease and he does a good job of running up the field."
The Giants also will be without rookie ' running back Rodney
Hampton, who broke his leg last weeken~ In the playoff victory over
the Chicago Bears. Hampton's loss will force veteran Ottis Anderson
to slloulder more of the running responslbllltles. Anderson gained 784
· yards on 225 carries In the regular season and scored 11 touchdowns.
. "I don't know what effect not having Hampton will have on their
offense," s·ald San Francisco defensive end Pierce Holt. 'The more
~derson runs the ball, the stronger he seems to get."
Defensively, the Giants must find a way to disrupt San Francisco
49ers quarterback Joe Montana, who has the uncanny ability to find
his third and fourth receivers.
"When you ·have Joe Montana and· Jerry Rice, anythlna can
happen," said Giants head coach Bill Par,cells. ''Tb11t team can put up

40 points any day."
·
.·
New York will rely on Its pass rush, led by, linebacker Lawrence
Taylor, to hurry Montana. During the regular season, Taylor had 10.5
sacks.
.
"I think they will have a lot of people on the line of scrimmage to
rush the quarterback," said San Francisco off~~slve tackle Steve
.
:
Wallace. "Th'ey have to~o that to be s_uccesstul.
The Giants shut down Rice In the first meeting, but with John
Taylor and Mike Sherrard both now beallhy, New York will not be
able to concentrate solely on the 49ers' oullltsndlng receiver.
·
"I caught just one puaand they really defended me well," said
Rice, who In 1990 beearne only one of four players In NFL b!Jtory to
catch 100 pasaes In a slnflle seuon. 'This weekend Is eotne to be a big
test for me. I've already got an atiltude."
·
The contest also could come down to special teams and the battle of
field position.
·
New York punter Sean Landeta' s,44.1 yardl per punt&amp;'l'oasaverage
led the NFL while San FranciiiCO's Taylor and New York's Dave
Meggett are 'among the league's moat daqerous returners.
"In big games like thla, thespeclal teamsbecomeverylmportant,"
said Harry Sydney, tbe 49ers' 1peclal teams captain. "If you don't get
the ball past the 20 on your return, It limits what you can do
offen,slvely. We are gome to have to find I way to make a bl&amp; play."

,-.~

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Pitga C-2- Sunday Tmaa Sentinel

~orth
.

~

J...,.rv 20, 1~81

Porneroy-Middleport-:-Galipolis, 'Ohio-Point Plaasn. W.Va.

-

.

Southel-n hands Eastena 91-71 defeat
om,
witli &amp;.
••••t
::,-:.-:a:a= l:
a.

Gallia beats Kyger Creek 109-60
.

'

.
~~ when Junior forward Darin
Smith stole th~: ball and passed It
to Tackett, who drove In for the
lay,up.
. Bobcat guard Sean Denney,
who finished with 14 pOints,
burled the first of his three
three-pointers from the right
wing with 6: llleft to Ue the game
at 5-5. Kyger Creek forward Phil
Bradbury followed that with a
16-foot Jumper from the Jeff wing
- with 5: 38 left to glve the'BObcats
a 7-5Iead - their orily advantage
of the nlg[)t. .
That Ieljd lived for only 12
seconds, because. Pirate forward
Jeff Ratllft got Inside for the
layup and was fouled. He missed
the bonus foul shot, and the game
was tied at 7-7.
This was the start of a 10-polnt
scoring parade that saw tbe Bucs
take a 15-7 lead before Denney
dialed long distance from the
right wing again (3:53) to cut
North's lead to 15-10. But even
though Bobcat forward Shane
Swisher. sank a 15-foot Jumper
(See J&gt;IRATES on C-3)

BY SCO'M' D. WOLFE

. By G. SPENCER OUORNE
- ·' 'nm..S-Del Staff
VINTON - North Gallla,
fiai'dly looking shopworn after
Thursday nlgbt's voyage to •the
Bfuegrass State, put six men,
lhcludlng two first-line reserves,
~p· double t1111res In administerbig a 109-60 whitewashing of
Kyger Creek Friday_night.

With losses by Eastern and turnover-oriented defense and
Symmes Valley. the Pirates (6-8, the fast break spelled trouble for
6-4) · moved Into a three-way tle the Bobcats, whoweredealtthelr
for second place In Ute SVAC, fourth stralgbt loss by a team
three games behind front· . rebounding from a 105-81 road
runners Hannan Tracl! and · loss to . Maysville and playing
Southern (who won Friday night) minus head coach Ron Twyman,
with four conference games wbo was sick with the flu.
remaining.
Reserve/ assistant varsity coach
Control of the boards, a
Gregg Dee! guided the Pirates In
•
both games.
The preview of things to come.
came 15 seconds after .tip-off,
when Pirate point guard Chris
Tackett, who came oft a JO.polnt
performance against Maysville
the night before to lead the court
with 23, stole an lnbounds pass by
Kyger Creek and scored on a
layup. -Bobcat forward/ center
Bryan Hall, who paced his team
MERCERVILLE - Hannan
Tuesday to host McDermott
with 16 points, tied the game 33
Trace put 12 men In the scoring
North\vest,, while Symmes Val·
seconds
later on a 14-!oot Jumper
column In Its 85-36 knockopt' ley will remain Idle until Friday
from
the
right half of the lane.
victory over Southwestern Frl·
night's game with Eastern at
Hall's
flrs't
foul sent Ptnife
day night.
Tuppers Plains ..
postman
Shane
Smith (10 points,
Senior guard Jason Black, who · Score by quarters
lour
rebounds)
to the line 12·
helped keep tbe Wildcats (11·3,
Symmes Valley .. 6 15 10 24-55
seconds
later.
He
missed the first
9·1) In a first-place Ue with
Oak Hlll ., ...... , ...
13 10 27-64
but
made
the
second,
and North,
Southern In .the· SVAC with a
OAK HDL (M) - Potter
ahead 3·2, expanded th.a t lead to
game-high 18 points; received . 6-1-2-17; C. Simpson 6-0-4-16;
major offensive assls tance from
Davis 4·2·0-14; Lewis H-8-13;
senior backcourt mate J.J. Be·
Hall2-0.IJ.4. TOTALS - -114-IUf
van and senior forward Todd
Field coals - 23-45 51.1%)
Boothe, who had 16 points each.
Three-polaters- 4·9 (44.4%)
Senior forward Chris Metzger
Free !brows - 14-32 (43.75%)
put In 16 points to pace the
ReboUDCII- 41 (C. Simpson 10)
Highlanders (1·11, 0·10) .
Tumovers - 13
Jn the reserve contest, the
SYMMES VALLEY (U) Wildcats won 66·44 behind
Robinson 9-0-9-27; Renfroe 2-2·2·
Jimmy Brace's game-high 27
12; Lester 2·0-2-6; Blake 2-M-4;
points, which helped Don Saund·
Gates 0-1-1-4; Pierce 1-0-0-2.
ers' crew to keep Its first-place
TOTALS- 1"14-U
tie with SVAC co-leader North
Field coal• - 19.56 (33.9%)
~idl!a. Fortner led Southwestern
Three-pointers- 3-13 (23.1%)
&lt;tth 17 polnll!.
Free throws - 14· 20 (70%)
. : •on this week's schedule, FrlRebound!! ....: 28 (Robinson 8)
tJay travel dates are in' store for
Steals- 8 (Gates 3)
llpth teams, as Hannan Trace
Tumovers -' 16 .
~II head north to North Gallla
fi'd Southwestern will head up~tver to face Southern.
&amp;core by quarters
4 door, 5 speed trans·
Regency Brougham ,
l:louthwestern ....... 8 16 8 4-36
mission, stereo cas·
fully loaded, low miles,
lfannan Trace ... 1~ 24 30 15-85
setta, just traded .
one-owner.
(Overall)
: • HANNAN TRACE (85) TEAM
W L PF PA
l!lack 4-1-7-18; Bevan 3-2·4-16;
Hannan Trace .... 11 · 3 1031 772
~the 5·0·6-16; Rankin 2·1·2-9;
Southern ............. ll 3 1035 869
Ill MERCURY
Z:Ioyd 2-0-3-7; Unroe 0-0+6; Eastern ......... ..... 8 5 878 919
- •..J
~row 2-0-0-4; Cremea11s o:1.1J-3;
Symmes Valley .. 8 6 848 845
Clornell 1·0-11·2: Woods 1-0-0-2;
North Gallla ....... 6 8 1143 1143
f
•
l
tiarnes 0-0-1-1; Watson 0-0-1-1. Oak Hill .... ... .. .. .. 4 9 851 944
LTS , automatic, alr , power
I:O'fALS - :!t-5-31-85
Kyger Creek . ..... . 2 12 · 835 1041
windows &amp; seat. IOc~ uade
: · Field Joals- 25-66 (37.9%)
~uthwestern ... ... 1 11 683 875
~: Three-pointers- 5-14 (35.7%)
!·l!'ree throws -.30-39 (76.9%)
(Conference)
'
Rebounds - 41 (Boothe &amp;
Hannan Trace ..... 9 1 '788 533 .
Rankin, 7 each)
• Southern .............. 9 1 783 629
: AMIIIB -19
Eastern ......... .... .. 6 4 702 727
•Steals- 24
Symmes Valley ... 6 4 590 · 586
: Tumovers - 19_
North GallIa . .. .. ... 6 4 830 736
:soUTHWESTERN (86)
Oak Hill ..... ... ...... 3 7 625 726
Metzger 8-0-0-16; Haney 2-0-2-6;
Kyger Creek ........ 1 9 583 762
· -Mershon 1·0-2-4; Carter 1·0-0-2;
Southwestern ....... 0 10 535 737
K;lser 1·0·0·2: McCarty 1.0-0-2;
TOTALS ............ 40 40 cM36 5438
. Pope 1-0-0-2; Sites 1-0.IJ-2. TOTi\LS-16-0-4-86
(Reserves)
:li'ree throws - 4-10
.
(SVAC only)
TEAM
.- W L PF PA
OaiE mll64, Symmee Valley 111
North GallIa ... .. .. . 8 2 597 427
•At Oak Hill, It took four Oak
Hannan Trace . .... 8 2 570 431
Hill cagers to score In · double
Southern ......... ..... 7' 3 558 445
figures - the third time Doug
Oak Hill .... .... .... .. 6 4 540 . 511
Hale's crew has done so - to
Eastern .:...... .. ..... 5 5 461 520
rounter a game-high 27-polnt
Symmes Valley ... 3 7 457 553
pfrformance from Symmes Val·
Southwestern .... ... 2 8 360 503
ley center Carl Robinson and
Kyger Creek........ 1 9 393 546
beat the Vlklrigs.
TOTALS ....... ;.. .. 38 38 3522 31122
.
·After a game-opening layup bY
lfublnson, the Oaks ( 4-9, 3-7)
Th•raday's final
r¢eled oft . nine unanswered
Maysville (Ky:) 105, North Gallla
points to surge ahead and stay
81
· there, though the Hill watched a
,
Friday's resuHa
2~-polnt lead In the fourth quarter
Harinan Ttace 85, Southwestern
shrink to five In the game's last 36
two minutes before both teams
Southern 90, Eastern 71
g\)t Into a foul-shooting contest North Gallla 109, Kyger Creek 60
Model SR-901
that ate up time the VIkings (8-6, Oak Hill 64, Symmes Valley 55
6-;4) couldn't afford to lose.
They played Saturday
:Junior forward Bill Potter led Oak Hill at Minford
the south Jackson scoring parade
w)th 17 points,' while sophomore
Thll.week'acames
center Clhrls Simpson Invested
Tuesday
heavily In the victory with 16 McDermott Northwest at Oak
pQ!nts and 10 rebounds.
Hill
·In the reserve game, the Oaks
Friday
won 45-42. Mike Turner led the Hannan Trace at · North Gallla
S(lpllngs with 13 points, and tbe Soutliwes.tern at Southern
Norsemen's Pierce led all scor·
Symmes Valley at Eastern
ets with 14.
Oak Hill at Kyger Creek
·In this week's datebook, Oak
Saturday
Hill, who played Minford Satur- ·Miller at Eastern
wlll return home on

tlannm, Trace wallops ·

SWHS; -oak ·um top~
Symmes Valley
u

SVACstandings

RAONB -Dial 23-plint eft'crll

..._

P'lielm

'The win· allows Southern 10
mainlllin pace with ~ T!acc
for a tie in the league SI8Ddiilgs at
· 9-1, wbile l!llllem is virlually
~ flom f deleodlna ita
sv,_ crowll 0 I )'(Ill: qo.
Soe*"' · il 11-3 IMIIIIl llld
liuf«n Ia Dow 8-5.
;
Bailey bad die bigesl pme of

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9.84 ROLL
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1,112" X23" (135.12 So. FT.)....J9.34 ROLL

X23"

SAVINGSVARY
HOHERR

FT.)..... J5.99 ROLL VA~~~~~NI
INSULAnNG

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lt: 114"X ~5" (48.96 SQ. FT.) ....... f4.17 ROU~
''&lt;"' ~.
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________________
••

105-81 loss to Maylvllle (Ky.)
. Thursday nifrbt:
llctn IIJ...,..,.
.
North Gal Ill ..... 1t 15 19 28...: 8:1! .
Maylv!Ue ... ).....21 30 :M 25-l05:
MAYIVIU.B (1.) - 0. Myr'l'ulloftl'll - 21
1o.o-0-20; T. Wyrick 7-0-2·16; • '
Ick
XYOD CUD (•) - Hall
Kllli
3-S-H7; Dearlna 6-0-0-12; ·
1-0-2·16; . DeiiiiiY 2-3-1·14; . VIDa•
G.
Thomas
· 6-0-0-12; Jaclc:aon··.
nlleva 5-0-0-10; Sw11her 3-0-2-8;
4-0-0-8;
Steward
3-0-0-6; M. Tho- ,
Bradbury 1·1-1-6; Rhodes 0-1-0-3;
mu ~: S. Nelaon 2-0-0-4; '
Bulb 1-0-0-2: Klnaery O-O-H.
Bell!lett 1·0.0.2; B. Nellon 1-0-0-2. ,
TOTAU-11+7. .
...._ tile fleJd - 24-'1 (39.3") TOTAJ.I- tw+UI
..,.. .. u.-~ '
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. . _ 11M u. ,... 7-19 (31-K)
NOiml OAU.IA (11) - Tack··
Olllllebu
(VIIIaiiiM!Va -ett 7-3-7-311; s. Smith 11-1·1-16: ··
Stout 1·2+12; ·Farley 1·1·2-1; ·•
6)
Twyman 2-0-1·5; RatUtr 2-0-0-4!
Awhfl.:..13
Peele: 1-0-0-2; D. Smith 1.()-0-2; . ·
..... -6
Staton
·· 1-0.0.2; Fuller 0-0-1-1&gt;' .
'1'anloftrl - 23
TOTALII- 11-T·IWl
.
Prem . . u. - 111-21 (76.2%) ,,
Here' are the mulls of North's
..,_. &amp;lie are - 4-13 (30-K)
Prem 11M lllle- 2l·M (61.8%)
0. 11M •• • - .32 (Farley 6)
t I II - 11 (Ticlc:ett 6)
IMnll - 15 (Taclrl!tt 4)

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she •••a••· ed llld am
3-0 'SHS. In
i'dn..... ol.lil OWII, wiiDe -.Joy. rw:1t •• IMhJoo, P• D Jil*ad
In&amp; _...., 8ne niPt flam -lfle die biD upc0111t IDd Billell pul
Ooor. ·
EHS on die board with a twisbng
In 111 ovemU w~ ef. drive IDd cutting South«n's lead co
fqrt, aenion Micbael Kinetic! lad 3-2. '
JCll'CIIIy Role cadi dicl dleir pm, a
Baer did 1 ~of lhe BiJall
Kirelid DOidled 11 pl)inls lad clri~~e on die other eod 10 N*b biJ
.Ja.ny Role llld 10.
lftb ........ of tbo VNm• poe. only
Spirilld lad delleiviaiiY i!uict 10 ~Moore .o'ti:.UQ:h a ro11owjunior pwd 11m Biaall ild I lne. up julllper for 1 S.. IICXR.
pme of. biJ own ''ia acbieviq 1 &lt;&gt; Bailey -.ldcd die full of biJ

from the rl&amp;ht wina 25 lleCOnds etpt polatl -all on la)'IIIII-ID
aRtter oenuey'l .econd treY to that quar1itr. But NOI'tll wu lble
back Nort11'11ead to 1J.12, the toexpandtbeltle.. tol0-40attbe
Pirates put 15 more coaiJ In the end of tbe 11111'11 qliiiWr, and 1n
baUer wbUe allowtq.tbllr 1\le&amp;la ' tba ~t allbt mlaulill tbe ollly
to seore .oM mOre. pi)lnt for the mys!er)' left wu wbetber tbe
rest
of the quarler to take a hillll would cr1c-Ic: tbe eeatury
RISING TO THE OCCASION
Nordl Galla'l fiMI-Imsal&lt;
14-polnt
lead Into the .econd . mark.
on- provided pleatJ of opportaallel'lor ~ HCIIIII Brlu
frame.
'·
. '
. _';Hey ~. cu . we score
Stout (wttll ball) to rile to tile occuloa ohcortacla
n!Pt'i
In
act
two,
the
Pirates'
100?"
- . the que1Uon oae
1~ qal111t aplut Kner Creek. S&amp;etlt caaaed 11 polnta to llelp '
preuure-cooker
deflllll,
wbtch
Ptratt
tan yelle4 out to Pirate
pllllh lbe bolt Plntello a 1.... victory. ('l'lmel-lleaiiDel pboto by
earl!er
atarted
dellectlnl
puilet
IU&amp;rd
Brian
Stout, who ftnfllled
G. SpiiBoer Olllone)
and otherwlae anrealllvely 1o- with 16 pollltl, early In the Jut
ing after tbe ball- loole or not, quarter. Wh~n . tile ullon
bqan tospurthefutbrealc:atan ~OIIId tile barrier, tile 1t1ran.
ever-increulnl pttch, wllich - Ratliff, till Smltbl, Stout and ,
combined with control of the Tackett - wen on tbit bellch '
defeasive bolrda, held the Bob- watchlnr 10pbolftoN frolltman
cats to five point. (two each by Kevin Hunt llllk a JumPil' from
center Jamie Buab and Hall, and tile ript IIJif of the lane to puttbe
onebYSwlaher),wblletheVInton Buclabe!ld 101-!if wtth 2:0. left.
sailors racked liP 28 Wlnta In a
In tbe -.rvt pme, tile
quarter that spotillhted Terry Plratea won A. Rob Canal!)' '
Farley, a 11-1 Ienior forward who led the Ml~pmea with 1•
wu first "'oft the Pirates' bench pob)ta. A-dam .DIIIbf)', stu
and scored elgbtof his 11 polnll In Denney'• youapr brother, ~ '
that period.
.
tbe Bobcata with 10.
Leading by :rr to start the third
On tbll week'I *Pada, North
quarter, North Gal Ill expe- Gal Ill wtll l'ltllrn to till bard·
rlenced a meiUn1 of that marlin wood on Friday to hOlt SVAC
In the quarter'a flnt three co-leader Jfan•n Trace, while
minutes, as Ky1er Creek link Kypr Creek (2·12, 1·9) will bolt
four of the quarter'• flnt five OaiE HID. ·
"--'kets In tbat apan. But In Selre by • • ..,,.
between those four bulc:eta wan Kycer Creek .... 11 5 1t 20- 60
three-spot bY Tackett (6:23) that North Gallla .....00 28 22 2t-109
took.someofthelmpactoutofthe
NOaTII Q.uJ.,IA (1•) BObCats' comeback bid.
Tackett 9-1·2·23: Stout 4·2·2·16;
With the'backcourt of Denney RatUft 5-1..0.:13; FarleY 5-0-1-11;
. and Crail Klqery evelily dlvid· . s. Smith 4.0.2·10; Twyman 3-0-4lq six foull, North lOt mote 10; D. Smltll 2-0-U; Statcln
aggressive on detenll!, tbou&amp;h . 2-0-U; Huat 2-0-1-5; Caucty
Hall bqan to takt~ advantace of 0-0-4-4; Fuller 2-0-0-4: Racer
the lack of aurea11vene11 tne 0.0.1·1. TOTAIA- 11+11·1•
WHO'S OPEN!- Nortb Gallla foi'Wllrd Darla Smith (left) peen
Pirates were showllli on the . " ' - tbe flelcJ- t2·71 (59.2")
III'GIIIId Kypr Creek lroatman Bryan Hall lor the anawer Ia the
defensive boards by scoring
-·
·
fln!-mlaute. of Frldaf nlpi'l SVAC pme on tbe Pirate&amp;' conri.
Tboqb Ball,outecored Smith 1U, tbe Plratel walked away wllh a
11J9.10 wta. (Tim..Senllnel pboto by G. Spencer Olborae)

IR114" X15" (48.96 SQ. FT.)............

1'1112''

liw~··~S3ro995tt;;'2~9;9~5rr;i~~~1;&amp;9;9~5H"iiwfii•• $5495 '3995

liiiiXII'·

In&amp; 23 pnWI, lllaiCCIItal • midi

Pirates win..._ ___:.(Ce_llllll........;.•;,:;;•~rr-.;,;;;...;c~..t);,._;_

X15" (88.12 SQ,

air.

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btlrd·rouaht

Tor-t;.. 10 I
li0&gt;11
ftc!OryQWirP bnPridaynJptiD
die Clllltea W. llayme Gym-

FOU,..FACEJ)

4 door, automatic

a-.._

pvH _,......

1~1 1-t" X 23" (75.07 SQ. Fi'.)..... J7.27· ROU

transm ission .

bil Ylllity Cll'ell', Dill

1

T.S Cta1 up

'

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••

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office.
It WDII't .takc you lona 10 ftf1(1 out what rve kiiO\'o'll
. for a lona time. When rou'n: wamed up with Cenrnl
Trull, you ju5t can'! be beat.

'•

•,

·:••

::•••.

•••

••••
••
.,
••••

CENT~L TRIHf.

APt4CBANK

::•

l:"lu.1l Of;plf'tu nil~ I '-' '"'"·•

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GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

.....

~ .. 111~

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•

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~~~g~~~~C~-4~~Su~~~~~v~n~w~•:•:•~S.~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~m~MI~GY~~M~~~~~~~~~~~rt~G~s~II~~~~~·~·~O~h~IO~~P~U8~il~A~I~~~L~VV~.~~~·~·~======~====~~~~~~J~•~~~~.V~-~2D~.~19;9;1: 1 :

20, 1991

Logan beats GAHS 71-61 to grab first place in SEOAL

LOGAN- Host Logan built up
dropped to S,. overall
With 1:07 remaining In the
a 20 P91nl lead late In the third snapped,
and 4-21n league play. The two third, LHS wu up 51-31, and It
period, tllen held of! a fourth teams entered the game dead- wu53-33wlth : 28lettlnthethlrd
quarter comeback by GaiUpoUs locked
for first plaee.
period when GABS began Its
to post a 71·61 Southeastern Ohio
' GAHS was unable to penatrate comeback. ·
League victory on Hilltop Court the Logan's defense for three
Attergettlngtheflnalbucketof
Friday night.
periods, firing. away from the the thlril period, GallipoliS· outCoach Gary Swinehart's Chief· outside.
The taller and quicker scored the Chiefs 8--3 durlag the
talns, now 7-7 overall, climbed Chiefs waited lor numerous first two miDutes .of.the. fourth
past the Blue Devils to take over missed Blue Devilshota,gotgood period to cut the deficit to 56-43.
undisputed . first place In the position for ·the rebounds and It
Ryan Smith's layup (3: 21) cut
conference standings with a 5-1 was ott to the races:·
It to seven. With 56 seconds lett,
reC?rd· Coach Jim Osborne's . Logan led 11-4 after one ~rlod, Josh WIUiamsgota driving layup
Blue Devils, who saw their 30-21 at halftime and 53-35 going . to cut the detlclt to six, 67-61.
seven-game . wl t~nlng streak Into the final canto.
GAHS was then forced to foul

Tornadoes
win...
.
with 11 suing ot" live 8lrsiglu points,
compliments of two SHS turnovers
resulting from the Eagle )lress.
Bisscll and Moore hit field goals
and Durst hit the secood of two free
throws for.the Eagles first lead with
2:35 left in the first frame.
From this point on a torrid seesaw battle typical of the ancient
Eastem-Soulhcm rivalry began.
The remainder of the l'nanc saw
· three lead changes and two tics.
· A Bier drive and Scoa Lisle free
throw again gave SHS the lead at
15-13, but a pair of Murphy lOSSeS
again tied the scue. SHS lOOk the
lead once more, but a pair of BisseU t.ossea, a Moae field goel with
24 seconds. and a ncar-t'8111 srea1
by Durst 1D1 ensuing bucket with
just three seconds left gave Eastern
' ·· a 21-17 lead and todt some wind
from the SHS sails.
.
At this point the Eutern fans
wen: on their feet and the Eagles
wen: ftying hip, but the visiton
did not •
advan. of the
momentwn, letting 6-S jWiior pivot ·
man Michael RusicU penetrate the
paint for the second q11811tZ's lint

------------•
(8E0,0ppelll!nta)
Marietta ........ 4 2 2'12 247
(All-G-)
Lopn ............ 4 2 301
TEAM
W L
P OP GalUpolla ....... 3 3 256 249
Portsmouth ....... 11 1 1019 974 · Warren ....... :.. 3 3 233 250
Chesapeake ... ,... 10 2 944 725 'Atbena ...... :.... 3" 3 274 252
Southern ............ ll · 3 1031 873 Jaclrsotl ... .... ~. 1 ·5 2Gil 265
Waverly ............ 10 3 \113 IW5 .TOTALS
' 18 18 1148 lk8
-..
•••, ...ene
. brea:
Galu poUs ........... 8 4 769 734
a·•--.VInton County... . 7 5 811 712 Logan 51 Galllpolla 43 ·
Jackson ..!-&gt;;........ 7 6 823 848 Marietta -H Jackson 39
Greenfield ......... 7 6 651 655 Athens 52 Warren Local 43
Logan. :.............. 7 7 9!12 942 Otller area -rea
Wheelersburg .. .. 5 8 IKl&amp; 803 Fairland 73 Chesapeake 68
Marietta ............ 5 8 896 861 Federal Hoeklag 73 . VInton
Athens............... 5 8 734 836 County 68
Pt. Pleasant ... . .. 1 9 553 624 . Greentleld 63 Hlllaboro ~
wari-en... .... .. .. ... 0 12 "92 829 Southern 90 Eaatern 71
HuntiDaton Eut 55 Pt. Pleasant
48
SEOAL VAB$ll'Y
TEAM
WL ' P . OP Waverly 74 Minford-59 ·
Logan ........ :... 5 '· 1 , '397 363 Portsmouth 69 Aahland 57
GalllpoUs ...;... 4 2 418 383 Valley 53 Wheelersburg 50
Jackson ..:.; .... 4 2 - 366 · 367
LM&amp;DIIIIt'anm~~a: .
Athens ........... 3 3 374 377 GaiUpolla at Waverly
Marietta ........ 2 4 416 399 Athens at Alexaitd~ ··•
Warren .......... 0· 6 · 341 424 Weat Union at Portsmouth
TOTALS
18 18 UU DU Jonathan Alder at Wheelersburg
Friday'• vanity reeultll:
Tnnda,J'a pmea:
Logan 71 Ga!Upolla 61
.::~:ua~tvc:==~
Jackson 54 Marietta 53
Athens 59 Warren Local 49
Zanesville at Marietta
Mancheater at Greenfield

-

four three-pointers. Michael Evans Southern 17 21 23 29a90
tallied IS markers, and Jamie
SOUTHERN (90) • Andy Baer
Proffitt and Russell Singleton had 6-3-2-23, Michael KiDCIIid 3-1-2eight each, while Brackin McFann 11, Todd Grindslaff 1-1-3-8; Jay8011
had seven. Easiem was led by Pat Codner ~3-3, John Hoback 0-0Newland's 12, Wes ~ugh's 11, 1-1, Roy Lee Bailey 9~5·23,
J~y Oine's nine, Rod New· Scott Lisle 0-0-1-1, Michael Rus-·
some's eig))t and Robert Reed's seD 3-04-6, Russell Sirigleton 1-0five.
2-4, Jcmny Rose 5.().0-10. .
Southern
wUl
play
at TOTALS- 28-5-19-!10.
Ravenswood
Tuesday, · while . EASTERN (71) • Chad Savoy
Eastern will host Symmes vaJiey 2..().3-7, Matt flnlaw 341-7, Tim
and Miller nexl Friday and Satur- Bissell 8~5-21, Jeff Durst 7.().2day, respectively.
16, Mark Murphy 2-0-4-8, Randy
~ 6-0-0-12. TOTALS - 28-0Score by qnarters
15-71.
Eastern 21 II 16 21•71

.L·

,

' seven.

·

·

Soulhcm bid 12 llealJ, 16 lur-

JIO\Iefl,

11

enim

llld 19 fouls.

EalltZII had J1 111111 (lix by .
Dint), had J9 biiiiOWft, eighl
blocb (Finlaw wllh four). had
sj . . and 22 fouls.
SoulhciD won the reaerve game
67-47 Jed by Mark ' Allen, who
JIOICIIed I pme lliJh 19 poinll.
Folden of thole Jllllbn Clllle in
the linl hl1f wilen Allen canned

1111- ..

•

...

'

91

mix

98

21 Resident: aufflx
22 Whole number
Bar legally

"Hart - Hart•'

A, -, -. o.

u

Near

29 .. _ the Paople" ·

30 Eagle's nasi
31 COOk IIOwty
32 Trade for money
34 Large cask
36 Force
36 1966 World
Series

Winners

39

Rocky hill

' ::

.Jaa. 18 cames:

•'1, ¥

Portsmouth at GaiUpolls
Nelsonville-York at Logan
Belpre at Warren Local
Jackson at Pt. Pleasant
South Point at Wheelersburg

'\ r
r ·~ ·
•

...

~·T

"';

BA.NKRUPTCY
61"·221·0118
(

AMO.

44 Brennan iO.
46 " - Thiel of
Bagdad".
47 TeutoniC deity
48 Scotllllh cap

49 Act-. Meyer
50 Washington bill
51 Brown klwt
53- garde
54 Concerning
55 War god
57 Airline Info.
59 Twisted
60 Critical point
61 TV's John Boy:

.

82 Pocketbooks
84 Pastime
86 Evening party
88 "- My Children"
70 Babylonian hero
7,2 Poem
73 Blunt ends
74 Brim
77 Ocean .
78 Utter:
· communicate
60 Spiro
82 BUeball stat
83 Frulll8eds'
85 Iterate
88 Mexlea~ dish
87 Hurried
88 Electrified

90 Lair

'

Fat arouncl

DOWN

.

1 Renovate,
2 Go In
3. - White and the
SeVM OWarla .
4 Tooth crown

99 Small chltdren
101 Melli
104 Large bird
105 Blitch
107- Arden
108 Aegr81
109 Obllae
110 Born

5 World org.
6 Kitchen ending

7 Tellurium aymbol
8 Corrlda c:h.-

111 Father
112 Caudal

8 ChOice Part
10 Singer Roll
11 aa.bell'a Mel
12 Earth goddess
13 Hold on property
14 AI home
1~ Depot: abbr.

appendage

114 Sllowyn116 .. Miami_ ..
117 Youngster
118 Printer's
.120 Conaplracy
122 Metal

-r•

·124 Bone

41 Fr-

partk:le

178 flant
177 S.. animals
178 Hlrdy herOine

. ·.
, ,.,

AnORNEY-AT.UW - ' , :~.
336 s. High St., Col-us, Oil.
LOCAL CONSULTATION
••
KNIGHT, MUlLEN LAW OffiCES,
, ,l UI
POMEIOY, 992-2090
p
·h
...,.
. In
wit
.~.

-•Y

Meigs girls
beat Miller --:-

...

,,

1$ Abouhd

17 Heron
18 Correlative or ·

.

125 AbdutiD

nor.
19 Annoy
2.3 Flllll Indignant

127 RNw In Siberia ·
129 Small napkin ·
131 Draw on by

at

degrna

28 Spanlllh pot

133 Spanlllh artiCle

2V S~giCioua

134 Thaelore
138 Equally
137 MlrrY
139 Golf gadget
140 Flnlllh
141 Mr. Steiger
142 Eerly mom

32 Part of. school

year
331~money

35 Ch-'&lt;lean city
38 Negate
37 er.dful

40 Defaced
42 Bridle
mouthpieces
43 Clvtllnlury
45 Parle atock
· oxallenge
48 Type Of CI'OII.

143 Health reaort
145 Conger

'

147 Make content ·
151 Ku-antm
152GI~- . , '
153 Stladt
..:
155 Hearing orgM
157 ACI'-Ive

52 Culling 1.001
58~MCUrely

•

IUbaiiiDCII

158 Gratuity

58 To the left

59 Takellrom) ,

159 Old Greetc c:oln
180 Altemethe word

80 Pal.r

82 Rat. trite

161 TllrM-toeCIIIIOth

utterance

-·

183 weruw natlvM

83 Shoots from

185 Mountlln nymph

187 • . _ aymbOI

65 HypothetiCal
IOrc:e
86 Tues unlawtuUy

188 Feroe lllancla
whlrtwlnd

169 Contradict
171 Tum lnllde out

87 Pachyderms
68 Cleopatra's
· nen:1111

172 MarUnlque
volcano

e9 Hawaiian - t h
71 "'Seventh - ..

173 Fore part

in the thitd &lt;1(1181ler and went to
defeat the Lady Falcons 57-43 in
girls' TVC actiOn Thwsday evening.
The win avenged an earlier loss
to Miller in December.
Tricia Baer had an outstanding
game fm head coach Roger Foster
~ she Scored 25 points and had Il
rebounds and four steals, sl)e was
joined in double figures by Kelly·
Smith who chipped in with 18
points and 11 rebounds.
Meigs jumped out to a 12-9 lead
at the end of the first quarter, only
to have Miller tie it up at halftime
at25.
Baer and Smith took over in the
third quarter, Baer poured in 10
third q_uarttr points and· Smith ad.ded SIX to lead the Marauder
charge. Meigs; bad tile upper hand
in the founh quarter 10-6 to post
the 57-43 win.
Also turning an outslanding
game for the ~uders ~ere Jennifer Taylor With four pomts and a
game high seven assists. Jamie
Hanning led the Falcons with 17
points, Sandee Beattie added 10.
In the reserve pne Meigs out·
scored MiUer 41-9 in the second
and. third period and rolled to a 54•
24 win over Miller. Lori Kelly led
the way with 12 points, Crissy
Taylor added II .POints.
The Marauders lllise their n:cotd
10 11-3 overall and will travel 10
Basten\ 10 play the Lady Eagles.
Score by quarters
Miner 9 16 12 6-43
Meigs 12 13 22 10=57

7t C\lllhlon
79 a.ibytonlan
deity

81 Tantalum symbol
... If ...

,,.._ .

!·..-•H.·

89 Blrd's home

;• fj' ~

92 Nerve network
.93 "The Burning
84 Wine cup

·i!~

~"

....

,~,

._,

95H~t

97 - Marie Saint

•• f:- 1

.,

.

98 Snappillh

I

99 lnclln~tlon

,, .

100 "Days of -

.,,'

~

Lives"
101 Speed contest

102 ''- of Love" ··
103 Danson of TV

...

106 Untamed
109 "Huckleberry-" ·
.113 Booty

115 Agave plant
·~
'a

116 Empty
119 Cut
121 Stalemates
123 Utterly lrretlonal
124 " - Gringo"
125 Head of parish

I •

ff I

.

church

., ! "

126 o.stres with

eaoerness

' . • .t' '

,,,

128 Spelling cont"l't
130 Jumpers
·

•

&lt;VI

. .....'

132 Arbiter

133 Vast age
134 Taverns
135 Egg dish
138 River In Scotland
141 Knock
144 Article
. 146 Jacket part
148 Experience

LOf~·

8mltb tallied a eareerH poiDte, but GABS Joel

'lmpiiDIIU'-..,.

149 Exists
i5o Halla
151 Is borne

when they head down U.S. 35 to
take on Cross Lanes Christian on
Friday.
·
Score 'by quarters
ovcs ................ 25 22 18 19-84
Teays Valley ..... 13 17 28 18-76
OHIO VALLEY (84) - Wray
9-1-5·26; HUI 6-2-7-25; McCleese
7·0-1-15; · Hall 1-1·1-6; Peavley
0-0·5·5; Back 0-1-0-3; Graham
1-0·0·2; Little 1-0-0-2. TOTALS2-il-19-84
Foul shots - 19-33 (57.6%)
Reboundll - 25 (McCleese 9)
Blocked shots - 3 (McCleese

2)

Asslsla- 7 (McCleese 3)
Steals- 20 (McCleese 8)

· i'unovers - 22
•
TEAYS VALLEY (78)- Lester 6-2·2-20; Freeman 6-0-3-15;
Casto 4-0-5-13; Halstead 6·0-1·13;
Lewis 4-0-5-13; Childers 1-1}.0-2.
TOTALS- 27-2-16-76
Foul shota - 16.-27 (59.3%)

159 Monster
182 " - Magic"

'1

,.,

184 Meadow

.•;

188 Guido's high note
..167 Rear of ship
170 "I.e! II -"
174 Bone
•

'

..

• .._J

,..,' '

...

,._.~

The Unlwrllty of Rio ·Grinde announce• the opening of a

,..

• 1 ',

,.

poaltlon for en Accoun.lng Cieri! In the Finance Office.
RIIPOIIIibl1111ee of the pollltlon lnclu$ computer entry of
Information auch aa PIIYroll, general ledger joumal entrl11
and 1 variety of data on atudlnt accounta r-lvable; verlflcetlon of cllttalla of tren1111C1Ione for accuracy; dewlopment of epeclel repona and analyaee; pr.....-atlon of .bll·
Hnga for lnt1r11al cllpartmenta l!nd outllcle ·llllencle•: prePIII'Itlon of detail of donatlona and glftl for audit purpoHa
and performing other dutle1 111aalgned by thl Vice Prell· ·
dlllt for Fine-. .
Oullflcatlana lnaludl high achaol educatlan ar aqulvallnt
with .-.INc! blalloround In ICCOUIItlng, aaact typing 1nc1 computer -. - -, good typing~ lllld 1Jqlli1aiiCI with peraonal C011111UWr rlqlllrtd. Elqiarlll~ce wllh LOTUS helpful.
EntJy Wlge for
40 hour I * _... poaltlan Ia ti.ZI per .
hour. Pilei lllwe .IIIII medial! bllllllta ~~-~·... Normal
-'dna houri
a.m.-e:00 p.m. Mondly ttwouall Fildey.
·lnteraated peraona ahould -it 1 copy of their raaume.lnclucllnt,::r nam• end t•phone numhitra of three refer•-•
• the
af J1nu..-y 215. 1891 to: .
'*-oMII Officer
Ma. Phyllla
The Untwallty of Rio Grinde
P.O. lox Ill
.
Rio Grandi, OH. 41174

.....
,,....
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e:.oo

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. John Johnson
Greg RusseU
Phillip Batey
Brent l.arck
Chris Thomas ·· ooa-o
o
Danny Hudson 000-0
0
TOTALS ,
15 3 8-13 47 ·

·J •·

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cllld.,_
Maaon.

'

VINSON (82)
Simpkins
11 0
Carroll
9 0
Russ
8 0
Vinson
f 2
Lafferty .
3 0

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0-0
1-2
3.(i
0-0
0-0

., ·csee VINSON •n c-t&gt; :~

...

130-011
3 0 4-610
3 0 1-2
7
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3
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We accept IJIIOignment from priuale iMuraiiCe and Medicaid

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The fowlh-rnnked Vinson
Tigers visited the Bend Area Friday
evening ·for a Southwestern C~n­
fetence basketbaU encounter wtllJ
the Wahama White Falcons and
when the Wayne County ieam left
town the charred remains of the
nets on both baskets were stiU
smoldering as Vinson roasted the
White Falcons by an 82-47 score.
The Tigers shot a phenomenal
~% from the Door during the
games first two quaners and played
a tenacious man-to-man defense
throughout in luuiding the Bend
Area cagers the one-sided league
setback. Vinson finished the SWAC
contest by connecting on 37 of 61
field goal attempts for the game for ·.
a blistering 60% accuracy while
Wahama connected on 18 of 54
from the field for a poor 33%.
..
, The conference ,lriumph lifted
the Tigers overall record to 9-2 on
the season and 4-0 inside the
SWAC while Wahama fell to 4-7
overaU and 2-S in league action.
WAHAMA(47)

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CLINIC

5UNSTAI SillS GAlliEN 'IUCTOIIS
Availoblt in 16-11 &amp; 20 M.P.

Sports Correspondent

152 Hebrew m!)nth
154 Tense
156 Wander
156 Chinese currency

.C~iLDREN'S

~ ·

wah~y~~!~cl~2-47 ....__'_1~1!!EA~n:!M!.lA~INL..n_.___sr_co_N~D

.,.,, .

CLE•-nrwta OFFICE.

•

defender .Joe llanDIDI ( 11) to
lake a pus from Eric Roffman (out ol view) for an euy
layup ID the fourth quarter of
Frlda)''l 8EOAL came lit

Heard about

V.m•· SOn do-urnQ
"aai::J

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

1-------------------.

•

SCO'IT DEPOT, W.Va.- With
a court-high 26 points from Greg
Wray and 25 · points from Dax
Hill, Ohio Valley Chrjstlan
boosted Its record to 7-4 by
beating Teays Valley Christian
84-76 Friday night.
The Defenders got In early foul
trouble, and head coach William
Asbury allowed several nonstarters to get plenty of action In
the first half. But In the third
quarter, the Defenders, who had
an 18-polnt lead at halftime, saw
Teays outscore them 28-181n that
frame to cut their lead to seven
with. eight minutes remaining.
But former Ga!Ua Academy.
front-liner Mike McCleese got
· seven of his 15 points and six of
his eight steals In the fourth
quarter to help keep the Defend·
ers on top. :
. Lester led Teays with 20p()ints.
C01nlng this week, the Defenders will resume hardwood action

•

AWAITS BALL - GaiDa
Academy's Ryan Smith (110)
1ets tree Inside from Lopn

Ohio Valley Christian beats
Teays Valley Christian 84-76

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs

Sham
75 Anger

84 Drunkard

GaJUpoUs ....... 4 17 1• 26-61
Logan............ll 19 23 18-71
GALLIPOLI8 (81) - Scott
Morgan 2-0-1-5; Clint Davia 2-0-15; Scott Jividen 0-1-1}.3; Shane
Tackett 0-1-1}.3; Josh WIUiams
2-1-1}. 7;" Chad Neal 4-0-1-9; Ryan
Smith. 10-0-4-24; . Rob Skidmore
1-1-1}.5. TOTALS !1+7-tl
LOGAN (71) - Joe Hanning
4-0-7-15; Trevor Unger 3-0--3·9:
EriC Burris 3-0-6-12; Chad Shut· .
tleworth 8-0-1-17; Brian Carman
1-1-il-5; Shawn Halley 2·0-2-6;
Colin Mowery 0-0-1-1; Lance Bell ..
2-2·6. TOTALS 23.1-U-71

0U) ·
8eore bJ quarien

TOUGH DEFENSE - Lopn'1 Bob . Swaekhammer keepa
pressure on GABS guard .Joi!lh WUHama '(82) during Friday's
SEOAL cage battle at Logan. The Chlefal118 staved ott a
four•perlod comeback by GADS to win !1·61.

Maraudm outscaed MiUer 22-12

73 Oeac:andant ol

87 Weaken

up a loat date when they dll,!
not .play on Dec. 8 (when the
rd I d ·at
varsity played Conco · • n ·•
lng

...

.

175 o.poaitl

123 "TWII1gh1 -"

40 Myself .

inlta.

to:.

kid.,.,.

20 Cloth measure
24
25
27
28

Pertllnlng

IUfllx
92a93 Cake

1 .. _ 911"
7 Pedal digit
10 Canine
13 Pay heed
19 Flag

.

Soulhem OUinlbouDded Eastern

...

1

~S~U~N=D~A=Y=.P=U=Z=Z~L=·E~R=.-_,....-J·~·

ACROSS

. po~~ Murphy bucket with 53
seconds left the score 81 34-32, but
two aitical Bailey buckets in the
last seconds of the half gave SHS 8
38-32 advantage Bl.the half.
· Second-half action was quick
and excitina IS both clubs played
OUT OF REACH- Soalbera forward Boy Lee
pata
with upbeat tempos and full court
ld8
lllot
Jut
out
of
tbe
reach
ot
Eutem
center
Rudy
(U)
press..e. The IICtion was slowed,
durtai
Friday
nfild'a
SV
AC
pme
lit
Racine.
Bailey,
a
1-1
Junior,
however, by numerous fouls. One ·
teammate Andy Baer for -rial honors 11!1111 %$ "lnfa, wblcb
key in the game was th8l EHS had
helped
Uie Tonw"oM rack
a 1&amp;-11 vlctoey.
.
to go JII()Sl of the game with six
players, while Southern head ooach
Howie CaldweU utilized his bench
10 perfeclion . with multiple substitutions thai gave his front nmnen the needed n:st to be 51r0ng at
the finish.
Kincaid, Bailey, Rose and Todd
Grindstaff SSW most of the action in
the third round. while Eastern
spn:ad its points out ovec the entire
linc-up.Southem maintained 81
least a five point . advantage
throughout the frame, but could not.
shake the Eagles, who played a
much better game than in. the first
medina atEutem.
·
Great individual play from bolh
sides lidded at touch of clus to the
high-SIIkes pme, as Beer and
Bailey chaUenged the Easttm field
general Bisscii, who made many
great passea and )lad six assisls.
Chad Savoy and Matt Finlaw
wen: somewhat CJ.uielied oflensi¥ely,
but key inpdients in keeping
Eastern in the game.
FoU&lt;JWing an SHS time-out
Caldwell's rank and file did what
they wei" SUJlPOIICd 10 llld quickly
built up a ten point lead at 57-47
with 1:2~ left in the third frame
· (the biAACSt lead of the f.!1M thus
far). Perhaps the Eagle JdJier came
·at the hands of Kincaid who
swished a· b-pointtz at the buz.
AL'l'ERS 8BOT - No -111M Gill allot bJ Eutern forward
zer to give SHS a 61-48 lead at the
.Jelf o.nt (11) leave~~ bla flaaerllpe doea Soalbetn frontma Boy
buzzer. . .
. .•.. · .
• . · Lee .BaiJeJ (14J) alter IIIII Jumper ID the lane durtn1 Chapter %ot
After DUrst ~. die 1\rst ~ , Friday nllld'• Me... CoUnty SVAC aerl~~a 81 Racine's Charles W.
of the final round, SO!Jthem !3lbed
Baymu G)'IIIIIMiam. The Tomadoea won lt-71 to sweep lbe
nine unanswered pomts (Sill: by · aerlea.

42-27, loci by Bailey'• 13, Rose's
eia~Jt, and Bw't lmliL r.focft led
EalltZII widt ei&amp;ht.llld a1...1 bid

Frlda)''a 1am•:

See Anawer to Puzzle.on Pase C-3

Bissell n:l'liavd, but Bailey
canned two from the line, then the
big tnan Russell nened a short jumper to tie the ·scue 23-23 at the
6:18 mart.
'
Mo&lt;:R gave Eastan its last lead
at 25-23 u on the next ellchange
Baer drilled a crucial three pointtz
(26-25 Southern) and Rose hit a
baseline drive to sway momentum
back to die Tornado front at 28-25.
From this point on, Soutllet11's
lead fluctuated from two to five

ranae.

rebounds, ·u by Burris and (: 39) sewed up the Logan
committed 19 turnovers.
victory.
Ryan Smith was the only Blue ' Earlier ID the week, the GAHS
Devil In double fllures, finishing reserves downed Wellston 38·29
with 24. Chad Neal added niDe. In a non-cOnference game, mak·
GalllpoUs connected on 25 Of 70
· field · goal attempts tor 35 percent. The DevUs were seven of 12
at the line and had a season-high
30 . personals. Scott Jividen.
Smtt)l, and Rob Skidmore all
fouled .out. GAHS had 31 rebounds, nine by Smith and 13
turnovers.
.
Gallipolis, w!t&lt;/ played at Waverly Saturday night, will host
Marietta on Friday before hostIng top-ranked Portsmouth on
Saturday, Jan. 26. Logan Will
ho~t winless Warren Lo&lt;:al ·
·
Friday.
1n Friday's preliminary ganie,
Logan's Papooses broke a 42-42
deadlock with 2:10 remaining,
then went on to outscore the Blue
Imps 9-1 to post r51-43 victory.
The LHS reserve victory not
only snapped the Galuans' four·
game· whmiDg streak, It also
·.knocked them out of a four -way
tie for first place.
GallipoliS fell behind 13-8 after ·
one period, but trailed only 26-24
at halftime. Logan led 38-31 going
Into the final quarter.
The Blue Imps battled back to
knot the count at 42-all on a
driving layup by Nathan Miller
wHh 2: 31 remaining, but back-toback layups by Tom Smith and
Matt Mellinger and two .charity ·
tosses .by Bram Rlddlebarger

Marietta at GaiUpoHs
_
Warren Local at Logan
'
' ...~
Athens at Jackson
r·
,:•
Ceredo-Kenova at Chesapeake
•
.....
Meigs at VInton County
. ,,. .
Miami Trace at Greenfield
' '
Southwestern at Southern
Pt. Pleasant at Wahama
Waverly at Valtey
Portsmouth at Russell
It "'!-.
Northwest at Wheelersburg

L.W. ENN

-----~---=----~:-:-::-=-==-

_....:&lt;.:...co..,....ntlil=· u::.:.:ed:.:!r..:.:.om.:.:..c.:..
· 4::..)

'!!~rSEO:AL:R~IA':IlrE~R=V~'ES!_
·~-~-.1:A:n:OINEY==D=·=NICIWL===MI=Il=E=N:;·-;?
,....TEAM
W L
P · _2!!:.__!So~uJth~ern~~at~Ra!
OP Pt. Pleaaant at_~v~ens~w_ood~
Barboursvil~
.., 1

score.

Grindstaff) 10 take a 70-Sllcad.
After a mass SHS substitution,
Eastern gave the 1brandocs 8
legitimate scare and brought back
memories of lalt year's incredible
cooieback when they OIIISCOn:d the
hoses 12-210 cut the lead to 72~.
SHS caUed lime out to n:group,
and the firm of Baer, BaileY, .and
Rose came tog_ether to mop up f«
the 'Ibmadoes.
Soulhem hil 28 of 66 for 42 per~t and 5-12 lhrce pointers. while
lt~ting 19-27. the line. Eastern hit
28-~ from the lloor, was 0-6 from
tJno.point
and was 15-23 at .
the line. .

.C·hieJtains win ...

Logan hit 24 of 43 field goal;• , ·
attemptafor55percet,t,waa22of -. ·
35 at the IIDe for 62 percent and
had 16 personals. LHS had 41, . •
(!lee CRIEFI'AINS oa C-ll)
, ··,
·
J

Cage &amp;landings

(Continued from C-3J

.

LHS placed tbiee player• ID
double tlprel, led by Chad
Shuttlewortll'l 17 marlrers. Joe
HanniDI added 15 and Eric
Burrll12. ·
,

during the flpal miDute of play.
Logan connected on 10 ot 17
otlarltyshotslnthefiDalperlodto
preserve Its lead and earn the
victory.
~ ·~

VV...Va.

Ohio-Point Asrsnt.

NOW IN OUR GAWPOUS LOBBY•••
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"Drive A Uttle - Scale A !At"

Banlc .P'fnancfng Available

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APNC BANK.

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Rlplty, WV

372-FORD
.(372·31173)

�.,

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Pomeloy-Midclaport-GI'IfiMIIil, Ohio Point Phmrrt. W. Va.

~- 20,

.

1891

.

Athens, Jackson tecm:.I SEOAL !Victories Friday night
THE PLAINS .,... Warren Lomired In tbj! league buement.
cal's Warrlorucratcbed trom an .
In the fourth period Reed
11-polntdeflclttotletheJameat
converted seven of el&amp;ht tree
45-45 before a ~bnlcal foul
throws as the Bulldogs made
·enabled Athens to escape with a
good on 12· of 141n that period.
59-49 SEOAL win Friday night.
Bob Bailey scored 23 points and
The Bulldop bad Jed through·
Scott Hlllklrk 12 to lead Athens
out the entire contest and were
while Kirk Hutlman swl1hed 22
cruising with a 45-38 lead late In
tor Warren and Brian Bowl: had
the contest.
10 mar kers.
Warren's Ryan Dennis . then
Score by qll&amp;l'ters
scored all orbis seven points In a
Warren ........... .... .. 9 8 10 22-49
1:30 span to knot the score at
Athens ............... 10 12 13 24-59
45-45 with 2: IS left.
ATHENS (59) -' Jason Reed
From 3:50 to 2:18 Dennis hit a
l -0.7-9; Matt Jolllck 2·1..0·7: Reid
pair of tree throws , a three point
Schaller !i-0-1-1; Bob Bailey 11.0·
goal, and a layup to bring; his
1•23: John Harmon 1·0.0.2: Scott
team back before the crucial
Hlllkirk 5-o.2-12; Brent Jlartman
T-foul.
0·1·2·5. TOTALS 28-l-13-8
· WARREN (48)- Jason Harris
Athena' .Bob Batley scored a
goal and was fouled on the play, 1..0·2·4: Scott Brackenridge 3-()..0·
prompting the Warriors' Kirk 6; Ryan Dennis 1·1·2·7· Kirk
Hutlman to throw the basketball Huffman 7-2-2-22; Brian' Bowe
3-0-4-10. TOTALS.15-S-10-4J
to 1M other end ·of the fioor,
drawlq the technical.
Reserve score: Athens ~2.
Batley canned his free throw
War ren 43.
and Jason Reed , added the
technical foul tosses to give
Jackson 54, Marietta 53
Athep a 50-451ead wlth2:021eft.
At Jackson, the Jackson Iron·
A goal by Scott Hlllklrk and
men saw a 13 point lead evapotree throws by Reed and Brent rate In the f9urth quarter Frld&lt;aY
Hartm.an down the stretch gave illght before hanging on for a
AHS the will and kept Warren 54·53 SEOAL victory over

Lyne Center schedule
The following is a schedule for
Lync Center 81 the Univmity of
Rio Gtande:

SUllday, JID. 20

· Sat.urday,Jan.26
Gymnasium - Closed due to basketball. 7:30 p.m. Redmen v.
Wahh.
'

Gymnasium · 1-3 p.m. Open
Pool • Closed.
. Recreation. 6-7:30 p.m. College
Sunday, Jan. 27
Recreation.
Gymnasium • 1·3 p.m. Open
Pool • 1·3 p.m. Open SWim. 6- reerea~on. 6-7:30 p.m. College
7:30 p.m. College swim.
· recreabon.
.
Monday, Jan. 21
' Pool • 1-3 p.m. Open swim. 6Gymnasium • Closc:cl.
7:30 p.m. College swim.

Pool Closed.
0

Tnesday,

Jan. 22

0

Wedpesday, Jan.lJ
Gymnasium · 6-7:30 p.m. Col·
lege recreation.
Pool • 6-7:30 p.m. College

Swim.

·
Tbursdlly, Jan. 24

(Continued tram C-5)
Williams
2 0 0·0
Clark
0 0 2-2
I 0 0-2
Hensley
Ritter
0 0 ' 0-0
Harmon
0 0 0-0

May

1

~

. TOTALS

35

0

· ·
,.• Marietta 44,

2 6-12

82

.

Frldiy, Jail. 2!

731i :'&lt;'('Ond 1\ venue

1

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~

I Otx-n

L

( 614)

·despite
·
uncertainties
.

scan.

Farm Flashes

Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550 + (304) 67~
/

An Open Letter From The Locked-Out Rcwenswood. Aluminum ·work~rs

'·

""INJU~ &gt;IlCE
EI~F:
Is A 'lin~E:AT 'I'&lt;&gt;
JU!&gt;riCE I 4:VF;R
I~ID''
-DR. MARTIN LuriiER

As the. nation officially celebrates Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s .

Human Rights ... Economic Justice ... Human Dignity.

RAC has made a mockery of theSe concepts ever since It
locked out 1, 700 members of USWA Local 5008 last November. .
The c"ompany hired out-of-state
securtty forces to intimidate the pard
• . . working people of West Virginia
and.their communities. It is
trying to stop the payment

.
4

.

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,'/

Meigs County
agents' corner

Public hearing .Feb. 1.3 for
beef councll's M&amp;R program

By John C. Rice

Any persons lntereste In pres·
entlng testimony regarding this
program may appear In person
at the public bearing or through
legal council. The public bearing
Is scheduled for 11 a.m., Febru·
ary 13, 1991, at the Ohio Depart·
menta BuUdlng, 65 South Front
Street, Hearing Room3A, Columbus, Oblo. Also, Director Maurer
will be accepting written testlm·
ony prior to the bearing; written
testimony must be received no
later than 5 p.m., February 12,
1991• Written testimony should be
addressed to:
Director Steven D. Maurer,
Ohio Bee,f Council, Ohio Depart·
ment of Agriculture, 611 S. Front
Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215.
Mycotoxlns In Corn - did you

"The rest of the market was In
kind of a rest perlpd. There was a
tug of war between buyers and
sellers as everyone tried to figure
out just how much of tbe·Mideast
war bas been factored In to the
market," lte said.
.
Goldman said he thinks the
vast m•Jorlty o! players feel the
war will be short. Nevertheless,
be expects the market to be
buffeted by news from the region
and to remain vola tile In the near
term.
On the trading floor, Cltlcorp
was the most active Issue, up ~·
to 13~ In dividend-related
trading.
~M followed, surging another
2 to 117~ after i'allylngThursday
on a surprisingly goOd earnings
report. Coca·Cola was lblrd, up
% to 48')!, .
Scherlng-Plough was also ac·
tlve, up % to 41% after falling
sharply Thursday.
.
Among the other blue ., chlps,
Philip Morris was up % to 52')!, ;
AT&amp;T lost% to 31~ and Gerieral
Electric was off % to 57%, but
Exxon gained% to 51~.
Volume of NYSE ·listed Issues,
Including trades In stocks on
regional exchanges and In the
over· the-counter market, totaled
268,864,710 shares, down trom
377,160,200 shares traded
Tuesday .
·
Prices were mixed In moderate trading on the American
Stock Exchange.
The Amex Market .Value Index
Continued on D~

harvest moldy corn last fall? If
you did, did the moldy com hav~
a pink color? Any corn that came
out of the netd with higher than
normal visible mold should be
, suspect. The most common my.
cotoxln causes feed refusal and ,
vomiting In certain classes of
livestock. Growers with iraln
that Is moldy or has had a ll!'eater
level of Glbberella ear rot,' sllould
have a mycotoxin analysts conducted before attempting to feed
the ll!'aln. Drylfti corn down to
lt% moisture will discourage the
production of more molds. The
problem ot feeding moldy corn Is
more pronounced when fed to
swine. Moldy corn can always be '
diluted by mixing with clean
corn.

Chevron, Amoco . unfr~eze . gas price~

enVironmental excellence

•

L

ear!L!f!

..

.
'

•·

~Tobacco

fartners can·
market. extra p»unds

. We ask not just for us, but for West Virginia.
.

~,_t

.'

splinter · the l).S,;led al~ce
against Iraq - a prospect they
felt would severely complicate
the situation In the Gulf.
But stocks· turned hl&amp;her early
In the afternoon when It became
evident that the early selling was
not enough to kUI the momentum
from Thursday's powerful rally.
The gains came as U.S.·led
forces carried out the largest air
bombardment since World War
II Friday agalnat Iraq and as '
President Bush urged Israel not
to ·retaliate for Thursday's
attack. ·
·
Later In ·the afternoon, the Dow
suddenly lost Its 17-polnt gain
when Israel again went on a
nationwide alert In the evening,
forcing residents to don gas
masks and head for sealed rooms
to escape possible chemical
weapons.
There was no lmrqedlate word
of what set off the alarm, but
Pentagon officials said they did
not think It was another missile
attack. At that point, the Dow
reversed course and won back Its
en~e gain.
' · '
Finally, explrat!'on-related
buying sent the Dow to a sharply
bl&amp;her close. The broad market
did not match the strength In the ·
blue chips.
"We had an external Influence
today, the option expiration,"
said Alfred Goldman, market
strategist at A.G. Edwards &amp; .
Sons 1nc.ln St. Louis. He said this ·
primarily affected the blue
.c hips.

By JANICE IURKEJ,
UPI BuinM8 Writer
NEW YORK - Despite war
uncertainties, stocks closed
sharply higher heavy trading,
paced by the Dow Industrials,
which got a late boost trom
buying lied to the "doublewitching hour" expirations ' o!
futures and options.
The Dow Jones Industrial average - which soared 114.Go
Thursday, Its second-biggest
gain ever - rose another 23.27 to
close Friday at 2646. 78.
Among ·broader market
gauges, the New York Stock
Exchange composite Index rose
1.89 to 180.87 and the Standard &amp;
Poor' s 500-stock Index added 4.26
to 332.23. The price of an average
share jumped 33 cents.
Advances led declines 828-674
among the 1,965 Issues crossing
the NYSE tape. Big Board
volume totaled 226,770,000
shares, compared wl~h the
318,890,000 traded 'nJursday,
which was the eighth busiest
session on record.
After opening lower In the
wake of Iraq's overnight missUe
attack on Israel, stocks seesawed
In the early afternoon on news out
o! · the Mideast. Then, In late
trading, prices, especially the
blue chips, got a boost from
buying tied to the "doublewitching hour" expirations of
stock-Index (Jltures and optlona.
• The attack on Israel pressured
prices In the early going. lnves·
tors feared Iraq's move might
draw Israel into the fighting and

introduces new senice

~joins GEMI to foster

I
. ,-1'-

Jan. 25 dairy road show

-

Ohio Beef Council's Marketing
and Research Program- should
It continue? Steven D. Maurer,
Director, o! tbe Ohio Department
of Agriculture, will be conduct·
lng a five-year continuance hear·
lng for the OhiO Beef Council's
Marketing and ,Risearch Coun·
ell. The purpose of the hearing Is
to determine whether Ohio
farmers want to continue this
Bank One is introducing an the ·Internal Revnue Service, ex- · locations in a four-state region, in· marketing and research pro- .
eluding Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio · gram, or It the program should .
electronic tax filing service 81 all plained Pratt.
be presented to farmers tor a
and Michigan.
·
According
10
Pratt.
Bank
One
Bank One, Athens, offices, accordIt sufficient evidence Is
vote.
has
pioneered
in
offering
an
With
the
new
Bailk
One
service,
.ing to Lama Caruso Prall 81 Bank
presented
In support of the
lhe
individual
brings
in
a
comelectronic
tax
filing
servfce
which
One, Athens.
program,
It
will continue for
pleted
tax
rellll'll
to
any
panicipat·
was
available
a
year
ago
in
its
Bank One's new service · is a
another
five
year
period.
mg
banting
cen·
Bank
One
location
to
have
it
Columbus
and
Dayton
convenient method for taxpayers to
arrange for their federal tax rellll'lls ten. Now, Bank One is offering electronically filed. It is then
to be elecbOnically transmilted to this service through 416 banlting quickly forwarded 10 Bank One's
National Retail Lending Ccintcr in
Columbus where the return is
electronically ttansmitted to,the Internal Revenue Serviee for process·
By United freea International
panles that announced price an extremely volatile market,
ing.
At least two major oil compan·
freezes on gasoline after the start and we believe It has done that,"
"Taxpayers using Bank One's tes reacted Friday to the -sharp of war In the Oil· rich Middle said Robert J. Rauscher, marElecnonic Tax Filing have the ad· drop In crude on prices triggered East. Others lncl uded Texaco ketlng vice president of ChicagoAmerican Electric Power, parent AEP has come to recognize G'EMI
of Ohio Power Co., has reaffinned as the leadw in developing tools · vantage of knowing that they can by U.S. air strikes on Iraq and Inc., Shell 011 Co., Mobil Corp., based Amoco.
"Amoco believes the market·
.its commitment 10 lhe environment and strategies for management in expect to receive their tax refund Kuwait, reducing or unfreezing Unocal Corp.. Atlantic Rl,chfleld
Co. and Du Pont's Conoco Inc.
place does the ' ties! job of
by ~ining the Global Environmen· lhe environmental area. We loot within two to three weeks from the wholesale fuel prices.
tal Mansgement Initiative.
forward not only to sharing our dateofacce~bythem~ • Chevron Corp., the nation's subsidiary.
·
assuring supply at the bed
GEMI is a coalition of major ideas and experiences with this Revenue Service,"· explained Pratt. largest gasoline marketer, said
Several o! the companies,
prices," Rauscher said, "During
corporations formed IP foster en· group of the nation's most respec- As im added convenience, a refund tate Friday tt will reduce whole- Including Chevron, said the .the 5-montll period after the Iraqi
vironmental excellence by business ted corporations, but also to using can be directly deposited to their sale prices where needed to stay freeze would last for.seven days,
Invasion and before Jan. 16, oil
while others did not specify the
prices have returned nearly to
worldwide.
what we learn tbrougll our mem- checldng or savings account at ·competitive.
Bank one or any financial institu·
Amoco 011. Co. also announced amount o! time.
"We lire deli~hted 10 welcome bership to gauge·how AEP can im·
pre-Invasion levels. "
Chevron said Friday It would
The nation's oU Industry came
AEP to this distm~hed group of prove its performance . and tion. With the Bank One service, It bas lifted Its temporary freeze
taxpayers can have confidence -thai on gasoline, disUllate and jet fuel continue to treat Its frozen price under sharp criticism for a rapid
Americin complines who are seek· mllllllgclllent."
'
the software used . in the J)rocess
ing tq contribute in a substantive
round of price Increases at .the
GEMI was formed
year checks a return for accuracy before prices on the heels of an outbreak . as a "cap" or"celllnf'untll Jan
way to improving ~ en· as a center of caporate
rship
' 23.
pump Immediately after Iraq's ·
of war In the Persian Gulf.
vironmental management, • ssid and thinking on the subject of en· elcctronic filing of the tax return. ·--The san Francisco-based
"If we had foreseen a price
Aug. 2 Invasion of Kuwait.
Susan F. Vogt, executive director of vironmental managemcnl Working An acknowledgment then comes Chevron said the cuts, which will drop, we would have said 'cap' or
President Bush urged the In·
· GEM!.
with other global business or· back to the bank from the IRS and take effect Saturday, "vary by 'ceiling.' The suggestion by some dustry to show moderation on
"As a national leader in an in- ganizations such as the Intema- the bank notifies the. customer of region·and are Intended to meet that we troze prlc~ to keep them
!lrl!!lng and the Industry cornpdu$11')' confronting a. wealth of en, . tional Cllamber of Commen:e and the tax return's acceptance by the current coinpetltlve ' market · higher than the marker Is the
lied by temporarUy holding the
. .
vironmental issues, AEP. will bring' the · International Environmental IRS..
J el(els.'! ·
·
most ludicrous, Irresponsible _. line on gas prices .
Bank
One's
service
is
available
an im~t perspective 10 GEMI's Bureau, GEMI aims 10 contribute
In some markets, said spokes· thing I've beard lh a long time,"
Secre~&amp;ry of EneriiY James
wort, Vogt said, "and we ~ subslantively to the development of for a fee of $24. 1S and payment woman Bonnie Cbalklnd, there Chevron Cbalnnan Ken Derr Watkins said late Wednesday
forward 10 AEP's active panicipa- a wrlrldwide business ethic on en· may be made by cash or check. will be no change tn prices If said.
Bush's decision to release oil
tion in our efforts."A. Joseph vironmental lll8JI8IICIDent and SUS· Taxpayers using Bank One's new those areas are already operat·
Amoco, meanwhile, also ·sustrom the goverllll\ent's Strategic
service · will be provided an tng at "competitive" .levels. pended Its price freeze, paving
Dowd, senior vice president and lainablc deveioprnenL ·
·
Pi!troleum Reserve - hours
generlll counsel for AEP Service
AEP and its subsidiaries, includ- electronic fifing customer service Other markets will see price cuta the way for wholesale price a fter U.S.·Ied forces St&amp;ied their
number of 1-800-879-4829 as an of as much as 5cents a gallon, she · reductlona If the market down· · Initial air attacks aimed at
Corp., ssid "Over the past year,
Contlnued on D-8
added convenience. Customer f!CI'· said.
turn contlnuea.
expelling Iraq from occupied
vice hours wiU be Monday through . Chevron operates 680
"The freeze was Intended to
Kuwait- ensured that Amerl·
Friday from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. and company-owned stations. and serve as
temporary cap In
cans would not face any shorSaturday from 9 a.m. 10 3 p.m.
tages of gasoline or other petrogasoline to another 10,700 prices to help protect hstomers
Those interested in !canting sells
"bra!!ded" stations, operated by from short-term price spikes In
leum products.
more about Banlc One's eleci!OIIic
tax filing service may contact staff :~d::::.tdealersandjobbers,
at any · participating Bank One·
Chevron and Amoco were
Under current law, the secre·
GALLIPOLIS The U.S.
office in Athens, Meigs, Perry or
Department of Agriculture Mon· tary has authority to encourage H&lt;icldng counties.
among the major U.S. oU com·
day authorized tobacco produc· additional marketing of burley
ers to market additional 1990 tobacco, up to five percent of the
GALUPOLIS - The Gallla · solid waite and litter problem•
crop burley tobacco withOut basic quota of the farm on which
Cou11ty
Farm B~~u II In the faclfti our ltste. Maay IIJ'Oups
Incurring marketing penalties, a the tobacco was produced, to
midst
of
Its annual Jlltlllberablp work on thete problems, but
OAK
HILL
•
Edgil,
Steven
and
who sought 10 convey .the latest
news release from the Gallla meet nonnal demands of expqrt
Jerry
Boggs,
representatives
of
cam'pa11111.
Cur:rent membera are Fa~ Bureau worlcl tor rural
methods and technical informadon
County Agricultural Stabt'uza. and domestic markets.
reminded
to
~e-new now. Anyone
Boggs
Pest
Control,
Il)c.,
Oak
Hill,
people.
necessary 10 conduct safe and elfoc·
tlon and Conservation Service
The addltlol!lll quantity of
not
a
member
Ia
encour~Jed
IP
recently
returned
after
four
days
of
' live pest conbOI services.
Farm Bureau members can
said.
burley tobacco that Is marketed
The maximum quantity of under this authorlza!ln will be intensive training at the oldest con- . lmpioved pest cootrol services join. Farm Bureau Ia people lllre talre advantage of many thlnp
aucb u dllcounls 011 auto parta at
wiU allow the specialist to build a you-farmera, laDd ownen, rural
additional marketings ·a pro- eligible for price sup rt at the ference of its kind io the nation.
reslclents, and frtendl of agrlcul·
·
""Serving
the
Public
...
Protecling
very
.successful
business,
despile
NAPA outlets, mall order pres.
ducer Is allowed under Monday's same level as oth
burley the Environment" was set as lhe
ture . Working 101etber, crlptlon drug servlee, 11v1np on
lhe
disturbing
economic
outlook
for
authorization Is an amount equal tobacco marketed fr
the farm
vllton care at leading centers,
to five percent of the farm's baste and will not be deducted as an central theme for the 55th Annual this nation's small bUiinea in- members caa Improve the rural
quota. For example, a producer overmarketlng when determln· Purdue University Pest ConbOI dustry and varying public opinion ltandard of ltvlq and Improve savlqa on automobile Insurance
·
pressures against pesticides and farm Income.
at Nationwide qencle1, and
on a !arm having a basic quota of lng the !arm' s 1991 burley quota. Conference.
Farm Bureau baa worked to more. All of 11111 for S'7 per year.
. More than 900 people from 36 their uses.
1,000 pounds and an effective
Producers may obtain. addiAs in rceent years, Slate and cbanp estate laWI, persOnal Call l-ll)0.3&amp;\-19M for eomplete
' quota of 16,000 po,unds could tional Information from their stateS and several foreign countries
·were
in
attendance,
to
view
many
federal
regulatory
concerns property tax laws, and ICbool detalll, or ,contact a Farm
market an additional 50 pounds local Agricultural Stabilization
aspects
of
pest
conbOl
technology
fundlllglaws.. It worlcl to provide Bureau Board of 'Director
received
specialaucnlion
.
of tobacco without Incurring a and Conservation Servlet1 Office.
leadership
for solution• to ·.the member.
covered
by
a
series
of
speakers,
penalty.
.

Bank~ One

KING' JR.

of unemployment compensation to the locked-out employees in a
•
vengeful attempt at economfc intimidation.
It continues to seek and hire permanent replacement workers.
And now It has directed its search to the local area around the plant In a
thinly veiled plot to divide the community's solidartty of splrtt and action.
· Just last week: RAC once again showed Its 'blatant contempt
forboth its employees and the collective bargaining process. Finally
agreeing to negotiate after more than a month's delay. RAC withdrew
all contract ~ffers and left the-bargaining table. The company ope!Jly
refused to negotiate despite the USWA's continued
desire to reach an agreement.
' :rhese repeated affronts against the locked-out
employees: their fainrues arld their communities ~e
indefensible, but they are not Indestructible.
We will not back down because we know, as Dr. King
did; that If injustice is allowed to survive .In one place, Its
coiTUption will spread everywhere.
Our support from the community has been oveiWhelmlng.
and soon we Will be asking West Virginia's elected officials to join us
in this fight for justice and dignity.

birthday this week, we ate reminded that the basic prtriclples lie
lived and died for are being violated In ',\'est Virginia by the
Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation. · ·
.
·

Theme is announced for

tlon: Coping with Stressful presenting more than 600 com·
BY EDWARD M. VOILBORN
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT, . Times; Examining the .Crop panles. Many local farmers use
. AGRICULTURE 6 C.N.R.D
Enterprise on Dairy Farms; and this activity as a one day winter
GALUPOLIS - Managtn11 for Fat Sources for Dairy Cattle. A,$3 vacation.
The Tobacco Market N~ws
Profit will be the theme for the retfltratlon fee will be charged
annual "Dairy Road Show". This at the door. No advance reglstra- Service reports sale prices for
the week ending January 10
11011 Is necessary. If you need
years event wUI
averaglng,
$177.20 per hundred.
be held at the
furthler etalls call. Jqhn Rice,at
the
lgs ,County Extension That was a.galn of $2.38 from the
t)louth District
· week before Christmas. This
Oftlc or myself (446· 7007).
Extension Cenbrought t,he sea&amp;on average. to
A
reminder
of
the
availablllty
ter qn Route 93
$174.97
per hundred. They were
Farmers
Tax
Guides.
of
IRS
Just sou tb of
estimating
(January 10) that
Stop
by
'
or
call
for
this
tree
Jackson on Frl·
around
91
percent
of the 1990
bulletin. We also have a goo{!
day, January 25
Burley
Crop
has
been
sold.
starting at 10 a.m.
wUI be supply of farm account books
The
Tobacco
Market
News
on your own with the program to available for sale•
reported
non
auction
Service
also
Power Show Ohio Is scheduled
conclude by 3 p.m. The nick·
name "Road Show" actually for January 25, 26, 27. This has purchases from producers re·
comes trom the Idea tb'ta several grown to one of the largest shows corded on ASCS form MQ79 at
'( of the O.S.U. specialist go annu· of Its kind during the last twenty about 4i mDllon pound&amp;. Mark
ally as a group out Into the state years. The pOwer. show, which Is your calendar March 5 has been
held annually at the Ohio State set for the Annual Spring To. and do programs.
This years program will cover Fairgrounds In Columbus will bacco Producer Meeting at Han·
topics: Forage for Milk Produc· feature some 250 exhibitors re. nan Trace High School.

The family of professionals

!1 -~ Weekdays. Eve~gs and Saturday by A:ppolntm~nt

.
a ~ cuh prize rr,m lbe Ohio Valley Publllblnr
Co. Leave your name, address tmd telephooe
number with your card or le&amp;ter. No telephone
calla will be accepted. All contest entries llhould
be turned In to lbe newspaper office by t p.m. each
Wednesday. In c111e of a tie, the winner wlll be
chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallla County
farm wlli be featured by lhe GaiUa SoD and Water
Conservation District.
·

. MYSTERY FARM - ThJa weell'a ID)'IItery
farm, featured . by lhe Melp SoD aad Water
Co~~~ervatlon Dlatrlct, Ia located aomewbere In
Melp, COunty. Individual a wlsblnc to participate
In lbe weekly contest may do 10 by petllnc the
farm's owner. Just maU, or drop off yoar Jiles&amp; to
the Galil.poUs Dally Tribune, 8!5 Third Ave.,
GaiUpoU8, Ohio, 41831, or lbe D,.tly Sentinel, ,111
Court St., t&gt;omeroy, Ohio, 45788,and you may win

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

446-8677

.·/
.;

a

Fann Bureau.membership
drive underway in area

Boggs representatiYe ~ttends coDference

'

'

.

UNITED 8TEELWOR1f!JH18 OF AIIEJuCA

5019 MacCorkle Avenue, S.W. •

South Charles~on, West Vtrglnta 25309

FoR Moo ll'IFoRIIAnoN CAlL Tint

USWA RAVBNSWOOD

Loc~tOVT

H01Ul'IE AT 1·800-842·8887

.

,.

.

''

I

.

D

·stocks close · er

.·
Thank$toanewsurg~breakthrooghlaiownas lhe abdomen, feaving almost .invisible
Since
Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy, palicn~ like Kalhy · lhere's no long incision, .b ' s a1mos1 oo post·
Wears of GaUipolis Fen'y resume their nonnal acopetlllive.pain. And dlat mams many palicnts are
tivitics within just a few days of having their gallreleased from lhe hospital within 24 hours and re111111
bladdm removed. "I couldn't believe I felt that
totheirnonnaiiOIIlincwithindaysradlerlhanweeks.
good," says Kalhy, who did lauildry a day after her
If you suffer &amp;om gallstones cr gallbladder disrelease from lhe hospilal and went bact to work 81 ease, ask yOlO' doctor about laploscopic gallbladder
L.A. Joe'sin Point Pleasant shortly thereafter. ''Four
surgay, or call one of DID' surgeons, Jack M. Levine,·
Band-Aids for gallbladder surgery," she marvels. "I - D.O., at (304) 675· I460, or YOW!g I. Choi, M.D., 81
think it's just fantastic ~ we have this procedure
(304) 675-1666. ·
right here at home!"
Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy at PVH. Yet .
Using specialized instruments, surgeons at · anocher reason 10 loolc IOus forhigll quality, state-of.,
Pleasant ,Valley Hospital mate four tiriy openings in
the· art technology in healthcare.

Gallipolis, Ohlo 45631

Section

••••••

,Cet·tified Public Accountant

Gymnasium - 6-7:30 p.m. Open
recrealion.
. Pool • 6-7:30 Open swim. 8-10 '
p.m. Church group.

.

ne score.

Jackson 39.

.

.

r

Farm/ Business

-0-0 2 TOTALS ILl·

McKitrick 1

It's fantastic that we have 1
this procedu~e right .here at home .

0

o:o

0 0

._Lynn E. Angell

Gymnasium • .6-7:30 p.m. Col·
lege m:reation.
·
Pool· 6-7:30 p.m. College swim.

. .
.
· ·213
·. • Dolig Zoeller 1-0-1-3;
~srth:~~rl~k 2.0.5-g; Jeff
.
· • teve Boord 1·1).().
2,
Stutler

I

0

For complete. professional Individual and business
tax preparation assistance call

.

n

·LAPAKOSCOPIC
CHOLECYSTECTOMY

4
. 2
2

Available
•Direct Deposit of Refund (heck

Pool Closed.

3-1-1-10. TOTALS 1»11-M
MABIETl'A (liS) _ Matt
McKenna 3-0-0-6; Mnk
O'CQaner 4*8; Chad LIIICQJn

Vinson wins...

r-~-Electronic Filing

Gymnasium . Closed due to basketball games· S: IS jun. Red·
women v. Urbana; 7:30 p.m. Red:
men v. Ohio Dominican.
·

Marietta..
.·
·
The Ironmen Improved their
recordto7-6overalland·aretled
with Gallipolis at 4·2 In leaille
play willie the Tigers drop to 5-8
and 2-4.
.
After building leads of 30-22 at
halftime and. 42-32 after three
quarters Jackson led 45-32 with
6:53 left In the game. Marietta
then went OD a 16-2 run. to take a .
48-47 lead with 1:53 to play on a
pair of ,Josh. McKitrick free
throws.
Jackson went back on top 52-50
with 21 seconds left, then a goal
by Mike Morgan m~de It 54-50 at
the 17 second mark, and Martel·
ta' s Chad LIDColn drilled a
three-point goal at the·buzzer. It
was tbe' Tigers' only successful
three-pointer ln 19 attempts
during the contest.
Matt Walburn led Jackson In
scoring with · 15 points with
Clayton Valentine and Willy
Woodard each adding 13. Woodard jllsograbbed12ofJackson's
32 rebounds.
LIDColn led' the Tigers with 13
points and eight o! his team's 29
rebounds .
.
Score by quarters
Marletta ..... ....... l l l l 10 21-53
Jackson .......... ... 15 15 12 12....:54
· .rM:KSON (54) - Matt Wal·
·burn 1-2·7·15; Clayton Valentine
6-0·1·13; Willy Woodard 5·0·3·13;
Brad MuM 1-0..1-3; Mike Morgan

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•

. Page D-2- Sunday limes-Sentinel

Poma-oy-Midcleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plarsr"t

w. va.

Janu-v 20, 1991

The Gu,H War-at home and overseas
'

.

I

CHECKING THE BOMBS - .\ ll'Ouad suppo~t
crewmu checks bombe mounted on the under·
neath of a.U.S. Air Force A.Cintruder on Friday.

..
I.

.

'

.

. '·

.

'

U.S. and allied aircraft have been bombln&amp;
strate&amp;lc targets within Iraq for well over 30
hours. (UPI/Keuter)

•

•

•••

Pomeroy-Miclcleport-Gallipolia, Ohm Point Plam 1t. W. Va.

Sunday Tim• Sentlnii-PIIga D-3

.~ Bush at midtertn: Ohio stocks rebound ·in 4th quarter

The put .
reliVM
BEALLSVILLE (UPI) _ The

-'d f•
~ e mmg~ moment s~::d:::h:~:::re. :h";18
• •ory
·li ' •• Bak
.
er
m
.
~·

'

Leading the way In the most
Winners among utilities were
recent survey was the NCR Corp. All tel, up 27.8 percent, Cincinnati ·
of Dayton. The computer giant, Bell16.3 percent: Amerltech 9.4 ·
wtth Its stock price aided by a pel'lilent, Centerlor Energy 8_2 tiny community ol Beallsville,
bounded durtng the !Ina! three hostile takeover atlempt by the percent, Ohio Edison 7.1 percent, where 500 people live nestled In
months of 1990, with winners American Telephone a. Tele- Dayton Power &amp; Light 6 ,9 per- rolling hills near the Ohto River,
outnumbet1ng losers by a 3-tO:t · graph Co . , ahot up 37.6 percen t cent, American Electric Power lost siX of Its sons In the VIetnam
ratio, but most stocks failed to from $56.63 oa theclole Sept. 28 to
.7 percent and Cincinnati Gas &amp;
War. Twenty years later,13 more
in-19 92
.
.
recover fully from hits taken $90.75 on the cloee Dec. 31. NCR 5Electric
~. 9 percent.
young residents are In the Middle
·
following Iraq's Invasion In AII J closed June 29 at 164.13. .
Also enjoying a strong three East.
But all the while, Bush himself
gust and other eccnomlc factors
It Is believed Beallsville's per ,
Next In line was Chrysler • up months were Ohio's three largest
was the first to say tha-t he had
during that time,
· 34 6
·
capita
death rate during the
38
to $12 63
f
$9
. · ' bank ho~lng companies, wlt h Vietnam.wa.r was the h'tghest In .
~en ·rldlngagravytralnandhad . . A United Press International . · percent rQm ·
But, unlike NCR, Chrysler was Society up 24 percent, Bane One the nation.
·
not yet been "tested.'·'
·surV-ey of 50 stocks of companies farfrtimreboundtngtoltsJune29
u.p 20.7 percentandNatlonaiCity
The president's predllec:tlon
who are either headq'uartered
''We are a very small and
'
up 18.5 percent. No.~· Amerttrust close-knit town and that made
level of $1 5. 75·
Ohio or are major employers In
for foreign ·policy became
· Roadway Services of Akron was the only b.ank In the survey
quickly apparent when he moved
the state found Increases for 37 was up 31.6 percent to $38.50, the showing a decline.
the losses we soffered In Vietnam
Into the Oval Office, even though
from the close Sept. 28 to the Limited of Columbus up 30. 9
The retail Industry was miXed even more traumatic to us," said
he had campaigned In 1988 to be
close Dec. 31. There was no · percent to $18 and A!Itel of with the Limited up 30,9 per£ent, DeJJ:nas Moore, .social studies
the "education president" and .cJ!ange by two and the price ofl1 Hudson up 27.8 percent to $34,
Sears Roebuck even and May teacher at Beallsville High
the "environment president."
stocks fell.
School.
Dessa Strahl, a student at
Suffering the largest blow, In !)epartment Stores down 7.9
From the standpoint of most
Despite the strong fourth qual"of percentage loss, was the
percent.
May
operates
stores
In
Beallsville
High School, said she
terms
observers, Bush erred during the
ter showing, however, only nine
LTVCorp,parentofLTVSteelln
Ohio
under
the
May,
Kaufmann
misses
her
brother, Ronald, 22,
Tlananmen Square democracy
of ·the 50 stocks recovered to
.Cleveland. LTV's· stock dropped and L.S. Ayers names.
one of the 13 stationed In the
protests In Beljlrig In June 1989
abOve their closing prices at the from75centsasbareto50centsa
Two of the big three auto MlddleEast .
when he appeared to be conciUaend of the second quarter, June s.hare, a fall of 33.3 percent makers were down, with Ford
"I'm scared lor htm but lfe
tory to the top Chinese leaders
29. They were Gibson Greetings, during the quarter.
falling 13.8 percent, General
·
and even ~nt emissaries to the
Roadway Services, Alltel, Arne- ·
Arnerltrust of Cleveland . Motors falllng 5.2 percent and Joined the military to protec:to"r
mainland after he had barred
rt:Och, Chiquita, Dayton Power dropped 26.1 percentfrom $11 to · ·Chrysler galillng 34 _6 percent.
countrysolfthat's whathewants ·
such high-level contacts.
· and IJght, Loral, NCR and $8.13. Amerltrust had traded as ·--~------::-::OO~~to~d~o~
, I~'llll.suliipiipo
...
rt•h•lm•.11:.·s•h~e•s•a•ld.,
.
Durlnghlsflrstseveral months ., Rockwell InternationaL
hlghas$29asbareduringthelast
In office, the president, gulded·by
Prices of 48 of the 50 companies 18 months, but Ohio's fourth
~W~,-,
.
· ~'N\,.'l
hard -line advisers, Ignored Sofell during the third quarter, the
largest
b8J!k
lioldtng
company
,..
...
,..:.._
. '",..,~:" ..
viet President Mikhail Gorba·
worst performance since UPI has been facing problems.
.ttl;_'
i
•if
.•Bulk
Home
Delivery
began Its quarterly survey of the
chev's entreaties lor . a new
The company lost $51.6 mllllon
'
detente. Many months .later,
Ohio stocks. Iii fact , lo~rs during the first quarter last year:
•Competitive Prices
phenomenally, the walls of cornoutnumbered winners only one .
On Aug. 16 Amerltrust anmunlsm came crashing down,
previous time, the flrstquarter of nounced It would cut.78Q Jobs and
.ending the Cold War peacefully.
1990 when the price ol16 stocks on Aug. 28 Chairman Jerry
Bush and Gorbachev opened a
Increased, 23 fell and three were Jarrett announced his
new warm relationship during a
unchanged.
resignation.
two-day meeting on the stormIn 1989, there were 31 winners
Other big josers during the
tossed waters off the Medlterra·
In the first quarter. 36 In 'the quarter ·were Tlmken of Canton,
TOLL FREE
nean Island of Malta In Desecond quarter, 38 In the third down 21.4 percent to $21.13,
1·800·423·4.399 - OH.
cember 1989. · BuSh's penchant
quarter and 26 In the fourth Armco, down 16.3 percent to
1-800-423·4419- wv
quarter.
for telephoning world leaders
$5.13, and Ford Motor, down 13.8 ·
and filling them in paid off after
After opening with only 16 percent to $26.63.
Iraq Invaded and annexed Kuwinners In the first quarter of
The Industry having the most
COMING
App IIOilCeS- VI'In dCr CIVICe
SOON·
walt on Aug. 2. Bush, once the ·1990, the market rebounded with solid quar11!r, as usual, was
'U .S. ambassador to the United 26 wl!lners during the second utilities, with eight out of nine
Nations, called In his markers
quarter before falllng to only two showing Increases. The excepand won a 28-natlon coalition
winners In the third quarter and
tion was AT&amp;T, with Its stock
against Iraq .t hat Included the
rebounding again to a near- falling 2.4 perce·n t to $30.13 as It
Soviet Union and several Arab
record 37 winners In the fourth
mounted Its takeover attempt of
KANAUGA, OHIO
JCT. RT. 35 &amp; 1
nations. It ' was a feat that
quarter.
·
NCR.
commanded admiration .
.I
By RICH EXNER

e

WASHINGTON (UPI) -As his
first term reaches · the haltw_ay
point, President Bush had em. barked on the' inost crucial
course of his presidency. Secre'
tary or State James Baker has
called It a "defining moment In
history."
· ·
· On Tuesday morning, Jan, 15,
the U.N. deadline for Iraq to
~hdraw Its tl oops from Kuwait,
Bush took a soutary walk on the
south grounds outside the Oval
Office to reflec:t on the repercusslons of a devastating decision.
The following evening - 19
hours after the deadline had
.pas~d - allied jet fighters had
· begun the assault on Iraq and Its
positions In Kuwait.
It has been a pensive time for
the 66-year-old president, although . he Is not prone to
Introspection. Rather he Is a man
of action, always on the go,
dubbed early on the "aer9blc"
presldeqt.
On Inauguration day, Jan. 20,
1989, he passed the word that he
would not be confined to the
White' House. He made good on
that pledge, traveling to 28
foreign countries and 44 states In
tltepasttwoyears.AtrForceOne
became his home.
Before the Persian Gulf Crisis
and the confrontation 'ol(lth Iraq's
Saddam Hussein, Bush was riding an unparalleled high In the
popularity polls. Not even the
early warnings ol a recession
could hurt his image. •
So convinced that he was a
shoo-In for a second term, no
Democratic presidential asplrant has yet dared to go publiC on
the prospect of seeking the
party's presidential nomination

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Janlllrf 20, 1991

TOMCAT TAKEOFF- An F-14 Tomcat takes The United States 1111d allied aircraft have
off from .the deck of the aircraft carrier USS Jobn continued to keep the prenure on Iraq wlthateady
F . Kennedy while on Its way to Iraq on Thursday; · raids. In the ferep-Ound Ia 1111ot11er Tomcat.
(UPI/a;;uter)
.

m

LP GAS

r

CALL

411
9
.
446
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FOR MORE DETAILS

ITrv U•T•••vll I
c

,.

s .

BURLILE LP GAS

Classifie
Announcements

Public Notice

.

• The Area's Number · 1 Marketplace
( ·

Giveaway

4

Real Estate General

Real Eatate General

Real Estate General

PUBLIC NOTICE '

•

REIDY TO GO - A crewm~~~~ aboard the USS
Kennet17 elpafa to the pllotolanA-7Coraalrashe

.

.prepares to lake off on Tbursday. The Coraalrwa8..•, ·
part of Kenuedy's fourth
(UPI/Keuter)

'

raid Into h-aq. •
·

FOR SALE
· 1 C8rd Of Thankl
The Ohio Volly ·Bonk ..:.....-=~:.=~==--Compony, 420 Third Av·
Coni of Tho,..
onuo,
O.lllpo!lo, Ohio P-P'I fO'I lint • ~ oonl.

48831 • will offer loroolo tho
· fallowing deocrlbed prop·

lf1Y:

1883 Oldo. Flronzo

Swill II
1G3AD310XDK32101t
Ill ~ ld
Thl ..~lei
• ...ule
, •otw!ho- Joclcoon
oo ot
o public
l'tko Olftco ef tho OhiO Vol·
ley · ' Bonk Compony, 370
Cn~l•r.

Sot qUIOIIJ In o choir. """"'""
::: •" 1 .::':~~~J
klndoot _,., Aa ony . fl1ond
oould, PlrhiP'I ,..... . _ not
tho,., Juot tnought of uo thot
cloy, wh ....or you did to-··
toll our helrte, tMnk you eo

.::0: ,:

w.,__

oil fomiiJ .......- . ilolghbcn,

Pike, Golllpollo. churcho, Tho Flo¥. JonY Scott
OhiO ot 10:00 o.m. on Bot- ond The Fog!- ""-o-

Joclcoon

J
28 1881
•·-Y·
.,uery '
·
Tho vehicle will be oold to
~

H -. Wo ntond

I

ol.-.

tho h'-hoot bidder "•• to"
..
wlthGut ony oxp,.••d or

lmpllod worronty. Thlo vohl·

t•·n•· ~ -. r help ond • - - - ··~
pool duotnll tho- of our loved
..... lilly tho Lonl ond
katp you. Tho lllmlly of VIrginia
"Gingo" - ...

clo rnoy be - • ot tHo
J.C.oen Pike Offtco of tho ·

3 Announcements

OhiO

Vollly

Bonk Compony

up to tho d ..• .,d time of

-•

-o..
Tho Ohio ,Voi.IIY · .Bon~

Compony ;.•rvoa tho right
to eccept or Njoct ony ond
ott bldt, ond to wllhdr- thlo

aDOPTION
H1ppi1Y monied IICUN CO&lt;Iplo
wllh lo glvo worm I loVInG
h - to 1 whit• 1\iWbom. Ell·

.,.._ P'lld. CeU Tora ond DGug

coltoct onyti1Mit4 til 3111.

velllclo ITvm lllo PTior to the QOU) CREDIT CARD, 100% liP'
-~- Terme o f 8 1 te: c1111 or · money
p!OVOCI,back
St,IOO.
credM
Hno
....
.. for cam8...,.m
CERTIFIED CHECK. ·
ptoto lnlo call
t..--GOtO
JAN 20. 23. 2B. , .. ,
ns.tw.

lllk..,

·oHIO'!! SUPPORT- Several hundred students
anti-war demOIIIVMiotll have be.
place
-. -- ; IIIII&amp; the "Star Span&amp;led Banner" In Columbus 0 n · nation-wide IInce the bomblq be&amp;llll on WeD.·
· Tbunday at a pro-U.S. Involvement rally on the
day. (VPI/Reuter)
·
·
. ·• Oltlo Slate . Unlvenlty campua. Both pro- and

2 toonolo llollu- Shollhonl
~· 4 ~aid, 114-m-

2 kilt.,. I o cot lo glwtwo • month aid _clop. · 40111.

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School. • Aleo,
thenkl to Wilcoxen
Ft~nerll Homo, ·Ptlll·
beerera: Eric Diddle,
Donnie Shupe, Fred
LAimlay. . Sid V1nce.
Jerry Nibert. 1nd Teel

••

•..
•
•

•
•

8Nbh1.m,
end Rev.
Rlak MlloYed elf the
D8flvlle
Holln-

•

Chut'llh. who In
obarge fJf the MNic...

••

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forell'OUDd, while the .2-meCer deep crater left
;I
•'·

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the mWtary. Petl'llfO, a VIetnam veter1111, wQI '
sead IIII)'One - free - e paper !lenlce Ill... Send •
a aell-addreued boatneu abe envelope to Senlce ·;
Jllar, 10011 Woodson Road, St. Louts, lito. 83114. •
(UPI)
•

Y·

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

....._,-ton
IJ•• ..,.......

Alok
Compony
now b~
a..,.,_ . . . . tho .., . .....
ld Olllo, ~. -

"'.....
u- -T!'N7N.
Vlrglnll,

WI dt •..,... AuotiCII

~ervtn~

.• '

boll - : R.C 11M Glllloy

.
or-

oncl In mint aondMion.

WI- lo buy: Junk ..,. with
rnoloro I KI'TIP mot·
oi.114-3'1W121.
WI- To Buy: Junk Autoo

-Lorrr or
wlllout
- · Coil
Uwly.
1M IIII!!J3.
Wlfllod: irtoll Solttor PilppycCell

IM-481-111f7.

•

We app..alated ell
of the ICt8 of Wndn-

Mtended to

111.

Thank you •II,
Wife, B-''Y Loudin,
Children, J ... •

C.rol louden
L.Uie t.o,ldln
· Jean A. louden

1nd Or.ndchlldren.

·

.......

WI lo buy ""' 11111111nt
·
- · ~~~-•
Pine. r.-n
~.
~

Employment Scrvrces

.

11

Help W811hld

·-ton,-.. . - ·
...,.,

...
..
--·----... ...::-:
--,

$lor ...
- , ... alii with .....
up. Cell Koy, .,.._71110.

2

In Memory.
In Memory of

FLO HUNT

8/13/13·1 /18/111
Your memory to .. II e
keep_..,
With which we wilt
n-pen, ·Thougll Ootl h11 you
In hit ltMplnt
We'll etweya hive you
lnourhul18. · ·
Slldly mllead by
wife. ohlld..., •
•~ld,.n.

AI/ON • All -

INTILUOINcl

Cell llofilyn

.... -

RIO CUTEII ESTATES
Build your home among the trees on one of these
seini·secluded lots. I mile west of Rio Grande.
lots range in size from 2.5 ocres to 5 acres. Res·
trictive covenants lor your protection. Prices
range from $6,500 for 2.5 acre sizeto$10.300 for
select 5 acre parcel. County woter available. Call
us for more information.
133&amp;

CLEAIVI£W ESTATES

29.6 ACRES OF lAND
Cansisting mostly of aood growing timber. 5 ocres
or more of 29 acre tllct is open land lorconltn
and hu fru~ trees near 1 room remodeled home.
2 car RlriRI and several· othr small buildina. '
l'elcefulloCation to live With c.ood view. St Rt 160
between Ewington inti Wifkesville. Priced a! ·
$42,500.
. . 1302
WHEIE GIAIIDIA USED TO LIVElli
Clean I~ story home along Route 1 offers lots of
charm. 3 bedrooms, fireplace. dining room and
fuR basement are just 50me at the features. 1.66
acres includes 2 car garace and bam. New gas
furnace Installed recently also. Beautiful river
view ta enjoy from the shade of the maple trees.
Pricsd at $59,500.
Ill&amp;
BUY lWO HOlES, GET OIIE FIEEIII
Agimmick you say? Not 11 all! We have two 3 bed·
room homes thot have been well maintained and
cared for for sale, and we'll throw in 1 mobile
home to make n1 b1111in! Currently rented fo
$7I 0 totJI, and could rent for more. ):Ill for more
iniormaiion.
1209
SMALl IUT SNAPPY
Exceptionally clean and uncluttered 3 bedroom
ranch. no honey,do projects here. Don't miss this
one - call for an oppointment today. You wen' I
believe the price of $39,900!
1512

•£W UmNG - COUITIY ATMOSPHRE!
2.8acres, m/1. Ranch style, 3.bedroom home. in
Rio school district. Owner will finance to qua!tf!ed
buyei. Very neet home, 'eat lor. stJrters. L1v1ng
room dining roam, tam1ly room wrth frreplace, eol·in kitchen, Ill baths. Carport. Nice flat lot w~h
tots ol privacy. 50_
. 's. Please .call ioday. 1204

a1

JOIIP.

HITina. Cell (1J •

=-~\.=R.
ra:un.~
..
AP: . "Of .,.,.d-..
I •

....
.................... .........
...........
:e~

IPW In Polloi -

~

II·

.:::.'It::
- .......-.......011·=·=

-AndRiwmTII

w- d '
5

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TAlE YOUR TIME
You have to go to appreciate this lovely 3 bedroom
ranch. Living room whh fireplace, dinina room,
eat·ln k~chen and 2 baths, 2 car a••ae. I acre
lot. $55,500.
. .
.3414
. IT. 7 PROPERlY
Very well kept home in nice aree includes 3 bed·
rooms, iar~t fomily room, full basement and in·
ground sw1mmin1 pool. Easy to heat and mointain. Great s!Jrter home!
.
. 1213

IIIIDEII Flm, IEALLJ IIIFTYII
You'll count youueU lucky to~n this good-lookinc b~lellll With one car prage and fenced yard.
There ore 3 bedrooms lnd one bath, and )he
· nandy penon in the l1111ily will enjoy finishing the·
lower' level Into··recratlon room for the family .
Don't w~H~Ihe pril:eJs $42,900!
1503 ·

COUNTRY ATIIOsPHEIE AT IrS lEST
Take advanta&amp;e of the owne(s hard work ond
money spent on this outstanding lenlleman's
farm. Very clean, well decorated and completely
remodeled home includes 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
finished basement, lireplace and Iorge kitchen
w~h plenty of cabinet1 Over I3 acres, mast of
which is flat tillable 1round, very nioe barn lnd
beautiful country surroundings. BONUS:
Completely remodeled I bedroom house in·
eluded. Perfect lor mother-in·law,Jtntlllar exllo
income, relatives, etc. Call lor more dellils.

17 ACRES Ill
Vaclftl lond located in Green and Springfield
Townships, Just off U. S. Rt. 35. Fronts on town·
ship reed and old U.' S. 35. Water and gas mila·
ble. Lind lays mtlsl1y rolling with excellent build·
ina locations. Hn hilh hiN ·area w~h nice view.
Cltv school sYitem. lltst location in Gallia County
,to bujld and live. Priced at $67,500.
N340
Fl•E cou•rn HOllE
Here is 11 fine 1 home IS you'll lirid. Very quiet
. and pe-ul ltllini, .large spocious home with
very lar11 COmlllllltble rooms. QuoiHy built brick
ronch futures 4l•t'fl bedrooms, 3 full baths, 2fi.
replaces plus indoor BBQ. Large kitchen dh di·
nette plus ftil'lllll dinin1 room with' haidwood
floors. hi, partially flntshed basement. over$iZed
~ car prop. Huge wrap.around deck, lnground
pot:ll and 40 acres to romp around on. ()ver
$100,000. ' .
.
1201

~. .

MJ-IIt.K~ -

(114) 1144141

. Very nice and s)llcious home located in a quiet
neiihborhood oilers 4 bed.rooms. 3 full baths, full
basement and more. EJrtra lot included, also rnsround poot: $81,900. Priced to sell!!
N218

Several new house in this ouiet area lust 10 mi·
nutes from town. We are offerin1an II yur old
· bricklfrome rn very Rood condition wlh option Ia
buy two lots on each side lor ellra space. 1296 sq.
ft., 3 bedrooms, 2iaths, living room, kitchen/din·
inc area, 2 car garage. $50,900.
MID

.,_......_ ua o ..a~ DEA.

VERY PRIVATE I WOODED!
Perfect settina to enjoy this newly constructed loc
home. Large front porch to enjoy cool summer
breezes; attractive woodburner and harlh to
warm your soul on those cold winter nights. All·
pro•. 2,300 sq. ft. ot comfortable livina SJIICI in·
eluding 3 bedrooms (room for41hl, very attractiv*
country kitchen, livi~g room whh pine cellin&amp;,
newly finished family room and 211 blthS. tarp 2
car garage w~h overhead storage. Appro•. 5 years
old. $89,900.
1215

filu• TOW.SHIP HOME

1'11t Subdivision II GI'Oirin&amp;l

&lt;

ville

•

Scad.......,.

p.m.

a--2

tend I VIKY IPICIII
thank• to Ron P1xton •
Ollie B1rry, end tho ·
entire ltaff of · Add•·

•

.. .JMd a conente bomb lbeltet uanotber101dler
pun• chllllb of an Iraqi Scud ·m!llllle1

1,

!lR.
m.II!I!J
ll:ii.~c.A,..
Dovo
-·
1 U.P.

gave money. 1nd com.
fol'tlng warda.
We would like to D ·

•'

from tbe ~nleelle'e blut tin 11'r1411Q'. Tel Aviv - e
under a-nd diQ' of Iraqi
attecb.
(VPI/Reuler)
·.

Sale
------~,....,~
ALL Yonl l l l o t - 1o tiiold 'tii
- ·· OEADLIIIIE: :too p.m.
tho cloy boloro tho Ill 11 to MI.
&amp;undo oclltl2:00 p.m
F~y
11cwocto) .;.ton . 2:00
vard

7

... -oot, Clilllor
..... ·......,.
- lull
1111111 .......

.. loved one.
Th1nka to ell thoee
who unt flower• and
cerda, brought .food,

•

• , JUIMIII!:O SHELTER - Two llraell 10Jdle1'1

Loot:
Loothor
Clloulllo!.
Clloclcboolc ond ~U. n
'""""' 114 441 2144,

I

of our

1n11111 111 ·
Hottdar•f
You can you know. Give yourself~~ ultimate gift
- a bra"cl new custom built home on Scarlet
Drive. 3 bedrooms, family room, 2 blths, double
garage, large kitchen w~h quality cabinets and
dining area. North Gallia schools. $76,900.
7
AWAY FIOI THE Clm
Nll
Capture the spir~ of the outdoors with 1 full acre,
beautifully landSCiped yard w~h lots of trees.
House features 3 bedrooms and eat-in kitchen.
Easy access to a large covered potio from a lovely
family room w~h a woodburner. Judae far yourself - ifs everything you would e•pect City
schoOls. $55,000.
NIO$
Baine

Rto-,Ohloi1W4Ht12.

The flnilly of Lum1n
E; loudon wlthol to
exprea ·their ·olncere
thenkl 1nd tntltude
to the many frllnde.
f1mlly, ond neighbors
who helped In lftY WIV
durlnt the time'of toea

'.
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8DVICBII'IAG8-To1Q'Pih-ofO\IerllaDd,
Mo., wua. ever,o., to have a Service Ill. . In
tllelr wllidow to lhow eupport for loved .,• ..., part In Daert S&amp;onn. UN of the Semce.
•Jl1ar data back to World War I. Wilen dlepleyed
.In a window, &amp;be Blue !IIIIi' lndleated a love~ one 111 J'

tiO

~

v

j

'IWb. aid, Bram btiCfl a whlo,

;.if'!.:"
,C...:::''llo.'1::."J
==.:•
On 11. Rt.

Giveaway

4

PATRIOT lAUNCHER - Capt. James
Thursday over eastern Saudi Arabia. Soldiers ;
·8pu11er, left; p - wltll bW men In front of their
are, from left, Lt .. Charles McMurtry, SJI. Joe :
" Pl&amp;rlot mllllle lanacher on FrldiQ'. Silan&amp;ler's · · Qblqer and Spl. ReQe Tenor. (Reuter)
•
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battery llbot down the lnql Scud inlselle
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Lo &amp; F nd
much
Teluo WtotniCN•
_6__-:---::at=-:::OU=~=:::
d
R
8quod
:
11
~nt Voller ;:;... 011H: - : llolo " - • -

- ~II

This flEW LISTI.G Is Too Pllflct For Wontaft
Thors why we lnvilt you Ia see this 3 bedroom
home sillrng pretty on Neif:lr bortlood Rolil One
look . and . JO!I'II be 'lool'ed on the meticulous
housekeeprng.l1ke new carpet, tal·in kitchen with
applilnces, ~ beth in mister bedroom, woter IGf·
tener, t~n house~ttic f1n and a fulbasement for 1.
· weafth of stor11e space or a future recrNtion
room or workshop. This home is 1 bell rinatnc bu.
earn at only $53,0001 Washineton Elementary/G
A.H.S. schools.
.
1114

Wiseman .·Real Estate
. (614) 446·3644
t. M. WISIIIAII, IIODI .

DAVID WISIUII,
110111,
446·95$5.
.
.
LORETTA McDADE. 446-7729 CLYDE B. WALKER, 246·6278

B. J . .tfAIRSTON.- 448·4240

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Tmee-Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

Help Wllnttd

11

Apartment

'

IAJI-1-.y

8

KIT 'l'f CAJU.YLE~ lty l.any Wrtpt

for~nt

-

I

....., .....

In

c

EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT AT 7 P.l.

,...... to: eli . . 117. ....

Loe~tlon: D.A. V. Build inc on

t.::::..~T~~5

~

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Rt. 35 Bypass

REG. •a9 .00

_$4500

Door Prizes
AUCTIONEER, DAYI DBOCGS, LIC. 4596
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO &amp;14-441·n50, ·

REG. '79.00

~~~----------~~··

0111 Pilei

WORK BOOTS
BY WALKER

•
CAROLINA .
•

liZES 7 111111 IS
IIISUUTID

GOLDEN
RETRIEVER

I
IEGIUI
I

GUNS
AMMO

I

••

MOVING

3 hp puah mower
110.00, riding
mowtr box tnller
*IIO.OO,quHn
Wlterbed 8100.00,

bod,_ - . boll!, lppn&gt;L
S ..,..,. JoHer Ro.d, Kinnan
I

IMdGGilliid.

,
. ..- loaldnll
.. r..a..:
0:.
tdet
for 1 -111p aftllbll
.,.,.on to f,_ IF rt I high
I I - to ond 11om o

ljiOCioi-lnAI-.Oilloon
o·dolly loolilo, iw U. Nnlndor

llujloriN-··

litho-,..... n-od,
........ tho
~ 11 1t41M5-4212
-.m.4jOOP.m.
dolly. -

.

- - Md dolfnioy *""-.

Jo-

"""" in ,.,_, .-

~--~-~~P-~~~~~~"'~·w~
. ~·~":" ·I
Wonlod:

Erwgoilo

......

·- - ~ DEN'TIIoL ASSISTANT to join our
pfoct:oe porto!- IEliportonoe
llllpful. 1M nDI n1:

ry. W..

87 Yemahe Klrego

1100 U.300,
new welding tiMI,
torchle end
pugea, 11815.00.

GOVERNMENT~ HOIIII from 11
NP~irj,
DllllnQIMnt IU

(U

A-,

-poill.

OH

41111.
Wlnled: Opt aJnllrlo a.a.an1,
IDI
..,.., l!ldlt.
- iequlred.
....,....
h
~ llnd
to: ..,. Cia 011, olo

'n••

. . . 1 1 1 - - Ex:. OH·
4M2 W OUrronl 5181.
b - n l -ion In Pt.

"""'"" w.,.,..,

-~ - Col .. Lupn
• •· a m•ClnclnMtllnd.,.,., Auclloneerw, Inc.
P.O.-._

"'·

0111o 111111

I

ihplil-.

=..,- :S_...'IMI
-.J.,.bod:,
....

~
....... For u;
ko-lon cd collocl 44

446-6624
goutheAn Sli~~g CRea~ 8stale

- - - Wil ilnonce.

12dl .... - . . .h
J Mlo, on 1 .,.lot, CA. nnl
Wllw tip. I 1 wei, 11132
· t14x2SI..al,
- ....... -:'~·
121.000.
1
-.

luclnllt ~•
Col ..
-Ill •
......
. . . ._..

~

Teal ·=~ 4 ......... Ex- And .....
~ilnl
eon :11M 111 · 1124117.

I

Wllnted to Do

I

. . . . . . . . . . .

. . . .

.

IIAimi'UL APAIITIIIHTI AT

ar, tQtal BUDGIT PRICU AT IACUON
1115 1m- -U'i:~
- - I ItoI I P5ioe
1.... Collt4-441-tetll.
___...,,.,
.
.
.
.
.
CIIItMtti
..IIE .
-·
lloatPiik

-··

IB

0

:'r&amp;jl

=..:': .:.C,:'~

~

.Aport-.
tbr,

Can .. loll WI 501,

. . .r. poid,

=:-:; =l:::.-- fll4:'m.

Sloand

2 ..........,. CINDorY. aoocl

- 11ob5io-..,
;do,l14
UI4C'Ci.111 n.• ....,_
r•r""'•
Now llti 141171 ............ ,n

llidJiolort. Coli Tom Andoooooo
••1111afl• 1:00 p.m.

-:!L12112
...... toloocco
._,
""""' trolllr ilocoliRED~

,., p1on1o - - _,,

AI

upo5oln,

Aw;.r ......,... ....

.... ,.

quirod.lt44oo "21
~$

1,.,.....,.
Ulonrp, PI
rwfiNiloli

, JUDY DlWITT
446-1141

614-286·5868

(AlHY WIAY
446-4255

' 379-2114

SAM HOFFMAN
379-2449

rr•1311Ciill

·.
~

JEANNIE TOWYEI
. 446-1006

TAMIIIEDEWITT
441-0703

--~
111-mt.

...........

ild. ....... tor

-

.,,,,,
,.,
,.,.,10,

H'"' Ill BIH611r

~··
·

IIEW LlmiGI
PLAIITING TIIEII

We love You,
Mommy • Daddy I

Gran

In time for sprinl pllntlnt epprox. 73 ecre farm
· with the mejority of leild bein1 lillble. 87' x 55'
melll btm, fenced. Glrlfl, 2 story lreme rlfnOo
d~ home, 4 bedr~s, I~ blths,l111t country
kEhen, bosement. Don't let this productive fM'III
by.
.
121M

· Nan••

mtdle~l tenninol·
OIJ and/or chlrtinc.

Ito,

ltdicall/ltdiCIId
ttms and a LSW or

· newly rem~
room, bath, fon:etl
area, nestled emong
acre lot
· 12162

SIIUGGLE UP

22

Mofi8Y to LQan

Join the Heal1hcare Family at
Veter.ans Memorial Hospital. lm·
. mediate . openings for Registered
Nurses to . work in . Emergency ·
Room, Home Heelth Nursing, and
Acute Cere (Med.·Surg.) Salary
commensurate. with experience.
Excellent fringe benefits.
CONTACT:
Rhonda Dailey, AN, B.S.N.
Director of Nursing
Veterans Memorial Hoepitel
116 East Memorial Drive
f'omeroy, Ohio 46789

814 992·210

Ext. 214

ROOIIEY PIKE AREA

With this 100 acreS. Older I~ story home plus mo·
dem A·freme. Born. Rurol Wiler, merlretlble tim·
ber, privrote IOCition. Cell today!
IUI9

You'll find !hi$ 4~ ecre mil tiiCI ol VICini lend.
Ru11l Wiler aveiloble. All land is ·clelred end till•·
ble.
12174

NOT EXPEIISIYE. BUT AFFORDABLE!

3 UIUT RENTAL COIPLEX!

3 bedroom mobile home end 21ots. C.ble TV eviil·
1ble, city fl:hools. c.n to see lod.r!
12110

Receive 1 IJO$iive Clsh ftow from the rentil in·
come of this newly constructed complex. Elch
unrt consist$ ol 051e bedroom, tumifoed kitchen, ·
livlnl room, blth. Vinyl sldine.Low maintenance.
C.tl todly lor more dellilsl $69,500.
12116

l~ WEST AREA .

!dell development pro::l. OVer 100 acres.
I.Jnd lays well, p!lrtially
ed. Cell lor co!lllllete
llstin&amp;!
.
•t2112

·

· WHO'S ON FIRST?

'. c•rlato,her
.Skl4•ote

Wants to sell this
nestled on 2 ec:es
bedrooms;Doth w/1lfllen tub.
$14,000.

JUST LISTED!
BE NATURFS IIEIGHIOR

ACREAGE -

81rth4ay .

.

With the warm leelinl of home dh this cozy I
$lory remodeled home. 2 bedrooms,livinR room,
pa:ti1l basement, 11111 nice kitchen. In crty canvenience. Cell todew!
·
12172

EOE

REGISTERED NURSES

-···

-

--1473

IINpor, _ _ n .:-. choir

a '""- o1 1200-

.

.-I.__·L,n_RL..v--'-3N--AL..s--'1~---'1

I -N 0 l

I

-~

p 0 RRuA
. ~~--~:---.1:--''-r-1-"'1-·lr-8--1,
wogon.
304·77:1-

con~~n1on. -

uot

Buy "' 1111. RIYorlno Antlq-.
tt24 E. lllin 81-,
Houri' II.T.W. Mtoo o.m. lo 1:00
r~ ,00 to 1:00 p.m.

-IDY·

Qulfto
·-SonJ phoiDI
"" 1140
- l o nonilaood
-riJIIIon
IO

t P - . Alhona, Ohio 4mt or
con 114/18a1117 ., 1141112·
2481.

54 Miscellaneous
Men:hlncllst
121 • Anvi!c -elM blko,

22
M-borg Rnoa- acopo, 3047!W310. .
.

I

D. C. Metal Salts, Inc.

The wife was fed up w1th
.
.·. - .. t)er husband for video taping
1,----'----L.-a...;..-'----L.--' every little event that .hap·
GR I T AC
pened around the house. He
..,.....,...;,_..,.....;...~__,.~..,.....,..
. responded
indignantly .

I;..__,~l~..-.....:1_.....:1_9-..:.l_l_o.~.I......:~:~~~: ,:~~s--~~~- ~~~~·
c L Ay uN I
IIIIII
.

.

•

.

.

' . tO
Complete the chuckle (luoted
V by filling in the missing words
you develop from step Na.'.3 be law.

~. ~~~bortd
r! ra

nMdo. Arry olio .
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATE on
post blc:toa.,.il :-4 oeck f,.,,

these

Jr--...--,--....,.--"1"--"T---1· 0

.

Connoli&gt;urg, Inc. ol751$
S_.oliling in Pol'
BuM"ingo.
Designed to mHt your

I

i1

·

' .

You will be when-you mektl hH with this excellent hofne on O.kDr. 3 bedrooms livinl room with
fireilllce, 2 blths, new S!OIIP. bUidlna, bnutiul
llnilsciP!nl in beck llwn. So many imy
ments, -it's fike new. /1. piece you'll! proud
home.
.
·

VACANT LAND
Approx. 50 ecres,· mostly wooded. ,
$18,000.

=

''

BUDCET PRICED! $22;900.00

Well m1int1ined I story home end .9 !If 1_n ecre
lol! 2 bedrooms. tivinJ room, beth e11-1_n ~hen,
newer shlnllt roof. Clll for cO(II~ellllistm~

114

VIEW OF RIVER

Wrth this OVII' 8 fCje lrlct of lllld. Wooded, site
clured for mobile-home· or house ru111 Wlllr
evtillble. ROlli frantlaealeilll SR 1. $8,500.00.

.

.

.

. mtJ

.. C5otlolngl. :IIMm ...u .

Wlloon Stoft aolf cluilo, Moytog
- · ::0...711-41148.
-

I

G kL

r1

deals. Save huna:\dl:

evtn thouMndl of
doll oro.
lo&lt;al !alB bpr.,onllli¥1

DONNA CRISENIERY ,

"*' •otlng
21113121

otovo,

....

lnctoao iligh, SIS. 304·

17141137.

E.S.R .. Bo• 158
Goilipollo, Ohio oiBS31

PH. 61

Real Estate General

:sat
C5noilnd
-"'
• .
Tronomloolon
1100; Ono Hyd•
Olllliic l;oill!w, 1100; On•·
Grovoly Gordin Trootor l li·
qulpMine .._.,. •• ot:M.

•

MA Pootoblo ligna ond llltora.
F,_ Muurr. 1-100-l:tS-1453
onytiiM.
lanllnl CIII'CII. ZW. blloW a.
-. _
. . o5 roockoo ond ·

---~-•
Big 41or !oorm blolt lor
,....124
up. - - inodoio. .....
..-mt.
OOftiiiiOIW.,

a.rt

BliCk

FioOjlicca-~.

Waa1lnJmlng

r

t3SG; kiQ cue:-

lom Utility Trolicri\1100. 114-24&amp;lm, E_,lngo_o orlp.on.

Concnla a pllollo llflllc tonlo,
Ron Evanto · E,.,.....,. Jocil- · OH 1-..s7o0121.
DP - · no bike. rru
S%11. 104 1111 3104
4,00 ond 7,00 Pll. ·

A V'MV' DNINNm:J
AOV'Nm
'IJM'IJ fJNINNntl WOJJ
019'1'1:11
SlU9/\9 9S91.1l dO!S 111M SWI!J 95941..
. I:IV'QI:fdn
'AI!UBU6!PU! p9puodS9J 9H ·9sno4
NOT1V'9
94l punore pauadde4 · IB41 1uar.a
;.. QNV'I:f8
an111 AJar.a 6u!dB! oaP!" JOI pueqsn4
;.. 7&gt;f't3M
1a4 41!M dn pa1 seM 911M .941
S13i·Wifi:IOS

,,').,

IIOOUPOII - IUIT ST. - I
""' plln,'211odf0011silml\' ,,...,
hi~l room, tlt·in kltben, b1th,
hrly coopo!od, 1\ordwood loon, in·
sulllloi. uo:ellenl conditon, "'"'
let. Elttrl nll:e yard. let's look. law,
1o-: 20's.lmm8dilte posseuilln. ·

5t3 l. 2... IIDDLII'OII-lBR.

.....

on~

--

$37 ,!00.

510 S. 210, IIDDL!POIT- 3 BR.

On~

. Real Estate General

$49,900.

IIDDL£POII- 242HICIIII.You11 rwver pt • bthtr bur. Good
houiO. ...., lot $12.500.
11051 COOl ID .. PDIIIIIJ - 3 :
BR, only $39.500.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

111

-..f \I

/1(1/J/,'j/,,

150 SECOND AVENUE - Walk to shopping,
church or park. Nice older home offers LR,
kitchen, den, bath, 3 BRs, basement. Call today for more informalion.

BLACKBURN REALTY ·

(6141 992-3325

Help Wllnted

A ltssor del'" ••,.ore
experllnce in public rt·
'lltlons. Slits or ...:...1
people rtlattd fields
•Ill also be considered.
Reply In confldenc6 to
llr. Lindeman at PIN·
Ant Hill Convalescent
Ctnttr, 7143 U.S. 23
South,
Pluton, Oh.
45161. .

.....
..,....; """"''· t 2 lp.m.

_I I 1 I

Arnrl

lllwnp ........:. von: -""
le110Md tl,...: Reduced
1148 pick-vp
lood. Don'o
5.oncicaoping. 114-441-1141.
.

with 4 Chalfa, 17.110

_Pomeroy, Ohio

Dtpt. idNI candidate
•ill haw experience
•itb ld:nissions or In·

Rrntals

eurp~

216 East Second

41101H.

P.lttunt Hill Connlts·
cllll Ctnttr, a 201 btd
skilled nursi511 llcili!J,
is seekincapplicallb for
our Social
Strvlcu

'"'rtctiono,

4
• - Bod; tt2.20 por
- . 4 IIN!Iior Chool o5
o.-,
por -·AI. 141,
4 MH• Oil At. 7 in ~ry.

SQIIERVILLE'S

boalcic llnJnllil ~
otrroa, MW hcHn, Frr. lit. sun.
NQQH.I,IO PM. HII"Y - k
clothlnct new, In tllock all Winter;..
Corhoof linod blbo, oovlrlllo•
tOll, on rwguicr prlco, (llwolil

TEAFORD 1
RE4L ·Esfin ·:.

DMINI - ·

SERVICE/
ADMISSIONS

SAM

... -

Reiii .Estate General
Ill

-=======:-:
SOCIAL

....... 2Aoiolon,ti0Nilto,S
- h Qollipollo Locko,
pulollc - · · liD

Bullnea

At. X con-

1:00

'

/ 1

-. - - · --.
r
- , IUI'II - .

Happy Ads

5

- - ..lng. 1 Md 2 loairoom lllllrl-* It VI~
118nor
and
RIL:•
. _ _ , . in IIIMiw rt. """"
Si... Col114-1111·711l EOH.

a 11

p.m.

~

738 Second Ave.
J.••uam•

Aufftlf · fDr- • •

IIOTE: Tbt Country T11der Is ~evln1 its SprinJ Slle. Ever·
· ytloln1lllttd !IUS! sell. Plus more mlldlendrse hi' '"n
consl151td. This Is ou: III'Jid All so for.

Judg Dswltt - 810/1.11

REALTOR•

a

PRESTON IUSTI\RD AUCTIONEER

141'10 llob5io

-.wt:Ju'Jd4pullooui;Piuo 2 h J w m - i n 2
c:.n.ro1 Air, ·- . , wv. _ , ciopoooi;

l)'alnlng

1i

'-*1/1-./UIIl-

Mh:Oflloelfllllcct-••'.,.......,

Z IR portldy IWn'od, . -lidlng, · 3 SoiN
IIR, Z ·- ·brickZ noliolliO. -Iiiii rtvor- in
double lot. · - 1&lt;onougo.
,._,..
Real Estate General
Real Estate General
Real Eltate.General
0041 oriOW'Ih1t11.
~lt44t1Mn.
--~~------~~~~~~~-----------~~~~~~~----~-----~~--~~~~~--------Unilomlohod ar ..._ - .
1n
Crown CIIJ, tt4 aet tao.
~.

=r::
c:=-~~:r - ._..
14·
Bualneu .
AdlloOn-.
:on.
""'""' -llloo_....,
.=.= -._. - ·...,......==
_

I

11:::~:.

11'

814·448·8616

jlftljllltJ. ~ Your

:og t o - _ , - IIIJOUI' 32 Mobile Homes
ond to cu. IIIII, 010
Mlr •• 0.11r 'II5Uw, 121
for Sale

Thlnl

... ·-?Ill ""•
1144•

......

lUll

lUll. l'f4oiiZ.

. . . 'liiFOOIR

I

ALE . KWY

llocot1o- ..... ...,.,.. ~

.... oouoh 8nd ohllr, Wfill•

--•m ~ .P!!! --·
·

,

GilliS: New !itlgium Brow~ing auto's, Browning pumps, new
and used Wrnchesters, Wrn~hester Deluxe deer guns. Winchester 20 11. Youth Model, new and used Remington
1100's and 870's, Mossberg new and used, auto's and
pllmps, Ruger Red label shotguns, some new and used sin·
ale. b11rel shotguns, Thompsoo muzzleloaders. Ruger
I0/22's, Remin&amp;ton 243 Cll. 700 ADL. Ruger Mini 14 223
cal. S.S., Ml30 cal. Carbine milrtary, .Mauser 308 military,
Chipmunk 22 Cll., Winchester 30/30 cl. 1968 Centenial,
Ruger Super Blk. Hawlos, Rulflr Blk. Hawlos, new Cdtar 15,
Ruger P89 DC 9mm w/cese, Ruger MK II auto's, Co~ 45 Govemmlfll SS, Colt 380 Government SS, Co~ IOmm Double
Elalt. Colt 38 Speciel, Co~ 1961 Kansas. 22 cal. in box in·
' fired, S&amp;W Model 29 Clessic, S&amp;W Model 57 41 ma,., S&amp;W
469 9mm auto. several used Smiths and Colts. This IS just a
partilllistin1 of 10ns. We will take some consignments.
KNIVES: Buck knives, Remin&amp;ton knives, Gerber knives, mil- ·
ill;y bayonets. and swords.
'
ACCESSORIES: Custom pistol grips, archery supplies, tree
_stands, deer scent, turkey calls, box, and diaphrams, RCB's
re!olding supplies: scales, tumblers, holders, pullers, etc. Sl·
inas. chqkes, magmazines, loclos, sights, scopes, rings, tar. gets, gun cases. pistol cases, gun rests, Winchester ammo
bOxes.
· CLOTHING: ·New Army issue camo. pants, shirts. and COllis,
· ponchos, hals, canteens, etc. Hunting pants, coats, vests,
turkey vest. real tree clothing.
AMMO: 38 Special, 9mm, 357, 44 mag., 45 cal. 223, 7.62,
deer slugs, all kinds shot shells, plus more.
TERMS: Cub or check w/propw I.D.

-

blby lteme, Iron
BBO'tr 1215,

Dtolrtct. ~- Cool! or

KNIVES
CLOTHING

. LOCATION: Take SR 93 south from Jackson,
U mile to County Extension ·center.

kitchen teble w/4
·chelre 180.00,
telephone bench
w/ce.b lntt 1215.00,

31 Homes for Sale

CALLs

DATE: SAT., FEB. 2, 1991 '
· AT 10:30 A.M.

SALE .

Real Estole

TURKEY

II

54 Miscellaneous
Men:handiM

54 Mlsc.llaneout
Min:hlndiM

of

-

~~,. bucll -

·PUBLIC AUCTION

r.1erCil-111diSC

A111ono. OH 41m11. i14oiiiWIII,
Ext. 221. E.O.E.
.
·

...

AMERICAN
SPORTSMAN

·:wm

· iiEDICAL 'IKMNOLOOIIT
lor .-y Ollwr
0"111a1' I II llel'rtOrlal
llaopi'.., II Haooilol Dlln,

c-.
L-lll. .d . . . . . . . . .
-.,c:;- Do=~
iloo:iof, J4,:!.'ri -"-

HOUIIII' _ , I"''U SllurdoW,

$4()00.$5()00

Of' MLT A I hand.

--=

ond
11.11 por - " ' Polwl - - . . . - . 814.01 por

n.eo

UCnstd erid loncltd In Stitt of Olllo
Not R1$IIOftllble for Accidlflts or Lon of Proptlly

my-·

ttfS® ·::::

simple words. Print letters of
each in its line af s~ucres.

·"-NTIDWN

. OUI PIICE

Consi&amp;nments taken fromiO:OO to 1:00 diJ Ill Slit.
NEW AID USED IERCRAID!SE
Terms: Cuh or Check 111111 proPif 1.0.

a.

~©\t~}A~-1:&amp;

THAT DAILY
PUZZLER
- - - - - - - - - - - Editod by CLAY R. POLLAN------------

Goode

&amp;Auction

&amp;.AUctiOn

PUBLIC AUCTION
CONSIGNMENT SALE

ft&amp;ll ......&amp;W.MIIIWill}'f •• ......
I lllwe

.bobi oilier lor 2 chlidrwn
- 2 a in
Will
Cillumblo-. -~-

Houlthold

~

Anlfrll,

lea: a Ilt.C.
IIOp
""'
,.. I ., 1

5I

Sunday

Ohio- Point Pleasant W. Va.

'0 wards
Reao range the 6 scrambled
.
below to make 6

··-··
r
::
...._ __
I

,,

Public Sale

PubliC S&amp;IJ

8

30W'S--.

b ..... : If ,...

.,..rtUrf 20, 1991

JanUary 20. 1991

Phsu It, W. Va.

'

.

·

..

OWIIER WOUlD COIISIDEI
SEWIIG 011 LAID COIITIACT

Approxillllltly 42 1ctes sitlllled in Huntin&amp;IDn
Townsip. Rulli Wiler.
1817
.

;;i

.

CHEAPIEDI
REDUCED TO $7,900.00 ..
2. bedroom f11me h01111locattd It Vintoo. L11111
nrc:e level lat. OWIIer NEEDS TO SEW llan'l Joelj.
1111, call _, '
12121

-lilt,

RIO GIAIIDE AREA

Remodeled 3 bedroom very lltrwc:tM h - in·
eludes full
IPPI'OX. 30 ICIIIIIncl'lhll
bo:ders RtceOOII Crwk. Slillllwoodld 1a1, Pill'
lull! land, lllbtcco but lnd IDOd 1111 btm In
10011 condition. Pt•11 Clll for - . delllls!

12171

10 ACRES Ill

, Wooded ICIIIIII kic:llld In Huntineton Town.:~
c.n bldiy. $17,600.00.
·'.

EAGLE RIDGE - Newer
white brick with 3 bed·
rooms, 2 baths, family room
on 1ecre. Very private loca·
lion. $65,000.
SYRACUSE - River front
property nell to the marina.
2.5 acres lor fishing excitement. $20,000.
CHEmR - Nice 3 bedroom home w~h new roof,
remodeled w~h a large m~
dem krtch'", close to town ·
but yet with a lot of privacy.
'$18,500.
t
POMEROf- Excellent Sill·
ter home just out of town
wrth aJ.•rd and nexttoplaygroun , 2 bedrooms and full
besemenl plus 1 carport.
$16,500.
RACINE - Business build·
Ins · with four rental apart·
ments. all in.full oper~tion ,
lei this investment PlY for Hsell. $45,000.
MIIIEISVILLE - 3 bed·
room house with a full besement, I~ bitlis, new roof,'
great piece for a young fem·
ily. $15.000.
POMEROY - 2·3 bedroom
wHh two sundec:los viewing
the river, nice buiH-in kitchen, all ~ec:tric, fully
cupeted. $16,000.
POIEIOY - 2 houses - 5
rentel units, live in one and
let this PlY for ~II.
¥m IEAUTIFUL - 3 bed·
room rwnch on 5 acres, lui
finished '-rne:t, 2 c.- preee. ulll modem ldl:hen. 3
-full btllos, -recrulion room.
You must • !tis horne to ep._ it. $115,000.
USTIIG- Gr11t hunt·
ingland, close to the river,
152 Krts. Close to Revens·
wood Bridge. $35,000.
IACIIIE..;. Btiutiful 2 story
home 3-4 bedrooms, full finished basement, 2 Clr_ 1•
rn1, uteiiHe dish. $48,000.
WE IIUO LISni&amp;S
H.U.D. IIDIIES AVAIWLE
OAt£ E. TAYLDI
112-3121
I.A. 'VII' VAUITIIIE

................
,.........,.If
...........
......
.

I •••.,,

....,.

ftlt • •• ttll

441-1172
OFFICE 112·1325
IIUCE TWOID, IIOIEI

514 Second avenue ·
·...... ·..
Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 1'
···.· · Phone: (614) 446-0008
Ranny Blackburn, Broker

TO THE SALE
OF SEVERAL

GIEEII TOWNSHIP - SII/I.Ll FARM CON·
rAINS 15.69 A., m/1, 2 barns. shed, llll&amp;e,
and 14 BR home. Other features of this home:
LR krtchen, blth, part basement. wood burner
stove, propane heat, crty schoo!s, close to Nor·
.thup
'

DUE

HOMES. WE NEED
NEW LISTINGS.

.

THIS ONE SPEAKS FOR ITSElfl Beautiful
brick home on .93ecre lot. Bull Run Rd., over
2100 sq. ft. of living s~ce. Totallr. equipped
krtchen, 3_BRs, 2 baths, 20•30-1ving room,
format drnong room, frreplace, HP /cent. air
25131 carage with openers, large rear patio:
ienced yard.

GIVE US A CALL IF YOU WOULD BE INTERESTED
- IN S,ELLING YOUR HOME.

IIEW LISTIII&amp;- KIN EO II DR.- Ranch style
home, 3 BRs, bath, LR, kHchen, lun basement.
JI.;..A. '

AFFGIDAilij LIVIIIG... $31,000 - 3 B{!S,
· III balhs, LR, kotchen, DR, ges fumace, Clr·
pet, 24x24 unattached aarage, just outside of
lown. .
20 .ACRES, IIORE OR LESS.' HUIIJINGTON
TOWNSHIP- OWIIEIS 11/I.Y HELP FINANCE
QUALIFIED BUYERS- Ranch style home offers 3 BRs, LR, k~chen , balh: Newer bam
15x24. Cell for more information.
$22,5001 - This A-frame home offers3 bed·
rooms I\1 baths, LR, kitchen wrth stove end
refrigerator, electric heat. part basement.
H1nnen Trace School District..69 acre. .
OFFEIS lORE THAll THE AVERAGE HOIE...2
lots and a beautiful home for $44,900. Outstandin~ featum ol this home are the livin1
room w~h fireplace, bui~ - in hutch in dlnin1
room, 3 nice bed:ooms. 2 bitlis. us hell and
centrlleir. · ·
13.2 ACIES, MIL NE/I.R MEIGS IIINE ~(­
.Qider two story home w~h vinyl siding. Storm
windows. Two SIIJIII barns.

145.000 - ST. IT.
IOOIY Ht)IE +5 acres m/1 • mobile home
_EXCELLENT STARTER HOME - 3 3 BRs, kitchen,LR, FR. part basement, very nice
IOclled atthe edge oftown.lots otextras. Call for $32,000,
BRs.LR, krtchen, bath, laundry, attached gar· • home.
·
dlttlls.
II ICE HOlE LOCATED AIDIIGJ)HIO RIVER$39,100. 4 BRs, beth. LR, krtchen, carpet, oil
•
$25.000 - Approx. I acre along St. Rt. 588
heal 2 car detached garate. utilil't building,
(400
It
of
frontage).
Smell
home.
offen
2
BRs,
II ICE HOME FOR THE GROWING _FAIIILY tarp
lawn and nice view.
bath,
LR,
kitchen,
mobrte
home
pad
on
prop·
.
Green township nearCentenary. Bi-level home
'
offers 4 BRs, 2 illths.LR, kitchen w/range, re- erty.
SPRIIIG YALIIY - OAI DRIVE - larlfl
fril .. Uti, displ., oven, FR. gas heat, attached 41/I.Y IE WHAT YOU ARE LOOKING FOI ranch style horne offers 3 BRs. 2 baths, l ·
11r11e. situated on approx. one-half acre .
Newer ell brick home iust five minutes from · shaped lR/dining IIlii dh fireplace, llice
downtown.' 3 BRs, 3 baths, peat roo_m, lam rly
l'ltchen 'larp 'femiv room,leundry eru,_patoo
room, 2 car ettched garage, heat pump/cent.
doors,
..
. . 1is heel
..
211 ACRES; IIORt OR LESS. HUIITIN&amp;TOII air, city util~ies. .
IIICE ST/I.RTEI HOllE - Loceted just it the
TOWIISHP - Brick home offers 6 BRs, 2 CONCRETE ILOCK GARAGE IN VINTON. 28x32, ed1e
town. This home features 3 bedrooms,
baths, eat-in kitchen. LR. FR. el~ . and wood concrtte floors, 220 electric service, forced air fuel both, oflivin1
room, kitchen. dining r.oom end 1
hilt ctller house,logblm, sheds, frontage on
oil
fumace,
!wo
h9
OVII'heed
doors,
1118 walk·lli full besement. Five mrnutes to downtown.
Reccoon Creek and little Raccoon.
door,
•
OWNERS li/I.VE DOllE /1. LOT OF WORK AND
VERY II ICE RANCH STYLE HOME LOC/I.TED ON
IIOW YOU C/1.11 GET THE BENEFIT$ - Five
REDUCED TO 149:900 TRI-LEYEL .HOME STATE Rt. 1&amp;0~ 3 BRS. LR, ltilchen w/11np, re- minutes to town, 3 BRs. 2 baths,LR, kitchen,
LOCATED 011 RT. 160 offers 3BRs, I~ baths, rrrcerator, one car 11t1ched 1111ge. 100x300 It
nat. ps hut vinylsidinl. $39,900!
LR, ~Hchen, fam,ily rm., two decks, attached lot
2.4 ACRE TI/I.CT - CDIIIiERCIAL SIT£ PIIIIloceted on Upper Rt. 7 across from the new
1&amp;9.7 ACRES, HAIRISOII TWP.- Home on
Ill TOWN - SECOND AYE. - 2 story home
shoppinl center.
I~R IIORTH GALLIA H.S. - 21 \I acres m/1,
roperty with 3 811. bath, LR. k~chen, FR.
dh 3 BRs, LR, kHchen, Beth, DR. Affordably
llorpn Twp. Frtnk W1rd Rd. - $17,500.
· r.1111 barn,
priced.
.
; ACRE LOT$ FOI SAI£..0'"" Twp., c~y
LOT FOR SALE. RODIIEY COI/I. RD . ...; .824 101 ACRES, MIL, GUYAll TWP.- SOme tillaH.5 ACRES Ill:. CLAY TWP. ---fronts on
'chools, Fairfield Vanco Rd. area.
acres,
$6,900.
Call
for
details.
ble.
Frilndly Ridge. $18.000.

•••••

'

.

Rannv. Blackburn. Broker

448·0008

.

Ruth Goody, Sale• Associate

379·2828

..

'-,.

�·,

•

55 ~licllng ~lin ,.,se,._,._Pet;;;,•;;..fo;,;,;..,rSa=le~,... 56

MIR:hllndiM

Peta for SeJe

r

1, 1

January 20. 1991

1991

Ohio-Point Pins rt W. Ve.
MerchandiM

';_!pp!lt-..

,•. l,_!

61 Farm

Jlf)C~.

· .,..

H o r F o r - - ......
Q~~~Mrra

1912-

..• u..

~-

Pol pupo. Lolo ol
Howl
tnlned.

BRIDGE

.•.

,.,

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

JAMES
JACOBY

.
.'Birthday ·".

.862
.974
IJ7U

2011 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. O,HIO
OFFICE 992·2881/HOME 982·11182

Don't be afraid to taka on endeavors

·Increased actlvJ'tu In both the social and
'
commercial worlds is likely in the year
ahead and you're apt to have too many
complaints with these new trends.
AQUARIUS (.18n. 20-Feb. 111 You may
be Inclined to taka things as they come
today. unless you are confronted by
some type of serious .challenge. Competltlon ·or adverslty will quickly bring
out your better quaNtiea. Aquarius, treat
yourself to a bi!lhday gift. Sand for your
Astra-Graph predictions for the year
ahead by mailing S1.25to Astra-Graph,
clo this news-. P.O. Box 91428,
Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be sure to

WF.ST
+Q 10 9 (
.J 5.2
f .Q6
+QJJOB

1-U-11

.

.

1&lt;.,.,

. -

'-

.
.
is '-

.

.H

TO IIOVE INTO
Owners have done
remadeling and have made this
house a home. Very good location on the edge or town. lncludes 3 bedrooms, living room wrth attractive stone lireplace, dining room, eat-in kitchen, lull basement. large 2car
garage. Very easy to heal and maintain. Great starter home
or perfect for those looking for convenience to town.
$59,900..
11802

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

+

446-3644

.

__ .. ____
Ant. Nil, T-lop,

1tD -

~000--~

.;~.c-:::r·~~:
_._v..

-·

an

Coli oflor Jp.rn. 1~211a!lti.

1111 Chovr 4 - · drt.o, v... 4

-=tui&lt;Ol.JI
hubo, t~aoo.,
I OJf., ftotbOd, $215.

1177 C

114-

.
INI Chevy -k. ¥4, olr oond,
tow
a:a an, 31M-171-

mi-.

72U.

tell Otda
!'M-II4Il'IUI3D..

Dodgo Rom. 0.110, RaroJ
SE,
-"Ho
ar!gtilol
ooncltlan. - 114
2411,.,1,
· e~
2411 am
··
.

·~-·

p.rn·
•

lONG BDTTDII- Crispen Con.;- APIJ!,OX. 2 acre lot with. ~
250 feet of river lrontagt, boat dock, lanla.stic view, and el5 '
yr. old ranch with 3 bldrooms, and 1 t.mlly room: A21! ear ·
garage wah vinyl siding and wood burner.
$52,000

-

-L

.

""'-"h 'ttoyagor lllnl
rniiH, .,,, ''"·

v.n. ao.aoo

...... tto,IOO. 1104471-2141.

1. . Un.in T.,j Cor, Loodod.
1.111111r -ion.
Low •
b·
oollonl
117
oftor5prn.

"\'l":l:e

74

Motorcyclel

1110 . . _ 4 Railer, 4 WD,

'

446-1066

. Ken Morg1n, Realtor1Broker-446·o971
Allen C. Wood. Rllllltor-4411·41123
Moll Canterbury, Re•llor-4411·340e
Jean.tll Moore, Realtor-21111-17411

I

or

I

or

iDee.

&amp;Ill.,.

e ......

e..t.61(#1.ow61•·ttWJW'-'97S-t99t

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

,;,~··-~~~' ~

Canaday
-. Realty

446•3636

. . . . . . D. M
awaM '
UIOC. 441-2114
.
. .y ·- 441-UIJ
rJ.Cml
uaoc.

;.-.~..

ROOMS, 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. FAMILY ROOM OFF
· KITCHEN ON FIRST FLOOR PWS RECREATION ROOM OPEN·
lNG ONTO DECK ON SEOOND FLOOR. FORMAl DINING .
IIDDM.l!VING ROOM HAS FIREPLACE, SPINDLED STAIRWAY
IN FOYERI1 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE, 3 TO 4 ACRE SITE WILL
BE SURVuED WHEN SOLO. HOME IS COMPLETELY SUR·
ROUNDED BY TALL PINES AND OTHER TREES. ONLY 10
Mll£S FROM CITY. fiRST TIME OFFERED. $125,000.

CDZY COnME .Jtocated on 12 acres m/1. II you want
peace and quielaild privacy, you 'will love this cozy 2 bed·
room home. Features a larp lireplace1 patio doors from ma$te~ bedroom and more! Call. You 'will be surprised at the
pnce!
11211

••
SliD WOODED ACRES -Containing scenic view lor home . •
site and lntils lor hiking or huntin1- Abundant wildl~e. pic- ·
tureque laree rock formation. Enjoy nature It b best on your ••
own land. $20,000. .
1226 ·

2 ACRE 11111.1FARII with 7 room aluminum sided home with
stol!er furnace.and count)' water. Has tobacco base and out·
bu11dmgs. Askmg only $29,900.
11301

ON EDGE OF TO!WN in this 2·3 bedrbom home (well insulated
and a low gas,budget). Partial baSIIIIIent, laundry·area, ill·
age and more. Only $29.500.

•

'

I'OmiiiOOI SUIDIVISIOI - THIS 3 BEDROOM, II!
BATH HOME HAS LOTS OF CHARM. FIREPlACE WITH WOOD·
BURNING INSERT IN LIVING ROOM~TTACHED 2 CAR GAR·
AGE, INGROUIID POOL WITH COYE~~t;D PATIO. 168,000.
HIGH Yllllllm FIOII THE lEW 4 IME HIII. .AY. AP·
PROX. 47 ACRES. ABEAUTIFUL COMBINATION OF TillABLE. .
PASTUR£ AND WOODLAND. 1981 SCiftJLT MOBIL£ liOME.
CARPORT, GARAGEt OTHER OUTBLDG. NEAR RIO GRANDE.
EXCELLENT BUY A $50,000.
.
• JUST LISTED! - VACANT LAND ON HANNAH TRACE ~D.
101 ACRES VACMT LAND. $29,000.
OHIO TWP. - APPROX. 78 ACRES, TOBACOO BASE, VACANT
LAND. $32,000.

..,.

lARGE

me

VACANT LAND w~h elec: avaitable.
well. L~ted on ~h sides o~

dining.
·_rolling
bam. You

.

•'

PI ICE IEDUCED EVEI IIOIEIII 3 bedroom home with I I!
-: acres,loc:aled within Vinton Villare. Was SZS 000 reduced to
. $22.500. NOW REDUCED TO $21,500.
'
·:·IIEW
USTING: 3 bedroom brick. 'Situeted on I acre. 5 mile.s
·'lfom Gallipolis on Bulaville Roecl . ~yger Ctee~ School Dis·
"•!riel. 1,440 sq. ft. Priced inthe 60's.
· ·
·

..

.#

,.,....~ '

IIICII HOlE II em - 4 BEDROOMS, 3 BATHS. THIS
HOME WAS CUSTOM DESIGNED FOR THE SITE. HAS 4
lEVElS, CATHEDRAL CEiliNG IN LIVING ROOM, GAS FUR·
NACE, CENTRAl, AIR. $54,500.

:d

CHUIIIE- VERY ATTRACTIVE3BEDROOMATAVERY AT·
TRACTIVE PRICE. ~500. KITO!EN EQUIPPED WITH
RANGE AND R£FR114nATOR. CARPORT, LARGE LEVEL,
FENCED LAWN. READY TO MOVE IN AND ENJOY!
EUIEIA ~ sl,500 .- EXCELL£NT BUY ON THIS HOME.
NICE SIZE LIVING ROOf!!, KITCHEN EQUIPPED WITH RANGE
AND REFRIGERATOR, 1 BEDROOM. BATH AND UTiliTY
ROOM. ACT QUICKLY. nilS PROPERTY IS PRICED TO SEL~
FASTI
IWITIFUL COUIITIIY SmiNG ..:.. NICE 3 BEDROOM
RANCH HOME HAS FORMAL DINING ROOM, FULL BASE·
MENT, 3 CAR GARAGE, LARGE TOIIACCO BARN, EQU I~MENT
BU!LOING. APPROX. 56 ACRES. $&amp;0,000.
.

'

NEW LISTING ....: Agent-owned double lot with 3 bed·
room ranch home with family room w/fireDiace
equip~ kitchen, full basement, 2 car attached gar·~ I 2 in-around pool with priwacy fence. Asking
Ollty

.800.

1301-

. ..

·•
IEDI!OOIS. 2 baths.'living room, di~ing room , k~chen
)itll utili1Y room (1 ,012 sq. ft.) condom1mum. GQOD LDCA· ·
"!ON c"oose your carpet color and MOVE IN NOWI! Call for
:}IIQre' i~formatitll. ·
'
·
·

.,

'
~

''
.,_

', .

••
•

; NEW USTIIIG: 10 acres, Perry Twp. Some tiinber. Buy now
. tor SIO,OOO.
" 1
4.5 ACIES. WITHIII TliE 'C in OF GALLIPOLIS situated along
;Jlarlield Awe. Site includes 2 building lots w/c~y water,
"Sewer. BUy now lor $30,000 or purch1se house with lot for ·
, ,5,000.

•

'JE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Village II. Call lor more
-information.

•

•

:U ACIES 1/llll DH.ID TWP- Frontaae on St. Rt. 7 wrth
~e limber..Pricad It $10.000.
~~~~~~

*
•

'•

o tiiO Ceatory 2tlooiBao,. Cot!&gt;ot'llloll• -

ror'tk

., Mil .. of.COnto!ll2t ReaiEatale Cor!lonUoo.
Eqltlllklultljj Oppoo\uall).
~ ~ 18 1-DBm.Y OWNIID IIND~TID. .

•

.·llfVESTIENT PROPERTY IN VINTOII- 6 rm. house located
: atbnc Main St Re,nt or live in. Presently grossing $2,100.00.
·Buy now lor $15,000.00.

PDIIEROY AREA - Is this immaculate brick colonial w~h 3
bedrooms, 21! baths, den, full basement, 2 car pntge, 2fireplacas,.l6x32 in-eround pool. Satellite dish, 24 acros m/1,
and much, much more. Reduced to $145,900. frlust see this
one. .
. , 8294
NEW LISTING - New modular home with family
room, dining room 3 bedrooms, 2 baths situated on
1.54 aetes, Olive township. look at this one today.
$49,500.
11309

Electrlcll •

Refrlgel'lllon

LOT - $PIING, VALLEY
One large lot approx. 101'x!71'. C~y water, c~ysewer , na·
luntl gas, electric all are availablealthis low. Prepare NOW to
. build your dream horne in !his pleasant, quiet, and nice sub·
division just s short distance out ol Gillipolis. Lot ~17.

.:X

D~':; •

fl...

.

ilop11o
Tonk~-.:::
Co
RON EuaAP

.

·-

•

o~oe-.,OH,_,._

c..... lloblle ............

JIJ
I'OIIIIna,.
·~-pi==
potloo I doolul iiC. REMOOE •

tNOI

RAw

1~4-B~-Itll.

I

1111

.

85 General Hauling

1456

LEADINGHAM lEAL EST ATE
PH. 446-7699 or 446-9539 -

.R I R W . . . - - . ....
torno, •no. lrn--t.OOO «

~~~ doiiYory. C.H 104-

EldmiiH.

.

J'Ie&amp;l Estate General ·

~al1fA&amp;zk
23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

ainiL.miQW.,U

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
R~al

Real Estate General

~ t;?/md

E . .M

UNBEATABL£ BI·LEVEL
IEDUCED PRICE 011 SPRING VALLEY HOME!
Veiy anractive and well maintained . Great neighborhood,
super location. Was $89,900, now priced at $82.500. Fea:
tures include 3 bat~s. very nice family room with lirepla·
ce/insert. 3 bedroolf!s. living room, dining room , eat -in
kitchen. Gas heat an ~ central air. 2 car .garage: ·erick patio
plus new deck for outdoor entertaining. Giwe usa call today
because rt might be sold tomorr.ow!! .
N207

Estate.General

PIOFES~ONtl SliVI(~ MUU THE Dtf fliiNCl

m

VIRGINIA SMITH . BROK ER. 388-8826
DIAN CALLAHAN. oiiEALTOR . 266-6251
EUNICE NIEHM . REIILTOR . 44 6 -tB97
RUTH BARR. REALTOR. 446 -0722
LINDA SKIDMORE. REALTOR . 379·2686
DEBOft,.H &amp;CITJS , REALTOR. 446-88 06

' LYNO'A FRALEY. !lEALTOR . 446-6808 •
MICHAIL MILLER . AIIOCIATE . &gt;WI-8801

RE-'LTO~'

POMEROY,O.
992·2259
PRICE REDUC[D - POll·
EIOY - Here is the home
you have been waiting tor.
Newer bi-level home in great
condition, basement, ~ car
garage, 3 to 4 bedrooms,
equipped kitchen, basket·
ball court, central htat and
A/C. 31! acres in one ol
Meigs counties most desirable areas. Owner was as~ng
$74,900.00 but has re·
dwcecl his · 1)rice
to ·
$69,900.00. Call to see this
beautilulliome.
NEW LISTING - PDIIERDY
- Nice home with 2 to 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, WBFP..
carpet and NGFA heat. Full
basement, nice
yard.
$27,000.00.

1101. OIIIP 1A11S 10 DlAI TODAY! Movt rijl!t in. On 1
quiet tlrtlt I&gt;CIIed claM ID ""'"· jiOI! olft. ttc. A very nee
t1M11fortlblt 2 Slory home with 3 bedum.. l~ wlfirepll~e. mn·
tar bldrm. wltirflpiiCf, 211. beduns., up, kitChen, dlnlfll 1ru,
svnRJOm deckltnd front pore~. buement, Ill in lood rep~lr .
Just the ' pllce far 1 .flll'tity Inti it Is at 1n 1ffordable pri:e.

SR 7 - 2 lllln Nor1h of
Well built brick
home, new blacktop drive·
way, landscaped yard, 2 car .
garage, AC heat pump.
Country living, 7 rooms, lire·
place, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
2 miles from Chesler Grade·
School and Eastern High
School. $72,500.00:

on 5.5acres,wrthin
view of the Holzer Hospi!JI. 24'x36' bam presently being
utilized as a 2 car garageand storage. 2other outbuildinp. A
QUALITY HOME with many a'menRies, 2 full baths and 2 half
baths, den, formal hvinc room and dining room, 2 WBFP. entertainment kitchen ... QUALITY THROUGHOUT.
IIIVESTIENT PIOPER.TY - 7 REIITAL· PROPERTIES .:._
live in one, rent the others. located wrthin the city of Galli·
polis, 2nd Ave. Purchase Ill lor $100,000.
·

·'

84

c•nter -

mil
feel Ol. IIWIIng

t

= :-..=:
IAIEIIENT
WATIIIPROOANG
u--~~~
fl'll!l'l'.
1-.
1.- fO- II lulililllld
Froo . .COil I•

Galllpdl Ohio
1144413..
j
•

RACINE - Nice ranch
home, 3 bedrooms. I bath. ·
carpet, F.O. heat CIA, re·
creation room in basement.
Range and freeier. 2 car
garage with cement drive·
way. Garden space.
$74,900.00.

••

NICE COUIITIY IIOIE- 3 BEDROOMS, EAT-IN KITCHEN,
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE AHO REFRIG., VINYL SIDING, NICE
SLOPING LOT. EXCELL£NT BUY FOR 135,500.

-ondPtno

l£TART - IIANUAL lOAD
- Mobile home site, one
acre landscaped lor mobile
home or building site. Asteal
at $3,500.00.

1!. 11.. IEDIDOIIBRICIIANCH, s~ultted

...
.....-.....,..;;;
•*'***
FM ITAI IIOIE - TWO STORY REDWOOD
STRUCTURE QUALITY AND BEAUTY THROUGHOUT. 9

Home

81

POIIEROY - LONG HOL·
LOW - Approx. 113 acres
of woods and meadows.
Older 4 room home lor the
handyman. Has barn and
misc. sheds. Call for details. ·
$45,000.00.

•

HDUCED $5,000 - OWNERS OF THIS LOVnY HOME
WOULO LIKE TQ RELOCATE AND HAVE REDUCED THE PRICE
. TO $60.000. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, NICE OPEN FAMilY
ROOM/KITCHEN AREA WITH FIREPLACE, 2-CAR GARAGE.
LOCATED ON JAY DRIVE. JUST OFF ROUTE 35.

IULAVILLE ROAD- VERY·NICE I YEAR OLO HOM( 3BED·
ROOMS, 2 BATHS, GOOD OUALITY HOME HAS ANDERSEN :
WDDD WINOO'(IS. ElECTRIC HEAT PUMP, 2 CAR GARAGE,
OYER AN ACRE LAWN, KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS. $59,000!

NEW LISTIIIG - 2 lor the price of one. Own your own tn
bedroom horne and have anoltter 2 bedroom &lt;IJllrtment 10
rent lor added income. Both located only m11ul11s from
HOlzer. Paved road, rural W!lar, over an acre olland.llfllt
two car pra1e,"outbuildinp and lots more.All lor $41,000 or
make owner offer. .
OOf 1

TRANOUILm AWAY FROII THE lUSH - Ranc_ll home
located minutes from town. With a little paint, new carpet
and TLO you will have a_ great place to come home to.Price
reduced $44,500. $39,900.
1279

76 ACRE FAR II wrth 2 bedroom horne wrth dec~ county wa-• '
ter, baseboard hea~ old barn, tobacco base. Some nice bath rooms. $43,000.
1302

Clarlor'l Ftu-.g
oncl H•ll!llf

NEW USTING - ROUTE 7
. - New lodular- This~ a
quality 3 bed room home. I \!
bath~ carpeted, utility , in·
sulated, storms. Large, level
I acre lot Eastern District.
$44,900.00.

IYRTLE DRIVE - Immaculate 3 bedroom, winy! sided
home, II! bath, heat pump, large garage. level yard.
$56,500.
.
11278

way

S~rv1ces

RESIDEIIT!Al · INvtSTIIUTS • COIIIERC!Al - FARMS '·

32 Locutt Street. Gellipolia

IT. 141 GIEEN TWP. - Is this 6 year old vinyl sided
wrth 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room, kitchen, dining area,
deck. All this and more on over 2.5 acres. Asking only·.
$54.900.
1275

Plumbing&amp;

.... 1:00

..... !v.fZ'oocl ~-

ffre~~·:r:p~:~r~:1r~r::~~~

Acc1110rle8

.... -4111.

w·

•

AUto Parte •

1NI R-'i A I - DL, I

-

Houll!!l.
dli-

~-· -Coli

-...,, 1110. 11!1 Dodao Omnl, 4

RUTLAND - Dtpot St. -.,A,Iargt lot with a new sectional
that is 28x52. Really beautifUl' with cathedr1l ceilinas, skyl- •
igh~ bay window, garden bath tub, 3 bedrooms, dinin1 room '
and two baths. The kitchen has gargtous oak cabinets.
.
S4UOO •

Real Estate General

wrt• ... 7pJn.

c.llt4

75

-

Upholltery

- · a.ooo 1o 4,000 • r *·

.........
-~-.·~·
.....__
lolllry ~~.

AiC. - . V&gt;o!Y -

~I

Real Eltate General

car
garage,
men!,
brick
for details

Wrl ....

f11

Sunday limes-Sentinel-Page- D· 7

riiiiH .. IE . . . . . . . . . . .

T/2711

tm Joop Chorokol 4x4, V,.
onglno, . - droo, rvr11 lead

Real Estate General

level

lmproviiTIIIIt8

73 Vena &amp; 4 WD'I

Problematic
side-suit

l

811 Gene!'al Haling

Home

81

MIIMIIn Loader, 11 AO

f1ti.IIM -5:00PM.

,._..,II. PIS, m,

+

Real Estate General

auto, olr,
IJ'Ite . . . .,

ground up. '
•
3S21.
tmGIIC .......
- , . .' ".-.-..,
lTD,
- 11,100.114
· 14,100
ttl 2120
rnlloo. .· lad
-- -Dot-.,.,.... bod;
toft.

IIIDDL£PDRT -Prietd Allonblt- A·ll! story home dh .
vinyl siding, insulation, 3bedrooms.laratllwingr~ dining,'
area. Has some newer ~neling.
u2,000.

.

a

.--lnl,.
___.,y---75 Boats l Motors
'
for Sale ·

:f;:;:.z, '='i:!o~~ '__;;:lmp.;:::rov::;ll l:=.:e:;.nt;.;;s:..·_

ilfflh 41,000 0111111 - . AC.

FLATWooDS ROAD - Agrowing ara. Approx. 3aCies w~h : •
a great laying buildina s~e or mobile home silt. TPC water '
available. Electric lines across the.property. Farmers Home ·•
Approved. Almost reedy to go, just needs you. · . SI,OOO. •·.

EAST

~forSale

J:." -

'

.n

larger than those you are used to han.K 10
dllng In th8 .year ahead. Conditions are
IK10982
changing, and It is time tor you to move
up to 11M! big leagues.
+763 .2
AOUARIUI (,.,_ »Fell. 111 Partners
SOUTH
and asaoclales are likely to talk a gooc:t
•
AK43
game today, but, unteoa their Input Is
.AQ863
cleartydellnad,youmaybetheonewho
lAS
will have to bear the bulk of the respon+94
slbllllles. Major changes are ahead tor
Aquarius In the coming year. Send tor
Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: South
your Astrt&gt;-Graph predictions today.
Mall $1 25· to A11 - ~ .....
1 ~ ·
•
r ......r.,..., c 0 """
Sat1111
W..t Norlk East
newspaper, P.O: Box 91428, Clevetand,
••
P8ss
2•
Pass
OH -«101-3428. Be sura to state your
2
Pass 2 NT
Pass
zodiac Jilin.
4•
Allpass
state your zodiac sign.
PISCES (Fell. zo.Marcll 2111 Before asPISCES (Feb•.:IHierch 2111 Your intu1
tina 1 1 bllgati
ilion should not be taken lightly today, sum ng any new
nc a 'I
ons at
Opening lead: Q
.s~lally 11 •Our lnll""t pertains 10 this lime. be sure you can cbmlortably
~
•
"''
manage your present ones. You arit at a
things of a material nature. Tt..e may critical point; yoo don't want to get In
be dOUar signs in those hunches!
0 - your head.
ARIES (~Welt 21·Aprll1tl You'U enjoy ARIEl ( ...... 21·Aprlt 11) Objecllves
establishing new relationships today; of stgnfltcance might not be achieved as
being around people with fresh Ideas readily u you had antlclpatad today. Be
will help refurbish your own mental prepared to mike lid)uatrnenta If you
· outlook.
encou11ter telillar1Ce.
TAURUS (April 20-MIIp 201 If lhllre Ia TAUIIUI (Aprti20-Map 20) You won't
something slgrllflcant yoo hope to be re4uc1ant In ualellng others today,
achieve today. try to do It without call- . prOYided 11 It convenient. H o - . H
ing too much attention to your alma. Seha 1 dlaru 1 ~t
• dol
By James Jacoby
cr- will help minimize distracting, out- you ,. 0 · P w•.. Y011 re ng,
-•
you're not likely to comply.
side lnfl-.ces.
QEIIINI (..., 21..June 2111 Feeling lucky
Today's deal is similar to yesterQIEMIIt (MIIJ 21-June 211) Tl!ere's a today? There Ia a baata for thla assuml&gt;day's, but declarer's approach
to
po18ibllity yoo will tear11 a vary con- lion; l)owever; It 11 ratt.. fragile. If you
be' different. Once again, declarer bas
~tructive lesson today through a first- pulh 11 too far, your luCk could sour
a side-suit, this time spades, with two
hand experience. It will be something quite suddenly.
potential
losers. But it will not do deyou'll be able to use advantageously CANCf!lill (.kiM 21....,.1J 221 Do not daltoo
much good to
A·K and
clarer
wlthln the next few days.
s1 1 ...... 1
1
1 1 !her
CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) Your great- 1111 e m,.... .an aaa gnrnen s o o
s
a spade early on. West
sl~~p~~:u~:~
est asset toda• Is your ability to build today, _ , _ , 11 'YOU are pursuing
the third spade and then play
•
something you hope will be profitable.
spade, allowing East to ruff
and Improve upon foundations already lnetead
h8fplng you achieve your
king or 10 of hearts. You
established by others. Thera could be pta, they may • prove to be
two Instances - e this gift will be counter"'oducf"-.
that this could be avoided if decla,..!f
utilized.
·
'
~·
"v
took a heart finesse and cashed tne &lt;ace 1
LIO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 22) Although you 're LIO (Julr 21-Aug. 22) There II a JIOII'i·
of hearts. But then West' would
billy you mli'Y wtlflfe under preuure toapt to be fortunate In your lndep!lndent day and replace constructive plano with
third heart when he won a spade
endoavoro today, you might be more leal eflective ldesa. Have faith In your
killing the ruff in dummy. .
lucky In a part-ship lll'rangement. Fire qlnal blUeprints.
There is an answer, bowever. DeVIIIGO (Aug. 2J.Sept. 221 Do not ask
yoor best shots in both areaa.
clarer should win dummy's ace of
VIIOO (Aug. 23-lept. 221 Critical for more than you're entitled In a )oint clubs and then tate a heart finesse.
changes can be made today In a allua- endeavor today. lf you get gr-.ly, there
lion that lately hBO not """' Mving up to , Ia a chance you coold kill the goose thitt · When his queen holds the trick, he does
not cash the trump ace but instead
your expectations. Do what you know 18)'11 the golden egg.
plays a _low spade from both hallds.
needs to be done to radically Improve LIIRA (Sept. ZS.OCL 231 People with
Repnlleu
of the subsequent defense,
mattars.
•
whom you'D be Involved today will be
declarer will cash the ace of hearts,
LIIIIA (s.pt. 23-0ct. 23) Yoor pop&lt;llar- cooperative, provided you are equally
lty Is trending in an upward direction It&gt;- u compliant. This situation could sudplay" A·K of spades and ruff the last
day. and you could be _ , more BP- dentY change if there lan't any give and
spade if necessary.
pealing than usual to members
tile take.
.
· This was not such a good game conoppolile sex.
.
SCORPIO (Oct. :14 Nav. 22) There are
tract, needing the heart liJM!IISe and
SCORPIO (OcL M-NOv. 22) When mea- lntereallng opportunlttes regarding you
probably a ll-2 heart aplit. It's bard to
sured against your-·· you are llk"!Y today, but thay cannot be taken for .stay out of game with 2S hllh-card
to be the most succaaful today. You II granted nor ireatad lncllllerenlly. They
points in the two hands, but perhaps
have a tenacity and stick·tt&gt;-111- could be of short duration and thereSouth
should have bid three no-trump
that won't let you quit until results mMJ rore, must be acted upon quick~.
rather
than four liearts. A novice de1o&lt;Jt expectations.
IAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 Don't
clarer who might fail to make fourSAOmAIIIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 Y011 approach 1rienc1a with whom you are inhearts would likely make nine trickS
could be In a rather restleal mood It&gt;- valved aoclafly- a hair-brained comin no-trump.
·'
~ay and, In order to feet aettsfl~. you'll merc1a1 acherne today. The only
need variety and Ch~ge. Don ! let Olh· you'N be able to aroose their Interests is
ers plan your agenda.
with a feaaible practical plan
22-.lan.. 111 This
CAI'IIICORIJI (Dec. :INen. 111 If you've CAJIIIICORN
dOM something r-tly that didn't could be a'lll..olitable day for you, pr~&gt;o - J•-hcobyif&gt;oots"JIICObyDtiBrid#"ud
work out too well for you In tha financial vtded you locUI'bol one project and 101· ' J"""TIIII C.ntc.m..• (wit~.. O'it/J llilf•tllot-,
realm, this Is a good day to take mea- tow It through to completion. If you go 1M J•~ Qn,.Jd .hcoby) Ire IJOIII' IVIil~&amp;~ It
/lflblisbed by Pllarw &amp;loU.
suros to turn dellclta Into profits. It can orr on
the resuna may be l&gt;ocltltM!s.
IPANIIIIIILJ b I Allli.
be done - ~ you try.
·

-c...,. Rl,-.

otm Ford LTD. Good~=
po~n~. 1110. .
72 TNcka lor Sale

'·

IIIDDLEPOIIJ- ~hnJIWinted I loS !Ioiii- This one
· approx. 10 m. old 1nd has been r11111adeled ower. Hts 2 ;
bedrooms down and 11oft bedroom up. Cathedrel ceilinl in· '
living room, new l11ge front 1nd rar parches. Grell wiew of ·
river. MUST SEE TO SEE HOW CUTE.
S2UOO

+AK5

,.,_ 21, 1.1

Jon. 20, 1111

~

l r.lll spa rt at 1011

·..e:: . .-

.

~'blr

•

~; .:

DOTTIE S. TURNER. BRO!(ER
NORTH .

.

powor-11,411.
IOoU. 1 'tt~ftl with
.
tl-00 - . ....,...,.,,

71

·~~­
iiiiiiu: 1.1 ll c~ n '.,...., ·.
/~ '

1

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

......._

........

Real Estate 081111'11

ASTRQ.GRAPH

' r' tlr

w. Va .

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolil, Ohio- Point Pllmant.

..---·""-h¥.
=-·=·-. ,..,.. ....__,_

lloitnol ..... In tllo ·2411-

CNr-. -

•

,.

.

at the. junction of ROute 160 and Ewington

to hall price. $5,500.

·

.

~lCID w ••• ~ ··••l£SS located in Ohio Twp, The property
approx. 1.600 lb.tobacco base, Call lor

•

•

.

1'1'01! 1Y OUII OFfiCE FOil A COMPLETTE
/ , IIIOCHUIIE OP OUII LII'IJf!tQJ,_

LANGS~ILLE - Co1ntry
Eltltt - Ranch home sit·
ting oii 40 acres, 4 bed·
rooms, 2 baths, carpet, heat
pump. 2 ear garage, basketball court, barn and pond.
$64,900.00.
REEDSVILLE- 5 to 7 acres
of va~ant land with a view of
"the Ohio River. Water
and electric available.
$25,000.00.

~.

w/ bar. bllh. util. rm .. 2 ~. BRs. urpet. ran,. lei..
dtsftwasher dispoSit -2 Cll gsrage, ~lee . BahUI /C i\, Prt:td m
the 40s. T•'ke • look at Mrs. Neat and Clean.
·

POIIEROY , - 2 bedroom,
I\! story home with carpet.
built In bookshelves, patio
and rear' 'pa!cony, ·with a
view or the river. II! car gar·
·~· $23,000.00. '
I'OIEROY - 5 acres of vi·
cant ~nd on top or a hill
near town. Grat location for
a house or · trailer.

$3,900.00.

PDIIEIOY - Remodeled
· home in town wrth large lot.
threa or lour bedrooms.
Carpet, elec. BB heat Bar·
pin priced at $21,900.00.
OOOER - lallroltl Street .

- 3 bedrooms, I bath, II!

story insulated home, has
bay window illllvinl room. 2
story cellar house. Storaae
building, w~h extra lots.
$19,500.00.
ATTENTIOIIII ATTENTIDNII
ltlp County lui Estate .
Ow!J.trs, We havi IIQirs
rilly to v1tw JOUr prop·
trty. CALLTODAYANDUST
WITH CLELAID RW,ml
Hlll
...,.~:ii:::::~·=
'Tfllllll

CI.OSf IR ,II liNT CONOITION:O n ~ I yimoij, LR. di·

)'llftt, kitchen

ttl2.IIW UIIIR llltiT MI'IMI.- Oollnontu qui:~
..~ .. tlil - " ' 2 """ - · 1 4111111111., If.
""·· din. "'··

on• • ~-. •~ ·~

.,n iMll

~-

ro-

"'

MIO. IIW urn.. - ClGII
M.c.. . . - Mid IMt&gt;
aiiiJ Yt'ry nk:o 3 bldn•. tii!Ch, com~ LR. ut&lt;n IIOllon, 2
botiO, flmlly rm., I cor prqt. illllllldelo _ . . ,

o-

willfi-L

--

-Hilh.·All
UCMT
uti-1MD
.....-,..1/l.. MIL -

•

• kOIII -

01111

M . lilT q .!til IATIOIM fllllll - 127 oc. MIL
ftDIIb at! 2 toldt. l.ond 125,000.00.
•
.

·- ..-

~~

.....·--··-""

___ _.... ____ ---

�&lt;

)

-,.

•

January 20. 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-:-Point P11111nt, W. Va.

PaQa D-8- Sunday Times-Sentinel

Eastern Airlines. suspends ~perations Friday
later, scheduled a news confer- Shugrue, appointed to run the
oracarrlerwlllcomeina!ldplck
ence forlOa.m. EDTSatunSay In airline In AprU, convinced U.S.
up the pieceS," he said.
Miami to,dlscuss the reasons for Bankruptcy Judge Burton LlSeveral parties, lncludiDI
the shutdown and 1ts fland In late November to grant Trans World Alrllnes Inc., have
ramifications.
·
the alrllne access to up to $135 expressed Interest In acquiring.
•'It Is a terribly sad time for all million In cash raised through
parts of Eastern's operations.
of us, " said Eastern spokeswo- . asiet sales.
But Eastern said Friday It had
man Karen Ceremsak. "The
Llfland granted Easter!I'S renot taken steps to convert Its •
employees here perfonned mira- quest over the objections of
Chapter 11 bankruptcy case to
cles over the past two year to creditors.
Chapter 71lquldatlon, despite the
bring an airline that had been
At the time, Shugrue said the
shu !down. ·
Allho~~gb Eastern Is smaller
grounded (and)' put It back up In money would allow Eastern to
tJte air."
,
·
cont1n11e operations through
todaythanltwasprlortothel989
Union officials expressed re- ·.. March, by which time he prostrike, a shutdown ·could stU!
gret, and the belief that East· . jected the airline would reach the
t'nconvenlence thousands of pasern's collapse could ·have bee!\ break-even point.
sengers. The alrllne carried
more than 1.4 million passengers
avoided had the carrier settled , But Breen of the pilots uniOn
Its long dlspl!te wt.t h unionized said Eastern, which may have
during December. ,
employees.
been losing as much as $3 mllllon
Easterp has beep able to keep
"It Is a real tragec!y;" said a day, ranoutofcashearUerthan
Its planes ai'oft despite Its huge
Frank Ortis, president of Local Shugrue expected.
losses by selllng assets. Money
702 of the International Assocla' 'They are out of cash, "· he
from !hose asset sale~ went Into
tlon of Machinists, one of three
said. ' 1t Is our upderstandlng' an escrow account.
.
Although there Is llttle . mo~:il
unions that struck Eastern on that Eastern was loslngabout$3
. March 4, 1989, forcing the carrier million a day."
left In that account for unsecured
Into bankruptcy five days later.
Eastern had bet!n seeking
creditors of the airline, who are
"It's a shame that (thealrllne)
Investment partners ln. recent
owed about$1 bllllon, more than
•
where most of the macl!lnlsts put weeks to-help It Implement a new
$50 million had been set aside for
·agreed
that
aq.
u
aculture
'
s
hould
·
.
In
most
of
their
adult
life.
had
to
business
plan~
·
ticket holders In the event of a
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) '- at lhe state level, .a griculture
be
·
regulated
the
same
way
as
come
to
this
point.
It
could
have
Ortis
of
the
lAM
expressed
shutdown.
,
Aquaculture - commercial fish departments or il.a tural resource
agriculture,
while
regulators.
dis·
been
averted
If
they
had
sought
hope
that
a
white
knight
may
still
Eastern
said
the money Is
farming - could supply 10 departments?''
agreed.
Producers,
researchers
·
Floyd suggests that all,-agenpercent of the U.S. m eat supply
and Extenslim personnel agreed labor peace," he said. The lAM emerge.
•
more than adequate to relmremalns on strike against
"We are1 . hopeful that a person.
burse ticket holders.
by the year 2000, accordlqg to a cles with an lnterestlnregulatlrig
fisheries management specialist aquaculture develop a unified
that statebelongs
jurisdiction
for aqua· Eastern.
'.
r:======================~
culture
In agriculture
permit process to both promote
at Ohio State University.
rather than natural re~ource or ·
The airline's . demise caused
"Fish consumption In the Uni- the Industry and protect public
little surprise, coming as It did at
game and fish departments.
ted States has been Increasing Interests. Such a process makes
"We askecl people about con- the e11d ofa IODI, uphill battle for
since 1980," Pete Cole says. It easier for producers to begin an
survtval.
trolling birds that prey on fish,
"Ocean harvests and Imports are a quaculture operation and ' such
FAMILY PRACTICE
as
cormorants
and
herons,"
"We have been , Sf~tlclpat\ilg
not going to be able to meet comply with regulations,
Floyd says. "Producers stroqgly thls, :•·sald E :J . Steen, a spokesFloyd and others from the
Increasing consumer demands."
man tor the Air Line Pilots
supported a right .to kill pretJa- Association, another union that
But policy makers have to School of Natural . Resources
clous birds on their property ·
decide how to regulate the use of gl!ther«id Information from aqua- without
a , permit: The s.a me struck Eastern In 1989. ALfA
the natural resources required culture producers, researchers,
group
said
they would be unwll- ended -Its strike In No\Tember
by the Industry, says Don Floyd, · Cooperative Extension Service
ling
to
Invest
money In tech- 1989, although relations With
Ohio State natural ·resources personnel, -regvlators and repreniques
to
keep
predacious
birds Eastern remain rancorous.
.sentatlves of environmental
'
policy specialist.
from
eating
their
fisb."
"We knew there was no way
Aquaculture, like agriculture, groups to determine which aquaThe groups, differed on the
they could last beyond Monday,"
culture policy Issues need
Is based on natural resources.
1
Breen said.
ssue of food safety, wlthenvlro!lEastern was able to restore
Public policy plays a big role in attention. ,
The
SIJrvey
included
Illinois,
mentalists most stroqgly suppor- . service In the wake of the 1989
how Individuals use public ret!ve of regulating the use of
sources, such as high-quality Indiana, Iowa, · Kansas, Michl·
pesticides,
antibiotics and chem·
strike by hiring replacement
water, to produce food for profit. gan, Mlnneso~ Missouri, Ne1 1 b
tt.
Is
Re 1
pilots, and It financed Its
ca s y aquacu ,_ur ts.
gu a- ongoing operations by selllng
Expanding aquaculture produc- braska, North Dakota, Ohio,
tors and environmentalists, un·
tion raises several slgnlfican t South Dakota and Wisconsin. It like
producers and, researchers,
assets, Including Its profitable
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
was funded by the U.&amp;.DepartpoUcy Issues, he says. .
age
ctes
to
Northeast
shuttle
and
Its
Latin
want
public,
health
11
''
"One .Jmportant Issue Is who ment of Agriculture and Michi25TH
&amp;
JEFFE~ON A VENUE
protect
consumers
from
chemt.
American
routes.
Will regulate · the aquaculture gan State University through the
Eastern remained unproflta·
cal 'c ontamination of privately
POINT PLEASANT, WV.
lndu'sll'Y," Floyd says. "Should It North Central Regional Aquacul·
cultured fish. All groups agreed
ble, however. The airline posted
ture
Program.
·
·
·
·
be regulated the same as agriculthat some regulation Is' n~es- ' an operating loss of about $355
. Producers .a!ld researchers
ture, and who will administer it
sary but differed on what type of
mWIO!I for the first three months
agency should be In charge,
of 1990.
Floyd says.
Company efforts to restore

By DON FINEFR~K
UPI Bualaess Writer
MIAMI (UPI) - Financially
troubled Eastern Airlines suspended operations at midnight
Friday' In a move expected to
strand thousands of p;1ssengers
at airports throughout the United
States. The shut down ended the
carrier's 22-month ba ttle !or
survtvaL
The airline was obliged to park
Its planes and suspend Its 800
dally flights after running out of
cash. Eastern has.b een operating
under Chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection since March 1989,
Eastern said a ll · scheduled

Ohio Lottery

Bills and_.

flights after midnight were can- passengers at airports throughceled, and all emplOyees except out the United States and Canreservations agents were In- !lda ..However, the shutdown was
structed ·not to report to work expected to have the largest
Impact In Atlanta, where East·
unless notified.
American Alrllnes In Fort ern maintained Its only hub
Worth. Texas, announced separ- operation, and In Miami, Its
ately that It would hOnor all headquarters city.
Easter!\ said all passengers
Eastern tickets.
American also said it asked the hokilng tickets , for flights after
Department of Transportation midnight Friday I!VOuld ~elve a
·
.
for emergency authority to oper· · full refund.
The fate of Eastern's 19,000
a te Eastern's routes connecting
Miami and Tampa to Toronto, full-time employees was, uncer·
Canada, and New York's La taln. The eompally, whlcll began
Guardia Air port to Montreal, . mall service In 1928 and added
passe11ger ·service two years
. Canada.
Eastern's collapse could af~t

Group~

have diverse·ideas
about commercial ·fish fartns

· ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

'

~iants advance
to ~uper Bowl

Piek-4-: 0943
Cuds: Q-H; 5-C;
10-D;S.S
Super Lotto
3-8-12-33-34-39
Kicker 131714

Page3
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Januiry 21, 1991

Vol.41, No.119
Caryrtrtecl 1891

May use
POWs as human.shields
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&amp;aqi.
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· flyers and Issued a radio message Monday threatening to US!!
Iraq, wagllig war• from the
prisoners of war · as human
.. skies and through the airwaves,
shields.
. · :tired Scud missiles Into Saudi
Secre~ry of Defe!lse Dick
.Arabia, paraded men on televlCheney condemned the threat
:slon Identified as captured allied , and said mlstreatm~nt of POWs
By DAVID AL:i!:XANDER

Ualted Pret~s ID&amp;er'na&amp;ton&amp;l ·

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl)
plan around such problems and
Hall of all businesses started will even make a few sacrifices, he
tali In the first two years. For says.
. 'family -run ~slnesses, survival
If the next generation Isn't
1
·
can be even harder.
qualified to take over the busi"The simple fact Is that smali ness, F;rven says now Is the time ·
businesses survtvlng -Into a· third
to start training or to consider
generation are qulte uncomhlrllftmanagement expertise.
mon," Bernard Erven says.
' 'The key has to be an up front
"When you add the additional and reallstlg analysts of the
stiess of that business being situation, " he says. "You can't
family run, the chance of success be naive and say, 'Of course
Is even sUmmer."
Johnny and Jane will continue
And that, says the Ohio State the business.' Maybe they don't
University ' agrlcultur;ll econo- 'll'ilnt to. Maybe they just don't
mist, means families have to · have It In them . Sit down now and
take some extraordinary steps If find out Then figure out ways to
they want a ·business to live on. · make sure they can affqrd to
· Family farms, grocery stores, continue If they want to." ·
day care centers-they all face
Start by writing goals for the
the challenges of competing with business and having each busllar&amp;er firms and With the differ- n~ss partner write down personal
Ing goals of all the Individuals goals. Knowing all these aspiraInvolved.
tions up front makes It easter to
"If you look at the chara~terls­ spot any potential conflicts. '
tlcs of the small business. none of
thla Is surprising, " Erven says,
.., ''They're usually dependent on
one to three key people and those
that aren't farms tend to be
Continued from D-1
. aimed at a niche market."
1
Niche markets may erode ing Ohio Power, have been 'widely
easily, and concentrated respon- recognized for numerous environslbillty makes survtval harder If meow achievements, among diem
one person leaves the business the construction of die first coolil)g
for any reason. he says.
tower in this bemispbere in order to
. "When you throw famlly probminimize power plants' impact on
lems on top of business problems, . rivers, preservation of muuel beds
It's no ·wonder so few family in the Ohio River, the donttioo of
businesses survtv_e many genera· . redaimed. surf~mined land to the
· International Center for the Preser'!Ions," he says.
Size Is part of the problem vation of Wild Animals for use as a
some businesses are just too
wildlife preServe and JeSWCh
small to be competitive. Others
facility, and ~ development of
·
have trouble building and main· · wetlands areas. ....
talntng the management exper·
ttse needed to keep a business
altve.
And then there are famlt¥
problems.
Divorce, health, changing career goals a!ld raising chlldr~n
have a major Impact on the
COMPLI'IE STOCI llitl45
workplace In a family business,
Erven says.
If the family wants the busiCOMPLm STOCI
ness to thrive Into anothe r
generation, It's going to have to

°

profits
crippled
recent
months were
by rlsl!lg
jet fuelIncosts,
a ' •-----------------~~~~~------•
slowln(lkeconomy, and lingering
doubts about the safety of the

COLONY THEATRE

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4514

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

IMIAIM MTIIIEtS SAT/WI I
~Ill lllliitfT TVESDAr

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flUI~l'

7:00
. ,t:lO DI\ILY
SAT/SUM I NON

MTINI:ES

1 :00,3:10
MfU (t)

AT

FINMUL

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC

IHHH

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thrv TllaSDA'fl

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Ulll ll iH

MISERY

.................................................••:•
·-.
. 1986 Buick Regal Limited
Only 58,000 Low Miles. Black with Burgundy Velour Trim.
Loaded With Optional V-8 eng.
Shows Exceptional Carel · ·

'

MEN'S SW.ATERS
COMPLITI STOCI

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS
COIIPlm STOCI -'S

DRESS SHins,nc•" WI ••,
COMI'Lm STOCI

LS. SPORT SHIRTS
..

of
Ill Dealers composite In·
. ex rote 1.18 to 376.99.
. ·

446-0123

~----~------~--~~--~ r

1986 Buick Riviera

Only 34,000 low miles on this locally owned luxury car.
Arctic while finish with jade velour trim.
Expect Rare Quality and TLC.

1-----------~~~~~~~~~----~------------ ~

a.•

1987 Pontiac Fireblrd Trans Am
Only 40,000 Low Miles
Black finish; t-tops, tilt wheel, cruise control, cassette.
Mature owner

.-

. 1987 Buick Park Avenue

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HOLZER CLINIC
Pediatrics/Family Practice
446-53 71
446-513 7

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New Buick Trade-In!
•
Features full luxury power equipment.
..
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. L.;.;ow...;..;M..,i;;.;le;.;.s.;..lol ~

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1990 Buick Skylark .

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4 Door, automatic, air conditionl~g. AM/FM.

.
.
.

WAS $8888.00

Special At

$7,900

j

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50°/o
OFF :

"

.·
,•

sm·ith Buick-Pontiac
1911 Eastern Avenue

•

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U IIH:t.:10

4 Door - We Sold This Local One Ownerl
New platinum finish with pallex cloth trim.
Only 18,000 Low Miles (Not A Misprint)

(614) 448-2282

·eoft~to3.
Tile Natlo1181 AS'!(lCiatlori

t' UN !-~ I IA L

--

SUITS &amp; SPOITCOA

Continued from D·1·
nile 1.23 to 303.95. Advances led
.. deCUDes 279-257 amoDI the 757
111ue1 traded. The price of an
aver81t ahare gained 4 cents.
compo11te volume totaled
u,g1,1811 ahares vs. 23, 628,230
tnded Tbtll'lday.
Sa1«J1011 Phlbro led the Amex

U lllt' ; H f."ll~ tn

1987 Pontiac Bonneville

s•

OlE Mllll
7:30
ADIISSIOI 11.10

AEP.. ~

Stocks...

.J ,\ J\:1 I:tt ('

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Come Grow with Us.

Cheney

Allied warplanes hunt Scuds

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
•~~o...:
~g

~rimes

and nip&lt;)rteq that allied borrtblqg Mo!lday. Patriot air-defense mls- ported hearing "a big blast" near
-hi!.d heavily damaged Iraq's air slles ~Ired by the United States what may have been either
defenses and chemical .and nu- destroyednlneScudsandthe10th downtown Dhahran or nearby
fell Into the Persian GuU, Pen-. Khobar on the guU , Other witcle'ar facilities.
nesses reported )leartng three
Saddam's forces launched 10 lagon officials said.
Scuds Into .Saudi Arabia In two
In the first assault Sunday explosions.
attacks late Su!lday and early . night, Iraq launched three Scuds
President Bush, In Maryland
toward eastern Saudi Arabia . at Camp David for the weekend ,
Pentagon spokesman Pete WIIU- provided updates on the war by
ams said the rockets were
phone Sunday to Saudi Klqg
destroyed by three of five Patri- Fahd, British Prime Minister
otS flreil by U.S. forces.
.
John Major, French President
,Seven Scuds were launched
Francois. Mltterrand and Egypearly Monday, Alr Force Lt. Col.
tian Pre~ldent HosnL Mubarak,
Mike Gallagher salr;lln the Saudi said White House spokesman Bill
Harlow.
capital of Riyadh. He said four
Allied warplanes, meanwhile,
were downed near Riyadh. and
pounded Iraqi targets desp(te
two near the port city of
Dhahran.
some problems with the weather.
"Six of the Scuds were shot
U.S. officials urged Iraqi soldiers
on the Saudi-Kuwaltl border to
down by Patriot missiles. The
Scud missile landllli In the water . tay down" their arms and surdid not require eJiiagement,"· render before a bloody ground
Gallagher said. "We ·have no _war Is mounted.
Elements of the 82nd Airborne
reports yet of damage or Injury."
tie could not provide an explaDlvlslo!' a11d the Screaming
Eagles · ot the 101st Airborne
nation of a crater In R;lyadh that
reporters said they saw after the . DivisiOn were moving to forward
missile attacks:
· positiOns Sunday near the north·
To- date, all Scud a,t tacks
ern frontier that separates Saudi
against Saudi Arabia and Israel
Arabia from Iraq and occupied
hitve Involved high-explosive
Kuwait.
conventlonar warheads, not
"We are repositioning In an
chemically tipped warheads,
assembly area mirth along the
border to conduct offensive oper- .
despite fears Iraq would employ
allons If we are told," said CoL
Its chemical weapons, the spokesman said.
.
Ron Rokosz, commander of the
During the first Scud attack,
82nd Airborne's 2nd Brigade.
United Press International reU.S. combat casualties, most
. porter Jonathan Ferzlger reContinued on J)age 6
. . . .,,";
i
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would cpnstltute a "war crime."
He said Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein's plan to use human
shields would not deter the allied
bombing campaign.
The United .S tates Intercepted
the Scuds with Patriot missiles

airline.
Last fall, Eastern's unsecured
creditors, who are owed about $1
billion, openly called for the
liquidation of the airline. ·
But Eastern trustee Martin

~46

1 Section, 10 Pogea 26 C:.ntt
A Muhlmedio Inc. NewapopOf

. .

aJ constitutes war,

(104) 675·1675

"If aquaculture Is to grow, we
must deal quickly and effectively
with the food safety issue," Floyd
says, •'The lack of a federal
seafood Inspection bill hl!lders
the expans Ion f t he Industry. ..
Major support for 'expandlqg
. aquaculture comes from CQnsumer concerns wtth health and
nutrition, Floyci ·says. If poor
processing methods or chemical
residues become an' Issue, consu·
mer Interest Will drop. he says.

zo..

en .1ne

a1

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Low tonight ·near , five. ·
Sunny Tuesday. JDgh In low

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PAIN CONTROL CLINIC ,
WEIGHT CONTROL

. Survival /of small
family-run business ~
takes more
than money
.

Piek-3: 416

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Gallipolis, Ohio
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BIRCHFIELD FUNERAL HOME OPENS Tbe Blrcblleld Funeral Home In Rnllan~
· ormerly Huater Fuaeral Home, is OPen for , . ness. , Open bouse -w u observed ove tbe
weekend wltb approximately 100 In attendance.
Pictnred Is tbe Blrtbfield, family, 1-r, Mr. and

Mrs: Howard C. Blrcbflel!l, Jeffrey C. Bln:blleld,

Julia Jyl Blrcbfield a~ James Blrcbfleld, owner.
Bln:bfltld stated that be bas ~ived bis licenses
1
, from botb tbe Oblo and West Vlr11lnla Embal·
mers and Fuaeral Directors. He also has 8n Oblo
Insurance Ucense to sell pre-need funerals.
'
'

· RIYADll, Saudi Arabia (UPI)
- Allied warplanes are aggressively- trying to pinpoint and
destroy Iraq' s remaining Scud
mlsslle launchers to stop attacks
that have triggered warning
· sirens In two major Saudi cities,
mllltary officials said Monday .
And ·Air Force Maj. Gen.
Burton Moore, briefing reporters
on developments In the fifth day
of the war, blasted Iraq's treatrn,ent of coalition pilots and
crewmen apparelltiY now held as
prisoners of war.
Moore also said the allies have
downed two more Iraq I aircraft
for a total of 11 and lost a Navy
F-14 Tomcat, which carries a
crew of two, In the most recent
round of attacks. Allied planes
flew another 1,100 sorties against
Iraqi targets, brlnglqg the
number of sorties to 8,100. Nine
. U.S. aircraft and five allied
planes have gone down to hostile

..

fire.
He said the allies have "not
achieved
100 percent of our
Asked by a reporter · from
against
the fixed sites,
objectives
Kuwaiti television what message
and
tbe Scud
the
mobile
sites
he had for Kuwaitis trapped In a
missile capability" and It conbattleground, Moore said:
tinues to be a priority target.
"Keep the lalth. "
Moore said the launchers In·
"We continue to aggressively
pursue (Saddam Hussein's)
volved In a missile attack on
fixed and mobile Scud capabll- Sunday have beeri attacked and
tles. .. . Results of his effort to •'we have taken some or them out
(but) we are nowhere near
launch ·Scuds both yere a11d 111
Israel have been very Ineffec- . completing our campaign
objectives ."
tive," said Moore.
. '

Middleport residents asked to show
support of D~rt Storm by flying flags
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman today requested village
residents and busl~~esses to show
their support for Operation Desert Storm by displaying the
American .flag at their residences and l!uslnesses .

Hoffman stated that Middleport has always been a very
patriotic community and that
now was certainly the time to
visibly show support for our
country, our troops, and our
president In the ongoing efforts to
free the people of Kuwalte.

Martin Luther King's widow
praises Israel for restraint
j

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ATLANTA (UPI) - Coretta
Scott KIDI opened the annual
celebration .of Martin LUther
King .tJ'. Day by calling for· a
cease-fire In thi! Persian GuU
war a~ denounciDI the war as
"another misguided at tempt to
make the United States the
world's policeman."
The wlfe.of the late civil tights
leader also praised Israel for not
retaliating to Iraqi · missile
attacks.
Mrs. KIDI opened the celebration Sunday, the eve of Martin
Luther King Jr.' Day, with her
annual "State of the Dream'
addres's at Ebenezer Baptist
Church, where KIJii and . his
·
father served as pastors.
"It takes courage and Wisdom
to refuse to be aucked Into the .
cycle of retaliation, ·and I bbpe
and pray that Israel will be able
to continue to exercise restraint," Mrs. KIDI said.
Her addrels, which echoed her
late husband's 1963 "I Have a
Dream" speech, spoke of the
unfinished
war on poverty. and
.

•

racism and called for a cease-fire
In the Persian Gulf .
In a mov!DI ceremony that
opened With "The Star-Spangled
Banner," Mrs. King reaffirmed
her late husband's plea for a
world where ambassadors, not
missiles, . settle international
disputes.
•'Let us be clear that we are not
fighting for democracy for there·
Is no gen\Jine .democracy In tbe
Persian Gulf," Mrs. KIDI said.
"This war Is yet another .misguided attempt .to make the
United States . tM world's ·
.
policeman."
·
Speaking from ·her husba!ld 's
former pulpit to a capacity crowd
of more than 700, Mrs. KIDI
challenged a government she
said spends !!5 cents of every
taxpayer dollar on the military
and only two cents on education.
"We can be thankful that the
hosta11es are home from Kuwait
and Iraq, " she said. "But the
real hostages of u.S. militarism
are American achoochlldren, the
nation's 3 mUllon homeless peo-

'

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'

pie, the 20 million Americans
who experience hupger every ·
day."
,, During her speech, Mrs. Klpg
spoke of the peaks and valleys of
the ciVIl rights movement In the
past year: Nelson Mandela's
release and visit to Atlants;
President Bush's vetooitheCivll
Rights Act of 1990; the end of the
Cold War and the beglnntngofthe
Persian Gulf War.
"1 wish the president and the
U.S. Supreme Court would Jlllder-.
stand that American bas had
affirmative action programs for
white males for tWo.centu.l'les,"
she said. 11t Is only reasonable
that women and mlnorltll!ll r,e- ,
celve a fair share of the great
wealth that we have lielped
produce,'' .
The King Week fl!lltlvltles
colltlnue Monday with an ecumenical worship service at Elle- '
nezer Baptist Church, with
former Atlanta Mayor Andrew
Young as the keynote speaker,
and a parade up Peachtree
street.
'·

CERTIPICATE
OF
COMPLIANCE
PRESENTED • hal Pi estoa, rlpt, Adalt
METT Coordinator or tbe Oblo Departmeat of
Mental Retardation, praented a Certlftc:ate of
Complluce to tlte Melp CoutJ Board rA MeD·
tal Retardation and Developllllelltal DbabDitlel
on Friday at Carleton Scbopl. Prestoll stated
lhat · the certification usures that tbe Melp

"'-

BOII'd rA MRIDD II Ill run eompUaace wltlt Ill
Uemi rA tbe Adalt METT (Malnaalnl.., Evalaa·
doll, 'l'raiDIIq and TecJmlcal Aalstuce) revh.
Tbe Melli Boml rA MRIDD II Ollt of·ODIJ tlve

coantles 111 Olllo 111 run compliance. Accep&amp;1
tbe ta dllcate 011 bebalf rA tbe Board Is 'l'odd

Kina.

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--··-"1 _..............

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