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•
•'

Sund~"

The Daily Sentinel.

By The Bend

------=---...

~10

•

Contemporary Living ... ___B.:;...y_crn_d~yo_h_·ve_ri:
.

•
a beverage are usually enough food . Buucr
1 .
•
Cheese
and
Crackers
for a snaclc at any time. Instead of
'
Raw Vegetables
candy, soft drinks and othec empty ' •• Fresh
Fruit
calorie food why not 1ry one of the
Some of us ·snack just a litlle;
following nutritious
altermffives. . · sOme
.
of us snack around the cloCk. .
Whatever your snacking frequencY:.
this wedc.
• Frui 1 Kabobs with Cheese may be, n' s what you eat that'
counts. Keq&gt;ing your eye on yOUI'
Cubes
•
main goal • a b•Ianced diet - is.
* Banana Bread
·
•
Celery
Stuffed
with
Peanut
--- .
.. most impMIIIII of all.

On Bl

.

Cl

Kansas·defeats Arkansas

Rio
Grande
theater
production ~;. ·

'

Friday, March 22, 11K11:

By Cynthia S. Oliveri
food in regular meals that will add
County Enenalon Alfnt Ho~e
up 10 their daily nutritional needs.
Economics
· A slice of cheese, a wheat cracker
. Did you ever SUip IQ think about · or a banana 81 mid-morning or mid·
the ''extras" you and your family afternoon could help 5!IPPly needed
eat during the course 11f a normal energy. .
·
day? What about the doushnut you
Studies have pointed out lbe folhad with your mid-mqming coffee, lowing:
or the soft drink and chips during
• Concenttated sweets and high
your favorite television~?
fat foods satisfy the appetite. If
Snacks can add nutntion or these foods are eaten as snacks,
empty calories ·to your daily diet. they may discourag~ appetite at the
Wise choices made at the super- next meal.
marlcet can help you provide sensi. • If fruit juices and fruits, raw
.
Cantata/Drama
·
ble nutritious snacks for your fami· vegetable ·scrips, sandwiches and
ly.
milk are available as snacks, family
With busy schedules to keep, members may he less tempted to
many families find that two sit- eat rich foods that may spoil their
Sixth &amp; Palmer, Middleport
down-together meals a day are appetite for the next meal.
. imwssible 10 plan. There are after
There is no one and only way 10
P.M.
schOOl activities, meetings, and a · plan nulritious meals and snacks. It
Portrays the birth, life, death and
variety of other thin~s competing is known that when one meal is
for our attention wh1ch may con- · missed, it takes extnl careful planresurrection of Chrllt In eonr and drama.
EVERYONE WELCOME!
tribute 10 a more casual pattern of ning if the Qther two meals are to
eating. Readily available, self-ser- furnish the nutrients the body
PASTOR: JAMES SEDDON
STUDENT OF THE WEEK • Sblln McLead wu selected stu·
vice food encourages piecemeal needs. Also, if snacks are eaten,
dent of the week at Melp Junior Hlah School recently for work in
eating and snacking. ·
most individuals must reduce the
music. PresendJII her cerdlk:ate Is Mrs. Teresa Davis.
· In earlier generations, Ameri· amount of food eaten at mealtime if
cans developed a patlem of three they are to maintain ideal weight.
•
spaced meals and frowned upon Very active people such as athletes
extra snacking. Today, however, and people doing lteavy physical
snacks have become a regular part work may find snacks helpful in
Gen. Hartinger Pkwy 14.71 J.:kaon.Flu 354 Ealt Main St. .
GALLIPOLIS
POMEROY
providing energy.
of our life.
MIDDLEPORT
814-441-3837'
814· 992-6292
Snacks can provide extta nulriA snack is by definition "a taste,
814·992-5248
ents and play an impqrtant part in a sip, a smack, a bit." Snacks frej
meeting minimum daily food quently become ah extra meal! A
needs. Small children may not be · beverage only or a finger food and
; Members of the Racine ·Support · Gulf and one whose father is there. · able to consume the am()unt of
' to Troops Group and Southern
Everyone is welcome 10 attend
' High Schooll!fe havillg a '"llumks· to represent their sons, daughters,
giving in March" service on Sun- fathers, mothers, husbands and
ONANYSHAKE
day at 3 p.m. at Southern High friends who are serving at this
caslle in World I, the second is near ·
School remembering our troops time.
By Jeff Hilleary
' who are still in the Persian Gulf
·The public is invited 10 attend,
This month, in Video Views a the end of 1-3, and the third is clev: and in memory of our fellow sol- and to bring banners, flags and . look at two Ilalian heroes wh11 take erly hidden on a path behind a
SUNDAY, MAI(H 24, 1991 ONLY
· diers and their families.
signs. Those attending are also
on unbelievable odds but stilLstand boulder in the upper right comer of
the
second
World
map.
To
get
it,
This J'f?llliiiTl will consist of a encouraged 10 wear red, white, blue
tall for ITUth, justice and pasta. First
candlehght ceremonr with the or yellow and to bring a candle.
One Milkshake. a.nd Get One
let me get in the old . ring you so past stage .4 and use your
hammer to break the rock. Go
main feature being 10 light a large Questions can be directed to Bea . here.. .Ready, paisanos?
Madt Tht "Old Fashioned" Way!
• USA with candles.
Cornell at949-2884.
· In April Rocky V hits the stores down 10 where the Hammer BrothAll ministers of the couiy are .
'
with a KO that makes Mike Tyson er is and beat him and his twin.
• welcome 10 attend. John Jackson, a
look laughable. Reprising his This wiU give you your third whis·
SPECIAL SUNDAY, MAICH 24
: chaplain from the U.S. Army
By WILLIAM c. TROTT
dynamic Rocky Balboa character, tle.
THIOUGH ·
"
.. '
In Worlds I, 3, 5, and 6 it is
: Reserves will be the guest speaker.
United Press International
Sylvester Stallone becomes once
SA1UIDAY, MAICH 30, 1991
· Members from local church choirs
A New Zealand woman who
more the champion of the lillie possible to clean up in the coin
and the S11uthern High School supposedly has been getting · guy. In a return to his roots, in departnient by turning the Hammer
OUR)'....
Band will perform and the band . $13,000 a year from Capt. Mark
more ways then one, Rocky goes Brother on the Map Screen into a
OUR
WHOPPER
treaSUre
ship.
In
those
Worlds
col·
will present the National Anthem.
Phillips, the esttanged h~band of baclc 10 his old neighborhood after
.BAR 8 Q RIB
FISH TAIL
, Students from Southern L9eal Britain's Princess Anne, 1s cl&amp;m- losing not only his millions but get- lect a number of coins that is a
the
tens
multiple
of
eleven,
have
; Schools will speali, including a stu- ing he fathered her 5-year-old ting some very bad news from his
SANDWI(H
SANDWKH
digit in your score match that num; dent whose brother is in the Persian daughter.
,.,..., Ieol....le cold - ·
doctor.
fA IJOpul• f-rlte ..,. cod lightly b-od
good. ·unoth-.d in our
Depressed, the retired champ ber and stop your timer on an even
ond ' dell' IJIICI In 100'11
apecial b~ MUCtl)
pure v-olUble olf.)
finds that it is not so easy to get number. This is a good way to gel
FOI OJIII.Y
ON SAU FOI ONI. Y
away from an established lifestyle extta men and be the bero of your
as he is hounded by 10 unscroplous ' neighborhood.
'
That's all for this month. See
fight promotor and then he takes on .
·· Stephanie Sayte received .first level.
protege in the form of Tommy you soon.
; place on her essay con~ming soil,
Other winners were Michelle aGunn.
· one of the fundamental components Brown, second place, receiving $15
Rocky V, the latest and the best
: of life on earth, sponsored by the and Michelle Friend, third place,
in
the
series, Stars not only Stallone
~nd
' Meigs S9il and WIUIT Conservation receivin$ $10.
but
Talia
Shire,
Burgess
Meredith,
Dislrict and the Ohi11 Federation of
This IS an annual contest sponSoil and Water Conservation Dis- sored by the Ohio Federation of Burt Young and Stallone's real life
, lricts.
Soil and Water Conservation Dis- son Sage. PG-13 rated for violence,
. Sayre received '$25 fr11m the lricts. This year's donors for the but is a treat f11r those who like
. Wi~dows
: Meigs Soil and Waster Conserva- state awards w11re Ohio Farmer's great actin~ and an even beller
' · lion District and her essay went on Union, Roben W. Teater, Cecil and sequel. Due m the stores Apru24.
In the Nintendo corner this
: tQ area judging with the possibility Eloise Robinson and Emerson Marmonth
is a return 10 the Mushroom
of a $800 cash prize at the state ting.
Kingdom as the evil King Bowser
· Koopa crawls back out of his shell
"')
and gi1CS after Mario and Lui$i for
a winner take all battle. Not Willing
'
The Alfred United Methodist coming evenis: the district retreat to play fair, the JiZar!1 with an atti: Women presented a Len ten pro- at Camp Asbury on April 5 and 6 . tude bdngs with him his brattier
: gram, "A Gift of Hope," when the and School of Missions in 1uly.
kids who have used magic wands
: group met recendy at ~e ch~h.
· Nellie Parlcer had the prayer cal- on the poor rulers of the different
All members IOQk part m readmg endar and chose Brenda Connelly, worlds and turned them into dogs
and discussion lind rem~mbering laity worker at Robeson Church and spiders and things like thaL
women leaders ol the AJfial unif· and Community Center, LumberNow as I am sure that mosdy
' ed Methodist Church. A cQUection ton, N.C. The group signed a birth· every one ~ had a chance 10 play
· was taken for prayer and self- day card for her.
this game, I'll go sttaighl 10 some
: denial. The program closed with all
Martha Poole and Mrs. Parker of the tips that will give you a
' reading the closi!Jg prayer and served sandwiches and cookies chance to kick Koopa tail along
' benediction.
during the social hour. Pastor side that powerhouse plumber from
; During the business meeting . Hausman asked the blessing.
Brooklyn.
·
ihere were 221 sick calls for the
In this game you have warp
Others present were Thelma
• three winter months I'Cp!Jfted. Flo- Henderson, Nina Robinson, Sarah .whistles instead of warp zones as in
: renee Ann Spencer reponed that Caldwell, Charlotte VanMeter and the other games. These are three
: the picture of Rev. Sharon Haus- Osie Mae Follrod.
litde rods that will take you 10 any
'
.
' man, a member of Rural Chaplainone
of the seven very dangerous
The next meeting will be held
i Re place dlitfl y. wor n ·ouc
: cy Association, appeared in the April 16, The program will be worlds on the map. One is in the
l•rodud"ff
.
I
P..:*=f,
windows wifh the
: United Mcthodisl Review.
"Wednesday's Child."
I'
beautiful
energy efliciency
Andtnrn'•
nPW
I'
. The group discussed a visit to
tnnmw..tgltln""'
I'
of
low·maintenance
'
; Sine-Cera. Mrs. Spencer and
4
!
"-O....A ......e&lt;t
Ande rsen ' Pt- rm, ·Shield'
Tina Geary was the best loser
, Genrude Robinson are in charge of
rrj&gt;lotemnt far lhol
windows We hav~ &lt;i7.e&lt;
and
Janice
Curry
the
runner
up
at
old, dnfty, looky .....
• anansements.
·
and style!1i lo ril almost
the
recent
meeting
of
Ohio
TOPS
Rick and Kim Taylor, Long
r-haw..w.
: Pastor Hausman reported on
'!=:=:=:=:=:~~ any
opening. Callu&lt;
You don't need to
Bo110m. are announcing the birth of No. 570 held at the Carpenter's
-.;
today for a free estimMe.
Hall
in
Pomeroy.
build
•
new
od
..
lon
their first child, Neisha Nicole, on
lo onjoy lhto •t..fiThe fruit basket was won by
March 9 at Holzer Medical Center.
ol-oflhlo
Diana
Herdman
and
the
surprise
She weighed eight pounds and
OIDEIS MUSt IE PlACED If
tnnm doolr. Our
gift was. won by Darlene Buckley.
.·'
:
II
ounces and was 21 inches long.
..
Winners of the Easter egg decoMaternal' grandparenis are Van
, It was vQted not to hold a meetrating
contest were Peggy Vining,
: ing on March 18 du~ 10 Maundy and Janice O'Lynn, Ft. Myers, fla. first; Shirley Wolfe, second; and
tporifl..lly · - ••
; Tbiii'Sday Lenten IICMCCS by rnem- Maternal great grandmother is Lil- Vir&amp;inia Dean, third.
WINDOWS DUE TO IE SHIPPED
~m.. I
lian
Bums,
Huutington,
W.Va.
' bers of the Preceptor Beta Beta
owlnpn1 ..d 1Udln• doore.
OffiCCI'S
will
be
installed
at
the
Paternal grandparents are Don
*EEl Of MAY 27, 1991 •. ·
lleol Jet, bec....e llle Freaetnreod ldapd
: Chapter, Beta Sigma Pili Sorority,
next meeting and a funny money
and
Diana Taylpr, Long Bot10m.
door lo 1111141e lo lui, lla beUer dQa will 10
; at the chapltr's m:ent meeting held
auction will be held.
oa for Jean. Come In ud - lllodaJ.
!511/e DEPOSIT IEQUIIED.
at the Grp Episcopal Church.
t
' Sheila Hains, "i Gamma Mu
, Chapter, .visited the meeting to
$3. 00
$3.00
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
: ex~d 10 invitation to Founder's
IIARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY • SIJIDAY
· Day ft'hich will be held at the
446 4J24
SAAMIN NIGifl TUESDAY
iring in your house pions or
l•d.... Hardware
l Sponallll oa April25.
window sites lOOn, for n free estimate.
; Sandy Iannarelli visited the
: chapter to JWelellt details pertaining
I to the dinner dance It Royal Oak
' Plllk apo111101ed by dl8pters of Beta
.: Sigma Phi. The band. )ay flippin',
: will provide enierlainment. He is a
: ~It M«ehead University.
will be used 10 establish a
•voc:adoniiiChollrship fund.
M !ICIIIOIM ODD
' OfTJCen will be elected at the
IQ PUSU , .:1 IMUII llliKT .
614-992-6611 .
IIJ Dl SCDLWT CiiWGII:S .
lirll - - in ApriL
US PAIII Sf.
101 SHOIIIIIGJ
RefreabmentJ were acrved by
fAIDAI 7, 00,1 ,00
IIIIDDtEPOII.
OH.
SAT . I ,00,1 :00, 7:00,9 :00
Donna Jones IIIII Lillian Moore.
SUN.l
:OO,l
:00,
7:00,9
:00
He r 1 for dlo April meeting ·
Toll,,.. 1-100-733-3334
. 7:
. will be Charl111te Elberfeld and
' Roberla O'Brieri.

75 cents

Dr. Donald Hanon announces replacement
for Gallipolis practice • on page Dl ·

·Inside

AJoac tile rber. - -Bl-8
B•ttbm - - -- - · Dl
Colllk:L....-------· Ioart

:

Cl

l'loci&amp;.-----Dl·7

ne.... . ------·A!
EdltorlaL..--..--....A2

Eagles donate $300 to Meigs Library for
large print books • on page B7
·

Cloudy and cooler on Sunday.

Farm.. - .....__
- ,.......___
"....... ct-s
Dt..a
spor~~.....

Weatlller_____......A4

)

'7he Day He Wore My Crown"

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday Evening, 7:30

..

VDL .28, No•.7
COpyotghted 1~1

-

'•

FREE!.

employees of the GaDlpolll ~velopmental Cen·
ter·based RIYervlew Recycling prograll.
Riverview Recycllag was estabHsbed Ia 1987 to
provide GDC residents with jobs.(TI!IIei·Sen·
tlnel photo by Krls Cochran)

'i!H§Itll

Sl~'

. $179

TRUCKlOAD

~~SALE

All Sizes
Styles of Andersen
Available.

Milliron staied Friday t hat his
job and that of Michael Po11ler,
who is in charge of equipment
REEDSVll..LE - Ohio Governor maintenance at ihe forest, are
George Voinovich' s proposed bud- dlreatened by the budget proposal.
get for the 1992 and 1993 biennium .Both. positions are full-time )obs;
could drastically affect the future and are the only full-time pos1tions
on the Shade River Forest payroll.
of Shade River Forest and its staff.
At least $1.5 million in budget According to Milliron, the workcuts have been proposed for the load at Shade River Forest is aug·
Ohio Department of Natural mented by· General Relief workers
Ruources Foreslry Division, and and by summer employment pro·
•
·according to Shade River Forest grams.
In
addition,
Milliron said that
Manager 1im Milliron. he and
his
state-owned
residence, located
another staff member could lose
on the outskirts of the forest, would
their~ if the budget is approved.
Division of Forestry operations be closed, as would as would tho
in Lawrence, Gallia, Jackson, e{Juipment headquaners situated
Meigs, Athens, Washington. Perry, nexi door 10 the residence. TIIOse
Morgan, Monroe, and Noble coun- . properties are located on Joppa
ties are threatened by the ·cuts, Road between Tuppers Plains and
which are a part of the Republican Reedsville.
Other state forests which would
Governor's cost-cutting budget
be affeCted by the budget cuts are
pror..::,sfuver Forest is a state for· Dean State Forest, a 2,400 acre forest 11181181ed under the multiple-use est in Lawrence County: Gifford
program of the State of Ohio. It State Forest ,in Athens Cou,nty ,
c11nsists of some 2,400 acres in which is a 320 acre seedling planta·
Olive and Orange Townships: The til&gt;n; and Perry State Forest, a
property is open 10 the public for 5,000 acre forest in Perry County
hunting and hiking, and some of near New Lexington.
In nddition 10 cuts in the state
the ~ from timber CUI from
flllllsts,
fOI!I' fife pro~tion units the property benefilll Meigs County
Barnesville,
Barlow, Stockdale and
and the townshipS.
By BRIAN J. REED
· Times-Sentinel Staff

P.eople z'n the news

SWCD winners announced

Multimedlo Inc.

N... IP.PIII'

.

Proposed .state budget cuts ·
endanger Shade River Forest

FLAVOR

Buy

3 Sec;tlono, 132 Pageo

'

SHAHEJAlE

The ·Video View

A

-----

McClure's famly .Restaurant

:Racine troops support
group plans service .

~

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-;-Galllpoll._polnt Pleasant, March 24, 1991

:]Jiverview Recycling beneficial
"(O .enyiroflment, GDC resident~
.By.KRIS CPtHRAN · ·
Times-~ntinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS • If you're not
recy,cling, you're throwing it all
a way . 1ust ask the workers of
Riverview Recycling, based ·at the
Gallipolis Developmental Center.
Established in 198;7, Riverview
~ecycling is a non-profit recycling
·P.rDgram providing work &lt;worll!ni'Ues for res1dents at GDC. "Many
workers do not have fine' motors

such as eye and han&lt;!, coordinalion;• said Marilxn Shealy, pro-.
gram manager. ' By starting the
recycling project, it supplied residents '!Vith jobs who don't have rme
motor skills."
Funded through a grant from the
Ohio Developmental Disabilities
Planning Council, worltei's receive
actual salaries just like area
employees in these types of posi·
tions. Current!Y, Riverview Proo·

Tuscora • would al so be closed,
resulting in the loss of six full-time
empl\lyees. While slate forests like
the Shade River Forest also serve
in the capacity of forest fife protection units, the four separate units
are set uo in areas wbere there is no
state ptoperty.
According to Division of
Forestry District Supervisor Paul
White, the Sliade River Forest acts
as a fife protection unit for Gallia,
Meigs, Athens and Washington
Counties.
Both Milliron and White
stressed that, if approved by the
General Assembly, proposed budget cuts would result in the loss of
staffing but would not immediately
close ,the forests themselves. However, .maintenance~ staffing of
the (orests would be\ seriously curtailed.
In addition to culling .staffing of
state forests and fite protection
units in the district; the proposed
budget cuts would also terminate
21 other clerical and maintenance
staff members, either in the central
office or in positiOJIS throuahout
White's district. Also, the division's aviation fire patrol would

·

c'oaJe~tD,oxist.

~ '"'I" ~.v,

•

ucts has five rull-time employees
among the 84 that are participuting.
They aiso pay city taxes and social
security just like every hard working cidzcn.
Giving these residentJ jobs and
eventually placing them outside of
the facility, states Shealy, is cheaper than supporting them at GDC.
Wben lbe program was ~·
Shealy 'points out. the GDC resl(See RIVERVIEW, pllge A3)

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

:Alfred'UMW meeting held
'

l

Taylor birth

TOPS meets

: Preceptor Beta
; Beta has meeting
(

LOOKING BETTER - Gayan Township
Trustee Roaer Watsoa holds one or a dozen
horses that be helped resc:IHI from starvation on
a CrowD City farm. Tbis mare and ber barn·

....

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

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

'

SALE PRICE

;NINJft

Friday, April12, 199L

9203 5

,"]

&amp; SUPPLY CO.

I

'

mates are reCcmriDI slowly after lOiBI nearly
three montbs without rood or water. (T·S photos
by Melinda Powers)

Horses surviving on kindness
WALLS COME TUMBLlNG DOWN • Tile
J, 0. Roed,l brick structure constracted In 1897
at tbe intersection or U." S. 33 and State Route
124la Pomeroy was razed Friday in preparation

ror bl&amp;bway rrloeadm. A lonlll• 11 ocery aad
aeaeral merchandise store operated by tbe
Roedel family, It later serv~ as headquarters
for the Melp bookmobile.

Way cleared for highway relocation
'

By CHARLENE H()EFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff

POMEROY • The intersection
of U.S. 33 atNye Avenue and State
Route 124 is a changin~ scene as
houses and business buildings are
razed in preparation for highway
relocation and improvements.
Friday the old J .0 . Roedel
J&gt;uilding .which was construc.ted in
Ili97 was demolished bf the Aldan
Stone Co. of Chesterhill , seneral
contractor for the $1.5 million
road relocation projecL
The brick building for many
y.ears housed the Roedel family
g,Ocery and general merchandise
business. It was later used for an
appliance repair center, and then
frOm 1967 10 1977 was headquarters for the Meigs bookmobile. The
building has been vacant much of
the time since then.
Last Sun«~&amp;y the White House,

.'

.,

built near the tum of the centlll{',
and located just office Route 124 m
the same area, was burned by the
Pomeroy Fire Department
Two houses have already been
demolished and two others are in
the process of beins torn down to
clear the Nye Avenue area which
will be used f11r the intersection
roll!lways leading from East Main
and Route 124 into Route 33. The
toad relocation wort is exJ.ICCted 10
get underway in early April and has
ah August complcdon date.
Meanwhile, a 13-root metal culvert baa been installed UIIdez Route
124 to handle the water Dow from
the area to the north of that state
highway to· the Ohio River. The
culvert mstalled by ~ga Stone
Co. is 216 feet long and while
:water is cunendy Dowing through
it, IIORie work remains 10 be com·
pleted on both lbe upper and river
sides of the area.
~~

While the problem of the intersection, an extreme turn for traffic
from Route 124 onto U. S. 33, has
been recognized for many years, it
wasn't until after the collapse of
the old stone arch under Route 124
that the puject got pushed forward
by the Ohio Depurtmcnt of Tllllsportatiori.
In the early moJ11Ing hours of
Feb. 2 1990 the culvert underneath
the road collapsed closing Route
124 10 traffic near the entrance !0
the White House. A temporary
road to bypass that section was
built 10 handle traffiC.
An OOOT official on the acene
that day said that his department
was aware 11f a .potential problem in
the area and noted thlt plans for
improvements there as well as at
the intersection
were already in the~
.
plannmg stage.
The culven cave-in turned it all
inl!l an emergency situation.

By MELINDA POWERS
Times·Sendnel Starr
GALLIPOLIS - The horses
were starving. Some had already
died.
A dozen horses' plight 10 survive on a Crown' City farm has
drawn a community together and
allowed a concerned local man
make the best of a tragic situation.
Roger Watson is the friendly
and pleasant man who took it upon
himself last week to come to the
rescue 11f the suffering animals.
With Watson's efforts, the 111imals
were removed from the' farm and
are slowly recovering.
,
· Last week. as Watson drove his
black pic:kup truck down the wind·
ing gravel roada of Oallia County's ,
southern end, he explained in a
straightforward manner the incidentJ SUI10undiR8 the discovery of
the horses.
He had hWd about the horses
from people around his home. in
Men:erviUe. He is a Ouyan Town·
ship trustee and felt, that as an
oflice holder, he should do somethins. And when he watt ro check
out the atoriet of the horses' poor
condition, he was met with a
some sight.

srue·

.
•

-·

Two animals at the farm had
recently died. One half-skinless
carcass had been dragged to the
middle of the farmyard where stray
dogs had eaten its flesh. One ani. mal was lying dead in its stall.
~·I went over the hill (near the
farm) and saw other bones and
skull~, " Watson said quietly,

remembering the sight. He esti·
mates five horses in all had died at
the farm.
'
The animals that were still living had been without food for three ·
months. Boards that bounded the
horses' small pen were gnawed and
notched. The horses were loolcin11
(See HORSES, pqe A4) .

Gospel workshop, concert
scheduled at Ariel Theater
By LEE ANN THOMPSON
. , Tlmes·Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS • "There Is a spc·
cial joy in singin' gospel music,
and a special joy m singin( black
music, and anyone can do iL
That's the opinion of Ethel
Cllfile·Austin, and she will prove
that point when she c_onducts. a
.ROSDCI music workshop 81 the Ariel
'~beater in Gallipolis on April6.
The workshop is open to every·
one who has a love of music, and
Caffie-Austin believes all-white
choirs can sing black spirituals, and
sin§ them well.
. 'Black .voices hl\VC a certain

.

-·

quality with the rioh , resonant
sound, but i ~ can be developed with
a little wort." she said "I've hrard
all-white choirs sing black spirituals beautifully."
·
Caffie-Austin was scheduled to
sins here during Black History
Month, but the opportunity 111U1C to
appear at the Kennedy Center for
the .Performing Arts m Washing·.
ton, DC, accordina to James
Jfugan. Hogan is a mend ofCaffteAustin's and the ditec:tor of Youth
United For Christ 11 Paint Creek
Baptist Church.
·
Wben the
Center per:·
fonnance was o~
Hogan said,
(See GOSPEL, Pile AS)

Ken:t
'•

�Mluch 24, 1991

Commentary and perspective

Peg.-A2

March 24; 1991

'

825 'lblrd Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-ZMZ

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
· (814) 99HI56

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WMON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aulstant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER of The ~nlted Press International, Inland Daily Press Auocla· ·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
'
s~uld

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welwme. They

be less than 300 words .

long. AU letters'aresubject t oedithl&amp; and must besfgned wtth name. address and

telephone number. No unsigned letters wOI be published. Letters should be In
~od taste. addt'IIIIRf ilsua,..Aet~. ··

pressure in high places. Tiie Ethics
. Committee failed to zero in on
those pressure points. One of Keating's minions, anorney-lobbyist
Margery Wwnan, was handled by
the Ethics Committee with kid
gloves despite the fact that she was
Keating's representative in Washington.
Waxman, once a high level official of the Treasury bepartment
left public service and ended up at
the Washington office of the
Chicago law firm of Sidley and
·Austin, part of Keating's stable.
(Some of the buyers of Keating's
junk bonds were convinced that
Sidley and Austin shared the blame
for their losses, and named the law
firm as a defendant in a suit
brought over ihe junk bonds.)

WWAT A TeRR\FIC
'WE~OME

Really freedom of choice?
Dear Editor:
The proponents of abortion on
demand have introduced a new bill '
in Congress, The .Freedom of
Choice Act. The term "Freedom of
Choice", in this case, is another in
a long line of euphemisms insisted
upon by a group of people wellschooled in saying exactly what
they don't mean. You know: "l?re~;
nancy termination", not "aborbon ;
••pro-choice" ~ not ••pro-abortion";
"fetus", not "unborn child". (Have
you ever looked up "fetus" in the
dictionary? I have. Out of curiosity,
I checked it in my Random House
Dictionary. Here is what it says:
"fetus - the young of an animal in
the womb or egg, especially in the
later stages of development, when
bddy sbllctures ate in the recogniz·.
able form of its kind." Not much
room there for waffl i_ng about
wh.ether or not a human fetus is
human.)
·
: Anyway, back .to the poinL This
bill, The Freedom of Choice Act,
would provide .tax money to pay
for abortions, allow abortion at any
time during a pregnancy, for any
reason, do away with parental conseill laws, and allow that a physician may be sued for refusing to
oerform an abortion. In the name of
freooom of choice, this bill would
viblate my freedom to choose not
to: spend my money for abortions,

the freedom of an ·unborn baby to
choose to live, the freedom of parents to choose to counsel their
underage pregnant daughters, and
the freedom of doctors to choose
not to perform abortions.
Each of these provisions strikes
me as another step through the
looking gl;~ss, but the last seems
craziest df all. Suppose I, blooming
with health as I am, went to a doctor aild demanded the removal of
my appendix. (I don't want it.
Someday it might become infected,
interfere with my career plans,
cause me no end of trouble.)
Should I be able to sue the doctor
for refusing? Why not? It's my
body, isn't it? Surely I am entitled
to have any part of it removed if 1
so desire. And if I am poor, I
should certainly be able to charge
taxpayers for the oper11tion. :nlis
argument, applied to appendices,
tonsils, even toenails, 1s patently
ridiculous. Were it not so terrifying, it would be equally ridiculous
when applied to the "removal" of
unborn children.
If "pro-choice" advocates find
the Freedom of Choice Act reasonable, I can only conclude that they
have traveled so far down the road
of self-deception that they are
unable to consider the issue rationally.
Sincerely,
Ann Hurst

No taxation, no consolidation
wealthy schools graduate best eduAs different opinions on the cated? If that were so then we
c0unty school issue are expressed, should look to Beverly Hills or
J"m moved to say something even Palm Springs for our future leaders.
at the risk of sounding angry and
I understand the loss of the tax
· mational.
revenue from Gavin; However if
' I grew up in Gallia County, my memory serves me correCtly we
graduated, class of 67 NGHS in my had 4 high schools before Gavin.
home we went to bed hungry every
As a miner I'm concerned about
night, cold in the winter, poorly raising taxes at a time when
diessed, Mom pre~ 2 meals a employment is questionable. And
dlly, I turned down the 1st meal it hard for everyone else as well.
was usually water gravy and sour
I think its time the school board
dbugh biscuits, when I graduated did something "For The Kids" by.
f(om high school I weighed !08 stopping the bickering and getting
down to resolving this without
lbs.
· I've often wished I could go another levy or consolidation. And
~k in time and Talk to Abe. Lin- listen to me There's not going to be
coln I'll ask him what it was that another levy passed: As a parent
dro~e him to get his education; I've been threatened to many times
walking several miles to school, by the proponents that all the high
bilck home, chores, then late at schoolers will have to be bussed to
nj11ht by the light of the ftre place Kyger Creek or, The State will step
stUdying. Now I'm in no way try- in and set our tax rate ... So what?
Have any of you parents ever
ing to say that I'm an Abe Lincoln,
bill my points are (I) you don't had a problem at school and called
luive to be wealthy to get an educa- your board Reps.?. Supt.? I have ..
tiOn (2) you can get that education did I get results? No .. Imagine
how difficult it will be to get
i.,: a I room school.
results
from a financially indepen~ Now the proponents to .consoli~tion and levr ·sen their position dent board.
In closing I must only comment
by advocating It's "for the kids" as
t11p any other position isn't, Well, to those of you in the county that
t:m for doinS the ri!fht thing, That, took Gov. Voinovich (candidate)
not necessanly is rwsing taxes, if I around and wrote his campaign
..VCre convinced that pouring speeches wasn't this one of his
Schools, roads, bridges,
rocneY at this problem would make . promi!les?
. bs ?
tlie children in Gallia County the JO
•····
Don Holcomb
tiest educated in the country then
2901 Alice Rd.
J'il support it ... Well money is not
Ewington, OH 45611/i
~)lat drove Abe. I'm sure.. Do the
Dear Editor: .

foday in histQry
.•

By United Press International

'

;· Today is Sunday,_March ~. the 83rd _day of 1991 with 282 to follow.
-: The moon is wamng, moVIR&amp; toward 1ts full phase.
:- Tbe morning stars are Venus, Mars an~ Saturn.
·: Tbe evening stars are Mercury and Jup1ter.
:. Those born on this date llfC under the sign of Aries. They include
financier Andrew Mellon in 18S5 •.. silent film actor Fatty Arbuckle in
ti87 ... pioneer film animator Ub Iwerks. wh~ artistt&gt;: hel~ Walt,Di.sney to realize his visipn, in 1901... Repubb~an p~s!denu[\1 candidate
Thomas Dewey in 1902... poet Lawrence Ferlingbeltl m 1919 (age 72) ...
~~Ctors Norman Fell in I~2~ (age 66) and Steve McQueen in 1930... and
d{ess designer Bob Mackie m 1940 (age Sl). .
,
•
-: On this date in history:
.
;. In 1934, the United States granted the Philippine Islands independence,
Cffective July 4th. 1946.
.
,
'. Jn 1965, white civil rights wOiker Viola Uuzzo of Detroit was shot and
killed on a road near Selma, Alabama.
In !976 Argentine President Isabel Peron, widow of strongman ruler
.hJan
was arrested in a military coup {koo).
. .
:- In 1989, the Exxon Valdez hit a reef m the Gulf of Alaslca, ~111ing II
dii!Uon gallons of crude oil in the largest oil tanker spillm U.S. h1story. ,

"

Pmm:

I.

Much of Keating'_s lobbying
money was. spent trymg to keep
federal regulators out of his hair
and stop them from imposing new
regulations that would curb his
speculative operations. He bought
Lincoln in 1984 and converted it
from a traditional home-mortgage
company to what many federal regulators consider to be a federally
insured casino. Within a few
months, the Federal Home Loan
. Bank Board proposed regulations
that would have rolled back many
of the investment options that
tempted Keating into the S&amp;L
business in the first place.
Keating would later say that he
spent more than $55 million in his
war against federal regulators. A
chunk of that went to lawyers lik~

Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta
' Margery Waxman. What did those .·
lawyers do for Keating?
·
We have already reported on :
some of Waxman's taetics. In 1988·
when Keating was trying to get the .
Bank· Board to transfer the oversight of Lincoln away from the San
Francisco regional office of the .
Bank Boatd, Wax man wrote in a ·
memo to Keating: "You 'liiY~ the
Board right where you want them. I .
have put the pressure on (Bank
Board Chairman Dannr) Wall to
work toward meetmg your ·.
demands and he has inslrueted his ·
staff: 'If they mess up this time ...
it's all over."'..

Letters to the editor

J.IOME

I

TURNOUT! ~R...
oR ARE .THOSE

THe lJIEMPL.tYJABT
LINES?

•

uS.T~PS

Rememb~ring
Forward: During this week I
was in Florida watching the
Cincinnali Reds plar.inll exhibi·
lion games. Story wdl follow on
my experiences there. However,
during this week three or my
friends died and my experiences
with each one rollows.

•

Now our associates Michael·
Binstein and Tim Warner have ·
found another Ieber from W8Xlllan ·
to Keating laying out a banle plan.
The letter; dated Jan. 22, 1988,
advises Keating against suing fed- ·
era! regulators before he gives the
lobbying process time to wort:.
Waxman told Keating she didn't ·
want to discourage him from bringing a lawsuit, but that there were
other options: "If you can't reach a ·
settlement with Doc how (Daryr ·
Dochow, the Bank Board's chief' ·
examiner in Washington) that
resolves the exam, moves us to '
another district and gets their support to stop the SEC and Justice
mvestigations, then launch your
nuclear offensive."
It was a big laundry list - stopping two federal investigations
being the biggeshof Keating's
problems.
'
Questions concerning that and
other Keating activities could have
been put to Waxman when she testified to the Ethics Committee, but
they were soft pedaled.

.Fight crime- not innocent people_ch_uc_ks_ton_e.
dents, this was standard operating
procedure. But this time, ML.A.
Law" got caught on candid camera.
And how did lhat monomaniacal
monopolist on morality, the police
chief, respond? His critics were the
same ones who opposed the use of
military force in the Persian Gulfl
A few L.A. cop body-stomping,
headkicking incidents during
arrests and their fascist-minded
boss will be accusing critics of giving aid and comfort to the British
during !he Revolutionary Wat.
That America is plagued by a
separate but equal cnminal justice
system is a PRIMA FACIE fact of
life. Only the poor and minorities
are denied the consistency of fair-

Philadelphia, the nation's birthplace of freedom, ·has turned into
its morgue for equal justice.
In just one 12-hour period:
• Two black men who had spent
22 months in j3il for a murder they
did not commit were released when
the district attorney's office confessed in court to not having
enough prosecutorial evidence.
• A federai magistrlite ordered a
new Dial for a black man after evidence in a i 7-year-old murder case
indicated that the assistant district
attorney had systematically excluded blacks from the jury 1ry keeping
two "separate but equal" bsts!
None of this came as a surprise.
The Philadelphia district attorney
who has just resigned to run for
mayor sheepishly recently confessed to this columnist that he was
guilty of pulling out his gun on two
separate occasions and threatening
to use it in a manner unrelated to
proteCting himself.
Such irresponsible conduct for
Philtidelphia prosecutors is normative. But it pales into obscurity
compared to the behavior of an
American Gestapo that masquerades in uniforms labeled Los Angeles police.
All DECENT Americans were
horrified after witnessing on television the brutal beating of a stopped
speeding motorist by a group of
L.A. cops.
For many Los Angeles resi-

'

buckets and dumping them into the
hack of the truCk, Payne ~ints oul
Employees learn to build up the
confidence to empty the buckets
and return them to the house, not to
mention shariQ&amp; the responsibilities
along the route.
· Othcin playing a viiAI part in the
program alon11 with Payne are
Steve Little, Bill Stoops, and
Louise Wilson. All the employees
know Louise, she's the one who
distributes the paychecks.
"It's easy to get attached to
them (employees)," comments
Payne, who is con~idered an
Ambassadlfr to the program by
Shealy.

...

But with most pr:ms like by city and county officials," states ODC, referring to the various pro- .;
Riverview Recycling, .
can be Shealy. "There's a solution and . grams providing jobs for ~iden~. · :.
'"We had paramount tssues m••
funding problems. Aceordinll to they need to decide. We need to get
Shealy, the ODDPC grant will have some ·ideas established now to help . our minds when the recycling pro' to be reapplied for in August of ' with the IODIII'IIIIIe plannin11." ·
~m was .established;" said Shealy.;
A lot chnges are happenhlll
We want to put these employees·
1992, .with the possibility of not
nationally,
says
Shealy,
whO
hopes
in
worthwhile jobs. I think recy-·
receiving another granl
·
.
t
o
brinK
some
or
those
changes
to
"Eventually this (funding for !he
cling ~ create jobs."
program) will need to be aildressed

over the president's crime bill is a
Senate Judiciary Committee reoon
that indicts America as "the most
violent and self-destruCtive nation
on Earth .~ Americans kill each
other at a rate surpassing ALL
nations !hat keep crime statistics.
Would the death penalty arrest ·
this trend? As a supporter of capital
punish!Rent I think it would, if it
did not languish in appeals. .
Instead, Congress should seek to
mandate a more equitable applicalion of the death penalty. At the

same time, conservative. opposition
to the expansion of gun control
must be neutralized. Death by guns
flourishes and many yahoos hold
membership in a lobby, the National Rifle Association, that hold~
America hostage to prevent gun
controls:
Some ideological trade-offs may.
.be necessary. But a crime bill
MI!ST be passed . .If you agree,.
wflle your senators and con gressperson and tell them so.

COLUMBUS, O!lio (UPI)Gov. Gecqe Voinovich has reappointed one member· and named
· two new memben of the Qhio Racing Commission, which ·re11ulates
th.e horse racing industry in the
state. .
The appointees are: Norman
Bmon of Cincinnati, George Zane
of Brootlyn and Bmat Green of
Cleveland. All were named to
termsendin&amp; Mlrdl3l,l99S.
Barron, who has served on the
c:ommission ror seven! years. was
I'CIIIIIOinted.
Z"ane replaces John Bumbri,
whose term expired. Green, a former All- Pro running back with the
Cleveland BIOWIIS, replaces Nelson
Lancione, ~ho also resigned.

Unarguably, the criminal justice
system is not perfect. But its crippling imperfections should not be
allowed to alibi the rejection of
President Bush's crime bill..
The president's crime has two
problems: It doesn't go far enough,
and it goes too fat. A major obstacle to the bill's ~e appears to
be liberal opposttion to the expansion of the death JlCI!ality for 30
more crimes. many of them drugrelated.
How ironic for a government
that has just concluded one of the
most comprehensive destructions
of human life in the history of civi-

. DIYCLEANEIS

-------------.A. Pkkup and
Delivery
'\

WORKING TOGETHER • As a J#Drt of t~elr
classroom requirements, th~se two Buckeye
Hills Car~r Center students, (left), work wltb
the disabled at the Gallipolis Develocental
Center-based Riverview Recycling. As
ph, a
full-time employee, Rives one of tbe students a
"

lization.

Equally ironic for the debate

Publl!lhed. each Sunday, 825 Thtrd AVP. ,
Gallipolis, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Put&gt;
llsh1ng Company!Multlrnedta, Inc. Se-

cond clau paatage P.M at .GallipoliS,
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Member: Ui11ted Preas lnternaUonal,

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446-9495

OFriRJNG:
• • Stoclll
• Corporate Bouda

Donald DcMison, 34, confessed
Friday to the abduction and ~­
gulation death of Janet L1ff, S81d
Sheriff Dwight Radcliff.

• U.S. 1\'euury Securlda
• M•tual Fuada
• Iuured Tu.fl'ree
Muld&amp;* Bouda
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Radcliff Said Dennison then led
authorilies to a cr~ek near
Williamsport, where L1frs body
· was found. She had been abducted
from her home on,Thursday.
· "He reall~'t indicllled why
he did it,"
!iff said "He had
indicated to us that he knew both
her and her husband."

Contact:
STAN &amp;VANS

Ubbj IIGCII, 81111100

When the woman was abducted,
her 18-month-old daughter, Amanda, was left in the bouse. She was
discovered playing alone outside
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CJRCLEVIU.E, Ohio (UPI) Pick&amp;way County authorities say a
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big hull, Linda, another full·tlme tJ!lployee,
helps pull a dumpster along. Not only do the
employees learn job skills, they also learn how to
interact with others. (Times-Sentinel piJoto by
Krls Cochran)
·

WAS}JINGTON (UPI) - Six
Ohio students have been selected
by the National Endowment for the
·Humaniiies to receive individual
Younger Scholars grants that will
eQable them to conduct independent research and writing projects.
Tbey are among 49 high school
students and 87 college students
from 33 states and the District of
Columbia picked from 823 appli~ th
cants or e g'rts. d
.d
"We are P ease to provl e
these outstanding young people
this
d
·
unique opportunity to con uct senous humanities research and writihg-projects this summer," said
NEH Chairman Lynne Cheney:
, Ohio students receiving the
grants are: Jennifer Com and lennifer G·los, both of Westerville,
Sarah Hall of Columbus, Katheril)e
.
Prince of Wilmington, Elliot RatzRECYCLING
RESPONSIBILITIES
• Stacks apnn stacks of
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seen
ill
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newspapers
Scheid of Cleveland Heights.
at GDC that bave been dropped orr by GaiDa Couuty rnldmtl and
along the curbside pick-up. Mike II pictured pladn110111e aewwpapers in a neat pile to get them ready for the trip to Lancaster.

SUNDAY ONLY
SUIIIICIIIPTION RATES

.'

.... Open at 7:00 A.M.

_ Six_Ohio students
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New York, New York 10017.

"And then I wrote 'THE WIT AND WISDOM
OF SADDAM HUSSEIN.'"

"

CARDINAL

Newspaper

Berry's World

He'll be shaving
before his parents
have to replace their
Lennox Dimension ·Heat Pump. ·

Governor names
racing commission

..

neSs.

'

CHECKING THI BINS • Pktuecl II Mike u lie clleclll tile
Rivmlew Reqtlllll drop-eft' bla, located II tile Ga1Ilpolll Devel·
opmetJIII Center. Mike II one of 84 GDC resldelltl pilrtldpatlq

old friends .. •..----B....:..y_Fr_ed_-.w._.C_ro_w.

tion. Whether it. had any influence a man, believe me.
The Forest Run area has lost an
on·him or not, I told him about my
GEORGE W. FOLMER, SR.
outstanding citizen.
cancer surgery in 1975 and that I
George W. Folmer, Sr. died
GORDON H. CALDWELL
was still going strongly. He stated Tuesday, March 12, 1991.
Gordon H. CaldWell died Toesto met that the doctor assured him
Among other occupations, day, March 12, 1991, following an
that all the cancer had been George was a· coal miner. In the extended illness.
removed and that he could continue Forest Run area, be knew the histoHe served as Meigs County
to live a normal life. However, any- ry of all the mines ,in that sec;tion. Auditor for 16 years. During that
one who haS had cancer knows that He was· very helpful to my late time, I·knew him very well. Oorthe can-cer can recur anytime . father-in-law, Irving Karr, and don was best described as a,consciCharles Asa Bradbury strongly brother-in-law, Irving Karr, Jr.
entious, affable, and dedicated serr
believed that ·he was goin!f to
My father-in-law owned a block vant of our county. Although he
recover and that he could contlllue of coal in which George did some was a Democral. he nevertheless
his day to day activities in a normal mining. Unfortunately, this opera- had many friends in the Republican
way . I firmly believe thdat h_e tion had to be shut down due to Party. .
·
thought that with prayer an pos1- excessive mine water.
My experiences with Gordon
tive thinking be would whip this
I knew George's mother, Lizzie, were always pleasant, and he
disease. If there is one think verx well. She was_a fr~uent VISI- quite kn~~ledgeable.. libQUt
remarkable about Charles Asa tor m oudaw off1cenn the-late-work. Iillater years, he was kno·l!wn
·~-- -tr--:Bradbury it wns the"fact that he felt 50's. I also knew two of George's a,s the "Elder Statesman" of Tup-"
positive abour living, not with- brothers, Clarence and Max. Like- pers Plains. Whenever one needed
standing his terrible ordeal with wise. his son Donald , "Sonny" toknowaboutanotherlivinginthat
cancer. Charles Asa lived life one Folmer.
area, Gordon always· had the corday at a time and enjoyed it.
In later years, I frequently rect answer.
In the intervening time, Charles stopped at George's vegetable
Gordon is survived by his wife,
made many. many nips to his sec- stand on the comer of Forest Run Helen, his son, William and daughond home at Myrtle Beach, S.C. I Road anct Route 7. I purchased a ter, Rita. .
imagjne that he made three or four great deal of vegetables from him
Gordon H. Caldwell was an outtrips a year to hi~ second home, but and could also rest assured that I standing person.
always returned to his first home in was obtaining top quality.
Carry on.
Middleport.
George was always a friendly
(Story of trip to be conrinllld)
Charles Asa, three days before person. Unfortunately, he became
he d1ed, was ready to come home very sick, and his last few years
(Editor's Note: Long-time
and start packing for another tnp to . were rough on him. NeVertheless, . Pomeroy Attorney Fred W.
· a ,._
Myrtle Beach, S.C.
. ' he always had a smile on his face Crow IS
nequent contributor ot
•
s
He was a War Veteran, Che m1st whenever you saw him.
columns ror the ultday TiMes~
and served as a former member of
George is survived by his wife, Sentinel· Readtrs wishing to
Middleport Village Council. Wife, Cora; two daughters, Shelby Davis applaud, criticize or uprds llfl
Jeanne Anne and children, and Linda Edwards; three sons, opinion on any sub}tGt (exctpt
Suzanne, Mary Elizabeth, and Asa Jim, Bill and George "Dick" pallllcs or reUgion) are Invited to .
survive him.
.
Folmer and one brother, Ml\x write to Mr. (;row.ln care of this:
Charles. Asa Bradbury wns q11ite Folmer.
newspaper.&gt;

CHARLES ASA BRADBURY
Charles Asa Bradbury passed
away on March H, 1991.
I first knew Charles Asa after
the War when I returned to
Pomeroy in the 50's and 60's. We
played golf at the old Tommy
Weber Course at Chester. Some of
his other playing partners were
-Moon Clifford, Reimo Nieri, Bob
Jacobs, E.F. Robinson, John Duerr,
myself and many others. Charles
Asa was a quiet man who enjoyed
the game and especially enjoyed
the conversations that took place
on the golf course. He .was fascinated by Reimo's comments about
Moon Clifford.
Later, Charles Asa quit playing
because of physical disabilities.
·Charles Asa Bradbury was a
man who enjoyed jokes. He always
had a sunny side.to his disposition
and for so.me strange reason he
liked my writings. Haa you notieed
that his car carried a bumper sticker? "Save the Rhino." Do you
know the story behind the bumper
sticker?
1
A most i"mportant quality that he
had occurred after he had his operation for cancer in 1987. I visited
him ril!ht after he had his opera-

dents
ftna.llld fonmost, b!Jt 6,000 pound paper baler was
tHis il llbo a community project.
inslllled iD die warebouse earlier
this month not only oxpllldinll its
ja."At the start of the project
were told Oallia Countians inlaU, but expmdina jobs u well.
wouldn't voluntarily separate their "The mon: volume, lhe men .P.bs
traSh." said Shealy. "We've .been thatcanbe~~~pplied,"Shealyaad.
proven wrong."
According to Sbelly, ~ and
In the begiAJ~ing, Riverview .plllstics are liken to Middlepon
Productions htiif jus&amp; one drop-off (600 pounds per barrel); lin and
site located at ODC for local resi- aluminwn cans so to Huntinall:ln:
dents wanting to have their trash and paper, (10,000 pounds) and
recycled. With such a tremendous cardboard (1,000 pounds per bale),
response and program expan.sion, are transported to l..ancast«. ·
three more permanent drop-off
But before the Jtiverview trucli:
sitea have been established in 'Rio leaves ODC. there is plenty of
Grande, Vinton and Thurman. work to done to prepare for each
Future sites being considered are · trip. Glass needs to be crushed,
· Cadmus, Mercerville and Chesh~ paper and cardboard need baled.
areas. ,
cans md plastics need washed OUL
Anyone wantina proof that resiAnyone who makel a drop-off
dents are recycling can been seen at ODC will more thlll likely see
in the Sprinj! Valley area. Some of Ralph, every employers' "dream
the homes m the Maple and Elm employee." One of the five fullDrive areas are participating in the time workers, Ralph literally gets
curbside pick-up portion of the into his w&lt;Xk, whether its lllllmping
recycling program.
down trash inside the dumpster to
Each household is given two to make m~ room, or running as fast
three buckets in which they put as he can from house to house to
their trash to be picked up each piclt up the buckets along the curbweek by a Riverview supervisor side piCk up.
.
and employees. "We hope to have
Not only do the workers need to
· approximately 2,000 households be taught how to perform th.eir
participatin~ in the curbside pick.
jobs, but they need to be trained
up this year,' stated Shealy.
how to stop working, says Shealy.
· One of the biggest moves the "We teach them how 10 take a··
program has taken has been into break. get a cup of coffee. If not,
It's warehouse at GDC this month. most of these workers wouldn't
Although the move was supposed know when to quiL"
to take place last August, the space
Linda, who is also a full-time
is certamly welcomed commented employee has become more confiShealy.
dent and helps on the curbside
Items accepted at Riverview for. pick-ups with Ralph and Homer
recycling include, tin and alu- Payne, hired throu~h the grant,
minum cans, glass, plastic, paper who serves as the driver. Curbside '
and just recently, cardboard. A pick-up isn;t simply picking up

we

Ethics committee missed some key points
WASHINGTON- The Senate
· Ethics Committee curiously found
only one villain in the Senate's role
in the savings and loan scandal Alan Cranston, 0 -Calif. The committee decided to pursue disciplinary action.aJ!:ainst him alone
among the ·~Keabng Five" senators
who got mixed up with S&amp;L highflier Charles Keating.
Keating's Lincoln Savings and
Loan collapsed in April 1989 and
left American taxpayers with the
bill of nearly $3 billion, the largest
in the thrift debacle. Keating also
sold more than $200 million in
now-worthless junk bonds to some
20,000 unsuspecting customers. in
Southern California.
Keating was able to run amuck
for so long because he. applied

Riverview
..
·-(Froii--.-RJVD:---:vmw:-·. _,...-:, "-=-1-·
were

'••

�•
Times Sentinel

March at, 1181

Pomeroy-Middleport

Horses... _ __.:.&lt;From-=--_a_o_as_ES~·.::_P•.::..ce_A_1&gt;

---Ar~a

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
.for food - and a way out oi theif frowned. '1t was only until after I beginning to fill out a little," lie
prison.
got the horses off that farm did continued, J!O&lt;!ding lhe animal's
. · As ·puddles of moisture would they call and say 'Let us )alow if ribs. "We re hopillg she'll do
forrn in lheir manure-filled pen, the we Clll do anything.'"
okay." .
.
horses would drink it up, Watson
Other county offiCials WCJe non· · As Watson begins to pass out
explained. I was the only water committal or not interesled. Only hay and com to the animals, the
they had.
with the help of Gallipolis City noise level begins to rise in the
"Their coats WCJe just all eaten Solicitor Doug Cowles was WMIOII bam. What was once a quiet and
up with lice and most of lhem were able to sign a canplaint ~the peaccfulltaYen becomes fiUed wilh
just bags of bones." he said. "The farm's owner and ftle ifwith the the sound of snorts, whinnies and
veterinarian said that a colt that one 6allia County Sherifra Depart· · pounding hooves - excitement
of the mares had was a year old, ment. Under the abandoned ani· over the caning meal.
but isn't any bigger than a three- mats section in the Ohio Revised
"When we brought them here,
month-old."
Coclc, Watson was able, by Jaw, to they would shy away from you and
As he turned onto another grav- remove the hones from the fann
~ hide against the wall," be said.
el road, Watson shoot his head, ,, Watson's community has J&gt;U]ied 'But now, they' ll come right up to .
Saddened by lhe lhought of lhe lit· together to help the hones and to · ~~- They're just as gentle as can
!le colt:
,
tal::e the financial and physical
"The mare just wasn't produc· responsibility of their care off Wat·
Although the horses have only
ing any milk for lhe colt, She just son
been at their new borne for a short
'.
wasn' t getting enough to caL"
,;I've bad 75 to 100 calls from time, bare spots in the animals
The I 2 animals, includ~ng .a people offering com and bay," he coats have begun to heal. Even lhe
young b~rro, w~uld have dted tf said. "Some of them just want to little burro was beginning to feel
some acaon wasn t taken:
know how ~ horses are doing and better.
COIIt were already bellnalng to heal,"lltlloqb be
LET'S EAT - This burro, one of the U
"When we got him here, he
Watson brought Galha County if they can come out and help feed
had only been at bls home ror four days.
l!nimall
&amp;avec!
from
the
Farm,
poSes
for
tbe
CIIJII•
Sanitarian Stuart Lentz with him them."
would just drag .those back legs
era
just'
before
feediag
time.
Rqugh
spots
on
bls
Watson stopped his truck in the because he was so stiff," Watson ,
_ and took pictures of the horses.
"Me and Stuart had to wade barnyard of the Lawren~_ County said. "He was so wesk he couldn't
Watson is limited in lines drawn on a map.
gry they have chewed thC bart off ;
through manure this high to get to a farm where the horse.s are now even bmy. But now he's doing bet· hisAlthoug~
time
and
resources
to
do
as
He
bring's
uP
anolher
incidence
all
the trees they can get to.
·
couple or them," he said, pointing housed. He got out and looted at ter." The burro whinnied his agree- much as he can for the animals, his
of
neglect
cattle
on
a
nearby
"But
I
can't
do
anything
about
to his knee. "He didn't seem to care lhe pasture where live horses were ment as Watson came nearer with a kindness seems limited only by
fium that have gone unfed for sev· t!tat," he said. ''That's out of my.
·,scoopful of com.
about that •. even though lte was graiing on new shoots of grass.
eral
weeks. The cattle are so hun- township."
·:
· Though the animals m:e improv·
weanng mce· dress pants and.
''Those are"looting a lot better,"
clothes. He seemed really con • he said with a smile. He no doubt · ing due largely to his initiative,
cemed and serious about lhe siiua· was thinldng about the conditions Watson is quick to thank others for
Showers and thunderstorms in
the east Saturday morning, then
lion.
of the animals when brought tliem · their help. · '
"The veterinarian (Allan E. becoming partly cloudy with a
Watson chuckled. "He even lost there four days before.
his shoe in the mud, but never
· Two mares in the group are Boster) checked them and gave us chance of showers and thunder·
pregnant and wiD give birth soon. medicine for nothing," Watson storms in the afternoon . In the
stopped going," he said.
But his smile fades and his brow Watson believes that the babies said. "The Gallia County Animal northwest partly cloudy with a
Welfare League and Mrs. Webb slight chance of showers and lhun.
furrows as he· hegins to describe mi'-ht survive.
how difficult it was to get lhe hors'She's going to nave her colt donaled hay to help out." Watson derstorms. Elsewhere partly sunny,
es away from the farm.
right here anytime," Watson said, also wanted to thank the volunteers breezy ..JIIith. highs middle 60s to
"lt just didn't seem like an~ne petting an obviously·pregnan~ daD- who donated their trailers to move around 70 in the south and in the
wanted to get involved,' he pled mare on the nose . "She1s lhe animals.
60s in the north. Saturday night,
rain likelY. in the nonh. The ~aio
~y 21-26, 1991
may become mixed with snow late.
Cloudy with a chance of rain elsewhere. Lows in the middle 30s to
around40.
Nothing can compare to the spectacular wonder of
. Sunday, rain or ~e likely in
the northeast. Mostly cloudy with a
Niagara Falls. Join escort Mary Fowler on this sixchance of rain in lhe northwest and
day motorcoach tour to Niagara Falls and Toronto,
central areas. Partly cloudy in the
far south. Highs in the 40s.
Canada. Don't miss this exciting tour!
Mooday through Wednesday
Fair Monday, lows in the middle
Call or stop
today!
20s to middle 30s. Highs in the
50s. Fair Tuesday, lows in lhe 30s,
highs middle 50s to middle 60s.
OAUIPOLii
446-0899
·
.
Wednesday, a chance of showers
Travel Agency Str~in(l tho gono~Wpublic u wo/lu our mornbon. ' ·
ilnd thunderstorms. Lows in the
40s, highs in the middle 60s to
'
middle 70s.
·
South Central
Saturday, partly su,nny and
breezy. The higlt 6S to 70. Southwest winds IS to 25 mph with
higher gusts. The chance of rain is
'
20percenL
~
Saturday night, cloudy with a
)
chance or rain. Colder with the low
I
- around 40. The chance of rain is 40
•
rl r
percent.
,
. Sunday, partly cloudy. The high
~
SUPP,E RTIME - This pregnant mare
from near starvation. W!!tson says tbls mare
around 50. The chance of min is 20
"enjoys a dinner or corn as she slowly recovers .
may give birtb any day.
percent.
..

Ohio weather

NIAGARA
FALLS

Hospital news ·

S

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•

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•

GALLIPOLIS-, Curtis Johnson, of Vinton, reported that a resi~ dence on State Route 325 had been broken into and that two itelils
• had been taken. Johnson staled lhat a chain saw and a bag of cloth; ing was stolen, valued at $225.
,
Rodney S. Clark, 23, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., was arresled and
•
: incarcemted for driving under the influence, failure to control, and
::· no operator's license by lhe State Highway PallO!.
•
Michael L. RosSiter, 22, Crown City, _was ~ted and incarc~­
, ated for disorderly conduct and pubhc mtoxtcallon by the Galha
· County Sheriffs DepartmenL

: Easter Egg Hunt is Saturday
•

; . GALLIPOLIS - The Annual Easter Egg hunt wiD be held in lhe
; • Gallipolis City Park at I I a.m., Saturday, March 30.
;
The event is sponsored by the Elks Lodge I 07, Emblem Club,
• Rax Restaurant, Ohio Valley Bank and lhe Gallipolis Parks and
• Recreation DeparUnenL
" '
~
There will.be over 2,000 toy filled colored Easter eggs in the
park with lhe panicipants divided into the following age categories:
, three and under; four to five; six to eight; and nine to 12.
· : Other activities include an Easter Bonnet Parade immediately
: following the hunt. Awards will he giyen for the most colorful,
; most unusual, Jllld the most traditional bonneL There will also be
. ; four golden Easter eggs, sponsored by Ohio Valley Bank, with a
; special present inside. ,
·
Rax's Uncle Alligator will be on hand to distribute free food cer• tificates and every participant will receive one bag of Easter candy.
(See LOCAL NEWS, page A6)

. '

Police officer gunned down

.

'

BULK GAS ·SUPPLIER
•HEATING
•HOT WATER

-

•COOKING
•CYLIN.DER TANKS

........

TANK. SIZES
AVAILABLE
.

•250 GALLON
•330 GALLON

•500 GALLON
.•1000 GALLON

HOT WATER TANKS, HEATERS, COLEMAN
TRAILER FUIINACES AVAILABLE

Haven't )UU done without a10ro long enough?•

BAUM LUMBER"

STAll IOUTE 248

CHESTEI

985-3301

Trump, competitor fight over executive
~: ATLANTIC CITY, N.J.'(UPI)
...:. It has all the makings or a prize
aght held, in one of the nation's
glitzY casinos.
.
But instead of cash, casino
industrY titans Donald Trump and
Steve, Wynn are doing battle in
court for a human prize, a gaming
- executive witll access to vital trade
ilecrets.
•' In separate court suits riled
•

Thursday and Friday, Wynn and
Trump are fighting for control of
Dennis Gomes, the 46-year-old former president of Wynn's Golden
Nugget Casino in L8s Vegas.
Trump staned the scrap when he
offered Gomes the top executive
slot at his Taj Mahal Reson Casi.
no, one of three casinos Trump
owns in lhe seaside resort city.

~filAR

•

';J'·~-.'l!

K1 DN EY STON E·liTHOTRI PSY

I

:- ~,.

S
TIRE
CENTER
JOII FULR- MAICUS FUlll
2tl W. Malll

OWIIEIS

i!d
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
V"l

Pomeroy

Th• Family ol proleulonal•

992-2101
1I

I

.Ji , .,.

~

' ''

\,

•

' ••

'

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SATURDAY,
MARCH
.
30,
1991
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~
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'•

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--------'~.~---------

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~&amp;~.,

(:)~ -t.~'

U.S. RT. 35/RIO GRANDE, OHIO
(614) 245-9442

'

,.

---- ·- .

·:-\.
~~

. Valley Drive, Point Pleaslnt, W.Va. 25550 (30t) 8~.

- ·''

~-

ACTIVITIES START AT 11:00 A.M.

SPRINii Vi\ IiI Y CIN~MA

for those who suffer from painful kidney stones. It's !mown as shock wave bthotrtpsy. But
we call it the "Stone Crusher."
,
With_lithotripsy, doctors use sound waves Instead of a scalpel to reduce kidney stOnes to
afirie sand, which can then be passed painlessly through urtne. That'sgoodnewsforkldney
·. stone sufferers, because that means no surgery. Less pain. A faster recovery. And lower
costs. And you don't have to travel to Charlestoll_Q,rColumbus to find lithotripsy technology
WE'VE aROUGHT THE "STONE CRUSHER" TO YOU. .
.
Can Pleasant Valley Hospital at (304) 675-4340 .. or consult your personal physician _
-to find out If llthotrtpsy can help you. .

J.

tragedy."
Karl Vultee of Beavercreek has
Mayor Richard Clay Dixon says he
been
charged with aggravated mut·
hppes "something positive" comes
der
in
the slaying.
from the shooting death of a city
Deputy
Chief Virgil_Mcpo~ald
pPlicc officer and the wounding of
said
Vultee
was spotted m hts piCk·
another officer.
.up
truck
on
the l:ity's east side at
: Officer William Whalen. 38, a
9:57
p.m.
Thursday and was
),.year veteran of the force, was
gurmed down Thursday night when stopped by Beane and Whalen. .
As Whalen stepped out of h1s
lie al!d Lt. Randy Beane, 33,
cruiser
the truck dri~er fired a
sfopped the dri,..er of a picjtup semiautdmatic
rifle' through a slidj:ruek.
ing
rear
window,
striking Whalen
"We are greatly saddened by
twiee
in
the
head,
McDonald SBid.
the loss of one of our own family
Beane
was
struck
in the lower
members, an employee truly dedi·
extremities
by
bultet·fragments.
the
Cjlted to his profession and to his
deputy
cllief
said.
.
.
community,' said Dixon. "I only
Vultee was arrested a shon ame
hOpe lhat something positive will later
at a Beaverqeet service sta~pme from this · community
tion.
·
·
The officers had stopped Vultee
to question him about an apparent
dispute
over a locked door at a
(\rmy Reserve units to
motel where he had been staymg.
'
He reportedly fired shots at the
come
home next week door
after he discovered a lockout
device had been placed on lhe door
to keep him from entering the
; By United Preas lnternlltlonal
' The first Ohio Army Reserve room.
unit de(lloyed to the Persian Gutr
followmg " Iraq's invasion of
IS:uwaitlast summer is scheduled to
rerum home next week.
" The 236lst Signal Center
Qctachmcnt in Alaon is to return to
Obio Tuesday. The Wlit became the
first Oltio group sent to the Middle
East last Aug. 27.
' About 200 members of the
2077th Army Reserve School in
WarrensviUe also are corning horne
next week, Those soldiers, who
Wer-e activated Jan. 21 and sent to
.Fort Gordon, Ga., in support of
OlliE IVIIItG SNOW 7110
AllleSION S1.50
Operation Desert Storm, are to
446-DtU
!Crum Friday.

-:-o~tYTON:- Ohlo-WPl) -

'

At Pleasant Valley Hospital, we'Ve put a revolutionary technique toworktn our community

': . eiUIE JOBS •OIL (HANGE
ALIGNMENT

EGG HU·N T

and

. ,_
. . -Local news briefs--. r-----------------~
Buy From A·L9cally Owned
:·Lawmen investigate B and E

deaths------- Gospel... .

a.m.

by@

•

Sunday Tlmee-Sentlnei-Pege-A5

(FromGOSPEL.pqeAt&gt; •
Caffio..AIIIIin racbeduled her. visit playing piano at age six, and.three
Rick Enevoldsen
. her parentS, two childten, Boonie Wesley W. Scott ·
GALLIPOLIS • Wesley W. to ~lis fer Aprll6. The work· yeas later was ciRcling the senior
NBW CONCORD • Rick and Thomas Michael, and a lwochr
and choir Of her father'S Church. As a
80, of 129 Kenyon Dr.. Gal· ShOp Will begin at 9:30
Enevoldlca, 29, a former T~s er, re~= ~~:Tuesday,i~.m. Scott,
end
at
3:30
p.m.,
with
a
break
for teen, she was appoinled Mirtistu of
died Friday, Marcb 22 ,
Plains resident, died on Fnday, at Fisher Funeral Horne, Mi dle- lipolis,
lunch,
which
is
included
in
the
S4 Music for the Churches of God in
199I at Pinecrest Care Center, foJ.
Man:h 22, 1991 in a work-related
ChrisL
accident in Atlanta, Ga.
pon. Burial wiD be in Riverview lowing seven years of failing regilullion fee.
.
After
the
work~:£'
students
Her African-American heritage
He wu bora on January 29, ee.;~ may Cllll at the funeral health.
will
become
pert
o{
e-Austin's
is
suong,
and has been traced to
He was born Nov. 8, 1910 in
performance
in
the
Ariel.
A
won·
slaves
in
Alabanla.
Caffle-Auslin's
~~in::~.Darwyn and home, Mooday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to Cheshire, son of the late Elza and
derful
~
is
expected
by
-Ariel
father
is
ihe
aon
of
a fmt genera·
Ether FlfD ScoU.
Besidel his parents, he is sur. 9 p.m.
Artistic
DirectCll'
Lora
Lynn
Snow.
lion
slave
and
himself
was a share·
He' was a retired employee of
vived,~ ~OlD' sisters, Mrs. RayShe noted the acoustics of the 1895 cropper. She was taught the old
· the Gallipolis S~ate. Institute, theater are outsllmding, and should songs and old ways, passed down
mond (Leigh) Canter of Racine, Douglas Raike
.
•
(GDC), as a supemsor 111 the recre·
Mn. Lea (Lynn) Harper, Lilburn,
.
.
·
ational dcparlmeot, retiring in produce a rich sound for the gospel by her parents.
Ga., Melui6 Voselsong, Little
Adm~ion to the 8 p.m. concert
G~LIS FERRY, W.Va. · ' 1972; He was a member oi the First performance.
Hocklna. IIIII Pebeoca Evevoldsen, Douglas
Ethel Caflie-Austin is a IIICJ'(Iber is $6, and ticket are on sale at sev·
Raib,
87,
of
Oalli)IC)Iis
Church
of
the
Nazarene,
Morning
,
Lilburn, Oa.; four IJrolhers, Charles
of the West Virginia Commi!l!!ion · eral locations in Gallipolis. The
of Viratnli, Chuck, of Newark, Ferry, W.Va., died Friday, March Dawn .Masonic Lodge 7,. Scottislt of Arts and Humanities, appoinled workshop is open to the public and
Tim, olDk:klon, Tenn., and Steve. 22,1991 at Holzer Medical Center, Rite Aladdin Temple of the Shrine, by Goveml&gt;f Gaston Capenon and cost is $4, which includes lunch at
VFW Post 4464 and American
of Columbus: and several nieces foUowing a long illness.
He
was.
born
July
28,
1903
in
Legion
Lafayette P.o st 27. Mr. has been a representative for lhe · Paint Creek Baptist Ch'wurc~h~·-............:~~~~~~~;
and r.qJIIDws.
,..
Ironton.
son
of
the
late
William
P.
Scott
was
a U.S. Navy veteran of Mid-Atlantic Arts Council's meet·
Funeral services will be held on and Mary Jane Fettm Raite."
ing
on
minoritieS'
in
the
arts
in
World War D. a life member of the.
Monday at 10:30 a.m . at MockHe
was
a
retired
.
e
mployee
of
·
G:allipolis Shrine Club and the Washington, DC.
Miller Funeral Home in New Con: the M.T. Epling Company.
She has performed with many
Recrealional Association of Ohio.
cord. Barill will be in Bloomfield
well-know
gospel artists such as
Survivors include his wife,
He is survived by his wife,
Frienda may call at the funeral Aileen
·
Albertina
Walker,
Shirley Caesar,
Raite; tw'o sons, Christa Hilt-Scon, whom he mar·
home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. at 7 Doug~ Wolfe
the
Wirulns,
and
Edwin
and Walter
Raike Jr., or Oleshire and .ned i\ug. 22, 1936; one son, Roger
.
p.m. 1o 9 p.m. on Sunday.
Hawkins,
ill
addition
to
directing
Ric~ Raite of Gallipolis Ferry, w. Scott of ~ucyrus; three sisters,
Fo!lowiag the service, the fllll)i· Vf.VL,
her
own
groups
in
lhe
Charleston,
:laughters, Mrs. James ~ Kail, Dorothy Roush and
ly will return to the home of Mr. (Betty) two
,
.
Baldwin
of Gallipolis·and Gertrude Hysell, all of Cheshire; W.Va. area.
and Mrs. ~aymond Canter in . Mrs. Dale (Kathleen).Ruleo
.
Caffie-Austin
has
also
written
or
or ML one brother, Paul St:ott of Midlile·
Racine.
Juliet,
Tenn,;
one
sister,
Mrs.
Mae port; th.ree grandchildren; two arranged the inusic and directed
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Morrow of Pt. Pleasan~ W.Va.; 10 great-grandchildren; and two. step- two plays relating to black heritage
musiC. "I am afraid that this generAlice M. Matthews
~dchildren; and IS great·grand· great-jrandcliildren.
ation
is losing sight of their gospel
: GALLIPOLIS - Alice Mae children.
·
, · Funeral services will be con·
Maahews, 79, of Gallipolis, died
Three brothers and one sister ducted 2 p.m. Sunday at Waugh· cultural heritage and its rich histoTbursdal', March 21 at Holzer also preceded him in death.
Halley-Wood FWieral Home wilh ry.
tradi .
'.'1 want to carry the
uon to
~edical Center. She was a retired
Funeral services will be con- Rev. Michael Bearden officiating.
e)n.pplltoyec of the Mason County ducted 2 p.m. Monday at the Burial will be in Gravel Hill Ceme· see that it is not lost." she said.
Active in the music of her her·
lfo8id of EdUcation.
Waugh-Halley-Woo'd Funeral tery Cheshire.
• Surviving are two daughters, Home. Burial will be in Mound
Friends may call at the funeral · itage since a childhood, she began
OBEDIENCE TRAINING IS NOT
I;ouise A. Musgrave of Gallipolis Hill Cemetery.
home on Saturday from 2 ui 4 p.m.
and Nina M. Vaughan of Point
JUST FOR THE SHOW RING!!
Friends may call at tl)e funeral and 7 to 9 p.m. Masonic services
home on Sunday from 4 to 9 p.m.
will be conducted by Morning
P.leasant.
. FOR JNFORMA TION ON CLASSES
• Funeral is 2 p.m. Sunday at
Dawn Masonic Lodge 7, Saturday
Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point
at 8:30 p.nl. '
. Veterans Memorial Hospital
CALL 446-1864
I!Jeasant, with buria,J in Jordan LeWis R. Schwartz
There will be a graveside flag
.Friday admissions • None..
SHERRY ROBERTS-:-TRAINER
presentation by VFW Post 4464.
Friday discharges'. None.
Gemetery.
•
POINT PLEASANT - Lewis
Maxine C.,Michael
Ruebcn Schwartz, 85, Point Pleas·
. POMBROY - Maxine C. ant, died at his residence Friday.
Michael, 67, of Pomeroy, died Sat·
Born March 30, 1905 in Letan,
Urday, Mlln:h 23, 1991 at the home son of lhe late John G. and Mary L.
of her daughter.
(Donohue) Schwartz, he was a
Born in McArthur on Oct. 12, retired farmer.
t923, she was a daughter of the late
He was also preceded in dealh
Walter and Edna Oifer Gilmore.
by four sisters and three brolhers. .
· Surviving · are sons, Larry
Surviving are his wife, Mary E.
(Erma) Michael of Gering, Ncb.; · (Wilcoxen) Schwanz; three daugh·
· a))d Raymond (Debbie) Michael, ters, Mae B. Pullin and Pearl E.
. Qarwin, Terry Michael of Rutland Pullin, both· of Lomin, Ohio, and
and Tiln Michael of Hometown, Diane L. McGuire of Dayton; two
W.Va.; .a daughter Mrs. Richard sons, Lewis R. Schwartz Jr. of
(barliene) Stewart of Middleport; Leon, and George W. Schwartz of
five brothers, Clarence (Freda) Point Pleasant; two sisters, Elsie A.
Gilmore of Middleport, Richard Mayes of Clinton, Ohio, and Millie
(Zelma) Gilmore, Gene (Lucy) M. DeWeese of Point Pleasant; 20
Qilmore and James (Donna) grandchildren and 15 great-grand·
Qilmore aU of ~meroy, Byron children.
(Connie)· Gilmore of Columbus;
Services will be 2 p.m.' Monday
three sisters, Mrs. Roland (Joan) in the Wilcoxen Funeral Home, .
Wise of Rutland, Leona Eblin of Point Pleasant, with the Rev.
!'!arwin . and Margie Ward Off Wilmer ' 'Bud" Richmond official·
l)ngsville; 16 grandchildren, five ing. Buriat will be in Eckard
gJ'C8I grandchildren, sevtnll nieces Chapel ·Cemetery, Point Pleasant.
nephews.
.
. . Friends may call at the funeral
· : She was preceded m death by · home Sunday from 7-9 p.m.

&lt;f/l) !):i'' i . 't~s· meiJ·r.~·tn#f!t&amp;;~~~rfllc?fts~ !\;1,;·

~ON~" ·

Pomeroy-Middleport Galllpolla, OH Point Pleaeent, wv

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�March 24, 1991

nmu Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleaaant, wv

.;_Local news briejs-

On Friday at 9:42 Lm., Rlllland squad ~ to Loaa Sbeet rot
Ethel Orueser, who wu lllrcn 10 Holzer Medal Ceorer.
At 12:03 p.m., S}'IIICUie squad went to Clrlctoo Street£!. Connie
Stanley. She was tieated but not tmnsported. At 2:3~:·· Racine
squad went to Reedsville for Bill Andenon, who was
to Vererans Memorial Hospital. At 3:12p.m., Pomeroy squad went to lhe
Meigs Senior Citizens Caller for Bernice Carpenler. She was Iaten to
Holzer. At 6:19p.m., Rutllnd squad wentiO Mdp Mine 2. Teueuce
Coolins was transported to Veterans. At 8:52 p.m., Rutland squad went
to Long Sueet IIJd transported Ethel Grueser 10 Pleasailt Valley Hospi·

Page-A~undlly

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(Jirla LOCAL NEWS, pqe A4)

: Young transported to Orient

· · POMEROY • DeM Y~ of Columbus was ll'lll.!pOrted 111 Friday
: to Orient Corrccliona F~~:ihty 10 begin serving a sentence on two
· charges of tbeft by doviption.
· Y~Jae
received lhe ~e~~tence from .Meigs
Common Pleas
Court J
Fred W. Crow mIller YOOIII was~
811ilty of the two
charges by Crow. Yoaq waived bis rightiOa~trial
Ac&lt;:ordinllll lhe Melli Cowlty Sberitl'a Depllbiitllt,
was
sentenced 10 two 18 monih consecutive sentences, with lhe
sentence Suspenc!cd. YOUJII placed on five years )X'Obalion and was also
ordered 10 pay ralillllion, ..Ycourt costs IIJd cooperate widl offlcials
in further invesriplioQ I&amp;IJIISldle oilier pany in~lved.

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·Parsonage B&amp;E investigated
POMEROY • Meip County Sberiff's lleplllies we~ ~ 10 the

:Mount Moriab Cbun:ll of God par90II8£e in Letart Township 6n Friday
night to investipte a ~nakina and eoteririg ~port.
·
Accordinf.c!elhe n:pon. a pane of glass was broken out of the frmt

· door of lhe
llld a SIIIISW!&amp; microwave was stolen. The incident
is believed 10 have OCCIQied IOIIICiime between 8 p.m. on Thursday
IIJd Sp.m. on Friday.
·

OH-flolnt Pleasant, WV

March 24,1981. I

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Sunday

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HiaJtway Plltrol, Clarlc.was westbOund near Sll!t Koute 7 when ~ . .,
IIIIJII'eDlly loll cootrol of his car in a curve. His 198~ ~~ ~
CUd.- then went ofT the left side of the roadway •.striking a utility

OHIO VALLEY·CHRISTIA
SCHOOL·

poleciart was c:ited ror driving under the influence, no. operator's

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licenle and failure to control.·

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On Satunlay 81 4: 17 Lm., Middlepat squad for Ernie Wclb, who
was laken 10 Veteillls. At 6:50a.m., Middleport !qUid went to Mur. ray Hill Road for Maxine Midlael. She was clcad on arrival.

•

3 hurt in one-car crash

GALLlPOLIS - ~ West Virginia residents suffcml minor .
in~ Saturday morning •
the car IIIey wm riding io struck a
utility pole on Gallia County Road 23.
Rodney S. Clarlc, 21, and his passengers, James A. Newman, 13,
and Mike McCany, 3S, all of Point Pleasant. we~ transDOrled to
Pleasant Valley Hospilal by the Oallia County EMS. Clad:: ~fused
~ent and the hospital had no ~ord of the OthCI two being
ttWed.
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A&lt;;tording Ill a repon from the G~-~eigs I!Ost of_ die State

1991 WVCEI, STATE BASKETBALL CHAMPS!
CLASS ''AA''

Seanie Hills
Easter B.uany

Two charged with DUI

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POMEROY· The Meip Cowlty Sheriff's Depanmeot arrested two
men for drivillg llllder die mfiuence on Friday evening.
· · Paul Laudermilt of Port Worth, Texas was charged Iller be drove
1
·his 1981 Mercury otf Sllle Roure 7 into a field.
. Shortly after midnight, Thomas Swan of Racine was charged with
. driving under die inf)~, faiiiii'O to CORIIOI, and ~g undct SUS·
. pension after he illl his vehicle off the roldway IICIIi koyal Oak Palt.
Also amsted for disorderly conduct wast aoHiennilt's brothel', William
Swan of Middlc:port. Boch subjec:ls wae lodged in die Mew COIUity
Jail.
1

Wll hop to your home •
business' • s~hool • day
care center, etc!
Surprise your Boss • the Kids

A.SALUTE TO THE' OHIO VALLEY
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL DEFENDERS'
1990-91 BASKETBALL TEAM WHO
HAVE CAPTURED:THE WEST VIRGINIA
CHRISTIAN EDUCATION ASSOCIA liON
STATE BASKETBALL .TITLE!

• your significant otherlll
For more informati-'bnd to set up
appointment - call 446-7150.

:Meigs EMS answers calls
: POMEROY • Meigs Emergency Medical Services answered eight
calls for assistance on Friday and early SIIIUrday.

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THE HEART OF YOUR BEITER BUSINESS
COMMUNITY
.
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..· Reader Ads prepared by ,GROUP MA:RKETING and PROMOTIONS

STANLEY A. ~AUNDERS MONUMENTS
Established Before 1903

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BA~RY &amp; SO.NS PAINTING &amp; BUILDING

.
Locally Owned &amp; Operated by Jim Berry
.
Don't let.the gravesite of your loved one go unmarked. A monument should reverently and beautifully •
Skill, in~egrity and total service are all in your corner when you rely on BARRY &amp; SONS PAINTING &amp;
express the fact that a loved one lived, not that he or she passed on .
BUILDING for your next building project.
Locally, Stanley A. Saunders Monuments, at 352 3rd Avenue in Gallipolis, phone 446-2327 or 593-6586,
As one of the area's leaders in the painting, building and remodeling field, this firm has won the respect
features one of the finest displays of monuments and markers. There are several sizes and styles to choose
and admiration of building experts throughoot the area.
· 1 Located on Nebo Road, in Rio Grande, phone 379-2320 or 1-800.379-2320, these builders realize their
from and employees of Stanley A. Saunders Monuments will be glad to discuss your needs.
Their stone craftsmen offer years of experience in lettering and their workmanship is guaranteed. Some
good reputation is squarely on the line each time they accept a large or small contract. Be certain you rely'
unique facets of this business are their quality memorial and monuments.
on a contractor who pla·ces customer satisfaction above all else:
The writers of this Heart of Your Better Business Community section are pleased to call the unexcelled
Fromthei~~ialplanning, toaccurateestimates, tocompleteon-th~obsupervision, to a realistic completion products and personalized service of Stanley A. Saunders Monuments to your attention. To discuss your needs
date, the profesSionals at BARRY &amp; SONS PAINTING &amp; BUILDING employ only competent workers and use only
or for assistance in pr~~need plans, contact them at 446-2327 or 593-6586.
.. durable, toP9rade building materials. ~et these experts give you a bid. BARRY &amp; SONS PAINTING &amp; BUILDING
·specializes in. Painting Interior and Exterior, custom home buil(ling, garages, concrete work, roofing, siding,
CENTURY 21 BIG BEND RE~LTY, INC. ~
windows and dryV'iall, in fact anything concerning your build.ing needs both interior and exterior.
'
Russell D. Wood; Broker
, .~ .. .,.
We the writers of this Heart of Your Better Business Community section, congratulate BARRY &amp; SONS
PAINTING &amp; BUILDING for continued dedication to excellence on every job.
If you find that real estate isg~tti~g more complex and confusing everyday, or that the thought of making
the btggest Investment 1n your life IS oyerwhelm1ng, we urge yo~ to relax and let the friendly real estate
professiOnals at Century 21 Btg Bend Realty Inc. located at 652 2nd Avenue, in Gallipo'lis, phone 446-7107
JORDAN'S GAS SERVICE
share their wealth of experience, training and professional expertise in real estate .with you _
. .If you use propane you'll want to be sure to look for certain qualities in your distributor. Perhaps the
It doesn't matter whether you are buying or selling, Century 21 Big Bend Realty Inc. deals with every
most tmportant will be the quality of the fuel and the COil)petency of the service you recieye.
•
transaction in terms and figures everyone can understand.
,
.Locally, JORDAN'.S GAS SERVICE, located at U.S. Rt. 35-and Starcher Hamrick Rd . (3 miles East of Rio
Their professional judgement in property appr,aising . has. been of significant· value to area property
Grande), phone 245-9119, delivers first quality Forrell gas.
owners. W1th therr knowledge of the ma.rket, and therr deta1.led I1st of recent sales, Century 21 Big Bend Realty
L. P_gas at competitive prices. As for the services, you'll get t)'ie kind of competent, trustworthy service
Inc. can help you determ1ne the best pnce for any re!'l estate you are buying or selling . They are constantly
you 'd expect from a locally operated company.
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updated on the newest developments on mortga,ges, 1nterest rates and values, and although some of the
Everyone at JORDAN'S GAS SERVICE goes a long way to make friends. Their delivery equipment is
recent financing plan~ seem rather complicated, you can always rely on ·them for sound advice and
always well maintained so. that your order .can be delivered when promised. Helpful advice on energy
knowledgeable answers.
'
conservatton IS cheerfully gtven and to assure you of competent billing and to keep your account straight, ·
All in all, we suggest you take the confusion and worryout to the real estat~ market by contacting Century
JORDAN'S GAS SERVICE makes use of meter printed invoices on all bulk (leliveries.
21 B1g Bend Realty Inc. whether your needs are res1dent1al, farms, commerCial, ~ppraisal~ large or small.
We ,the writer5 of this Hearfof Yoor Better; Business Community section, suggest you rely on JORDAN'S GAS
We, wnters of th1s Heart of Your Better Busmess Commun1ty section, for the second ~onsecutive year
SERVICE for quality propane, compet~ive prices and dependable service. For seiVice or information phone 245-91 19.
recommend that all of our readers call t.his excellent professional real estate firm today, or stop by their offices
10 Gall1pohs for all of your.real estate needs. We know you'll be glad you did! Century 21 Big Bend Realty Inc.
SIDELINE SPORTS
1s a member of International &amp; Relocat1on Services. (Each Centu~"''ffice is independenJiy owned &amp;
Locally Owned &amp; Operated Since July of 1990 by Mark Allen
operated .
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.,
In this area, team participation sports means quality uniforms, clothing, shoes, and equipment from
SIDELINE SPORTS, serving you from theirconvenient location at 334 2nd in the .French Square, phone 446.'!413.
HOUCK'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING INC.
.Area individuals. coaches and officials can rely on SIDELINE SPORTS to provide them with quality
Locally Owned &amp; Operated by Vernon Houck
selections rn team uniforms and Official equipment. Serving your team uniform and individual needs year
·
(with 19 years of experience)
·
,,
round, SIDELINE SPORTS featuresT-shirts, caps, pants, shorts, sport jackets, athletic socks, etc. with complete
~thin the walls of your home and ~ffice are networks of pipes which bring water to your faucets, and
monogramm1ng and screen pnntlng available. Any color o.r style combination,you want is available for men,
hot a1r to your rooms. W1th such a soph1st1cated System, and the demands put on it every day it is little wonder
women and youths. In addition SIDELINE SPORTS is striving to feature all types of sporting apparel for
that things occasionally go awry.
'
workout, aerobics, running, etc. Plus they are also your local headquarters for all.types of NIKE brand sports
footwear fr;&gt;r any possible event.
·
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Having a single contractor you .c?uld rely on for sal~. service, or installation of duct and pipe •ystems
W?uld be 1deallyconven1entwouldn I 1t? The wntersofth1s Heact of Your Better Business Community section
A complete selection of name brand equipment is also sold here. Both .team and individual customers
th1nk that people 1n th1s area have such a contractor: Houck's Plumbing &amp; Heating Inc., on Mill Creek Road
are welcome. Select baseballs, softballs, bags, gloves, athletic shoes, practice equipment, soccer and safety
outside the city limits on Rt. 1 in Gallipolis, phone 446-9638.
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equipment. All nationally known brand name equipment is available at competitive prices.
. . Whether it's installation, orfixing clogs and leaks in pipes that are already there or making sure that the
SIDELINE SPORTS is also your local headquarters for licensed Professional and College apparel and
carry a full line for most teams.
atr IS runmng through your vents the w_ay 1t should, they are professionals at Houck's Plumbing &amp; Heating
Inc. who can.help you . They come to res1dences or bus1nesses, and they come fast. They work hard, and ihey
We, the writers of this Heart of Your Better Business Community section, are pleased to recommend
do the work for a reasonable price.
that you shop SIDELINE SPORTS for all of your uniforms, sporting goods and apparel needs. We're sure you 'll
be glad you did!
.
. Plumbing and heating are the very environment of modern life. Don't trust your living environment to
anyon~ less than the skilled, licensed, and experienced employees of Houck's Plumbing &amp; Heating Inc. We,
the wnters of ·this Heart of Your Better Business· Community section wholeheartedly for the second .
TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING
consecutive year recommend Houck's Plumbing &amp; Heating Inc. ~~'· an honest, efficient, and professional
For complete professional welding and machining services TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING has come
contractor able to handle any problem .t~at could arise in your home or office.
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to be re!jarded as one of the best firms in their field .
For years this reliable company has been providing expert services to businesses, farms, industries and
THE WISEMAN AGENCY INC.
homeowners alike. From a simple welding job in their shop or in the field with their portable units to more complex
fabricating work, TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING can handle it all, large or smalL The people at this fine firm
Insurance &amp; Financial Service
are fully qualified to do ttie work promptly and professionally and pride themselves on friendliness.
Tom Wiseman C.I.C., Gary Roach C.I.C~. Mark Curry CFP and Sandra Perkins
The owner, Mike Haley, has made it a point to hire skilled, competent employees for all phases of his
. When trying to decide which insurance company to insure with, remember one thing : yo~r inClependent
business. They offer the kind ·.of expert craftsmanship that comes thmugh years of exR&amp;rience . Services
1nsurance agent doesn't work for any big corporation with the accompanying red tape. he works for YOU /
provided by TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING include portable and in,shop welding, machinery services for
Therefore,since he's not bound by endless big corporation policies which often r~s4lt in the insured being
heavy and farm equipment as well as metal fabricating work, plus TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING features
treated more l1ke.the computer read-out sheet than a person, your independent agent can design that
new radiators and radiator repairs such as blowoot and recoring, and specialize in one day service for your
package whrch Will g1ve you and your family peace of mind for a lifetime.
convenience.
, As an expe.rt in all phases of insurance, incl~ding life: auto, boat, motorcycle, mobile home, disability
We, the·writers of this Heart of Your Better Business Community section, are pleased to suggest that
rncome pmtectron, f~re: crop, and bus1ness, he can effectively handle your TOTAL insurance needs.
all of our readers contact TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING for all their welding and metal fabricating and
Your Independent 1n~ur~nce agent in ttl is area that w~ recommend is The,Wiseman Agency lnc.located
radiator
needs. They are located at 17 Cole in Pomeroy, phone 992-376B .
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at 451 2nd Avenue 1n Gall1polls, phone 446-3643. When th1s respected agent stops out to your home or office
to dtscuss protect1on, you Ube surprrsed at h1s low key presentation -quite the con~rary of many insurers.
TREASURE HOUSE OF CERAMICS
To be ondepende~t of ftnanc1al worrres, rely on your independent agent. Call The Wiseman Agency Inc.
. •Now featuring Porcelain Dolls•
at 446-3643 and put Insurance womes behind you . We, the writers of this Heart of Yoor Better Business ·
~ommun1ty sect1on h1ghly re.commend The Wiseman Agency Inc. for the second consecutive yearfor all your
If you're among the many looking for an exciting and creative new hobby, let the friendly people at
Insurance and frnancral servrce needs.
TREASURE HOUSE OF CERAMICS, located at 432 Pike Street in Gallipolis, phone 446-7387. Here they will
show you their stock of beautiful ceramic merchandise and supplies .
Together with their fine line of high quality merchandise and realistic prices, these friendly people can
KENNY'S AUTO CENTER
show
you
how to inexpensively begin now on that new hobby you have in mind. If you look, they can give
Good clean, low mileage cars &amp; trucks
you complete lessons in the art of ceramic-making . Call 446-73B7 for information concerning hoors.
. Locally Owned &amp; Operated by Kenny Reynolds
Notonly are hobbies of this kind very enjoyable, but they are a good way to relax through creating many
.For too long a trme, automobrle dealers considered "used cars" and "used trucks" as a sideline to the
practic;~l
and beautiful articles for home decorating and gift-9iving . TREASURE HOUSE OF CERAMICS are now
bustness of selling new models.
.
featuring beautiful porcelain dolls. They also feature Greenware, flowers and ~upplies for special occasions
Things have changed and one of.the big reasons is the kind of business operated by Kenny's Auto Center.
along with a'complete gift shop for your convenience. With Memorial Day not far away TREASURE HOUSE
They beliew that the used car and truck buyer is j~st as important as the new car and truck buyer. They are
OF CERAMICS have beautiful handmade flower arrangements for the gravesite of your loved ones. Call
determined to gove each customer the finest ~lily, and the best possible price. They have a large family of
446-73117 to place your order in advanc~ .
.
customers who return because they know that Integrity, seMCe and assurance lilf quality are passwords here.
We suggest to the people of this area who are looking for a constructove and fun way to enjoy their
. The safe way to buy a used car or trusk is from Kenny's Auto Center located at 264 Upper River Road
spare hours, that they stop in, or phone 446-7387. They'll be more than happy to ass1st you in your start to
1n Galhpohs phone 446 9971 .
saving money on gifts and home accents.
They take personal pride in every used car and truck they sell, and on-the-spot financing truly makes them
The writers of this Heart of Your Better Business Community section highly recommend TREASURE
·
a "one-stop• headquarters for yoor automotive needs.
HOUSE OF CERAMICS to this and the surrounding areas for many pleasing hours of self-t!njoyment and lor
We,. the writers of Heart. ofYoor Better Business Community section, for the second consecutive year
their knowledge and inexpensive merc:randise. Why not stop by on Pike Street and see for yourself,.
would hke to recommend th1s f1ne dealer to all of the many readers. They are open for your convenience
Monday · Frrday 9:00a.m. to 6:00p.m. and Saturday 9:00a.m. to 3:00p.m.

Congl'afUiafiong
ON A JOB WELL DO.NE!
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WVCEA STATE CHAMPS: Coach Greg. Atkins, Assistant Coach Bill
Burleson, Benton Hafl, Dax Hill, Greg •Wray, Chris Graham, Matt Little,
Mike McCleese, Jeff Peavley, Jerry Back, and Jonathan Turner.

PROUD!

Nikki Saunders, Hollie Bartels, Cindy' Sheets, Lora .
· Tucker, Beth Blevins, and Christy Mock.
CH~ERLEADERS:

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Anonymous Fans
Sandra Adams
Stephen AdQms
Penny Burleson
William Burleson
Hannah Burleson
Sora!Jeth Burleson
...Scott Birchfield
Gary Bowman
Connie Bowman
lisa Bowman
Brad Bowman
Tim &amp; Dianna Beaver
Hannah &amp; Nathan Beaver
•
Beth Blevins
•
'•
Jim &amp; Nancy Blevins
Darlene Beaver
Joyce Cochran
Jim (ochron
Rachel Cochran
Charles Cox
Carolyn Cox
Brad Cox
Mary Conn
leah Danner
· Kristen Dassylva
Jeremy Evans
' Seth Easton

T.J. Frasher
Ryan McCleese
Melissa Morgan
Heather Fleming
I
Nicholas Mulholand
Jennifer Fleming .
.·'
Heath Massie
Jami Gianechi~i
Gabe McQueen
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Dina Gianechini
' Mr. &amp; Mrs. John North, Jr. ·
Michael Gionechini
. Debbie North
Courtney Goooch
Chelsea -Gooch- . ---...-_ .. _ .. _____._ .._____ ---- Alvis Pollord-fomily--·- - ·-.. ---·
Mark Palmer
Tom Gooch
Gerry &amp; Carolyn Prall
Audette Gooch
Keith Prall.
Ron Hickmon
Paul Queen
Leah Hickman .
Stephen Roberts
Aaron Holley
Koren Roberts
Shelly Henson
Philip Roberts
Anna Hamrick
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Dave Rees
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Jay Allen Jarvis &amp; Family
Bud Rice
Benjamin King
Jeff Smith
Ronnie Keenan Family
Marsha Smith
Rachel Lusher
Nathan Smith
Michael Little
Sarah Smith
Sarah Miller
Rick &amp; Carla Swain
Billy Miller
Dennis Salisbury
Ginny Miller
Polly Salisbury
larry &amp; Lori Miller
Kelsey Salisbury
Sue Murray
Garrison Salisbury
Erica Massie
· Jordan Shaffer
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Melvin Mock
Jerry Sayre
Jill Mock

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\

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CAll AND ELEANOR
I

ATKINS
"A CLASS ACT!"

..

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DR. &amp; MRS.
FRED WILLIAMS
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•·•J

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DRS. MARK AND SUZANNE MilE
WALKER AND FAMILY

: .Andrew, Nathan, Michael
: : &amp; Christopher Williams

MI. &amp; MRS. RICK
SIMS &amp; ANDREA
"We're Pred of All
ef 'to•"

"WAV-TO 001
MR. &amp; MRS.
' FRED PYLES

.

"C.. ar•t•latlon"

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MR. BUILISON AT
AMERICAN IRIEDERS
SERVICE
"Jo~

Ifell Dote" ·

:;FROM
c'"l"'''''''"'
Sug1/
FLASH'S MOM
BILLY JO

·Glenn, Sue, Amy and

AI... lcenhow•

"Oreat Jo•, l•r•l"

JEFF DONNELY
"C.. Irltulatlo•• •••
Jo~ Well Doael"

BIG DAVE'S GYM

"c,..,,•••,••,...

o~cs

D•'••4er•l"

. GREG ATKINS

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•••

•I

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"Oreal Johl"

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'••

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SLONE ·
"#1 We Knew Voa Coal• Do It" .
BILL AND CATHY
WRAY "Terrlflo
. Joh, Our• I"

•
•

'•
'•

STEVE, LISA, AND DUSTY

GEORGE GIBBS
"~ ou're the Betti"

Ashl1y Alan &amp; Noltali• Pylos

, Mary Sayre .
laura Sayre .
Cindy Sheets
Daniel Sizemore
Shaun Tate
Iris Tate
lora Tucker
---RacheHucker -- _. _.. · · ·
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Michael Tucker
Jonathan Taylor '
Jessica Vickers
Aneso VanMatre
Amber Wolfe
Jeremy Wolfe
Brian Willia111s
·Rob Wilson
Eli Wilson
Amanda Wilcox
..,. .Victoria Wikox
James M. Wilcox
Diana Woodward
Joe White
G.E. Woodward
Geo'rge Woodward, Jr.
(annie Zinn
Christy Mock

STA11 FAIM INS.
,_.......,

SIIIING VAlLEY l'lAZA

GAWPOLIS, OH.

UnLE STAR

BOWMAN'S

RICK PERDUE

332 SICOND AVE,
GAUIPOUS, OH.

Hom.c:are Mallcal Supply
70 PINI S1111T
GIWPOUS, J)H.

Sitfefine Sports

JC PENNEY CO.

OHIO liVER

334 Se&lt;ondAI&gt;o. • Gallipolio, Ohlo '511.11
&amp;U · ~~6

WINISIIIUI IIPAIIS
IUUSIYI ..STAIS • CRACKS
eSCUTCIIIS - Y · •
18141448-1127

CATALOG SALES CENTER

PLAZA

.. 13

OHIO IIVR PLAZA

GALUPOUS, OH•

:·co•ORATUUTIONS"
.'

16141446·1525

&gt;

.,

i

IRVIN'S
GLASS SERVICE '

EASTERN AYE. a GALUPOLIS
16141 446-4423

MID-STATE, INC •
367-0600

"WAY TO 801"

J.D. NORTH

PRODUCE CO.

110 Yllll n., GAWPOUS ·
(6141 446·1931

MISS PAULA'S
DAY CAIE ONTD
410 JACKION PIKE
GALLIPOLIS. OH .
1114) 441·1224

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Pomeroy-llddleport · Gllllpoll8, OH Point Pll818nt, wv

Page-AS-Sunday nmee Sentinel

Michael J. McGinnis, 49, itt. 3,
Gallipolis, no front liunse plate
installed; Rickey L. ~as. 25,
.
.
• GALLIPOLIS • In Gallipolis Stephen R. Schlniaer. 2i, 23 Burg- lrooton, $81, safety VIolation; 4lld
Municipal Coun Thursday and Fri- er St., $15; Edward R. Siders, 27, Bernice M. Gardner, 66, 617 1(2
day, Eddie A. Mayes, 26, of Point 547 Burnette Rd., Gallipolis, $15: Fifth Ave., Gallipolis, $43, failure
Pleasant, W.Va., was fmed $750, Annette S. Siders, 28, 541 Burnette · to yield. ·
Speeding bonda were forfeited
given 10 days in jail and a one-year Rd., Gallipolis, $15; and Mona L.
by Tandy J, Simpson, 45, 40
license suspension for DWI.
Masters, 26, GME, Bidwell, $15.
: Melvin W. Wolre, 41. of BidVarious other bonds were for- Burkhart Lane, Gallipolis, $42;
&lt;Well, was fined $450, sent to jail feited by Christciphcr S. Petro, 21, Barbara E. Shields, 3S, RL 2, Bidtor three days and handed a 90-day Crown City; $43, illegal passing; well, $41; Lauric A. Cardillo, 29,
'icense suspension for PWI.
Judith K. Mcnickle, 46,.93 Cedar Rt. 1, Bidwell, $50: Geo~ge E.
• Craig D. Wright of Gallipolis St., Gallipolis, $43; Kenneth M. Berryman, 38, Cana, Va., $47;
~as fined SHJO and ordered to do
Frash, 19, Cheshire, $43, improper ~uflls B. Lo&gt;'e, 27, Little Rock, .
five days' worth of i:ommunity ser- backing; Debra L: Hall, 31, RL 2,
:..ice for making a false statement to Vinton, $43, no valid registration
ll police officer.
. ·
decal; Scott E. Bratton, 23, South
· Thomas Fulle~. 29, GME, Bid- Bend, Ind., $81, log book not
well, was fined $50 and given a updated; Marvin L. Duff, 59, .
suspended 30-day jail term for dis- Columbus, $56, no ·tax decal on
(lrdtsly .conduct.
truck; Jerry B. SchOreder, 4S,
: Kenneth C. Smithers, 24, of Fruithland, Ont., $81, no medical
Charlotte, N.C., was fined $5 for examiner's certificate; George D.
Speeding.
Otworth, 50, Ironton, $174, over: Seat belt bonds were forfeited loaded tractor-trailer: Diana
by Juanita G. Robinette, 34, ESR, . Bowles,27, Pomeroy, $43, tailgatGallipolis, $15; Joseph D. Jackson, ing; Joshua H. Haislop, 19, Rt. 2.
~0. Wheelersburg, $15: Rodney E.
Gallipolis, $43 for expired iegistra·
Collins, 18, S.R. 141, Gallipolis, tion and $35 for not wearing a seal
~15; Ernest Edwards III, 21, Yinbelt; Angela S. Thaxtpn; 22, Rio
len, SIS; Janice Johnson, 57, Vin- Grande, $43, tailgating; James H.
ton, $15; Phillip E. Hawk, 33, Vin- Runyon, 31, Nelsonvilfe, $81, safejon, $I 5; Bessie A. McDill, 25, ty violation; Leon A. Nichols, 96,
j'lelsonville, $35; Roy A. Phillips, Rt. I, Vinton, $81, no medical cer29, RL 2, Crown City, $35; Antho- tificate; Dennis R. North, 40, Rt. 4,"
W. Peuy, 19, Bidwell, $15; Gallipolis, $8J, no medical cenifiJllizabeth G. Platney, 27, 2178 cate; Barry S. Bryant, 40, Rt. 2, .
White Rd., Gallipolis, $15; Shelly Bidwell, $43, expired registration;
A. Oliver, 25, Thurman, $15; Eric Ann E. Saunders, 62, 545 Ann Dr.•
A. Adkins, 19, Oak Hill, $15; Gallipolis, $43, failure to yield;

Municipal
court news
.

Ark., $43; Plmcla R. MoleJer.. 19,
Da)'klll, $42' J - c. ('moo!, 66,
Lanuville. $42; TUCiday A. Green.
31, Simi Valley, Calif., $51: Joha

W. Watson, 46, SL Qaimillc, $44;
Kat!lryD J, G~tles, 18, 602 First
Av~ .• Gallipolis, $46; F~ank D.
GWIM, 28, RL I, Crown Cny, $41;
Kenneth E. Turley, 26, Crown
City, $41; Douslas R. Flinner, 19,
Hcndcnon, W.Va., $41; Vernon H.
Bater, 69, Blac~burg. Va., $46;
David w~. 37, Obetz. $41:
James E. Culley, 32, Hlm.JI:t. _!'J .C.,

March 24, 1881
$40; Kellie L. Roberts, 29, Proc·

unille; $42: Atllhony A. Pello. 46,
Worthlngtoa, $45; Sharon B.
BUIIbonJ, 31, Waverly, $43; Danny
· K. Perry, 39, Goshen, $43; Alise G.
Rowan, 30, Greenville, N.C., $44;
Charles S. Cincinnati, 21. Grove
City, $4S; Rodney A. Stewart, 20,
Little Hocking, $41; James E.
Williams, 40, Proctorville, $41;
Ricky A. Robinson, 29, S. Bloomfield, $42; Robert E. Wil.,n, 68,
Dunbar, W. Ve., $44; Corey F.
Compton, 19, Westerville, $41:
Eugene.J. Alrmsi. 53, Dublin, $44;

"

Eva F. Pale, 33, Pocl, W.Va., $43;
Gtry D• Farley, 28. West lfanalill.
W.Va.,"$41; Mart R. Cllap!Mn, 20,
Crown City, .S.48; Beedhel D.
Breeding, 62, Hardy, Ky., $46;
aregory w. Keys, 35, Columbus,
$44; Russell E. Lewis, 31, Columbus, $77; Thomas D. Oxley, 46,
Hurricane, W.Va., $45; C. Robert
Brown, 48, Chillicothe. $48; ~
C. Heaton. 31, Hubts Heig!lls, $44~
Steven D. George, 19,.RL 2, Vin ~
ton, $45; Sheny 1.. Lykins, 42, S.R.
7, Gallipolis, $43; and George E~
Holman, 69, Syracuse. $44.

Along the River

.

flttempt to COJWinee Dr. Char- ·
les B. Jrelcluun {Robert EnMJ,
.President ofMount Unfort Col- :

lege,

to re..czdmft Richard to ;
clanes qfter he has recefHd :
trafnf~' at

\ COLUMBUS • Ohio Hunger .. sionallcaders.

:rut Force will release a stlidy this

y.oeelr; that estin\ates approximately

§.5 million American children

inder age 12 are hungry. the study

TilE EUMIJIAnoN OF
. MADEl:fJI . . .Af O'HAII

Her dNth will Uke a moment
fhows a frightening number of
When God up-it'e enough.
roung. Ohio children arc among
I'"" given her repentant epace
I'm tired of her wicked goff.
!bose, and a stunning additional
~umber are at risk, according to.a
She h•• ewayed a whole netion
press release.
With h.,- foolieh courageoue
, lh response to lhe ground-break· etand;
· ij!g study and its recommendations,
But how can llhe epeak for othan Ohio campaign to ~d childhood
ere
. .
,
.
'unger will be announced later this ~ _When her lilll"lltn God 1 hend7
tee1c. Included in the spoilSa'S and Madelyn claims there Ia !10 God
Sllpporters are the Ohio Association
And eeya she wanta no pert.
. of Second Harvest Food Banks;
She would take Him from her
Akron-CaniOII Regional Foodbank;
lOR
'
Mid-Ohio Food bank; Athens,
If~~ could snatch Christ from
~ocking, Ptsry, Tri County Com. 11 heert.
· munity Action Agency; Mahoning
Like., oetrich whh, head In und .
· '¥'alley Food Bank; and Pike Coun$he rajectl whet • obviously
ey Ourtreach Council
true.
,
There ia • God in Heaven
• This statewide effort Is part of a
Qational campaign organized by the W~~o eurely loves Madelyn,
· Food Research and Action Center
·
. .
in Washington DC. To date the
In the future ahtntng glory
·
h ' be
· · J
Madelyn wll be alone, whhout
C:e~am~p~ai1~.g~n; as en Jome
Without BUt, end whhout Goci
m more ~ 40 states
Whhout any hope no doubt.
0/99/ Ra~m L: Horp" 3120191
of nauonal 0~~~::
plus business and

Performailce
dates: April 4. 5 &amp; 6
. _,
.

1991 CHEVROLET

'

S-10 pickup, 5 speed, .
4 cylinder. ·

Rio to stage original human
interest drama 'Love, Richard'

S7Q87

'

1991 CHEVY CAVALIER

1991 GEO STORM ,

2 door, front wheal·drive, 4
cylinder, 5 speed, radial tires,
bucket seats.

2 door, front wheel drlve,.5 speed, .
.air conditioning, AM/FM cassette.

$10,455

S7963
U.sed Cars And ,

riced To Sell!!

.

I

:17 CHEVY CAMAIIO .•.... $72911 Ill CHEVY S.10 ILAZEII .. $Hill 17 CHEVY VAN .••..•• .. S71t5 II CHEVY Z·2• ...... , . 511,4111

IIIlA Gr.,-, 2 door, llr, POwer 1t•rtn; &amp;. IT....II Sliver &amp; blue, 2 d(M)r, .. whHI ~ . . . . . lrown, Yin, 6 CVIIndlr, IUIOfN.tlc, Blu.;Zdoor, I cylinder, IIUtornlltC, llr, power
brliktt. llnted ~~~. AMIFM r1cno, tldlel u,.., e cyllnct.r, ll\llom.tk:, atr, powtr atlertngi &amp; power •tMrtng 6 b"""· recflelllfft, bucket stMttng I~~. dlgltel clock·, ttnted 81111,
rally wheela, I~ owner lrllde.
bfMel, tinted gtlll, AMIFM fldtO, rtGa. tlrltl, ...... •
.
\ 1111, CNIN, AMIFM II IreD cllllttl, '*fill

17 CHEVY CAM AltO ·..•••. $7295

17 DOlliE IIAM • ' ' ' ' ' '

bvc:kot Moll.

$5195

II NO, ..., -

.. - - . - - · · -

su..r, 2 door, ecyttnde;, 5 · - · llr, power II CHEVY CAYALER .•... $4111 Willie .., tront • ...;, 'd~ve , • ' - detalaot.
While, • door - · '""" ~. out..Nttc. ._. sloortna &amp; tnkn, II CHEVY COIIIJCA , . , , , , $14911
1101nna l brokOI.-IInlod gl. ., AwFM IOdlo. r.:t._l tires, rally whHta, buc~eteuts, lOcal drtve, 4 cylinder, eutomatle, sir, po...., ,,..,. rdll tiNt, l)uelclt Meta.

;;n;;m.D

XLT LAIIIAT

$11115

IT4"'1 Mo.UOn, pickup truck: VB engine, 5
· -· ••r. oowtr """"a &amp; ......... tinted
g1111, trtt IIMrint wheel. crutH control,
AMIFM 'IIIIo, '''"" cnootll, rotlod loner
rldllls, !Wily wheel I. re• step Dumper, local
one owner now Chevy lrodo.

::,!,:::.•~,;~::_:~~~~=•IOdto, ~a:
II CHEVY CAYALER , • , , . $42111 -

-:!!1M·· .$10,MI =-~~i.:rv=.~=~~~~.:.d:f~:.

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

IJIIIII&lt;A au-. • door Hdon, '"'"' atno, AMIFII lodlo, rodtal "'"'·
drive., • cylinder, MJtomatlc, ,.,, power lteer· bum.,.,, -'urntnum wheels.
Ina &amp; brokn, llntld alai. AMI,M IOdlo,
1'11!1111 tlrea, Filly WftMII, bucket NMI.

II ..,_,., C•l'll

• • • • • • 57111

•=

IPI'In Mlroon, "dOOr tldln, front whttl driVe,
wllOIIc-.. buckll 11111. F - , Y-.

ht~r ltoo 90 CHEVY IEIImA , .. , , . Sltlll

......,.
17 rvnu
"ltmN " 11 • • • · • • 57115
,.... 8,.,.., •111,8 cylinder, outomotlc, olr,

IPilll Riel, 2 dOor coupe, front wftM1 dr+Yt,
llitOIIIII~, otr, - n a &amp; brlkft, dlgllll

ciOcll, Unlld giMI, AMIFM I'ICIIO, fldlll fll'll, ~·
l y - - b u c k l t _, 1 . , . . . , _

• -L
$
R~U~"""
"
-~~-a&amp;-. dlattll dock, llntld
•• TDYOT"'""""
. • .... llt9lllllml1181ock,2-couoo.VI,5-.IIr, giMI.A-Mrldlo,IOdlllll'",rlllywhoolo, II lEO I'IIZII ..... ,..... SMIII
lltu light blue, ataUof'l w~gon, front wheel power lteertng &amp; brlkn. dlgltll ctack, tint.~ bucket Hats.
IPIIU Blut, 111 door lldln, .front whlel drtvlt, •
drlw, • cytl- ong1no, .,tOIIIIIIc, otr, ..,_ gtuo, 1111, crutn, AM/FM 111100 - • • · ll -.oy .. VEII•IJO
SillS cytt- IUIOINIIc llr -IINrinalst-nal-H, tinted gl . ., AMIFM IOdlo, rldlll 11101, roily - · · conooto, bUCkll
"""'• - .
"
•••• .
. dlattll doCk, Hntod at~. AMIFM rldlo, ,..,,;
r8dflll, rally whlell, buelcel MilS, •loctA ...11. rtlr windOW defoggM. .
If. . . ~eel &amp; ~lver, pickup truck, V8, Urel, wttHI Cowerl, bucket 11111. ,ltlory
owner now MIIZdo tlodo.
II CHRYSLER LIIIAIIOII $4HI M&gt;lomotlc, llr, 1110~na &amp; brok11, •

:::::;;~~=~~~~~~~~~:W::::",:! 11 CIIEYY LllfiiiA ..•.. $10,115

IZ DLDI CUTlAII CIERA .. $2995 IJ4«1A Mln&gt;On, 4 ctoor - : ,;,;.,, · MZ• MatOOn, • door sectll'l, front wl'ltel Clrtve, 4 cylll'lder,eutomet~. llr, powtr tt..,. atep bumP'!.
d~ ... IUiomotlc, " " · - llllflnv &amp; brokol. lllfl l brllin, llnlld g-, CNIIO, /IMIFM
llntld Ql. ., AMIFM rldiO, l'lldlll II'?"', wt1M1 ...1'10 cMMtte, f81RII tlret, whMI oowera.
COVIll.

.

14 . . WAIOI&amp;R ' ' ... $4!115

II FOlD ESCORT

·

$4HI

,.._ M.-oon, • dOof lldM, front whMf dfkot,
IUI-Ic, olr, IIOWif IIMrllitlbrllin, dlgllll
CkK:k, tinted gl. ., AMIFM rdo, i'ldlll tfm,

- - F-.,·-

CAI'IICE ' . '. '$13,H5

"""11 Slott ....._ ; ir;,r;, ..... drlw, 4
11'4111A lf'Dwn, 4 wtiHI driYI, IUIOft'lllic,.tr, cytlncftr, automatic, llr, power 1tter1ng &amp;
-lloorlna l brlliH. llntld
AMIFM brllln, I I - ati!IIS, AMIFM rldlo, IOdilltltoo,

ot-.

MdM, Vl.,..;ne,artomatlc,
&amp;
tlntld gllll llil •
' l'ldltl tfm, ~

br-

rldk», red!• Urn, rilly WMIII, bUcket tuta. rally whella, buCket Mill. '

114 FOliO LTD ... ... . . , . . $3111 II CHEVY CAYAW .•... $Hill
~~'""'-""~~'"· ""· '"',"'"""·"'· -

CHEVY CAPIIICE,,,, .$13,115

-Sioor· '""'Groy, 2ctoor,8cyllndlr,.,tomotlc,llr,
~-w.
IS,
.
dl»r lacks, tN'flell VIm. powertlltrtng &amp; ~-. tlnted gl-. AMIFM
1111, crullt, AM/FM TIIHD, radill wtllfl!'lll!., wNel radiO, r.!Md ltHer recllall, rally whetta.
COVI'S.
bucket .-t1.

*'

15 CADILLAC ELIIOIIAIIO . . $1315 II CHEVY CEI.EIIIITY .... $Htll

.

SALES &amp; RENTALS
OXYGEN
HOSPITAL 8EDS

24 HOUIS
7 DAYS

WHEELCHAIRS

A WEll

WALKERS
Lin CHAIRS

SIIYICE

full line of Medical &amp;Sur1ical Supplies
, . , ........ " . . . Doll....
16 14) 446-1106
'101&amp; 1111 t -IM·44S-UG6

d~yo.

Btut, 4 door Mdln, VI, eutomtllc, llr,
power tt.lftng, bf.ft, wtndowl &amp; dotM' loclls,

"It was a terrific revelatiOn for
he became the first bllnd·deaf me to come to the reellzatlon 1
pcr$011 to ever W&amp;doate from the · had to ~ojeet reel deafness and .
school.
blindness, to avoid using either
Kinney returned to the Hadley senses on the stage," MOler said.
School and became Its director. "It left me . feeling exhausted,.
The focus of the sttry Is upin his be&lt;;ause I can Interact with the
three-~ar mart~ to a blind other cast members with lilY eyes.
teacher named I;:velyn DaVIs But wben playing a passive role
Wannbrodt. Although she died In whiclll must deprive myself of
In 1965, the marriage produced those senses, It's much more
a son and Kinney continued demanding.·
speaking and championing the Miller will be joined In the cast
rights of the handlt;apped until from the Alliance production by
, his death In 1979. i 4 , • ,
Jay Mullins as Evelyn and Judy
"Love, Richard"
li'seleCUon · Lindner 1\S Jeannie Ridenour,
of the Play Readllii!Cir!:le' at Rio Kinney's lonflllme secretary.
Grande In 1989 and received a Other roles were to be cast JopoaiUve response from the cam- cally.
pus and ccxnmunlty participants · "I reel the script has the poten.
who read the ·work aloud and. or- tlai,_ror widespread Interest,·
fered critiques to Crist anq Miller said. He added that In
Harper. MOler said It waS chosen addition to the human dlmen·
for production and underwent slon of the story. It projects a
Its llrst perfonnance In Septem- hopeful. llfe-alllnnlng message.
ber 1990 at the Firehouse TheaMore Information and ticket
ter In Alliance. The production prices are available from the Fine
was attended by nwnerous area .· ·and Performing Arts Center by
residents who knew Kinney as a calling (614) 245-5353, extenyouth and as a student at Mount slon 364. The toll-free number In
Union.
Ohio Is 1-800-282-7201.
admit him In the early 1950s and

was

·The play is a biography of Richard

. Kinney, a blind and deaf Ohioan who
became director o~ the Hadley School ~or
'f.l
J•
the BUnd in Winnetka. nt. and an inter· nationally Wiwwn speaker on the p· ro~
·
1
the liandicappect.
,-

zems of

·

diQttll clock, tlntld glaa. tilt, crviM, A~FM

II~

- . - ......

--..F.....,,_ ,

14HIA Bloclc, 2 clool, '"'"' • VI, IJ44IIU10Wn,4cloorlod.,, M&gt;I....,Ic,llr,
CIVIC'· ''' '" .$7111 11 CAMAIIO Z·21 , , , , .. $11,MI
•utornltlc, .. ,, power etwrlng, ~n. win· power ....,.1'\Q &amp; • • · tinted gllla, AMtFM ,..... Grwr. 4 doof ~en. 4 cyllndtr, IPnll Blul, 2 doOr coupe, ve. IUlomttlc, tllr,
d.,..,,_., &amp; dOOr toekt, ••nc11u root, dlgH81 rediG, NdlaiiiM. whMI
IUIOmiiiiD, llr, ~ ttMrlno I . , ... , I&gt;OWtf,ttllflng, tnMI, wtndowl &amp; CIDOr lOeiia
clock, 1111, llnlod at••· CNIM, AMIFM .._
17 CHEVY .1. ILAZEII $1111 dltflol clocfl, dntod a•-· AMIFM ...... dlgllll - k dnlld at- '"' CNIII AMnoM
CMMtlt, ,_.Ill wt'lltewallt, wi'l Wr.,il,,..,
.··-· , •
c
Ttte, rwltll tlrH, wMel IIICMra, bucket MI'W~ rdlf II"' ,fW'Y,wMitl 'conta61
window defogger.
IPIUI lfOWn, 2 door, 4 wMel drift, I ...... ..., w;lndow dlfJIDei ·
buclllt llltt ·,.., _.,.:_ det
' '
'
II -.oy
,.....118 IIOC • • $1111 cytl-.
outomllic, llr, ..,_ oloortna ' II CIIVY fULl. IIZE IUDII •15 ttl . ,
, - ·
......::• """'"
~.llntwd . . . . tht, CNIM, AMIFM rldlo.
·• '
IJ4n1C Rod, 2 iloor, VII, IUIOiftollc, llr, - · rlllod ,_, lldloll, rilly -11, bvc:kll 1Jt4111111od &amp;- · 2 - · 4 - drlw, VB, H CII£YY COIIYETTE
$14 M5
ltMI'Ino &amp; b.n, tln.t ld gl... lilt, AMIFM IHit.
IUtofNIIc, llr, power tteerlng I tw-.., Aid 2 doOr ve
lc
' ' ' 11 '
tte~ GUMtte, rldlat 11,.1, 1'1111~ wMIIt, .
·
dltJHII alook, liNd .,._,tit, cNIM, AMIFM br.k.. wt,MJo,;s~ .. ~lock •111":!fl1•
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17
DilliE
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rollod lotiO!
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wt'IMII
oontofe, buollet
8Htl.. IOdloto, rilly CIOCII, 'tlnltd fl•,
II AMC EAILE ........ ,,IHII Bl... ,plekuptNCil,5-.-~~oo~na
'
·
- · rldlot 11100, r i l l y - · · - -·
If~ SIIYor, 4 d-.' whoolclrlve, llotton &amp; broli01, IOdlll - ·
H DYIIAITY , , , , , $71111 lioJcllll -··-window dolotlatr. ·
·
.
•1900 • .,,omottc,· llr, oowor • • - a &amp; Sl OLDI CUTLA••
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IIIIIIIIIIA CIVIC '
$""1!1
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'
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l!ll'tllmAC IIOMVI.LE •. $4HI "'"· rilly-·· . . •
• ··
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, _ ,_,,, IOdilltlm, buckot
ilm!U Two lone""'""·' door lOCI.,, VI, 17 CIIEYY IIIYA , . , , , ; .'.$1111111 II CllfVY ZEliA'· ··'' .SIMII10 CHEVY 411411 , , .. , .$111111
oulomotlc, olr, SIN~na. - " · win- - Wllill, 2 - · , _ d~... _ , lllll:k lllckup tniclc VI .,-~ II
dowol-loc:ko, llnlod at-. tlll;cNIII, • cylinder ~ iolr ll-'na
M&gt;l-lc. llr, oloorlftl &amp; - . . . -~~"":.a brolill, wl.;.,.;.ldoor
AMII'M I I - - " • · rldlll whllewlllo, - · llnild glOM, AWFM /11110,-10101, ~c-. Hnlld gl-. AMIFM rldto, rodltt digllll clock, ltnlld - · lin, CNIII, IMIF~
WI,. WMIII.
bucket Mlfl, , _ window defogger.
tl ..., f'llly «f'teett, buCket tM'I.
ltiNO ~. rlllld ltftet l'ldl., rtfty whllll,
ccniOio. buckll-•-

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_IJGIII_•_ _,_,'"'"'

4cloof-. """'-d.,.i "-

Gospel Sing
in the Smokies

Human Interest drama will take
the stage of the Christensen Theatre In the Fine and Pcrfonnlng
Arts Center this spring when
• ... And It Was Signed: Love, Richard" Is p~ented by a group of
campus .and cocnrnunlty performers.
The play Is a !JlOirapby of Richard
Kinney, a blind and deaf Ohioan
'Who became director of the Hadley
School for the Blind In Winnetka,
lll.. and an lnternatlonaiiy known
speaker on the problems of the
. handicapped.
The t'WU·BCt play, adapted by Lyle
M. Crist aiK! Thomas Harper,~
of Alliance. Ohio, from Crlst's"blography or Kinney entitled
"111rough the Rain and Rainbow:
Is a "love story reaturtng the chatlenge of a handicap and function·
lng In the 1Mlf1d." said Greg Mfller,
Ph.D .. coordinator- of the Fine and
Performing Arts Center, who will
portray Kinney.
The play wiD be ~esented Thursday, Aprll4 at 8 p.m.: Friday, April
. 5 at 8 p.m.: and Seturday, AprD 6
• at 8 p.m.
-Love, Richard' Is a good farnfty
entertainment and I think especially meaningfUl for those who
have direct experience with handicaps: he addl'&lt;f.
Kinney, who was born near Canton, became blind at age 7 and IGSt
his heartng at 20. forctng him to
leave Mount Union College In Aliiance. In Spite of his handicaps, he
was determined to lead a normal
lfe and attended the Hadley School
to receive specialized tralrling.
When he finished there, he convlnced Mount Union olllclals to re-

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June 29-July 2, 1991

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Escorted by
Rose Marie Brisker

Miss Cooper (QJUiil WLseftumJ

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"...And It Wa Sigud: l.olle

Rfclulrd, • an OriflNII litollf"'llhhl:aldl ••• .,., ,... Oilt
and 71utmaa lftuJrer. be,.
untec1 cat tile UnfNrsftu of
Rio Grandi April 4, IJ and 6.
:na. JJ1a11 UIUI ,. cUrwcc.d fiJI

•

SECOND AVE.

441-0898

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.John~.lfd.D. ·

s.Ninl th• gM.,Mpub/ic • w.tt • ouriiiMrtb.,..

/.

. •J

tat. Rfch4nl .KfRMJI (Greg
Mill~ UlhUe IfnneJI u.ndergoa tnlfnfRQ at the Badle&amp;t
School for tu Blfnd cfurirw

'Prices include atl , lact~ Incentives I~ dealer and GI.I'-C 1st Time Buyer P~ogramc.:.t.n unllsaubject to plior sale. Financing avallabfe 'lith approved credli

Travel
to the Great Smokey Mountains for·a week,
.
end of inspirational music performed by some of the
best gospel singers in the country.
Call or stop by
today!

the lltulle.,for the :

Blind. The true story of Iln- :
ruty, a noud educator cand :
champion of the rights qf tile :
hanlfkapped, IDlU be .Presentelt :
at the UnfversitJI qfRio Grun.cfe .:
April 4, 5 Gild 6.

testing facility open
in Jackson to serve area

Campaign to end childhood
hunger to begin in Ohio

March 24, 1991:·

Rfclulrd," Rfchcard Jl'lllMJt, '
plfl.,ecl bit Gret~ Aflller, rifht, '
Gild his mother (Carol~ ;

~DL

yarious reasons, mcluding the testmg was far away, Kelly said.
. "We hope. by opening a full,
.. ume .CD!-- .wntten and skill testing
locanon m Jackson, persons requiring a COL will contact our new
office and obtain the required
license," Kelly said.
All drivers of heavy trucks and
buses must possess a CDL by the
e~piration of their current drivers
license or April I , 1992.
Wriuen CDL testing may be
completed at any driver's licensing
station by appointment oc the CDL
facility in Jackson. If a skill test is .
required, you can call 614-2864245 for an appointment. Drivers
must furnish the vehicle, Kelly ·
said.

B

In "... And ft Wcas Sfgud: ' - , :,

ny

: GALLIPOLIS - A complete
Commercial Driver's License facility is open in Jackson county 10
~ needing to obtain that tesliflg,
according to Sgt. Blbert Kelly,
CDL Southeast Ohio Coordinator.
; The facility, at 301 H1,1ron
Stree~ will be open for those need·
ing the written CDL test Monday
lhrough Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. by
a · bllenL
{~11 testing availability has
l;leen a problem foc those in Southeast Ohio, Kelly said. The closest
~ill testing location was Colum~us, and now there is a state-run
location in Jackson to better serve
this portion of the state, Kelly said.
As the , April I deadlin.e
approaches, there are many needing ihe COL who. haye_pul it off for

1rhnts • jtnfuttl Section

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Page-B2-sunday nmes-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

---Weddings---

wv

Engagements---r---

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a three-act comedy-draml tint produced at Rio Grande in February :
1990 and set for producticn again .
at Rio Grande on April 12 and in :
Athens April 18.
.
;
Wotht. li teacher Ill Rio ~
Elemenwy School, directed last'
~ear's local LBTS presenwlon ot:
Sleeping Beauty."
•
For more information, COIII8ct:
the Fine and Performing Arll Center at 2AS-53S3 extension 364. Th~ •
toll-free number in Ohio is 1-800- ·

RIO GRANDE - Auditions f&lt;l'
"Puss 'n" Boots " the next production of the LiUI~ Buclceye 'Theatre
Series, will be held Wednesday,
Marcl! 27 from S-7 p.m. in Room
124 of the Fine and Performing
Ans Center at the University of Rjo
Grande.
' The production calls for a cast
of 22 to 2S people, with various
roles for males and females. Those
i.nta'ested in auditioning are asked
to briDg a photo of themselves.
The shpw will be direc.ted by
Donald Wothe, Rio Grande. from
· an original script by Clifron Spires
Jr., WoUsUlll. Spirea adapted WashingtOII Irving's classic-story "The
Legend or Sleepy Hollow" into the
first LBTS production in 1986. He
is aiSQ the authiH' of "Four Dead,
Four Surt in Two-Vehicle Crash."

282-7201.

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March 24,1991

March 24, 1991

Auditions for play set for Wednesday

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OH-Polnt

--Anniversaries"'"'--

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AnEfiTION:

.......... ,,
COICIIfiiiD , ......"IS
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Galllac~
·
I.4KalldiMI
~ ,... lit
Trace I .... Sdi11L

JS, 6:

Na

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STATE PROJECT • Lise Adldas IDd Crystal SboJII are sbOWD
with their State Project Dlspley Board that received a nnt piece
radng It tbe.FHA regional skillS eveat.
·

They're here! The first walking heels!

Bethel Ladles Aid hold ineetinfl ·

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GALLIPOLIS • the Bethel

Mot. , • •,..H
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. MASON • L1sa Dawn King and
.l):&gt;hn Thomas Robinson were unitGel in marriage during a double ring
~eremony on Feb. 14 at the Chris\'ian Brethren Church in Mason,
W.Va., with Rev. Jimmy Lewis
qfficialing !he candle light ceremo-.
ny.
·.
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: Given in marriage by her father,
~e bride wore a long satin gown
llimmed in lace and satin bows.
The bodice was accented with
beads and sequins, puffed sleeves
ind
a full skin with cathedral train.
b
QCr veil was accented with beads
and sequins. ShC carried a bouquet
df pink and white flowers with lace
4nd ribbons of pink and white.
~ Heather Thomas, Middleport,
"as maid of h~~or. Bridesmaid
t,as Billee Renae Pooler, half-sister
the bride. Both wore long pink
,. esses anc! carried a bouquet of
"inlc and white flowers wjth lace
mbbons.
·
·.
} Amanda King, niece of the
6ride, was the flower girl. She wore
pinlc dress with a halo of flowers
her hair. She carried a
bas-

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ket of pink and white flower petals.
Rmg bearer was Timmy Robinson, nephew of the groom. He carned a white satin pillow with two
golden rings 1111ached.
·
Randy Smith, Hartford, W.Va.,
was best man. Rob ·Robinson
Weirton , W.Va., the groom's
brother, was usher. The groom and
father of the bride wore white tWte'
dos with .pink cummerbunds.
Debra Putman, step-sister of the
bride, greeted and registered the
guests.
A reception was held following
the ceremony. The room was decorated with pink and grey balloons
and streamers and pink and white
wedding bells.
. The bride's table featured a
three-tier wedding c8Jce with a pink
founl8in and a bride and groom .
topper.
.
The bride is the daughter of
Roland "Gene" King, Middleport,
and Sharon Pooler, Chester. The
groom is the son of John and Harriot Robinson, Stubenville.
The
resides in Shade.

RAELYNN BASHAM, ALFRED ROUSH

Basham-Roush
Mason, W.Va.

COOL VILLE • Mi: and Mrs. ·
Gary B~sham, Coolville, are
announcmg the engagement of
their daughter, RaeLynn Blisham,
to Alfred Lewis Roush, son of Mf..
and Mrs. Alfred .Lc:e. ~oush,

Spirit Dress

She is a graduate of Meigs High
School and he is a graduate of
Wahama High School. He is
employed at Ridgeway's Exxon.
. _Wedding plans are incomplete.

·· . Wedding policy
The Sun~ay Times'~enti~el
regards weddin~ of Gallia, Me~s
and Mason ~lies as ~ws and_IS
~~Y
to graphspubiJSh "filhoueddinJ stones
WI.
t Charge .
owever, wedding news must
meet general slandards of timeliness: The newspaper prefers to
pub!1sb accounts of wedl)ings as
soon as possible a&amp;r the event.
. _T~ be published in the Sunday
ed111on, the wedding must have
laken place within 60 days pri&lt;l' to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received
by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m., prior to the date
of publication.
,.
Photographs of either.the bride
or d!e brid~ and gr'?om may be
pu~Iished w1th ·wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, snapshots or insrant-developing photos .

·

are not of acceptable quality.
Questions may be directed to the
editorial depanment from 1 to 5
p.m. Monday through Friday at
(614) 446-2342.

BHCC lawn and
garden show set
RIO GRANDE • Crafts, lawn
and g~den equipment, old cars.
customized cars, live enterl8inment
and food are just some of the sights
and smells that wiD be at the 1991
Annual Lawn, Garden and Craft
Show/Open House, Aprif 20 and
21.
The slaff and students of Buckeye Hills Career Center invites the
public to attend the event on the
campus of the Un'iversity of Rio
Grande from noon to S p.m.
Door prizes, tours of the vocational programs, a free nursery/day
care center and an auction on Sunday will' also be a pan of the program,

~Smith 60th

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lAFAYEnl MALL
GAWPOUS, OH.

THE SHOE CAFE

MIDDLEPORT
614-992-5248

79 J1ck1on Pike
GA~LIPOLIS

6 14-446·3837

364 Eut M1ln St.
POMEROY
614-992-8292

SHAME SAlE
ONANYSHAKE
FLAVOR
SUNDAY, MARCH 24, 1991' ONLY

Buy One Milkshake and Get One
'
Made Tht "Old
Fashioned" Way!

FREE!

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; Local Job Bank helps seniors ·

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$179

'
VJ
ON FINE ·CARPET
PLUSH &amp;
SCULPTED CARPET

. $AYE30°/o
Available in 12. 13•
and 15' wide

. Veterans Memori al is also an asset in a·rrra,:ring new cbusiness
because most businesses planning co relocate won't move to a
community unless there's a nearby hospital.

(NOW IN STOCK)
8 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM

. INDOOR/OUTDOOR TURF

~SITE TUIF STAITING AT $3 9 5 YD.
Get ready for spring. Do thoie patios
porches, welkw•v•. pool side now. '

6' CAR CARPET AVAILABLE""""""""'"""

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FIOM $495 AID UP

...._HI_G-::H:E:ND=ARM~S.;;.;TI;;;.;;O~N;.;::G...:Y;.::IN:.:Y:.:L::::
..·":::""::::;""::::;
'"'.:!'SA~YE~5~0~·!._J!_0o~y0~

)

r-·- ........- ..............;.;~~:;a
.~

WEDDING ·BAND SPECIAL
Buy the Gents' wedding band at regular price
and get the ladies' matching and at

112 PRICE

Choose from the area's largeat aalaction of
ArtCarvad weddi_ng bands. Dozens of styles
from which to chooa,.,

JtRTQ1RVElJ
._9)._; ~.~-

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(614) 446-7733

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AI I

Includes Oil Change &amp;
Filter; Greasing; .Check
Transmissian, Power
Steering, Brake, Windshield
Washer FluidS &amp;

Differential.

$20.00
20 mile radius of Rio Grande
(Extro Chervo If Over 20 Mllool
Wl~l COME TO YOUR
RESIDENCE OR YOUR
PLACE OF EMPLOYMENT

614·2C5-5951
If NO ANSWEI1 .245-5152

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Spring Base Loungtr $t59
High Back Spring Base Chair $86
Rocker $79
Ottoman S49

• Indoor/Outdoor Usc
• Versatile Style
• Plush Comfort '
• Available in 12 D&lt;lcorator
Colora
• Maintenance Free
• No Peeling, Cracking or

Loveseat Glider $169

ut

BuiTB

r - - - ---.,....,-- f • Weather · Resistant
Cushions Available

SEA
PINES

• 3-Ycar Limited Warranty

• MADE IN THE U.S.A.

Lounge Chair 1199
Ottoman $59

End Table 8179

Sta cki ng Chair $189

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·.../ . / \ SEA
. _.. ~::&lt;--~ /.._ .PINES·
', ~--1..__ _·-- -

NEW ARRIVAL OF KITCHEN PRINTS

LARGE SEIICDON OF
u•s .
FOR RENTALS, CHURCHES, BUSINESSES, nc.

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CALL FOR APPOINTMENT OR STOP
BY OUR. OFFICES~.
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LYNN
ANCieLL.
C.P.A.
•

11 5 I. IIMIIAL DIIVE

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GALLIPOLIS · There will be a ·
divorce support group meeting,
Monday, March 2S at 7:30 p.m. at
the New Life Lutheran ChtD'Ch. F&lt;l'
m&lt;l'C information call 446-4889.

OIL CHANGE SERVICE

Personal &amp; Business Retu'rns
.El-ectronic Filing
Fast Funds· 3-Day Refunds
Student Banking Cluti Discounts

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POIRIY
992·2104

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an

match between an applicant and
employer on file, the Job Counsel
makes .every effon to find an
approjlriate job opening somewhere 10 the community.
. . When an employer submits a
job order, the Counselor attempts
to sent the most qualified person
for an interview. The employer sets
the wages paid and the hours of
employment. It is also his/her
responsibility to check references.
The Job Bank is open 2 1/2 days
a weelc: Wednesday from II a.m.
to 3 p:m. also Thursday and Friday
from 71a.m. to 3 p.m. so feel free to
call at that time. The number to call
is 446-7000 and ask to speak to the
Job Counselor.

YOUR TAXES .••

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL

~•••• lflrrulll HostMtal ·

SOMITHING SPECIAL

D&amp;S

Were Serious

ARRIVING DAILY, NEW SPRING
STYLES AND COLORS

Our ~os pical is one of the cop employers of the Community .
generating a great deal of bus ines·s through purrhasing. payroll and
payroll taxes.

Please be sure to let your Congressman know your fet:lin~o,rs about
t~ese curb:Kks in Medicare _and other healthcare programs. Hdp
~eep Your Hometown Hosp1tal as a stron~ asset for the Community.

FOI ONLY

Salisbury as hostesses. ·
The couple resides in Georgia.

In addition to providing a wide-range of healrhcare servKes.
Yeter::m: Memonal - Your Hometown Hospital - is an ·
·
econom1r asset to the Community.

0~ course. government cutbacks in healrhcare programs like
Med1car: are mak i n~ it more .tnd more difficult for all rural hospitals
• ro prov1de all the services the community needs and deserves.

\ GALLIPOLIS · The Senior Citi:zen Job Bank with beadquarters at
;the Gallia County Senior Citizen
. ~nter located at 220 Jackson Pike
·has been serving employers in the
:~mmunity and also applicants 50
· rears of age and older who are
·mterested in full .or part time
employment.
The Job Bank is sponsored by
the Ohio Commission on Aging,
Tille V, and is a low cost program.
· When an applicant comes to the
Job Bank, he or she fills out an
application listing s1cills and past
experience, hobbies and job preference. Arter interviewing the applicant, the Job CounseiiH' conracts an
timjlloyer to obiain an interview for
9'&amp;t specific person. If lhere is no

lA populw fworh:e good, tmath•ed In oUr
apoci1l borboquo ooucolt

D~yl Salisbury and :Mrs. Steve

A MATTER OF ECONOMICS

Divorce support
group to meet ·

~

Russell-Baker

.,

"The Christian advanced in.years,"
~as read ~Y Vir,in~ Fisher; ''The .
g1ft of fnendshlp, was read by
TheiJ'!'II G!lkinson; "Unexpected
Blessmgs, was read by Dorothy
L1ptack;" and "A perf~ day," was
read by Lena Belle Williams;
The meeting was closed by a
prayer by Jeannie Ross. The next
meeting will ~e April 3 at the
church, along With a potluck lunch.

Pennsylvania lottery

. COLUMBUS ~ Mrs. Julia Prose
The couple was married Feb.
proud to announce the marriage 28, 1991.
.·
of her daughter, Martha A., daugh- '
Mrs. Slyman is employed as a
ter of the late Earl L. Prose, to nurse at Riverside Methodist BasMarie W. Slyman, son of Mr. and pilal and her husband is associated
Mrs. Wayne Slyman of Columbus. with his father is insurance.

1\iR. AND MRS. CLARK (DEBBm) BAKER

·Mudsoc 4-H club .
·holds fir5t meeting

·
..Romema ker 's state meeting
May 1-2 ·

•clure's Family Restaurant
Gen. Hartinger Pkwy

wedding
anniversary
.

grandchildren and 15 ~t
children. .
.
·
The family will host a dinner on
Man:h 31 and an open hOiiSe will
be observed from 3-4:30 p.m. at the
senior citizens dinner in Pomeroy.
A card shower is planned.
The couple requests that gifts be
omitted.
· CADMUS · F'll'SI meeting of the
year, Jan. 8, 1991. Elected Officers:.President Kelly Stanley; Vice
PreSident Joe Stanley; Secrel8ry
Jody Stanley; Treasurer Krissy
t GALLIPOLIS . . The Gallia lake. Becky Culberison told of the We~ver; Safe_ty Officer Brian
; ~ounty Ex tension Homemakers , advanlages of attending the state Dav1s; Recreation Leader Jessica
:Council met March 12, 1991 at the ' member in Columbus, May 1 &amp; 2. Whealdon; Health OffJCers Carolyn
~ Presbyterian Church for their regu· . The area meeting will be in Oak and Adam Stanley and News
.1ar monthly meeting.
.
Hill at the Lewis Family ReSiaurant Reporter JOI\Bthan Baker.
; PJ:~sidenl Japet Pettus led the , March 2.1.at 9:1S a.m. where they
Meeting held on March 12, at
~mllCllng. The Pledge :ro The Aag . have deliCIOUS turkey meals as well . Cadmas School. Jodie Stanley
;:was led by Helen WOod and she as other gQOd meals. If you can, called roll, Nine members present,
•also read an article about the flag. please bring stuffed animals to next 3. members absent. KeiJy Slanley
· ~elty Jean Lamphier gave devo- meeting for the hospital. Jeri Allie brought 'meeting to order. Jonathan ,
;nons on Easter and how everyone was at the meeting and displayed Bak~r led 4-H pledge and Jessica
;should learn to know Jesus Christ. several articles from her shop .on Wh1lden led American pledge
·Janet Pettus remarked·about the Second Ave. in GaiJipolis called Brian Davis read safety report o~
cinteresting meeting we had in That Special Touch.
guns. New business was discussed .
~February. ·
Hostesses for the potluck lunch on fund raisers. Some reports on
"' The group was asked to bring were Bernice Wood, Jackie Ora- how p~ojects were coming along
'-family pictures to meeting in Ajlril ham, Sue Baker, Virginia Cre- wer~ g1ven by some members. Old
, or photo contest. Call Extens101i J!lenns, Linda· Saunders, Janet Pet- busmess discussed then meeting
'office number 446-7007 for more tus, Belly Jean Lamphier and Jean was adjourned.
,
Grubb.
·
;information:
The group was also reminded,
The new officers for coming
(Optional) io bring articles for Cui- year~ Betty Carpenter, p-esident;
:tural Arts Exhibits to next meeting . Pat Graham, vice pres. ~. Virginia
HA~Rl~BURG, Pa. (UPJ)'April I fqr State Meeting to be held Wright, secretary; aiiJJ Bernice The ·w1nmng number selected
;May I &amp; 2 at the Holiday Inn, Wood, treasurer.
Thursday night in the Pennsylvania
Worthington Hotel, Columbus.
Every homemaker is welCome Lottery's Daily Number game was
. •, R,ulh Pitchford real) an article on to attend meetings.
282.
:11oison and what precautions to
The Big-4 Number was 5062.

LOOKS LIKE A PUMP,
FEELS LIKE A SNEAKER...
·.

'

•. RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Paul ·
jtJosephine Hoback) Smith, Racine,
- . !.will celebrate their 60th' wedding
; ~iversary on March 31.
· ··
: · · The couple was married March
31,1931.·
, They are the parents of Dan
~ : Smith of Racine, and Roben Smith
'_Pf Columbus. They have ninll
,

IS

GALLIPOLIS • Debbie Russell
and Clark Baker were united in
marriage on Saturday, Feb. 23, a
the home of her Jll!MIIIS', Mr. and
Mrs. Warren SaliSbury, Dogwood
Dr., Gallipolis, with Rev. John
Wood OffiCiating.
Matron of honor was Mrs. Dale
Haskins of Columbus, aunt of the
bride.
Best man.·was Ernie Baker of
New Jersey, brother of the groom.
Music was provi4ed by Oloria
Sahsbury. A reception was held
foUowinJr: the ceremony, with Mrs.

MR. AND MRS. PAUL (JOSEPIDNE) SMITH

••

. Prose-Slyman

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Uriiteil Methodist Church for their
ll'!Onthly meeting.
·
Thirteen members and five
. guests were treated to a potluck
lunch . Dorothy Liplaclc gave the
blessing of the food.
Seventy-seven sick calls were
made and 32 cards were sent since
the group's last meeting.
· Lena Belle WiUiams read scripgrand- turc. Jeannie Ross read, "As I took

........ ( 1.41

MR. AND MRS. JOHN (LISA) ROBINSON

my morning walk;" Rose J.n,.es

Ladi~ Aid met March 6 at Christ ·· read, "The Resurrected Rabbit;"

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Be!luty ••• ·Comfort ••• illld Durability
Casual Outdoor Furniture at its Finest

Corbin and Snyder Furnifure
&lt;.J55 SECOND AVENUE
.OH .

...

&lt;6 14l446-117 1

...
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�Pege 84 SUnday 11m• SenUnet

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolle, OH-Polnt Pleaaant,

Rio Grande offers Mexican trip
. RIO GRANDE • ~ four-week
mp to the culturally-rich Mexican
city ofPuebla is being planned this ,
summer by the College of General
Studies and Uberal Arts at the Uni·
versity of Rio Grande, for any student or community member in.lerested in learning Spanish.
"~llment is open 10 any student wbo would like to really learn
Spanish,." explained professor
Karen Daniels. ''The student does
1101 need any language baeltground,
because there will be.classes for
elementary. intermedi.ate and
advanced language study."
The trip, and accompanying
Spanish instrUction, will run from.
id-June through mid-July, with a
depenure date of ~une 17 currently
anticipated. Enrollment is limited
to IS and reservations must be

made by the end of April.
Mexico's fifth largest city and
To fully participale in the Mexi- combines the advant~~ea of modcan culture, students have the ern metropolis with .small town
unique opponunity to live with cbann.
host families and are encouraged to
Some of the sites included will
take psn in their daily activities.
be the Loreto and Guadalupe forts,
The Spanish language classes the once-secret convent of Santa.
will meet Monday through Friday Monica; and tbe Casa del
from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., for a Alfenique, a colonial mansion now
•
total of 80 class bours scheduled housing a moseum
during the four-week trip. College
''There are also many fasciDitcredit will be awarded to partici- ing towns' and villages within slot
pants. Total cost of tuition and travel distance of Puebla." Daniels
housing for the four-week session explained.
is $895.
.
()pdonal weekend tours 'to MexGuided afternoon excursions ico City, located 80 miles from
will provi!le the opponunity for Puebla, are .also planned and are
students to explore the community available to students at a modest
firsthand. Visit8ilons are planned to additional fee.
nUII1CI'OIB points of·historic, artistic · To obtain fllither information,
and an:hitcctural interest in Puebla. eontaet Karen Daniels at 245-5353,
Puebla, the City of Angels, is or toll-free in: Ohio at 1·800-2827201, ext. 436.
·

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'I

prayer on March 11, with
Annabellp Sisson leading the
Pledge of Allegiance; Jean Mullins
led tlie TOPS pledge. KOPS pledge
· was led by Thomas. . · .
··
A Blessing In Disguise was read
by Helen Trout. A Funny Money
auction was held following the
meeting.
Gardner., weight recorder,
announced that Thomas was KOPS
best loser of the week, when memhers met on March 4.
TOPS prayer was led by Virginia Voight and Emogene Johnson
fed the Pledge of Allegiance. TOPS
pledge ~as led by Ed1th Gardner
and Behnda Dean led the KOPS
. pledAge. Ko
· PS E
new
ncourage TOPS
program began March 4 and will
.

DAVID L. PORTER
AnDy Lt Col. Davill L. Porter,
has received the Chief of Cbaplains
Scroll award for hi4 faithful support of the reliai0111 and spiritual
needs cJ soldic:n, lcadc:n and their
families. He iJ'OIIIOftJd the spiritual,
moral, and ethical weD-beiDa of all
penamel widlin his c:ommml and
the Schweinfun Military Community.
Potter is currently a student at
the U.S. Army War College,
Carlisle Barracks, Pa.
.
He is the son of Margaret Porter
of 921 Fourth Ave .• Gallipolis,
Ohio. ·
His wife, Kilen, is the dallihler
of Woo.drow Saunders of g-483
Sycamore Lane, Gutr Breeze, Fla. ·
The colonel is 1 1961 graduate
of Gallia Academy High School,
GalliDOiis, and a 1968 il'lduate of
South Dakota State University,

Bndin;~D.LEWIS

end April 29. Each KOPS member
Airman Jeffrey D. Lewis has
draws a TOPS members name. graduated from the aviOnics comKOPS members are to call, wri1e, munications and Dlvigations sysor visit member each w~ and 1ry terns spec:i~ist course at Keesler
to help or encourage them to lose. Air Force Base, BiloXI, Miss.
New names will be dtawn May 6.
Students were taught bssic naviKOPS members ate Janet galion, and maintenance of radio
Thomas, Belinda Dean, Catherine and radar avionic 01vigations sys~~\~T=t~ie Stephenson, and tern~ ainnan is the son of John F.
TOPS Area Recognition Dar. and Mar$aret Lewis of Chesa(ARD) will be held Saturday, Apnl peate, Ohio.
27, at vail Middle School, MiddleHis wife, Cindee, is the daughtown. Theme for ARD is "At The tcr of Charles Marcum of 901 Jef·
Movies With TOPS." All contest ferson Ave., and Sandra Chadwick
and rules for this event were of 3421 Bradley Road, both of
reviewed by Janet Thomas, leader. . Huntington, W.Va.
· Anyone wishing information on
He is a 1982 graduate of ChesaTOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) peake High School.
may. call Janet Thomas at 367-0274
MI. CHAEL L•.BR
. OUGHTO
.
N.
or Helen Trout at 367-7233.
Ainttan Michael L. Broughton
.
'
has graduated from Air Force basic
training at tackland Air Force
Base, Texas.
atso·receive a Full Tuition Scholar- . During the six weeks of lraining
ship to The Art InstiWie worth over the airman stlldied Air Force mis·
$8 000 a Full-Two Year Tuition sion, organization and customs and
Schotanhip to Oklahoma City Uni- received special training in human
venity worth $10 000. Every Con- relations.
In addition, iiimen who comleStant will·rec:eive a $200 Scholar·
ship to John Robert Powers plete basic training earn credits
Schools of Modeling. toward an. associate degree through
Miss Julianne Pylant of Conroe,
Texas .was crowned Miss National
Teen-ager at the National Pageant
in August JuliaJine has received
over $12,000 in cash for college
and $35,000,in Wilion scholarships.
Miss Melinda Young of Cincinnati
is our reigning Miss Senior Ohio
National Teen-ager, and Miss
Heather Carrell is our reigning
Miss Junior Ohio National Teen·
ager.
Each contestant aceepled has the
option to participate in the Volunteer Community Sei'Vice Program
of the National Teen-ager Pageant
This pro$I~ffi teaches to share and
to partic•pate in school and civic
activities . Contestants will be · ·
on scholastic achievement·
j'udged
eadership, appearance, and poise- .
personality. There is no swimsuit
competition. Talent may be presented at the option of the particiKALEIGH TIIOMAS
pant or an oral essay on the subject
of"What's Right About America".
For more information or an
applicaiion write to Ohio State
COLUMBUS - Nate and Terri
Director, Jean Stanko, 5200 S. Thomas of Columbus wish to
Ridgeway, Chicago, Illinois 60632 announce the birth of their first
or call (312) 2a4-6565.
child, Kaleigh Noel. •
.
For more information on the
She was born on Oec. 20, 1990
Miss Ohio National Pre-Teen and at Mt·.· Carmel East Hospital.
Petite Pageants (Ages S-12) Con· Maternal grandparents are 8cb and
tact Karen Simmons, State Direc- Mary Louise Hennesy of Gallipotor, 1921 Wa1er Street,·Pon Huron, lis. Patenuil grandparents are Dick
Michigan 48060 or call (313) 982- and Dot Thomas of Gallipolis.
5248.

Ohio teenage pageant seeks contestants
America's Miss Ohio National · 1991.
Teen-ager Pageant is now aec:ept·
There will be a State Winner
ing applications for the 1991 state and 4 Runners-up in each of the
Plle&amp;nt. .
.
.
two age divisions:_13, ~4. 15, and
1be OhiO National Pageant will 16, 17, 18. The Wmner m each age
be held at Stouffer-Dublin Hotel in division will receive a $1,000 SavDublin, Ohio on April 5-7,1991.
ings Bond, an all expense paid trip
The Ohio National Teen-ager to Orlando, Aorida ro-compele in
Pageant is the official state finals to the National Pageant, and a Full·
the 19th Annu111 Miss National Tuition Modeling ~cholarship from
Teen-ager Pag_eant to. be held in Robert Pow_ers, wc:-'th $1,000. .
Orlando, Flonda, August 9-17,
Our Semor Oh10 Teen-ager will

Sentinel Calendar
Community Calendar Items
POMEROY • There will be a
appear two days before 1111 event special meeting of the Salvation
ud tile day ollbat event. Items Army on Sunday at 6 p.m. (note
•lilt be received 'lftll In advance change or time). Lt and Mrs. Timto - r e publleadoa In the cal- othy Higgins of Athens are going
to .be present. Lt. Col. and mrs.
eadllr.
SVNDAY
~wrence Moretz, pi vision ComRACINE - The Racine First mander from Cil~nnad headquar·
Baptist Church will have revival ters will make their first visit to .
services Sunday through ~h 28 · Pomeroy. They will conduct the
with Dr. T. Howell Upchurch as meeting and speak:- There.will be
the evangelist Services are at 7:30 special music.l'ublic invited.
p.m. nightly and morning bible
SIUdies are at 10 a.m. .,
MONDAY .
CHESTER - A white elephant
POMEROY • The Pomeroy sale Will be hCid at Monilay's meetUnited Methodist's &lt;;hancel Choir ing of the Ken Amsbaly Chapter of
will sing the cantata, "Jesus of Izaalc Walton Leagu!l on Monday
Nazareth," on Sunday at 3 p.m. at at 7 p.m. at the clubhouse. Ham
the church. Jeannie Welker is will be furnished. Bring covered'
director and Paula Welker is dish, table service, drinks and
accompanist Public invited.
dessen.

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MIDDLEPORT
The .
cantata/drama ''The Day He Wore
My Crown" will be presenled at the .·
Middleport First Baptist Church on
Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Co-directors
are Cathy Riggs and Donna
Grueser and choral director is
Sharon Hawley. Public invited.
POMEROY • A 12-step AA
meeting will be held Sunday at 7
p.m. at the JTPA office in
Pomeroy.
.

. 1

RACINE - A "Thanksgiving in
Match" celebmtion will be held in
Ra.cine on Sunday at 3 p.m, in
obserVance of the end of the Gulf
War and to support those troops
still serving there. Those attending
wear red, white and blue or yellow.
Bring fla8s, pictures and banner, as
well as candle for the candlelight

ceremony.

POMEROY ·• The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the veterans service office ·in
Paneroy.
RliTLAND • The Rutland Garden Club will meet Monday at 7:30
p.m. at the home of Margate~ Bell
Weber. A discussion and demonsuation will be made by Connie
Hill. Mrs, Eva Robson will have
the arrangement and Ruby Diehl
will have .the hint.

Birth is announced

SWIMMING PO

·

!:i=&lt;.~&amp;::;~o~l::i

Langley is the son of Sharon G.
and Roger D. Langley of Rural

•aOM

ROBERT L. VANMETER
Ncw~romoted Airman 1st
Class R
L. VanMeter has been
decora.ed with the Air Force
Achie~t Medal.

''·

1be medal is awarded to airmen
for meritorious aets of courage, or
other outstanding acco!Dplishments.•
VanMeter · is ' an, aerospace
JllOPI!Ision specialist at Offutt Air
Force Base. Neb:
·
He is the son of Vickie and
Cecil L. vanMeier of Rural Route
2, Letart.
The airman is a 1989 graduate
of Point Pleasant High School.

...

....,.,.

RODNEY P. LANGLEY
Airman 1st Class ROdney P.
Langley has graduated from the air
Uaffic control operator course at
Keesler Air .Force Base, Biloxi,
Miss.
· Course graduates were tau·ght
aircraft recognition and performance, navigatonal aids, and procedures to regulate air traffic lllld.
airpon traffiC eontrOI.

!lllflllt

••

Pictww Whit
Yeu Wtiitl

•,
'

:

DON'T LET YOUR FAMiLY

HISTORY FADE AWAYI

llrfnt , _ orlglnel pllotop~pllt to
uo far F,. oon•lt8tlon ond lltl-

See· the profeawn.al&amp; at ...
•

!

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TAWNEY STUDIO : '
"••

424 SECON~ AVE.

'--------..:
GAWPOLIS, OH.

•
•'
•

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IT'S TIME TO HAVE
FUN IN '"91"

·:·
.i ·.

IMAGINE beginning a.warm summer day with a
refreshing swim ...
IMAGINE dousing today's problems with a cool
swim at sunset ...
IMAGINE your next pariy softly lit by the shimmer of colored lights reflecting on the water.

..

:f:
•
:

Because this w&amp;ekend THE POOL PEOPLE will
make it happen - We are going to sell above
ground and· in-ground pools at a never before
heard of price.

;~: :
.:
· ·;
,,:.
·: ':'

CHECK THIS OUT!

~::
•.

NOW STOP IMAGINING

.:.
:i;:t:

24' ROUND ABOVE GROUND POOL
lEG. •uso
. NOW $132 5

The first five pools sold will receive e FA EE L!nderwater light. This Ia a total savings of 8400- This Friday,
Saturday 8t Sunday Only. So don't be left out - .
Hurry In- We Are

~'Acrotl

Special occ..iona require _peciel preparation•. If you are planning a wedding, annivaraary or PI'Om, then you
lhould come aea ua at Heakina-Tan·
ner.
You will hew over 190 ·atylea of tuxado• to choo11 from. We have a large
lllectlon of the lateat atylea and com·
pllmentary.acce11orlea for thia apecial
occealon.
··
Clullity formal-r at AHorMit Prkn.
GROOM TUX FREE WITH 8 OA
MORE IN ·WEDDING PARTY

A

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. . IIJIIIAY &amp; ...., 11. I P.&amp; IllS.. ••• na 11. J P.&amp;

••

RIO GRANDE - James Tyler
Pearson, son of Linda Pearson of
Rio Grande, celebrated his second
binhday, March 16 at his home
with family and friends .
Those helping him celebrate
were: maternal grandparents, James
and Latrell Stepp and Johnny Den- ·
mark of Aorida; Darlene and Barrry Duty, Elisha and J.R Robinette;
Shirley Whitesell; Robert, Angela
Cherie Barry; Julie and Laura
Duty; Brandon Robinetle; Dale and
Nichole Whitesell ; William and
Sara Collins and Danny, Natha and
Jimmy James.

z I 446-1416 l~il

·:
·:"•

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..

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.•.•,
••••

•

••6·SA•s
OliO 11¥11 PlAIA
Ilet- . . &amp; lig ._

IWIIPOUS, OHIO

•
•

AND
.

;corner of Second at Grape St.
·:.
(Tope Furniture Bldg.)
GALLIPOLIS • 446-2842

Light oak finish .

Open Daily

9-5

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•

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THIRD &amp; PINE ST.
GAWPOUS

Visa/MC/Discover

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KINCAID, ENGLAND,
COIIO.LLA CLASSKS
·IMPIIIAL, JIMSON ' .
nANDAID, SPIING All

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Ruat and Beige Stripe.

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CHERRY CURIO ·
N.0 t 1499·.95
NlY $2 4 997

TABLE &amp; 6 CHAIRS
'
12.199.9.S $89997 .,
. ONLY
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FINISH

L

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BASSEn FULL SLEEPER
w/INNERSPRING
MGt f799.95 $39997
. ONLY
.

TABLE &amp; 4 CHAIRS
Not 1499.95 $2499
ONLY

446-728
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PICTURES

GUN CABINET

Not149~~h$24997 . $997

OCCASIONAL CHAIR

AlM~~~lHOAK

3 COLORS

NGt•M~:tty$34997

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KING SIZE ILACK FIIISH

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SWIVEL ROCKERS

OAK FINISH

QUEEN SlEEPER
MATCHING CHAIR
Country Blue

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SOFA/LOVESEAT /CHAIR
Country farthtones
511
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Loos.e Pillew Ba£k
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Not 113~N9L~ $44997

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$997 AND UP

FLEXSTELL KING SIZE

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OAK FINISH HUTCH
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MOST nEMs LIMnED .
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EARlY AMEIICAN- 2 cotoRs
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FREE· DELIVERY

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FURNITURE
STILL HAS ITEMS OF

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MTS COIN COMPANY

a0 /,

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M111- &amp; Fri. 9 to 9 P.M. ''-&lt;'~~
s.t. 9 to 6P.M.
---~./
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•
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Diamortd Earrings Set in 14K Gold
WEEKEN:D SPECIAL! $.

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BUNK
BEDS
STARTING AT

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you'll get everything you expec( lrom / ~J};.;;_~;. /
an expensive salon, except the price. i :~ ~. r~ A."-:&gt;
You don't need an app.ointment. / :~-...·s "V/' 7
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Birthday celebration

.CHRISTIAN DIOR
•AAfFINATI
GROOM'S TUX
ollLLILAIS
•IIOIEAT WAGNER
FREE
FOR PARTY 0~
•"EAAE CAIIOIN
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'RIO GRANDE • Angela Luann
Roesky, daughter of Barry and
D.-tene Duty, celebrated her 11th
biithday with an Alice in Wonderlal)d theme at the home of her aunt,
Linda Pwson.
:Those helping her celebrate
wt~re: Maternal grandparents,
James and Lauell Stepp; Shirley
Whitesell; Elisha and I.R. Robinette, Robert, Barry Jr., and Cherie
Roesky; Julie and Laura Ann Duty;
Brandon Robinette; Jamie. and
Fr¢ddie Collins; Danny, Jimmy,
Nathan James.
She is a founh grader at Washington Elementary.
·

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Celebrates 11th birthday

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GALLIPOLIS • St. Louis for the County Church Softball
Catholic Church celebra1es Palm League, Monday, March 25 at the
Sllllday, March 24 at 8 and 10 a.m. Rodney Church of God. 1be meetEcumenical Blessina of Palms at ing begins at 7 p.m .. and is-open 10
the park on the comer of Second teams and members wish•ng to
Avenue and State Street at 10 a.m. play.
with St. Lquis Catholic and St.
GALLIPOLIS • Babysitting
Peter Episcopal participating. The
course March 25-26 from s to 9
pgblic is inviled.
p.m. in the French 500 Room of
Holzer Medical Cenler. Must be 12
MONDAY
RODNEY - There will be an years of age or older. Call 446organizational and sign UP meeting 5247 'or 446-5313 for Information.

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calendar lltould be received -~
era! days Ia ldvauce to allow for
publlealiau.
SUNDAY
·
. BIDWELL • Layman Dsy Serv1ce at Mt_. Carm~l Church, Sun·
day. Mon!ing ~ICC, 10:45 a.rq.;
afiCmQOn serv1ce, 2 p.m. Guest
• speaker will Ill! Rev. Melvin Freeman.
·

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By UDited Presslntemlltioul
President Bush, commenting on
tbe brutal beating of 1 l;lfack
motorist by a group of white Los
Angeles policemen that WIB videotaped by an onlooker and sparta~
n8tion.al OlllraiC=
.
· "We have all seen those shocking tapes. Those lefrible scenes stir
us all to ask for an end to gratuitous ·
violence.... I was shocked by what
1saw in those tapes."

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Community Calendar

Quote of the Day

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1 a.m. Tne band "Axix" will be
performing and t11e theme for this
year's dance is "Proud To Be An
American".
· T!cl;ets can be purchased from a
club member or contact Lynne
Kennell-Allen at Sideline Sports.
Ticket prices are $16 a couple or
$10 for a single. Members are also
selling tickets for a Washington
D.C. trip.
Final plans will be discussed at
the April meeting.
Members attending Legislation
Day, in Proctorville, Ohio Thurs.
March 14. A convention is coming
up in April and ooy member wish·
ing to attend Should contact Cindy
Saunders.
·
. The next meeting will ~ Menday, April 1 at St. Peters EpiSCopal
Church at 7 p.m.

';:
•
:

THE POOL PEOPLE
-

TO HOLD

RT. 3, BOX 266

.GALLIPOLIS • The March
meeting 'o f the Gallipolis Junipr
Woman's Club was held Monday
Mlirch 4th at the St Peters Episcopal Church. . . .
·
Christy Wilcoxen Moore introduced the evenings ~er, Tim
BeiZ, from Holzer Chilic. He discussed a variety of topics, such as
burns, water safety and cycling. He
answered many questions from the
members.
President, Cindy Saunders
thanked everyone who helped in
the decorating of our city park.
Members met on a Saturday in
February and put bows and a banner UP on the bandstand, to help
show the group '.s support of the
troops in the Jiersian Gulf. ·
.
The annual Spring Dance is
going. to. be held at the Elks Club,
Saturda~. AJiril 13 from 9 p.m. till

•

motn. No obl9tlon; of oou,..
'

Shaw.
.
The February meeting of the
Temperature's Rising 4-H Club
Wl!S held at the meeting room of
Columbus and Southern Electric
Company. 21 members were present.. A history of 4-H was discuss.ed by the club. Under Old
Business the club decided to donlte
$25 to the kitchen of the 4-H Food
Booth. Under New Business candy
sales and inc:reasecl camp fees were
discussed. A speaker for the Man:h
meeting was abo discussed. Members were re111inded to select their.
projects and to hav!l their enrollment cards by the next meeting.
Committee reports were read with
Beth Kuhn giving a report on
strangers and safety, Rita Shaw
giving a repon on poisoning, and
Leslie King giving a report on
stress.

wv

GJWC plans for annual dance

•
:

·

For That Special
Occasion ...

or

RouJ:
S!Nth
Point Hi8b School
_ _,.;IE~n~o~a~,~o~u~.--, .

~~~~of Chess-

JIIPER Rr. 7

TEMPERATURE'S RISING
4-H Club
GALLIPOLIS • The January
meeting the TemperatUre's Rising 4-H Qub was held at the meetingroom.ofColumbus IIIC1 South- ·
em Electric Company. Reports of
pll$ meetings were read. A pizza
party was held at the Oaliia County
Children's Home and reco11itions
were presented for the December
meeq. Under new business projeds arid a speaker were discussed
an4 elections for this year's officc:n were helc!. Heather ADen is the
president, Marie Kuhn is the vice
president, Kelly Atkinson is the
secretary, Jamie Davies is the news
reporter, and Jill Roderus is the
treasurer. 17 members were present. Guests· were Mr. and Mrs.
Walker, Mrs. Haner, Mrs. Kuhn,
Mrs. Allen , Mrs. King and Mrs.

~~~of

D.
Roule 1, Ch?t&amp; Ike.

LAY·AWAY
NOW

MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
Coin Club will meet on Monday
evening at Burkett Barber Shop iil
Middleport. Trading session precedes 8 p.m. meeting. Auction and
refreshments. New members are
welcome.

MIDDEPORT • Meigs Junior
High Academic BooslerS Club will
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- . m~t Tu~sday at 7:30 p.m. in the
. port Masonic Lodge No. 363 F and Jumor H1gh cafeteria. All parents
AM will meet Sunday at2 p.m. for and inlerested persons are urged to
worli: in the master mason degree.
attend.

Community College of the Air

Force.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleaaant,

4-H club.elects officers

.

DIAMOND SOLITAIRE RINGS

OUI LOW
DISCOUNt
1991 PIICISI

March 24, 1991

March 24, 1911

-----In
the service
the

TOPS, KOPS announce winners
CHESHIRE . TOPS OH 1383
met March 18 at Cheshire Baptist
Church with Odella Mack as TOPS
best .loser of the week. Janet
Thomas was KOPS best loser and
Jan Snider, Cheshire, was wei·
comed as a new member.
Virginia Voight ti:d the TOPS
prayer. Pledge of Allegiance was
ted by Emogene Johnson. Sandy
King led the TOPS pledge with the
KOPS pledge being ted by Belinda
Dean. Helen Trout read a verse
titled So Sweet.
Edith Gardner was the winner of
TOPS Ladder of Success contest.
She received a TOPS cluum. Members To The Rescue a TOPS program, was present~d by Nancy
Whit!ekind.
.
Catherine Little led the TOPS

wv

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Page 86-Sunday Times Sentinel

March 24, 1981 .

Vinton announces Right
to Read contest winners
VINTON - Vinton Elementary
celebrated Right to Read Wcek
wilh lhe !heme "Malee Friends with
Books." Activities included: 'sustained silent reading, badge day,
coolrie day, read a shirt day, and a
visit from Molher Goose.
A coloring contest was held for
grades K-3. Winners were as follows:
1st Place: Jenny Wellington, Jill
· Bush, Bridget Lawson , Craig
Payne, Christy Edwards, Laura
Ring.
.
2nd Place: Niki Ring, Kayla
George, Dustin Gibl!s, Garaleah
Bailey, Brian Hale, Tylina New.
3rd Place: Scott Harder, Gabriel
Marcum, Misty Russell, Cassey
Lawson, Joshue &amp; Jeremiah
Harkins, Kristen Marcum.
Badge Day had the following.

Community League
· discusses festival

VINTON ARTISTS • Pictured are the colorlag coa,test wiallers during Ril!ht to Read Week
at VInton Elementary. In lront, (L to R):
Jeremiah Harkins, Joshua Harkins, Brian Hale,

GALLIPOLIS' • The GFWC
Community League of Gallia
County held lheir February ~ling
in the Gcnisis II meeting room of
Grace United Methodist Church.
The Home Life Department presented the JII'OIP'8III with club chairman Shanin Carmichael, a Holzer
Medical Center muse, conducting
pressures and glucose monitoring
on each members. Cannichael then
told members signs to look for with
low and high blood pressures and
diabetes.
Prospective new 'member, Carel
~limk, WI$ introduced .. The HLD,
consisting of Carmichael, Kitty
Griffith and Beverly Dunkle, provided snacks using a St. Patrick's
Day theme. The door prize was
won by Julie Dragoo.
President Claudette Higgins led
the discussion of two upcoming
club projects. The French Festival
on May 14-16 .and the Fourth of
July river Festival Talent Show.
Canned goods were brought by ·
members for the Food Pantry.
Next month's meeting will be
March 26 at Dr. Samuel L. Bossard
Memorial Library at 7 p.m. The
.Public Affairs Deparlillent will be
in charge of members helping to
move books at the library.

Christy Edwards, Kristen Marcum, Tylina New
and Laura Ring; Back: Gabriel Marcum, Kayla.
George,
Bush, Misty RUSSel~ Dustin Gib1!5,
Bridget
CIISSey Lawson, Gara Leah
Bailey and

Quot~

ELECTROLUX ANNOUNCES
NEW TOLL FREE NUMBERS FOR
ELECTROLUX CUSTOMERS
1-800-348-6912

}$agles donation to help ·
visually impared readers

•
(ELEc;TROLUX)

..

Eisenhower to speak

Medi•Lift®

.

EASTER SALE!
RUSSELL STOVER

EASTER
$4~5.
:
BASKETS•••••• STA~ING
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DECORATIVE VELOUR COLORS

THE

POWER
RICLINER

MILlf

CHOCOLATE

AND

ily United Press International
U.S. Attorney for the western
district of Virginia E. Montgomery
Tucker following a drug raid on
three fraaemity houses at die Uni·
versity of Virginia; "There are no
havens. There are no safe places io
conduct drug trafficking.''

LOW MONTHLY·PAYMENTS

POWER
LIFT· •

..

PALMER

of the Day

Hamiton completes USMC basic training

SHOE CAFE

FOR SALES AND SERVICE ·
•CENTRAL YACS •COMMERCIAL
•RESIDENTIAL
ALSO. ANNOUNCING
PURLUX WATER SYSTEMS

HAPPY

Sunday nmes Sentlnei-Pige-87 .

GALLIPOLIS • PFC Chadd T. associates degn:e in criininal inves·
(Wick) Hamilton, son of Curtiss ligation at Barstow Community
·and Maureen C::ouch of Route I, CoUege. ·
11J United Preas lntei'IUidoaal
Hamilton's brother, L/CPL.
Gallipolis aad graadson of Stanley
REDGRAVE'S REVENGE:
(Jim) and Agnes Brumfield of Todd Hamilton is stationed in OkiVaaean Redart~ve has gone to Waterloo and Mrs. Faye Hamilton nawa, Japan with the USMC 3rd
Actors Equity with her claim that of Gallipolis, has completed all of Supply Battalion, Bulk Sroraae.
she was dropped from a touring his basic training in the U.S.
Aayoae wishing to ·write ClJadd
company of the play ''Lettice Marine Corp. and has been can write to: PFC Chadd T. HamiiLovage" ·because of her oulSPOken
Box S281 MCLB, Barstow,
assign(:(~ to bis permanent station at
opposition to the Persian Gull War.
Barstow Logistic Base, Barstow,
If the actors organization deter- Calif.
mii!CS that Redgrave was discrimiA 1990 graduate of Kyger Creek'
nated against, it will file a High School, Hamilton joined lhe
grievance ·with the League of Marines in July of 1990. After his
American Producers and the matter completion of basic training at Par·
could end up in arbitration. Red· ris lslimd and Camp Lejune, N.C., .
grave was in a similar situation in he stattea his schooling for .crimi19g2 when lhe Boston· Symphony nal investigation at Lackland Air
Orchesaa dropped her as narrator Force Base, San Antonio, Tew.
of Stravinsky's "Oedipus Rex"
After graduating fifth in his
••
aftu she came out with some stri- class, he departed Feb. 27, 1991 for
dent pro-Palestinian comments. his P.efRIIRCnt station in California
She later won $100,000 in damages While stationed at Barstow be will
from the symphony.
.
continue his s!udies towards an
HAWK'S
. JEWELRY:
Michael Horse •. the actor who
plays Deputy. Hawk on "Twin
From ...
Peaks," will be one of the big
auractions at this weekend's Amer· THE
ican Indian Festival and Maitet in
Los A=:r· H!)rse, who is part .
Zuni,
ero and Yaqui Jndian,
LAPI Tim IIAII•G&amp;W.OI.IS
is an accomplished jeweler and
artist and graduated from the
American Indian Art Institute in
the locjll Auxiliary or the Fraternal Order or
'' CHECK PRESENTED • Elderly aad visuaDy
Santa
Fe, N.M.
handicapped residents or Meigs County will
Eagles, right, presents a check to Ruth Power,
MELLENCAMP
MOVIE:
librarian, center, and Wanda Eblin, library
..,on have • wider selection or larae priat books
John Mellencamp is concenaating
board member, for the purchase oraew books.·
from which to clloose at the Meigs Coaaty Pub- ·
on rock 'n' roll again now ~t he's
qc Library. Here Becky Mankin, representing
finished his rust movie. He JUst finished production on "Falling from
"ALEXIS" White Patent/Black Patent
Grace " in which he stars as well
as di;ects Larry McMurtry's
DEFIANCE, Ohio (UPI) - The screenplay.
·
·
grandson of late President Dwight
Eisenhower will speak at Def1811Ce
POMERO\" - A check for $300 . Eagle Auxiliaries reeeive the grants College next month to help estab· to:be used for the pUrchase of large . from the Order's Memorial Foun· lish the Kevin McCann Chair in the
print hooks was p.resenled to the datiall in appreciation of their sup- Humanities, the college announced
~igs County Public Library Fri. port of the senior citizens oriented Friday.
• Do you have hlp or knee arthritis?
by
cia}' by the AUlliliary of the Frater- Golden Eagle Fund which the
David Eisenhower is completing
• Do you suffer from lower back pain?
nal Order of the Eagles, Aerie foundation administers. Eagles
a
trilogy
on the life and times of his
21.11. Pomeroy.
raise money for thiS project which
~As explained by Becky Mankin, makes available grants to bona fide grandfather, Dwight D. EisenhowIf so the Penox® Medi-Lift® Chair
Auitiliary secretary, the money is a charitable or~anizations working er.
"~sture of support to the library on programs wding the aged.
can be your answer to more
The April 9 event will serve as a
f«' its services to the elderly and
Each year at the Grand Aeriecomfort and mobility.
visbally handicapped."
Auxiliary convention a display is fund-raiser for an endowment that
will
pay
the
salary
and
a
research
:This is the 17th year of the grant shown of library gift presentation
p~:nun which is national .in scope. news pictures sent in during the stipend for the designated profesNOW AVAILABLE IN FIVE
sor7
current

Career ·c;enter, on of two~·.
teamS 1io1q Ohio hialuchools, wlll t~ ·
put their lkills in autornalive ICC'· ...
vico to die test in die lllio linall ~:~
lhe Plymoudl AM~ Shoot· :
ing Coolest May 10 in Toledo.
•+
The contest pits te~~~~s qainpt •:
each other and the clock ia f •.:
"hands-on" demonsbaliQn of JD04. ••
'The JI8IC...~• : ·•
ern automotive semcc.
winning lelm will trDYd to y.'ui! .:
ington, D.C., to compete t'! til&amp;.:
June 17 Trouble Sh()OIIIIg naliollf:·
finals. .
~·
In 1990, top state honors weat. :
to Wes Smith and Robert Doles of:.
BHCC.
. ·.;
BADGE WINNERS. Pictured are the badge whtaen 'durlng
Rlabt to Rod Week at Viatoa Elemenlltry. FrOID left, Autuma
Alban Karry Kropf, Craig Payae, Kyle Deel, Liltle Boggs, Aman- ·
da Da~ Amy McCoy, Chris Fitch and David Da~ls.

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

eop . zn
the news

BHCC competes ·:
-·
TOt.1$DO • Buckeye Hills;~

homeroom winners: Niki RinJ.
Autumn Alban, Karry Kropf, ~nug
Payne, Kyle Deel, Lottie Boggs.
Amanda Davis, Amy McCoy,
Chris Fitch, and David Daniels.
The school winner was Lottie
Boggs with 278 badges. Staff winners included Mrs. Dallie Forgey,
Mrs. Fannie Metcalf, and Mrs. Vita
Cannan.
The VintOn Elementary Swdent
Council sponsored a Right to Read
Week Graffiti Board. Beta Club
members Erin D~l. Larry Hunt,
Kari Alderman, and Heather
Compston, produced a news video
about Right to Read Week. The
video was shown to all students as
an activity to kick-off the week.
The week concluded with an
assembly to recognize student participation and winners.

r

March 24, 1981

HOlLOW OfOC~TE

MEDICAL SHOPPE ·

565 JACKSON PIIIE•GAWPOUS,OH.
(6141 446-2206 or 1·100-445-2206

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LOCAL CONSULTAnON ·
KNIGJI.T, MUllEN LAW OFFKES,
POMUOY, 992·2090
In Pdmeroy with

ATTORNEY D. NIOIAEl MillEN

Quirks in the News
By United Press lntti'national

CARLTON
EASTER
CARDS

PLUSH ANIMAlS
30°/o OFF .,

Deel aacl Karl Alderman, prodiiCed a news
program, Vinton News Network. It aired Tuesday, March S. ·

ATTORNEY:Ar:LAw
336 S. Nigh St., Columbus, OH.

WRITING ON THE WALL • Student Coun.
ell me•bers at Vinton Elementary sponsored a
Right to Read Week Grafitti Board. Members

EASTER

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992-6669
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MIDDLEPQRT, OHIO

Graduating

Auditions

,WINNERS • The Chester firth grade cheerleaders recently won

992-5776

firJII place ia the North Ellstern League Basketball Cheerleading
·,~

Brown/White Black/White
Navy/White Taupe/Bone

Tw~~~y=~?ack

'4400
MULTIA PATCH

~~eat-':ubs

flew coach class Friday
from; Alaska to a new home in
Wadlington state beca~se they
we~ &lt;toO little to gO as cargo and
were~perfectly harmless, Alaska
Airlines said.-'"they're being treated as one
woul4 treat a cat or a dog," Alaska
Airlines spokesman Greg Witter
said,W. Seattle. "They're so young
and tbey don't have coats to speak

Whlte/Patenton Top 1
Bone/Patch on Top

CLASSIC PUMP
Bone. White, Black

or:·:·

''4200

s~ the bears traveled with the

h~

Black Patent
White Luther

-,.
-.
....:,....
-.
-'r' ··

SLING PUMP
•
·

.
4 400

' l,

~

"

' I .• '

Taupe. Black. Nevy, White . _

•sooo

•
·ld

WE MAKE SPECIALTY
BASKETS FOR EASTER AND
ALL OCCASIONS . .

B~t;zrcubsflycoach ~-~

SPECTATOR

z

Syrocutl, Ohio

CDIIIpetltlon held at Riverview Elementary. Pictured,l-r,are BiUee
Renae Pooler, Bethany Cooke, AprU Foreman aad Rachael Seth•

. ''

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

·. I

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

.•

Family Planning.
It Makes Sense...

OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ·

CANDY

Hours: Monday thru
Saturday 9 A.M.-6 P.M.

SENIORS

bvstvlart ,

EASTER

CHOOSE FROM
•Lilies •Azaleas •Reiger· ·
Begonias •Caladiums
•Mums •Tulips
•Hyacinths •Miniature
Roses •Regular Roses
•Kalanchoes
•Amaryllis's •Daffodils.

pictured are, from left:
Compston, Amaada Davis, Jerem1 Kldd, Michael Stephens, Amy
McCoy and DanaeUe Carlilse.

Bear cubl ny coac:h
KETCHIKAN, Alaska (UPI) Bt&gt; at thl' lup of the class
Two cuddly newborn black bear
with cia~~~~ graduation
cubs were too little to travel as
announcements.
cargo and so were given coach
seatS for their nigHt from Alaska to
ComP Sl'e our wide line
a new home in Washington state.
of graduation supplies
"They're being treated as one
would llCal a cat or a dog," Alaska
Airlines spokesman Greg Witter
20"1o Off ~th of March
said in Seattle. ""They're so young
PAT'S POSIE PITCH
and they don't have coats to speak
1462
Soilor Rd~ Vinton, 011.
of;"
So the bears traveled with the
humaa piiSICIIgers. not buckled into
seats, but inside the kind of small
animal travel cage that might he
used for a cat or dog. ·
An Alaska Airlines customer
service •ep•esentative accompanied .
the bears. who emerged for infant
formula feeding from bottles durConfidential Services:
in&amp; die flighL
r Altboulh most animals - cerBirth Control
tainly all large animals - travel
V.D.
Screening
cargo class in the belly o( the
Cancer Screening
plane, biologists feared Lhe cold
Pregnancy Testing
inalnls of the aitcrafl where freight
and big 10imals ride would chill
the cubs to the point of hypotherSieling '" sole. No Diae l'lfUHCIIII'Vk• beca• of int.aitr to pay.
mia.
·
Weijhing only a few pounds, a
l'llft root toag and with just a thin
COil of rur, the baby. hears h,ave
goaea ..,ccial treauncnt ever smce
the mishap that left them as
PO.ROY:
GAWPOUS
~ ~lier this monlh just one
236 E. Moin St., 2nd Floor
414 Second AYI., 2nd floor
weelc after !hey were born.
992-5912
446-0166
Loggers in southeas,J Alaska
1:30 .fo S:OO Mondoy-Friday
came upoa what turned out to be an
1:30 to 5:00 Mondoy-Fridoy
occupied beat hillcmation den 10d
Closed Thursday
·
ls30 to 12 Soturtlay
c:aved it in, st1111iaB the new marna
Cloutl Thursday
bell' 10 blllly that she toot off and
·AlSO: Jacbon, Om pnlll, A.._, Ch••lhl, logan I McArthw
aever IClumod - abandoning her
two newborn babies.

WE HAVE A
LARGE VARIOY OF

,.. .

• 1 .. 1

;.,

Opon MDII. l Fri.
til I P.M.

, ......... n...
ill ......

Sat. ttl 5 .... "

'

..

."' .. '

. , r&lt;'.

..

~ 1..':

passengers, not buckled into
seats,' but inside the kind of small
ani~! travel cage that might be
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Niekamp 5 of 5.
A key to the second half was Tri-Village's switch
from a zone to man-to-man defense, a move that
brought smiles to both ·st. Henry head coach Fran
Cuilbault lll!d some lof his player.
"I was surprised;" said Guilbault, who recorcled
his SOOth coaching victory in the RedskiriS semifinal
win over Kinland Thursday. "Their zone gave us as
much trouble as any defense we've faced all year.
"But, that's (man-to-man) been their basic
defense all year and I've always said you have to go
with what you do besL"
'.'It gave me a smile," said Niekamp. "I plar. bet·
ter with my back to the basket and I really don t like
a zone. They (opponents) are usually a little smaller
and weaker than I am and I can power it up on
them.''

Randy Ward led Tri-Village in scoring with 12
points and Dirk Lewis had 10 for the Patriots, who
had their worst shooting game of the season, hitting
14 of 46 for 30.4 percenL
Shane Bietry, \vho led Tri-Village to its semifinal
win over Columbus Wehrle with 21 points, was held
scoreless in the title game.
Wayne Trace 77, Unioto 55 • Haviland Wayne
Trace, led by Russell Jewell with 23 points and Rob
Welch with 18, built up .a big early lead and coasted
to a 77-55 win over Chillicothe Unioto Saturday at
St. John Arena to win the boys' Division III state ·
high school basketball cha~pionship.
Wayne Trace, which fin1shed 24·3 with its 18th
consecutive win, raced out to a 14-2 lead with little
more than five minutes gone in the game and the outcome was never much in doubt.
The frustrated Shennan Tanks, who also wound
up their season at 24-3, made just ooo of 12 field goal

,

Connecticut women hand Clemson 60-$7 loss

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-

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - Kevin Niekamp and
Scott Brunswick each scored 19 points and led St.
Henry on a second-half sur~e that carried No. 1 St.
Henry to a crushinJ 71-45 wm over No. 3 Tri-Village
Saturday In the D1vision IV championship game of
the boys Slate high school basketball toumamenL
A three-point play by Bob Hoying with 2:34 left
in the third quaner broke a 32-32 tie and ignited an
184 run that ended with St Henry holding a 50-36
bulge.
Tri-Village, which lost for the fi{SI time in 28
games, never got closer than II points the rest of the
way and the final 26-point spread set a. new small
school record for winning margin.
The title was the second in a row for St. Henry,
which captured the Division Ill championship a year.
The Redskins also won the Division IV football title
last fall, btX:oming the fil'!il school to win both fOOL·
ball and basketball the same year since Marion Pleasant in I 972-73.
In addition. the St. Henry girls won the smallschool volleyball championship last fall.
St. Henry, w.hich finished 26-1, with its only loss
being a 73·71 decision to state-ranked Van Wen (a
Division 11 school), trailed only once in the game,
31-30, on a three-point play by Tri-Village's Nate
Lindamood with 3:39 left in the third quaner. It was
tied ill 32-32, but the Redskins closed the third quarter with a 10-2 run and a 42-34 lead. That ended
things for Tri-ViUage.
· Niekamp, a 6-foot-6, 250-pounder, scored 13 of
his points in the second balf and Brunswick 12. The
Redskins made 21 of their first 22 free throws and
W!lund up with 23 of 27. Brunswick was 8 .of 8 and

GOOD THURS., MAR. 21, 1991

I

Boston, Chicago winners

' RACING 'FOR PUCK· The New York Rangers' Paul Broten
(left) bypasses Philadelphia's Mark Pecle11011 (rl11bt) and races to
the puck on mid-Ice lu the first period or Saturday's NHL game In .

Pblladelpbla, whlc:b tbe host Flyers won 7-4. (UPI)

·

second period Saturday en route to a 7-5 triumph over Pittsburgh that
extended the Blackhawks' unbeaten streak to seven games and snapped
the Penguins' home unbeaten run at14.
The victory gave Chicago a 6-0-1 record in its last seven games. The
defeat was Pittsburgh's fmt at Civic Arena since Jan. 3, and gave the Pen~insa 13·1·1 record in their last 15 home games. The Penguins are 7-2·1
m tbeir last 10 games.
· ·
With Pittsburgh leading 1-0, the Blackhawk&amp; tied the score on a goal
by McGill 43 seconds into the second period. McGill ftred a slap shot
from the right point that deflected off defenseman Randy Hillier's skates
past goaltender Tom Barrasso.
·
Goulet gave Chic111o a 2-1 lead at 1:59 on a power play. Goulet convened the rebound from the right edge of the crease of a shot by Doug
Wilson.
.
··
•
Chelios scored !I seconds later put the Blackhawks ahead 3-1. His 50foot slap shot from the slot went under Barrasso's glove at 2:10.
The Penguins cut the lead to 3-2 at8:33 of the second period on Mario
Lemieux's goal. He scored off a rebound of a shot Bob Errey from about
30 feet in the slot past rookie goaltender Dominik Hasek.
Jeremy Roenick scored at 17:27 of the second period on a power play
. to put Chicago ahead 4-3. Roenick backhanded the puck from behind the
net and the puck suuck Barrasso and went in.
.
Kevin Stevens scored 22 seconds later to cut the lead to 4-3. Stevens
scored from 20 feet in the slot for his 38th goal.
Chicago increased.'lts lead to S-3 at 18!54 of the second period on a
goal by Dave Manson. Troy Murray won the draw to Manson, who fired a
slap shot from.tbe left point by Barrasso. . ·
Mark Recchi's 40th goal,"' 4:52 of the third period, cut the leailto 5·
4. Recchi converted his own rebound from the riJ!ht edge of the crease.
Steve Thomas scored at I 0:35 of the third penoo to increase Chicago's
lead to 64. Thomas filed a 50-foot slap shot past Barrasso.

en-ry;-WayneTr~ace- win -n-ivision~Iv,- rii state crowns

•

1:~.!~.:.~~l7.:.~~~-o~!J

FLAVORITE

'.~'

With victories over Tri-Village, Unioto,

Only At Powell's Super Valul

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foulS in the second half. including
its lOth with 12:30 to play to put
Kansas in the double bonus.
Alkansas jumped out to an early
lead in the fust gaif by using heavy
defensive pressure and the hot hand
of Day, who had 21 first-half
points.
Day scored eight of the team's
first 17 points, including a pair of ,
three-pomlerS. as Arkansas took a
17-6 lead with 14:24 to go in the
half.
Kansas hung tough through the
inside play of Jamison and Randall,
and took the lead at 29-27 on
Brown's three-poinLshot at the
5:59 mark.
.
Arlcansas responded with a 20-6
run, including 15 straight points, to
close out the half and iake a 47-35
lead.

a

Limit 1 Please

1

. A Mark Randall offensive
rebound, lay-up and foul shot at the
15:35 mark $ave Kansas its first
lead, S4-51, smce 5:59 to go in the
first half.
Murry knotted the score 54-54
with a threeiJOinter and Arkansas
took a five-point lead at 62· 57 on
Day's offensive rebound and follow with 12:10 to play.
The Jayhawks held the Razorbacks scoreless over the next four
minules aad went on an 8-0 run,
in~luding two insi&lt;!e baskets by
Jamison, to iake a 65-62 lead with
Br13 left. Kansas led tbe rest of the
way.
_
·
Kansas put it away at the free.
throw line, where tbe learn shot 26
for 33 for game. In the second half,
tbe Jayhawks made 24 of 30 free
throws . .
A,rkansas committed 20 team

Tocchel scored hiS 40th of the season into an empty net at 19:36.
By JOE CIALINI
.
The Rangers tied the score at 1-1 on a power-play goal by Ron Tur·
UPI Sports Writer ·
: .
cotte with one second left in ·the fliSt period. Turcotte was falling to tbe
. PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Pelle Eklund scored th(ee goals and assist·
Cd on two more Satunlay a{ternoon to lead the Philadelphia Flyers to a 7• ice when he put the puck in the open side of the net for his 23rd goal of
4 victory over the New Yort Rangers, who lost their eighth sttaight game.
the year. ·
Tocchet returned to the lineup and gave Philadelphia a 1-0 lead at9:29
': Rich Tocchet added i pair of goals for the Flyers, who had lost three
with his first goal since Feb. 18.
strai,ht and seven of .theu previous eight contests and find themselves
Tocchet. who had missed two straight games and 10 of the previous 14
fighung for a playoff bel'lh.
··
Goaltender Pete Peeters recorded his first viciOI'Y since Nov. 30, when
btX:ause of a pulled groin, outmuscled tbe Rangers' Davi&lt;! Shaw to get off
·
a shot that fooled Richter. It was Tocchel's 39th goal of the season.
the Flyers posted a 5-1 triumph over the Rangers.
. . .
The Rangers entered tbe game with tbe best power-play raung m the
In other action, Boston beat Buffalo 64, and Chicago edged Pittsburgh
NHL, converting on 24 percent of tbeir advantages, but managed only one
7-5.
Bnins 6, Sabres 3 ·At Boston, Cam Neely scored two goals Saturday
goal in nine power plays.
.
.
afternoon and the Boston Bruins peppered two Buffalo goalies with 45
Eklund gave the Flyers a 2-1 lead just 55 seconds mto the second penOd when he lifted a rebound over New York goaltender Mike Richter. shots en route to a 6-3 victory over the Sabres.
The Bruins, who rampaged for 73 shots against QuebtX: goalie Ron
Richter stopped' shot by Jeff Chychnm· but could not prevent Eklund
Tugnutt
Thursday night. continued assaulting Saturday against Buffalo
fiom scori"' his 16th goal or the season.
goalies Darcy Wakaluk and Daren Puppa. who substituted at the begin. Philadelphia increased its lead to 3-1 at 14:51 when Mark Pederson
.
tipped a wrap-around shot by Ron .suner past Richter for his lOth goal qf · ning or the second period. Boston had 33 shots after two periods.
Dave
Christian
got
his
32nd
goal
of
the
season
37
seconds
into
the
theseason.
·
·
game; taking a pass in front of Walcaluk and lofting a wrist shot high into
. Peeters made saves on Brian Leetch and Brian Mullen when the
the net Ray Bourque's power-play goal at 10:32 made the score 2-0 but
·Rangers were on the-power play .to preserve the .two-goal lead as the
Buffalo
closed wi!hin a goal on Bob Ray~s seventh of tbe season at 6:05.
Rangers outshot Philadelphia 12-7 m the second penod. .
Neely's Wrist shot into the top corner made'the score 3-0 before Buffa·
New York closed within 3·2 41 seconds into the thud when when
lo's Benoit H~e scored his 18th goal of the season. at 13:17, to bring
lifike Gartner scored his 45th goal of the season on a wraparound shol
. Eklund restored the Flyers' two-goal lead with a power-play goal 78
the Sabres to w1thin a goal again.
Jeff Lazaro's fluke short-handed goal at 18:32 restored Boston's twoi!Wlnds later when he put a soft shot past Richter for his 171h goal of the
goal
lead. While Buffalo was on the power play, the puck squirted out of
season.
th
the
Boston
zone with Boston's Dave Poulin and Buffalo's Grant Ledyard
. Tie Domi known more for his fighting than his offense, scored c
in
pursuit
Wakaluk
roamed far to his left in an effon to ·cut off Poulin but
fliSt 'goal of his career at 6:37 to cut the Philadelphia lead to 4-3. Domi
Lazaro reached the puck and shot into the empty neL
'got ahead of Tim Kerr, took a pass .from Brian LeeiCh and beat Peeters.
The Bruins increased their lead to 6-2 in the second period before Buf·
Mike Ricci' stole the puck from Bernie Nicholls and beat Richter with a
shot from lh~~ht faceoff circle for his 21st goal of the year. giving the falo scored its third goal. Bob Sweeney finished off a 2-on-1 started by
Flyers a 5-3
at 12:02.
•
· '
· Petti -skiriCo at 6:4'J.; and Neely got No. 47 o( the ·season on the power
The Rangers closed within one again on Ray Sheppard's 24th goal of play, knocking home tbe rebound after four attempts by Ken Hooge to put
..
the season at 13:30. Shcpjlard skated around a crowd of five players in the puck paSt Puppa.
. Rick Vaive scored while the Sabres -.yere on the power play at 12:21 to
front of the righi of the oet and shot the.puck into the open s•de.
.
.
.
'
, Eklund clinclicd the 111umph w•th h1s th1rd goal of the game at 18.54. make it6-3.
Blackhawks 7, PenllJins 5 • At Pittsburgh, Pa., Bob McGill, Michel
A nifty passing display forced Richter out of position and gave Eklund an
Goulet and Chris Chelios scored within 87 seconds of Chicago's five·goal
empty net. '
I

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

!1 18.5
OZ.

to ice tbe upseL _ .
. Adonis Jordan added 14 points
and Sean Tunstall and Te1ty Brown
each had II for the Jayhawks.
Aitansas, the No. 1 seed in the
region and ranted second national·
ly, ends it season at 34-4. Todd
Day paced the RazortJecks with 26
points, Oliver Miller had 16 and
Ernie Murry added 14 for
Arkansas, which went to tbe rmal
Four last season.
Kansas sc;ored the first eight
-points of the second half to cut a
47- 35 halftime deficit to 47-43
· with 17:55 to play. The Jayhawks
continued to surge and lied the
score 51-51 on two Tunstall free
throws with 16:06 left, by which ·
time Arkansas liad already commit·
ted seven fouls 10 pot Kansas jn the
bonus situation.

.

In the NHL Saturday afternoon,

I

I ·

.

.

•

1
I

Limit 1 Please

I
I
I

March 24, 1991

.

•.
By BILL TAGGART
UPI Sports Writer
·
· CHARLOTIE, N.C. (UPI) Alonzo Jamison scored 2() points
Saturday to lead Kansas past
Arkansas 93-81 in the NCAA
.Southeast Regional final, vaulting
tile Jayhawks into the Final Four.
· · Kansas, the 1988 naliona1 cham·
pion, will play next Saturday in
lll~lis against the winner of
Sunday s East Regional between
·Nonh Carolina and Temple.
. Kansas, 26-7, nillied from a 12·
point halftime defiCit behind Jami· .
son's. 16 second-half points and
:intense defensive pressure. The
1ayhawkS also committed only two
'1umovers in the second half after
10 in the o nin
·od.
'· In the l:st ~fo"or the game,
.Kansas made 17 of 20 free throws

limit I Please
.

C

Kansas hands Arkansas 93-Slloss

24&lt;.

!ua.

Monday tlK.u Sunday
8 A,.,·lO PM

1rint.es .- j.entin.el Section

•.

game, managed only four points
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) .Kerry Bascom scored 22 points, before fouling out with 5:41 to
including a pair of key free throws play.
Connecticut, which led by as
late in the game, and Connecticut
earned a berth in the NCAA many as 13 points in the first half,
· women's Final Four Saturday with look a 48-39 lead on a,layup by
a 60-57 victory over Clemson in Bascom with 8: 12 to play in the
the East Regional championship . second half.
Clemson closed within 53-51 on
game.
Bascom's free throws gave Con· a jumper by Counney Johnson with
necticut, the third seed, a 55-51 3:24 10 play and hal! a chance to tie
lead with 1:09 to play and enabled tbe score with 2:23 lett but Boyatl
tbe Big' Bast champions to hold off missed 1 pair of free throws.
After Bascom S8flk two from tbe
fourth-seeded Clemson, which shot
line
for a four-pointlead, Connectia miserable 33.3 percenL
Wendy Davis had 12 points and cut went ahead 57-5 I on a plir of
Mcshan Pattyson added 10 for free throws by Pauyscn. Boyatl hit
a three-point shot to Iring Clemson
Connecticut, 29-4.
Clemson, 22-11, got 14 points within 57-54 with 19 seconds 10 go
each from Kerry Boyan · and but Davis • two free throws put
Shandy Bryan and 13 from Cberon Connecticut ahead 59·54 with 16
Wells. Jackie Farmer, who was seconds left.
averaging nearly 14 points per
Angie Pelers sank another threepoint shot to CUI tbe illad_to 59-57 .

but Pattyson made a single free
throw with three seconds to play
for the fmal margin.
Clemson scored the first two
points of the game but never led
again as Conl)ecticut used a 15-2
spun to talce a 15-4 lead on two
free throws by Orly Grossman.
Connecticut expanded its advantage to .25-12 on a layup by Bascom before Clemson closed within
29-24 at 'halftime.
Clemson closed within one·
point ·on three occasions in tbe second half but Connecticut scored
eight straight points to take a 46-37
lead on two free throws by Bascom
with 9:49 to play.
'
Named to the all·tournament
team wete Connecticut's Bl!scom,
Davis and Laura Lishness, Clemson's Wells and James Madison's
Paula Schuler.

attempts in the flfSt quarter, were outrebounded 15-5
and committed sill turnovers to trail 184 at the end
or the period.
\
The Wayne Trace lead reached 22 poinis late in
the second quarter, 39-17, and the Raiders led 39-23
at the intennission with Jewell scoring 15 of his 23
points. ·
·
·
It got no better in the second half for Unioto,
which finished 21 of 66 from the field for 31.8 per·
cent. Trac~ was 26 of 53, 49.f percenL
''We li;st three games before Christmas and
haven 'tlost since,'' said Wayne Trace head coach AI
Welch. "We're a much better ball club now than we
were then.
"We thought we had a size advantage and we
were quicker at about every spot on the floor, "
Welch said in analyzing the game. ''It showed up.
"They had to gamble to get the ball and numerous
limes we sttipped the ball away from them early in

Seles tops Sabatini{n Lipton finals
love-4, love-40. I probably never
will again either," Seles said. "I
never really thought about coming
back. I was getting ready to play
the third seL"
Seles slugged her way to a 6-5
edge and served for the maiCh bu1
Sabatini wasn't through yet. The
Argentinian resident or Key Biscayne survived 'four match points '
but fmally fell when she was long
wilh a backhand slice from the
baseline.
"I was relieved because I was
gasping for air, •' Seles said.
Sabatini also was fatigued, and
said it was part of the reason she
lost her lead in the second set.
"I gol tired at times. That's the
reason I made a few mistakes," the
fourth-ranked Sabatini said.
II was the second straight Lipton
title for Seles, a 17-year-old
Yugoslavian who lives in Sarasota,
Fla Her victory a year ago started a
banner year that netted her the
1990 French Open, tbe 1991 Aus·
tralian Open and eventually the the
No. I ranking achieved less than
two weeks ago.
.
Sabatini is known for forcing
the action by coming to tbe aa but
after the ftrst game when she brolu:
Seles serve, she seemed pinned to
game.
the
baseline.
"I had many chanCes in tbe·sec·
·
"She
didn't give me many
ond set," Sabltini sakf. "I missed
chances
to
go to the net." Sabatini
lbree easy balls•••
Seles marveled over her come· said. "She is playing vety well.
You have to wm the points. She's
back.
"I've never come bact from not going to give you any."

ByLESKJOS
1JPI Sports Writer
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPI)Monica Seles, with a reputation for
refusing to give up, surprised even
herself Saturday with the eomeback
a~ainsl Gabnela Sabatini that
sealed the Lipton International
Players' Championships women's
title and secured her world No. 1
nudting.
·
Trailirig by four games and 40·
love in the fifth, Seles rallled for a
6-3, 7-5 ttiurbph over local favorite
Sabatini in tbe $2.5 million touma·
menl
· "In tbe beginning of the second
set. my concentration went down,"
Seles said. But she began hitting
the comers with her tv. a-fisted
forehand and won the game to
make it 4-1 and swt a streak that
ended with a 4-4 tie. From down 5·
4, she went on to win.
In the men's fmal Sunday. close
friends David Wheaton and Jim
Courier will face each other. Couri·
er was seeded 13th in the touma·
mcnt and Whealon wu unseeded.
Sabatini bemoaqed the lo~t
Opportunities In the leCOIId set, particularly when Seles won three
straight points to take the fifth

"
·'

the game. I think that took them totally out of their
offense. I think: the first eight minutes set the tempo
for the ball game. They jus~ never got settled, I don't
think." .
Matt Combs and Jeff Miller each scored 14 points
to lead Unioto in scoring, while Jasbn Thress and Jim
Hutchinson had 10 each . Combs also had 12
rebounds.
·
Wayne Trace also got 15 points and a game-high
13 rebounds from Bill Hall.
There were 40 turnovers and 39 personal fouls
called In the roughly·played eontest.
The title was the first for Wayne Trace, which lost
in the semifmals in 1987 in its only other trip to the '
state tournament.
The first 3:09 of the game was played with a girls'
basketball, which is slightly smaller than the boys'
ball. The mistake was discovered by Wayne Trace's
Rob Welch.

'

.

Seles said it wasn't in her game
plan to keep Sabatini on the baseline and she was ready for her if
she came to the neL
"I wasn't fOing to say before
the match, she s not going to come
to the net, but if she does, I'll rry to
pass her," Seles said.
It was the third vicrory for Seles
in four maiChes between the young
rivals and Sabatini thinks she
deserves her ranking.
. "I wouldn't say she hits harder
than everybody else but she doeso't
give you any chances," Sabatini
said.
The victory ljlised Seles's mllll:h
record for the year to 17-1 and
dropped the 20-year-old Sabatini to
19·2. Seles reached the final by
defeating Mary Joe Fernandez in
the semifinals Thursday, when
Sabatini ousted Steffi Graf. The
victory in the $2.5 million tourna·
ment earned Seles $112,500.
Although Wheaton and Courier
have met only once on tbe Tour - :
a Wheaton victay in 1989 - they
are close friends and attended the
Nick Bollettieri Tennis Academy 11
BradeniOII, Fla., together.
"We know each other's games
inside out. that's for sure," Courier
said. "We pqldice together all the'

lime.''
Courier said it didn't bother him
to be playing a close friend in a

fmal.
"Whoever's across the net, it
doesn't maaer," he said.

�.,

March

Tlmes Sentinel

Meadows named
ONU golf captain

PomeroY-Middleport Oelllpolls, OH Point PJ•unt, wv

- - - -- -

With Bucks' first-half FG shooting at 31%,
..

with a trip tbroulb the Soutb dur·
ing tbe wee* of Apri14-8.
Named • .the ICilll 's tapllin is
senior Tom Meadows (Gallia
Academy '87), last year's all.Qbio
Athletic CoiiCc:mlce sclcclion who
finisbed eiglllb in the league meet
with a two-round score of 163. He
poslfd aa avemge of 823 shots per
18 holes lasl )'CBI'. which was good
for third.best on the team.
The tellll will hoSt only one
. match this year- the ONU Invita,
tional on May 4-5 at Colonial Hills
Country Club.
This year's scbcdule is as fol·' lows:
: Apri14-8: Soutbem trip
: April 12-13: at OSU-Lima Baron
; Invilalional
·1opri121: at DeniJon Invitational
: .,t.pril 22: at Capital Invitational
: :April 28-29: at Wiuenberg lnvita·

, , u.lkd ...... hllenatioul
W. ~ Bater opened !he
game wilb a missed dllllk Friday
night, it set tbe mood for wbat
would prove to be a very long night
for theObio Slife B•w:Jr-yes.
Ohio State bit only nine or 29
shots from !he fieJd (31 percent) in
the fust half and St John's Malik
Scaly sc:ored 22 poiniS and Robert
Wer4ann tossed in 21' to lead the
Redmen to a 91-74 ujlsct of lbe
Buc:keycs in lbc NCAA Midwest
Regional semifinals.
"I thought !he f~rst offensive
series set !he tone for tbe whole

ganic," Buckeye bead coach
Randy Ayers said. "They got four
or five CIIICks at the ball in that fJCSt
possessioo."
Baker missed ·his jam and Werdann put up an offensive rebound
to give St. Jobn's, which never
trailed, the fJCSt points of the game.
"You could tell in that fust pos·
session tbat they were hungrier.
than we were," said Jim Jack$0n,
wbo led Ohio State witb !9 poin~.
The Redmen stayed hot all
night, finishing witb 63 percent
from the field. Five players scored
in double figures.
"Five players in double figures
is a luxury we didn't have during
the regular season," St. John's
mentor Lou Camcsecca said. "We
just shot so well. You let guys back

in the game when you don't
score."
St. John's connected on 60 percent of itS field-goal attempts to
build a 43-24 halftime ad...nta,e.
Ohio State closed to 63-47 w•lh
12:28 remaining after baskets by
Mark Baker and Treg Lee, but !hat
was as close as the Buckeyes
would get.
.
"I thought in tbe second half
our defense iet down," Camcsecca
said. "Thank GOd we'd built up a
cushion in the first half.''
"We didn't start mating !he
effon points until the second half,"
Ayers added. "You can't get 18 or
19 points down and beat a good '
team like StJohn's."
St. John's cemented lhc victory
(Sec NCAA on C-3)

-1ional

; May 4-5: ONU Invitational
· May 9-10: OAC championships
: t at Apple Vallcy COuntry Club)

11 JO£ CIALINI
·
UPI Spor11 Writer
Andre Turner and Ron Ander·
son came off tbe Philadelphia
76en' beocb to belp end tbe Chic:a·
go Bulls' nine-game winning
sueak.

Turn!:r directed the offense and
Andcraon scored 15 of bis 20
poials in' the [ouith qllll'ICt Friday
niihl 10 load PbiiadcJpbia to a 9S90'victoryovcrChica&amp;o.
Turner added six of his 10
points and five of his nine usiiiS In
die final ~riod u Philadelphia

:Lyne
Center
slate
s• .
.

...

·

·

,.

·

that, you have to rely on your'
defense and for tbc most pan over
the long haul, it was pmay good.''
Nothinjl was better than the
defensive Job Philadelphia did on
Michael Jordan, who hit only eight
of 23 shots and scored 20 points,
10 below his average.
· "I can't _take (credit), the tcani
can," said Hersey Hawkins, who
~Jordan much of the game.
'We did a good job on do~bling
, (Sec NBo\ on C-4)
'

r:=========::::::::::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::~

ROBER.T M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

"They looked like they were
ready to be had and then tbe~ came
alive in me fourth quancr, ·said
Chicago bead COICh Phil JICkSOII,

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIG.HT CONTROL

;r.,OO:nat~:!.~oa28..:~

son hurt ua again and Andre Turner
rcally changed the pmc around for

·RAPID REFUND:?

·'

poinu hi the aec:ond quarter and
had a 14-point ad...ntqc early in
the thin1 quarter but lhe 16en never
qulL
·
·
"A couple of lima we made a
JCC11. run in tbe first halt llld lben
they ICOrcd the flllt six poillls of
the second half to put us down
IO," Philadelphia bead. coach Jim
Lynam said.
"We had it tied at 80 and they
scored six iii a row. We had to
mate several runs. In a pme like

k:t::::ea~~~
pmcs.
,i

Heard about

•

Sunday Tlmes Sentinel Page C3

Philadelphia stages comeback .
to hand Chicago 95-·90 defeat

St. John's beats Ohio State
91-74 in NCAA tournament

ADA • Obio Nonbern Univmi·

ty's golf team wiD begin its

March 24, 1at1

them. ••
·
,
Chical(C? led by as many as .1 S

•

:; RIO GRANDE - The activities
: iehcdule for Lync Center is as foi•Jows:
::
GymiWium bours
: - Sunday • 1-3 p.m., open rccre• )tion; 6-8 p.m., coUege recreation
: • Monday ·dosed
· ;: Taesday • 6-8 p.m., college

Put America's Tax

POMEIOY
611 EISJ MAIN Sf.

- ~on

: · WedDesclay • 6-8 p.m., college
•fecrcation
·
· : ; Tblll'lday.· 5:30-7 p.m., college
--··~- : Jf.Creadon
.
.
Friday • closed
•· Saturday. closed
·
• · Sunday, Marcb 31 • 6-8 p.m.,
t(&gt;llege recreation
:'
••
•i
Pool boun
;. Sunday ·closed
•: Monday • closed
: Tuesday ·closed
: : Wednesday ·dosed
· : Thursday • closed
: · Friday • closed
:: Saturday "closed
·: Sunday, Marcb 31- closed

DIVE! DIVE! • PhUadelpbia's Charles
Barkley and Cblcago's Scottie Pippen respond
to the command by bustling after the loose baD

GAiliPOUS
SECOND .&amp; SYCIMOIE
'

'

Chuck WlngeH Builders
1 Carol Ln., Athena Oh.
592-4119 or 592·3749 .

Home atbletlc events
: . Friday • softball doubleheader
ys. Findlay, 1 p.~.
•: Saturday • baseball double&amp;eadcr vs. DefUUlce, I p.m.; softtiall twinbill vs. Mt. Vernon
Jtfazarene, I p.m.

.

By United Press Intematlonal
The reality of Do Jackson's cur·
rent condi!ion loomed larger than
any vision of a future comeback
Friday, when even the most head·
line-hungry team in baseball
~tiiscd 10 take a chance on him.
: · The New Yodt Yankees, dccmihg)l!ckson's medical condition
ioo big a risk for the price of his
$2.~75 milliQn salary, declined to
c;taim tbe two-sport All-Star, whose
P.ro careers look finished because
a deteriorating hip condition.
.; The Yankecs had the frrst shot
lit Jackson, 28, who was waived
Monday by the Kansas City Roy$. He injured the left hip last Janllary in 1J11 NFL playoff game as a
running back for the Los Angeles
Raiders.
"We played over 1,000 scenar-

See Your Unibilt Builder Now, Purchase Your
New Home by May 6th and Save. Choose
From Over 100 Different Ranches, Lake Cot·
tages: Cape Cods and 2-Stories. Interest
Rates Are Down. So There Has Never Been A
Better Time To Purchase The Home of Your
Dreams.

.

at mlclcourt In tbe ftrst qulll'ter ol Frlcla1 nl1ht's
NBA contest in Pblladelpbll's Spectrum, wbk:•
tbe Slxers won 95-!10. (UPI)
.

· Yt;~nkees decline to sign Jackson

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POINT PLEASANT, WV.

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GAlliPOLIS &amp; POMEIOY
446-0699

.

ios. We irieil a number of avenues
to see what made sense. We didn't
come up with anylhing satisfacto.
ry," team president Leonard Kleinman said.
A teams could claim Jackson for
just $1 bur must par. his 1991
salary. The Royals will pay onesixth of tbe contract if Jackson is
not signed by another team by
Opening Day . Jackson has the
option of rejecting any claim and ·

becoming a free qent
The Yankees had six leading
ortbopcdic specialists evaluate his
previous reports.
"There wasn't one doctor who
said tbey felt he could play at the
level we wanted, probably for IWO
years," Yankees' G M Gene
Michael said. "We felt we had a
~cat chance at a great talent. We
.JUSt cnnl~n't.l.tlkt~ the risk." .
(See BASEBALL on C-4)

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·~

·(Continued from C-2)
.,¥ith 11 9-0 surge, featuring six · ·
'
pllints by Jason Buchanan, that'
gave tbe Rcdmen an 84-59 advanuige with 4:27 left
.
., The Redmen take a 23-8 record
into Sunday's regional championsh•pil~wnsn&gt;Ulte, winners over
Connccucut in the other Midwest
. semifinal. Ohio State, tbe Big Ten
co-champion, ended its season witb
a27-4 mark.
In other regional semifinal
matchups, Duke downed Connecticut 81-67, Nortb Carolina blasted
Eastern Michigan 93-67 and Temple topped Oklahoma State in overtime 11-63.
.
Duke 81, Connecticut 67
At Pontiac, Mich ., Christian
LaeUner scored 19 points and Greg
Koubek collected 18 to lead Duke
in a Midwest Regional semifinal .
T-he victory moved Duke within
one victory of reaching the Final
Four for tbe fifth time in six seasons.
,
. A year ago, the Blue Devils
eliminated tbe Huskies with a 7978 overtime victory in the regional
final. This year Duke never trailed
as it improved to 29·7.
Guards John Gwynn and Chris
Smith led the Huskies, 20-11, witb
16 points apiece and Scott Burrell
finished with II.
N. Carolina 93, E. Michigan 67
We have all colors of granite - beautiful blacks, deep
At East Rutherford, N.J .•
Geor~e Lynch and Pete Chilcutt
reds, pinks, greys, brown - every brand name available!
combmed for 12 points and North
Choose your memorial now and have It beautifully
Carolina ran off 15 straight following a brief confrontation between
sculptured or personalized with an etching. Stop In and
Tar Heel Rick Fox and Eastern
see our professional people at work. All of our carvings
Michigan center Marcus Kennedy
midway through the second half m
and lettering are
an East Regional matchup.
com plated locally by
c """
&lt;Ood mo FRH boo'lo" &lt;l&lt;o•iog ••TOnoh I
The Tar Heels, 28-5, the
f
P' "''"'d '" 1..._11 color w•th ~· •• ond po ir •\ h•ted .
t
1
region's top seed, will meet Temexperienced era t• ·c ll •ndl1 Nl ,.e on o vthor,red ~*1'\ MOfl•tr-nl Co :
ple in the final on Sunday.
smen. You do not
' ' P' " ..... IO IOve coiiOll')'( hOifle .
:
The 121h·secded Hurons, mak·
.I
C Pica'• •end me det od• oboo~o~t movtOi eum\ w•tho"''l
have t o waIt whi e
ing their first -appearance in the
'"''""'
1
I
Sweet 16 after upset wins over
your
order
Is
being
"""'"
:
Mississippi State and Penn State,
lettered and shipped s..... ' ' •• ,..
:
finiSh 26-7 .
C1ty o r To wn - -- -·Temple 72, Oklahoma St. 63
in fOr Setting. .
Phoo o
:

HOLZER CLINIC
FAMILY PRACDCE

Tht Ntw \brh Times, Ftbruary

:.

PVCS trio named
:to all-tourney team

Craft

: Hill, McCleese and Wray concluded their prep hardwood'careers
with the victory, as did fellow
stniors Chris Graham, Benton Hall,
Matt Little, Jeff Peavley and
Tooathan .Turner.

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Northern Michigan
.
"\
tops Alaska-Anchorage
: MARQUE'ITE, Mich. (UP!) Dallas Drake scored three goals
~ added twO assists Friday night
to power Northern Michi~ an
8-5 win over Alaska-ARc
in
die opening game of their N AA
Oivision I quarterfinal hoc;key
pJayotr game.
The W'aldcats, 3S-5-4, lead the
blest of lhree series 1-0. Game 2
'ifiU be played Sanuday and a thin!
pmc, if necessary, would be
Played Sunday.
·

New Cavalier trade.
4-apeed, ail', vinyl trim,
one owner.

WINTER SALE
IN. PROGRESS

D!.XIDLL

: GALLIPOLIS • Ohio Valley
.Christian cagers Dax Hill, Mike
:McCleese and Greg Wray were
:iecently named 10 this year's all{Ownamcnl team after posting a 73;10 victory over Cross Lanes Chris:tian in the West Vilginia ChriStian
Education Association state toiDliB·
:ment earlier this month.
-: Hill, the tournament MVP who
'(inished his three-year career with
the Defenders with I ,293 points,
racked up 55 points in the cagefest,
including 33 against Cross Lanes,
)lllhich is coached by former Galljpolis Pam &amp;. Recreation director
Mike Simmons. McCleese, a 6-4
~~Cnior who llllnsferred from Gallia
,t,cademy, was the Defenders'
chairman of the boards in the tourrlament, and Wray, a 6-0 senior,
ijotched 21 points and rendered
offective defense in OVC's last two
games. The veteran trio joined
. Cross Lanes' Shawn Bell and Todd
Wilson, Grace Christian's Brian
()avis and Steven Reynolds, and
Greater Beckley's' Matt School-

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(OT)

· At East Rutherford, N.J., Marie
Macon scored eight of his 26 points
in overtime to send !Otb-secded
Temple past third-seeded Oklahoma State and into the East
Regional final. Temple, 24-9, will
play North .Carolina Sunday, with
the winner advancing to the Final
Four in Indianapolis next weekend.
Oklahoma State's Corey
WiUiarns sent tbe game into overtime when he went one-on-one
with Macon and hit a jurnptt from
the top of the key.
'l'emplc had a chance to win it in
regulation when Macon received a
length of the court pass with 1.5
seconds left. but his shot bounced
off the back of the rim.
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Page C4 Sunday nmes SenUnet

March 24, 1881

Pomeroy-MiddJeport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

March 24,1991

In Friday's Division II, I semifinals,

Lexington, Dayton C-J, Cleveland St. Joe, Lakota winners· .

Will .feulding Pirates be able to keep rest of NL East at bay?

·

· By UDit_. Prt~~Intel'lllllional · Van Slyke fomied lhe most potent lacking; bencli is lhin.
.
. Despite what you might have outfield in baseball last year. Bonds
New faces - Curtis Wilkerson,
hwd. there are some happy play- and Bonilla both hll over 30 signed as a free agent, adds infield
ers in the Pitliburglt Pirates' camp homers and drove in over 100 runs depth.
this spring.
and Van Slyke, limited to 136
Outlook - Leyland lili:es his
And there are some not so games because of injuries, hit 17 buUpen by comminee fiWIOICb and
happy
himlers and knocked in 77 runs.
will keep 11 pitchm on the roster
Noi only will Pittsburgh hitve a
Le,Yland will have to be a master - five s~ and six relieven. If
bullpen by committee, but three tactiCWI to make up for the loss of Leyland can keep temperamental
players will share first base: Gary first baseman Sid Bream, who Bonds happy, and if pitching staff
Redus, Carmelo Martinez and . signed with Atlanta; infielder siays healthy, Pirates will win more
Orlando Merced, who batted .262 Wally Backman, now at Minneso- ·than they lose. But another.division
ai Triple A Buffalo. They're excit· ta, and Reynolds, who fled. to tide seems unlikely.
ed just to~ in the majors.
• Japan.
"For lhe benefit of the team,
"You play every year like you
.
NewYorkMell
it'd be better if I doo"t play every- never won or never lost, whether
.
Once
rich, the ~ew
day/' said Redus; who biltted .247 · yott'r~ defending champions or York Metspitching
are
suddenly
c;aughl in a
in 96 games last season, starting 58 anything," Leyland ~d. .
at first base. "I know my limita·
Strenatbs- Solid rotation cen- recession.
The Mets learned at lhe slart of
tions. i'm a role pl!lyer."
te~ around NL Cy Young Award
spring
~raining that lef!·hander
And then there's National wmner Doug Drabek, a 22-game Frank V1ola,
a 20-gamc wmner last
~MVP Barry Bonds, whose winner. He~ oicely comJ?lemented
season,
has
bone
chips in his ·left
shouting match wilh manager Jim by Zane Smllh,John Smiley, Neal elbow lind may have
problems finLeyland on March 4 created some Heaton and B~ Walk: outfield ai_o ishing the season. Less than week
question whether the award was for of Bonds, Bonilla and Van Slyke IS into the exhibition season .another
Most Vocal Player.
baseball's best
Sid Fernandez, broke his
Bonds hilS settled down, Ley.' .
Wealmews- Who's on first? lefty,
wrist in an exhibition game and
land said. and is "playing like he's Leyland plans to plat~on there, will be lost to the club for three
on a mission" which is gOOd news . although all!hree .cand1dates are .
. .
for the Pirates in their bid to rejleat l)lore suited to l!ac~up role~; club months.
· In the past these problems could
in the NL East.
. needs a l~adoff hmer now that have easily been .sol vee;! by the
Bonds,BobbyBonillaandAndy . Backman ISJ!One: team speed IS ' depth of pitching on the team. But
the Mets don't have much to fall
back on this ~- They traded Bob
Ojeda, a quality left-bander, 10 the
.
Los Angeles !Joc!¥ers over'the win·
ter and Ron Darlmg, once a major
pan of lhe starting.rotation, is com·
mg off elbow sorgery.
'
but it's a very difficqlt lhing to proOn -top or everything. else, the
By JEFF HASEN
ject
Me~_,have
)ost Parry! Strawberry,
UPI Sports Writer
.
"I
can
cite
some
negatives,
but
one
of
their
drawing cards, to free
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -From
by
and
large
there
are
some
good
a~ency.
He
is
now the starting right
Raleigh 10 Barcelona, Fnmkfun to
things,
except
for
the
litck
of
hug_e
f1elder
with
the Los Angeles
San Antonio, the sidelines are
names.
But
let
lhe
league
give
11
Dodgers.
·
·
·
·
.
being rimmed in orange. It's sure
their
bestshot!'
·
.
Instead
of
Strawberry's
home
to be quite a 'conn-ast to the green
Beck said lhe evolutionary pro- runs the Mets will feature Vince
ptar,ers on the field.
cesscanbeentenaining.
Coleman's stolen bases. Coleman
:
'I watched about half of.the
"It's
a
chaUenge
10
identify
the
was signed as a free a11ent only
, : teams in ·scrimmages," ABC's
•
he
said.
•
'Right
now
weeks after Stritwberry Signed with
names,'
1 Brent Musburger said of the World
they're
unknowns,
but
with
a
few
the Dodgers and the speedy out·
}Lea~ue of American Football,
games
under
their
belts,
those
fielder
will play center field and bat
· commg this weekend on ABC and
·the USA Network. "I was pretty names will slowly be known. leadoff for his new team.
Coleman, allhough not ·an ideal
.surprised. There were no snap· Someone will he second or third on
the
depth
chan,
but
all
of
a
sud~en
leadoff
hitter because he strikes out
eltchange fumbles.
a
kid
is
in
there.
It
does
lake
a
litde
too
much.
nevertheless gives the
"These guys can beat the best
time,
but
we'll
identify
those
s·to·
Mets
a
dimension
at the lOp of the
·of the college teams. They're a
.
ries."
batting
order
that
they've never
·couple or touchdowns better than
In Britain, Channel4, one of the had. He has averaged 91 stolen
USC;"
two
national commercial networks, bases il season in his six major
• . The rag-188 squads will be fea· .
will
show a weekly one-hour pro· league campaigns.
tured on ABC on Sunday after·
gram
every Saturday during the
Strengths - Dwight Gooden
noons and on USA Network on
season,
with
highlights
of
the
(19-7,
3.83), Viola ·(20-12, 2.67)
Saturday and Monday ni$hts.
and
David
Cone (14-10, 3.23) are
Monarchs
and
other
European
"All things are relattve," said
Division
teams.
.
quality
starters;
reliever John Fran·
Musburger, who will be in
The
move
is
a
continuation
of
co
(33
saves)
is
top notch closer;
Barcelona to announce today's
NFL
team capable of stealing 200 plus
opener against New York-New Jer- Channel4's strong links wit!~ . bases: solid middle of order with
sey. "If the cornerbacks are slower football, which it has televised 10 newcomer Hubie Brooks· (20
by a second! so are the wide Britain for nine years.
homers, 91 RBI), Howllfd Johnson
receivers.
·
SwjtcbiDI channels • Forget- (23-90) and Kevin McReynolds
"I think the football will be the ling
lheir fighterS, isn't the bout (24·82).
easiest part. I want to see if the most eagerly awaited the ~ne
Weaknesses - Pitchers won't
· franchises did their homework. where it's Bob Alum vs. Don Klng
~
'all
You need competition from top 10 in a battle of promoters and egos? . be helped by ~ ense, espec1 y up
bottolll. That's always been pan of
the success of' the NFL. The New
England Patriots, on any ·given day.
could beat any other team."
Gordon Beck, USA Network's
..
eltecutive producer. admits the programming is as untested as the
'competition.
"It's real hard 10 tell how it's
going to do," he said. "It's up
against a lot of problems (basket4 Door, 5· apeed
ball, baseball, hockey), so to speak,
but we're hoping for close to a 3
rating initially and to bmld from
180 E. State
Attl!lnl. Oh.
&amp;94-8666
there. There's a high initial interest,

By GENE CADDES
With 21 seconds ieft in oVertime and Lexington clliiging 10 a 62-61
The Divisioit 1 semifmal winners were Cleveland VIlle Angela-St.
.
UPI Sports_ Writer
.
lead, Feick rebounded a missed free throw by teammate Scott Cooper and JOICpll, a 68-62 winner over Massillon Perry, and West Cllester Lablta,
COLUMBUS, Ohm (UPJ) - Lextngton"s Jam~e Feick was never a put it back in for a 64-61 margin.
wllkb nipped Lancuter so-47 in ovenime.
secre1 to major_college basl&lt;etball Jecruiters. Now, thee~ state of Ohio
. "I rolled~ my man and was just i'! lh~ right place,'~ said Feick, w~
SLJoeeph. 224, ooencc1 ~lh a 10-0 lead and was up 28-10, but had to.
knows wbo he.'s. ,
. .
.
.
did not score m the fU'St quarter afteqRcking up rwo qiDCkfouls and sll- . rally in the leiXllld hlfrto whip Perry.
.
.
Fe1ck, Lexmgton s 6-foot· 7 Juruor center, turned 10 a 31-pomt, 19· ling the bench for much of the openin~ period. "Rebounding is my main
The Vikings used a 14·3 run late in the thad quaner and early 1!1 the
rebound perfonnanl7 Friday in StJohn~· l~g."!e Minu~n to role on this team. Jjustlry tokeepmyiOtensity up."
fourth 10 wipe out a 42-39 Perry lead. Pete Sears _scored 10 of his 26
a 66-61 overtime ~n over Wooster Tnway m the DiVISion n semifmals
"We knew Feick was a playec," said Triway head coach Randy Mont· points during that 5U111e.
.
.
. .
or the boys state high school hasJrttbell toumamcnL
gonrery "He was no stl'l'f!SC 10 w It's hard 10 stop him He'' so big and
Peny's 6-foot-10 Chip Hare led both teams wtth 31 polltU, 2~ commg
. But the Lexington win dido'~ come ~thout some artltiow moments, the ballS were bouncing nghl to him."
... · ·
.
in the second half. He also had 14 rebounds. 13 or those commg after
~·th Lexmg10n blowmg a lO..pomt lead 10 the final 62 seconds of regula·The second game was another nailbiter, with DayiOn Chaminade-JuJi. . halftime. ·
..
. .
.. .
uon. .
..
. ,
cnne nieping Columbus Bri~s 65-64 with a fourth-quarter rally.
"Wo got in 100 deep a hole at the begmru.ng of. the game, .said ~
. Tnway, traihng s~ after FeiCk s two free throws with 1:02 to piAr,
The cagfcs hit five thrcC-pointers in the fmal ·eight minutes, with Eric CoaCh Larry Wilson. ' 'We di(jn't get a hand ID thea fape. We looked -like
!ook ad:&lt;lll_llaBC of some Lexm~ m!stakes and shaky ~ ~w sfioQt- Wills' third of the game putting C-J ahead to stay 65~3.
we were in a panic.
.
.
··
mg to ue 11 at 56-56 on Scott Biddle s two free throws w1th s1x seconds
Briggs missed three of four free throws in the finai1S secondS 8nd also
. "Orice we got lhem under conn-ol, we gav~ them a good gam~. We had
left;,
.
.
. .
got a final field goal atteinpt away with four seconds to play but couldn't our opponuniries. But the run to get back m the game definitely took.
We thought we had 1t won and got a httle ovm:onfiderlt," S81d Fe1Clc, pull it ouL
·
·
somedtin&amp; oat of us in the third quarter."
,
·
who said he has heard from_ nearly .~very major !&gt;asketbal! sch~l in the
Briggs led 29-20 after one quarter, but went lhe final 5:33 of the secI·*"'a's 7-footJ.B. Reafm_yder re!'&lt;Jimded in a missed _sbot ~lh 52.
onc1 quaner itnd the first 1:43 of the third (7: 16) between Jloints.
seconds remaining in the overttme penod to break a 46-46 be and lift the,
:nauon, mcluding all of the B1g Ten. Vfe ~ere a little SUI!Irised.'
'
'
Thunderbinls 10 their win over Lancaster.
.
.
(ContinuedfromC-3)
Lancaster's Tim Henwood had a chance 10 tiC W,lth four seconds
.
·
•••
remaining, but inisSed the first of two free ~ attempts. The SCCOOijtry
by Henwood, a pllnned intentional miss, went itt.
, ,
·Michael refused to divulge the bone" within a month.
each
homered
for
the
Brewers.
Charlie
Leibrandt
allowed
four
hits
Latota's.Mark
Jt!ggle
then
iced
it
with
three
seconds
10 play w~n he
·opinions of the specialists, JackIn other off.f~eld baseball devel·
Rangers
13,
Pirates
10
and
two
runs
in
six
innings.
Mon·
made two from the bne.
·
· and G Ca
; son's medical history or comment opments, Mariners President Gary
I..ancastet, led in scoring ~Y Bill Dilley !lith 19 po1nts . . reg ve
BradeniOD, Fla. Tony Scrug- treat's Delino Deshields had two
•on a repon Friday in the San Diego Kaseff announced the city o.f gs At
belted a three-run homer after hits and two siOlen bases.
with 17; 1railed 42-34 tariy 1D the final pcnod b:ut fmally tied It at 46-46
:Tribune that Jackson will need a Tempe; Ariz., broke off ncgotia· Kevin
Reimer
had
tied
the
score
/
·
·
Astros
5,
Mets
0
on
cave's two free lhrows with 2:5110 play. Neither team scored the rest
·hip replacement
liOD$ for !I new long-term lease on · wit11 a solo home run in the eighth
At
Port
St.
Lucie,
Fla.,
Iimmy
of
regulation
pllly.
.
G . added.12
.
1
; Jackson. and his a~ent Richard the team s spring training site. City ·against Pittsburgh reliever Yin·. Jones and three Houston relievers
Reafsnyder
led
Lakota
with
14
points
ar1d
Keith
regor
.
:woods have maintamed he may . manager Terry Zerkle told the
·
·combined to two-hit the Mets.
' return to baseball this season. Mariners Tempe is pursuing other cente Palacios. ·
PbiUies
l'i,
Dodgers
S
Jones allowed both Mets hits and
}Voods has said he would be will- options.
At
Oearwater,
Fla.,
Ricky
Jorsn-uck out three over five Innings.
ing Ill aller Jackson's contrac!The Mariners have trained at dan had a pair of run-scoring sin- ·
Orioles 3, Twins 1
• Jackson's doctor in Bitming- Temrc Diablo Stadium since the
to
help
Philadelphia
defeat
a
At
Sarasota,
Fla., Cal Ripken
gles
~arn . Ala., James Andrews, says he club s inception in 1977 and the
Los
Angeles
spli't
squad.
Von
collected
two hits and an RBI to lift
lielieves Jackson will play again.
current lease expires in Oc10ber
: · However, the San Diego Tri- 1992. In negotiating the past year Hayes scored the winning run in Baltimore. Ripken is 12 for 17 this
bune Friday said a source close and a half, Seanle sought approxi· the eighth. He tried to go from ftrSt spring. Baltimore's Jeff Ballard
10 third on an infield groundout and yielded one run and five hits in 'five
with doctors who examined Jack- mately $2.4 million in facility scored
when the throw to third innings.
Son in Los Angeles said his hip improvements ani! better financial
went
in10
left field.
Blue J11ys l'i Cardinals 2
deteriorated in "spectacular" fash- terms.
Plus Freight
Tax &amp; Title
,
Tige!'lll, Reds 9
.
At St. Peter;burg, Fla., Gle·
ion, probably soon' requiring
In elthibition games:
At
Plant
City,
Fla
.••
Rob~
hit
~
nallen
Hill
and
Kelly
Gruber
hit
(eplaccmcnt.
Indians 7, Cubs l'i
solo homer _and smgled 10 two lhree-run homers 10 power Toron·
' The Tribune said the panial' dis·
At Tucson, Ariz., Alben Belle a~ns
180 E. State
Attl'!nl, Oh.
694-8&amp;6&amp; '
~d Tra_v1s Fryman had thr!lC to, which recei:ved five shutout
·· lOcation of Jackson's h1p had the. hit a tw~H~Ut, three-run homer off
4ual effect of destroying irreplace: Mitch Williams to cap a ·five-run bus, mcludmg a ·.Ho~er, .to hft innings from Todd Stotdemyre. ·
DetrOit over a Cmcmnat1 spht r-~__:·----:------------;__-------~--::---------,
able canilage in the hip joint and ninth inning to lift Cleveland. Doug squad.
Chris Jones homered and.··
!;ringing about avascular necrosis, Dascenzo went 4 for S and scored
a restriction of the blood now to two runs for the Cubs.
droveinfourrunsfortheReds.
ihe hip boile, causing it 10 die. The
Brewers 9, A's 1
newspaper's source told the TriAt Chandler, Ariz., Paul Molitor Duncan homered and drove in two
bune that the degeneration was so went 4 for S and drove in two runs • runs to lead the Reds over the Roylapid that the joining of femur 10 10 lead a 16-hit Milwaulcee attack. als in a split-squad game. Duncan
See Answer to Puale on Page C·!l
~ip joint was down to "bone on Candy Maldonado went 3 for 3
hit a solo homer in the first and
while Dale Sveum and BJ. Surhoff added an RBI single off Archie ACROSS
4 Bro. rela,tlve
star
79 Sea eagle .
Corbin in the Reds' seven-run fifth.
5 Cut
89 Abstracl being
83
ObsCure
1 Froc~
Red Sox 3, Royals 2
ccontinuedfromC-3&gt;
s
sun
god
92
Begin
85
Sharp
reply
6, Grate
•
At Win~r Haven, _Fla., Andy
1
High
mQUntaln
95
Measuring
device
86
Morsela
bim when he got the ball down Mavericks 104, Knldu 102 (OT)
10
Mohammedan·
McGaffigan walked Phil Plantier
8 Gilbert of
98 Detest
87 FOod fish
lj:Jw·. We tried to take it out of. his
priest
At Dallas, Rolando Blackman · with the bases loaded in the sev99
Writing
pad
"Ro-nne"
88
Circle ol light
hands and make someone else beat' surpassed !he lS,()()().point mark in enth inning to force home John
14 Burdene~
101
Polar;
frigid
9
Divide
89
Spanish
article
U.s, and the strategy worked.
19 Alleviating
the first quarter and scored 6 in Moses with the winning run to help
103 Half: prefix
90
Irritate
proportionally
; "He is human. Every guy has overtime. The Mavericks survived Boston over a Kansas City split
21 Winglike
104 Ginger91 -throat
10 Mental images
22 Great - (dog)
his off night and tonight was his. three New York shots in the final squad,. Roger Clemens allowed
105 Cenler
92 Sodium chloride
11
Indefinite
number
23 Retreat
Ele didn't seem like his typical seconds, 10 hand the Knil:ks only three hits and rwo runs and struck
106 Reverse: abbr.
93 CharacteristiCS
12 One, no maller
24
Breaking up
f.eisty self."
,
their second loss in nine games. out six over six innings. J ·
107 Armstrong ID
94 Carney ID
which
into parts
• Charles Barkley led Philadel- New York, led by Patrick Ewin~'s
· Braves J, Expos 2 ·
108 "Duck -"
96
Arabian
13 Coroner: abbr.
26 Offspring
J)hia with 22 points and 17 29 points, overcame a 19-pomt
At West Palm Belich, Fla., rook110 Perch
commander
14 For fear that ·
28 Annoys
!Jlbounds. .
111 Fulfill
deficit but lost for the fmt time in ie Rico Rossi's one-out single in
97 Ceremony
15
Lawyer:
abbr.
29 Dutch commune
• "We dldn :t play wei, but we seven overtime games this season.
112 Inter
the bottom of the lOth drove in Jeff
100 Exist
16 Bruce Willis film
30
Bard
ijung in there, ' Barkley said.
1 13 The sweetsop
Bla\lser with the winning run.
102
.Hints
17 Miatakes
32 Order ol bailie
'' How a game ends up is what
115 Door-sign
'
105
Rudely concise
18 Birds' homes
33 Capricorn
117. ApprDIICh
oounts, nol what happened ell(li·
10!1 Cronies: colloq.
20 Considerable ~
f!r. ,,
.constellation
, 119 Concerning
112 Forbids
23 Actual
.,··.
34
forrld
120 Vehicle ·
Anderson hit only three of his
113 Dani'!h.Jsland
25 Tidy
35 Tear
121 Companions
r.irst 10 shots, but he s;mk five of •
114 Jean 61
27 Athen's country
37 Challenge
124 Weak fOod
Itis last seven.
28 Verse
"Designing
39 Roman bronze
128 Fasting Re&lt;lod
• "I didn't.even know that," he
31 Three. to Enrique
women," et al.
40 City on the Oka
127 Painful
said. "I didn't worry about it. I
33 Mardi116
"Broadcast-"
41 Prohibits
128 Raply
38 Act .
l&lt;epJ. sn-oking it"
_
118
Top
of house
42 Walk unaieadlly
130 Helmond sitcom
38 Soaper Braeden
And \umer kept getting him the •
120
CriticiZe
44
CylindriCal
132 Plays on wordS
•
40 Poems
advertety
ball when it counted, like on the
46 Furniture style
133 Game played on
41 Lure
121 Ship's cargo
jumper that gave Philadelphia the
47 Golf scores
horseback
43Den
48 Chair
compartment
l~ad for good, 91-90 with I :20 10
134 Skill
45 Madden
so
Easy
joba
122
Deer's horns
play.
.
,135 Strike
NO ONE ELSE CAN GIVE YOU A
46 Out-and-out;
52 Portion of
'
f23
Of
the same
: " When he got going, 'I was
137 Miserable failure:
DRIVER'S AIR BAG AT THIS PRICE
confirmed
·
material
~boking for him," Turner said.
tobacco
slang
!
4 7 lnalgnlllcanl;
Plus Freight.
53 Hutlon ID·
125 Pretentious
' In other games, Scanle held off
139
Forerunner
ol
CIA
ONLY
.
petty
Tax
&amp; Title
55
Soil
ehoenix 111-105, Indiana thumped
homes
140 Await selllement ·
49 Woody plant
57 Rob Reiner's
Boston . 121 -109. Milwaukee
126
Sheen
141 Name
51 Solicits earnestly
slopped the Los Angeles Lakers
dad: lnits.
127 Beau and Jell,
143 Evergreen trees
52 Bush's Vice
58 Goes astray ,
99-92, San Antonio stunned Miami
145 Consumed
to uoyd
•'
President
59 Female relative .
146 Cons ,
97-90. Dallas nipped New York
129
Shower
53 Snare
60 Phys.
•
148 Boata
I 04-102 in overtime, Detroit
131 Puissant; mighty
54 Filament
62
Music
variety
150 Public
132 Sat for portrait
~oundcd New Jersey 109-93,
Per Mo. ·
56 Ephemeral;
64 Rex or Willis
•
133 Nobleman
y.tashingllm overcame Atlanta 121anii!)Uncements
tranSitory
· 66 Pacino or Hlrt
134 Passageway
~
152 More uncanny
(16, Minnesota knoolced off Cleve59 Observant care
68 Peach St.
136 Support
153 Walch lace
J,imd II 0-105. and the Los Angeles
60 Repast
69 Remain
••
136
Nuisances
154 Disturbance
E:lippers defeated Charlotte 10661 Negate
70 Spelling contest
140
Baker's
products
156 Father or mother
IOO.
63 C~urch dignitary
71 Venlilales
•,
141 Athlellc group
157 Lees; grounds
•
Sonics 111, Suns lOS
86 Nissan· Truck~•••.•••.••••••.••.•••••••••••••·• S
65 Loved one
73 Come Into view
142
Lamb's
pen
nllliie
156 Crippled
'
: At Phoenix, Eddie Johnson
67 French plural
75 Hatred
144 Pierce
159 Surfeit
$cored half of his 34 points in the
77 Average
article
147 Excavate
160 ~feats
fourth quaner to lift the SuperSon.
69 YBll: Sp.
78 ~ minister
148 By way ol
'
ics. Johnson, trad.cd to Sealtle b,Y
DOWN
70 Chastises
80 Sheets of glass
:'
149 Drunkard
Phoenix early in the season , h1t
-,
81 Pigpen
72 Strike ·
151 Anger
1 Put off
seven of nine field goal aue111pts in
·7 4 Hasp. asst.
82 Old
'
153 TV late night
2 Los Angeles
lhc founh quaner and 14 of 22 for
84 Looking glass
16 "-One and
host: lnlts.
footballer
C)lc game. Ricky Pierce scored 20
86 lroquoian Indian
Only"
155
Tellurium
symbOl .
3 Ancient Hebrew
for Seattle. Kevin Johnson and Dan
87 "Rescue 911 " .
77 Ancient Persians
ascetics
M:ajetle led Phoenix with 23
:•.,
apiece.
'
Pacers 121, Celtics 109
VW )etta Gl ••••••,••~....................
'
: At Indianapolis, Reggie Miller
•.•.
'
~cored 21 points, Detlef Schrempf
~·
'"
added 19 and LaSalle Thompson
•,
pulled downa season-high 21
.,
rebounds to lead the Pacers, who
iook control of the game in the
~
S
''
'
(011rth quaner, hitting three of four
""1
three-pointers and shooting 62.5
percent from the field. Reggie
t,.ewis and Brian Shaw scored 23
points each to lead Boston, which
~asn 't beaten Indiana in Market
• I
•'
~quare Arena since March 16,
'.,
1989.
' 'I
,
Bucks 99, Lakers 92
••
• At Inglewood, Calif., Frank
:1.,
Brickowski scored a season-high
32 points and Dale Ellis added 12
ef his 30 points in the fourth quar'I
icr, lifting the Bucks. Los Angeles
Olayed without Magic Johnson, .
who was bothered by tendinitis In
••
Iloth knees. James Worthy scored
•
34 points, including 14 in the
fourth quaner.
;
Spurs 97, Heat 90
-,
• At Miami, David Robinson
'
~red 28 points to lead the Spurs.
•.
.
San AniODio led 70-64 after three
quarters, but scored the first 5
points of the fourth quarter and
.,
.•'
llcld the Heat without a field goal
for the f.tnl three minur.es. Miami
~
. . 37 pen:ail in the filial quarter.
'.,

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. I

up Tim Raines, one of the game's
(See NL EAST OD C-6)

Ufe Insurance

Milatreal Eqlos
The Monn-eal Expos are on the
verge of breaking out from the
pack in the National League East
Montreal has finished in third
place six times in the last nine seasons and should other division con·
tenders falter, the Expos could
make amove.
· Montreal has a solid pitching
foundittion, but lhe Expos will need
to hit to win the division. They
added power by obtaining Ivan

1991 HONDA ACCORD Dl
$121 72 5 T•xP~u;ltle

$1699

'

Calderon from the White Sox. To
get Ca:Jderon, however, they gave

an

NEW 1991 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE

'

the middle when: shortstop Johnson and second baseman Tommy
Herr have limited range and center
fielder Coleman lacks instincts;
middle relief is suspect; manager
Bud Halrelson has only one year or
big league experience.
. New faces - Coleman takes
over as regular CF; Brooks
replaces Strawberry in RF; Terry
Puhl, signed as a free agent, adds
pinch hitting and outfield depth.
Outlook; - As long as Viola
stays in rotation, lhe Mets should
be able to stay in the pennant race.
They'll score enoU&amp;h tuns to suppan pitchers but will have 10 shore
up defense 10 win division.

Maiden WLAF season
to commence today

NEW HONDA CIVIC Dl 4 DOOR

. ATHENS HONDA CARS

Sunday nmes-Sentlnei-Page C5

Pomeroy-Middleport Gllllpolla, OH Point Pleasant, WV

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Sentinel

OH Point

March 24, 1991 ·~

wv

Improved NL West to make Reds' repeat bid uphill fight
By United PreuiDteraMioDal .
Manager Lou Piniella says the
Cincinnati Reds still baVe much to
prove after lasl year's World Series
sweep of the Oakland Athletics.
The Reds shed their label as
underaehieven, gained from futishing second in die N11ional League ·

NL East...

f

Wcs&amp; from 1985-88, by stani!lg lasl · well. Defensively, I think we exe- similiar start in 1991.
season on a tear llld Slaying on top cuiC betler than anybody in base"I think it wonld really IICIId 4
straight through October. Pinlella
claims die 1991 Reds will not join
btieball's list of one year wondtn.
"It wasn't a fluke," Piniella
~ "This is a good 1illle ballclub.
We play wilh in.ty. We execuiC

ball. We led the National League m
hitting, and we were second in
fielding. This wasn'ta fluke."
Last season die Reds held an 8
1{2 game lead in the NL West by
May 15 and Piniella is hoping for a

.JI'Cit messa11e to the rest of the
division if we ~rot off to a great
stan," he said ''it'd be 'we'n: hen:
to get die job done again ....
The odds an: qainst the Reds,
who an: trying to repeal as world

(Continued from C-5)

most dangerous plilyen.
fulfill a wish list as well as Cubs'
The Expos operated austerely ~~manager Jim Fn:y did last
under fonner owner Charles Bronf- .
mber.
·
'
man and will likely continue that
Within the space of a few
policy with Claude Brochu. Gener- weeks, the Cubs landed all thtee
al manager Dave D_olflbrowski, free agents they sought dwing lhe
UPI' s 1990 National Lc!lgue Exec- offseason~ outfielder George BeU
utive of the Year, ·has. done well and pitchers Danny Jackson and
growing his own talent and thl!t Dave Smith. Those acquisitions
could pay off soon With a pennant.
suddenly turn the Cubs from' longStrenBtbs - No superstaiS on shots in the NL East to front-runpitching staff, bul it's solid DeMis ners.
Martinez is consisaent veiCrBO and
Bell provides stability and
joined in rotation by ililpresshre power in left field, Jackson's addiyoung lefty Chris Nabholz and tion gives the Cubs a solid fourerratic Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd. men S181'1ing rocation and Smith is a
Tim Bwke, is BIIIQIIg ~st n:lieven 'more consisiCnt closer than Mitch
in the NL. Infield well-stocked Williams ever dreamed of being.
with Andres Oalarraga and Tim ·
Add them to a nucleus of Ryne
Wallach- at corners and Spike . Sandberg, Andre 'Dawson, Mart
Owen and Delino Deshields up the · Grace and Greg Maddux and it's
middle.
understandable why manager Don
Weaknesses - The .250 learn Zimmer was so anxious to get the
batting average (next to last in NL) season started.
.
hurt the Expos lilst season; Montre"After I heard we landed all
81 has lacked quality catcher since three of the guys we were going
trading Gary Carter in 1985.
all I wanted to do was get
l New races- Calderon should after,
down to Arizona (for spring trainihfuse some power; pitcher Brian ing)," Zinuner said
Barnes (13-7, 2.77 ERA in Triple
The key wiU be whether pitchers
A) could crack· rotation; Barry
Mite
Harkey and Rick Sutcliffe
Jones excellent setup man for . can bounce
from injuries and
Burke; outfielder Moise Alou could ceniCr fJCiderbact
Jerome
can
lie.their star of futun:. Has speed · recover. from ·a poor Walton
sophomore
11nd power, lite father Felipe,; campaign. If that happens, chances
. Brochu led group that bought club are
aood that the Wri~ley Field
tpr $92 million. .
.
· faithful
will see the fust World
• Outlook - The Expos may 1101 Series dim
since 1945.
.
win it all, but manager Buell;
StreiiBths
Outstanding
right1,\odgen keeps his ~earns competihand=wer with Bell, Dawson
live. The fulure is brighL
and
; solid four-num rota'
tiOn of
1, Jackson, Harkey
Phlladelpbla Phlllla.
.
ind Sutcllft'e; Smith has converted
~nseasonably bad weather m IS percent of his save "situations
t:Jonda, the personal ptoble!'ls of over the last six years; excellent
¥nny Dy~tra and another 10J~ left-right setup men in Paul Assento No. 1 pncher Ken Howe~ ~n t . macher and Les 'Lancaster; sttong
em;mgh tO ~amp~n .th~ Sptnts Of defense UJ) the middle wilh Catcher
f~tladelphta Ph•ll.tes manager Joe Girardi, Sandberg, DunstOn and
liltck Leyva,about thts baseball lie&amp;" · .Walton.
•
.
$On.
·
. .
Wnkueuet - Poor third-base
:- Even tho~gh the Phtlhes m~de platoon of Luis Salazar and
Gnly o,ne maJor rpm~uoo ~unng Domingd Ramos; Jact .of Jeft-handf,he wmter- Stllnms inftelder ed power; JX*tttial for clubhouse
~ally Backman !0 a two-year con- dissenion with the moody Bell on
lltiCt -. Leyv~ htes what he sees _baonl; injury worries about several
4bout thts year s !Cam.
.
.
pitchers; possible distractions
; "I thmk we've got the n~t m!x . tnvolving contract status of Sandof veterans ind young auys, satd berg and Walton.
·
Ceyva, beginning his third season
New faces- Bell, signed as·
at the helm. "This club doesn't free agent, ,brings healthy bat to left
want a lot of changes. Tiley thtnk field; Jackson, signed as fn:e agent,
tltey can do it themselves. I've is reliable left-handed starter;
always believed thafs the biggest Smith, signe4 as (ree agent, takes
Part of the battle.''
· . over from Williams as No. 1 clos• The Phillies did improve last er; Jose Vizcaino, acquired in
season, winning 10 more ~ames trade, backs up Sandberg and Dunthan they did in 1989 and tymJ for ston in middle infield
fourth in the NL East. The mill of
Outlook - Virtually all the
)Jiayers includes third baseman pieces are in' place. If Zimmer Cll!
Charlie Hayes, who has less than keep Jackson, Sutcliffe and Harlcey
iwo years in the majoiS, and rookie healthy and Bell and Walton
second baseman Mickey Morandi- happy, Harry Caray will have ,
ni. On the opposite end of ~ expe- something to really sing about.
rience scale are players I~ DykStra, Diclcie Thon, Von Hayes and
St. Louis Cardinals
Dale Murphy.
Who are these pys?
·· "Our guys feel real g~ about.
They're weartitg cardinal red .
each other as plilyers," Leyva said. uniforms and practicing at AI Lang
.••Lenny Dykstra and Darren Stadium, but what's a-Bernard
Dault:lll could've signed long term Gilte;t.?
contracts anywhen:. But they chose
Busch Stadium program vento sign with the Phillies because
they like their chances of winni!lg
with the learn we'n: puttina ron the
field."
·
; Dykstra, who set career bests in
b'lming, hits, stolen bases, RBI,
"!'alks, on-base percentage, runs
and total bases. may be in-trouble
with the commissioner's office for
his participation in an illepl poker
Jlme last winter. He u being
~ ujvcatigated after he admitted to
losillll $78, 000 in a poker game
I
'
tiear liis home in Missiuippi,
;
"We've aot some young pitchers - Pat Combs, Terry Mulholland, Jose DeJesus - who are
~oing to be good," said Dykstra.
•
'I'll bet my life savin1s Canba is
going to win 20 pmes one year.
We're learning how to win. It's
going to be a good club in the
fullltC.·'
StrenBtbs - Solid offense with
lineup consisting of Dykstra (.325),
Von Hayes (.261-17-73), Murphy
(.245-24-83), Krulc (:291-7-67) and
Qaulton (.268·12-S7); plenty of
. 'ICICran know-how.
~ Weakneaes- Loss of RHP
Howell unli1June weakens youna
rocatlou: rookie second baseman
Mickey Morandini played just 2S
pmel with Phillies Jut -.on and
will be telllld on turf; no left-bander in bullpen, although team
roponedly tryinJ 10 deal for Chicai~
go's Mildl Williams.
· New fiiCtl - Backman, signed
to a two-year deal, adds infield

dors will be busy when manager one more spot opens up," Torn:
Joe Torn: unveils his 1991 flock of said.
The good news is n:Jiever Todd
St. Louis Cardinals.
· Of the 10 St. Louis plilym eJj: Worn:ll, who has not pitched since
gible for free llltCIICY .at the end of SepL 4, 1989, coUld be. 9ti the roslast season, only Jose Oquendo ter by May, not the AIJ,Star break
n:signed witli the Cardinals. Gone as earlier projected.
Custom Ftlted Dentures In One Day At Our Teays Valley Offl.ce
"We told him we're not conare Vince Colem'an (New York
' · By Our Professlonalli And Trained.Stall'.
Mets), Terry Pendleton (Atlanta), cerned about takin$ him with us
Wilhe McGee (San Francisco), when we leave (spnng training),"
Made I~ Our Dental Laboratory By guallfted Technicians.
Ken Dayley (Toronto) and John Torn: said. "He understands that. I
~L TOLL FREE 1-800-92&amp;:0025
said 'when you're ready for us,
Tudor (retired).
Gilkey, a 24-year-old right- we'n: n:ady for you." ·
Fbr AR Appointment or IDformaUon.
St. Louis fans, this team's for
handed hitter who stole 45 bases
Our Regular Serotce Is Avatlable At AU O.ffices.
and hit .29S at Triple A LouisviUe, you.
SAMB
DAY fBI(VICitS Ol'f RELINES AND REPAIRS!
Streo,lhs·- Shortstop Ozzje
is projected as the starting lert
fielder, n:placing ~oleman, while Smith, wmner of 11 Gold Gloves,
DENroR.ES START AT $134 PER
.
last year's l'egular catcher Todd and second baseman Jose Oquendo
SMALLADDnYONAL CHARGE FOR SAME DAY SERVIc;E
Zeile wiU stan at third; which was an: solid defensively; Lee Smith, ··
Pendlelon 's comer for seveli years, who saved 27 games lilst selison, is
WeSt~'-.
· Ray Lankford, who hit .286 in 39 intimidating in the laiC innings.
Dental Service
Loss• of
games with the Cardinals, will stan · Weaknesses Magrane weakens already feeble
in center field.
WUDam V. Bell. D.D.S., Inc.
"We'll still play an
_ R¥1ressive rotation. Right- bander Bryn Smith,
1031
58311 DAVIS CREEK RO.IO
10i PO!'I.AR FOOK RD.
style of game," Torn: swd, which 35, who, missed six weeks because
'IN. 757-7441
should' smooth some St. Louis fans of a shoulder injury, now is the
who·are angered at the loss of their opening day starter; still no power,
former staiS. "You have to pn:tty _with exception of 34-year-old
much base your style of plily on the Pedro Guerrero who hit 13 home
club you have.
runs lilst ~; Zelle may struggle
"We have people who still can offensively trying to adjust to new
steal bases. I know we don't have third base duties.
New races - None unless one
somebody lite Vinnie Coleman,
counts playen such as Gilkey and
who we canjust turtt loose."
Torre;, who replaced Whitey Lanlcfonl who hav!) played a total
Herzog on Aug. I, hils stressed fun- of 59 major league games ..Five
damentals this spring and split the new starten an: projecled from one
.
.
squad for .four days to make cenain year ago.
the coaching staff became lamiliar
Outlook - The rest of the
with all the playm. It crealed long National League East spent money
on fn:e agents, while the CardillalS
days - 6:30 a.m. until 6 p.m. but was important to the staff, saved. SL Louis is counting on its
farm system to supply plilyen. The
which includes four new coaches.
"We felt we wanted to see peo- Cardinals will be red all right this
ple first hand and we felt it was year- as in embarassing.
tmportant to do that," Torre said.
"We've had a good wort ethic .
People have been giving a good
effort. They've-been serious about
what they'n: doing."
However, the Cardinals continued an unfortunate trend in their
spring camp when pitcher Joe
Magrane was diagnosed with tom
Our Total Comfort System is not only a
ligarqents in his left arm on March
1. He will undergo surgery April 1
·virtUally worry-free heating and cooling
and is sidelined for the season.
system, it's also easy to own. Our low •
"The only thing it does ·- and
interest financing offers you these
you could see the life come to the
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• No down payment
pitching staff- all of a sudden
I
• Up to IOyearstopay • Easy monthly
It's hll'd to f"md a retinment
payments • One· ":
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•II *Ilk we hive enoup offen1e
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6etthlre ...
to

champi~ for the first time since
the 1971 ind '78 New Y~ Yankees.
"The Yankee ICam was a liUle
older club than this,' • said Piniella.
who played on both those New
York IC&amp;mS, but who hasn't run out
of ring fmgers. "We (Reds) have
two players on our rosier who an:
over 30 years old. That's iL This is
-a YOWII balk:lub. It's still a hungry
ballclub.
"I think the biggest thing we
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Page C8 Sunday nmn Sentinel

NL We st... -:----.:&lt;~Conti_·nued~from-C-6).:....,_

Davis, the team's best player, is
still not fully recovered from
World $efies injury; laclring in lefthanded power; owner Marge Schott
creates llisharmony with her pemu. rious ways.
. New faces- Return of rightbander Ted Power only ~ addilion: more imponandy is who will
replace ~Danny Jackson, who
signed with Chicago ·Cubs.
Outlook - Of the teams that
swept. a World Series, four made it
to the series the next year and three
repeated as champions. Only two
teams - the '63 Los Angeles
Dod111ers and '66 Orioles . flopped the next season after a
senes sweep. Piniella knows what
it tak:es, having played on the last
team to win back-to-back championships. What he 'II need is a
healt!ty pitching staff and amore
aggressive offense.

__
includes Rick Reuschel, Black,
Don Robinson, Scott Garrelts,
l&lt;elly Downs, Jolm Burkett and
Mike LaCoss; aolid defenae at corners with Clark at first and
Williams at third; addition of lefthander Righetti complements
righty Jeff Brartdey in closer role.
· Weaknesses - Thompson and
McGee strike out far too much for
leadoff men; unsettled situation at
shortstop between incumbent Jose
Uribe and Mike Benjamin; unhappiness among pitchers who get
demoted into long and middle .
relief.
Newfac:es-McGeestepsright
in for Butler in center field; Black ,
adds. to already crowded swting
staff; Righetti converted 36 of 39
save OJ)port_unities for Yankees last
year; rookie Steve Decker being
j!i~n full iiwottunity to win catchmg job.
Oatlook - Teams have won
their divisions without 1rue leadoff
hitters before, but it sure would
help the Giants cause if they had
one. In a division as compeliuve as
the NL West is this year, the Giants
may find themselves hard-pressed
to keep up.

Houston AICrol
The f{ouston Astroe underwent
a major house-cleaning over the
winter that could Iei-we the National
League club out in the cold this
summer•
More than a dozen vetmn players who were 011 the rostct last season are gone, including pow« hitter Glenn Davis, .dependable second baseman Bill Doran and OUt·
ftelders Franklin Stubbs and Glenn ·
Wilson. Alsa gone are pitchers
Danny Darwin, wbo led the NL in
earned run aveiage, middle ·relievers Larry Andersen and Juan Agosto, and stopper Dave Smith.
All the moves c.ame as owner
JoonMcM~n~hewas

team masquerading as a m1jor
leape club. With so much youth,
inexperience ud UliCCitlinty, the
Astros could lose mOre than 100
pmes.
Atluta Bl'll\les
Ted 'J'umer may have men thaD
J - Fonda to flauilt this summer.
The Atlanta Braves are on the
-se of turning the minds of Georgians from football to baseball in
the summ«.
·
Turner in vested in tw!l maJor
free agents last winter, signmg
third bueman Terry Pendleton and
first baseman Sid Bream. Those
two players will immedi~tely
strengthen the Braves defens1vel):
at the coroen where the club was
extremely weak last year.
The Braves committed. 158
errors and allowed 94 unearned
runs - by far the worst totals in ·
the league. This offset 162 home
runs, which were the second highest total in the league, and the
result was another last place finish.
H Turner did nothing else with
the signings, he sent a message to
his young club that he does care
about winning. It's a signal that
should hdp boost the confidence of
SOIIJe of the Braves' young stars of

March 24, 1891
the tidule.

New f1ee1 - Pendleton, ·a
superb fielder, will sllrt at third
fino young 111n in Ron Olllt (.303, base IIIII Bream will be die every32 hPmen, 84 RB~, 33 stolen day firtt basoiDID: Mite Heatb,
l)Bsoa) and 1990 Nabonal League signed u a free -.at. llldl ~­
Rookie of the Year Dave Justice · ing depth; Glatn WiliOII,
(.282-28-78 i.11 127 games); two a free
t, IIIU'idca &amp;ood
solid 11111t011 tn John Smoltz (!4· . outfiemefp; Rafael Belliar , .
11, 3.85 ERA) and Tom ~laVI~e signed U a free qent, CID play
(10-12, 4.38); talented reliever m shortstop Oi IIOCOJld ' - IDd
Kent Men:kcr (4-7, 3.17); one of. Berenguer another free agent
pme's top pillch bitten .in Tom.my signee, adds'middlcJdief IUppOit.
Oren. who had 18 ptnch hils,
Oudnot - Okay so Fonda is
includin_g four homers, and prettiei. At least die Braves 1re II()
1cnocked tn 17 runs last season.
longer ugly ducldiJI8s. They lhould
· Weaknesses - Poor defense, play much better this season
C$peci•lly at shortstop (Jeff Tread- although it may not be teflectecl ui
way), second base (Jeff ~la~se~) the s14J1dings as the )IlL West is
and left field (Lonnie ~nuth), !'101 expected to be the toughest diviswting staff; uncertain catchmg; sion in baseball.
· ·
not much help on the beilch.

SbuatJis- Two or basebell's

=

Juan

pulling the club up for _.te, but the
moves also left m8llllgel' Art Howe
with a young, inexperienced team
that is a strong candidate for last
place in the NL West
"Everyone is curious," said
Los Ancetes Dodgen
Howe. "I'm curious. We've got
Darryl Strawberry's arrival is
more than 50 players in camp who
bein~ heralded as !he greatest thing
want to be on this 'leanl. It's a conto hit Los Angeles since unleaded
cern to try to be as fair as possible
t veryone. _Every job is open.
gasoline .
The slugging putfielder, signed
's what I've told them beCause
by the Dodgers as a free ~ent after
ant every single player fighting
for a job.
.
seven seasons with the N~w York
.
San l;)iego Padres ·
.
"I don't think we're going to be
.
Mets, certainly gives an already
If the 1991 version of the San 8$ bad as some people are saying.
powerful team another potent bat
Diego Padres looks anything like We mig~t not be as good as what
and certified gate attraction.
But the Dodgers resemble one last year's edition, it s only by we hope, but a lot of young .players
are going to get the chance to show
of those made-for-TV movies with coincidence.
One of general manager Joe what they c:an do at this level."
a lot of marquee names and little
Players like Mike Simms, Jeff
substance. Although the team has Mcilvaine's fJISt items on the 1111enlots of talent, very little of it is da was to install change throughout Bagwell, Steve Finley, Dave
homegJ:Qwn and that used to be a the entire organization, from play- Rohde, Luis Gonzalez, Curt
sraple of the great Dodger teams of ers to office personnel down to the Shilling and Pete Harnisch.
team's unifonns.
Only two position players returo
the last four decades.
About
oDe-third
of
the
roster
has
from
last season, catcher Craig
If manager Tom Lasorda were
changed,
with
malcontent
Jack
Biggio
and third baseman Ken
to name hi~ ppening day lineup at .
Clark
taking
his
complaints
to
Caminiti.
Bi~o will stan at earththe. eight fielding positions right
BoSton
and
Joe
Caner
and
Roberto
er,
but
Cammiti
will have to fight
noW, the Dodgei'S probably would
Alol)lal' used in a blockbuster trade for his job with BagWell, who was
ha~e home grown talent only at
Financing Availabli
that brought Fred McGriff and acquired froin Boston in the Andercat~:her and third base. The rest,
l~'lo2 yr. Parts &amp; Labor
Tony Fernandez over froin Toron· sen trade. ,
,
,.
thou~h solid professionals, are
Warranty
The Astros do not have a power
acqUISitions from other clubs who to.
100'1'. s yr. Parts &amp; ~ ..
But that's not the only differ- . hitter 10 replace Davis, who hit 22
ne,\'er learned the Dodger way tli
IIYenJng Vain, Compr-r - '
ence.
Also gone are many scouts, homers and drove in 64 runs in an
Out... , .......
play baseball.
This lack of cohesiveness public relations personnel, recep- injury-shortened season.
Davis was traded to Baltimore
sh9wed up plenty last year and tionists and others. Even long-time
trainer Dick Dent, whose skills in January for Fmley, who is likely
oft~n drove Lasorda to eat. Lasor&amp;
da, who lost 45 pounds last year, kepi the Padres among the least- to Start in cenrer, and pitchers Har·
wants to stay slim. A mature i~Jured teams in baseball, was nisch and Schilling.
Rt: 2 Box 447, Gallipolis, Ohio
Houston has traditionally had
Stiawberry might be perfect for his g1ven the heave-~,_
Call1·800-872-5967 or 446·9416
"":fre wor~mg ~n ~m h~- , solid pitching, but even that is in
didi.
!Bony, . Mcl.lvli!?e S81d. My Job question. Mike Scot!, the 1986 Cy
~trength~- Awesome power
Young winner. underwent anhrofrom left side of plate with Straw- IS tli build.unity.
He got off.to a good stan by get- scopic shoulller surgery in Decemberry, Eddie Murray and Kal
Dalliels, all of whom are capable of tin~ rid o~ the whining Clark. In · her and at age 35, will be watched
hitting more than 30 homers; addition, two other play~ who ran closely. Mark Portugal and Jim
Scioscia is one of game's best a season-long feud. wnh Tony Deshaies return to their starting
catchers;·if Orel Hershiser and Tim Gwynn-~ gone- Mike Pagharu- roles, but the reS! of the rotation is
.•
uncertain.
&gt;
Belcher can bounce back from lo and Eric Show. . ,
injtlrY-plagued seasons the Dodgers
B!Jt harmony 1sn t go\ng to
Strenphs -Plenty of enthusiwiH boast one of league's best sohdify the outfreld or rebwld the asm, which wiU be a plus if it can
1991 FO~G:9~T LX 4 DOOR
· starting rotations. Ramon Martinez farm 1ystem. 'fl,ult Will take bf!le, have some success early; lots of
and· newcomers Bob Ojeda and thou~h Mcllvame has shown. he speed with Eric Yeliling (64 SB),
l»•nablib·OI~tt Prlce .......... ..$,9,991.00
-Kevin Gross are proven swters; won t shy away from makmg Biggio (25) and Finley (22) all
solid bench with outfielders Sran moves.
·
capable of stealing 30 or more
Javier, Chris Gwynn and Jose Gon- · Strengths - !]wynn, yo' hose bases; pati~t m~er who will be
zalez and infielders Mike Sharper- .309 average last
wa,s hJS low- a positive influence on the young
TOTAL DEUVERED PRICE: ·
·
·
son, Lenny Harris and Mickey est smce 1983; McGnff, one pf the players
Hai,Cher.
··
, most prolific power.hitters i~ the
We~ltnesses...;. Lack of experiWeaknesses- lnfreld is unset- game; catcher Ben no Sanuag~ •. ence; no proven power hitter; quesfrom hJS · ·
· puc
· hmg;
·
1led with only Murray a fixture; who can throw.t runners out
·boot·
Bip uo.na ble starung
no
one of baseball •s worst double play k nees an d h1. ·270 10
•
bullpen closer.
combinations last year in shortStop Roberts, a speedster on offense an~
New races :... Finley will be the
1991 FORD Fst!&amp;q~ LARIAT 4X4
Al(redo Griffin and second base- ~. )ack-of-a,t,t-trad~s on de_fen~e~ starting center !i~lder; J:Iarnisch
- ·-- · ---·------.- .. ------- -"
..
-----man Juan Samuel; lack of quality
B1g Three Pltchmg c~bmabo should earn spot 1n starung rotallaDufacturer'a Sq. Price ......... 19,1505.00
third baseman; left-handed reliever of Bruce Hu~st, ~ WhitsOn and tion; Schillin and Don Carman
Special FactoJY Discount ............. 1,500~00
needed .to complement righty Jay Andy. Be'!es, sohd double-play add bullpen :fepth; Bagwell will
Dellblgh.Qarrett Dlacount ............2,437.00
Howell.
combmauon of Fernandez and push Caminiti at third for playing
New faces - Strawberry will Roberts.
.
..
time.
TOTAL DEUVERED PRICE:
Wea_knesses - B1g qu~suon , Outlook _ This is a Triple A
be regular right fielder; Brett Butler, signed as free agent,laltes over marks 10 left and center fields;
in center and is a quality leadoff reva111ped infield may struggle with
. Your home ..• your
hi~; OJeda. obtained in trade with. chemistry and timing; lack of solid
automobile
• .. your peace
fourth
and
fifth
starters;
unsettled
Metq, joms starting roration as does
of
mind
•••
situation
behind
closer
~raig
relief
Gross, signed as free agen~
1991 ME!l~ilfx9JtAND MARQUIS LS
Lefferts;
having
to
know
everyOutlook - Much of the
body's
names
by
the
end
of
spring
Dodgers' success this season will
I!IJmufacltann-'a
Price ..J. *20;770.00
result in a proper solution to the training: those ugly caps with the
IJJ~cililJ'acto:I'J' :DIIICCNIIlt•••••• : ••••• 850.00
muddled infield problem and white us" and orange uD" interlocking
over
a
blue
background.
l:kiab!lab·-a.i.rreltt Discount....... 3,320.00
comebacks from Hershiser and
New faces - First baseman
Bekher. There's enough ralent here
Protect them all through AAA
TOTAL D~ PRICE:
to challenge for the NL pennant McGriff and shortstop Fernandez,
Insurance Agency with our
acquired
in
trade,
move
right
into
and maybe enough to keep fans
Multiple Line Discount. the starting lineup; Jim Presley,
around after the seventh inning.
signed as free agent, and Scott
'OJLIU ooo4 TllltiiiWICB 81, 111111 ,
San Francisco Giants
Coolbatrgh, acquired in trade batde
Despite committing $33 million
fl!£ third- base job; Marty Barrett,
c:.tt Our Woo
. .,. . .Rflftfe
to three free agehts during the win- Signed as free agent, pushes
Alotlt ,...., "'
. ter, the San Francisco Giants may Roberts at second base · Larr-y
wind up rethinking the one they let An.dersen, signed as fred agent
446-0699
getaway.
·
becomes right-handed setup ma~
While the additions of center for Lefferts; Wes Gardner ·
a~uirec! in trade, expected to con:
fielder Willie McGee and pitchers
1991 Ford Tempo OL
1990 Ford Probe
1989 Ford Tempo GL
Dave Righetti and Bud Black . tnbute m long and middle relief·
. '
John
Costello,
acquired
in
trade'
4
door,
auto
..
crulae,
tilt
wheel,
should make San Francisco a conAutomatic. air. tape
Auto .. 4 door, PS, crullte, air,
air,
pc&gt;WI!rwtndowa,
power
loco,
tender in the NL West, the differ- should find work as middle reliev:
lmwance Ag.ncy
LowMUeage
26,000 miles
6,too m!lcs
enCe could be 'the loss of Brett But- er; and many, many more.
360 loQIOI A•.,
ler 'from the leadoff spot.
Outlook - The Padres have
Goll..... Oh.
Butler was a vital part of the had the talent to contend for the
446·0699
Giants ' offense, getting on base last several years, only to underarid allowing sluggers Will Clark, achieve. Having ~en a step back
1991
1989 Ford Escort
1988 Foret Rl!nger 4z4
Kevin Mitchell and Matt Williams ~o. regroup, there's little chani:e San
Rally Sport
to see good pitches. Butler always
Statlofl Wagon, 5 speed, aJr
' . . See Puzzle on Page C-4
5 •peed. air, 33,000 miles
Loadod. T·Top
was good for 100 runs and 40
' 'Air, 4900mllea
stolen bases, helping Clark (1988),
Mitchell (1989) and Williams
$
$
(1990) become only the second
t.hreesome to lead its league in RBI.
1987 Buick Regal
1988 Chevy 8·10
1984 Bronco D
·But Butler went south to.the Los
Ltmltecl
5
opeod,
air,
AM/FM,
Angeles Dodgers as a new-look
:Z door, auto .. PS, air.
Auto .. air, 4x4
25,000 miles
free qent, and the Giants are look36,766
m!Ie.,
black
ing for an adequate replacement.
."That's going to be the whole
$
$
' center of attention in spring training," Clark said of the leadoff
dilemma. Robby Thompson and
.McGee will get first crack at the
job.
11 manager Rogel{ Craig can fmd
90111Cbody comfonlblc in the leadoff,spot, the Giants should have
enough.fuepow« to CCX::~:'"~ a
deep, tJiouah unspectiC , pllchinii!COIPS· ft not. Craig will have to
wOik: lllOiher of his pitching fllira.
South Ctl.trch Slraei
372·FORD
cles.
. hell
Strencths - Clark, Mile
Ripley, WV
(372·3873)
•d Williams form one !If the best
3-4-S c!lmbinations in either
leap: deep pitching rotation .that
.

.

The.mobile horDe
heat
pump...the air
• •

that also
hea1s.

. Bennetts Mobile Horne Heating

'

.,

L

Farm/ BUsiness

emintts • jtttlitttl Section

D'

March 24, 1891

Dr. Faro to serve area
residents as n.ew podiatrist
.

.

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. David J. non, 741i Seconl! Avenue, GallipoDr. Hannon, who served area
Faro, DPM, podiatry, has assumed lis, and will take up duties here residents for 30 years, retired ear.li• the Pn!ctice of. Dr. Donald L. Han- · Aptill.
er this year.
A native of Rochester, N. Y.,
Dr. Faro, 31,•a board certified
physician, is a member of both the ·
Ohio Podiatric Medical AssociatiPn and the American Podiatric
Medical Association.
Dr. Faro and his wife, Beverly, a
native of Pittsburgh, Pa., plan to
move here the·the end of March.
Dr. and Mrs. Faro enjoy exploring the Ohio countryside on weekends; camping and other outdoor
activities. He is also a National
Hockey League fan.
Dr. FBIQ graduated from Grove
City, Pa. , College in 1982, and the
and you may win a $5 prize from the Ohio Val· · .
MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery
College of Podiatry Medicine in
ley Publishing. Co. Leave your name, address , .
· farm, featured by tbe Gallia Soil and Water
Cleveland in 1986. He served two
and telephone number witb your card or letter.
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
years surgical residency in PittsNo telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to particiburgh.
entries should be turned in to the newspaper •· ·•
pate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
Dr. Faro, who will also serve as
olrJC:e by 4 p.m. each Wednesday.ln case of a tie, • ,
tbe farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your
the Gallipolis Developmental Centhe winner will be chosen by lottery. Next week, ,
guesS olf ..to tbe Daily Sentinel,111 Court St.,
ter's podiatrist on a pan-time basis,
a Meigs County farm will be featured by the :Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or tbe Gallipolis Daily
provides specialty care for probTribune, 825 third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631,
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District.
· '
lems of the foot and ankle areas.
He has a special interest in the
fields of sports medicine and podiatric surgery .. Dr. Faro recognizes
.,
the special. needs of the geriatric
Edward M. Vollborn
·using the product in certain fields · Center near Washington C.H. was ",
and pediatric populations and the
County
Extension
Agent,
with poor draiilage and a history of completed .on March 6 and 7. TIJe '
impartance of preventive care.
SUCCE'flDS DR. HANON - Dr. David J, Faro, 31, left, a
Agriculture
&amp;
CNRD
stand
problems. "Apron" seed bulls gained 3.2 pounds per day '
He stiltes that the many probGALLIPOLIS
.
The
local
sheep
treatment
has the same active during the last 28 days and an avernative of Rodlelter, N. Y., has IIIISumed the praetk:e of Dr. ~oaald lems can be avoided in adulthood if
L Hannon rlaht, who retired earUer this year. Dr. Faro will take detected and treated an an early producer· group will meet Monday, ingredient as "Ridomil" and pro- age 2.8 pounds per day for the 112 ·'
March 25, 7:30 p.m. at the Senior vides some of the same protection.
test period. One bull gained 4.22 '
his du~ at -746 Seeond Avenue, GaiUpolls, on Aprl11.
age.
Slug control around tobacco pounds vc:r day on the c~ro sil~~ :·.
Citizen s Center. The group will"
focus on working out a set of by- beds can be needed anytime the based rauon w1th only f1ve bulls ·
.
taws for a formal organization. We temperature is 40F or above. The gaining over 3.5 pounds per day. .
also plan to have an educational mild winter and abundant rainfall Open house for the Washington :
segment to the program. All sheep may put. us in a slug problem siwa: C.H. test wiU he at the Bill Marting': '
producers from the area are wei- bon agam th1s year. Slug bruts pl'O' facility on the evening of March 2': .
: DAYTON • Robbins &amp; Myers, year-to-date, up from last year's first half," said Daniel W. Duval, come to attend.
vide the best method of dealiill! and the sale will be at the Faye~., .
Tnc. todav reooned that for the sec- $.49 for the .second quarter and president and chief executive offiThe fungicide "Riilomil" was with these pests. Begin applications County Fa1rgrounds at I p.m. on '
ond quarter and the six months $1.05 reported for the ftrst half.
cer "in view of the fact that last recently approved for use of alfalfa · of baits in an 8 , 10 foot band Saturday March 30. An estimated·'•
Sales from continuing opera- · year was a good year foi- the Com- to control seedling diseases caused around the outside of plant beds. 65 bulls will he sold. ·The sale o( ·•
ended February 28, 1991 showed
improvement in sales and net .lions for the quartet were up 9% to pany and because this year we are by Pythium and Phytophora fungi. Repeat every 7 to 10 days for about the traditional test bulls at the Belle :
income compared to fJSCall990.
· $28.9 millio11 from $26.5 million facing recession:u-y pressures not Ridomil 2 E can be applied at 3 weeks. These applications should Valley location will be April 2Q a~ ·;,
Tile Company also announced for the previous year. For the six present last year."
planting as a broadcast soil spray or reduce slug numbers before they 1 p.m.
.•
.. the sale of its RENCO operations months, sales were $56.7 million
"Our Fluids Handling Group impregnated onto dry fertilizer. It enter the bed. Monitor slug populaReminder: Soil samples will be·. ;
located in Goleta. California to Dr. compared to $52.9 million for continued its stellar performance can be applied at one to two pinls · tions by putting small pieces of taken today (Sunday March 24)
Johannes Heidenhain GmbH of 1990. Net income from continuing especially in the oilfield and waste per acre. See the label for specific plywood on the ground. Check from 1-4 p.m. at the County Exten: · :
Traunreut, Germany for cash. The operations increased dramatically treatment markets. In the Motion restrictions. The University of Ken- periodically under the plywood for sion Office. This was scheduled for.:·:
RENCO unit manufactures optical for the Second quarter to $1.8 mil- Control Group we are encouraged tucky are not making a blanket rec- slugs.
the convenience of those who have -:
encoders for the office and indus- lion from $1.3 miUiol! for the same by the steady improvement in ommendation to use Ridomil on all - 'fhe 1990-91 Bull Test at the work hours that conflict with nor:
trial autOmation markets and ~- period last year. For the ftrst half of orders especially for brushless sys- alfalfa seedings, but believe there Southwestern OhiO Bull Evaluauon mill Extension Office work hours. ; .'
sents less than 5% of Robbms &amp; the fiscal year, continuing o~ra- terns. The sale of RENCO is part of may be an economic benefit to
Myers toral sales. ·
- tions ·net ·income reached."$3.4 mil- a series of steps~ have undertak:' After',recognizing a sm~ll loss lion, ujJ from $2.7 million for 1990. en to sharpen tl1'e focus of the
"
on the .sale of RENCO, net1ncome Earnings per share from continuing Motion Control Group. Order rates
fo_r ·~he second qu.~ter was $1 :3 operations climbed to $.70 for the for both Groups were up for t~e
million and $2.8 million for the s1x quarter and $1.38 year-to ' date quarter and backlogs rem am ·
months ended February 28, 1991. compared to $.50 'and $1.07 for · strong."
This .compares to $1.2 miUion and . 1990. ·
The company is traded on the
. ~2.7 million for the same periods
"We are very encouraged by the NASDAQ-NMS under the symbol
of fiscal 1990. Earnings per share results for the second quaner and ROBN.
were $.51 for the quarter and $1.13

Farm Flashes

Protecting the crops

Money Ideas

·Monetary condit.ions

-

up

R&amp;M earnings continue to improve

Cooling

rem:

$9,491.00*

----.

.

sue.

$16 800.00*

.......

..

.

'

'
I

I

Meigs County
Agent's Corner

. .

·-

Requests increase for new
pesticide relief from pests

infested areas wearing white soct,s food panicles (P.et food, birdseed
By John C. Rk:e
will pinpoint "hot spots".
and other poss1ble food source·s
Co. Ext. Agent,
'" should be protected). Repair cracks
CARPET BEETLES &amp;
Agriculture
or holes in foundation, screens or
CLOTHES MOTHS
POMEROY - With increased
Dry
clean
and/or
launder
clothother areas where mice or rats may
concern for the environment and
ing
before
storing.
Some
hang
enter
the home.
the move away from com.plete
clothing
outdoors
in
bright
sunPIGEONS
reliance on pesticide use alone,
light.
Some
use
moth
balls,
espeOse
sticky
substances such as
·several clientele have requested
Tanglefoot
where
pigeons are likecially
when
storing
susceptible
alternative methods of pest control.
clot~ing
.
Always
inspect
stored
ty
to
roost.
String
monofilament
Following are some suggestions:
clOihing regularly.
line (fishing line) 3-5 inches above
CARPENTER ANTS
.
BATS
.
areas
where they roost Use "porcuEliminate high humidity, poor
Repau
all
cracks
or
holes
m
the
pine"
wire sllCh as Nixalite or Cat
ventilation and moisture problems
home.
Leave
the
largest
hole
open
.
Claw
to
prevent birds from roostin basements, crawl spaces and
for
several
days.
After
bats
have
ing
other parts of the home. Repair
·
WOODCHUCKS
moisture-damage wood. Do not left the area in the evening, close
up
the
final
opening;
do
not
do
this
.
Place
an electric fence around
· store fm:wood on the ground near
in
April
through
July
when
young
the
area
to
be protected 5 inches of
or against the house. Keep stored
·
may
be
trapped inside the building. the ground.
lumber indoors dry.
DEER
.
HOUSEANTS
Protect individual shrubs and
Select the food material most young
trees with chicken 111ire o~
frequented by the ants (jelly,
hardware
cloth (a pliable wire
peanut butter, honey, grease, etc.). screen). Well
built and maintained
Some homeowners bait with .2 electric fences
effective for
parts boric acid in 98 parts food. large areas when are
ST. LOUIS (UP!)- Anheuserdamage is severe.
Othere mix equal pariS of borax Use natural repellents such as Big Busch Inc.-and an ann of the Interand confectioner's sugar.
. Game Repellent or Hot Sauce on national Brotherhood of Teamstm
FLEAS
vegetation as soon as damage is said Friday union members overKeep the pets and pet-living observed. Not that repellents may whebningly approved a new threeareas clean and thoroughly vacuum alleviate a damage problem but year contracL
rooms regularly. A goose-necked will rarely solve-it
The contract covers 9,000 prolight ov« a P.!ID of .-py W1llel' left
duction
workers at 12 breweries.
·MICE AND RATS
oYanight will monitor adillt popuDetails
were oot released. The
Trap or use glue boards. ~eep
lations. Also, walking through household areas clean and free of pact will expire Feb. 28, 1994.

A-B, Teamsters
settle contract

NEW DRILL AVAILABLE • The Melp SoU and Water Conservation District has a new 10' Haybuster JIOotlll driU available, to
go along with the 10' Brillion 11'151 Reder. Tbe Haybnster drill
rents ror $SO plus $8 for each acre after the ftnt nve acres. It can
be used ror vus as wellu small vain seedlnp.

POMEROY - The Meigs Soil .
and Water Conservation District'.,
has a new 10' Haybuster no-till,
drill available, to go along with the
I0' Brillion grass seeder.
.•
The Hayoustcr drill rents for· •
$50 plus $8 for each acre after the •
first five 'acres.
The Haybusters can be used for .
~rass as well as small grain seed--mgs. It requires a minimum of 6()',
horsepower tractor with single"
remote hydraulics.
:.
For best results, according to the
Ohio Agronomy Guide, spring· •
grass seeding dates are March 15..:•.:
April 30.
·~ ··
The Brillion seeder rents for $30
plus $6 for each acre after the ftrsi .
five acres.
·.
The Brillion seeder require$ a~ •_
minimum of 30 horsepower tmctor•., •
The district also has for rent a ,
two row no-till Allis Chalmers coni' '
planter. The rates are $40 for a:.minimum of five acres plus $8 fill'··
each additional acre.
. ,;,
Tractor requirements for the·,
corn planter are 40 horsepower&gt;
with single remote hydraulics and.:
a1 temator to run the seed unit on·
the planter.
. .:
To schedule to use either or •
these pieces of equipment, call the- •
Meigs Soil and WBJer Conservllion.·,
District Office at 992-6647 and asl(
for Blair Windon.
-

�Pag&amp;-'02~nday

nmea-Sentlnel

March

March 24, 1891

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Plnsant, WV

11

......................
.........
.....,.., " ... .,..

Saddam reshuffles Cabinet.to consolidate · power.;
CAIRO, Egypt (UP!) - Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein, in an
.apparent bid to .consolidate power
';amid rebellion in his war-battered
·Jiation, put a Shiite MUSlim in the
:newly created position of prime
· minister Saturday IIIII sacked veteran Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz.
• Baghdad Radio's report on lhe
· first major Cabinet shuffle since
; Iraq's defeat in lhe Persian Gulf
:war came a day after Saddam
·appoinled one of his top aides vice
; presidenl and a week after he
;promised democratic reforms in a
· nationwide speech.
• It also came as unconfirmed
•reports in Iran said many people
~ had been ltilled in clashes between
:rebels and loyaliSt troops in Bagh·dad. .

The changes appeared aimed at

wooing Shiite support for Iraq's
longstanding SCQI}ar government at
a time when Slriitc rebels are light·
ing loyalist rroops in southern Iraq.
The shift also may have been
aimed at keeping the loyalty of
Saddam 's ruling Baalhist party by
Jli:Omising he would P.laY a diminIShed role in the datly affairs of
state.
Another goal appeared to be
encouraging Iraqi nationalists to
su~pon a government of national
\llllty rather than allow Iraq to be
split between rebellious Kurds in
the north and Shiites in the SOiith.
Baghdad Radio, monito~ed in
Cairo, said Saadoun Harnadi, a Shi·
ite, had been appoinled prime minister.

It also said Aziz - a Christian
,-- was stripped of the foreip minisuy portfolio and left ooly with the
post of deputy premier. The radio
station said the new foreign miniSter was Ahmed Hussein Khoudair,
wbo until now bas not been a
prominent member of Saddam's
governrnenl
.
Arlb diplomats in Cairo said
Aziz •s ouster as foreign minister
was an admission of his diplomatic
failme 10 rally Arab support behind
Iraq after lhe Aug. 2 invasion of
Kuwait.
The move 10 appoint Harnadi as
premier miiBDI the introduction for
the first time of the post of prime
miniSter 10 the irJiqi Cabinel Sal\dam in the JIIISl chaired all Cabinet
meetings, ~ him the de facto

•

premier, but Saddam officially
holds only the post of president
The reshuffle means Saddam 's
presence is no longer needed for
Cabinet meetings to be held, and in
effect ~ives Hamadi the task of
rebuilding lhe country under Sad·
dam's supervision.
.·
Hamadi iS a Shiite MUSlim, one
of Saddam's closest associates and
the man given the delicate task of
talking to the leaders of Shiitedominated Iran durina the Gulf
war. Iraq and Jicighboring Iran had
fought an eight .year war from
1980-1988, but Ira11. tried to
improve bilateral retauons while
attempting to hold on to KuwaiL
Hamadi, portrayed as a moderate throughout his J!Ofitical career,
Joined two other Shiites in the Cabmet - Defense Minister LJ. Qen.

and In ·
Sahdi Abbas T
Minisru Ali~ Majid.tenor
The radio said Majid retained
his portfolio as interior minister, a
sign Saddam was ,satisfied wilh the
way he was dealing with the growing uhresl in the northern and
southern pans of the war-battered
nation, following Iraq's military
defeat by U.S.-led allied forces in
the Gulf War.
The Cabinet reshuffle came one
day after the appointment of
· · T h Yass1· n
D epu IY P rem•er
a a
Ramadan, a member of Saddam's
inner cin:le, as vice president of the
Iraqi Republic.
The latest changes were seen by
Arab diplomats in Cairo as an
attempt by Saddam to consolidate .
his power and give his adminiStra·

l

lion a more moderate image. .
On March 16, in his first nation-·
wide speech since U.S..Ied forces
liberated Kuwait, Saddam said ,
''the decision to build a democratic
country is irreversible."
"We have decided to establish a
democratic society based on the.
constitution, laws, foundations and••
multi-parties," said Sad.~, who .
effectively controls Iraq s only .
legal pOlitical party, the Baathist ;
Party.
. .
. In an apparent response to ··
demands 'for changes m Iraq's
political system. Saddam said he ~
was confident. "true Iraqis loyal to ·
their country" would find the ·
"institut!nns of 'lhis new P~. the :
me_ans.. 11 l!ffords for potmcal
acnon.

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446·4249

Lind CWIIIIOI: S8.000 Down •
1210por-orii,OOODown

...... ............,.....
OVOI' , . , _ Loa

-

Examine our
"two-step" mortgage
before you buy~

...., ___
·

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.

32 Mobile Homla
lor Sale

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Uohin!l..... dlnittl,

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lank. N.l .. tri-sute

FDIC

Dr, IO...Witr.

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10 ~ Ia poll.- or

"*''iMO. lam up Ia 115.00 por
- · LAI .. troln you, COli 114,lt12110. '

lily -end ..~co ltiCIOIWk.
400
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fl~trdllil
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lneiUdl! 011 ~a
fllleri Gl ••• i ~
Trll• 'allen. POnt 111-mg,

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HOI'
t oyou_
-itniiiilotho 31 ttomealor Sete
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..............

'•*a wwilho--.101111-4

· llldudes OU (hange &amp; filter;
Greasln5 Check Transllllalon, .
Power St•rlng. Brake, Wlndlhleld
Washer Fl•ldt &amp; Differential.

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M-F~ -~·~~""~4~WI~a.~~~

10
111
" 441'1124.
- · -....--a I .IN. Ill

1 Cll'd or Thanks
CARD OF THANKS
In the mldlt of our
10rrow, we whlh to
· expreu OUf heartfelt
thankl 1111d
appreclltlon to
reletlv•. friend• and
nelghboro for the
flowers. food end
ct~rd8 we received
during the lo•• of qtir
beloved mother,
A11n1 D. Herrilon.
From the foomlly of
Anna D. Harrlllltl

The Family Of
BUEL K.
RIDENOUR
Would like to thank our
nelghbore .,d frlenda
for their ouppon during
the l.,ooa ond d-h of
our lovocl one. Thlllllta
to Dr. W•~moreland,
Dr. Lantz · ond the
at Veteran• Memorlel Hoepltal. ·
To the loolu AuxMI·
ory of the ChHIIr
Fire Dopertmenl. The
Mllhodlat Church. and
the D of A'1: molt oflll
to Rov. Shoron Hauoman ond Ewing' 1 Funeral Home , for your ·
klndn••·
Wife Peulino;
Sono Jim, John,
ond Grandchildren

nu,...

11

Help Wanted

1 112
4--..-.-~
114 IAurwl Cll

1

2

In Memorv
7

Dear Jeremy.
It haa been 1
· y•r since you left,
but your memories
still remain. I'll rlimember you al·

waya.

Love,
Sherri Frederl·ck

In Loving Memory Of
DALE ROTHGEB, SR.
who pallid ewev
1 15 .,..,. ego.
Maich 24, 1 978.
Your memorie1 to ua are

ok-llko
With which we will never
pon.
Though God hoe you. in
Hit ltaoplnQ,
We wHI olwoy1 hove you
in our heerta.

SICily ml- by wile,
Glonno Rothgeb,
Md .on1.

In Memory Of
BRET ALLEN
ROOD
May 19'71
1990 Maroh
A year ago today
You went eway.
We do not underatand
Why Ood . rHched
down Hie hand.
But everydey the pain
Mekeo the tHI'I come

S02I.

.

:·

ATIENTION: GOLFERS

-====;:::::::::::;

I'

In Memory

In Loving Memcorv Of
BILL EICHINGER
Who p11- A •w- ~ -•
March ~3. 1110
you,
Dod Y.u
ond ond
Gr.,dpo.
Vlolqve
ml01I
Your Childron
Grondchlldtwn

Clo""' Naothrldgoo, li ......
luA

bothi, lllovl.

-S:OO.

:11111-175-

I

$20.00

I

10 mile radius of llo Grande

::F""':=·*:=:;.f711:;:;•;:''::::=== 3 Announcements
3 Announcements

-.1021.

2

=--· . . -·
-

1llil Viet-~ 2 -vinyl
........
lal, bMuJiful - . OIPp •
By Ocrwr: :stir A-, Cothl*ll
Oolllngo,
1 both, ~~~-- polio,
nlol .... looatfori, Prlold loW
..,,L offWt oon1lderecl. 114-

Or Vour P*- 01 Emptoy- ~ Vlldlag tM eln1ee •
HHD~ .:-:t:r-tt~z.
I
SO yro. "-.
"WWIIIIn zo il11o Rldluo a Rio Plrtl "" - - v.ry nice,
Orondo. IAddlllonll Chlrgo 11 .
lnqullfoo
Outol. Z0 MIIH)
;;;:::;--;:;;::---==
IJdn
'-'
Goo .... Pall- Bl-lfick&gt;n' Hooowwwlwis - · E.om Up
- - - ·to lhe m luol To S8GO por Workilltl AI
CIII ZOU'III-1lll7.
l'or Do111o Wrlto: Colli
·--~
- Ptoulo'l Doy
Contor. u
.... P.O
. . •-·
- · ~11:11
- • Win-

8Bolo,
o.m.-•b1:30
' ·"· 'ahlldcoN.
• ~ a-10.
l op.,
~ ..............

•ory

1f72- - - han!e
12atl, 2
oond

.
1m
Duko
Mollllo
Homo
011
- · bomil boJCIM 1:00-I:GD p.m. iM-iiji:

.... - A l l Cooh. Jlu ~

See the Heritl&amp;e
. · ~pril 18th-21st
· H1lton lllld, S.C.

!Extra Charge If Over 20 Mllael

G,ALLIA,(O.
Am&amp;
CRAFTS SHOW

WIU COlli TO YOUR IISIDIICI 01 .YOUI

PLACE Of .-LOYIIIIII

614-245-59 51
IF NO ANSWER: 246-6162

Rt. 35, Fairgrounds

2 bedrm., 2 bltb condo on
llarin1. Sl11ps 6. lots of
extras. Cllll now for aarly
dis~ount, (6141 &amp;e2-6480.
Oth• aeets aV1illbl1 foi
Vlcatlon this re•.

.

APRIL 6 &amp; 7
60 CRAFT BOOTHS
CAU
. 614-245-5363

_ F.OR BOOTHS

Itt Loving Memory
of VIR OIL MilLER
who left ua 21
yeara ago today.
You are always in our
thou&amp;hts
No matter illhtre we JO,
B
1 d
tcause " owt you so.
No eyes can see .us -P
But many 1 tear is slled
While others are ui"P·
Sadly misstd by l1tnily
and friends.

12TH ANNUAL
FARM MACHINERY AUCTION
Saturday, March 30-10:00 A.M.
JACKSON CO. FA.GIOUNDS
COnlGEVIUE, WY•
8 MII.ES WEST OF R•LEY ON RT. 33
FOR INFO
304-273-3477 or 304·273-4049
Sponsored by l\an111wood FFA &amp; YFA·
Reel Estate General

Real Estate General

Reel Estate General

·

SOUTHERN H-I LLS.
BE
ES_T ~E . INC~
738 2nd AVE. GALLIPOLIS
...... -~

JUDY DEWITT, BROKER .'... ;; ...... 446-8147
J . M arrill CartBr .......................... :...... 379-2184
Cathy Wray .............. ......................... 448-4266
Tammy DeWitt .................................. 441 ·0703

-··~

Jeennie Tolliver ... .................. ............ 448-9008
Sam Hoffman ...... .................. ............ 379-2449
PaUi Haw.!' , ····· ~ ···· · ··················· : ......... 448-1987

Dan Carter ...... ~·············· ··· · -'···.. ..... 448-·8 434

•• rein.

We've been told In the
pill
It would get Hiler et
leat;
·
But It's 10 hard to reaeon
Ceuae you ware a \
child of every •a·
~n.

Bprln9, Summer, Win·
ter end Fall.
You always had 1
om lie .for ell. .
You touched our live•
10

We went you to know,
We will never forget
The one called ttRET.
Sadly mi-d by
Parents,
Grendperenll. Aunts.
Uncle end Coualna

BtAT THE REliT RACE!!

THE VERY BEST

With this 2 or 3 bed roam home. Remcxleled, vmyt
siding, storage buildine. Ill acres plus eicetlent
garden area. Tobacco allatment. Raccoon Town·
ship. Unbeatable price. $29,000. Call tcxlay!

hood close to hospital and othet conveniences,
this 3bedroom. 2 bath home reflects top quality
throupout. llvrtl room·wnh fireplace, knchen.·
new storaae buddine. beautifully landscaped '"
back. Many more extras. You must see to appreco·
ate.
~2898

~2895

THE PIIICE IS RIGHT 011 THIS
3 bedroom, vinyl sided rancll. 111 baths. lull
diVided basement, large covered patio, carport, 2
car preee. apprn II ac. lawn. Crty water and
sewer and gas. Priced at $44,9(10, CeiiiO(jay lor en
appointment.
II 2897

Madim WOIICitnen of
America

.
-··---·

u•11 OPPOITUNin

.......... "' '"'"' ""-

.., ' - t potHIIaf? TINn
y•'rt ...... fl I lift-...

lot • toll ,.. """"' tho ....
' " t t&amp;lllloor lor
- . . , - .. otlHIIJII

,.,...

......... w;
........

. . . . . . lllillwor .......

- Dlotrkr
MIIIIISI!!I.
......
P.O. ... 331

........ Ott. 41614
16141 t4S-tllt

Elite lrame and stone chalet located at Charolais
. Hills Lake, beautifully situated on over 2 acres. 3
bedrooms. living room. dining area, family roam.
full basement, deck overlooking lake. Attached
garage + separate 2 car garage. Atruly gorgeous
home wnh a lol of edra arJJenities.
H2891
~

YOU CAN BRAG ABOUT THIS
Gorgeous brick home just as soon as ybu take one
look, you'll be sold. 3 bedrooms. formal dining and
living rooms, 3 baths, faJ!Iily room. tully equtpped
kitchen. 2 car ,garage and separate 24'x36' gar·
age, pond. private settine. Exceptionally ni.ce
home with a lotolamenities plus over 4acr,es. C1ty
schools.
112157

PlANTING nMEI
In time tor spring planting appro1. 73 acre !ann
wrth lhe ma)ortty of land beina tillable. 87'x5~'
metal barn, fenced. Garage, 2 story. frame
remodeled home. 4 bedrooms, Ill baths, laree
country kitchen, basement. Don't let this
producttve farm pass you by.
12194

..........

.

'•

I

lEW LISTIIG
The "REDMAN" located at St. Rt. 35 near Rio
Grande. •Business only: includes complete
mventory, pool tables, julu! box, equipment and
other business chattels. Leese includes a 2
bedroom apartment to assist w•h monthlv rent.
Possible owner financing.. Cell now for an
appointment allhis super opportun"y! ;82899

SCENIC SPLENDOR

LOTTA LAID
Approx .. l33 acres in an. Wooded, s~uatld in OhiO
Townshop.
HOOO&amp;

-·I·--..
............,

COIIVEIIEIIC£1
• Only a lew blocks .'rom chu"ih, school and
shoppin2- 2 story bnck home silualed on .644 .
acre in Gallipolis. 3 or 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
nice living room and large ttt·ln k"chen. Call
today for appoinlment.
112111

.

. If you're lookma lor a home in a super nerghbor·

HelpWintBCI

11

or

.l

'nock

Fluldo. And
--~~~-Wll
Cornllo
ElltW
Your R•ldeno.

.

-AM

OIL CHANGE SERVICE

.,....

CARQ OF. THANKS
During my recent
stay In Holzer Madl·
cal Canter I wish to
tha.. Dr. Evana, Dr.
Whitely, Dr.. Lent•
and Dr. M. Walker,
1110 tha nul'ling ltlff
for taking cere of me.
Thanka to tho•
whO gaw me flowera, cerdl, Iettere and
their vlaitl with me.
I aapeeially thank
Rev. Baker and IV·
. eryone who kept me
in their prayftl'l.
May God bleas ell
of you,
.
Wilmil Reiber

No

INO'IICII
OHIO VALLEY PUILII- CO.

IVINDlliOe
~
- ·BlaForI
Bolo.
Not
Or todo.
Fot LD- Wort! Pt. Ttmo1K

IDrlniCIIeqHIYefbla•r
-.,GalT-, 114-441o-7111, w
DlblM. ...., lp.m., .,. 111

D&amp;S

32 Mobile Homea
tor Sate

.... _....

;

Ref•-

Buelneta
Opportunity

anent1o11 au•
0wn1r11
OIIINI •lloiMI tken: Will Do

eo..

ooS To Sol: Z ltory lbr
Conw Lot In .. Ofllo,
Enllllnt ....... .. .,. -

NDDIMIIncle tMI p do Mill,_
aiJh,....,.. you- ond

wanted to Do

CARD OF THANKS
In the mkllt of our
10rrow we wleh tQ
expree"l heertfelt
thank• and
appreciation to
relatlv•. friend• end
nelghboro for 1ha
klndneu end
1ympethy they have
1hown to u1.in the
loeo of our beloved
.Huobend, Flther end
Grandfather,
Pau I Skidmore. M·ay
God lieu you all.
Lucille Skidmore and

re"'. -.·-

.
'

...,. -

Meed

eomr:.:..
-·-No

.ue

to sa.OCM! 1n

Myrtle S..chl
2 II, 2 IJiltlts, c0f11111ete
kif. . &amp; ....., .
For ,_a lnfwmatlon

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

.

1\merican troops relax in Egypt ·

LOANIIY IIAIL
n houri.

....•.
Up

llwliWWII.
- · TV -

18

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(12 !ftl. s. of

RMotl

-----=
.
.
=
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Goi'IM Clty-laech,
S.C.

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•

po:::;., bid••

OCEAII PIOifl
COIIDO

•

}Egypt unlikely to offer exile again

i

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

-..
,..._,..1100,

==· =---:

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..... ....... :::::...

Sunday

POIIaT1

Buelneu
Opportunity

... ,._. .. YMITei!IOr

Conllt tltlan.__tJ'IJhe:IIIIJ~

-

)f~;~-- ~~~~:~~~~~:~~~::~~~~bu~lt· ~~~~~~~~

21

.101111 KUW.IfT:

TEACHER WANTED

where

11 Wlnted to DQ

~ .........7110.

day. "IIJJ.r!led back more food than out who won the Super Bowl. released, taken to a u.S. Naval hos- everylhing ~t you could t!:Jink_ of. ·
COI.LEOE DEGREE NEEDED.
I ate. I ate ju~ en~ugb 'til I felt like Some of these guys had been ~n for piIll ship, then on Marth 9, flown I did a h~e bit of backtraclcing mto
In lnolruotor
,...... .. .._.. oan~mun~~r
n
I bad something m me,lhen I gave 45 or SO days, and they d1dn ' t , to Andrews Air Force Base for a my pasl
.
.
;
pll-llllloto_ln_
it back."
·
know."
reunion with their families.
"For lhe m_ost part, I JUS~ literal- ~·
- -tPaMinorl. II you Mile
_Although he su~fered co~sta~t · Fox and the other allied pilots
Last Friday, Fox was operated ly.sat u;.ere wtth a blank mmd. and :
to
00!111, -..
-.
..-..
. ojob
-·
or...,...,ho
pam from. a tom hgament m .h u were moved several more umes. on by surgeons, who repaired the S81d Hail Marys, ~~ you etther ..
rig_ht leg and an injured elbow, On F~b. 28, lhey were taken to a tpm ligament. He has been under· got.depressed lhmkm$ abO!Jt t1!~ :·.
:-:.~,~~
wh1ch he had struck on the canopy facll1ty they guessed was the going intensive physicallherapy past, or you got semJ-CxcJte_d •.
01twr..
who
.,.Ol'ellln,
and
-to-uportolon
-·
• lolo
rail of his plane when he ejecled, Republican Guard headquaners, and·said he Will travel to his home about the ·prospect of bemg ·
.....
•Milia t111n. Hours: 2:3Dp.m.
Fox said he never received medical and their treatment began to in Swansea, Mass. in a couple of released.
.
. ,..
Sundoy t11ru 1:311o.m. Frldoy;
attention during hiS captivity.
improve dramatically. They were weeks before returning to Tucson.
"I was anxwus about my physt· "
1111p Olli'l'r ......,, UyiiiM
In Baghdad, he was kept in a given eight blankets each, and
Fox, who is divorced and has cal state," Fox said. "My main
oil; I hoUr monlhly IIIII
solitary cell at a prison that Ameri· began to receive fruit and cheese five brothers and sisters, said he · concern was th_at one of lhese B!JYS :
or
cans called "Baghdad Biltmore." wilh their meals.
thought a lot while he was a prison- would lose lhe1r temper and ... JUSt ·
Vllkl-~good"U
Ina
..-d,
.... lldiiJ!roll
His break ~the evening of Feb.
After lhe cease-fire, they were er. •'I lltought probably abou 1 haul off and do too much to you." .•
•Ul011 a•ll · DO¥. . . . ,..uirMI.
23, when allied planes .dropped ,.-,,..------ - - ' - - - - - - - '·-......:.........:.........:..._......:..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
sa.oo hour, 1a ..... -.. . 11141 ..... lon, lllok lllnthree 2,000-pound laser-guided
c
•:
1 - ool 1-.atl-2302 no
bombs on the comm"and· bunker
next to lhe prison. The force was so
~- Equol bpp;iunlly
great that the prison shook, the
.: 'iACHIR WANTED- NO COL•
\Windows feU out and the cells filled
lilal DIGIIII 111111110. Fullwilh dusl
-lnllruotor - t o
Fox heard the voices of other
01 tL. . . . . F•iill
10-ln-captured American and British
(P
on. • you ... to
pilo~ yelling, asking one another
ill, ...... - ....
for lhe!f names and other infonpa- .. ;::t-. joli lor
lion. Soon, Iraqi ~ards put many
,.~:::=to
. , tlieh nrlo&amp;il
of lhe captured all1ed pilots in a bus
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
"" .: • ., ond
and took lhem to anolher building
where they were kept for four days.
...... 2:l[llllt.lll.
""""" thnl t:lo..m. Prldoy;
~ 'F!lr abou! 12 hours or _so, 11
......
a
uer
requllllldlytlnie
Public Notice
Public Sale
Public Notice
PubliC NotiCe
8
Amencans were together m one
oil; 2-llour nlaoolltly IIIII
cell, and that iS the only time that
&amp;~ton
-tnal: or •
oltllrwl•
piN end procedu,.. !Bo.rd Ohio Volley Bonk Compony
LEGAL NOTICE
-do.iocl.
IIIah- ~
the 11 of us were together," Fox
Polley
8.01.00.00).
The Boord of Alcohol.
up to the doll ond time of Rick Pooroon Aucllon c-pony ..
ilrlvnow-~~~~_.._
u··
Appllcolion d01dll no: tole. .
.......... and good
tdtqu.le
said. "We got to meet each other, · DNg Addiction end M.,tol
portencomoue.,.clllwlonco.'
April10,
1991.
.
.
Hoolth
S.
o
rvlceo
of
Golllo,
Milon
=liM•
oonr~g~
requiNd.
Tho Ohio Volley Bonk
say hello, compare stories and find
011!!!._~"!_uelly, WIIIJ1ckeon end Melga countiet MARCH 21 , 22, 24, 191
u.oa
hour, to - · I...,.,_
Compony rtlll)lll the right Llceoiold
Yirglnlo,
304-t
~,...
•·
11141~-Hin­
h11 •nnounced it le , . .king
to occept ... rejectonyindtll
l..ted oon. l-.at-2301 no
propoulo for tho provlolon
bldt. ond to wHhdrow theM
Public Notice
thin 11211t1j._~ .....
of rrwntol - h ond dru·
vehicle• trom oalo prior to 9
wantld to Buy
Chrllty. E.... .._,unity
g/ olcohol llrvic:H In the
NOTICE TO
tho tole. Tonne of Sole: Cooh ::::::::::::-::=:::::~:-i:::::~
~··.,
or CERTIFIED CHECIC .
Complollholaillold
or Eololool
community. Controc11 will
CONTRACTORS
.
Arrt Jypo of lumh-, ai"· •
be IWirded to community
ATE
OF
OHIO
MAR . 20. 24. 27. 1991
plllincoo, ontl-'o llo. ··
~ CAIRO, Egypt (UP!) - With ground. "He was a bit of a bully, my brolher and I took a trip with
ST
IIJenclot who will provklo
- '.., ............. 21-112.
DEPARTMENT
OF
"urdish and Shiite Muslim rebels always P,icking fights wilh my cus- him ... and be ltept trying to draw one or more of tho following
TRANSPORTATION
Public Notice
:
mbu Ohl
tnching their way toward Baghdad tomers. '
him to the party and its princi- Mrvicee
Cor
• Down. 114- .
1. Counoollng I Porycho·
Colu
'·
o
Morch I. 1881
and pundits predicting the immiSaddam was exiled in Cairo in pies," be said.
1 cant ot Thanka
..-yColto.
·theropy
S~n~lco
Controct
Solet.
Logo!
Copy
NOTICE
j!ent ouster of Saddam Hussein's 1959 after becoming involved in a
The Andiana restaurant became
2. Dlognolllo •••••mont
No. 81 •289
.
The Moroh 18. 1181. -um lllo llo!o llo!olo. "'
~aathisl regime, speculation in the Baathist plot to seize power by a recruiting station for .Saddam.
Sorvico
CE CONTRACT milling of tho Gollll· -Conclltlanllf4.4111ML &lt;
3 . Modlco
' tion/Somotlc · UNIT
PAlpropoulo '!"ill be Jocklon·Meigt Boord of AI· Old -or~ To 11 ,•
~ddle East has shifted from when machine-gunning the car carrying When students from nearby Cairo
Soole&lt;l
. Mr. • Mro. Charleo
r
1
..
d
11 till office of lhl coho!, Orug A~dlction ond
Fot A
ProJICI. •
•VanSickle would like
·Trutnwnt
ihe Iraqi leader will be ousted to Iraq's then-leader, Gen. Abdul University campus spilled mto the
4.
Pro-Hotpltollzotlon
Dl..-or
oftlw
Ohlopopon·
M.,lll
Hoolth
•
woo
114-411-2111.
•
Jo
oend 8 very lpeciel
he might seek political asy- Karim Qassim.
cafe after class each day, Saddam sc,..nlne
nwnt of TriiiiPOflllli&gt;n Col· ..,oollod far thot dote. Tho An4'0r 1i1 ble Sow •
4
~~The assassination auempt was a often Clii)OUIIded on lhe riJiiteous6. Dey Trootmont IPortlll umbut, Ohio. untl 10,00 A. milling hie roochl· ·... !l!!IL~'LI; 2524 .
_ .. , : ·'···-·--- • ·-···-··-·! '• Thank-You to ell of
J:toopltallztt!~~~ - _
_ _ -M--Onlc;-·Bt•ndord Tlnw .. dulod·· for .Mondoy, ·Morch
.
e. Doy Actlvltllo 61n1lco T .•
April 2 18 91 1~ 211, 1981, ot 7:00 p.m. 11 Wont to buy otronnlnlon lor •
·•who Mnt card1, glfto
ness .of Baathist
thinkinginto
or.
to drag students
as a
attempted
7. Hotllno '""''"•
A~heno~' Gollll.' Hocking, the Boord offlco locotocl ot
Bulo1k1 :Ja""tl.ll'•.:.;•~
. end attended our
the Gulf War were consid- tribesman and fled to Damascus fiery political debates which fre8 . Enwrgoncy lorvl!=o
M-'Mo roo Mor-n 414 Bocond Avonue. Golll· 1-0nlylor t-·~ ~
•
•
, Anniversary Party.
9 . RelidentW Treetmtnt
...,e.
n •
- • polia.
~ .,.. eqUI1 v11,.., •
~red possible candidates, as was and then to Cairo, where then-Pres- quently developed into altercations.
Tonni Noblo. Vinton and Woohlng· MAR. 21, 22. 24, 1881
l-..7!120.
•
Thank you ell very
Mauritania. But they have all · ident Col. Gamal Abdel Nasser . Saddam was arresled during one ServlcoiShon/LDng
10. R•ldentlol Suppcin ton Countln, Ohio on ..,.
Wlnlld to buy, ltondlng tlmbor, .:.
•
much.
llenied offering Saddam asylum.
griJnted him political asylum.
such dispute with a fellow Iraqi, S ic fEMe A
tlon ATH-33·1.112 on U. S.
F
01
e
•. - •· " Route 33 In the City of loBob Wlllemo I 1oM 114-tlt12; Cairo, despite Egypt's staunch
Saddam received a stipend from who he lhreatened to lcill wilh the torervCoN,
Announcements
Crl11o, SuperviMd
"
the CHieo of Bolpre
114411.
•
1111"· 1n
-,upport for the U.S.-led coalition lhe Egyptian government and a full knife he often saapped to his belL . Aportnwntol
Wlnlld To Buy: J101k Autoo
5,
H~yAda
. Community Aooldon· ond Morietto, In tho Ville!!•• 3 Announcements
!1&amp;3Jnst Iraq, was another possibili- scholarship to attend Cairo Univer· The police puUed the two apan and till11Service
of JecksonvHia, Canurville.
wKh or · wlthoul Call~;
jy
sity Law School, but those who . took Saddam to the station, where
12. Cooe Monogemont Murroy City, Bolle Volley Areo SlngiH 0e•IKy LArry Lively. I'M 311 13 c1.
Sorvico
ond
Coldwell,
lower
Solem
~ 'An Egyptian columnist suggest- remember him say he rarely attend- he was identified as a political
PeopJo
For
Blanlflconl
Contw.nlfll.
13. Canaoltatlon Sorvlce ond other vorlouo routoo ond Relatlol.tllpe.
Employment Serv1crc,
ed thiS week thal Egypt might want ed classes or studied.
refugee under government protec·14
M
~-• H11It E
uctiont
by furnlohlnt ond -•: - - · P.O. Bo1
IC grant Saddam asylum, since
"He would arrive in lhe mom- lion.
lion &amp;.n:;;'
h duco- inttolllng roloocl povonwnt 1043, Gollpolll, OH 411S!.
.Cairo sheltered Saddam as a young ing and spend all day here, either
•'We tried to prevent him from
15. P-ion Sorvico
nwrkor mot..Wo.
Tr
••119· 4 - drtn ----------------~~
11 He ... wanted
••
0 ·00 revolutionary in lhe early 1960's smoking cigarettes, siPPi~ coffee coming back after that incident,"
or
ATV.
on
our
prap1ttr.
-::::--::-f.'~:'::::-:-;;:;;;==~!
•
111. Information ond Alf·
Pr
""''
..........
,
Vlolotore will bo -utocl. AVON • AM 11'M1, Coli llortlyn •
'"' 0·00 m ·
and has often granted asylum to . or reading lhe paper," said Abdel- . said Abdel-Meguid. "But the errol s.,lce
C
W11vwSCM 112·2141.
;
17.
Foronlllo
Evoluotion
Work
loneth
VorH?u•
deposed Middle East leaders - ' Meguid. "He may have gone to police said he was under Nasser's Service
-h.- T. llortln 11141 felt or v•rkJu• mll11.
.
•pplclttone.,...,.,....
..
the
.:
from the Shah of Iran to exiled class once a week but I never once protection."
Priority will bo given to
!.1....,."1width - Voneo. 4
Gl
Noir City lull.... .... •
leaders of Libya. Sudan and Alge- saw him study."
According to accounts, Saddam thooo oppliconu whou
T1w dolo sot lor complo· ::-::=~~V:-iiiiiW~~a:;:y:-:== ..._,
looll!•nt - ~·•
ria
·
A Cairo University official said was arrested a second time in propooalt oddreu the n•do tion of thlo work ohell be •• I lomoll pulltlloo,llwlta, -hor • .,..., ...a U..Ouom.
of
..
_lol
cllont
populo·
HI
fo~h
In
the
bidding
proport
ColtiO
port
Gorrnon
• "We could give Saddam shelter they had no record of Saddam Cairo, when he chased a fellow
Appalnlllllnl
-~-tholl bo re- ohopord, -~~-­
IIOMI
Compony
hll 10 No1111-.~;
in Cairo,'' suggesled lhe columnist graduating and they could not Baallrist through lhe streets wilh a tiont" or who wll dollvor
modlole _ , . . No .....
urviceo
in
undor·IOrved
quirocl
file
wllh
hit
bid
sold
1
good
.
1
10
for Egyp,t 's leading daily. AI release hiS transcript. After Saddam knife.
peMnae All
ry. No ..... "''
cerllfied chock or coohler' • lr!ll - · 1 not "' - . . - 11 Full/pori tlmo,
or PM. •
Mnun. ' Then we could send him became vice president of Iraq, he
Saddarn often became violent oreot.
··speclel client popu18- check for •n amount oqu• ~.m.' tM ta 1141 beta01n
1-1 ,.rit.
0-lld pluo - . ;
back to Baghdad, where they received an honorary law dearee wilh anyone who challenged his tiona.. aN defined aa:
Sgt. Sandre Taylor.
to five per ..,I of hie bid, but , ,..,:,....,.....,..,--,---.1 8
I
M
-.kly,
pall·
'
would string him , to horses and from Baghdad University in 1970.
political assumptions. "He hated DI..._;voro
Y
ontolly In no 1111111 more Jhon •flfty •f bluk ~= -hor u... ' daughter of Anna
fmll req-. Coli •
drag him through lire streets."
"He rarely studied," recalled a Communists especially," said a
z. Chlldron
thouoond dolloro. Of • bo~d 1111• latlw
· Oglol- LoiJ 30W11-nol .... lor Lort •
J. Taylor, ha•
~~~~~3. Subotonce AbuM
far 1., .,.. ...t. of hie bid, 114-8l2 IIMI.
.
• Such fervent anti-Saddam senti- former classmate. "But he read former. Baathist colleague. "He
returned from
77ATTE~ POMEROY!
4. Victim• Dl Donwlllic poyoble to the Dlroctor.
~~~~end Collie,
ment is still strong in Cairo, even outside his subjects all the time, was never afraid to use his knife in Vlolonce
Operation
De1ert
'POITALJOIS•
•
a-.. mullopply. on the
among those who befriended lhe especially the writings of Michel a fight against them."
11177
·11UO
hr.
fot-m
ond
'
11. Oldor AduMo
proper forme. for auollfico· 1 wk aid 0onnon 1~ IPJJIIootlon Info., oon l·:nt-111' :
Shlald I Storm.
young Baathist activist during his Aflaq (one of lhe founders of lhe
"He was crazy," said Sami
1.
MI/MR. DD / MI
tlono ot leoot ,., •Y• prior to ai¥1- to good 1&amp;17 ll.m. ·10p.m. 7 doyo.
I would like to
•
7 . Vllorono
lo the cleiiMt forGPonlne hoiM,-IIIOnl.....,..lon,CIII
political exile here from 1959 to Baathist party.) He was infatualed Hussein, who lived on Dokki Street
thank all my
8. HeorlnQ lmPI!Irod
bide in occordlnoo wllh MN. Hoh --11'11.
AVON I:104471-1421.
All - · I Shirley ;•
1963.
with Aflaq. For him.• Aflaq was a and knew him at the time. "He
,_,..
'
frillnd•
and family
·
B. For.,olc Cllo'nt1
Choptor 1111211 Ohio Aovloocl Femlloopoyedoot SOWl'll-"1'171.
• Interviews wilh former acquain- propheL"
would do anything to pick a fJghL"
who wrote me and
10.
Gonorol
Cocle.
••=-=w;;:-=;:lnd-:;;lvld=uo::to::-::-=-=~
· lances from his days in Cairo
Saddam's devotion to Baalhist
One afternoon at lhe Andiana, Populotlon/Othor
Plont ond opeclflcotiono
Ulb mllod, 104-1111- tid In Eomlng • • 110 on hour. ,•
,showed support In
No door to IIDor n1
ry. Call :
Qlveal aspects of Saddam 's person- party ideals bordered on the reli· the restaJUMt's janitor acc~tally
Appllcetlono may be ob· ore on fill in the Doponnwnt
10 many small
111
~
1
by
-~lin
ofTroniPDrllllollondtheof·
Key
-.e:J-7110.
'
Slow ond Nhlaorolor, 304-t"li~ity, but none of those interviewed
gious. "He was extremely serious splashed water on Saddam 's
nov ony 1nw · ..., 1 flee of the Dlotrlct Deputy :1030
or m-M31'.
.
ways.
;
l
o
b:
;
.
,
.
...
=
:
;
::.,::-:.=.=·=·.-:::~:-:":-:~-=:
~
18141 441-3022 or moy btl Dlroctar.
would lilte to see Saddam return to and devoted to the party,' Slid the trousers while mopping the floor.
01!!,
l;venlnp.
WMII•'*·
•
pickoduplltheBoordolflco
Tho Dlr~or ••-•• ~. To
Cairo for a second period in e&gt;tile. former classmate. "We both shared
''He was enraaed,'' Hussein II
PuPO. Mhrld
lloaiilrld. Colt oftor _
414 looond Avenuo,
-·
-· ~
' " He was what y,ou might call an similar dreams for the Baathists, recalls. "He actually called the Room 202. Golllpoh. Ohio. right lo rojoC1 ony ond ~II · -· ·
lp.m. IIWII·IMS.
•
11821.
In -donco with our blda.
undesirable person, a loner of sons. but his dreams went much deeper. police and said his trousers had
ll..,.lttor - - , ROC Com- ;
JERRYWAAY, ·
'' recalled Hussein A'*l-Meguid, II was like he was spending 24 been ruined and asked that the man - d policy, oPplicetiona
J!Uio
DIRECTOR
OF
6
lost
&amp;
Found
ohollbe P""'idodto-nclft
~ 'f '
t :1...m.; ~
owner of the Andiana Restaurant hours a day plotting the party's be punished. He was so indignant who•
~~~~-::=~= 1:41p.m. 6
orgenlutkt... •ruc:- MARCHTRANSPORTATION
.
-·
17, 24, 1181
Found: IMal Whllo Doa,
and Coffee Shop on Dokki Slleet, future."
about it."
lulo, -lllng policle1 ond
F - . 'nolrilly: AI. 141. e~ Chilli _,. -In~= ,:
Saddam's fav«?rite stomping
On one occasion, "I remember
procedurtl, ond IOI'Vice •·
44e-1tcll
4/ldoy_Z_
, •
!Ivory odhore to tho follow·
Public
Notice
llghl
required,
·:
lng crltorlo:
1
IIIIIUN
·
•
rnw • - thlll be •
PUBLIC NOTICE
Sale___ I tor~~o::~=:::.:=::
public or private lor-profit.
FOR BALE
.
.;.__..;,;;...;;..;..;;..;
. .lltlllol- 11 . _ c. "~
·or not-for-profit. •a•ncy
The Ohio ~ollty Bonk
22eareoi~PIIIIIIW . . . . .:
~ H!JRGHAD~. Egypt (UP!)- most popular tourist.resons.
price," said one youth in a gal- duly conotltutocl undor tho Company, ·420 Third
~'zoo
lloln It, I'll
~. •
The s1ght of sa1lors ·from the abiya or Jona loose Arabic gown Ohio Rovlowcl C* to aon· Avenue. Golllpoll•. Ohio
tabb•eJalalLowspulledoutawad
GBlllpolla
"•· '"' ....,
Inllh
- .......11Polnl
Jolo " •
duct
bualn-ln
the
IIIIo'
of 41131, wHI ott. for ulo tho
.....
Oltllit,
pl $5 bills, and wid! a wide B!"'n · warships brought whoops Of~ reaching his . . He peddled his Ohio:
following ducrlb'ed
&amp; VIcinity
" - · wv.
:
pled to the Amencan ~arships from local shop·Iteepers. bote
father's copper and braasware,
Tho A11ncy oholl oclhoN pr-'Y:
iadlored off lire cout o_f th•!,EIYP" and res'!'uranl ~wners, w~o have offerlna. "the barpin of a life 10 Ill fwMol . .d llltl ~-·
1184 Oklo Flrenu. Sor. It
rogul.ltlont 11 thoy 1G3ACIIPI!!IC341117
lin Red Sea resort, saymg: ,I love seen thelf luc!lltive lnlde d•sa~ time" to curious, camera-toting, .,d
opply 10 locllltloo. admlnlo·
11H Chryoler, lor. II
~erica. They helped us wm the because tour1sts were too fnaht· short-haired sailors
·
tr.tiv. op•miona Md men- 1C38H48E8GN123884
Jvar. Now,lhey're helping us win en~d btthe war to travel to the
Primary school teacher Ill hlohh '""''"'" deliVery,
1188 Chivy, Berotto GT.
Their hair' a not ,
tile peace.
Middle East.
Mohammed Baz, 32, is a member Including, but not llmltod to:
.... It
curly;
-..
-Equol Employmont
~ Since the end of the Gulf war,
And those locals who for a num- of a voluntary organization which
Opportunity
But their eyes are
IG1LW14WZKY1111111
• U.S. Milors have been relaxing iq ber of reasons dislike the idea of tries to help vtsiton for free
-Still Roglotrolion. Cor·
TheM
Vlhf!:IH.wlll
be
oold
still blue;
"ur~ -hich has a popula- their sleepy reson turning into a · . "Hurahada grew up as ~ resort tlfioation, ond Uconoure of II I publlo ulo 11 tho
And
they still love
lion ltlllle 30po!&gt; ,arid lies about rm.eat~on center for the ~~can town, ,and .people are used to lhe Profoulonol Stoff ond J...._, Pll&lt;o Offici of lho
Focllilllo
each other
Ohio Vallly Bonk Compony,
2S() milel or a IU·hOur _drive fi0!1h mil1tary re111111n a small m1110111y.
eccenbic ways of tourists. Unlike
-Ito• 8uHdlng Cod"
370
Jockoon
Plko.
Oolllpo.t Cliro - before thelf warshtps
When the USS Normandy wJIS Luxor, you can walk around in
Uke
they u1ed to
AIMJllo. Ohio ot 10:00 o.m. on
•
~
--lon
_
,
_,
-.IJCIIne.
.
· spotted approaching Hurghada's shona and nobody will blink an -Quolity
do.
-CIInlcol Rooordlng · Solllrdoy. Morah 30. 1181. 8
Public Sale
loklne IPJIIIooiOM lor Lob Aa- •
ICoeplng lylllm
l)la IICGIIIIJriDI day, _the gray rocky coast, young men in the eyelid," Baz aid.
The vehlaleo wll bo oold 10
HAPPY 80thll
Confld.,llellty;
hlllhHI bidder .... •...
&amp; Auctloil
Wa .t IN liieralt earner USS town's bazaar whistled and As be spoke, helicopters from The -'II"CV lhell mointoln till
~wllltriln._... 'r'l • or :
Dan, Donna Jean
.,y up...... .,..
~,
!L "fal IIICI the cruiJet USS Nor- cheered.
the USS America whizzed by in the oil flnMolol fWportl In .., ..,. without
and ChHdran
AJIIIIy ......... a 17, t:GO till .
Implied _,..,ty. Thl•vooh·
. , _ , •at peacefully in the
"Bring all the riavy here. We'll air while small children waved.
do- with -oily IC · tcln fiiiiY be .... It the Wr linn•,.,.. Aucll:lon a.vloe, SiOO.-Corl ~Ina, 111•• - . •
\ I
ceptod accounting prlncl· Jockoon Pll&lt;o Office of the . Rio Orondo, Ohio 11W41-1112. ' L.Mart, wv . - 3101.
L
~off one of Egypt's give them a good lime .and a good
•
.
'('
r
.
r
•
I
)
~

Help wanted

0

'

Classi

11

,

.

Former POW recounts captivity, beating ;

: WASHINGTON (UPI/States) the ~llied pilots seco~s before _lhe
:.... Feb. 19 ~gan a hBf!Owing two soldier captured and disarml!d htm.
:Weeks for Au Force pilot Jeffrey Over the next days, be was moved
:-fox. Prevented from sleeping for n~ward toward B~hdad, always
~ore th9:0 20 minutes at a ~e. by blindfolded, stoppm~ at under:
.;Ius Iraq• captors, and subststmg ground bunkers and pnsons, w~
;only on rice and bread, he was not he was mter:roga~d by ascendmg
.sure he would return from hts ranks oflraqt soldiers. .
.
&lt;Baghdad prison ceU to his home in
In B'aghdad, Iraq• ~oldters
~ucson.
accused the 3?-year-.old lieutenant
: After leaving Davis-Monthan colonel of Iymg and beat h1m ~o
Air Force Base for Saudi Arabia in s~verely that they puncfured hts
~ate December, Fox's OA-10 air- f!ght ear d!_um. In a later mterroga.plane was shot down as he flew 15 ll~n, Iraq.1s t!lld Fox .they were
:,.niles. inside of Iraq, hunting for gomg ~ lciU hun and cocked a gun
:JK&gt;mbmg targets.
n~_hJS head. They shottt close to
l; He ejected 3,SOO feet over the · h1s nght ear.
·
.
:Jraqi desen, injuring his right ·arm
Isolate!~ from other Amencans
ilnd leg. Once on the ground, he and cons1gned to small cells, he
lruf!lmoned allied planes on hiS sur- ~~med that he would be seven:ty
' ivai radio and limped toward the IRJ~ o~ passed off to a terronst
, outh to take shelter in a burned- orgamza'!on soch as the PLO.
He tned to sleep on cement
out tank. Arescue effon was set in
ifn~on. .
floors with his single blanket, but '
t Fox hear.d the planes overhead rarel&gt;: was able to doze more lhan
!'JI'hen a single Iraqi soldier 15 !Dinutes at a stretch because &lt;?f '
eppeared, running toward him, the constant. racket made by h1s
motioning at lhe radio, shouting cap~rs bangmg on cell doors and
~'off, off, off."
tal~g to themselves.
" "I was hobbling. I was not maleYou never kn~w. Every step
fng any progress, and this wa~ a !~Jat you h~ outside, JOU fi~.
~oung guy," Fox recounted during It was commg to you, . Fox swd.
in interview Friday at Andrews Air '_'You had one ~re open all the
Force Base in Maryland, where he ume on ~t d_oor.
.
.
is recouperating from surgery and
Fox S81d hJS meals .constsled .prt·
his impnsonmenl.
manly of a bow~ of nee or a l?'ece
"It's too late," Fox radioed to of bread, sometimes both, tw1ce a

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

1991

'.

OH, HECK!
.
COM£ ON &amp; BUY ME; I'M DilLY '5.900.00
1 need

some work. but what do yoo e1pecl Nice
lot. 2 bedrooms. living room, end more. Cell today
for an appointmenl!
112126

3 UNIT

YOU'Ll KNOW THlS IS AGOOD BUYII

When y011 see this wilt liken Clrt of mollile home
nestled on 2 acres more or less ollreed surround·
ings! Private settine. 2 bedrooms. living roam.
bath w/garden tub and eat-in kitchen. WON'T
·lAST LONG! $14,000.
112185

RIO IRAIIDE AIEA
Remodeled 3 bedroom very aft~ctive home in·
eludes lull bllernllll. approK. ~ ecret land tilt!
borden Raccoon Cflllk. Sm11t wooded lot. pas·
ture l1nd, illbaCCG ba• and lfiOd size barn in
good CGIIditlon. P111se call tor more dellilsl
.
t2901

.

.

COMPLEX!

IPAC£ FOI SAUlll
Approx. 36 Recently mllllld, lencld,
pond. Majority olacftlll Is tillable and ~1::J
wooded. Cell IGr prieland location!

TIRED OF YOUR LANDLORD?

Sick of rent?-then own this cute little 2bedroom
home situated on .9 olen acre. large bath, stor·
age building and room to expend as your lam&amp;
does! Cell ioday! Price reduced - $22.~~8s4

RENTA~

· Receive e positive etah Hoc from the rental in·
- \ cotne o1 tllit newly construcllld compte.. Elcll
unrt consists ~ one bedroom, lumisllld kitChen,
livinJI'OOfiiJblllh. Yinylsicllne._Low mainten•nce.
Call tod1y ror more dellilsl $69,500.
fi2IN

.

16 ACIES IORE/L£SI

Located in HuntiniJion Township. 12 ICIIS

m/1 $7,000; 4 BCIIS m/1 $3,700.

HIJ07.

· THII PIOPEm YOU CAll AFFOIDH

VACAIIT LAID....'.I3.71 ACIES 1ppro1. Green

Township. Rulli Llillr and ellldric available.
12tH

LAND/HUIITIIIGTON TOWNSHIP

50 ICriS 11101'1 or less, frorhJ8 alortJ Sllepard
Line. Cllil for more dllllls.
110004

.,

'

�.

.... -

----

--·------ - - --------·· ·-- ------·------------------- -

. . ...

.....

·-

.-

~·

...
March 24, 1991

nmee-Sentlnel
32 Mobile Hornell

-

35 Lola " Aci'Nfill

----:to--:r_s._Je---:~-1 o..~. -

::.-a'= l~l:i :.::_•
.........

. HcMihold

5I

-. ' ~~:=to

LAFF·A·DAY

Household
SWAIN

FURNITURE. 12

Ollw 81., Golllpollo.-. Uaod

coliJI4-IJio-.

.,..

....... WY, no .,..., .,.....

JACOBY

41 HouMI fOr Rent

EAST

•xJ
.A

Q80

J5 sz
12
J 10 7

IOU

•

•ss

• QJJOH

SOUTH

• A

-~--.

••••
... ..., •• fenoect, , .....

"When doee spring come? Betw.n the
leet lime 1shovel the driveway and the
lira! time I mow the lawn."

2.~

first ·

• AK5
.AKQZ

8'

West
Pass

Nerlll
2 NT

Eul

Pus

3•

Pall

1111' or 1111. lllvertno Antlquea,
1124 E. llol n -~-. P-roy.
Houra: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 1:00
:;:.:".,., 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
2521
•
· ·

,

1411. ,__oml'lolllngi"!o;t
-. ·

'*

ISit1lorY

-'--:=~=:-'::::=-;;;::-::::;;

• ,....... ...... :ra"b'!:ia,_,

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

~~=·

or

I

' - . . , boiNI ill blr with
Cklllio
ooramlo fop and S -i!IG
-Sondphotooonil-otrotlonto
pn -ion. - ·•oilond, 20W11-4111.
-•
1
t Potion, AthMs, Ollie 4111l1 or 310 JaiNI Doen•a
'
call 1141M2-1657 ., 814~ ~'Ci.l"".,.::_4~

D. (. Mttal Salts. .IJK.
Cannllilu'll. Inc. 47&amp;19
S!*llllirlftg in Pole

:!let.

7 llooo!e!Y Of p,_ Dc
e,
Porty o.w-, Mzoe: 111, 'Ill, to
11111,14G_h..,u4a••L

.

BOG~S AUCTION SERVICE

Floor-

114 441 11031.

EVERy·FRIDAY NIGHT 7:00P.M .
LOCIItlon: DAV Building on At. 36 Bypaas
· Conalp..,ts liken from 10:00 to 6:00 day ol sale.
1985 Iotta utility trailer. 6ft.x4 ft ., SAE class, 2,000 lb.
cap. willlradials. N.W.and used merchandise. Somethin1
for ....,oite.
T11ms: C111t or check w~h propiii.D. Door Prizas.
AUCTIONEER. DAVID BOGGS, Lie. 4596
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 614-44&amp;-n50
Licensed and bonded in state of Ohio.
Not responsible for aecidlltts or loss of property.
Would you like to have a salel
' Contact David Boas 614-446·

+s

StorM, lloclo Tope
Togotller.
llperllo

"'-

'*

Cotid-1
F01 CluorMIHd Prochocta And

Dtptndabll S.D=l CaH Your
Local , . _ ,
211-1400.

- · 114-

For Site: Chlnct Colllnal, -

"""""' Wall
W!l'Uihl
._ bench. Pointing 011 - ·

local Sa111 llopr11Mialiwo

·~.Airwc::!::'....!7t::. s~d
Color T \!
::.":'14'='~:
. · .,

1141: '

-11oM, -

114 441 3012

:..~~~~~ ~s~ .
SATURDAY, MARCH 30
AT 10 A.M.

• Blonde 3 piece bedroom suite with box springs &amp; mat·
tress, vanity lamps, G.E. washer &amp; dryer, G.E. electric
30 in. range, 2 clocks, several pictures, large paintmg,
, 6 pieCe ~melle set, glass door bookcase, 2 piece livmg
·, room suite, ·table .lamps, can opener. juicei, toaster.
coffee pots, pressure cooker, lots of dishes, pots &amp;
: pans, Tupperware, lots of books, TV stand , corner
~ shelves ; lots of figurines, ironing board , pillows, sev·
,. eral box~s we haven't gone through yet.
. .
'; 1971 Pontiac AC, PC. lots ohxtra in fine
condition. .

ApM-.t nalll... Jar 2 .- I
MftlllruaUon worbrt lOt •

21M. ,
.....,. .... _ _ _ or_h.

'

-~~~~·----Hoell.
11t . . . . .

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

'\.

VERY PIIVATE &amp;
setbng to
. enjoy this newly constructed log home. large front
porch to enjoy cool ·summer breezes; attractive
woodburner and hearth to warm your soul on
those cold winter nights. Approx. 2,300 sq. ft. ol
comlortable living space includmg 3 bedrooms
(room for 4th), very attractive country krtchen.
livmg room with pine ceiling, newly fimshed family
room and 211 bath's. large 2 car garage with
overhead storage. Approx . 5 years old.
$89,900.
m5

overtones. .
AIIIII!SI......., 21·Aprll11) Be alen lor
a new _,tuns that could suddenly develop at this time. lnltlally, lt may appear
rather risky, but upon Investigation, It
should prove I!QUnd. Aries, treat your111111 to a birthday gift. Send lor Aries'
Astro-Grapll prldlctlons lor the year
aiiNd by malting $1.25 to Allro-Graph,
c/o this - · P.O. Box 91~28 ,
Cleve!Md, OH «101·3428.
TAIIRUSIApoii»M8r 211) A aUuatlon
that hU ceollld you anxiety looks like It
will bt concludld IUCCIIUfully. Mons
importllllly, perhapa, Is the fact that it
may be a harbinger ol -"lng more
· promising.
QIIPP1 (118r 21-June 211) Soma out·
side lnlluenc:as you didn't expect could
acllpoe your preoent plana. Instead ol
Ulherlng In counterprOductive clrcumstences, they could locus on benefits
you've ovwtoottld.
CANCIR (.ltlllt 21...1uly 221 You've enterld a cycle that could be very lortu·
nata - . your linanclsl interests artt
concerned. ~uck and reality are In harmony and blg _opportunllles may result.
LIO loltllr D-Aug. 22) Personal ambitions have 1n excellent chance lor aucCBIS itt lhls lime. Even though others
mey be Involved In your affairs, the diestiny of developments lies largely In your
hands.

(Aug. 21-s.pt. 221 11 looks like
Lady Lucie may lake over the manageof your liming In Important arrangements tOday. She should be able
to put you In the right spot at the·rlghl
time.
.
U811A (s.pt. 21-0ct. 231 An alliance
you've recently entered could hive
gnsater Significance lor you and your
counterpart than elther of you may nsel·
ize. The dewel-ts look promising.
ICOIII'IO (OcL 24-NOw. 22) II things
he¥erl'l been going too well lor you lately regerdlng finances or your career,
don't deepair. Conllrucllve trends
should now oleri overriding undesirable
VIIIQO

"*''

c:irc&amp;IIM'--

Ideas you conceive tOday

should be Yigoroualy pursued. You
COUld be on to something very worth·
- · 10 don't treat these perceptlono
kldl'lel•otly.
CM'IISCOSSSI (Dec. 22..,_ 111 The
time It right to ttlke pooitiw meuures
to c:Mnge- thing you've been wlllt·
1ng to cltlloge. II your blueprint Ia nsedy,
-.t building your ,_future.
AGI'AMM·(.IM.IO . . . tl) You could
111M ....., at this time In
-"lnn out bel..rlclal llld enduring
The- to yciiW IUC Clll
II
lor the 0111« guy what H II

·-Ia.
.,. ""**

This II in
promloklg PlfiOd lor you,
and In the lurtherlng of your

211

to

UUA (Sept. 23-()ct. 231 A meeting

that atarts out in a light vein might turn
out to be very oerlous tOday. when you
and an old friend discover you can collaborate on a jOint interest vital to you
both.
ICORPIO lOci. ll4 Nou. 22) A family
problem, that has been a thorn In the
flesh lor the put,_ -•looks like It
II lboullo dissipate. II will be replacld
by lnlluencato mons conduciw to

M

..., . ,

. Eatablloh ~
take pooitlw - r e s
them.
.

•

SACIITTARIUijNov. ~. 21) Take
lima today to review plans which, up until now, have appeared to be unworkable. You may acquire a ,_ perspectlve that wt11 enlbla you to clarity goals
more effectively.
CAPRSCORN (Dac. 22....... 11) Your financial prospects continue to look encoureglng, provided you uae your lnlllaliw - common to eiCJ)Iolt your
opportunities. Be r "tile In determinIng what you hope to get.
AOUAslsUI (.IM. 10 Fell. 11) Something mlghl develop tOday that COUld
slow down your progrees on .., lmporllllt, personal Ulldett..dng. H~. II
you have enough determination to
preu on, you'llnwoell.
~I IFill•..., ""2111 11 you want
something you ioMed out retumecl,
IIIOUgll " may be • !rille -.arc~
lor you, you may have to expreu yoow
wtahee With • ~ today.
/

'

.· KENNETH SWAIN
DIAN CALLAHAN
,: '
446-3159

~: WEDNESDAY,
:~cH 27, 1991

::' . 10:00 A.M.
•
Located at ·carter a ~:nina, Inc., on Rt.

180,
;Gawpalla..O~,.ODe.mlle off Rt. 31S on Rt.160~
~arth. lmmedlatelJ foUo...m, Auction at tbla
:locattOD.- will then mon to 910 3rcl Aftnue
~ QalllpoUa Uld ..u remalnlnlf ltema ill
,~o- .. C~ ..SEnna, IDe,, hu lfone
1eatofbulne• -eftrythinlf ..n. to the hl&amp;h•t
'ildder. All t:nu:b and heavy equipment will be
4ald at 1:00 p.m.
r TRUCKS: -

••

·~

'•

&gt;

:,

tl

'.,
,.

h

'.
!

;•

LOCATIOII - LOCATION - lOCATION - Ask
anybody! Location 1s most 110portant when
selecting a home. Here's a 6 room home on I acre
w~h a grell¥tew of the river and only 5 miles lrom
town. Includes 3 bedrooms. fireplace, full
basement. carage and barn. It's priced al $59.500
and should nol be on the market long.
1116

NEW LISTING! - Home and 1.5 acre lot located
[ust off Rodney-BidWell Road on Denny Cemetery
Road . Includes 3 bedrooms, 2 bath modular home
on permanent loundatlon. County water and
septic system. Also storage building. less than 2
mtles north of new Rt 35 interchange. Priced at

$32,600.

.

.

COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE AT ITS BEST - Take
advantage of the owners hard work and money
spent on this outstanding gentleman's farm . Very
clean, well decorated and completely remooeled
· home includes 3 .bedrooms, 2 baths, finished
basement, fireplace and large kitchen w«h plenty
of cabinets. Over 13 acres. most of which is llat
tilllble ground, very nice barn and beautiful
country surroundings. BONUS: Completely remodeled I bedroom house included. Perfect for
mother-in-law, rental for extra income, relatives.
etc. Call for more details.
1211

-306

ALMOST COUNTRY - Happy iving starts herem
lh1.s well cared for three bedroom brick ranch.
There are 211 baths, a 2 car garage and a large
heated workshop for the craftsman tn the family.
Take a look tooay. $64,000.
1507
NEW LISTING - located on Rt. 7, 5 mmutes from
town, this is a very nice double-wide home. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, vauHed ceilings in the lamily
room, living room and kitchen. Flat lot, fenced -in
yard . Outbuilding. $45,000.
1205

29.6 ACRES OF LAND consisting mostly of gooo
growing hmber. 5 acres or more of 29 acre tract is
open land for garden and has frurt trees' near 7
room remodeled home. 2 car garage and several
other small buildmgs. Peaceful location to live
w~h gooo view. St. Rt. 160 between Ewington and
Wilkesville. Priced at $42,500.
~302

NOTH!N' BUT COUNTRY - Very gooo location
along Rt. 325 1ust south of Rio Grande. Here's a
deluxe home for the beginner. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths. Very nice kitchen. kving room, family room,
partial basement. Country surroundmgs. City
schools. $42,000.
11220

2.122 ACRE TRACT Of LAIID located on Graham
School Road. Less than I mtleoffSt.Rt 14l.Gooo
building sites! Seller Will provide use of existing
cross1ng adjacent to · 2.122 acres with buyer '
providmg mamtenance. 4 m1ies to Holzer.Hospital,
. 6 miles to Gallipolis by way of St. Rt. 141;
Surveyed description. $12,000.
*305

lfT NATURE BE YOUR GUIDE- To this country
home on 13.9 acres. Privacy, four bed•ooms.
family room and one car attached garage are just
some of the features that you will enjoy. Priced at
$50,000.
.
.
MSOI

,1

•'

1

A IIUST TO SEE! - Very attrlcftve, remooeted
house in Village of Rio Grande on the best lot in
Rio. Completely remodeled, 3 bedrooms, Uvlng
room, dimng.room; eat-in knchen, all redacorated
very nicely. Full basement. Semal outbuildi~p ·
and garage. Great yard and garden spot. $54,900.

.

•

.,

.,
::

•

•·
:"

••

M200

•
•

GOOD INVESTMENT IN ESTABLISHED RENTAL
UNIT- Improved to attract good renters. Double
two story unit w~h separate front and rear
entrance. Storai_e building w~h children's play
area. liSted at $38,900.
1300

•

•
•
•
•
•

•
•

HAPPILY EVER AmR-. is ho" you'lt.live in this
3 bedroom, 2 bath home featunng a large great
room, formal dining room and separate master
suite. Entertaining continues outside in the above
ground pool. Priced at $59,900.
1504

•

•
I

•

.I

••I

VACANT LOT IN TOWN - $6 500 buys this
50xl42 lot close to Foodland. ~utld that town
house and live_convenient to everything. 11225

•
I

CLEARVIEW ESTATES - The subdivision is
growing! Several new houses in this quiet area just
10 minutes from town. We are offe.jngan 11 year
old bncklframe in very good cond~ion with option
to buy two lots on each side for extra space. 1296
sq. ft.. 3 bedrooms, 2 batfls, living room,
kitchen/dining area, 2 car garege. $50,900.

...

.

~w

'
RotoraiDr
UGHT EQUIPMENT &amp; SotiSCEUANEOUS: 42" Gold Blan

wwer troweler, Dayton 17' lloor polisher, mOd. 750 Ston&amp;
lnortar mixer, Whitman mOd. WBS-11 Concrete Buggy,
G/lampion concrete aaw, Hilti Pneumatic concrete drills&amp; bita,
7-HP Briggs &amp; Slratton conaeta finishor, assortad concmte
~. Edco ooncrete grinder, Jaeger 150 Pir compressor;
pjo,tabla air compressor 2 HP, White Transit level, MOd. P.
5900 Master Cornpactnr, Kent air-hammer (Jack hammer),
Jieger Rock Orin, Kent KB 555alr-ham""'! (backhoe), ~ler
~d. pips cutter, miscellaneous piaaac pops, new pl8sac pipe
41!ngs 0-5 driiNng machine (,.pping machine). trench jacks,
~~~Hydraulic Floor Jacks, btsement jacks, 5 HP Aeartfne
tjtitotilter (aame as new), miter saw, Wilson high spsed nsdl81
Mw and 24' table with roller assorted 12' blades, PoW&amp;r~J~alic
l!lbJe aaw tO' blades, masonary saw, Ski ch!'in saw,isrge fuel
of tuinaos, Rockwell milm box. 2 Skll grinders, portable
J;loben welder, 3 water pumps, 2 grease nH!Is, IBM computar
t~ptem, miscellaneous office supplies, 6' work &amp; storag&amp;
•lion, Pro II alum. bfake, Boice crane shaper and blades,
~101nt joiner with 8' table, 32 ft. alum. ladder. &amp;&lt;tensiOn
Jidder. wooden etep laddor, Motnrola base radio station and
lour mobiles, paint, stain, pslntooloring sysrem, paint lhaloer,
et.ctricalsuppliea, miscet,.neous block and bricka,large lolol
~alad siding, insulation, ,_ duckless ,.ns, new bmaker
bdxealllddiBCOnneetboxes, scrap lumbar, assonedwoOdan
lliunara sheet meal lor' heating duct, roof vents, drywall,
drainage tile, down spout, miscellaneous parts and
I!_Uppllea, toola, ~sonad nuts, bolts and saews, Ace &amp; o,~ .
ho-. doors, new handles, knobs. na~s. steel baam.
~m~m-1
·
-

.:•
,.;.

Wiseman Real _-Estate

••

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO.

lpNCH

(614) 446-3644

•'

David Wiseman, Broker, 446-9'555

••

_IIAIION, WV

773-117811

OWNER: FOREST MULLINS

fJ-:
c.to • Cloocll-ponled
jir 1 llonll- of.,...., No EJceplionl

llelltapan•••• ,or Acoidtnt1 or Loee of ProPer1y

Lie

I

LORETTA McDADE, 448-7729 CLYDE B. WALKER. 246·6278 B. J. HAIRSTON, 448-4240

'

•

Feu· Prom drl
with . .
-arlee, 3 7,1.,20,_ wom
only coli oiiOr 3:w 1141112·3120.

'

441 I till.
•
Kimball ollno, eiOIIIont concJ.

114-112-8ll"""hne.
Peavy KBIOO

• ·•

""":::.~·

200WIIII0,$300.

, ..

--------~R=e~ai~E~~~at~e~Ge~n=e~~~~-----------~R==eai~E=st=m=e~Ge~n=era~I--------~R~e~ai_E_~_at_e_G_e_n_e_~_•_________ ~

(?fmU:t~at~MzA

CUr,kz 91

R£SID£NTIAL · INVESTMENTS; COMMERCIAL · FARI!S-,

.

23 lOCUST ST.

llllltt
30 lnah
A-1
Condttlonl
S82i.
l1t Ut ·
tMI.

·lB
. ·

446·6~06

-

• ._., Dlomond ...._
mont Ring. 44 · pointe, liP'
JlfOXI-IIV 112 coral. a-uiiiUI
atOM.
(acellenl condltlonl
11er1oua lnqulriee 0n1y1

11EALTOR~

PIOFUIIONtJ, SUVI(I iiAIIS IHI l.fiii?KI
'
.
VIRGINIA SMITH. BROKER, 388-1821
DIAN CAllAHAN, «EALTDR . 2&amp;1-1251
EUNICE NIEHM. REALTOR. 448·1187
- RUTH BARR. REALTOR. 441·012~
LINDA SKIDMORE, REALTOR. 378 -ZII&amp;e
DEii~RioH ICilJI, REALTOR.' 441-8801
. LYNDA FRALEY. REALTOR , 4411·1101
MICHAIL MilLER , AIIOCIAJE. &gt;MI·Iiot -

@r
,_
.......
............

'
'
,
,•

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~

14-

1'M411 IOSI

JaM o- Alcina Llwn - ·
c:.ndMionl I~:~~;, 114-38'17140 aft« llp.m.
Utwn Ch* AlcJing Llwn - ·
11 - · 311 lncll CUI,
114-31111-1180.
Lumber 1100 ft . wltd cheffy.

•
Plllned. Olher
-boanl l Trim. 114441-1038.
Be

1'11111

~umber

JleiCh piOOI dNH oliO SJ4, full
hoop, gto..o, hair oleco. Tobie,
I chalrit. :104-m-43el.

Portable liGhled SlcJn ~­
F- oleli..rynetl.... fllutlc lett.,. 14'7.110 box. t-aoo-533-34113

_.mnOOIIIG THE ?IAIITIFUL OHIO IIYEI - Cozy
1nd w1nn bunti.OW, 2or 3bdrm., •t·in ~ilthen , rtnge 1nd r•
ffi&amp;., wnporch, fJ.ill buiJII!fll oi 1nd woodburniiJ fur !'Ice,

_

o~ytlme.

Qullta, 875-1132.

I

weft insullted. Nice lot and 1 car prllf.

otllchacl, 11310. - .

Real ~state General

••

216 East Second St.
POMEROY, OHIO
(6141 992-3325

M. IIIAT FAIPILY 111•10•0GO .., itW~ .. LR, oal·ln

llou-..tll~

kitchen w/r~nte llld ref., 3 bedrms. ullib rm .. 1tt1cbed 2 ur

II t ' ' I t If I t I . t 1'1 t' I

Available

DAU E. TAYLOR

992-3129
·R. A. 'Val' VALENTINE
446·9112
OFFICE 992-332$
lruct T•forti, I role•
.1111 11.11 I•

chlrm Datiln and conwenilnce. This IS perlect ~~the Stftlle.
retied Or jet set. 2 btdrm., 2 baths, kt.lerr,LR and OR, utMity
rm. loclttd on the lint toor. Truly de f&amp;hlful. lnsPKI by
appointnwnt this cencbnlnium.
•

lEW COIIEICIAlliSTIIGOii st7 -CO~Itlql­
be used kl sell c1rs, &amp;fottfY stOfe,1ntiques, etc. New hilt·
1ool. oiot:loi:. EPA oppro.od sopti: sr~m. tlfY 1&amp;. bldt.
beth 1nd llfll!. Great canf!ftian and loc:lt_iDn,.

IIIII lEW Lmlft ftiUICEIIIIIIliDcllldin Chllhitl•~
on ~sit !Jfto, S~uotod on ~ K&lt;J m/1 1otturin1 3 BR. I both.
1Mna room, kitchen. utilty ruom 1nd 1 car lltlched prlte.lnd
2 car detached pr111. WeiiCired lor~me. Clllformaredetalls.

.''J.,,

......Ill
.

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tltl. filii COIIIDI'I AU FOI AIYINIII IGII FOI
Slt.DOO. ltlo" rilhl in .,d ~"' ""' luroltlfl-lfolllol kind t1

house. Lovtly t star~ him! home with LR.' OR, tilth. l BRs.
litchen, ranp With stH·d•ninl oven, Ml bm~n~t pertillty
fi~ished FR in blml. w/showtr, liS hut, cent. llf. You must
thee" this out il m1 Wlnt 110Dd buw .

,.,,
11670. zIOIILI HOlES FOI SALE on -~ mll ol on ocrtiocoltd
on U~pe 1 R 1 ~er R~ute 7, and 1 20'x22' block garage_ ~utkhng.

I·

11n. lEW USTII8 - Twomes more or le~locetedona good

(Old netr Rio Gnnde. Perfect place to build, access to rural
w1ter 1nd other uti~tles. Citw sc l'tool dis trict. Clll for more

,

illlortnllian.

'

·

"'74. II'IUSTIII - Quiolllllil!clioo. TW• - · · c!toor.M.
affordlble hOme ftllures tflret bedrooms, two baths, llmily '
room and mKh ITIIft. The •ntertor Is J)tffectly hlrmonlltd.
Situ lied Dn .6 m/1 kll, N.G. school district. PJiced lo move. Call
for detlils.
•
MilO. Will WID COITIACT to rieht burer. lrwestm!nl
property IIJirtment buildlne Ills five uinb, flOd cash ftow and
• , .... ~,.,._ Cali '" details.

•.

'

.
.

11637. VISIT THIS HOI! ond soo •hy "'soy lhis 1! a ouali~
!tame. 3 bedrooms, 2 btlhs. lolm11 dinirlc room, kitthen lnd

flmtty room with tirepiK:e utilitY. room with a llrpded porch.
Home its"'ated on 1 nC:elot ••ttl a two car "detached n ra11 in
·• wery -nice nei&amp;hbcwlmqct

.

.

.

'- .

I.

•

.

...i

$7. YOllllllltM THILGI 'IICI. 'iCIUII 'llf!CI:
This beou~lltl brl:k rii!Ch lllme wthopp,2.150 Ill-M.hn botrt

•

well desiped lOr fJiiYICy 111d comlorllt fl!ltoreslll- bedrms.
2 blths, din. rm.,llitchen,lrw. rm., utlity rootn. tamllyr room. pr·
•It· This hame is sl111ted on 4 acres m/1. ·

11151. IDT tO IIAYtll IAitOIIAl FOIIST - 127 I&lt; m/1.
Fronb on 2 roads, land conlrlcl. '25,000.00.

lfnll-lil'c

IJ,

llrllfl. llrll flit IDt. Brtk end viilyl. ,53,900.
HM . 11. EIECUTIVE - We chlllence yoU to find any .more

.....

POMEROY - Very nice 2
bedroom with lull basement.
carport, nice yard, close to
playground. $14,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Beautiful 3 bedroom , 3 bath. full
ftmshed basement. 2 2-car
garages, on 5 acres. You
must see this t_
o appremte
II. $115,000.
POMEROY- 2-3 bedroom,
fully carpeted, 2 large sundecks, built-m kitchen. Th1s
IS a cute home. $14.500.
MINERSVILLE - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. lull basement, new roof · in a
fnendl~ neighborhood . Only
$15,000.
POMEROY - 2 houses lor
the price of I. 4 rental units.
Th1s is a really good buy for
only $25,000.
IIIDOLEPORT- Price Reduced - Owner is very
anxious to sell. large busi·
ness . building, lull base·
men!, possible rental unit.
this investment should pay
for itself. $15.500.
SYRACUSE - 3 bedroom,
mostly carpeted. large lots,
one floor plan, storm doors
and wmdows. $19,500.
EAGLE RIDGE - In the
countr~. very private, newer
white brick w1th 3 bed·
rooms, family room , 2 baths.
$65.000 . .
RACINE- Very beautiful3
bedroom, full finished base·
men!, fam1ly room, fenced in
patio. Large yard, satellite
dish, 2 car garage. $48,000.
POMEROY-Bu siness build ing, 2 business units. 4 rent·
al apartments, all in full op·
eration. $55.000.
RACINE - large business
building with 4 rental umts.
This would be a mce mvest·
ment. $45,000.
-pOIIEI$Y - large 4 bed·
room house. Price reduced.
Owner 1s real anoious to sell
Quickly. Good condii1on
house. full basement. hot
water
heat, efficient.
$26.000.
WE NEED USTINOS
H.U.D. Homes

•• ... hndldln Oftlo, K....ucky, ond WV Ill
DIAI'"I'IIA?IIIM YIIIDOIIS NUM~Ut

•

•

1985 Ford Pickup Ft50
tQ75 Ford F615 E Dump Truck
19n Chevlolel1 Ton Oump Truck
1972 Ford F 700 Fiat Bed
19n Ford van
Homemade Lowboy Trailer, Tandem
1950 Fruehauf Tool Trailer
'
1962 Fruehauf Tool Trailer
1964 Tnsi Mobile Tool Trailer
'
HEAVY EQIIPMENT:
19711 case 5eoc Backhoe
36' Trenching Buckel ·
24' Trenching Bucket
Case 18ol5 Uni-loader
· Case 586 Fork Lift
1969 Massay Ferguson MOd. 65 Tractor
2099 Hours
5' Blush Hog

tiuorted
g..,g.,,

We Need Listings! I!

2 AKC rt.glot- 11o1e a--.
1 monlhoi oncl running, blocll
btonkodted wl tlctli::, 011 ~·
!!!a.roch or ltOO por 1!4- t-

TEAFORD
-REAL ESTATE

tAUCTION
WAIIJS

PH. 6i4•256,6S11

- -Coli 814 441 0211.

Instruments
=--:-=~~~~~ ~
All ,A~iey Cle~net, _
_.,
S200. Coli bo- U a 3,. 114-..

&gt;,

••

" country is the place for you, then
seeing lh~ 1988 "Mansion" sectional
Nature is your neighbor on this secluded onea.cre,
nicely landscaped yard. 1500 sq. ft. of living
s~ace. 3 bedrooms, master bath features a
• garden tub" with shower. Dtning area and eat·in
kitcben. Patio doors open onto a large wood deck.
Your oppdrluniiy to get back to the great outdoors
lor only $40,000. Southwestern schools. 11107

IM-7142orlt411M 11001.

DONNA CRtSENBERY
E.S.R.. Soa181
Gallipolia, Ohio 41i83t

llfoom ond SUpply Shop Pot
Groomlna. A l l - AIIIIVO.a.
lama Pel l'ood Doller. ;Julie

Musical

. SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE

'•

j,
0

'

'

IT. 7 LOCATION - Very well kept home in nice
area includes 3 bedrooms, large family room, full
basement and in-ground swimming pool. Easy to
heat and mamtain. Great starter home1 1213

. - Otd you really think you could buy a
bedroom, Ill bath "brick". home for under
$:;11,000? Well. you can and it's only about 4 m1tes
lrom town . located m a quiet and friendly
neighborhood, this would be a great place to start
housekeeping.
~505

•

..•

PRI~E. RE_!IUCEDII!_Wfl~l

rears.

OWN.ER: ESTATE OF·VIRGIE HOUCK
BEm t'ERN &amp; FARREL HOU'CK ..

..

' ¥: '•

you

tuec:el8.

...GITTAPSIU8 (Nov. 21-Dec. 21) En·
1~

more

·s~ is.
llk;;iy- ior
In the
year ahead then it has been lor the past
two
You'll have the opportunity
to apply lessons you've learnld from
painful experlencea.
ARIEl (lllercll 21·Aprlt 111 A lrlend
may discuss a disturbing lsaue with you
tOday that Is a bitter pill to swallow.
H.,_, ,.ter, upon review, you're·
likely to agrae that the comments were
lor your blm good. Major changes are
ahead lor Aries In the corning year.
Send lor Aries' Aatro-Gnspll prldlcllonsiOday. Mail $1.251o Aalro-GriPh,
c/o this """"paper, P.O. Box 9t~28.
Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be sure1o
state your zOdiac Sign.
TAURUS(Aprl? 20-Mtlv 10) Be persialent and consistent In pursuing your objectiY88 today. Even11 may caat shadows on your horizons, but they'll only be
temporary obstructions to your
progr-.
OIEJIMIII (118p 21-.lune 20) You might
have to contend with a complicated development tOday. but II you base your
reaction on a past simMer experience.
you should bt able to resolve II nsadlly.
CANCER (..,_ 21-.IIIIJ 221 In a bual·
nasa dealing tOday, don't tie reticent
about . Insisting upon your own terms.
With a little haggling. you should be
a~le to get wtoat you want.
LEO (JUly 21-Aug. 221 You and your
mate might bt requlrld to make a crucial and difficult decision tOday. Firmnasa on your behalf will be required, becauae your counterpart may win under
Pn~~NM~re .
.
VIRGO (Aug. D-lept, 221 Before makIng a costly inY88tmentln a new Piece of
equlpmenl, make CI!Jialn that you cannot repair or adapt what you h.... Ingenuity could. save you money.

~

TRADE YOUR RENT RECEIPTS for the deed to this
3 bedroom ranch s~uated on a shady 2.42 acre lot
on a dead end street. One car garage, new roof and
deck. $27,500.
1509

UNBEATABLE Bl-LEYEL Ill SPIING VALLEY Very attractive and well maintamed. Great
neighborhood • super locat1on. Was $89,900, now
priced at $82,500. Features include 3 baths, very
nice family room with fireplace/insert. _3
bedrooms, living room. dimng room, eat-1n
kitchen. Gas heat and central a1r. 2 car garage.
Give us a call tooay because ~ m1ght be sold
tomorrow!
-207

Merch 25, 1111

The year ahead could bt one ol exceptional promioe, -1811y in areas
- · you can utilize your Imagination
and creativity. You could also be quite
lucky In situations that have political

. '"'

.; ,.

ASTRO-GRAPH

1115 dlchwltch 1. . - Duotz
d-l 1111111,., Hoe 1;;jj _ ,
bllde. WIH toko trade ln. 114-

• f Sal
Pats
or e

56

~~~===t====~~;::::;:::::;:::~-=====:.==.~~===---_..:·"

1 . o..m, TroctO. s - eon.,..-.

Rooms

Buldlnp•
to m• your
naedl. Any ailo .
CHOICE OF 10COLORS
AlEE ESTIMATE on
PDOt bl~- osctro~~
deeta. Sove huna: ldl, ·
.... thou•ndl of
doll.-..
D.esign~

.......

r-------------------

Fumllhed

.h

r

.

-· Qoiod
oMeom7.

nso

45

h

"Velcro is a lot c eaper t an
~~~,ii~~= chains and it's maintenance
-.OH
,
free.
Dodr 15,1100.
D-4, Colalplllor
Older,• .__
Good -ion
_ _ _ _ _ _ _T'________...,

Public Sale

PUBLIC AUCTION CONSIGNMENT SALE

;

· All-

Opening lead:

le,

- ·Coli

~.

,.

Pus

Mtn:hancll.. -

-.
=...:.._:o..:.ullaell
~ a~
Tnlllntl llolor, -

&amp; Auction

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: Soutb

Pits fOr S.te

2 ::.

Antiques
·
llolor, 11 • ...- .
53
;;::::-::.-::::::--:::::=:::-:~= rr.Mer
In Good - . .
:ltl-llft8rlp.m

5p.OI.

•xQton

5&amp;

~ cyt. MIG. , , . _ -

- l.-8,...,. ..

• IBt
WEST

Soie8rown~nGAiio-a,110AOE

'

,..,. lftlll cNJr, *'·" I* -1c.
1 Polae W..,..._, 814.01
por·
. ~=-.:.. ••nk~- .
- 1.14
u. ~-I
I*
-lc.
, 34.44 por ...._
Roo'l .., $lll por-. - .
w11o 1 a.llo, 17.10 por ·4
ltd, StUll por
,....,
I CloooJ tlt,
ol
Dcoorra,IUOpor-.At.
~ 011 Ill. 7 In C.nllnOry.
HOURI: 1i1o11c!oY thru lot...,,
..............: . _ , , 11 - -

.763

=:· =r=
"n:'..!-t:l:
'=

54 Mlsc.lllneous

1·112-7 . . . . - Pump.
10 II. ol

Wo-: lr-na-IAR.a2 For ?20

.___.

1-U.tl

U7Z

JAMES

52 Sporting Goods

WV,

IIINT20WN

NORTH

.,.,...

-nt.

•

t=o:w-.~W:,«n. --~......

PICIC"::..:C"'RE112 mL
Ho&lt;lllholcl -!llna- _
Jerrlcho llcJ. Pl.

Sunday nmei-Sentlnet-Page-05

54 MIICIIIeneoul
Men:hancllll

Goods
AUCTION l

'IIIII ., -

1111.
--·"'·

51

Goode

2--·-

Household .
Goods

5I

44

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

.-ch24, 1191

OH Point Pl..•nt, WV

.

'

"

.,''
-

Hit~

- VACAI! LAIIO - 7 AC. M/ l ocross kom North Gallio
All ullitos anl~blo.

tltl. twO lltii... IUIUI.Giw/LR, FR. both.Cllfll!,...
~ kitchen basomOtt. 2 car pr111. ~~~~~- ~ or:. lot mil, crty
sr:heob. s3o·s.

L------~-----------------------------------------------------------------------------~ ~
I

'

�,
OH Point Pleasant, wv

Tlmes Sentinel
JUT 'N' CARLYLEIII by Larry Wr!Pt

71 AUtos for Sale

73 Vans I 4 WD's

,...

....... ............... "·

~i

ft,IOO. I

V... oulomollc,

11112.

ANSWERS TO

------.........
·-

-

m""" -a ·oreno- low

mlleeal.

I

01111.eloft oa1

f14.t8.1141-l:»p.m.

,... Col 7 P•. 'Ilion"
Aulllll0 Trll~ Air, -lnL tl,IOD

...,..............
•• •·

--

j r::~:~;~' S©R~}A-~£trSs

sa:~4)~-"tfi-S

WOlD ·
GAME

73 Vans .&amp; 4 WD's

78

Tluok-·-·-·
79

.'121-lmork
~c~, 1111n st Rutranct
011 • , , . " " ' - _ . ... tMOO.

Real Elhlle General

7p.m.

1110 CAIO dill bib, oomo
,.~.. saoo. H4-ta-242t "'
81241111 • .

~

•

.••• '
·~ ·

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I

1114 ¥tlllltlno, 2 - · rriw
hft -l!,IIOO llllioo, 1101, roro

NK E T T

cycio,R,...,. ~

Se 1vrces

81

.
•

•

'

1

t~

"'mit"'""''

M"'t people will
can't do a lot of things but rarely do'
we find a person who doesn'tthink
hecanrunthe··········.
.H.~

I.

1:.

:·~:· .I

ELBRI

. ~I·L. . oi'L. . . Il-. . .JI'IL...J

,-v_u_N_E_E_N_....,I G

ACRES 11/l OF IIATUR£'S B£ST ROLLING HIUS And a 4 bedroom, 2\1 bath home with family room wlfire· ·
place, liv1ng room w/conversation pit and fireplace. dining
room, large master bedroom with fireplace and large bath.
Thrs home has over 2,700 sq. It m/1 of li•ing area and too
many amenrtres to hst here. By the way, there is a3bedroom
guest house so bring Mom, too. Call today lor information
and appointment.
·
#271

9

1

1

1

Fully Nit cont
. l.ooclid.
cotholt "-_.!I ~to.o-~ W1 11}1Y to
:::,.,.. u · - - · 11-1:112-

f'IM llllmot ... Cllll coltect 1·

~~-04.1a
....

tliig:""

.!!'..
wor1111~
"~
· ~~

11 0

Complete .the chuckl.e quoted
by folltng m the mossong words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

,:::,~
a r a ow.

,,. ... =•'
84

I

Electrical I
Refrigeration

lopllc Tonk .......... 110 OofiMI
C.. RON IYANIIIniRPIIiib,
1vt
-., OH 1..-.aJ1..t121.

llllnO a lleplo 11110111, Dovlo
-Yoo
-...roo Crill! Ad.
pi

,

s-ico,
p.,.,
oupptekup, llld doltvory. 114-

87

Upholstery

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

=
~;r~f;!.=~

__

rn

fulriliUN

.......

Coli :J04.t71.4114 "" froo •

~========~==~~~~::::::::::::~~
---~--·------=-~~~~~-moi~·-·------------Real Estate General==.....;......,._

.

Real Estate General

FARIS AND VACANT LAND
2UCRES- HANNAN TRACE ROAD, $15,000.

blade,l1,110. ~....

101 ACRES - HANNAN TRACE ROAD, $29,000.

75 ·Boat• &amp; Motors
·
for Sill

ACREAG£ - ROUTE 218 BARN, $28,000.

12' Aluml,_ - · Trallor, 1112
Jollnoon Out ...nlllotor, Uko
-1 81.100. lrownlnt - guno. 114-441-8111.
1tl4 Alum. ""'" boot, 14 11. with
1Nt8, 7.5 f'IP. IEvenrudl motor,
duty trallor. AI llko ....
• 114-2!M357.
11111 Pont- ....~ 24ft, I!Ohp
motor, trail•. 83,11410. or trac1o

67 ACRES- ROUTE 325- 3 BEDROOM HOME 2BARNS
NICE LANDI $38,000.
'
'

=
76

MOBILE HOME HOOKUP
·
·
'

78 ACRES - ROAD FRONTAGE TOBACCO BASE OHIO TWP
· EXCELLENT BUY AT $32,000. '
.
'
.
NEAR RIO GRANDE - 45 ACRES, BARN. A·ffiAME CABIN,
SHOLTZ 2 BR MOBILE HOME, BEAUTIFUL LAND. $50,000.

~up aqual YOhiO, 304.e75-

::
.=. · . . .

.,

WA~~NCI

412

C.IW'Ii"' hi.

... - - - - moo1

hlah - · onglno. t . m1r.., UnMndhlonol 11101'"'" guo...,. 11•
a Daooa. F- Eotlmotol
!IIlAH 4000 irol. Oon., olr, bat·
• •e 1111
,..., poeka, lull= owning • Ill. ~I - n c • ~.
· """
·

YMW\1: 225 four Win ltl•l
,._,lly ovorhautod. wtlll graclor

l1r-·rr~1 6,.:z,.IT:. . .:.;I,. . :E:. ,I.- I

·'

Home

Improvements

1'91'
Bolo: 1111 114-441-1110.
- · XA-100,
Colallerlp.m.

5

-

---.
...........
~r--=
- · · TV - . opocllllzlna

114-1714121.

.. -

.

Pklnblngl
Hutlng

'*·

~~~7-~~at.

1110

27 II. Tlllll -

·-

. JET

82

AMwliDn llolora. r r
New
I ,_,. - - In Olaoll, RON
EVANS, JA~. QH. 1 -

Camperafo

homo a

1111
4 -otter
·
11100. 200-SX-.
carr 11+448-4121

Home
Improvements

81

MotorHomel

W II - . p .._, ttoOO.OO,
114-"JIIWOIZ.
.

·.

-:S

campers &amp;

79

MotOI'Homll

LIMBeR

Real Eatate Ge1181111

Sunday

lila I 11: I'Gnl, nloe olylo, 1371,
1141altlt.

.Rearrange the 6 scrambled
• words below to make 6
simple words. Print letters of
each in its line of squares.

UNeVeN
GOVeRNMENT

-lonl

Auto Pans 1

AcCIISDrleS

· . Editod by CLAY R. ~OLLAN - - - - - - -

;

SCRAM-LETS
ReVOLT
Most people will admit that they
MeRGeR
can't do a lol of things but rarely do
KITTEN
we find a person whodoesn'tthink he
ZITHeR
can run the GOVERNMENT.

cr:. ;,-.":r!..'*:::!
AIIII'V ..

March 24, 1991

March 24, 1891 ·:

,... -~4 WD, 1..00,

r.
OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

(allacrea&amp;t approximate)

Auto Parts &amp;
Acceasorles

BudgOI TranomlaaloM, u..d a
.rabulll, Ololtlng ol $1111; 114-2461177, 114-J79.22e:t.

......" · '•,

· Real Es.tate General
Estate General

-

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

OVERLOOKING THE OHIO RIVEI .
economical to live in, l.ike new shingled roof, white
sid1ng (no upkeep), Gallia Rural Water System, small
(no work), and afront porch. Thos four rooms two bed·
, with bath ana a shower in tub. Ideal for 'a retired
or a young couple just starting to buy their first home
paying rent). See this home now.
11696
a~d

63

LivestOCk

F* Pie- For a..lnWIB 1233.
lllra Col :1112 yn old.llaro Colt
:n - l l o otcl. Walkll Quarter

- " " ulo or trodo
llaalll- Umoolno Burr 814l'IS'ZIII "''1112·1101.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTill
PH. 446·7699 or 446-9539

- --.l0W71-4112.

UIIIIJ lulldlng SPL: 30'140'111'
......... · oldn • rool, 1•
,..,.. .... 14' ...., :

~~.

ERECTED IRON HORSE

BEAUTIFUL SffiiNG - And this 3 bedroom, I bath and
family room home. Also large building on 1.390 ar.r• in city
·schools lor only $53,900. Call for more information.

Real Estate General

IIOILDE AS.114-:132.fl016.

•

Real Estate General

({;)1/ ·. efjP /J

~trr

·

446·1 066

.

.

..t'$•""
'··,,

......
;

.

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RODII EY AREA - Here is a lovely 3bedroom, 2~ bath, spirt
level with lamrly room, living and · dining rooms, full
basement, brick fireplace. separate woodburner, 18x36
poot, 2 car garage, central air. All this and more on over ~
acre. Clilllor details and appOintment today. Asking $84,000.
.
#296
NEW LISTING - Fix it up and resell or rent out' this 3 bed·
room home. large lot. Paved street. $19,900.
#327 ,

• 21'K24'6" family room w/woodburner, nrce rirge deck off oi
, ,te krtchen lor cookmg out this summer! LOTS AND LOTS OF
: SPACE!!' OWNER HAS REO~ CEO PRICE fOR AQUICK SALE.
•

•

'•,.

'

'

·''

L1v1ng room, d1nong room kitchen bath with enclosed
lront and back porch with 1.9 acre. Call' lor more onlorma!lon.
.
3 BEDROOM B.RICK. Srtuated on I acre, 5 miles from Galli·
polls on Bulavrlle Road . Kyger Creek School Orstnct I 440
SQ. fl. Priced in the 60's.
· '
GOOD ·INVESTIIEIIT PROPERTY- A2 story frame double
located on Second Avenue, Gallipolis. 4 rooms and bath
downs!Jirs and 4 rooms and bath upstairs. Call today. ·
INVESTII.ENT PROPERTY IN VINTON- 6rm. house located
along Marn St Rent or live in. Presently grossing $2,100.00.
Buy now for $14,000.00.
GR£EN ACRES - Two lots. I large level home site. 140 fl.x
14~ fl., crty water. Green School. Good location. Priced right
at $10.000.00.

.

;: RUTLAND - Salem Strut - At the ed~e of town Aone
•• story ranch wtih 3 bedrooms, lull basement, attach~ ~ar·
~lrden anoce lay11g lot. Newer bath and equipped kitchen.
..
or pool area.
$29.900
BOTTOM-Crispen Corn•- Approx. 2acre lot with
of ro•er frontage, boat dock, fantastic •iew, and a 15
•• yr. old ranch wrth 3 bedrooms and a family room A2'.\ car
:: ·gerage With Vinyl Siding and. Wood burner.
. $52.000
:· IUTI.AIID :_Smith Run Rd . - Thisdignilred counhy resi·
., dence is apicturesque setting with aredwood home that sits
:, w,y ~ck from the r,oad Has adreamy pecan krtchen. cathe·
• dral cetling on spacrous hvrng room with frreplace, and there
:. are two baths. Thrs 124 acre farm is set up for beef cattle. It·
.• has a large metal barn and other outburldings and stock
:. pond.
$140,000

TWO BE.DROOIIS. 2 baths. living room, dining room, krtchen
and utrlity room 11.012 sq. II.) condominium. GOOD LOCA·
TION, choose ~o~r carpet color and MOVE IN NOW!! Call lor
more rnformatron.
•

•

· IIDDL£PORT - Alway swanted alog home? This one rs ap:, prox. 10 yrs. old and has been remodeled all over. Has 2bed·
: roams down and I loft bedroom up. Cathedral cerl1ng in h•·
. lftl room, new large front and rear porches. Great view of
rover. MUST SE.E TO SEE HOW CUTE.
$29,900

NEW LISTIIIG: 10 acres, Perry Twp. Some timber. Buy now
for $10,000.
6.5ACRES WITH III TH£ CITY OF GALLIPOliS situated along
Garfield Ave. Site includes 2 building lots w/city water,
sewer. Buy now lor $30,000 or purchase h.ouse l!ith lot for
$15,000.
.

ECoiOIIC~L LIVING- If you II'!! just starting out or i.f your

cllrldren hiVe ftown the coop, this 14x65 Hillcrest mobile
home will be just riaht for you. It has 3 bedrooms I I! baths
front lftd rear porches, and is total electric. Readi to move to
hour lot
JUST '8.000

ST. RT. 124 - 3.14 ACR£511/l AIID A I II
NU .. SIDED HOllE wrth 3 bedrooms, ~th. kitchen and liv·
rng rm. 2 car garage, pole buildrng wished, setell~e dish and
more. Asking $46,000.
#284

.

BAUII ADDITION is this extra nice bi·level home on a
well·mantcured neighborhOod. Maintenance free exteriOf
loan assumption available. Call today to look at this spacious
4 bedroom, 2 bath home. Asking only $62,500.
11216
.. ,,, -&lt;.

NEW. LISTING - New modular home. Family room, dining
room, 3 bedooms. 2 baths, skuated on 1.54 acres m/ 1in 01·
.i•e Townshrp. Look at this one today. Asking only $49,500.
#309
SUMNER ROAD- Is this 2 bedtoom aluminum sided ranch
witti bath, loving end family rooms, basement, one car gar·
age, storage building. All this on .840 of an acre m/1. Askong
ooly $46,900. ·
41299
NEW LISTING - B.urld great childhood memories for your
children in this spacious ranch home situated on approx. 2
acres where lru~. nuts, berries abound. Attached 2 car gar·
age, full unfinished basement w~h afireplace. Portland area.
Asking $55,000.
#325
NEW LISTING - Two story frime home, nice woodwork
throuallout. Detached garage. Mulberry Ave, Pomeroy. Only
$22,000.
m5

'

flEW LilA RD. - Agent
ranch home, family room with
I
full basement, 2 car attached carage,
with privacy fence. Askmg $55,000.
NEW LiliA ROAD - Neat 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch style
home _w1th o~e car attached prage, maintenance free ex tenor wrth a "rust right" yard.
41291

•

GENTLEMAN'S FARI -Elegant country living on 111acres
m/ 1wnh alovely cedar 4 bedroom home. OYer 2,000 square
feet olliving space includes 4 bedrooms, fireplace, fonnat
dinin&amp;, equipped kitchen an~ much more. land is level to
rolling and Includes a beauttlul pond; 1 2 car prap and a
barn. You will love k. Call lor •n appointment $110,000.

1121

' RACINE - 50'xlDll' 1 tj!llfl~~-"~ook·ups. Cement
• pad on a good sM.IIQNL'I'W,!I!fi!M.

~

'

1

• NEAR CHESTER- Brock ranch home with 7.2 acres, pond, 3
, car gatge. Well mA/nJaj~ .hm:llitb.IIJ!I!wood floors, large
• living room, 3 ~IIM!i. ~MIKin kitchen. lamily
: room, full basement with loreplace and woodburner.
• $80,000.00.

..

: RACINE -Nice brick ranch home. 3 bedrooms, I bath,car·
• pet, C.A., rec. roMllati-D!NQarage and many
yother nice leatures. $69.000.00.

•

~eUSINESS IS SO GOOD, AS YOU CAll $(( W£ HAVE AP·

.PROXIIIAT£LY OVER $400,0110.00 WOITH OF MEIGS
PIDP£ITIES PEIDING Ill A YARtm OF PRICE
: RAII8£S. IF YOU HAY£ AHOllE AID CAN1 SE£11 TO SEll
• ,T, BRIIIG IT 011 DOWII TO CLELAND REALTY AliD WE'll
: GIVE IT OUR BEST £FFORT AS WE HAY£ WITH THESE
• ,PRDPEITI£S.
.
.
• HENRY E. CLELAND ....... :............. 992· 8191 '
' JEAN TRUSSELL .......................... 949·2880
.... .................................... 985·4411
. .. .......... ...................... 112·2259

1 COUNTY

.

79 ACRES IIORE OR LESS located in Ohio Twp. The property
has some timber. Call fOf more information.
STOP BY OUR OFFICE FOR A COMPLETE
BROCHURE OF OUR LISTINGS.
j

; DOESN1 THIS IIAKE HOUSE SEIISE? Why put up everytJ\.
t ong you've got and go heaviy in hook when you don't HAVE
: tofHere's anice, comfortable place woth 3 bedrooms in Mid·
• dleport priced RIGHT at only $16,000.00 - OWNER WANTS
: A SALE!
. ·
'

j·

61 ACRES fli/L IN OHIO TWP. Frontage on St. Rt 7 wnh
some timber. Priced at $10,000.
·

.EIIM JEFFEIS .......................................... 992·3056
DAILII£ Sf£WAIT ........................................ 992·6365
IIIOYL WALT£RS .......... .............. ;................. 367·0421

a

, RUTLAND - 3 old home with laMgarage, free gasto
• house plus a 19 Attlii!'P!IIolilrlillf ' 70' with expando
• and room addkoo .Dl'ltnretii'IMII,
~edish and many
r other features. Allrn good condotion. 48• acres. $72,500.00.

WE HAVE BUILDIIIG LOTS in Rodney Village II. Call lor more
information.

.IDDUPOIT- A~rgain ol a home. A I \! story home with
3 rocNIII up and 3 rooms down. Carport, part basement
equi!IINd kitChen. Great s!Jrter or rental home. $8,oo0

; DARWIN- Country Settin1- 3 bedroom, ! bath. all elec.,
, modular home I'IIIIAt 'iii:II'Htoilli storage building
• situated on appMlt"t~re bl'l'dllff'MEDIATE POSSES·
; SION' $34.000 00.
: RACINE -Business 91!Portunitll~ ~s County- Res·
taurant Bus i nesslrliA~~~UfNINUI
want to be in bu·
; siness for yourself, call today lor details! $74,900.00.
•
! FLATWOODS RD. - Nice 3 bedroom,.!, bath modular home
• sitting on approxSIILiii:rPJil\lBI•.&lt;Iarpet, heat pump
• with central air! $38,000.00. ·

•

.\

1

A~l

BRICK HOII£ LOCATED iN TH£
SPRING VALLEY ESTATES AREA .....
3 BRs. I \! baths, living room, dining area full
basement. gas hat, carport, city utilitres and crty
schools. Call for more informatron.

Real Estate o.neiJI

169.7 ACRES, HARRISON TWP. -Home on
property w~h 3 BR, balh, LR; kitchen, FR.
large barn.

;~RACINE - Thi! house needs some work to make it a home
• but the beaut~ulcWif ~tl'dNn'ltuiHJe the reward fm
~ your efforts. 4 beli'1~Mt,tlll!Of\''!Tclolol ll'lth part basement.
• $12.000.
• NEW LISTING- POII£ROY- 50'x290' vacant lot on lin·
, coin \feiW1ts. Water, elec., and city sewer available. Nice lot
• lor a trarler. ASKING $6,500.00.

•

2. ~ED ROOM HQME LOCATED ON WATSON ROAD .,...

Real Estate General

PROVIDETHE FAMILY- We'll provrdemrythrngelse

l mthos 4 bedroom, 2 bath home! 1.485 acre 2 car garage

; TUPPERS PLAINS- Theie isanrce tittte home with 2 bed ·
• rooms, I bath, hMW!IIil[fHill"ainted and frxed.
i,Sittmg on a nice.. l~t oll50'x456'. $23,900.

CHESHt.RE - Rousll lane - House Hunting! - Perfect
spot to hve. Alarge 2story 3 to4 bedroom home with approx.
I acre ol nrce level lawn. Thrs os a house wrth charm. It has
two lrreplaces and an 0pen stairway.
$45.000

.

~ YOU

1.9 ACRES 11/L. and this vmyl sided 2 bedroom home on·
Adamsvolle Rd. Has fenced area lor animals. Also nice gaden
area, rural water. $21 ,600.
41328

'•

MIDDLEPORT- Race Street - MANY POSSIBILITIES lor
thrs Com mer coal burldrng. Nrce looking brick building that is
· set up as a hotel, but cauld be changed to about anything
Has 6 rooms wM 6 baths, plus a large storage area:
.
$21 000

BIDWELL - $21 ,000- THIS COULD BE AN EXCELLENT IN,
VESTMENT PROPERTY. 2 BEDROOM HOME ·wiTH 3 NICE
LEVEL LOTS ..BETTER LOOK, THIS AREA GROWING FAST!

WOODLANQ DR. - Owners have purchased another home
_ and wants sold this nice st•rter home or lixer·upper ·With 3
bedrooms, family room, utility, unattached garage. $39,900.
Open to offers.
11279

· ·WA~liNG TO BIILD? NEED LAND FOR MOBILE HOME? OR JUST
. We have seYeral tracts of land to suit most any need.
Just caH one of our agents today for help in locating land that's right for you.

ROCKSPRINGS RD.- Approx. 80 acres wrth·water &amp; elec·
~rc milable. Beaut~ul spot for house or mob1le home. Has
approx. 25 acres .of cleared land. Also has another burldrng
srte with a beautiful view.
$27.000

Real Estate General

NOTICE
HASKINS TAVERN ON COU.RT STREET WAS RECENTLY DA·
MAGED BY FIRE. WE ARE STILL OFFERING THE"PROPERTY
FOR SALE . PRICE HAS BEEN ORASTICALLY REDUCED fOR
QUICK SALE!

LOCATION IS GOOD .- Close to town, 3 bedrOj)m home
ne~s some work. Pro~e reduced to $62,500. But ownirr · ~
anxrous to sell and w1fl entertam offers., .
41269

CJUeC.IIIW ..lllltlrtt ,.,_,

206 NORTH SECONP AVE .
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DOTTIE S. TURNER, BROKER
EVERYMAN'S OREAl - A 35 Ft. Housebolt - Th ere's
nothrng more pleasurable than cruisrng UP and down the
Ohoo Rover rn your own y~cht. Sleeps 9, has marine rad io,
and a tro·axle boat trarler, Looks like NEW. To see give us a
call.
$21.000

: NEW LISTING - Mlfii-FARII CLOSE TO MIDDLEPORT: BOTH TOWN AND COUNTRY? Yes, you can have your cake
r and eat rt, tool All the beauty of a country setting, yet wrthin
• mmutes of all the conveniences ot town. This property has
• approxrmately 3.88• acres with a 2 story frame home that
has 3 bedrooms, family room, equippe:l kitchen. 1 car gar·
bam.
other great features! Call for your

STEP BACK IN TIMEI THE ABOVE TURN Of THE CENTURY
SKETCH OF THIS BEAUTIFUL OLD HOML.PROVES IT ONCE
WAS ONE OF THE MOST ELABORATE HOMES IN GALLIPOLIS.
IT COULD BE NOW, WITH SOME WORK AND IMAGINATION
If RESTORING AVINTAGE HOME IS YOUR DREAM CALL US
FOR ATOUR OF THIS ONL.ANO MAKE YOUR DREAM COME
TRUE!

rural water. All thos a~d more on .73 of an acre m/1. Call lor
appointment.
·
41212

....,...

~.

HOME NORTH OF VINTON offers complete ~tchen, lots of Pfi·
vacy, 12 acres to roam on, fireplace. Only '15 Years old. ~I lor
more Information.
412..

•
•
GREEN TWP. - Is this brick and 'vinyl sided ranch with .3 . •
bedrooms, bath, k_itchen, living room with fireplace, gas heat. . •

rn

. Ken Morgen. Reeltor/Broker-448-0971 .
Allen C. Wood, R•ltor-,448·4623
Mole Centerbury. RMitor-448·3408
JBirnelltiiMoore.
Reeltor-268·17411
• ' •
'" ..
&gt;

HOME 992·6892

mo

·({'food ~t:eat/j"l Wlw.
32 Locust· Street. Gallipolis

' OFFICE 992·2888

·-

WALNUT TWP. FARII -Enjoy country hvinC l!~h tillable
land, pasture, and woodland all included'in thos farm of approximately 76 acres. Nice tobacco base, Home.has two bed- ·
rooms, hvmg room, dining area, krtchen. Askrng $39,900.
41302

BULAVILL£ ROAD- EXCELLENT LOCATION ONLY 5 MILES
FROM CITY. OVER AN ACRE LAWN. 3 BEDROOM 2 BATH
HOME HAS NICE OPEN FLOOR PLAN. KITCHEN HAS ROOMY
SNACK BAR, DISHWASHER, ANDERSEN THERMOPANE WIN·
DOWS, ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP, 2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE.
THIS IS A UNIBILT HOME. PRICED BELOW MARKET VALUE ·
AT $59,000.
PORTERBROOK SUBDIVISION - THIS 3 BEDROOM l'h
BATH HOME HAS LOTS OF CHARM fiREPLACE WITH wOODBURNING INSERT IN LIVING ROOM; ATTACHED 2 CAR GAR·
AGE, IN·GROUND POOL WITH COVERED PATIO. $68.000 .
PERFECT FOR HORSES -PASTURE AREA IS LARGE EN·
OUGH fOR RIDING RING. MODERN 3 BEDROOMS, COUNTRY
KITCHEN, FAMILY ROOM WITH WOOOBURNER. 2CAR CON·
CRETE BLOCK GARAGE. OVER 9 ACRES. $49,900.
.
THIS COlY COTTAGE IN EUREKA HAS TO BE THE BEST BUY
ON THE MARKET! 3 ROOMS PLUS UTILITY ROOM ANO BATH.
JUST REDUCED TO $6,500. .
.

$22,5001 - This A-frame home offers 3 bed·
rooms, 1\1 baths, LR, kitchen·w~h stove and
refrigerator, electric heal part basement.
Hannan Trace School District .69 acrP..

ATTENTIDNIIIVESTORSIII Nice home located rn
town on 2nd Ave ., owner has moved to a new
home and wants this one sold. 3 BRs. LR. Krt.. IIINI FARM - located on Bulavrlle-Porter
Rd. - 13.44 acres and anice one story home
DR, bath, garage. Pnced rn the 20's.
wrth 3 BRs. 2 baths, LR, knchen, FR, Or, carpet,
PRIC£ REDUCTION ....$49.900- located on oil and el.ectric heating, 4 car unattached me·
Second Ave., one block from grocery and tal garage, barn, approx. 4 acres fen ced pas·
downtown shopping. Thrs home offers 3 BRs, tu1e.
LR, kitchen, bath, basement. gas heat. city
utihties. ldeal for the older couple who wantto ·-MAY- B£ WHAT YOU ARE LOOK IfiG FOR :....
walk and be close to park and shopprng.
Newer all briCk home iust lrve minutes from
211 ACRES, lOR( OR LESS, HUNTINGTON 'downtown. 3 BRs, 3 baths, great room, family
TOWIISHIP - Brick home offers 6 BRs, 2 room, 2 car attched garage, heat pump/cent
baths, eat·in knchen, LR. FR, elec. and wood air, city utilities.
,
heat. cellar house, log barn, sheds,lrontage on ·• •
Raccoon Creek and little Raccoon.
3 ACRE LOT FOR SALE - located along SR
160 in Charolais Acres.
$32.000. EXCELLENT STARTER HDIE - 3
BRs.LR. krtchen. bath, laundry, attached gar· OWNERS HAVE DONE A LOT OF WORK AND
age.
NOW YOU CAN GET THE BENEFITS - Five
- Appru I acre along St. ~t. 588 minutes to town, 3 BRs, 2 baths, LR, krtchen,
.
ft. of frontage). Small home offers 2 BRs, nat. gas heat, vinyl siding. $39,9001
LR, krtchen, mobile home pad on prop·
KRISTI DRIVE- All brock ranch style home, 3
AFFORDABLE LIVING ... $38,000 - 3 BRS, BRs. l 'h baths, eat-in kitchen, formal dining,
I \1 baths, LR, kitchen, DR, gas furnace, car· 12x30 LR w/FP, attached garage.
pet, 24x24 unattached garage, just outside of
town.
VACANT LAND ON RT, 588 CLOS£ TO TOWN
,
.
6
H5,000
- ST. RT. 588
- Nice building site.
3 BRs, kitchen, LR, FR. part basement, very nice
home.
•
CON~Rn£ BLOCK GAIIAGE IN. VIIITOII, 28x32,
·
!':in';,~~- HOllE AND 1.686 ACRES, 1/Lin ~n~~~:ce.flCX:O~~el:c"verh'c.~vdoorrce.s,fure00e:l8 wa"rllk~~
~
Twp. Home offers 2 'BRs, LP, door.
...,
••

OWNER WILL FINANCE DOWN PAYIIEflnROOMY HOlE +5 acres m/1 • mobile home lovely 2 story home in countrv. 4 BRs. I•
located at the edge of town. lots of extras. Call lor · country kitchen, OR, 18x24 LR, 18x20 master
BR with skylight and ~ass doors to deck, 2
details.
baths, full basement, vrnyl siding. Srtuated on
7 acres more or less on State Route.
THIS ON£ SPEAKS FOR ITSElf! Beautiful
PRIVACY S£EKERS LOOK AT THIS ONEILarae
brick home on .93acre lot. Bull Run Rd., over
log
home can be purchased wkh 162 acras or 2
2100 sq. ft. of living space. Totally equipped
acres.
This home offers 4 BRs 3 bolhs
kitchen, 3 BRs, 2 baths. 20x30 living room,
equippe:l
kitchen, LR, FR, 2 firepleces, heat
formal dining room, fireplace, HP /cent air,
pump/cent.
arr (backup system!. overs~ed 2
25x31 garage with openers, large rear patio,
car attached garage. Frontage on Raccoon
fenced yard.'
Creek.
.
.
20 ACR&amp;S,IIORE OR LESS. HUIITINGTOII TOWI· I NIC£ HOlE FOR TH£ GROWl fiG .FAMILYSHIP - OWN£15 IIAY HELP FINANCE QUAL· Green townshop near Centenary. Bi·ltvel home
IFlED BUYERS- Ranch style homeolfers3 BRs. offers 4 BR~, 2 blths,LR, kitchen w/ranp,reLR, krtchen, bath . .Newer barn 15x24. Call lor lrlg.. r1H •.dtspl., oven, FR, 111 healttllche:l
more information.
·
··
· garage, Situated on approx. one-half acre.

.

NEAR GAGE .... Perry Twp. - 26.624 acres
m/1, barn and 2 springs on property.
ATTENTION HUNTERS - 35 acres in Clay
Twp. Smalllrame house on property, 2 water
taps. $15,000.
.2.4 ACRE TRACT - COII£RCIAL SIT£ locate:l on Upper Rt 7 across from the new
shopping center.
NEW LISTING- KINEOII DR. - Ranch styie
home. 3 BRs. bath, LR, kitchen, lull basement.

36.5 ACRES 1/L- CLAY m.- Fronts on
Friendly Ridge. $18.000 .
BUILD A NEW HOlE OR PUT YOUR IIOIIL£
HOllE H£R£ - 29.8 acres m/1 vacant land.
Frontage on St. Rt. 160. Rural water milable.
$16,900.
13.2 ACRES. 11/L fi£AR MEIGS IIIII£ 110ider two story home with vinyl sidina. Storm
windows. Two small barns.
5 ACRE LOTS FC!R SALE ..Gratn T1111 .. city
~chools. Firirfield Vanco Rd. area.

FAIII FOR SALE~ GUY AN TOWNSHIP- 86
$9 500 _ 17 5 ACIES VACANT LAND- Perry acres, .m/1, older farmhouse with 2/3 bed·
Twp., SymmeS Creek bottom land. Some hill. To· rooms, bath, LR, krtchen, several outbuHdinp,
larae bam, tobacco base. Call for directions.
bacco base.

�Pllg1' D8

seritlnel

lltomefoy-Mcldleport Galllpolll, OH Point PINIInt, WV

MilCh 24, 1111 :

USDA proposes amending rules,
provisions of tobacco marketing
GALLIPOLIS • The U.S.
Department of Agriculture has
requested public comment on a
proposed rule to amend provisions
of ihe burley and flue-cured tobacco marketing quota programs.
Keith Bjerke, executive vice
president of USDA's Commodity
Credit Corporation, said the
amendments are required by the
Farm Poundage Quota Revisions
Act of 1990.
Effective with the 1991 crop
year, when a farm is dividend as a
result of a reconstitution, the burley
tobacco farm poundage quota
.transferred may not be less than
1,000 pounds. This limillltion does
not apply when the farm is reconstituted among immediate family
members or pursuant to probate
proceedings.
"The law does not specify the
disposition of a quota less than
1,000 faounds or the manner in
which arms must comply with the
1,000 pounds minimum quota,"
Bjerke said. "The proposed rule
says owners of farms with less than
1,000 pounds of burley tobacco
quota which are divided as a result
of a sale may sell the quota or pur-

· chase additionalljUOC&amp; to Jalll 111e
1,000 pounds mim a or llll•'kllt
the divided farm widl odMr ....
owned by the same peiQI 10 IIIII
the combined farm
at taut
1,000 pounds of Q1101L"

liZation and Conservation Service
if burley and flue-cUJ"ed tobacco
dealen do not comply wilh end-ofmllketing year purchase and resale
reporting and inspection requiremenlli;
The propll.ICd rule alto:
• Jequires burley and fluc;-cured
• permits, cfrcclive for tile 1991 tobacc:o warehouse operators and
and subsequent CIOJI yeara, the 111e dealers thai pun:hase from procesof burley tobacco marketing quoca sors and manufacturers tobacco
(from an owner of a farm to tile that is in the form not normally
owner of anolher f - in lbe lll8lteted by JJIOducers, to maintain
county);
'
certain reainls and provide for the
· • beginning wilh tile 1994 I:JOP, inspection and weighing by an
reduces a burley tobacco fanll ASCS tepctiUilltive: and
quola to zero if no .OO.:co is,._.
• provides Jor the collection of
ed or considered pliiiMd in two 1111t IOblcco nwteling assessments as
of the three preceding years:
· set forth in the Omnibus Budget
• increases the burlei tobacc:o Reconciliation Act of 1990.
lease limitation from 5,000 to
Additional information appears
. 30,000 pounds for the receiving in the Federal RCJister.
farm;
Comments should be received
• permits the leucllld tranlfcr no later than March 29 by the
of burley tobacco quota from 0111 Director, Tobacco and Peanuts
county to any other county in Ten- Divis.ion, ASCS, USDA, P.O. Box
nessee Only:
.
. 24 IS, Washington, D.C. 20013.
• revises the period ~uired to
. All written submissions will be
GTE TE~M • Tbe GTE Employee Ittvolve·
share in the risk of productAg ftue- · made available for public inspec- · ment
Team members are shown with one or two
cured to~co thil 11 purchllell. or lion in room 5750. South Building,
memorial plaques they developed. In the front
reallocated:
·
USDA; between lhe hours of 8:15
• outlines the acti01111 to be lllr.en a.m. and 4:4S p:m. Monday · row (left to right) are Paul Chap!Dan, Bill
by the USDA's Agric:ultural Stabi· through Friday.

much of a probl- for piaats
because most or them are •or·
mant," he says, but it
11urt
people with heir! and respiratory
problems. In neighlloring Iran, for
msrance, officials Mw .peaill'dlcally
warned citizens about health 1'11111
from the smoke.
Ozone and )ieroxyacetylnltrlta,
or PAN, form wllen nitroae•
oxides and unbumod h~droellbuua
- common in SiliOU from lliinla&amp;
petroleum products - combi..
with oxygen under briibt-. ·
Both ozone and PAN • fOUIIIA
in ~over smouy eitila. They are
lOXJC to plants, wtth OEone causi111

cou"

' agriCU
' Jt. ure
· . · .:" ":'
,.--- Oh10

--t

' damtac atcoilccntrstions as low as
0.1 JIIIUper million.
But Weidensaul says Middle
Bast concentrations could remain
lower than those of the polluted
.Los Angeles basin, for e~ample,
due to topography and winds ani!
because ozone and PAN quickly
degrade.
"You run into problems when
fonnation rates place faster than
delrsdation," he says.
"rhe chance of damage could
rise if the fires burn for several
months, because Middle East
plants soon will be leaving dormaney, Weidensiul says. Growing
plants are more susceptible to
ozone and PAN because their siO·
mii!CS- "breathing" hates in the

· •ves- are open.

Dairy farm income may fall
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Dairy' farm income will be reduced
significilntly in 1991 compared to recent years.
Allan Lines, agricultural economist at Ohio Slate University,
says the problem is the lower milk prices farmers receiw for the
product after years of increasing sales and production.
In 1988, Ohio milk sales were S573 million. Sales increased to
$609 million in 1989, and 1990 sales are estimated at $6SO million.
This year, production has COJltinued to increase, but
lilrely
to be in the neighborhood of $550 million, 15 percent lower dian

.-.arc

1~

.

Because it will be difficult to reduce operating expenses, net
income will be severe)y affected, possibly down as much as 60 percent.
Many dairy farms are likely to lose money. Those with avcr.,c
or above-average amount of debt will most likely be hurt Removing S100 million from the cash flow earned on dairy farms will likely reduce dairy fann asset values significantly, pbssibly by as much
as $1 billion if low incomes persist.

Budget problems spell cuts
cqLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) - Federal budget problems broulht
spendmg cuts for farm programs m the 1990 U.S. farm bill, liut
more will !ikely be sought, says Ohio Slate University farm policy
expert Carl Zulauf.
Farm policy makers will spend the next two years conc"entrating
on the intemationallrade fron~
Those two years will also give the economy a chance to i:etover
from its current poor performance and the politicians will have the
1992 presidential elections behind them.
'
That will be just in time for the ne~t major round of dcbale over
cutting the federal deficit and cutting agricultural spendilg.
Barring a major decline in farm income, Zulauf cxpec:ts trlditional farm programs to take another budgerary hiL Faillft to convince other countries to.cut their subsidies or a pick up in the general economy might reduce lhe cuts.
.

Madigan might end siege
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) - The appoirunent of Edward Midi·
gan as the ne~t Secrerary of Agriculture could signal 111 end to a
decade-long White House siege on federal farm progt1111t.
Carl Zulauf, agricultural policy expert at Ohio State University,
says choosing Madigan may indicate that President Bush wants 10
leave farm policy alone for a while.
For the past decade, the White House has led the charge to
reduce spending on support to farmers.
Madigan, the ranking minority leader on lhe HOUJC ,.ncultural
commiaee, is a veteran of farm bill and budget debates llid is ~
as fairly moderate on the spending issues.
·
Such a position will become more interesting in about two years
when federal budget concerns again take the national spotlight and
lhe White House is looking for places to cut spending.
Farm commodity programs are likely to be viewed as Cllldidates
for further cuts provided farm income does ·not decline subsranlially.
'

LARGE SELECnON

.,

'
•'

•

NEW HAVEN, W. Va . Charles G. Mathews has been promOied to human resources supervi101' fer Appalachian Power Company's Central Midline Shop, South
Clarlestoa, West Virsinia.
'
Mathews holds a bachelor of
KieDee degree in industrial relatiooa and fabor studies from the
West VirJinia Institute of Technology. He wu employed at
ADDalachian Power's Mountaineer
PliDt, New Haven, W.Va., in 1990
as a human resources assisrant and
transferred to Central Operating
Company's Philip Sporn Plant,
New Haven, in January ·or this
year.
Mathews is married and has two
children. He is a member of the
Sprinafield, Ohio, Exchange Club
md the Mid-Ohio Valley Society
of Hum111 Resources. He also is an
alternate on the Mid-Ohio Valley
Emergency Planning Council.

LE&amp;AL NOTICE '
The Public Utilnies Commission of Ohio has set for
public hearing Case No.
91-02-EL"EFC, .to review
the fuel procurement practico and policies of Columbus Soutllem Power Com·
IIIRY. the operation of its
Electric Fuel Co111ponent
and related maners. This
hearing Is scheduled to
begin at 10:00 a.m. on
March 25, 1991, at the of·
fices of the Pubic Utilities
Commission. 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio 43286-0573.
All internted parties will ba
aiYen an opportunity Jo be
fiurd. Further information
may be obtained by conlll:llng lhe Commission at
lllei!IM lddms.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Gary E. Vigorito.
Secretary.

.

Roc• of Age• offerl you a choice of I dl"-t ooler.r
grenlt•- Whatever your requirement• may lla, 11m,l1•
Rllefacdon Ia a-..rad with Rock of Agea.
Y.lhuta Houn: Open Friday 8:00 a.m. 'tll4:00 '·"'·
Other Houn by Appolntmant-183·1181 er 441-IU7 ·

RAILEY A. SAUNDERS MOIUMIITS
JJJ ........

Ph. 446·13117

....... 01.

•
1 Section, 10 P11111 25 centa
A llutdrnodla Inc. Nowopapor

-4 -

Man believed drowned·
at Gallipolis Locks,
Dam
neir

Edwards aod Rick Swart. Back row, (left to
right) are Ava Garrett, Steve Kisling, Kathy:
·!'arty, Kristie Rillle and Pete Hart.

· The.seQtih continuCd Monday
for 1 man believed to have
drowned Sunday afternoon .at the
Gallipolis Lot:ts and Dam, when a
t.ge he was working on hit a pier

.

and capsized.

A towboat owned by the Mulzer
Crushed Stone Co. of Tell.City,
Ind., was preparing to exit the mam
locldng•chamber at the dam when
the lead barge struck a pier, causin~J the load of !&amp;r&amp;e limestone to
shtft and capuze the: barge, a
spokesman for the Gallipolis.J..Qeks
and Dam said Monday.
·
·
. ~ spo~sman, who re~eased
the mformation to the Huntington .
Herald-Dispatch, declined to give
his naine, but said the 2,200-horsepower towboat was pushing four
barges loaded with large rock up
river when the accident occ:urred
about 4 p.m. The boat's fleet
totaled eight barges.
Officials said the barge apparbroke free in swih currents

drivers and 'jJromote safe driving. It
was adopted for use throughout
GTE's statewide operation.

READY TO SEARCH - omcers from the
Gallla County Shertfrs Department Sunday
prepare to help other ofYiclals search the Ohio
River for a man believed to be drowned after a

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

SALISBURY, NC
GAFFNEY, SC
MORGANTOWN, NC
GEORGETOWN, SC
WALLACE, NC
STATESVILLE, NC
HARRISONBURG, VA
WHITEVILLE, NC
ZEBULON, NC
WASHINGTON, NC
SPARTANBURG, SC
JONESVILLE, NC
NARROWS, VA
GREENWOOD, SC
BLUEFIELD, WV A
lAURENS, SC
FLORENCE, SC
REIDSVIlLE, NC
SUMPTER, SC

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
lENOIR, NC
ROCKY MOUNT, NC
CHARlOTTE, NC
NEW BERN, NC
EASlEY, SC

. .

Smith-Buick-Pontiac has been rated as one of the Top 25 CS/Customer Satis~action Index - Leaders for the Charlotte, N.C.
Bui_ck Zone. We would like io tha.n k o~r Buick Custom~rs for
ratmg us favorably on your survey questionnaires.

WE WOULD LIKE TO EXTEND AN INVITATION TO All AREA
. MOTORISTS TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUI
. AWARD-WINNING SALES AND SERVICE DEPAR,TMENT.

@ The Great American Road belongs to Buick"' ~

barge captlzed near the Gallipolis Locks and
Dam. Coast Guard omclals were expected to ·
resume their search Monday.

Rockslide tears down lines;
leaves 1,300 without power
By Mindy Kearns
final customers at approdmately
OVP News Starr
7:20p.m.
. .
A rockslide along S.R. 62 in
Officials from the Charleston
West Columbia knocked down o(ficeoftheOOH were expected to
power lines and left approximately arrive this morning to view the
1,300 Appalachian Power Co. cus- damage. Drilling is scheduled to
tamers without eleclricity Sunday.
begin tomorrow at both slide areas, ·
The slide occurred at 8:10a.m., and lhe rocks will be blasted either
with rocks continuing to consrantly Wednesday or Th·ursday with light
move until after 10 a.m. Traffic charges, so they wiJ.l,.not disturb
was halted along the route for some any remaining rocks.
time by the West Virginia Depart·
According to Ross Roosh, assismcnt of Highways, Mason Coulity rant superintendent of the Mason
Division, and the Mason Volunteer County DOH, crews were out all
Fire DepartmenL
weekend, mostly taking care of
Only one da~or to this slide, mud slides and slips in the roads.
a boulder slid . a separste site He said the county is e~periencing
in West Columbia, also along Rt. one of the weuest springs it has had
62, that conlinues to block one lane f9f a while, and attributr.s the slides
of traffic.
to this.
The Saturday slide, which also
Mason County Board of Educaoccurred at approximately 8 a.m., tion member Brian Billings hail
is located at the scene where three recently brought up the many slides
prior slides have happened in the in the West Columbia area at a
0

Appal~chian . ~~~~r:gs ~ase~~~i~~t.~:e~~

to
Power Co. Manager Steve Carpen- wnte leuers of concern smce many
tet the power.. company recetved buses and children, along with
the' call sho~ after 8 a:m., and teachers, &amp;aronts, and the public ·
workers arriv at the scene 10 find travel Rt. 2.
the ·line down and power poles ·
Billings said a plan of action
broken north of the West Columbia must be put into place, and said he
sub-station.
plans to keep in touch ~ith the
Carpenter continued, saying DOH himself to assure something
several employees were called oui is going to be done before someone
and power was restored to 850 cus- gets killed. ·
tomers at 1:20 p.m., by "switching"
The local DOH dOllS not have
power from the West Colum~ia the funds ~r aulhority to take on lhe
sub-station to the Sporn sub-stauon large proJect needed to clear the
above New Haven .
hillsides in West Columbia. The
Power company employees l~ter state office has ~n al~ to lhe
spanned the rockslide area, making problem ~~vera! limes m the past
repairs and setting two new power by local c1uzens.
·poles. Power was restored ·to th.e
Continued on page 6

.·
.
. equipment fowlil on lhem to.famil- . their continuing education 'require- plete 18 hours, plus 27 hours of
.
refresher courses. and EMT's musl
· iarize themselves with the same. ments.
(One of the system's major heli·
All EMS staff, including participate in six hours of continuNearly 50 ~le, representing copters was recently damaged by a drivers, must complete a prescribed ing education and 27 hours of
refresherworlt.
Slllfi members frOm Meigs County vandal's gunshots· however, ·a number of continuing education
Emergency Medical Services and standby was used in lhe seminar on hours in order to maintain their cer- · Lunch for those in attendance
·
tification, Byer reported, and the was provided b{VeteranS MemoriVeterans Memorial Hospital, Saturday.)
Acc:ording
to
Meigs
EMS
Direc'EMS
department holds some son at, and those attending received the
attended a day-long seminar at the
tor
Bob
Bycr,the
joint
seminar
was
of
continuing
education program instruction free of charge.
Meigs EMS Training Center on
lhe
brainchild
of
Dr.
Ricltai'd
Pat·
on
a
monthly
basis.
"I'm real pleased with the
Saturdliy.
terson,
tile
Emergency
Room
The
number
of
continuing
edu·
turnout,"
Byer said Saturday. He
Ana Reynolds and Bobby ComDirector
at
Veterans
Memorial
cation
hours
is
dependent
on
the
reported
that
the group was made
well, both medics for Grant Medical Center's Life Flight helicopter H~tal, and the Medical Director level of training the EMS staff up not only of Meigs EMS and
.
VMH staff members, bill several
service, assisted Dr. Richard for eigs County EMS. Pauerson, holds.
however, was unable to anend the
Medics must complete 88 hours medical prtif~sionals from Gallia .
Jancza~. the Associate Medical
·
Director for LifcFlight, with the seminar, so Dr. Douglas Hunter, a of continuing education in three County.
staf( physician 81 Veterans, hosted years. Advanced EMT's must comseminar.
The session addressed the sub- the program.
Byer reponed Saturday lhat the
jects of trauma assessment, helicopter safety, and the legal aspects seminar was a part of the continu·
of trauma treaunent. A LifeFlight ing education program 81 the EMS
helicopter was 81 tl)e scene as well, offiCe, and that lhasc attending the
enablin~ those unfamiliar with the meeting would receiving six hours
LifeFltghl helicopters and the of in-service credit, to applied to
By United Press lntematlonal
The sties over Ohio started to
clear Monday and large amounts of
sunshine were expected to cause
temperatures to be mild.
·
In the extreme southern parts of
Ohio
temperatures were cxeected
Heavy damage was ·incurred to two vehicles in an accident on
to
be
in the upper 60s, wh1le the
Middleport Hill early Saturday evening.
forecast
called for temperatures in
According 10 Middleport Police, Robert M. Haley, Pomeroy, was
the
SOs
in counties along Late
traveling up Middleport Hill when he lost,control of his moton:ycle 1 ,Erie.
'·
on a curve. Sranley E. Aleshire, Rutland, coming down the hill,
· The warming trend that will
obsetVed the IIIOIOII:ycle out of control and in an attempt to avoid a
start
Monday was to become more
collision went off the right side of lhe road.
pronounced Tuesday as an increasHaley was cited fer failure to control and also for driving without . mgly strong soqth wind will bring
insurance, and Aleshire was cited for driving without an operator's
in au from lhe Gulf Coast region.
license. Both vehicles were towed from the scene. Neither Haley
Highs were predicted 10 be from
·nor Aleshire were immediately treated for injuries although it was
the upper 60s to the mid 70s. Tueslater reported to the police tha~ Haley was being treated for a neck
day sllould also bring partly cloudy
i~ury.
.
sides and a chance of mainly after·
noon showers.
The clearing that started Sunday
night in the Buckeye State gave
some people a good view of a
Two minor accidents Saturday evenin$ resulting in light dsmage
bright
display or the northern
to lhe vehicles but no injuries were investiPied by Pomeroy police.
lights,
also
known as the Aurora
The ftrst one occurred at 6:40 p,m. on West Main,Street. A truck
Borealis.
driven by Harvey Bush, Jr., of Letart W. Va. was struck in the rear
Besides the clearing, other feaby a car driven by Carrie Bartels, Pomero~licc reported that
CULVERT INSTALLED • A 13-toot dlametures in Ohio's weather overnight
Bush had slowed in traffic to mate a left
turn. Bartels was
.
ter
metal
eulvtrt has beeo illstalled under State
included some trac~ amounts of
unable to stop and her car hillhe rear of the truck. Neither driver
Route
124
ID tilt Kerr Ru• area to balldle water
drizzle in the east and temperaiiD'es
wascited.
·
now
from
the area north or the blllnnly to the
that were from the mid 30s to lhe
The second acc:ident occurred it 7:11 p.m. 81 538 West Main SL
Tbe
old stone drain under tile road colriver.
lower 40s by time dawn
Continued on page 6
laplled
Ia
February,
1990 creatilla an emeraeocy
apProBChed,
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentlnel·News Starr

JANUARY 1991

· IT'S OFFICIAL!.!

darkness.
Chi.ef Deputy Wood Said this
momiilg that two large·boats were
being sent to the 11m1 by the Coast
Guard, which will probe the area
with sonar.
The Coast Guard official slated
the barges were being moved away
from the locks this morning.
Although not damaged, the loclts
will remain closed until the rocks
from the capsized barge can be
removed.
The Point Pleasant Delachment
of the West Virginia Slate Police,
who. are handling th~ incid~nt, had
nothmg to release thiS monong.
The Galli a County Sheriff's
Department, Gallipolis Fire Depart·
ment, Coast Guard and West Virginia State Police were cin the
scene.
Upon telephoning the Moizer
Crushed SlOne Co. in Indiana this
morning, a represenlative declined
to
out
infonnation.

Trau. rna, tr·eat~ent topt·c of EMS. semt·nar .pasl~:~ding

TOP TWENTY-FIVE CSI LEADERS
SALISBURY .MOTOR CO.
MARVIN BISHOP PONTIAC-IUICK-GMC
CAUSBY BUICK CO.
PARRISH MOTOR CO.
MINCHEW BUICK-OLDS
ALEX GREENE BUICK, INC.
CURTIS Kin BUICK, INC.
RICK EDWARDS PONTIAC-BUICK
GILL BUICK-PONTIAC, INC.
SMITH-MilLS PONTIAC-BUICK
. WAKEFIELD BUICK, INC.
GENE McNEILL AUTO WORLD, INC.
MITCHENER CORP.
GEORGE H. DAVIS CO. INC.
A&amp;T PONTIAC BUICK, INC.
BALDWIN BUICK·GMC TRUCK
EFIRD PONTIAC-BUICK, INC.
CARDINAL CHEVROLET, BUICK, CADILLAC, INC.
GOODWIN BUICK-AM( INC:

lhat shoVed it into a pie!itie
upper end of the locks, causing the
load of rocks to shift and the barge
to overturn. •
The victim's name was not
being released as of this morning.
According to Gallia County
Sheriff's Department Chief Deputy
c.tos Wood, the man was clipped
by a large rock when lhe load of
limestone fell from the barge .
Impact with the rocks apparently
10re off the man's life jacket, which
was found some tinie later. ·
· Two other deck hands on the
fleet were uninjured..
. · ·
According to a represen tatlve
from the U.S. Coast Guard office
in Huntin$l0n, the search for the
body conunued this morning, but
from along the shore. The official
slated due to the high water, debris
and fast current, small boats were
unable to Slly in the water to allow
a search. Last night's search was
terminated about 7
due to

CLIEAIRING ROCKS FROM ROADWAY ·DOH Assistant Superilltendent ROllS Roush muned equipment Sunday to dear tbe roadway or
rocks and debris tbat fell from the hillside in West Columbia, aloag S.R. 62. Tbe rockslide downed power lines, and left over 1,300 Bend Area
residents without electricity. Power was restored tO approximately 800 people by 1:20 p.m., with the remaining residents not having electricity
until after 7 p.m. State DOH ollk:ials were expected this morniag to view tbe area. Rocks from this sUde, along with with others that fell in a
·
separate Saturday incident, will be blasted from tbt area later tbis w~ek. (OVP photo by Mindy Kearos.)

SUPERP-ERFO

,JOM BROOKS CHEVROLET-BUICK, INC.
HOWELL BUICK, INC.
LEE A. FOLGER, INC.
TRENT OLDS-CADILLAC-BUICK, INC.
RAY WEISNER IIUICK INC.

showers.

Vol. 41, No. 235

VICe ot the deceased employees.
Last year, the local team developed a progrilm to recognize safe

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC, INC.

40s, winds becom!f.-th !ellS
thu 10 •pb. Tu
y, partly
cloudy With a sUght chance or

Copyrighted 1..1

Charlotte Zone CSI

·Mathews
promoted

Mostly dear, low In tile mid

Lotto: 1, 16, 19,
25,46,47
Kicker:973792

'

GTE remembers employees

ATHENS • A GTE Employee
lnv?lvernent Team has completed a
proJect to honor dec~ Athens
and Pomeroy area reurees or
employees who died while actively
employed with GTE. .
Phil Biderman, Athens District
Manager. sold the memorial
plaques have been installed in the
GTE Phone Mart.at ttl West Washington Street 11nd in an employee
entra~ce at GTE's employee
reportmg center on State Route 56.
Members of the team completing the project were Rick Swart
and Steve Kisling (co-chairmen)
Kristie Riffle, Paul Chapman, Av~
Garrett, Pete Han, Bill Edwards
and Kathy Harty.
Names appearing on lhe plaque
. are William E. Barstow, Robert W.
Sheldon, ~lie H. Bailey, Knneth
0. Davis, Robert N. Andrews,
Kenneth T. Bean, Jessie J. Sldnner,
Clarys M. Hunter, W. Clifford
Stout. Keqneth F. McCole, Freda
M. Bolen, Larence E. Diddle, Latry
A. Platt, Paul.E. Perry, James L.
Buclcley, Mary Lou Hood, Orland
E. Ely, Dalesfotd W. Ward and
Fred c. Hashman.
.
GTE's employee involvement is
a volunrary program that allows the
formation of reams to review problems and select projects to improve
operating procedures or improve
employee morale: This project was
designed to pay tribute. to the ser-·

Pick 3:734 .
Pick 4: 5020
Cards : J-H, J-C;
K·D; K·S

On page4

•u

Oil fires . spawn ozone, other gases
WOOSTER, Ohi.o (UPI) Burning oil fields in Kuwait and
Iraq are spawning ozone and other
gases, but the threat to people and
plants from those gases shOuld be.
relatively small and temporary,
says an Ohio State University air
pollution researcher.
"With a lot of sun and tem~ra­
tureS over SO or 60, ozone will be
formed" from nitrogen oxides in
the smoke, says Craig Weidensaul,
a professor of forestry and leader of
the Ohio Agricultural Research and
Development Center's Air Pollution Laboratory at Wooster.
"It probably won't represent

'

Ohio Lottery

Duke, NC in
NCAA final
four games

Warming trend
swings into state

I

iI

,...---Local briefs-__,
Man injured in motorcycle crash

....

2 accidents reported to police

•••
•

I

sttuatloa and pushiDa forward piau by
Departmeat or TrUipOi'tltlon for lllabway relocatloo ,and lmpi'OYemeot at the illtenectlon or u.
S. 33 and State Route 124. lnstallatloa of the
oew culvert was tile first phase or tbe overall
$1.5 miUioo project.
.

'
•·

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