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~

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Pomeroy-'-Middleport,-ohto·

Page-10-The Dally sentinel

. &gt;

Couple ~~
find new
beg~nning ...·.
inMeigs
B-1

Cpllege

Scores

f

Turkey shortage shot prices up
'sky-high' in 1947. James
. Sands A-7

I

Thanksgiving Thursday; Christmas just around comer • BobHoeflich B·S

•
tmts.

Vol. 21, No. 42
Copyrighted 1881

TulSa 45 ou 13 . .
.
Tenn.
l6 Kentucky
7
,
r.

E. Carolina 30_Cinn.19
Dayion 27 BWU 10

Mkbigan 31 OSU 3
Iowa 13 Minn. 8

Inside

·.

Along the river ..............Bl-t
Buslness/Farm .............. o.;l-8
Classified .....................:.DJ-7
Deaths. ........................... _..AJ
Editorai ..............................Al
Sports.............................. Cl·7 ·

Wealher ...........................A-~

-

Cloudy,Cb~orlllow40per·

CtftL

...

10 lb.

guarantees fr~edom of s11eech,
press and expression to all cttizens,
has been under scrutiny since its
ratification and has been subject to
a number of challenges, ranging
from the Alien and Sedition Acts of
the 1790s to the current controversy-over "politically correct" speech
ontltenation'scampuses.
Participating in the panel were
Jacob Bapst, educational media
~ialist at the university; Galtipohs Municipal Judge Joseph L.
Cain; Sara Davis, coordinator of
multi-ethnic affairs -at Rio Grande;

Lloyd Moore, an attorney from
Ironton; Monsignor William R.
Myers of St. Louis Catholic
Church, Gallipolis; Angela Price,
editor of The Signals, Rio Grande's
sludcnt newspaper; Barbara Summers, reporJ~l for the W~llston
Telegram; Ivan Tribe; Jl!O(essor of
history at Rio Grapde; and Pat
Whitehead; assistant publisher at
· the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Moderator of the discussion was
L~ Ewing, director of university
relauons at Rio Grande.
Discussion covered such issues

~~·

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15 !lectiolle,101,.... , •
AlluiMIMCielnUke; p"'.

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Panel eyes freedoms' rol! In modern society
RIO GRANDE - The First
Amendment was the topic of a public forum Thursday at !he University of Rio Grande in which a panel
of campus and comniunily mem·
bers discussed the First's role in
.contemporary-society.-·- . 'The form is one of several
planned by the Students in .Free
Enterprise
(SIFE) chapt~r at Rio
•
Grande in celebration of the 200th
anniversary of the ratification of
the BiU of Rights.
The First Amendment, which

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Mlddleport-Pomeroy-G~IIIpolls-Polnt Pleasant, November 24, 1991

.

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~,

'

as responsibility in free speech, the
role of lhe news me®! in Operation Desert Storm, definitions of
obscenity, the separation of chu'rch
and state, and die Sunshine Law.
Jerry Gust, director of the Loren
M_. S~rry Center for_Economic ..
-Education at Rio Grande and advi·
sor to SIFE, felt the forum was
valuable for its exploration of differing viewpoints on aspeets of the
First Amendment.
"A very interesiing part of the
discussion, but without conclusion,
was the meaning of respectfulness

in speech and writing about people
about whom the speaker or the
author may not agree," he said.
"The panel consisted of divergent views, backgrounds and opinions, people who did not know
each other until minules before !he
forum began; but immediately
began discussing issues within a
framework of mutual respect,"
Gust added. "The panel's members
enjoyed their roles and liow much
they learned from the discussion ,
and are eager to participate in
another panel." '
.
.

'" :
•

.' -,
Throughout this year, SIFE liU
distributed materials on die ConJil.
tution to area schoolchildren to
promote awarene~ of the Bill ·of
Rights biceDttAnial and itt 1m tiiiiCe to American IIOCiety.
said this~ futnre forums will -be~
ins!Dictive to the conamunitY. "I'm confident lhat widl a liUlc
more experience, a degree of c:ommunity interest win fonn, iiDd lbll
we will be technically COIDpelelt
enough to provide ~~ of theae
forums to the schools, he said.

·&lt;f:t ·

Middleport woman receive~
national Legion Auxiliary award

and Up

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Starr
MIDDLEPORT • A Middlei'Ort
woman is one of five in lhe Umted
States to receive the 1990-91 Veterans Affairs and Rehabilitation
Field Service Volunteer Award
from lhe American Legion Auxil-

M01JDtain

lb.
Fresh Turkey available through Wed. Nov. 27, 1991
Limit I Per Family With Additional Purchase (excluding items prohibited by law)

U.S. No. 1

·ausset Baking

$

~~c:!Mf {;$*'_

oes

lh Bag

abandoned in Gallia

Pumpkin Pie
Limit I

P~ue .

Additional

Purchaae
(excludln1 llemt

prohibited by law)

Limit I Please, Per Family
With Additional Purchase
(excluding Items
prohibited by law)

24 Pack
12 oz. Cans

Jumbo Roll

Brawny
Towels

Mega

Butter

Maxwell House Ground or
French Rout • 12-13 oz. Can or
10 Ct. . 7.1 oz. Box Filter Pack
Ground

Coffee
Your Choice

Limit 2 Rolls
Please Prr Family,

Limit I

Wllh A:ddJUonal
Purthue

P'te..e A!r Family,
With Additional

(excluding item•
pmhlbll~ by lnw)

Pure hue

Food Club

Food Club

Lite
Egg_Nog

Cream
-Cheese

!••)

8 oz. Box

Monday 'l a.m. thru
Saturday Mldnlte
Sunday 7 a.m. r'
'til 10 p.m.

Prices Good
Friday, November 22
thru
Sunday, November 24, 1991

·Ice
Cream
Y2 Gal. Ctn.

,,

GALLIPOLIS BIG BEAR STORE .
- 1

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99

Bear
Minimum
Prices
Items and Prices Effective only at:

Ohio's new living will won't .
effect local EMS service teams.~

Wet roads, deer contribute
to.Friday traffic accidents

Borden Elsie

Your Cbolc:e
of Flavors
Cln.

99

fexC!Iudlnlllem•
prohibited b)'

32 oz.

Transponation on Oct. 7, lhe rail
line from Minenon to Kanauga has
been offtcially abandoned.
A total of 28.IS miles of track
GALLIPOLIS - CSX Trans·
wiU
be abandoned.
portation will soon be covering its
The line hasn't been used since
u-acks in Gallia County.
I989 when CSX operaled the last
Literally.
According to a notice of exemp- coal train from Southern Ohio Coal
tion received by the Gallia County Company Mine 3 to the Gen.
Community Improvement Corpora- Jar.1es Gavin ·i&gt;ower Plan. The tine
tion from the Ohio _Depanment of
Continued on A-4
By KRIS COCHRAN
Times-Sentinel Starr

Per

Family Wllh s10

26 oz. Box

NATIONAL AWARD WINNER· Here Geraldine
or
the American Legion Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Postl28, proudly
displays tbe .cenlfi.cate she was awarded by the Veterans Arrairs
and RehablUtation Field Service Volunteer Award. Mrs. Parsons
was the redpient or the multi-state Central Division award for giv·
ing 1100 hours of volunteer service to veterans in 1990-

csx rail line officially

Mountain Top
Great With
Top Frosl
Whipped Topping

:t,,,/ ~ :·

iaryThe special award in recognition
of volunteer service to veterans has
been presented to Geraldine Par·
sons, long-time member of the
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post
I28, Middlepon, in recognition of
DEBATING THE FIRST- Larry Ewing,
Whitehead or the O•lo Valley Pablishilll C~.,
the I,IOO hours of volunteer field
rlgbt, moderator or the public forum on the
. and MoJ!Sipor WIUIUI R. Myen qr SL Loals
service to veterans which she accuFirst Amendment held at the ·university or Rlq ·
Catbolk Church, Gam~ Tbe forum is~ or
mulated over the past year.
Grande, raises a point witb members or tbe
several planned to eommt1110n1te tbe ratiriCation
She was selected for the award
or the BiD or Rights.
panel partidpating in tbe disc~sslon, from lefl,
· on the basis of her hours, the hi~h­
Gallipolis
Munieipal
Judge
Joseph
L,
Cain,
_
Pat
est in the Central Division wh1ch
encompasses nine stales.
A certificate was presented to
Mrs. Parsons by Linda Boone,
nalional chairman of Veterans
Affairs and Rehabilitation Field
Service, and Ruby Paul; national
president, American Legion Auxiliary. It is the fJrSt such award to be
received by an Ohio member in
. By BRIAN J . REED
executing the power of attorney responsibilities will remain
many years.
Times-Sentinel Starr
becomes temporarily or permanent- unchanged in lighl of the new law; :
A liVIng ~·II takes effoct onlt ·
During Mrs. Parsons' 22 years
POMEROY • The question of ly unable to make decisions regard·
when
two licensed physicians
of membership with the Middlcpon how Ohio:'s new "tiving wiU" leg· ing treatinenL
declare
thai an individualu pemia. Auxiliary, she has accumulated islation will effect local Emergency
If an Ohioan has executed both
ncntly
unconscious
or terminally ill
over 8,000 hours of volunteer ser- Medical Services teams has been a living will and a durable power of
and
unable
to
~ommilnicale.
vice to veterans. A past president answered: it won't.
attorney, the living will "overrules"
As none of the personnel who
of the local unit, she comes from a · The new "living will" law went the power of attorney.
family of legionnairies and Ailxil- into effect in October, and authoThe new law also considers the staff emergency squads in Meip
iary members . Her father, Albert rizes adults to speeify in writing if treaunent of people who don't have County are physicians. they ~ lot
Roush, has been a legionnaire for they want life-sustaining treaunent living wills. If a patient is lerminal· qualified to carry out the wishes:of ·
39 Y'ilfS· her molher an Auxiliary used if they become terminally ill ly ill, the next-of-kin can consent to citizens who have execubld -li. . .
memberfor30years.
and are unable to communicate. having life- support equipment wills . Those volunteers remain
Field service hours are earned The law also provides for an appeal removed if that person is not obligated to treat the illness ·or
by working directly with veterans process through probate courts by responsive. Other family members, injury for which lhey were called
without pay, A requirement is the specified family members, but not however, can appeal to the local regardless or any llvlnc wiD.
Before any decision can be
recipient must have completed the by strangers or the state.
probate court
American Legion Auxiliary Field
Through the new law, Ohio
If !he patient remains comatose made regarding life support sysService Orientation Program.
became the 42nd state to recognize for a year, two doctors • including tems, patients treated by EMS
The recognized Auxitiary mem- ljving wills, allowing people to one who is an expert in comas- crews must be lransportcd by squad
ber has spent coun1less hours make the decision while they are ma y certify that the person will to a hospital. At that time, the,IWO
assisting veterans in their homes, in healthy, specifying how they wish never recover, and again, lhere is physicians required can make the"
hospitals and nursing homes. - to be treated should they be unable an appeal process for other rela- necessary decisions.
"A living .will has nothing to do
Conlinued on A-3
to respond later.
ti ves.
A durable power of attorney for
Meigs County Prosecuting wilh training or duties of EMS perhealth care has been recognized in Attorney Steven L. Story and EMS sonnel," EMS Administrator
Ohio since 1989, but !he new legis- Medical Director Douglas Hunter Robert Byer said. "These people
lation revises !he power of attorney spoke to volunteers and manage- will continue to treat eases as they
as it relates to the living will. ment )J(!rsonnel of Meigs County's always have, regardless of whether
Unlike the living will, the power of county-wide Emergency Medical that patient has a living will."
Failure to do so, Dyer said,
attorney authorizes a person to · Services program at lheir regular
could
result in legal action against
make health care decisions on in-service meeting on Tuesday, and
behalf oi- another, if the individual told them that their jobs and the EMS depanmen~

RESPONDING TO ACCIDENT - Gallla
EMT Mare Vanco, rl1bt, and paramedic Roy
Jones prepare to remove Rle M. MlkbeB,·67, of
Point Ple1151nt (not shown), from ber wm:ked
11183 Buick Century at tbe lalenedlon of S.R. 7
and tbe eastbound aeeess ramp to U.S. 35.
According tq a report from tbe Gallla·M~IIS
Poll of tbe State Highway l&gt;atrol, Mltebell
· attempted to make a left turn ooto _tbe!amp·and
•

lato tbe patli or a veblcle driven by JJrenda S.
: Cogar, 311, of Syraeuae. MlttheU '11'115 died by the
patrol for failure to yield. Both women were
tnuported to Pleuaat Valley Hoapltal by tbe
Gallla County Emeraency Medleal Service
where tbey were treated aad releaaed. Also
respondina was tbe Galllpollt .Pollee Depart·
ment.
.

By .nM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Starr
GALLIPOLIS -Treacherous
rain-slick roads and the area's
abundant deer population con·
tributed.to accidents Friday in Gal·
lia and Meigs Counties. Eight accidents were reponed by the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol.
·
Three people were treated for
minor injuries.
.
The first accident occurred at
6:50 a.m. Friday on S.R. I60 in
Gallia County. According to the
patrol report, Jackie L. Saunders,
48, of Gallipo'fis was northbound
on S.R. 160 in Springfield Town·
ship when a deer struck his 1986
Ford F-150 in the left side causing
moderate damage.

The second accident happened
at 8:45 a. m. Friday on U.S. 35 in
Gallia County and involved two
cars.
The patrol report stated that a
1990 Chevrolet Beretta, driven by
Tara N, Easton, 20, of Gallipolis,
was weslbound and stopped for
traffic. Another westbound car, a
1976 Toyota Ceijca GT driven by
Bruce E. Dearinger, 18, of Malta,
was unable to stop on die wet road
and ran into the rear of Easton's ear
causing moderate damage to both
vehicles. ·
Dearinge( was eited by the
patrol for failure to maintain
assured clear distance.
An accident at 9:40 a.m, on U.S.
33 in Meigs County resulted in
minor injury to a Middlepo!l_~th_.

.
•

According to the patrol, Jason
L. Stewan, 16, of Middlepon, wis
southbound on U.S. 33 in SalisbUty
Township and lost control of his
1982 Ford EXP on rain•slick pave·
ment The car slid off the right s~
of the road, stroclo a gas meter and
!)Ole. sli.d back '?nto the roadway
ovenunung onto tiS top.
•
Stewan WIS tranSpOrted to Yilt,
erans Memorial Hospital by tbc ' .
Meigs County Emergency Mcdic:ll
Service where he was trealed 11111 •
released for minor visible injuries: ·
Darnaac to the car was listcchi
heavy and disabling. S.tewart was
cited by the patrol for failure to 1
control and failure to wear a belt.
A two-veliicle a~cident at the
C01tlnuecl on A.J

�.... ..--......._..._

:

~ommentary
.

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and perspective_

November 24,1991

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A Division of

fpMJLTIMEDIA,INC.
825 Third Ave.,

GaWpolls, Ohio

(614) 446-2342

Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. W~GETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

'

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslstartt Publisher-Controller

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

.

...--i1'!"rERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words l2n~lletlel's are subject 10 editing and must be signed with
name, address nd telephone number. No unsigned letters will be

published. Leue s should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
. personalities.

Credit card fiasco hit
American way of life;
Playing with plastic
'~

WASHINGTON - The lasting
image of the U.S. military in the
Persian Gulf War is the grand
unveiling of its flashy , high-tech
smart bombs. But for the Iraqi soldiers who survived, the lingering
impression is a blizzard of good
old-fashioned propaganda that fell
from the sky.
The leaflets were as critical 10
the defeat of Iraq as the Tomahawl\s, Apaches and F-18s. In what
may have been the largest psychological btitzlcreig in military history, U.S. planes dumped 1,027,620
leaflets over Kuwait on Jan. 12 as a
warning that war was imminent,
and another 265 ,000 over Baghdad
eight days later after the fighting
had begun:
.
Our associate Jim Lynch has
seen a Pentagon report that details
the work of the Psychological
Operations Group, or PSYOPS ,
and its growing role in U.S. military strategy. The PYSOPS units
arrived in the Gulf in November
1990 and quiclcly teamed up with
Saudi, Egyptian and British counterparts. Their mission was simple
- exploit the low morale of the
Iraqi troops.
·
Saddam Hussein had filled his

'

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By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent .·
. . .
. WASHINGTON - Nowadays, it seems, the busmess of Amenca IS
credit, on plastic cards, and never mind whether the customers can afford
to pay the bills.
.
.
.
. .
. One senator said the family dog could qualify for a credit card m thts
market.
. After.collaborating in the credit card fiasco, President Bush and
Congress got the message: Force bank card interest rates down and a lot
qf people won't be permitted to buy on plastic any more because the
banks that issue cards will have to be more choosy about thetr credit nsks.
. Common sense suggests .that would be a good idea - but the consumer economy is slumping, the banking industry is having lrouble, and
tighter credit would be bad for business.
.
·
,. The futile exercise on cred11 cards was a diSplay of government
()itngling that contributed to a stock market plunge and ended where 1t
l!cgan, with bank card interest rates running at about 19 percent, desp1te
Bush's minicampaign to talk them down and a Senate attempt to do 1t by

.r

ing credit card mteresl rates could help perk ~p the economy. I d frankly
like 10 sec the credit card rates down," he srud. "I believe that would help
stimula!C the consumer and gel the confidence moving again. ''
That was it, but that was enough. Sen. Alphonse D'Arnato, R-N.Y.,
bidding for re-election, grabbed t!Jc issue ~d had it befo~ the Senate the
~n'exl day. His amendment, effecuvely cutung credtt card mterest rates by
iabout 5 percent in current c~umstances, was approved 74 to 19. House
.leaders said it was likely to sweep through there, too.
• But the administration opposed a legal limit; Bush was trying to jaw:bone rates down, not compel cutS. He said later it hadn't occurred to him
:that anybody was going to put the idea into legislation, although there
'have been auemvts at it ~fore , most recently in 1988.
: By the weekend, after the stock market dropped sharp! y, one Cabinet
:member was saying Bush would veto tile cc1ling and another called the
'legislation wacky.
.J
: "The market fell not because of the president's suggestion," John 11.
'Sununu the chief of staff, said in a television interview. "The market fell
:becaus~ of a proposed bad piece of legislation. There's a difference.:·
: The Washington Post said it was Sunun.u who wrote the cred1t card
•suggestion Bush delivered.
: House Speaker Thomas S. Foley, who had said it was highly likely the
:limit would be approved there, too, shifted gears and said there was no
:rush. The credit limit then was blocked when a House panel drafted bank·ing legislation.
.
. .
.
.
: What's likely now ts a comm1ss1on stud~ of credit card mterest ,rates,
•which have been identical at 7 of the I 0 b1ggest banks m the busmess.
:Maybe that would get back to the question of who is really paying the
'bills and what the high in!Crest covers.
: About a third of credit card customers seldom pay any interest because
:they pay their bills moo tilly.and don't carry credit balances. That cutS the
'effective in!Crest rate.
: So does the cost of doing business with cus10mcrs at the other end of
:tile scale, who don't or can't make their pay~ents.
.
.
; · Lobbying against the rate hmu, the banking mdustry srud that_an mtcr·est ceiling would force banks to ISsue cards only to the most credll worthy
;customers, meaning that as many as 60. million people wouldn't be .able to
'put it on plastic any more. There were about 242 mtlhon bank cred1t cards
:in circulation in 1989, according to the consumer group Bankcard Holders
;or America.
• "Credit cards do not have secured backing," said Sen. Jake Gam, R:ulllh, opposing the _intercstlimit. ',',They arc floated to most everybody,
.J
.
.and the default rate IS much h1gher.
D'Amalo, arguing for it, agreed. "Your dog ti&gt;Uld get acredll card,"
· he said . "They mail credit cards to everything and everybody that
l'(lOVCS."
•. By some estimates, credit gone bad accounts for nearly 5 percentage
Points of the card interest rate. To thai extent, at leas~ good customers
with credit balances arc paying high interest to subsidize bad ones witll
Llllpaid debts.
That works as long liS tile cycle k~ps going.

.

Berry's World

By Jack Anderson:
and Dale VanAtta .

army with reluctant warriors, and . Iraqi troops from the "Hail M~" .
the early days of poundmg m the end run of alhe~. troops behmd
·
:
air war would make them even Iraqi lines. Loudspeakers wert!"also
more reluctant. The PSYOPS peo- attached to' battle Wlits . In one case, have been showering the Cuban;
pie had to convi~ce them that it an entire Iraqi battalion surrendered troops on the island with leaflets.
was in thetr best mterests to gtve to a FU'St Cavalry helicopter patrol and pqssibly bluffing them into an.
up.
whe~ the .hcrew bhluff~dthe I~~s·by early sQrrender.
. .
!
In one "especially effective te 1 1 mg t etn t at . eat rom
PSYOPS w.ere assigned a.higher
method," according to the Pen- above" was imtninent
. .on f.orces droppcd
One Ir·a·ql· divl'st'on commander priority
~hen
tagqn, coa Iill.
·.
oo 1 by
· 1989
· · ed
· more
· d than:
leaflets on lrarji umts warmng that told the allies tllat the leaflets were 2 so diers train IQ mm war-·,
they would be bombed shortly. second only to the bombings in fare swarmed into PanamaTwhit_h:
After a·quick strafing proved that demoralizing Iraqi soldiers . In invading U. 5 · troops.
.etr
the leaflets weren't lying, a new some cases, the Iraqis were so weapons were bullhorns and loudflurry of leaflets was dropped on primed to surrender that-they ran speakers. Their job was to 'blast:
the survivorS reminding them that out of their bunkers and waved Manuel Noriega out of his sanctuit would get worse if they chose to their arm s and white nags al' the ary in the Vatican diplomatic mis- ·
fight back.
first Americans they saw. They sian. Such songs as "Nowhere to :
· Broadcast capability comple- turned themselves over en masse to Run" by Martha. and tl!e Vandellas;
mented the leaflet campaign and whomever would accept theit sur- . and "Smugglers Blues" by GleM
enabled coalition forces to deliver iender, including reconnaissance Fiey were credited ·with wearing ·
more sophisticated messages. The helicopters that were just passing down the opera-loving Noriega. ,:
broadcast artillery included Air through.
· ·
HOMELESS PROBLEM National Guard Special Operations
The Pentagon's PSYOPS have Outside every town under fire irr
EC -130 aircraft equipped with . come a long way since 1983 when Croatia is a trickle of refugees.
-ftsmitters, three ground sta- th
fi pcd · G da A Some from border towns with Scr~.
radio ....
e program 0 P m rena ·
bia told our correspondent Michael·
tions and a joint U.S.-Situdi TV classified Army- report called Viner that they had hidden in their
broadcast. The leaflets acted as "Lessons Learned from Grenada,' ' cellars for months. One mother said
'• safe conduct passes '' and the devotes five pages to the failures of she had not dared take her newborn
broadcasts told the Iraqis how to PYSOPS. The report noted that tile
, thr
.
surrender.
Army wasted 72 hours after the ini- baby out of the basement.or ec
Loudspeakers on the front lines tial invasion waiting for transporra- months. Otllers said they had been
are credited with helping to distract tion 10 Grenada when they could forced to abandon their c~ll~rs
when water from the rains rose
from their ankles 10 their knees. A
grandmother left her home with her
dead grandchild under one arm an~
the small family dog, also dead,
under the other arm. One man\ who
had lived in America for a lime,
compared the siege to something
he had !Cained in the Unitoo States::
W~tTH~R
"We were holding out as long as
we
could. It was our Alamo."
:
COLtE~tD
MINI-EDITORIAL - A fcder-·
A~T
ON
aJ judge may have tO dO Wll.at the,
Pentagon docsn 'l have the courage
to do, eliminate the ban on homo-.
WAATt; IN MY
scxuals serving in the military. A
Conner Naval Academy cadet has.
sued the military to change the pol-,
icy that he says is unconstitutional.
and based on prejudice. The Pen-:
tagon has long maintained that it
would be bad for the morale of sol-'
diers to have to work in close quar-.
ters with gays. That is petty and
shows that the brass lacks con fi :
dence in ;he· average man or
woman in uniform. They arc
already working in close quaners'
with gays. Their gay co-workerS'
simply aren' t allowed to adm1t1t.

lr-M-an-st-iel-d,-I2-5·..,1•

w. VA.
.
~

(f az. •

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,,

-

. LONDON (AP) - Roek star
Freddie Mercury acknowledged
Saturday (hal he has AIDS, and
urged everyone to join him in the
fight again~t "this terrible dis- .

ease.' '

. In a statement, the flamboyant
from the group Queen said:

~inger

Published ca«:h Sunday, 825 Third Avo.,
Oaltipolil, Ohio, by t.ho Oh io Valley

Publishing CompanyiMultimcdia, Inc: .
Socond claa• po1t.age paid at Gallipoli a,
Ohio 45631. Entered aa second clats
mailing matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Po.t

Chuck Stone :

dent admitted he was "depressed"
By
by the deCisive humiliation. (Wags
quipped that it wasn't clear together, Heritage's tax strategic~
whether Bush was la~entihg claim that the elimination of sever.
Tbomburgh's defea~ or the defeat al programs - such as the Agncut;
of the Bush administration to lure Department's Conservation
which Thornburgh was tied tighter Reserve Farm Subsidy ~rogram !
than straps on an electric chair.l · fcdeilll wa!Cr subsidies aM-honey
The Wofford DoctrinePJaced and diary subsidies - can save
Americans as No. 1 on the lisl of $262 billion over five.years. .
i
priorities. "We've got to start takTypical of conservative myopia:
mg care of our own first," Wofford the Heritage proposals don't toucH
said in his message about afford- a still bloated defense budget Ever!
able health care for all Americans.
George Bbsh conceded on Sept. 2(
Carried to its logical conclusion, that the defense budget nrust be
the Wofford Doctrine means ftrst pruned. Democrats agreed. But
taking care of Americans who are they, plan to subslitute an ax fo(
in dire need of some form of eco- scissors.
nomic relief. A capital riains tax cut
Some kind of tax relief must !xi
is like helping wealthy people to passed, however, if families ar~
'Save money .on gasoline for their going to help resuscitate the econo&lt;
yachts.
my. But tax relief unaccompanied
Recently, the Heritage 'Founda- by severe defense budget cuts will
tion, a respectable repository of only worsen the budget deficit
·
conservative cogitation, offered a
Surely, Republicans do not wani
29-page proposal, "The Tax Cut · to still be guilly of what they spen~
Budget that America Needs."
the lasl - century a~cusing
Erudile and thoughtfully put Democrats of doin~.
· ·

.. .. - ·-

NorthWt; and the 6011Jld 70s m
the South. Temper1tur~1 were:
expected to reach the 80s tn 5Wd! •
Aorida. .
.
. ;'
The htgh for the nauo_n f~~ ,
was 87 de~~ the Tanuanu Air, •
port, near Miarm.
.
;
.: ,

!

omce.

Member: The AaociaLcd Press, Inland
Daily Preea Anociation and Lhc Ohio
Newaptper Aaaociation, National
Advertiam1 RePree entalivc, Branham
Newlpiper Salea, 733 Third Avenue,
New.Yorll:, NewYor'-10017.
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SUlltiCRlPnON RATES
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One Week............ ..........,........... ......... ...90o
One Year....... .................:..... .......~..... $46.80
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No tubtcription• by mail permiltod. in
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The Sunday Ttmes·Sontincl will not be
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tDcarrien.

MAIL BUBSORIPTIONS
l•ndayOnly

Ono Yur................................ .......... t47.84
Si• Monlho .................. .................... t24.79
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t3 w..u......................................... t2t.84
26 Weeka......................... .. ...... ......... f43. t6
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28 Woeb.......................................... $4UO
52Weeb............................ ..............$88.40

.

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·.

By JOHN CHALFANT
Assol:iatedPressWrlter
COLUMBUS- President Bush
returns to the state Monday for the
first time since the 1990 gubernatorial campaign to kick-off a drive
for 'community support in achieving six education goals.
Bush will speak to school students, teachers, administrators and
local government officials at a pro~ram attempting to generate local
mvolvement in reaching goals
adopted by the president and the
nation's governors.
He a!so will stop by the Foft
Hayes Metropolitan Education
Center during a 3 1/2-hour vis:t
which, unlike his 1990 trips on
behalf of Gov. George Voinovich,

ing..---t
"This is an official trip and
there won't be any political aclivities at all," Slate Repu,blican
Chairman Ro'Jen Bennett said.
The last lime Bush was in Qhio,
p.rior to the November 1990 _eleclion, he raised more than $1 mtllion
for Voinovich during trips to
Aleron and Cieveland.
State School Superintendent
Ted Sanders said communities
statewide will be encouraged to
start a process for achieving the sill
national goals or other additional
education targets they view as
important
"We've got this schizo~hrenia
in America toda.y where m poll

'j

after poll ,.. the. general public · The six national goals ~ ·
believes the nation 's schools are thatbytheyear2000: ,
. · •;
not what they ought to be, but that
- All children wiD saart achool •
is not the way they feel about their ready 10 learn through a variety of;
own school their child attends,'' early childhood education pro,;
Sanders said.
grams
.
:•
"I think the president's visit . -'l'h(. high school Jrad!llltion:
draws attention to the challenge ·rare will incr·.:ase D atl:..1St90 peril
that we face, calls attention to the cent.
:
goals, and 'calls attentiOn to th~ fact
- ·Students will dcmonstrato :
that this is a community issue,'' he competelll:)' •.n Engli:dl: m'llhc:mll~ •
said.
.
.
ics, scuien ce, i•is~"'l an_d gt,ographfii~ ~
A statewide committee appomt- .8. students .wt1I ;,e lfStm,
cd by Voinovich to oversee the the world in science and malhemat::
campaign will have a brief private ics achievement
;;
reception with Bush. The group
- Every adult will be literate. •j
includes corporate, education and
-Every school will be free o( ,
government officials, along with drugs and violence, offering a dis•.
students.
cjplined
. environment conducive to""·
.
leammg.
.

cost-saving eff0 rts hav-e;
by~;ow:~~:.~:~eg,i:u~~J} been p-roposed .before
~
i-nvolve-nopo-litical-fundr_··

;-.

.Rock star Mercury has AIDS

w;

~·~

F't Cloudy Cloudy

POINT PLEASANT- DeWitt ·· LONG BOT1'0M - Carl J.
Browning, 97, Point Pleasant, died Offutt 88 of Bald KnobFridayin Pleasant Valley Hospital Stiversville Road, Long Bottom,
foUowmgabnefillness: . .
died Saturday, Nov. 23, 1991, at
Born Nov. 5, 1894, son of the ·• the Holzer Medical Center in Gallate S~uel S. and Roxie.B. Hicks Iipolis. '
. .
Brownmg, he was a rel!red purBorn Dec. 25, 1902, in Minoachasing agent for the Lorado Coal rah , w. Va., the son of the late
Mining Co .. He was a r_nember of George and Mary Ann Jarvis Offut,
St. Paul Umted Methodist Church, he is survived by his wife Mary
and Masonic Lodge Minturn Lodge Offut
No, 19, AF &amp;AM.
In addition to his wife, he is stir. He was preceded in d~ by his vived by a daughter, Op3J Morris
wtfe, ~na Ashley Browrung.
of Racine; two sons, Opha of
S~rvtvmg are a daughter, ~· Pomeroy and George of Cincinnati;
Lewts (Gretta) Allen of Pomt and three grandchildren, Opal
Pleasant; two sons, Donald Brown- Marie Grueser of Pomeroy Janet
ing and David Browning, both of Morris of Racine and Carl Offut of
Aorida; and four grandchildren and Dixon, Mo.
'
four great-~dehlldren.
Also surviving are two brothers,
Serv1ces wlll _be Tuesday at 11 Hayes and Cecil, both of Cama.m. m the Wilcoxen Funeral bridge.
·
Home, w1th the Rev. Jusun Moran
He was preceded in death by a
officiating. Burial wiD be in Kirk- brotller William
land Memorial Gardens. Friends
Ser~ices wili be held Tuesday
may call at the funeral home Mon- . II a.m. at the Ewing Funeral Home
day from 7-9 p.m.
in Pomeroy with the Rev. Roland
Wildman officiating. Burial will be
in the River View Cemetery in
Middlepon.
.
.
Richard H. Clark
Friends
may
call
Monday
from
. .
2-4
p.m.
and
7-9
p.m.
at
the
funeral
SWITZERLAND, Fla.
Richard Herman Clark, 62, of home.
Switzerland, Fla., died Saturday,
Charley Smith
Nov. 23, 1991.
.
' He wa~ born June 10, 1929 in
Galli a County, son of I he late · POMEROY - Charley D. Smith,
James Chester and Gladys Allmon Route 143, Pomeroy, died at his
residence Saturday, Nov. 23, 1991.
Clark.
He was"bom the son of the late
Survivors include his wife ,
William
D. and Emma Wingett
Ernestine Lauder Oarlc of Aorida;
Smith.
one daughter, Debbie Bowden of
He was an assistant supervisor
Florida; four sisters, Dorothy Jean
to
the county engineer, a member
Clark Caple of Delaware, Ohio,
·of
the Bunkerhill Church, a World
Cynthia Ann Clark Vangundy of
War
II Army veteran, and a 48Bellefontaine, Frances Marie Clark
Houck and Josephine Clark Rice, year member o_f the Drew Webster
both of Gallipohs; three brothers, American Leg1on and Republican
George W. Clarlc of Point Pleasant, party.
· 1ude h'ts w1
. ·r
Survivors me
e,
W.Va., James A. Clark of Athens, Naomi
Johnson
Smith;
two
daughand Arthur Allmon Clark of South ters, Mrs. Doyle (Jan Ann) Knapp
Bloomingfield; and one grand- of Langesville, and Mrs. Danny
daughter, Ashley Lynn Bowden.
He was preceded in death by (Naomi Joe) Worley of Damels,
nine $!andchildren; three
one sister, Alice June Clark W.Va.;
great-grandchtldren;
two brothers,
Arrowood.
Roy
and
Eugene
Smith,
both of
Funeral services are under the
Pomeroy
;
and
two
sisters,
Mae
direction of the Glidden Funeral
Taylor
of
Texas,
and
Kathryn
Home, Hemdrick, Aa.
McGhee of Columbus.

Fred W. CroW:

·'

Sunny

, Carl J. Offutt

DeWitt Browning

CUSPS 525-800)

'

Atlantic and southell!Nciw England/
seaboards.
.
Highs Saturdaywere were in the.
teen~ and the 20s in the P~s; the .
30s m_the Rocky Mo~ntam sta\CS
and Midwest; ~e 40s m the Northwest and Matne; the 50s m the

•-

Area•;t;;;~s-will

-VisA""""'_
· redPro-S!Grapl'i'C I N e r -

''With Gor as oui Fai.her, nothing else really mailers. Anything
else is only a temporary testing, approximately two weeks in Marc6
which becomes an opportunity to which seems to be dead time. To
strengthen us for life, and to find explain this fuithcr, the writer is a
the true Souree. And in all thing we baseball and football nut but docs
are able to give thanks and praise ·not like basketball. Sports wis~
to God."
there is nothing enjoyable for me
The w~itcr also shares the same during this period of time. TV is
belief as Rev . Wildman do cs in also lousy this time of the year.
connectidn with the various seaA lot of my friends go to Plorid3
sons. I thoroughly enjoy the beauty and points south during the wintet
of the trees, landscape and scenery season. Their absence makes this
that arc present in the fall of the win!Cr season a bit harder to digest
gear. However, in the back of my I have the resources to follow th~
mind there is always the cold win- crowd but decline to do so. After
ter approaching. Winter to me is about three weeks in Florida , I
the depressed time of the year since would go stark raving mad . I!
the flowers and ·vegetation ha ve would be much harder for me to be
died . Then there is the cold and in a strange habitat with three
snow which follows. Fortunately, months idle time.
the winters have been less severe in
I really feel sony for those who
the past two or three years with emigrate to F.lorida just because the
v ~ ry little snow. .
Jones do. This status symbol hype
For some strange reason I am is disgusting to the writer. Perhaps,
beginning to feel a dislike of the Rupe, I do not Know what I ar~~
Christmas season, especially the missing, but I will take M~ig s and
commercialization. There are too Gallia County living anytime over
many depressed people who arc an extended three months' incaralone with no friends or family. ceration in the Southland watching
Christmas also provides too much the sea gulls and sharks. Enough
for too few . The Christmas season saig, Rupe.
brings me a great deal of sadness
.l
Carry on.
especially when I think of all those
(Long-time Attorney 11red
I have known well that arc no
Crow
is a contributor of column ~
longer with us. The excitement that
I used to have is missin g. Christ- for the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
mas will no longer be the same Readers wishing to applaud, crit-'
icize or comment on any subjecl
without Ted Reed. '
(except
politics and religion) are
There is also quite a lull existing
encouraged
to write lo Mr. Crow
from the last two weeks in January,
in
care
of
this
newspa~t;,.)
·
the entire month of February and

''

Ice

. ,SirpWflfS T-sfomls ' Rain Flurries Snow

•

"How sbout this/In Palm BIIBch, Will K. Smith

Th~ storm system· that lias
drenched the Nonheast for the past
few days began heading toward
northein Maine.
·
Forecasters called for fog !Did
low clouds over the Appalachll!"s
and sunny skies along the m•d-

President Bush to visit Ohio for ·kick-off drive '.

.. ...
. ..

.. . ..

To cut taxes, trim Pentagon budget

hss hsd an 'ALAN ALDA IMPLANT!'".

PA.

By The AIIOCiated Pi'~ ~- Rain feU over the Northeast Satutday and snow feU over the Northem Plains and Great Lakes region.
Heavy snow was forecast for
later in the day in eastern Iowa,
Wi~consin and Michigan's upper
penms$.

•

•

IND.

Discussing autumn and winter seaso.ps ·

And things .will get worse, George
Bush'S'"what-me-worry" serenity
notwithstanding.
He knows this. Otherwise, he
would not have taken off his Gen.
Custer uniform and agreed to sign
the Democrat-sponsored extra benefits bill for I. 7 million unemployed workers.
If George Bush were 10 really
have his patrician way,the only tax
cut he would implement would be
for capital gains. If he is forced to
malee budge·t cuts, he will "dis"
those groups ,who need government
intervention the most by proposing
cuts that decimate social welfare
programs. I
·
Perhaps li did n01 hear the one
mes588e that managed to stagger
oui of the recent elections- a burgeonin$ awareness in America for
embracmg the Wofford Doctrine.
In case you ilave already forgotten the name, Harris Wofford, DPa. , won re-election to-the U.S.
Senate by defeating former Attorney General Dick Thornburgh, a
man so close to Bush that the presi-

sunday nme• Sentinel Page A3

OH-Polnt Pleaunt, WV

I;

PLATE.

· Like Mark Twain's weather,
e'verybody talks about tax cuts, but
nobody docs anything about thern
- at least, anything that wm satisfy everybody.
· As late as the latter part of October, Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, DIll., chairman of the Ho~se _Ways
and Means Committee, sa1d that he
did not expect a lax bill to be enact. ed this year.
What. about some kind of jobs
creation bill? Probably not Repub' licans have at ways had a blind.spot
when it comes to the federal government's active intervention to
solve economic problems: Culling
taxes is preferable 10 creating jobs.
Producing tanks is more important
than saving babies.
And neither one will help a
stressed-out economy.
But some kind of pump priming
is necessary to pull the economy
out of its recession.
Middle-income families are
being dangerously squeezed. Industries are layi.ng off ~opl~ faster
than a shooung star.s traJectory.

•

. . ..

~

IVUATs
MYPlATEOR

waves reach great heights and
crash thunderously agatnsl the
shore and to hear.thc. crackle of
lightening and feel the force of the
winds is inspiring.
"Perhaps I should f~l small and
terrified. Certainly the forces are
much $fealer than me and I could
be thetr helpless victim. But they
remind me of the greatness and the
power of Almighty God. And He is
my heavenly Father. True, I might
at some time be caught in a•storm
that would hurt me. But Go4 is my
refuge and my strength.
"There have been times when ·I
have been caught out on Lake Erie
when a storm arose. I have come
back to shore in a lillie row boat
with the waves six feet, and more.
Perhaps I didn't have enough sense
to be afraid. But it was fun to ride
the rollers and to test my skills
against nature.
·
"But, of course, the only way to
ride out a storm is to go with the
waves. You must use them or they
will swamp your lillie boat. But
when you accept their strength,
allow them to lift you ':"hen they
will, but keep your goal m mmd, tt
becomes only an interesting diversion on your way nome.
"Isn 'I that the way it is with
life? We enjoy the beauty and the
.. good times. But perhaps we apprec iate them most when .we have
gone through the storms of life.
And even the stonns can be exhilarating testing us they reveal-metal
that perhaps we had no known and
help us to put life in perspective.

"""'

Cold front threatens heavy snow in Great Lakes are~.

j

MORE

POMEROY - I came across an
article written by Rev. Roland
Wildman which appeared in the
Trinity Times dated October, 1991,
Issue Ten. The article, describing
the autumn and winter seasons, is
so weU written that the writer fell
that he should pass the message
along to the readers of this column.
"For many of us, this is the
greatest time of the year. The days
are warm but not hot, and the
nights arc cool. There is a crispness
in tile air and all of nature seems to
put on a show of beauty. Each
scene seems to be more beautiful
than the last one. All around us is
the signature of God's love.
•· "The only problem with autumn
is that we realize what is to follow.
And for many of us, winter is our
least favorite season . But what
would life be like without it? We
had-the experience of living in the
So uth where it rarely got below
freezing. We discovered that we
really missed the cold and, yes,
even the s~ow .
"I know of a man who retired to
the Caribbean where it has never
gotten below 66 or above 93
degrees. He had retired there in
order to enjoy the constant good
weather. Except for an occasional
hurricane, it is always great. And
he reported that the weather was so
boring that he could hardly stand it.
"Personally, I find a thunder
storm invigorating. It is great to
watch a storm approach over a
body ·of water - either one of the
great lakes or the ocean. To see the

Pomeroy-Middleport~alllpolle,

.

Accu- Weathe.-

I'M NoT SURE
To BE

~~l began Nov. 12, w~en Bush said in a fund-raising speec~.l\'at reduc-

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W0~athu
Sunda;y, J'l!oy. 24

&lt;

Psychological warra·re key to Gulf victory

I

OHIO

Pag~.....A2j

• 1

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November 24,'i 991 j
'

I

___···- ---· .... "'--- ......... ___._._,........,._.._ ....

"Following lhe enormous conjeclure in the press over the lasl two
weeks, I wish to confirm that I
have been tested HIV positive and
ha'e AJDS.
"I felt it correct to keep this
information private to date in order
to protect the privacy of those
around me.
"Howeter, the lime has now
come for my friends and fans
around the world to know the truth
and I hope that everyone. will join
with me, my doctors and all those
worldwide in the fight against this
terrible disease."
His spokeswoman, Roxy
Meade, said Mercury, 45, was in
Britain and was not hospitalized.
She refused to discuss the singer's
health.
"He just wanted to let people
know that he has the disease, and
that's as far as it goes," M.ead
said.
~
....... ""' ........-... .
He has lived a reclusive existence at his west London home in
recent montlls, and the disease that
attaCks the iinmune system has left
him looking frail and gaunt.
·

Sargent; and two qrothers, BiUie
and Harley Smith. - COLUMBUS, -Ohlo(AP) -=
Funeral services will be con- First-term Gov. George Voinovich
ducted I I a.m. Monday at the followed a trail blazed by ·~is preEwing Funeral Home, with .Rev. decessors in asking business execuEugene Underwood officiating. lives to recommend ways state
Burial will be in Carlton Cemetery. government could operate more
Frjends may call at the funeral efficiently.
home on Sunday from 2-4 Jllld 7-9.
The response from his OperaDora Stanley
tions Improvement Task Foree was
report with 1,592 suggestions that
GALLIPOLIS _ Dora Stanley, acould
save $43 I million.
89, 733 First Ave., Gallipolis, died
Don't count on the savings any
Saturday in Oak Hill Community time soon.
Medical Center.
Government spending will conBorn March · 8, 1902 in tinue to increase rather than
Pomeroy, she was a homemaker decrease whether the report is
and a member of the Pomeroy First implemented or gathers dust on a
Baptist Church. ·
shelf.
She was preceded in death by
The government neither grew
her stepfather, Elmer Davis; her smaller nor spent less after any of
mother, Elizabeth Davis; her hus- the previous efforts at streamlinmg.
band, Lewis E. Stanley, on May
'When former Republican Gov.
19,1988; and by two sisters.
James A. Rhodes moved into the
Surviving are a daughter, Mar- Statehouse in 1963, the Little
garet Ehman of Gallipolis; a sorl, Hoover Commission he appointed
Charles L. Stanley of Mansfield; to reorganize government produced
two granddau$hters, Margi Wheel- ideas for saving $60 million.
er of GaUipohs, and Cindy ScherThe group's name wa.s taken
rod of Columbus; and a grandson, from two federal comm 1ss 1ons,
Chuckie Stanley of Columbus.
both headed by President Hoover,
Services will be Tuesday at that recommended ways of improv10:30 a.m. in the Pomeroy First ing the federal government
Baptist Church, with the Rev .. 1 When Rhodes returned to office
Robert Kuhn o(ficiating. Burial in 1975, he appointed a second
wiD be in ·Beech Grove Cemetery, state-level panel of business leaders
Pomeroy. Friends may call at the to conduct another study.
Willis Funeral Home from &amp;-9 p.m.
The Jesson was not wasted on
Mo;~ybocty wiD lie in state in the
church one hour prior to the 'service.
Soulb-Central Ohio
Sunday, cloudy with a chance of
flurries. Brisk winds. Nearly steady
POTSDAM, Germany (AP) temperatures around 35. Chance of
Russia's president, Boris Yeltsin, snow 40 percent
visited eastern Germany on SaturExtended rorecast:
day and· sought to build_econlll!lic
Monday through Wedl)esday:
ties between the two regmns trymg ·
Chance of snow Monday. Fair
to overcome Communist legacies.
and c)ry on Tuesday ane Wednes"We face the same sickness and day. H1ghs wlll be in the 30s Mondifficulties because we're going day and Tuesday: Lows will be,in
from one system to another," the the 20s. Highs wtll be m the mtdRussian Federation president said 40s Wednesdy, lows near 30.
in Potsdam, once part of the former
Soviet sateUite of East Germany.
On the f~al day of his three-day
trip here, Yelstin toured Cecilienhof Palace, a rococo, English-style
villa where Harry Truman, Josef
CARPENTER - The board of
Stalin and Winston Churchill held trustees for Columbia Township
the historic 1945 Potsdam Confer- will hold a special meeting on
"ence that led to the post-war divi- Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the ftre stauon
sion of Germany.
instead of Dec . 2 as regularly
Yeltsin was treated during the scheduled.
visit like a foreign head of state and .
signed cooperation agreements
witlt the German government and
with Daimler-Benz, Germany's
biggestconglomera!C.
CLEVELAND - (AP) Friday's
Ohio' lottery numbers:
Pick3: 540.
Pick 4: 9197.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Cards:
K-H; 2-C;A-D;IO-S.
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS - Elizabeth L. Hayes, Chester; Julie A.
Corcoran, Rutland. 7
FRIDAY DISCHARGES SPRING VAllfY CINEMA
. George Genheimer and Emma
446 4574
,' : ..
Chapman.

Weather

former Dcm&lt;lcrati~ Gov:--Richard
Celeste, who authorized a similar
examination of government operalions after taking office in 1983.
Now comes Voinovich, who
made creatio~ of the_ latest task
foree part of_his ~patgn ..last year
as he promtsed to go tnt~ .t~e
bowels of state government m
conductingd~ comprehensive management au tl.
.
.
Some recomm~ndauons •.n the
report that was deh~ered to hun on
Tuesday began ruMI_ng mto trouble
wtthm hours~~ ther.r. release, and
more opposlllon surfaced by
week's end. .
..
.A suggesuon to aiJ?hsh or lower
umon-level wages p31d to ~orkcrs
on state construction proJeCts to
save $92 million drew predictable
fire from the _Ohio State Buil~ing
and Construeuon Trades Councal.
Ohio Consu~ers' Counsel
William S~ratley objected to a ~ommendauon that state public utility regulators be allowed to discuss
rate cases in private before deci~­
ing them. Currently, the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio is
subject to the state's law requiring
public bodies to hold meetings
open to the public.

State Sen. Eugene Watts, R·
Columbus, and law enforcement
groups urged Voinovicb to reject a
suggestion to save money by
switching to a single license plate
system.
. . ·•
Voinovich anticipated ·· the·
repon 's potential for controversy.
and acknowledged that some of the
ideas may be sera~. But he pre:
dieted a great majority would be .
implemented.
.'
. Legislative leaders bave 11ee11 it
all before, of course, House Speak.;
er Vern Riffe, D-Whee1ersburg,'
and Senate President Stanley
Aronoff, ~-Cincinnati, know~
of the impOrtant changes depend 01!
legislative approval.
~
Riffe who said the Hou~
would uke close took at the
report, said he had heard som6
complaints that the tas1c force haif
not sought comment from all pat•
ties involved.

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�Pomeroy-Middleport-GaiiiPQIIs, OH-Polnl PI!IB~nt, WV

CSX...

FRIDAY MORNING ACCIDENT • Jason
Stewart and Jason Hall were transported by the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad ~~ Veterans Memo·
rial Hospital after lhe car they were driving in
slid on wei pavement and overturned. The acci-

den I occurred Friday morning on Route 33 and ·
Ibis was ltie scene shortly after the two were
removed from lhe vehicle. (Times-Sentinel photo
by Julie E. DiUon.)

Wet roads cause... _c_on_ti_nu_ed_rro_m_A_-1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
intersection of S.R. 7 and the eaSt· in the intersection of S.R. 124 and Ford F-150 driven by James W.
Belville, 41, of Gallipolis, was
bound ramp of U.S. 35 in Gallipo- C.R. 5 in Meigs County.
li~ Townsh1p at 10:05 a.m. resulted .
According to the patrol report, nonhbound.on S.R. 7 and failed to
in two people being treated for Mary E. Ro"sh, 42, of Pomeroy, stop for another vehicle, driven by
minor injuries.
pulled onto S.R. 124 from C.R. 5 Bradley S. Smith, 26, of Gallipolis,
: The patrol report states that into the path of a westbound vehi· that was stopped waiting. to turn
~enda S. Cogar, 39, of Syracuse,
cle driven by James A. McDonald, left onto S.R. 218.
Damage to Smith's 1988 GMC
w.as southbound on S.R. 7 when a 26, of Rutland. Roush 's 1979
n9rthbound vehicle driven by Rae Chevrolet C·IO struck McDonald's 1500 was listed as heavy. Belville
!(., Mitchell, 67, of Point Pleasant
1984 Ford Escon on the left side, was cited by the patrol for failure
aftempted to make a left tum onto spinning McDonald's car around to maintain assured clear distance.
A Middleport man was cited
t ~e on-ramp and pulled into the
and off the right side of the road.
following
a t~-vehicle wreck on
pickup
received
light
Roush's
path of Cogar's vehicle causing a
S.R.
554
in
Lneshire Township
damage while McDonald's car
collision.
5:26p.m.
Friday.
' : Cogar and Mitchell were trans· ~ceived heavy and disabling dam·
According to a patrol report,
age.
~ned to Pleasant VaHey Hospital
Michael
K. Harrison, 34, of Mid.
Roush was cited for failure to
were they were treated for minor
dleport,
was
eastbound on S.R. 554
yield and McDoncld was cited for
il}juries and released.
in a 1986 Nissan Hardbody pickup
Damage to Cogar' s 1981 Ply- no operators license.
and
was unable to slow for an east·
A
truck
belonging
to
the
GaUia
n!outh Trail Duster, and Mitchell's
bound
1979 Mercury Zephyr, driv·
County
Commissioners
received
1983 Buick Century, was listed as
en
by
Charles
L. Weimann, 52, of
heavy,
disabling
damage
in
a
twoheavy and disabling.
Cheshire,
making
a left turn onto
truck
accident
at
2:20
p.m.
Friday
: Mitchell was cited by the patrol
T.R.
643.
Harrison
attempted to
at
the
intersection
of
S.R.
218
and
fc;&gt;r failure to yield when turning
pass
Weimann's
car
on
the left and
S
.R.
7
in
Gallipolis
Township.
·
left .
struck
Weimann's
car
in
the left·
The patrol report indicated that
• Two people were cited after a
two-vehicle accident at 1:00 p.m. the commissioners' truck, a 1984 rear.
•
[lamage to both vehicles was
li!ted as heavy and disabling. Har·
rison was cited by the pauol for
failure to maintain assured clear
distance and driving under the
influence.
A Tuppers Plains man's 1983
Dodge 150 pickup received moder·
ate damage in a deer-vehicle accident at 10:15 p.m. Friday.
,
A patrol repon sTated Jeffrey M.
Burke, 27, was nonhbound on S.R.
7 and struck and killed a deer that
was crossing the road. The deer_
was removed by the Ohio Dcpanment of Transponation.

~·No;;ve;m;~~r~~';;'~1~;-~~-~&amp;============~~==~==~· ~p:om~e~r~oy~-;M:·~Id:dl~epo~rt~~;
·~!l~lpo~II·~·~OH~.;;P:ol~n~t·P~I=•:•:n~t~,WV~==~========~s~u~nd~a~y~n~m~e~s~Se:n~t~lnM~~h~~!e~A5~-

November

Continued from A·l
•
"
~,
exte!'ds_.from
- ; ,"We
didn't have anything " "Gallia County js on the thresh·
Galh~hs, K~rr, Bidwell, Vmton concrete to offer them (CSX). We old of a new era of economic ~
and on mto_ Vm~n County,
had no cus~mcrs," said _Fo~ler. growth," _Fowler,~s lettet pointed :
The nOIJficauon also stated that "We looked mto the poss1bibty of ouL "It's 1mponant we keep all of )
tl_le Interstate Commer:ce Comm1s- using the line for hiking b'llils, and our assets intact.so that our guns 1
SIOn (ICC) h~s established p~e- with the bypass around Eastern are fully loaded when opponunity ~
dures by wh1ch mterested parties Avenue, we had hoped to havJ the calls." .
'
can protest !"e ~onn:'ent, make ·right-of-way from Kanaiiga tlfSec·
One possibility·Gallia County
offers of fmanc1al as~1stance to ond Avenue," he added.
would have in a rail system would :
purchase the track ~d nght-of-way
Efforts to save the line were be a shon:haul rail line which is a .;
for US;tl as a recreabonal.traJ.l.
mad~ by !!live~ officials including privately owned tine.
:•
W1~ fu~ure econom1c develop· Ga!hpohs C1ty Manager G!enn
According to Fowter, the only
ment 1~ m1n~, Jack ~owler, CIC s_m1th ~d Gall18 CouQty Engmeer rail line left in Gallia County is
execuuve v1c.e pres1de~t, ma_de J1m Baud.
•
Conrail from Charleston, W.Va.,
~ffons t~ coni!Jiue the rml sen:1ce
"Mr. Baird submitted a letter which comes acrosS ·the Ohio river
m Galha County by contacung expressing Gallia County's need through the north end Qf the counCSX.
,
for a rail system," said Fowler. ty and onto Columbus.
"I wrote C~X an~ asked them "Glen~ (Smith) also submitt!'d a
'A time has no( yet been deter·
~ot to do anythl_l)g WithOut conTac~- l~tter m an effon to· purchase the mined when officials will begin
mg the CIC, city or county offl· lme,"
·
pulling up the tracks
cials," said Fowler. "I stated that
·
we would like the opportunily to
purchase the line."
Despite Fowler's and other city
and county officials' attempts 10
save the line, time ran out.
.,''

Semce responded to eight calls for assistance on Friday and early
Saturday mommg.
·
At ~:48 a:m. th~ POmeroy IJIIit went to Route 33 on a motor vehi·
cle acctdent m wh1ch Jason Stewan and Jason HaU were transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospil,al.
,., At II :20 am. the Rutland unit was called to Route 124 for Julie
1.,0rcoran who was taken to Veterans.
The Middlepon Fire Department responded to a-motor vehicle
accident on Route 124 at 12:52 p.m. Mary Roush was b'eated but
not transponcd.
.
· ··
·
.
The Pomeroy unit,-at 10:16 p.m., wentto Route 143 for Charley
Smith who refused trealrnent and transpon,
·
On Saturday at 12:01 am.the Pomeroy unit was calloo to Baker
Road for David Pratt who was ~n to Veterans.
.
At I :.12 a.m. the Middlepon Fire Deparuneni responded to an
electrical ftre at the Ray Lemley residence.
The Middleport unit at 2:57 a.m. went to Route 7 on a motor
vehicle accident in which Matt Smith and Anthony Smith were
b'eatcd but not transponcd.
.
.
At6:22 a.m. the Pomeroy unit was again called to Route 143 for
Charley Smith who was treated but not transponed.

Middleport...

Deputies probe B.&amp; E

Kan.auga.t~r~ugh

l·

ju~t

LOC31

1

Squads have 8 runs

· Continued from A-1
Duties have included everything
from taking veterans for medical
treaunent to writing letters and grocery shopping.
Mrs. Parsons has been especially active with veterans in nursing
homes. Currently there are 15 ip
Arcadia Nursing Home at
Coolville, five at Overbrook, and
eight at the Pomeroy Health Care
and Rehabilitation Center who
receive service through the Middlepen Auxiliary unit.
Last fall Mrs. Parsons headed up
a program of remembran~es for
those serving in Operation Desen
Storm. Chrislrnas boxes were pre·
pared by the Auxiliary and mailed
to more than a hundred area servicemen and members corresponded with them during. the full tour of
duty in Saudia Arabia.

· 3-BOUR

'

POMEROY • Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Depanment investigated a breaking and entering that occurred outside of
Reedsville on Friday evening between ·6:3() and 9 p.m. at the Ron
Epling residence.
.
.·
According to lhe' repon, unknown subjects kicked open the front
door. The only item reponed missing was a video cassette recorder.
On Friday evening at7:10 p.m.·deputies investigated an accident
on Route 248.
·
According to the report, Troy C. Sigman, Letart, W:va., was
eastbound on Route ) .48 and when _he Jitaned into a right curve he
reportedly saw a deer in the roadway. He reporie4that he swerved
to .miss the deer and his vehicle went off the roadway on the left
stnkmg a tree and embankment. ~Heavy damage ·was~Jistcd to the
1991 Chevrolet. No injuries were rejJoned.

.DIYIILE
THURSDA'( NOVEMBER 28

4·7 P.M.
.,·'

20%.::!:
STOREWIDE SAVINGS

Seren_itj House receives grant

•FREE CHRISTMAS GIFT WRAPPING
•lAYAWAYS WELCOME
.
•OPEN EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT
nLB:OO P.M.

GALLIPOLIS- Serenity House, a shelter for vi~tims of do_m.estic violence and homeless women and children, will be rece1vmg
$26,208 in funding under the State VictimS. Assistance Aci and the
Federal Victims of Crime Act.
.
The acts both enacted in 1984, distribute funds coUectcd from
penalties paJd by convicted criminals and are aUocated yearly by the
Attorney General.
. .
.
.
Serenity House serves victims of domesuc v1olen~e m Galha,
Meigs and Jackson Counties and can he reached by callmg CRISIS·
LINE toll-free at 446-5554 (in Gallia County) or 1-800·252-5554
(Meigs and Jackson Counties).

• Except Carllartt

PASSPORT
AID I.D.
PHOTOS
.

RtadLI•

·Grand jury indicis Oak Hill woman

MIDDLEPORT

5 MIN TIS

JACKSON - A Jackson County grand jury returned an .indict·
ment Thursday against Carrie C. Wong, the Oak Hill woman
accused of wounding a police officer during an October incident at
her State Route 93 residence.

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 SECOND lYE.
GILLIPOUS, OH.

i~dic!ment

Specifics of lhe
were not immediately available frOm
Prosecutor Mark Ochsenbein OJI Friday; The Wong case was the
only item considered by the iurY.·
•
.·
The jury heard testimony from 25 witnesses during the day-long
scssmn, mostly from police officers and sheriffs deputies present at
the sccneofthestandoff.
·
.
. Wong, 43, wife of Oak Hill Community Melli~ Center physicmn Henry Wong, has been charged in the wounding of Oak Hill
police officer Teny Snyder, who respond!'(! to a call to the Wong
residence and was injured when wong reponedly fired a shotgun
blast at Snyder's cruiser.
·
Snyder has since been re.leased from the hospital and may rejoin
the village police fore~ within ayear.

.

·~MEROY · Units of the Meigs County Eme;gency Medical

BIG

briefs·- - - - - - - - . Minorities. absent from

Four a"e$ted overnight
I

GALLIPOLIS - Four people were taken into custody recently
at the GaUia &lt;;:ounty Jail.
·
Arrested were: James W. Bias, 37, of Gallipolis, failure to
appear; Tammy A. Plants, 29, of Bidwell, welfare fraud; Michael
W. Holder II, 18, of Gallipolis, bench warrant; Theresa Diane
Queen, 31, of GaUipolis, disorderly after warning.
Mata_Yic.to~. age unreponcd, of Huber Heigh!J, was cited by
the GaU1pohs Police Depanment for left of center, Improper trans·
pon of a firearm and driving under the influence.

'

....

"'""'-

DO&gt;NA.TI:NG TO D.A.R.E. - G. Richard Brown, manager or
Unity Savings and Loan, is shown here presenting a donation to Gal·
lipolis Police Department patrolman and D.A.R.E. (Drug Abuse
~esistance Education) officer Wayne Sweeney. The donations will be
used to provide lncenllve and reward items ror children attending the
Gallipolis City School System where the D.A,R.E. program will be
ipstrucled for the nrsl l.lme in January. Sweeney will be asking for
donations for the GaiUpolis City Schools D.A.R.E. program. Sweeney
said thai no phone solicitations wUI be made for the benent or the city
Q.A.R.E. program. Gallia County currently has two separate
D.A.R.E. programs- one benefiting city schools and lhe oilier bene·
f'iting county schools.

,.

Social service agency to
operate in shopping mall

I

. CINCINNATI (AP) - An
ai!ency that serves poor and homeless people will open a store in a
posh suburban shopping mall Monday to collect [ood, clothing and
personal-care items.
Mall developer Towne Properties donated a vacant, 200-square·
foot store at the Kenwood Towne
Centre mall to the St. John Social
Service Agency, a downtown mission which is pan of the Franciscan
ftealth System of Cincinnati Inc.
' St. John will accept donations at
the store and distribute information
about the agency, spokesman Larry
Pauly said.
', "This is a tremendous opponuriity to' collect items for the needy,
to establish an awareness of the
agency among the public at large,
and to recruit volunteers for the
a~ency," Pauly said.

®

Syria 'stalls on peace talks;
split with Jordan widens

.·
;

The store will be called "The

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) Syria is staUing on accepting a U.S.
invitation to attend peace talks in
Washington because it ftrst wants
Israel to agree to discuss surrender·
ing war-won Arab land, Arab
diplomatic sources said Saturday.
Amid increased Arab wrangling
over the peace process, Syria
appeared to be toughening its stand
that without negotiations on territo·
ry, the talks are futile.
So far, only Jordan has said it
will attend the one-on-one talks
between Israel and its Arab foes ,
scheduled to stan Dec. 4 in Wash·
ington.
The Palestinians have not
responded, bot prospects for their
auendance look favorable. "As far
as we are concerned the chances
are very good, provided there is a
.seriousness of intent on the side of
all the parties involved," said
Hanan Ashrawi, an adviser to the
Palestinian negotiating team and its
spokeswoman at the fust round of
talks in Madrid.
Israel was also expected to
respond favorably, although it has
made clear its displeasure over the
Washington venue. Prime Minister
Yitzhak Shamir said after a meet·
ing with President Bush on Friday
. that there would be more discus·
sions on the site. ·
.
•• Lebanon also has not responded.
:But since it is allied with Syria, it is

Miracle Center." It wiU 'open with
a formal ceremony Monday and is
to remain open until Dec. 31.
"This isn't costing the agency
one penny," Pauly said. "Towne
Properties is reaDy being wonderful
about this."

BANKRUPTCY
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992·6417
In Pomeroy With

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13. Point
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8. Check Nose Cone .
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9. Check Mount
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'4. Reseal Fittings
11-. Check Surge Suppressor
', 5, Check Wiring
12. Check LNB
:6. Check Pole
13. Check Polarotor
Check System Alignment

;7.•

We've just made
account balan\B,
banking that much easier
transferring funds, paying
for jubilee card holdersbills. u:sarnor1g more
whether you live nearby,
than 1,000 jubilee'
work nearby, or just .
machires-=-:anchhe Plus
..·/
happen to ~ passing by.
System®retwork of
349 Third Avenue
Our rewest·Jubilee
58,000 mac:hires
Gallipolis, Ohio
banking machire lets you
worldwide.
ger to your money when you reed it mast.
And it's ore more W'irj to show how we
And handle a lot of other banking
care about your banking convenience. So stop
·l:Jusiress-making deposits, checking your
by-· anytime.

.'

~--

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. ~~·c

--

-

likely to follow the lead set by
Damascus.
Lebanon' s for eign minister,
Fares Bweiz, said Saturday that
Lebanon had received the U.S .
invitation and would respond soon.
The Amencans have set Nov. 25 as
the deadline for accepting the invitations.
The hard line taken by Syria
appeared to be aimed at squeezing
the Americans to pressure Israel
into softening its position. It also
came amid indications that efforts
by Damascus-to for$e a common
Arab SWid were commg undone.
The sources, spealcing on condilion of anonymity, said the Syrians.
and the Palestinians are now
expected til boycott a planned
meeting in Amman with the Jordanians in fresh attempt to coordinate their positions at the talks.
, This i ~ bcc~use Dama~us was
d1S8ppomted by Jordan s IIDmediate acceptance of the u.s. inviTation without consulting Syria and
the Palestinians. The Syrians also
fear Jordan might be tempted .to
stnke a-s!lparate peace ueaty w1th
Israel.
.
.
. .
,The Synans y1ewed the mauguration of a new Jewish settlement
in the Golan Heights ory Nov: 4,
attended by three Israeh Cab met
ministers, as a deliberate provoca·
lion.
-

-

---· •

·-

Bank One Offers
Small Business Administration Loans
If your small business needs financing,
call Bank One to learn how · you can
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Guaranteed loan.
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'·

RIO GRANDE - ·The Ohio Board of Nursing has granted "fuU
approval" to the program offered by the Holzer College of Nursing
at the Un ·versity of Rio Grande.
The approval is granted annually by the board following its
review of the college's annual report. In addition, the board checks
the P.rogram's compliance with the board's rules and regulations.
Notification of the approval was sent to Janet M. Byers, R.N., dean
of the college.
The college offers a two-year, associate degree course for registered nurses, as well as an advanced placement track for licensed
practical nurses wishing to become R.N.s.
There are presently 142 students enrolled in the college, including 71 in the fii'St year and 71 in the second. Of those, two are LPNs
from the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Chillicothe
undergoing the advanced placement track course of study.

state would have far more dispolat health of our children so that Ohio
capac ity than necessary if the industries can legally dispose of
Waste Technologies Industries their l~~zardous waste, when , in
plant is opened in East Liverpool.
fact, WTI will be burning mostly
''Why does the governor .want waste from out of state," said Lisa
to permit all these hazardous waste Tychoneivich, of the citizens group
incinerators in Ohio, when we Save Our Country.
don ' t need them, " said Diana
Schlauffman, a Nova resident and
member of the citizen s group
STOP IT..
" The worst part is, we know
that if these do all get built, hazardou s waste will be burned in
them, it will be trucked in from all
over the U.S., making Ohio the
nation' s hazardous waste pay toi·
let.''
Beth Newman, Greenpeace
2•517
spokeswoman, said instead of
building more incinerators, Ohio
and the country should implement
Reg.
toxic use reduction programs.
$19.50
About I p.m. Saturday , the
protesters marched around the governor's suburban Bexley mansion,
carrying signs and banners.
424 SECOND AVE.
" How dare the Gov ernor of
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
Ohio tell us that we must risk the

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446·1113- 446-4744

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TAWNEY STUDIO

.'

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.·
...before you snap up a
;ewelry "bargain"

I

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HOW TO APPRAISE A JEWELER•••

Z50R

lAYAYtlY FOR CHRISTMAS .
10'5, 100'5, I25'S i.Stock .
'u'you'vc ; er ridde~-lie'fore. you kn ow there;s no S;tt q"'u ite like
one of our tough liltle ones, for one of yourtough little ones.
What you may not knowis how easy it is to make lh~t happen.
Especially now. Because American Honda Finance Corporation
has two special holiday options for those who qu alify: Either no
money down or no paymem for 90 days.•
So, Merry Christmas. And if this isn't the happiest New Year
they've ever had, fine. Keep the bike. Return the kids.

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ConSider EXPEBiiNCE: 47 years In the
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men on stafl - We service what we
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'condder SEI ECTJQN; Best Selection ol
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the · Trl;coun~ - - - - ~ -- -· '{
Con•lder OUAUU; We stoek only
aaedlum to liner qualltJ Jewelry. .
You'll never · be disappointed by
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IJANI&lt; ONE. ATHENS. NA M·rrJ!,·,·fTJI(

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At the White House there are
only two blacks of any promineix:e
on the president's staff. At the
Capitol~ black staffers hold about
300 of the 8,200 jobs that influence
le~slation B!ld political decisions.
Hispanics have only 150, Asian
Americans 45.
"They're saying, ' Don't do
what I do, do what I say,"' the
Rev. Joseph Lowery, president of
the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference, says in a repon prepared for publication Sunday by
Newhouse News Service.
There is only one black law
c Jerk at the. Supreme Court -

OLD FAMILY
PHOTOS COPIED

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working for retired Justice Thut· •:
good Marshall. Justice Clarence; ·
Thomas ' four elerks are wbite
males.·
·,•
Last.week's passage of the Civil '
Rights Act, signed by the pe-eside,nt.
· aUows employees or Congress altd
the White House to claim job dis·
· elimination protection, but it dOes :
not require affmnative action.
·'
The Newhouse survey says ·
blacks are in 68 of the 2,700 most'
imponant Senate staff jobs.
· ':
Sen. John Glenn, D..Ohio, told .
Newhouse that as recently as 15
years ago, some senators ind repre·
sentatives told the Congressionill·
Placement Office that they wanted
no blacks.
·,
"We have made progress, but:
not fast enough, " Gleim said .'

College of Nursing wins approval

GILLIPOUS, OHIO
2110 u.s. RT· 36 s

'

WASHINGTON (AP)- There
are rellltively few minorities on the
payroll at the White House, in
~g::J,ress and at the Supreme

WAVERLY (AP) - A grand jury declined to indict a man
charged with murder by the Pike County sheriff, Deputy Thomas
Cassity said today.
The shootings Sunday left Jesse Gilmore of Waverly and Rebecca Tolle dead. Relatives said \}ilmore went to the home where Ms.
Tolle was staying and shot·her, then threatened several others.
The grand jury decided Gene Wireman was defending himself
and others when-he shot Gilmore; Cassity said.
Sheriff Larry Travis jailed Wireman immediately after the shooting and frecd.him-Thursday.after the grand jury cleared him, Cassi·
ty said. Bond had been $200,000. ·
The shooting occurred in western Pike County at a home with a
Peebles address where Ms. Tolle was staying. Wireman lllso had a
Peebles address. Peebles is in11eighboring Adams County.
Relatives said Gilmore and Ms. Tolle had recently separated.

a

.

,

Suspect cleared in shooting death

Greenpeace activists ·protest at governor's mansion
peace USA and memoors ot envi. · COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Environmental activists went to ronmental coalitions ·from Ohio,
Gov. George Voinovich' s home on West Virginia and Penn ylvania
There was no viole~e and no
Saturday to demonstrate agaiflSt tijs
arrests,
State Highway Patrol Dis·
stance on a proposed hazardous
patcher
Sharon
Collins said.
waste incinerator in northeastern
Voinovich
said
Thursday at a
Ohio.
news
conference
that
the incineraProtesters at the governor's
.
tor
would
give
Ohio
about four
mansion said Voinovich has said
times
the
incineration
capacity it
Ohio already has enough capacity
to incinerate the state's hazardous needs. Grcenpeace said in a statewaste and doesn't need the inciner- menL
The group on Thursday said an
ator in East Liverpool.
analysis
it conducted shov;ed the
About 40 demonstrators attended the rally sponsor~d by (Jrccn-

governme·nt'. s.P.'!. w· er ce nte."··-~·

-~

,,

to quillfled CU$1omel'!l.

.

,,

'

.

�'
eage-AS-Sunday
nmes-Sentlnel

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

'

~rrest w~rrant is~~ed for

Michael
Jackson's brother
..
.., LOS ANGELES (AP) -

'

An
anest warrant was issued for
J:tandy Jackson, brother of enter·
tainer Michael Jackson, after he
failed to surrender to 'authorities to
begin serving a jail sentence for
beating his wife and baby.
. Stephen Randall "Randy'' Jackson was sentenced Thursday to 30
days in jail for beating his wife and
infant daughter.
The same day, his defense auorney, Vernon McGhee, told Munici·
pal Judge James Kaddo that Jack.
son was in the hospital.·
Kaddo ordered the defense to
provide details on Jackson's condi~
tion and set a Friday deadline.
The judge issued the no-bail
warrant after Jackson missed the
deadline, said City Auorney's

Judg~

Office spokesman Ted Goldstein.
In Janua.ry. the 30-year-olll
Jackson was charged with misdeJIIeanor battery on his wife, Eliza
Shaffy Jackson, 28, and their 14monih-o1d daughter, StCvljBDna
He pleaded no contest to one
count of battery and was put on
probation.
Jackson was arrested again on
OcL 30 when Mrs. Jackson phoned
authorities to report that her husband was pushing and punching
her and the baby, prosecutors said.
Randy Jackson sang with his
brothers in a group known a.S The
Jacksons, the successor to the original Jackson 5 group that was the
launching pad for brother
Michael's solo career.

Rio Grande administrator
outlines projects at meet~ng
..,, RIO GRANDE - Dr. June J.
-~lobodiart, coordinator of graduate
ducation at the University of Rio
rande, was on the program of the
36th an~ual Ohio School Boards
~ssoctation Capttal Conference in
Columbus Nov. 11-!.3.
:: Slobodian told the conference
!hat collaboration between various
~nstituencies in-a-community
Tfere essential to conference topics,
~hich focused on such issues as
educational reform, pre-school pro~s. at-nsk srudents and parental
lllvolvemenL
:·. She described the collaboration
b;:tween the University 'of Rio
Qrande and the Meigs County
~ hools, which will serve as a rural

!.--

demonstration for the state. She
explained the community education
process and how it is workin~ to
benefit all of th~ students in Metgs'
three local school districts. Efforts
are bein$ made to assist other
. counties m collaborative effons,
she said.
The Better lnfonnation Program
initiated by Rio Grande's president, .
Dr. Barry M. Dorsey, was also outlined to the conference by Slobodian. The program brings together
educators, business and professional people, social agency and court
represenJatives, parents and community members to address educational concerns facing southeastern
Ohio.

uy From A Locally.
Owned
..
'

.

1

station in a series of interviews that
Stirli"' was set up to cpnceal con·
tributors' identities. I·
"It was done to protect the identities of contributors who didn't·
want others to know tlpat they supported (the) campaign," Duke was
quoted as saying.
Duke's campaign finance .
reports filed in Baton Rouge show
no contributions from Stirling,
though they show the Duke campaign sent it$196,219.
Maris McCrory, attorney for the
state ethics board, wouldn't comment specifically on the Duke case
nor say whctl1er a complaint had
been filed with !he board.
·
Duke, a KKK grand wizard in
the late 1970s and Nazi sympathi~­
er in !he 1980s, was elected to the
state House in 1989. He lost the
Nov. 16 election to Democrat
Edwin·Edwards in a landslide.

Judge forbids protesters to
tresnass at abortion clinics

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ifwo employees shot to death .
L~~~~~~~~·o~~i~~~r.~ide ::~~~~s~o~~ih~h~~w:~eu~~~~e~ SPAGHETTI DINNER/OPEN HOUSE
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1~ta=~~~~{?~n~~~t to OOith abo~~~ ab~iii~~~~~~ sr:~nd

,t,

} Police Sgt. Martin Crawford

~d the two apparently were taken

the back of the Old Country Buft Restaurant in !he Consumer
uar~; ~~ing Cen[!:r and shot
executiOn-stye,
·
: The victims were identified as
. tephen Faun, 18, and Laura

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by
Faun's father who went to check on
his son when he did not come
home.
Police said the shootings
occurrC!I between 11·p;m, Friday
and 2 a.fn. toQa.y.
· ).·
No arrests had been made, and
therewerenosuspects; policesaid.

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Ada McKenzie was the~ and'
Ruth Beman was !he recepti0111st, ·!
Out in thewarehousewhereLouif
Preston was the manager were: John'
R. Richards, Paul Pullins, GeorgC! .
Johnson, Harlan Richards, Howard
Thivener,CarlManiska,and BcnF;Evans.
·"
This warehouse supPlied grocer-·
ies in the Evans chain that were located in Jackson, Athens, ChiJiiW'.•
the, Oak Hill, Nelsonville, Hunting·1
ton, Pt. Pleasant and Charleston at
well as GalliPQiis.
The Evans Grocery Compal))': .
began in 1924 in !he French City •
Hotel building at Second and OliYe.
Stanley andJohnEveretttEvans were'
the foundm.ln later years BenEvansJ'
Emerson Evans and Ben Franklin
Evans were added to the fliTII. I.t w~
in 1960 Jha~ the Evans Grocery QJ,
merged with the Thorofare Grocery
CoofPiusburgwithihenamechang..
ing to Pennyfare.
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Montrie Chaksupa . M .0 .
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DR. A. JACKSON BAILES

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SHARONVU.LE, Ohio (AP) Seven people were taken to the
hospital today after chlorine leaked
into a hotel's restaurant, authorities
said.
Tim Weber, a police department
dispatcher, said chlorine that was
supposed to go into a hot tub at the
Residence Inn in Hamilton County
apparenU y leaked into the hotel's
restaurant about 10 am.
Four people were taken to
Mercy Hospital in Fairfield, and
three others were taken to Bethesda
North Hospital in Cincinnati,
Weber said.
Spokespersons at both hospitals
sai~ the n~es of the injured and.
thetr conditions were not immediately available.

~:i !s:.O?~~ct~d~et~:,:~~

I

'

CHESTER

i~~~~~u:iofW~%:n

oppose
Slng e plate·idea

With or Without Ther11ostats
95
STARTING •
AND UP

'.

=

~ena[OT, police

BULK GAS SUPPLIER
UNVENTED HEATERS
r

OH.....Polnt Pleaunt, WV

~

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.
mincemeat pies came to $!.62.'
Denison, was announced as the foot·. By JAMES SANDS
The total bill then to feed 20 in · ball banquet speaker. In the GallipoSpeelal Clm'elpolldent ·
.
lis bowling league, Watson Contrac·
.The~ Vial 1941 and it wlls the 1947 was about $20.06. .
That
same
meal
today
would
run
.
tors, SJKi!tg Hill and O'Dell Lumber ·
weekofThanbgivi"'.Hadyoubeen
were tied for fli'St. Holzer beat Kert
doing your
at
Gro- you about $75.
Cery, here's bow
Drug despite the higti SCfJies for Kerr
Day shopping
Thanks,ivine '47 news items
being rolled by afellow named Blind. ·
· Some o the newg items of 1947
would have gone,
High School basketball kicked off
included a black out in Gallipolis on that week with Rio Grande losing to
Twkeyswerevery .
Tuesday of Thanksgiving week. The South WebsterbutbeatingRichmonhigh that year evelights were out Wm 6 to 8 p.m. The dale. Mercerville lost to Rome 76-12.
rywhere. It lleellis
c_ause w~ believed to be high winds. Charles Bodirner announced he was
there was a short·
The Coill't f.louse clock was behind closing his store at Eureka Some
age, ihus 'driving
again. Just the week befOre, techni· people read withjnterestihe vice raid
. the price to 69~ a
· pound. Some
cians ~ad reset tlte clock when the by 50 FBI agents in Ironton on fa•
electric went out in September. Now mous Buckhorn Street. Some 28
people were optins for poi'lc. In
that is what they were serving !he it would likely be behind for two women and. 15 men were arrested.
the' Gallia County Sheriff confi1500 patients at the Gallipolis State more monihs.
The
Elks
Lodge
was
getting
ready
dcntally announced that he.did not
Institute. But let's say you·went with
for
a
big
Wednesday
dance
!hat
feabetieveanyone would be in !he county
BUILT
IN
1947
.
•
The
Evans
Grocery
Company
built
tbls
turkeyanywayandyouwerewanting
1
tured
Ted
Wildermuth
and
his
orjail over Tbanksgiving. But one
·,11'arebouse in 1947 and was JISed by them ror two decades. In tbe
tofeed20peopleatyourfamilygaihchestra.
The
Union
Thanksgiving
"bright fella" rammed a Gallij)Oiis
:I970s, .the Union Worman Tobaero·co. was located bere ·on the
ering.
· ,
·
:corner of First Avenueand Spruce Street.
·
The cost of the turkey would be ,services were set for the Baptist Police car on Thanksgiving after a
Church. They were to be held on chase through town.
1
$13.80,
It was earlier in 1947 thai the
'
The vege\Bbles would have in- Thanksgiving Day at 9:30a.m. with
Presbyterian minister L.H. Stebbiris Evans Grocery Cornp31Jy bad built
as the speaker. ,
the large warehouse at fi'irst and
Announcements
were
made
that
Spruce.
The corporate hea&lt;!quartcrs
•
[
·
·
were ~ams, a good buy at 25 pounds
Santa Claus would appear in Gallipo- were also located here. In tllat office
lis lhe Saturday after Thanksgiving. were: Stanley Evans, president and
t
•
He·was .to eome by ailplane to Holzer gencfll( m~ag~r, G~e Bovie,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A Republican m tlle Gu!'-contrQlled oysters that year for oyster.dressing Field and then be escorted into town
73¢· All the ingredients for a
tate Senate leader and law Senate, said front plates aid in at
only
nice
tossed salad came to 64¢. Cran- by t!le Ohio State Patrol. He was to
nforcement groups on Friday ;dentifying hit-and-run vehicles, berries were 42¢. Bread, enough for make a public address in between a
r$ed Gov. George Voinovich to traffte and parking surveillance and dr ·
d ·
'thb
eoncen by the Academy band led by
"'Ject
a
srudy
panel's
idea
for
savlocating
stolen
vehicles.
·
essmgan
eaungwJ
'"'
· to 78¢. Butter was 38¢. utter, came Herb Pepper and the liigh school choir
ing money by switching to a single
He was joined in opposing a sinFor dessen, all the ingedients to directed bv Ruth Sawyer Docpping.
tjCense plate system.
gle plate by representatives of the make six pu_mpkin pies and two
WoodY Hayes, then coach at
Fraternal Order of Police and the
1 Sen. Eugene Waus, R-Colum·
~~~· ;.~gt ~::oc::l~ ~;~~~a; ~~~.keye State Sheriffs' Associa1
tear' tinly vehicle plate instead of
Dewey SlOkes, the nationarFOP
~
--· ·
- -~- · •
the current requirement for front president, said he would prefer the
and back tags.
rest of the country switch to a two1.'
The cost-saving recommenda- plate system. ·At present, 23 states
tlon was among thj)se release(! by require only one plate.
CINCINNATI (AP) - About plaint against a man who allegedly
the ., governor's . Operations
"We have taken a strong stand 250 demonstrators gaihered this shoved a megaphone into his face,
~provement Task Force. · ·
.
on it, urging not only Ohio not to morning at an abonion clinic, one oolice said.
, Watts said dual plates provide a regress to.a single plate ~ut to pro- day after a judge banned six orgaStrang identification. tOOl for law mote 8 tWO· plate system through· nizers of an anti-abortion group
enforcement ·
out the United States as· an assis- from trespassing on the property of
POMEROY • Members of the
.-: ·"There are too many instances tance or a tool for law enforcement four clinics.
Meigs County Golf Association
,(hat we know about in which infor· to use," Stokes said.
A group of anti-abortion and will host a d.inner dance at the
.~ation leading to a suspect's,arrest
The task force report said that • pro-choice protesters carried signs Senior Citizens Center on Sunday,
:was taken from a front license plate by using one plate instead of two, and chanted songs today at the Dec. 8.
George Hall will provide music
.~nd because we know that, that's the state could save more than $8 Planned Parenihood Clinic, which
·the pnmary reason not to turn back millioo.. Watts said th"e- savings remained open during the protest.
for the dance and the tlinncr will be
:Y,hat is a successful system," he would not outweigh benefits of the
About 40 police officers were at catered by Sonja Wolfe. Cost will
$aid at a news conference.
current system.
the scene, but no arrests were be $25 a couple or $13 for singles.
• Watts, who is third-ranking
made.
Reservations are to be made with
·•
· · - -Brian Taylor, an anti-abortion · Bob Freed at 992-2044. The public
protester, issued a private com- isinvitedtoattend.

Miller, Ricine, no valid operator's
license, $75, suspended, costs,
three days in "jail suspended if.valid
operator's license within 30 days,
possession of marijuana, $50·and;.
costs; Steven P. Erwin, Pomeroy, ·
.our. $350 and costs•• ~ ~~·
jail, 90 days operator s bcense sus-.!,
pended, upon cnrollment.and com: :
plction of the RTP school, $150 of
fine and jail will. be suspended,
reckless operation, $50 and costs;
Larry W. Stew an, Rutland, deer
out of season (two counts), $250
and cosiS on each c~arge, restitu·
tiO!I on each charge, one year probation, hunting privileges for deer,
suspended until August 31, 1992.

jail, suspende!J, One year probation;
Brian Wolfe, Portland, taking a
deer out of season, $200 ftne, sus·
pended, 811(1 co$15, restitution, one
year probation, ()IIC, year hunting
privileges suspended, fuearrn forfeited to the State of Ohio, spotlighting, $200 fine suspended to
$100 and costs, must complete a
hunter's safety course.
Raymond E. Sayre, Pomeroy,
taking a dec:r ouL of seaspn, $200
fine suspended and costs, restitution, one y~ probation, one year
hunting privileges, suspended,
must complete a bunter's safety
course, spotlighting, $200 fipe,
$100 suspended, costs; Rick. T.

-

Turkey shortage shot prices ·up to 69 cents a pound in 1947 -1

O'-Brien fines ~6 · in Meigs County Court

POMEROY • Meigs County assist one party in taking deci: dur·
Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien inl! closed season. $150 and costs;
fined 36 defendants on Wednesday. Edward J. Dreyfuse, domestic via. Fined were: James A. Whiiting- lence, 10 days in jail, suspended to
ton, Middleport, speed, $20 and time served, costs, one year probacosts; Larry L. Johnson, Columbus, tion; Terry R. Reuter, Pomeroy,
safety violation, $50 and cost&gt;; speed, $23 and costs; David J.
Ralph Jones; Gallipolis, improper · Koblentz, Pomeroy, speed, $2) and
handling of a firearm, 10 days in costs; Michael L, Mlll]lhy, Marietjail, suspended, $50 and costs, one ta, assured clear distance, $10 and
year probation, weapon forfeited to costs; Raben C. Saltsman, Racine,
the state; John W. Paulowskt, no muffier, $5 and costs; Orland L.
Pomt PIeasan I , W.Va., speed , $ 2 . Staats, Portland, failure to c.ontrol,
and costs; Cindy HayeS, Pomeroy, $20 and costs.
DUI, $450 and costs, 90 days oper. Clark Taylor, Long Bottom,
, ator's license suSNpsion, one year speed, $20 and costs; Christine
probation, three days in jail; Raben Schultz, Pomeroy, failure to yield,
;wA
$25 and costs; Wilson R. Powell,
Edward Starr, Maeon, Ga., sr""',
$15 and costs; James M. Gnmm, Reedsville, DUI, $350 ~nd costs,
Cincinnati, speed, $15 and costs; 90 days license suspension, upon
Qpal Kauff, Pomeroy, failure to enrollment and completion of RTP
control, $20 and costs; Geoffrey S. school, $150 of fine and jail time
Osborne, Gallipolis, following too will be suspended, failure to conclose!~, $10 and costs.
trol, $25 and costs; Jolin Evans,
Cecil W. Wise, Crown City , Long Bottom, failure to conJ.rol,
speed , $15 and costs; Richard $25 and costs; Kimberly Wilt,
Eugene Dornan, Waverly, safety Pomeroy, expired operator's
violation , $50 and costs; Rhonda license, three days in jail, suspendTennant, New Haven, W.Va., ed if valid operator's license within
speed, $26 and costs; Frederick 30.days, $75 and costs, $50 of'fme
Colburn, Pomeroy, spotlighting, suspended; Danny Robson,
$250 and costs; knowingly trans- Pomeroy, no operator's license, 30
porting a loaded ftream1 in a motor days in jail suspended to five days,
vehicle, $150 and costs; )ames H. consecutive with previous charge,
Bennett, Clifton, W.Va., failed to $125 and costs, one year probation,
signal left IUro, $5 and costs; GaiTy speedinf, $25 and costs.
·
L. Mercer, McArthur, safety violaApri Castor, Inyokern, Calif.,
lion, $50 and costs; Tony Imboden, no operator's license, three days in
Syracuse, failure to display valid j'ail suspended if valid operator's
plates, $10 and costs; Lmda Pow- icense within 60 days, $'7.) and
ell, Tuppers Plains, speed, $26 and costs, improper turning, $25 and
costs.
costs; William L. Elliott, Pomeroy,
Thomas Schoonover, Rutland, spotlighting,- $150 and costs, 30
possess parts of a deer that did.not days in jail suspended, one year ·
have a statement auached showing probation, must enroll and comwhen and where legally taken, and plete a hunter's safety course,
date received and from whom transporting a ftrearm in a motor
re~eived, $65 and coSIS, aid and vehicle, $150 and costs, 30 da_
ys iri

'
Sunday

•

24,1991.

November 24, 199~

pummy company paid
businesses that wanted to
~ide link to Duke campaign
~ NEW ORLEANS (AP) David Duke acknowledged tliat his
~~aff created a fake company to
mde the identity of businesses that
fiad been Ihreatened because !hey
did work for the former Ku Klux
~lan leader's gubernatorial camJlaign.
- But Duke and his top adviser
tim McPherson denied allegations
tllat Stirling Publishing Inc. of
Jackson, Miss., was set up to funiiei secret campaign contributions.
llS a San Francisco radio station
l)lported Thursday. Sucb contribuuons must be identified in camJlaign finance rep(lns.
- · Duke said Stirling Publishing's
primary role was to pay a St. Louis
direct mailing business that wanted
its link to !he Duke campaign kept
confidential.
"A lot of people we'd done :
business with, and I'm talking
about people that we've just done
work with, had been threatened and
Stirling was set up, I think last
year," said !he 41-year-old Duke,
who lost his bid last week to
become Louisiana's governor.
The company gave the ftrn1s "a
little bit of buffer so they couldn't
endure economic blackmail," he
said.
McPherson,- a lawyer in whose
name the company-'s post office
box is registered, satd, " There
were no contributions concealed in
itat all."
" We tHink it is (legaiJ," said
McPherson, who heads the committee exploring a possible presidential run by Dulce. "That may be
debatable. That's what lawyers
argue about."
Radio station KGO of San Francisco reported. that. Duke told Jhe

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Times-Sentinel

November 24,1991

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

OUR

• ientitur Section B~
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ON

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•

• TEEN-INSTITUTE • Dan and Sue Romuno-lead Teeillutitute :. groups iS a part or their VISTA. volunteer work. Here, 7th and 8th
· graders at,Southem )unior High School share their Juach period
:: wi.th the Rom!!~~ pictured center, during a semi-weekly 11 iies,

,

,

sion. Positive approaches to dru1 and alcohol avoidance are-always
stressed In 11 programs, which are held In aU three or tbe county's
school districts. (Times-Sentinel Photo by Brian J.. Reed)

I

: ~ouple helps youngsters lead drug free .lives
4·7 LB.
AVG.

Limit One With Additional Purchase

By BRIAN J. REED
more common vein of chemical . offace, Dan and Sue were placed' in
As a part of their work, they
: Times-Sentinel Slaff
abuse - the abuse of alcollol.
ajob uaining and educatillll pro- have assisted in the Teen Institute
'.
· Two months after Sue met Dan,. gram. They underwent a series of program for teenagers, and now
.- HARRISONVILLE - A Meigs she discovered that he was not only tests and assessments and were serve as co-coordinators of that
tomlty couple has gone from a life heavily involved in drug ~se. but soon enroUed in Hocking Technical program.
:or chemical addiction to a life that he was al~o trafficking in College.
Dan leads an intervention coun:devoted to assisting youngsters drugs. Dan now admits lhat he sold ·
Enter treatment
seling program for young men, Wid
;with similar problems through the drugs so that he could afford to use
Dan went into drug and alcohol Sue is in the process of starting a
.yJSTA progJ3lll.
them himself.
treatment at Jackson General Hos- similar program for. young women
Nearly a decade of married life, pilal in the Spring of 1988, and Sue in each of the high schools. Along
: Dan and Sue Rom uno of Harhsonvilie met In Columbus a marred by drug and alcohol abuse, followed a month later.
with other HRS staffers, the
decade ago, got married and began had begun.
"I came out of treatment with a Romunos are in the process of
what would soon become an
Dau.lmprisoned ·
new altitude," Dan says. "!learned tmining educators to coordinate the
bdyssey of drug Wid alcohol abuse,
Dan and Sue made several that drugs and.alcohol were what BABES program in the elementary
schools and'pre-school·programs.
,ending in Dan's arrest .Wld convic- atteml'ts to stop their chemical wr.re holding me back."
All of the programs led by the
·tion on drug-related charges in abuse m the early years of the mar·
Sue says now that their treatRomuno's
emphasize positive eleFranklin County.
riage • most successfuUy ~hen Sue mcnt also taught them that genetics
ments
and
lhe
value of life.
Now, both have conquered their became pregnant wnh the play a major role in the disease of
''No luldict is a bad person who
addictive behavior, and work with Romunos' son, Franco.
addiction.
.Meigs County's young ~pie in ·
However, the Romunos now
"As we learned about addiction, needs to get good, but a sick person
c hopes that these. k1ds w~n't realize thalilll a4dict ca11' t solve we realized that both of Dan's who n®ds to get better,:• Dan'tells
I ave to endure the4 nroblems that the lddk:tion ,problem by himself • ~"""'""nts were 'rum num
_ ers' in . the ltids. '
At le8st one educatllr is•sold pn
' e Romuhos havt "
~-· ·. ·-: ~ or lri~ ~g and ~ling ~;'wNYat", Sue said wiili ·asmile.
· ·
Early yen
the root of the addiction.
She also admitttd iliat both of her th~ Romunos' work in the scpool·•
systems. Jim Adams, Principal at ,
• Born and reared near New York
Dan's addiction problem ~nts were alcoholics.
'City, Dan Romuno was an all- became mo'st appareiltro him in the
Wuh the help of administmtors Southern High School, states that
·!iround star athlete as a youngster, early 1980's, when he was arrested,. · at Hocking Technical CoUege, Sue the Romunos do a·"ttemendous job
enjoying a brief periOd as a profes- convicted and sentenced to a term received a Sllecialized degree in of relaying, in a proper way, the
sional boxer and as a tickboxet. · in the Ohio Penitentiary for drug Spon.s Medicme, Wid Dan .a degree help that is available to Meigs
" Sue grew up in Columbus, and ab!lse.
in Corrections Counseling - both County youngsters who arc in need
;was also active in athletics. She
He was released on shock parole degrees that -they could use in of help."
"The Romunos let the kids
:was an All-Slate Cheerleader as a in.l983 and he and Sue moved teaching others about the disease of
know there are people who care,"
·teenager, and later worked as an bact to Meigs County, where Dan addiction.
Adams said. "Because they're not
:aerobics i~structor.
had ~;~urchased land prior to their
Help others
: After a stint in the U.S. Army iri mamage: According lQ Dan, his
Shortly after they left the treat- the kids' twents, or their teachers,
DAN AND SUE ROMUNO • have taken their many lire exper~.
•thc late 1960's, Dan settled in release from prison did not end mcnt program in Ripley, Dan and the ltids don't feel threatened, and
can
be
more
open
with
Dan
and
ences
' 'on the road", a•d now counsel and work with students in
:columbus, where he became a. their problems with drugs. Their Slic began a N~~~totics Anonymous
Meigs
County's schools. Working as VISTA volunteers, Dan aud
;partner in an Ilalian restaurant and addictions to drugs and alcohol, cthhcap teder ~onr M
we igyearss
Co.1uniy, w_hich Sue."
Sue,
who
are reeoverlng drug and alcohol addicts, coordinate Teeri
1
1
0
Thanks
to
the
efforts
of
liealth
•bar. In 1979, Dan met Sue at a however, remained unsadsfied due · y ,
:columbus disrolheque. Less than a to their Jack of mon:ey: Dan had
'In August of !990. Dan and Sue . Recovery Services, and the Instilllte programs, couduct interventlou groups and act as "nontbreateulna" Dltllton to Meigs County students. (Tilles·Sentluel
:rear later, they married.
sol~ his share of the &lt;;olumbus became volunteer counselors for Romuno's, six Meigs County youth
• Dru's of abuse had been a part busmess, and, after hts parole, the Volunteers in Service to Ameri- have been placed in youth treat- Photo Brian J, Reed)
ment programs - hopefully to treat
~of Dan s life for some time br the began ~ . work part·~e for an oil ca (VISTA) program. Their work is
•time he met Sue. He now admus to well driUmg company mBerea.
performed through Health Recov· their diseases of addiction early.
Not only have the Romunos
having been a regular cocaine
In 1985 and 1986, the ROIDII!IOS ery Services, Inc., a non-profit
: abuser, who also dabbled in' mari- be~an to culti~ate marijuana on agency with an ,off'ace in Pomeroy kicked their addiction, but they
have also become non·denomina·juan a and several psychedelic thcu property 10 Western Meigs (~ee related story, this page.)
tional
Christians, and they credit
: drugs.
County in an attempt to feed their . Interestingly, they are Ameri: Cocaine in the late· 1970's and ad.dictions. However, their plants ca's only huaband and wife team of their faith in God with helping
; early-1980's, was the drug of w~r~ c~nfisc_aled in an airborne former addicts now working as them through the.dark times.
Sue probably sums up their tes•choice for the wealthy and success- . eradicabon r&amp;ld. They were warned coun~elors in VISTA's drug and
timony the be~c "The Lord healed
. rut. Dan now uses the term "coun- by law enforcement officials that · alcohol division.
.
·
•tryclub"drugtodesa;ibedcocaine, f~er cultivation would result in
Their VISTA work takes them us and restored us."
The Romunos are especially •
~which was beinJ used increasingly theu arrests.
into all of Meigs Couniy's schools,
(by athletes, politicians and promi·
The Romunos were .now broke, uaining youngsters in the charac- excited about a program that they
•nent.citizens ofthe'day.
• · · and were forced to turn to the teristics of addiction and encourag- created, called "Christian People
At the time of the Romuno's county's welfare system to survive. · ing them to abstain from drugs and Recovering" (CPR), which looks at
the commonly-used 12-step treat· .
~ marriage, Sue was inv~lved in a
Throug~ the Pomeroy JTPA. alcohol.
ment program from a Christian perspective. The 12-step program they
use is the same as that used in the
Nan:otics Anonymous, Alcoholics
Anonymous, AI Anon and other
addiction programs. However, the
"higher power" refen;ed to in those
programs is referred to directly as
"God" in the Romuno's new program.
New beginning
The Romunos' lives are filled
with more wholesome elements
now that their addictions have been
D.A.B.E.S.
• Kim Mastrangelo, Jel't and Rebecka
treated, and they intend to stay with
Flanders, right, are traveliaa throu,hout Meigs C~unty to train
local teachers to use tbf "B.A.B.E.S.' puppet program. Botb work •
the VISTA program for at least two
through Htalfti.,Recovery Services, Inc., the same agency wbkh •
more years.
When not involved in their
ove~es tbe work'\r Dan and Sue Romuno. Tbe program, directed
particularly at elementary-age studeots, is aimed at preventing
VISTA work or conducting their
drug
and alcohol abuse. (Times-Sentinel Photo by Brian J. Reed) '
own CPR program, Dan and Sue
_ are working as true.."hands-on':.
parents. Their son, Franco, is now
10. and his parents devote much of
••
I
· their free time to malting a differPOMEROY • No addiction end most loyal consumers iJt
ence in his life. Most ~tly, Dan takes a toll on American society America. Only cigarettes have •
Wid Sue coached Franco's basket- like the addiction to drugs and greater
product loyalty from con ~
bali teani, and Franco himself alcohol. Consider these statistics:
sumers.
•
recently placed 6th out of 29 pOrtic- · • If a parent is an addict, there is
80
percent
of
the
prisoncrJ
ipants m a punt, pass and ltick con- a 65 percent chance that a child now incarcerated are imprisone4
tes~ Franco was sponsolcd in that will become an addict. If the seccontest by Health Recovery Ser- ond pauent is WI addict,.lhat proba- ror offenses commitled under the&gt;
influence of drup or alcohol, or foe.
vices.
.
bility inaelses to 90 percent
offenses
commmed while buyinJ,
According to Dan, he and Sue
• The iarsest killer of young or selling drugs. Ohio t.axpaye~
would like to re-pay Meigs County people, qed 16 to 24, is alcohol- spend $18,000 per prisoner, ptl\&gt;
for its contribution to their educa- related traiTic accidents. The sec- year.
•
tion and for the time they spent on ond-larRest killer of that
group
The total financial loss ineiud
the welfare roles dQring the dark is alcohol-induced suicide, and in~• product
costs, loss of ProcJuc
days of their atjdictions.
third is alcohol-related homicide.
uvuy,
fines
and
CO'Ift CDSIS, due
More importantly, the Romunos
'tHE TRUST CIRCI:E • Teen l111titute pro• 10 percent or the people who. cocaine abuse alone, is estimlle4
deslped to develop peer coulldence In teens. Tl
would like to ~ a message of · drink consume 40 to 50 percent of
' &amp;f.mmlnglnclldts lots or fun adltlvlties to ~
runctlons witb tile hope tbat akollol and drug
at $25 billion per year. That r~
: . younasteu Interested. Here, Dau and Sue
hope to the area s young people.
all of the alcohol consumed in for all drug and alcohol abuse liSe(
avoldaDce wlll eliminate tbe leed ror addlclloa
•', ROIDIIDO leadea aroap troll Souf,llern Junior
"I want to see a heahng in America.
CDIIIICI_- and treatment. (Sentinel Photo by
to $ISO bil~cin.
~
. HIRh School lq the "Trust Circle", 1 game
Meigs
County,'' Dan said.
Brian J, Reed)
·· ·
- Alcohol consumers are the sec-

~

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lb. Sweet ·
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..

�Page-82-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-.Point Pleasant,

wv

November 24, 1~1

November 24;" 1991

Sunday

Rev. MacKenzie .
GALLIPOLIS- The.Rev; Alben
H. MacJ(enzie,- Rector of - s~, ,
Peter's Episcopal ChurcH .in Gal- '
lil10lis, has been appoint¢ Dearl of
the Hocking Valley Deanery by
Bishop Herbert Thompson, the
eighth Bishop of the Diocese of
Southern Ohio.
On Nov. 9, at the Episcopal
Diocesan Convenlion in Dayton,
11 Deans were installed by Bishop
Thompson.
As' Dean.s. they.will be responsi- .
ble, with the Bishop for pastoral
ministry to the clergy, people and
Parishes ih their respective Deaneries, and will be a source to support ·
the ministries as pastors, priests
and teachers. .
The Hocking Valley Deanery, of
which the Rev. AJ MacKenzie will
be Dean , includes St. Paul's in

Logan The ChUrch of the Epiphany
in Nelsonville The Church of the
Gooa Shepherd in Athens; Grai:e
Church in Pomeroy and SL Peter's
in GaUipolis.
· -~~ ,. ~

.

''
•

,!

TANKS

Simpson-Nottingham
-~Myers-Pearce
BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Runyon of Gallipolis and Mr. and
Mrs. David Pearce of Bidwell,
announce the engagement and
upcoming marriage of Christina D.
Myers and Donald D. Pearoe.
Miss Myers is a senior at North
Gallia High School and plans to
further her education in Business
Management. She attends French
City Baptist Church.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Simpson, Pomeroy; announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Valerie
Lynn, to Je(frey Joe ·Nottingham,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Nottingham, Long Bouom.
Miss Simpson is a 1986 graduate of Meigs High School. She is
employed by Hair Happening of

Athens.
Nottingham is a 1983 graduate
of Eastern High School. He is
employed by Delta Metals-and
·Fabricating of Middleport.
The open church wedding will
be an event of Feb. 22 at 7:30p.m.
at the Middleport United Pentecostal Church. A reception will follow at the Old American Legion
Hall.

Mr. Pearce is a 1990 graduate of
North Gallia High School and is
employed by the Ohio State Highway Patrol as a cadet dispatcher.
He plans to attend the !24th PaD'Ol
Academy class in January 1993. He
is a member of the French City ·
SC
U
Baptist Church.
GALLIPOLIS - The following
The wedding will be held July
Wednesday, Nov. 27
are
activities and menus for the
25, 1992.
10 a.m.-noon -Crochet circle
week of Nov. 25-29 at the Senior
10 a.m.- Walking club
Citizen's Center, 220 Jackson Pike,
Thursday and Friday
Gallipolis:
Closed for Thanksgiving
Monday, Nov. 25
Menus consist of:
10 a.m.- Walking Club
Monday - Pepper stea'k,
10 a.m.-3 p.m.- Pool
hominy, cabbage/carrots, bread,
11 a.m. - Short Subjects
chocolate pudding.
I p.m. - Chorus
Tuesday- Ham and bean soup,
Tuesday, Nov. 26
cottage cheese, tossed salad, com10:30 a.m. - STOP/Physical bread, jello.
Fitness
Wcdnesday Chicken,
10:30 p.m.- Video matinee
Augratin potatoes, green beans,
I p.m. - Play practice
cole slaw, dinner rolls, brownies ,
10 a.m. -3 p.m. - Quilting -pool
fruit cocktail.

Sen10rs
' '

.,

Op{(n house slated
RACINE - The Racine Optometric Clinic, 909 Third Street,
Racine, will observe its open house
on Sunday'from 2 til 4 p.m. and the
public is invited to attend. The clinIC is operated by Dr. Melanie A.
Wccse, Optometrist

VFW to meet

··~...

~'

,,

BRIAN SPENCER and NANCY BAKER

·.

Baker-Spencer

: POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. engineering. She is presently
; Larry Baker, Pomeroy, arc employed by Triplett Engineering
• announcing the engagement and Services. Spencer is a member of
!:approaching marriage of their the Iron Workers' Union Local
"daughter, Nancy Lynn Baker, to 697.
·Brian Wayne Spencer, son of Don ·
The open church wedding will
, aid and Judy Dixon, Rutland, and be an event of Dec. 20 at the Rock
.r the late Marvin Spencer.
Springs United Methodist Church.
~
Miss ·Baker is a sophomore at Music will be~ in at 6 p.m.
:: Ohio University majoring in civil

POMEROY - The Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
meet Monday at 4:30 p.m . ac the
D.A.V. HaU in Pomeroy on Butternut Avenue. The group will meet
prior to speaker, Senator Jan
Michael Long.

Trustees to meet
LEBANON TOWNSHIP - The
Lebanon Township Trustees will
meet Friday at the township building.

We Sit Down Together
We sit down together
To commune and to dine;
To ask God's blessing
On that from the Vine.
We sit down together
To a bountiful table.
We thank our God
Who made 'it all able.
We sit down together
When church is done.
We rcncct on the Word
And the Blessed Son.
We sil down together
To pray and to cry:
When we all remember
Why He came to die.
We sit down together
To think and to plan :
How to glorify christ
This day in our land .

Rayburn-Clay

NEBULIZERS

~Roderick-Smith

respiratory problems
(Asthma, Bronchitis)

; GALLIPOLIS - Elizabeth Rod; erick and David Allen Lewis Smith
. of Newport News. Va., were mar; ried Saturday, Oct. 12 in Pine
· Knoll Shores, N.C., at the home of
: the bride's parents, Dr. and Mrs.
: Evan C. Roderick, former Gal~po­
, lis residents 1
: The Rev. Rene Mishew of the
: First Presbyterian Church official~ ed the wedding. A program of
i piano and vocal music was present. ed by Shelley Edwards of Alexan: dria, Va.
. The bride, escorted by her father
: and given in marriage by her par. ents, wore an off-white silk suit
: with tear-drop pearl fringe trim: ming the cuffs and hem of the jack' et
· Maid of honor was Jane Boyd of
·. Natchez, Miss.
· Best man was Donald Long of

CONCENTRATORS
•Sales, Rentals,
Repairs
•Wheelchairs
•Hospital Beds
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eCominode Chairs
•Walkers
•24 Hour Service

•Bath Safety Aids
•Urinary/Ostomy
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,
•Insurance Claims
Processed
Medicare &amp; Medicaid
accepted)

lin• ••alle•l 111•1111•

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs. late ·grandfatl]er was pastor.
Warren Clay, Rutland, announce
A reception followed at the
the marriage of their daughter, Meigs Senior Citizens Center.
Melissa Sue, to Brett Lee Rayburn,
The bride is a 1988 graduate of
son of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Ray- Meigs High School majoring in
burn, Point Plcasan~. W.Va.
cosmetology. She_is_cmployed at
they were married Oct. 18 in the office of Dr. H.D. Brown,
Pearisburg, Va. and repeated their D.D.S. The groom is a 1987 graduvows on Nov. 9 at the Church of ate of Poim Pleasant High School
Jesus Christ in Rutland where .her majoring in building trades. He is a
boiler-maker.

MR. and MRS. DAVID · (ELIZABE'fH) SMITH

~·•for the treatmenrof"

hed [e announced

;.

MR. and MRS. BRETT

•Portable_ (Refillable)
•Stationary

.

TOP EMPLOYEE - Pinecrest Care Center recendy 1Dnouud
the selection or.Yolanda Howard as the November EmplOyee ofdae
Montb. S~e bas been employed at the center since 1977, IUid 1111
worked in both nursln1 and activities departments. Mrs, Honrd
. wiD receive a reserved·parking place, gift certificate, and I! d!t1 orr
with pay. Pictured with the award winner is David Snyder, admla·
Istrator.

Radford, Va;
Following th~ ceremony a cocktail buffel was held at the Roderick
home. Among the out-of-town
guests was Patrick Griffin of Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla.
The bride, a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and Ohio
State University, holds a Master of
Science in Library Science from
the University of Kentucky. She is
employed by the Virginia State
Library and Archives as aliteracy/outreach consultant
The groom, son of Mffl. Albert
N. Smith of Sebring, Fla., and the
late Alben Smith, is a graduate of
Georgetown College, Ky., with a
M.S., L.S., and Master of Arts in
Germany. He is employed by Gcac
Computers, Inc., of Toronto, Canada as a library automation consultant.

Wedding policy
The Sunda y Times-Sentinel
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs
and Mason counues as news and is
happy to publish wedding stories
and photographs without charge
However, wedding news mu st
·meet general standards of timeliness: The newspaper prefers to
p~blosh accoums of weddings as
soon as possible after the even!.
To be published in the Sunday
eduaon, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words an 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 the bride and groom may be
publi jhed with 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 instant-developing photos
are not of acceptable quality.
.
Questions may be directed to the
editorial department from I to 5
p.m. Monday through Friday at
(614) 446-2342.

i r-----~--------------------~------------------~
PRE-HOUDAY SALE ON ~ MILUON DOLLAR INVENTORY OFFERED FOR 12

Inc.

·-

''•

}

565 JACKSON PIKE • GALLIPOLIS, OH.

BIG HOURS ON SATUI\DAy U SUNDAYt NOVEMBER ZJ U Z4 NOON mL.•

,'ALL FURNITURE &amp;
RELATED ITEMS INCLUDED
IN THIS

446-2206

RHOLIDAY
SALE

"Serving the Area for Over 14 Year•"

DOORS WILL OPfN FOR

•

PRE·HOIIDAY SAU

SA'ftJRDAY

12 NOON TIL

t. P.M .

This may bt lht best Item ever to

..

flfurnlth lor lhe Holidays. Seal tlnanc·

'

lng ltrms.

NO PAY TIL MAY,

MONDAYONL

\

•ENTIRE INVENTORY ON SALE
NOTHING HELD BACK

COME EARLY AS SOME ITEMS
ARE ONE OF AKIND

All GOODIITAIID OR ON DISPlAY ARE
AYlit.Ailf FOR NO NY Til MAY AND
IEC. 24 DEUYEIY

Monday, November 25 - 9_AM·8 PM 5
MEN~S

~

ll:!Robert L. Harper

HATS .
°/o

6/3191

5

.

OFF

Zirkle-Starcher
at 5:30p.m.

MIDDLEPORT - The marriage
·:or Michele Zirkle to Edward
·· start:her will take place au!!c Mid.=&lt;llcporl·Church of Christ on Dec.

..

14

A reception will follow at the
Pomeroy Senior Ci~zcn s Center.

There's so much to do in Ashland during the Holiday
Season. There's the Winter Wonderland of Lights at
Central Park, Horse Drawn Carriage Rides around Central
Park. the Festival of Trees, Holidays at.the Kentucky
Highlands Museum. Holiday Entertainmerrt at the
Paramount Arts Center and much more.
The Ashland Plaza Hotel wants you to experience Ihe
Holiday Happenings in Ashland. We have aspecial
package called 'Du: Winter Wonderland

New
arrival
Douglas and Teresa Powell , one-half ounce and was 20 and

:
: North Ridgeville, announce the threc-quancr inches long.
· birth of !heir son, Jonathan Dou Grandparents arc David and
: glas, on Nov. I.
Luella Powell , Racine, and Ernest
- He weighed eight pounds and and Mary Shuler of Lctan Falls.

For That Special
Occasion .•.

Weekend Get-Away.
It Includes :
• Deluxe Guest ·
Ashland Plaza Hotel's
.Room ·
Winter W,onderla.nd
•Contlncnlul
Breukfusl li&gt;r 2
Jl&lt;'CA.,nd Ge•A~
•Indoor Pool -

---:::~~~"~~~~~~~sa~l~~~i~tt-t!id:-····
ding, anniversary or prom, then you
should coma sae us at Haskins- Tan·
ner.
You will have over 190 styles of tux·
ados to ·choos" from. We have e large
selection of the latest styles and complimentary accessories for this special
occasion.
Quality Formalwear
al Affordable Prices.
GROOM TUX FREE WITH 6 OR

MORE IN WEDDING PARTY

'

'

• Rumours I,oun~c
•AlcJI'uild ~ r's

RcslmtriUll.

Subject toSpace Available
. Ofle1 Goo~ lhru Jan. 15 1992

The Holidays will be here soo.n. Call and make your
reServations today to experience the Winter Wonderland
Weekend Get-Away at The Ashland Plaza Hotel ~

1·800·346·6133
Ashland Plaza Hotel

A CJmztastic Sanfs•
V.lhe Ollulallll Family Ha•rcutters t
U6·SAMS

Opel Mon. &amp;.fri. 'tH I p.m.; Tu• •• Wtd., Thurs. &amp; Sat. 'ta 5 p.m.

J;tff?!U;

OHIO 11¥11 l'IAZA
lot- Milk &amp; lit It•
GAIUPOU~

01110

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9 to 9 P.M.

lot. 9 to 6 P.M.
Svndoy 12 to S P.M.

"""'•
~

One A1&gt;hland Plaza, Ashland Ken\ucky
(606) 329-0055, Toll Free: l-800-346-61H3

********

••'
•

MEN'S WRANGLER

•.

•

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FASHION

••'

JEANS ·

REG. 530 ·
GROUP OF MEN'S
SNAP WESnRN FLANNEL SHIRTS

•'

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I

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'
light pint -lrf lldtiloord ltutcli, t"~· l'frm &amp; Ssltlo ••Irs.

i

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l

l
••
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'•
~
a
~

..

'•

••

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•'

MEN'S
SOCKS

11

SJ899

VALUES TO

$,25.00

..
FREE DICIMIIR 24TH DELIVERY
5% EXTRA FOR (ISH Ill FULL
ON SATURDAY 01 SUNDAY
FREE LAY·AWAY WITH 20% DOWN
12 MONTHS FREE FIIIAIICING
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
FIRST COME, FIRST SIRVID
ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE

SJ 599 ea.

2 FOR $30

Reg.
1
4.00

$ 99

3PAIRS 8
3 PAIRS s1798

SAV£'8.02
GROUP MEN'S Reg. $22 ea.

2FOR $35 SJ 099

GROUP OF MEN'S ARROW
DRESS SHIRTS . Values to '32

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FLANNEL SHIRTS

2FOR $20

TOP COATS &amp; ALL WEATHER
'COATSSAVE

20o/o OFF
=-=ill

Open Mon. lllru Fri. 8:00 to 8:00
· Setunt•y 1:00 to 5:00
CLOSED SUNDAY ' ·

�•

Pomer~y-Middleport-G~IIIpolls,

November 24, 1991

OH-Polnt

.i '

'
November
24, 1991''

Pomeroy~Mlddleport-Galllpolls,

•

OH-Polnt Pleasant

'

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wv

,

Nibert recognized

Beat ofthe Bend ....
by Bob Hoeflich . ·'

f-- •

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GUY AND ELLEN THOMA

,,

RUTLAND - Guy and Ellen
Thoma, Rutland, celebrated their
30th anniversary on Nov. 19.
He is the son of the late Ollie
and Georgia Thoma. She is the
daughter of William A. Young,
Rutland, and the late Ida Gilkey

MR. and MRS. RUSSELL (DAWN) LU(;As

Pusey-Lucas

•

'I

(r
' ..'

Young.
.
l'
They have three children, Terri·
and Dwight Sturgeon, MinersviUe;' •
Kevin and Tracy Thoma, Middle' t
port; and Sheryl, at home. They:~
also have two grandchildren, Bran' •
don Sturgeon and Tesia Thoma.
·

.•'

Program conducted

LAUREL, Del. - Dawn Eliza ·
The groom is the son of Mr. and
Pomeroy Elementary recently
beth Pu sey and Russell Allen Mrs. Raben Lucas of Cheshire, and
conducted
a Communi.ly Assault
Lucas were upited in marriage is the assistant plant manager of
MR. and MRS. MARC (CHARLA) VAN CO
Prevention
(CAP) program which
Aug. 11 at the First Baptist Church Lawrenceville Brick and Tile ,
was enjoyed by the students. A repof Laurel with the Rev. Grover Edganon Plant.
Roberts officiating.
Matron of honor was Melanic
The bride is the daughter of Bowman of Johnson City, Tenn.
Best man was Barry Fergerson
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.· Each wore tea length dresses made Freddie Pusey and Kay P.. Pusey of
.
'
Charla Elizabeth Beattie and Marc of burgundy stain, and each carried Laurel, Del., and a teacher at Jef· of South Hills, Va.
The couple resid es in
Alan Vanco were united in mar- white lace fans decorated with ferson Elementary School. Jarret,
Lawrenceville, Va.
riage Saturday, Sept. 28 during a minia ture burgundy carnations, Va.
double-rin g ceremony at the St. baby 's breath and burgundy stain
Paul United Methodist Church, streamers.
Point Ple;1$ant, with Pastor Justin
Flo we r girl was Am y Fox ,
Moran officiating.
cousin of the bride.
The bride is the daughter of
Andrew and Rosa Lee Beattie of
The groom wore a black tuxedo
Sunday, Nov. 24
Tuesday, Nov. 26
. Point Pleasant, W.Va., and the
with
tails,
a
white
vest
and
bow
tic.
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va.
·
GALLIPOLIS
- Movie matinee
granddaughter of Andrew and ElizThe
groomsmen
wore
black
tu
xc·
,Rev.
Raben
Parsons
will
be
speak·
at
the
Gallia
County
Senior Citiabeth Beattie and Charles and Oma
dos
with
waist
length
jackets
and
ing
at
the
Pleasant
Valley
Nursing
.
zcns
Center,
"Dan
ces with
Wcstmoreland.
black
vests
and
burgundy
bow
tics.
Home at2 p.m.
Wolves" 10:30 a.m.
The groom is the son of Charles
and Cheryl Vanco of Gallipolis, The junior groomsmen wore traditional tuxedos with black vests and
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
CHESHIRE . Cheshire Chapter
and the grandson of Clinton and bow
ties.
Union Thanksgiving Service, 7 450 regular meeting, 7:30p.m.
Virginia Taylor, and Ruth Vanco
Chad Vanco, brother of the p.m. The churches of Rio Grande
and the late Joe Vanco.
groom
and Andy Beattie, brother of will celebrate a union ThanksgivRIO GRANDE -Open Gate GarThe bride was escorted by her
the
bride,
as best men. J.R. ing at the Calvary Baptist Church. den Club meeting, 7:30 p.m. at the
father and given in marriage by her Wright andserved
1
Troy Johnson, friends Rev . Jack Berry of the United home Or Mary Jo Doi!son.
Proparents. She wore a bridal gown of of the groom
,
served
as
ushers.
Church
will
be
preachMethodist
shimmering white satin styled with
groomsmen were Brad Tay- ing. Rev. Earl Dale CBC !'astor gram: OACG tape.
a sca lloped necklin e and jewel Junior
and Chris Taylor, cousins of the will preside. A fellowship will fol. VINTON · American Legion
encrested bodice. The dress fea - lor
groom.
low . Public is invited.
Post 161 meeting, 7:30p.m. at the
tured alencon lace sleeves trimmed
Rin gbearers were Zackery
Ewington Legion Hall.
with sequins and strands of pearls. McDonald
and Seth McDonald,
KANAUGA - Silver Memorial
The balloon skirt extended to a nephews of the
bride..
Baptist Church services begin at 6
GALLIPOLIS - Lions Club
chapel length train edged with lace.
Music
was
provided
by Sherry p,m . on Sunday.
Her fingertip pouf veil was made of
Board meeting.
sheer illusion accented with seed King , Betsy Sandprs, Marty
Boswell , Tom Phillips, and Joe
GALLIPOLIS · Faith Temple
pcarls'and embroidered appliques.
Gulley.
Independent
Church will ha ve
The bride carried a cascading
Rocky
Jeffers
preaching
at 10 a. m.
bouquet of miniature burgundy carA reception followed at D. 's and Keith Eblin preaching at 7 p.m.
nations attached to a white Bible French Quarter, Gallipolis. Music
Three Meigs Countians were
covered in satin and lace made by at the reception was provided by
CROWN CITY · Jackie Clark among the summer graduates of the
her grandmother, Elizabeth Beattie. the Gary Stewart Quintet. Recepwill
.De giving slide presentation of University of Dayton.
The nowcrs also consisted of ivy tion organi zers were Eli zabeth
Receiving degrees were Clifford
his
recent
trip to Russia at the Vic·
and baby's breath threaded with Beattie and Mary Durst, aunt of the
Joseph Kennedy , Long Bottom ,
tory
Baptist
Church,
7
p.m.
burgundy satin steamers lied in bride.
masterls degree in school counsel·
- · '
· love knots.
The bride is a paruime employing;
Madhu B. Malhotra, Pomeroy,
Monday, Nov. 25
Matron of honor wa s Andrya ee at State Farm Insurance, Galmaster's
degree in social agency
GALLIPOLIS · Babysitting
(Beattie) McDonald, sister of the lipolis, and is a fulltinie student at
counseling;
and Cindy Jo Allen,
bride. Maid of honor was Monica West Virginia University at Park- course at Holze r Medical Center, master's degree in elementary edu·
Bass, friend of the bride. Brides· ersburg, majoring in Crimioal Jus- French 500 Ro om, Nov. 25·26 cation.
from 5-9 p.m.
maids were Shannon Angus and tice.
Elizabeth Brown,· friends of the
The groom is employed at
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
bride. Junior bridesmaids were Philip Sporn Plant in New Haven,
Chapter
283 OES regular meeting
Tamara Westmoreland and Ainan- W.Va.
and
installation
of officers, 7:30
da Utterback, cousins of the bride.
The coupe resides in Gallipolis. p.m. at the Masonic temple.

Beattie- Vanco

•

~.

30th annivers.ary observ~d

;;

resentative from CAP will be
attending the PTO meeting in January to generate an interest,in the
program with the parents. _ !

MR. and MRS. DARRELL GREEN

Couple celebrates 10 years
CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs. anniversary on Saturday, OcL 23. ·
Darrell Green of Swan Creek Road
The couple has one son,
Crown City, celebrated their lOth Jonathan.

SUNDAY
CHESTER • The Ken Amsbary
Chapter of the Izaak Walton
League will sponsor a slug shoot
on Sunday at .I p.m. at the clubhouse near Chester. Prizes of meat
and money. Free hand and bench
rest events for scopes and rifles.

rr'lie entire· staff at · your
. Jfometown Jfospita[ - 'Veterans
'.Memoria[ - wislies you a most
p{easant 'lfr.ank:§giving.
'Ifr.ere are mang reasons to give
tlianf&lt;:§- eacli in gcmr own way ..
'.May you enjoy a.liappg, /iea[t/ig
liolUay.

UD grads named

'I'll POMEROY MERCHANtS
ASSOCIATION WOULD LIKE
tO JNVITE .EVERY~ONE TO-:-·"Home For The Rolida~s''
1991
,

I

CHRI$TMAs·OPEN HOOSE
SUNDAY,
lsi

12:011-S:OO P.

•

MEE'I' Wlft SANti ArtER 'BE PARADE IN

Mill PUK 81 COUR' STREET

LOOK FOR 11-ITORI SPECIALS IN .
WEDNISDIY.'S EDITION
Chri&amp;lmas

· Parade
2:00p.m.

..._

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
11 SE. MEMORIAL
POMEROY
992·2104

•

.....

~

(614) 441-0411 '

••

338 Second Ave. • Gallipolis, Oh. Rachael Proffitt and Karen Eachus.

,.....

.....

STOP IN AN.D·sEE OUR SELECTION OF DISTINCT FINE
FURNISHINGS AND UNIQUE GIFTS FOR All TO ENJOY.

)

•BraSS (VIrgl~i~~Mec;;.k;f;;;;;o~D~oooo, "' ooo o~o,

~~~~~+~~~.Jt1..~~;c

..

•·

~}. OSCAR'S RESTAURANT~

'

•The Thymes .(Bath, Body &amp; Home Fragrance Collection)
•Woodbury Pewter •Specialty Picture fraMes
•Taylor Woodcraft •Santas
•Distinctive Lighting •Pictures
•Floral ArrangeMents •Rugs
•Tapestry &amp; Needlepoint Pillows
•Chalkware •Table Runners and Much more!

Featuring A

~
.~!

'••

BUFFET
WIIH I LAlli YARIIIY OF FOOD.I FROM

" $

11:30 a.lll. to 7:30 p.at.

50

'

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....

M
\!!J?}

,. ~. ~

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· - · · · .. ~·-1

THANKSGIVING

SALE!
(§2

.,,

-"- ---····

~

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OF GALLIPOLIS

On The French Square • 314 Second Ave. • 446-2333

THANKSOIVINI WEEK

Wool Mellona, l'weeda, Faux i
Furs, Sweater Coati, All
Weathfra and Mohalrl.

COATS .
ALL

25% OFF

Caaual and Dreaay

Short &amp; Long
Slzu 4 to 20 (Including Petitti)

SUITS &amp;
DRESSEs·

The Perfect Dreaa or Suit tor
any OCCIIIOR. AU Nleclld from
our Regular Slack. Missy, Petite
lnd Hilt Slzea. 4.10 24%.
Choose from Leelle FIIJ, Henry
Lee, Diane Roberts, Kaaper and
many more.

OYEI 250 TO CHOOSE FIDII

33% to
5.0% OFF
SPORTSWEAR

Sanibel, Palm Club, Robbie
Sport and more.
All Coordinated In The Bast
Flit '91 Colora• .

IIG SlllCnON

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( \' I \
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OGRAPBY
AT

HOLZER CLINIC

'--0) 2·Speed Washer

,

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Model WWA7678M
8 cycles including Extra Clean and
Quick cycle. 3 water level ·
·
3 wash/rin se tempe ratu re
ti ons. Bleach dispe nser.

' na·

----,d

~

The Radiology Depm·tment at Holzer Clinic 's Mnin Facility has
received th e Am erican College of Radiology's

MAMMOGRAPHY ACCREDITATION
This coincides with National Bt·east Cancer Awareness Month- the
ideal time for ladies to schedule a Mammogram at ....

g.
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Toto! Hnko ovolr.W.Io oil

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L11111Wii T1me Uffer 1

GAWPOUS, OHIO
···~

JOHN NIBER'l'

1/urr~

(. ;f

f

'

MASON, W.Va'. - JohnW, Nib- ·
crt recen!ly received the rank and
decoration of Knights Commander
of the Court of Honour of the
Ancient and Accep~ Scottish Rite
Freemasonry.
This is in recognition of those
33 nd degree Masons who have
worked diligently in Scottish Rite
Masonry or in activities which are
in keeping with the purpose of
· · Masonry .
.
The honor is called an Investiture: Niben is a York Rite Mason
and a member of Beni-Kedem
Temple AAONMS. He is als6 the
secretary of the Mason County
Scottish Rite Club.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
also !)as begun plans for the holiday season.
•
The active Women ' s Auxil iary- the hospital' s volunteer
group and a dandy, it is-will be
putting ~p Christmas trees about
the hospital, the first week in
December and the Auxiliary will
again sponsor a decorated door
contest for departments at the hos·
pita! so that the building will take

Ldrge C;1pac;ty
!.:_.\.'J) 5 Cycle Dryer

'

-

"Christmas is coming;·
"Turkeys are fat;
. ,
.
"Please put a penny,
. Hosptlal employees are takmg
"In the old man's hat".
m canned g~ to help P.rovide for
Some of you will remember that the underpnV!leged and a request Is
sar.ing fr&lt;&gt;D,l long, long ago; some being made to 'the public for stuffed
~fyop won L
. teddy bears. The bears are to be
Either·way, it really doesn't given to the 35 residents of the hosm~tt~r since .we don't talk about pita_I's extended care facility for
I penhies . ~ny~or~. No Sir! ·It's ·. c~unas: Bears m~y be left at .the
1991 and were mto. dollars-.Iots Auxthary couQter m the hospital
~f dollars-~me of us talk in bil- lobby. By the ~ay, collecting the
lions and never bat an eye. We can bears for the pallents IS to be a surd!! that in view of the prosperity prise for the 35 extended care resi·
·that we're aU enjoying.
.
dents.
Pull yourself togethCI:-there is
At the Meigs County Senior Citno .recession-that comes straight
out of Washington-and if there i:rens Center a tree of light will be
were you know you apparently f~atured this season. Donations of
couldn't count on $Ovemment- $5 will dedicate a light to someone
sometimes we call1t the "leader- special in your life, either living or
ship" made up ofboth DemOcrats deceased. For each donation a card
and Republican s-to do much with the recipient's name and the
about it. After'all, how can you donor's,name will,be attached to a
solv~ a problem if you don't admit light on the tree.
It eXISts1
·
The tree will be lighted at 5:30
Meantime, on the local scene we p.m. on Dec. 5. To pariicipate
move ahead with plans for the dooations may be sent to the cenChristmas holiday season-at least ter, Box 722, Pomeroy, or taken to
in a sense it's an escape from the the Center.
The ftrst light on the tr.ce appro·
grim economic realities.
priately will be in memory of
At the Meigs County Museum, Sharon Wright, an employee of the
\he annual Christmas Open House center, who died recently.
has been set for Sunday, Dec. 8,
Oh-did I mention that I hope
and as a parf of the event ~there will
be completely decorated tabletop you have a great Thanksgiving? I
Christmas trees which will be up believe that's something we do
for bid at a silent auction. Funds B.EFORE Chri stmas. Do keep
from the sale of the trees will be smiling.
used to further programs at the
museum.
Incidentally, a holiday feature
this year will be displays of angels,
santas, and snow or water domes.
If you have any of these item s
which you would like to loan they
should be taken to the museum
between I and 4:30p.m. on Dec. 3,
4 or 5. Be sure to label your items
with your nam e so they can be
. returned.
Also in conjunction with the
open house there will be a/li3ndcrafted Christmas stoclcing contest
on Dec. 8. Stockings may be of
any kind--crocheted, patchwork,
embroidery, needlepoint, knittedwhatever. Prizes will be awarded
winners. If you'd like to take pan
take your creations to the museum
between I and 4:30 p.m. again on
Dec. 3, 4 or 5.
The museum is always impressive for the holiday season-this
year should be real unusual.

l' ·~~!i!iii~~~

Will BE OPEN

T

"") J
. !

Refreshments

RACINE · The Racine Ruritan
Club will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the Star Mill Park. There will be a
· guest speaker and a covered dish
dinner.

RACINE · There will be a brief
- RAtiNE - The Racine Ameriorganizational
meeting on Tuesday
·Can Legion Post 612 and auxiliary
at
7
p.m.
at
the
Southern band
will have a Thanksgiving dinner on
room
to
discuss
the
concert band
Monday at 5:30 p.m. at the post
home for legion members, auxil- .program. All interested students
~nd parents arc urged to.attend.
iary, guests and needy families.
WEDNESDAY
. POMEROY - The Meigs CounLONG
BOTTOM - The Faith
ty Veterans ·service Commission
Full
Gospel
Church in Long Bot-·
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
tom
will
have
communion services
the Veterans Service Qffi cc in
on
Wednesday
at 7 p.m. There will
Pomeroy.
be special music and fellow ship
POMEROY · State Senator Jan following the service. Pastor Steve
Michael Long will speak at the Reed invites the public.
DAY Hall,l24 Butternut Avenue
WEDNESDAY
The
in Pomeroy on Monday at 5 p.m.
Reedsville
United
Methodist
He will give an update on Veterans
and Dependents on State and Church will hpld a Thanksgiving
County.Veterans Affairs. The pub- service.on Wednesday at 7:30 1i m.
The public is invited to attend.

Rome
Embellishments
-· "For All Youi Interior Needs,; ·

Free Parking

POMEROY - The Tuppers
POMEROY - The Kyger Valley
Plains
VFW Post No. 9053 will
Quartet will be at the First Baptist
Church of Pom eroy on Sunday · meet Monday at 4:30 p.m. at the
D.A. V. Hall in Pomeroy on Butter·
be~inning at 10:30.a. m. The public
nut Avenue. The group will meet
is mvited to attend.
prior to speaker, Senator Jan
POMEROY - There will be a Michael Long.
17-step AA meeting on Sunday at 7
MIDDLEPORT - The OH KAN
p.m. at the JTPA office, 117 West
Coin
Club will meet Monday at
Second Street in Pomeroy.
Burkett Barber ShoP. in Middleport.
POMEROY • The Narrow Way Social hour and trading session
Singers will perform at the precede the meeting at 8 p.in .
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene Refreshments will be served and
on Sunday at 10:30 am. Rev. Glen new members are welcome. ·
McClung invites the public.
TUESDAY
POMEROY
- The Ohio Eta Phi
POMEROY - Special services
Chapter,
Beta
Sigma
Pbi Sorority,
will be held at the ML· Hermon U.
will
meet
Tuesday
at
7 p.m. at the
!i. Church at 7:30p.m Sunday. The Meigs County Senior Citizens
Censervice will feature Tabitha and the
ter
in
Pomeroy.
All
members
are
New Life Singers and Crystal Pow ·
urged
to
attend.
ell.
MONDAy
' REEDSVILLE . The Eastern
Local School Board will meet
Monday at 6 p.m. at th e high
school.

French Square

LANGSVILLE · The Rutland
Garden Club will meet Monday at
7:30 p.m . at th e home or Mrs .
Albert W~odar.d , Langsville. A
demonstrauon will be held on makmg pme cone wreaths.

Sunday

38&amp; JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OliO
448-11289

"THE LEADER IN WOMEN'S HEALTH CARE"
•

•

�Pomeroy-Middleport~alllpolls, OH......Polnt·Pleasant, WV

PaQe--86-Sunday Times-Sentinel

·1 --

November 24, 1~1

Pomeroy-MI

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

Gallia County schools Whiteley named state's· !lew ACS preside11t
name early ~ter\rention
service coordinator
GALLIPOLIS - Melissa A.
Moore has been selecled the Early
Intervention Service Coordinator
for the 1991-1992 school year by
the Gallipolis City Schools.
The Early Intervention program
is designed to identify and assist
families with children under the
a~e of three who may be in need of
early intervention services.
Upon receiving a referral,' the
Birth to Three Early Intervention
Service coordinator will work with
the family, child and area service
providers to determine the need for
early intervention services and then
she will assist the family in linking
with the available resources.
As a part of the Birth to Three
Early Intervention Program, Gallia
County has established ·a Collaborative Group which meets regularly
in order to plan and implement a
Comprehensive Early Intervention
Service System designed to meet
the unique needs of' the community.
This group is composed of parents,
local agency representatives and
area service providers.
The public is w~lcome to auend
the next meeting at 10 a.m., Monday, Nov. 25 at the St. Peters Episcopal Church, 51 Second Ave.,
Galfipolis.
·Moore receited her B.S. Elementilry Education, with Emphasis
on Early Education, Magna Cum
Laude, University of Rio Grande.
1989. She has been a substitute
teacher in both the Gallipolis City
System and the t;;allia County

GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio Division of the American Cancer Society recently· elected Daniel H.
Whiteley, M.D. to the Presidency
of the organization's volunteer
Board ofTrustees for the 1991-92
term.
· ·Dr. Whiteley, a specialist in
general, thoracic and vascular
surgery, is a member pf the Holzer
Clinic and Holzer Medical Center
surgical staffs.
Beginning his training at Princeton University in 1957, Dr. Whiteley completed medical school at
Upstate Medical Center in Syra· ·
elise, N.Y., and began his Internship and Surgical Residency at the
University of Cincinnati. Upon
completion in 1973, he came to
Holzer and has practiced surgery
there since.
Dr. Whiteley was elected to the
·Board of Trustees of the Ohio Division in 1979 and since then has .
worked ·at the state level to represent the nine-county Southeastern
Ohio district, which includes Gallia.
·
During his tenure, Dr. Whiteley
has served on several committees
including Professional Education,
Field Services, and Service and
Rehabilitation, chairing the last for
two years. He served as Secretary
of the Ohio Division in 1989-90
and Vice President in 1990-91.
Dr. Whiteley views the Ameri·
can Cancer Society as an excellent
opponunity to help cancer patients
and their families-through sen••'e: e~
and education.
"He's a very warm person who
is dedicated to seeing that poople
get the help they need. He did a
fantastic job as our Crusade Chairman," said Pat Boyer, executive
director of the American Cancer
Society ' s Gallia County Unit.
"Throu~h his leadership, our residential mcome rose by 38 pcrccnL
He actually took a·week off from
work to deliver crusade kits to volunteers."
Dr. Whiteley espouses the mission of the American Cancer Society, the world's largest volunteer
health organization. Supported
safelY by volunteer contributions,

"

1

MELISSA MOORE
Local System, ana •s a graduate
sr.udent at the University of Rio
Grande.
She is a Member of the Junior
Women's Club, the Pembroke Club
and The Order of the Eastern Slar.
She attends the Grace United
Methodist Church, Mary of
Bethany Circle and participated in
the GaUipolis Bicentennial Tour of
Historical Homes.
She and her husband, Jay, reside
at420 First Ave .. UalliJJOiis.
For referrals or additional information, contact Mrs. Moore at4466187 or write to her c/o P.O. Box
943, Gallipolis, 45631

Annual parade deadline set
GALLIPOLIS . The Gallipolis
Retail Merchants Association has
finalized plans for the 1991 annual
Christmas parade to be held Saturday, Dec. 7.
.
Deadline for entries is Nov. 26.
Participants will begin lining up
from 4-4:30 p.m. at the Gallipolis
Developmental Center.
Walking units will line up at the

comer of Spruce Street and Second
Avenue and equestrian units will
line up at Spruce Street exlension.
The parade will begin from
GDC a,t5 p.m. and is scheduled to
arrive downtown at approximately ·
5:30p.m.
Those interesled in participating
should fill out the entry blank and
return 11 10 the chamber office.

GALLIPOLIS
CHRiSTMAS PARADE

•"•

'

cultu~~ :;arls.

, Fetinily Planning
, It Makes. Sense•••
Confidential Seniices:
Birth Control
V. D. SQreening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing
Siding ftt

sore. No - mw.t sank• ' - • of inability to pay.

,-

llr .

PlANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

POMEROY:
. 236 E. Main St., 2nd Floor
992·5912
.. 1:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Closed rhursdoy

1.

414 Stcond be., 2nd floor
446·0166
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday ·
8:30 to .12 Saturday
Closed Thursday .
ALSO: · Jackson, Cllllaplab, Alhlnf, Chllkotht, ~n &amp; McAl1IU

DANIEL WHITELEY

'

~~:New
.-

health care brought
..•~~lo
--tri.:.~state conLmunities _

-

::: ;.~. GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer
:; ::Clinic has brought a new health
.• : care specialization to the people of
~: ~e tri-state area with the opening
!·.::Pf the Occupational Health, ~pons .
~: •!ticdicine and Rehabilitation Cen~· ·.ter.
• • •' Lo«;ated on the corner of Fourth
~::SOd Sycamore Streets in Gallipolis,
::&lt;me Center is home to the newly
:;:: !,lireated Dqarunent of Occupation.. : ·al Medicine. Months of planning,
:--training and remodeling have gone
~&gt;into making the facility the only
~::Occupational Health .Center of its
t, . :teind m southeast Ohto or western
.. - West Virginia.
.
; ~ Occupational Medicine deals
with the relationship between
worlcers and their work environ, ' mcnt from the aspect of health,
·, :productivity and social adjustment.
· l't deals with the diagnosis and
· ·treatment of work related injuries
:; 'and illnesses, and encompasses all
' aspects of health including preplacement and interim examina: :Hans, impairment evaluations,
acute care, prevention, rehabilita•tlon of injured' wotiei's, work sirnu' \ation and conditioning.
,
Aiso involved are environmen' tal exposures, ergonomic job analy:: sis and modification, and assistance
.•
1
·
1 • · 'th th
' . ,lO cmp oycrs m comp ymg WI
e
. Amencans with Disabilities Act.
, Physicians treating workers
•from an Occupational Medicine
·
·
h
k
· ;perspective v.'cw t e wor .er as a
·- ·-highly specialized athlete, smcc the
: worker is usually trained to do a
·· :ipecific job. And just as .the team
"'

.

TYPE OF UNIT:
MOTORIZED:
WALKING:
EQUESTRIAN:
Mail Completed Form To:
'
GALLIPOLIS
AREA
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
P.O. BOX465
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

.

LOCOMOilVE- November 16-22

.·

UPCOMING COURSE • Pictured are orgknizers for the
upcomjng babysitting course offered by Holzer Medical Center•.
The classes will be held Nov. 25·26' in the French .Five Hundred
.Room at HMC from 5·9 p.m. For more information eaU 446-5247 1
or 446-5~13.
···
.

.

.

The Key Club of Gallia Acade- GARS Key C"lub has r eceived
my High School recently sponsored state, national, and international
a K-FaJTlily Banquet for members attention for their award winning
of the Key Club and their parents, achie~ement.
·
members of the Junior High
The . banquet was hosted by
Builder's Club and their parents, GAHS Key Club president, Jason
and members of the Kiwanis Club · Kopack. Officers of all tfuee clubs ~
were recognized and the officers of
and their spouses.
The banquet was held in the the Builder's Club were installed
GaUia Academy cafeteria. The pur- for the new school year. The
pose of the banquet was to promote Builder's Club is under the leaderfellowship and to create excellent ship of Chad Ford, an eighth grader
relations among the three clubs. at Gallia Academy Junior High.
The Kiwariis Club is under the
Key Club, the largest youth service
organization in the world, is spon- leadership of Gail Belville. The
sore.d by Kiwanis in order to give banquet served as the kick-off
young people an opportunity to meeting for the upcoming "Toybecome involved in service pro- Town" project. AU three clubs will
jects and to help build ~nd foster join together to supply the manpower needed to conduct the proleadership in young people.
The Builder's Club is the junior ject
Once again this year "Toyhigh version of the Key Club for
students in grades seven and eight. Town" will provide toys for needy
The Key Club at GaUia Academy, children, coats for needy individuchartered in 1941, is the third old· als, and food boxes for needy families. Gus Petrie served as this
est club in the state of Ohio.
year's chairman of the K-Family
Durin~ the past five years the
Banquet .

0°/oon

suffers when a player IS mJured, the
company is .not as efficient or productive when a worker is injured.
The goal of Occupational Medicine
is to design an aggressive, individualized treatment program
designed to return the worker 10 the
job healed and ready to work as
quickly as possible.
Holzer Clinic's Occupational
Medicine physicians are' assisted by
the highly trained staff of the Occu·
pational Health Center which
includes eight Licensed Physical
Therapists,
two
Registered/Licensed Occupational
Therapists, four Masters Degree
Exercise Physiologists, two Nationally Certified Athletic Trainers, an
Occupational Health Nurse, a Certified S~cech Pathologist. and an
Occupauonal Case Manager.
These professionals use the
Roy N. Saunders will celebrate
most modem leChniques and equiphis
60th birth!lay on Sunday, Nov.
ment to meet the patient's n~ds.
Using the computerized Isotcch- 24.
Those wishing 10 send cards can
nologies B-200 Isoinertial back
mail
them to: Roy N. Saunders,
testing machine and Cybex II Plus
Edgewood
Manor of Lucasville,
Isokinetic lesting and rehabilitation
Inc., P.O. Box 789, Room 604,
device.
.
.
· AU patients are supervised dur- Blossom Lane, Lucasville, Ohio,
ing their therapy and rehabilhation 45648.
sessions, and their ~regress is
closely monitored. Pauents can be
referred for any of the Cenler's ser'
vi·ces by themselves, their employMrs. Mane Thomas of Bidwell
·
er, physician or rehabilitative coun- will celebrate her 93rd birthday on
Sunday, Nov. 24 .
selor.
Those wishing 10 send cards oan
For more information, contact
the Occupational Health, Sports mail them to: Mrs. Marie Thomas,
Medicine and Rehabilitation Center 1593 White Oak Rd. , Bidwell,
45614.
at 614-446-5100.

-

t

.

ALL BEDS!
COMPLETE LINE OF
ACCESSORIES
*Hf:aters
•Lilers

•slreets
•comforters

•Mattresses *(OtHiitloHr

INSTANT CREDIT

DELIVERY

ua·

SE'f.DP!
WI ACaPT:
Visa/MC/Di-•I AM. bprest

OHIO RIVER PLAZA
PEA RIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPOUS
446-2337 HUNTINGTON, WV. 736·1 508
OPEN M.S 10:00-9:00/SUNDAY 12:0().6:00

Card shower

·f.ree Gift to
the First 200

Card shower

Holiday Sale

.

..-•.•
•

•

''J

Balora you buy Jewelry
anywhere, compare our
prlcaal

li

New arrival ·

·..

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Carlos (Marie) Stanley of Gatlipolis, announce the birth of their son
at Holzer Medical Center on Monday, Nov. 11.

''L, lawney
Jewel.ers
422 S~COND AVE.
,
GALUPOUS, OH.
.
...................._..

il

~·

..

-~

.

THE 1991 CLAUS &amp; CO. R.R. ORNAMENTS
· This collection of four beautifully
handcrafted ornaments is the perfect
way to keep track of your 1991
Quistmas memories. Each week, you
can get a different ornament for just
$3.95 each with each $5 Hallmark
t
purchase. The dated train trestle is only
$2.95 with any Hallmark purchase.
Come soon to a participating
Hallmark store listed in this ad because
supplles are Ipnited. And this is one
train you don't want to miss .

. Pictured Above
,• .r,a.padded top lane
chests. $

-.·.

. '

'"'o:-vor""'1"'2""lill""or-tot"""

to stocl.

.
.

'
'

Shown right: Large
cedar lined sweater
chest. Awailable in oak
or cherry.
Rt••
$6 0

''
''

PECAN cir CHERRY

..

ONLY 451N STOCK

• I

'

A.NNUAL RETREAT-scott Lucas, Administrator of Veterans Memorial Hospital, left, is
pictured with two speakers featured Friday
afternoon and evening when the annual retreat
ror the hospital's Board or Trustees and Medical
Starr was held at the Holiday Inn, Kanauga.
.center is ·Peter A. Pavarini, Columbus attorney,
who addressed the hospital groups on recent
developments in hospital law and Bradley C.

Engel, right, senior consultant with the
Medimetrix Group, Cleveland, who spoke on
organizational relationships including the alternatives for rural hospitals in today's changing
environment. The annual retreat is held in conjunction with recommendations by the Joint
Commission on Accreditation for such a meeting
away from the hospital site.

Gifts!

. Collect all four.
A different ornament each week.

Our Gift Department is
overflowing with special
items for your home!

•

: Open house Dec. I
! . MIDDLEPORT - "Village
Christinas" open house will be held
· ' at the Middlepo" Ans Council on
Sunday, December I from I p.m.
: 10 5 p.m. and Mooday, December 2
• from noon to 8 p.m.
Handmade gifts will be availr able. including baskets, dol.ls,
; wreadls. teddy bears, C8lied chaus,
• homemade candy and other onunsual gifts. Door prizes will also be
given1way.

=~·~

•

-*~"

Let our family

••• •

•,;

help your famU.y ...

Only at participating Hallmark·stores
l

'

: Service scheduled
'
LONG BO'ITOM - Faith Full
:. Gospel Church will have commu:- nion services on Wednesday
evening at 7 p.m. There will be
' special mlllic llld fellowship will
follow tbe service. Pastor Steve
, Reed inYi•lhe public.

249

dyltS IHtr '""'

CABOOSE- December 7-13

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

•Willia••••11 Brass
•Pinecone Potpourri
•Cotton Throws
•Decoratlft Wooden Picture
fra•e•
•Floret Arrangements
•L••P• •Decoratin Pillows
•Jewelry Ch11ts

COMPLEFE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
fOR HOME USE

HOME OXYGEN - 24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE

\

' ~\

•HOSPITAL BEDS
•WHEELCHAIRS
•BEDSIDE COMMODES
•WALKERS
•BATHROOM AIDS

•

BOWMAN'S HOMECARE MEDICAL
Family Owned
&amp; Operated

THIRD &amp; PINE ST.
.GALLIPOLIS

.~

Serving Ttul Aru For 7 YNIS

•Fint Furniture
•Custom DraptrJ
11Carpet
•Wallcovtrlng

SECOND &amp; GRAPE
IN GALLIPOLIS
446·0332

FREE IELIVERr
© 1991 Hat lma r~

'

"

•'•
•

,,

I

'

·~•

K-Family banquet honors
Key Club members, parents

DRS. DAVID MILLER and TIMOTHY BETZ

j

.

· K-FAMi:LY OFFICE:RS • .Pic!ured at the recent K·Family ban·
· quet are the presidenis ortbe Gallipolis K-Family Clubs. From left
are, Gail Belville, Kiwanis Club president; Jason Kopack, Key
Club president; and Jason Ford, Builder's Club president.

GALLIPOLIS

4'

REDUCED PRICESI

PHONE:

GALLIPOLIS- The 18th Annual Thanksgiving Eve Worship Service will be held on Wednesday,
Nov. 27 at 7 p.m. in the chaJ;Jel of
Holzer Medical Center. Patients,
' their·families and guests are invited
· to attend the service.
: This special religious service
· will include seasonal hymns, Scnp; ture prayers, a sermonettee center. : ing im the theme of ~giving
· to God, and Holy Commumon.
~
Rev. Arthur C. I.Aind, director of
· Chaplaincy Services at HMC, will
: lead the worship service.
• Anne Roach will be the soloist
· and organist will be Corrine Lund
: of the New Life Lutheran Chun:h,
: GaUipolis.
,
Patients and staff who are
, unable to .attend, will be able to
· view the service through a closed
: circuit television system within the
: hospital, channel16.
•
Tim Hackworth, audio visual
: training specialist, is in charge of
- the production.
!
Patients at the service will be
under the care of evening nurse
manager, Sarah Bl111er.

Sandra is completing her siudies;in
Physical Therapy at Ohio Unive?i·
ty.
·
.;
·••

diamonds, earrings,
diamond rings,
birthstones, men's
rings, diamond
necktaces,al)d

'

Thanksgiving eve
service set at HMC

dedicated to eliminating cancer as a rah (Stewart), Sheila and Sandra;
!Dajor health PL?ble~ by prevent- Deborah is a case manager at
mg andcancdie.r, ~~v~g lives CJ:om can- Woodland Centers, Sheila ~hes
cer
mmtshmg suffenngfrom
cancer through re~h. education
and service. ·
Dr ;

Our entire Inventory of

GROUP:
CONTACf PERSON:

·-· __ ......,._
the American Cancer Society 'is ·· Edna, have three' daughlers, Debo· · Science ~t Gallia Academy a~d

'

•

••

•

�'

Page-88--Sunday Times-sentinel

THRIFTY CHUNKY

'

DOG
·fOOD

No.A Michigan hands
Ohio State 31-3 defeat

•

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·IO PM

I

20LB. BAG

$229

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
Nov. 24 thru Nov. 30~ 1991

KRAFT

MARSH·
MALLOW
CREME
•.

13 oz.

69-( 99(
Chicken••••••••••••••
$2 59 GRAHAM

WHOLE FRYING
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LB.

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KEEBLER ·

BEEF BUCKET

.

Cubed Steak•••••••

CRACKER PIE
CRUST

LB• .

WILSON'S CORN KING

60Z.

Wieners•••••••••• oz.
TYSON CHICKEN PAniES OR
Breast Fillets•••

79(

12

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T·Bone Steak••••

LB.

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PORK BUn

LB. .

1
·

STOVE TOP CHICKEN

SPRINGHILL BONELESS 7·12lb. avg.

ms ••••••••••••••••

Sports

November 24,1991

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

STUFFING
MIX

LB.

By HARRY ATKINS
AP Sports Writer
.
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - Desmond Howard
had the longest piDlt relllrn in ·Michigan history and
.finished with 213 all-':J:e ya$ Salurday 10 help
the No.4 Wolverines de eat No. 18 Ohio State 31-3
and clinch the Big Ten championship outright
Michigan (10-1 overall, 8..0 Big·Ten) has won six
of the last seven games from Ohio State (8-3, 5-3),
including ,all four during John Cooper's tenure as
coach of the Buckeyes. Ohio State announced
moments'before kickoff that Cooper had been granted a three-year contract extension.
Michigan wiU meet Pacific-10 champion Wash· ington in the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day. Ohio
: State will play Syracuse in the Hall of Fame Bowl on
• : Jan. I.
'
. Howard had eight yards rushing, 96 on three pass
· receptions, 93 on the punt relllrn, and 16 on one kick·
: off return. He has gone over the 100-yard mark in
· all-purpose yardage in 19 of the hast 23 games,
: including the last 12 dating back 10 the 1991 Gator
· Bowl. He has scored 210 pointS in those 23 games.
: Howard, a leading candidate for the Hcisman Tro: phy, has scored 23 touchdowns this season. His 93·
· yard punt return, which pul Michigan all~ 24-3 in
: the second quarter, broke the school record of 88
. : yards by Dave Brown against Colorado i.n 197~..
After hauling in a 41-yard punt by T1m W1U1ams,
Howard split tlvo tacklers at the 10-yard line and
then broke a taclde at the 18. He moved 10 ihe Ohio
. State sideline, picked up a block from Dwayne Ware
at the 30, and went the iest of the wax untouched. In
' the end·zone, Howard sttuck the familiar pose of the
Reisman staluette before he was bowled over by his
· teammates.
Elvis Grbac completed eight of 14 passes for 123
yards.
·
Kent Graham completed four of eight passes for
. 47 yards in the first half for Ohio State. He was
· replaced by Kirk ·Herbstreit at the start of the third
quaner. Graham returned midway through the fourth
. quaner but was ineffective.
Michigan took control on two Ohio State
turnovers in the second quarter.
Lance Dottin intercepted an overthrown pass by
· Graham and retiD'Ded it18 yards to the Ohio State 12.
· Five plays later, Jesse Johnson dove in from one yard
· out for a 14-31ead.
Carlos Snow fumbled oil Ohio State's next sriap
and it was recovered by Michigan's Otis WiUiams at
the Buckeyes' 21. Four plays later, J.D. Carlson
kicked a 37-yard field goal for a 17-31ead.
Burnie Legette scored on a one-yard run on
Michigan's first possession, after the Wolverines
used a fake field goal to keep the 10-play drive alive
from a founh-and-thrce situation at the three-yard
line.
·
Tyrone Whea~ey had a five-yard toachdovm run
in the third quarter for a 31-3 Michigan lead~Howard
caught a 50-yard pass from Grbac on the fmt play of
that70-yard, eight-play drive.
Wiltiams kicked a season-best 50-yard field goal
for Ohio State early in the second quarter.
Howard didn't have a chance to catch a touch·
down pass. A week earlier, at Illinois, he had set an
NCM record by catching TD passes in 10 consecutive games.
·
No. 10 Tennessee l,, Kentucky 7 - At Lexing10n, Ky., James Stewan rushed for 149 yards and a
10uchdown and John Becksvoort kicktld three field
goals Saturday to .lead No. 10 Tennessee to a 16-7
Southeastern Conference v1ctory over Kentucky.
Stewan scored on an eight-yard run off right tackJe that gave Tennessee (K-2 overall, 4-2 SEC) a 16-0
lead with 9:47 left in the third quarter. Stewan car-

ried six limes for 44 yards in the 10-play, 65-yard
drive. . .
· ·
.
Becksvoort kicked a 22-yard field goal in the fll'St
. quarter and connected from 35 and 28 yards in the .
second period in giving Tennessee a 9-0 advantage at
the half.
Kentucky (3-8, 0-7), completing its .worst season
. since going 0-10-1 in 1982, got on the scoreboar
. d
when fuUback Craig Wallcer dived over the middle
from the one with 13:50 left in the game.
Tennessee, which will play Penn State in the Fiesta Bowl, has won the last seven meetings against
Kentucky. The Volunteers close the regular season
next week against visiting Vanderbilt.
No. 13 East Caroliaa 30, Cincinnati 19 - At
CinciJ1oali, Jeff Blake passed for two touchdowns.
Dion Johnson mn three yards for the, go-ahead touchdown and No. 13 East Carolina survived a scare to
beat Cincinnati 3()..19 on Siuwday.
Cincinnati defenders Ronnie Dixon and Vaughn
. Boolcer sacked Blake for a sllfety with 4:48 remaining tocutEastCarolina'slead to 21-19. TheBearcats
(4-7) started from their 45-yard line after the ensuing
free kick, but stalled when Lance Harp's pass to
Doug Hoog ~ained only one yard on fourth-and-two
a1 East Carolina's 34.
~
Cincinnati ~ld on the next series and got the ball
back with two minutes remallli&lt;Jg. But Jerry Dillon
interCepted Harp's a1 the 20 and ran it in for a touchdown.
East Carolina (10·1) scored Its nnaltwo(iolnts on
a safety with 1:05 remaining. The Pirates, who pia~
North Carolina State in the Peach Bowl on Jan. I,
won their sehool-recon110th in a row after losing the
season opener 10 Illinois. ·
Johnson's score with 8:07 remaining in the third
quarter caine 2:10 after Harp's 33-yard 10uchdown
pass 10 Marlon Pearce had given Cincinnati a 17-14
lead.
·
.
.Pearce earlier caught a 36-yard scoring pass from .
Halp ·

·

(

Cincinnati freshman David Small rushed 25 times
for 131 yards, giving him 1,004 yards for the season.
. No. 23 Tulsa 45, Ohio Univ. 13 -At Tulsa,
Okla., TJ. Rubley threw for four touchdowns and
became the 15th player in NCAA history to pass for
9,000 yards in a career as No. 23 Tulsa coasted to a
45-13 victory over Ohio University on Saturday. .
Rubley's 167 passing yards gave him 9,192 yards
for his career, but the Golden Hurricane (8-2) relied
largely on its running game 10 dominate OU. Chris
Hughley rushed for 166 yards and backup Ron Jackson had 112.
Bobby Brice had 63 yards for the Bobcats (2-8-1)
and set up their only touchdown with their longest
play from scrimmage, a 22-yard run.
Rubley threw touchdown passes of 29 yards to
Marlo Fllir, 21 yards 10 Hu~llley and three yards to
HSfie~ Cruwder, but his b1g~es1 of the day was a
·• thrcli:ylull'coiner lob t6 Dan Bllson.
·
It was Bitson's fllSt touchdown catch since 1989,
when he was a second-team AII:American but was
nearly kiUed in a car accident a week after the season
ended.
. His amazing recovery has been a rall)'ing point for
Tulsa, and the entire team celebrated w1th him in the
· end zone. The celebration penalty gave the Bobcats
the ball at midfield, and Jonathon Clemons scored
from the one af!Cr a nine-play drive.
The Hurricane threw often to Bitson in the fourth
quarter. He needed 84 yards to become the school's
all-time leading receiver, but finished with two
receptions for 40 yards.
He dropped a ball over the middle that was intercepted by Shencll Bruson, leading to a 27-yard field
goal by Jeff Marchant late in the game.

6 OZ. BOX

Seles, Navratilova advance to title
match ofV,irginia Slims Tournament
3 LB. BAG

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•

By BOB GREENE
AP Sports Writer
.NEW YORK (AP).- Monica
Seles and Martina Navratilova
turned up the power Saturday to
make the Virginia Slims Champi·
oriship ti~e match a repeat meeung
of their U.S. Open battle.

Novotna 6-1, 6-4, Seles crushed
Gabriela Sabatini 6-1, 6-1 in an
awesome display of power tennis.
The final wiU be today.
"Everything I touched just was
golden," Navratilova said: "It
didn't mauer how hard I hltlhc
ball, where I was aiming, wha.t kind
~~A~ft~er~N~a~v~ra~t~ilo~v~a~o~u~st~ed~·;Ja~n~a~o~f~~~~shots I was trymg to

HANOVER

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1 Miami va·. Boston coue,e ................. ~ •• Late .
2 Wuhlngton 91, WashiDJton State ........ Late
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Florida State ........................... Did not play
llrllchlim beat Ohio State .................... 31-S
Florida ... ~ ................................ Did not play
california lost to Stanforcl ................. 21-38
Penn State ............................... Did not play
.AII.bama ................................. Dld not playIowa beat Mlanctota ..................'...-. ••••. 23-8
Tenneasee beat_Kentucky .................... 18-7
Nebraska. •••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••• Did Dot play
Teua A a: M beat Southern Methoclllt .611-6
Eut Caronna beat .ClnclnnaU ............ so-19
Clemson beat South Carollna ............. 41-24
Colorado beat Kaaau ........................ 17·14
Syracue beat Weat.Vlrtinia ............... 18-10
Notre Dame ...................~ ......... Did Dot play;
Ohio state loat to llrllchlian ....; ...........',3-31.
Oklahoma ................................ Did not , ..;
VlrJlnla beat Vlrllnla Tech .................. 38-0
Stanford beat Callfanla .................... 18-10
North earonna State beat Muyland ... 2()-17
Tulia beat Ohio Univeraity ................ 45-13
Georata ....................................Did Dot play

24
211 UCLA n. Southern Cal ••• ~ .....................Late

$15,90

hit"

If anything, Seles was even better. She rushed past Sabatini in 48
minutes, allowing the No. 3 seed
on I(. 27 points in the entire match.
'I think I hit some wonderful
points," Seles said. "Whenever I
needed points,'! was coming up
with some good shots."
Seles won her U.S. Open Iitle
,baltic with Navratilova, taldng !he
first-set tiebreak 7-1 before ripping
through the second set 6-1. But
Navratilova won their last meeting
two weeks ago at the Virginia
Slims of California in a three-set
final.
·
·
"Martina is playing great tennis," Selcs said. "For me, !he most
important thing will be to ... just go
for my shots. It is the last march of
the season, so I am going 10 give
all the energy that I have left in
me.''
Seles, seeking her second
straight season-ending Virginia
Slims Championships ti~e and her
lOth 10urnamen1 title this year, hit
cvcry~ing hard, and everything
went in. She picked impossible
.angles and went for unmakeable
.passing shots. They all went in.
Sabatini, who won this Madison
Square Garden event in 1988,
played some of her best tennis of
the week. She only had two games
·to show for it.
The Argentine, third-seeded in
this 16-player field, held service at
30 to begin the mau:h. She held at
15 to pull even at 1-1 in the second
set Everything else belonged to the
top-seeded Seles.
In all, Seles hit nine unforced ·
enors and 25 winners. She won 54
points. Things were going so well
the devout baseliner won on four of
her five trips to the net.
She got in 81 percen1 or her fmt
serves in the opening set. Then she
increased it to 90 percent in the
second set.

.

'

'

mGH STEPPER - Michigu tallbiiCk Jesse
Johnson (left) steps tall after bypassing Ohio
State defenders Rich Frimel (90) and Chico Nel·
son (13) for a 27-yard gain during tbe first quar·

ter or Saturday's Bla Ten seasoa fiule in AaiJ:.
Arbor, Mlcb., which the fourth-ranked Wolver:- :
ines wlln 31-3. (AP)
:::

Dayton beats Baldwin-Wallace
27-10 in NCAA D-Ill playoffs
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Cornerback Mike Ramicone scored the
decisive 1011chdown by stealing the
ball from Baldwin-Wallace's
punter after a bad snap in the fourth
quarter as Dayton beat the Yellow
Jackets 27-10 in the ftrsl round of
the NCAA Division Ill playoffs
Saturday.
The victory moved Dayton to
I I -0 on the year, while the loss was
the fll'st in II games for BaldwinWallace, champions of the Ohio
Conference.
Dayton will play at defending
national champion ADegheny in the
quanerflnals Saturday. Allegheny
beat Albion 24-21 in overtime Satwday.
Pat Hofacrc scored on a pair of
one-yard runs to open and close the
scoring, but it was Ramicone's
touchdown which was the difference.
Baldwin-Wallace led 10-6 at the
half, thanks to a one-yard run by
quarterback John Koz and Mike
Barbena' s 39-yard field goal.
The Flyers took a 13-10 lead
midway through the third quarter
on a 15-yard touchdown .pass from
Steve Keller to Bill Franks, with
John Bianchi adding the point-after
kick.
On 1he fifth play of the founh
quaner, Tom Scrdinak went back
to punt for Baldwin-Wallace with
the ball on · the Jacket 26. But the
snap went over his head and orr his
fingers. He picked the loose ball up
at the four, but was swung around
by Ramicone. Ramicone then

caught him a second time and lOOt
the ball from Serdinak in the end
zone for the IOuchdown with 13:-32
left 10 give Dayton a 20-10 lead.
Hofacre then rounded out the
scoring on Dayton's nexl possession, capping a 12-play, 69-yard
drive with his plunge over left tact- .
Ie.

Dayton ~cld B-W to 17 yards
rushing on 31 atrcmpts; the Jackets
totaled. 180 yards of offense.
Marshall ,3, E. Tenne~e St. 9.
At HuntingiOn, W.Va., Michael
Payton set an NCAA Division I·
AA season record for passing efficiency Saturday and placekicker
Dewey Klein broke the Southern
Conference career scoring record in
Marshall's 63-9 viciOry over East
Tennessee State.
Eighth-ranked Marshall (8-3, 52) all but locked up a berth in the 1AA playoffs . The pairings in the
16-team field will be announced
·Sunday afternoon.
II was the final game for coach
Don Riley of East Tennessee ( 1-10,
0-7). Riley announced his resignation earlier this season.
Payton completed 13 of 19 passes for 210 yards and hit scoring
passes of 14 yards to Troy Brown
and 61 yards to Orlando Hawhett in
sparking the Thundering Herd to a
42..() halftime lead.
The junior quarterback, who djd
not play in the second half, finished
the regular season with a passing
efficiency of 182.85. The native of
Harrisburg, Pa., broke the record of
171.1 by Frank Baur of Lafayelte

.
..
·.....
'•.
•• •
..
-••.
..
••
•.
...
•
.•.
•

in !988.
Klein, a senior from Fon Lauderdale, Fla., kicked nine extra
points 10 set the Southern Conference scoring record at 304 points,
breaking the mark of 302 points by
Kirk Roach of West Carohna.
Brown also set a record, while
teammiiiC DCrdc Grier lied one.
, Brown' s 89-yard~ retum of the
second-half kickoff was his third
for a touchdown for the season. set·
ling a 1-AA record.
Grier returned an interception
.l()() yards for a 10uchdown, tying
the Southern Conference record for
· longest interception return held by
several player.;.
Glenn Pedro scored three Marshall IOuchdowns on runs of sev~.
17 and fl.ve yanls- Freshman T!illii
Donnan quarterbacked Marshall
the second 'half and threw !Ouchdown passes of 12 yards to Cun
Nethercuu and 58 yards 10 Andy
Bowen.
East Tennessee's scoring came
in the third quarter on a 3 I -y·ai~
field goal by Brandon Milhorn and
a four-yard pass to Chris Bealty
from Randy Meredith.
Akroa 37, Temple 32
At Philadelphia, Pa., Jeff
Sweitzer connected with Harol~
Robinson on a 48-yard scoring play
with 1:20 left in the game as Akrori
defeated TcmJ?Ic 37-32 Saturday. :
Akron, wh1ch ended the season
5-6, trailed 32-31 with a third-and;
15 when Sweitzer ~ 10 Robin•
son, who caught It at the 10 and
raced into the end zone untouched.

THE VOLUNTEER SQUEEZE Is what these
Kentucky Wildcats - Adrian Sherwood (left)
and Melvin Johnson (right) -put on Teanessee
~eceiver Cory Fleming after Fleming catehes a

.'

•

(

•

�--

' .~age-C2-Sunday

Pomeroy--Middleport-Gallipolis, Ott-Point Pleasant; wv

Times-Sentinel

In SVAC girls basketball preview Friday,

November 24, 1881.

.

tory.
Each scrimmag~ consisted of
two eight-minutequaners ..
Southw~tem 16, Southern 12
The opener saw Brenda Lewis'
Southwestern squad score the frrst
four points of the game, though the
game's first basket- a layup by
Renee Hale - came after an offensive drought that for both teams
lasted more than two minutes.
Gypsy Simpson padded the
Highlaild~rs' lead tli 4-0 with a

• .M.·

'II

•

DONTA SHOOTS - Southwestern ·front-liner Jennifer Donta

; (42) gels In front of one of the Southern players during 'the first

• quarter of Friday night's SVAC girls basketball preview opener at
: Kyger Creek High School, IS teammate Cindy Armstead (far right)
• looks on to the left of Southern's Jessica Codner (12). Donta scored
: three poinls in the two-quarter scrimmage to help the Highlanders
: win 16-12. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

.

,.,
:
•
:
:
•

CLEARS DEFENDER - Eastern's Tabby Phillips (right)
passed the ball clear or tbe outstretched arms of Symmes Valley
defender Trena Schneider in the first quarter of tbe nightcap scrim·
maee of Friday night's SVAC girls basketball preview, which the
Eagles wlin 26-23. (Times·Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

By SCOTI WOLFE
T-S Correspondent
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Eagles of second-year coach Dawn
Heideman are currently looking
forward to the upcoming 1991-92
,.&amp;iris' basketball season with 16
· girls' vying for a spot on the varsity and reserve squads.
Heideman returns to Eastern af.
ter leading the Eagles to an impressive 13-9 mark overall and 12-2 in
the SVAC, where she was named
the league's "Coach of the Year"
last season.

j.(;allia County girls basketball slates

:Gallia Academy

.:8ate
.

Ti •

to • '

Opponent
29 ........ Portsmouth-6:30p.m.
•Qec. 5 ..., .......;..at Athens-~ :30 p.m.
llec. 7 .. Greenfield McClain- I p.m.
•Dec. 9..............Rock HiU-5:30 p.m.
:pee, 12... ... ...........L~~an-S:30 p.m .
:Dec- 16...............ChilUcothe-6 p.m.
'!J«. 19 .... :.....at Mll!iellS-5:30 p.m.
.11ec. 28 ............at Alexander-! p.m.
~an . 2 .................. at Fairlan~-6 p.m.
t!an 9 ......... Warren Local-5.30 p.m.
16 ............at Jackson-~:30 p.m .
.18 ..............atRockHill-lp.m.
. 20.....Vinton County-5:30p.m.
:Jdn. 23 .................Athens-5:30p.m.
~an. 28 ............at Chillicothe-6 p.m.
ij.,.. 30 .............. at Logan-5:30 p.m .
~· 3.............81 Po~mouth-6 p.m.
feb. 6 ..:............. Marieua-5:30 p.m.
IPtb. IO..at Warren Local-5.30 p.m.
!feb. !3.. ............Jackson-S:30p.m.
~ov.

·=·

Jan. 27 ...................at Southwestern
Jan. 30 ...............................Oak Hill
Feb. 3 ......................at Kyger Creek
Feb. 6 ....... ...........................Eastern
Feb. 10 ...............at Symmes Valley
Feb. 13 .................. ..at North Gallia
Head coach- Ed Moore
(Unless otherwise noted, all
games will start at 5:30 p.m.)

-Kyger Creek

Date
Opponent
Dec. 2 .........at Jackson Tournament
Dec. 3.........at Jackson Tournament
Dec. II ...........................at Trimble
Dec. 12 ..................Symmes Valley
Dec. 16 ...................atNorth Gallia
Dec. 19 ......... ,......................Eastern
Dec. 28 ........................at Waterford
Jan. 6.....................81 Hannan Trace
Jan. 9 ..... ................ at Southwestern
•
Jan: I3 ............................... Southem
:Uead coacb- Gordon Baker
Jan. 16 .................,.........at Oak ~u
•I
.
Jan. 18 .............................Waterford
I · (Start times are liven for the
22 ................................Trimble
frettrve pmes. Tbe vanity games Jan.
Jan. 23 ................at Symmes Valley
lwJII start approximately hour Jan. 27 ..:......................North Gallia
~d a half later In real time.)
Jan. 30 .............................at Eastern
.
Feb. 3........................Hannan Trace
•
•
-" Feb. 6......................... Southwestern
Feb. 10 .......................... at Southern
Feb. 13 ............ ....... ,...... ....Oak HiD
':O.te
Opponent
"""'. 3 ...............Chesapeake-6 p.m. Head coach- Tom Weaver
...' . F ' land

•n

'

'-Jlannan Trace ,
l)ec.

s.............................at

aar

:r&gt;ec. 12•..-.......................at ·sou&amp;hem

(Unless otbenrlse noted, all
games will start at 5:30p.m.),

::OCC· 16 ......................SOU!hwesle!'"

•Dec. 19 ........ :................ .at Oak Hill
l •. 2..... .........at Chesapeake-6 p.m .
;J•t 6 ..........................Kyger Cleek
~· 9 ...............................81 Eastern
13....................Symmes Valley
~-· J6 ......................... Norlh GalUa
iJan. 22 ............................... .Fairland
:Jan. 23 ............ :.................. Southem

II··
*

'

North. . Gallia
Date

Opponent

Dec. 2 ..... North Gallia Tournament

Dec. 12 .... ...................... 81 Oak HiU
Dec. 16 .......................Kyger Creek
Dec. 19 .... .. ....................at Southern
Jan. 6 ......................... Southwestern
Jan. 9..................at Symmes Valley
Jan. 13 .................................Eastern
Jan. 16 ...................81 Hannan Trace
Jan. 18 ......Portsmouth N.D.-I p.m.
Jan. 23 ...............................Oak HiU
Jan. 27 ................:....atKygerCreelc
Jan. 30 ...................::..........Southem
Feb. 3................. :...at Southwestern
Feb. 6 .............. ....... Symmes Valley
Feb. 10 .............. ..............at Eastern
Feb. 13 ...................... Hannan Trace
Head coach -David Moore
(Unless otherwise noted, all
games will start at 5:30p.m.)

Southwestern
Date

Opponent
Dee..2 .at North Gall!&amp; TOumall)ent
Dec. 3 .at North Gallm Tournament
Dec. 12 ................................Eastem
Dec. 16 .................at liannan Trace
Dec. 19 .................. Symmes Valley
Jan. 6 .......................at N«th Gallia
Jan. 9 .......................... Kyger Creek
Jan. 13 ...........................11 Oak Hill
Jan. 16 ...........................at Southern
Jan. 23 .............................at Eastern
Jan. 27 .................. .... Hannlll Trace
Jan. 30................at Symmes Valley
Feb. 3 ...................... :...North Oallia
Feb. s.................................JackiOII
Feb. 6......................at Kyger~
Feb. 10 ..............................Oak
Feb. 13 .............................. Southern
Head coacb - Brenda Lewis

(Unless otherwlle noted, all
Qec. 3 ..... North Gallia Tournament · games
will start at5:30 p.m,) .
Dec. 9 ... at Portsmouth N.D.-6 p.m.

Heideman moved into the
coaching ranks after an outstanding
college playing career at Ohio Uni·
versity; where she won numerous
awards for her offensive post play
and rebounding effons.
·
Tammy Capehan returns to assist the lady Eagles for the second
year, while current OU star Laura
Reding joins the stsff, while completing her eligibility at Ohio Univmity. Reding will help with the
varsity and wllf assist Capehart
with the guard work. Capehart
guided the Eaglette reserves to a
(See EAGLES on C-3)

1'It didil't'IIJipear tO me'thit. the '67; ··
By The AssoclatedPresa
· ·· ·· . · - '""":"'
Shaquille O'Neal .and No. 6 other feUows were looking for him ·
LSU·•Jmost blew it at uum1c:,
'Louisiana State looked like they as much as ~bey cOuld.~· Northeast ·
,were playing for the first time in a head coach Mike Vining said. '.'It
·While. At least they avo~ a big looked like some of the others were .
,upset, and that's more than No. 4 lookin~ io have big nights them,Kentucky did.
selves. '
.
Meanwhile Kenti!Cky's 22-&amp;ame
· LSU, trailing by 18 poihts early
,and still down by eight with two home winning streak was snajlped
.minutes left, rallied tp beat North· by Pittsburgh by an 85.:j)7 margin
~t Louisiana 77 •76 Friday night in the second round of the preseam a season OpellCr.
.
son NIT.
O'Neal, the player of the year in
In other game~, No ..9 Seton.
college ba$ketball last season, had Hall beat St. FraiiCJS; N.Y"' 99-78,
15 points, 15 reboundS and blocked No. 15 CotmecticUt troUnCed Hart·
five shots for LSU. But he also fl)rd 76·46 and No. 23 Georgia
made ~vera! bad passes.
Tech defeated Colorado State 84- · '

. suceessful'season last year.
.
· Lost to graduation from last
,year's club· were some important
cogs in Eastern's winning effortseniors Suzanne .Clay and Lorrie.
Baker, and sophomore Stephanie
Otto, who was a first team SVAC
honoree who f!!Oved to Texas this
past summer.
.
Clay; a second team Ali-SVAC
selection, w.ill be missed greatly ·
fro!" the "~oor generai",.poslti~n,
while Lome Baker, the Stepptng
Stone" award winner for leadership
also graduated.
Top returnees for the 1991-92
squad include letter winners and
seniors Tiffany Gardner, Ruby
Burke, Jennifer Roush, and Lee
Gillilan; junior MicheUe Metzger,
and sophomore-Jaime-Wilson. ·
Last year Gardner, a 6·0, forward/center was the defensive
award winner and adds-need highth .
from the post Burke, a 5-9, swing
guard, was the winner of the "Hustie" award, and versatile gullfd
MicheUe Metzger, a 5·8 player had
the '.'Most Assists." Otto had the
"Most Rebounds• and the 6--2 senior center was "Most 1m proved."
Another integral returnee will be
5· 7 senior point guard Tabitha
Phillips, who alternates with 5-6
Wilson at both guard ~lions.
Heideman stated, 'We lost both
of our senior point guards, but our
ballhandling is very much improved. This will be a big plus in
the program. We are much more

Eastern's 1991-92
girls basketball roster
Player-pes.
Ht.
Tiffany Gardner-F/C ...... 6--0
Ruby Burke-G/F ............ S-9
Jennifer Roush-C............ 6-1
Lee Giflilan-G ................ 5-8
T~~it!'a Phillips-G .. ........ 5· 7
Debbte Gray-F .............. .5-7
Shelly Metzger-G/F ....... 5-8
Penny Aeiker-F .............. 5·9
Jaime Wilson-G ...... ,...... 5-6
Nom Eastman,G ....... ..:.. 5-4
Amy Redovian-G........... 5-8
Tara Congo-C ..............5·11
Mariko Tayama-G .... ..... 5·2
Melissa Guess-G/F.... ..... S-7
Beth Hyseii-G ................ 5·5
Michelle Schultz-F......... 5-9

399 W. M1i1

461 SOUTH THIRD
MIDDLEPORT, OH."
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MASHING ·THE RIM of the objective of Kentucky postman
Jamal Mashburn (left), who goes up againsttbe defense offered by
Pitt's Eric Robley durinl the first ball of Friday niebt's pre-season
.NIT game In. LexiiJIIon,. Ky~ which tbe Panthers won .85-67. (AP)

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,

Desfitc citing weaknesses as
lack o hei~hth and sometimes
ovcr-aggresstveness, Coach Heide·
man looks for her squad to be
SVAC contenders and would like
to advance further in the· tournament.
Overall Eastern fans should be
in for another fine season of girls'
varsity basketball.
Following is a roster and schedule.

•
'•

-·...

-

Ferrellgas
State Route

~
Ferrollgos

~5

Gallipolis, OH 45631

Call us

446-2264

Cliffside Golf Club
CIIMipaio, Ol1io

grid standings
OP
189
215
118
148
214
181
125
243
n3
254
389

3 Rouncb of Golf
"Groen-~·

OP
78
57
84
116
93
189

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617

'Frldayls result:
~State playoffs)

.•

..

•CAPE 18 DeSales 13

-.

~-~

- ·-

'

AUtO RIM CENtER

. Numbtf

SEOALONLY
(1991 Final)
:ream
W L. P
Marietta ............... 4 I 107
topn ........... :......4 I 110
Oallipolis............. 3 2 123
lackson ................2 3 138
Wamn ................2 3 103
1&gt;\thclls .................o 5 36
lrOTALS
12 12 617

•

~IGrout'ld

Dawn Heideman

(Overall)
1991 FiDal
;ream
W L
:Portsmouth ............9 2
'Col. DeSales ....... ..9 4
:r.ogan ....................7 3
Jlallipolis ...............6 4
Jackson ..................6 4
Marietta .................4 6
;Coal Grove ............4 6
Meigs ................... .4 6
marren Local.. ......2 8
faint Pleasant........! 9
Athens ...................0 10

T458

IN MIDDLEPORT, :OHIO
PH. 992·2 i 96

ing.''

: (Unless otherwise noted ~ all
11oubleheaders will start with the
reserve game at 5:30 p.m. The
'Varsity game will start at approxwately 7 p.m.)

-•

$13,999 .

·

Date
Opponent
Nov. 30 .at Fedeml Hocking-6 p.m .
pee. 12 ..................at Southwestern
-Dec. 14 ............... .. Meigs-5:55p.m.
Dec. 16 .............. ...............Southern
Dec. 19 ................... at Kyger Creek
Dec. 23 .Federal Hocking-5:55p.m.
~an . 2 .............................. at Trimble
·Jan. 6 ....... .......................... Oak Hill
Jan. 9 ..... ............ ....... Hannan Trace
,an. 13 .....................a.t North Galli a
ian. IS............... atMeigs-5:55 p.m.
Jan. 16 ................at Symmes Valley
:Jan. 23 ....................... Southwestern
;Jan. 27 ........................... at Southern
'1an. 30 ........................ Kyger Creek
'feb. 3.............................at Oak Hill
~e~. 5 ................................. Tri mblc
feb. 6 ....................at Hannan Trace
.feb. 10 ........................ North Gallia
:Feb. 13 ...................Symmes.Vallcy ·

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101

Yr.
Sr.
Sr.
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So.
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confident with the ball, which in
tum will cut down turnovers!"
"After a line off-season workout
and conditioning program !think:
many of the Lady Eagles will become better shooters al)d scorers
this year. I also look to 1et more
three ·point goals this YCI!I'·
·
Heideman who was a rebounding specialist herself, was quick to
recognize the importance of weight
lifting and improving upp_er body ·
strenghril) the Eagle front line. Af• .
ter' extensive workouts this summer
the result hss already been seen in
improved rebounding, where the
second year coach stated, "Our improved strengtli, aggressiveness,
and confidence will help us rcbound better this season."
- Depth-wise, even with last
year's losses, EHS should be solid.
"We haveno'problem substituting. The problem I have is selecting a starting fi ve out of nine
strong players. I look for our
starters to be rotated a lot," said
Heideman, smiling with the
thought of having such a problem.
Eastern has ,good overall team
speed this season, which should enable them to get their fastbreak going. Citing the ability of her "quality athletes• to get the ball up and
down the floor, Heidem;m says if
her squad·can get the lay-up off the
break, ''there will be no need for an
offense."
EHS hopes to push the ball up
the court offensively and not give
up as marly lay-ups defensively, a
combination that the EHS mentor
cited as the "key to our success."
"When we do set up, we want a
lot of mevement and better shot selection. I feel offenses are better
.when a team is relaxed. We'll look
better this year and will have more
people involved in scoring. Our
team has a great attitude, work
hard, had a taste of winning last
year, and have come back with
high goals. The new players have
come along quickly .. .I look for a
;trong season."
Defensively, lOok for EHS tore. ally pressure the ball and forc e
turnovers from several different
· lilignments. ''We hope to be. more
aggressive as we started our tempo
last year and will pick up the paee.
Our strengths are based on last
year's success and the numbers we
can play (9•10 getting lots of time).
We are self-motivated and willing
to work hard with five fresh players
to be on the floor, always pressur-

.

remaining ·before fr eshman under COICh Ron Ganulin. a fonner
Clarence Ceasar hit a three-pointer UNLV 111ia1t.
and Paul Marshall followed with a
G_..ulin 111d his team ran in(O
three-pointer
traffic problems and needed nearly
and a short shot to tie it.
three 6ours ~ abOut two hour~
Ceasar was fouled with five sec- more than normal - to make the
· onds left, and missed his first free bus trip from Brooklyn. They
throw. Ceasar made his second try, arrived at Seton Hall's campuS
Northeast's Keith Johnson missed aboUI 30 minutes before tipoff, and
at the buzzer and LSI,) had wait
the start was delayed for 20 min.
Ceasar and Singleton bad 16 utes.
..
points apiece forLSU, and Maurice
Seton Hall scored the gi,me's .
Williamson added 13.
first seven points and was ahead
Chad Jacobs scared 19 points in 16-10 when Ca;~oer entered. He
the first half for Northeast, includ- keyed an 18·5 spurt and finisbe4
ing four three-point
with 20 points, as did Terr,,
shots. LSU abandoned its zone Dehere;
·
·-: ·
defense at halftime and went to a
No. 15. Connedlcut 76
;..
man-to-man, with Singleton
Hartford 46
;
assigned to stop Jacobs. The switch
Roil Sellers scored 12 poini(
Paid off as I acobs did not score during a 13-0 run that closed tl(e
again.
·
first half and ·sent Connecticut
Pitt 85, No. 4 Kentucky 67
bri:ezing past Hanford.
.
~
Senior center Darren MornThe Huskies led 21 -19 whe.ll.
ingstar scored a career-high 27 Sellers started the burst. The lo~·
points anti Pitt shut down Ken- was the wotst for Hartford since-.:
tucky's long-range shooters.
.
31 -point defeat by Wichita State cit·
The Wildcats, who made 16 of Dec. 29, 1984..
••
32 three·pointers in beating West ·
No. 23 Georgia Tecb8f :: .
Virginia on Wednesday, made only
Colorado State 67
· -:
seven of 36 three-point
Jon Barry scored 29 points anif
tries. Kentucky shot just 27 per- Georgia Tech a(l~anced to th~
cent overall.
semifmals of the NIT on W~
No.9 Seton Hall99 ·
day night against Texas at tlil! ·
St. Francis, N.Y., 78
Madison Square Garden.
-: ·
Bryan Caver came off the bench · Coach Bobby Cremins won flit
. to spark an early burst as Seton the 200th time at Tech and
.
Hall
SL Francis· rust
300th time overall .

Eagles ... cc'~ntinuedrromc-2&gt;

WILL IT GO IN? -That's tbe question foremost on tbe miDds
of Kyger Creek's Keri Black (partiaUy obscured by Oak HUI's Tara
Fisher, No. 20) and Oak Hill's Jennifer Ramsey (left) seconds after
Black's shot bounced around on top o,f the rim retainer iD tbe rii'St
quarter of Friday night's SVAC girls basketball preview scrimmage. Though the shot rmaJiy went in, KC's luck was scarcely better after that, as the Oaks went on to win 16-12. (Times-Sentinel
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

IQl

su.,day nm• ilntlnnl P80• C3

LSU edges ·NortheastLouisialla; Pitt tops Noe 4 Ke-ntucky .in NIT.

layup following her offensive of two-point leads on the strength guard Tabby Phillips (5· 7, sr.),.for- Phillips (four), Roush (thrt;e) 10d
·. · • . .
rebound, but Dave Gaul's :roma- of baskets by Nickie Meade (7:22) wards Tiffany Gardner (6-0, sr.) . Burke (two).
dQeS fmally got on the board with a and Beth-McCormick (6:55) that and Ruby Burke (5-9, sr.), andJen: · . To their credit, the · Vikings
jumper from the right half of ~ . sandwiched a game-tying long nifer Roush (6-2, sr.) at center. started working on the five-point
There was .also Symmes Valley lead - an advantage created in
key by Aimee Mills (1:50) and a . jumperbyTriplett(7:09).
12-foot jumper by Jessica Codner
But when· Mullens stole the ball with point guard Trina Schneider ·. part by a pair of layups by Metzger
(:26) that tied the game at4-4 at the from Pirate poirit guard Tina Myers . (5-4, sr.), off-guard Stacy Conley in the last 30 seconds of the first
~nd of the frrst quarter.
, and drove .m for the layup with (5· 7, sr.), forwards Julie Wilson (5- quaner - the Eagles had to start
The Highlanders, with front-lin- 5:57 left to tie the game at 6-6, 7, so.) and Cathy Krausz (6-1, jr.), the second quarter. But the ~glcs
ers Cindy Armstead and Jennifer Trace started to ~ull away, albeit and Jennifer Owens (5-10 , sr.) at inched their lead back u)l to five
between the six- and five: minute
Donta on hand, showed some slowly, before building a lead siz- center.
strength in the paint, as demonstrat· able enough for Mullens to practice
1n spite of the height, it was the marks ·o f act two. After a few
ed by Armstead's teain-high seven some of her no-look passes a Ia shorter people in the forest- Julie reductions of the Jead, baskets by
points and Donta's three, but Magic Johnson. In ·addition, the Wil$on and Schneider - that got Roush and Jaime Wilson coming
numerous mistakes - common to Wildcats also had time to keep thin~s rolling for Donna Wilson's 24 seconds apar) gave Eastern a 22'
Vikmgs (Jennifer Davisson , last 15 lead with the-four,minute mark
both teams - in ball control and working on their inside game.
Also
scoring
for
the
Wildcats
year's
coach, stepped down after fast approaching.
ball security cost the Highlanders
were
Marianne
Caldwell
(two
taking
m~temity leave). But after
But in the next minute,. Oweris
several chances at rebounds and
points)
and
Missy
Sanders
(one).
Krausz
put
an
exclamation
point
on
and
Krausz scored on layups to
steals. This, combined witll the ·
Meade,
Salisbury
and
Dama
Valley·
'
s
lead
with
an
11-foot
trim
Eastern's lead to 22-19, and
repolishing of the Tornadoes' net
radar, saw Southern whittle away at Twyman scored· four each to lead jumper from the left wing with after Roush missed the second free
6:02 left in the first quarter to give throw after making the first one
Southwestern's lead until a .pair of North, and McCormick had two.
Oak Hill16, Kyger Creek 12
Symmes a 5,0 lead, Dawn Heide- (3: 16), Krausz' sank an eight-fool
baskets in the lane by Mills in the
Tom Weaver's Kyger Greek man's Eagles rained'buckets on the jumper from the left ·half of the
last 90 seconds of the scrimmage
cut 'ihe five-point lead Southwest- squad ~ad considerable trouble Vikings, outscoring them 14-4 the Jane to cut Eastern's lead to 23.2·1
with three minutes left .. But Valley,
em had with 1:4~ to go to one (13· finding the nylon against' an Oak ' rest of the quarter.
Hill squad minus two starters (AliThe Eagles' defensive pressure could manage only one basket- a
12) with 59 seconds left.
But the 5-10 Armstead, who cia Lloyd, one of the missing ·seemed more organized than that of jumper in the lane by Owens,(:2'7J:
was responsible for the High- starters, suffered a sprained left the Vikings, though neither team -after that, and Eastern got a freelanders' last five-point lead with a ankle in practice but should return was lacking in desire to create throw from Jaime Wilson .and a·
layup, sank the first free throw to action next week) and its head havoc with whomever had the ball. four-foot turnaround jumper froll(
before missing the second. With coach (Scou Cayton was preparing In addition, an unselfish offense the right wing from Gardner down
~
Southwestern ahead 14-12, South· for his Saturday wedding, but man- helped the Eagles lay the ground- the stretch to secure the win.·
Owens, .who Jed all scorers in
ern's Linda Mangeroy had a aged to find time to break away work for what could be a starless
chance to get her team in position from the slag pany and show up at but star-studded team, as shown by the preview with -10 points, was' ·
the offensive contributions of followed by Krausz (eight).
to tie the game, but her pass on the the preview).
In spite of the Olllcs' problems Gardner and Shelly Metzger
Schneider (three) 81)d Julie Wilson.,
fast break feU into the Highlanders'
hands with 35 seconds left. The handling. the Bobcats' defensive points each), Jaime Wilson""'''·
Highlanders created the final score pressure throughout the affair, the
when Armstead repounded a one- Hill padded the 84 lead it had at
and-one miss by point guard-Ghari- the end of the frrst-quaner-and DBl-·~
ty Lewis and sank the four-foot loaned it to I0 points with 3:20 left
jumper in the lane with 22 seconds before three straight.baskets by the
Bobcats in the last two miputes cut
left.
· Also scoring for Southwestern the Oaks' lead down to the four·
were Lewis, Gypsy Simpson and point margin at which it eventually,
Missy Simpson (two points each). settled.
The Bobcats had the advantage
Mills, who led the Tornadoes with
eight points, was followed by Jen- in height, with Keri Black (6,0, sr.)
nifer Cross and Andrea Moore (two in the post and Stephanie Jones (5I I, fr.) and Amy Gindlesberger (5each).
8,
jr.) as forwards going against
Hannan Graee 27, N. GaUia 12
center
Jennifer Adkins (5-7, so.)
In spite of the fact. that junior
and
forwards
Anila Carney (S· 7, · ·
point guard Lucy Mullens led Hanso.)
and
Tara
Fisher
(5-5, sr.). But
nan Trace in scOring once again, it
the
Bobcats'
overall
youth and
appears that Ed Moore's Wildcats
early
ineffectual
shooting,
not to
have learned something from the
mention a consistent failure to box
NBA champion Chicago Bulls.
out
in the paint, caused them to get
Mullens had nine to lead the
behind
and stay there.
Wildcats, but "team effort" seems
Holly
Sharp Jed Oak Hill with
to be the phrase that pays, and it
eight
points,
and Stacey Adkins
did in the form of seniors Tammy
had
four,
while
Jennifer Adkins
Thomas and Kim Triplett, who had
and
Fisher
chipped
in with two
six points each. ,
each.
Black
and
Tanya
Drummond
David Moore's North Gallia
led
KC
with
four
points
each, and
squad drew fli'St blood in the form
Gindlesberger
and
Jones
scored
of a baseline jumper from the left
side by Beth Salisbury eight sec· two each.
Eastern 26, Symmes Valley 23
onds into the game. And even after
The nightcap was a tale of two
Thomas took a pass ft:am fellow
teams
with plenty of redwoods.
front-liner Stephanie Stapleton and
There
was Eastern with point
rna&amp; the layup 15 seconds later to
tie the SliJile, the Pirates took a pair guard Lee Gillilan (5-8, sr.) , off-

Improving Eagles to
start season Saturday .

Pomeroy.o...Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleau"" wv

November 24, 1991

_Southw_estern, Hannan Tr~c~, O~k. Hill; Eastern post Yictories .
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
'
Times-Sentinel StafT
• CHESHIRE ;_ In the four
scrimmages ·that comprised Friday
fiight's SVAG girls basketball pre·view at Kyger Creek High School,
Southwestern, Hannan Traee and
Oak HiU held their opponents to 12
points, while Eastern's Eagles
needed the intense scoring they
a·nteashed on Symmes Valley to
withstand the Vikings' challenge
and emerge with a three-point vic-

..

.., _ ._

__ . _ _ ..... .......

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4) _ _..

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November 24, 1991 ·:
"-.

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

Page-C4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

~
. ~~~==========~~========~~~~==~.==============~.-

Better-conditioned Bobcats to take floor in 1991-92·season
lia Academy before the start of the Competed .. . 1991-92, Win,'" said who are out of gas shoo_t fN rooJi
school year leaves KC without its Riccardi. And ii seems thanhis ~ pricks than hull's eyes) in the
blue-collar leading scorer. So what year's team is trying to live up to fourth quarter," Riccardi ·said.
does Riccardi plan to do with the the mol!O, as several of the players "We're better conditioned now
new breed of Bobeats?
have attended various summer bas- than last year."
For one thing, an attitude that ketball camps and open gym at the
The addition of 6-3, 230-pountl
puts winning above all else is vital, KCHS gym this past summer in Grady Snyder - one of four
because Kyger Creek hasn' t had a addition to ~-round weight train- reluflling lettermen in the lineupwinning season since the 1983-84 ing, conditioning that at one point and 6-2, 180-pound senior Jerry
season, when Keith Carter was tbe had the p1ayers running four miles Ramsey should provide th~:, beef
head man ll!ld players suc_h as J.D. per day and running the· stadium the Bobcats need to enter the paint
Bradbury, Dav1d Martin and Chuck steps being put into effect
with confidence. Seniors Phil BradVogel were on the roster. That
"If we're well conditioned, our bury, Craig Kingery and Marc Viicrew propelled the Bobcats to a 15- shots won't be affected (players lanueva, all starters on last year's
,
7 &lt;(ecord, which included a trip to
the Ciass A(nowDivision!V)see- .
tiona! finals against Carl Wolfe's
I '
lf.l_, I U.
I
Southern Tornadoes , who beat
·~JC
lhem47-43.
•.I_ ....
With Kyger Creek posting an
·
...-,
overall record of 33-113 since that
season, such a showing seems to
Tri-Valley Conference volleyWeaver, a 5-8 middle hitter, was
prove that boys' basketball hasn't ball champion Meigs placed three 75 of 96 receiving (78~) and 133
been high on the priority list on the players on the first team and also cif 144 S~Jrving (92%) in additon to
Cheshire sports scene . Riccardi ·' took home the top two individual her 20 aces, 79 kills, tO ~ists and
wants to change that
awards for this year's TVC all-con- 93 points.
"We've got T-shirts that read ference team.
Baer and Hanning were also
'Bobcat Basketball...1990-91,
Tricia Baer, who led the all-con- named to the Division II, District
ference team, was joined on the 13 all·Star team, while Weaver was
firSt team by teammates Kim Han- named to the honorable llJCntion
ning and Chrissy Weaver. Baer was team.
named the Most Valuable Player,
Here are the members of the
while Marauder coach Rick Ash 1991 all-Tri-Valiey Conference
shared Coach of the Year honors volleyball team.
with Jackson's Chuck Dorsey.
First team
COLUMBIA, S.C. - Reedsville resident Michael Harris was
Baer, a 5·5 senior setter, had an
Mel~- Tricia Baer, Kin\ Hanone of only six amateurs from Ohio to participate in the amateur
82% (82 of 100) receiving percent- nin~ifler·ssy ~;av~lot, Sandee
portion of the Bassmaster 100 at Lake Murray near Columbia this
age. She was 189 of 199 serving
. past fall, where he was the only participant from Ohio to make the
for 95 %in addition to her 68 aces, Beattie '
· top 25 payoff limit.
·.
39 kills, 78 assists and 147 points.
Vinton County - Missy
: Harris placed 16th overall with a 14.6 pound ca«;h to win a $500
Ash led his team to tlleir second Vanover ,
.
· prize.
·
consecutive TVC championship .
NelsonVIlle: York - Becky
A pro segment and amateur tournament were staged.
with a 19-1 recordoThe-last-three . ·Rosser, Stephame 1\t!elaughhn - .
David Whanon of San Augustine, Texas, stroked the sulky largeyears under Ash have seen the
Federal Hockang- Jenme
mouths of Lake Murray just enough to give him the professional
Marauders post a 58-12 (82.9%) Pierson
,
. championship in the Bassmaster BP 100. His catch in a four-day
record, two TVC championships,
Wellston- Jenrufer Ousley
period was 48 pounds, 12 ounces, allowmg hun to edge out Tom
two sectional championships and
Alexander- Teath~ South
· Mann Jr. of Buford, Ga., by five ounces.
one district runner-up.
Honorable menhon .
Harris's achievement was quite commendable as he defeated
Hanning, a 5-6 senior outside
llelpre - Shen Stacy, C,brjsty
amateurs from 28 different states to gain a chance at the top 25.
hitter, posted a 79% (71 of 90) Bartl~tt
.
receiving percenta$e. She was 200
M•,ller - Melan!e Pompey
of 209 {96%) servmg had 41 aces,
T!lmble_- Ang•e King ..
85 kills, eight assists. and 145
Nelsonville-York - Christma
points
Warren ·
Vinton County- Jill Hatem
·

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times·Sentinei.StafT
CHES HI RE - Los t in the
hoopl a surro undin g the Kyge r
Creek gi rls' basketball team's
claiming a SV AC co-championship
was some good news coming from
the Bobcat boys camp last year.
To m Riccardi's Bobcats didn't
end up in the SVAC basement last
year - Southwestern did. But it
was the Highlanders, who were
beaten by Kyger Creek in both of
their regular-season meetings, who
put an end to the Bobcats' tournament tmil with a four-point victory
in the Di vision IV Rio Grande sec·
tional (see last year's scores at the
end of the article). In addition, the
Bobcats committed an average of
17 turnovers last season.- a drop
from the 30-odd gaffes per game
that marked the 1989-90 season.
Graduation, which claimed top
scorers Sean Denney and Shane
Swisher, wasn'tthe only means by
which Kyger Creek lost players, as
juhior Bryan Hall's transfer to Gal-

Three llarnuders recezve
1

a1·1

•

vo. lleyball honors

I

-Area sports briefs:Harris makes top 25

GAHS basketball reserve
seats still on sale

GALLIPOLIS - Reserve seats for the general public for tbe
1991-92 Gallia Academy basketball season arc still available.
The price wiD be $40. Tickets may be purchased in the principal 's office at Gallia Academy High School from 8 a.m. lP 3 p.m.
on weekdays. There will be a limit of four tickets per individual or
business.

'
:
:
:

team, will head a cast that includes
a ·sophomqre group Riccardi
claimed could .make running the
full-coon press a lot easier.
· "(Sophomore) Paul Covey can
shoot threes, and I've got Shane
Polcyn and Chris Crace, who has
grown three inches from where he
was hist year," said Riccardi, who
reported 18 candidates going for 12
seats on his bench. "llefore, we
didn't have people who could get
the ball up and down the court.
Now we do,'' he added.
Ricc~rdi's assistants will be
reserve coach Chip Haggerty
(reserves) , Brent LoYe (eighthgrade squad) and Chuck Leach
(seventh:grade team).
.
Kyger Creek will play its first
game on Friday, Dec. 13 against
Symmes Valley at Aid before ~!lay­
ing bost for the firSt time on Fnday,
Dec. 20 against North Gallia.

Kyger Creek's
1990~91 results
Opponent
Ironton St. Joe ..................L
Eastern .............................L
Symmes Valley ................L
North Gallia .....................L
at Oak Hill ....................... L
at Southern ....................... L
at Southwestern .............. W

,
THE PLAINS - The Athens County Shrine Club will hold its
• annual basketball preview on Friday, Nov. 29 at Athens High
School, with four two quarter scrimmages on tap.
At 7 p.m. the Meigs Marauders will tangle with the Vinton
County Vikings, and. at 7:45 defending TVC champions Federal
Hocking will play Trimble. Logan will play Nelsonville-York at
: 8:30, aild the last contest will put the host Athens Bulldogs against
the Alexander Spartans.
.
'
Admission will be $2 for students and $3 for adults.
•

Score
45-49
55-68
44-49
73-86
61-90
49-84
65-61

Wahama Tournament
- -(at Mason, W.Va.)
Opponent
Score

Sharples ... :.......................L 70-90
Hannan ...........................W 67-64

Back to regular season
•

Opponent
Score
at Eastern ..................... ~ ...L 62-64
at Symmes Valley ............ L 50-56
Wahama ........................... L 70-76
at North Gallia ................. L 60-109
Oak Hill (OT) .................. L 64-71
at Wabama ....................... L 62-79
Southem ........................... L 53-75
at Hannan Trace ............... L 72-88
at Ironton St. Joe .............. L 59-75
Southwestern ..................W 58-57

(Rio Grande sectional)
Opponent
Score
Southwestern ................... L 54-58

'

;Junior high Eagles
:to begin season Dec.12

. EAST MEIGS -

.
~
The Eastern junior high girls will open their
: season with the Eastern varsity on Thursday, Dec. 12 at Soutbwest-

' cm."'

: There are 13 players· currently vying for a starting spot on the
; team. Team members are eighth-graders Nicole Nelson, Jessica
• Karr, Beth Bay, Rebecca Evans, l.aurcn Young, Kristi Warner and
: Crystal Morris, and managers Debra DiUon and Crystal Smith.
: The seventh-grade players are Laura Eastman, Patsy Aeiker,
; Crystal Holsinger, Amanda Milhoan, Martie Holter and Christie
1 arossniekel.
Scou Wolfe is the junior high coach.

'

;!1

Opponent
Oak lliU .... ................. .....W
at Southern ......................W
at Southwestern ..............W
·NortlrGallia ........:..;... .....W
Symmes Valley ..............W
at Kyger Creek ...............W

RIO GRANDE- The activities;:i
schedule far Lyne Center is as fol-. : ,
•;J

Iows:

.... l

Gymnasium hours
"'
Sunday - 1-3 p.m.,.open recre-' ~
ation; 6-8 p.m., college mcreation ; +:
Monday- 5:30-7:30 p.m.•.col-· •
lege recreatiOn
ruestlay - 5:30-7:30 p.m., college recreation
•
Wednesday -closed
'
Thursday - closed
;.
Friday -closed for SVAc: •:
boys basketball preview
;
Saturday - closed
Sunday, Nov. 14 - 6-8 v.m.,
college mcreation

'

Score
Opponent
South Point.....................W 59-55
Chesapeake ...................... L 49-59

. ·:;;:,''k?i

':¥'iitl· .

ERICA

:· ;·

~

·-~*;~.

..

THOUGH IT MAY SEEM that Charlotte
guard Tyrone (Mugsy) Bogues (1) is bowling for
dollars, be Is actually getting a grip on the loose
;ball after Indiana forward Detlef Schrempf

,,

By The A-ssociated Press
: The Miami He;n is doing its pan
tel change the face of the NB A ajul to maintain the status quo.
• The Heat, an NBA doormat-for
t1lree seasons, improved its record
~ 7-3 Friday night and moved into
f•st place in the Atlantic Division
1\jith a 118-112 victory over the
Sbcramento Kings.
I What didn't change was that the
l~ss was the 43rd straight on the
rqad for the Kings, extending their
~A record.
l " Let's be honest; I didn'tthink
ll!c'd be 7-3," fttst-year head coach
Igevin Loughery said. " But look at
the way .we're playing. There's no
reason we can't win these ¥ames."
~ Glen Rice-and rook•e Steve
Smith scored 23 points apiece for
tlie Heat, which needed 27 games
tP win seven last year. The Kings,
} 3 at home, arc now 0-6 on the
road.
; The Kings didn't give up on Fri4ay, even though Miami led the
ontire second half. Sacramento
~ored 39 points in the fourth quar¢ r and closed to 112-108 with 44
seconds to go, but Rony Scikaly
Jllade a layup and Smith hit four
!fee throws to clinch the win. ·
, Elsewhere in the NBA , it was
~harloue 112, lntli8113 110; Atlanta
99, Philadelphia 92; New York 99,
Detroit 90; Utah 121, Denver 96;
Phoenix 105, the Los Angeles ClipPerS97; Golden State 116, Portland
tl 2; Chicago 112, Seattle 109, in
gvertimc; and the Los Angeles
akers 98, San Antonio 96.
Hawks 99, 76ers 91
Kevin Willis, the NBA's leadiog rebounder, had 27 points and a
cjlreer-high 23 rebounds as Adanta
won at Philadelphia.
: Rumeal Robinson had 16 points
a)ld a career-high 15 assists for the
Hawks, who knocked the 76ers out
de first place in the Atlantic Divis,·on . .
Charles Barkley had 35 points,
11'1 rebounds and six steals for the
76ers, who trailed only 90-87 after
two free throws each by Barkley
a)td Armon Gilliam.
,, Robinson then hit an 18-foot .
jumper to $tarl a 7-2 rally that put
i6e Hawks back in control.
·Warriors 116, 'rra,ll Blazers 112
' Golden State improved its roa&lt;!
rj cord to 6-1 as Chris Mullin
11C9rcd 2S points, including a 15f~ter for the go-ahead basket with
1!2 seconds remaining against Ponl~~d.
T The Blazers were called for two
:Zll-second violations in the final
;130, including one with 14 sec~ds remaining, setting up Mullin's

.'

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.
I

-

(be bind Bogues) loses the ball during tbe first
quarter of Friday oigbt's NBA game in Charlotte, N.C., which the Hornets won 111-110. (AP)

.to take first in Atlantic Division

Sports briefs
General
RUMSON, N.J. (AP) - David
"Sonny" Werblin, whose signing
of quarterback Joe Namalh for the
New York Jets gave the old American Football League credibility and
set up a merger with the NFL, died
of a heart attack, his wife said.
Werblin died Thursda¥ at
Co!umbial're.sbyierian Hospilalin _
New York. He was 81.
During his-career, Werblin was
a talent ·agcnt, a team owner, head
of the New Jersey Sports and
Exposition Authority and of Madison Square Garden.
Werblin was a longtime member
of the board of go,vernors of Rutgers University. A new $18.5 million recreation facility on the university's Busch campus in Piscataway was named after him last
month.

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Regular season resumes

•

~iamf'tops s.acrarite~to 118-112

L.Jice a good ne1gflt&gt;or. Slato Farm IS mere
State Farm Insurance Compan1es
Home Off•ces · Bloomington, lllmois·

.

Score
80-45
70-52
84-41
86""12. 72-45
84-49

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At Souih Point
Holiday Tournament

Pool hours
;1:
Sunday - 1-3 p.m., open~i·
. swim; 6-8 p.m., college swim
; ~:
Monday - closed
1.•
Tuesday - 5:30-7:30 p.m., col-· :•
lege swim
:: :
Wednesday -closed
••;
Thursday- closed
•
Friday- closed
Saturday - closed
Sunday, Nov. 14 - 6-8 p.m ., ·college swim

Car111r at lhird Att- &amp; Stole St.
Gallipolis, Oh.
PhaM 446-4290 Home 44~·m~

.
I

GMC:TAUC:K.

,,

Hannan Trace's
1990-91 adventure

.

Lyne Center slate

Trace hi$t6ry -:- betore !1!.'-.P~.· _ goard. . ·
· . -.. . get lheir tongues waggtng i.n !he
thers ended the dieam by comtng
"We will be more phystealthan s!l(:on!1 quarter. '!'hat's why we vc
frot;n behind to ~ !'Jem 59-46 at last .year, but. we n()OO to work on go~ to have eight people ready lQ
Wnght State tJnJVemty.
. · def~ns~," sa1d Jenkms, who ~111 go, and ·we need five, guys that we •
The steady hand of graduauon, begm hts 12th season as the Wild- can get (at least) eight po1nts out "
which at times·can be kind to some cats' mentor. He said he's seclting of. This is a team effort.•
·
·
teams br. talring a few good playetS the same kind of balance that existHannan Trace 's last chance to '
from championship teams, swept ed on last year's team - a group defeat archrival Southern at home, ,.
through Mike Jenkins' camp like whose leading scorer, Craig where' the Wildcats haven't won in ·-'
Sherman'.s army through Atlanta. Rankin , avera ged 15 points per that long -stand ing rivalrt 'since
The starUng fiVe and most of the game, whde the other four starters posting an 85-77 victory on Dec.
bench from that team havegraduat- averaged between 10 and 15 per 18, 1987, wiil com e· on Friday,
Dec. 13 ___: the Wildcat&amp;' fi rst.home ·
ed, and sophomore Chad barnes, game.
who showed some double-dJgll
"We can have offensive balance, game of the year The Wildcats ·
offense ill tournament action fol- but we need defensive balance," w111 take on Hqwie.Caldwell's Tor- "
lowing his promotion to the varsity said Jenkins, whoindicated a des~e n~does in Racine on Jan. 24. · · '• ;
squad from ti)e reserve team, ll1UIS- to have no weak hnks m htS team s
Also on the schedule Hannan -..
ferred to Oallia Academy. ·
defensive scheme .."When I w~nt Trace has the distinction' of being '':
So who shall¥ part of the ne,w man-to-man , basehn~- to-basehne the only team in Gallia County this .
breed that shall JOID Chad Swam defense, that doesn t mean you season to play teams from the :
(6-2! sr.), who will p~bably be the pick(your man) up at halfcoun," ' Bluegrass State, as the Wildcats :
starttng center, and Bnan Unroe (5- Jenkins told h1s charges at a prac- will play at ~celand in the season ,
ll,sr.)?
t•celast l(l.eek.
opener on Friday , Dec. 6. The ;
Frontmen Alan Queen and
"What do people do when they. Wildcats will play at Russell on •
Bryan Brumfield, both rather beefy get tired?" Jenkins asked his team Jan . 7 and host Raceland on Feb. 4.
5-11 juniors, should see plenty of at that same practice. "They make
Don Saunders wi11 coac h the
time in the pain~ Jimmy Brace (5- mistakes. That's why we've got to · reserve team.
II, sr.) should also see time at for· ·
·
•,
ward, as well as Jason Freeman (60, sr.), Dave Poling (6-1, jr.) and
Bobby Hurlow (5-11, Jr.) while
•
Matt Davis (5•9, sr.) and Shawn
Cox (5-10, so.) arc the probables at
'
* Total new appearance with no baH~ry door
'',

I~

~· -'

'

Sunday Tlme. -Senllnei-Page--CS

EXPRESSIONS••• Newesl Concept

• CAAOU SNOWII(_N

;: Rio-Denison tickets available
.' '

streak h~ding~inJo . the
Dmston IV reg10nals ~gatnst ·
Ci!leinnati Lockland - .tbe £anhest
post-season adva_nc~ m Hannan

(All Tuesday doubleheaders
start with reserve. game~ at 6
p.m. and varsity games aa: 7:30
p.m.; all Friday and Saturday ;~
twinbills start at6:30 and 8 p·.m~ -:,
respectively.)
; •:

For the pnv1tege or 1ov1ng and w0r1&lt;1ng 1n this
communit1 . Fo&lt;wonderlullnends and ne1gh·
bors ... F01 servrng your insurance needs May
you an enro1 a sale and happy Holoda,

-

w!nni~g

t::

giving thanks

,. RIO GRANDE - The Southern Valley Athletic Conference
: announced the date and matchups for the boys previews.
:. The boys preview will be played Friday, Nov: 29 at the Universi:· ty of Rio Grande's Lyne Center. Southwestern will play Southern in
• the 6:30 p.m. opener. North Gallia will take on Hannan Trace at
: 7:1 5 p.m., and Kyger Creek will face Oak Hill at 8 p.m., while East: em and Symmes Valley will tangle at8:45 p.m.

; GAU!fOLIS - The Gallipolis Parks and Recreation Depan. mcnt is sponsoring a men's basketball league for men at least 18
; years old that are no longer affiliated or eligible to participate in
· high school or college basketball.
..
; The league, which will have teams playing each other at least
·once, will begin play on Saturday, Dec. 7. All the games will be
played on Saturday mornings or early afternoons at the Gallipolis
- Developmental Center gym; on 15000hio Ave. ·· - - - ---- The fee, which is $1 50 per team, ('an be made payable to the
, Gallipolis Parks and Recreauon Depanmcnt, 518 Second Ave., Gal: lipolis OH 4563 L The league will be limited to the fttst 15 teams to
; register with complete rosters and registration fees paid. RoSters can
· be picked up at the P&amp;R office, located op the second floor of the
· Gallipolis Municipal Building. The deadline for submitting a roster
· is Friday, Nov. 22.
'
' For more information, call446-1424, extension 38.

Date
Opponent .
Dec. IL .... :.......at Symmes Valley ·
Dec. 20 ........:............... North Galli• ;:
Dec. 2l ............................at Eastern , :
Dec. 27 ......... Wahama Tournanneot ;.
Dec. 28 .........Wahama Tournannent '
Jan. 3 ........................Hannan Trace
Jan. 10 .......................Southwestern ·
Jan. ll .................. atlronton St. JQe . ~
Jan. 14 ...........................at Southern ••
Jan. 17 .......... ...........~ .........Qak Hill..~·
Jan. 21 ............. ............ :.at Wabama ·•;.
Jan. 24 .................... Symmes Valley ~·:
Jan. 25 ..................... at North Gallia , :.
Jan. 3L ......:.......................Eastem ,~:
·Feb. 4 .............. ,................. Wabama ; •
Feb. 7....................at llannan Trace ·
Feb. 14 ...................at Southwestern •.~
Feb.IS .....................Ironton SL Joe ;-:
' Feb. 18 ................ ..............Southem •.•.
Feb. 2L ................. .....-at Oak Hill

A time for

'

Men's basketball league planned

...

.

faces.to populate ·Hannan Trace r0,ster for '91-92 season ..· . .:

: By G. SPENCER OSBORNE · ed of hist year's hard)VOOtl adveil··, tures of HannartTi'BCe'sgents who
• · ·TIJnes·Sentlnel Starr
MERCERVll.LE- No one. in opened their season with s'even
'the Guyan hills needs to be remiod- straight wins and had a seven·~ame
·
·· ·

COACH IUCH ASH

;' • SVAC preview matchups posted

. RIO GRANDE - Tickets arc currently available at Lyne Center
·. for Lllc Nov. 30 men's basketball game between the University of
Rio Grande and Denison University, to be played in the Newark
• High School gymnasium .
· The tickets, which arc $5 each, arc good for the Rio Grande. Denison game at 8 p.m., aod the matchup between Tiffin University
· and Marietta College at 6 p.m. Botb games constitute the Newark
Lions Club Collegiate Classic.

~ew

Head coach -Tom Riccardi

In the tournament•••

:' Shrine Preview Friday

'

·

Kyger Creek's
1991-92 schedule

Pomeroy-Mldcileport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

November 24, 1991 ·

~·

I I

•

,,

.

wide-open winning -shot. After
Buck William s' inbounds pass
sailed out of bounds, Mario Elie
was fouled and sank two fr ee
throws after time expired.
Clyde Drexler had 3 i points and
10 rebounds and Jerome Kersey 15
points and 16 rebounds for the
Blazers, who lost at home for the
second time this seasOn.
Lakers ~8, Spurs 96
At Inglewood, Calif., Los Angeles defeated San Antonio for it
sixth consecutive victory behind 18
points each by guards Sedale
Threatt and Byron Scott
The Lakers, routed by Phoenix
in their first game following Magic
Johnson 's surprise retirement on
Nov . 7, have won every outing
since then . The Spurs, now 7-2,
hJd their five-game winning streak
snapped.
Rookie Greg Sutton hit a threepointer witll3 .6 seconds left to pull
the Spurs to a 97-96 deficit. Scott
converted the fi rs t of two free
throws with 2.6 seconds remaining
before Spurs center David Robinson missed a long shot at the
buzzer. .
.
Dulls 112, SuperSonics 109, OT
Michael Jordan scored 10 of his
31 points in overtime as Chicago
edged Seattle before a crowd of
38,067 in the Kingdome . the
largest regular-season crowo in
Sanies histi&gt;ry.
Derrick McKey, who scored 29
points, tied the score at 97-97 with
a pair of free throws with 9..1 seconds left in regulation.
Jordan then carried the Bulls to
their eighth straight victory, putting
them ahead for good wi th a ISfooter 32' seconds into the overtime.
Suns 105, Clippers 97
At Phoenix, Dan Majerle scored
21 points as the Suns dealt Los
Angeles its sixth straight defeat
after a 5-2 start.
The Suns al so got 19 points
from Tim Peny, who made his first
start ibis season as head coach CottO.(\ Fitzsimmons shuffled the Iipelip in an erfon to get more production.
The Suns took a 79-72 lead into the fourth quarter, then started the
period with three free throws by
Majerle and a layup by Kevin
Johnson before the Clippers got
their firSt basket. An 8-2 run late in
the quarter gave the Suns a 96-83
lead.
Jazz 121, Nuagets 96
·
At Salt Lake City, Jeff Malone
scored 31 points, including 11 dur·
ing a 16-2 run in the firSt quarter,
leading Utah over Denver.

,,

L
atOakHill ......................W 81-47
Jackson ...................... .....W 74-62
Southern ................. ..........L 60-79
at Eastern ........... .............W 86-67
Soutbwcstern ..................W 85-36
at North Gallia (OT) .......W 79-74
Fairland ............................ L 54-73
at Symmes Valley (OT) ... L 63-67
at Jackson .......................W 76-65
Kyger Creek ...................W 88-72
Eastem.............. ..............W 104-75

Tourney time

.

You Can Reduce
Those Coltlr tJUUty Bill.. While Addlnc
· Comfort And Warmth To Your Rome...

:1

L ,. ..

(Rio Grande sectional)
Opponent
Score
Miller......... ....... ............... w 86-53
Trimble ...........................
86-71

·;o

BOW!
With Replacement Wlndowa
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·-·

SEASON•ALL

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(Ohio Univ. district)
Opponent .
Score
The Jazz trailed 19-10 midway Southern ... ......................W 59-57
through the ftrst period before Mal- Green LocaL ............ .....W 66-51
one's hot streak helped give Utah a
30-271ead.
(Dayton regional)
Utah then started the second Opponent
Score
period with a 17-6spunfor a47-33 Cin. Lockland .................. L 46-59
advantage. Rookie reserves Corey
Crowder and David Benoit combined for nine points in that n'm.
The Nug$ets, who got a seasonhigh 28 pomts and 15 rebounds
from rookie Dikembe Mutombo, Date
Opponent
got no closer than 11 points in the Dec. 6..................at Raceland (Ky.)
second half.
Dec. 13 ...................... .......Southern
Knicks 99, Pistons 90
Dec. 20 .................. at Southwestern
John Starks and Patric k Ewing Dec. 21.. ............................Oak Hill
scored 20 poin ts api ece as New Dec. 28 ....... ........................Fairland
York won its second straight road Jan. 3.......................at Kyger Creek
game by defeatin g slum ping Jan. 7 ......................at Russell (Ky.)
Detroit.
Jan. 10 ........................... ......Eastern
Ewing, who signed a two-year, Jan. t4 ...... .......... at Symmes Valley
$t8.8 million contract extension Jan. 17 .....................at North Gallia
earlier in the day, had 15 points in Jan. 24 ...........................at Southern
th e second half, whi le Stark s Jan. 25 ................ ..... :.Southwestern
scored 14 in the second quarter. Jan. :H ..................,.:.:·:.::at Oak Hill
Ewing had eight in the fourth quar- Feb. 4 ...............................Raceland
ter when the Knicks broke open a Feb. ? .......................... Kyger Creek ·
close game.
Feb. 8 ............ .. ............... at Fairland
After Detroit cut an 11-poi nt Feb. II .........Ohio Valley Christian
deficit to six , Ew ing and Starks Feb. 14 ............... .............at Eastern
combined for six straight points to Feb. I8................... Symmcs Valley
rebuild the margin to 90-78 with Feb. 21 ........................ North Gallia
3:34 to play.
.
Hornets 112, Pace rs 110
Head coach- Mike Jenkins
At Charlotte, No. I draft pi ck
Larry Johnson had 25 points and 15
(All Tuesday doubleheaders
rebounds and passed to Muggsy start with reserve games at 6
Bogucs fo r a 17-foot jum per with
p.m. and varsity games at 7:30
15 seconds left against Indiana.
p.m.; all Friday and Sa'turday
Regg ie Mil).cr..had 25 points for twinbills start at 6:30 and 8 p.m.,
the Pacers.
r~spectively . )

Hannan Trace's
1991-92 agenda

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�.
nmes Sentinel

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PQmeroy-Middleport-Gall

November 24, 1991
1

November 24, 1991

~

I
~

-

By KEN RAPPOPORT
Winnipeg Jets for fulure considerations, is now undeAP Hockey Writer ·
feat¢ in five starts (4-0-1) since joining Buffalo earThe way the Vancouver Canucks and WashingtOn
lier this month from the Rochester Americaris of the
AHL.
~
. •
- ..
.
Capitals have played this season, it's·easy to overlook some of the other 'teams in the .NHL. But the
Capitals 6, Bruins 3 - Peter Bondra had two
Detroit Red Wings are starting to make people lake
goals and an assist to lead Washington past Boston
notice.
.
. , for its first victory a: home against the Bruins in
With a 4-3 victory over the Minnesota ;North Stars
!~fi~ly four rears.
.
on Fridl!y night, the Red Wings exreqded their curBondra,.l'im Bergland and Randy Burridge scored
rent unbeaten s~ to eight pnes (7-0-1). It's the
rust-period &amp;oaJs as WashingtOI) built a 4-0 lead and
longest s~ for the Red Wings ~nee March 1988.
helcl on f~ its fift.h victory in six games. The C.apitals
"When you aJe in a.run like this,'everythiug goes were 0-5-2 against Boston at the·Capital Centre since
(n your fjjvor, like it did IOIJight," .Detroit coach· their last victory~ Nov. 25, 1987.
•
Bryan Mlimly said. "That's why we 101 this 'win on
Canucks '- Flames 5 (OT) - Defenseman Dave
a night whe~ we weren't playing our best."
Bahych·scored his third power-play' goal ilfthe game
Coupled with Chicago's 2-0 loss at Buffalo, the at2:14 of overtime to give Vancouver a wild viciOty
Red Wings improved their Norris Division lead over over Calgary.
.
.
the Blackhawks 10 three points. .
Babych scored the winner by tipping the rebound
Meanwhile, the Canucks and Capitals continued of Sergio Momesso's point shot past Mike Vernon in
to look ~ood. The Canucks beat Calgary 6-S in overthe Calgary goal.
time to •mprove their NHL-best recoolto IS-6-3 for
Devils 8, Whalers 2 - Claude Le.nieux scored
33 points. The Capitals whipped Boston 6-3 1Q give
two goals and added an aasist to lead New Jersey
them a 16-5 record for 32 points 10 tie them with over Hartford. lbe Devils led 2-0 after one period
Monlleal for second overall.
.
and 5-2 after the second, when Lemieux scOred both
.I
'
•
• als.
Elsewhere, New Jersey bombed Hartford 8-2 and . h1580
.
Toronto beat San Jose 3-1.
·
New Jersey goalrender Craig BiiUn~n made 20
Red Wings 4, North Stars 3 - Sergei Fedorov saves for his third viciOry in three decis1ons. .
scored two goals and Tim Cheveldae made 29 saves
Maple Leafs 3; Sbarks 1·-:- Mike FoUgno set up
as Delroit beat Minnesota.
Craig Berube's game-winner, then scored a goal of
Fedorov notched his first two-goal game of the his own as Toronto won its fust road game of the
season, and has three goals and three assists in his season. The .Maple Leafs, who also snapped a six·
last two games. Overall, he has scored six goals this game winless~lleak, were 0-10-1 in road games prior
season.
10 Friday night.
:'"\
Sabres 2, Blackbawks 0 - Rookie goaltender
Berube's goal broke a 1-1 tie with 2:261eft.in the ·
Tom Draper blocked 29 shots in recording his fii'SI second ~riod. With 12: IS left, Berube returned the
NHL shutout as the Bufalo beat Chicago.
favor w1th an assist that set up Foligno's 20-fOQt slap
Draper. obtained by the Sabres last June from the shot that gave the Maple Leafs a 3-1 advantage. ·

going in - a defensive attempt that proved successful - during Frida.y nigbt's NHL game in
Detroit, wbieb the Red Wlnp won 4-3. (APr

DIVING DEFENSE - Minnesota goalie
Darcy Wakaluk dives in front ol' the net to pre·
vent the shot or Detroit's Ray
from

~

. Sports briefs

':"'

Basketball
HOUSTON (AP) - Hakeem
Oiajuwon, who has the same ailment that struck President Bush
last spring, is resting comfortably
=while undergoing more tests to
'determine what is causing an errat·
iC heartbeat. The .7-foot all-star
.center will remain hospitalized at
·least through the weekend, Houston Rockets general manager Steve
Patterson said.

I;

~

SalJatini capture quarter/lnal ·
wins in Virginia Slims Tournament

:

Golf
'
'"' .JHOUSAND OAKS, Calif.
Ai') - Tom Purtzer and Lanny
Wadkins combined to shoot an
opening-round 61 to lake a three: stroke lead in the Greg Norman ·
' Shark ·Shootout. Mark O'Meara
: and Australian Steve Elkington
; shot an S-under 64 over the 7,025yard Sherwood Country Club

~

course.
1

Steve Pate and Hale Irwin were
1 at 7-under along with the team of
; Tom Kite and Davis Love. Norman
1 and partner Jack Nicklaus were
; seven shots behind the leaders after
; an opening 68.
I
Boxing
: EPERNA Y, France (AP) ; Unbeaten Genaro Hernandez of
· Los Angeles knocked out French: man Daniel Londas in the ninth
· round to' win the vacant World
: Boxing Association super-feather· ·
; weight title. Hernandez improved
to 24-0, with 13 knockouts. Londa,
55-8 with one draw, lost his second
, attempt at ·a world title.
Horse racing
··
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
1
I (AP) Pas by Pas. $3.20. was an
easy eight-length winner over
1 Sparky Dun Cee in the $62,658
i Morven Breeders' Cup Stakes at
i the Meadowlands.
i INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) • Charisma took the lead late in the
1 stretch and beat Scorpio Marjorie
by a length in the $33,000 feature
at Hollywood Park.
NEW YORK (AP) -Queen Of
ADVANCES TO SEMIFINALS- Yugoslavia's Monici Seles
: Sevens, $13.60, held the lead
returns the voUey rJ America's Mary Jo Fernandez during Friday's
: throughout and took a neck viciOry
Virginia Slims quarterllnaiJ11atcb In New York's Madison Square
; in the $47,000 I Deceive purse at
Garden. Seles, the tournament's top seed and defending champion,
• Aqueduct
moved Into the semlftnals by beatlag Fernandez 6·3, 6,2. (AP)
1

semifmal match at Madison Square
Garden. The first semifinal sent
surprising lana Novotna .a~ainst
fourth-seeded Martina Navraulova.
The doubles fmal was also held
Saturday. lbe top-seeded pair of
Novotna and Gigi Fernandez
played Navratilova and Pam Shriver for the title.
Seles and Sabatini were impressive in their quarterfinal victories
Friday night Even the losers were
impressed.

.

.

.

.. .

iiQ.ve~'h~;«~~~·~:~,Jo~··$~~~·

.1

•

I

Atllllde DINI01
Turn
WL PtL
1
Miomi ....... .............. .1 3 .700
Ailllddj&gt;llla ........... .'.7 4 .636
Orllndo ...................l 4 .5l6
a ...........................6 l .loll
tlew Yod&lt; ................6 l .loll
' Wullinplll.....:......:.4· 1 - .m
N'ew Jersey ..............l a ,200

a

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·.

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Centraii&gt;IYIIkln
2 .Ill

Chk:IJo....................9
Albn~ .................... .1
Milwlllk• ...............6
Clt•olaod.--...5
Doua~L .................... .l

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lndJin• .....................4 9

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Pit....... . . .

p.in.
Miami tt O'lietJO, 4 p.m.
. Phillcltl~at ~4p.m.

In the NHL ••.
WALES CONFERENCE
P"""'DI"'IIIII

N.Y.R13 9 I
New!_, ... 13 9 0
10 I 3

Phllldelj&gt;ltio .... I 10 I
N.Y.Ulinolors . 711 2

3.5

17 l5 Yl
16 12 13

AdaniMvlllon

4.l

6

.301

2'1 7l 74
26 11 63
23 14 12

Blockbu s ter

:.:.;

32760

Monday's game

992

20Sl60

San Francl.lo tt 1M Atl&amp;dca Rtms,
9p.m.

913

6

216369

....... 1 9 4
...... 4 ll I

II 61 71
9 63 10

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw•l Dlvldon
W L
Houi!Gn .................... 2
7 2
7

PeL
.100
.771
.513
,.00
.364

9

.100

s.. ..,..................

Uuh .........................7 l
OlnV. "'''''V''""'"'".. 6

Dollu........................
-

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

Plldll&lt; OMoloo

a.... s~..............1

3
LA. t.Wn ............7 3
S.ul• .....................7 4
l'oll1ood ...................1 s
LA. Cli_ .......... .l I

Phoorll&gt;. ...........:....... .l · I
..............! '

l

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GB
.5

2
•

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1

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
NorrlaD\-.,
'"'"
W L T l'to.GFC"
o-Il
........ 13 I 2 21 92 74
Clli•so . ...... 10 9 S 2l II 7S
SLI.oolo ...... 9 I l 2370 77
- . .... Ill . I 11 61 11

T_,IO

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.:zso

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4
4

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S•fliM 0\... loo
v........ ... IS63
'"'""'.... ... 10 1 l
Wloni9il .... 10 I 4
Cttltuf
..... 10 9 3
UtoooiOII
... 711 3

s.. J...

..... 111 1

US614

' '··

339263
2l II 12

2A 64 66

23 II 7l ' '
17 66 12
1 llllo

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6,- 3

w""""""'
T.....,l.Son!o.l

w_,.., ..._,,,!Sp.m.

Ballalo at a-, 7:05 P""

Nn __
....,_, • .Pbil 1 •I ' ... 1:33 ....
N.Y. l•. .dtn 11 Piiuloo~P, 7135
p.nl.
w-at&amp;b-1:05p.m.
~d'S

rrz, I:OSp.~n.

......... - . . 1:05 p.m.
N.Y.Kiofo!lat II. Laulo, lo!S p.ro.
S•l,..atlM Aft&amp;tloa, 10:3.! pm.

Toa~es

Noa-

.

'~

~

e

.

.

FamUy Restaurant
2FOBI

SA I.E
BUY ONE TURTLE SUNDAE_
AND GET ONE FRE.E!!

BARB QUE
RIB SANDWICH
AND MEDWM~~--­

FRENCH FRIES

MONDA\f NOV. ss THRtJ StJNDAY, DEC.l

GtL Jbtiljtl' P!WJ,
MIDDLEPORT

614-992-5248

479Jacls•Pib
GA1UPOUS
614-446·3837

;

354hst . . St.

.

I'OMEIOT

1

614·992-6292

•,
I,

..,,

..

· Ealt'Carollne
va. ·North Carolina Stale

·.
.

'
I'

'·

J

Oklahoma
va. Vlrginll
JaCksonVille, Fla., Dec. 29, 8 p.m.

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

lowa
-..
.
VI. BYU or Slllllltgo State .
..San Dlego; Dec~30, ·8·p:m. ·• ·

washington .
vs. Michigan
·• ~ · ·Pasadena, Calif., Jan. 1, 5 p.m.

~~ Miami

Oronge

~ · vs. Colorado or Nebraska

~

rillllllnola

y

..

.:::

UCLA
El Paso,

p,.,...

_

~tr.Dime

I

Dlva.tonm
AI 0.)101 WtltoiM Stadium

.

Cittion 11, Colum!M: DeSalcl Jl

At a.... Finnie Sladllnn

Men ':.

Jan. 1, 8:20p.m.

1iflli""'-""""-""'

tl~

Chllclrt•n\ Stt't'r

Mf-ln ·,

ltAC.I

.:...

Mentor Laie Catbolic 3S, Akron St.
V""""I·SL Mory 14

.~

..'" -'"

, ~

.

STOCKING s9oo
·STUFFERS ·

''

:1181'S
J

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•

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IIIII DltMIII'I

'

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How The West
1U« r.IFT

riUfriNG

""JC.Ndy (9-3)

..vinnln~ uw u..- n..: rd lion,

,.

,

•

t

ut mCn 11m..l -Rom~n &gt;Rilh
.

II UU.:Olh,; ~x.II1J0k~ tlntJ ~ li d t:un:)HU(.; IIOO.

'

BUCKEYE RURAL ElECTRIC
COOPERATIVE, INC.
•

'

•'

Alwllf, In ~!J ic . t.urc!.lt ~-~ v..:rli!tUtt W~)h.: r n txJOb have tx.-cn

MANY DIFFERENT STYLES

'

any ID'tarurubl!.

;
I

.

'

JEWELERS

:

.

~~

•

••

'·

I

..

-

.•

POWER IY THE PEOPLE,
FOR THE PEOPLE.

.'

~

.... ......_ .-....-.... . ..........__..,_...... ~" "

•'

One of28 Ohio Electric Cooper•tive• ·
143 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631-0279

;.•

•

422 SKOND lYE.
GAUJPOLIS, OH.
,

•

I

. I OL PURE SILVER

. Cindnntti Ca\ll'ltry Day (11 - t) vs.
Blulllon (12.0)
AI Hart~lle Lake Sladh""
Newut Calholle (11-1) VI. M~Oon·
old (11·1)

i(

.
I '

...

I'

Tbey played Saturd~y
.

Wnmf•n'~: nr [hilrlr(&gt;n·~
~11111'1

.

IIACI

That's why at the end of every fiscal-year, any monies ~ .
cooperative may have after expenses are allocated to cooperat1ve
members-who also happen to be cooperative owners- in the
fonn of capital credits.
Think about it. Cooperatives deliver more than affordable elec·
tricity and outstanding service. By adhering to a "non-profit"
tradition that began in 1935, cooperatives'deliver savipgs a~ well.
But that's how an electric cooperative is unique. After all, whe1
our members save money, it makes our owners very happy.

.VI.

.....................................11f111....

...

Delivering service- rather than making money, is the foundation
on which Ohio's 28 electric cooperatives finnly stand.

Sugar

New

Dl•lllon n
At ManlfleW Arlin Field
!6, loW)miJo 6
AI C.•loo Fa....a Sladlum
Unlantown lAke II, Sk:ubenville 7

f

Miamt:· Jan. 1, 8 p.m.

~

VI.

Caihollc (IO.l)
AIAIIIIa ..... P1tdl
S-C-(IO.:I)n. Wu-

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

Rose

Ho l1day

we have some
information you can
take to the bank.

·If you think
electric coop~ratives
are in business ·
to make money. ..

Tempe, Ariz.,.Jan. 1, 4:30p.m.

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

John Hancock

AIDvbUoM•IenbwJ: (11-1) ve. Sprinaficld

••
·'

Ptnn Stall
va. Tennt~••

va. Sin Diego Stitt or BYU
Anaheim, Cal~ .• Dec. 30, 9 p.m.
............................................................................................................

Friday's scores

'j

.••••

Gat or

TUIII

Ohio high school
football semifinals

DI-V
At tro,. Mtmoriii .SLidlllm

I

•
'·

, Tampa, Fla., Jan. 1, 1 p.m. -

Freedom

DI•-IV ·

TIMJ ptayid Saturday

8

. Ttxas,A&amp;M (SWC winner)
Y8; FlOrida State
Dallas, Jan. 1, 1:30 p.m.

o...ion4 SL I"'""' (10.:1)

v -.. 6.CalpqS,or

NEW SKIPPER- Nortb Gallia principal/athletic,director
Patrick Stout bas gone to tbe wheelbouae. as tbe new pilot or the
boys basketball program ror the 1991-92 ~eason. Stout stressed a
:' maximum or conditioning and a minimum or mistakes as the keys
for this year's squad. (Times-Sentinel photo)
.

~~~~~~!

·

Cotton

Oa"" w-.
a-....

Doooil4, Mionoioao 1

..

l:~

6 .............................
Dec.
:................Unioto ·
Op~'nt
· Score Dec. 713..................
........................
......Oak HiU
at Umoto .........................,L 80-104
Dec.
14
.....................
...
at Rock HiU
· atSouthem .......................L 63-81
Dec.
20
...................
at
Kyger
Creek
OakHiU ..........................w 91-83
Dec.
21
....................
.........
Southern
atKygerCreek ...............W J!6-73
at Hannan Trace ...........,...L 72-86 Jan.~ .....................at Southwestern
Chesapeake ...... &lt;.............;.L S7-92 Jan. 7 ........................at Chesapeake
Eastem ............................W 89-71 Jan. IO .................... Symmes Valley
Southwestern ....,.............W 101-66 . Jan. 14 ................. :...:.......atEastern
at Symmes Valley ............L 75-77 Jan. 17 ......................Hannan Trace
Sou them ...........................L 69-81 Jan. 24 ...........................at Oak Hill
at Oak Hiii ..... :................W 75-58 Jan. 25 ........................Kyger Creek
11 Federal Hocldng ...........L 95-106 Jan. 31 ........................... at Southern
at t.faysville (Ky.) ............L 81-105 Feb. 7.........................Southwestern
Kyger Creek ...................W 109-60 Feb. 14 ............ c..at Symmes Valley
Hannan Trace (On .. ........!- 74-79 Feb. 18 ......................n .~ ...... Easlern ~
at Easrem ........................W 114-84. Feb, 21 .................. at Hannan Trace
at Trimble .......................W 92-90
"''it Southwestem ~.............W 86-61 Head eoacb - .Patrick Stput
Symmes Valley ..............W 93-92
(All Tuesday doubleheaders
start with reserve games at 6
Tournament play
p.m. and varsity games al 7:30
(Athens sectional)
p.m.; all Friday and Saturday
Opponent '
Score twlnbllls start at 6:30 and 8 p.m.,
Crooksvilie .......................L 61-89 respectively.)

··

Calltornla
va. Clemaon
Orlando, Fla.. Jan. 1, 1:30 p.m.

AI
Sladlum
Centorvitle (11 · 1) •• · Columbu•
(11 ·1). ' '30p.m,
At Akron Rubbltrlowl
M111illan ~aahiaa•on (10·2) n .

a.rralo 2. CU..ao 0

North Gallia's
1990-91 cruise

Citrus

Dl...loo I

FrldaJ'ucores

North Gall s
91 •92 opponents

North Carolina State

"s'"aco•
,.
'.
vs. Ohlo State

.............................. .;; ........ ,... ~ ............'w·....,..•;:v .......... .................. ......... ..

Cincinntli AcHIIay d Pt!ylic&amp;l. fidu -

~

T..,.

'

Hall of Fame

·~

Ata""ma
,., .. ',:&lt;·y··
·,,,,,h ..'·
U4l
ve. ColOrado or Jiliibraaka
Miami , Dec. 28; ~p:m. "

Danwer 11 Setttlc, 4 p.m.
SanDieco 11 New Ycxl Jcu, 4 p.m.
Atlaml t1 New Orleult, I p.m.

..... ll72

"

1.

"I believe we can control the many se;150ns f!lf the Pirates - has four years as a pqliceman in the
boards; anth•hen you do tha~ you ~ided to lake personal command u.s. Air Forc:e, set"ving in .the
can run," said ~lOut of the offense of the team himself.
Phi!Uppines and in New Hanipshire
he w81!ts to see from his Pinltes. "If
"I've J!OI only nine out right · before attending RiO Gnnde ColI condition them properly, our lack now, and 'because of ihis. we have Je~e. where he ~uated in 1980
of experience, and depth won't to keep turnovers down and stay w1th a bachelor s degree in social
show so mucli. .
out of foul .trouble, because if we science comprebension. Wllil~
"We will see sprints all year dori\ we'U be in trouble," said the teaching history 81 Gallia Academy
long, and we will run on offense. 37-year-oid Stout, who coached and later at Bidwell-Porter, be
regardless of' who we're playing, football and girls basketball at Gal- entered a master's program at~
because I don't like to sit on the lia Academy before taking on boys University of Dayton, whtch
ball," he added.
junior high and reserve basketball accorded him a master's degree in
Fred Dee! will coach the reserve at Bidwell-Porter Elementary in the administration in 1984. He was
team.
early 1980s. In the 1982-83 season . hired as Nort.h Gallia's principal in
Stout takes helm
he fiUed in for Twyinan, who was 1985.
· ·
As he had trouble in the waning in the hospital recovering .from an
He lives near Bidwell with .bis
weeks of football season finding eye operation, as North Oallia' s wife, Patricia, a teacher at · ·
any takers for the captain's chair, reserve coach while continuing to Addaville Elementary, ancf their ·
S10u1- the third hea~coach
in
handle his junior high coaching two sons, Brian (a freshman Bl the
,
·
duties.
University of Rio Grande) and
.Stout (North Gallia '72)spent Jason(afreshmanatNorthOallia).
,

f;oinlirie, which '\viii' be talle(than
last year's edition.
·
In the. backcourt should be
Cl!arles Peck (5-l), jr.) at the point
and fellow junior Ryan McCarley
(6-2, jr.) at the other guard slot, and
for the fust time since his freshman
year Peck .will enter the ·transition
period from football 10 basketbalL
Other players that will see varsity time include Jason Burdette (6-3,
jr.), junior Mike Campbell f111d Jim
McClure.
"My philosQphy is always
upbeat, and they have to believe
they're winners," said North·Gallia
principaVathletic director Patrick
SIOut, the Pirates' new mentor who
will begin his first season coaching
vnrsity baske~l ·on Friday, Dec. 6
alhomeagainstTrimble-thefint
game of a three-game home s~d.

Atlanta, Jan. 1, 11 :30 a.m.

,'[lee;, a~. 3:30p.m.

.......................... :··................. , .. T """:"•" .._. ..:... :.......... :................. ......... ..

Todly's cames

B\llfalo at New EnaJand, 1 p.m.
Dt.Uu tl WuhinjtOft, I p.m.
Ddroiltl MinnOIOLI, l p.m.
HOUltOn It Pi!Ubu.rah, I p.m.
ln•ianapotis vt. G"reen Bay at Milwtuk-.1 p.m.
Kuw Cit)' 1t Cltwland 1 p.m.
1.411 A•ac~ Rllde11 al Cindnnatl,
lp.m.
··- . ~- ~,._
N!!w Yark Oitnta n Tampa Bty,·l

'

Smith .and first-year player Nathan
Adams . .·.
· •·
The 6-0 Smith, who i(.jlired his
knee in the football season finale
against Kyger Creek, is a probable
for the last quarter of the season,
but not before then; Not having
him in -the lineup will leave the
junior-dominated Pirates rather
poor in 1erms of varsity experience.
Kevin Hunt (6-4, jr.), who paid his
dues for two years on Gregg Deel's
reserve team, should join Rob
Canady (6·2, jr.) and Brad Fuller
(6-0, sr.) on the varsity squad's
· · · .. ' ·

Peoch

This week's NFL slate

San Anuwdo 1t Penland, I p.m.
Selnle at L.A. Oippen, 9 p.m.
Mll••u.kteatL.A:l..aken,lO:JOp.m.

Gl

.&gt;·

'. /
&gt;h'

"lbe whole match she was just
playing so well," said Jenmfer
Capriati, who fell to Sabatini 6-1, '
6-4. "I mean, if I hit a great sho~ .
she would just come back with it. " i
Selcs eliminated Mary Joe Fer!
nandez from this 16-player, seasonl
ending toummen~ 1&gt;-3, 6-2.
'
Navratilova and Novotna postc4
their 9uarterfinals victories lburst
day mght;
shocking seer
ond-seedcd
. 6-3, 3-6, 6f
I and Navratilova
Ai'anr
ua Sanchez Vicario
6-2. :

~~';.•. 'lv~I.~Jn~dlana or

i .•.••

I

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Sunday Times Sentlne~

. · :._.......
. · ;··w·~m·•
: Fr~·~·
~.~·~·.::,.,,:.,
~~~ 9~W
1~!.::ct~·
4.P·f11·
&lt; "':'
.,T':u·c···s:c:o·n·::'·:·A
:· ..riz
.. ......•...·D
...·e... c..... ....·3..1...··..8·....·P.....·.m
....··.......................
........
, .. ,.......
.....,.:·:::::-:.
.......,.·. .........
:...,......·';.:.... 1
J;:·i;:',;~ ; ~-··,'.,""
.. · ... · .. ·.

I

'
Tonicbt's
pmu

wv

'·

I

In theNBA ...

·ny G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tll!les-SelitineiStaff'.
VINTON - Is North Gallia
entering .a new era7 One can' t~
sure until the season begins, but
one tlilitg is certain ~ the gu&amp;~:d·
dominated years of Chris TackeII
and Brian Stout are over.
.·
These 'two recent graduates were
responsible for 52.3% of the
Pirates' offens.e last season under
Ron Twyman's tutelage. But
Twyman won't be back at the helm
for this voyage, which will ~ave
some new faces on .
.
two seniors·'
t. ', i'J "· :'¥' ,,'

~Seles,

By BOB GREENE
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - lbe last
time Monica Seles and Gabriela
Saba~ni met at the Virginia Slims
Championships, they staged the
fust women's five-set match since
1901.
Today, they can 't play more
than three sets.
Seles, the defending champion
and No. I seed, met the third-seeded Sabatini in Saturday's second

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

"North Gallia.to sail into 1991-92 season with skyline, short bench

Detroit :edges Minnesota 4-3
for "eig·hth consecutive·victory

r
i

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'~

!~•...
l

.,

...

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Pomeroy-Middleport.:...c;alllpolls, Ott-Point Pleasant, wv

Page-CS-Sunday Times-Sentinel

~Southwestern
.

.

By G. SPENCER OSBORNR
TimeS· Sentinel Staff
GAGE - Southwestern's boys
basketball progam has a new head
coach - again.
Mel Carter, ·previously the
Highlanders ' girl s mentor, has
taken the reins of the boys team in
succession of Bob Dunlap.
"Success is spelled WORK" is
· one of the inspirational signs that
the 54-year-old Caner - the fourth
coach at Southwestern since 1987
- has posted up on the court. He
claims working on funamentals as•
the foundation for the success he
seeks for his players.
"We want to iron out our mis·
takes , and since we have no stars,
we' ll have to work together,"
Carter said.
With Aaron McCarty (6-1, jr.)
running the noor and 5-7 senior
Adam Simpson mannng the off.
guard slot, the front line will be left
to the best combination coming
from 6-3 junior Chris Mandeville,
Keith Ashworth, Trevor Ashworth,
Jamie Morse and Kevin Staten.
Carter said he considers Mandeville, who also distinguished
him self on the reserve squad last
year, important enough to the
Highlanders' plans in the paint that
he is working on making Trevor
Ashworth solid enough to handle
himself on the noor "so we can
g ive Chri s a break," he said.
"We' ve got to keep Chris in the
garn e."
..
Carter has seven full-time varsity players and four - Trevor Ashworth, Jim Massie, freshman Eric
Shriver and Staten - that will be
rotated b~ tween the reserve and
varsity teams.
Carter will be as sisted by
reserve co-coaches Jesse Ehman
and Mike Walker.
Last season
Graduation claimed leading
seorers Chris Metzger and Richard
Haney. but the transfer ~ook look
juniors Adam Blair and Jeff Pope;
the heir apparent to John Slles
center position, 10 Gallia Academy,
as well as junior Jason Williams,
one of the Highlanders' top
reserves last year.
The Highlanders have a lot of
work to do, considering that they
ki cked Kyger Creek out of the
SVAC basement in the regular season before beating the Bobcats in

November 24,1991

·'Farm/BUsiness

to start 1991-92 season with new head coach .·

the first round of' !be. ll.io. Grande
sectional. In post-season play, only
Southern - who knocked off the
Highlanders to claim the Rio
Grande lower-bracket sectional
title - and Hannan Trace
remained alive among SVAC
teams after the Highlanders completed their season.
McCarty scored in double figures in 10 of Southwestern's 19 .
games last year and averaged 10.3
points per game. No returner pro·
duced anything within shouting
distallce of McCarty's offense last
year, and that must cllange. Why?
Because a pair of eight-game losing streaks marked the Highlanders' season, and pan of the reason was that Southwestern failed to
get off to a good start. In games
that the Highlander.; scored 20 or
more points in the first quarter,
they went 1·2. Otherwise, they
were 1·15.
About Mel Carter ...
Carter (Oak Hill '54) received
his special education certificate
from Ohio Univesity in 1962, and
in a stretched-out educational pro·
cess that saw him begin his teach·
ing and coaching careers in the
meantime, he received his bachelor's degree in education from Rio
Grande College in 1968. ·
Among other things, he has
been involved in coaching for 29
years, running the show in football,
boys and girls baskelball, baseball,
softball and volleyball. He took
three Highlander girls teams - the
1979-80, 1980·81 and 1981-82
squads - to the Class A district
tournament. He has been a basket·
ball r~feree for 32 yearS - a span
that has seen him appointed 10 the
state tournament officiating· crew
seven times.

Southwestern's
1990~91 affairs ·
Opponent
Score
Symmes Valley ................ L 46-58
at Eastern ......................... L 66-67
Hannan Trace ...................L 41-84
Southern ........................... L 56-73
at Oak Hlll ....................... L 50·59
at North Gallia .................L 66·101
KygcrCreek .........:...........L 61-65
at Symmes Valley ............L 55-79
at Hannan ........................ W 81-69

Eastern ........... .:.:.............. L
New Bosron ...................:.L
at Hannan Trnce ...............L
at Southern ....................... L
Ohio Valley c.s ...............L
Oak Hill ........................... L
North Gallia ..................... L
at Kyger Creek ................. L

58-66

59·69

36-85
44-67
64-73
60-66
61-86
57-58

In tournament action ...
(Rio Grande sectional)
Opponent
Score
Kyger Creek ...................W 58-54
Southern ........................... L 55·101

Jan. 17...............................Soothem FCb. 21 :.:.......................at Southern •
Jan. ~t. . : ...at Ohio 'Iilley Christian .
Jan. 24 .:.... :..........................Eastern Head .coach -Mel Carter
Jan. 25 ...................at Hannan Trace
'
Jan. 3l ....................Symmes Valley
(All T!lesilay doubleheaders
Date
Opponent Feb. 7 ..................... .at NMh Gallia start
with reserve games at 6
Dec. 6 ...............at Portsmouth Clay Feb. 8...................... Jll New Bpston p.m. and
vanity games at 7:30,
Dec. f3 .........:.........n ... .. ..at Eastern Feb. 11 ............................11 Hannan p.m.; all Friday
aad Saturday
Dec. 20 ............... ~ .....Hannan Trace Feb. I4 ........................ Kyger Creek twlnbiDs start at 6:30
and 8 p.m.,'
Dec. 21...............at Symmes Valley' Feb. 18 ...........................81 Oak Hill respectively.)
Jan. 3.......................... .North Gallia
Jan . 7 .......... .................New Bosron
Jan. 10..................... at Kyger Creek
Jan. II ..................Hannan (W.Va.)
Jan . .14 ........... ....................Oak Hill

Southwestern's
1991·92 schedule

.

'

By RODD AUBREY
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Doug and Pam Dailey thought
they were going 10 lose everything when financial
disaster sttuck in 1981.
• ·
Dailey, who farmed 2.100 acres of corn and soy·
beans about 25 'miles west o( Columbus, knew· that
heavy rains washed away their hopes for success~!
crops. And Mrs. Dailey teamed that the cosmetics
·' company she worked for wenl banlaupL
"The whQ!e botrom just fell out of everything,
1
• and thai was the start of it." Mrs•..Dailey said. "We
'. were both basically wiped out at the same time.''
, As their debts mounted 10 $400,000, they sttug·
' gled ro hold on 10 their own 192·acte Madison Coun; ty farm as a lender foreclosed on a ~oan. . .
&lt;
The Daileys' fight focused national auenuon on
; the fmancial probiM~:s !~!at farmers ~cross the COWl·
· try were facmg dunng the recess1on ·of the early
: 1980s. Like thousands of other farmers, they evenbl·
: ally losL
· In Janu3!y 1983, the Daileys' farm was sold at a
; sheriff's auction on the steps of the county court·
! bouse in London as hundreds of farmers shouted in
• protest.
: The Federal Land B8nk of Louisville, Ky., which
: held the 'fliSt mortgage on the farm, bought the prop·
• crty for $225,000.
.
: The DaUeys say they eventually cut their eleclrici·

MOSSBURG 500 PUMP (OMBO...... 5245°0
24.11. Deer l•r,.l••• 21 11. Accuclloke.

'~'""~.,.,--~·.

•

.

MARLIN MODEL39 AS RIFLE ...........$26900
~!!.

22

' ALL~BRANDS OF-SLUGS 1M STOCK.- COMPLETE UNE OF ACCESSORIES

DEER

!

·LU BER

CHESHIRE • James W. Roush,
'f Maintenance
Mechanic-A; Robert

CHESTER

tas-a3o1

The move squelched rumors
coming out of Columbus all week
that Cooper would be flied unless
his team defeated Michigan. The
Buckeyes were 0-3 in Cooper's
first three tries against the arch·
rival Wolverines..

-

~~-

emphasizing Ohio's auractions
during three weekend trips.
Voinovich said at a morning
meeting of the Ohio HotelMotel

'

~ E. Burton, ~intenance Mechanic·
~ A; and Lester A. Plymale, Person. nel Supervisor, a1 the Ohio Valley
Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek
Plant, received lheir anniversary
:awards for 35 years' service to the
. company acconding to Nonnan H.
: Tarr, plant manager.
Roush joined OVEC on October
23, 1956, as a Laborer in the Labor
Department. In ·1958 he transferred
:to the Maintenance Department,
. where he adva_nced_through the
various mainlenance mechanic
:classifications. In 1977 he was promoted to Maintenance Mechanic·
A; Roush and his wife, Roberta,
:live at 828, Rt 588, Gallipolis. .
Burton joined OVEC on Ocrober 29, 1956, as a Laborer in the"
Labor Department. In 1958 he
transferred to the Maintenance

Department as a Maintenance
Helper. He progressed through the.
various maintenance niechamc
classifications, and in 1978 he was
promoted ro Maintenance Meehan·
ic-A. Burton and his wife, Delores,
live at 26 Cave Street, Pomeroy.
Plymale joined OVE~ on .Octo·
ber 29, 1956, as a Laborer 1~ the
Labor Department. In 19$9 he
transferred to the Operations
Department as a Utility Operator
and advanced to Auxiliary Equipment Operator that same year. In
196'1 he transferred tp the. ferforma.lce ,Department as a F,crfor·
mance Clerk. Three years later,
He was prom.oled to Adm.inis·
trative Assistant m the AdmmiStra·
live Department. In 1981 he was
promoted to Personnel Supervisor
m the Personnel Deparument. Ply·
male and his wife, Molly, reside at
5191, St. RL 588, Ga16polis.

WATER HEATER
LESS VALVE
GLASS LINED
;'

IEFR9H20

ROBERT BURTON

.

Sl 5900

:Bane One Corporation

lt28RIAICEIIUTTERfiS'

48

Hi(lh cmkinQ 1111/lS tor quick s~rrs mst&gt;Ore co/!1 .

CllfnlleS.
txchlnoe.With

71111AIIPBAmRY

.

~ll

•
..

GOOD ASSOITMEIIT OF
SIZfS AIID FIIIISHIS

CAROLINA LUMBER
AND SUPPLY COMPANY
Wou,.: Mondoy.frldiJ, I om4 pm; Saturdlly, I -12 noon

"

LESTER PLYMALE

:'Money Ideas -

fllfltif SAVfl PIUS

'

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~

Flint honored

5 YR. LIMITED WARRAm ·

675-1160 . Point Pleas::r.!, W'.'

Association that the trips will high·
lighl the variety of recreation in the
state. .
Ohio's .major metropolitan
areas, the Kings Island amusement
park near Cincinnati and the Cedar
Point amusement park near Sandusky, the Amish settlements in
north-central Ohio lind a other
auractions await rourists from both
within and outside the srate,
Voinovich said.
,"Because of our geographic
location, competitive pricing and
our positioning as a gateway desti·
nation, I believe our $7.2 billion
uavel industry will remain sttung,''
·the governor said.
·
"But the competition demands
an even stronger commiumenl and
an improved public-private partner·
ship to maintain our competitive
edge," he said. "If we are to live
up ro.our claim !lS the bean of it all,
;we! must bllild;renewC\1 exci~enl ,
an(! pride among Ohioims for wlial
our state has to offer."
Voinovich alsb said there should
•. f
be more participation by bote! and
motel owners. He said they were
.•
the cruciallinlc in bringing conven·
lion and tourism business.
He also suggested intrastate sis·
1er-city agreements to encourage
Ohioans to tra~el to other Ohio
cities.
Voinovich said after the speech
he did not yet have ariy specifics of
the weekend trips w1th his wife,
graphical maps. Approximately 130 studeots '
CREATES SIX TOPOGRAPHICAL MAPS
Janet, but' said they would probably
will use tbe maps each year. Nostrant received 7
•
Kurl
Nostrant
(standing
at
right),
an
eighth·
be tied 10 other excursions.
help in building the maps from students Joe :
grade
science
teacher
at
Alexaoder
Junior
High
"What I've been doing periodi·
Grubb
(kneeling) and Kevin Shaner.
·
School,
used
a
1990·91
mioi,grant
from
South·
cally is a 'Cabinet Away from
Columbus Day' ... and when we do ern Ohio Coal Company to create six topo·
that we're going 10 schedule a long,
three-day weekend in thai part of
Ohio,:' he said.
"We're laying out next year's
schedule, and I don't know yet
where we're going to be going,"
Voinovich said.
ALBANY • For the sixth year in contributed over $24,000 for the enthusiasm for reading; a projcc1
a row, students in the Alexander, funding of 65 creative and innova- that will enable students to con·
struct and develop an indoor gai;Meigs Local and Vinton County tive learning projects.
GAU,IPOLIS - Mark Flint, an school districts will benefit from
This year's winner.; were select- dening unit; and a program that
associate of the Super America special learning projects funded by ed by a review comminee consist· will utilize lhe "Choking Charlie"
store in Gallipolis, has been recog- Southern Ohio Coal Company's ing of three Southern Ohio Coal mannequin to teach students th.e
nized for outstanding performance
employees ~ad three educators correct procedure for the Heimlic~
Division.
concerning the company's Cus· Meigs
Maneuver.
According to Dave Baker, from each school district
romcr Service·Awareness Program human resources manager at the . Among this year's winner.; arc:
In addition , Baker says one
according 10 R. J. Maxwell, senior Mei~s Division, the company's a program that combines books and grant will be used as seed money 10
vice president and general manager mim-grant program recently computer software to test compre· create a "partnership in education"
of SuperAmerica's Southern Divi· awarded more than $4,000 10 fund hension and keep records; a project program in the Meigs Local district
sion.
II projects. In the six years of the that involves the purchase of bouk where 'southern Ohio Coal has
Candidates are observed and program, Southern Oh1o Coal has sets designed to generate more ~!ready offered topanicipate at one
or more schools.
evaluated with respect to friendly
attilude, a~pearance, professional·
ism, efficiency, use of intercom
and telephone ctiqueuc.
For his commitment to service
excellence, Flint received a certifi.cate of appreciation, and a special
. "Service Attitude" award.

Area students will benefit from special
learning projects sixth straight year

40 GILLON ROUND

312 6th Street

When Dailey failed ro ·provide i~ he was thrown in
jail for 39 days for contempt of court.
·
The Daileys say they were able to keep Lhctr.
·house because a local bank was patient enough to
work out a plan.
Dailey, 46, now drives a truck, work he started
shortly afterlosing his farm.
·• .
He said he has paid off the earlier debts but now is
worried about .medical bills stacking up. The Dailey ~
don' l have health insurance.
'
"As you.look back at it, we' ve come out ofil with
more than maybe you could have expected," Dai le)t
said.
Mrs. Dailey, 42, now has her own cosmetics busi:
ness, which she operates out of their home.
,
"We're a small. linle companx," she said. " Bu\
we are debt-free. That I made sure of." .
•

-

Wetl!'r Hl!'lltl!'r•

OFF LIST PRICES

Section D.

'mimts. itttfintl

.

.

MOR·FLfiAMERICAN"

BATHROOM
VANITY
CABINETS
25% DISCOUNT

.'

ty, healed water on kerosene lamps and 111.e macaroni.
Harrington, depqty 4iJector of the economic research
'"Ibat's when we aged," Mrs. Dailey said. " You
service at the U.S. Deparunent of Agriculture.
see the fnt pic!UIM of us and then 'just six months
He said land values are up, interest rates are down,
later we aged 10 years."
and farmers are paying off !heir debts, The number of ·
Although oiany farmers offered their support. the
troubled farms has fallen to 5 percent of the total.
·couple llli~~Wetcd to cri~cism that.they lived irrespon·
Some of the turnaround was pi'Qdded by groups
sibly 11114 lavishly dunng hai'd times: they had cars
such as the F~ily Farm Movement, which the Dai·
and fiits,.11114 they t90k trips. They said .the luxuries
leys helped to create. Farmers' groups worked to get
were benefits from the company Ms. Dailey worked
legislative, fmancial and emotional help. The federal
for. 1
.
:
.
government at one poillt temporarily stopped forecloThe D.aileys became a symbol of the vanishing . sures.
family farm. Their story w&amp;S partly the inspiration ' "loWe always thought that even though we went
behind the 1984 movie "Cotmtry;" in which Jessica ·through a lot. it wasn't for nothing," Dailey said. " A
Lange played a farm wife uying ro hold her family
lot came of it."
together during foreclosure.
·
But even-after the farm action, problems contin"They were 1101 alone by aily me31JS," said War·
ued for the Daileys. Autliorities asked for a list of
ren Lee, a professor of agricultural economics at
assets in the 3,300-square·foot home they b11ilt.
Ohio Stale Umversity. "For the most pan, no one
will ever forget the '80s."
. .·.
.
A f~deraf study showed that 200,000 I? 300,000
farmers;- about 10 percent of the nauon s row were fotced iniQ banlcruptcy, fo~lo.sure or financial
reorganization from 1980 to 1988. Interest rates were
high, land values were low, and prices farmer.; gol
for their:crops were ~er. .
· ConditiOns began tQ umprove in 1986, four years
·after the federal government started spending $150
billion for price supports and other help.
"Fartner.; are generally better off," said
. David

iRoush, Burton·and Plymale
:honored for 35 years service

OSU's Cooper given three-year
extension on coaching contract
ANN ' ARBOR, Mich. (AP)John Cooper was given a three·
y~ar ex1ension on his contract as
Ohio State's head football coach
Saturday, just moments before the
Buckeyes' a!J_nual baule wilh
Michigan. ·
,

--

.

AND UCENSES

STATE ROUTE 248

.

to lead
tourism
-lcampaign by example

.~ Governor
--

~

CLEVELAND (AP) - Gov.
, George Voinovich said Friday he
• and his wife plan to lead a travel
• and tourism campaign by example,
CARTER TAKES COMMAND- Mel Carter, a fixture on tbe
Southwestern athletic scene for as long as many or the players' par·
ents can remember, bas assumed command or the boys basketb11ll
team for the 1991-92 season after beading the girls basketball program last seiiS'on. In getting his charges ready for the Dec. 6 opener
at Portsmouth Clay, he will bring bis vast experience to a team
thinned by graduation and transfers. (Times-Sentinel photo)
.,

.

!Family reboUnds ·from 1983 farm foreClOsure

he

.. '

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•'

.,

•

.,

By STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS- Headquartered in
· Columbus Bane One is a regional
· bank holding company whose bank·
• ing affiliates manage $33.2 bil6on in
: assets (excluding
: Bane One Texas)
inover750offices.
'Bane One is orientedtowardretail
lending, has no .· .
loans to lessdevel- ·
oped cotmlriesand
is consistently one
.
of the most profitable and best capi· ·
talized banks in the U.S. Prior ro its
interslateexpansion, IIane One made
numerous acquisidons within Ohio.
Subsequent to the 1985 chan~e. in
law pennilting interslate· activity,
ONEhasbeenanaggressiveacquirer
beyond Ohio's borders.
Nel income available to common
stockholders advanced 19.0% 10
$129.0 million, or $0.81 per share
(versus $0.68 per share a year ago).
. The quarter's results w~ fueled .bY
.·11 5.6% increase m net mteresl m·
: come owing to a larger average loan
• balance (+11.9%) and a wider net
· interest margin (6.13% versus
• 5.28%). Theprovisionforloanlosses
: advanced a moderate 12.2% and even
: managed 10 decline from the provi·
• sion taken in the second quarter. Fee
; based income (excluding securities
' transactions) also aided earnings by
•advancing 13.0%. These favorable
· ~ results produced higher profilllbility
· ratios as the return on average assets

advanced ro 1.73% (versusti.S5%)
and the return on average equity in•
creased to 15.74% (versus.l~.46%).
As with all banks. crel)it quality
remains a concern . .However, Bane
One's non-perfa:mmg assets as a
percentage of ending loans ll!ld other
neal estate owned, at 2.20%, remams
~uperior to peer.; and belo:w the ~.0%
1ndu!try benchmarlc that 1S.~yp1ca11r,
cons1de~ed h1gh. under .normal
econom1c conditions. Importan~y.
the reserve for loan l~s remams
s~~ at 1.73% of, endi~g loans .. In
add1~on, Bane qne s capllal posn~
rern.8Ins excepuonally ~ng With
equity,10 assets of8:51 %. 1 .
.
Bane One. con.unues 10 .report
excel.lenteu;mngs m a very difffcult
banlting environment and as such ~ts
com~on stock seUs at a substalltial
premlu!IIIO the~ an~ 10 ~rs.
Y!e beheve ~at thts ~al~tion IS.JU~­
Ufied and l)lill be m8Ini81Red With';"
the foreseeable future. 'I'hC quarter s:
ex.cellent results encourag~ us ro.,
wseour l991 and 1992eammgsper
share C!'tumates 10 .*3.15 and $3~0.
respeouvcly (lxevwusly S~.OS aild
$3.45). ThcCompanyn:rn.aillsone~
~most pro~dable and,hl8hly capl·
talized banksm tbeNauon. Astto!IS
bal31!C~. sheet ,and experience with
acquiSitiOII,S.wlll allow Bane One,ro
'arner additional market share gB!M
m the future. We conbl!ue 10 as~
the common srock our highest rating.
(Mr. Evans is ao lnvestme~t
Broker for The Ohio Company 111
their GaiUpol~ omce,J .

,.

,.
'

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Brett Wilt working as
weather forecaster nt ou
ATHENS - Bren Will, son of
Ruby A. Wilt or Gallipolis, is
working as a weather forecaster
with Ohio University's Scalia· Lab
for Aumospheric Analysis. Wilt is a
1987 graduate of Ohio Valley
Christian High School and is cur·
rently a senior majoring in geogra·
phy/meteorology,
"I tend to believe that the open·
miridedness of the students builds
better forecasiS as opposed to creal·
ing a forecast under the procedures
of the National Weather Forecast
The students are allowed to say
exactly what they think." Wilt is
re~nsible for examining current
weather conditions and determin·
ing trends that will affecl Athens
weather conditions. All forecasts
are updated twice daily by students.
The · Scalia Lab provides a
weather service for Athens area
residents through a 24-hour hotline
which can be reached by calling
(614) 593·1717:

NEW BUSINESS • Anita Lester of the Heritage Doll Sboppe recently opened up the doon
to her new business located at 31 State St., Gal·
llpolls. Open Monday tbroul(h Friday, 9:30 a.m.
to S p.m. and Saturday, 9:~ a.m. to 4:30 p.m., '•
Lester specializes in.band painted porcelaio col·
lectible dolls, many originals and reproductions.
•I

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November 24r
. Page-02-Sunday Times-Sentinel

California adopts standar~s
for 'world's cleanest gasoline'
'

L OS ANGELES (AP) ~ The
state' s smog co ntrol agency
~pproved a plan to make refi ners
prod uce w hat i t says will be the
worl d's cleanest- burni ng gasoline
- one that will cost up to 17 cents
per gallon more at the pumps.
By 1996, fuels sold in California
m ust em it 30 perce nt to 40 percent
f ewe r pollutant s th an today 's
blends, under the standards adopted
Fri day by th e Ca lifornia Air
Resources Board.

Public Notice
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo, Ohio
November 15, 1991
Coniract Salaa
Legal Copy No. 91-1071
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed propouls will be
.received at the office of tho
Director of the Ohio
Department of Transporta·
:uon, Columbus, Ohio, .until
·10:00 A.M., Ohio Standard
:Time, Frldsy, Decemb8f 6,
19911or Improvements in :
Gallla County, Ohio lor
:Improving GAS-7-29.00
Stlte Route 7, VIllage of
Cheshire by linear grading,
pavement planning and
repair, placing pavement
"reinforcing Iabrie and resur·
~ acing
with
asphalt
"'Concrete.

: Project and Work Length:
&gt;!6,379 feet or 6.69 mil...
• Pavement Width: Varies
: "The data set lor compl•
11on of thla work shall be as
·) at forth In the bidding
· .proposal.'
• Each bidder shall be
:iequlred to flle with hit bid
• certllled check or cesh)er'a check for an amount
·equalto ftve or cent ol his

" Thi s marks one of the big~est
moves we can make for clean atr,"
said Jananne Sharpless, chairwoman of the Cali fornia Air Resources
Board.
" This is not a so-called alternative fuel. lt is cleaner burning gasoline of all grades for all cars every
day ."
Board members said the plan
would ·force refineries to create the
world's cleanest burning gas and
c ut dai l y statewide emi ssions bv

about I ,435 tons, with about half
the reduction in the Los Ange le s
region.
The new standards, approv ed
after a two-day public hearing, will
require the oil indust.ry to remodel
refineries at an estimated cost of $2
billion to $5 billion.
That could tran slate to price
hikes of 12 cents to 17 cents per
gallon , board spokesman Bill Sessa
said.

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

btd, but In no avant more

Department of Tranaporta·

Revised COde.
Plana and apeclllcatlona
are on flle In lho Department
of Transportation and the
office ol the District Deputy
Director.
The Director reserve• the
right to reject any ond all
blda.
JERRYWRAY
Director of Tronaportation
NOVEMBER 17,24, 1991

lliiii fifty thouaand dollars, lion, Columbuo, Ohio, unlll

or I bond for ten per cent of
his bid, payable ·to tho
Dlroclor.
Blddera must opply, on
the proper lormo, lor quail II·
cation at least tan day a PFI· ·
or to the date set lor openlng bids In accordonce with
Chtptor 5525 Ohio Revised
Code.
Plana and opoclflcatlons
.ora on flle In tho Department
of Transportation and the
oHice of the District Deputy
Director.
The Director reaerves the
right to reject any and all
blda.
JERRY WRAY
Director of Transportation
NOVEMBER 17, 24, 1991

to:oo A.M., Ohio Standard
Time, Friday, December 8,
19911or lmprovemontoln:
Athens, Gollle, Hocking,
Malgo, Vinton Countloo,
Ohio lor Improving eectlon
ATH ·13·0.00 on United
States Route 13, other varl·
oua routaa ond oectlone by
performing 1 b~ bonk IIU•
dy and curve Inventory.
Project Length: 0.00 feel
or 0.00 milo
Work Length: Vorloualeet
or varloue miles.
Pavement Width: Vorleo
"The dote oet lor completion ol thla work ehell be 11
sat forth In .p. bidding
proposal.'
Each bidder ·lhttl be
required 10 flle with hlo bid
Public Notice
a certllled check or cuhler's check for an amount
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS equal to five ~er cent of 111•
STATE OF OHIO
bid but in n evirii mOre
DEPARTMENT OF
fliit. fifty thouoond dollaro,
TRANSPORTATION
or a bond lor ten per cent of
Columbuo, Ohio
hlo bid , peyoble to the
November 15,1991
Dlreclor.
Contract Sales
Bldd8fs muot •PPI.y, on
Legal Copy No. 91·1059
lhe proper forma, lor
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
quallllcatlon at lent lan
Sealed propoula will be dayo prior to tha dote aetlor
received 11 the office ollhe opening bide In accordonce
Director of the Ohio with Chapter 5525 Ohio

1---------

Real Estate General

Public Notice

Real Estate General

446~3636~~
OAKWOOD DRIVE -CITY CONVENIENCE, COUNTRY
TRANQUILITY, ONE OF THE OUTSTANDING
FEATURES OF THIS LOVELY HOME IS THE
ENORMOUS LIVING ROOM WITH A COZY FIREPLACE
AREA. 2 LARGE BEDROOMS WITH SPACE FOR A
THIRD. FA~ I ILY ROOM , DINING ROOM , AMPLE
STORAGE (.OVERED PATIO. LOTS OF TREES. WE
WILL BE PLEASED TO SHOW YOU THIS LOVELY
HOME. CALL SOON FOR AN APPOINTMENT! $79,000.
NICE TO COME HOME TO! BRICK RANCH , HAS 3
BEDROOMS WITH LOTS OF CLOSET SPACE. WALK·
IN CLOSET OFF MASTER BEDROOM, 2 BATHS,
LARG E LIVING AND DINING ROOMS, KITCHEN HAS
LARGE SNACK BAR. DINING AREA OPENS ONTO
COVERED WOOD DECK WI TH BUI LT-IN SEATING. 2
CAR ·ATTACHED GARAGE, FULL BA SEMENT, HEAT
PUMP APPROX. 10 ACRES . BARN , OTH ER
OUTB.UILDINGS. CITY SCHOOL O I~T" ' r T '1UPER·
NI CE PROPERTY! JUST LISTED!

NICE COZY COUNTRY HOME, 3 BEOROOMS, 2
BATH's NICE DINING AREA OFF KITCHEN , LARGE
LIVING' ROOM Wll:H. FIREPLACE, OVER AN ACRE
LAWN. EXCELLENT BUY AT $40,000.

&lt;\"!W

'

STOP, LOOK AND BUYI PRICED $7,000 LESS THAN
LAST WEEKI COLONIAL HOME LOCATED AT 845
SECOND AVENUE IN GALLIPOLIS IS PRESENTLY IN
USE AS A4 UNIT RENTAL. NEW LOW PRICE $48800
BETTER CALL SOON THIS PROPERTY IS IN A GRtAT
LOCATION AND IS PRICED RI GHTI
FARMS AND VACANT LAND
25 ACREI-HANNANTRACE ROAD. $1 5,000.
101 ACREI- HANNAN TRACj: ROAD. $29,000.
VAN ZANT RD •• , NEAR KYGER. . 8 ROOM HOM€
APPROX. 25 AC. $39,500
RACCOON ROAD- 39 ACRES, MOSTLY WOODED. _
WATER TAP, 2 SEPTIC TANKS, ONE TRAILER SITE
PR ESENTLY RENTED. $25,000.
$8 500. NICE WOODED LOT WITH BUILDING. WOULD
EXCELLENT HUNTING CABIN.
.

MAKE

'so

RACCOON ROAD ACRES, MOSTLY WOODED.
'WATER TAP , 2 SEPTIC TANKS, ONE TRAILER SITE
PRESENTLY RENTED. $25,000.

YEARNING FOR A BEAUTIFUL OLD HOME TO
RESTORE? LET US TAKE YOU ON A TOUR OF THIS
BEAUTY. FRONT ENTRY HAS BRIDAL STAIRCASE ,
REAR ENTRY HAS A WINDING 3 $TORY STAIRWAY
THAT TAKES YOU TO WHAT ONCE WAS THE
SERVANTS QUARTERS ON THE THIRD FLOOR.
THERE.IS A BALLROOM WITH MARBLE FIREPLACES,
LIVING ROOM AND ENORMOUS DINING ROOM,
KITCHEN AND STUDY ON THE FIRST FLOOR. SEVEN
BEOROOMS ON THE SECOND. MUCH, MUCH MORE.
YOU WILL NAVE TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE
ALL OF THIS HOME. ON LY .$72.000.
COUNTRY ESTATE: GIV E YOUR FAMILY THE
PRIVACY THEY DESERVE I 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS,
FAMILY ROOM, PLUS RECREATION ROOM, LOVELY
FORMAL UVING ROOM WITH FIREPLACE. EQUII'PED
KITCHEN , FORMAL DINING ROOM, REAR DECK,
SECONO FLOOR BALCONY. ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP,
NATURAL 'REDWOOD EXTERIOR, 2 CAR ATTACH ED
GARAGE. SURROUNDED BY 9 BEAUTIFUL WOODED
ACRES. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT. $125,000.
$27,500 - VERY NICE 1988 MOBILE HOME SPACIOUS 14'X70' HAS 2 BEDROOMS. 11(2. BATHS
LARGE LIVING ROOM, AMPLE CLOSET SPACE.
DECK, STORAGE BLDG. 1.55 ACRE GENTLY
. SLOPING LOT.
.
260' JACKSON PIKE • , 4 ROOMS PLUS BATH • NICE
LOT $27,000 GREAT LOCATION.

' MAKES THIS PROPERTY A
LOW PRICE OF $28,000
. GOOD INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY. 3 BEDROOM
HOME PLUS GARAGE APARTMENT. LOCATED IN
$8,500. NICE WOOOED LOT WITH BUILDING. WOULD
CITY.
'
MAKE EXCELLENT HUNTING. CABIN.
AVDRBT 11'. CANADAY, BR.ODR
MARY P. n.oYD
LINDA G. SKIDMOU
SIXTY ACRE FARM ·:_ RECENTLY REMODELED tY.
REALTOR
3'n-2088
REALTOR
446-3983
STORY HOME HAS VINYL SIDING, 3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS DINING ROOM , MODERN KITCHEN HAS
CUSTOM BUILT OAK CABINETS. FENCED PASTURE
IS PERFECT FOR HORSES OR CATTLE . BARN,
STORAGE BLDG. CELLAR HOUSE. $52,000.
'

--·

Public Notice

· Public Notice

November
Public Notice'

4

24, 1991

Employmrnl Srrv 1crs

Pomeroy-Middleport- Getlllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleaunt,

11

Help Wantld

dnl Ptople call you. No IX·

Attun•d.

1 Invent
7 Chinese pagoda
10 Spring month
13 Argue
19 Less soiled
20 Actor Gerard
21 Poem
22 Four-sided
tapering pillar
24 Hidden supply
25 Maiden loved by
Zeus
27 Agave plant ,
28 "- the Right
Thing "
29 As far as
30 Italian poet
(1265·1321)
3,1 Vipers
32 Saucy
34 The - Gees
36 Shape; figure
38 Let It stand
39 Legal mailer
400,-, Q, - , S
41 Cannon
44 Hypothetical
force
46 " Ready, -, go"
47 Ed .' s concern
48 - lem
49 Falsehood
50 - Angeles
51 Seine
53 Landon ID
54 - Paul. Minn.
55 Goals
57 Moccasin
59 Manner ol
behavior: sullix
60 Pith helmet
61 Compass point
62 Military unlls
64 River in France
66 Disengage
68 Distant
70 Ancient chariot
72 Newt
73 Giver of gilt
74 Rubber tree
77 - roll
78 Holds back
80 lngredlenl
82 Crimson
83 Sullen In aspect
85 Hinders
86 Relund ·
87 The Three
Stooges,
lor one

88
90
91
92
93

Insane
Hyson
Three-toed sloths
Capuchin monkey
Earthquake
~6 Apothecary's
weight
99 Farm building
101 Waltzed
104 Hurry
105 Vat
107 Alllrmallve vole
108 Bitter vetch
109 Total
110 "- Maria"
111 Still
112 Verve
114 S,lrloln 116 Cupola
117 Unused
118 Therelore
120 Goddess of
discord
122 Scottish cap
123 Explosive device
124 - . C, D. - , F
125 Bona
127 "- Law"
129 Writing tablet
131 " Candid
Camera"
. request
133 Greek letter
134 Calcium symbol
136 Concerning
137 Indistinct
139 Slender finial
140 Cloth measure
141 Cooling device
142 Lansbury ID
143 Arid
145 Fabulous bird
147 Uncommon;
noteworthy
151 Pale
152 Monk 's title
153 Ireland
155 Cooking vessel
157 Couples
158 Rodent
159 Condescending
lOok
160 Sun god
161 Myse1r
163·Repasts
165 Reserved;
lndiHerent
167 Italian river
168 Prlnl8f',s measure
169 Killed
171 Fracas
172 Plague

173 Roasting
chambers
175 Withered.
176 Gather
177 Chemical
compound
178 Lairs
DOWN
1 Nearest
2 Harvests
3 Hearing organs
·4 In addition
5 Tellllrl~m symbol
6 Greal Lake
7 Grimes ID
8 River Island
9 Excuse
10 Pauern
11 Fuss .&gt;- ··
12 Old pronoun
13 Entrance
14 Erbium sym~ol
15 "The Burning - "
16 Word ol sorrow
11 Shades
18 Holds in high
regard
19 Alluring qualities
23 Ma -and Pa 26 Spoken
29 Playthings
32 Pledged
33 Journey
35 Overhead railway
36 " - Hare to
Eternity"
37 Sameness of
pitch
40 First reader
42 Rip
43 Otherwise
45 Leave
48 Equal ity
52 Twitching
56 Six-person group
58 Board game
59 Bury
60 Doctrines
62 Disputallons
63 o ccupied a chair
65 "- Thee I Sing "
66 Landed estale
67 Large cyclone
68 Gave food to
69 Time gone by
71 Dismal; gloomy
73 Precludes lrom
75 Maul greeting
76 Tokyo's old name
79 Phys.
81 French article

84 Ewe's mate
87 Make Into leather
89 Lavish londness
on
92 Identical
93 Attempt
94 Regret
95 Regulallon
97 Roman bronze
98 Having dull finish
99 Rays
'
100 Wooden vessel
101 Speechless
102 Day belore
holiday
103 Condensed
moisture
106 Prohibit s
109 " - Came
Running"
113 River In Africa
115 Babylonian deity
116 Barbie, lor one
119 Ancient
121 weakens
123 TV.' s Cos'by
124 Franklu~
. holder
125 Commands
126 Continued stories
128 Ventilate
130 Drinks liquor
often
. 132 German 133 Male
134 Sways lrom side
to side
135 Warning devices
138 Swab
141 Obese
144 12 mos.
146 Punctuation mark
148 Mollifies
149 Roman 101
150 Angry
151 Thin, crisp
biscuit

152
154
·
156
158
159
162
164
166
167
170
174

Iron symbol
Arabian
commander
Abound
Flower
Alfectlon
Opp. ol WSW
- - carle
Grain
Seed conleiner
Diphthong
- garde

·

Ho"Wttl'll'l

•=

~':' i:o~ :t~~:~~rf'~1~

•

'1:.1~~

j,,,.,

.t :

11

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlne~

wantldtooo

R-.~~~~~..;.lln....;;to,;:tivN;,_·,;.•;,;nt,;.ed;.;;,..-WI-alt.. l
to O~tr? HoYt 1 Porty?_Eund _ Cartlflod Dt- .Mtehlnlc And
· Rlltar WI-? AVON. Cau•-, Got Motora, Pon-TI1110
l14-!lt2-7t80 .
· _,, Job; Wont To Do: ctoan Ho..e·1
Anyti11101114-211U340.
Sttr Approvad H~ Aatlttanta: II Yov Art -..a AChtl- Gao 'liN Portabla llwm1111 dol11
lenglng Poaltlon In Hoo11h ear., htul row loa• to 1ht m11
jull
Apply In Pnon: sc.ntc Htlll caii:IOW75·1l57.
, Cantor :111 luck....._
Nuiai1
GetiWIIy, Huntinglont.'!N ott f..
::.tL7:
•-.- Mill PauJa'a Dly Ctre C.nttr.
84. Minora M,.t Be with Laaal Road, ldwol, """"·
Ball, tllordoblo, chlldclra.. 11-F
Quonlltn. Hlghllta. 717-348-311'8. Tilt CAPS progr1111 11 tOokina 8 a.m. • ~:30 p.m. Agoa 21P10.
tor'pa~ volunt.,. 111 wori Baloro, ofttr achool . DrojHna
'N0 •~par
- Itnca NaCMatry. A du~- '~"
·•--- 81'-~
... -4 · - 1n..- ' " a font
•-~.
Dally Stlary Of $300 f« Buying
on hourt
SAFE'_.,.~
Toddler Clro,l14-448-1227
•.
Mtrchtndlae. 814-366-2082, Elf. ~REE to achoot chlldran.
3B83.
Portrltt who on!Ov clllldron and
n-.1~ Wllh . 10011 ompan•. hova 111110 woulcr ba Vtr\' wtl· Ch
h
...,....,
• . como., A"""""",
~y~Lirn;:::::;;•::·1::1::4:::_4~::1·:71228~.:-:;=
Mul!l tn oy working wllh public.
,.,_,., Wil . ara 1 ;;
Appllcal\t mvof hlva gOod va~unteer agoncy, we do. com· Wll Do Hciuaoc~~· 5 Yaara
cltarical end computor lk11lt, , - · thO voluntaar wllh • , Ellparlanod14-4
1 or 814Salary commonoura11 w11h IX· loktn poy ~115.00' an hour lor · 44f-G2.251aavo mosaago.
wo"'~
-nted
In
Plrilnct,
!Jtnefll..
- ,-, _ . lnf•-~lon,
Wll 1lkl care·of or htlp aldt~~
mall
Nlumelxcellent.
1o Box P·22
care achoolt. ·•nllf
v.n ...
coll514-lll-8811
.'
In
thtlr home, 11-Spm, 114·14
Point
Plaaaant
R119illor, 200
21 81
Main St,
Point Pl1111n1,
WV . ~-,...-.,---:--:-7---:---'-.

f01ii;.,.

=nt~o~;J~~~~::~pog~~

no

•-rrilc•,

+

.J

How to llandle
4th-round losers

·'
•'

on a winner. ·'

See how well you can handle the
fourth round by covering the EastWest cards in the diagram and planning the play in four spades. West
leads off with two top clubs .
The bidding features a popular expert gadget. Two clubs is strong, arti·
ficial and forcing. Two diamonds is
waiting, perhaps hiding a reasonable
hand if the responder doesn't have a
good suit to bid. The responder's three-

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Pass
Pass

Pass

North
H

3.a

Pass

Opening lead;

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

'Your

Nov. 24, 19t1
Look tor some major changes you've

been hoping tor to become realities In
Ihe year ahead, especially In areas that
have a direct effecl upon your material
well-being.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dac. 211 The
li ne ol least resistance may not be the
route you should fOllow l oday. Do what
is more elfectlve, even il it's a tad hard
and a bit inconvenient Know where to
look lor romance and you 'll lind it. The
Astro-Graph Matchmaker lnstanny reveals which signs are romantically 'perlect lor you. Mall $2 plus a long. sell-addressed ,.... stamped ---envelope
to
Matchm aker, c/o this newspaper. P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland , OH 44101-3428.
CAPRICORN (Oac. 22-Jon. 11) Associates cou ld be so involved with their
own problems today that they will not
have time to look out tor your interests.
You'r e lhe one who 'll have l o protect

NO. 1.
. AOUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fib. 11) Th is is a
good day to get in lauch with an inti-

male friend you·ve been neglecting a bit
lately. This Individual is beg inning to
wonder whether you still consider him
one ot your lavorlte people.
PISCES (Ftb. 20-March 201 Do not let a
strong -willed lriend establish your Db·
'"- , jectl ~es for you today. You, betler than
anyone else, know your top prlori11es at
this time.
ARIES (Morch 21 -Aprillll Sometimes,
lt 's d ifficUlt to request fav.o rs, bul it you
find It necessary to do so, th is is a good
day to try - especially If it Is something
you 've been unable to work oul on your
·'

TAURUS (April 20-Mir 201 You might
not be able to get everything you want
In your co mm er~l al dealings today, but
11 you 're firm and hold to your terms,
you should come out reasonably well.
GEMINI (M., 21 -Juna 20) An agreement you recently entered 1n1o has both
benellts and liabilities. However. you
could do worse - if you try to make
provi sions a"er 1h~ fact.
CANCER (June 21-.IUIJ 22) Posslblll·
ties for material reward look very good
at this time. but you will have to earn everything you get. If you're prepared to

r~~~J:r·:::~~i ~'!.::~~:~ess to

cooperate with others is your greatest
aaaet loday. Beneflts could come to you ·
through those you 're Involved with - II
you are a loyal team player. ·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-lepl • .221 The key to
success and lulflllment today Is to try to
do tor others what you want to do lor
youroelf. You'll gain through giving , not
through being selfish:

Thank~c to the
children of Letart,
Portland ai)CI Racine
Elementary Schools

for their handmade
card!l and ltttera
sent to
Hoback
during his llln181.
Your .comfort and
I!Upport meant a lot.

am ·

The wile. llld hlmllr
of D1rluil WMIIerltoll .
wlah to think elf the
frlenda 1nd neltihboiW on Leiding Crwk lor
oil I heir thoughtful- ·
neaa end klndnett In
tendi ng donlllona. of
food, love off~lng,r
and the beoutlful
llowert.
WHe I Fernlly

200 Main S11'Nt, Poln1 Pleaun1,
WV25330.

yard, 614-843-53411

.

Bill

's Wife {Nancy)

w•

THANKS
would like to

expr••• our · elnc•r•

1ppreclatlon to oil Qur
rolotlv11, frlando ond
ntlghbora lor oil the
prayaro, flor1l oflerlngo,
clrdo, food ond wordl ol
comfort during lila loot
of our huaband, loth~.
and gran~. Kenneth

H. H1gar, Sr. alao our

thank• 1o Whlto-Biowar
Fuiierel
Ham• . in
Coolville ond VFW Pool
9053 Tuppan Pllina.
Arlie Hagar &amp; Family

We wiah to thank
everyone at Veterana
Memorial Hoapllal, Dr.
Palter aon,
Dr.
Welherall and nur~•
In Emergency Room.
All the otaff at Ewing
Fu nerel Home and all
her friend• and neighbora lor flowera and
food and their vlalta
during the lou ol
Irene F. Ruaaell. May
God bleaa you.
Huobandand
Children

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

We 11111 deeply gr....
lui to tho11 who Mnt
llo.w art, . cerda, food
and In other l!f•Y•
expreu their aympathy on the deeth of
our ' loved one,. Bill
Hob.ck. Our th811ka to
Rev. Roger G1.c1 ad
apecial lhonka lo the
pallbeerera •nd the
Flaher Funerel Hom.. .

Blll .,

Wife (Nancy) •
. I

F~~mlly

•.

~:;:::;:::::::;t~~

~

The
family
ot
William (Blll) Hoback
would like to take thle
opportunity to axpre•• our delptat
apprecletlon for the
klndneu, . love - lnd
eapeclally the preyera
during our time of II~
neu and lou. We
l!fould like to thank
everyone who oent
food, flol!fera ond
carda. Again, thankl
_I!! ever:yo!IUI!'bc! .eame__
in touch and were wHh
u• during our lime of
aorrow. Yout klndneaa
and love· will never be
forgonen.
The Hoback Faritily

Real Estate General

+K

club rebid is a · aouble negative," desc ribing a really bad hand. Also
North's three-spade preference is
trealed as non-forcing by many experts. However, South is too strong to
stay out of game.
South has one club loser and two
spade losers, but he mustn't take his
eye off the heart two. The right play is
lo ruff the second club and then to
duck a spade. Assume l bat West returns the club queen. South ruffs, cashes the spade ace (relieved to see tbe 32 split) and then plays hearts.from the
lop. However East defends, he cannot
stop South from ruffing the heart two
" in the dummy.

738 2n()j AVE e GALUPOPUS

446-6624
The Peof)le You Know&amp; The Place To Call
J. M~rrill Carter

379·2184

Cathy Wray

Jeannie France

Tammie DrWill

Shirley loster

446--80011

' 446-6624

446-1260

. 446-4255

P~tli Hawk
446-1967

Som Hoffman
379-2449

a) 111t, ....,APIDI IWTI. . . . A.._

LIBRA.(Sopt. 23..0cl. 231 Something In
which you are presently involved is in
need o1 constructive reorganization.
You already know what should be done.
and now Is the time to do it.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Be alert lor
a development today where you could
serve as the Intermediary In a matter

that could generate prollt for others as
well as for yourself.
Nov. 25, 1tll1

~ Cftirthday

own :

+3

W.ll
Pass

Shirley, Lori, Tammy &amp;
Virgil II Waleon
Tony, Paula &amp; Brandon
Nolen.

Saoking Cortllltd X-Ray Tech- B1bplttlng In My Hom1, Full·
nician. In The Stitt 01 WV To Time Or lJrap In• Welcame_;
Work Fuii·Tlmt In Physlclane Mothr Of Twa, Reterancn
Offici, Send ·Resume To: Box p. Avollabla. 114-448-1451.
21, c/o Point Pl1asanl Register,
I will do rug weaving , $5.00 per

.AKQ

Vulnerable; Neither
Dealer: South

• Proper Care and Handling of
Fourth-Round Losers" is the name of
a chapter in "Kantar Lessons II."
When you evaluate a hand using the
Losing Trick Count, it is assumed that
the fourth card in a suit will be a winner. But, as we all know, this isn't always the case. Suppose you have three
low cards opposite A·K·Q·x . How will
you avoid losing that fourlh round ?
Well, perhaps the opponents' cards
will split 3-3 , but that is against the
odds. If they don't split, you must either ruff the fourth round or discard il

A

.J4

UKQ2

1 card of Thanks

.c

gNCIUI't or 1yr IXP. muet be Enalntlflryg, t&lt;CUU,OOO.OO 011 25550
WtnlH .motlnlld ulnpirwon,
lbll to Nn h rvacl, lmi'Hdlltt FWd Wor..,_ tiOO,OOO.DO. Call
•
$21,00-$52,000 1• y.r, tl'llnlna
ADVANCED COMMISSIONS • tmpl"ttftanl 1o run toam, 114- 1-27N58a El1 1572
Ptrt-Timt
BtbiJIII«
In provldtd, 'trptrltnct proltr...r,
Financial
Pold Wttkiyl Elm Up To $11101( 141-2110,
'
· '
Ch hi10 K
A
4 atnd rMUmt 1o Dilly Santlntl
Firat Yttr. Call 1-100-721-6659
.
LA
' BORERS
"
'
ygor
rll&lt;.
..
·PO
lox
-a
Pomtroy,
·
OH
DajiiWttk (Appror. 12 HR,wK
•••
TOOAYI
Eldt~ man nttclo ~y to IIVI AND M.INTENANCE NOW Tolall 114-367-o139 Ahor 5p.m. 4-c5_7&amp;:.:cg...,.------,,.---':-o 2
Auanllon AN'S: II You Would In an care lor him, 807 Second HIRING, TO $18 HOUR. 1-IOOo Rolorancoo Roqulrtd.
Work lnHn home 180 par 100
1
Bust ness
~·
Chtil
Y N .
St, Muon, WV 25210 • 304~773- 8I2-HU.
I
II I ""- lion
Ll •- tO
11'111 our ul'llng 5045.
.
,
P1rt1
Pti'IOn,
E~rlen ct prtptr
I'M •
nJ¥"! ...1
opportunity
Knowladtll AnlfSklllo, Apply In 1;;::===-:-:--::-- ·::-.C7.'" Lootdna fcir paop1t- trt aell niCBiaary. Job dutlll will con· sand otamp to K.S. Enltr11riatt
Plreon: Scanlc Hille Nuralng Ellparioncod Httllng And Air motlmtd, nt11 In
alai o1 lnvantory, ordering, ,. P.O. lor 5157-JMW, Hlliokla, Hoi ·
WOt.FF TANNING SEllS
Cant•, 311 Buckridga Rood, Condltlonlntl"'nllallar And Str· ,, haw 1 ear to fill hornt ula atocklng,
run
computar 07205. Phone 2111-'IOH280.
New Commtrclal, Home Unhs,
Bidwell, Ohio Wt Offar Compall- vlca Mon Apply: Orman l'latllnc. potRion. llilry l!lua comml1- program, daallng wllh ·pant In·
F""" 1119.00. Lompoc Lotlona,
tlve Sll1ry, Benefl1a, And Excel· 1317 Ohio BtrMI, ~nt PIMaant, alan, 304-17S.:1725 lnttrvlewa venlory. Alao, will bt 111 apon· 12
SHuatlon ·
Accunorill. Monthly l'lyiMnts
ton:t:W:o:rk:tln:;g;Ce:;nd;h;lon;;;t.;::;;;;;;;.J,;WV;;:;:25;;550;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;..J;g:;OO:I:III:12::;10;:n;oon;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ alblt tor ahlpplng roctlvlng.
Low AI $18.00, Coil Todoy FREE
Wanted
Somt ftllf'l lifting lnvolvod.
NEW Color Cllalog. 1-8011-228Call 304-273-2790 bolwun B:00- Would Llko A Nlco PllcO To.Uvt 8212.
5:00pm.&amp; nklorJohn,
wtth A Roo,~ta To Short
Pomeroy
Nurtlng
·And : Chora. 114-446.
NORTH
U·ZI·It
BRIDGE
RahobiiRatlon Cantor H11 tm- 14
Business
1 .card ofThanks
.654
mecU11e &lt;&gt;Pining For Par1·Timt
.873
LPN Or AN. Mutt Bo Abta To
T lnlng
• 10 9 4
Work All Shlfta. Pravlouo El·
ra . perlenc. In LD~JQ·Tenn Care Rllraln
+a 7 u
The family of VIrgil R.
NowiiiSouthttllam
Prlflnld. WIU COnsider Nlw
Watao n would llkt to
Graduatn, S.lsry Baatd On auatnHa eouaga, ~r~ Volley
WEST
EAST "
PHILLIP
Ptuo. cau Todly, 114 -438711
VNrl Of Experience. Excellent
10
.KQ 9
extend
our he•rlfell
,
Benefits.
Call
Carol Rll911lorotlon~127141.
ALDER
.10 9 6 5
KanaWIIItky; AN DON For lnttr·
thanks to frlen&lt;h, foml·
tJ87
t6 53!
18 Wanted to 00 .
view At614·992-6606. E.q.E.
Iy and nelghbort who
+AKQJ
+10942
Rtglttertd Nuraa,· CMSI Payt
Will Bobyoh In My · Home
helped In any way durUp To $52,000. Free Prlva11 Anr.lme.
Rodney . 1\1111.
· SOUTH
Housing. C!!!._ Toll Free 1-§QO._ Ra~r•n-_Avollablt . can 81J-_ _ Ing-our-tlme oloorrow.
· -A-8-H 2
2454887. .
423-1739.

tary. 814-365-2082, EXI.3883.

Your material prospects look promising
lor the year ahead. If you are enterprising and Industrious, you might lind new
ways to supplement your Income.
SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 Your
llrst Ideas are likely to be you r soundest
today. Whan you overanalyze'develop·
ments, you could become ineflective
and negative. Major changes are ahead

NEW LISTING !
IN TOWN!
Sellers relocating and musl sell th is older &lt;
slory home. 3 bedrooms, nicely ca rpeted
throughout. Vinyl siding, gas forced a1r lurnace with central air. Low maintenance ,
garage. Off sueet parking. Exceptional value.
Call today I ~need in the $40's.
12938

NEW LISllNG!
ENJOY THE VIEW FROM THE
FRONT PORCH .
Of this enchanting slone and frame ranch. 3 or
4 bedrooms, 11\ baths , 2 fireplaces, formal din·
lng, lull linished basement wi th additional kilch·
en. Attached garage, nat gas heat wilh cenlral
air. Low utilities, low main tenan ce . City .
schools. Wi1h in one mile lrom Gallipolis. Make
an appointment loday'
#2944

-··W HAT MORE COULD YOU ASK FOR
ATTHIS PRICE $32,~00
3 bedroom ranch home wi .h liv ing room, eat·in·
kitchen, ulilill , and bath. Nice. lanced-in lawn
and anac~ed carport. Wilh tn m~nu les of Holzer
Hospital. Call today.
#2875

for Sag ittarius in the coming year. Send

for Sagittarius ' Astro-Graph predictions today. Mall $1.25 plus a long, self·
addressed , stamped envelope to AstroGraph, c/o this newspaper&gt; P.O. Bor
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be
sure to state your zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11) Occaslonal ly,lt's helpful to cast a lillie bread
upon the waters In hOj&gt;e of generating
somelhlng In return. B'e carelul today
you don 't toss In the wholeloal.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fab. 11) Someone
you're closelY allied with might be loo
insistent upon things being done a speclllc way today - this Individual' s way.
If it 's not promptly adjusted. suc h an ar rangement could inconvenience you
·considerably.
PISCES (Ftb. 20-Mtrch 20) Be willing
to share whal you have with friends less
fortunate than you today, even though
what you give or loan might not be
returned.
.
ARIEl (Morch 21'-Aprll 111 A close
pal' s feelings could be hurt tod~y If you
exclude this lndlvlduallrom an Involve·
ment with your other friends. Do nol
!real this oversight casually.
TAURUS (Aprii20-Miy 20) You're under rather fortunate lnlluences today.
but don 't expect more than to which
1ou're entitled. Unrealisllc expectations
could lead to connict. .
GEMINI (MIJ 21-JUH 20) Th~ comments of a nagati~e associate ~u st be

kept In proper perspective today. Don 't
let this Individual's remark s dampen
your enthusiasm.
CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) Someone
you 're depending on might not be able
to do everything promised today. Have
a conllngenc1 plan ready where you are
more self· sufficlent.

LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 221 Jf you yield to Inclinations to procrastinate, you 're likely
lo be only partially eflecllve In your en deavors today. Timing Is of ul lmate
Importance.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-ltpl. 221 You mbat at·
lend to your responslbllhlea In an orderly IUhlon today or else you could create
a logJam lor youraell. Be methodical.
LIIR- (8ept•.P-Oct..231 Being a social•
climber today .could !urn out to be
counterproductive. Those with clout are
the very onoa who might be the least
supportive.
ICORPIO (Del. 24-Nov. 22) Doing
things lor the sake ol erpecllancy today
could slow you up rather than thrust you
ahead. The more shortcuts you take,
' the less progress you 'll make ..

'•
~-

Mamttnance

pario- '*'tllry. 1-100-255Fn&gt;nl 1!!1!11. Coou Hilpaio To
0242.
.
AYOI! 'I All Araaa I Slllltay S121Hr. Pj,rrn F·T Cal 1-..a2Spaera,~l&amp;-1421.
2111. •I
'P091AL
JOBS •
.
"' •our Araa
•••byolht.~.
Want~
In
My
u.~..
'".~
. ' HELP
....,'IIICI Por Year Pluo
Do ~'
~ Ho ,...Jll."''"""
.
· BtnatNt, Polloi eam.re, 11or- 2·31 ~ A Wttk, For 7 Month j:' o:''"dooui!!•lntanenca,
41 141
1
Old, "" " 7.
·
..T'hr,
F71
211-'138-980'7 11• p6432 1 a.m. Dtntlll 'Rtcaptlonltl Naadod 21111.. r .
.
Fui~TI111L
Sand Rtoumo An"• · rn.·
·
To I Pm 7 Da•a
R
· '' , ' ·
tiara- .To: CLA Bo• 011,
• at o: Conlldt~~ltl BerAVON • AI! aroaa,. c 1n Morllyn cJo Oolllpollo Dtllv T~bunO; 825 ~ . t .Wortt, C~mlnal
Waavar 304-8112·2045.
.,
Third Avonut, Cllllpollo, OH
Mltiing Ptrlono, 104-35745831.
·
11140, 24 hclir aorvlct. ·
A Oai~u
Sail~
Of
$300
.
Fo
.
r
'
··
·
Joba t· K'[;
· lit ·~ F · Con
8 ~ylng., More ondltt. Burar Orivar
wonted
troctor
trallarh:r.Jo
n
••• IN.0011 oo•
N--•
• No E
- • ··
=xparionco Ntc• 31 yre old, driv• IC ool llnrcllon 1'1Wor•~
'!!'..!~ s•
••• ·

L

ACROSS

11 . • Help w•ntacl

Http Wantid

wv

e:

',

Puzzle Answer on Page D-8

11

ACT NOWI
' ~li lihtr· Nltded For
MODE~
Only O,ponunKy To ~pply Fo.r ·
~ Afftr School Cora, 2 Yatro And . Up AduHa, .All
', 1380/DAY PROCESSING
XMAS And Co,_ll~llkiriiAina .!"hoot ldayo; Chy lchoell. AgNITypaa,. Stloctlng , Now
PHONE ORDERII - PEOPL£ With ~ CrOcth ChoCk: IIOWU· • C/lj
, Roll- R• F-, Sttklng Promo11ontl
CALL YOU,
1141.
·
qulrad, . nd ~: lol · Strvlct Erpooura To Locol And
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
' CLA Olt, OIOOal.potlo DtNr. ·
Ad....Ualng. No El·
•
1-800-~42,
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
. TrlluntJ.!al '!lllrd A....,., Gt .
net -ory. FIN Futl
Elctlltnl
Poy,
lltnoiH'!, llpollt, "'!' 45Ut.
oHo ly Agoncy Rep At !p.m.
Tro..portatlon,
407-2t2-41'tr,
"""""
.. L HELP .
And 7p.m. Slllrp On Sunday
1•• 01
r-•.•
Dacambar 111 AI Hollclty Inn
- day Pf'OCIOIIng phana or- El1. 571, la.m,·10p.m. Toll

wllh Choptar 5525 Ohio 10 Month Old Mole Dog Hta All
directed : to odvarlloe lor .NOTICE TO CONTIIACTORs .Revised Code. , .Shots, P!ayf\11 To Good H0m1.
,
STATE OF OHIO
614~6-mt
·
.
bida for the - purch••• ,o l
Plana
ond
apeclllcatlona
neee11ary melerlale, aupDEPARTMENT OF
are on iltaln lhe Deportment 2 yr old ChoW 1o 1 good home,
TRAHSPORTAT)ON ~
pliea, and equipment, mainof Traneportatlon and the 304-882-2411.
Columbua, Ohio .
tenance conlrocte for
olflco of the Dlatrlct Deputy
Novambar .15,' 1991
radioa, hooting .,d lir-conDlreclor.
Colltrlet Solta
ditioning unlla ond electriThe Dlroctor reHrvea the 6
Lost &amp; Found
l.egal Cop~ No. 11-1058
cal work, legal advtrllalng,
right'
to
reject
any
end
oil
~:-:-::::::"-::::::~:""':::::::-:::
UNIT
PRICE
CONTRACT
insurance expiring during .
blda.
Lost- fem111 puppy, c· n'lontnt
Suled propooalt will be
calendor .year 1U2, ht~vy
redlah brown~ whlto chll1,
JERRYWRAY old,
n~m• K••r, .,;o Rd. 1!1,
equipment rentala, b'enc~- 'received •r tht ofjlct of the
Director of Tranoportadon Pom~roy .
.ing and bocklllllng, uni- Director· ol lht. Ohio November 17, 24, 19i1
form• •nd wurlng opparel Dtport11!tnt of ·TrenoporllLoa1- Whitt lomalo For Hound
114-62-3083 .
lor the vorlouo City deplll'l· tlon, Columbuo, Ohio, until
Announcements
mente, tree removal and 10:00. A.M., Ohio Stondord
Lost : Llrgt, cltr'k tan •ultca11,
cutting aervicea, and cut; nma, Friday, QectF!1blf 6,
lull of mtr)a' clothing, bolwHn
_ _ _ _ __._ _ _ S1racuaa &amp; AllvlowOad bridga,
ling of harmlul and/or noxl· 19911or Improvement! In:
1 814·992-5522.
. . .
OIJI weeda aa are neected
Atheno, Galllo, Hocking, 3
Announcements
by •the City lor the calendlr M•lga, Monroe, Morgan,
year 199~. Thtll will be Noble, Vlntqn, W.lhlngton No Hunting or Traapautna 8
PubliC Sale
advertlaed In the Galllpollo Countlea, Ohio for lmprov· anytlma on Alljmand Smh~
&amp; Auction
DallY' Tribuna, 1 nawopoper lng ooctlon ATH-33·12.45 on propartj.
:::-.-:::~':":':~:::-;::::=::-=::
Rick Ptaroon Auction Company,
of general circulation In ll!t United Stat11 Route 33, othfull time tuctlonMr, complete
City of.Giillpolle, according er vorlouo rautao and oac· 4
Giveaway
urvlca. Llcanaad Ohio,
to law and the Chortar ol the tlono by furnlahlng and - - - - - - : : . . . - - ouctlon
lnarolllnir relatd povamenl 3 K111-: 2 Callca, 1 Molt Tlgt~ Waot Vi'lllnlo, 304-77Wl85.
City of GIIHpolio.
S1rlpa; 1 Border Colllt DOg, Wedtmaytr't Auction Sirvlct,
II Ia neceooory to obtein marker maltrlalo.
Rio Granda, Ohio 114-245-5152.
Project Length: 0.00 loet Ftma~,l14-441-4070.
bldo and enter Into conor
0.00
mile
lraclo l~r moterlala, equip4 wk old Gtnnan Bhtpardl g
wanted I B
Work Longth: Vorloua leet Ratriovor, &amp;14-114-2335
men~ aupplieo, ond oervlc·
;::::::;:~:;::::::::o::::-u~y:-::::eo for uae by the City In the or varloua mil...
5 PuppiM: . Pori BNctlt, Port Compltlt Houullald Or EoPovemant Width: Vt~n
calendlr yoor19t2 In order
Collie, Some Lang Halr, Som• lalnJ Anr Type Of Fumhwa,
Appllanctt, Antlqua'o, Etc. Alao
to obtain the boot prlceo lor . "The dote let for comple- Shol1. 114-446·105f.
auch itomo and lo lnaura tion olthlo work'ahell be •• 8 outt puppi.O 1o good ho&gt;ma, Appraleol Avallobltl 114-245that aaid llama oro avlilable aet forth In the bidding taltMir· · Rlt Terrier, molhtr· 5152.
propoaal.'
lo tho .City when needed.
mlrad, 614,618-12UO
Clog.lng Shott, 81%1 8 112 And
PASSED:
Eoch bidder ahall be Fre~ Bilek And Whl11 Kl11tn, st" ore 112, &amp;14-245-sm.
November 19, 1991
required to flit with hlo bid Molt, 7 Wotkt Old, 114-3e7·le7t, Uaad llobl1t Hl)mlt, Call 814- ·
ATIEST:
a certllled chock or cuhl·
44~1!5·
Deborah L Hugheo
· er'• check for Iii amount F- PuDDIH: Malt, I Wttka Wonl to buy llandlng tlmbor &amp;
Clerk of the City
equal to flve per cont of hit Old, Part thaw, 114 381 1008.f
plna, Tim Bttrha 81'1-112·7880
bid, but In no evenl more Khtant to good homt, 8-11- atttr lpm.
Commiaelon
Dow W. Saundero than flfty thout~nd dollare, 2461
to buy, Standing tlmbor,
Prealdenl ol the City or 1 bond lor tan per cant ol U111, yellow Lab, 7 mo old, 014- Wonled
Bpb Wllllema a Sona '614-112·
Commloalon hll bid, poyoblo lo . the 1'12·3041
5448.
The foregoing Roaolution Director•
M1ttma And lax Springs, Wanted To Buy: Junk Autoo
Blddero muar opply, on · Floor Modtl TV. Doatn1 Work,
ia hereby opprovod ao lo
Wllh or Whho&amp;A Motore. Cal
form.
the · proper forma , for Aduh Dilpara. 114-448-4127.
Lorry Uvaly, 114-388-1303.
Oouglaa-Cowloa qualification It leu! tan Snoopj'lo A-Biiutltiil18 Pound
Galllpolit City Solicitor days prior to tho dote oot lor Young Ftmlle Faltt Tvpa Doa, Top Prieto Pold: AU Old U.S.
November 24, 1991
openlna bldo In occcrdance White, Brown Hud. Bl1cli COino, Gold Rlna!, SIIYtr Colna,
Colno. M.T••. Coin Shop,
Stloto, Groot Componlonl 614- Gold
2$8·1764.
'
' 1!1 Second Avanut, Galllpolla.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

~elp Wantld

11

1

11 . HeiJ)' Wanted ·

Giveaway

•· By Phillip Alder
RESOLUnON NO. R91·10
A RESOLUTION AUTH·
ORIZING THE CITY MAN·
AGER TO ADVERTISE FOR
BIDS FOR THE PURCHASE
OF MATERIALS, SUPPLIES,
EQUIPMENT, AND SERVICES FOR USE BY THE
CITY IN THE CALENDAR
YEAR 1992, AS HEREIN
DESCRIBED.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT
RESOLVED by tho City
Commloolon ol lha City of
Golllpolle, Sllta of Ohio:
Thollhe City Man9r of
tho city ol Golllpollo, Ohio,
lo horaby oulhorlzed and

Canaday Realty

'

wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH- Point Pleasant,

1991

NEW LISTING!
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS
-1983 Schult Mobile Homo, 14'x70' with 3 bad·
rooms, bath wtgarden tub, living room , nioo s i~­
ed kilchen equipped with appliances, eleclnc
heaVcenlral air. All this resting on 4.6 acres +
older barn corn crib, molal bu ilding wilh concrele tlooni&gt;Q. Call todayl
#2939

NEW LISTING I
A HOUSE TO CALL HOME!
3 bedroom ranch leaturing ttl.! baths, lireplac:e
-in living
wen designed kitchen;·lamtly
room basement Recenlly mstal led heal p~mp
wnh gas backup. Garage patio with deck1ngi
plus much more. Slate Reule 160, c•ty schools.
Make an appointment today!
#294 1

room:

'

LOTS OF RIVER FRONTAGE .
Priced al $2 800 and up. Call lor mora detatls.
'
#2916

NEW LISllNG!
JUST IN llME FOR HUNllNG SEASON
66 wooded acres situated at Hamson
Township. Rural water, fenced. Call today lo1
location . $29,000.
12943

3 ACRES M/1:
Si lualed in Morgan Township. Good home si1e.
Rural water and eleclric available. *29 17
$3,QOO.OO
Lol along Ohio River. Call for more inlorma~io n ,
#2923
WHAT IS THE SENSE IN l't.YING YOUR
HARD EARNED MONEY IN RENTI
When you cou ld be pay ing lor lhis remodeled
home. Living room. baih , lorced air, gas heal,
newer deck, nesll ed among shade trees on
approx . 1 acre lot
'
#2920

,.

PRICE REDUCED! MULTI-PURPOSE
Excelltn t I!Xation tor resi dential or commercial
p rope~y. 35 Wesl area. Vinyl sidod 3 bedroom
ranch .'Over 1 acre loJ and approx. 1,100 sq. It,
commercial bu ilding.
#2909
$5 50D.OO
VIEW OF THE OHIO RIVER
With this 8+ tracl ol land. Wooded. Site cleared
for mobile home or house . Runil Water and
eleclric available. Along SR 7.
12131
LOCATION IS IDEAL!
Super builing lots. Approx. 5 acres each, level,
12933
rural water available, city schocla.

[H

ATTRACTIVE RANCH HOME
ON JAY DRIVE
Offers 3 bedrooms, living room, family room ,
eat-in kitchen newly remo deled, 1~ balh,
allached 2 car garage, cen1ral air, Green
Township, cily schools . Wi thin minu tes ol
hospital and town. Call lor an appoin1ment.
$55 ,000.00.
#2932

l

OWNER MUST SELL! !I . .
You must make an appointment to see th1s mce
3 bedroom home located in !he heart ol Crown
City. Above-ground pocl with nice deck area.
Priced in lha $40's.
" t 2934
NEW! - NEW!- NEW!
This modular is only 9 months old and si lualed
on over 11\ acres, 3 bedrooms , 2 lull baths ,
living room , study, formal dining, lamily room,
study with shelving , anached 28'x30' garage.·
Electric heal pump. Make an appointment today
to view this beautifu l home with. e~e rv 011.tra
possibl e. Immediate possession. Rio Grande

area.

·

THE RENT RACE!!!
With this 2 or 3 bedroom home. Remodeled,
vinyl siQng , storage building, 1-112 acre plua
excellent garden area . Tobacco allolrnent.
Raccoon Township. Unbeatable price. $29,000.
12895
Calltoday.
NEW LISTING
MUST SELL IMMEDIATELY!
1973 Grandville Mobile Home located in
Quail Creek. 14'r70', 3 bedrooms, newly
remodeled bath, lront porch, new storage
bui l~ ng &amp; large front yard for play area.
12140
PRICE REDUCED! 49 ACRE FARM
In Walnut Township, tillable land, pastu re and
woodlot. Agood size tobacco base and tobacco
bam. Three bedroom mobile home with spring
developmen t + another nice homesite with utilities in place including seplic system . A great
hunting area. Priced loday at $36,000. Please
call lor more details.
#2935
ACREAGE
13+ acres. Green Township. Listed at $10,000.
Lots of development around the area. Some
land is wooded. Small stream running across
property and has a small pond. Homesite is
graded off . Has eleclric and rural water available. Call us now.
12927
YOU CAN AFFORD TO TAKE A LOOK
ATTHIS HOME - ONLY $22}00IMMEDIATE POSSESSiuN
3 bedroom ranch , eal·in ki tchen, balh, utility
and more, approx. 1 acre lawn. CaU'to take a
peep atlhts oneI
,2930
SUPER LOCATION, SUPER HOME .
Very a11rae1ive 3 bedr.o?m home. Large hYing
room, fam ily room, dm1ng room .and katchen,
recently remodeled, 2 lull baihs , 2 car garage.
over 2 acres. Silualed at 'Buhi·Morton R~
just oil SA 35. Call·today. Immediate posses10n.

12914

...."'"a

MULT!Itl.l USfiNG SERWCE

REALTOR•

'

'

j

.

�·.,------:--

--

-

1991

N!)vember

PUBLIC· AUCTION
.

.

.

·44

at 11 :00 A.M.

Aetum.

1-800.226-

Nrnlat.d, utllltiH

2251

2

~11,

3-mlln .Oulh

R17.8t4-387-ott1
TraUtr &amp; lot tar .. r,, Ocala Nat'l
Forllt Floridl, 2-bdrm, 2:.()ith
8t4-992.e783
•

In Memory

Apartment
. for Rent
11~

t·bdrm opt· In Mlddlopool,
u111111u pel, $250mo pluo dop,
6t4-949'2217.
'
t·Bdnn
$2501no. · 1·Bdrm
$300mo, both lumlohod ond all
utilities, alao room• tor rent,
814-8411-2526
:I·BR In Middleport. No polo.
Pay own ulllltln, S~O per ma.
Deposlt/Ret.rancea requirtd.
614-992·2381 doys,
2-BR Unfumlshld downtown
Now Haven WY. No polo. 6t49e2·7481, ol19 t500 oq ft, oom·

"To get the discount, you have to
note from
therapist. ..
4 rooma and bath, good concll-

Remember Psalm
27:t
love you, baby,
wherever you are and
whatever you are
dong, my heart Ia with
you.
The Lord will make a
way.

In remembrance of
BEVERLY M.

tlon, an Old River Road, Glenwood, WY. $14,000.304-578-2t41.
Brick Home In nice. location al
Golllpollo Ferry, Wilt Torry
~ubdlvlslon, 3 bedrooms, 2
batha, DR, K, LA, large family
room. Courtny to Brokers.
snown by appointment only.
304-675-2029.
By Bulldor Now 3 Bedroom Full
BaHment With 2 Car Garage
And Family Room, Large
Kltchon An-I Dining, UIIIRy
Room, 2 Full Batha Walk In
CloMia, largt Lot, Cit~
Schoolt, 4 Mllta Frcm Town
$511,5oo Conaldtr Tradt-ln Of
Mobllo Hon., 81H46-8038.
E11t•m Melge Co, 230 acrw, 7Room hauH 11 yra old, new
lllnal aiding, lorced air, gaa lur·
nace, central air, tree Ql•, trailer
lot, 61&gt;M85-4320
~

Lots &amp; Acreage
12 Aer.., 8 ltYII. At. T.:Ot15o. 2
tobacco blma &amp; baH. Trailer
hookup. Prlca 'Fiduced. 304-74:J..
8196.

.

Building lolo,kcno end up, TP I
C water, Eastern Melga Co.,
quarter mile off SR7, 614-9853584
REBATE REBATE!

Up To $1,0oq Rebate On Select

Lots &amp; Aceragt For Sale, Land
6t4·lll7-3044 lftlr

Lo1 Modele AI Elooo Homo Cen·

tar. Great Selection Nowhere

Lots and acrtagt,
taga, unraalrictad,

El" But Elsn Home Center. 1·
800-a89·5710.
lract. 6t4-245~448..

Rental s

2 bdrm houu In Rullond, $275
month plus utilities, dlpoalt and
reflrenc" required, 614-9927503
2 Bodraom $200 Month In
Maaon. Plus Utllltlu, Referent•

And DopooR, 304.e75-t216.
2 bedroom tumlahtd ham•,
1200. per month, NtW Haven,

JnlftiiL

304o882·74M

ANSW.RS TO .
SCRAM-LETS
I

2 BR houu. Rtf. &amp; Dop. 304.
875-5112.

S~UBBY

3 bedroom houu, 22t6 Jeff"'
ton Avenut, $300 montn.
Roloroncn &amp; Dopooll. 304-67521111.
.

Happy Ads

All the World
Should Know
Today Roscue
Turns the
Big 4-0!

· This little
guy.l$• not
messy

· He's
"Mussy"

Happy
~Oth,]ohn!

.

SYSTEM.

· Hov. 23, 1952.

5

Auctioneer, David Boggs 4596
Gallipolis, Ohio
Flelreahments 6t4-446·7750
Licensed and Bonded In State of Ohio
Not· reapon1ible for accients or loss of property.
'

~

Miscellaneous
Real Estate General.

Goods

53

Rooms

Antiques

Roome torJirent -week Of month.
Sto~lng

ot S1201mo. Gollla Hotel.

----

614-44f.l58'0.
.·--

--•·

.-

.,,

Siooplna _.. whh cooking.
Also trallo~lpoCI . All hook·upo.
Clll after. •2100 p.m., '3()4.-rr.J.
5851, MIIOII W1J...

46

HIUSE ·FOR SALE
MEIGS COUNTY
RIGGS CREST TOWNSHIP ROAD 1059

48

Large 5 bedrooms. 2 ful ' baths. lot~ or cloSet
space. k~cnen plu! new oppiionces. dining
room . living ro om. large family room (wffh
woodburnerl. new hot water heater. brand
new AeratorSeptic Systern.double level deck
w~h roof .fruit trees.snrubs. fenced backyard.
conc·rete walks. outbuilding l2xl6.

Merchandise
51

81

Ho.usetiokl .
Goods
i930'o Solly couoh I oholr, JIDO,
6t4-949'2202
.

-LIKE NEW

In country, 8 room s. bedrooms. large tamil1 room . nice and
modern kitchen. dining room with French doors to a 14'xl4 '
redwood sundeck. 2 car garage, Andersen windows, Ra e·
coon Twp .. one acre level land. You must see this home.
Phone now tor appointment
#675

•

S poster Klrta-ela Wlltrbtd on
doublo podooloto. $450. 114-4468818.
'
•
. .
.
Cirpot 1112 $50 .&amp; Upl Solo On
All Outoldo , Corpot: $3.81 &amp;
$4.6; Kl1ch0n Cerpot, 17: VInYl
$4.6 . Solo ,On All Corpot In
Stockl Mollohon Cerpoto, 114· Zenith 26 lneh conaoll color TV,
with remote. Jt50. 5 ·pllco lv01y
446·7444.
bedroom au~• whh mattrua &amp;
boxoprlngo. $350. 614-445-7231
aherlpm.

'

CONTACT

CLELAND REALlY

BUSINESS OFFICES &amp; SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2nd .AVE•• CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

' 614·992~2259
POMEROY, OHIO

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
· PH. 446-7699

REALTOR

,

ALARM~S¥STEM

QUR.N's hirthlliiy, .
At I look out my
window
Spacial thoughts of
Bev are always near
Her amiling lace, her
thoughtful words,
And never a tear.
Another teason has
come, Bev's favorite
one.
She alwaya loved to
tell about Christ'•
only ,an.
We know Bev'a new
home Is far greater
than ours.
God's promises have
never been broken,
For he h11 promised
we will meet Him In
the sky.
So many times we
could have IBid
We love you, we. let
thaae thing• go by.
We know ahe'a not
gone lor good, juat
wahlng patiently by.
Sadly milled by:
Hutband &amp; children,
mother, brother• &amp;
alatera, nlecea &amp;
nephewa &amp; many,
many lrlenda.

!lome Qf this merchandise is fro~ the
, lilte Florence Canaday.
Portable a.i r cooler, chairs : dishwasher floor
f~ns, Sears dehumiq~ier, lhrow pillows, bed pil·
lows •. shoes •• clothes, some new; sewing
r/iach10e, sew1ng machine cabinet, elec. wee·
~eat~r. 2 B&amp;W TV:s. dishes. bedspreads, mal·
tress pads, sheels, curtains, metal and wooden
tables, rugs, boat tools, hats, purses, elec.
clocks, swaepers, floor polisher, pool fiker; bar
stools, crock pots, deep fryer, toaster, toaster
broileroven, ice cream maker, irons, elec. skillels, coffee pots, mixer pols and pans, 2 crock
hooks, sled, 100% cashmere pastel
suede';. length pastel mink, shovid beaver jacket, 100% cashmere jacket cape, matching hat,
"nti&lt;!ues, wicker chair and stools, antique melal
Wheelbarrow, old metal toys , stone jars , carbide
light, meat grinder, iron skillets, antiques, wash·
er wilh suction cup, quilt " Daisy chum, plus
much, much more. Something for everyone.
Terms of sale: Cash or Check wlth,proper 1.0.

The man's car had been stolen.
When it was found several weeks
later and returne.d to him, he was in
for a big surprise. The thief had taken
the time to install an ALARM

Mt:tLLOW
ESCAPE
UNMASK
FRIDAY
GLOSSY

3bt Soctlonll Homo In Chy 1
Block From Ohio River Pi.Za,
lt4-448-20113, BotwMn 3 And
llp.m.; 304·743-4358.

~

For ,.,.,. Ntw 1 bdrm apr; tum
or un!Urn, In Mlddlopool, 814HI!-6225 or Hl!.s304.
•
Fuml- 1 ·BA, LA, Ut·ln
kHchon1 lg. P«C~j! R!5 mo. Soc.
dop......~cn. 14-445-2236 or
8t4-448-258'1.
Fumlahld 1·bdrm apt. Mid·
d.r1. carPtt, diP l · ref requfrWd,· 1225 piUI IIICtriC 814-HI!-6an.
Fumlo~od 3 Aoomo &amp; Bolh,
Clan, No Polo1 Rollr.,.. a· .
Dopoo~ Roqulroa.I14-44S.1519.
Nicely Fumlohod · Apartment,
tbt, """ to Ubtory, portolng,
central htat, air, m.r~nce ,...qulrod. 814-448-G3;18.

S4

· Household

45

-~

Cost, High

51

Fumllhod' opt. All utlllll10 pold.
1 BR, upltalrs, 2rid Ave. Good
cond. Bt4'446-1523.

1900 Chestnut St., Gallipolis

across from Smith Buick. Watch tor
signs.
Local Pay Phon• Rout•. Low

Apannient
for Rent

.

~ D.JTE;. NOV•.30, 1991
I:OCATION:

wv

Pomeroy-MI

·NOV. 301 7:00 P.M.
.ISAAC'S AUOION HOUSE

•

Real Estate General

County Appll.nco Inc. Good
ulld appillo, T.V...... Opon
f a.m. to 5 p•.,. Uon.-811. 614-446·t699, 127 3rd. Avo. Gal·
llpolls, OH
~
Oobbto Solid Ook Dining Room

VINTON, OHIO.
DON'T BUYYOUR GIFTS BEFORE THIS
AUcrJON AND PAY TOO MUCH!

•

All merchandlae I• new, there will be a large
•election of toya, dolls, houaewaraa, toola,
and much mQre. Thla will be one of the largest Chriatmaa Auction• In the area. Come
on out and eee how an honeat auction oper- ·
atea. We do not allow buy backs or owner's
bidding on their own merchandise. Dealers .
wlfl pall at leaat one of ev~rythlng that Is
auctioned.
·
Auctioneer: Flnnis Isaac's
(614) 388-9370- 3~80

Why sweat, hustle and cry
Buy a Mindy's Pie.

Order Now, Don't Delay
Fraa Dalhrary, or Carry It Away.
CALL

MINDY'S OVEN

NOTIC;_: OF SALE
The Un~ed States offers for aale property located
In the Village of Proctorville, lawrence County,
Ohio, being deacrlbed ea follows:
Subdlvlalon
Indian Guyan Park
Lola
Block A. Lots 9 &amp; 10
!Jiock A, Lots, 19, 20, 2t, 22, 23, 24,25
Block C, Lola 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
Block C, Lota21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27,28
Block D, Lola 6 &amp; 7
Block E, lola 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
Block E, Lola t3, 14, t5, t6, t7, t8, t9, 20
Block F, Lata t, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
Indian Cemp Park Subdivision
Block H, Lots 2, 3, 4
Block H, lola 5, 6, 7
Block I, Lots 6 &amp; 7
Block I, Lots 8 &amp; 9
Block t, Lots13, t4, 15, 16
Block J, Lots 1 &amp; 2
Block J, Lots 3 &amp; 4
Block J, Lots 5, 6, 7
Block J , Lots 8, 9, 10, 1t, 12
Anyone interested In submitting an offer
should do ao by submitting their offer In
duplicate on Form t955·46, "Invitation, Bid, and
Acceptance Sale of Real Property by the UnHed
States". Offers will be accepted at the Farmers
Home Administration State Office; Suite 1001,
Fecler.al . Building; · .100 Weal Capitol Street;
Jackaon, MS. 39269; phone number (601) 9655458.
Terms : The property will be sold to the .highest
acceptable offer lor cash. Teo percent (tO%) bid
depoillta ll'lutt accompany offera. Bid deposita
must be In the form of a cashier's check or money order. Peraonal checka will not be accepted. H
purchaser elects to purchase the real property
lor .cASH and then lalla to comply with any of
the Ierma of the sale contract, pursuant to Item
t2 Liquidated Damages of Form FmHA 1955·46
Invitation Bid and Acceptance. Sale of Reill
Property by lha United States, the earneal rnoney
deposit shall be retained by the government aa
full liquidated damages.
Thia property will be sold without regard to
race, color, religion, aex, age, national origin or
.marHal 81atua.
'
Form FmHA 1955·46 and inflructiona for submitting offera may be obtained from Lawrence E.
Be~a, County Supervlaor; 529 Jackaon Pike·
Galllpolia, Ohio 45631 ; phone number (614) 446:
8688.
All of the property except Block H, Lola 2, 3, 4,
5, 6 and 7 of Indian Camp Park Subdlylalon will
be aold aubject to the lollowlng easement for
protection of floodplains:
A. No dwalllnga, barns, bulldlnga, or other
atructuree ehali be built within the covenant area.
B. Filling the covenant area will be prohibited.
C. PIIICing or allowing to be placed any garbage, refu.., eewage, eludge, earth, rocka, or
other debrle or the draining or qumplng of oil,
aclde, peatlclde waatea, pol10n1, or any other
type chemical waate will be prohibited whhln the
l:ovenaill area. Thil reatrlctlon doea not apply to
application of agricultural chemical• In eccor·
dance with Environmental Protection· Agency .
Use Reatrictlona.

Suite, 1·112 Y•r.. Old, Uk1 Ntw,
Jl,700. 614-441-64tl Affir 4p.m.

Empire Furnlturail GolllpaUo.
Sto111 Hour• Man ayT Wedn. .
day, Frldo.Y, 8 o\.M. o 8 P.M.

Tuetd1y, lhurt~IY. Saturday, 8

A.M. To 5 P.M. Sunday, t2 Noon
ToSP.M.

LAYNE'S FURNITUR~
Co1Y'ple1e home tumilhll"!gl.
Hours: Uon-Sat, ~. 6l4...t460322, 3 mlln ou1 Bulavlllo Rd.
Froo Dollvory.

home has a lot more to offer than most io its
class . Located in one ol Gallia County's best
sellina neiohborhods - Spring Valley - its
close to shopping, hospital, etc. Home features
3 nice bodraoms, til baths, large living room,
lonna! dining and eat-in kirchen . Ful.l basement
with family room . 2 fireplaces. 2 car garage.
Large lot Home warranty backs up house
oomponents for a full year. Call now tor an
appointment
11229.

OF LOOK·ALIKES? - We've got a
·one of a kind" home tor you . TH~ eye appealing rustic contemporary home has something
tor the entire family. Master bedroom has adja·
ent lofi and ample home lor the mast complete
bedroom suite. Uving room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace will welcome your guests for
you . Full basemenllhal just won't quit has poilsibiities tor a 4th bedroom and more. lnground
pool. Large outbuilding with potential to
become a guest house. t .5 acre lot with a
view. 4 car storage. Give us a call for an
appointment You've got everything to gain lind
nothing to lose. $125,000.
1204

VERY
HOME For the
moving up or starting out For $52,500. you're •
buying 4 bedrooms. 2 liaths, living room and
family room. Very nice eat-in kitchen with oak
cabinets. Garage and nice deck. City schools
1206.

Real Estate General

FOR TB£ HOLIDAY SPECIALS
Real Estate General

WAITlNG FOR
-Is th]s i9oo + sq.~~ ·. of
living space and 1985 Redman d!W. Nice fot.
In Centerville. Has heat pump, huge living
room, 3 bodraoms, 2 baths, 3 car garage. Call
today .
1396
ON BULAVILLE PIKE - is th~ attractive vinyl
sided home with 3 bodrooms, 2 baths, large lovIng room, dining area, kitchen and laundry, gas
heat and cen~al air, a 2 car carport wlloft. Patoo
and storage buildings. All this and more on
over ~ acre priced in low 40's. Call lor Y,Our
appointment today.
#'398
122 ACRES MIL FARM- 'Mih tobacco base ,
3 large barns. home has 4 bedrooms, liv1ng
room. dining and kitchen, 1 ~ baths, Hannan
Trace Schools $45,000.
1397
NEAR RIO GRANDE - Newer 4 bedroom 2
bath home not completely finished and situated
on 9.2 beautiful acres mil with lots ot road
frontage and other buildings. See lhis one.
#3n
BULAVILLE PIKE -Is this 2 bdrm. home with
bath, kotchen, large living room and laundry,
heat wilh natural gas, wood or coal. lull
basement. 2 car detached garage and 16'x20'
building. All on over 2 acres. Only $36,000.
#381
OUTGROWN YOUR PRESENT HOME? - You
can afford to move up! 5 bedrooms. 2 baths,
kitchen , laundry, palio and·2 car garage, quiet
area but yet close to town. Call for more details .
1366
CONDO IN CITY -Ali brick with 2 bedrooms 2
lull baths, equipped kitchen, living room. dining
room. laundry w/Washer and dryer, heat pump
cent. a1r, many extras. Very nice. Must see.
Only $1!5,000. Cali lor more~inlo . ·
#388
COUNTRY LIVING - In this remodeled 3
bedroom country home featuring heat pump,
large family and dining room combo. 1i\ bath.
small room lor nursery or sewing room, lots of
storage, rural water and much much more
Situated on 20 beautiful rolling acres mil. Also
horse bam.
1375
RIO GRANDE AREA - 1680 sq. ft. ol living.
space in this 3 bedroom , 2 bath home which
also has family rm., and lois Qi olher amenoties.
Watch lhe birds and squirrels as you relax in
your family room . All elec. .Only $39,000. Call ·
now for appointment. ·
#346
FARMETTE - Two barns, a 3 bod room 2 balll
home. cor)les . with heat oumo a~d lull
basement Watk~n closets. flat land with almost
I ooo· road lron'tage. 8.2 acres mil. Need to
see. Asking '53,200.
· 1395
RIO GAANOE A.~EA - Three ~acts of land. (I)
22 acres mil ; (2) 20'acres mil; (3) 100 acres; or
buy ali three with 40x60 horse barn. 14x60
implement storage shed. All have road frontage
on Tyn Rhos Rd. various prices. Call lor more
information. ·
1359
TWO HOMES IN ONE - UPf"'r level has 3
bedrooms, 1 balh, kirchen. dining room, living
room; lower level has 2 bedrooms, 1 bath,
living room and dining 11111a. For onl)' '47,500.
OWner will considef laitd contract
11310

you
""'''"""'•, , room. dining room.
kitchen, bath and
room, two car garage.
Oil and wood heat. I on over 72 acres. Call
lor your appointment .
1394
NESTLED AMONG I THE TREES - A 3
bedroom home with family room . livino room .
bath. Also a large 20x20 building woth a 12&gt;&lt;20
shed. All on 1.390 acres. Coty schools. $53,900.
#320
TIRED OF RENTING? - Buy this 2 bedroom
home woth LP gas lloor furnace . vinyl siding,
and .4 of an acre m/1 . Ready to move into after
you cut the grass. You will want to take a look
at this one.
;
#386
CLOSE IN - $2S,ooolwill buy this 2·3 bedroom
home with partial basement and detached
garage . Call today.
#298
FARM IN HARRISON TWP. - t48 acres mil
with 4 bedrooms. I balh home. Vif\!11 sided with
newer kitchen with waln ut cabinets. sawmill
and other equipment go with !arm. Don'l delay.
Only $70,000.
#369
NEW LISTING IN VINTON VILLAGE - Very
nice one story brick home wilh 2 bedrooms ,
bath. dining room , livinq room. laundry and
equipped kitchen. hardwood floors , 1 car
anached garage. Walk·in attic. N1ce back pa~o
and L·shaped oovered Iron! porch. Asking mid
· $50s.
*382
I

CLAY SCHOOL - 3 bedroom. family room.
elec. heat, attached garage, with opener, all on
.5 acres mil. Tool shed. immediate possessoon ...
See ittoday.
#392
DEENIE DR. - All brick 3 bedroom r~n ch with
' tl\ balh, full basem•"'~j..ion·&lt;C: · entrance. 2
car garage ~ · sf\\.ll \'~ ... w root and heal
pump, 12'x t 2' ""cK, city schools. On nice lot
Asking $64,900.
#368
124 ACRE MIL ~ARM - Located on Lincoln
Plke and this ranch style vinly sKied home wilh
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, lamily room, dining room
and kitchen. fireplace, 36x48 approx barn, new
fences tobacco base . some implements.
Asking' $69,900. Call for your appointment
today.
1277 •
UPCREEK ROAD - 67 acres miL
building sites. Rural water avaolable.
timber. Road frontag e. Call lor
information.

Good
Some
more
1290

. - ~-

_._ Beal Estate General-

Wood rJ{?a{ty, Inc.

. Rt. 160 with river view.
One acre with noat 2 bedroom home. Must see.
tsking only $25,800.
1289

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

446·1066

Allen C. Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor-446-0971
Mosa Canterbury, Reahor-446-3408
Jeanette Moore, Raaltor-256·1745
Tim Watson, Assoc.- 446·2027

NEW LISTING -located on Sycamore Street
in Middleport Ranch home with 3 bedrooms.
level lot with above ground pool. Only $27,600.

11391

STARCHER RD. POMEROY - Two ways to
buy. House and 82 acres mil or house and 3
acres mil. Either way you go•~(, 1ely well kept
t and 112 story sided • -~~~ ...n 4·bedro?ms ,
bath, dining roorl' ~ \?~ ••n woodburner, lovong
room and kitch,.,P.)i.nial basement. detached 2
car garage, 20x30 barn. 8x30 covered porch,
lruit trees. and much more Call for pnces and
into. Must see thos one.
#367
NEW LIMA RD. - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large
spacious kitchen with island range. Horne has
had lots of care. Look at .this one. Only
$35,000.
1361
NEW LISTING - · Sumner Rd. is. this nice 2 .
bedroom 1 bath ranch with alumonum s1d1ng.
living room, kitchen, family room, lull bsement,
woodbumer, one car garage, and more on . .84
of an acre mil. Asking only $40,000. Call lor
inlo.
1393
RUTLAND AREA - t985 Sizzler doublewide
wilh 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, liv. rm .. kileh•n
laundry, 2 car attached garage. Gas well wtmoe·l
income. 2nd home has living room. kitchen.
bath, and 2 bedrooms . Call lor more
infonnation: Only $30;ooo..
1371

Nice . 1br APirtmtnt, Water,
Truh Fumlshld, $240/mo. Ptus
Sec:urlty Dopoolt.lt4-448-85H.
Nice Zbr Spackwa Kllchtn,
Dlnttlt, Rtfrlgeralor, . &amp; Range
FPmlohod, G""'nd Floor, All

Room• Carpll.ci, Yard, Covarld

P,otlo, Cell Eorl Topo, 614-4450IIt.
Complotiy Fumlohod mobllo
home, 1 mila below town overlooklrid liver. No Polo, CA. 8t444li-G3ls.
NOIIh 4ih Avo, Mlddlopon, Ohio,
:z; room apt, utiiRin paid, 304·

·NEW LISTING -Eastern schools: 3 bedrooms
1 and 112 baths, family rooni, extra good
condi~on . On approx. 2 acres Asking $45,000.
1384
ROSE HILL RD., POMEROY - is this ·
aluminum sided 1 and 112 story home with 4
bedrooms, bath, dining room. kirchen and living
room. Full basement on 1 acre. Convenient to
downtown Pomeroy. Only $28,000. Call tor
details.
1372
2 YEARS OLD - 1 story ~inyl sided ;t bedroom, t bath with full basement, gas heat
large L·shaped deck. $t8.500. . _ 1243'

CHESHIRE AREA - 12.9 acres mil ol vacant
land. Not restricted. Has two story barn. Some
timber and 700' road ~ontage on Story's Run
Rd. Call lor details. Asking $16,5~' ~50. 1335

POMEROY AREA - Character, style. countcy,
· charm. This home has it all. Older home.
completely refurbished. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
Wrap-around porch. Several buildings.'Situ~ted
an approx&gt; 1 and 112 acres. ·Rock Spnngs
Road. Asking $59,500. Will take MH lor down
payment.
•
1345

VACANT LAND - 4 acrer , undeveloped
residential land io Jackso· ,ounty bordering
Appalachian Highway.
1374

LOCATION, LOCATION! A '(;1iity built ~.orne,
too. Ranch with • f.t&gt;~Oit-1 . tormal .din!ng,
family roor.sf\\.B.~•• ment and 2 car garage.
Located in Mickllepon. $75,000.
1135

I

I

apt. Mutt

moot quollllcotlon under Hud

91and.arcts, BttwHn 10.3pm 614~

112·7772

NEW LISTING - In Pomeroy. This home was
built in the 1940's and shows the cltar..,IOir·lond··l ·
quality ol the era. Four bedrooms. I
room, dining room. full basement with driv•a-in
garage, in·ground pool. Asking $46,000.

COUNTRY
-3
bedrooms, living room, family room, bath located on 2.5
acres. Green·Gallipolis school district. HURRY 1! CALL
TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT.

Piplomeroy CIIHa IOCOpllng op4~bldroom

Sfnglo EHicloncy, Ponlally Fur·
-nlllhH, Water-lnctudtd, o.posit

Roqulno~ 1 Coli ·BI1woon 8 A.M.
And 2 P.M.It4-446..!l20.
.....oil t BR. opt 7 Coun St.

Kltchtn

Whh
IIOVI
&amp;
re'frlg1111tor, $185. - mO. - plua
ulllllln. dtpoalt &amp; rerertncta.
1,!4-1415-4126. ,,

•
54 Miscellaneous
•
Merchandise

MORTON

BUILDINGS, INC.

EaeellMc.e Slnc:.ll 1903

13233 S.l. 1'80
Ashland, Ky. 41101-8939
Call loll frH Mor!on, Ul.
I·Stl0-447-7436

MOBILE HOME - A t2x65 mobile home on a rent·
ed I washer and dryer hookup in bathroom, 2 bedro.oms,J.3\\ ~ 11 storage .bu.il&lt;:liog ..PriQ!ld .at $i.OQ&lt;H)Q,
HOME IN CROWN CITY - 3 bedrooms. living room,
kitchen. bath , lull basement, central heat and aor
conditioning, 2 car garage. Rented mbile home on back
of lot. CAll FOR MORE INFORMATION.
PRICE REDlJC'Eb -, LOG HOME WITH 10 ACRES M or
L in Hamson Twp., 3 bedrooms , 1Y. bath, large living
room and kitchen. Large porch, bam and storage shed.
Nice country setting. MUST SEE!!'
MOBILE HOME IN COUNTRY - 3 bodrooms. 2 baths,
large porch. electric heat, central air, 20&lt;30 garage,
located on 2 acres m or I in Ohio Twp. CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT!
BEAUTIFUL·LOG HOME - 2800 sq. fi. olliving space, 3
bedrooms. t Y, baths. located on 1.0 acres and borders
Raccoon Creek. Green and Galhpolos schools. CALL
NOWII
HOME &amp; 3 ACRES IN HARRISON TWP;- 3 bedrooms,
1 balh, deck on front and ·side of home, a block garage
24x22. CALL ABOUTTHIS ONEil
100 ACRES M or L on Friendly Ridge in Clay Twp .
Water and electric available. Priced at $32,500.00. ·

FOR L!)T OF "LITTLE REASONS",
CHOOSE THIS OLASSIC.•.
'
( t) In town convenience - kids can walk to
schools anbd activities. (2) Ample living space
- lormalliving room, dining room , 3 bedrooms ,
2 baths, sunny kitchen, family room (over
2,000 sq. ft.O(3) Ample storage space - large
attic and basement, 1 car garage (4) The price
- $63,000. All th is lor the special people in.
your lite.
·
fi09

a

FOR SALE - 62 acres. Lawrence County.
GOOD INVESTMENT PROPERTY - A 2 story frame
double located on Second Avenue , Gallipolis, 4 rooms
and baih downstairs and 4 rooms and balh upstairs Cali
today.
'

D. C. IIIII Salts,IIC.
Cannelburq, Jnc. 457t9
Speclalizmg in Pole

LOCATED IN GALUPOUS - VINE STREET - 4 rental
units. good income property. Call for more infonnation.

Buildings.
Designed lo meel your
size.

HOUSE IN GALLIPOLI!j - 3 rooms and bath, walking
distance to schools and stores. Priced at $t 6,000.
QREAT LAND FOR DEVELOPMENT - 40 acres lor sale
in the city .llmils of Gallipolis. Check thiS one out. '
·
GREEN ACRES - Two lots, t large level home site, 140
148 ft. city water. Green school. Good condition.
Priced rijjht al $10,000.
·

DON'T LOOK AT THE PRICEII - It will shock
you to see that you can stoll own a home_for
$33,000. You will find this 3 bedroom. vonyl
sided ranch in Centenary close to the conven ·
ience store. Smaller remodek!d room pertect
tor sewing room or nursery. Remodeled master
bedroom.-Detached 1 car garage. Approx. 314
acre. City schools. ACT NOW!
1801
HAPPILY EVER AFTER - Is how you'll live on
this 3 I&gt;E!draom. 2 bath home featunng a large
reat room, formal dining roo'!' and sep_ara~e
~aster suite. Entertaining continuos outside '"
the above ground pool. Priced at $54,900.
1509

. HARD TO BELIEVEIII - Over $1 ,000 monlhly
' income on this 3 unit apartment plus mobile
' home . Apartment building completely
remodeled in 1978. Located in Rio Grande
near UniverSity. Oviner out oltown and wants it
sold. Unbolievably priced at $59,900!11 You put
a pencil to the figures and you'll arrive at the
same conclusion 1 have ...a great investm.ent!

' 1404

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS In Rodney Village II . Call for
more informaliOn.

.m
....

CALL TODAY FOR AN

. ·APPOINTME1'JT

DOES A LARGE UVING ROOM with a slone
fireplace , spacious kilchen, lull basemen t
sound good? Well . it so. we have the home for
you. located iust minutes from town. You will
also get central air, semi-lined cedar closets ,
extra large family room and all at a very afford·
able proce. $45,900 Call for your showing
today.
1704

·'~.

LARGE COMMERCIAL ~UILOINii
RT. 7 - Located near Silver
with over
5,100 sq. It of clean. dry space. Approx. 112
finished, 1/l unfinished. Plus 3 bedroom apartment only 8 years old. Finished space is heated with high eWi ciency gas and has central air.
Ideal for many uses . Call lor more·irilormation.
11200

WANT A BEAUTY OF A HOME WITHOUT A
BEAUTY OF A PRICE? - Then th is t98B
Fairmont Townshouse (1 4x70) is for you . Large
living room , dining area wilh buill·in buffet,
large master bedroom with buoll-in dosk and
dresser, 2nd bedroom, large bath with garden
tubeEnclosed laundry area wilh new Whirlpool
washer and dryer. Outdoor area oHers nice
deck, concrete clock sidewalks and storag e
buiding. Located on a rented lot or move lo
your own lol. Offered at a price that can't be
beat, only $t5,500'!! .
1610

VERY PRIVATE &amp; WOODED!- Perlect setting
to enjoy this newly constructed log home .
Large frOn l porch to enioy oool summer
breezes; attractive woodbumer and hearth to
warm your soul on those cotd winter nights.
Approx . 2,300 sq . ft. ol comfortable living
space including 3 bedrooms (room for 4th).
very auracbve country kitchen, living room with
pine ceiling. newly finished fam ily room and 2:.1
baths Large 2 car garage with overhead storage. Approx. 5 years old. $1!9 ,900.
•21t

"THE PRETTIEST PLACE AROUND
- That's what the owner told us. We have lo
agree - it invites com mendation. A finely
crafted 3 beedroom home with l!ving room,
dining room, family room , large kirchen and 2
baths. Situated on a picturesque 3 acres , m'l.
wooded setting wilh access to large fish1ng
pond. OWn with pride. $85.000. ·
#603

YOUR "GET STARTED" HOME - Settle into
this homey three bedroom with fen ced back·
yard. You'll love the large kitchen and adjoining
cozy family room Priced at $37,900.
1505

HOME &amp; LOT FOR $29,90011 - Quiet counlry
surroundings make th is 3 bedroom home
anractive. l ocated close to shopping. Features '2 full baths, large living room, eal-in kilchen
and dining area: Plenty of parking. Not many
places available for this price in good condition. · "
12t8
SECLUDED ACREAGE - 14.58 acres , mil in
Morgan Township . Panially wooded With small
pond. $14,900.
1503

BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME HERE - Set~e
into this homey lhree bedroom with lanced
backyard. You 'll love the large kitchen and
a~o ining cozy lamily room . Pr1Ced at $37,900.
#605

DOES A NICI;,LOTAND GOOO NEIGHBORS
APPEAL TO YOU? This home o•ers that and
more. A nice size ranch home located in Kyger
Creek area. large living room, spacK&gt;us kilchon
with oak cabinets . avers1zed 2 car garage,
cable and satellite dish. 2 plus miles ~om Rt 7.
$52,500.
.792

'NEW LISTINGS NEEDED NOW!!!
Wiseman Real Estate
.

.

PLEASE CALL TODAYt

(614)
.
.446-3644
.

·u. by

\I

LOCATION - Ask
anybody! 'Location is most important when
selecbng a home." Here's a 6 room home on I
acre with a great view of the river and only 5
miles from town. Includes 3 bedrooms. limplace, lull basement. garage and barn .
$59,000.
t116

...

"2-25M.
k:allon,

scenery,as
you view
I
your front
porch . This 3 bedroom,
level home
is just minutes from town , and
is a 2 car
garage with automatic door opener far your
convenience. Satellite dish. This home is
priced at an aftordable $54,900.
11500

WANT A HOME AT AN AFFORilABILE
PRICE? THAT YOU CAN MOVE RIGHT
INTO? - Then you need to take a look at this
beauty. Large living/dining room combinatK&gt;n,
nice kitchen with laundry area, 3 bedrooms
and 2 baths. Newly painted ceilings and exterior. Combine this low price with low Interest
rates and ydu can fu lfill your homeowner's
dream. Only $32,000
1613

David Wiseman, Broker, 446-9555
CAROLYN WASCH, 441-1007
SONNY GARN:ES. 446-2707

LORETTA McDADE, 446-7729
B. J. HAIRSTON,.446-4240
I

..

�Times-Sentinel

54

56

MiscellaneOus
Merchandise

a-,

lin Ford

Hllc-k,
~100;
1113
Oldamobllo
!1!MP, 11,000; 1183 Dodao
Dlplolftel $400; 3 Aero Ploco I'Jf
Lond Mlh Howo And Bam,
112,000· All PrieM Aro No;ollablo, Call 114-2116-f554, Loivo
MUIIQI.

Pomeroy-Middleport-GallipoliS, OH- Point Pleasant,

Pats for Sale '

56

Clipboard Pol Grooming And
Boarding Kannll~ Formar Votl·
ntry Atilll}~ uwn~r Tammy
""""'"· f1....rv-2739.•
!log Houuo Ftw Salo: Sovoral
Slzoo. Wayno Shoomakor. 814441.0513.
.

1112" No.4 ohootlng, - m - Dragonwynd eanory Poralan,
Int 11ovo, , . , _ prohung Slamooo and Hlmoloyon khlana.
dOore, alumn ahUittn, tr• 614-446-3N4aftor 7 p.m.
llllnd, a~lliclal CMotm11 lroo
Flah Tank, 241S Jaekocn Ava.
~ oowlng mochlno, 304,
Point PI-nt, 304471-2013,
I
.
lull Una Tropical lllh blrda,
3Ludwig Drum 811 Wllh amallanlmala and aupplln .
lnoro, llldllan HIGh Hll And
Guinea Dkla, varloua colon,
Svmboll, ~. 114'241-11148 At- tame,
11444D-3075 IVtnlnga &amp;
larlp.m.
-klnda
S RoeHM Good C.rpet, For S.l1, Happy Jeck Otrmoxlde: Advan·
614-25WOI3.
Old gormacldal dlalntactant lnAIOC Chocolota Labrodor Pup- ICIIvatoo porvo, polio, ECHO,

l!loo, Wormad And Shola, noo;
Sako Fl.-r 30:06 Llka Now,
1700,114-441.-.n.
AntiQuo Dok Wuhltond Whh
Towel lor; Bnako Haad Hand
Conrad Wilking Slick With
Clluo Eyoo; Dr- Whh Mlr·
'w.j_ Foriton Colloctor'a Qloll;
ftuan And Mo1ican Poltory
From Tha IIO'o; And Othor
PI- 01 Fumhura. 114-31181221.
Anantion Bual._ Ownaro And
Employ-: Alfardablo Hlahh
lnouranco For Tho Sail·
Ei11P!ofod. WV &amp; DH. 114-445NASE An)'IIITII.

l._lnett, crib, awing, Wll,ktr1 R~'-terld Chocollll Lab Puphighchair, car 1111, lwln pin For Chrillmll, Rudy By
w,ryautllgu-. 304475-1541.
Docambor 11th, $300, 614-446-

ladr-n
luh'!,
*'50; 1\ritn
tiiOi
Vaccum
ciNner,
$35; lad,
Hew

Farm Equipment

63

Gohl grlndo,.,llor, Now Holland
.Aeglllllid female ral terrier 7ft, hayblndiJ Naw Hollind i ft.
puppy. Yacclnaltd A wormed. hayblnd,
ow Holland 707
$75. 114-445-1354.
toraga hlrv1111r, :Z huda. AC 2
row, 3 pt hitch no Ull com plan·
RotwtUtr pupt; email deposit to ltr. AllaJC. cond. 304·213-42'15.
hold. Call to place order for
Doco-r littor. l14·318-1354.
Walkar Pupo, 8 Wookt Old Fin- Jlm'a Farm Equipment, SA. 35,
ley RIYir Chlat BrMd, $50 Each. Wll1 Glliloolla, 114-148-11777;
Wlda oollctlon naw &amp; Ulld farm
301-182·3594.
tractora &amp; lmpltmtntt. Buy,
1111, trodl, e:oo-s:oo waakdayo,
Fruits &amp;
58
Sat till Noon.
Vegetables
MF 2U Tractor, Sharp! 18,810;
Ap~11- Raoaonablo Prlcad. Flt· II MF Whh Bulh Hog, Rake,
ltr 1 Fruit Farm, SA 143 1 mllt Baler, And Mowing lllchlnt,
South of Carpenter, follow l3,t50; Ownar Will Flnanca, 614·
algna Dpon Salurdlylllm-spm 288 .. 522.

Livestock

November

..

Real Estate General

24,

1991

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright .

Real Estate General

animal a~lllly. 304-075-7721.

850 'Buft.£ 9&gt;foi-ton

304~75-1158.

446-4206 or 446-2885

OUtrter Horu, 1 112 YNr Old
Coh, lucltakln. Honor Brol&lt;o.
1400. 114-379-~.
Small mu!. tum, one tum of
w9r11 horaoa. Hlmpahlra awo
limbo. 114-448-1168.

64

Hay

1........ -

,,.., ~ n ·

,

good condhion.I14-.2U.68ft.

) f78 Ford LTD, PS, PI , amllm,
AC, 614-112-2186
.111)1 Buick LlmRad, E1coUtnt
Con&lt;IRion, 13,200. Call ARar
5p.ift. 114-441-2168.

ON!Und ahlll corn, 1110Aonh 12
parcont Food, l1201ton
ay
n&gt;llo1 $21. Morgan Farm, AI. 35.
304 .. 3?·2018.

18'11 Chrytlor Cordoba, AC,
Crulao, 1100,114·112·2171
lf78 Chryalor Cordoba, :ieo ong,
IIM-175-11155.
11.11 Mercury 1t1tlon wagon
niio allckar, good bodr and
tlrei, S400. or but otter, 3Q4.
1137-34111.
IUO C:ltryolor Cor$1oba LS, 8cyl, 1utomttlc, nice car, •alOng
$915 080, no rull. 614-9411-26113

Nil, 11rg1 round beiH

•xcellent,
only

Supplies
&amp; livestock

Transportation

Farm

OWNER WANTS ACTION ON THIS PROPERTY
Lovely home -rusl watltng lor a ntcelamlly Beaulilulliving room 22•24 family room and .
den area. 3 bedrooms , dtntng area w/atnum doors leading 10 back deck area. Large fronl•
deck area Lois of prtvacy Call for an appolnlrnent

71 · Autos for Sale

Will t"INir"ICI. 014o286-654a.

At11ntlon D1lrymen And F•r·
mara: Anordabll Hoanh In·
•u,.nc1 For Thl Self-Employed.
WV &amp; OH. 814-145-NASE,

~~~67~A~ft~a=r~4p~.m=-~~==:J~~~~~~:::;;

ll'ldl tor a 71-11 Z·28 Camaro of

1-Chlangua bull, 11100, IW1112·

oqual valuo. 614.f811-4623.
1861 Muolang, I cyl., auto., 11c.

21!51

Interior. 1a3l Cl'levy 2 door

10-Simmenttl Charol1l1 Crott,

VM:ANT LAND
r

Prestigious Neighborhood

oodan. 304-675-3160.
1188 AQHA Big Sorron Maro; 1...;.:.:;;::,.:.:__:,:.:...:=:..._,....._ _
Big 19110 AQHA Chlllnut Gild·
Ollis Starilro body, good
lng; 2 Hor11 Trail•, New Pllnt,
$100. 1m Monte Carlo,

$1,1D5. 614-2~522.

5.6 Acres more or less of Woodland. Excellent
bu dding site. Land has been surveyed.

Clr, 350 IUIO, bucket IIIII,
con1011, 12 bolt r11r end, $1200
Cultom Llvutock Hauling. Can r~llr whHit, good cond obo.
Haul To Hllltbaro Saln or Lo- 1m Mont1 Clrlo, 402 •nnine,
ca~l.
Chuck
William• ovar 400hp, 10,
ut ~ t 1'1,
o
'

Trl ec39.001'11k Trucking. &amp;1-.
24 -.!10911.

nice lntldl tnd oul, 2000 obo,

Comor Cablnol, $115. 114-446-

11-

322f.

-1

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

· Edwarclo bollor, Cl1alog
310MLlniiUI 380,000; outpllt
1111-m,OOO. No pump. Oood
oond, 11,000. Arllll Sorvtt Air Cond unn, Modo! 1
Acx:oiO. noodo pump, 11,000.
Wootl!lllhouoe olr - o o r
Model 3YCL pump, controlo,
lonk, 1100. uM 3M Eldlar Block
Y.a ehnrallt qlne compte11,
1100. _I opood SpiCor lran""'lollon, 1400..h.ma may be vitwtd
Cky Building, 400 VIand Sl, Pt
PI-nt. 304"75·1810 or 6752310.
FIINOOd tor 1111. Will doMvor.
130 lruakload. $50 cord. Stan
Mlllor, .lorry Luc11. 814-211-IHO.
FIINOOd, Will Doll-. 114-2111202.
For
Salo:
Whlto
G.E.
Aafrlaorotor, Oood Condition,
111U14-+41-G121.
Ollila Tlmbar Producta SpUt
Fl-ood Dollvarod, Wo Acoopt
Hoop And 4: : : •
ollanco,IM-1

1-

...

Handmlldt plnoapplo llhch
taorlcol aol•) atpn, 10x80. 614441-.2t1S.
lnt Cub Cudt« lawn I prdon
tdlrtor wJHme an. 1800.
- h • El - llln. bar 1100,
114-111.'1·211111.
Lodlao knoo longth llathor
~.~aand¥1 brOwn, olao 10.
12. HU, m ie, PI, l14-ta$o

•

--

11011 Or _ , In Your Houoo?
Ivy ENFORCER, Klllo Ilia I
miCe In only 1 -11111.

GUAIIAHTUDI Avalablo al:
loum True Voluo 91~1 •11 Wilt
Mllln ltrwt, Chnhr, ""'
flail Dr Mlao? In Your lfouoo?
luy ENFORCER, Kllll rata I
In only I -ng.
QUAIIAHTUDI Avllablo al:
Q'Doll True Voluo Lumbar, 134
Eolllloln - · P...roy, DH
AuarMIUonld .....,. •
dlyon, 1100 and Ill'· Wo
-onmolloo. ThoWIIhorl
Dlyw ~ 114-441-.2144.
a.nntMII' aMil O.k. Aah
And
llckory.
FIDolloaad, And Stocilod1 151,
Pick-Up lAid, Don Waugn, 614-

(]

.RESIDENTIAL · INVESTMENTS - COMMERCIAL - FARMS

23 LOCUST ST.

446-6806
NEW
LISTING
SYRACUSE - Ntco homo
tn excollent locatton,
Beautilul vtaw of nver. LR,
DR , FR , 4 bedrooms , 2
balhs, cenlral "" &amp; heat,
alum . stdtng. Needs a litUe
repair. Way underpriced at
only $25,500. Call us lor
an appotntmenl.

ffl4. FHA- PRICE $311,100 -II% APR, 30 yr. torm,
paymant 1315.17 mo. -MAKE OFFER FHA-VAFARMER HOME LDAN can move you Into 1111s home
with very llnle money Owner will take a mobile t1ome
for pan payment. Deluxe doublewlde, masler bed·
room, With balh, famd~ bath, 3 bedrms., f04'mal d1nlng,
loads of P•ne cabinets. 1 car garage Supe&lt; buy.

MIDDLEPORT - Let· your
homo pay for ilsolfl This
house has 2 apartments.
Downstairs is a comfort·
able 2 room apt &amp; garage
Upstairs a nice 2 BR apt.
w/balh, ktt. &amp; LR. See
today. Pnce Reduced

llu- lk ... t lu Ht

;LI

1718. CEDAR &amp; STONE RANCH - Everything's sp•
aal about, th11 fashionable contemporary home.
Harmonized LA, DR&lt; 3 bedrms., 2 baths, lg . master
bedrm. Loads of cabinets in kif, new family rDDm w1th
a Victorian touch. Wall Unit bUill m w/bar area and
e~tra arorage. Back door pat1o and garage. LQrge lot
wuh trees In a lovely n01ghborhood. This home IS of
superb qualny
1687. PRETENTIOUS .:. RAMBLER. Cedar rench

home Situated on '17 acres, this homo learuros s BAs
and or Olf1ce , playroom, 21·2 baths, ut1lity room,
cathedral ce111ngs over llv1ng room, dining room and
kitchen, con versation p11 in liv1ng roo m and stone
flteplpce, l1re and secun ty alarm system, finished
fam 1ly room with hrep!ace, hear pump and central
aJ iur 2 car garage, ooveted pano, barn, stocked pond.
Home has app 3,000 sq It hv1ng space and many
orher ame0111es CaP tor more inlormat1on.
t753. CLOSE TO TOWN With many ntce features.
You mull go inalde to appreciate Lovely throughout
Custom-made
cabn'18ts . 3 bedrms . 1'ti bath s.
lull divided
wf4 rooms Thla home
. C1ty schools, city water and

-~

Real Estate General

OFFICE 992-2886

clolhoo, .....10, 364475-'1211.
Spoclol After lfoura Salo: Fa~
L101 Cnft SuJIPIIao Thll Friday,
W And All DoJ Solurday Ano
-_yl Quhl"a Country Storo
And Shop Jackoon
"'""'
,._,
com•. Jock·
Ohio, ··14~. V.I.P.

205 North Second Ave.
.J~Iddleport, QJ:1_
LOOKING FOR A COMMERCIAL LOT? -Just off tho

~
yd.;
L101 f yell. Prlnco,
.,,00; 11"·"
lnah High

DEXTER - A large 2 slory homo wtlh 3 bedrooms, op.n
porcf1es and many oulbutldtngs. Silting on a lillie over an
aero .
$15,000,

yd.

MIDDLEPORT -1 st Sl. - II ran tal propet1y is what yoo've
been looking lor we've got it In th11 houso you havo a 2
badroom apMmont downstatrs &amp; a one bedroom apart·
monl up, also has alumtnum stding and a one car garage.
Prasently bolh apa~ents ara rented.
111,000

llcll CllaiN And 10 Inch IIMil
..... Cnfto Only 11.H yd.; Huao
Clloronoo
On
Beautiful
U,_ry Fa~ Par Couchll
And Chilli Onlr, lUI • 13."

"'S

c1o1
UIINIU

Army Camoutlauga
lnaulllad docron

~

GIWtnl•

$30,

lolthor US Combat • -· Car·
hm alolhlng, old llmor knllo
- · Sam -.tllo'o ~.~n­
dvvtle WV kooldo unlca,
AI. II N.Frl, Sol, Sun, -:00
PM Ca1andod houn during
- ' " ' _ _ ,. 3C14-27S-11155.

1731. NEW LISTING. MARK OF QUALITY·
Distinctive and dlflarenr 4 bedroom, b~ level w1th 3
baths,lR, FR w•ll1 firuplaoe, ~tchen IWI1!1 cherry cabi-

,

nets), dine~e, eltc. heal P1JrY1p, CIA, rei , range, diSh·
washer, duspasal , screened·tn back porch, 2 car
on 4 acres mil Pt1ced right. Take a lo~ a1

Gl;tiD&lt; - ··

TRADE

heal wilh central air, garage. Romantic gazebo,
patiOS, beautifully landscaped. Al l lo~ngl)t maintained.
Potenrlal bed and breakfast or rema1n residential
#700. COLONIAL CHARM WITH OHIO RIVER '
FRONTAGE. Immaculate cond ition , 3 bedrms., 1 ~ ·
baths, kitchen, LR, DR With woodbufning fireplace. •
Th1s home ts welt cared lor anctlocated COf'lvemen~y ~
10 town and shopping. Very good garden spot 1 car •
garage You have no idea what a mce home until ~ou
see1nslde MAKE OFFER.

me than JU SI what you are look1ng for Pe rfec~y
harmonized In every way. LRIFR. OR, 3 BRs, 2 ba!Tls,
ka wlbar, range, dishwasher, woodburnfng f1replace.
elc. HP, CIA on appro x 1 ac MIL Call today

Ulld llllllho oqul_,., lnaludlo'l) ,.,.... ayl1arn whh
dnadlra, NCtivw, dlth I

1187 Ponllac Trane Am, T-l.opa,

Building
Supplies

l*k, brick, -

property

l&gt;lpoo, win·

~ou

DREAMING about tne

want 10 own and

ta~e

a look at lhls

quality built 3 BR ranch wilh LR, eat[ln ~ tc hen , FR

...Untolo, otc. Claude Win·
"lo ,Orinda, DH Call 614-

w/ Ure~ace, 2 baths, 211.! car garage. new roof, 314 'ac1

MWG\

pond on 25 acs mfl Beauttful sening. Call for fTI Ote
1nfo.

5tl Pete for Sale

gas

·-·
- -·....,.., .

1~:; B=a;_~ar~5::·=

A41U11 AIOC Polling ,~po,
and 111111111o0. :IO(.IJS.l
till

n:te·PL

·

1 rr moll
pup.-.
good
will otMMI, nio¥1ng, 30W71o
AIOC _ ,

-

..._ T"""'

~.

deck, tlec. heal pump, CIA, 2 car garage, 2 car
carport on 1 ac mil. $40s

'

131,000

·-

...

BRENDA JEFFERS.........................................IKI24D&amp;I
~

" ••,......... 0111 •

I

.. .

onwith
• ., leu
1
open slalr"-• sidingr
123,000

MIDDLEPORT - Vtno Street - A nice atM to !ve in, Thla
home could have 3-1 bedrooms. All rooma are nice sized.
Has dishwashtr, stovt, rtfrig,, dtlpq,sal, and flraplace.
Sits on 2 fenced ftatlols. Plenly of mom for kids .

DARLINE STEWART.......................................OD2-838&amp;
SANDY BUTCHER................... ........................192·5371
SHERYL WALTERS.........................................387·0421

'"'f

of the line Inventory and fixed assail. Reatonable ·

1llf Ford ElaM L. 2 door, 4
=-~t.~·ooo m1111, 12,000.

&amp; INTERIOR DESIGNS - 1500' ol display aroa. Top .

orico. $20.000.

.

1111

r

J

Dodga

Carovan SE
v_,
Oood Con·
cation. Interior, E - . 14,100;

Lbadad HI Ill.

been made to make this a comfOftl.ble home.

GOBBLE GOBBLE-UP THIS DEALI Reodsvtllt, one
story ra~oh atylo home in Riggs Crest Manor. 3
bedn&gt;oms, 2 baths, 2 car attached gemge, aleclric F.A
heal ASKING $42,500. Make an ofter.

_______

heavy roof, kit, corlll!lic

NEW LISTING... A SMALL HOME WITH LOTS OF
STUFFING! - 1 story block stylo W11h B.G. fum~ce .
appliancos , carpet &amp; drapes on 41\ acros wilh 2 sepltcs &amp;
axlra mobllo homo hookup. 2 sheds &amp; maenad hunl
porch. ASKING $26,900.
PERFECT FOR PILGRIMS WITH INDIANS!- Porno~
Ptka , apprnx . 25 acras of rolltng wooded propot1y wilh
very spacious remodeled homo! 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs,
largo living &amp; dining rooms, oqutpped k1lchen . MUCH
MORE! $69,000. Mako an offer.
THE OLE GOBBLER OF THE OFFICE TURNS A YEAR
OLDER SAT., NOV. 3oth. HE SAYS HE'S "36". WE S/tJ
HE'S FULL OF....STUFFINGI STOP IN
l
BROWSE ... WISH THE TURKEY...HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR A DEAL OR WANT TO UST
GIVE US A CALL...WE'RE THE BEST OF THE FLOCKI\
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!
HENRY E. CLELAN0.........................................99H191
TRACY BRINAGER ..........................................t49·2438
JEAN TRUSSELL .............................................949-2660
JO HILL ................................................... ,,",,985-4466
OFFICE.:·::.:......................................................... H2-2251

WOlD
IAMI

POUAN

___,

1752. NEW LISTING. SPACIOUS MODULAR !YIN·
DALE! wnh 3 BAs, lg. LR , DR. kllchan w/d1n. area
range, rei , dw, dllpolll, elec. hoat,M:, 2 batl1s [I

I

.

s E Ac E p

JUST THE HOME FOR YOU II Very nice all
- brick home located-on Kathy St., just off SR
35. new kttchen, 3 BRs , LR, dining, w. balh
RIO GRANDE - vacanl lot. . Ultltltes
available. Just off SR 325 near apartmenls

REDUCED TO $34,900 - Older home and
1 75 acre mil on Netghborhod just a short
distance trom' 141. 4 BRs , kitchen, LR, DR ,
unattached' garage, Thermopane wtndows,
gas heat

I

LeGRANDE BOULEVARD - All brtck, 3
BAs , LR, kitchen , bath, lull basement gas
forced atr, attached garage, city schools.

Do YOU LOVE THE OLDER HOMES IN

'IL.-1-R
I' ...LA-D..LI-"--FY
I I I' ....._,I
I ···-- --·-·.

1731. NEW
TREES, TREES,
TREESII12 aCies 1M Also 2 BR homo wlgroat room,

FAMILY SIZE HOME - Atttactive home
locolad at c~nlenal)', offers 4 BRs. 2 baths ,
kitchen, LR Attached garage and nice lawn

LR , ki1chen , BAs, bath, large front porcf1.

The man's car had been
stolen. When it was found
several weeks . later and
returned to him, he was in for
a big surprise. The thief had
taken the time to Install an

the brick Cape Cod home lhat hat a friendly holm&amp;
atmosphere . II features 4 bedrooms , 2 baths, llvmg
room overlooking the Ohio River and a large lake type
body ol w010r adjoining property boundaries. Space Is
a 36x48 ""tal building. Period for someone that has
a business and needs a large storage area. Ptua, a
14x24 building !hat could be used lor a showroom or
a small &amp;Q81'1rT:lflf'IL.Call for more dewila. ,_

QUIET, SECLUDED setting iust'minutes to
HMC and downtown. Home features 3 BAs,
kilcf1en w/range &amp; relng .. LR, DR, carpet,
fireplace , city school diS I

block from grocery store. Nice home oHers

.f

11662. OUALITY-LDCATIDN-SPACE- Ouaiity Is In

CORNER LOTS - Very ~~~fi~~~;;;;,
BAS, bath , kitchen , carpel ,
detached garage.
RIO GRANDE AREA - 2 87 acres, m/1,
lovely 2 sto!)' home wilh 3 BRs, 11\ b balhs .
kitchen . LA, ideall y located near new
highway

GOOD IN·TOWN LOCATION - Ju st a

1 I I I . .

shower) , enormous FR, woodburner (hta" entire
house), 2 car garage, ln·ground pciol, Ohdosad patio
on 1 08 ac. mlf. City achooll. Cell and let us shoW you
tl'lts home with Vlf'Y comfonable living.

;

OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE BY
$10 1100111 Very nice home offers 3 BRa, 2
baths, LR, kitchen. This farm is silualed on
Sugar Creek Road, Ohio Township, and
has a new 2Bx40 bam, tobacco base Call
lor more delails.

WALK TO All THE HOME GAMES - Very
nice home JUst a lew blocks lrom down·
lown, 3 BRs , 1y, baths , LR, OR, gas heat.

~: r-B~U
__s .....r -ry_B-r::lz-tl
1
.

TOWN? - This one is located fUll across
lrom GAHS. 5 BAs, 4 balhs , LR. kilchen,
sunroom, comer lot.
LINCOLN P1KE - NEW LISTING - .3 BR
ranch, fenced inJard for pals or cht ldr.~n .
beauttful covere deck, barn style uttltly
bldg., aHurdably priced.
PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS ONE I
Large log homo con be purchased w•lh 162
acres or 2 acres This home offers 4 BRs, 3
baths equ ipped kitchen, LR. FR. 2
fireplaces, heal pump/cant air (backup
·~stem) , oversized 2 car attached garage.
Frontage on Raccoon Creek.
30_5 AC. MIL, Raccoon Twp Garners Ford
Rd. Pond and bam , Iaveiy place lor a naw
home.

fi replace, kitchen, bath, patlo and mce backyard . Prlot

30's.
1710. 30 ACRE FARM MIL wilh tobaco buo and

barn. 2 slor~ frame houte with 3 bedrooma, bath,
l1 v1ng room, u~ llty room. Call lOt' pnce and location

REDUCED PRICE!
EVERYTHING YOU COULD WANT- This
sectional home ts located just a few
minules lrom Green Elem. School , 4 BRs,
2 baths, LA , equtpped kitchen , DR,
ltreplace , central wr. 16x32 pool wlheatsr.
oovurad patio, 20x24 sheller house

TAKE A LOOK AT THISIII - Located on
Second Ave .. walk to store, cf1urch, school
and shopp1ng 2 slory home o~ers kttchen.
LR, OR, FR, 3 BRs, 2 baths, gas
heaVcentralatr.

BE THANKFUL! You siYI have a chance to purchase lhis
homel Has boen romodolod located in Pomeroy Wllh
large lot. 3·4 bodrooms , carpatedlnicol ONLY $19,900.
Owner wanls to SELL!

Rearrange the
scrambled
:
words below to
' simple words. Print le11ers of
•' each In 111 line of squares.

~~Tim~21RIRM~,

0 ~"''"' lli·ln kitchen
. In Mo- Twp. Coil.
fii4G. COMMERCIAL BUILDING .. home •
apartment All of this In one bundle Qf real
ostata. This propat1y is loclltd on a comer lot
with propet1y having lhe river as its boundaiy.
'this home has a great deal of polential as a
home or office apace. It leaiUraa 3 bd., 1\\
batha, lamil~ room, buement Wilireplace, lots
of t torage 1rea. It eloo flllutwt o 2 bd,, 1 balh
over a 2 cor ~ara99. Call lor an
1o set thlalnlllreaang home.

A HOME WITH ALL THE TRIMMINGS! Pomoroy - Brick
ranch with 2 lots. Ftroplace, central air, full attic &amp;
basement, Iron! &amp; side porches , 1 car garage W11h
storage. Close 1o town on pa"od siiiOI. ASKING $45,000

CLAY

$20.000.00. .
1755. RIVER BOTTOM frontage wlcabin.le,OOO.OO

~d 1ng ,

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

'::~;~;~' S©\tg\l}A"~~s·
Edited br
I.
:0
6
moke 6

SECLUDED COTTAGE lor IWo or more 2
badrrno. Larga IIYing room, lull batl1 New rapars hlvo

'

RACCOON CREEK - A nice camping lot v.illt tlactric
and groy water dispolli, Sho-s and bathrooms rNIIy
close. Aloo has lrontaga on Raccoon CrHk lor a boat
dock. Could ba youro lor $2,000 down anq $129.55 a
monlh at12% lor 3 yeora.
TOTAL COST $5,800

Mercury Topaz 11,1115; llllf
Monll Carlo 11,615; 1114 Old•
C\IIIIU $1,1185; 1113 Didio Cut11,310; 1113 Dodgo fOO
,
Oll5j_ 1981 AIIC 1715; 11181
~w MOO; 1110 cttew CHI·
lion 16a&amp;; 1114 Oklo Dalto 18
1!,111· 111f Okla Clora 11,515;
ltll Sulek Part Ava'"" 12,500;
I I D Auto Sallo, Hwy 160 N,
.,. 448

I
DOUBLEWIOE ranch with 3 BR,
LR. OR, kit. w/bar, range, rei., lg. lront poroh. back

DOTTIE TURNER, Broktr...............................t$2-5812

._ .._

'

~ ~··

~:!E;.~~

IQyllmo
1~88 Dodgo Sh-. PS/PB,
Crulaa, Tlh• Air, Tlrao,_Low
Mllooga, ucolllnt Conanion,
114-4(8-7315Aftar &amp;p.m.

111!119. BUSINESS FOR SALE ONLY- WALLPAPER

J

and Suptlly Shop PM
- - • All , _ , llvloa.
l'il Food Dollar. Julio
....... Cl1l .,. 441 OH1, 1-100-

1 MC r gletu'td, plltkotor
CooUr lpinlol ,.,...,.., 422-4141 doylloM or *""'OOM"'""'ngo, aok klrAoakr
• d!t II' I bllck pupa, mothtr
.......rod llock Lob, old,
greatpolo, . . I14-IIINOPI

elrto, exc. cond., ktldtd, must
Mil I $7DOO, 114-IMi-2134

1111t Chov. Cllobrlty &amp;3,1185;
1881 Ford Fllllva $2,215; 1111
Hyundll 11,1185; 1167 Nl-n
s;ntr• 1\6115; 1187 Morc\I'Y
Topaz 111185; 1887 Ford11,1H; 11iiii Chov Novo .,,115;
1185 Ch,..., Llbaron 12,1115;
1111 Plymouth Alllant .,,1185;

locatton. Eastern Ave. Opportunity to oomblne home
and business. Ohio River frontage , Very nice 3
bedrm home wlappllances , full basement This 11 a
money making propos~1 0n. CaU for appointment.
1690. FREE GAS. 26
mn old larm homo 2
wells pay 1116 or the tolal tncome. 118,000.

111e entry extended Into the kitchen, 16a53 deck,
cement walks and pad. Set this home and stop look·
1ng elsewhere

441-.2111.

-

1887 Dodao Drnn~ fclr, Auto,
20,000 Orlglnlal 11Aio1 _ Looka
And Auno EICOIIontl JO mpg.
13,000. 814-441.-, Aftarlp.m.
1887 Marcury Orand Morqull,
10\V mllet, A-1 cond, no tradla,
3qU75-11111.
107 Oklo Doha 68,11,000 Mlloo,

4,...

secunty doors, 11011

Real Estate General

o¥Uon Clll 614-448-2342, Ask

Afl Power, Air, Exoll!wd CondltiM 11100. 114 4111 an, After

ranch home located 1n lht eounuy. Extensive work
completed as follow•: new thermo Alll!dt Windows,

WOQDIUIINER King Slovo
WOad Or Coal, 1200 Firm. 114-

Real Estate General

~Pout .

.

1762. FOUR BEDROOM HOME, 2 lATHS - Roomy

.......14-11:1..173

55

..

r..

1675. TAKE A LODK AND YDU WILL BE
SURPRISED TO FIND THIS doublewlde ranch to be

e tNt by HEA kit

nttda repair. Good lransport•
tl6n Clr. 11,5QO. For mor. lnfor-

lial ford Muttlang &amp;:X. Loadlld,
ktonclod Worrant~ ~. DBO
-1027, Qr.
441.

RUTLAND- How can you boat a deal hke lhis? A 2
home wilh.3_bedrooms and a mce flat lot. A
lopass

2 Chlv Sho~ Wldo lido••1m
And 11711 Modll, I Slngll Tan~.
1 Dual Aull F-. 304..711-3073
Aftarlp.m.
2 1111 ol Pontiac Flon&gt; cuotom
WhMII, of- 13 &amp;14, wllllh any
GMC lrO!If whlll drivo, 114-182·
7184

~:J.1

1887 Chovy Nova: high mllaaga,

~n

I

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

II '~

188i C.vallor For SaiYiga, S500
Rnn. 814-:118-.
18811 Doalao DayiCN' •Oood
Condition; ]jew Tlroo, if Spood,
Tranomlloion AMIFM Storoo
Caooollo, SUn~1 -PS, PB, Air
Condhlonlng, 12,... Or Boot ()1.
tor, 614-.21H251.

LA w/f1replace, huge family rm. Wfflreplace, formal
d1nmg rm .. 2.178 ac. wllh frontage on lake large
will cons1der your mobile home on part payment Has
Room-Room-Room. 10 acres V1nyl and \ tone ranch
is only 2 yrs old, 3 badrms , 2 lull bathS, charming
LR. lg. FA, country style kttchon wlbeauulul wood
cabmets, central air, rang e and relg., 2 car garage,
24'it38' building Wf12'x12' door. Road frontage

1i54 Joop Choroltoo, 4 WhiM
~va, 4&lt;1r, Auto, PS, PB, Tl~1
Cluloo1 _~111FM C.-a, 11 ~
MillO, u,IOO. 614-141-3861.
1111 F-2110 DIIMI, 4 Wlllll

IPU Chavrolll Calobrlty, PS,!I!,
~.ooo mllll, good oond, ,...
1118-3461.
1111 Ford Escort, auto. whh air,
new tlrM, new txhauwt. $1200.
114-3'11-2114.
1116 Mazda AX7, ..... dlmaga,
low mlloago ptuo ollroo, llkrng
~· phOna 614-tt:l.f012 ahor

0472 VERY LARGE HOME - 4 bedrms.. 1~ baths,

matn slreel. You really need to check this ono out.
Localed on 3rd slreel, Middleport. Has an income
110,000

31M..7~t.

76

Home

&amp;.OOpm

441.-.

_ _ , COIICh, lldlng mowor,
11andafd l&gt;lano, bon

1113 Chovy S.IO 414 Blai;S 5
IDIOd In a0oc1 •-lion,
0.

18110 Plymouth Voyagar. v.. on·
gino. ;n,ooo mllll. PS, AC, Ill,
c!f!i!!._~-FM caalllta.l12,000.
ltw,....4V.

U-

81

Improvements

lief Flroblrdl v.a- auto, black
Wlollvor blra, boautllul ..~

, 3 batl1s, hbrary,
baSiamenl,, 5 flroplacos, gao •

ac.

lf78 CJ5, low mlloa, runo good,
1110, 614-247-2111
lf78 Chavy Van, 11,250. 3044757832.

Drive. 11,000, 114-441-0201.

Acceasortas

Home ·

0 Prlead to 1111, 614·'142-2357 aftor

1736. COMMERCIAL or RESIDENTIAL. Pnme

1
galcwe .
The smart couple will fall In love with 1h1s 3 bodrm .
ranch. Cozy fireplace in LA. Na cabinets In kitchen.
Low gas heat, pa,tio, 2 car ?arage, new outbu1ldmg..
Preulest corner lot with rBII fence and some new
shrubs IWld trees .

1188 Ford Bronco IIXL. V.a, po,
pb, AC.:,:,IItlta, 8-opood liOn·
derd,
0, fttiY like trade,
614-tt:l.f407

81

4

11712. LAND CONTRACT. KMR. 3 bedrm, 1%
story home Situated on '21 g lois and basemen!,
•
close to shopptng centers . Well kept home and . :
large 2 car garage. Treed lot. lmmedtate .
possession . Owner will lease w/optton to .
purchase. Pay rent lor yoor down paymant.
•

--~

OKMo

Auto Parts &amp;

llMJFM CIIMtll, 4 cyl, I"'IW IX·
hlt.1lt 1 i14·H2 7231, 1v.nlnp

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 38W826
DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR, 441.f806
EUNICE NIEHII, REALTOR, 445-1817AUTH BARR, REALTOR, 448-0722
DEBORAH SCITES, REALTOR, 441.f806
LYNDA FRALEY, REALlOR, 441.f806
MICHAELcMILLER, REALlOR, 441.f806
PATRICIA ROSS, ASSOCIATE, 245-1157&amp;

I

I .. r.tlt

6'1Wt30.

~711.

,115

Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Pege-07

vinyl roof &amp; haadlinar, 71,000
nlllio,II,OOO, IM-1112·3410
1a84 Dodg1 Arln, 4 door, bleck,

APARTMENT· all of tl'lis tn one bundle ol real estate.
T1'1u1 property is IO&lt;:ated on a COiner 101 Witt! property
having tl'le nver as 111 boundary Th1s home has a
great deal of potential as a home or office space. It
features 3 bcf. 1 112 baths, fam11~ room, basement
Wlfirtplace,lota of storage 81ea. It, also, leatures a 2
bd, 1 bath apartment over a 2 car garage. Call for an
appointment to see th1s inlereatir~g home.

appointment.

PRICE REDUCED on
Middleport Homo. 2 slory,
3 BR, 111 balh, LR, OR,
new ktl. w/cobinots, base·
mont, garage, carpeted,
cenlral heat Now only
$24,900 Call us lor an
appolnlrnent

o· 'C '"'"" ··

REALTOFl'

17$9 COMMERCIAL BUILDING • HOME •

NEW
LISTING
POMEROY - Beaulil.ul
brick home, oxcollonl con·
dttion, 4 bedrooms, LR, 2
DR study, full basement,
garage, apl. over garage,
new wiring, good roof, full
modem security syslom .
Under pncod lor qutck
sale . Call lor an

'Oil• I •('lJ\1' ,1

1187 Ford Ranaor,. 4 cy~- _1

IPHCI, axe cond,

114-446-2110llolvo mMIIgl.
FIOO Ford, lind 211&gt;10d, good
tlt'll, rune good, tl200, 114=2412111

73

11113 C:hovy Von 305 auto
AIIIFM , OIW llroo, rura gOOd
11500, 614-112-2811.

1982 Uncoln Town car, excellent
cond, new Mlch1dn tlrn, niW

Real Estate Generai

HOFESSIONaL SUVICfMAUS Jlllllff-IICI

4411

Ping Pona Tabla, Largo Doak,
:II"W.XII2"L :n"H. With Cllalr,
SIIWIIIono Ampilllor, Set
01 Twtn 11111-. 614-446-

Real Estate General

TrUcks for Sate

_
a-

LISTINGS NEEDED!
WE HAVE GOOD CUSTOMERS NEEDING RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES.
GIVE US A CALL!
•

11..378..251

72

lUll, ti37Q lnl...tlonal whh
IUO Dodgo Diplomat, 2 D-. alo-, -1« Com. Englno, 41
All Powor, Good Shapo. 1100. ,..,.. wet liN, 1fr coridtUoner.
114-211-1417.
1811 bll1 dump troller, 34L-72H,
814-8112·3150
1880 Ollllmobh1 Cutlut, 4
Door, Autornllic, v.a, 1100. 614- 2·1118 Nl111n PIU'a, Cholca
441-3040.
13,1115; 1111 Torola fl4 PIU
19110 Pinto $850 Elcalionl Con- 16,111; 1887 .1ooD Grand
dllonl 114-446-0201.
w-~
_!.oldod,
-·
16,1115:
1BronooUko
II &amp;3,211;
1981 Sick Elactra, luxury ear, 1114
II S2,6_~j 1113
- r ovorythlng, good condi- Chav 9-10 Blazar U,wo; 1116
tion, dopondablo ISOO, 114-'142· Dodge 314 Ton PIU 12,411; 1110
Fonf 41f PIU 11,"1; lf78 Chav
3107 -~~~ lllm-tpm
Van 11,111; 11114 Chav S.IO PIU
1981 Splrll f Cvllndor, Good 11,111; 8 • D Auto Saloa, Hwy
Shapo1 HIGh Mllaoga, 1100, 110 N, ~4f'...61&amp;5 .
OBO, bii.W-77110.

1868 Chevy, rlltorod. 13750. or

Alllt Chalmor D-17, Dlnll,
Plowa, Cuftlvala~ Grain DriN,
12,750; 10 MF Hnloh Mow11,
Plow.._ Culllvator, l3,2101 _0wnor

10 Mellbu, 4 dr.1 air, lltt, ·crulu,

•

&amp; Grain

11et1,

II Chivy pickup whh now
molor, 1pprox. 4000 mllll.
CloOd tlr•, need• IlDdy work.

~-"·
1.:J
.

'Bonnit Stutes, 'Broker

76

wv

Improvements
BASEMENT
4 aluminum olllla. Two 10" wlda,
WATERPADDANQ
Two I" wlda. good rldlaltlroa.
IIIII- guaranFha Chovi'. . -: 114-llt-4123.
I-. Loaal -~~ lurilllhod.
I·
1111 tanka, bfldr pMI, ono Frao ootlmllao. C111 ton lnH:Ic whMia, rtdlllort, 114-237-. doy ., ~ ·
ft1!1~1 Mc. D I R Aula, ~ ......... Walarptoo.
~~72-3a3orl· llnj.
Cu~lo Homa lmph.,omorlla: 82
Plumbing &amp;
SIOUJ Volvo Grindor, S Y1011 y..,. Elporiora On Oldlr •
Heating
Old, Ulta - ; llou1 Soot Dut- - · Room Addhlonl,
111, Guida T -.. AI- 6K In- FOIIIdatlon Work, Roollng,
Ca~•'• Ptomblng
Ollora ...,. Trlllao Con- Kll-.o And Btlho. Froo EoF...,hlndPirll
a-.tl4-446-2306.
""'"'"'
Rolol-, No .loll To
Oalllpolll, Dhlo
llg Or 1111111114-111-11225.
114-448-3888
Aon'o TV Sarvlca, -lallllng
In lonlth oorvlclng moll
ot!llr brofldl, Houoo allis, •II!&gt;, 84
Electrical &amp;
.... aPI)IIanco -Ira. Wv
304-1714311 Dhlo 114-145-2454.
Ref!!lleratlon
Room oddlllono, aiding, roollng; Realdinllll or comnwcial
vinyl roplaa_, wlndowi, wl~ng.-- or_,.,
CllfiiiiiiY bf AI Tromm, 614-1142· MaMr UeenMd Mctftcl1n.'
23a. CALL CDWCT
Aldlnour Etodllcal, 304-175·
1711.
Dovlo
Sow·VIC
Sarv~o.
t1oorgoo Crtok Rd. PMa, f11 Upholstary
!IIIII; plc'kup, lind - . . ,• 114- .:.;_......,.:..::.,;.,.;....:;..;,:.:~...,.....
~
....., •• u,tloilloring Serv1ce s
lng trl county .... 26 ,..... Tho
Will
polio .
, _-_ . roornli,
pul·
updocko
VI~ belt In tumhu,. Upnot81Mirtg.
Fraomon'o Ploonblng And Hoot•
304-f75-11M tor !roo oo~r trallor ""'~'ng. ·~ Call
114-211-1111.
tlmatao.
I

(ja{{ipofis

814-378-1418

61 Fann Equlpnieot

Pom!lroy-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

VETERINARIAN.
Dr. BIU !;:rank, DVM. Largo

W1n1 to Buy 1pprox 2 lbl, of
ttl/1 ?b~ W1/nut Kem•l•. 304..
671-

and Rhino vlru-. Dlllnfocto
ordinary kannll boetoria. A I G
FEED SUPPLY 812-2114
HAPPY JACK MI,NGE LDTION·
Prornolao Hilling And Hair
- h To Any Ma!'91, Hot
Spol, Or Fungua On DOgs And
HallOo WhhOli ~laona! J D
;:NO.::.:A.::.:T::.H.:_PR,:.;O:;:D.:.UC:;:E:...-..;·---,-c-Happy Jack Mango Lotion,
promotoo haallng and hair
growth to any m•nae, hot tpOt,
or lunguo on dogo I ho1101
whhouf Cortlaono, A &amp; G
Supply, 114-112-2114
Rog. Chlnno Char.Pal pupa,
lott ol wrlnk1l1 1 814·949-2791.

61

Pets for Sale

WV

1701. LOT FOR SALE - 1 aero k&gt;tlor sale In Addison
Townahlp. Call lor price and locatlan.

•
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211 ACRES, MORE
LESS,
HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP- Brick home
oll&amp;rs 6 BAs, 2 balhs, aal-in kitchen, LR,
FR, alec. and wood heal, cellar house, log
barn, sheds, frontage on Raccoon Creek
and Liltla Raccoon.

YARD -Very nice all
BRs. LR wnireplaco. ea•Jippec
basement

GREEN TWP.; PORTERBROOK SUBD.,
WITH VERY NICE RANCH ~ 3 BAs, LR,
kilchen , balh &amp; hall, 2 car garage, ltreplace

OWN YOUR OWN FAST FOOD BUSI·
NESS - Plus laundry. Localed on St Rt 35.
Call lor more tn!ormation .

NICE STARTER HOME- Located just at
1he edge of lawn. Thts home features 3
bedrooms bath, living room, kilche.n, dtnmg
room and a full basement Frve mtnutes to
downtown.

MEIGS CO., 240 A , m/1, Bedlord &amp;&amp;to•
Twp:, old ong&lt;nal log home Wtlh add111on
added, dr~ll ed well . coun l y water
avail , has been owned by same lamtly lor 4
generations

5 ACRE LOTS Green Township, Fatrlield
Vanco Ad and Wsi1s0n Boslic Rd Boautilul
place to bUild a home

NICE RANCH STV LE HOME localed ,
Ktneon Dr. offers 3 BAs. batl1. LR, kiiehen,
full basement, gas heat. Ntce starter home
-or teltremenl home.

oitio fOWNSAIP - 53Y. acres. more or
less very mce ranch style home offers 3/4
bedrooms , LR. kitchen , balh , lull baseman!.
carpal deck garage, siding. Tobacco base
and tobacco bam Additional land
108 A., IM , Guyan Twp lfacant tatid, spnng
on ploparty
•
.98 A. MIL (Hobart Dtlion Subd.) along
Raccoo~ Creek great lor a mobtle home
Large ptne trees'on 33 sides. All level
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 2 4 A • mil,
248 frontage along SR 7, jusl across lrom
Ohio Rwer Plaza.
STATE ROUTE 218- 1 263 acre mA .vary
ntce home offers 3 BAS, 1 bath, hvmg
room , kitchen range and relngeralor.
hreplace , city '!later, basement, etty
scf1ools.
'
A.,
m/1,
Perry Twp , Symmds Creek
.
17 5
botlom land, some htll, tobacco bas e.

$35,900111 - E•tra nice ranch style home
offers 3 BR, LR, kitchen, utihty rm , attached
garage and a 1CI&lt;ll300 It lot Great for the
young couple.
CONVENIENT LOCATION - COMFORT·
ABLE HOME - JuSial the edge of town lhis
homo offers 3 BAs, beth, ktlehen, LR, DR.
24x30 garage. Ntce shade trees Very well
kepi
36 A., m/1, Springfield Ave., Sect 2l
$45,000.
640 FOURTH AVENUE - Nice home offers
kitchen: LR, FR. 2 bdrms., bath, DR, gas
heal. back porcf1, clooalo schools
VILLAGE OF CENTERVILLE· - Ntce 2
story offers 3 BRS , bath, LR, kttchen , DR ,
gas heat, 2 fireplaces. Sttualed on 1 850

acre.

$9,000

FRONTAGE ON THE RIVER - 3 BRs. LR.
equipped kitchen, fuel Oll lurnace, cenl air,
full basement. attached garage 3 acres

EXfRAOADINARY - 11 2 A m/1 , beautilul
lar elog home, 4 BRs, 2'-1 baths. LR , kilch·
en~ OR , FR. 3 hreplaces. Call lor more
details

t7.457 A. , m/1, Clay Twp., Sect. 21 and 27 ,
$30,000. Near Clay School.

$21,00011 Older home needs some work
but has potential. LR, kitchen, bath, unattached workshop &amp; carport, 3 lots ea .
66x166.
GET COZY IN FRONT OF THE
FIREPLACE - Atlrac1ivo homo oftera 3
BRs bath, kitchen, 12x24 family room wilh
flre~ace and living room wilh fireplace.
Situated on 1.12 acre, mil, appro• . 10
minutes flllm lown.
WHITE ROAD - 20 acres, m/1, vacant land,
approx. 1 mile lrom Charolais Lake
$20,000

OFFICE BUILDING LOC~TED AT 250
SECOND - ON tce down and 12 BR
apartment upslalts Very ntce butlding Call
lor details.

$28,900.....Evona Helghll, 3 BR, LR, kitcf1·
en, balh. full basement
ALL il'ftltK. EXCELLENT LOCATION, 3
BAs, lg. balh, lull ba~&amp;menl , aniChtld
garage, 1Y.aaenv1, on SR 141 .
THE PLACE TO BE - Near ho.spila,l and
shopping, all brick, 4 BAs, LR, kitchen, lull
basement. attached garage, large lot.

�....

....

._

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•

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Page-DB-Sunday Tl mes-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Mid~port-GE:IIJ.polls,

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

November 24, 1991 ..

Browns
_upsej
Chiefs

the,week -afte~ leaves·
..

MYSTERY FARM ·This week's mystery
farm , featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
MeigsCounty. Individuals wishing to participate
in the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your guess
off to the Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, and you may

win a $5 prize from lhe Ohio VaHey Publishing
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
number wlth your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All contest entries should
be turned in to the newspaper office by 4 p.m.
.each Wednesday. ln case of a tie, the winner will
be chosen by lottery. Next week; a GaUia County
farm will be featured by tbe Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation Dislrict.

Old newspapers fincl _a
new life in farm fields
WASHINGTON (AP) - Agri- may only need to be two feet or movement and marketing and
culture Department researchers less," the report said. "They also respond to other industry conmay have found a usc for yester- arc studying to see if tile mixture cerns," he said.
The changes are effective Dec.
day's newspaper other than wrap· will work on top of tile soil."
Next year, it said, gypsum and 20.
ping garbage or lining bird cages.
"Plowing newspapers into the fly ash - byproducts of coal-bum· , "In!ermediate handling facili·
ground might be the best way to ing power plants - also will be ties are assembry points for cattle
grow crops and recycle newsprint, used. Gypsum keeps hard clay soil being transported over long dis·
especially in the Southeas t, " from becoming cement-like and tances," King said. "Under current
USDA's Agricultural Research provides calcium.
rules, tllese facilities may be used
" With further research, this only for moving cattle directly to
Service said in a recent rcporL "In
this region, a hard layer of clay method may become feasible for .slaughter. Expanding the use of
soil, usually less than a foot from disposing paper waste and improv- tllese facilities will make it easier
ing soil quality," the report said.
the surface, is a barrier to roots.' '
to assemble run truckloads going to
"Researchers created an ideal Changing Regulations
quarantined feedlots."
environment for roots in this clay
The Agriculture Department is
The Olher five changes will:
by filling 4-foot-deep trenches with changing its brucellosis regula-Relax the present requirement
a mix of 50 percent soil, 40 percent tions, among them a new provision that intermediate handling facilities
shredded newspapers and 10 to 15 to allow movement of cattle from be located apart from other liveapproved intermediate handling stock handling facilities. The
(lerccnt chicken litter.''
With this new growing mixture, facilities to quarantined feedlots.
change will require separation only
"The six proposed changes will from facilities handling breeding
the report said, roo[s are able to
draw in water from four fee t remove restrictions.on the cattle stock.
instead of six inches. Each foot of industry without significantly
-Lower the minimum allowsoil store s enough water to give increasing the risk of spreading able potency of official calfhood
plants the equivalent of an inch of brucellosis,'' Lonnie Kin~. deputy vaccines, to extend their shelf life.
administrator of the Am mal and
rainfall.
-Specify conditions under
. Chicken manure " cook s" Plant Health Inspection Service, which the standard card test may be
shredded newspapers so they said Tuesday.
used as an offiCial test for vaccinal·
"Basically, the proposals ed animals at appJ:OVed stockyards.
decompose quickly. the report said.
" But scientists say trenching accommodate changes in cattle

Farm Flashes

Vetoes ban on milk

MADISON, Wis. (AP)- Wis·
consindairyfannersarefrcetouse
a synthetic hormone that boosts
milk production in cows now that
Gov. Tommy G. Thompson has
vetoed a bill that would have
renewed a ban on.the substance.
In his veto messa¥e Friday ,
Thompson said extendtng the ban
hemlock , and the pines and on bovine somatotropin (BST)
spruces.
would put Wisconsin dairy farmers
"Diffcrcnttyr;s of wood bum at at a commercial disadvantage if tile
different rates,' Heiligmann says. hormone is used in other states.
"The heavier woods, such as oak,
But farm organizations, fearing
hickory, locust, hard maples, wal· an increase in the nation's pricenut, beech and yellow and white depressing milk surplus, protested
birch tend to bum more slowly." · · Thompson's veto.
Starting a flre is especially easy
He "has betrayed Wisconsin' s
with softwoods such as pine, interests to the agri-drug lobby,"
spruce and fir. Aspen, birches and said John C. Stauber, spokesman
willows are also relatively easy to for the Foundation on Economic
start. Woods that are especially dif· Trends.
ficult to start inclu~ fruitwoods,
Democratic State Sen. Russell
basswood, beech and locust.
Feingold, the biU's author, said he
The wood smoke of trees, such was unsure whether to ask the
as the fruit and nut trees, is general- Democratic-controlled Legislature
ly similar to the fragrance of their to try overriding the Republican
fruit. Conifers and sassafras also governor's veto.
produce a pleasant aroma when
He ' said he might introduce
burned.
alternative legislation when the
" All wood tends to produce Legislature reconvenes in January.
some smoke,'' Heiligmann says.
The bill vetoed by Thompson
"The heavy hardwoods tend to would have extended to June I,
smoke the least. Softwoods smoke 1993, the state's moratorium on the
more than light hardwoods and sale, possession or use of BST. An
wood that has not been seasoned earlier state ban on the hormone
will almQst always smoke." ,
expired June l.
The softwoods, hickory, birch
The federal Food and Drug
and cherry have a tendency to pop
has said it expects
and spark when burned. When Administration
to
approve
BST
for use in conburning these woods, use a firesumer
products
within a few
place screen or close the stove door
months,
and
the
state
wanted to ban
to prevent sparks from flying out
tts
use
before
federal
approval.
and starting a fiJ'e in your home.

Changing the mood
with firewood
GALLIPOLIS · Changing the
mood of that cozy winter evening
in front of the hearth could be as
'easy as changing the firewood.
A fire's warmth and aroma can
make a difference in how much it
is enjoyed. And, according to an
Ohio State Univc~ity forestry spccialist, knowing how different
woods bum makes it easier to get
the desired effect.
Randall Hciligmann, forestry
specialist at Ohio State University ,
sars different characteristics deter·
mtne how much heat wood produces, its aroma. how fast it bums,
how easy it starts, and how likely
the fire is 10 smoke, pop or spark.
"Generally speaking, hardwoods
'proctuec more heat than softwoods
and heavier woods produce more
heallhan light woods," Heiligmann
says. "Trees have different densi·
ties, so the heavy ivoods contain
more heat."
High-heat woods include oak,
hickory, locust, sugar and black
maple (the hard maples). walnut.
beech, and yellow and white birch.
Black cherry, American elm, hack·berry, silver and red maple (the soft
maples), sycamore and boxcldcr
produce moderate heat. Low-heat
producers in clude aspen, ba s~wood, cotton wood, balsam. fir ,

Puzzle on Page D-2

;or·

low interest rates.
He also reaffinned his intention
to wait until his State of the Union
111essage in January 10 deliver a formal plan for dealing with the economy.
Bush and his troops were trying
to keep their heads low after get·
ling burned by the credit-card issue
the week before. The president's
call for card issuers to voluntarily
lower th~ir rates started knocking
over the dominos that led to the
market's Nov. 15 collapse.
Taking a cu~ from the president,
Congress proposed mandatory rate
ceilings, which in turn sparked
rebellion on Wall Street. It all
added up 10 a public relations dis'
aster for the White. House.
The week's economic figures
kept up tile pressure on Washington ; Housing starts were up and
mortgage rates down, but new
claims for unemployment benefits
continued to mount. In addition,
the trade deficit widened in
September.
A poll of 45 economic forecasters by the National Association of
Business Economists found most
believe a rec"overy is iiiider way

team at
or
were
presented a plaque
a
Slugger
baseball bat recently, which represents slugging
away at Chevrolet's truck sales. In recognition
for going over their sales objectives, Ford Motor
Co. recognized the local business efforts in
achieving model year truck leadership over
Chevrolet. Pictured, len to ri~ht, Sc!!tl Reuter,

PageS
'

"despite recent disappointing eco~

..

But a separate survey commissioned by The Associated, Press
after the stock-market drop founa
that two in three Americans believe
the economy is gettiQg worse.
Deal Goes Through
In other business headlines.
McDonnell Douglas Corp.
announced a $2 billion agreement
to sell a big stake in its commercial
aircraft manufacturing business to
Taiwanese investors ... Unisys
Corp ., spooked by the market
plun~e, witlldrew plans for .astock
offenng to offer its defense unit to
the public ... Nynex · Corp.
announed a $550 million charge
agamst earnmgs as pan of a plan to
slash 3,400 jobs ... Merck &amp; Co.
stock jumped on reports of a study
showing that its anti-cholesterol
drug .reduced pl.aque in coronary .
artertes ... UpJobn Co. said it
would change the packaging:of
Halcion to address concerns about
the safety of the sleeping medicalion ... Bei!South Corp. an~
Britain's Cable &amp; Wireless PLC
were- chosen - to--build~a-new
telecommunications system for
Australia.
·
·

business manager; Philip Ponicsan, zone Man·
ager or the Clnclnl)atl Regional Ford Motor Co~ _
presenting the. plaque to Turnpike Dealer John ,
Sang; and Steve McGhee, Turnpike sales man·
ager. Ford also announced that Turnpike cus·
tomers rated them in the upper half in their .
. zone for customer satisfaction. (OVP photo by
Pam Dotson.)

a1

. r-

Vol. 12, No. 143

' Copyrighted 1991

Production down

WASHINGTON (AP) - Milk
production during OctQ!ler in tile
21 major dairy states totaled 10.2
billion pounds, slightly Jess than in
. ·October 1990.

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

· electric motors.
"We have taken the prototype
inverter and reduced the number of
parts by 85 percent, re~uced the
cost by 97 percent and tmproved
the reliability !50 times," Abra·
hamson said.
One key to tile early success has
been to work on several generations of technology at the same
time, he said.
"We have our battery settled,"
said Donald Runkle, GM vice pres·
ident for advanced engineering
staff. "ll's on budget, it's on target,
it's in good shape."
Runkle joked ihat the car would
be on the market next Tuesday.
'

'

Governmerit leaves emergency projects in limbo
By M.o\RTHA BRYSON HODEL come from a $100 million trust
Associated Press Writer
fund fmanced by a tax on coal pro.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. duction.
However, some states have been
Emergency reclamation projects at
: about 90 surface coal mines in sev- reluctant 10 take on the emergency
eral states have gone uncorrected projec~. saying tlley cannot handle
· since summer because the federal projects that require a quick
Office of Surface Mining has run response.
The Office of Surface Mining
out of money for them.
The agency. says it is turning tile has "been in the emergency recla·
· unfunded proJects over to tile states mation business for 10 ~ears, and
to be financed from their Aban- over that 10 years they ve gotten
:·, doned Mine Lands grants, which pretty blood~ good," said David

By LAURA TOLLEY
Assoeboted Press Writer
. SPACE CENTER, Houston! Atlantis' crew today released a
; $300 million sateUite for detecting
: missile attacks, after a rare night
; shuule launch that lit up the sky for
: hundreds of miles.
: The I 00-ton spaceship blasted
• off from Cape Canaveral, Fla., at
: 6:44 p.m. EST Sunday, blazing a
· trail over the Atlantic. The six
· astronauts released the satellite
• about six hours later. accomplish: in~ the main ~oal of their 10-day
' miSsion for the Pentagon.
' "We had a real.ly good deploy.
: It was grea~ " Army LL Col. James
: Voss told Mission Control.
; An attach~d rocket lifted the
: satellite to 81) orbit 22,300 miles
above the equator this morning and

cedures to be responsive to these
kinds of emergencies," Rosen·
baw1i said.
Some people don't have an
extended period of time.
S8!11 Underwood of Fairmont, a
Red Cross·di'sa5ter relief vohmteer,
has been working to relocate families left homeless by a major land·
slide on the Ohio River near
Cheshire, Ohio.
The "Blankenship slide," pre·
cipitated by drainage from an aban·

doned underground mine, has
destroyed the homes of as many as
seven families and has disrupted
traffiC on Ohio 1 along the river.
Jt js a project put on hold by the
gap in federal funding .
"Homes are sinking and the
area almost looks like it was hit by
an earthquake, you know, the clas·
sic example of where the earth
opens up and swallows evetything
on the surface." UrMierwood said.
"In some of the crack.s. they

then .separated from the craft. The
satellite . will work with other
Defense Support Program satellites
in alerting the Pentagon to missile
launches and nuclear blasts.
The 5,200-pound satellite is
equipped with a large infrared telescope that has 6,000 sensors and
can detect heat from missile
exhausL
The rest of the flight will be
given over to military experiments,
including exercises in spotting U.S.
military installations from space.
Atlantis' launch was delayed for
13 minutes because of an oxygen
fuel leak. The shuttle also had to
wait for an orbiting spacecraft to
pass out of the way.
A malfunctioning steering system on tile satellite's booster rocket
halted the mission's first count·

down last Tuesday. A new guid·
ance system was installed, but
engineers still have not found the
problem in the old one. ·
"You all certainly earned your
Thanksgiving," launch director
Bob Sieck Sieck told ground work·
ers after liftoff.
The spacecraft's journey 224
miles above Earth is NASA's sixth
and final shuttle flight of the year.
It was the seventh night launch out
of 44 missions and the fust liftoff
in darkness in a year. .
The mission is tile ninth military
shuttle flight. Everything was clas·
sified for the first seven; even tile
liftoff time was not divulged until
nine minutes before launch. The
Pentagon lifltd the secrecy to save
tens of millions of dollars spent on
Coutillued on page 3·

'

APPRECIATION DINNER '· Staging tbe
Meigs County Fair Is a big job ud Sunday niJbt
Fair Board members were glvea aa appreciation
dinner at the Rock Sprlogs Ualted Methodist
Church. Those board members attendinF. were
len to right, seated, Jennillgs Beegle, Virg~l Win·
don, Dan Smith, Barbara Fry, Addalou Lewis,
and Laurie Reed; and standillg, Roger Spenter, ·
Bill Radford, board president, Ed Holter,
Clarence Hendersou, and Jim Sheets. Special

Pressed on whether OM would
make it to market witll an electric
car fim. Runkle was evasive.
"There is no technical barrier
sitting there that we have to break
through to allow us to get to the
manufacturi·ng stage," he said.
"We still need tremendous atten·
tion to detail."
GM showed off its Opel Astralmpuls " electric vehicle for the
fi~t time in North America on Fn·
day. The car is a five-door, fourpassenger conversion of its Opel
Astra wagon made by Adam Opel
AG and sold throughout Europe. It
was first shown at the Frankfurt
Motor Show in Seplelllber.

recocnltlon a! tbe dlDDer WU &amp;lveD, to Melp
Couaty Sbmff James Soulsby for proYidlac
security at tbe fair, Holter for tbe Holstela
Show, Wallace Bradford, and Melcs Conly
Extension Agent Joba Rke for tbelr COIItrlba·
lions. Windon aad Lewis were named delepte
and alternate to tbe Obio Fair .Boards Assoda·
tion, Jan. 14·17, In Columbus. Several other
members wDI attend.

Sutherland leaves for United St(!-tes

·OFF THE PAD • Tbe space shuttle Atlantis
. clears tower as it lifts orr early Sunday evening
. at Kennedy Space Center, Fla., Atlantis aod her

crew of six deployed a U. S. Department or
Defense sateUite. '

By NESff.o\ STARCEVIC
Associated Press Writer
FRANKFURT, Oennany (AP)
- Former American hostage
Thomas Sutherland left for the
United States today, a week after
his six-year ordeal as .a hostage in
Lebanon finally ended.
"I'm really glad I'll be back in
the United States," Sutherland said
before boarding a jetliner bound for
Dallas-Fort Worth airport, where
he planned 10 catch a flight to San
Francisco.
.
Sutherland, 60, was accompa·
nied by his wife, Jean, and two of
their daughters, Joan and Kit. They
said they planned to spend Thanks·
giving at the home of a third

daughter, Ann, in Berkeley, Calif.
At Frankfurt airport, Sutherland
and his family purchased traditional German lederhosen, or leather
pants.
Earlier today, Sutllerland left the
U.S. military hospital in Weis·
baden.
Sutllerland and British hostage
Terry Waite were freed Nov. 18 by
Shiite Muslim kidnappers in
Beirut, Lebanon . The Iranianbacked hostage-takers have said
they plan to release the three
remaining American captives soon.
Sutllerland had. hoped to leave
Germany on Thursday, but his hospital stay was prolonged becau~ of

trcaDIIent for gasltliis and an ulcer.
On Sunday, U.S. Air Force
spokesman Capt. Ray Cornelius
said Sutherland was in "very good
condition."
Sutherland, of Estes Park, Colo.,
was dean of agriculture at the
American University in Beirut
when he was kidnapped June 9,
1985.
At least six Westerners are stiU
missing in Lebanon -three Americans, two Germans and an Italian.
American Terry Anderson, chief
Middle East corresporident (or 'The
Associated Press, is tile longest·
held hostage. "He was abducted
March 16; 1985.

·,_·_------Local briefs-----___, Cabinet minister says
Man sentenced on drug charges
A Middleport man received the maximum sentence allowed by
law on two drug-related counts in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court on Friday.
·
Roger Dent was sentenced by Judge Fred W. Crow Ill on two
counts of aggravated trafficking in LSD, &lt;me count being a fust·
degree felony and the other a felony of the second degree. Assistant
Prosecuting Auomey Linda R. Warner had nrommended the maxi·
mum sentence at Friday's sentencing hearing.
·Dent was found guilty on Wednesday by jury of the two
counts, which charged Dent witll selling LSD to an undercover
SECOagent.
Judge Crow senten~ ~?en.tto seven 10 25 years in prison for the
first degree felony conv1cuon, and fined hll!),.$7 ,500. A sentence of
five to 15 years and a fine of $5,000 was imposed on the lesser
count.
According to Warner, the ftrst-degrec felony charge carries with
it a mandatory actual incarceration of five years, while a mandatory
· actual sentence of three years is imposed on tile lesser count. The
fines are also mandatory under new, tougher drug legislation.
Crow ordered that Dent serve his sentences oonsecutively, or one
after the other, meaning that he will likely serve 12 10 40 years in
prison.
·
In addition to the stiff sentence and fines, Dent's bond of $7,500
was ordered to be foneited to the Meigs County General Fund 10 be
used against the costs of his prosecution.
Dent was represented in the case by Pomeroy Attorney John R.
' Lentes.

a

Correction
The number for reservations on the Hocking Valley Railway's
Santa Claus train rides was incorrectly listed in a recent edition of
1:· TM Daily Stnlinel. The number for reservations is (513) 335-0882.

(304) 675-1675

Israel will accept invitation

Methodist service slated
The Reedsville United Methodist Church wiU hold a communion
and Thanksgiving service on Wednesday at 7:30p.m. with Rev.
Sharon Hausman conducting the service. The public is inviltd.

Damage said light in accident
Light damage was incurred to two vehicles in an accident on
Krogers parking lot at6:30 p.m. Sunday.
Pomeroy police reported that Robert Patterson, Ewington, driving a 1986 Toyota truck, backed into the left side of a 1985 Pontiac
driven by Gina Phillips, Middleport.
There were no injl!ries and neither driver was cited.

Woman cited after wreck

'

·

A Racine woman was ciltd after a two-vehicle wreck on C.R. 30
(Forest Run Road) at the intersection of S.R. 7 early Saturday
evening.
·
.
.
·According to a report from tile Gallta-Metgs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Louise Durst, 56, of Racine was northbound on
S.R. 7 and turned onto C.R. 30. DWSI went left of center and struck
a westbound vehicle on C.R. 30 driven by Hoby M. Landers, 28, of
Pomeroy.
·
Durst's vehicle then struck a fence, acconding to the repon.
Durst was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospttal by the
Meigs County Emergency Medical where she was treated and
released.
Landers and a passenger, Michael D. Dill, 29, of Rutland, were
uninjured, acc(ll'ding to the report.
Damage 10 the fronl·left of Durst's 1986 Chevrolet Cavalier was
listed as moderate and disabling. Damage to the left-rear of Lao·
(routlnued on page 3
'

JERUSALEM (AP) - Israel
has offered to meet in Washington
with its Arab foes for one or 1wo
negotiating sessions, provided '!he
peace talks then move to the Mid·
dle East, a Cabinet minister said
today.
.
The comment indicated that
despite Israeli anger al the way 1he
Bush administration announced
Washingtan as the location for the .
next round of peace talks,
Jerusalem will reluctantly accept
the U.S. invitation.
There have been misgivings on
both sides, but none of the parties
appeared prepared to reject the
U.S. proposal and derail the most
promtsing effort to end the Arab·
Israeli dispute since il erupted in
1948, when Israel was founded. •
Lebanon today accepted the
U.S. invitation to auend tile Dec. 4
talks .in Washin~ton, and sources
said the Palestintans would do so
later in the day.
The other potential panicipants
are Jordan, which accepted hours
after Washington extended the
invitations on Friday, and Syria.
Egyptian President Hosni
Mpbarak flew to Damascus ·todaY

'

•

dropped a 20-foot suing down try·
ing to test the depth. We threw
some rocks down one of the
crevasses and we never heard them
hit bottom," he said. "And the
whole thiag is still moving."
Although more than $700 million in fees collected from coal
operators is unused in the Abandoned Mine Lands Reclamation
Fund, Congress approved jUSt $15
million for the federal emergency
Contillued 011 page 3
.

'

1

, POINT PLEASANT, WV.
,.. -

Rosenbaum, deputy commissioner
of Kentucky's Department of Sur·
face Mining Reclamation ·and
EnforcemenL
Rosenbaum said the federal
agency can have work under way
in 24 to 48 hours, compared with
10 to IS montlls for his agency to
make its way through its complicated competitive bidding process.
"It will take any state, Ken·
tueky or whoever, some extend¢
period of time to develop the pro- .

I

:shuttle crew delivers $300\million missile-detecting satellite

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE

1 Secllon, 10 Pog• 21_,ta
Aloluldmecllol Inc. .......,.,.,

Pomerov·Middleport, Ohio, MonctJy, November 25, 1991

Hughes lending big hand to GM's electric car
WARREN, Mich. (AP) -GM
Hughes Electronics Corp. is helping General Moto~ Corp. refme iiS
electric car power sooree, one of
150 projects in the defense contrae·
tor's goal of remixing its business
for.a peacetime economy.
Hughes Aircraft .Co., a wholly
owned GM subsidiary, announced
plans two years ago to cut back on
its defense work, then amounting to
80 percent of its business.
The mix now is 70 percent
defense and 30 percent commercial. The goal by 1997 is to have a
S0-50 mix of defense and commercial work, said James Abnthamson,
OM-Hughes executive vice president for business development.
GM bought Hughes in 1985 for
$5 billion in caSh and stock. Now
it's absorbing technological know·
how that Hughes created for the
skies for its vehicles on the ground.
For its electric car, the Impact,
GM is tapping GM Hughes Electronics, its electronics arm made up
of Hughes and Delco Electronics.
Hughes has redesigned the car's
power inverter, which converts the
flow of direct current from the bat·
tery to power pulses which drive

Cltu, cokiiOIIIPt. Tliltday, · .
m..tly .....,y. Hlp ta lllld 111

•

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nomic news.''

1!. ' :

Pick 3:622
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Super Lotto:
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Kicker:482769

I

troubling questions abouf
where we go from ·here
By J.o\MES M. KENNEDY
AP Business Editor
NEW YORK- The week after
the stock market's November sur·
prise produced more questions than_
. answers about the state of the economy.
After one of the worst market
drops in history, .few signs of
improvement appeared.
The Dow Jones industrial aver·
age, despite a slight rebound on
Monday. finished the week 40
points below the level it hit in the
previous Friday's 120-point
plunge. .
In Washington, officials backed
off the idea that helped precipitate
· the market •s collapse - a proposal
to limit credit-card interest rates.
But they offered no concrete alter·
natives for stimulating the deadly
sluggish economy.
The clearest signal to arise from
the settled dust of the market's crisis was that nobody knew quite ·
what to do. .
Although President Bush conceded that some Americans were
" hurting," he held to his position
that the ecOI!_omy_was fundamen~_:
ly healthy with low inflation and

Ohio Lottery

•

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•

in an appuent bid to encourage
Israel's most implacable foe to
attend. Lebanon and Syria coordinate closely on Ill of their moves,
and Lebanon's acceptance could
indicate that Syria ultimately will
follow suiL
Ehud Gol, a spokesman for
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
Shamir, said the Israeli government
was discussing its moves and that
he would not comment before deci-· ·
sions were made.
But Industry Minister Moshe
Nissim said Shamir, in his talks in
Washington last week; agreed to 111
initial round of talks in the American capital. ·
•
·"The u.s. must ... respond to
what the prime minister prQpoled
in his meetings in Wuhing10n: the
possibility that there wiU be one or
two meelings in Washington 111c1cr
the assum~on or ~lnation
that the otbcr talks will be in tbe
reJion and liCir it.." Nissim Slid on
Israel t1ldic{.
Transport Minister Moshe
Katzav told Army radio that a
Washington sian, "In order to
agree on a few procedural points
loolcs possible to

me::

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