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\

1G-The o.lly Sa 1tinoll

Ponaoy _Mldclapcrt. OHo

r---Local news briefs...- eon~nued from page 1

Fltdly, ...,._, 11, 1--

Snow chills Southwest; -East

:up ·~

wa11118

..
By Unlled Pr-. IDI.er•tlvnz•
A storm dumped up to a foot of'
snow Thursday In the central
mountains of- Arizona, thunderstorms soaked parll of the South
and unseasonably warm temperatures prevailed In New England
and the Middle Atlantic states.
Arizona's first major storm of
thewlnterdumpeduptolBinches
of snow on Asllfork, 10 Inches
farther south In Prescott and up
to .3 Inches In Flagstaff, the
National Weather Service said.
One mountain &lt;oad was closed.
A snow advisory was posted
Thursday afternoon lor parll of
Nevada alter 14lnches blanketed
Mt. Charleston, adding to the 22
lncl!es already o1l the ground
there. '
•
Snow- advisories also were

against both parties In the action of Jennie Bass against Br ian
E . Bass.
.
·

•

Issued for Thursday and Friday ' eusll to .0 mph we..t blamed for record Ml . ·In caribou. MJ1111,:
for the higher elevations In uprooUna about 30 trees In surpufi'I'Jtlldqzeeslletlll-,;
Arizona, Colorado llld northern Clinton, Miss., and alx light and 63 at Wlndlor Loella. Collll.,•
New Mexico, theweatherservtce atrplanea and a hanger were tylq tile mark !Or the day Ill lni
said.
damaged at i. lmall airport at · 1173.
, ·
t
Five calls lor asslstsnce Were answered on Thursday by ~nits
. Showers and thunderstorms Raymond. "Some Qi ~ air·
Lopa Iaternat10nal Airport In •
of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
hit parts of TeliU, - Arkansas,
craft were turned completely Botton reaclled a reoorcl
At 12: 01 p.m., Racine went to Trouble Creek Road for James
Loulllana and Oklahoma, while upetde down, " said em~eocy decrees before noon, b~ID&amp; a ,
Hinkley who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
heavy fog covered much of north
services spokesman Larry 1?-year-old mark. Tile tempera· I
Pomeroy at 12:13 p.m. transported Clara Custer from the
Texu, · leedlng to canceled or Etsher.
.
tur:e bad
clbnlled to
Amerlcare·Pomeroy Nursing Center to Veterans Memorial
delayed fllabts at 1 -bauas·Fort
U.l ht raiD was scattered over depeea by 12:30 p.m., but.the_'
Hospital. At 3:53p.m. , Pomeroy was called back to Americare
Worth Inter!llltlonal Airport.
northeuljern Oblo and · nortbw· weatber service said, "EII)oy It
lor Frances Adkins who was also taken to Veierans Memorial
The
weather
servt~ ' Issued
estern
Penns)(lvanta, and snow while you can becaUJe thll
Hospital.
winter sionn warnings for the sbowersllngered over Michigan, reoord. comes just prior to a cold
At 7: 59p.m ., Rutland transported Donald Orwsh !r()m Meigs
l
Texas and: OklahOma ~nban· Wisconsin, Minnesota and ihe , front ... "
Mine No. 31 to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
·
dies, lor the south plalnl of Texas eastern porUon of the Dakota&amp;. • The mercurY clbnlled to 68
. At 8:28 p.m., Middleport was called to Hobson for Edna
and for Kansu until Friday.
Temperatures hi the South degrees In the nation's capital at
Chrisman who was tsken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Flash-~lood watches were
remalbed.mlld, with Charleston, 12: 19 p.m., exceediiJI the reoord
posted for part.l of northeastern S.C., reporting 52 detrrees, ~tIn 1929 of fiT degrees.
Texas, northwe&amp;lern ·Louisiana, Atlanta 61 and Mtaml71.
Harrlaburg, PL, set 1 new
UnusuallY warm temperarures record htp for the third COIIIICU·
Mlsslsllppl and New York state.
Torrential rains and wind and foggy. cloudy Ilklei hovered tive day. The weather llervlce
over New England Thursday. said the mercury reached 65 •
Burlington, Vt., reported over- depeea Tbul'lday, breakllll the 1
Continued from page 1
cast
and temperatures as old record for the day of 64
- J ··------~----~-- high skies
as
52
degree,, It was a degtees set In 1986.
Investigators of coercing Lewis, . plas Uc bag of what appel!.red to
WASHINGToN (UPI) - An Vienna and cannot be extradited and said Lewis would "lie on the be evidence.
D11rlng Barry's tenure, at least
espionage network that recruited to the United States, the network pope" ·f or a reduced sentence.
Soutb Ce.a tral Ohio
.
Extetided Forecae&amp;
;1.
·
· Lewis was to be ·sentenced a dozen dty officials have been
accused spy Clyde Lee Conrad In• said. ·
Rain developing Friday night,
Sanday throa&amp;h Tlleeday
convicted of crimes In office.
West Germany was extensive
Investigators told ABC that Friday.
A chance ·of rain Sunday and ~
After the-Ramada Inn probe
In 1985, Kl!ren Johnson; a • · with a low between .0 and 45.
and has reached Into many Szabo's network went beyond
Chance of rahi Is 100 percent. Tuesd~tY. Fair Moriday. Highs •·
Western nations, lncliidlng the Italy, West Germany, Sweden came to light, an Indignant Barry . low-level city employee with
Occasional rain, heavy at times, mainly In the 40s. Lows In the 308 ·:
stood
before
national
television
whom
Barry
admitted
having
a
United States, ABC News re- and Austria. There are suspected
Saturday,
with highs between 50 Sunday and Tuesday and In the
cameras
and
declared
his
Inno"personal
relationship,"
·
was
ported Thursday.
spies In Spain, Britain and the
and
55.
Chance
of rain Is 100 20s Monday ..
·•
cence,
claiming
to
have
been
convtcted,ot selling cocaine. She
Conrad, a native of Sebring, United States, the network said.
-'
"tried,
convicted
and
sentenced"
percent.
'"
served an 18-month prlaon term
Ohio, who faces spy charges In
A former U.S. Army sergeant
by
the
media.
for contempt of coun after she
West Germany, was recruited by first class, Conrad was charged
Barry was arrested Thursday refused to testify to a grand jury
convicted spy Zoltan Szabo, who last year with treason for his part
also recruited spies who were In the spy ring. His arrest at the VIsta In downtown Wa· about allegations she sold CO·
Lodge to meet
.degree.
.
placed In -other alUed countries, marked the first time that a shlngton, about two blocks from caine to Barry himself. A grand
Racine
Lodge
461,
F
.
and
A.
M.
Truateea
lo
meet
jury found no evtdence agaii\St wll meet In_ special session
·ABC said, quoting unldentltled foreign citizen living In West the Ramada Inn.
The Lebanon Township' trus·
The
seventh
floor
of
the
VIsta
Barry.
sources within the spy network.
Germany had been charged with
Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. at the tees-will holda special meeting at
Barry's liitest national con·
ABC said . Szabo recruited treason, according to Hans- was cordoned off by lawenforceMasonic Temple. There will be
ment
·
officials,
and
two
plain·
troversy-flared
Jan ..7 over a Los work In the entered apprentice 1 p.m . Saturday at the han: .
Thomas Mortati, 42, who was · Juergen Foers~r, a spokesman
·a rrested for attempted esplonfor the federal prosecutor's of· clothes law enforcement agents Angeles Times profile of him.
•a ge In Italy . Mortstl told an flee In Frankfurt , West left . that .floor, each carrying a
) tallan court he was paid $500 a
Germany.
. )nonth by tbe Hungarian Intelligence service and was sent to
Hungary for a two week training
Continued from page 1
Continued from page 1
course on spying.
Dally .l toek prlcN
leste said he would actively have been Impossible for them to (As of 11:30 Lm.)
Mortatl was looking for classipursue are the $700 mUIIon do.
fied Information on the NATO
Bryce 1111d Mark Smith
defense system, llallan prosecu· ·capital construction approprla·
"We have recently completed of Blunt, Ellls A i:oewt
lion, to be Introduced by the end the courthouse elevator which
.tors said. After confessing to
Wh!te with blue· carriage roof, PS, PB, ,
of
February, a 'c omprehensive will be of -g reat benefit to ail Am Eleclrlc Power ............. 31%
attempted espionage, Mortatl
cru11e. air. 302, fuel injection, excellent .
drug-fighting bill already under Meigs Countlans for years to AT&amp;T ..... ......... ....... ;...... .. .-.. . ~
. :-vas Imprisoned In Vlncenza,
shape, 1 owner, new car trilde, low midebate and a p)l!.n to attack the come.
Italy.
·
Ashland on .................. ,..... 38~
leage.
,, , .
lack of landfill space by recy''Additionally,
and
the
thing
of
Bob
Evans
.
...
..
,
....
....
..
...
,
....
.l3%
Szabo earlier had . u'sed two
cling solid waste.
whlc,h I _am most proud, Is my Charming Shoppes ....... , .. .. ... 10
NOW
l&gt;rothers as couriers who were
The governor · also stressed participation In a government City Holdlitg Co ... .......... .....14Y)
~ubsequently convicted ot -es·
billS to protect Ohioans' drinking that Is fiscally responsible. Dur- Federal MoguL .......... ..... .... 20')8
plonage In Sweden, ABc said. He
water, provide telephone servl· Ing the last eight years I have Goodyear T&amp;R .......... .. ... ... .39')8
h~s worked foratleast20yearstn ·
cesfor the elderly and disabled, ·endeavored to see that our Heck's ....................... ..... ... .. 3%
the Hungarian Intelligence
and a lobbying reguhitlon bill.
government In Meigs County Key Centurion ....... ... .. .. ... ... 13~
service.
On capital construction, Ce- maintains a balanced budget. I Lands' End . .. .......... .. .... ... ...18')8
. Szabo was convicted of espionleste called for buildings on . shall continue my efforts tpward Limited Inc. . ,........... .. ... .....
age last fall during a secret trial
unlversliy camp uses to support this kind of sound fiscal Multimedia Inc.................... 84
6 cyl .. ~and., PS, PB. clean,- 84.000 miles.
In Austria, but he served no tline
research, job training fac!Utles management.!'
Rax
Restauran!S.,
.........
.......
1'){,
lri prison because he cooperated
and additional classrooms and
Roush, who also operates the Robbins &amp; Myers ..... .......... .15%
with authorities: He lives In
Long bed. P&amp;, PB. 815,000 miles. ._ ~
·
laboratories.
.
Gravely Tractor Sliles In Pome-- Shoney's Inc .. .. ........ :... ....... 10~
roy, Is the son of Mary K. Roush Star Bank, .. ..... .-.:..-............. .20~ and the late H. Kerns.Roush. He Wendy's IntL ........ .......... ..... ~~
V-8, auto., PB, PS, air, 1 localowner. very· n~ cci!lditlon . .
resides In the Forest Run area Wortbll)gton Ind .... .........: ....21'!4
Ibn, Ky. Also survtvlng are with his wife, Ramona, and
;l ., ' • '.«:1 i
( Aabland Oil'I tlrli-quarter net
John Gilmore
-· '
grandchildren, Kim Taylor, Dal· daughters, Kimberly and Krista. Ul/lllare VL 11.72)
SEE RAY RIGGS
las, Texas; Kelly Taylor, Cotum·
'
(Edllor's Note -The following
bus; and Kerr! Melleck, of
was written by a former new•
Chriatian
Seh®l annountti additionaltp Mle
Mansfield, and Chris· and EI'Ik
:p aper mau, a native of Melp
Ashley, Bradenton.
The Rejoicing Ute Christian talnedbyca!Ungtheschoolofflce
County, who was never ncceu' BesIdes his wife, he was School In Middleport Is pleased to at 992-,.6249, Monday through
ful In purging the ~'printer's Ink"
precedl!\l In death by a sister, announce theaddlttonofgrade8 Thursday, from 8:15a.m. to .3
from bls blood. Tbls 18 bls (!!!~'~
Helen, In Infancy, and a brother, for the 1990-91 school year.
p.m. The sclloolls located at 333
• 'by·llne'' aud •~" to Ills career
Milton.
This will be the school's fifth
N. Second Ave., downtown
St. lt. 7
915-4200
"nd life) .
He" was a member of the year In operation.
Middleport.
The school spans kindergarten
PomerQY Lodge 165, F&amp;AM, and
the Oneco United Methodist through grade 8.
By JOHN W. GILMORE
,
Church.
·
_ lntormatlon regarding regis- .
&lt;
BRADENTON, FLA. - We
Services will be held · at . !ration procedures may be oilmust all come to the Inevitable. I
Griffith-Cline Chaj)el, In Braden·
just did. ·
ton, Monday. Interment will be In
I have ilved life to the fullest Manasota Memorial Park In
some things I might be ashamed
Veter1111i Memorial
Oneco. ·
to relate, but, most of all, It has
. Thursday' admissions- Hattie
been good. To go Into that would
Sellers, Pomeroy; Frances Adtake a biography ·a nd the follow·
John Stahl
kins, Pomeroy. l ng Is slm ply m~ obituary. How
Thursday discharges - Guy
many gel to read their obituary
John B. Stahl, 75; of 40482 Priddy, Luc!Ue Braley, George
before they depart, must less Laurel Cliff Road, Pomeray, died Molden.
write their own. This, then Is my
Tuesday at Ohio Slate University
obituary:
Hospital, Columbus, following a ·Licenses issued
John William Gilmore, former
brief Illness. ·
Meigs County resldent, .dled Jan.
Mr. Stahl was born Oct. 6, 1914
Marriage licenses have been
'
19, 1990 at Manatee Memorial · at Laurel Clplf to the late Bert Issued In Meigs Probate Court to
hospital In Bradenton~~ the age and Louella Bradshaw Stahl. He Bobby Joe. Rupe II, 17, and
of 79. He had resided In Braden- was employed as custodian at the Spring Dalane Reed, 17, both of
ton since 1960.
Meigs Couniy Courthouse for Pomeroy; and Stephen Olin
many Y!!ars. He was also an Jenkins, 35, Racine; and Eliza·
army veteran of World War II beth VIrginia Long, · 27, Point
Born June 9, 1910 In Bradbury; and a member or ·Feeney· Pleasant, W.Va.
·
he was a son of the late Fred W. Bennett Post 128 of the American
and Minnie Horden Gilmore. He Legion, Chapter 53 of the Dismay be remembered by some abled American Veterans · and Divorces grmted
through · his many years as a
Rock Springs Grange·No. 2565.
Jtvorces have been granted In .
reporter, s pprts writer and later
Survivors Include a sister, Meigs Common Pleas Court to
editOr of the now defunct Dally Clara Gilkey; and several nieces
Donlta AprU Pooler from David
Tribune. He was emprayed at a
and nephews.
-.
Elliott
Hendricks; and Ronda
Sarasota newspaper for a brief
In addition to his parents, he Green from Paul E. Green Jr.
period but for 12 years had been was preceded In death by four
employed at the Alumlcralt brothers, Harry, Fritz, Marl! and
Foundry In Bradenton from
Wallace Stahl; ' and lour sisters, Case dismi&amp;sed
which he retired In 1977.
'Ruth Geary, Edna Schaefer, • Mr. Gilmore enlisted In the Birdie Shawver and Cecile
A case of petty theft -flied
agalnit Louise Carsey In the
Army during World War II and Harrlllon.
for two years served as private,
Services for Mr. Stahl will be court of Pomeray Mayor Richard
confidential secretary to the Saturday, 1 p.m., at Ewing Seyler has now been dismissed,
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-1, AA Funeral Home, with Derek officials report. Ms. Carsey wu
Command headquartered In
Stump officiating. Burial will be fined on the charge In the court
'·
RlchmO~Jd, Va. FoUowtng serIn Rock Springs Cemetery. last week, but after. additional
vice, he was associated with his Friends may call -at the funeral evidence was submitted to offl.
father and mother·ln·law for a
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 on clals the former action was
For a limited time only, wren you order Shoney's famous aU-you-care-to-eat ,
rescinded - and the , charge
number of years In the Shumway
Friday.
dlsmlned.
Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar at the regular price, you c;m get one of Shoney's sizGreenhouses at Syracuse.
'
In 1933, he was married to
zling, charbroiled hamburgets for 59¢. That's one Shoney's deal that can build
I
'
.
Dorlll Shumway who preceded
up your appetite and still leave you with a triffi
budget: (AVailable
,, ·'
him In death In December, 1981.
They were the patenll of three
Monday through Friday, 11 a.rn.-3 p.m.)
·
·
chlldien, John F. Gilmore, Sara·
JOta; Jane (Robeit E.) Beegle,
HoapiUIIizetion lnaurance now availllble not only for
Racine; and Valerie (Richard)
•
hN.Ithy peopie, but qualifying people with pra-eidstAshley, of Br11denton, all
&lt;
lng
hulth
conditlona.
No
phyilcal
exam
.
or
long
surviving.
hNith hlatory. Meige County a,.. enrollment hal beHe Ia aiJO · survived ~ one
•
gun ao: _
·
brother, Arlhllr M. Gilmore of
••I
Pomeroy ,111111 four staten, Leona
Call Toll Free 1-800-462-81&amp;1
l
Eblnbaeh and Martha Childs
Malga Loctll 992-2870
Middleport; Mary 1?ur1t, Pome:
• ,
Alk for E•n• Anapech
'
"
roy, and Eather Burns, Covlng.
•

Sfluads receive five rolls

Group-sciys spy .
·n etwork extensive

..

a.:

further

a:

'--; . . _

_.,....

50\l'th
~

·Colleg~ basketball results

Celebration
oommittees
are named

Beat of the Bend:

· In Our Town:
Remember those old war cannons
in Gallipoli&amp; City
0.7

B-1

...
Gov. Celeste ... Manning
.

Stoeks

PIICE IEDUCEDI

1986 FORD
CROWN .VIaORIA

~~~5

34*

.

S6595

Mosdy cloudy. Hlp near tO.
Chance ot rain !0 percent.

•
t
1 2 Secttono. 7&amp; Pog11
A
Inc.

Middlepoit-Pomeroy-Gellipolii---Point PleMent. Jenuay 21. 1990

-----------1V~~r----------

----Meigs announcements----;

Along the River ......... BJ.B
Bualnet1a ...................... D~l
Comb- ...•.......•.. :~... Insert
CJaasUieds,,,, ,,,,nr.uooo1)2...7
·Deathl ..••••.••.•..•..•..•.••.A.J
Edllorlal ..., ................ . A-2
Sporla . :............ ....... . C-1·1

It's all in the family•••B-5

M nv.or- ·

0

Inside

•

water system extension to gO to bid
. By NANCY YOACHAM

Tlmes-SeatlneJ·IIIafl
EAST MEIGS- Tuppers Plains· Chester Wat~r
Dis trlct will be watching the mall for a letter from
Farmers Home Administration, officially advls·
l'ng the District to go tci bid with a $828,000 water
line expansion. Don Poole, general manager of
Tup~rs Plains-Chester Water District, reported
Friday that after talking with Don Sommers, of
Fn)HA, Marietta, "It Is expected a letter w!ll be
sent Immediately frQffi FmHA advising the
Dis trlct to bid the Phase-IV Proj~ct."
The Phase IV expansion has been several years
In coming and w!ll add 140 new customers to the
Tuppers Plains-Chester system, as well as 17.1
miles of main line, Poole said. Areas to be added
to the system through Phase IV Include Silver
Ridge. West Shade, Kingsbury Road, CO!IriStreet
and Letart Falls In Meigs County, and County
Road 53 In Athens County (Lotttldge In Athens
County to Alfred In Meigs County) .

A $641,000 loan and a $187,000 grant, both from
FmHA , will fund the expansion.
PhaSe IV calls for two new tanks to be added to
the existing sys.tem to strengthen existing lines,
Poole explained. One tank will be on Gold Ridge
near Holley Road In Meigs County and the second
will be In Athens County In the New England area.
The addition of these tanks "will allow storage In
the event there are power failures at our booster
sites ," Poole s_a ld, "ancj will allow -our customers ·
to maintain water service until power Is
·restored." Presently, when power Is lost In these · areas, "both Gold Ridge and New England
customers lose water pressure Immediately," he
added.
It Is the opinion of the Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water District Board, according to Poole, that
after the Phase IV Project Is completed, no new
water lines Will be laid to large areas unless In
conjunction with an expansion of the District's
treatment p)ant facility . The District's treatment

plant , which Is located at Long Bottom, has
reached Its 20-year expansion capacity. explained
Poole. As long as yearly growth within the system
Is normal (about 70 new customers a year) the
treatment pl!lnt wUI be able to maintain Its
present level, . Poole_sald.
·
In 1988, "when the drought was so severe, " a
fifth well was added to the system's existing well
field which Is also located at Long · Bottom , he
_added.
.
. ·
Also In 1988, the Dis ttlct , asked that people
desiring tQ be considered for water service In the
future, complete a form at the District office "so
as to make It easier to plan where the Interest tor
water Is," Poole explained.
There are many areas In Meigs and Athens
Couillles where an adequate supply of water Is
sl(ll unavailable. If you wish to be considered for
water service. In the future and have not
completed one of our forms, pleaSe contact the
office," he stressed.

"There Is no guarantee that water service could
be ex_tended to your area, but !!there Is no Interest
shown by residents of certa in roads or villa ges.
you would ilot even be considered."
The District Board exte-nds a thanks to those
people who helped with the Phase IV Project by
signing customers, obtaining easements, and In
general, said Poole, "who just worked so hard In
an an ·effort to have water lines extended In these
areas." Such an effort by these.people' make " city
water''· a realltoy in our communities, he added ,
Upon receiving official notification from FmHA
to· proceed with Phase IV, the District will have 45
days to bid the project. After awarding the bid, the
contractor must have 30 days notice to proceed
and then 180 days to complete construction.
Going by that schedule, a-nd with no unforeseen
complications, the Phase IV expansion " could be
finished by September, with some new customers
possibly on line earUer than that," according to
·
Poole.

year to

eXpand.plant

1984 FOlD F-1 $0 ........................ S3495
1.983 FOID.F-1 00 414 ................ S3995
'

.

1984 CHEVY S-1 0 BI.AZEI ••••••;.•••• S6495

-......-Area ·death""s- -

•

GGS

Hospital news ·

- ~~~

the Apple Grove .
. wii(
Secure e~istinl! jobs_mo~ so . than
create new ones.
"They've worked .hard 10 make
Goodyear feel good about the
community !hey 're in, and obviously the expansion is ·a good
reflection on ihem," Caperton said
of the local boosters. '
.
. "I've always said economic
develQPment in West Virginia oc·
curs most often when you have
wople in -the community working
hard,"the
r 'd.

·~,--·~&lt;l!~rf\Ohitlon

will

be spending approximately $25
million to construct an eight-story
addition to house an operational
center and processing center.
"There will be new polyester
reactors in a brand new facility,"
said Wayne Love, manager at the
Grove
"We will be
our ·
adding

till:

you're
in West Virginia
" Capenon trild
with this
company
"TIIis investment .helps ensure.
long-term stability of Goodyear's
operatio115 in our state,'' Caperton
said of the expansion, which will
create 30 new jobs.
.
Construction on · the ope~ational
center should be~in in April and
completed late thiS year. Work on
the. proc;essing center is sch~uled
to begin this fall with the entire addition c;pected to be .iri opera.tion
liy mid-199\.
·
''There is an attitude ·that has hurt
the·economic development in West
Virginia that was asked by a repor·
ter today, 'Why West Virginia?'
Why nQt West Virginia," Caperton
said. "This is a great place to do
business. We have a great workfot·
ce; we have the resources and we
are in a good location. It's time for

development authority trello8UI'Zr; Lydia Long, HoiiH. of
Delegates; .Jack Fruth, development authority pr~dent; .John
Wiseman, "Muon Cou•ty Roundtable president; Len Harvey,
-secretary of commerce aud Frank Lee, development authority
execudve director. (OVP pholo)

- PRAISES L9CAL BOOSTERS - West VIrginia Gov. Guion
Caperton lave Maaoa County Development Authorities 1111d
officials much credit tor lnftuenclng Goodyear Tire 1111d Rubber
Compauy to Invest approximately U5 mUilon Into a new
technological addition at the Ppblt ·PJeu1111t Polyester Plant In
Apple Grove. Pictured behind Caperlon are Charles Lanham,
us 10 nQt be surprised that we can
do better."
tlie" 'p1iinl "'wnii:li opened in
1959, makes plastics used in soft
drink containers, tires, textiles and
adhesives.. The operation presenUy
employs 540 people, and produced
450 million pounds of potyesier
resin last year, Caperton said.
Love said the facility was the
first plant _10 manufacture
soft drink botUes and
foo&lt;J

trays that can be used in the
microwav~ or conventional oven.
"This
exj!Msion puiS'· us ar·
forefronl of technology again,"
Love said.
The plant has been expanded II
times over the years, most recently
in 1988 when $50 million was
spent 31 the facility.
On hand to join in the announcement were Mason County
Development Authority officials.

me

new

Frank Lee, ,executive director; Jim
Lewis, president; Jack Fruth, vice
president: and Charles Lanham,
treasurer. President of the Mason
Collnty
Roundtable,
John
Wisemen, was also present.
Others anending the conference
were United Rubber Workers Local
644 representlltives, Don Rollins,
president; Aoyd Sayre, vice president; and Howard Knopp. past
president.

Judge overturns

On other maners, the govemot
saiil that Mason County was two
brilfgeS'ilway from·fCCeiVing a new
bridge over the Kanawha River.
Caperton also said:
:
- Some parts of his -legislative ··
program will be ready for introduction next week.
·
- He will not make public his
feelings on abortion until and unless the Legislature passes legislalion related to the·issue:

part of drug law

.

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lunch

Meigs County Health Insurance
Enrollment

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FOR LUNCH

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TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - A
federal judge has ruled unconstitutional part of · an Ohio law
pasSed last May dealing with the
sale of drug paraphernalia, rulIng that a three-word phrase
made the statute too vague.
U.S. District Court Judge NIcholas Wallnskl left Intact all
other portions of the law In his

ruling Friday.
A Lima store, Papa Nick's
Specialties, sought the court's
opinion after the owner received
a warning the store would ·be
violating the new state law when
It went In to effect Nov. 2.
The paraphernalia-law prohibIts sales of Items that a "person
knows or reasonably should

know.. . will be used as drug
paraphernalia."
Wallnskl said the phrase "rea·
sonably should know " was too
vague . to make the law
enforceable.
"This court finds that the
statue, absent those thi'e.e words,
Is legally operative ," Wallnskl's
-(See .JUDGE, page A3)

.Reporters refuse coVerage deal
'*

Lod1e
dona&amp;ed
toward the Anti-Drq
Chapter Skate Part)' oa8uper Bowl8unday. Here,
Exalted Ruler Marvin Boxdorter pi'Ciellta tbe
check lo Pamela Matlira, cbalnnaa ·or tbe
chapter. Alao pictured are Chapter Flnauclal
- Officer Cheryl BuD llld lhe Elb' Doa Rumley.

aapenlsed
. wiD be 2 to 4 p.m., IIIII. 28
Ska&amp;eevllle USA, and parents c1111 pick !IP tllte
children and get l!ome Ia time for tbe football
game, Mature l!ald. All attend!"' will be served
hot dop, eoft drlnka 1111d Ice cream cake from
Dairy Queea. ( nmes.SenUnel pl!olo l

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPll
- A Huntington newspaper .and
television station have refused to
let a circuit Judge screen their
coverage of pre-trial hearings In
the case against an Ohio man
accused of killing a policeman.
The Huntington Herald·
Dispatch and WSAZ-TV Friday
refused the request from ~bell
Circuit Judge Allred Ferguson In

the Bobby Dean St~cy murder
case.
Ferguson told reporters they
could only remain In the courtroom during a pre-trial hearing
If they allowed him prior approval of their coverage. Television
s tatlon WOWK accepted the
arrangement, and stayed to _
cover the hearing.
The judge said he did not want

to run t'h e risk of jurors hear!ng
some of the Information released
In the pre· trial hearing.
A jury from Mercer County,
more than 100 miles from Huntington, will be brought to Hun·
tlnglon next week and seques·
tered while It hears the case.
"There Is no way that we can
stay In the proceeding II one of
(See REPORTERS. pa1e A3)

even~ .' all year .
Pomeroy's . 15()th aDniversary offers special·
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By .JULIE E. DJLLOIIf
TlnteHieaiiHI lilltl
POMEROY- It'llleft! -1'he
_sesquicentennial .year of
Pomeray.
The Pomeroy lelqaiceDten·
nlal Committee bll a lot In atore
forresldenllolthebladarealllld
surrounding comntullltl" .Ill
terms of events, eoateat.l, eater·
tatnment, and exhlblta.
Sub-committees have been
to~ but the committee 1tDI ..
need8 bj!Jp In all areu. So llsten-.up,and see what you could

,

get Involved wltl!.
· The flrat . big weekend ' Is
comlaguponAprll28and29. The
weekend will consist of the
Founders Day Dinner at the
Pomeroy Elementary School on
AprU 28. The Yeatured apeaker
will be Steven M. Newman,
author of "Worldwalk." He Is
Ualed In the Gulnnt!as Book of
World Recorda_u being the first
peraon to walk around the work
alone. Entertainment ror tbe
dinner will be provided by a hand
bell cbolr from Parkersburg,

.
W.Va.
The cost of the dinner' ' will
· be $10 per Jll!rson and $18 per
- couple.
On both days, April 28 and 29,
there will be Appalachian arts
and craft display,, demonatra·
tions, and aqutltshow,IJlODIOred
by the senior clttzena. A flower
and quilt show wUJ be sponsored
by the Winding Tralla Garden
Club. This will be held In the
Pomeroy City Hall Auditorium
(the fonner P.omerpy Senior
Hlgh.SChooJ.) Other garden clubS
are Invited and encouraged to

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participate. In this two day weekend will be known as .Herlt·
Also on June 8, the exhibit
event, the floral arrangements . age Days and most of .the ''Ornate - and· Simple Forms.'
will refleci the quilts being shown activities, which will pertsln to Pomeroy Furniture and Cloand the publiC will be Invited to PomerQY'S pioneer heritage, will thing, 1840--lMl" will begin at
do the jlldglng.
be carried out on Court Street.Ail the Meigs County Library. Tills
On AprD 29, the churches In entertainment for thll wei!kend exhibit will feature pieces of
downtown Pomeroy will have II free of charlie to the public.
furniture and clothing as well aa
open house with a representative
On June 8 beifnnlna at ': 30 jewelry and other Items that date
from each church providing Its p.m. the Melody Men Barber- from uiat period. The exhibit 11
history and conduct!~ that shop Qllartet will perform, fol--'" being presented by Catherine
church's tour. Also durlrig this lowed by Bob and Kendra Ward Steiner, Ph.D., and Schyuler
Ume there will be several homes Bence. The play, "Rivers of Cone, Ph.D., both of the Interior
open for tours.
, Gold' ' will take place at 8 p.m. · deslga department at Ohio UniThe next weekend of events and this will be followed by the versity. The exhibit will last
will be June 8, 9, and· 10. This Midnight Cloggers.
·
(See POMEROY'S o'! .U)
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Pomlrot-III'MJI)Ott-0

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A Division of

82:11 'l'blrd Ave., GaJ!Ipnll&amp;,

0111~

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo
(6U) 98Z..2158

.(61,) tii-2342

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlllber
•
ROBART WILSON JR . .
ExecaHve EdUGI' ·

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aslllolant Publlsher-ControDer

A MEMBER of The Ualted Press International, Inland Dally PrMs Associa-

tion and tbe American Newspaper Publishers Ass&lt;:rla_tlon.
.

.

LE'l""tERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be tess than 300 words
lq. All letters are sub) ect toedlltng an (I mUst be signed with name, address and
t@lephone number. No uastaned letters wut be pu)Jl.lsh'ed. Letters should t)e tn

aood tute,
'

addrealln&amp;·_~~ •.not

.Soviets
regtet
arming
India
to
the
teeth
.
·
.
Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
centuries as Tver untU Its name
was changed to honor the second
president of the Soviet Union.
Nlkltln, whose statue doml· nates the riverfront, set sail
down the Volga In 1466, c.rossed
the. Caspll!n Sea anc;l journeyed
overllind through Persia before
reaching India by sea . .He was
attacked along the way by
Tatars, who stole his go.ods and
ills merchant dream of riches.
Then Nlkitln died of cholera on
the way home. But his written
account of the trip put India on
the map for all of Europe.
The tie between Russia and
India grew stronger especially

persmaJtttes.

.

:Backstairs
at ·
..
;: the White House
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
_ WASHINGTON- The U.S. Marine Band, known as the President's
:-Band, Is traveling · fo the SOviet Union next month 'for an 18-day
:·concert tour.
'
Col. Joh)'t Bourgeois, conductor of the band, Is preparing a program
· that should bring tile musl~·lovlng Russians to their feetwlth rousing
; American nuf!lbers and the familiar classics.
: The .concert swing Is part (If a cultural exchange program that Is
, being encouraged with the U.S. new hands-across-the sea
:.rapprochement. The Red Army Chorus was a big hlt In Washington
· and other cities when It recently toured the United States.
; Bourgeois said his repertojre also Will Include songs from the
: musicals "Carousel" 11nd "Porgy and Bess." In addition "01' Man
River" will be .sung by a Marine Corps soloist.
' In a trlbu te to his Soviet hosts, the red-coated ,band will play
' ''Moscow Nights" and also "America."
: The first concert wlli be held on Feb. 5 or Gin Moscow. Leningrad,
; Minsk, Kiev are among the other stops.

.

: Barbara Bush has become a walking tour guide when It comes to
; the upstairs family quarters at the White House and she delights In
• showing ·oft tile histo* mementos.
~ The president's sisters and brothers chipped in to buy a new
·; mattress for the seven-t.oot Lincoln bed In the Lincoln suite-a bed,
' Incidentally that Abral!S-m Lincoln never slept In, but was used for
·. guests In his era.
: It seems that Bush liouseguests, who were Invited to spend the
' night, did complain about the mattress'()n the bed. The new one Is
:custom made.
.
,
, In the room Is one of the five copies of the Gettysburg Address in
' Lincoln's hand.
; The first lady enhanced her knowledge o! the Lincoln era with a
~ visit from Pulitzer Prize winning historian David ' Donald who
·delivered the first of a series o! Whl!f! House lectures on the
'. presidency recently. ·
(
.
· Donald shOwed Mrs. Bush the secret doorway 'In the yellow oval
·sitting room tti on the·family floor, jlod the window, down a narrow
:corridor, looking out on Pennsylvania. avenue where Llncoin made
:speeches during the Civil War.
· The Yellow Oval Room also was used as an office by Franklin D.
' Roosevelt and Harry Truman. It Is the room where ROosevelt first
·Jearned that Pearl Harbor had been bombed on Dec. 7, 1941.
,
: White.Ho!l'se securlty'these days would never permit a president to
:hang out of a window on Pennsylvania avenue.
· Mrs. Bush also visited the summer cottage of the Lincoln and hls
:wife Mary Todd on the grounds of the Old SOldiers Home In
' Washington where they retreated during the sweltering summers in
·the
nation's capital In the 1860's:
.
.
.. Mrs. Bush has read most of the first lady.books, but only excerpts of
·her predecessor Nancy Reagan's book ''My Turn."
;. Stlll she gives a lot of credit to Mrs. Reagan who renovated the
:family suite and made it livable. "She saved mea lot ott rouble, "·said
Mrs. Bush. "The plumbing works."
.
: She said she Is also grateful to Pat Nixon for the small room that
·was converted Into a beauty parlor. -It also was used as a delivery
.
·.
:room for the Bush spaniel Mlllle and her six puppies.
: During her dally one-mile swims in the outlloor heated pool, Mrs.
Bush listened to a tape of Rosalyn Carter reading exerpts from her
·book "First Lady from Plains." The waterproof tape recorder, given
; to her by a friend, was strapped around her waist.

.

nate

Jud

mUllan 'people In uniform.
- The Indian air force has 870
planes and ranks only behind the
United States and the Soviet
Union In . Its cornbat airlift
capability. More worriSQme to
the United States, and even tot~
Soviets, Is India's ~urn-range
ballistic missile capability. India
already has a nuclear bomb.
· -'- The· Indian navy has , .
nuclear submarine courteiy of
the Soviets.
- India has a larg~ defense
Industry, employing more than
25 000 scientists and engineers
w~rklng In 15 laboratories and 60
research centers. , .
·
Now; as we have learnedJn our
private talks wjth Soviet officials
in Moscow, the Soviets , are
worried about the burgecjnlng
strength of the Indian muttary.
They wanted to help India
become a power, of sorts, but not
the huge regional power that It
has become.
.
With Soviet attention focused
on Increasing cooperation with
the United States, cooperation
with India is taking a back seat.
That was also apparent In our
visit to Kallnln. The mayor, like
the city's famous medieval mer·
chant townsman Nikitin, spoke of
boosting titternationai trade: But
unlike the times of Nlkltln, the
people of Kaitnln are looking to
the west. ·
The mayor made much ado
about hosting American peace
marchers ln-Kallnln last year. He
spoke of exchanges with Kalin·
In's sister city, Buffalo, N.Y. He
spoke alsQ of Finland' and West
Germany . But no ·mention was
made of India.

alter India broke Its eolonlal
relationship with Britain. The
more . hea~tiy India's enemy,
Paklsta_n, came to depend on the
United Sta~s. ·the . more · India
relied on the Soviet Union. The
military relationship with India
was useful for the SOviets, too, In
keeping otf·b'&amp;lance their mutual
enemy, China.
'The unexpectecl result of the
friendship Is that India Is one of
the most powerful mllltary establishments on the planet:
- With a population of 880
million, India has about 1.4

ROY (liM) SJIIU!:Y lB.

. Roy J.J~~' Sibley Jr. .

'

.

The rector of the swanky
Episcopal church on Long Island
' was starting to perspire .
He had just been told that
George·Lamsa, the Bible translator who would be the guest
· Mrs. Bush has become hooked on her computer. She learned word
speaker th.at morning, was going
:processing last summer and says the president now accuses her of
to preach on the text, "It is easier
:"being married to ~he computer."
for a camel to go through the eye
· The first lady is transcribing on the computer her diaries, dating
of a needle than tor a rich man to
:back for 30 years In very ·small handwriting. She said she definitely
get to heaven."
:pl'&amp;ns to write a book, and the dairies wlll provlde.her with a starting
This was the church to which
·point. But her memoirs won't be on the stands until after she leaves
J.P. Morgan, 'the du Pants and
:the White House.
the families of other rich Wall
· Meantime, President Reagan's post presidency book Is expected to
Street bankers belonged. Mar·
:be published in early 1991. Reagan, who put the personal touch on all . gan himself ·was to take the
.of his speeches, Is expected to do a lot of his own writing on hls book.
collection this Sunday morning.
It suddenly went through the
mind of the rector that for Lamsa ·
to quote those words of Jesus to
this congregatloh was the same
as tellfng the people they couldn't
go to heaven.
·
.
By United Press lnternattOnal
HDon't worry," Lams a reasToday is Sunday, Jan. 21, the 21st day of 1990 with 344 to follow.
sured the r~tor. ;".The correct
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its ne\11 phase.
translation of that passage Is
The morning stars are M,ercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening star ~Jupiter.
.
'rope,' not 'camel,' as I wiU point
out In my sermon. The Aramaic
Those born 011 this date are under the sign o! Aquarius. They include
chara'cters for camel and rope
Jloldler and Vermont folk hero Ethan Allen in 1738; explorer and
hlltorlan John Fremont In · 1813; Confederate Gen. Thomas · are practically Identical.. Only
native can tell the · difference.
·~tonewall" Jackson In 1824; firearms designer John Browning In
The Greek translators got It
1855; ~ger Nl\Sh Baldwin, founder of the American Civil Liberties
wrong." (Lamsa was a native·of
Union, in 1884; fashion designer Christian Dlor In 1905; actor Telly
the Near ' East and grew up
Savalas In 1924 (age 00); comedian Benny Hillin 1925 (age65); golfer
speaking Aramaic, the language
Jack Nlckl'&amp;us In 1940 (age 50); opera star Placido Domingo In 1941
of
the apostles.)
·(age 49); stqer Mac Davis'In 1942 {age48) and actor Robby Benson In . ·
J955 (age 35) .
The passage, Lamsa said,
doesn't mean It Is Impossible lor
•
• On this date In history: •
a rich man to get Into heaven. It
means there wm. have to be sonie
In· 1792, FJ'encb King Louis XVI was executed In Paris.
changes first.
In 1861, t.flssllslppl Sen. Jefferson Davis resigned tram the United
Just as you have to remove
States Senate, 12 days before Mississippi seceded tram the Union.
som~ strands of the rope before it
ln 19M, !be world's first atomic-powered submarine, the Naudlus,
will go Into the needle's eye, said
wu lauDChed at Groton, Conn. ·
Lamsa,
so a rich man wUJ simply
In 1917, President Jimmy Carter pardoned American VIetnam
have
to
strip away some of his
War-era draft evaders and ordered a case-by-case study of deserters.
desltes to get Into
'
. material
hea.ven.
:'
A tboUJh• for the day: ACLU founder Rojp!r Nash Baldw,ln Bald, "I
The sermon went over well and .
always felt that you h~d to defend the ,people you disliked and feared
u well u lho~e you admired."
· even J.P. Morgan complimented

.

~Today in history

a

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Lam sa after· the· service.
The rich can save their lucky
bucks for Lamsa. Other transla· .
tor~ are not as optimistic for
them, .Thi!se scholars say that
Jesus, by asking his hearers to
Imagine' the Impossible - a
camel sque~zlng through the eye
of a sewing needle- was driving
home the point that a rich man
trying to get Into heaven faced
similarly Insuperable
difficulties.
·
·
Some Bible scholars ease the
rich man's predicament somewhat- In Latnsa's fashion- by
explaining that the needle's eye .
referred to by Jesus was the
·small pedestrian gate In the wall
surrounding a city erected ·to
keep out Invading armies coming
on horseback. The gate, which
was too low for horse and rider to
.pass through, was known as the

George Plagenz

"little of their extra fat."
The old Calvinists looked upon · God favors most In this wor)d, we
wealth as a sign of God's favor.
need only . turn to the Fo~bes 400
But does' anyone really believe
where personal fortunes range
that If we want to know whom
from $5.2 bllllon to ~275 miUion?

Boy who fell into pond dies .

c·

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Our House get's

$J3

lor repairs

Berry's World
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USED

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When you think of sporting·
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THE OHIO COMPANY
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·
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"needle's eye .."
A domestic camel, meanwhile,
could go through the needle's eye
only If the packs he was carrying
on his back were removed.
· Likewise, a loaded-down rich
man could get through heaven's
gate only If he stripped himself of
his material possessions.
It Is Interesting that none of the
rich people who fell under Jesus'
censure appears to have been an
evil person. It we read the
parable of the rich man and
Lazarus, we are led to Infer that
the only thlng~batlanded the rich
man In Hades was that he was
rich. To Jesus, "having It all"
was a sin Itself.
Giving generously to the synagogue did not make everything
all · right. In the parable of the .
widow's mite, the rich dropped
large sums into the leiT!ple poor
box but Jesus was unimpressed
for what they g,a ve was but a

tw~~~~::·wiU

IRONTON _ Blanche G. Robe 2 p.m. Sunday
approximately two weeks and
GALL.jpO~IS _ ROy · {Jim) blnson, 71, Ironton, died Friday In the Crow-Hussell Funeral catalogues of the exhibit will be Joan Wolfe, co-manager at Bank
Sibley Jfi.•,'55, Crown City, died at
night at her residence. She was a ~ome, with the Rev . R.C . B.r own· . sold as a sou venter of th!' One, Invites any Interested Individual to display th!!lr art work or
6:15 p,m,. Frk\ay at hls residence. . . retired teacher In the Syf!lmes · lng officiating. Burial will be in sesquicentenniaL
crafts
in the mini parks, as bas
. He Wa~"·' employed by Fred ,Valley Local School District:
. · Eddy Chapel Cemetery.
. .On June' 9, the. entertainment been done In the past. It Is· the
' Phllllp!l Bt'' SOns Construction Co:
Born May 25, 1918, In Wilgus, + Lonnie Spurl~k
:-vm begin at ·n a.m.' with 'the hope of the sesquicentennial .
· Born1· Ja:n. 1, 1935, tn Gallla. she was the daughter or tbe ·late
.
.·
Shady R!v.e r Shufflers. This will committee that the art pertain to
was the son of Roy· Chat)es apd SOphia Wilson
POINT PLEASANT '- Lonnie
County',''
be followed by the commun[ly an older 1\eritage type of theme.
Slb!er: ·wM'sllfvlves and resides
RObinson.
. Spurlock, 88,' Whitman, W.Va .,
choir and a barbershop quartet.
The next weekend o! activities
A graduate or Mason-Aid High died Thursday In Logan General
In Crown City, and the late Daisy
The "Restoration Jazz Band" will take place on Oct. 6 and 7.
Hall SibleY! Hespentallorhtsllfe
School and the University of Rio Hospital, folloWing a lengthy 'will perform at 2 p.m. and this This weekend, or Ethnic Settlers
Crande,.sheresldedlntheWIIIIUS Illness. ·
in Gallla County and attended
will be followed by Civil War Fest Weekend, will feature
Crown City Wesleyan Church.
and Aid area for most o! her life,
A retired chief 'e lectrician for · drllls. The war drills will be events
pertaining to the EuroAlso surviving are hjs wife,
and had llveclln Ironton for the Ethel Chilton Coal Co.~ he was
followed by an old lime gospel pean Heritage. of the early
Sally PI)IJllps Sibley; a daughter,
last 13 years.
also the former owner o( Spur·
gioup. The Judging ofthe Pioneer settlers of the area, English,
Mrs: Larl'}' (Donna Kay) Dlllon
Sh~ was a member of the lock's-Esso Statlop.
Costume Contest wm take place German, Welsh, and Scotch
Surviving are his wife, Bessie
· ofFiorence,Ky .'; twograndchlld· , WllguaFalrvlewBaptlstChurch,
at 6p.m. and th.ls will be followed Irish. There wlll be an arts and
ren; a .slster, Mrs. Kyle (1'&gt;\arjo- 1
Wilgus Grange, the D~V McComas Sp.urlock; three
by Sweet Mountain Sound. ·The craft fair , parade, entertain·
rle) Donnally of Gall! poll~; and a
Auxiliary and the Ohio Retired daughters, A-lma Kirj&lt;endoll of
evening will conclude with men't, Including a German band, .
Stolllngs, W.Va., ~IIford Evans : another presentation of "Rivers and games.
brother; 9arl Sibley of Crown . Teachers Association.
Surviving are her husband, . of' Pecks Mill, W.Va., and Made.
'.
City. , ,
0 fGid"
q .
Ariy organization or individual
He was preceded in death by a · .Radford Robinson, whom she line McNeely of Point Pleasant; :
On June 10 all Herrltage Days who Is Interested in sponsoring a
marrl~ May 18, 1946; two sons, · two sons, Carl Spurlock of Pecks
brother·, Roger Sibley, In 1974.
activities will take place at the single activity during the year, or ,
Services wlll be 1 p.m. Monday )'hlllp R. Robinson of Chesa- Mill, and Lonnie Spurlock Jr. of
Meigs County Museum.
reserving a concession vendor
in the Waugh-Haltey-WOOd Fun- peake, and f!ruce D. Robinson of · Point Pleasant· a stepdaughter.
On June 28, at 7 p.m . the Ohio spot for these weekends, should
era! Home, With the Rev. Fred Richmond, Va.; and a grandson, Constance Walker of Salt Rock,
Univei'sHy Communiverslty contact the Pomeroy Chamber of
Shockley officiating. Burial will Todd Robinson of Pedro.
W.Va.; three stepsons, Thomas . Band, sponsored by Bank One, Commerce Office at 992-5005.
be in 'Crown. City Cemetery. · ·She was also preceded In death McComas of Logan,.-W.Va., Carl will perform on Court Street.
Friends may call at the funeral by two brothers, Carl Robinson McComas ofHavi!t'ock, N.C. , and
· home from from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. and Dale Robinson:· and two Jim McComas of Metucln, N.J.;
Sunday.
.sls.ter.s , Selma Dillon and 11 grandchildren and several
.
. .
Pallbearers will be .Lawrence Mildred Dillon.
.
great-granchildren.
··
FAIRFAX, Va. · (UP!) - A George was brought to the
Phillips, Freddie Phillips, Roy
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday
Services will be 1 p.m. Sunday 5-year-old boy trapped · 40 minhospital to revive him. His
, . Phillips, Larcy Phillips, ~bby In the Phillips Funeral Home,
in the Evans Funeral Home, utes in an icy drainage reservo!~
temperature rose to 102 degrees
Phillips, Tom J..ewis and Shorty. Ironton,. with the Rev. Pete Chapmanlrille, W.Va :, with the lias died at a Virginia hospital, . alter doctors removed his blood,
Mayl\llrQ.
·
Bruce ~fflclatlng. Burial wlll be Rev. James Fortune officiating. four days after his lifeless 'body · warmed It up and put It back in
.
·,..
In Wilglls Fairview Cemetery. . Burlal'wlll· be In Forest Lawn 'was pulled from the pond a,nd
, .·
his body . Doctors were able to
Go~;F. -CaiUcoal
~" Fhrlendtrs may call atMthendfuneral Cemetery, Pecks Mill.
doctors
revived
the
child.
res.
t art the youngster's heart,
•
•
•1
..,
orne om 6·9 p.m. o ay.
. ·
.
George Sader died Friday at and It beat on Its own until hls
VINTO)'I - Gokl.lt~. E. Call~ '/Wil'l '
Earl Shaffer
'
Fairfax Hospital from a lack of death.
coat, 81, Rt. 3, · BidWell, died ·
tam • F'leld8
oxygen to the brain, a hospital
But doctors had said · his
Friday. night in Holzer Medl~al
POMEROY~ EarlS. Shaffer,
spokeswoman said.
,prognosis for recovery was poor
Center.
··
. :ti't!Jw LEXINGTON, OHIO 69, of Pomeroy, died Saturday at
The boy was brought to the and he had less than a 2 percent
June 11, 1908, In Mason William Claude Fields, 64, of 306 Holzer Medical Center. He was a facility Monday afternoon after chance of surviving . without
;;~w.v·a., she was the Ealill!rn Ave., New Lexington, malntena:nce mechanic for falling Into the drainage reser- brain damage. He suffered damof the .Jate Golden an.d died Friday at hls,homefQlloWing Kaiser Aluminum, retiring after voir, but be never regained
age to mos ~of his major organs,
Ra\rbuJ~n Callicoat. ·
an extended"lllness.
.
23 years
·
and his brain had begun to swelL
consciousness and breathed with
Born J!llle ,18, 1925 at _CI'-!'ks· . porn Aua. 11.1920 !JI Charles ton. the help of a: respirator.
""'
The hospital spokeswoman
'lfU!t:•:'tlli,l!ewa~ ,• ii!JN.l'dllli' W.Va., he.,was a son of tlie late
.
"Our
h~art goes out 10 the,
said
tlie tamlly would announce
la.te David and Laura llli!lt Thomas and1 Cora .Phillips f&amp;f!\liY at' this dlftlclllt · ttme," funeral arrangements later. The
r •
,•
one .
Fields. ~e was•a resJ!Ient of New Shaffer.
.
·
hospital- spokeswoman Mary
family has not commented sin.;e
~rn ot Oberlin. •
, .
Lexington for 18 years, but had
He was a World War II Army Stuart Rizk said. The family was
the
a.c cident. ·
·
·
She &gt;Nas preceded In death by ' also lived at Pomeroy and v~teran.
at his side when he died, she said.
The Ice-covered pond had
.,. four broillers and four sisters . .
Hartford, W.Va.
He was a
Surviving are his wife, Gathel
The child's temperature had begun to thaw when George and
Services wlll be 1 p.m. Monday retired mine manager of Peab- Shafter of Pomeroy; two sons.
in the,IMcCoy-M 0 ore J!:uneral ody Coal Company Ill New Robert S. · Shaffer of North dropped to 90 degrees and his the girls, ages 12 and 14, walked
heart had stopped beating when on it and fell in.
Home; VInton, with thi Rev. Lexington. He was a veteran of carolina and Thomas L. Shaffer
Despite his submersion, doche was pulled born the reservoir
Alli-ed Holley officiating. Burial World War II, a member of the of Council Grove, Kansas ; a
tors attributed George's survival
behind
a
row
of
townhouses
in
will 'be. In Pine Hill Cemetery. Mason; · W.Va . . posts of the daughter, Belinda Jeffers of
Centreville, which is 20 miles to hls age and the temperature of
Friends may call at- the funeral American Legion and the Vete- Pomeroy; a bro.ther, Ralph west of Washington, D.C. Two the water. In cold water, a reflex
homdl'om ji:8 p.m. Suo&lt;lay. ·.
ranaofForelgnWars; tlleEagtes Shaffer of Givens , W.Va.; and older cousins· had fallen In with in the body shuts down non -vital
Lqdjp! at New Lexington; and the eight grandch.lldren.
him but were !lOt seriously hurt. . organs. allowing oxygen to go to
New Haven Church of God, New
He was preceded In death by
Shirley .Pet~
Doctors and nurses struggled the essential organs- the heart,
' Haven, W.Va. .
r
eight brothers and one sister.
_;
. ..,,
' .
valiantly In the hours after brain and lungs.
.Survivors Include his l"lfe, , · ervlces will be conducted Tues-·
YIN'FPN - Shltley. Peters, 8-J,
Margaret;
two sons, Jim 11n!1 day, 2 p.m. at Rawlings,. Coats r---~--------------------------~
Wilkesville, died at heF residence
Kevin Fields and a daughter. and Fisher Funeral Home In
1
Saturday morning.
Arrangements will · 'be an- Kathy Owen, all of New Lexing· . Middleport, the Rev. Clark
10% OFF
nounceil later by the McCoy- ton; five grandchildren; one Baker officiating. Burial follows
All SUNDAY
great- grandchild; seven broth- ·In Meigs Memory Gardens.
1
.. Moore Funeral Home, VInton.
DROP
ers, Franklin Fields, of New
Friends may call at the funeral
•Sal!!
D1y
Service
on
Shirts
OFFS!
&gt;, •
Lexington, · and David Jr., home Monday, 2 to4 p.m. and7 to
·1 eAiteratlens on Site
Charlea Knotts '
,Freddy, MelVIn, Wetzel (Doc:), 9 p.rn.
Ray and Glen Fields; and a ''
.
1 !lxperiencad Stllff
.VINTON- Charles Knotts. 87,' . sister, Loulle, all of the Mason,
1 !llows: 7:00 •m-1:00 pm
Bidwell, dle6Frid'8)' aftetnoon In W.Va. area.
ij:otzer Medlciil Center. .
.
In addition to his parent_s! he .
()(}0
OHIO
$
lEG. 12.90
Born May 1, 19Q2, at Linden, · • was preceded In death by a son,, '•
'
J'
W.Va., ' son of the ' late William David Fields, lq ' 1968; and a
Democratic State Representa· l•CAU""U6;9495
and Melissa White Knotts, he was brother, Gerald Fields. .
live Mary Abel of Athens an·
a retired employee of the C &amp; 0
Calling hours at. the Roberts nounced today that Our House
Railroad and a member and Funeral Home, 304 Mill St., New Museum In GGalllpoUs wlll redeacon of the VInton Baptist Lexington, wlllbeSaturdayfrorn celvlng $13,000 tor needed lateChurch.
2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. GravHide rlor repairs.
services will be 1: 30 p.m. !!Iunday,
'''The acquisition of funding tor
....
- a:t the Grah'&amp;m Cemetery at thiS project Is Important," Abel
~ 'limeJ- Jeutina
Letart, W.Va. wltll Rev. Clyde said, "becausewecannotletthe
•
·Fieldl ~-· :Mllltary rites structures of our valuable muse'
wlllaiiO lie beld at lite cemetery • u1111 · deteriorate. Our House
·
' · ,i,· ·· ·
Museum Is an Integral part of
Em'~
aaylor
Southeastern Ohio's history."
, The repairs Include plaster~g ··
POINT PLEASANT - Ernest and painting for the museum s
L. (Jim) Taylor, 64, Point Plea·
.
. Interior walls.

l

.

Bible translations vary for wealthy.

In the Christmas gift department, the PreSident and Mrs. Bush
' received a present from their Secret Service detail that they cherish.
. :It's a pastel draWing of MIIUe, and occuples.a place of honor on the
,wall near the mantle of their cheerful sitting room with colorful
flowery sofa and chair coverings . .

Pomeroy's ...

'!e

'Have
half
uoveming
half
succeeds
·
.
.. e · .
.
Chuck Stone

The successes and failures of case In Israel:
senators - Charles Robb, Va.;
·
George Bush's year-old presld·
t:~tnety years ago, that caustic
Nunn, Ga.; John B. Breaux, La.;
votes than on any other Issue.
ency may be defined by a Irish wit, Mr. Dooley, wryly
and Howell Heflin, Ala. America Is clearly pro-choice.
little-noticed anecdote about his observed that'"Th' dl!'llmycratlc
supported the Republican presi· . Yet Bush's "have half' politics
youth. Accm'ding to childhood party ain't on speakln' terms
dent on legislative votes with
enable him to campaign just as
friends, a youthful Bush usually with itsllf." In 1990, he might
higher percentages (over 71
vigorously for Republican promanaged to avoid confrontations suggest that the "~aypubllcan · percent) than dld stX mnderate
choicers as Republican .prowith peers demanding his. candy . party's house atn:t In order
Republican senators. - Larry
lifers. And the seeming contra·
or other goodies by concluding lther."
.
Pressler, s.o:; Arlen · Specter;
diction has not dented the armor
the negotiations with the conciliA recent analysts by Congres·
Pa.; Alfonse . D'Amato, N.Y.;
of his high popularity.
atory, "Have halt' '
.
.
slonal Quarterly, "A Year' of
Pete Wilson, . Call!.; James JetOne major outcome of "have
Nelther party got all of what it Comity and Conntct," confirmed
ford, Vt.; and Mark Hatfield, . hair.· politics Is Its Impact on the
wanted, . but serious conflicts the political divisions on both
Ore. (between 59and69percent.)
1992 presidential race. White
were avoided.
sides of the aisle. CQ's authorita- · The same pattern was re·
House-aspiring Democrats are
"Have half' explains the evo- tlve analysts Is oneo!thenatlon's
pealed In the House as 10
already moving \oward the ceolution of Bush's "government by most comprehensive reports on
Southern Democrats from Flor· . ter, which Nunn has always
coalition. '' But the coalition Is not' ·congres~lonal support ot and ida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mlssts:
occupied.
so much bipartisan as It Is opposition 'to a president, using_ sippi ani! Texas supported the
or the three top Democratic
IdeologicaL And the trouble with votes on which he took a stand.
Republican president more
leaders in the House, Gray
· "have half" - or coalition Sen. Sam' Nunn, Georgia's
times · than dld 10 . Republicans
supported Bush the most the
government Is Its political fragil- conservative Democra.llc hawk
from New England.
opposed him the least. By the end
Ity. When party loyalties collide on -defense and : most domestic
The Civil War ended 125·years
of Bush's four years: it Is possible
with ideological self-Interests,
ago, but Its ghosts still sneak
that his "have half' • Influence
issues, would easily quality as a
party .ties {Ire Invariably wea- Republican In good standing with
back occasionally to haunt us.
wUI have transformed Northern
kened. And when the two-party
In 1990; a less violent, but
liberal Gray intoacarboncopyof
his voting record, which is more
system is weakened, you get the .supportive of Bush than those of · equally hate-filled clvU war
SOuthern consetvattve Nunn.
kind of fractious Impotence that
sqmeofhlsmoderateRept.~bllcan
threatens todlvtde.thlscountry:
~r. Dooley would Just
has frequentlY been character Is· . colleagues from the North. In
the abortion controversy. On this
shake hiS' head In disgusted
tic of Italy and is presently the fact, !our Southern Democt:atlc
Issue, Bush stands to lose more
admiration.
·
·

pre-trial hearing until It co~~
contact Jts lawyer.
Ear !fer in the week, Ferguson
abruptly s'topped Jury selection
in Huntington. saying he could
not find an Impartial panel to try
the case there. Ferguson tried to
keep the ~witch to Mercer County
secret.
Stacy, a Columbus native, will
go on trial Monday in the 1981
killing of Officer Paul Harmon ..
· Stacy was convicted of th~
murder In 1982 and had been
serving a life .s entence In th~
West Virginia Penitentiary, but
won a new trial last year from th~
state Supreme Court.

lie

.

.

(From REPORTERS, page AIl
___:::..:.::.::.=:..::::.:.:=.:::..::.:::.:.......:
_ __;___ _--:..

SurYivllll are hll wife, Nora s~t. died Friday In Pleaont the rules was that lite Judge gave . mlngs said he did not dispute
!lnal approval of what- we pub· Ferguson's decision, l:i~t hls
WHtfall Knotta, whom he mar· Valley Hospital.
lished,"
said Zack Binkley, exec· reporter left "because she had
ned Dec. 29, 1923, in GalllpDUs;
Born Nov. 23, 1925, In Point
utlve
editor
of the Herald· better things to do, honestly."
aon, WWlam C. Knotta Of Pleasant, son o! the late Robert
Dispatch.
"We
had
no cholc.ebut
Ferguson refused a request
Cohunl!ua; two daughters, Mrs. Ernest (Biackle) Taylor and
leave."
·
from
the newspaper to delay the
to
Broob (Mary Lou) Trout Of
Burg"'s Taylor, he was a
WSAZ
news
director
B!ll
CumFrwco, N.C., and Mrs. Robert ntlred employee of Buckeye
(Elizabeth) ltrahan Of Blr- Sleet Cas$gCo., Columbus, and
tf.e
(From JUDGE, page AI)
mlnlrbam, Alii.; 10 iJ'andchlld· an Army veteran of World War
l:l •••--:...-----'-~---ren and several great· II,
ruling said.
thought might be in violation."
grauclcblldren; and a brother,
Surviving are four daughters,
The judge noted that the U.S.
Bowers said the law should be
.Gflmer Knotti of Bidwell.
. Judy Marcum of Columbus,
Sixth l!lrcult Court of Appeals In rectified by the state legislature
He wu l!receded In death by · Unda Brookover of London,
ClnciMatl has struck down ''rea- to clear' up any vague points.
one brother and two sisters.
.Ohio, Barbara Peck of Lakeland, . Son to know" language that had
· Store attorney Fritz Byers said
Service~ will be 11 a.m. TuesFla., and Donna · Gilman of ·been Incorporated In a drug it. Is still Illegal to ·sen Items ·
day In the McCoy-IIJoore Funeral Lithopolis; two sisters, .Mildred · paraphernalia law passed by the · knowing they will be used as drug
Home, VInton, with the . Rev.. Whittington and Ernestine Whit· city of Parma.
.
· ·
paraphernalia because · courts
Alfred HoUey and the Rev. tington, both of Point Pleasant;
Allen County Prosecutor David have ·held that circumstances
·Marvin Sallee offtclallni. Burial · three brothers, Jo~~eph F. Taylor Bowers said au thorltles In Lima and other factors can be consiwill be In VInton Memorial Park. · of Point Pleasant, and Dale and sought to avoid confrontations dered when· establishing that a
Friends may call at the funeral Richard , Taylor, both of Mil· before the state law took effect by seller knew the Item would l)e
!wood, W.Va.; nine grandchild· telling the store owner "what we used for drug paraphernalia .
hom!! tram 7-9 p.m. Monday.
•
ren and a great-grandchild.
Blanehe G. Robinson
He was preceded In death by
_.....:&lt;~Fr.:.::o::::m:.;P..::o.:.:::M=E=ROY:...:'s:..:o:.::n.:.:A~l)_ _

Page A-2·

====~~====~==~========~
KALININ, U.S.S.R. - This
city In the Soviet Union Is proud
of Its statqe of Atanasy Nlkltln,
Russia's own Marco Polo who, In .
1466, became the first European
to visit India.
. Kallnln is proud to have played
a part In opening a trade route.
But the 20th century relatlopshlp
between the Soviet Union and
India has e.rolved Into something ·
that 15th century Kallnln could
not have anticipated. The Soviets
·helped turn India -!nto a huge ,
regional mllltary power -,larger
than seems wise now in this age
of East-West peace. The city on
the . Volga River was known for

Sunday Temas Sentinel-Page A-3

1t. W. VIIi .

Reporte._..8... _

IJommentary and perspective
~mtbq- 1tim.ts • itntitttl

''ro'is, Ohio-Point Plus

'

I

•

�'
Paga-A-4-Sundly Tmes-Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePort-&lt;Wipolia, Ohio-Point Pie

•t. w.

r----Area news briefs----------------,.,- ---,
EMS answers nine rolls
POMEROY -Nine calls were answered on Friday by units or
the Meigs Co11nty Emergency Medical Services.
At 1: 10 a.m., Middleport Fire Department was called to a
minor kitchen tire at the Janet Elkins residence on Hysell St .
Pomeroy at 2:47a.m. wentto Mulberry Ave. for Michael Todd
Hubbard who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 10:09 a.m., Rutland transported Faye Mulhollen from an
auto accident on Route 124 to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Salem TownshiP . Fire Department was also called to the
accident scene at 10:13 a .m.
' •
At 11:11 a.m., Pomeroy went to Route 7 for Edna Haning who ·
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital and at 1: ~ p.m. to
Mulberry Ave. tor Ada Hoce to Holzer Medical Center.
Tuppers Plains at 5: 25 p.m. was called to Route 7 tor Clara
.
'
' .·
Braden who was dead on arrival.
At 7:43 p.m. , Rutland transported Phyllis Wooten from
County Road 27 to Holzer Medical.Center.,
.
At 9: 14p.m .. Tuppers Plains treated JOhn Ehrman at Eastern
High School.
Middleport at 10:07 p.m. was called to South Second Ave. for
Elizabeth Mourning who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

~Clothing

needed for family

POMEROY - Clothing Is being collected at Pomeroy Village
Hall for the family of Marlon Watson. Everything the family
owned was .Jost In a fire last week. Watson Is a part·time
employee of the village.
. .;
·
His sizes are' medium for shirts, 31 waist and 32 length for
pants, 8\-2 for shoes. His wife wears medium tops, 10·12 pants,
and.8-9 shoes.
.
· Sizes for the children are as follows: Cookle,.medlulm shirts,
9'10 pants, 6\-2 shoes; Cassie, 4·5 tops, shoes 11, pants, 4·5; Sue,
5-6 tops, 11\-2 shoes, 5-6 pants; and Jeremy, stze 12 shirts, 10-11
pants, and 4 to 4\-1 shoes.

Armed robbery investigated
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia County Sheriff's Department was
called at 1:55 a.m.' Saturday to Kanauga to Investigate an
armed robbery at the Gallipolis Holiday Inn.
Officers said an armed, masked man entered the motel with a
gun and demanded money. The holdup man took an undisclosed .
amount of money and left on foot, according to the sheriff's
department. · ·
·
·
.
The robber was described as a white male about six teet tall,
weighing about 150 to 160 po)Jnds, wearing a green Army style
jacket and a blue and white toboggan. He spoke In a low voice

when he demanded money. He had dark brown, curly balr of
mediUm length, and also wore a red and whle handkerchief.
Area law enforcement agencies were .notified to be on the
lookout tor the holdup man. however, at" last report, he had not
been located.
.
The sherlt1's department booked Allen Eugene Sheets. 31, Rt.
3, Gallipolis, on a chargeottheft by dec~ptlon. Sheets will have a
hearing In Gallipolis Municipal Court.

'.

.

v•.

J...-y 21. 1810

C~es

aid programs and application
forms change each year.
A financial aid officer will
focus on the area of flnariclall!ld
Including grants, loans, scho.lar·
ships, college work·study and the
l!ppllcatlons. Federal Pell
(FAF) an&lt;!theOh.lolnstructlonal
Grant IOIG) will be available at
the meeting.
,
Bl)fore that, an FAF or OIG
will be available at the GAHS
Guidance Office. Students or

'

J-...y 21. 1990

One pe~n iQju•-ed

' GALLIPOLIS-' Gallipolis Po- Ram Charaer.
backed Into a 1981 Olds Cutlass
GALLIPOLIS- Central Trust
lice cited Keith B. Lamrn, 22,
Lamm complained of an injury driven by Clarence H. Easton II, "Co., 352 Second Ave .. Galllpolls,
1216~ Eastern Ave., Gillipolls, but was not treated.
20, Ashville.
·
flied three complaints this past
.. on chartes or driving under the
Pollee also Investigated an · . Easton was stopped at the exit week In GaiUa County Common
lnfiuence, left of center and accident at 3:08 p.m. Friday on ready to pull out onto Eastern Pleas Court seeking judgments
leaving the scene of an accident Second Ave., 150 feet south of Ave. Damage wa~ minor to both totaling more than $15,000.
at 12:47 a.m. Saturday at 1220 Cedar Street, where a 1984·Jeep vehicles. No one was Injured.
The bank Is seeking judgeEastern Ave.
, Cherokee driven by Linda Smith, There was no citation.
ments In the following cases:
Pollee also Investigated a
Pollee said Glen H. Adkins,§~,' 37, LangsVIlle, struck the liack of
Rt. 1, GaiUpolls, and anotlier a 1985 Chevrolet Cavalier driven hltsklp accident Friday at the
·
vehli:le not Identified by pollee, by Tara N. Easton, 18, ESR, Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza
were headed north on Eastern GalUpolls,.
where . an unidentified vehicle
South Central Ohio
Avenue when Lamm, headed· . . PamagewasmlnortoEaston's. struck a parke~ 1983 Buick
Sunday, mostly cloudy . High
south, went leftof center.
car. There was no damage to Skylark, owned by Adrian Glb· near 40. The chance of rain Is 20
The unidentified . driver went Smith' s vehicle. No one was son, Rt. 2, VInton, and left the percent. · ·
off the road to avoid a collision,•. lnjure(j. There was no citation.
scene. No one was IQjured.
Extended Forecast
Lamm's car went off the road · · Pollee Investigated an ace!· Damage was moderate. .
Monday through Wednesday
and over a small embankment dent Friday at McDonald's Res·
Pollee .cllatlons also Included:
Fair Monday and Tuesday, and
after sideswiping the Adkins taurant, 1715 Eastern Ave. Offlc· · Betty L. Neville, '31, Point Plea· a chance of rain or snow
vehicle. Damage was heavy to ers said a 1981 . Chevrolet sant, ),lO taillight and Daniel H. Wednesday . Highs In the 30s
Lamm's .1979 · AMC Spirit and Ch~vette driven by Roland W. Freeman, 19, Willow Wood, driv· Monday and Tuesday and In the
minor to Adkins' 1987 Dodge Hively, 16, Rt. 1, Scottown, lng on the sidewalk.
40s Wednesday. Lows In the 20s .

Commodity distribution Jan. 23

h

Weat er

Eye:i· eare p.. roi~~t
taruets
·area
.
elderly
'J

Jason Marcum, Rt. 2; VInton,
theft; and James L. Marcum, 33,
Columbus, Ohio, falluretoweara
seat belt.
·
.
Forfeiting bonds for speeding
were:
Steven M: Edwards, 18, Fl.t. 3,
Gallipolis, and Jackie Frye, 40,
Verdunville •.' W.Va., both ' $48;
':farry Cochran Jr., 45, Huron,

,. Me£gS
• ·county .cOUrt

·.

. I

Sale At The Alco-v e
Atl·American Greetings
EVERYDAY INVENTORY

REDUCED 60%!·
Valentine's Day Cards

50%

I

THE ALCOVE

L-----~--.---------------..J ·

Hospital news
Holzer 1\ledlcal Center
Discharges Jan. 16- Matthew
Bond , Ostle Ferguson, Debra
George, Zelma Gray, Lester
Hawk, Tamara Hawley, Megan
Kilgore, Robert Manllnl, Rose
McDade, Gloria Mitchell, Mrs.
Jimmy Niday and girl, Raymond
Pauley, Dale Richards, Chris
Sayre, and Marjorie Sfaklanos.
Dlschar1es Jan. 17 - Autye
Baker, Margie Brown, Ramona
Denney, Beatrice Eubanks, Tl·
rnothy Faulkner, Belva Fisher,
Usa Harper, John Hpyt, Mrs. ·
Charles Hubbard and daughter,
Joseph Lawrence, · Robert
Mayes, Sharon Meadows, Ruby
NewelL Teddy Penix, Stephanie
Pulllna, Ryan Ro\llh, Phyllis
Rowland, Thelma Stephenson,
Jobn Uebel and Tyler Wllklna.
.....,. laa. 17- Mr. and Mrs.
CharleS Anael, son, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. James Clark, son,
Pllily, W.Va. Mr. and Mrs.
Antllony Mahley, . dauahter,
Welllton.
·

A fanz.ily · apvroach
to h·e alth care ...

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'·

Remember when the same physician who treated you for the
sniffles also took care of your baby sister, and saw your Mom and Dad
for their aches and pains, too? Then you remember the family doctor.
At Ayers Family Health, we're combining that old-fashioned
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- medical care from infancy through geriatrics for your entire l;.mily.

.
•

can (304) 675-6015 for an appointment today. And let ~stake care of your ~amlly.

David R. Ayers, M.D.

H. Edward Ayers, M.D.

Family Practice

Pediatrics &amp; Internal Medicine

JZLI
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
V'"J
The family of profeuionola

\

.

,

Middieporr

CHESHIRE _ The 128,000 · Lea~ers of Tomorrow.
·.
these individuals whose dally
members of Key Club Interna·
Now !n the third year of the routine revolves around glvln~,
tiona! have set aside the week of program's ·tncepllon, Roger dedication and caring - l e
Jan. 21·27 1990 as Worldwide Woods, resident of Key Club teachers.
. h
Teacher· Administration Appre- · International, and senjo.r at Los
"These devoted people lay t e
elation Week
Alamos High School, New Mex· foundation for the developement
Through~ut the week,
leo, Sates:
of a!llludes, values, academic
members of the Kyger Creek
"It Is so easy to take for backgrounds and awareness of
High School Key Club at Chegranted the contr.lbutions .that millions of students. Their efforts
shire will be paylng"·trlbute to
Individuals make on our behalf will be reflected In the pathway
their' ·teacb(!rs, admlnlsirators
especj~lly when those contrlb'l· tomorr~w·s leaders choose to
and support staff of the school In
tlons ·11re on a dally basis. Key follow.
.
1
recognUon of the tremendous
Club · International hopes to
Woods also noted · the u~q~i
contributions these· duls make
remedy this tendency by taking epess of the program becau
toward the educatlo~ of today's
thls opportunity ,t o recognize and Its recognltlo~?fthe profe~slonal
high ' School students· _ the
express our appreciation for educator on a worldwide levfel.
· ..
'
·.
. He continued "Appreciation or
I"" •.:::' .. .
the . education and personal
growth of students In the 13 Ke:,;
· ·
·
·
·.
. . - ·.
Club Nations will be demon·
strated this week as Key
Clubbers .In nearly 3,800 high
·.
•·
.
schools pause to recognize the
' COLuMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A Jobbyts't bt,ll and on a' House blll to contribu tl~!'is of these selfless
no~~~- citizens group said. reforl'l);c~~lgn t1rt4'nce la~s. . educa;ors.
Olllit~"'&amp;
enjoy "numerous..
0
bla'ck . holes" .tn state taw that ·
~0
IS
allow them to avoid disclosing
. · '. '
• . .
.·
bow they spend money trying to · PORTLAND, . Ore. (UP!) fraud.
tnfluerice legislators.
,
Most residents or the tiny .town
Former Gov. Vtc Atlyeh, who
Jartet..'Lewis, execu live dlrec· where Bhagwan 'Shree Rajneesh was In office during the Raj nee·
tor of Common Cause of Ohio, and thousands of his follbwers shee periOd, said the guru's death
said a Senate panel studying established a commune gener·
"puts the final conclusion on a
lobbyist disclosure rules Is mov· all&gt;; .~refer.:to forget their expe· very sad story In the history of
lng !ri the right direction: but Its rlence l'(lth Je self-proclaimed the state of Oregon."
, proposal still "doesn't go far · "rlc)l man'·s" JPITU.
"He · was not a very ntce
enough because what we really
Shree R"jneesh, 58, died Frl· person," Atlyeh said. "They 1his
need Is c~ear enforcement, clear . day In ·India, a deathmarked by followers) were really tormen·
penalties."
·
• lndlfterence and a tinge of relief tors of .Oregonians." .
Lewis and Common Cause ~ In"the town of Antelope, ~urned
.Antelope-area residents ap·
chairman Todd Ambs said 'Frl·
upside down by the. guru's peared more subdued.
day thatunUke disclosure laws In ' preachlngs· of opulence, capital· " "Time heals things," said
other 'states, money spent by
Ism and free Jove.
resident . Ellen McNa'mee . .
Ohlo.,lollbylsJs can be ·easily
"I think J!IOSt people w~~ like' "We're prelty lndlffefent."
hidden.
:
to say just a little relief, said
"I don't think anybody Is
Ambs said the public Is pre· . Tom Pomeroy, who works at the . jumping up and down for joy,"
~en ted from knowing the role of Antelope Store and Cafe, a said Kelly McGreer, who owns a
money In the legislative process. · gathering (l'lace tor the t~'s 50 farm .adjac.e nt to the RajneeCommon Cause said It con·
residents. "We 'don't haye to shees' old CQmmune. He said
ducted a st1,1dy of nine states and
worry about h!rn"comlng back." many local residents would "just
found at least clrcumstanlal . Shtee Rajneesh 'left India for as soongoaboutourbuslnessand
the United Stat~s In 1981 and not remember them."
evidence that Ohio · lobbyists
were hiding expenditures.
attracted thousanc;!s of his illsciJean Opray, an Antelope res!·
"The nlimbers we found In the
pies to the remote Oregon com· dent who became mayor after
report · were of such startling
mune . ·esta bllshed on a local the guru left town, said she had
ranch. ,,
, .
contrasi that It leaves at least an
not thought about the guru
appearan~ of Improprieties,"
He 'left the . United States In recently unt.ll a reporter called to
Ambs sal~.
NoVef11bel" 191!5 after pleading ask about'hls death.
\ '
A ·'senate .' i&gt;anel led by Sen; · .
~o.charges of Immigration
Robert C.qpp; R Lima, Is review·
ing a :JJ:opse · bill that would
require pl!llple who try to )obby
Jeglslaiera on behalf of clients to
file adil)t,\OIJ!\1 reports reflect)ng
their g l t - · on bills •lllld
on display through
dlsclo~htttbll!ions to and
expen~:. oJ officeholders and
February 26, 1990
candid ~ '. .
, ,
Fifth Floor, Aldan Ub111ry
Oh to~~~ ts are req \I Ired to
Ohio University ·
ltemtzEt'~x~rriUtures on any
public !!tfl.Cf!,&lt;if. more than $150,
but noite&gt;.'Ofo'.tite· Ohio lobbyists
un. ·Union" ·
ltemtztlll"'ili&amp;'r eports during the
Dr. Maier Fox. ·ltHOrch Coordinator
time Common Cause made Its
Thursday, January 25 UMW~ Washington, DC
·study.
,·: ...
(
Thl
liner''
The study was conducted from
. 7:30 p.m. . .
· January through June ot last
lrvina Hall, Room 194 Pref. a....w Lewi~ Dtpartlllfftt tf History .
Wtlt VIrginia llnirwlity ·
year.
Common Cause found that
1,8631obbylsts were registered In
Friday, January 26
Ohio and reported spending
7:30 p.m.
"llarlo• c-ty u.s.a."
~$171,940 during that time.
Irvin• Hall, Room 194
"Coal Mining W-"
Darryl Dever. president of the
Ohio Lobbying Association, said
his group has ·no problem with
Radio PrOfJrams
disclosure laws, J;lrovlded "we
don't get mired In unnecessar~
alld fugue
sUnday, January 2.1 Hornpipe
paperwork."
· .
· ~
.Cupp said the senate · panel .
and JIIIMICII'y 21
,,.,; ,,.. '""· •••rlllltlll of lht9Fy
would continue h,l(arlnas on the
WOUI-FM
IIIGIIIIdiC....

.

Mu:imum ~01it 199,999.99. Subaancill penalty for early -irhdnwal. Interest
paid to prku:ipal and mmpuundrd ~etlrly. lares rffeaive Jan. 19. 1990, and
, . . to ch~~tae ·withouc norke. Yield •umn rh• ~rared rate mnaim consrant
loft ND Jell' wirh no wirhdrtwall of interest or P,rincipel

The &amp;r~k That Makes Things H/1111""·

Affili~~ The Crncral8.1no:'!P""'ariun. Cincinn••· OhK1 · t.ft.mbn FDIC

WV 25550
,.

••

t

·I

I

110,000 .N.UM DEPOSIT ·

--

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

''

MAlVIN BOXDORFER

.,

Auount A•nt
450 Second Avenue, #1 03
Gallipolis, Oli. 45 631
. Bus. 614-441-11 04 .

Lottery numbers

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Gallipolis

1HE CEN1RAL TRUST COMPANY

••

Su~e 12, Valle Drive, Point Ple-.ant,

CALL

.

Teachers, administrators honored
by . .Key.Club ·I ntern'a.tional this .week

G'.U'f"lt
.. .

Ohio, $46; RltaA.Ehmal), 33, Rt.
Joe P. Bartee, 23, Rt. 3. '
2, Patriot; Edward Rothman, 36, Bidwell, . !allu_re to register; ,
South Charleston, W.Va.; Wll· Mark' A. Haner, 19, Gallipolis,
!lam L. Walker, Ga!Upolls; and · failure to display a front l!cense
Erie L. Meister, 18, Worthington, plate; Debra K. Adkins, 56, Rt. 4,
Ohio, all $43; Johnny Hogue, 54, Oak Hill, failure to dim head·
Moore, S.C .. and Duane Arney, lights; Jodi L. Burns, 20, Ga!Upo29 Hillsboro Ohio both $42; and lis, failure to stop within the
J;mes Trudell '37 Southern ·- assured clear distance, all $43
Pines, N.C.
'
'
bonds, and Jerry R. Brammer,
Forfeiting bonds on other traf· 56, Rt. 1. Bidwell, failure to wear
nc offenses were:
a seat belt.

REDUCED
.

Find out how much you could
save with new,Jower Allstate
Auto rates.

'-A.Jmm.On caus.e wants
.
I0..bby Iaws Stron ger
. '

POMEROY...:- 24 cases were · rabbits during a closed season;
d wednesday In Meigs Deborah L. Wolfe Halfhill, Ra·
processe
cine, $10 and costs, failure to
C?unty Court by Judge Patrick yield from stop sign.; Madeline
0 Brien.
Moore, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
'
Flnec:t were Jackie Parker, defective exhaust· James KeePomeroy, $300and costs,10days see, Middleport, S10 and costs,
In jail, 90day license suspension, following too closely; Kenneth R.
DWI ; $30 and costs, left of Leesburg, Albany,$15 and costs,
center; Brent Chapman, Middle- seat belt violation.
port, costs, 30 days In jail
Fined forspeedlngwereJames
suspended to two days, one year M. Warden, Vienna, W.Va., $20
probation, giving false lnforma· and costs; William R. Yost,
tlon; Marvin Randolph, Pome- All
Pa $20 · and costs·
roy, $50 and costs, six months In Jas':n~. weiis, Reedsville,
jail suspended to 20 day&amp;; res· and costs; Steven c. Hill, Pometralntng order Issued, one year
$ , d cos!S· William D.
probation,. domestic violence;
roy, 20 an
•
Tammy E Cunningham Letart
Katzlnskl, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
.,
·
' 1 b ' $25 and costs.
W.Va., $25 andcosts,.pass ng ad
Bo ds were forfeited by Altonz
checks; Paula Kemper, At~e~s.
HoU:es, Elizabeth,' N.J., $75;
$25 and costs, passing bad Jesse Peel, Raleigh, N.C., $60:
checks, VIcki Payne, Middle· Clifford McCarty, Athens, $60;
port, $25 and costs, restraining P
WI
Middleport $55·
1•
order Issued, passing bad
erry
se,
.
•. •
checks; $50 and costs, 10 days In James Cross, Dayton, $60, Da·
jail suspended to three days
nle! Young, Athens, $60, all for
314 SECOND AVE.
It
·'
speeding; and by Brian Hlchel,
GALLIPOLIS; OH.
...
as~l~h~el c. Davis, Middleport, Coolville, $40, for expired license
$25 and costs. no valid hunting plates.
license; Harold Scarberry, Mid· ~-----------...;_ _ _..;.,_:.....,_..7....;~-----------:---,
dlepQrt, $30 and costs, hunting ·
...

$23

lower auto rateS·!

P·";;.

disposed of in Municipal Court

GALLIPOLIS- Dennis Hunt,
31, Rt. 2, VInton, was fined $12
and costs Friday in GalU~~Dlls
Municipal Court on a charge or
failure to maintain control. A
charge or driving under the
Influence was dismissed against
Hunt.
Charges were · dismissed
against the following people:

percent Interest from Jan . 16,
1990.
Two divorce actions were
filed:
Shirley Runyon Is seeking a
divorce from Dan Runyon, Rt. 4
Gallipolis.
Bruz Junior Gibson, Gallipolis,
petitioned for a divorce from
Dorothy N. Gibson, Athens.

.Allstate announces

l::}
CLEVELAND. WPI) - FriMlicy .elderjy patients will not have to people from obtaining sight sav-. day's winning Ohio · Lottery
Abel, P·Athens, In ord~r to · make pay'!lents out of theJr own In~. care.
·
· ·vi e .. numb!"rs:
·
provldE1.1lY.e:-&lt;:aretoSoutheastern pockets.
. This Is.~ valuab 1e se~ ~ni
PICK·3
Ohio's neelly ,elderly residents, e. Abel said statistics !l)dlcate ~ld Abel, and 11 will cec: fo~
891.
has annoAJnced lh!! availability of , that 5~ percent ot all new cases of be :
,val~~bl~ r~s~~~ Ohio ...
PICK·4
the National EY.e Care Project's blindness occur yearly ln.people · re~h e~ ~I ~r 0 ~ur::~r . . . 8851
600 222
toiJ.free.nurnber.1·80Q.222·EYES. . over age 65. Half of these new
· e 0 • ee r m u'a1 m
10 7
7
Abel says this number can be · cases could be prevented through 393 , Is ?pen f ~ ble f~r ·Ohio
1 ~s av: a d older who
used by elderly persons to find a early detection and proper medl·
pflrtlclpatlng ophthl!lmologtst In cal treatment.
res en age 5 an
or • al
1 a
TheNatlonalEyeCareProject
are. American ~~~~~n~ot hae:
their area. Those ophthalmolo·
glstshavevolunteeredtoprovlde Is working to remove financial
resident~ a~~hwl
1st
eye care serVIces so that needy, obstacles that may prevent older
persona op a mo 10g ·

and the great weather all
combine to make Las Vegas
ont: of America's premier
vacation.dest~tions.
March 1-4, '1990

parents who already have ob· admission or scholarship to the
tal ned either an FAF or OIG are
university.
urged to bring It to the meeting,
Orebaugh and Cook say ."This
Cook said. ·
·
presentatiOn · should f!II!Ul a
If . parents have completed . needed area In · our guidance
their 1989 IRS forms, they Will he program and be Interesting and
assist In · actually figuring and
Informative for you as sudents
completing the financial aid and parents."
forms.
To help prepare adequately,
An admissions officers from Orebaugh said, those attending
theUnlversltyofRioGrandewlll should call the guidance office at .
be present to talk to students or 446-3250, or ask students to tell
parents lqterested spectncally In her how many \illll be attending.

Joe C. Stafford If, Ashland,
Ky .. $1,520.88 and 12.02 percent'
Interest from Jan. 16, 1990.
Mitchell Nichols, Huntington,
W.Va., and Cynnthll! Nichols,
Ironton, In the amount of
$12,346.50 and Interest at 12
percent from Jan. 9, 1990.
.
£ lean or and Dean Withrow,
Shade, $1,811.71 along with .12.28

ATuE'~§ ~ ,State Rep.

.

.Golden Buckeye applicatiOns

Sunday Tlm..Sentinei-Page-A-6

Pometot Middleport · Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Man cited for DUI, fleeing accident Central Trust seeks jud~ents ·

GALLIPOLIS - The Ga!Ua,
Tbe patrol cited Wile tor left ot
Metp Polt of !be State Hlabway cenler ..
Patrol Investigated five ace!·
One driver wu cited In a
dents Friday tDcludlng one two-car relll'fllld colll.llon at 5: 15
Injury-type acclclent and two p.m,. Friday on SR 281, ~~ ~
.car-deer accidents.
junction of Raccoon Roll · o
Fay C. MulhOUand, 37, Wilkes· one wu Injured.
•
ville, OhiO, ·was ,Injured In a
'l'he patrol said Mary E:
one-car accident at 10 a.m. Holmes, '44, Rt. 2, Galllpolla,
Friday on SR 124. 0.2 of a mUe drMng a 1985 Ford :EIIC:Ort,
east of SR. 325, near Langsville. stopped to turn onto Raccoon
Troopers said Mulholland was Rolld. Her car was hit tram
CHESHIRE -The Gallla·Melgs Community Action Agency '
a p&amp;sllnger In a car driven by behind by a 1978PontlacCatallna
will be distributing· · butter, peanut butter, and flour on '
Melissa M. Fife, 37, Lanpvllle, driven by Marjurle L. Hawley.
Tuesday, Jan. 23 to people holding Food Commodity Cards at '
Oblo. Fife lost control and her 39, Rt. 1, N'ortbup. Damap wu
· several locations In both counties. .
·
..
1986 Chevrole pickup truck went minor to the Eseort and nJode.r• :·:
In Meigs County, commodities will be dlstrlb\lted from 9:30
off
the road, · striking 11 tree. ate to the Pontiac.
,
a.m. until 12:30 p.m .. , or until the supply Is exhausted .,...
Damage
wai
mode~te
to
the
The
patrol
cited
Hawley
for
whichever comes first - at the Meigs County Fairgrounds,
1980
Chevrolt't
pickup
trucj(.
failure
to
stop
within
the,
assured
Racine American Legion, Tuppers Plains Fire Statton and
Pagevllle Town Hall.
.
Mulholland'sutfered minot vis· clear distance.
·
tble Injuries, the patrol reported,
Adeer was killed In an accident
Commodities will be distributed In Gallla County frorn •noon
and was taken to Veterans at 6:33a.m. Friday on SR 160, .7.5
until2 p.m. or unUI the supply Is exhausted- whichever comes
. Memorial Hospital.
mUes north or Gallipolis, . the
first - · at Woodland Centers, Bidwell Mount Carmel Church,
The patrol cited Fife for failure patrol report,ed. Troopers said
Guiding Hand School and the Crown City Fire Station.
to maintain control. . ·
the animal ran Into.the path ot a
People picking up donations for ot"bers must bring a signed
Another Me(Js County accl· 1978 Chevrolet plck,up ~ truck
note from that person along with that person's food commodity
dent occurred at 3:15 p.m. driven by Keith E. Brown, a2, Rt.
card.
•
Friday on SR 684, 1.3 miles soutli l, Bidwell. ·Damage was moder·
Individuals picking up .food commodities are also ;lsked to
bring paper bags.
·
,
or SR 681. No one was Injured.
ate. No one was Injured.
Troopers · said a 1989 GMC
The deer was lilt bUI'no! kllled
·
truck drl~en by James M. In another accident at 9:30a.m.,
'
Lackey, 44, Wellston, Ohio and.a Friday In Meigs CountY on•SR 7.•
1977 Chevrolet Statlonwagon 0.1 of a mile north of milepost 21.
driven by Louis L. Wise, 66, Troopers said the antmal wu hit
GALLIPOLIS - Bernadine Stelnebrunner, liaison aide for
Albany Ohio collided , on a by a 1988 Chevrolet driven by
Gallla County and the Golden Buckeye Card Program will be at
Johnson's Super Market, 735 Second Ave., from 11 a.m. to 2
curve. Damag~ was heavy to the Denise R. Johnston, 28, Tuppers
p.m., Tuesday, Jan. 23, to take appUcatlons for the Golden 1 stationwagon; moderate to the Plains, Ohio. Damage was mod·
truck.
erate. No one was Injured.
Buckeye Card and the federal Home Energy Assistance ·
Program (HEAP).
. .
Residents must be at least 60 years of age to quality for a
Golden Buckeye Card. They must bring proof of age such as a
driver's license or birth certiflcate. If totally disabled, persons
18 years of age can quality. They must bring proof of age and
disability.
.
· ·
HEAP Is designed to assist low·lncome families to meet the .
rising costs of winter home heating. A household may quality
for assistance If the total household Income falls within federal
guidelines. They must bring proof of Income, a utility heating
Llu Vegas!
bill and the Social Security numbers of everyone who lives In the
The big shows, the high stakes,
household.

Financial aid seminar set at Gallia Academy
GALLIPOLIS - A financial
aid program will be presented tor
students and parents of Gallla
Academy High School at 7 p.m.,
Monday, Jan. 22 ln . the school
library.
·
·
Guidance Counselors ·Sally K.
Orebaugh and Deanna W. Cook
said the meeting Is for all seniors,
regardless of which college or
university they plan to to attend.
Parents of juniors may also
attend. However, the financial

'.

I

5:00-6:00 p.m.

••

Hospital news . .
VMR
Friday admisSions - Thomas
Turner, Pomeroy; Edna HaniDJ, "
Tuppers Plains: Linda Persons,
Racine; Ola St. Clair, Pomeroy.
Friday dtscharaes - Doualas
Enoch, Anila · Hllldore, Myrtle
Pennybacker, Agnl!ll:lrown .

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A-6-Sunday Time. Sentinel .

Soviet troops

Barry to give up
District throne
WASHINGTON !UPl) - Embattled Washington Mayor
Marlon Barry will not seek a third term In ·office In face of
cocaine possession charges and an ongoing Investigation lllto
city affairs, a local television station reported Saturday.
The report came a day before Barry was supposed to
announce his candidacy for m11yor- a post he has held for the
past llyears- and a day after he was arraigned In u.S. District
Court on drug charges.
,
·Barry's spokeswoman, Lunna Rackley, could not confirm
the report that Barry was calling off his plans to seek a third
term In office. Ef.forts to reach the·mayor or other close al(ll!s
were not Immediately succesSful.
Quoting sources elose to the mayor, the local NBC affiliate
WRC·TV said Barry has concluded Ihat "the political damage' •
from his arrest Thursday .night Is "so bad that he cannot seek
reelection. "
.
·
·
The television' station quoted one source as saying, "One
moment he was leadlllg the parade, the next moment he was out
·
of lt."
There was no indication that Barry would resign his post
althmq;h late Friday he turned control of the city's dally
operations over to city administrator Carol Thompson.
The television station reported that the investigation Into
Barry's affairs was not limited to his actions Thursday night,
when he went to the posh Vista Hotel to meet a fonnermodelfor
a rendezvous that ended with his arrest on drug charges.
The station said investigators believe the mayor was Involved
in an 'informal network that granted lucrative city contracts In
exchange for drugs.
Barry, . meanwhile, kept a low profile Saturday, and
associates speculated he was In seclusion In his Washington,
D.C .. home, with his wife and 9-year-old son Christopher.
In a matter of 24 hours, Barry was arrested on rocalne
charges, underwent a battery of drug tests, was arraigned on a
· misdemeanor drug charge and - late Friday - was forced to
turn over control of the city's operations to Thompson.
"I presume he'll spend a lot of time with his family .•. I hope
he's thinking through what has happened ani! what he mustdo In
the interest of the city," said D.C. Council member Jim
Nathanson, who often has l;leen at odds with the mayor. ,
"He may be meeting Privately with members of the council,
one on one .. . the ones he's closest to," Nathanson said.
The Barry affair has been the hot topic of conversation in the
nation's capital since Thursday night, when news oft he mayor's
arrest first broke.
1
Some believe the mayor's arrest was rl!cially motivated
while others believe the arrest was the inevitable end to years of
speculation about Barry's extracurricular activities.
In, an editorial published Saturday, The Washington Post, the
city s largest newspaper, called for Barry's resignation saying,
"the mayor has lost his last claim to a position of leade~sbip. "
·'The city is In urgent need of a quality of leadership that he
can no longer provide, " said The Post, which endorsed Barry In
. 1978 in his first bid for mayor.

Why \Vas McMartin .
·molestation case
lost?
.
'

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - The
acquittal of the final two defendants In the McMartin Pre-School
molestation case left prosecutors
empty-handed following six years of pursuing what started as
the largest, most Infamous child
abuse case in U.S. history.
In the final analysis, jurors
reflected, prosecutors simply
could not prove their case.
A majority of the eight-man,
four-woman Superior Court jury
told reporters after Thursday's
verdicts that they believed some
of the children In the case may
have been molested.
But they S!lid the prosecution
could not pro,v e beyond a reas&lt;r
nable doubt that former teachers
Raymond Buckey, 31, and his
moth e r, Peggy McMartin
Buckey, 63, were tesponsible.
The verdicts climaxed the
nearly three· year, $15 million
trial, the longest, costliest crlmi·
nal proceeding in American legal
history.
"I believe that some ·of the
children may have been moles ted, but, proving it was kind of
shaky, '' juror Daryl Hutchins
said shortly after he and the 11
other juror's acquitted the Buck·
eys of 52 counts of child
molestation.
"I don't know If he (Ray
Buckey) committed· the crimes
or not, but I did not'see .enough
evidence to convince me he did,''
echoed juror Julie Peters.
Both Buckeys steadfastly
maintained their Innocence
throughout the case, which began in August 1983 with a single
abuse allegation.
Jurors deadlocked on one
count of conspiracy against both
Buckeys and 12
fOunts of
molestation against Ray Buckey.
Prosecutors will announce Jan.
31 whether they will re-try Ray
Buckey, but most ·Observers
belieYe they will not. His mother
will not be re· tried.
For prosecutors, the acquittals
marked an inglorious end to a
case that exploded Into the
natlona I consciousness In early
1984 with allegations that
hundreds of children had been
molested at the once-prestigious
VIrginia McMartin Pre-school in
the' affluent coastal community
of Manhattan Beach.
The largest sex-abuse case' In
A~nerlcan his tory involved seven
people, six of them women,
accused of 'forcing children to
engage In naked sex games, pose
for pornographic photographs
and submit to satanic rituals.
The case shriveled .In 19116wberi
five of the women and acores of
charges were dlsmt.ued for lack ·
of evidence.
The Bucke,ra were eventually
tried for molestln,e 11 of their
pupUs from 1978 until1983.
. Nine children testified. The
two remaining children were too
s~ to testify, but prosecutors
introduced other evidence ,of
-~--"'-

-·'

·-·

--

supposed abuse.
Many jurors said a strong
.factor In their decision to acquit
was the prosecution's use of
videotaped Interviews wllb social workers&gt;In whic)l the child·
ren identified the Buckeys as
their assailants.
· ·
The defense strongly criticize&lt;!
the tapes, saying the interview
techniques used by social
workers at the Children's Instl·
lute International in Los Angeles
were leading and overly
suggestive.
"The children were never
allowed to say In their own words
what happened to them," said
juror John Breese. "When the
Interviewers Interviewed the
,children, all the questions were
leading."

-· ·-------

~pen

••

Januari 21, 1880

Ponwoy-Midtleport-Galipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

~IVeP

fD'e in Baku

MOSCOW (UPI) - ' Soviet the Communist Party leader of others for their personal ambl· morning. But his reports could
troops smashed their way Satur· Azerbaijan Abdurakhman Ve- !Ions. their self·lnterests, and not be Independently confirmed.
day inio the capital of Baku and zlrov was dismissed Saturday, greed for pawer," Gorbacbev
Tass later quoled the Interior,
fired on armed nationalists and the Tass news agency said. . , said.
Ministry
as ~aylngthatl!lpeople,
'
rampaging street mobs In a night
"At this,hour I call on citizens Including six soldiers · and 45 :
of clashes that left at least 51
Tass said Vezlrov's duties of Azerbaijan and Armenia to civilians,. died In the battle of ·
people ·dead and 287 wounded, were taken up liy two members of show wisdom, common sense Baku, and that 36soldiersand251 ·
government officials said.
the republic's PoUtburo, A1.er·
.
and not give in , to provocative civilians were wounded.
,, Tass also reported more kll·
Soviet President Mikhail Gor· baljanl . prime ml!lister Ayaz slogans and actions," he said.
bacbev, looking somber · · and . Mutallbov and second secretary
Deputy Foreign Minister Alex· lings elsewhere In the republic, : ·
concerned, went on national Vlktor Polyanichko.
ander Bessmertnykh said at saying six people, Including a .
television to defend the use of
"The tragic· developments ' In least eight soldiers and 40 people poUce officer, a mother and ller ·
troops ~n the Asian republic and Baku and In the bordering . "from the ranks of the at · two children, died In a gun battle
to appeal for calm from both regions of Armenia and Azerbai- tacker:s" were .killed · and " a in the village of Sadarak Jlear the
Armenians '!nd Azerbaijanis. , jlm · and other Transcaucasian significant number" were Armenian border.
''It could not go on In this way areas bave laid bare to the fullest · wounded, His figures were later
' 'The situation is stilltebse but :
any longer," Gorbachev said. degree the price of an orgy of updated by Tass.
It
Is more or less.under control, '' :
·
·'The Soviet people demanded nationalism," he said.
A spokesman for the Azerbal· Bessmertnykb told reporters at a · .
· with rea,son that the leaclers()ip of
"It Is the duty o.f thestatetoput
jan!· miSsion in Moscow, Manas hastily arranged briefing in ·
the country take resolute mea· an end to lawlessness and Inhu- Agaev, said hundreds.were killed · Moscow. "There ts no continuous ·
sures to re-establish law and manity·, to resolutely halt ·c rimi· in the fighting between the Soviet fighting going on. There are nQ.
order and guarantee the security nal actions of the extremists who troops and armed Azerbaijanis, direct threats to government or
.of people' s lives."
·
have lost their humane charac· which 'started late Friday night Soviet bodies of power. "
In immectiate polltl~alfallout, ter, who are ready to sacrifice and continued into Saturday

Shuttle Columbia finishes .record. flight'·
..

I

EDWARDS AIR FORCE
With LDEF on board, Colum·
BASE, Calif. (UP!) - The
bia Upped the scales at 228,400
shuttle Columbia glided to a
pounds , eclipsing the previous
ghostly predawn landing Saturlanding weight record by 8,373
day, bringing an otherwise·
pounds, but Brandensteln had no
doomed science sate!Ute back to
problems piloting the spaceplane
Earth and successfully closing
to an exceptionally smooth
out a record 11-day rescue
landing.
mission.
,
The "LDEF" satellite Will
RuJllllng one 90·mlnute orbit
remain .In the ·shuttle's payload
late because of a minor glitch
bay until Columbia Is ferried
with. an onboard computer, Co·
back to the· Kennedy Space
lumbia swooped out of an ink·
Center late next week by a NASA
blac)c Mojave· Desert sky and
jumbo jet. Once on the ground in
floated to a smooth touchdown at
Florida, LDEF will be carefully
1:36 ,a.m. PST on concrete
removed and subjected to a
rl\llway 22 ai Edwards Air Force
thorough analysis to find out hoW
Base, one day after fog blocked a
a variety of high-tech' materials
landing attempt Frlda·y.
stood up to a 5 'h year sojourn in
"Ifs Miller time!" cheered
space.
astronaut Michael Baker from
'Along with rescuing LDEF,
mission control.
Brandensteln and company suc·
"Roger, Houston; It took a
cessfully launched a Navy Syn,
little while to get home today, but ·com communications satellite
we're happy to be back," rep Ued
Jan. 10 during the second day of
Columbia skipper Daniel
the marathon mission and car·
Brandensteln. ·
rled out a host of minor, In-cabin
It was the first night landing of
experiments .
the post-Challenger era - the
The third major goal of the
third in the program's history.· flight was to put Columbia and Its
closing out a 172-orbit, U·
crew through their paces over a
mllllon·mUe voyage that lasted
10-day mission as part of an
10 days, 21 hours and one minute,
"extended duration orbiter'' pro.
easily beating ihe previous shut·
gram to certify the space freigh·
tie endurance record by 13 hours
ter .for . flights lasting up to 16
and 14 minutes.
days. With the landing delay,
The astronauts, subjected to
engineers and do&lt;'tors will get
extensive post-landing medical
more data than expected.
checks, appeared none the worse
Br!!ndenstein, 47; co•pilot
for their 1~ days In weightless·
James Wetherbee, 37, Bonnie ,
ness, although they appeared to
Dunbar, 40, Marsha Ivins, 38, and
need more time than usual to get
G. David Low, 33, stayed on
their "land legs" back.
board Columbia more than two
"Welcome home," Baker told
hours after landing to~ medic,al
the crew as Columbia braked toa
checks and to readjustto gravity.
stop. "Outstanding job! You
Tbe astronau't s then were subshowed the shuttle at Its beSt
deploying and retrieving .sate!·
lites. Great way to start the
decade."
Hidden from · view inside Co·
lumbia's cargo bay was the
primary reason for the year's
first shuttle flight: the Long
DuratiOjl Exposure Facility, an
11-ton science satellite plucked
from a failing orbit and saved
from a fiery plunge back to Earth
In early March.

jected to more complete physical ·
exams before boarding two
NASA jets eight hours after
landing for flights tiack· to their
homes In Houston..
"One of the objectives of the
mission was to stay up there a
long time and get some more
data on how the human ,body
adapts to zero gravity and comes
back and readapts," Branden·
stein told well wishers before
!lepartlng for home. "So we've
been spendlgg alot of tjme 'wtth
the docs do(Jlg a lot of grunts and
groans and various other types of
post landing stuff."
.
Asked if any of the astronauts
got sick after landing, shuttle
chief William Lenoir said, "Not
that I know of." But he also said
"alter 10 days you have a
tendency to feel a little bit
woozier" than after shorter

missions,
Columbia appeared to sail
through its ninth mission In good
condition with only minor dam·
age to its fragile heat· shield tile
system.
"Our initial assessment Is the
vehicle is ill excellent condition,"
said Larry Ellis, In charge of
Columbia's ground processing.
.He said less \han 100 tile
showed nptlceable damage. - a
little les's than average - and
while Columbia's brakes heated
.up inore than usual to slow the
heavy shuttle down. no problems
were expected getting the ship
ready for Its next mission ..
The 30-foot·long LDEF sate!·
lite was launched In 1984 on what
was to have been a lO·month
flight to expose high-tech mate·
rials and other experiments to
the radiation.

,
·
:
:
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'

Committ~d ,t o Gallia co.-nty ·
.
Committed to Banking Convenience~
'

GIT
VICTORIAN , .
1583 Sq. Ft. Living Area

the PUrchase of a New Home by Jim Waher .

IIOMSURS,l
• WASHII I DIYU • lAS 01
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IUCTlK
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Choose koin our morelt1an 20 'moci·
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ground up. to almost any stago of com·
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one that is 90% complete. You tell us
wlleretollopthenllnishallorpartofthe
inside yourself to save money.
OVEII2llllladlla•21D 4111draama,

1, 212'n lltlla • One IIIII TwD

S11WJ llladlla

Jim Wllltr offtruvaryday LOW, LOW
prieta and LOW, LOW, LOW tO% A.~R.
mortgage llnlinelng with NO MONEY

·e

NO DOWII PAYMENT
NO "POINTS"
, NO CI.OSING COS1S to .lilted ,

·pltzz

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11

~~~:·payment

made at tho
time you agree to pure,... one or our
otandord model hornel, we'll aloo offer
anaddltlanalcrtdltoi1S%oltheamount
paid. lither - n payment or total J)&lt;'iet,
Homn. Inc. , 1989 CopvriQhllltricrly lf'lbrcec:l.

'•'.MJ:.r HOM.8

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The nelonlllrlllfDullllrOI~ lilrgll bi .. I'IDmll.

Oell'lbll , _ 1-100-MALnll (t•IOO 41Z.II37)
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u.s. At. 12

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Silver lrll\lge OHke

'

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Star Bank is committed to oanking convenience. ''l' '
Star Bank offers 3 convenient banking. locations in Gallia
County which enables us .to serve your financial needs
better. Whether you live in the downtown area, near
the Silver Bridge Plaza or Spring Valley, you're not far
from a Star Bank location.

-ntiUChuawell,lloorooverlllQ.

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purchase of items of permanent lm·

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&amp; larllra Colelnan
Court Street'.Offlce

3 Convenient Banking Locations

10% A.PA Fixed Rite MOl lglge

Our ofler tor your choice of Qne of
theaellne g~ta It lor a tlrriitod ~me, and
applies only to our standard lint of
hOmelocld f o r - conetructlon.
YouwlflrecoiWiyourchoictolglftawhan
yourhomegoesundorconotructiGn.,Jim
Walter Homes. Inc. must bo authorized
to begin eonotruc:tlon within eo dllya of
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'

·Worldwalk author is.Fo1;1nder's Day . speaker
By JULIE E. DDLON
. And Invited be was . People all
Tlmell-8eatlnel staff
over the world were taken with
POMEROY -Could you walk Newman, a tall. lanky , r~head,
around the world? For most o( with a smallAmericantlagonhis
us, probably not:
backpack. The book states that
If you would like to meet each family who Invited him to
someone who bas walked around stay In their homes wanted to be
the world , then the Pomeroy , a part of hls ·adventure.
Sesquicentennial Committee lias ,. Some of those stories included ,
a bomb scare, which, according
what you're looking for .
At the Founders Day Dinner, a to the book,becreatedhlmself,ln
part of Pomeroy's sesquicenten· Northern Ireland when he
nlal celebration, Steven New · parked his sack of dirty laundry
man. the author of ' 'Worlkwalk," with Its white plastic drawstring ·
will be the guest speaker.
outside a lord mayor's office.
Newman Is a young man from
He crossed the Pyrenees In a
Ohio and Is listed In the 1988 violent snowstorm, and the wind
Gulnness Book of World Records " ripped h lm from the
for )lis rerrta~kable feat of being mountainside. "
the first person olo walk around
He was pulled apart by a mob
the world.alone. '
of hustlers In Tangier and almost
Now by alone this means that killed by a runaway team of
~e had absolutely no !Jelp. He had
horses In Morocco.
no sponsorship, limited funds,
In Algeria he was treed for a
and his only luggage was a night .by long tusked boars, and
backpack which he named he was attacked by bull ants in
"Clinger."
.
the Australian outback.
His jaunt 11-round the world took
The book also states that
him four years to complete. He Newman was arrested 'tn, Alge·
saw five contl!lents and twenty ria, Yugoslavia, and Turkey
countries - a total of 15,000 from where he had to escape. H\'
, miles.
COSTUME COMMITTEE - The Ploaeer Costllme Coatest of
was caugh t on a stretch of empty
Pomeroy's Se8qalcentennW celebrall0 a will be held June I ,
According to his book, .he didn't raod in th e middle of the night tn·
Parilclpants may eater 'in 18 cate10rlea. C01tume committee
set out just to make a special , Thailand by two bandits with
members are, eeated from left, Sui&amp;D Clark and Joan WoHe.
record In history. He bad always machetes .
Stucllq are Rod Pullins an~S John Foeter. Tbe bat that Pullins 18
been Interested in the world and
Even wi th all the excitement,
holding belonged to 0.0. Mcintyre and the bats \Vom by the other
despite disaster headlines In the a(!venture, and danger In the
committee members are repUcas o! hats t,h at date from tbe 1800's . . · papers of other countries he had txio)&lt;, the dominant emotion one
been· convinced that ' there were feels while reading It is warmth.
good people throughout 11. He
According to Mary Powell;
.
.
.
wanted to find this out for · sesquicentennial chairman, It is
himself.
a book that tells oft lie outpouring
In his book, and during his of love and assistance shown to
appearance at the Founder's this lone American by people
Day Dinner, he will tell of his from Irish pub owners to Bud·
experiences with a detailed ac· dhist monks, people who wanted
count of his' intimate view of the to share In his dream.
world
Powell feels that because he'
In April of 1983, at the ag~ of28, walked far from the beaten path,
'
Newman left his home and . In parts of the world ,no tourist
headed for the East Coast where' sees, he was for many , the only
he flew to London and began his Amerlc~n they had ever met. She
travels.
also feels this made him a
By .M.m E. DILLoN
During his travels be didn't wonderful ambassador for the
TlmeA.SenUnel S&amp;aff
pay for lodging because he 'slept United States.
'" POMEROY - As a part- of Pomeroy's Sesquicentennial
·In fields, under bridges, In
In his book Newman states the
, "Celebration there Y{lll l!e a pioneer costume contest d,uring
abandoned buildings, or else In only thing' he ever asked of
, ljerll!lge Days Weedend In JUne. .
'
,
the hOmes of people who invited anyone was a drink of water . He
. The judging will take 111ace on June 9 at 6 p.m. This con_test
him.
was given money , food, shelter,
will ~esture c0 mpeutlon and prizes in ten catefWrles with three
groups. Everyone is Invited to beglil preparing 1800's style .
;, ~~~~~~:~ and
hair for participating in the contest; ,
w .Is open to
·
b(ly, itt!, man, womap,
wlllch
corillst of a '
By JlJLIE E. DILLON
•
• .:rtmett-Sentlnel Staff
and hair. unJUp
· POMEROY - The events for Pomeroy's Sesquicentennial:
ot Mama and
PoJneJ'!Jy.:•
'
the 1!10th birthday' of 'tbe indorporatlon of the village, have been
Each person can .enter
group one, two, and three
announced and committees have been formed to work on the
co,mp~:tltlon. There are no age or gender re_strictlons, but each
various aspects of the celebration.
person,can enter In only one of the age and gender catei(lrles in
Any individual or !P'oup Interested In working on any of the
group one.
,
'
committees is Invited and encourage&lt;) .to do so. The
Brothers of the brusll, will be judged on beard, moustache,
sesquicentennial committee meets on the third Tuesday of
hair, and headwear. Women's hat and balr judging will inClude
every morith, and Information on any of the committees may be
' hair, ribbons, clips, pins, and headwear.
obtained by calling Mary Powell, chairman, at 992·5005.
All other categories wi)l be J.udged on all hair and headwear
The committees and current members of those committees
lte!Di, all clothing and footwear, and "props." For example,
are as follows.
'
' broom, cane, rlfie, shepherd's crook, pitchfork. hoop, doll, ect.
Pomeroy Sesquicentennial Committee: Mary Powell; chair·
• , , Mama and Papa Pomeroy will be judged based on one man
man, ·Donna Jones, Emmogene ·Congo, Luia Hampton,
and one woman, both residents of Meigs County. Judging will be
Margaret Parker, Joyce Davis, Mary Gilmore. Roger Gilmore,
oq all of !he above Items, and the winners will reign ~ Mama
Mike Struble, Lee~a Murphey;RobertTitus, JohnFoster, Scott
· and Papa Pomeroy in heritage events for the remainder of the
Dillon, Julie Dillon, Sue Jean Raub, and Cindy Oliveri.
year. This' category is the only one wltli residency restrlctlon,s.
, ., ·Cookbook committee: Julie Dillon, chairman, ScQtt Dillon,
' First, second, third, ·and ,Jionorab)e mention prizes. wi.ll be
•and Mary Powell. This group is ,als() responsible for the Tasting
awarded in each of the ten categories.
Spree which will be held sometime in February or March. This
The judging criteria for every · category will include
Tasting Spree will feature recipes out of the sesquicente'nnlal
appearance, au tlt~ntlclty', and uniqueness. There is no deadline ·
cookbook, "Treasured Recipes of the Past" which will arrive In
for entering. Contestants will register, In costume, at 3 p.m,. on ,·
Febr,uary. Orders for the book may be placed throu~h The Daily
June9. ·,
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Sentinel or' the Pomeroy Chamber 'of Comme.rce.
~uslnesses, ·organlza!lons, and neighborhoods are enc9ur·
Advertising and promotion committee: Brian Reed. Lenny
aged to sponsor entries in the contest, tor special recognition.
Eliason, Julie Dillon, Dick Warner, Leesa Murphey, Cindy
For. Informations regar~ing this contest call 992·5005 dtirlng
• Oliveri, Jim HUh and Jim Huff.
-. •· '
· business bo)lrs.
·
oesigns, logo, and graphics 'committee: Joe Clarl&lt;, Sabra

Dust :of/ the duds,
the Heritage -Days
.costume contest ~ scheduled in June

and friendship.
Newman returned llome In
April of 1987. He feels tba.t he
returned. as a man who had
grown with the richness of his
experience, and with ample
proof of the goodness he had
sought.
Newman has a degree In
journalism from Oh lo Universit y
and bas written for newspapers
and magazines.
In 1987, be was given the
Governor's Award, Ollio's high·

est honor. He was brought up In
Bethel, the start of his trip.
He now l!ves In Ripley 'with his
wife, a schoolteacher he met
while lecturing about his'
worldwalk.
If all of this sounds lnte.restlng
to you, then you should attend the ·
Founder's Day Dinner or the
Pomeroy Sesquicentennial
which will be held · April 28, at
Pomeroy Elementary. Tickets
wtfl be sold for $10 per person or
Sl8 per couple.

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SPEAKER- Sleven M. N.ewman, author ol "Worldwalk," will
be the featured speaker allhe Pomeroy Founder's Day Dinner on
Apr1128.

Ash. and Roger Gilmore.
Actfvlties, sound, ancf lighting committee: Roger Gilmore,
Mike S\ruble, John Foster, Sue Jean Raub, Mary Powell, and
Mark Flultz.
,
Finance committee: Kenneth Utto Emmogene Congo, 11nd
Sherry Hart.
Fund raising committee: Ellel). Fultz, Joan Wolfe, Joann
Williams, Jim Hill, and Jim Huff.
HistoriCal committee: Margaret Parker,4o¥pe Douglas, and
Hugh Davis.
,
-Essay .committee: John Foster, Bill Buckley, and John
Costanzo. This event will be sponsored in conjuncllon with the
Meigs County Schools Superintendent's office . .
Costume committee: John Foster, Joan Wolfe, Susan Clark,
•and Rod Pullins .
Parades: Paul Gerard.
Founder's Day Dinner : The Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, .Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority. and the Shady River Shu!llers. The dinner
will be Aprll28 at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Tickets wm
.• be available for $10 per person and $18 per couple.
Senior citizens committee: Lula Hampton and Susan Oliver.
Flower show committee: The Winding Trails Garden Club,
Ada Lou Le.!"IS.
'Church committee: Sue' Jean Raub.
Hpme tours committee: Nancy Reed.
.
.
Historical exhibit committee: Brian Reed, Margaret Parker,
Scott Dillon, Julle Oilton, and Hughpavis .
, City Park committee: Tom Reed and Bill Young.

~ring

the entire trip they
weren't working.
got back, they worked where.' a~enture" led Price to phUosopeople are good and willing to
; •..
Tlmett-Sentlnell'taff
dldn t earn a dime, because all
In fact U was the brakes that ever they could, mostly for
phlze a little- "When·we go tout help when heip is needed."
.: POMEROY - ''It was the · they. could get for their labors got the group In trouble with the .farmers, in exchange for food
of the Immediate circle of home·
At almost 80 Price relishes hi
11)1venture of a lifetime, the thing were commo,ditles from
law at Grand Island, Neb.
'• and supplies,.· and despite being lqfluences' we found we had to trips down m'emory lane. An~
J; enjoyed more than anything farmers.
Seemstheywereunabletostop hungry at times, they' llj!Vf!r facedptosomereallties and we
that trip west ah those were the
I've ever done:"
"Alter all '!'e were In the great
at a light in front of the pollee resorted to anytbtni dlshone$t. .
were able to do that as ..;.y diary days!
' ' ·
• Long-time· Portland resident depresslo~ commented Price,
station, jumped a curb and took
Reflecting on that "real lllj!
out. We also found that
Gayle Price was reflecting on a who noted ' that "the hungriest off the top of a drinking fountain.
trip ·west"' which he and three I've ever been was on that trip.".
"Water shot 40 foot high and a
friends took in a used Model T
He said·that·hunger made him · distraught police captain took a
•ffitver" some 57 years ago.
· a pretty good psychologist and bucket and sat on It until the city .
: Flipping through t "scrlb)lle- that before he returned home he. could sllut off the main. We eve~
11,1 book'' which detailed the trials . was averaging 90 percent effl- made the newspaper headlines,
a!ld trjbulallol)s of the trip In the .clency on results when asking for quipped the Portland resident
s'""mer •of 1933, the retired,. food.
·
who was 22whenhemadethetrlp
school teacher smiled as he · ''Times were hard and every· but recalled It like yesterday
silently sklrnlned the words, thing and everybody reflected when he recounted the
c}luckled occasionally, and then ' It,'' commented PriCe, wbo des· experience.
's llaredsomeofthehuniorousand crlbed some of the state high· .. The drinking fountain cost the
not·so-humorous Incidents of ways as nothing more than sand four of them .a day on the
. t~at westward trip.
ruts because of the drought jailhouse steps and $23 dollars.
For hlrn It was a. trip down wlllch had swept the west.
Down to almost rock. bottom in
rl!emory lane.
The four spent their first night cash at the time, Price wired his
It was lri July, 1933, that Price In Chicago on a park bench on the folks who sent the money to.pay
.IJougbt his second-hand MOdel T shores of Lake Michigan and for the fountain repair.
1or $35 and with his three friends found that they wer.en't thl!' only
On the day.the four pulled out of
tpok off for the 'Century of ones wttbout a bed.
town after gettllli the old Model
Progress' world'.s fair and then
They were at Mt. Rushmore T's brakes repaired, the Gf.and
on Into the Great Plains States.
wben the work of carving the Island Independent wrote, slle
His companions were Hubert fact!. on It was . In prfllll'ettl, snorted out of tile city like a Rolls
• 'Pickle'' Price
Roland traveled Into tbe Black Hilla Royce- well almost like one, at
"Moose" Chatter~ •• aild Paul where cattle and honea roamed least·~ was mOVIng." ,
Capehart.
freely, .~ slept under the stars ,
Price s memolrel of the expe. "Moose" llad a rare sense of Ia the Bad 1 1nd1.
·
rlence Include the ellpplng from
hlnnor and was a taleDI!Id
T~ fell In With a caravan of the lndepende~t, a receipt from
cartoonist, Price said: 8lld 10 be l)'llfdel, made friends with a H.L. Moore, the chief ol poUce of
decorated the car with qldpl and butt:her knife petldler,
aot ~rand ~land, and a letter from
siOpJLS. "MBI')' Jane" wu let· Into trouble wltb the law In
Mooae written a week or two
tered eer011 tile l'adlat« aati"U J(ebrub. · .
elb!r tb~ retlll'llld !lome advlsNeeda BliCUit" on the beck end.
Thrllll of the trtp lnclucled a In&amp; Price that he lntenda to pay
Prlee recalla that when tliey "wild &amp;lid ICBI')'" ride dowll Bill his "alx berrll!l" on the fountain',
1e tllelr pocketa. Tiler
Ill: weeks Ieier
WU'l'WABD80!-IdulYIIIIG&amp;JiePrlceol
left home It wu with fill and Horn Mountain becaute after repair.
.
wltl!
lhree
ceall
btl
a
mlllltll!
.......
ww •a~
Porllull purcbued this ailed Model T1or sauu1
Wlien IJNoy returned aiX 'lieeks aettinl to the top they dlleovered
Tbe four never slept In a bed
memorlw.
lie 1111d thre, lrlenda lleltlled Welt wltlla &amp;.cal oiS'It
later It w11 with tbree cents.
the brakll on "Mary, ~ane" from the tinle th~ lett until they ,

Star ·aa11k, N.A., Tri-State

ret••••

Time &amp; Temperature: (Gallipolis) 446-STAR
.
446-BANK

Member FDIC

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·•nd

Hou&lt;1- Stt. a A.M.-6fM., s.,.. r PM.-ai'M.

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January 21, 1990

~

; ay CHARLENE HEFLICH

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B

'tvi"illion-dollar memories had for pennies and .Jots . of hard work.

3 Bedrooms • 2'f.t Baths

FIIIIIICitg

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Section

Pomeroy names celebration committees

••.A$500

This is normally our slow season. In
order to stimulate sales ..: In on:Jer'lb get
you to act MQW... Jim Walter Homes will
otter you a~ $500 housewarming
gift For a limited time only, when you
order your new home from us , you may
take your choice of one of the following:

-

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1t'ima- ientinoel

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�B-2-Sunclay Tma1 Sentinel

,.,_, t .

a.na.v 21. 1980

J.....,21.1990

Pomaioy-Midlleport-GaM1MJiie, Ohio Point ~ W. Ve.

. In the service.

Quillen appointed .ro·System board

'

~OMMITFEE - The Pomeroy
~esqulcentennlal cookbook should arrive In

February. T.be proofing copy was received Ibis

: POMEROY - Dora Wining,
Pomeroy's outpost sergeant for
the Salvation Army ,.was delighted wlih the reSponse to the
Army's annual
project of makIng Christmas
~lght lor the
needy and
Confident
the lives of many were touched In
special way.
: She appreciates all those who
g:ave so generously of their time
and money, as well as those who
l!rought In fQOd and toys. It takes
many people to carry out a
project where so many are

... By Charlene Hoeflich

according to friends here. Cards
may be sent to his home ':"here
he's recuperating from a broken
ankle. ·

Wanta new career? How ClboUt
becoming a nannr.
.
Thursday I received a call
from a former resident Inquiring
If we knew or anyone who might
Yep, it's Income tax time.
like to have a position with a
Again this year Income tax professional couple as nanny to
counseling will be available tor their one child. The Job sounded
senior citizens at the Senior terrific excellent living
Citizens Center, Tuesdays, Wed· quarters, benefits, educational
nesday, and Friday, 9 a .m . to opportunities. and a nice salary,
3: 30 p.m .
too.
Then Friday the mall brought a
Those coming In are asked to
bring along last year's return letter from a Company which
and the 1989 forms and mate· handles nanny positions In 130
rials. This service Is made . communities In the United States
possible through the Tax Aide offering positions with a unique
Program sponsored by the Amer· bonus - il tree trip to Europe.
lean Assocaiton of Retired
Seems there Is a real shortage
Persons.
·
of candidates for these "companIon" positions and the trip Is
And speaking of thE' Senior being used a recruitment techCitizens Center, plans are In full nique. The requirements are that
swing for a sesquicentennial you be over 18, have a high school
quilt shOw and sale to be held at diploma, some child care experience, and be.willing to go where
the Center on Aprll28 and 29.
Anyone with quilts or quilt tops the Jobs are.
For more detail you can write
which they would like to have
the
American Family COmpan· included should contact either
Ion.
Dept.
3, 102 Greenwich Ave ..
Allee Wolfe or Alice Wamsley at
Ct. or call 1-800-727Greenwich,
the Center. 992-2161. The show
will also Include quilting demon- 2437.
strations i!long with a display of
Have a nice week!
. quilt patterns.

a.

r~membered.

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· Residents of nursing homes In
Pomeroy . Middleport and Gallipolis, patients at Veterans Mem·
.orlal Hospital, those at the
County In!lrmary, along with
many needy families were
among the recipients of 378 gifts,
165 food baskets. and hundreds of
toys, both new and used.
Christmas is the big time for
h,elplng the needy 11t the Salva·
lion Arrpy, but as Mrs. Wining
says "the mil\lstry of helping
others continues throughout the
year."

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Kiwanis note 75 years of service

It's reunion time again!
The 1965 Pomeroy High School
graduating crass will have a
planning session next Sunday at
1: 30 In the Meigs Local Board of
Education office. That's on the
second floor of the old Pomeroy
fllgh School building .
· And, incidentally , Donna
Houck Carr, ~ne of the organlz·
ers promises that anyone who
' a.t tends . wtll be back home long
l:ielore Super Bowl time.

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past week and proofed by these committee
members from Left, Florence Smith, Rev. Laura
Leach, Sabra Ash, Scott Dlt.,n, and Eleanor
Smtih, (Tim~enHnet photo I

(:ommunity cor.~er...

GALLIPOLIS - TJ!.Is week, · son, Ken Amsbary, Ray Blowers,
l&lt;iwanls International marks Its Dick Brown, Gene Brown, Larry
75th anniversary. All8. 500 Kiwa- Boyer. Howard Brannon, Millard
nis clubs In the United States and Cassidy, .. Jay Cremeens, Bob
around the world have strived by Donnally, Albert Durose, J!&gt;f!
upholding the motto. • 'We Giles, Charles "Foxy" Grant,
Build," by sponsoring more than R~odonda Huggins, John Lester,
125,000 service projects eacl\ Rick Howell, James Marriner,
year.
Bob MacKenzie, Claude Miller,
Tom
Moulton, Wayne, Niday,
.
Members and officers are: Bill
Jack Rodgers, · Elton Savage.
Standish, president, Jay Moore,
vice president, Gall Belevllle, David Shaffer, Carroll Snowden,
·: Stephen (Pete) Simpson of 3708 second vice president, Bill John Taylor, Henry Thrapp,
$awmUI Meadow Ave., Dublin, Smeltzer , treasurer, RandyWey- Luther Tracy, Barbara Wallen
~3017. needs some cheering up , an t, secretary. Carolyn Ander- · and Pail! Woodyard.

Quirks in the news.___._ _ _ _. . .__.·. .
then rushing to victory, has been by 24 lengths but later was
charged with felony theft by disqualified because stewards
Presidential ear trouble
fraud and suspended for the and track officials suspected the
horse had not run the entire race.
ATLANTA (UPI) - Even the remainder of the track's seaspn.
Hearings Into the Incident
president of the United States has
Sylvester Carmouche, 31, was
car trouble.
taken Into custody Thursday by began last Friday and were
. .•
On the way'to the Omnl arena the State Police criminal loves, continuing.
Carmouche attorney Kent .•
Friday, President Bush trans- tlgatlve divisiOn and \aken to
!erred to a backup limousine on · · Lafayette. He was freed after Schaffer said the Jockey _lmme- .
dlately will appeal his
Interstate 75 when his armor- posting $1,500 b9nd.
Carmouche is accused of using suspension.
plated Cadillac overheated.
.
The presidential motorcade heavy fog to hide his horse. '
was · alone on the . multi-lane Landing Officer, near the top or
expreSsway wheii the car began the stretch .f or a mile-long race
.
to spew smoke.
Jan. 11. It Is believed the jockey
REEDSVILLE -The River"It overheated. These armor- remained at that point as eight
view
Garden Clpb will 'm eet .
plated vehicles are heavy," said other hOrses In the race circled
Thursday, 7:30p.m., at the home :
Housing Secretary Jack Kemp, the track, then joined the race as
ot Mary Grace Cowdery with I
who was riding with the pres!- the field approached the final
, Maxine Whitehead and Margaret .;
tum.
,
dent. "It's a problem."
Grossnickle as co-hostesses.
;
It only took a couple minutes
Landing Officer won the race
for Bush and his aides io jump
In to a backup car, another
Cadillac.
The disabled limousine was
left on the side of the highway and
Sense.~.
the president sped tiff to deliver
his address to a convention of the
Confidential Seritices:
National Association of Home
Builders.
Birth Control
The limos, adorned with AmerV. D. Screening
Ican and presidential flags, are
Cancer Screening
driven by Secret Service agents
Pregnancy
Testing,
with a seCond agent manning the
passenger slot.
•
. An aide said the limousine had
Sliding f•
ND - l'lfllllll III'Victs lllcaiM qf inability to pay.
suffered "an unexplained me. chanica! failure. It was accompanied by a diop In oil pressure.''
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO . .
The limousines are part or the
White House fleet ferried to the
site or presidential visits aboard
GAWPOLIS: .
POMEROY:
government aircraft .
&lt;
'
414 Second Au. 2nd Floor
236 l Main St., 2nd Floar
·
;
992-5912
446-0166
Jockey arrested In fraudulent
1:30 to 5:00 Manday-FridCiy
1:30 ta 5:00 MGnday-Fridny
ride
1:30
to 12 Saturdny
Cloncl
Thursday
VINTON, La. (UPI) - The
'
Cloud
Thursdny
phantom log jockey of the Delta
•
Downs race track, accused of
ALSO: JackHn, C._sapeakt, Athans, CNllkaflit, logon &amp;.McArthur
'
hiding his horse in a fog bank and
By United Press International

Family Plannh•g
It Makes

saa

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PLANNED PARENTH:OOD

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--life

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Quote of the day
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" 1 -Ill·

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'·"' '• NOTHING WORKS LIKE WEIGIIT WATCHERS!
-.nWATOIENinfJIMTICM.,'IIC.1a

au.l 800 582 1399

TOll

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By United Preu International
Health and Human Services
Secretary Lewis Sullivan, reactllli to the ·decision by R.J.
Reynolds Tobacco Co. to scrap
plans to test market In Philadelphia a new menthol cigarette,
Uptown, aimed a blacks:
•'It has been said that smoking
Is a matter of choice and Indeed It
Is, and the people of Phlladelpllta
h~tYe made their . choice and
· clearly have chOsen a life of good
health and productivity over one
of dl~e,ue and suffering. I would
hope that this 1111me choice Is
made by every American."

Come.to the Wdaht Watchers·m.eedna neuat ~
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541 StGond Ailllue
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Cost

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See Inside for Detatls

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992·6669
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Middleport, Ohio

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\

RIO' GRA1"0E - An orjginal
comedy-drama by Wellston
pJaywrlght Clifton Spires Jr. will
be ~&gt;erformed at the University of
Rio ~rande on Feb. 2-3 as part of
Its "World Premiere··· series.
"Four Dead, Four Hurt In
'Fwo-Vehicle Crash" will be
staged In the Christensen Thea·
tre of the Fine and Performing
Arts Center on those dates at 'S .
p.m. The play will be directed by "
Greg Mlller, Ph.D., coo!;dlnator
of the Fine and Performing Atts
Center.
· • The' play deals with the reactions of,a small town newspaper
s~ff to a fatal traffic accident •
Involving, among others, several
teenagers and the town's most
ppwerful.and malicious woman.
As a mystery surround log the
accident arises, the staff digs
deeper than usual. tumll)g up
some surprising answers while
confronting their own prejudices
.tqward some of thP in&lt;llvlduals
swept up in the Incident.
•' ·'The play Is alternately a
comiC look at the frustrations of
small town newspaper life and a
dead-serious drama about how
no one, even the supposedly
jllded newspaper reporters
themselves, is emotionally unaffected by a tragedy.' ~ explained

11\\1 \\llh.
.~.

JAMES E . SNYDER
POMEROY - Army PFC
James E. Snydf!r Jr .• son of
•James E. and Marie Snyder of
Route · _143 Pomeroy, a . 1985
graduate of Meigs High School
has t:ompleted basic training at
Fort
Be!lnlng in Virginia.
INVENTORY CHECK
Sales of the 1910 Blcentenn~J ·
During
the 13-week training
AnnlveriiU'y aoavenln have been &amp;Oinl well, accordlnrto ~hy
he
was taught riffle
cycle,
Bostic, ect-ebalrperiOB of the Blcenteanlal10uvenlr ud llceulag
traln41&amp;,
close
order drUI, dutle~
committee. Pictured taklag an Inventory of souvenirs; which
MARK A. MITCIII!LL
of
a
soldier,
first
aid, and general
Include plna, hats, cryalal and china platN Is Saundra Koby,
GALLIPOLIS- Navy Seaman
military
knowledge.
volunteer, Any bulliness or organization wlsblng to dqplay tile 18118
Recruit Mark A. Mitchell, son of
· Snyder was home with his wife,
Joro may do 10 by purcbaslng the Joro lor SUO or 7 percent of their
Norman L. and Bonnie L. MitJean, and daughter,
Norma
proftts. Contact CharUe or Kathy Bostic for more lnfonnatlon.
chell, Rt. 2, Ga!Upolls, has .Tabitha for two weeks In
( Tlmes~entlnel photo)
completed recruit training at ihe
December.
Recruit Training Command,
Snyder departed MlddlPport
·Great Lakes~ m. •
for his new assignment on Dec.19
During ~ltchell's eight-week
in Germany where he will be
training cycle, he studied genjoined by his wife and daughter Iii
eral military subjects deslgne.d a couple pf q~onths. All corres·
'•
to prepare him fqr further
By WU..LIAM C. TROTT
pondence can be sent to PFC
academic anl:l on-the- Job training , James E . Snyder Jr. 295-72-3360,
United Press lnternaill!nal
In' one of the Navy's 85 ~aslc
lACOCCA TRIE$ AGAIN: Chrysler Chalrma~:~ Lee Iacocca Is
In! Box 5723, APO, NY 09066.
fields.
planning to marry lor a third time. ''I'm rellllY excited," s~ld
Mitchell's studies Included seathe bride-to-be, California restaurateur Darrieu ll;arle, who Is
manship,
close order drill, naval
reported to be In her early 40s. "I hope he's as excited as I am."
CHARLES R. WITHERS Ill
hlstcry and first aid. Personnel
Iacocca, 65, presented Earle with ~n emerald-cut diamond ring
Army National Guard Private
who • complete this course of Charles R. Withers III has
Thursday and she says the wedding probably will be sometime
Instruction are eligible for three completed basic training at Fort
this fall. 1acoc~a·s first wife, Mary,died ln1983of complications
houyrs or college credit In Knox. Ky.
from diabetes after a 27-year marriage. Iacocca, 65, married
Physical Education and
former alrlln~ stewardess Peggy Johnson In 1986 but . they
During the training, students
Hyglence.
divorced alter only 19 months with her refusal to rpove from
received Instruction In drlll and
A 1987 graduate of Gallla ceremonies, weapons, map read·
New York to Detroit being one of the reasons for the stri1e.
Academy High School, Mitchell lng; tactics, military courtesy,
Earle's first marriage, which produced three children, ended In
Joined the Navy In July 1989.
· 1. divorce about five years ago. She apd ~aClOcca hilve been seeing
· mllltary Justice, first aid, and
each other for about a year.
·
Army history and traditions.
GEORGIA AND BROWN: The self-proclaimed "hardest· .
Withers Is the son of Charles R.
CHRISTOPHER S. SIMPSON
working man In show business" may have to walt a few more
and Brenda S. Withers of 147n
Christopl)er S. Simpson, son of
weeks before returrllng to the job market. Soul ·singer James
Jerry's Run Road, Applegrove,
Mrs. Crystal Simpson of SyraBrown, who's doing six years In a South Carolina prison over a
Wyo.
cuse, enUsted In the Alr Force,
1988 chase with pollee, qualifies for a work-release program
He Is a 1989 graduate of
according to MSGT Steven Elunder South Carolina law but he's also serving a concurrent
Hannan High School, Ashton,
frink, Air Force recruiter.
term from Georgia,' since the chase also went inio that state.
W.Va.
Athe.ns.
·
Because of Georgia regulations, BrownJhay 11ot be able to leave "
Upon successfully 'completing
. prison for a daytime jpb .untll sometime In March.,Brown has
the
Air Force's six-week basic
numerous Job offers. Including one from . a Columblj. trouey
. mUitary tnilnlng at Lackland Alr
firm that wants, him to work as a slngll)g conductor.
1· . • GIJft.'ABIBT'S SICK!' Fonrter 'L,rlll7d 'llilllrN l\lltar!-tf ·, Force· Base; neer. San . Antonio,
! · Allen Colltns, whose llle has been a serlesof •tragedl~ since the . Texas, Airman Simpson Is sche' band's 1977 plane crash, has been hospltaltzed lor 4 ~months 1 • duled to receive technical train1
. and Is In critical condition. His family has asked a Jacksonville,
ing In th.e administrative career·
field.
Fla .. hospital not to release Information about his' illness but two
Airman Simpson, a 1989 gradufriends Barry Harwood and Rick Rtilchard, iold the Florida
ate of Southern High School, \vlll
Times-Union that Collins has pneumonia ·and other resplraiory
, Infections. Collins was one of the survivors of the plane crash
be earning credits toward an
, associate degree In applied scienthat killed three me(Tlbers of Lynyrd Skynyrd and went on to
ces through the Community
found the Rosslngton-CoW118 Band . But In 1980 his wife died Of
pregnancy. compUcatlons and drinking problems led to the -.· College of the Alr Force while
permanent revocation of his _driver's license . ·. attending basic and technical
f
training schools.

'Four I)ead, Four
Hurt'
set
for
debut
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PROGRAM

-

!zed throughout the training - MA'n"BEW R. RICKARD
cycle.
" -·€LIFTON, W.VA. - Marine
A 1989 graduate of Wahanla
...~Pvt. Matthew R. Rickard, son of
High
School, Mason. be joined
Robert L . and Icy M. Rickard or
Clltlo,n, W.Va., bll8 ..completed the Marine Corps In July 1189.
recruit tralniDirat Marine Corps
, MARK E. NICELY
Recruit Depot, Parrts Island,
Pvt.
Mark E . Nicely has
S.C.
completed
training at tbe U.S. ·
During the 13-week training
Army
Infantry
School. Fort ·
cycle, Rickard was tau&amp;ht the
basics or battlefield survival. He Benning, Ga,
During the course, students
as lntroducted to the typical dally
routinf! that he will experience received training which qualified
during his enlistmentand studied · them as light-weapons infantry-·
the personal and pro~esslonal men and as Indirect-fire crewstandards traditionally exhibited men In a r lfle or mortar squad.
Instruction Included weapons
by Marines.
qualifications,
tactics. patrolHe participated In an active
ling,
land
min~
warfare. field ·
physical conditioning program
communications
and combat
and gained ·proficiency In a
operations
.
variety ot mUltary skills lnclud·
He is the son of Curtis G. and
lng first aid, rifle marksmanship
Willa
D. Nicely of Rural Route 1, .
and close order drlll. Teamwork
Chesapeake,
Ohio.
and self-discipline were emphas·

People in the:news

Garden clUb to rneet .:

'

:W!UdnlttbewondeffuiHyoocouldkeeprightonealing
-the foods you IM,IIvtng the same lileslyle. and still lose
:WIIIght FASl'l That's elGICIIy whal Weight Watchers
)mdlble new FAST &amp; Fl.fXIBLE Program is all about
:Go 10 your~ rss1aur1r1t. go to parties, tllljoy your
with la/nltf llld fr1ends While eating 1111118
-.....,.1111111piuatlll ~snaclc. Yes. it's all part of
·WtlgN Wlll:l..s naw fill &amp; FltDdble Program. It's the
-IIIWt l'fi'f to lou Wllighl iJid keep tt offI
..
:So. gelsmart...getlllarled...plnW8lghtWalclleBtodayl

GREGORY S. CO~
Army Sgt. Gregory S. Cole has
arrived for duty In West
Germany.
· Cole Is-a heavy wheel vehicle
mechanic with the SOlst Transportation Company.
IJe Is the son of Homer E . and
Nancy Cole of ·Tuppers Plains.
Ohio.
His wi1e, Krist!, is the daughter
of Bill and Jacque Gaddis of 49499
Route 681, ReedsvUle; Ohio.
The sergeant Is a 1982 graduate
of Eastern High School ,
Reedsville.
..

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•
_ PROOFING

'
RONALD
B. DENNY
Air Force Senior Airman Ronald B. Denny has arrived for
duty at Keesler Air Fprce Base,
Miss.
Denny is a cable and antenna
systems Installation maintenance specialist with the 1839th
Engln_e erlng Installation Group.
He Is the son of Earl and Betty ·
L. Denny of 738 S. Fourth· St. ,
Middleport, Ohio.
The airman Is a 1984 graduate
of Meigs High School, Pomeroy,
Ohio.

RACINE -MS. Joyce QuUieu, Director of Selective Service In proeram to prepare for . this
poulblllty'
Racllie, wu recently appointed . the iwne of the president.
Initial training consists or
QuUieD I.B the daughter elf
u a member of tbe Selective •
Service System's local board Raymond and Mary Lou Proffitt apprvx!mately 12 bours of In·
which serves Melp COunty .
of Racine. Sbe IS married to Ron stnletlon over a two-day pert~
TheSelecUveSI!rvlceSystem's QullleD and they have one son. focusing on an Intensive orientalocal boards, alihough In an Jason, who I.B a studeut at tion to the Selective Service
Inactive status, would be respcin- ~uthern High School. Sbe Is System, the major duties and
slble for di!Cidlng claims for employed as a secretary for responslbtutles of the local board
certain classifications. such as Ro-' Excavating CO. In Racine, memben, and the procedures to
.
conscientious obJection, hard- Is secretary-treuurer of the · be folloWed by the board.
In
addition
to
the
Initial
trainship, and r~~Jiglous mlni.Btry, Southern Athletic Boostrers, a
should. a draft be reinstituted by member of the Green Hills Ina. Quillen will receive training
I:.adles Golf Association In New In changes In the law, regulaCongress and the President·.
Board ' Chairman, Raymond Haven, W,.Va., and was a board tions, responsibilities and re·
Adams, welcomed Quillen tq the member of the Southeast Ohio Jated agency policies and
board and stated that she would Junior Miss Program for over 10 procedures.
There ·are now 1,366 men,
be Joining a select group of years.
.
dedicated, talented Individuals · Although there. Is no plan to realstered with Selective Service
who are donating valuable time draft qien Into· tbe military from Meigs County . These young
In service to both their country servlceatpresent,therelsaneed men· are tilifllllng the legal
and to the young men of Meigs to develop a readluess In the requirement to register with
COunty.
·
Selective Servlee System In cue Selective Service and are therEach Selective Service board a national emergency necessl· eby accepting an Important
member must be nominated for tales such action. ~ a member responsibility of living In this
theposltlonbythestategovernor of the board, Ms . Quillen will country.
prior to appointment by the begin a comprehensive training

Sunday TtmM-Santinei-Pagl B-3

Poowoy-Midclaport-GIIIipolil, Ohio-Point Pla81ant. W. Va.

•

Spln~s. 'who is editor of The ' 'well; anti Joe Wright, Crown
Sentry, Wellston's twice-weekly · City.
newspaper ,
Spires' play was chosen for
Casting for "Four Dead, Four production after it was read by
Hurt" was completed in De- the Play Reading Circle at Rio
cember and rehearsals are Grande, a group of campus and
underway .
.
community people who critique
In the cast are a number of otlglnal plays by Ohio authors.
campus and community per· Previous "world premieres"
formers. Including Carol Bow- staged at Rio Grande that were
ers, . Galllpolls; Gary Canter, .· chosen by this group Include
Wellston; Greg Dilley, Galllpo- ''The Original and Authentic 01'
lis; Bob Ervin, Jackson; Rick Country Store" by Robert SmldGates. McArthur; Meredith die of Pomeroy, and "Dr. Nash
Hawkins, Findlay; Terence Hop- and the ·.Resurrectionists" by
kins, Patriot; Judy Linder, Galli· William Hllsmlel'of Hamilton.
poUs; Aaron . Mays, Lucasyllle;
For ticket Information, contact
Minda Mlller; Rio Grande; Chad .the Fine and Performing Arts
Ousley, Wellston; Teresa Prov· Center at 245-5353, extension 364.
ens. Thurman; Mimi J .- Rentz, · The toll-free number In Ohio. is
Millersburg; Craig Smith, Bid· 1-800-282-7201.

Florida firms sued over
charitable solicitations
TOLEDO. Ohio (UPH - The
state attorney general claims
two rlorlda companies illegally
solicited donations In the name of
a charity without Its knowledge
and Is asking a court to bar the
firms from opera! lng In Ohio
again.
The ·attorney general's olflce
flied the suit against Events
International and ·Community
· Benefit Services In Lucas County
Common Pleas Coutt Friday. '
The lawsuit seeks between
,$250,000 and $800,000 In-tines an!!
restitution. Both companies operate from the 1111me address In
Sarasota, Fla.
Rick ElliS, a spokesman for ·
Attorney General Anthony Celebrezze, llllld the state began
lnvestlptlng the companies last
summer following complaints by
the Toledo offtce of the Better
BwliMII Bureau aout
child-·
ren's circus that Events International was stagjng.
. TelepiiOne solicitors c_lalmed
the money would benefit the
Special Otymplcl, but Ellis 111114

a

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•••

Events lnternatlonal did not
have permission to use the
charily's name. The suit claims
none of the proceeds from the
October 1989 cl~us went to the
Special Olympics.
Last March Events International began using the name
Community Benefit Service,
which holds the same address In
Sarasota, to sell tickets for a
cii'Cus and· Ice show.
Shows were also held In FindJay. Sprlnafleld and Cleveland
Heights. But the suit claims the
companlel failed to obtain permission from the charitable .
aroupa ' before aollcltln&amp;: for the

shows.

Officials for the Saraaota companieS could not be reached tor
comment. .
Richard Eppltaill, director of
the Toledo BetW Business Bu-.
reau office, aald he waa pleased ·
that the state ·bad beC:oP!e Involved. Eppa1eln said Eventl
lnternatloul had been a source •
or several complalntl.

"I like Overbrook Center because it is like living in
your own home. I think that the employees ~re more patient and klnd th anywhere I have ever laved before.
'They do a very,gOaa job with the Laundry and th~ meals
are delici~us and well balanced. I greatly enJOY the
games and activities; when you want .to go out somewhere, you do not have to write a book to leave!"

-~;dd_.p~~
.

'

MYRTLE JONES, RESIDENf

Co1ne ·Visit, And Experie~e F'irst

Harid 'The ·Overbrook· Difference.

...

,..,........ (•tlfle4

••cal•, Meclcare,
Worktn (OII90111Gtlotl
PriYatiiiiMMCI Propw111,
AIWtiAI
Sllf .,., II(IIIIIIItI.

.•

(614) 992-6472
333 PAGE STilET

lUDDLIPOI'I, OliO

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�· Peg a B-~Sunday limes-Sentinel

---Weddings---

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t

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THOMAS and TAMM.J:., (WELLS) COMER

Comer-Wells ·

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. -The
New Haven United Metbadlat
Church was the 1ettlq al the
double ring wedding cer emoey of
Kelly Sue Javlns and Jeffrey
Scott Roush on Dec. 2, 19111, with
the Rev. Bill Skeen offlclaling.
The bride ts the daughter of
Jerry and Delma Arnold, New
Haven, W.Va. The groom Is the
son of Ernie jllld Mary Roush and
the late David L. Roush, New
Haven, W.Va.
Music wa~ prqylded by Debby
Tygrett on the planp with Mark
ThomPson and Alma Dayo as
soloists.
Given In marffage by her
·parents and escorted to the altar
by her father, the bride wore a
gown of white satin scJttme,
embroidery, and re-embroldered
lace dropped basque waist I»
dice, scalloped v-neck and back
With ·long slim sleeves with self
covered buttons at wrist. The
bodice and sleeves were ac· .
cented with schtme embroidery
and heavy hand Qeadfng.
The fingertip veil was covered
with pearls and fell .from a
headband covered In white flow·
ers, and Insets of netting aild
dropped pearls.
The bride' s necklace was a
choker of three rows of gradu·
a ted pearls with insets of crystal,
gold and pearls . The bride also
wore her mother's first weddltlg
ring.
She carried a cascade of red
roses, stephilnotls, and grape
, vine Ivy. Ther11 were Insets of
dropped pearls'{ netting and
black and white ribbon. ·
The maid of honor was Kendra ·
Bass of South Bloomtleld. She ·
wore a tea · length gown with
black velvet bodice, rounded
neck, and pouffed point sleeves.

gowns were fashioned like the
maid of honor' s. The hal~ 'pelces
were Ivory bows .accented with
lace. They each carried a long
stem peacilrose. '
Jodi Stewart was best man.
Groomsmen were Bill Tawney,
Bre nt Skidmore, both cousins of
the groom.
Brit tan! Mersla, and Teresa
Wells , sister or the bride were
flower girls. They wore matching
teal tea-length satin gowns .
Tyler Mersla and T.J . Cox,
SUNDAY
. brother of the bride were ring
GALLIPOLIS
- The Gallta
bearers.
County Historical Society will
Nick Merslli pulled the aisle meet Sunday Jan. 2i at St.
runner.
Peter's Episcopal Church. The
.. The mother of the bride wore a
board meets at 1 p.m. and the
peach tea-length taffeta dress meeting open to the ·publiC starts
with peach la&lt;;e overlay. Mother at 2:30 p.m. The January proof the groom wore a tea-length gram will be presented by Donna
.
ivory sil k dress.
Sanders, Columbus Southern
Musi~ was provided by pianist
Power Company. on· '·Aspects of
Ann Moody and soloist William
Lighting In Historic America.:'
Tawney accompanist Pat Wasch
and soloist Allen Saunders.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY · Guests were registered by
Grubb Family Singers at CoUege
Michelle Skidmore, cousin of the
Hlll Church. Sunday, 7: 30p.m.
groom.
A reception was hosted by the
CROWN CITY - James Sims
bride's. parents in the church
and family wm sing at Crown
fellowship ha:I. The bride' s table
City Methodist Church, Sunday, 7
featured a three-tierd fountain
p.m.
cake accented with four heart
shaped cakes. The cake was
MIDDLEPORT- The·Fellow·
topped with a mlniture IJrldeand ship Singers will be at the
groom In a heart accented with Middleport Christian Union on
pearls and lace peach rose buds. Sunday . Services begin at 7:30
The groom's parents hosted a
p.m.
rehearsal dinner in the church
fellowship hall.
APPLE GROVE- Rev. David
The cake, mints and ali' flowers Harris will hold services Sunday
CROWN CITY ....:. Mercerville were done by the bride's mother.
at the Apple Grove Methodist
Baptist Church as the setting of
Th e co uple resides In
Church at the 10 a.m. service.
the double- ring ·wedding cer· . Galllpolls.
Rev. Carl Hicks Invites the
many of Christina Caldwell and
'
'
Randall James on Nov. 18, 1989
with · the Rev . Bruce Unroe
offlclatlng.
The bride Is the daughter of.
Mervin Dale and Nancy Cald·
well. Crown City. The groom Is
the son of Roger and Rose James,
Galllpolls .
Music was provided by Donna
Sanders and plano by Midge
Harris. The rec~tlon w~s held at
Hannan Trace Elementary fol·
lowi ng the wedding.
The bride ·wore a full-length
' -·.
'
satin gown. The gown featured a
hand-beaded bodice with match·
ing long sleeves. Underneath was
satin skirting draping In the back
to form a semt-cathedlal train.
The edge of the skirt was
scalloped with lace and had
sequins. The 1bride's veil was a
beaded floral tiara.
Her bouquet was a fan of
car nal Ions and roses highlighted ·
by royal blue and baby blue
ribbons. white lace and pearls.
' The maid of honor was Melinda
Caldwell. sis ter of the bride.
....._..
Bridesmaids were Sonya Caid·
well, Crown City; Missy Strow,
RANDALL and cHRISTINA &lt;CALDWELL&gt; JAMES
Crow n City, and Patricia Nibert,
cousin of the bride, Crown City.
i'
The flower girl was Brandy
Kasee, cousin of the bride,
Gallipolis. Donna VanScoy and
Nickole Swain registered the
gues·ts.
The attendants wore a tea·
length royal blue dresses made of
satin and sequins. They carried
hurrlcan lanterns surrounded by
•
carnations· and roses.
The groom wore a wh lte tuxedo
with • a royal blue tie and
cummerbund. The ushers wore
gray tuxedoes with royal blue
ties and cummerbunds.
•
Best man was Daniel Bays.
Groomsmen were ·Kelth Camp,,
bell, Mlkey Northup, and Lee
Mooney . Ushers were Bill Little
Discotmts do not apply to special orders/
and Randy Canaday.
The rlngbearer was Nicholas
Lynch, nephew of the groom.
The bride's a senior at Hannan
Trace High School.
The groom is a graduate of
'314 SECOND AVE.
Hannan Trace High :;chool and !s .
GALliPOLIS, OH.
employed by J -Tec Inc., Green·
.!
ville, Ohio. .

CENTENARY - On Nov. 17,
1989 Tan:tmle J . Wells and
ThOmas M. Comer were united In
marr ia ge at Centenary United
MethOdist Church.
·
The Rev. Orville White off!·
elated the double- ring wedding.
The bride Is the daughter of
Mrs. Darlene Cox of Crown City
a nd Rober tWellsofNorthup. The
groom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
ThOmas Comer of Gallipolis.
Given in marriage by her
parents., a nd escorted to the altar
by her father, the bride wore a
gown of Ivory satin, venice lace
appliques a nd pear ls, fitted bo·
dice with sheer lil~ sion net yoke
ahd sweetheartneckline. The full
satin skirt extended to a chapel
length train and· she wore a a
Juliet cap with pearls and
flowers . and a fingertip-length
vei l.
.She wore pearl earrings given
by her grandmother.
.She carried a cascade of Ivy,
ivory and peach roses , accented
with tea l peach ribbon, lace and
strands .of pearls.
Kar l Tawney was maid of
honor. She wore a peacl\ tea·
.length satin gown and a ha ir
wreath acce&gt;nted with baby's
breath and peach rose buds. She
carried one peach and one Ivory
long stem rose. Bridesm aids
were Kim Green and Tam!
Halley sis te r of the groom. Their

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W.Va. Leadership Academy set

She carried a crystal candlestick
With a lar&amp;e ICUiptured candle
cupcowred by redl'tlleS, stepba·
noUs, and black and red satin
bows and streamers.
The brldelnl81d8 were Anafe
Dayo, New Haven, W.Va.; Kim
Hypes, Nitro, W.Va.; and Patti
Starling, Toledo.
The flower girls were, Heather
Roush. niece of the groom, who
carried a basket of white lace and
red satin bows and streamers tun
of dried rOBe petals that were a
gift from the groom to !be bride
on Valentine's Day. Jessica
Roush, · ntece of the groom,
carried an arm .bouquet of red
roses, each decorated with red
·and white ribbons that were
presented by the bride and
groom to their mothers and
grandmothers during the cerem·
ony. Leaha Wlnnoves, niece or
the bride, c arriecl the brides
throw away bouquet which was.a
m(nlature of.the brl(les bouquet.
David L. Roush Jr .• brother of
the .groom, New ifaveJ!, W.Va ..
served as the best man; and
ushers were Butch Arnold,
brother of the bride. &amp;.rbours·
ville, W.Va., Tom Lewis, Colum·
bus, and Curtis Morris, New
Haven, W.Va.
The bride's mother wore a
street length red dress with a tun
skirt which was covered with a .
red lace overlay. She wore a
corsage ot red roses.
The groom's mother wore and
street length gown of royal and
white with a printed-bodice. She
wore. a corsage of red roses .
A reception was· held at the.
American Legion Hall In New
Haven, W.Va.
·
The guests were registered by
Angle Parker, cousin of the
bride, Columbus; and Amy

Sale At The Alcove
Entire Book Inventory
REDUCED20%

Large ·Selection of Books
· REDUCED .50%

THE ALCOVE.
'"

publiC, A covered dish dinner will
follow the servicf.
MONDAY
HARTFORD _:.The CalHa Ma·
son Meigs Crusade for Christ will
be holding a revival at the
Hartford Christian Union Church
in Hartford, W.Va. through Sun·
day with services at 7 p .m.
·nightly. There will be special
singers and speakers nightly.
Rev. Clyde V. Henderson, cru·
sade president. Invites the
public.
TUESDAY

GALLIPOLIS - Galllpolls Ro·
tary · meets Tue&gt;sday, 6 p.m.,
Down Under.
·
GALLIPOLIS - GAHS 1975
reunion planning continues Tues·
day, 7:30 p.m., Grace United
Methodist Chunoh.

----

CHESHIRE - Cheshire Chapter OES meets Tuesday, 7:30
p.m.
KYGER - Cheshire Township
trustees meet Tuesday, 5:30p.m.
In the township building In
Kyger.
,.

S.by Rulli eaady ban wwallllllld • ·
The Leadertlllp Academy, leaderllhlp
we Invite you
JACKSON'S MILL, W.Va. ror
PraldrDI ar- Cia; ''It!'•
The Le_llderllhlp Academy, Jo- which Is part of the -WVU to parttctpete In the Leadership d8uptlr,ILDIII. wbodled lnCI"!Jy.
.
cated at historic Jackaon's Mill Extenalon Service, Is dedicated Academy.
lbe . . of 12. The IUIIJ Clilaplllp
For more Information call
Conference Center near We~~ ton, to bulldln&amp; leaderllhlp lkllll for
prelldeilt, • loalt1me ,....... al Jirla.
11 gearing up for it's Sprtna 1990 bulinels, industry and/or com- . (304.) 269 6681 or write: Leaderdeilt
Cleveland. decided to 11-. ·
Scbedule to begin February 7, munlty leaclera. The Academy 11 shlp Academy , WVU Central
Baby Ruth by namial the candy bar ~·
1990 with the seminar " Bulldln&amp; In the business of training Wet1t Dtstrlcl Office, Jackson's Mlll ' after ber, explains The ltldl' florid .
Protesslonallsm." This will be . Vlralnln leaders with expert Conference Center, Weston,
Almanac.
·
the first of 18 seminars scheduled vlsllilll faculty 1~ a historic Welt , W.Va., 26452.
from February through May . Virginia ~etdng. The P:Uia · .
These seminars wlll Include gained will provide high return• ~:Y£,
topics such as Conflict Manage: on lnves.t ment, both personalty t':'i.,
ment, Publications To Help You and professionally. ~lect from
~!"''----------Sell. Body Language, -·T eam · the scheduled seminars or 1\ave
Bulldtng, ~oblem Solving and us design a program Just for you
'
muchmore.
·
an(! your .group. Whatever your
.

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By BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY - ,Three Meigs
the
Countlans will be
members

~under

wood" . to be
presented at the
Center for Fine
and Performing
Arts at the Unl·
verslty of . Rio
Grande on Jan. 26 and 27.
They are Mike Struble and the
Struble children, Evan and Erin.
Mike Is havlng a ball partie!· .
LISA GIBSON, PAUL B. LASSETER
patlng In the play which Is under
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the direction of Roger Jerome of
England. There are some 60 plus
roles In ihe play with 16 cast
VINTON - Mr. a nd Mrs. Grande Holzer co,ne.g e ·of ,members so each will be ~laying
Adrian F . Gibson, · Vinton, an· Nurslng1
. several parts. Curtain time Is 8
nounce tlie e ngagement and
. He Is a graduate of Kyger p.n\. ·both nights.
approaching marriage of their Creek Hfgh School and Is an '
daughter Lisa Gibson to Paul B. e mployee of Ohio Power ComStudents of the Pomeroy EleLasseter son of Mr. and Mrs. pany, Gavin Plant. ·
mentary School are In there
The wedding will take place pitching to collect Kroger Store
Barna H. Lassete r of Gallipolis.
Saturday Feb. 17 at 6:30p.m. at sales receipts which can be
She Is a graduate of Gallia
the Chapel Hill Church of Christ . traded for computers. It takes a
Academy High School and at·
tend s the University of Rio
heap of the sales slips, of course,
to secure even one computer so
your help would be appreciated.
Instead of tossing your sales sUps
Into
file 13, perhaps, you could
GALLIPOLIS - Final plans
have been completed.
send
them.along to the Pomeroy
f~r the Wedding of l&lt;itnberly
The open-church wedding will Elementary School. With lots of
Polcyn, daughter of Mr . and Mrs. be Saturday, Jan. 27 at 1:30 p.m.
participants, getting the reRobert Polcyn, Gallipolis, to
at St. Peter's Episcopal Church .
quired
amount of receipt slips
Mark '!'homas, son of Mr. and
A reception will follow ln the shouldn't be too much of a bassel.
Mrs. Roger Thomas, Patriot, church parish hall.
. The Home Health Nursing
Service at Veterans Memorial
Hospital racked up a record
14,741 home visits In 1989 .
The . service Is headed by
Elizabeth Smith, RN, and has ·
grown In leaps and bounds since
Its foundation In 19TI.
The
department provides nursing
services for people Ul In their
homes.
The emphasis these
days, of course, Is to keep ~pie
In their own homes for as long as
possible so the service Is bound to
keep on -growing.. The recent
elder care grant - a sizeable
amount - to counties In our area
Will also play a role In the
continuous growth of the hospital's home nursing service.

JEFFREY and KELLY (JAVINS) ROl)SH
Browning, Barboursville.
The bride · graduated from
Marshall . University with a
B.B.A. In Industrial Accounting.
She Is employed with Ladde&gt;r
· Man, Inc. In Columbus.
The groom Is a graduate of
Hocking T~hnlcal College with
an AAS. lri Electron!Cal Eng!·
neerlng and an A.A.S. in Broadcast Engineering. He Is em·
ployed With .Cellular One of Ohio
In Columbus.
The couple resides at 5073
South Walnut No. 95 In Ashville.

POMEROY -The Ohlo Etw
'Phi Chatper, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, wlll meet Tuesday. 7
p.m. , In the social room 'Of the
Grace Eplsco.pal· Church In
pomeroy.
· ·.

WEDNESDAY
RACINE -The Southern Boos· .
ters will meet Wednesday at 7
p.m. at the high school. All
parents are urged to attend.

Gibson-Lasseter

~

SUNSTAR SERIES GARDEIPRACTotS
Arcilablt in 14·16·11 &amp; 20 H.P.

•Hon.,..,

l!ooo!t• IDI
liD
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•He •••• lnfinih tpllld chtict

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shift-••• '"...

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anii.W• Alll.....,ntt41 to feltw • • • ~

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•hll , . . . toM ti_. tun., two transmiltM!n ,,.... ,. . . •tl4iffwenti_. lock hr
INhltioMI traction
•~..a ttick cvslioiiiCI nat
• .,. llldelt4 ......
I
-sit
ott.tarrunts for clependtlblt

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f·•"•

piWH ll"'fttt.

e£1Ktri PTO E•. . . III'UI dis•to~• attDCh·
mertts wilh flip of a switch
•Hr•a.ti' lift roitt •d lower _.,CM:~mlftts
olfortlooo~
·

90 Models Now In Stock

TIUCIIlOAD SALE Of FACTOIY
· DIIIOS liiD CLOSIOUIS

REED'S COUNTRY STORE

4TH &amp; Main, Reedsville, Oh.
.
PH 378·6125 .

VCR-TV
Repoir Center

------'

. FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
.'

Gold star
Samsung
Soundesign
Zenith

RIO GRANDE - Open Gate
Garden Club meets Tuesday,
7: 30 p.m., home of Karen Thomas. Bring arrangement from
scavenger hunt.

A.n_d a reminder - the Meigs
County Chapter of the American
Cancer Soclel)' will be staging a
'wine and cheese tasting eyents
from 2 t9 6 p.m. today ai the·
Senior Citizens Center In Pomeroy.' Dress Is Informal and there
; Is no admission charge although
· dopatlons will be accepted.

Emerson

Shin tom
Multi Tec:h
Scott

Linda Well of Chester Is
j attempting to help a couple with
· ·; ,?fif'li seven children locate housing.
· '"""''"' The house needed must be

WE REPAIR ALL MAKES

.

HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

391 WEST MAIN STREET

Schrnidlin-Weeks
\.
'

'

Employees under the direction of Dr. Ric.._ard Patterson, Medical
Director of the Emergency Fscility, oper11~ the department 24 hours a
day, seven days a week. at yo\lr Hometown Hospital. The Emergency Department has physicians on duty around the.clock ready to meet all situations which arise. ,·
Employees effectively keep the Urgent Care Center open from
9 a.m. to 9 p.m., seven days a week, 62 weeks !I year to aerve you.

.

LAKEVILLE. Pa . - Albert
arid Marjorie Schmidlin of Lake·
ville, Pennsylvania have an·
nounced the engagement or their
daughter, Linda Ruth , to John
Thomas Weeks, son of John and
Barbara Weeks, The Plains, Ohio
and grandson of Frances St;hOU,
Pomeroy.
'
Miss Schmidlin Is a graduate of
Wallenpaupacl( Afea · Jflgh

.01 d you realize that the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society, one of the oldestcontlnu·
ous historical organizations in
Ohio. was organized In 1876.
It wasn't until 1971 that the
society finally establlsbed a
museum at 144 Butternut Ave. In
Pomeroy. And that's been an
asset for all or us. The museum Is
open to the public from 1 to 4: 30
p.m., Tuesday through Saturday
each week.
Two part-time
employees and a volunteer dl·
rerctor make lip the staff. .

Junior HIJb and HIJh School. Hawkins spoke on areas of aelf
esteem and how alcohol and drup affect someone' slUe. Wlnnin1
prizes durtn&amp; a trivial purault rame were, from left, Ivan Fuke,
residential treatment program In Athens, who belped arranre lor
the B'peaker, Burt Kennedy, Chris !!Iotta, Mindy Hawkins, Mike
Cleland, Jim Carpenter, and Jason Nottingham.

WHEN IT COMES TO FEELING
BEnER ....
THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE HOME

"Home Health Care"
PRODUCTS
•Hospital Bedt
•Oxygen Concentrators
•Bathroom Safe tv Devices lll'tobuliun
•Lift Chail'$
· •Portable Qxy~n
•Tens Units
•Alternating Pressure
•WhHiehairs (Standard &amp;
Pad
Custom)
•Walkers
-Glucose Monitors
•Respiratory Therapy
•Commodes
Disposables
•IPPB Units
•Home BP Monitors

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BENEFITS

•Continuo! pttlent revll•• ond •No
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ropt8Cement

back\lp equipment.

to lhe patient.
' •No COlt
"

t'r

,..pn.ory

P-•·

thefopy -

OOulcit rMponl!l to • - potient oet·
, Upa, pickupa or ,.placementa.

•S.ntklve know*laeoble pttlent •One phone call cen cover ell your
nNda.
COntlctl.

Continuity of Care, Inc.
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES
- GREG UYLOR.OWJID
(614) 992·2310
507 Mullllrry Heights, Pomaroy, OH. 45769

,--------

2 MONTHS UNUMITED
TANNING&amp;
TONING
'

992-2104

'.

ISign Up Far loth &amp; Savtl

sso

OFFill GOOO THAU FEa. 1

RENAISSANCE
TANNING &amp; TONING
Rodn~y Pike Between
Rt. 35 &amp; 588

245-9516

"

..

.. ..

..

' .,
~.

.

Holiday Tuxedo Special

MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1990
TANNING &amp; TONING SPECIALS

'30

"

_,

RE-OPENING

Remember ;- Our Emergency Facility and Urgent .Care Center are
cloH by llt your Hometown .,_oapital and employees...and ready and
V!filllng to ~· you.

115 East Memorial DriYI, Pomeroy, Ohio

FREE! .
I

. l MONTH l,JNI,JMITED
TANNING
OR TONING

VETERANS
MEMORIAL HOS.PITAL ·

F10M A SBECY 010• OF SiiOES, IUY 'M fliiS1 PAil
AT RIGULAI PRICE &amp; GO
tHE !ND PAIR OF EQUAL OR
LESSII YAWL,

The Perfect Gift For 1bday
•. , A n-ea.stire Forever
Enesco introduces·a nostalgic new
· porcelain bisque collection of fine
figurines and accessories based on
the work of beloved English artist
Mabel Lucie Attwell!
Exquisitely sculpted ... hand·
painted ... these poignant toddlers
come to life and capture your
imagination with their charm .. .
· tenderness ... and wisdom!

F11 Tnt
•

'

,,,,,, OUIIIII
W• offer complete
tuxedo rental 78~ to
help you 19«* your belt
on that 'paolal day•
PIJ(ID FIOM
·~

on

~

Newspaper reporters and edl·
tots are sometimes Incredible
people. For example, Jobp Gil·
more, who resided 'in Meigs
County many years and worked
In the newspaper field, wrote his
own obituary before his death in
Florida late last week. Now If
John could do that - you
certainly can keep smiling.

2FOR }sALE .

School. Hawley, Pa., and King's
College, Wilkes-Barre. Pa. She Is
manager of media services for
PPO&amp;S, an advertising agency In
Harrisburg. Pa.
Weeks Is a graduate ()f Gallla
Academy, and Ohio University,
Athens. He Is an Account Execu·
tlve for Whlteco Metroeom, Lemoyne, Pa.
A May 26 wedding planned.

Uke ~ne big happy family, the employees not only take great personal prlda in their work, but they are aware of the special talents of each .
co-wodler eo that those talents can be used moat effectively in all situationa. In addition, these employees become involved In training programs in order to consistently upg111de their knowledge and skills.

),:

--------

Aaron, son of Evelyn Cleland
Bl'ady of Galllpolls - and many
of you, I'm sure remember
Evelyn - · arrived home on
holiday break from college and
.had With him a compact disk of
the late AI Jolson to add to lils
e&gt;xtenslve collection. Aaron, I
understand, Is not only a·1an of
the golden oldies but Is a
versatile, talented performer why not- we know hla mother Is.
Evelyn was delighted with the
recording because It brought
back a flood of memorieS of her
appearances In the Big Bend
Minstrel Association presenta·.
tlons years ago when m!l'IY of the
Jofson songs were used by the
end ~ of the ' traditional
minstrel~ circle. · Of course, It
pleases.mewhenany!ormercast
member can look back to past ·
years and have great memories.
At any rate, Evelyn said the
recording really set her off- shfl
told Aaron all about the minstrel
shows of the past- tl\e end men,
the mammies, the minstrel clr·
cles and what-have-you. ·Into the
bargain, · Evelyn sent along a
copy of the tape for us to enJoy and we do. Thank you, Evelyn.

GUEST SPEAKER - The Melp Local Dru1 .Free Gr1111t
recently apoaaored MIDdy Hawklni u a gaest speaker at Melp

POMEROY, OHIO

In 1990, when personal pride in.a job well done is reportedly on the
down swing, employees at Veterans Memorial Hospital take a·great deal
of old"fashione,d pride in the operation of the efficient, successful Emergency Departme~t and Urgent Care Center.

(ij,j

relative large With three or fou r
bedrooms and tbe rent must be
less than $350 a month. Unleu
suitable housing Is located by
Feb. 1, the family will have to go
Into a homeless shelter, Linda
reports. ·
Anyone with a posalble solution
to the problem should (:all Linda
at 985-3505. She Is at home on
Thursdays and anytime after
5:30 p.m. on other week days.
Linda will be bappy to provide a
reference for the family.

LINDA SCHMIDLIN, JOHN T. WEEKS

992-3524

OLD FASHIONED PRIDE

Ill,. ;1181

•

All in the. family...

Legion 161 meets Tuesday, 7:30
p.m .

72

\~~~

Beat of the Bend

---oVJNTON - VInton American

GALLIPOLIS - Overeaters
Anonymous meets Tuesday, 7
p.m . , Wiseman Insurance
Agency .

Blby lbll~

.neecss,

G&gt;mmunity calendar·

]ames-Caldwell

Sundlw Tmaa Sentinel-PagE B-&amp;

Pomiroy-Mkkhpart-G Mt: a's, Ohio Point PIP- 111. W.Va.

·Roush-]avins
•

..

.-...v 21. 1890

January 21. 1880

Pomeroy-Midclaport-Gallipolll, Ohio Point Plus nt. W.Va.

FRUTH
PHARMACY. ~
·JCT, RT. 35 4 160
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

$2 99S

EYENIIGS '11 I P.M.
111!029

" lt'l Tbe TbotiCbt
Tbat CouDta"

�•

21.1880

-----Annwena~s~--

•

anniversary observed
GALLIPOLIS - John Lee and
Verble WIIUgh celebrated their
40th 81111.1verury Jan. 17.
Tbey were united In marrlqe
at Robert Queen's bome . In
Gallipolis.
IHelping them celebrate were

Boosters to meet
RACINE- The Southern Boos'
ters will m~ at 7 p.m. on

J'"'-v 21. 1990

their cnlldren and family; Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Sanders and
family, Mike and Karren Wallah, ,
and faa'llly, and Unda W~Jh.
·The couple llu niDe Jl'BII,dclllldreD and realde oa Swan ·
CreekRoad . . •
I &gt;

·Now yo~ know

I

.
'

87 Valtatl .................. :.
The bot test maJor city on ·
Earth In 8anJkok. 'nmlland, ~·

Wednesday
tile high
schooL All .~w=he;re;~t:he~~~==aa~n=ual
parentl are at
urged
to attend.
Is 83.1

'

JOHN LEE and VERBlE WAUGH

MR. and MRS, KENNETH H. ADAMS

Adams' golden anniversary set
BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs.
K~nnElth H. Adams (Ginny
Sprague) of Rt. 2, Bidwell will be
celebrating their 50th wedillng
anniversary on January 27.
· The couple was married on
Jan. 27,1940 by the Justice of the
Peace Fred H. Hanson In
GalUpoUs.
Mr. Adams retired from the
GalUpoUs Developmental Center
and Is the son of the late Amos
and Nola Mae Adams.
' Mrs. Adams Is employed as a
senior assistant at Woodland
Centers, Inc. She Is the daughter

bread, gingerbread with topping.
GALLIPOLIS- Activities and
Wednesday - Ham &amp; beans,
menus for the week of Jan. 22-26,
with
onions, .Y.! boiled egg, tossed
of the late Chauncey and Flor- ·at the Senior Citizens Center 220
salad,
cornbread, pears In Ume
ence Sprague.
Jackson Pike, will be as follows:
jel)o.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Adams are the
Monday - Shuffleboard,
· Thursday - Meat loaf, ~!Jt·
parents of five children: 'James 10: 30; Chorus, 1 p.m.
K. Adams of Bidwell, Jack L. and
Tuesday - STOP /physical fit. tered potatoes, ·spln.,ch, bread,
Stephen E. Adams of VInton, ness, 10:30 a.m.; Matinee Video, frUit cup.
Friday - Tuna noodle casseVicki S. Myers of Gall!polls, and 12:30 p.m.; Pretty Punch, 1:30
role,
green beans, scalloped
the late Nola F. Brammer of p.m.
potatoes,
apple ring,
Bidwell. They have twelve
Wednesday - Armchair bread, jellospiced
cubes.
grandchildren.
Travel (Germany) 10:45 a.m.;
Make reservations by calling
There will be an open reception . Chair Weaving, 10 a.m.
446-7000
before 9 a.m. the day you
hosted by their children at the
Thursday - Bible Study, 10: 45
wish
to
attend.
GalUa County Senior Citizens a.m.; Herbs (Culinary Cooking)
Center on Jan. 27 !rom 2 to4'p.m .. 1:30 p,m.
They request all gifts be
Friday - Art Class, 10-noon;
omitted.
Craft Class, 1-3 p.m. .
Menus consist of:
Monday - Beef bar BQ;.trench
fries, cole slaw; chocolate
pudding.
Tuesday -Oven fried chicken,
whipped potatoes, broccoli,

·DRIVERS EDUCAnON
CLASSES

Ag singles
meeting slated
POMEROY - The annual
meeting of the Ohio Chapter of
Singles In Agriculture will be
held at the Plain City Barn on
, Feb. 3 at 7 p.m.
The meeting wiil be followed
by rOund and square dancing.
The Ohio Chapter Is open to
agriculture singles throughout
the state, and Is affiliated with .
the National Organization that
provides the same opportunities
on a national level.
The Plain City Dance Barn Is
located north of Plain City on St .
, CUNNINGHAM ANNlVERSARY - Robert and S,haron
Rt.42andthecostofadmlsslonls
· Cunntnrham, Syracuse, celebrated their 25th wedding annlver$5. Further Information may be
: : sary on Jan.16 with a family gathering a&amp; their home. Mr. and Mrs.
obtained from Karen Shell, 17
: Cunningham have two children, Shawn Cunningham and Rob · Hlllandale Drive, Newark, 43055.
: Cunningham, both of Syracuse.

-Wedding
policy
.

'

: The Sunday Times-Sentinel
:regards weddings of Gallla,
-Meigs and Mason counjles as
'news and Is happy to publish
wedding stories and photographs
without charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeliness. The ,newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published In the Sunday
edition, the wedding must hllve
taken place within 60 days prior
to the publication.
All material for Along the
River must be 'reclf'(ed by the
editorial department by Thurs·
day, 4 p.m., prior to the date of
publication.
Photographs of either the bride
or the btide and groom may be
published with wedding stories,
If desired. Photographs may be
either .black and white or goOd
quality color, blllfold size or
larger.
Poor quality photographs will ·
not be accepted. Generally, snap·
shots or Instant-developing photos are not of acceptable quality.
Questions may be .directed to
the editorial department !rom ·1
to·5 p.m. Monday through Friday
at (614) 446-2342.

Starting February 5th
GAWPOliS &amp; POMEROY

•

GALLIPOLIS, OH.
10-1 MON.-FRI.; 10·6 SAT.
NO LAYAWAYS • 446-9522
AU SALES FINALI

.

,

446-SAMS
MON. Mil Fill. 9 TO 9 P.M.
OHIO IIVEI PLAZA
SAT. 9 TO 6 P.M.
-BITWHN IW &amp; BIG lEAl
SUNDAI'
12 TO S P.M.
GAWPOUS, OHIO

• 446-0699
'

•

'

Committed .to Caring .
U.S. Health Corporation of
Southern Ohio's nursing mission iS
to provide our customers, the
patients and 'f.unilies of this
community with the high~ Ievcl of
quality care that our hands, .beans
·.;md minds can give.
We offer nurses the opportunity ito
practice their skills in a wide ~ety '
of areas. These include:
• Critical Care
• Emergency Services

• Surgical Services
•Home Care
• Pediatrics
• Matemal/Cif!d Care
e Medical/Surgicai
• Hospice
• Hemodialysis
• Psychiatric Services
• Women's Health
• Rehabilitation

HOMECARE.MEDI~AL
SUPPLY INC.

EQUIPMENT. SALES. RENTALS. REPAIRS
"Complete Medical Equ/pmlnt For HofJII Usl"

'

• HOME OXYGEN
• WHEELCHAIRS
•1iOSPITAI. 8£05

• SHOWER STOOLS

-·-·

w~ offer R.N .'s 10 and U hOw- shift
options on many specialty units,
competitive salaries, excellent health and
dental plan, eight weeks indivKtnaliud
orientation, tuition assistance, credit
union 'tax-dcfcm:d annunity, dietary and
pharmacy discounts, and more. ·
'
Send rcsum~ to Karen Walburn, U.S.
Health Corporation of Southern Ohio,
1248 Kinncys Lane, Port11t1011th, Ohio
45662, or call (614) 353-2131, ext. 6f17.

• ADULT DIAPERS
• LIFT CiWRS
• UNOERPAOS (CHUXS) • WALKERS
• BEDSIDE COMMODES • OIABETlC SUPPLIES

• PATIENT LIFTS.

• OSTOMY

·we BILL MEDICARE I OTHER INSURANCE F9R YOU
I! '
1

I

r

1

•

'
1

'! ' , , • I •• • ) )

446-7283
'•

..

...By James Sandt

onv

Medical Society provides
project funds ·
,

'

GALLIPOLIS:._ The Galllpolis Wandel and his younger brother.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallja
This year's awMd Is given In
Dlilly Tribune Is seeking old Earl, who was himself some kind . County Medical Society recently special recognition of the 1989-90
plct ures of area activities of pitcher.
. contributed to the Ga!Upolls City theme of the History Day Prothroughout the
Edith Gilkey also brought In a · Scl)ools' History Day projeet, · gram: Science .and TechnoloiY
past 200 years.
picture of tbeGilkeys' Queen Bee : noting th!! outstanding·. local, tn History. A project by ninth
Acceptable phoHotel and Restaurant, all · .re·
history of medicine.
grade · students Sam 'HamUton
tos will tie pubsplendent In red · and white
John Lester, History DayAdv!· . and Eric Hoffman, whlcll won
llshed 1!1 next
awnings over the windows. The
sor for grades 6-12, accepted the fifth place In 1989 ruitlonal
fall's blcenten·
Queen Bee was situated at
award from Dr. AllceGrlcoskl, a c01;npetltlon, chrOniCled the hlanial edition.
Second Avenue and Olive Street.
surgeon at Holzer Clinic and· ~·- . ~ory .and medical accomplish·
Photos may
The restaurant and bar was on
president of t)le Ga!Ua Couoty_ ' ments of Dr. Charles E. Holzer
• Include Individuals of historical the ground floor . There used to be
Medical Society.
· " ~ &amp;-. In Gal lis County.
'
· ln'.terest, Gallipolis . businesses,
a grocery store on the first floor.
According to Grlcoskt,
Tlie 'students presented their
musical or athletic events. or Olive Street side. The building
Medical Society has always b . ~ winning project, ,complete with
social ·events down through the was destroyed by fire nearly two
Interested In the coloi'fu~ history slide JlbOW, at the October meet·
years. Each piloto owner will decades ago.
of medicine In this countv.
lng of the Medical Society.
receive .c redit If his or het photo
Odds and .Ends - Paid Bob · The doctors a're dedicated to
According to Lester, GaJUpoUs
ts·published.
Hennessy the dollar I owed him. I preserving this chapter of his• City School students ha"e place&lt;!
,Photos that are brought In or lost on the Brown's -Broncos tory . and encourage youth -t6 . In National History Day three
mailed in for the 200th anniver- game. Going to try lt'again. I took · become familiar with the -herlt· : cOnsecutive years. Gallipolis has
sary edition will be returned as the Broncos for next Sunday's age. The Society Is partt ·cularl~ · also had more winners at the
soon as' they are processed.
Super BOwl clash with the49ers._J s-upportive of activities' In lite-. · state level than any o,ther Ohio
Margaret Wolfe, a retired haven't been a .Frisco fan since field Of science and technology .
_teacher, brought In some oldies Stanford's great Frankie Albert
·· ·
0
tlleotherdayltlcludlngoneo!the quarterbacked tile West Coast
city par.k. Tbere'sthlsblgcannon franchise and the Browns' Lou ·
,
1
In' J he photo. The park use&lt;! to
'Tile Toe" Groza defeated San
have four .cannons, one on e.ach Francisco 30-27 on a last minute
•
~
cofner of the'pork. And, there's a field goal.
low wooden bench around the
I still owe Johnny Ecker a
·
,
.
~· ·
. ·
.
park.
·
·
· . . buc]f. And , I will pay him. Got the
:u•s aot the line lillie's there ~ dpllar put away. llost that !&gt;uck
· ·
·
now. This was the original ~nell to Ecker on 'the Ohio " State·
around the P.• rk. Built whim? f Michigan · game. I think II w~s · •
,
.
.
..
remember !"ell (So does _Junior · OSU·Mlchlgan. At least, I had
,
Wilson) when I was small and Ohio State. You·know the rest.
RIO GRANDE_ "Under Milk extremely good at storytelling."
played on the cann9n In the park.
Turned on the tube the other Wood," the lamed Dylan Thomas
With a cast of campus and
For one thing, If you were real night and got a pleasant su-rprise. Play about a day In the life of a community performers. Jerome
small you could get a better view There was Johnny Withers •. who Welsh filllng·village to be staged said Instruction In the Welsh
of things when you climbed on top used to· uve In Po!Qt Pleasant, at the University of Rio Grande · accent and pronunciation would
of it.
and was a member of the Po in~ . JaQ. 26-27 ,Is a work of •'universal be essential. To that end, he
. The park bench Is go tie; so are Pleasant Volunteer Fire Depar\: -significance' • In the estimation of visited a Welsh friend, educator
the cannons. \he present bench men(. John's an Investigator the man who Is directing the John Longhurst, In Great Britain
around the park was financed by with the Athens County Shenfrs production.
during the Christmas hoUday.
the late Maybelle Mcintyre, Department .
Roger Jerome, the '. V,tslll'!g Longhurst recorded all the roles
widow of 0.0. , Mcintyre. The .
John was commenting Qn the · theatre professional from Lon- In "Under Milk Wood" on' tape.
cannons were scrapped along incident Jan. 13 In Athens w)\ere doll who directed "An Appalach·
Upon Ills return to Rio Grande,
with everY else In the 1940s, 24-year-old Keith R. HamppJr.. lan.. Cilrlstmas" at Rio Grande Jeromeprovldedallofhls15cast
during World War 11.
, · of ,Circleville. died of Injuries last ·month. said "Under Mil~ ' members (who Will play three to
. There's one thing that hasn t suffered In a fight in Iron~ of the wo~·· ts 1very slmUar to Thorn· ' lqur roles a_plece) with copies of
changed about the park. The ·Greenery Bar at Athens.
ton ·Wilder's American classic the tape to help authendcate
bickering aboui what goes on or
W~ heard this week from my
"Our Town" In terms·of'l!ealing their accents. He Is receiving
goes In the ',. park. The park wife's sister, Mary, Lou Miller with peo~Je and thelr.eileryday · assistance In this area fr(liJI
commisslonandcltycommlsslon Tenney i formerly of Rio exlst)!nce. .·
Elizabeth Davis of Oak Hlll, I!
can riot agree with the veterans Grande) and her 1\usband, Dr. ·
Jerome said the play's , 63 Welsh native.
· organizations about what goes In Richard Tenney , who Is winding characters ••are a panthfOn· of
"Since we are doing an ethnic
the park. That 's not unusual. I up job In Western Samoa. He's Thomas' perception of humanity ,PlaY, It Is a technical ~~blem to
can remember_when a member a~soc1ated with Cornell Unlver_the good, the bad and the ugly , get the ,. accent right, · Jerome
of the park board or commission s1ty, Ithaca, N. Y · whe~e the . viewed wlih respect and llffec- said.
(present company exfepted), Tenneys live, whe.n they re no) tlon Religion love good fellow·
The emphasiS on . how the
. whichever It was called at that traversing the globe. They're sHip music ;nd n~ture are .the · pllly's dialogue Is spoken stems
tlJlle, called the . pblice and scheduled to leav~ W~stern Sa· . life 'tn'f)uences which a~e .Pies· from the ~~ct th,at - Tilomas;wh~
chased u·s kids out.Of the park, moa about the middle of April : ented In rich poetical dramatic finished. Under Milk Wood
when we were play(ng stick ball.. and wUI travel extensively beprose. ·
'
shortly 1 • before . his death In
And. If you think I'm kidding, fore returning home sometime In
"All of the people In tile play . November 1953, originally wrote
there are Uylng· witnesses. I June. They've been In Western are Inhabitants of a fiCtional It for BBC Radio u "a play f!Jr
wasn't alorie'i)l the park;
Samoa for nearly three years.
town. In w_hlch he grew up," voices." It received _Its first
In her letter, Mary Lou said Jerome added. •'It's 1 rasclnat- 'PrOduction on· radio Ill January
And SlMJaklng o_l baseball.
they couldn't get a 'hold of Bill
lib 1954, with Richard Burton as the
1
emember the 1950 Gallipolis Gray. It wasn't our Ohio Valley
lng, compelling portra 1 w
FlrstVolce.Burtonstarredlatlie
Queen Bees? Edith Gilkey,
Bank's Bill Gray. This Bill ~~J~~~::.\. significance to 1973 film versloll with Elizabeth
widow of Dale Gilkey. owner and Gray's a ham radio operator In
Jerome said he also chose the Taylor alfd
O'Toofe.
manager of the Bees, .brought in Ithaca. N.Y ., and they were
play because he "realized that·,
Slncelt'wuwrlttenforanother
a team picture the other day· trying to radio a message to him. this area Is the center of Welsh medium, "Under Milk Wood"
along with a . picture of t~e . They always cotuact him by
Immigration to the :united has always presented a chat.
manager himself, Dale Gilkey • radio once a week to keep up with States . !love the Welsh In,terms lenge for the lt&amp;Je, one Jerome
along the ba~ipf' giving a. ~lgn.
the times. Dick Tenney's a ham
of their passion for life, their said he will approach by opening
The mldcentury team piCture
1radio operator that Is l and
h r
h
··
ot the Ohio Valley Association talks to people all over the world. .singing and t e act t ey are
(See PLAY, PAle B8).'
baseball champions Include John He'even talked with somebody In
Lee. Leo-Valentine, Allio Jeffers, Me!:;s County, one time, but I
Gilkey , Carl Bak~r. , Gene We- can't remember who.
•
therholt, Eugene Pickens, LawSo you tlllnk Spring will never
renee Lee, Emil Thomas, VIc come. Hang on. Baseball's
Hager, Bob Wlon, Graham spring training Is justaround the
Thompson, F.rank Valentine and corner. The pitchers andFred Burdette.
catchers report to Florida In just
Not present for the picture about four weeks. That means
Junior Wilson. Dick Lakin, Bob Spring Is not far behind.
(Sausage Bob) Evans, Grover
Long and Jerry Gilkey, Dale's
son.
· ·
' ·Amateur or semi-pro baseball
or bush league baseball (and I
call It that lovingly) !Jsed to
nourish In the area, especially In
NEW YORK (UPI) -Donald
the Meigs' Big Bend area. That Trump's 282-foot yacht, the
garden patch tilrned out more • Trump Princess, Is on sale for
good ball players than you could almost four times what he paid
shake a stick it. So did Gallla for it. The boat Is already listed
county. And, even Mason County. as the world's lareest private
Row abollt 'Mel (New Raven) yacht but Trump and bts wile,
Clark. who went up with the lvana, say lt'sjustnotblgenough
Phlllles. And, there was a guy tor the kind of entertaining they
named Wandel Mosser. a Ietty, Wl!-nt to do so they're building a
over at Point Pl~ant, who could 420-too! boat that will have a
·string strikes like nobody I ever IWfDI!n bath jind an aniphl·
saw. I know where Mel Is. theater. The new boat lsexpe~ted
Wonder wttat ever happened to to take th.e water In 1992.

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1
Play Wlth ·,untversa
if
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stgn tcanr.e' t e·s
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k
d
s·tage next .wee en

Peter

· Trump jer diverted
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NEW
ORLEANS, La. CUP!) Donald Trump's private jet had
tobe 'd iverted !rom New Orleans
to ' Baton Rouge Thursday because of heavy fog. The billionaire developer then took a limo
the remaining 60 .miles so he
could push his new game show,
"'i'rump Card," at the National
AUoCiatlon of Television Program E)cecutlves convention.
Trump ran Into another high
roller at the convention -Edwin
Edward~, the fiashy former
Loulltana eovernor whose gam·
bllni exploits are legendary.

Sunday llmea 8«1tintti-Prrr 8-7

llo W. Va.

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~nt P1111

Avenue near Olive Street the o~ cqrporatlon limit. Aa to · ltthecurewunotwOI'IItllanthe
brOUJbt suit aealnat Joseph. · the Improper uae of the elrden malady. Tile cllan:ll wu apoup
Colllns, Allee Freeman, and loti for bulldlne purpnes the of vrttY. loud peDill!COitala wbo
Edward Cox who Uved In lhanty judp ruled that u early u 1800a met to all hours ot the atcht.
boat&amp; to evict, the latter. Mills cabin was erected by the Vande- NeiJbbon complained of
claimed that the Land wu hls _aa bemdeDa on the earden lot near screams, eroua. and frenzied
the river, front property liwner· Cedar Street. At that time no hallelujahs cominJ tram the
ship lmpfted ownership to the low • objection was made nor had "holy roller" church much put
water mark of the Ohio River. there been llhlce until the •'shan· mldnleht. The churcll wu raided
The City of GaJUpolts entered the tyboat lawyers" had brOUJht It once. Then wbea one pastor wu
suit u a ~bird party clatrntna up to show other Instances of booted olit In favor of btl'
ownership of the river bank.
. lllqal use. 9f land. Fortunately uatstant, the forn'\er pastor trted
The shlmty boat owners for tile many persons wllo owned . to disrupt a servtce. The pall tor
claimed that tile river bank
beautiful homes on the former was arrested ' and tried. Durlne
which they were located had gf111en lo~. the judge did not • the trial the paatDr told the JudJe
been In adverae poaseaalon for 40 eVIct these owners. Shanty boat that he (the pal tor) could not be
years. The orlglilal shanty bOat ownen-w.ere not so lucky,
gulltyforhewu a saint and was
squatter was Jim Smith who tied
The' shanty boats did provide a Incapable of dolnJ wrong. The
his boat to the bank about 1880. iireat deal of excitement for the judge threw the cue out because
When the boat became old and town ln the 40 or so years they of his Inability to find the ·
Thill home on F1nt Avenue- bunt by the Vanden fun1J71a
hiallySmtthmovedtheboat liP On were here. There were also paragraph In the code that dealt
1848 on a carden lot. ID tile ~ plotllnl of Glllpolll, 1lll'lllea
tlie bank where It had rerllaiQI!d shanty boats located near VIne with "sainted tesdmony."
lot&amp; were aot 1uppoHd to have t.lldlnp located on tllem. The first
Into thel920s. Smith then sold the Street. Ma.ny of the shanty boat
One very aad epllode occured
such buUdiDI waa put upon lhllllotla1801. owaenhlpofthe 1lll'lllea
boat to a man for $'1$•. If was . owners plll!d a repu tab)f trade as · . In the 1880a when a YOIIIIIIirl had
lots an dthe river bank haa always beea a compBca&amp;ed.matter In
believed by the bu:ll.ef that' he had broommaker, carpenter, dray· ·moved to GaJUpolis !ram MiddleGatB)IOIIII.
not only purchased the boat as a man boat hand and so forth but· port. She wu given a lob as a
house but the rtver bank as well. . some of them operated t'housef,. • ~ok for one ot the women who .
Tile case was heard betore· ot Ill · repute" and gambllng]i ki!Pt a "bouse of Ul i'epute"ln the Judge -W.R. ·White ' whp diSco- callnos.
'i.'·sbanty boat section. ~r a few help. rhat night a .mob was got the suspected man.- Unfortu·
vered the facts as alrea(Jy
At one time a church was months aa Just a 'copk. the yoqng up. The shanty boat madam was nately tile man punished by the
mentioned. He ruled that the City organized In the upper end of girl was forced to receive a mBJ,l. denuded, catrled through town mob was Innocent. The real
then tarred and !(!lthered. culprit bad fled .
ot Gallllioll$ did Indeed own the Ga!Upolls to convert the shanty Sheescapedfrom'lhesbantyboat . and
The
mob
also tok vellll8&amp;nce on
river bank from Pine Street to boat people, but some wonllered · ~he next day, runnlnJ tQ town for

•

SALE IN PROGRESS!
All Fall and Winter Merchandise

Prlor1Daboutll22u.relftl'ta
numbel' of allanty boats located
In GalllpoUa on the town llde f1
Gallipolis Island
and on the Gam. polls shore. Of
course Galllpo.
Its Island hu
always · been
consl~ered
a
part of West VIrginia even wben tile Qty .of
' GaJUpolts oWlled,parrof it. West ·
Vtretnla also owns !he Oh to River
' up to the low water mark on the
Oblo side. It waa ·no doubt the
~slon of ownership that all()wed shanty boats to be located
!J!ere and avoid eviction.
.
•:ro add to the confusion waa the
!act that the orlglnlal platUne of
~town established garden lots
o'n the river side of First Avenue.
11o bulldlnp we~e to be erected
011 the gMden lots and the City of
Gallipolis was ' to own all the
property on t» river side of First
A\roimue trom·Pine Street to the
orlglnal. ll!)~tlon _ilinlt which
· was alio(j.l tile,middle of the block
of First. • , '
·
• In th~! '. elfly '' 1920s John 'and
Maggie
Mills
who llved on First
.
'

Jn·&gt;our town...

r----------------·-"·---..
HALF-PRICE!

River land, garden plots... ·

. ,.
...By Dick Thomas

Senior Citizen Center
activities set for week

Pome!oy-Middlapori-GIIIpolil, Ohio

An &amp;lull ~ Elql.

_llS_HWrH C9RPORATION
Ill S1ultem 011111

,,

Princess for sale

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,IJ

CONTRIBUTION - Jobn Lester (left), Gallipolis Cl*y Scbopla
History Day Advlsor,ls shoWII acceptlnc a$1,000 contribud!'n lrom
Dr. At tee Grlcoskl of Holzer Clinic, outr;olng Presldentof.tbeGaiBa
·
County Medical Society.
school.
The Medical Society's contrl·
button will be used for supplies,

equipment, and travel' expenses ·
related to the History Day
Program In GalliPOlis schools.

SUPE~SALE

PRICE .
-&amp; .
MORE
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MON. &amp; FRI. Til P.M.; TUES. WED., THUI. Tl 7; SAT. Tl S P.M.

FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH
·'

has merged with

ACROSS ·THE STREET
' '
'

Fbrmerlf Located at
448 Second Ave.
We have moved to our
new location to form ...

FOUNTAIN. OF YOUTH.
ACROSS-THE
STREET
.
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600 Third Ave.

Gallipolis, 01-l.
(614) 446-7266
Hours: Mon. 9-3,
Tues.-Fri.

8-7, Sat. 7-5

Patsy Campbell,
Karen Butns,
Shirley McCormick
and Sonja Steele.

WE SPEQAUZE IN:
Fine hair permanents,
highlighting, manicures,
facials &amp; men's hair styling.
.
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Ventriloquist
to perform ·

pOrts

APPLE GROW - Patty And·

er-.

veatrlloquiat, will per·
fwm .at tile Apple Grow U!llted
" "'''"'lit Olurcll on Ja11. 28 atlO
~Ill. 1'llere will also be apeclal ~
alna•A&amp; by the youth cllolr.

We Reserve The Riehl To
Ll"'it Quantities '

'

STORE HOURS ·

. Monday thru Su"day

.SALEM CENTER - The Sa·

·1em Townablp Trustel will hold a
moathfy meeting on Saturday at .
9 ~.m. at the fire house In Salem

'

Center.

. I

~ Legion auxiliary ~

"

· 8 AM-10 PM ,
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· RACINE -TheRaclneArnerl·
Call Legion Awdllary will meet
1"hunday at 7 p.m. at the
.American Legion Hall.

Bed and _
Breakfast
•
sem1nar set

Job Bank
aids seniors
GALLIPOLIS- The Job Bank

·~lcomes employers and appll·

cuta to .telephone the Senior
Citizen Cen,ter i.t ,446·111q() and
dlRU&amp;S their employmenrneeds
wtlll the job counselor. ·
'1ile Job Bank counselor will
explain tlie manner In which
potential jobs are matched with
tile knowledgi!, skills, and ablll·
ties of applicants.
The Job Bank at present Is
open Wedne5day 11 a.m. to 3
p.m .. and Thursday and Fridays
from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., so fee !free
to call.

1/4

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Pork

CHICKEN

·Leg Quart.ers .....•...· 49&lt;
FLAYORITE
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$1
3
9
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·Lunch Mea15 ••••••••
''··

LB

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LB.

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$ .89
Ru.mp Roast......... 1·
II.

LONG ACRE·

MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - In : the Buckeye~ to 69-66 before
the case of Minnesota's free Burton ·a nd Shlkenj~nskl ami·
throw shooting, practice appar·
wered with short jumpers .
Ohio State. which canned nil!!!
ently does not make perfecl.
The Gollhers (1%·3, 3-2) sank th~~polnters, scored the first
their flnal16 free throws to stave six points of the ~cond half to
oft a late Ohio State rallY and close within basket at .41·39. .
defeat . the Buckeyes 83-78
But ·the Gophers ·~untered ·
with nine straight points, lnclud·
Satlll'!lay.
tng a thtee.polnter by Kevin ·
. In their previous two games,
the Gophers made only 13 of 29 Lynch, on their way to outscoring
from the foul line. Against t~ . the Buckeyes 18-~. A three,
:Suckeyes (8·7, 3-3). Mi'nnesota pointer by Burton and a layup by .
.)'lound up 25 of 30. But the team's · Walter Bond gave Minnesota a
Improvement was not a case of 59-44 edge.
extra work.
The B11ckeyes played mu~h of
"We shot Ins fr~ throws (In the second half without. starting
practice), n.ot more,'' Minnesota guard Ja~aal Brown, · who
coach Clem Haskins said. "I picked up his fourth· foul four
would never tlllk about free
minutes Into the half and (ouled
t)lrow shooting because you cart out with 2:34 left. Jackson and ·
psyche youraelf out."
. Treg Lee .also sat on the bench ·
, The Gophers, whO led ·by as with fo.ur fojlls much of the half.
· many as. ·13 In the secoild half, ·
Minnesota, keyed ·by a full
sut'vlved a late Ohio State charge court press, used a 10·3 run early ·
to remain undefeated in nine ·. In the first half to take a 17·10
home games this season.
·lead.
Ohio State stayed close on
"We were In It until the tree
throws at the end." Buckeye three consecutive three-point
coach Randy Ayers said. ''That baskets by Jackson,, who had
was a veteran ball club making made only three three-pointers In
the plays they had to ·make."
the Buckeyes ' first 14 games.
The Buckeyes closed to within
A free throw by Richard Coffey
75-73 with 1:42 remaining on a gav~ the Gophers their biggest
layup by Ale)[ Davis, but Mlilne· lead or the half at 28·18 with eight
sola's Jim .Shlkenjanskl · hit a · minutes· left. Minnesota ·held a ·
short jump shOt after an offen- 41·33 halftime advantage.
Mlssciurl 95, Kiut118S 87
slve rebOund 20 seconds later.
. Willie Burton scored 19 points.
At Colul'l)bla, Mo., Anthony
Melvin Newbern tossed In 16 and Peeler scored 24 points -and
Shlkenjanskl scored·14 points for Nathan Buntin added 22 Satur·
the Gophers. Jimmy Jackson day , sparking the No.4 Missouri
and Chris Jent led Ohio State Tigers to a 95-87 ·Big Eight
with 18 points each.
victory over the No. I Kansas
"The key to our success Is our Jayhawks.
balance,·· Haskins said. '"We
Peeler sank 14 of 14 free throw
guys who c\m attempts to lead four Tigers with
have a lot
score."
20 points or more and helped
Minnesota appeared to have them improve to 17·1 overall and
the game In hand until Ohio State 4·0 In league play. Doug Smith
scored eight unanswered points scored 23 points and Lee.Coward
to close to within four, 67·63, with chipped In 20 points.
.
5:36 remaining.
The Tigers have won26consecJent's three-pointer
utlve gan\es at the Hearnes

•

JAMESTOWN

of

Roll Sgu~age ••••• ~ •• 89 &lt;

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Lettute •••••••~ •••••":~••• ·s9 &lt;
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FLAYORITE

Play...

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GALLIPOLIS - A meeting to
launch .t he 1990 membership
drive of the Melgs·Gallta·Mason
Marshall Athletic Club will be ·
held Thursday, Jan. 23, from 7·9
p.m. at Oscar's · In GalUpolls
according to President Terry
Chapman.
· Representatives from Mar·
shall University will be present.
Refreshments will be served. All
Interested persons In the M·G·M
area are Invited.

Blue Angels beat
Alexander 77-58
·~

.,

GALLIPOLIS - The GaiUa
County HistoriCal Society will
meet Sunday Jan. 21 at Sf.
Peter's Episcopal Church. The
board meets at 1 p.m . and the
meeting open to the public starts
at 2: 30 p.m. The January program will be presented by Donna
Sanders, Columbus Southern
Power Company. on "Aspects of
Lighting in Historic America."

~282-1201.

MU Athletic Club
membership drive
meet set Jan. 25

OOPS! -GaiDa Academy's Amy Huffman (SO) I - the ball as
she attempts to score ID the HCOnd half of Saturday's noa-Jeape
&amp;ame with Alexander at Albaily. However, the An&amp;els didn't l011e
the handle on the contest, which they won 77·118.

Historical Sociecy
mee~ing fearures
CSP speaker

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2°/o Milk

• . . .$. 79
eese 1lces •.•.~~.Q~... ,·1
· ~.;..'!
BANQUET
$
,$ .99 Family Entree •.':."~. · 149
2
K(RAhFT AMER. INSD.
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SUNSHINE

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/.

l

+\

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20 II. lAG

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' JH

tl .

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Dog Food ··~··········

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~ · BANQUET

2 LITER BOnLE

I

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oz. 89&lt;
Coca-Cola .........:••• 89&lt;··TV Dinner •••••••••••••
10·12

.THa. YOU CIIURY'

PIE FILLING ·

79C
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91·80 Big Ten victory over::
Northwestern.
,•
The Spartans, 15·3 overall anc!;,
4-1 In the Big Ten, have wo~
seven ot their last eight ,games: · ·
The Wildcats. 7·8 and o:5, haVf!,
lost five s tralght.
Mi chigan State, wblch led 42·28)
at haU!Ime, kept pres~ure on the
Wildcats ln. buUding the lead to
53-34. Manns, the leading scorer
In the Big Ten, hit a 22-foot
jumper from the top of the key tO
give the Spartans a 64-44 margin;
Ohio Unlv. 70, E. Mich. 52 '·
At Athens, Ohio, Dave Jamer·
son scored 30 points and Dennis
Whitaker added 13 points and 13
rebounds to lead Ohio University
to a 70·52 Mld-Amerlqn Confer· ·
el\ce wtn over Eastern MlchJgan ·
Saturday .
·
The win was the l,OOOth In 83
years of Intercollegiate basket·
ball for Ohio, which won Its
second In a row and now stands
9-8 overall and 2·4 in the MAC .
The Bobcats, with Whitaker, a
5.·11 senior point guard able to
control the tempo of the game, ·
pulled slowly away after a close
early portion of the first half to
lead 32·22 at the intermission.
OU was up 43·28 after a basket
by Whitaker at the 16:48 mark of
the second half and held. Its · ·
largest lead of the game, 53-34,
with 8: 47 to play .

I

Little Sizzlers-........ 9 9c.

(an

-

PKG.' ·

HORMEL 12 Oz. LinkS or 1o Oz. Patties

21 OL

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- '·~r

(From PLAY, page B7)
the show, briefly, as a radio
production . with actors reading
their lines. The play will then
make Its transition Into a live
stage performance.
Jerome sald.,Jle has much
·admiration for "Under Milk
)Vood" and Thomas' work. Area
audlepces were e'lposed to Tho·
mas II\ Decemver 1988 when the
Valley Artists Series presented
"A Child's Christmas In Wales,"
an adaptation of, the poet's'
recoUectlons of the holiday In his
, oatlve land.
· "Thoma, may have been. a
wastrel, a disgraceful man, but
he wrote like an angel and he Is
tile lftalellt British lync writer
ol tile cenhlry," Jerome said.
"In thla play, he shows this
tCJWJI, whatever Its merits, and
demonstrates a love of people
and what they do," JeromtWded. •'The play celebrates lite,
wltb believable human beings,
lind eek!brates .a respect for
llunumlty." ·
· "UDder Milk Wood" will be
Pft'IOnlledal 8 p.m. In the Chris·
teDieD Tbeetre of the Fine and
Performlq ArtJ Center. Admls·
lion II tll.50 per person and Rio
GrUIIe f4Mllthy, staff and stu·
..... . . atmlt~ free. For
laiJiiiiatlon, contact the
rt•tPICIPtrformlngArtJCeater
It - - . extension 364. The
IDIJ.tree number In Ohio Is

Wake Forest Saturday In an the season, a 6$-63 triumph over
Atlantic Coast Conference game. Seton Hall.
.
Duke, 13-3 overall and 4·11n the . Jason Matthews scored 19
ACC, built a 25-polnt halftime points 11nd Shorter a4ded 17 to
lead and scored the first 11 points lead Pitt. 6-9 overall and 1·41n.the .
of ihe second half. The Biue coniei\ence. Seton Hall fell to 8-7
Devils led by 45 points 8: 00 Into lind 1-4.
the second half.
C. Mlchl&amp;an 72, BGSU 58
Wake Forest, 7·9 and 0-4, never
At Mount Pleasant, Mich., Jeff
pulled within 26 the rest of the Majerle and Sander Scott each
game.
scored 18 points ~turday to help ·
Lolliavllle 88, Memphis St. 69
Central Mlc.higan . to a 72·58
At Louisville, Ky ., center Fel- Mid-American Conference vic·
ton Spencer's game-high 25 tory over Bowling Green.
points and 11 rebounds Saturday .
Th,e Chippewas 18·8 overall, ~-3
led No. 10 Louisville to an 89-69 MAC) posted a 34-26 halftime
Metro Conference victory over. advantage. The Falcons rallied
·
Memphis State.
to within 54-53 on Clinton VenaLaBradford Smith added 19 . ble's three-pointer with 6: 12 left.
points and 10·assls ts and ·reserve
But Central Michigan followed
Jerome Jfarmon scored 12 to help with a 13-2 run tp jl!mp In front ·
the Cardinals Improved .to 14•2 67-55 with I: 53 remaining.
.
over1111 a·nd 4·1 In ·the Metro with
Ball State 59, Toledo M
their fifth str-aight triumph.
At Muncie, Ind., Paris
Louisville coach Denny Crum McCurdy scored 15 points and
recorded Its 450th victory In 600 Chandler Thompson added 14
games over 19 seasons.
·
Saturday, leading Ball State to a
Pill 611, Seton Hall 63
59·54 defeat of Toledo In a
At Pit Is burgh, Pa., Brian Shor· Mid -Ame.rlcan Conference
ter's driving layup with 10 game.
seconds left Saturday gave Pitts·
McCurdy , a center who was
burgh Its first Big East victory of benched In favor of Roman
Muller, also added 10 rebounds,
while Thompson contributed· a
game-high 11 for the Cardinals
(12·4, 4·1). Ball State outre·
houndM the Rockets (7-9, 2·3)
.42·29.
.
..
Miami 72, Kent stiue II
At Oxford, Ohio, Miami, led by
Craig Michaelis with 14 points,
went on a 16-2 run midway
through the first hatr·and made It
stand up for a 72·61 Mid·
American Conference win over
Kent State Saturday .
The league-leading Redskins,
now 8·6 overall and 5·0 In the
MAC, tralled 13-9 with 11:551eft
In the first half when they began .
their run, which Included 10 free
throws and resulted In a 25:15
Miami lead.
Mich. St. 91, N'western 80
At East Lansing, Mich., Kirk
Manns scored 21 poln ts and Steve
Smith added 18 Saturday to
power No. 19 Michigan State to a

Center, whlc)l was filled· with a
capacity crowd of 13,300. Last
year, the Tigers knocked off No. 1
Oklahoma at the Hearnes
Center.
Arizona ·78, Oklahoma 7f
At Tuscon, Ar!z., Jud Buechler
scored. 18 points and grabbed
·nine rebounds, ·and Sean, Rooks
scored 18 pOints and san~ twO"
tree throws with :031eft Saturday
to help Arizona to a 78-74 victory
over No. 3 Oklahoma. .
• Wayne Womack added 14
points and nine rebounds for the
Wildcats, who extend~ the na·
tlon's longest home court winning streak to 41 games. Okla·
homa has .the secolll;l longest
home winning streak at 38.
Skeeter .Henry .scored 14 points
for the Sooners before fouling out
with 1: 281eft. Jackie Jones-added.
12 for Oklahoma. Arizona lm·
proved to 11·3 and Oklahoma fell
to 12·2 In the nationally televised
game.
Duke 87, Wake Forest 89
At Winston-Salem, N.C., Chris·
!ian Laettner and Phil Hender·
son scored 18 points apiece to Uti
No.8 Duke to a 97·69 victory over

Groun~
Turkey ••~~· 89
SUPERIOR· .:. .
. FR. NuiE·S..•...........
. . \ oz. ·99C
.

€·

J:=X21. 181Q

-------------------~-------·-------------

a

298 SECOND Sl.
POMEROY~ OH,

PRICES EFFEcnVE SUN., JAN•.21 THRU SAT., JAN. 27, 1990

. ' CHOICE BONE~ESS

------------

Section.

Minnesota ·holds Off OSU to notch 83-78 WiQ..

•

Tnmees to meet

POMEROY - Meigs Coun·
ti&amp;na are Invited by the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service
to attend a seminar on the
operation of a !led and breakfas I
to be beld Feb. 8 at the Lafayette
.
Hotel in Marietta.
Tbe program entitled "How to
Start and Operate Your Own Bed
and Breakfast" will be ~ld from
8: 30 a.m: to 3:30 p.m. and the
feclatratlon ree of $20 per person .
wtU cover · the cost of coffee
breaks, 'luncheOn, ana handout .
materials.
·
Kathryn K. Chenoweth, Wa·
shlngton County Extension
Agent, suggests that this might
be the business enterprise for
thoae with an extra bedroom, or
someone In need of money to
supplement an existing Income.
The program will presen I
speakers from the state, district
and county level to provide a
quality educatiqnal program.
Preregistration · Is r.equested
through the ExteQslon Service.

--~--

-- --

'

:to meet Thursday

'
{

IMT 3
ftWE

. . . Only " ,..• • • • , .
ltlll Sun.. - 11 "" s.t. Jill. 17

MAXWBl HOUSE ADC or EP

MASTEl ILEND

COFFEE

$3 ~·

34.5 oz.
. . Chllt " ,,...... Sup.- , •

GotM1 Sun.. .11ft. 21 thni SOt,. llln. 27

'

IIG CHIEF •

CAINATION

EVAP. MILK,
12

c~'•'2/S:l

Good Only At rew.U's •
Yalu
hM Sun.. JaR. 21 thru Sot. Jan. 27

GRAN. SUGAR
4 II.

lAG

Sl29

· Good Only At l'ew.U's Sup. Yati
Good Sun., lcnL 21 thno Sot. Jan. 27

NO WAY, JOSE! -Seton Hall's AnthoD)' Avent (U) blocka the
- shot of Pitt's Brl~ Brush 4ur1n.1 Saturday's game In Plttaburch.
The Panthers won 65-63. (UPI)

•

'

and tea~mates Tel!lher South
aild Shelly Ru,nyon provided
offensive help with efforts of 15 .
and 10 points, respectively.
The Angels, 11·3 overall, will
host Kyger Creek on Monday.
Quarter totals
Galllpolls ........ .. . 16 17 24 20-77
Alexander ..... .... 14 13 18 13-58
Galllpolla (77) - Thomas 16·0·
2·34; HamUton 7·0·9-23; Greene
6-0·0·12; Elliott 1·1·0-5; Young
1·0-0-2; Huffman 0·0·1-1. Totals-

ALBANY - Gallla Academy's
Blue An1els put three players In
double figures In posting a 77-58
triumph over Alexander
Saturday.
The Angels, who picked up
their fourth straight win and
their· sixth In the last seven
contests, witnessed senior for,
ward Kristl Thomas airmail a
' court-high 34 points, her fifth
performance In the 30s this
season. Senior center Lori Ha·
milton racked up 23 points and 18
rebounds, and sophomore guard
Dena Greene chalked up 12
points.
'
.
Poweted by 17 flrst·half points
from 6-0 center Mls~y James, the
Spartans stayed within siX of the
Angels at the half. but nine points
from Tliomas and six from
Greene In the third quarter
helped push the Angels to a
12·polnt lead going Into the fourth
quarter.
.
Jam~$ finished with 26 points,

SI· l·l2-77

Fleld goala- 32·78 (41% ) .
Thre~polnten - 1·1
.
Free tllrOWI- 12·16 (75%)
Reboanclll - 41 (Hamilton 18)
Blocked MOta - 2
Asallta -12
steals -15
Tunovers - 13
Alexander (58)- James 12·0.2·
26· South 5-0.5·15; Runyon 5.().().
10: Ani:Jrews :i-0.1-5; Gilkey 1·0.0·
2. Totals - 15-&amp;-8-118
Free throws- 8-12 (66.7%)

•ID

·At least $40 million·expected
By WJIJLIAM D. MURRAY
UPI Sporlll Writer
It's party time In the Super Bowl's neon jungle.
The Super Bets. The bright lights. The
excitement. It's Las Vegas. N.e v ., at Its decadent ~,.
best.
"There Is nothing like Super Bowl week,
· absolutely nothing," said Jimmy Vaccaro, the
head or the Mirage's Sports and Race Book. "'l,Ve
are flying In 1,000 people with large credit lines,
hosting a number ot parties and special events
and, generally. creating a ~ardl Gras. atmos·
phere here at the Mirage.
.
.
.
"I think It's harder now to find a room at one of
the major casltiOI fprSuper Bowl weekend than to
get a ticket to the game Itself."
'Ibe Super Bowl, which began as a roadside
:attractloa at the Joel!' race books back ID 1967, bas
groWn Into tlie tarrest celebration of wagering In
Arnerlc811 hiltory. Over $40 miiUon will be
wagered In Nevada's legal sportsbooks and up to
$1 bllllon more will be bet Illegally across the
countrY In office pools and at ·corner bars.
"People who will not ~ on anything else all
year long will bet on ,!he SUper Bowl," said Art
M8llteril, tbe head of the Laa Veps Hilton's
Super Book. "It's an event that brings in .a large
.,
'

number of flrs·t time bettors Into the sports book."
J:lut that doesn't mean the big bettors stay
home.
"We've taken some bets In the$10,000range, but '
the really big money doesn't come In until the
weekend of the game,'' Man terls said. ''This Is the
,
tip of the Iceberg."
Super Bowl week begins two weeks before the
game. On the Sunday of ' the NF.C and AFC
championship games, casinos throuehoutNevada
are pack~ with · gamblers slralnlng to see the
neon odds boards that grace th~ sportabooks. .
' Midway through tile final championship game,
the board lights up with the opening Super Bowl
odds and the betting frenzy begins. Thil year's
game started with the NFC champion San
Francisco 49ers favored by 10.
"It was one of the busleat star !I I've ever seen,"
Manterls said. "It Hhe ilhe favoring the 49ers)
started at 10 In the third quarter and was at 101·2
by the end of the game (the NFC championship
game). By the end of the nlght,lt'Wasll. The next
day It continued to climb to 111·2 and then 12. Now
It's at 12 1·2 and I would not be aurprtsed If It goes
to 13 or more."
The spread, however, baS slowed actllll ~ttlng

..

REVERSE LAYUP - Louisville center Felton Spencer (50)
10811 •P fer a revene layup agailllt Memphis State postman Todd
Mundt (Sl) durin&amp; Saturday's . Metro Conference game In
Loulavllle's Freedom Hall The No. 10 C&amp;rdlnals won 86-89. (UPI)
'

wagers for Super Bowl

on·the game. The Denver fans want to see how
high It will cltmb while the 49ers fans are thinking
twice about plunking down their cash on a wager
living up so many points.
'The game, Itself, because the spread Is
relatively high Is not getting much' action right
now," Vaccaro said. "It's dribbling In a little on
the 49ers but the Denver fans lire walllnt to see
how high It will grow. Tberelsn't theklndofaction
there Is on a game with a 2 or 2 1·2 point spread.
"What you·~ losing .t his week Is the wise or
smart guys money. They create the two-way
action and they are not betting." ·
To stimulate business, sports book operators
across the state have posted their proposition or
"exotic" bets early. These offerings allow the
bettor to wager on SI!Ch things as a 10-polnt
over·and·under for total points scored in the third
quarter, to bet on who ]Will score the first
touchdown (San Francisco backup quarterback
·Steve Young Is the longest shot at 20-1), on who
between Joe Montana and John Elway will pass
for the most yards and what team will make the
shortest field (10&amp;1.
'This Is the area (exotic bets) In which. we've
seen the biggest growth over the last few years,·:

.'
..,.._ .
~

.,...

~·'

Manterls· said. "It's the most attractive to the
casual bettors."
·
And attractive means money.
"I don;t think we'll see a record number of
dollars bet on the game itself this year," Vaccaro
said. "But we will see more money than In the past
bet on proposltiOII$. " 'l'he take from the Super Bowl is not limited to
sports bets. Action at the tables throu~hout tht&gt;
casinos Is also Increased as ls money spent on food
and entertalnmenl.
'There really Isn't anything you can compare it
to other than a major tight," Manlerls said :
"Money Is spent everywhere. "
.
The competition is also keen to have the best
and most unique exotic bets.
'There Is a llinlt to the number of wagers you
can bave In a game, but we listen to our
customers. If they come up with something
lnterestin1 we'll post It," Manter is said.
Around sunrise on Friday, while Montana and
com paD)' Is getUng In Its final practices, the race
will begin In Las Vegas.
'The last 48 hours Is a frenzy," Vaccaro said.
"There Is a tremendous rush · to get to the
windOws." '
•
·

�,...

January 21' 1880

VINTON North Gallia
cashedlnonOakHlll'snumerous
turnovers and confined the bulk
of the Oaks' offense to posttnan
Cbad.Sml,t h In registering a 71-38
victory Friday night.
''Chad. Smith pulled his load,
but we're limited when we don't
hit from outside," said Oak Hill
boss Doitg Hale, whosetroopstell
to 3-10 overall and 3-6 In the
SVAC. "(Shane Maynard) has
had It tough the last three or four
games," he added.
Maynard, the Hill's three-point
ace, had trouble connecttit'g from
outside all night and finished
with a season-low three points:
This was the third time this
season he has not scored In
double figures and the second
time In the last three games.
Chad Smith led all scorers with
22 points, 14 of which came In the
second half, after the Pirates had
posted a 31-polnt.halftime lead.
The Bucs scored the game's
first eight points and kept expandlng their lea:d while the
Oaks' offense failed to sprout
until Chad Smith sank a jumper
from the right baseline at the4: 55
mark of the f!rst quarter. Jn that
quarter the visitors would only
get one more basket, also by
Smith In the lane, nearly three
minutes later.
Meanwhile, Pirate point guard
Chris Tackett and swlngmen
Brlan · Stout and IQarin Smith

•

SMITH SCORES ~ North GaiDa swlngman DarlllSml&amp;h goes
alrtlome as be scores two of his five points on tblslayap In tbe tblrd
quarter of Friday night's SVAC. game agalllllt vlaltlag Oak Hill.
The Pirates won 71-38. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer
fll!honael

Clutch jum~r gives ,.
Vik~gs

54-52 victory ·

CHESHIRE - Senior guard Wahama.
.
.
·
.
Shawn Mootz sank a tie-breaking , ~ore by qiiBrters :
.
·
' ·
baseline jumper with' five se- Symmes Valley . 12 12 13 11...:54
conds left In Friday night's Kyger Creek ...... 1111 19 11~52
Symmes Valley-Kyger Creek enSYMMES ·VALLEY (54) ~
Ut Tn
counter to give the VIkings a 54·52 Mootz 6-0-4·16; Nlchoias 7-0-1·15;
·
triumph.
.Justice 4-0-0-8; Hayes 1-1·2-7; • MERCERVILLE ~ Hannan
Mootz's gamer came five se- Casteel 1-0-1-3; Pler.c e · 1·0-0-2; Trace's junior high girls' basket·
conds after B.obcat guard Sean Renfroe 1·0-0-2; Wall 0.0-1-1. ball team slipped away from
Denney tied the game at 52 with a 'rOTA18 ~ 21-i-t-M
Southern with a 21-18 Victory
baseline jumJier, which finally
Free throws ~ 9-21 (42.9% l
Thursday night.
·
erased a :seven-point advantage
KYGER CREEK (52) -Sipple
Diana: Nelson led·the Wildcats
the Norsemen had with four 9-0-3-21; Denney 6-0-4-16; with seven points, and teammate
mlnu tes left.
Swisher 3·0·3-9; Hall 2-0-0·4; M. Anita Rossiter scored six. SouthThe B.obcats, who dropped VIllanueva 1-0-0-2. TOTAlS ~ ern's A. Mills led all scorers with
their Joul'tb straight game and 21-J)-i0-52
12, and teammate. M. Wolfe
their 17th consecutive league
Free throws - 10-30 (33.3%)
chipped in wlth four.
contest, shed a two-point half·
time deficit by outscoring their
guests 19·13 ~o take a three-point
lead at the end of the third
quarter. "We tried to make them
shoot from outside, and consldet·
Inc that they weren· t hitting frorn
there, we were pretty effective,"
said B.obcat head coach Larry
·
·
.'
Markham.
the final frame the B.obcats
were hurt by 3-for-14 foul shoot,$250 VALUE.
Ing. During that time Valley was
·
NOW ONLY.
.
5 for 11 at the line.
The Vikln~ claimed a 42-29
victory In the reserve contest.
Jaye Criswell led Symmes with
12 points, while KC's Chris Slone
led all cagers l"\th .13.
·
On Tuesday's calendar,
Symmes Valley will host Ironton
St. Joe;wh!le Kyger Creek (1-12,
• 35t GAWPOUS .
446-9777
0-10),
at Pox·tsn:
East

J11

-

PometOf-'-Midclaport-G "J"llil. Ohio Pui1t Pln11 1t, W.Va.

By G. SPENCER 08BOaNE
Tlmee-SwlhleiS&amp;aff

hands Oak Hffi 71-38 loss

were stealing the ball from the
YOWII Oall Hill pards and doing
their -part on tbe boards to
convert these turnovers Into
points. Tackett. one · of four
Pirates who scored In double
figures, was the receiver for
many of the steals Stout and
Darin Smith would make In
· belplng the B.ucs open up their
· cavernous lead.
, "B.ecause we work on outlet
passes to an .area, It's second
nature to us," said North Gallla
head coach Tom Riccardi.
·
The Pirates did .a maxtmum·of
reboundlnc,chalklngup42grabs
to the Oaks~ 21. That was the sixth
game this. seas.on North bas
recorded · at least 40, and when
Riccardi's sailors have done so
they are 6-0. They also did a
minimum of fouling, as shown by
the fact that the south Jackson
five didn't see the;- charity stripe
until Chad Smith stepped up to
shoot a one-and-one with 1:40 lett
In the third quarter. He missed
that shot; one of . two the Oaks
would miss all night. '
' "
Pirate center D.J. Hammel led
his shipmates with 17 points, 10
rebounds and one blocked shot,
and all of his points came In the
. f!rst half. Tackett had 15 points,
and Stout had 13 points and seven
rebounds. while Shane Smith
11
four re-

bollllds aild ·one blocked lbot.
The Pirates· · bellcb came
throueh In the came's final
minutes, as 6-1 freshman ·Rob
Canady scored tbe capae's lalt
poiDts on a layup and lllcHd up
· six rebounds In a 5:30 time span.
Brad Fuller nailed one of the
Bucs' three-point b.-keu, and
Kevin Hunt scored tWo.
In the precedlnc reserve contest, North Gallla posted a 46-34
victory, .C anady led all cagers
with 13 points. ~njl Lewis ·led
the Hill with 10.
North GaiDa (8-6, 7·3) wlll be
Idle until next Friday's came
aplnst Southern· at R.aclne,
while Oak Hill, wbo hosted
Minford saturday night, will play
host to McDermott Northwest
Tuesday night.
Score by quarten .
Oak Hlil .. :...... :... 4 10 10 14~38
North Gallla ....... 22 23 17 9-71
NOR'nl GALLIA (71) -Hammel 7-0.3-17; Tackett 6-1·0.15;
Stout 6-0-1.13; S. Smith 4-1-0.11;
Haney "0-0-4-4: D. Smith 1-0.2-4;
Fuller 0.1:0.3; . Canady 1-0-0-2;
Hunt 1"0·0-2. TOTAlS - ~3-10- ·
11
·
From tbe Ooor ~ 29-74 (39.2%)
AI tbe line '-' 10-12 (83.3% ~
·Off the glaas -42 (HammellO)
S&amp;eals '~ 12
!l'unaovera -- 7
OAK RILL

0&gt;

$5989
$128'
.
!'1111011111
SIE BILL

'I.,.

Bus. 692-2497

Rea. 247-4772

•

wilj(r.~~reak;

'

-~ ,
.J,;.~ ,
•
,,~

- . $1,000 MINIMUM TRADE

•

•

":her Minimum Trade

MALCOLM W. LENTZ. M.D.
Orthopedic And.
General Surgeon

To·The Clinic Staff

t

Malcolm •W• .Lentz, M.D., Boar~ Certified General, Tho•
rpdc, and o,hopedic Surgeon will ioin the Clinic Staff on
Januaq 3, 1990, having previously been in private practice at Hillcrest Clinic. Dr. Le~tz earned his 111edical degree
from the University of Pennsylvania in1958. His intern·
ship was at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital. He
has had separate surgical and orthopedic residenciei at
the University of Cincinnati hospital, co111pleting Orthop·
edics
. in 19 78•.Dr. Lenfl is a fello"'- of. the A1111rican Col·
lege of Surgeons and a 111ember of the American College ·
of Chest Physicians. He hcu enioyed a very successful
. practice In the Gallla, Jackson, Mason, and Meigs County
areas.
(

Patients who have an appoint•nt with Dr. Lentz at his
Hillcrist' location after January ·1, 1990 should keep
their appointment date and time at his new offke In the
Orth0111dic Depart....nt of Holzer CHIIic. For 111on lnfor•
~~~ation or to schedule an appolnt•nt, call the Holzer ·
Clinic Orthopedic D~rtment at 4•6·5401.
'

( I

'

r'

l·

•

ALL '89 &amp; '90 SENTRAS
OVER INVOICE*
ONLY

Is .Pleased
•
To Welcome.

..

nJ&amp;ht and will host Warren Local
Friday . Marietta plays at Zanesville Tuesday and will host
Athen&amp; Friday . ·
Friday's reserve game, the
MHS. ·cub&amp; snapped Gallipolis'
11-game winning streak, 60-43.
Ga!Upolls trailed only 35-33 going
Into the final period, but the Cubs
poured 25. points . through the
hoop while GAHS managed 10.
The Blue Imps' trailed 15-12
after one , but led 24-20 . at
halftime. After a 31·24 GAHS
advantage .In · the \hlrd stanza , .
MHS tallied 18 of the next 20
po'lnts to win going awa:t.
Scott Jividen led the1m.'ps with
1~ . Chad Lincoln had 17, Doug

In

83 FORD Escort Wagon .................... *1.495
84 CHEVY Celebrity .......................... *2,495
.86 CHEVY Cavalier Station Wagon .... *3,995
86 CHEVY Camaro ............................ '3,995
. 83 MERCURY Grand Marquis ............ '2,995
88 FORD Escort .... :........... ,......... ;.... *4,795·
86 DODGE 600 ................................ '4,495 .
87 DODGE Aries Station Wagon ........ '4,995
86 BUICK Century .......................... ,. *4,995
86 MERKUR XR4Ti ..... ~ ..................... '4,$95
87 NISSAN Sentra, red ................ :.... *4,995
89 PLYMOUTH Horizon ... :................. *5,496
87 FORD Taurus ................... :... :....... *5,495
87 CHEVY Celebrity, blue .................. '5,496
88 NISSAN, Pickup, white ................. '5,996
86 CHEVY Camaro ............... , ... .'....... *5,895
88 NISSAN Pickup, long bed ............. *6,996
87 CHEVY Camaro ..... ; ..................... '6,495
87 OLDS Cutlass ........ :..................... '6,496
89 NISSAN Pickup ...... ~ .................... '7,296
87 PONTIAC Bonneville .................... '7,995
,89 NISSAN 300 ZX ......................... '16,995
.

'IIIIIICK UIITS OIILY. EXCLUDES lASE IOOEL

*'"•

.

Zoeller 14 and Adam Mcl(lt.rld!!:;
10 for the winners.
Vanity Box:
GALLIPOLIS (44) - , Stra,!h :'r
2·2·6; Sheets, 0·(1).0-3;
0·(1) -2-5; Murphy , 0-0-0;
am$. 3-(1).0·0-9; Neal,
McNeal, 6·3·15; Smith,
'J'OTAI.S 14·(3)-7-44.
. MARIETTA ( 43) ~ Mcl&lt;entld~~
2·1-5; .suer, 0-0-0; McKlt
1·2-4; Smith, 2-llHl-7; Hu:~~~~~=~:~·~
3·1·7: Suerken, 7-6-20;
0·0·0. TOTALS 15·(1)·10-43.
Sc.o re by Quarters:
Galilpolls ....... .. .... 9 14 8 13-·4~·=·
Marletta .. .... ........ IO 13 9 ..--.....
Reserve score- Marietta
Galll polls 43

AHS wins.

leSs through the · first three
periods, ·but he accounted for all
of ills se'Ven points In the fourth
along With eight points from Jeff
Ontko while the high-powered
LHS offenle was limited to just '
nine potnts.
It was Ontko's goal at the 3:22
mark that tied' the g'ame for the
fltst time at 53·53. One minute
later Loaan's Jim Redd tipped In
a goal to make It 55·53.
Just over one minute remained
when Ontko lg'aln tied It a!' 55-~,
and wltli 29 seconds showing
Plummer scored, was fouled,
and converte!l the three-point
plliy for a 58·~5lead.
, On Logan's . final trip up ll)e
MARIETTA '8
Mcllltrtck
·meets GAHS guard William
floor Chad Stiverson fired off a
Strait
(U
left)
a1
half-eourt
during
Friday's SEOAL hardwood
·
potential three paint goal that
game
In
hUOn
G11'1atMarletta.
TbeTigeracellmltedGallla'stop
mls~, but teamate J.R. Cordle
aeorer 1o ilx Points. GalQpolls won In lhe final seconds 44-43 C!ver
grabbed the . rebound and
(SEq;Opponents)
droppl!d It In just as the flnaJ born
the home team.
,
, IA'f-Gamee) ·
sounded. ·
' ·
·'
lock l -0·2; Shad Patterson 4·3·11;
·TEAM
· , W L
P _ OP
Ontko, led tbe Warriors (10-3; lead afier three quarters.
Athens ............... 11 1 . 865 676 4-2) ·wltb 21 points while Chad · The Bulldogs had built a Nate Schaller 5-2-12. TOTAlS .
Por'tsmouth 1...... . 10 2 1026 815 Shuttleworth drilled. four trtfec- lopsided 42·17 lead with just one 17-8-42~
Seore .b y Quarters:
South Point ........ 8· 2 666 · 635. tas eliroute to an 18 point effort ~ minute left before Jac~on's
Jackson
......... ..... .. 6 4 4 9-23
Warren .............. 11 3 1120 919 for Logan.
George Smalley canned a pair of
Logan .... .'........... 10 4 996 864
Logan outscored Warren frorn three point goals to reduce the Athens ................. . 6 8 14 14~42
Reserve Score ~ Athens 57,
Wheelersburg .. ,. 8 3 719 470 tbe floor, netttnc24of69attenipts final spread to 42-23.
Jackson
44 .
Greenflel&lt;l......... 8 4 679 548 for 34.8 percent while WLHS
Nate SChaller led Athens· with
Chfi'Sapeake .... ... 8 5 863 810 made. 21 of 54 to finish with 38.9 · '12 Points ~bile Smalley finished
Waverly ............ 7 5 709 612 percent .. At the foul. line, how· With eight poln~.for the Ironmen .
SoutlJex:n ........ :... 7 5 848 754 eVer, }'l'arren meshed 16 of 28
Pt.l'lelant ...... 55 G •
••''9!11WIIfleLoganwas .ftlllfof
Wal1
.
.
VInton : ... :.......... 4 6 5BiJ, 581 elgbt.
bum
Clayton Valentine'
Gallipolis ..... : .. :.. 5 7 ~ 692
The Chieftains also held the
Marietta ..... ,...... 2 11 752 824 qe off the boards, 36-32, with Mike Moore 0.2-2; Chris White ·
Jackson............. 2 12 7()4 798 Redd grabbing eight for Logan 2-0.4; Shane· Prater 1-0-2. T&amp;
SEOAL V~RSITY
and Kevin Fausnaugh collecting TALS 6-H-23.
W L
p OP 11 for Warren. '
TEAM
ATHENS (42) -Scott Stricklin
,Log;ln, ... :....... 5 1 435 351
The Box Score:
1-0:2; Jon Reed 2-2·6; . Scott
Athens. ·.. ....... ; 5 · 1 408 348
LOGAN (57) - Shawn AI- Decaminada 4-1-9; Kevin ~curWarren ....... ... 4· 2 412 399 lender 1-1-5; Chad Stiverson
GalUpolls ...... . 3 3 307 339 5-2-12; J.R. Cordle 2-0-4; · Chad
Jackson ... , ..... 1 5' ' 304 391 Dennis 3-0·6; Chad Shuttlewor~
Marietta.......... 0 5 · ~11 · 349 · 2'4-2-18; Jim Redd 3-0-6; TreVor
18 18 2177 ,1177 .UIJaer 3-0-6. 'llOTAU 11-H-17.
TOT.,.LS ,
Frida,'a .rtl.!lults:
_
WAJtUN (18) ~ Steve KnowiGalllpolll44 Marietta 43
ton 0-ll-2; Larry Ryan 1-2-4; Scott
Warren l.,il9a158 Logan 57
Mitchem 4-2-10; . Rick. ~hOlies .
Athens 42,.Jaci(Son 23
,
~0-4; Curt Plummer 1-5-7; ,:ref!
--~~
Ontko 9·3·21; Kevin Fausnaugh
Ntwr iJiftf
,.,a.:u:w:.
, ._!IEOAL RESW ELRVESP .· OP 4-2-10. TOTAllS !1-4-111-18. t '
TE ,..,.
Seore by Quartera:
~ · Ow ....... Inti _ _ "',..,.,
GaiUpolls ....... 5 1 288 285 Logan................ 17 18 13 9~57 . ,. . .lllfj
.
.
. . . . , 10 IJIJfMII- llt
IJ I ,
Athens ........... 4 2 296 280 Warren .............. ll 13 13 21-58
_ , .., ir ns ,..,._ ...,,.,. """""
· Mar,let~&amp;&gt; ........ 4 · 2 319 276
Raerve Seore - Logan 52,
JackSon .... .... . 3 3 297 286 Warren 38.
'
iiSii(J 1 Mlill.,.l~"'f/111.1111/Logan............ 2 4 264 276
-~~ ·
"" . . . . I
Athena 4! Jacklon =:! .
Warren .......... 0 6' 260 321
... its ,..,.,.,._ .
tOTAU
18·· 18 1724 ·1724
ATHI!:NS ~ A very · .slow,
1111 ,,.,.....,__"""""',......,
.Friday's resUlts:
deliberate Jackson offense de.,.,.~;,
Marletla 60 Gallipolis 43'
slgn.ed to slow a potent Athens
lllllftlllf1MI ,~,..,. «Hiinll&gt;ll rod~~
·Athens 57 Jacksoil44
offense, worked for just one half
Logan 52 Warren Local 38
Friday night before the Bulldogs .
'
!
Frlday'a I!On-SEO results:
~ted a 42-23 SEOAL victory.
Federal Hocking 73 VInton
This crawling pace resulted In
County 61
only 25 shot at temptl by the
South Point 65 .Chesapeake 50 lronmen (they made eight for 32
(ot) .
·
percent) while Athens finished
1
Hillsboro 56 Greenfield 48
· with 17 of 43 for 39.5 percent.
Portsmouth .69 Ashland 6!i
Rebounds were also scare as.JHS
Southern 55 Hannan ·Trace 46
pulled down 22 while Athens bad
Huntington East 51 Pt. Pleasant . just 12 Ill tbe first three quarters
49
.
,
•
'
beto" flnllblnc with 23.
• waverly 58 Valley 40
· '. · With the holl'!!! crowd chandnc
Wheelersburg 71 Northwest 37
"BOR-RING" "BOR-RING" the
Last nlgbt'a games:
teams were .tied 6-6 after one
Waverly at Gallipolis
period, Athens led 14"10 at
. Wheelersburg at Vinton County
halftime am;l had taken a 28-14
Buffalo' at South Point '
Columbus Wethle at Athens
(makeup)
Greenview at Greenfield ,
Southern 111, · Hannan Trace
(makeup)

HALE-COURT PRESSURE- Marietta's Matt McKenna (20,
lelt) applies half-court pressure on Gallipolis' Josh Williams' ( 32)
durtog Frld,a y's Southeastern Ohio League basketball game In
Sat&amp;on Gym~ The Blue Devils won 44-43 In tbe closing seconds of
plAy for their fourth straight victory.

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Cage standings

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HOLZER CLINIC

Sh.w'n McNeal was the only
. GalBan In double figures with 15.
Williams added nine. The Tigers
did a good job on Strait, limiting
the Galllans top scorer to. six·
markers,
.
Pete Suerken led the Tigers
with 20 polnts;l51n the first half.
GAHS defenders held Suerken
without a field goal during the
final two periods. ~-"
Jeff Smith and Jeff Hunsaker
each had seven tor MHS:
TheTigershltl6of33fleldgoal
atk&gt;mpts for 48.4 percent 10 or 16
free tosses, had 11 personals,
sev·en rebounds, seven by
Suer)len, and 12 turnovers .
Gallipolis played Waverly last

VINCE~ ~ Trailing by 11
points entering the fourth quar· '
!er· the Warren Local Warriors
(/Utscored the Logan Chieftains
21-91n ~lltHllllil im~"to·~'lrierge •··
with a !i8;57 11pset victory Friday
night.
.
The loss drops the Chleft!llns
· (10-4, s,l) .Jhto. a tie with the
.,_!hens Bulldogs (11-1, 5-l) for
fi,J;st place In the SEOAL standlogs with four )eague contests
remaining.
.,
•
F.rlday, night ·the Chieftains ·
made It look easy for .three
periods as they led by scores of
17-11, 35-24, and 48-37 before the
fateful fourth quarter. ·
Warren:s ace shooter,. C)lrt.
Plummer; had been held score-

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looM! iJJ.11n mldotir and
In two (0: 33) to clve GAR$ -the
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Cl\ltbt the Devils napping and
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Tlcers back on top, 43-42.
Osbone called time with 17
second&amp; left. GAHS worked It up
court Wllllains sUpped behind
Josh McKitrtck after GAHS. had·
spread Its offense and scored the
wlnnlilg goal uncontesk&gt;d.
Gallipolis hit 17 of 40 field goal
attempts for 42.3 percent. The
~lis were seven of nlne .· at the
line, hac! 12 personals and 25
rebounds. Gallipolis commit led
12 ~overs, seven In the first .
period.

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SOUTHIAS't
IMPOUS
·n c - I O A I

NEW DELUXE,. TRACTOR SEATS

In

' Pomlroy-Mict'eport-GIIIpolla. Ohio-Point Pleaunt. W. Va ...

COibee
from.
behind
in fmal seconds to win, 44-43
=
IMIIiPed

poJia

1986 DODGE
·34 ION, AUIO., 01Y-8
'

'IIY 21, 1110

- V'blllfilltltlliM
IINre t'Jtlll''a COIIIrcJI1Iq of 110111
10-2 aJid 36-31
boards, Improved bal~ ~~inC
Ill hi the f1rttt aJid last perlpcla after die ftnt period (...,....had
P'l1day Dllhl to llaDd tile Ma- ~eYeD of ltll 12 tuii!GI'el'l In tbe
rletta Tllfl!l1la44-43Bondleastern flnt q.,-lllr) aJid cOod defenltve
Ohto Leaaue bulretball aetbacll. play by tile entire team, llmltiJIC
Jlllllor Pard Jolb Williams' the 1'1aer1 wen below tbllr 58
drlvlnf layup wltb fM!B«&lt;nda point averqe. ·
left proved to be tbe came's
Dw1Da Frlday'a 32-mblalel
""' wlnnfDa lOBI. llfatt· McKenna's con.test, lbe lead exclwJwd
40-foot delperallon sbotfell short haildl 17 times. The score ~as
at tbe buaer as Coach Ed tied on dtf!erent occasions. Big' Paxton's Tigers fell to 2-11 geat MHS advanta&amp;e was 10-2
overalland0-61nsldetheleague. with 4:13 left In the tint canw
Coach Jim Osborne's B.lue (ollowlnca layup and fouilhotby
Devils inade ltfour straight wins Jeff Hj1J118ker. Marietta led 36-31
and Improved their season mark with 5:40 left In the came, and
to5-7.mlldetbeSEOAL,GaiUpo- · hadatleasttwOchancestouptbe
lis even~ Its record at 3-3.
count at that point.
• flillton · thought the came's
W!Utama .hit a short Jwnper
tlll'l!lnc J)olllt was the field goal alld William Strait canned one
tossed In by Smith (Ryan) after from tht! lllde to knot the·110unt at
the ball waa .flipped back by 36-811 wltb 3: 3llett. '
someone In' Ule crowd under the
After . Shawn McNeal gave
GAHS ' ~tM. "I knew :it we GAHS "a 40-38 lead (1:43), Jeff
dJdh' t scorefffft" 50, It was going Smith hit a three-point bomb
t!l be ~ clOSe game" Paxton from the comer to give MHS a
added.
•
U-40 ed&amp;e at the 1: 21 mark.
' Os~rf o&lt;felt ; the key points
Alert Ryan Smith grabbed a

9-04-22; Haines 1-4-24; Lewis
0.1-0.3; Maynard 0-1-4-3; Potter
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Fram the Door - 15-56 (2&amp;.8")
At tile liM - 6-8 (75%)
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Marietta at ~ville '
Ceredo-Kenova .at South Point
Pt. Pleaunt at Barbounvllle
Frlllay'l pmea:
Warren Local at Galllpoll.S
Athens at Marietta
Jacuan 11 Loaan
Vlntoq Co1,111ty at Miller
Ch""•l etlle at P:alrland
Soulll.fo!B at Buffalo
Greildlel4'1it .Miami Trace ·
RuAiillat·Portsraoutb
Nortb Gallla at Soullen!.
Wah&amp;ma at Point Pleuant ·
Waverly at Portsmouth We5t
Wheelersburg at Minford
Jaa. 2'7pma:
Gaillpolls at Portsmouth
Warrell Local at Belpre
Raveuwoo4 a&amp; SOittbern
rune Trate at Waverly

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21 1110

Ohio Point Plana Ito W. Va.

With FriJay

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~21,1110

wins, .

•
'•

iet•

REJECTION- Rll!lnan Trace center Crall RanldD (33)
bill
'hand on lhe ball to reject the ahot attempt ol an unidentified
Southern player during Chapter I ot this year'• grudge mateb at·
Racine. H~wevel', the Tornadoes prevailed enough times to' post a
5H&amp; victory. (Times-sentinel photo)

·'

Eaatera bid 30 tuniOVera, 21
steala, 17 ualata and 18 foul&amp;.
·sWHS had 32 turaovers.lO steals
and 14 peraonaiJ. .
Bissell led EHS with 6 thefts·
, while Durst had ~ as sis ts,Savoy
4. 'nd Caldwell 4. Metzger had
tour steall Cor SWHS.
Eastern WOJ! the reserve game
. 35-34 led by Wes Holter with ·8,
Matt Flnlaw and Chad Savoy
with 6, and Tom Hunter 5.For the
Hlgb41nders, Adam Slmp&amp;on had
11 and Adam Blair 9.
·
A huge credit should be given
to the officials who worked the
game· as they bad already done
the reserVe game, but when the
varsity officials did not show also
had to do the varsity game.

Seore by quarters
Southwestern ...... 9 13

22 18-64

87 DAVE BARRIS
·
T-8 Correepoadent
ROCK SPRINGS- The Trim·
ble Tomcats hit six or seven shots
trnm three-j)Oint range, lncludlnl four o1 five from . Scott
McClelland, en,. route to a 66-54
victory over the Melp Mataud·
ers FridaY night at Larry R.

Eulera ............ 18 25 19 22-IN
E.U'l'EBN (Sf) - Caktwell
0·2·1·7, Savoy 3·2·1·13. Froal
6-0-1·13, Bissell 4.0.1-9. Dunt ··
2·3·1-13. Murphy 2·0.2-6, Wheeler ;
3-().0.4), Moore 5-().().10, Adams
1·0.0.2. TOTALS - • I Ul.
SOVTIIWESTERN (N) -Bry·
aat, 0.().3-3, Hammond 3-0-3-9,
Jesse Ehman J..0.0.6, Meuter
6-0-12·18, John Ebmaa 3-0-2-8,
Potter 5-0.1·11, Sites 3-0-1-7. TOTALS tS-0-1!-a

MW~ Gy~naslum.
f the b~mcka sbcamldleroarlngou.()t

Tornadoes 111, Wlldca&amp;a •
· At ~acjne, \be Sou!bern Tornadoes struagled through the second period and reset Cor a much
slOwer tempo In the second half
en route to defeating the stub- ~ ·
born Hannan Trace Wlldrata •
(See SOtJTIIERN·•

•Wheel

lllgnm~nt ,

Cl) ·

·'

.•
: HANGING toUGH- A ualdeldlfted MeiP plaJer (wlt!l b..l)
. ·haap toqb tJlll.atiJte.defenaeoffered by a palroiTrlinble player

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•Used Tires
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:durtn1 FrldiJ nllld~• TVC contest oa llte.M arauders' home court.
:'rhe Torneat, ~I)I•M.. ~Time&amp;-Sentlnel .photo)

242 W.

Mal~

~"'

.•

Po...,.y
'

'

'j

•

Herifqge Christian ·
edges OVCS 63-61 .

'.

RAVE!It!lWOOD. W.Va.
kept driving It In to blm." Asbury
"We gave the game away by not said. "The score Indicates the
making wise declsions·and mak- result."
lng bad passes." said Ohio Valley
The game marked the return of
Christian coach William .Asbury Ohio Valley center E.T. VanMaafter the Defenders' 6J.61 1oss to tre, who scored two points.
Heritage Christian Academy Frl· VanMatre broke his leg against
day night.
Symmes ValleyonJan.9andwas
• ·'This is the first time In my cleared by the doctor to play ·.
career that I've had a team fose before the game, according to
five In a row,".ASburysaldofhls . Asbury.
crew. Who posted a 32-28 halftime '· The Defenders (3·6, 1·2) will
lead and took an 11-point lead In bost Cross Lanes Christian on
the last five minutes of the game. Monday.
"(Heritage) bad a &amp;.5 guy Score by quarters
. . · . .
inside (Jeff Hurst, who led all , OVCS ...... ..... :.... 16 16 14 15-61
sco rers with 39 points), and we Herltage ..... .,..... 13 15 11 24-63
HERITAGE (63) - Hurst
11·1·14-39; Barnes 1·1·3-8; Trl·
plett 2-0·2-6; Gray 2·0·0-4; Pre~­
ton 1.0.2-4. TOTALS- lH·U·a
Foul shootlnr- 21-33 (63.6%)
OHIO VALLEY (61) - Hill
9·2·8·32; Wray 5-0·2·12; Rawlings
(All games)
TEAM
W L PF PA 2·1·2·9; Peavley 3-0.0-6; VanMa·
Eastern .......... 11 · 3 1045 999 tre 1-0·0·2. TOTALS - 20-3·1U1
Fo8lallootlnl-12-25 (48%)
North Gallia ... 8 6 973 894
RelloUDde - 30
•.
.Southern ......... 7 5 863 751
Blocked
shots
1
.• Hannan Trace 7 · 7 838 789
Alalata -8
S-Valley ......... 5 6 679 702
Steala-8
Southwestern .. 5 9 1038 994
Tumover• - 20
Oak Hill .. .. .. .. . 3 10 749 925
Kyger Creek... 1 12 701 975

or

I'

off

SVAC standings

(SVAC game8) ,
TEAM
W L PF
Eastern .......... 9 . 0 674
Southern .... ,.... 7 1 637
North Gallla ... 7. :j.. 725
S-Valley ......... 4 $ 543
Hannan Trace 4 5 542
Oak Hill ......... 3 6 538
s0uthwestern .. 3 7 707
Kyger Creek ... 0 10 526
TOTALS ........ 37 37 4882

632
587
507

648

edges Point 5149 · .

ACI

468

BLOWER

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MOTORS
.

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N•¥(. For MOll

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711
760

4892

(Reserves)
TEAM
W L PF PA
Southern ......... 8 0 417 265
North Gallla .. . 9 1 499 376
Hannan Trace 6 3 400 . 327
Oak Hill ..... .:.. 5 4 409 386
S.Valley ......... 4 5. 371 371
Southwestern .. 3 7 383 465 ·,
. Ells tern .......... 2 7 328 411
Kyger Creek ... 0 10 266 472
TOTALS ........ 37 S'7 :1073 :1073
'

H~1fitington Eas~ .

PA
579

'

.
Friday'• ftllllls
Southern 55, Hannan Trace •&amp;
Eastern 84, Southwestern 62
North Gallla 71, Oak Hill 38
Symmes Valley 54, Kyger Creek
52
Tueada.J'• eo•lell8
Wahama at Kypr Creek
Nbrtllwest at Oak Hill
Iron toil St. Joe at Symmes Valley

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overh&lt;:o mea~theTomcatspicked
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10 tries. Harrison scored all6 of

1

his po,l nts In the f6urth quarter,
with VanMeter and Mitch each
scoring 5.
McClelland , a 6·3. senior fo·
ward, continued to lead the
Tomcats as he hit 4 out of 5 from
three-point range and 4 for6from
the line for 16 points to take
scoring honors. Curt Moore
added 15 and Bobby Burdette 11.
The Tomcats were 18 of 47 from
the line for 38, and a red-hot6 of 7
from the line for 86%. Trimble
cashed in on 9'of 20 from the line
for 45%. Trimble grabbed 3i
rebounds with Scott Auflick
gztttng 10 and McClelland 8.
Mitch had another outstanding

.}

By Gary Clark
.IICd· th locals
doubl .
nitz 4-1·1!·15; Shannon Barrel! 4-1·
,
pemu
e
to
e Its 2·9· Tom McDermitt 2-3-3-7· Chris
. SPENCER. W.VL • Craig Coon advanlag_e during third perio!f J)laY Oldaker 2,0. I -4; Chris Zertde 2·0· .
tocaled 17 points and John Damitz as the stmgy_.WHS def~se ~mlted 0-4; Philip Upton 1-0·0-2; Jamie
added 15. to lead the ~lling Spencer to Just 10 pomts m d)e Burris 0..().().(); R~ey Bumgarner .
Wahama white Falcons pas1 Spcn- ~W12.1be White Falcons led by SIX • 0-0:1.0; Brent Fields 0-0.0-0; Scott
cer Fr,idsy night by a 58-49' score' ilfl.er tluee qi181Jers at38-32.
·
Pierce 0-0..(}.(); TOTALS .22-14-20·
.and snap a two game losing skid by • l"ree' lhtQws played an 1mportant 58
coach Lewis' Hall's ;Bend Area part of the final canto with Wahama
cagers
·
cashing in on six or eight charity
SPENCER (4')
Tbe.Whlte Falcons feD behind by tosSeS in the period while the
Fred Hammack 5-4-6-14; Min
a 9-2 margin early in the Little Yellow Jackets were successful on Mc!=ulty 4·2-4-10; Steve Nichols
Kanawha Conference encounter but i!ISt five of 1.2 from the line. 4..(}.3-8; Rodney O'Brien 3· 1·2·7:
scmed eight straight points during Wahama maintained an eight to 13 Sam Sisic 2-3-6-7; Shane Keeler I·
the latter aages of the opening · point lead throughoul the final eight 1-2-3; Kevin Hall 0.().0-0; Jay
quarter ·to take a lead it would not minutes with its free throw profi· Hamric 0-0·1·0; TOTALS 19· 11 ·
relinquish
throughout
the dency er¢lling the Bend Area 24-49
remainder conrest. 11ie wiJ) srurp- team to pi'eserve the nine point 58·
Score by. Quarters:
ped a disappointing ':Jame LKC 49 victory.
1 2 3 4 Tot
losing slide for tbe 1
roundbaD ' Leading scorers in the contest for
men ·as Wahama improved to 7-4 the .White Falcons were Coon with WAHAMA 13 12 13 20 58
overau while boosting its&gt; Cj)D· 17 markers while Barnitz cOD· SPENCER II ·n . 10 17 49
ference slate 1o 44 on the season.
tril)uted 15 and B1111e11 rune. Swn·
· "Defense was the biggest differ· cer also placed a pair of Yellow Tot Fouls: Wahama 16, Spencer 15
ence in our ~g back iJ110 the jaclcet starters in double figures Fouled Out: None
win column, the · veteran WHS with Fred Hammack totaling .14 Tech Foul: Wahama Bench, Spen·
cage eoacb said following tbe win. points followed by Matt McCully cer Bench
"We played real good defense and ·with 10.
moved the ball exaemely well on
In the preliminary contest coach
offense and as a resUlt we llf'Clbllbly ~18!*. CaJlehart 's Little Falcon
had the !lest pme overall we've. Juruor. varslly &amp;quad weathered a 5·5·46 Friday night.
Southern Is now 7·5 overall and
pia~ this seiSOII." added Hall.
: founb· period comeback effort. by
• Our~ outside people 101 the · ~- Spencer roundball qu!ntet and 7-1 in the SVAC, while Hannan
ball to w"- it llllon1d .be wlildl,ip · c:&amp;q~e· away with a hard fought 44- Trace Is 7·7 and 4·5.
Southern -was led by junior
tum afforded us a real good sliot 411JJ{C decision.
selection aD evening long,~ added ·
Wahama. with· only Chris guard Todd Grindstaff, who took
HaD, Wahama shot a respectable · Thomas in double figure scoring, control of the ball and carried a
. 40% (22 of SS) from the floor while received a baiaJICed venture in the hot hand for 'I game-high 20
converting 14 of 20 (70%) fro!n the si:oring cQiumn oJo i:ome away with points. Senior Brad Maynard and
free lhrdw line. "We dido 't shoot as the victory. The wi11 improved the junior Andy Baer had good
weit as ·we could have but we got WHS junior varsity slate to 6-3 games with 11 and 10 respec·
lively. while Brent Shuler and
the good shots ·llild made . them ovenill and S-3 inside league play.
count when we had too," Hall said. BllaCk with. 13 !allies followed by Jayson Codner each knotted 5.
For Hannan Trace Eric Lloyd
"Spencer's gym is an awfully tough Brent Larck ·with eight and Scott
.
hIt
from all angles to polish ort a
place to Shoot the ball for a high Pierce with six. Spencer recieved
fine
offensive night and team·
percentage especially for a visiting IS points from Barker and nine
high
18
points. Teammate Riehle
team."
·
.
from Minko.
Cornell
added 8 points, ·and
While Coon and Damitz paced ~ In the first
lhe triple-heided
dependable
Craig Rankin came 1
the Wahama offense the Bend Area games, Wahama fresh~n beat the
through
with
14.
·
team n:ceived a big lift from senior Spencer plnth ~grader$, 42-38.
A seesaw first quarter saw the
fon\lard Shannon Barrett who came · Wahama "c8Jile. /rom behind"on 20
score
tied first at 2-2, then 4-4
.lhe 'bench to score nine points · points from .Cbessie . Pyatt and
before
Southern began to open Its
for the.White Falcons. Barrett, the fifteen from Carl King to pull it out
ortenslve
game . with a Baer
versatile sixth m·an for the WHS ' and win their fifth game against
three-pointer
and driving jumper
varsi~ quintet, "dicl.a real good job two losses . .
by
Grinds
tat!
to give Racine a 9·4
Aaron Grate conn-ibuted 3 ·
for us' according to Hall.
lead.
Wahama fell behind early and points, and Chad Weaver and RJ.
A' couple of missed SHS shots
trailed the Yellow Jackets by a 9-2 Roush each had 2 points. Kinder
margin before Damitz and Coon led was big gun for Spencer with 18 and Important boards from Todd
. the Bend Area team on an 8·0 run points, while six each went to Star· Boothe and Lloyd set i.tp successful HT scoring opportunities aild
to give the White Falcons a lead it cher, Sharp and Walls.
would never surrender: WHS
Wahamll freshmen will host their the score was again tied at 9·9 on
claimed .' a 13-11 advantage after next game Monday against a corner jumper by Lloyd. Next
J.J. Bevan put HT up 11·9 on· a
one period and i~creased its margin Ravenswood.
.
.
to three points 25-22 at the half
Wahama returns to "' action on twisting drive, but after that HT
with Coon, Barren and Damitz Tuesday when the White Falcons began tofadewlth SHS taking a 6
&lt;loing all die scorin&amp; for Wahams in vis~ neighboring Kyger Creek with point lead before, ending the
the set~ !*Ito:
.
.,
tipoff,times slated to begm at 6:00 canto at 21·17.
Southern blitzed early In the
Coonl~JitreE'ts and two each • and 7:30·pm.
·
second round, streaking to a 15·2
from TC~i,t ' Me
itt, Pllilip Up: ' '
WAH AMA (58)
.scoring
advantage at one point
ton, Clbijl 01 er and Barrett
Crai~ Coon 7-3-5-17; John Bar·
(32-19). but .a baseline drive by
Lloyd and ensuing free throw on
the foul gave HT some badly
needed momentum and the
Guyan five were back on track at
32-22.
Now It was HT' s tum and they
outscored SHS 10-4 during the
·
By Rick Simpkins
The Big Blac~ added to their final ·spurt before halftime for a
, 'It!'
. lead in the sebmd .QI1ar!er behind 36'32 ballganie.
The Big Blicks auffered lbrollgh ~ S(;oring o( F*.c ~ M'!'fOW, Southern twice built up leads of
a co!Hounh quaner lilst night as wiJ? each ·~ Sill pomts m the
the HunlinJIOD East Hi.lhllnden ~.The Bl&amp; Blacb scored ~4
came from behinil to deleat Pblnt polllts m die second qaaner while
· 51-49.
' the Hlghllndcrs eoul~ ooly
East oui5COI'ed the Big· Blacks nin.e JX!iniS. East cut
~ to
18·5 in tbat final frame to post the four pomts on two oc~10ns tn _the
PAC 8 win. The Big Blacks, who qulllter, b~t e~ghl straight pom~
led all but, one minute and thirty !iom ~ B1g Blac~ put the ~~~~
seconds of the game, managed only atl2 Wit!' 2:271eft m the period.
tleld goals from Jeremy Blain and
The B1g Bl.;ks shot the ball well
Br}'an Faber and 8 foul shot by in the firSt half, hitting 1S . of 29
Blain in ·thai decisive founh fi~ld JIOIIs fur 52%. Mean~ile. the
quarter.
.
• . Highfanders made ()lily eight or 28
. The Jilghlanders jumped oul to a shots, good for only 29%. The Big
4·2 lead With Brad Bell and Brian B~ were one for two ~m the
Lucas ' each hitting field goals, fOII;I ~ in the linl half, while the
lllldwicbed lrOUIId 0110 by Blain VISitors l'rom Cabell County were
The Blacks tben IICorecl nine~ four or eight rrom the chlrity stripe ·
- . 1 hi
.
in .....,
tho 11m
l"Ml Ql*la1~... uch
- ..1 pomts,
WI'lh J81011 Willi
..,,_..
bitting a 3-pointer and Bryan Mor·
""' uw" quarter - - m
row hitting twice for PoinL Chuck like die~ two quartm. EMI
Wood 101 tbe other bulret for tbe ~ llrst. but hehs by Wood,
Big Bllcks in the run. The 1811111 Faber and B~ increlled the Point
tnlded baskets for the remainder of I~ 10 16 poliiiS at 38-22. ~
the firBl period, widl the Big Bllcb Hii!JIInden flmO beck with SIX
once strctdlinJ tbelr lilif to 10 striilbl of their OWD to CUI the lead
points, ~ 10 bane lhe Hiablln
to lO'llefore Morrow sccnd for the

Southern ...

SHOOTING INSIDE can be tou1h wlllt aomeone oayourback, u
Eastern's Jeff Durst (311) finds oul u lie batlles Soudl-liern
center Chris Metzger under tile baaket durtag Friday nlpi's game
at Tuppers Plains. Durst tied twoolhls teammates with 13 points to
help pace lite Eagles to BD 8f.fl2 win. (TimetH!entlnel photo)

.f•

o
e oc s u 1 ng up a 9
lead before L.J. Mitch hit two
Cree thr.ows at the 3:20, mark. to
put Meigs on the scoreboard. The
Tflmcats hit 3 .C?f 3 from beyond.
the three ~lnt line In building up
a 22·8 lead at the end of the first
quarter.
Milch cut the lead to22-11at the
7: 45 mark of the second period on
a three point play, The Maraud·
ers played even with tbe';l'omcats
In · tbe second period but Meigs
. could aet no closer than a 11 point
deficit on a couple of occasions.
· Jay Humphreys and Mitch led
· the way for Meigs-In the second
period In scoring with Humph· rey~ netting 6 points and Mitch 5.
The Marauders hit another
cold streak In the third quarter as

Trimble out scored the maroon
and·gbld 11·6 to hold a 50·30 lead
beading Into the final 8 minutes.
Behind ~he scoring or freshman
Trevor Harrison, Mike Van Melet:, and Mttch, Meigs outscored
the Athe.ns County team 24-16 In
the final quarter but the fh'st and
third quarters proved to be too
much tor the Marauders to

Wahama posts-58-49 win 'over Spencer

UlCUS FILII

.OWIIEIS ·
.992·21 ..1 .

.

'

MEIGS
TilE
CENTER
JOIII
J,
FUlTI -

Santin•-Paga C-5

-Trimble -d o,ms .Meigs Marauders 66-54.·

Eastenl, Soyth~m s~y on ·top of- SVAC .
EAST MEIGS - oUtscoring first frame, but SWHS hit -a
Southwestern 1&amp;.2 In the second cooler 2 or 19 as a glass plate
quarter just before halftime, the covered much of the first ball
Eastern Eagles opened up a 43-22 bucket.
halftime score · eilroute to an
Southwestern enjoyed a much
84-62 SVAC triumph over the better 'SeCOnd frame as the ever
Highlanders Friday night.
husUlng Highlanders did not call
The front-running Eagles are · It quits and pulled to their closest
now 11·3 overall and 9-l! In the point since tb,e first quarter at
SVAC, while SWHS Is 5-9 and 3·7 27·20 on a John Ehman jumper.
~.
In the league.
Eastern picked up the. tempo
Eastern again used Its great
and
got In · shOoUng rhythm
balance to secure t()e win as four
behind
the efforts of Randy .
men bit double figures and nine
hit the scoring column hrcontrl· Moore on thi!.lnslde,key bucket~
butlng to the win. Eastern rolled from Savoy and Bissell on the
the dice for a trio of 13-pob)t outside, a Kenny Caldwell three
efforts, as Shaun Savoy, Mike pointer, and Mark Murphy goal
Frost and Jeft Durst each had to push ahead In a 16·2 stretch·to
that .number, while junior Randy the first half buzzer.
In the fli-st hall SWHS lost· the
Moore, an UP:and-comlng post
services
of Brad Bryant who took
man, had 10.
shot
Into the furnace vents
a
hard
Tim Bissell added 9, Kenny
and
appeared
to sUffer a rib
Caldwell 7, and six each from
Injury.
In
the
third
frame s~s
Mike Wheeler and Mark Murphy.
also
took
a
severe
blow as
·Highlander Chris Metzger led
all scorers with 18 points, wh!le high-scoring JobnE"man tett ~e
Bill Potter had 11, John Ehman· game with a badly distorted and
had 8, Joe Hammond 9, John palnflilly Injured ·ankle. The
extent of.that Injury appeared to
Sites 7, and Jesse Ehman •6 . ·
be very serious..
,
The tempo of the game from
Southwestern
made
a
slight
the onset was typical upbeat,
run-and-gun Eastern style bas· ·run at the Eagles In the third
ketball. but with Eastern's quick round, but Eastern 'maintained
lead and shooting woes from both Its zeal for the win.
The EagleS had 45 rebounds,
sides, the game added a new flair
led
by Mark Murhpy and Randy
of sloppiness. 'J;'hls was evl-'
Moore
with 8 each, w,.lle John
denced by the 62 turnovers In the
Ehman
and Metzger each bad 6
game. ·
Eastern had no single hero In each of ·Southwtistern's 12. I
EHS hit 29of58from thefioor, 6
establishing' an early lead as
otlO
treys and 8 of 16 at the I me.
every player took his turn In the
SWHS
hit 25 of69; 0·3, and 12of25.
spotlight a~ they flew. to an 18·9
Eastern•
had.' 32 defensive refirst period le~td: ·
·
22
In
the
.
bounds
al&lt;li!e
of Us 45.
EHS hit a dismal 7

Sunday T111111

PM•uy-Midr.hport-Gallipolia, Ohio-Point Pleasant W.Va.

'.

'

enuaaciiaa.H

..

0

..

s .

den cut dlit JUliA to aeven at
endoftheqaarter.

·•
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*
.

B._ Blal:b io malte the ·IC()Ie 40-28
(See BIG

BLAcU
\\

on C-1)

Officials: K. Harran &amp; G. Pack

JUNIOR VARSITY
WAHAMA (44)
.Chris Thomas (l)S·0·0-13; Brent
Larck 4'0-1-8; Scott Pierce 3-0-06; John .Jcihnson (1)1 -0-2-5; Phillip
B;uey (1)0·2·2-5; Jimmx Goodnite
1-1,2'3; Troy Oldaker 0-3-5-3;
John Zuspan 0-1-4-1; TOTALS
(3)14-7-16-44
SPENCER (41)
Barker (1)2-8-15-15; Minko 4-1·
2-9; Booterbaugh 1-5-10-7; Scabro
3-0·0-6; Rishel 0-2-4-2; Harper 10-0-2; Westfall 0-0-0.0; TOTALS
{1)11·16-31-41

game for · Meigs with 18 points
Meigs now 1· 7 in the TVC and
and 10' of the Marauders 36
1·10 overall played at Belpre in a
rebounds. Cary Betzlng also had
make-up game Saturday night
a good game on the boards with 9.
and will travel to Nelsonville on
Meigs hit 21 of 56 from the floor
Tuesday 'night. The .Marauders
for 38% and was 9 of 17 from the
defeated the Buckeyes In De·
line· for 56%.
cember for their lone win on the
A balanced scoring attack led
the Little Marauders of Rick Ash
~!~ by quarters
to a 63-58 win In the reserve
Trimble ............. 22 16 12 16-66,
game. James Howerton Jed
Meigs ............ ;.... 8 16 6 24-54
Meigs with 16 points,
Mike
MEIGS (54) - Fields 2·0·0-4,•
Cremeans hit 7 of 10 from the
Peyton 1·0·0·2. Betzing 3-0-3-9,
floor for 14 points, Bill Harless . Wright , 1·0,0-2 . .I-Jarrlson 1·1·1&gt;6,
and Terry McGuire added 12
Humphreys 4-0·0·8, Mitch . 7-0·4·
eac h and Trevor Harrison added 18, VanMeter 2-0-1-5. TOTALS9. ·Harless led Meigs on the 21-1-9-54
boards with 14 rebounds. to go
. TRIMBLE (66)- Moore 6·0·3·
along with Harrison grabblng10 15, McClelland 0·4·4·16, Bingham
and Howerton 9. Trent Pettit led 2-0-0-4, Burdette 4-1·1-11, Auflick
Trim ble with 16, CharUe Gatchel .4-0-0-8, Shonborn 1-1·0·5, c. Gat had 14.
·
chel 2·0·2·6. TOTALS_ 19-6-9-66

Gallia's New Car Dealers ~
to sponsor Tuesday contest
. RIO GRANDE - The Gallla
uqfverslty's · efforts to attract
County New Car Dealers Associ·
quality stude nt-at hletes, Red·
atlon are sponsoring the Tues·
men Coach John Lawhorn said.
day. Jan. 23 ll)en's basketball
"A university 's efforts to edugame between the Rio Grande
cate t.he people. it serves Is
Redmen and the Ohio Dom lnlcan . limited without the support and
Panthers. Game tlmels 7:30p.m.
interest of the local business
Free tickets for ·the game are
community," Lawhorn re·
availa ble at the four new car
marked. "With the Booster
dealerships in Gallipolis: Gene
Nights, we at Rio· Grande are
Johnson Chevrolet-Oldsmobile.
saying thanks to those business
1616 Eastern Ave.; Norris Norpeople who, through their annuaf
thup Dodge, 300 Third Ave. ; · financial commitment, have
Smith Buick-Pontiac. 1911 East·
made the job of bringing good
. ern Ave.; and Turnpike of
students.and good athletes to our ·
Gallipolis, 195 Upper River
school.
Road. · .
"The help shown 'by Gallla ··
·. Bymaking·donattons to the Rio
County's New Car Dealers Asso-·
Grande Athletic Booster Club, · elation is another indication of
the new car dealers have made a
the area's interest in the future of
significant contribution to the
Rio Grande, .. Lawhorn added.

TVC standings

('1\11 Games)
TEAM
' WLP OP
Miller .. ....... .... .. 10 3 884 793 .
Wellston ........... 9 3 851 732
Alexander
.. ...... 8 5 836 777
Score. by Quarters:
Fed-Hocking
..... 8 5 960 918 .
1 2 3 4 Tot
Trin'lble
....
........
$ 5 815 775
WAHAMA 5 16 14 9 44
6 10 11 14 41 Belpre ............. : 6 6 851 731
SPENCER
VInton County ... 4' 6 589 584
Tot Foul$: Wahama 20, Spencer IS Nels-York ......... 2 11 670 976
Meigs ............... 1 10 577 784
Fouled Out: Larck
Friday's results:
Officials: Unavailable
Alexander - Open
Miller 62 Nelsonvllle-York 43
(Continued from C4)
13 and 15 points in the third
'frame, but the alawys hustling
·Cats clawed back as SHS never
could .g et .ovenhe hump and put
them away. The Inability .for
Southern to put teams away has
haunted them all year long, but
Coach Howle Caldwell did every·
thing this ·night to prevent a
repeat of past efforts .
Going into the final round 49·40.
HT quickly close the gap, but a
more deliberate SHS game plan
regained momentum for . the ·
hosts and they closed· with both .
control of the game and the win.
Southern hit 19 of 39 from the .
floor. 2 of 7 threes and 11 of 17 at
the line. HT hit 21 of 50 from the
floor and 4·11 at the. line.
Southern had 30 rel)ounds led
by Maynard's 10, while Baer had
5 .and Shuler ·5.
· · .
:For HT, Boothe grabbed 8 of
the team's 25 rebounds and Lloyd
had 7.
SHS had 10 steals, 17 turnovers,
and 15 fouls, while HT had 4, 10
and 14 respectively ,
·
Southern won the reserve con·
test 49-29 led by Jeremy Roush's
12 and Michael Russeli's 11.
Jimmy Brace led HT with 9
points, while Chad Swain and
Brian Unroe had 7 each .
The two SVAC schools met
again last night In a n\ake-up
altair at Mercerville.
Score by quarters
Hannan Trace ..... 17 15 8 6-46
Southern .............. 2115 13 6-55
SOUTHERN (55) - Murphy
1-0-0-2, Baer 1·1·5·10, Grindstaff- ·
9-0·2-20, Bailey 1-0.0-2, Codner
1·1·0·5, Shuler 2·0·1-5. Maynard
4-0.3-11.-TOTALS 19-2·1HS
HANNAN TRACE (") Lloyd 8-0-2-18, Cornell 3·0·2·8,
·Bevan 2-0·0·4. Boothe 1·0-0·2,
Rankin 1·0·0·14. TOTALS 21·0-4·
46 •
'

Trimble .66 Meigs 54
Federal Hocking 73 Vinton
County 61
Wellston 70 Belpre 67
Tuesday's games:
Alexander at WellSton
Meigs 'at Nelsonville-York
Trimble at Federal Hock(ng
Belpre at VInton County
Friday's games:
.
Alexander at Federal Hocking
Wellston' at Meigs
VInton County at Miller
Trimble at Nelso nvllle-York

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431 PIKE STREET

. PH. 4U-9556 .

UNIVERSITY
QF RIO GRANDE
·..-...vsLAKE. 'ERIE COLLEGE

•••••

FRIDAY
FEBRUARY 2,1990
7:30 PJA. Game Time

KANAUGA, OHIO

HOLZER
..
CLINIC
z
NIGHT
0

·,

�·-

..
w. v•.

Ohio Point

'

With 30'points from Dumars,

SBIPI-..,._jwdercq u,
r11 II tl I lie 0 .......
.... 0111:, ...... ....

Pistons top ·Wariiors 132-107
By TOM WlfHi:Rs

UPI Spodll Writer
Golden State- coach Don Nelson should have•
known better.
On Thursday night, Nelson encouraged his
team to allow Michael Jordan to shoot from the
outside, thinking that might slow down the
superstar. Jordan burled a team-record. seven
three-point shots and scored 44 points In a 132-107
tout of the Warriors.
Apparently Nelson didn 't learn his lesson
because Friday night he tried the same strategy
on Detroit' s Joe Dumars and once again It
backfired.
Despite suffering flu symptoms; Oumars
scored 30 · points, Including 23 In the second
quarter, leading the Pistons to a 125-118 victory
over the Warriors.
Dumars, held scoreless In the ttrst quarter, was
perfect from the floor In the second quarter,
·making all 10 of his field -goal attempts. He scored
15:polnts in the final 2: 46 of the first half,lilcluding
three ·stralght three-pointers as the Pistons went
on a 17·5 run to close the half.
Nelson, who needs one victory to become the
lOth coach In NBA history to record 600 career
victories, said that there wasn't much his team
could do once Dumars warmed up.
···we were trying to look vulnerable.and let him
lOu mars ) have It (the three-pointer)," Nelson
said. "He slmpiy just kept hit ling the shots. When
he got-hot, the confidence factor sunk ln. and you
· and I and everyone In the whole buUding just knew
it was going in when the ball left· his hand."
Dumars · 23-point performace in the second
quarter was a team record. surpassing Kelly
Tripucka's mark of 20.
"I felt bad this morning at shootaround."
Dumars said. ''But I felt like If I got home and got
something to eat and drink and laid down I'd be
alright. But I got here and I couldn't loosen up. .
When you're sick, you tend to concentrate on what
you're doing and block everything else out."
Spurs 104, Cavaliers 101 - At San Antonio.

David Robinson scored 32 points and Terry
Cummings · added 29 to lead San AntoniO.
Cleveland was led by Randolph Keys with a
career-high 22 points and Larry Nance with 21.
Celtlcs 109, Pacers 184- AI Boston, Larry Bird
scored 29 points, Robert 'Parish 22 and Kevin
McHale 20 to pace Boston. The Celtlcs took the
lead for good with a 14-0 run late In the third
quarter. Indiana has lost Its last seven road
gamer.
Bulla 92, Hawks 84 - At Atlanta, Michael
Jordan was held to two poliits at halftime but
finished with 36 as the Bulls handed the Hawks
their sixth straight loss. Chicago received 17
points from Scottie Pippen. Atlanta was led by 26
points from Dominique Wilkins.
•
·
76erB 102, Heat 95- At Miami. Charles Barkley
scored 32 points to guide. the 76ers. Rony Selkaly
scored 32 points and grabbed 14 rebounds for
. Miami, which had a two-game winning streak
stopped.
.
Mavericks 117, Knlcks 103- At Dallas. Derek
Harper and Brad Davis scored 25 points apiece as
Dallas snapped a ttve-game losing streak. The
Mavericks won despite the absence of leading
scorer Rolando Blackman, out with an ankle
Injury. New York's Patrick Ewing led all scorers
with 38 points.
Magic 120, Nets 105 --' Ai Orlando, Fla., Sam
Vincent scored a season-high 29 points and Otis
Smith and Jerry Reynolds added 19 points each
for the Magic, who stopped a four-game losing
streak. Joe Barry Carroll scored 22 points to lead
the Nets.
.
Bucks 103, Lakers 102 - At Milwaukee, Fred
Roberts sank a free throw with 1.1 seconds
remaining to help the Bucks snap the Lakers'
four-game winning streak. The victory was
Mllwaukee's 12th In its last 15 outings. Magic
Johnson scored 26 points to pace the Lakers.
Jazz 118, Hornets 93- At Salt Lake City; Karl
Malone converted 12~f 17 shots and tlnlshed with
32 points to pace the Jazz. Dell Curry scored 23
points ior Charlotte, which received no points
from first-round pick J.R. Reid.

clt!,':lleapttll ... two

ae
·pillet nw~rtr•, tilt
_ . ,.... .., .., ... 111117.

a

o

o

IIIA'Nil OPI:N
Peoplel left treW u opea bouie .,.nday
• evea... Ia ....... of bolb 1-1111 Prealdent 8111
· : CEo lee Billion, aad reUrill1 Prealdenl811d CEO
: Jamea R, Lewis. Shon above, left to l'llht, are

'

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&gt;-!

By Edward M. VoUbom
County Extension A1ent,
Agrlclllture ol CNRD

~

'

1989 OLDSMOBILE
. CUTLASS
SUPREMES
5 NOW IN STOCK!

"FULLY EQUIPPED!"
COMPARE NOW - ·
LOWEST PRICES IN THE
OHIO VALLEY!
•

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. ..
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Engine
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Olen ··
Redlel Tires
•Sport Mirrors
3 now In ltOck et this

•nnted

Left • RIO.h t
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•

GALLIPOLIS- January Is the
best time ·of year to start those
farm records. To many of us
•
•
record keeping Is riot the favorite
part of farming, but procrastination doesn't help. We still have a
good selection of farm record
books.- Stop at the County Exten·
stan Office and look at .the
options. The "Farmer's Tax
Guide" prepared by 'the I.R.S. to
help farmers In greparing 1989
-returns Is now available free at
TO PRESENT P80GRAM
the County Extension Office .
.. - One of the preseaten at the
Be_gtnnlng Jan. 1, 1990, farm
; : o..u-y Collece Progr•ni on , .employers are now required to
~· Monday apo811 ored · by the
withhold Income taxes. Wages
• • Gatlla CoMnty Exteaslon Of· •.
tha.t ar~ subject to Income tax
; flee ,wUJ be Dr. Maar!Gt
withholding are those ~ubj~t to
.,~ RlllhtN~ .. ~C' ·~ FICA (Social Sec~ty) -, ~· ·
1• feelilr
Oble ')tate Vnl\ler· · Farm wages are no( subject to
:. atty. Dr. S.trld1 e received
FICA If the employee's wages
, _; hJs , degi-eea from PUrdue
are less than $150 p,er year or the
:' Unlvenlly In the are-. of
total farm payroll Is less than
dairy m&amp;~~a:rement and nutri$2,500.
.
.
lion. He had been on the
Farmers will need to request
faculty at OSU since March
W·4' s from employees whose
: 1886 and hu e;d enslon and
wages are subject to FICA and
·• r~earch responalbllltles In
income tax withholding. They
,• ilalry cattle nutrition.
will also need Circular E, Em·
·
ployer's Tax G~ide for the tables
'
•·
to use In calculating the amounts
to be withheld. Recent letters to
agricultural employers lndt- ·
cated that the Extension Service
has a suppty 'of these forms. So
'f ar the IRS has not provided us
with these forms, but we are
'i ~
.
'f .
&gt;
checking
the mali each day for
i, GALLIPOLIS . - A multi·
them. Discuss theissuewlthyour
:-county program Is being coordl·
accountant
If you feel the change
· ~a ted by the Extension Service
applies
to
your
operation.
. and Buckeye Hills JVS Adult
sales
of
burley tobacco
Gross
• Program entitled '_'Pork Update
for
the
week
Jan.
8-11 averaged
1990." The event will be held on
$167.29
per
hundred.
That was
~ ;Jan. 24 at 7 p.m. at Buckeye Hills
down
only
one
cent
from
the week
Career Center. .
·
Christmas.
By
the last
before
;, The focus will be on three
crop
estimate,
around
80
percent
; topics of current Interest. "Sow
J'r-oductlvlty Index" .and "Post of the 1989 crop has been sold at
. Weaning Nutrition for Pigs" will the end o[ sales on Jan. 11.
:t,e· presented by Tony Nye, Several of the burley markets In
North Caroliha and Tennusee
· Agriculture Agent for Clinton
·have
clo\i('d for the season. If you
; courity. Dave Gerber, btstrlct'
•
still
have tobacco to market,
; Swine SpeCialist, wJJI discuss
; swine bulldtng renovations.
• All pork producers are Invited
' to attend. If you have· any
' questions, C!lntact the Gailla
, County Extension Office (446• 7007) or Glenn Graham at Buck..eye Hills ~45- 53341.
'

at

S12 1 56 5.

STOCK #1911

.Pork program set
ifor January 24

.'

unbelleveblt

S8165.

a

OVEC employees receive
35-year service awards recently

Chalmers W. Ferguson. As· ·Hall and his wife; Esther, Jive at
slstant Shift Operating Eng!· 2910 Birch Avenue, Point Plea·
neer; Rex W. qarrlson, AISist- san!, Welt VIrginia.
!J.nt Sbltt Operating Engineer; ', Holmes jolnlid OVEC on JanDouglas H. Hall, Assistant Shift uary 1, 1955, as ·,an Auxiliary
Operating Engineer; Lloyd D. EqulpmentOperatorlntheOperHolmes, Unit Supervisor; John allons Department, and that
D . Mink, Yard Superintendent; same year he was promoted to
Arnold R. Mitchell, Assistant Equipment Operator. In 1967 he
Shift Operating Englner; and was promoted to Unit SUpervl·
Dayton C. Raynes, Shift Operat- sor. Holmes and his wife, Helen,
Jng Englner, at the Ohio Valley live at 2618 Jefferson Avenue,
Electric Corporation's Kygei; Point Pleasant, West VIrginia. ·
. Creek Plant, received their ann!·
Mink joined OVEC on January
versary awards for 35 years ser· · 1, 1955, as an Instrument Malnte·
v!ce to the company .. as an- nance Mechanic·C In the Perfornounced by Ra,mond H. Blowers, mance Department and ad·
Jr ., Plant Manager.
vanced to the position of PertorFergusort joined OVEC on Jan· mance Technician In 1957. In 1977
uary 1, 1955, 8S' an ~uxlllary he transferred to the Yard De·
Equipment Operator In theOper- partmei:lt as a Yard Supervisor,
attoils Department. 1\nd the fol· and In 1985 he was promoted to
lowing year he was promoted to Yard Superintendent. Mink and
Unit Supervisor. In 1976 he was his wife, Eileen, Jive at 708 Se·
promoted to Assistant Sl\!tt · cond Avenue, Gallipolis.
Mitchell joined OVEC on Jan Operating Engineer. Ferguson
and his wife, PhyUis, live at 2412 uary 1. 1955, as . an Auxiliary
Mt . Vernon Aveque, Point Plea- EquipmentOperatorlntheOper·
sant, West Vlrgjnla.
, . allons Department, and In 1957
Garrison joined OVEC on Jan· he was promoted to Unit Supervluary 1, 1955, as an Auxiliary . sor. In 1979 he was promoted to
Equipment Operator In the Oper· Assistant Shift Operating Eng!·
allons Department, and the fol - neer. Mitchell and his wife, Nel·
lowing year he was promoted to He, live at Route I, Cheshire.
Unit Supervisor., In ' I968 he was
Raynes joined OVEC on ,Jan·
promoted to · ~sistant Shift .uary 1, 1955, as an Auxiliary
Operating Engineer. Garrt.son Equipment Operator 111 theOperllves at 1003 22nd Street, Point atlons Department, and the fol~
Pleasant, West VIrginia.
towing year he was promoted to
· Hall joined OVEC on January Unit Supervisor. In 1968 be was
1, 1955, as an Auxiliary Equip· promoted to · Assistant Shift
ment Operator In the Oper11tlngs Operating Engineer and In 1985,
Department, and In 1958 he was to Shift Operating Engineer.
promoted to Unit Supervisor. In Raynes and hlw wife, Lucille,
1987 he was promoted to Anlst· Jive at . 107 5th street, Mason,
ant Shift Operating Engineer. West VIrginia .

RALPH SHEETS

Joins Wiseman real
estate sales team
GALLIPOLIS- The Wiseman .
Real Estate Agency announce
the addition of Ralph L. Sheets to
their sales team.
Sheets, a na ttve of Gallla
County, has 30 years In the
automobile sales business.
·
He recently sold his Pontiac,
Olds, Buick and GMC dealership
In Jackson, Ohio, and and together with his wife, Peg, pian to
move back to Gaillpolls .
Sheets said he is looking
forward to working with Gallia
C01Atty's largest and strongest
real estate firm. He Is also
looking forward to· renewing his·
old acquaintances and can be
reached at The Wiseman Real
Esiate Agency.

Course in clogging basics
.to be offered in.Kanauga

Tn &amp; Thle lxtl'll

'

{

av~ilable

rOt~(l CJ.A[)GCiiEBDIIPJAYSTALENT-DevfdStaaley,ale
1, clorp u etare with the Midway Clo11en. He Is the 101 of
M•vta l5lld • - ll&amp;uler of Pa&amp;rlot. He leU'IIed to eloc uader
'hrrr •·•-·• t.ltnctioM. Youcstaaley Ia lhown here at 1981
' 6ob Evue Farm F•Cival.

SALE ................. 1 9,186.00
'GM REBATE ..... -1,000.00
NET SALE
PRICE

keep In touch with your ware·.
house as to the expected closing
date.
USDA announced .the projected deflclen,cy payments for
the 1990 farm &lt;program. Signup
· period Is January 16 through
April 13. These projected deli·
clency payments are not neces·
sarUy what you wUI receive. That
w!ll depend upon the market
through the 1990 crop year.
Tl)e projected deficiency rate
for corn Is 90 cents. Forty percent
of the projected r11te, minus the
Gramm-Rudman reduction, minus the budget reconciliation act
reduttton. puts the estimated
payment at slgnup around $.322
per busheh Advance deflency
payments for this year's farm
program Is expected to be paid In
cash.
Un$easonabty· warm weather
In tnlCI·;January Is giving
gardners. and orchardists a
scare. BUI'hOrtlculturlsts at Ohio
State University say the warm
spell shouldn't last. ldng enough
to cause much damage. Fruit
trees are most at risk. De·
cember's bitter cold spell has
already damaged less hardy
trees, says Richard C. Funt. fruit
specialist.
Now, the early warm weather
may bring trouble as normal
temperatures return. Three to
five days of temperatures above
55 degrees will reduce a tree's
resistance to cold weather by up
to 5 degrees. Fuht says. Another
danger Is that sap could start
flowing Into the tree's buds
during the · warm weather and
freeze when the cold returns.
Such freezing can explode the
bud and prevent fruit from
forming.
.
Events and Happenings... Oalry College Program, Monday, January 22, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.,
Jaycees Building, Gallipolis;
Swine Update Class, Wednesday,
January 24, 7 p.m .. Buckeye Hills
JVS; Power Show Ohio, Jan.
. 26-28, State Fairgrounds,
Columbus.

...

•

GALLIPOLIS- The "Midway

Oeni Jo

tbe 6 week coune.

CJoaera" have been beatlllf out
Tile' count! wilt be made
the c..tterlna rllythm with their. available under the pldance of

1616 EAmll AVE. • GAWPOUS, !)HIO
CAlL TOlL Fill: 1·100·521·0014

OF THE OHIO VAI.I.EY
- ...

guide available .
·at G&amp;llia ·Extension ·office ·

"'•

(614)

•
CAJ' SALESMAN - IItke
:. Drebel liM Joined tile ·~r or

• Gll•n FordiJneola ...._,.
: Muda In AU.... Drellel re• aides aa lalan ltnet .. B&amp;
• laad wltb .... wife, . . . . . .
: - . .lua• Mltcb.U Be ...
'· ·~~ea~ emplof.. Ia tlae "" r..
duat17 for

I

Farm. Flashes
Fann~I'8· 118X

•

1990 CHEVROLET
· -·CAVALIE-R·
VL COUPE

Boolllly ,_ Ill 31 IIIII a-1

claims turn Into · continuing
claims," said Saunders. Initial
claims represent abOut 25 per·
cent of total unemployment
compensation.
Saunders said a slumping
automobile and auto parts Indus.
Continued on n~

.
Union conven Uon have approved
a "special order or business"

Seed. packets are

.

FACTORY RETAIL STICKER ...... '14,568.00
OUR DISCOUNT ........................ -1,003.00
. .
.
'13,566.00 NET
GM REBATE ................................. 1 ,000.00 SALE

'

.Jack Fruth, ehalnnan a! the
.
Raaldaa who retired Dec. 31 u loan olllcer;
Be~ty G~dner, who retired DeC: 31 u culltodlan;
811d Lew!B:: Rankins and Gardner 'were also
recoptr.ed at the open house ror their many years
of · sel'\llce. Lewis 18 shown looking · over a
collection of coln8 that wu presented to him
durlnc the open house program.

• Vltua Hartley, Jr., retired baak prealdl!llt and
, ; member oi the board of dlie~on; Dale Nl.bert,
cbatrmu or the ''"'ec•tlve committee; Elll8on;

Auto. transmlllion custo .. . .
AM/FM stereo w/'
m cloth interior rear d
.
Power hatch relea:•:e:e, ~ower door lo~ks cru~froster, 5.0 liter V-8,
' 9 V ••d•.moulding fl '
:se control, tilt Wheel
' oor mats and m h
,
uc more.
·
'

Thi• """""'· .nil Mt
tlir
_i._
llllido ~ wiltl Hollond Amorica W........lhr • I' t
in
• At.~.&amp; ..W. .. ~ ..... ow.,.a.lcno-.pa 1.,

Saunders said 65,000 claimants
were added in the first two weeks
In January , an 80 percent In·
crease over the same period of
1989.
"The real Impact on the
(unemployment compensation)
fund will come If these initial

Urging ,tate officials to act on the
problem of vehlcle·traln coUI·
sions In Ohio.
The order, approved Thursday
at the opening session of the
three-day conven lion, encour·
POMEROY- Wildflower seed ground moist unUI the seedlings ages the Public Util Illes Commis·
packets are a new Item on this appear In ab9ut three weeks.
ston of Ohio to' 'promptly appropyear's list qf available packets
In general, It Is best to seed riate Federal Assistance Funds
from the Meigs Soil and Water . prior to lbe season of greatest to allow the installation of signals
Gonservatjon District Ladies precipitation, which would be · and gates at cross)ngs where
Auxiliary.
·
March through JuDi! In this area. needed."
The one ounce packet, which
Other packets available from
The order also urges motorists
sells for $2.50, will plant an area
the ladles auxlll;try Include bun- to use common sense when
of 250 square feet. The pure blend
dles of White Pine, Scotch Pine, dtlvlng on railroad crossing~.
of. flower seeds consists of 10·12 Coloral!o Blue Spruce, 25each for
Ohio ranked third fn the United
.different annual and 10·12 differ- $7; Birch, Common Purple L'llac States In 1988 In the number of
ent perennial varieties which and White Flowering Dogwood, · tratn.vehlcle collisions with 405,
display their beauty with a 10 seedlings each fvr $5.
and third In fatalities with 39.
multiljlde of colors from early
Ground covering plants in· Twenty-five of the 36 fatal
spring Into fall. In addition, the elude Crown Vetch, 72 plants for collisions occurred at rural
wildflowers are easUy main· $20; English Ivy. 50 plants for crossings, the farmers union
talned and annual varieties will $15; and Pachysandra, also 50 said.
re-seed with an 'annual mowing
plants for $15.
.
Meanwhile, the union said,
after dry down in ear tv winter.
All plants'and seeds sold are mUilons of dollars In appropria·
Seed bed preparation for wild·
good for . erosion control and lions for upgrading crossings go
flowers should include little If
unspent.
wildlife plantings .
any' fertilizer . The soli should be
To order any of the packets:
The delegates ' also encourage
tilled and then raked until there
send the order, along with check the promotion of citizens' aware· ·
Is smooth, llrm se~X~ bed, prior
or money order to the Meig~ ness groups , such as "Operation
to seeding.
SWCDLA, P.O. Box 432, Pom.e· Ll fesaver," which provide litera .
Seeds should be mlxl!d with
roy, 45769. Or for further lnfor· lure and seminars promoting
sand, cornmeal, etc., to increase
matlon, cal1992-6647. Orders will safety when driving on railroad
the bulk of the mixture when
be taken until March 15 or until crossings.
planted. After sowing, . rake the
a)l packets are sold.
In other business, the deleSeed lightly Into the soli. Keep the
gates called for the easing of
Continued on D~
:. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Delegates to the Ohio Farmer

-~

and pool schedules

Pool&amp;ehedule
Sunday - CLOSED
Mollday - CLOSED
Taerdar - CLOSED
we•e••ay - 6-7:30 p.m.,
college swim
'l'llanday - 6-7:30 p.m., col·
lege swim
·
· Fnlay - 6-7:30 p.m. , open
awlm
s.&amp;IU'dar - 1·3 p.m., open
swim; CLOSED after that
• IJIIJiday, Dec. II - 1·3 p.m.,
oprn awlm; 6· 7: 30 p.m., coUege
awlm

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ..,.
· The Ohio Bureau.of Employment
Services reported Friday that
Initial unemploymentcompensa·
tion claims rose. by 41 percentln
December, the highest monthly
Increase In flve .yeats.
Administrator Ellen o :Brlen

Farmers ·union delegates take look
collisions in Ohio
at vehicle-train
.

1990 CHEVROLET
CAMARO R.S~

See Spectaru1ar A1asb.
At A JR.ice That1l
~~ur Breath. A~ ·
Mckinlo,. v.-....t 11..
'od loader

Initial jobless·claims
up 41 percent in Ohio

'\ ,

Lyne Center gym
RIO GRANDE- The schedule
of events for the coming week at
Lyne Center Is as follows:
Gyn\ &amp;ehedule
Sunday - basketball; Redwomen vs. Lake Erie, 3 p.m.
Monday - CLOSED
Tuesday- basketball: Redwomen vs. Mount Vernon. 5:15
p.m,; Redmen vs. Ohio Dominican, 7:30p.m . (New Car Dealers
Booster Night)
.
Wednesday -: 6-7:30 p.m . ,
college recreation
Thursday - 6-7:30 p.m., college recreation
Friday - 6· 7: 30 p.m., open
,
recreation
Saturday - 1·3 p.m.• open
recreation; basketball: Redwo·
men vs. Urbana, 7:30 p.m.
Sullday, J811. Z8 - 1·3 p.m. • .
open recrea{lon; 6· 7: 30 p.m.,
coUege recreation ·

Janu.ry 21' 1990

.

.

Fouled Out: Wedge .
Officials: J. Mahan &amp; R. Vance

Section

THIS WEEI&lt;'S BEST

Score by Quarter-S:
l234Tot
Pt. Pl.
18 14 12· 5 49
HERS
. 11 9 13 IS 51

Tot. Fouls: PP 20, HERS 19

!Far'm/ Business

Dlsll'lct ...............
lu. 11 Ia
Marpyllle.lll froiR 8n (L-B)
Lori Beth MIDiru, 11-11 ,..,._
old cllamplon; · Grer lamM,
tti-n ye&amp;N~Id ruallel'-. .; llllil
Betb Aaa Fellure, &amp;-t ,_.old
cbamploiL Behind dNm are
Tom Meadows, GalUpoU.
Elkl chairman; Ttm1117 Saedaker, lS-13 year-olll ellamploa; Mindy Pope, IJ-13 ,..,..
tid nulaer-up; aad lack
Rea-, GalllpoU. Ellta aullt-

gham

HEHS: Lucas 0 0 0, Burgess 5
2-3 12. Bowen 2 2-4 6, Tunnan 0
6·6 6. Brown 0 0 0. ~owfe 5 2-2
12, Pappas 5 (I) 2-3 15, Henry 3 23 8, Telesz 0 0 0, Given 1 1·2 3,
Dodge I 0 2. TOTALS 22 (l) 17·
23 64.

!

m• • SM.._,,

Fouls: Point 14, HEHS 9
Fouled Out: None
Officials: D. Marcwn &amp; J. Cunnin-

JUNIOR VARSITY
POINT: Beattie 3 2-6 8, Bums 2
(2) 4-6 14, Wedge 0 0 0, Gholson 1
0-1 2, Leport 0 0-1 0, Greer 3 (1)1·
2 10, Page 0 1·2 I, Neville 9 5-12
23. TOTALS 18 (3) 13·30 58.

~

Ia tilt Db' .._.. C.l al

Big Blacks••• _____~&lt;.!::C~on!!;u!!!nu!!!e::::d.!fr~om:.!!...!c~-5::!.)_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
wiih 3:22 remaining in the quarter. play. In the second quaner, the
The teams traded baskets for the Little Blacks wanned up a liule and
remaining three minutes of the did manage 10 knock off one point
quaner and at the end of the period, of that lead by . halftime. These
the Big Blacks Jed by 11,44-33.
Little Blacks never quit, and at the
At this point it appeared that the 3:06_marlc of the third quarter, they
Big Blacks were on their way to puUed in front by a 37-36 score.
their second straight triumph over a Another foul shot seconds later and
Cabell County school, and second the Liule Blacks enjoyed .38-36
consecutive PAC victory. But, it lead. But the young Highlanders
was at this point that the wheels scored the last four points of the
came off the Big Black machine. third period \0 take a 40-38 lead at
East scored the first eight points of the end of the quarter.
the quaner IQ cut the lead 10 44-41
East scored 25 points in the final
before Blain scored to end the quarter, but the Little Blacks stayed
drought for the Big Blacks. East . close the rest of the way, scoring 20
then reeled off six consecutive of their own. But, in the end, thc
points to take :he lead for the first
Highlanders won out by a 64-58 .
time since very early in the game score.
..
v;hen they led 4-2. Faber scored for · · Denis Bums scored 14 points for
Point, then Blain made one of two the Little Blacks and Toby Greer
foul shots and the Big Blacks were added 1(5. Neville, Greer and Jon
back on top by a 49-47 score with Beattie each latched on10 seven
27 seconds remaining in the game. rebounds for the locals. :But, East would score the final four
POINT PLEASANT
points of the game to win 51-49.
FG 3pt Ff Pts
Point made only eight of 17
0 0 0"
shots from the field in the second ~=er
4
1:2
9
.half, with six of those field goals Faber
9 0 1·3 19
coming in the third quarter. On the Voight
0 0 0.{)
0
other hand, East was hitting 13 of Swain
1 1 0-1
5
16 from :he field in the second half. Wood
2 0 0 ;0
4 ·
The Big Blacks tonverted ·only one Morrow
6 0 0.{) 12
of four free throws in tlle.linal two· Total
22 1 2-li
49
quarters, while East was five of 10
from the foul line in the second
HEHS
Jialf. The Big Blacks won the battle
of the boards snaring 27 rebound~ Bashem
0 ,o 0-0
0
21
for
East
Bryan
Morrow
led
Lucas
2
0
0-0
4
to
'th IS Bell
3 0 3-5
9
all rebounders in the game Wl
• Hoffman
6 0 1-6
13
Faber latched onto six rebounds for
. Point, while Blain had four. Mclr· Mes:el
5 0 0-0 I0
row also had three steals aod five DHargavis.
2 0 0-0
4
15
3 0 5-10
U
assists to round out a good night
The loss drops the Big Black's Bowen
0 · 0 0-0
0
.
Peny
000-0
0
3
4
10
record to S-5 on the season, ·
Total
21 0 9-21 51
the PAC 8.
The Little Blacks lost a close one
despite a game-high 23 points from
sophomore Mau Neville. Mau hit
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
nine field goals and was five of 12
446 4524
. ·. ~- .
from the free throw line.
Point fell behind early, the score
being :18-8 ·after one quarter of

~

I

four )'e...

·

tap11 profeellonally for the paat
year e.
Now both chlldrell and adult&amp;
will have an opporhinlty to leam
the "bailee of C!IOI diDCIIII"
bellnalnl on Sanday, Feb. 4, and
1111111111&amp; for the llellt five weeks
coneeeudvely at12: ~ p.m. In the
Dlnblld 'Amerlc81' VeteraRa
Butldlnf on Uberty Street In
· Kaaauaa. There will be a fee for
I~

Fran Lewla and Terry Hanaon,
dlrecton of the "Midway

CJoeeen".
For additional Information,
call Fran Lewis at (SCM) 562~
or Terry Haneon at (304) 7438250.
Local calls can be made to Joy
Berkley (614) 367-7605orPatrlcla .
Elliott (614) 379-2?Cii.
.

AIMelt i11Me ltll aad llelldl01 elel- wltlllllat-

.....,..., .......... '""-lieU.:.." .......

Qatelull. LtJT(', left ~~eoepla tile,........... Doll
vrn ·-... marat .....,. ••·. ,.,. fer Alllla&amp;e
lllnruee Co.• Dlmlon of

·-..-·

(!

--

ae...

�•

:PlPatllllnte-a-D-2-Sunday n --Sent•"nel

Jenu..v 21, 4. 990

~..!·~~~~~~~~..~~~~~~==============~p~~~m~MI~OV~~M~~-~«~ap~-~art~:~-~G~•~1P~*~D~~~·~OtMD~·~--~Poi~·~,~l!A~s~e~sn~t~VV~.V~·!a~.==========~';;:;==========~~-~·~~~~~
rii\TIOIII\L WEATHE.R ~ERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 1·2 1·90

De Ia Garza to 1 esisi agricuhure· cuts

l ··~i~)

DsNow

DES MOINES, Iowa ·&lt;UP1) The ch!lnnan of the ·Hou!le
Agriculture Committee said
. Tbursday he will resist huge cuts
In the federal farm budget but
said spending restraints will stop
lawmakers from extending new
plums to farmers.
Rep. Kika de Ia Garza, D·
Texas, told the Iowa Cor~ow, ers Association the 1990 farm bill
Will not be drastically different
tr?m the 1985 versl.on:
.
, ·'The feedback I m getting Is,
. tine tune It (the 1985 bill) I! you
want to, but don't change It,"' de
Ia Garza said. ''I'm not goln11 to
hav~. a novel ·and Innovative
bill.
De Ia Garza won a warm

DsHoweRs
"' St:~t r, ft t . , ; " ' ''

reception from the Iowa farmers
when he atauDCbly defended·
federal spending for price supports. Son.~e analysts believe the
Bush Admlnlatratton may propoee a $1 billion cut In 8Jrlcul·
ture, but de Ia Garza said that
can't happen.
"We're past the bone and Into
the marrow," he. said. "If you
continue ratchetlng down you're
out \If business.~·
He argued that · If every
agriculturally-related spending
Item were eliminated, the trillion
doUar !ederlll budget would only
drop 4 percent.
.
''They stole more money than
that during the lunch hour at

HUD," de 1a Garza joked.
De Ia Garza appeara.ready to
stop the aradual decline In taraet
price supports at the current
$2.84 a bushel.level, but warned
farmers not to expect ·an
Increase.
The Iowa Corngrowets want
targetprlceslndexedtolntlallon,
but de 1a Garza said the looming
deficit will probably prevent that
as well as a new loan prOIJ'am
sought by soybean farmers.
':J
· Tbe Texas Democrat did try to
reassure farmers the , current
General Agreement on Taruts
and Trade talks will have little
effect on the farm bill. That
statement contradicts Agrfcul·

ture Secretary Clayton Yeutter ..;
whorepeatedlywarnstarmersln _
blupeeches that GAIT will alter •
the way farmers do business.
••
Farmers have worried the ~
GATT delegates will trade away
farm programs In exchange for
foreign trade concessions.
"ForgetGATTisoulthere,"de
. Ia Garza said. ' 'We'll do what we
need for our purposes ."
De Ja·Garza also discounted the
•tntluence of e~vironmentallsts .
on ~~e farm bill, another worry In
the grain belt.
·
He 'said the ·environmental
debate will receive a lot of media
attention but play a back seat
role to tradltlonal!arm concj!rns.
a

wEATHERMAP-Roo~···~M""··-~u•~·"" Gardners shOUld wait .~ther .~7;=

.FRONTS : "

WJrm

"

RAIN

Co ld

Atlantic Coast States and lower Great Lakes today. ( UPI)

·

Expect higher pork prices
through the fall of 1990 as hog
producllon stays below expecta·
lions, Irwin says. Analts had
expected the January announcement to show lltlle change from
the Septel)'lber 1989 report.
But the USDA report indicates

·

month
to
seed
indoor
gaM.ens}
be held . . ~·
..· .
. . ··. . .
. ·
. . · · . · ~an. 22-25

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Fidgety gardeners should keep
their hands ott seed packets until
F~~ruary .
·
Saturday night.
A storm system In the Tennes·
Every January, some gar·
see Valley carrying moisture deners want to start !lower and
from the Gulf of Mexico promp· vegetable seedlings Indoors tor
ted a flash flood watch !or spring planting In the garden,"
eastern Kentucky. southern Ohio says Jim Utzinger, horticulturist
and par ts of West VIrginia and at Ohio $tate University. "It's
still too early. Theflrstseedllngs
western J&gt;ennslyvanla.
A w11 rm front created thick fog should be started In February.'.'
across central Indiana with VIS·
Utzinger Says gardeners .USU·
ibllltles less than a half-tnlle at ally start seedlings Indoors
times: .
. either because. they enjo~ ddlng
It was warm and sunny In the . so or becau!le they can I find
South and cold and clear In the transplants of the type or quality
West. The snow that peppered th~.Y want.
Colorado's mountains early Sal·
Gardeners can begin prepa·
urday moved Into the Midwest.
rations now," Utzinger says.
The southwest was clear and .· "Look for hlgh.-quallty seed by
cool and the Northwest continued visiting your local garden cento dr y out from last week's ters , or by checking garden
torrential rains.
catalogs. Also look for planting
Fog covered parts of California mix and packs to start the
early Saturday but lifted enough seedlings, and begin preparing 8
to allow the shuttle Columbia to space ,,ndoors where they will
make a perfect landing at Ed· grow.
The smallest and slowestwards Air Force. Base shortly
after 4:30a.m. EST.
growl~g seeds, such as double

Pork prices could be
on rise, analyst says
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI) Fewer hogs may mean higher
retail pork prices this year.
according to llvestock market
analyst Scott Irwin of Ohio State
University.
The Department o( Agrlcul·
ture's January report of hog
production indicated American
pork producers are being very
conservative in their expansion
plans.
.
The fall 1989 pig crop was 5
percent lower than expected.
That means 4 percent to 5 percent
l!'ss pork In the meat case and
. higher retail meat prices this
... ·summer. Irwin says.
"Th~ margin belw!'en retail
and farm-level prices has al·
ready been squeezed about as
tight as possible, " , he says.
" Retailers won't be able to
abSorb the higher costs they 'll
pay for pork b!'cause of lower
supplies. so we can expect to see
.much of the lncr!'ase passed on to
consum!'rs."

petunia anc! flb~ous-rO\)ted begonta, should be the first to be
started Indoors, Utzin~~:er says.
"~ou can use freSh or leftover
seed, however, the seed should
be of high quality," Utzinger
says. "Leftover seed should have
been stored In a coo!, dry place to
preserve Its capacity to germl-·
nate. It you don't know how
leftover seed was stored, don't
use lt. During winter, fresh seed
Is available from garden ca.tal··'
ogs and most garden centers."
U~zlnger recorntnends these
Ups.
.
-A planting mix of peat and
vermiculite. It's lightweight and
allows good water drainage and
air circulation. Such a mix Is
usually free of Insect eggs,
disease organisms, weed seed~
and herbicides. The mix needs no
soli, because .seeds conta,ln their
own food supply to germinate
and start growing.
,
-Light. Seedlings started Indoors must be kept In sunny
areas- a southernexposurelsa
good bet. The seedlings should

also receive supplemental light.
On cloudy days, provide 16 to 18
hours of fluorescent light
-Water, but not too · much.
Over-watering Is the biggest
. mlstakegardenersmakelnstarttng seeds Indoors. Most seeds and
seed)lngs will rot, get moldy or
become dl~ased In planting mix
that stays we(. Seed)lngs In wet
mix could also become tall and
spindly and probably won't sur·
\oive transllJantlng; .
· .
"Starting seeds Indoors marks
another opportunity tor garden'
ers to grow the latest types of
flowers and vegetables bred by
researchers," Utzinger says.
Such varieties are often better
able. to withstand disease or
Insects, produce higher yields,
tolerate higher heat, offer more
colors or are better tasting.
"Growing new varletle.s Is
often a :key to success tn the
garden," Utzinger says. "Try,
growing them alongside tried
and true ones, This helps you
compare plants and tlnd which
grO\V best for you."

Campeau · takeover of Federated
. proves costly for that company

production will be off 1 percent to
2 percent In the first quarter of
By RICK VANSANT "
1990 and 2 percent to 3 percent In
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Post·
the second quarter.
cards !rom Bankruptcy Court:
The report Indicated the · Reflections on •a once-thriving
number of hogs and pigs op Ohio company tossed billions of
farms Dec. 1 was 2.9 percent . dollars .Jrt debt by a corporate
lower than the September rep0 rt raider.
had projected. About 6 percent
fewer sows had pigs from Sep·
It Company A borrows money
tember to November than antic), to buy Company Band can't pay
paled, cu ttlng the pig crop 5 It back, why Is It that Conipany B
percent.
goes bankrupt but not Company
Irwin says the report also had A?
an Immediate et!ect on live-hog
That's what happened this past
prices. Futures prices jumped$2 week, with Company A being
to S3 following the report's Campeau Corp. of Toronto, Can- ·
release. Cash prices should fol- ada, and Company B being
low suit, he said.
Federated Stores of Cincinnati.
Overall, hog prices should end
Cam)lfi'au borrowed money to
up about 10 percent higher for buy Federated and ~ouldn't pl!y
1990 than projected last fall. That It back. Therefore, Campeau Is
means .. ·first-quarter prices not bankrupt, but Federated Is.
should range from $48 to $50 per Make sense? ·
hundred pounds, with slnillar
That kind of !inandal sense
prices In the second quarter .
contused a lot of Cincinnatians
By the third quarter, cru.h who don't claim to be junk bond
prices .s hould reach $50 to $52.
junkies and couldn't figure out
Irwin says recent prices should why Federated was bankrupt
encourage farmers to at least and Campeau wasn't.
hold production steady. It the , M·any Cincinnatians also werhigh price expectations brought en't too thrilled with the standard
by the January report hold up, !jnanclal world answer: •'It was
higher profits should stabilize a leveraged buyout."
'
product lon and return It to the
In lhl.s particular de'al, Federrate of expansion expected ear· ated w~s leveraged, that Is,
ller. he says.
Campea).l used the prospect of
· ?wnll)g · Federated's thriving
stores as leverage to get billions
at dollars In loans to buy
Federated.
.

·- --

Campeau even went to great
lengths this past week to emphasIze It Is not bankrupt.
Shortly after Federated sent
out a news release saying It had
filed for ban~uptcy, Campeau
sent out a new release j!Oastlng
t)1at It had not, repeat, had not.
tiled !or bankruptcy and was
continuing to push on with Its real
estate development deals In
Canada.
Officials of Federated, who did
not want to tie gobbled up by
Campeau In the first place. took
quite a few verbal pokes at
Campeau after flllng for
bankruptcy.
In a statement to Federated 's
100,000 employees, company officials said 'filing for bankruptcy
''Is a legacy of corporate takeovers and leveraged buyouts that
has lett tremendous burdens of
corporate debt . In Its wake.
Federa ted Is a perfect example
of this Wall Street phenomenon
coming home to Main Street."

ular, were ripped In a Cincinnati
Post editorial.
·
. 'The whole episode has been
tragedy for Cincinnati," said the
editorial. "Federated and Lazarus long have been Important
corporate citizens - willing and
generous benefactors and lead·
lng employers.
"Tbe company and the loyal
(Federated) ·employees Cam·
peau acquired are paying the
price for one man's Inflated
ego."
An accompanying editorial
cartoon showed two Federated
store clerks looking out the
· window at a derelict,
One of the clerks ~~Sks, "Who's
that bum? He's hurting our
business."
~
"
The other clerk answers, "Robert Campeau."
'

a

Americans spend
less on food

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) When 'Federated store clerks
Dennis
Henderson, agricultural
asked their bosses what they
economist
at Ohio State Univershould tell customers who ask
sity, says food purchased !or
a bout the bankruptcy, they were
home consumption Is 10.4 per·
told, "Remember, the flnallclal
problems are not with Federated cent of total U.S. consumer
stores, bu I with debt and other spending.
Canada Is next at 11,.5 percent.
financial burdens at the parent
The Sudan, at" 62.~ percent,
corporate level."
Federated officials also gave spends the most.
In the 47 countries Henderson
employees a new little dictionary
studied,
food for home consumpOnce Campeau got Its loan and they might find handy . It contlon
averaged
28.4 percent ·or
.
got Federated, It Immediately tained detlnillons of such words
made Federated an otter It . and terms as "Default," "Debtor total consumer SP!!ndlng. ·
Add spending for beverages,
couldn't retllse. It gave Feder- In Possession" and "Creditors'
WOOSTE R, Ohio (UPI) - A percent to 75 percent.
tobacco and food consumed away
Committee."
ated Its purchased debt.
computerized sys tem for fertlliz·
"It applies only the nutrients·
!rom home, and the IJ .s. total Is
"Saddled Federated with Its
lng crops could cut agricultural the plant will metabolize, and It debt," ts the way retired Miami
Bankruptcy can be profitable. stlll_the lowest at 19.1 percent.
•
water pollution.
yields major reductions In water lot ·ohio) University business Especially !or laywers and cor- The Netherlands comes In' seOhio State Unlver.sity horticul- poilu lion and fertiliZer costs;' ' professor ifarey Brooks put lt. . POrate hired guns. . ·
cond at 23.5 percent, and Sierra
.
turist William L. Bauerle says says Bauerle. whO works at the
Leone is tops at 65.4 percent.
Is that Ieeal? .· , .
Federated :baa alrel!dY asked
the new system delivers precise university's Ohio Agrtcult.ural
Henderson notes three reasons
Yep, says 'Brooks, because Bankruptcy Court Judge VIncent
levels of nutrlenls and adj.usts for Resear.ch and Development Campeau o\VIIed Federated and Aug to approve a Sl. 7 miiUon such a small share of Americans'
~hanging growing conditions.
Center.
'
could do with It what It wanted. payment to a law firm Involved In total spending 'ts on food ·- total'
It could keep fertilizer from
Conventional fertilization app·tncorne and consumer spending
Is II right?
bankruptcy paperworl!.
washing into water· from farms lies extra amounts of nutrients so
In the United States are second
Well, of course, there's a big
A
new
chairman
Federated
and greenhouses, he says.
that none run short and limit difference between what's legal hired to guide the firm through only to Switzer land on a perThe system uses a personal growth. The extra amounts or Illegal and what's right or · bankruptcy, (ormer Treasury capita basts, efficient food procomputer to contro110 fertil izer "cushions" over limiting levels Wl'OIIJ.
Secretary G. William Miller, duetlon and distribution systems
Injectors and to monitor nut· - 'are unused by the plan IS and
Right or wrong, Federated Is reportedly Is being paid Sl help keep food prices ~~ moder,•
rlents ln the soli. Bauerle says · may leach from the . soli with bankrupt and Catnpeau Ia not.
ate levels and Americans spend
million a year.
the system can be linked to Irrigation or rain. Contamination
less for away-from -home food
•'Campeau knew nothing a bout
overhead or drip Irrigation and of groundwater or surface water retalllna," said Brooks.
Campeau Corp. In general, and than co'nsumers In many other
c'ould reduce fertilizer use by 50 . may result.
"Period." ·
owner Robert Campeau In partie- countries.

Computerized system
fertilizes farm crops

.

SIUC professor
.

CARBONDALE, Ill. iUPI) - ·
Though It has been a decade
since work began on It, and !our
yean since the patent was
aranted, an Illinois professor
still believes a new sprayer he
•helped Invent will find a market
In the "real world. "
''TIIere are still people look·
Ina at It for deVelopment and
research and at this point I still
'

f

)

. ,

.

think It will find Its way Into the ·
real world of apiculture," IBid
Robert L. Wolff, profenor of ·
agriculture at Southern Dllno!J
University-Carbondale.
The sprayer, which Wolff
says can control 'he dlltrlbu· '
tlon of chemicals up to three
times more efficiently than
conventional sprayers, was
granted a U.S; and lnterna·
(

.

0

Rain and snow fall
, we.·St.
th
h
Mid
t
roug
0U
.
By United Press International
Snow and rain dominated the
East Saturday", the South was
sunny and warm and It was clear
and coolin the West, the National
Wea ther Service said. It was
snowing In the Midwest.
The National Weather Servife
posted winter storm warnings for
northeast New J ersey, northeast
Pennslyvanla, Long Island ·and
downstate New York because of
a low pressure system over
· Missouri . The weather service
said there was "the potentia l fo r
a significant snowfall but ... it is
difficult to forecast amounts.
Traevel wlll be hazardous in any
case."
Mixed light rain, sleet a nd
snow were. forecast for northern
Illinois with temperatu res a bove
freezing and most of the sleet
near the WisConsin border.
Colder a ir was movf.ng In behind
the low pressure system and up
lo 4 Inches of snow was expected

·:
p

.

'

.

COLUMBUS; Ohio (UPI)
·Greater respect for plants Is ·
resha In
·
1 d
horti!uu!.fs~r ~~ s~a:O, s~r:,:
Unlve 11 .
Ell rsS~Ith
· A · ·
cans ~ant Ia sta~s m~re me~1
P n s 0 re uce no
~~~d dust, tea~~ provide shad~
erostorf~~nt~olon, oxygen an
Snilth a thl
.,..
1 ··
lion forp~ ~Is h s ;~w ~~pr~:·
carl f aOh~ ,M e
urn e ,
nark": :~d· c~ s yar ~· ~a~de~s. C
· ~;pes Into 8 bi:ti:~~~:ar ~~~u~ :
try, making it one of the lar est
In the aU
T . h 1 gh
hortlcultu~e ~n~ustro m:ft n~: •.
. demand Smith h Yh lped 1
togethe~ the Ohl ~s e st!'u
Course Jan 22'~5 ursery ort
Rel!en~y In Columb~: the Hyatt
"People still mostly.see plants
as beautiful objects, but now they
also want them around t.o com· •
pensate for .plan rs being destroyed elsewhere, .. Smith says. . :
"To many people, placing new : ':
plants In the. landscape some-. ~
what ot!sets suburban develop- ••
meilt that destroys forest or open · ··
land. "I don't think people believe •
they 're making up for devastat·
lng acts ·of environmental dam- • .
age. However, there Is a greater
respect for plants and their role
In Improving our quality of life.
The at tit tide w)ll continue to
blossom this decade. It's part of a
gro'¥1ng l'!nvironmental ethic."
•
. Thephlo Nursery Short Course ~ .
Is expected to. draw 6,000 plant
producli_rs, arborlsts, garden ~...
center and nursery, retailers, .·
landscapers and la'ridscape
maintenance workers from
across the nation.
•
Topics of more tha'n 65 work· ::
shops Include landscape plants "
that Improve property values,
new ornamentals, trees for ur·
ban a{eas, an update on compost •
use and good low-maintenance •
plants.

r·

·Aiiimal housing; .
ventilation
to be topic

equipment producers had
showll Interest In producing the
sprayer over the last several
years.
"With the economy the way It
was In the mid· '801, 1 don't
think any firm was In an
Investment rnooci," Wolff IBid.
"We're cotnlng out of that
slump now and I firmly believe
the sprayer will eventually find
a market."

According to Wolff, 50, the
sprayer Improves spray coverap by 234 percent In com
planta and by 100 percent In
soybealll. The sprayer Illes air
to assllt In the delivery of the
chemicals. H has been
nleknmed "octopus" becau~~e
of the numerous holes that are
used to deliver the apray.
"In principle, It works a lot
like an alr-~ rlven paint ·
-~.--

•

GALLIPOLIS - Mike Veen·
huizen, Associate Professor of
Agriculture Engineering at
O.S.U., will be one of the
speakers at the Dairy College
Program on Jan. 22 at the .G~IIpolls Jaycees Building from ·•
10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
·•
Veenhulzen will discuss
animal housing and ventilation .
He has published articles on this
topic and was responsible for the
revisions In the current edition of •
the "Dairy Housing and Equipment Handbook." Any dairyman . ·:
Interested In learning more
about ventllation 1Is Invited to
attend. There will . also be a
variety of other topics concernIng milk production discussed at
this program.
Advance registration Is helpful. Call the Gallla County
Extension Office at 446-7007.
Walk-Ins are welcome. There
will be a $5 registration fee which .•
will · cover the ·Dat,ry College
hooklet and a cold cut lunch. All
dairy producers or other persons
lntere~ted ~e Invited io attend. ·

PUBLIC NOTICE
The
CENTRAL
TRUST
COMPANY of loulhe•t
Ohio NA the 1egel hotclor of
tho .foll~tng dMcrlbod - ·
oonol property by virtue of
Security Agroemonto doM
hilt'oby - l o r Mlo on the
27th dliy of Jonuory. 1990
•tten o•dock a.m. in theaflicoo of.,the tno1tinm..t Loon
Polllf'tmont in Go111polio.
Ohio the lo11owlng:
1918 Chevy S -10
Serlol Number
1GCBS14E7J22430&amp;6
'
1981 Mercury Lynx
Serlol Number
1 MEPM2098HTI 1 4445
1989 Moxum BOat
Seriol Numbof
USHD81MHJ889

•

1919 Mercruloor
130 HP Engine
Soriel . Number 418457

POMEROY - Articles of in·
corporation have been tiled with
the office of Secretary of State
Sherrod Brown In Columbus by
T.M. Ingram Enterprtaes, Inc. ,
Reedsville. The Incorporator and
agent Ia T. Mlehaellnaram, :)8917
Success Road, Reedsville..- ,

fTtent.
JAN. 14. 21

In cqmpliance with
F.ederal Regulations. the ,
PINECREST CARE CEN·
TER makes this public
notice:
PINECREST
CARE
CENTER in GALLIPOLIS,
OHIO accepts appiica·
lions for admission &amp;
employment withoul re·
prd to race, color, reli · .
gion. national origin,
sex, handicapped status, persons 40 to. 70
years of age or disabled
. &amp;Vietnam-Era veterans.
1· Card of Thanks
I

CARD OF THANKS
The family of Robert H.
Fisher would like to thanlt
our many
relatives.
frilnds. , nlilbbors, club ·
lllllllllers, tiiChilllltllf
and chtl'ch mtmbers for
their love, kindness and
sympathy duri~l our time
of sorrow.
We would also Ilk' to
thank the staff of Holzer
Hospital, Dr. Brubaker,
Or. Levert and the Emer·
pncy Squad who cared
for him in his time of
need . ·
·To the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home for a
beautiful service and
pastors Rev. Curfman
and Salee for their gui·
dane• a'nd assistance. ·
To the pallbQrers
and fellow men who participated in the military
rites. To all the ones of
the
orpnizaticins he
was affiliated with .
To all those who sent
food and flowers. those
who gave their time and
willingness to be at the
home and with the family· and. those who re·
member~ us in their
priyers. J
We thank all of you
and may God 8 less each
and everyone.
The family of Robert
H. Fishtf. Jessie l .
'Fisher. wile and sons .

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS OF
GALLIA COUNTY. OHIO
CUe No. 80 CL 10

Jam• W. Pi'Jae. .Inc.

·

' - t Vlrglnlo Co._.,lon
· Plolntlll. ,

•pou•.
t.a-•·

nut of
kin, dev1H01,
htolro. legit rop-entotlvM.
ooolgno lnd their legal
roprM ..tatlvM Wid
ooiilgno, if ony,
o.londonto.
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

unknown

Tile

.
·'

..'
•
·,.

..
...
•
....

At SIUC·, the sprayer II
m&lt;lunted on a se!f·Propelled • ;;
unit. But Woltt silld It would be
used In any spraying system .i

ibovo -clint• ore

hereby notified that •YOU
hove boon named,. clef.. d.
anti in the llbova IN'Ithlttd IC·
tlon wh•eln. plelntlll lo ,..
qu01t1ng the obovit coun to
quiet Ito titt• to cenoln rMI
proporty dolcrlbod oo toto
3BA though 47A, lnduotvo.
of Undvlew Addition to the
City of Go111pollo nqw con·
..,.dtoocreego.
The within aae h• .- . ,
filed In Tho
Pl. .
Coun of Ool11o
County,
Ohio. 1ocotod in the Gillie
County Coun Hou•. loculi
Stnoet, Go11ipallo. Ohio, In
the c•e number 1hown

eo........,

abo\le.

Glvuwey

1 yr.- old ..-y

a wtofto cot,

to

Colt oltor

...... """"' only!

lp.m. ,,, ... 011 1'.

2140c.llond ..... ....

- .Oyer

4p.m.

11

Help Wanted

lng Aoithorhy w• oefl tt• 101·

low~:Ia .Ford F-~~,;,

rlght to roject ony or ell bids
submitted.
Further, the above colleterol will be sold in the condition It i1 in with no ex-

prelled or implilld warrenti" given.
(1)21, 24• .2&amp;, 3tc

2

In Menaiem
In lovinc Memory of

NORMA JEAN SI{I1S

who passed .away 3
l.fiiS aao. .Jan. 21st.
We Wlftlod so much to keop
rou.
We ..lthod you diiJ by d~ .
Ullil II J•t wijh bnok1n1

ho.ts.
WI ..tchld you slip .W.,.

God watchod rou as Y'"' sui·
loud,

·

·

111 , ... you hod ·hod rour
short
So llftliy Ho doMdyour•"Y

eros

And took you in His c•e.
Your m1111ary is 041r kNIIUko.
~hh tllot WI will ,..., port,
OiNt ha y041 in His ilooplttl
But • hlwo you In 041r b...,_
Sitlly llls•d ly Hulblitd,

F1111r, &amp; Fri••·

oltor 1:30p.m.

CASE MANAGER. FuN ttme
poo!llon IVIHiblo In OUI-91!1onl
1111111to-ln -liidcflo.
tkMw recou•w WOftt u well u
-loll11d - · to cnm1no1
)Uitlc. ciiMta.
tr.vel

Clinic Aldi .,.,_
t1mo 1n . , . llmiiJ ptomlno
olllcM. Muot ha .. hlth oclloOI
dlplolrl!l "' oqulvatoriCy; good
oomm...._.lon Allie; acour~cy
- -;
-ncloblo,
.,.
111111lorollabto.
·Trllnlna
AU b He far IUtuN JndtyWuiJ

.-y

...,IUil,

who Ia ...,..lw to reproductiW

Help Wanted

UAOEHTLY llfoliU
~
llAILi P£A8011 to Ml W 1lne
o1 Nah
to
.......&amp;Ciurtna. ·~·...,
ltruoUon endlwnl cUitaiMI• _
kl
0.111o orM. lJion ugh t,.l!llng
~- For ~-•1 tntor•
vtow, . _- · C.K.
Wonh,
loutnw.etem Pl*roleulll, lox
M1005 A . Worth, lX 'N111 Of
phano, 'tt743N:131.

q_, -

hoiKh ftoodo Ia Cl-1- . . _
. . . . . . -who .. -~
-mod 111c1 con ,,_ 1n the Troclor trotior . - •Oiotod·
- be iluot have two yoora OX•
haw NII.W.nood
ll'lll'llportiHon;
portonM c1o1n drlvor . - . I
to 1rovll
CloJ. and 1te ... to P'• MW COL
1n four county catchment .,.•. wiNing
III&gt;Oiia;
Pomot or,
onct LlcoMO lnd IINa ..,_, lnd1vkl~~tls with 1 min~
,..... ........ ,,. . . 4422.
mum ot B.A. wllh one yNr peld ..Choolpoo1co
Wook41r.
nlng and "'"''""'·
Solunloy toau
.. on
............ 1n iidcllctlon flold. to..be
expected. Send NIUmt,
Muat demonlt1'81• • ttrona lf!Ciudlng
..._...... 12
Situation
. oommlltmene
to chlm~al ,.,.,. CJI to
P.. nned p.,...
dl p : ndtncy ciiW!ta 1ncl their lhood of Southo11t Ohio, JN
.wanted
~very.
A ttrong
or•
ganludiCINII anct accaunt•blllty Rlchlond Avonuo, Atilano, Ohio loby elMer In ony loamo
Br Jonwuy 31, 1890.
-poctlve 1 pliiO. Noaolloblo 4!'!1:!.
lhiM lllyo I , W- (14-1112•
EUCJUP.
,
MillY tlojlondont on odUcotlon
50t0. .
.
Ia.-. Pioooo mpand
to
to lw~ M.E.d., -.,
18 Wanted to Do
lo Direct« oo OoA.PIIIent

A_.,•

~

lenrtC.. Whh ,....IIIII CDVIt

for

-ion ..

bot•-•

'-t·

tor llld lltFM proMolona1
Nflr81 cu II P.O. Box 72C,
Athorw, Ohio 457111. 114-5112·
4721 E.o.E •

•~ 1 .,.. ......... bla

-n

--------1 n-.--,.

inga • Compeny reaervea the

=

by appolnt1n1nl only

11

Help Wanted

9

EARN MOIEY Roodlnt 8ookl1
$30,11001yr IIICOIIMI potont1o1.
llotllls. (-1) IOWI'I-tOOo Ell. Y·

wn•

-":-Pujbiie~ijtic~-:-"~-;..
.:i
Public
·· · R1. t4tWttno
01111 ~VIcfnlty
c:oro ..._ .,.......,.

any

a.y~..

304..71-201.

.Wonlod To lur: PIM
tt+-44t-ttl7 11.111. to

LEGAL NOTICE

tN«·

Auto - l c , OIPor- ...
qulred, havo own tooto. 1,.

HotrlMnvlllo ..... 114-7

Gil11a Matropollbon Hou•

s....,,.,..

wry at the 'time following
the passin&amp; of our loved
one. John F. Pouads. F01
the many prayeB, tele·
phone calls. cards, lovely
flowiiS, each handclasp·
and words of sympathy,
food, monll.y &amp;ifts, the
bellutiful Euloey liven by
Clll;lallf lljor William
Morrison. tl1e prayers by
Elder Sllerman Johnson,
and the Rev.
CaiYin
Minnis. the visit to our
home and kind wo~ by
EV~tW~Iist Sis!« Aorica
Boas. f01 the prompt rf·
ficient service by the
Gallia County Emereancy
Medical Service and Dr.
Judy and . Eme11ency
Staff at Holzer Medical
Center, the Rev. Eddie
Buffinaton, pastor of
MI. Carmel Church and
the Willina
Workers
Club ind Fellowship
Room, for performance
of Military graveside
rites by Vinton American Lecion 161, the
wonderful
dedicated
service and concern by
the directors of McCoy·
Moore Funeral Home
and Chapel of Vinton.
Ohio.
.
For alii his we will al·
ways be very arateful
and as we read in I Thes·
salonians 5:28 · '1ht
crace of our lord Jesus
Christ be with you.
Amen."
. The Family of
John F. Pou;~d~ I

Old lag or loon\ to
pnlliW In ...... Co......,.

Emp loyment Ser v1ces

StatiOn Wogon,
Mtl01ge 74;212, Aolo.
SelloCI bldo will be ac·
oepttd Unt~ February 1;
1980. Bldo -uldbemelted
to: , Gil1io Mo1ropol1uon
Houllng Authorhy, Routt 2.
lltclwolt, Ohio. ond mariled
(ltd! . GMHA ,...,.. the
right to ecoopt or rwject eny
or ott bldo. l'or more infor·
motion cllll 448·02111.
JAN. 11, 21 .

11

Wanted to Buy

lobrolll• ......... by

matlfy 40 unlto of I-lly
houolng. Effective 1 · 18,90 .
JAN . 21
·

PUeLIC NOTICE
NOTICE 11 .hereby given
thot on Saturdoy. Jonvery
27th,1f!90.et)0:00a.m .. l
public • Mle will be held et
1 0&amp;. Union Avonuit, PQm·
oroy, Ohio, to oell lor c•h
manded.
,.
tho following co111ite,.1 :
CHERR1NGTOiii.' EVANS · 1889 ChiiY. S-10 PU,
rodlo. Bumper, 11 opCI
&amp; MOULTON
OYirdrive, 8# •
by 0 . Dean Evono
1GCBS14E2K2182838 .
P.O . Box 409
Ge11ipo1io, Ohio 411831
1187 ChiiYrolot
4dr.
(114) 448·1737
Jon . 7 , 14, 21. 28; Feb. 4
ITo be oold lor the Vll111ge of
Pomeroy!
'
1181 Ford LTO Cr-n
Victor.!~! Pollco Cruloer.
·
4 dr. ·
1 Card ofThanka
The F.orrners Bon't. ltld
Sovlnga Comp••i: Porn•
roy. Ohio, -orveto the right
to
bid It thia Ule. and to
We wish 8XPf:8SS 011' ·withdrow
tho ebcive aoll•·
sincere arltitutli to
t - prior to 10le. Further,
The Formero Bonk end Sevyone that helped in

101 ...

.

Loll: llaa.
- .....
hell
OMpltiN.
_. . ,·..,,

Flooto Heir Fllhkono. A l.oodtr
1n 11to booutw 1nd•trv 1o
.-1ng ogoln1 Wo'ro looking
for 1 proteMionll, ta~nt.a
otyllll who 11 onthuolootlc a
- t o wool! w11h pooplo. w. of.
.. · - hCMo~y .....
.....
-ion,
bonoflto, od-lor!. •
_ . . . pot...lo1. n you hen
whit H tokoo col Amy, • -

With ........ 101 -......
Anewer. to-1he hii'M ot llue,
Hu I chtoift Del lor on,.114-4,16-

1014.

Yard Sale

7

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

_.

J ....

'

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

IZW313.

How Styllol Woiolodl Hoi• Hop-ng, Sl- 8rklgt Pilzl,
U.Mgar UcMM Prettrrtd. 11...,
441-331:1.

ALL Yonl MUll 8o Pilei 1n
DIAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.
the lily ...... 11111 non.
!!Uo!lllf .. 1:00 p.m.
Frldly.- Mondly od~lon • 2:00

l.lttlo CINir'l Pizzi lo -king
.._g,..alva indi¥1duall tor lA
lnitl

p.m. ~.

II

-Wanted to Buy

Good -

tnlok toppor, tar
~~~• :~:;
bed,

:!*1

Ju'* ...
~~..'!;..

C
.
l i· l l

w11h

or whloaut
l.orry Ltvlly eti-

AVON • All ·l'"'.!!!. Coli

Wavw 304-l82·;iMS,

"or11yn

=~::..:=-=----:::::::::::1.----­
,

11

Help Wanted

1Mn1g1men1

llump Truck HI...... Coli,
- · • und, Houttn .,....,
81one &amp; gnvel. I1C.-.a1W.

RN Cloo I I . _ lor
pod1olrlco a iiiluKI lor 1oooM Oonorol Molnt-- &amp; _.,.,
ure· nur~lna. I mo. to 1 yr. -ric, plumbing a .. _.ry.
Home caN Nul'lllna E~~:pwlencl lniUrlnDe CIIIIM -kMHne, 114roqutred, ...... collllchll1o, ol 317-GIII, or 114-211-1111 .
Ktmbor1r auouty co ... ., 1...,.,.
Mlso PaUII'I Llli CU. Clfillf.
75a4SS .
Solo, oHordoblo, ch11dc.l,.. M.f
RotiNd lomlll to llvo In "" · e •.m•• 5:30 1un. Aan 2'.+-10.
homo end elliot In co~ng tar Before, •II« ~ehoar. Drop-lne
MR llldv. Mult turnlllh r•t•ran.. welcomt. 114 4tii2Z4.
.
COl. Clij It 4oiii2-37SS.
•
Will b.obys~ In mr homo, on ·
Wo~I'MI n.odod nlghl ond
8ulovl11o Rood, Ex!/:~~- end
~

weekand1, apply In perRn VII•
Pllu, 30M JIICklon Ava,
Pt. Pft.

Wl11

WanfeQ.. Fi.lihin. dve-in Ntnny

lran. lti-311-17H.

10 Cll'll

tor 10ne child

In northern

Ntlnnct. 11.......

cloln O&lt;A

• beM111111ta,

building

gor-

•

~ old

-=rv

Hll-. Excol- -klntl condMionl, prlvllo 11v1ng quoflon,
OXCIIIont IOilfY. Send lotlor with
quo1HICIIIonlond photo to -'INinord, Box 11411, RFII, Long
Grovo,111.eG047.

politlona.

atop In lillY -ton or moll
,........ to: "P. 0. loX 70, Bar·
loooonv111o, WY 251104.
,baby •iol1tor 0111111011•
=~~
~lght olllft, :104-

""

N.. company in trtl neect.
Top Monov-nt a Soloo Rap.,
IIZS,IICIII to S71,000

Read the Best 5eler ·
Read the

CLRSSIFIED RDS

Potentl1l eamlnp.
211011 lor lpl., Ilk
Stew1rt.

REGISTERED NURSES

Immediate full time openings are available for
rqistend nurses to work in t~e Special Care
Unit. Salary commensurate with experience.
Excellent frinp benefits .
.·Contacl: R~onda Dailey, R.N .. B.S.~ ..
Dlrietor of Nuninc ·
Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy. OH. 45769
(614) 992-2104, iltension 213

(

EOE

M!DICAL LABORATORY TECHNICIAN
Part time position is available for a Medical
Laborat.ory Technician to work rotating
shifts lall shifts). Requires lndepandent
worker with capabilities in allarjlas of cllni·
cal laboratory. Excellent fringe benefits.
. Please contact:
Cecelia lisle. laboratory Supervisor
Veterans Memorial Hospital
116 E. Memorial Drtva
Pomeroy. OH. 46769
1614) 992-2104, Extenaion 216

•

NOW PLANNING
SUMMin APARTMENTS
ONE STORY FLATS AND
TWO STORY TOWNHOUSES.
ONE AND TWO IEDRQOIIS

AnENTION SENIOR CITIZENS

If you are 60 years of ap or older, and you are
on 1 fixed income, you maty qu1lify. for home
weatharization services. · These servim 1re
provided to you 1t 1111 cost ltld caa silqiflcantly
rtduce heltin&amp; bills for years to come. Persons
Interested in applyin&amp; (Senior Cltizeas only)
should call or visit one oftha followlna CAA of.

flees:

Glllia County Outrtlch Office,
· Senior Citizens Center
160-446-0&amp;11
•ias County Outr?ICh
Former OBtS

It'

Gllllo Metropollbon.l!ou•
lo t8rmln•lng
tho 1nv~ to Lind OWn.,, •d Reel E1tate lrokoro
lor the ollllmlollon of propanile to be p u - lor

lng A~

You must fila en •newer in ,
the above captioned cue
within 28 day a aft• the IMt·
publication horeof. If you loll
to 111e.ouch on ono-r; (udg·
ment by default mo¥ or wH1
be granted lor the relief de·

3 Announcement•

Cheshire Centrll
. .;;:_ 367·73410VllllCI,

4·

PUIUC NOTICE

tl)o d-o-tofopprox~

VI.

E. T. Morrilon wulthto

FOR MORE INFORMATION
PHONE 388-8212
OR VVAITE P;O. BOX 214
VINTON, OHIO 46688

sprayer, but It Is a lot bigger,''
Woltf said.
•
Wolff said the sprayer dellv·
en chemicals with more accu- . ::
racy, greater uniformity, and
Is n9t ·as subject to mUd wind
drifts as I!Onventlonal
eq~~~Prnent,

'

1989 TeeNEE Boot Tril10f
·
Serlet Number
1TYOJ1 113K1M02344
. ThoM unit• m.Y be lnaptcted by appointment.
Tho bonk offoro lheoe unito
without wlmntl•. 1nd reservea the right to •ccept or
reiect •nv off. racefved.
'rerma of ••I• will be cuh
or credit ,by prior arrange-

Articles :o f ·· .
incorporation filed

to mar~et revolutionary - ~prayer
tiona! patent . In 1986. Wolff
holdt the pateilt with~
Col'p.. sruc. ud .oenilll Wat·
IOD, &amp;l'eleai'Cber at tile Ua~·
slty of Flortcla.
Wolff IBid work on the
project bepn In about 1980.
·'We sot Into It rlehtaboutthe
time the agrtcu_ltural ~nomY
took a nosedive," Wolff IBid.
He said aj!OI!t 10 agr1cultural

;

11

'~"'

\:,'"""'1'~·
,, _,,

,,...........
~...-·~~l4.tJ-~

PttCE REDUCED!- you have been look· '
SPLENDID HOlE AND 13.37'ACRES. 1/l ' 4.9 ACRES. 1/l, JUs1 AT THE EDGE OF
ina
for a home that will give ~ou .room to
TOWN. BEAUTIFUL VIEW - 1260 SQ. 1(.
- Spacious ranch style home features 3·4
stretch
out this ~ rt. features mthis home ·
home
offers
krtchen,
living
room,
3
BRs,
FR.
BRs. 2 baths, equipped krtchen, FR. DR, LR.
are equipplli kitchen. formal dining den,_lo
fireplace, cirpet, heat pUmp plus wood. ten· ' 2 fireplaces, attached garage, workshop and
vety ivtttg room with fireplace, dinette, bath,
a 12x60 mobile home thll would be ideal for
lral healing system, air cond., 20K45 pool,
3 BRs. The tun basement is limshed and offmom or rental. Call lor more details.
unllllched aange. Tbis could be just the
•'.ers bath, laundry, roomy, attractive Iemily
one lor you rt you want privacy and space.
room.
NAVE YOU ALWAYS WAIITED AIEAUTIFU L
HOlE ON FIRST AVEIIUE1- Make plans to
AREAL CHARliER- 1.87 acres m/1 and an
IAIIE THIS YOUR CHAIIGE OF ADDRESS!
view this home !Ohlch offer,s 2 baths, large
attiiiNe country style home ;ust a couple ol
- AttractNe home ;ust minutes from town
m•es from HMC on Rt. 35. Features 1nelude · LR wdh lireplace and view of river,l ·shaped
offers 1368 sq. h.. 3 BRs. 2 baths, eat-in
kdchen, formal entry, FR, summer porch. lo3 or 4 BRs, bath, LR. k•chen, OR and FR. fi·
k~hen, dinette, family room, living room,
vely
llwn,
on
river.
replace. cas heat, Zcar garage.
latndry, cllhedral ceilings, fenced yard.
PRICE REOUCED TO $&amp;5,000! Buutitut l·
BIIICII HOI£ UIIDER $50,ooo7 WE HAVE
VIllAGE OF RIO GRANDE - 6 room home
shaped brick. AH rooms tarae. Eat-in kitchen,
OIIE on LeGrande Blvd, wdh 1full basement
111d .7666 acre, m/1. Features inClude LR,
formal
dinln'
lR
w/FP,
3
BRs,
I
'
h
baths,
at·
lllllrtially fimshetl),. carpoit. cenllll air and
FR. kdchen, laundry nn., gas heat. vinyl sid·
tached
aarage.,
llch mot:'- cau 1o1 appointmettt.
in g.
LOCATED ON RT. 619 1n Meip County th1s
:1.4 ARE TJIM:T - COIIEICIAL SITE --:
LOTS Of POTtiiTIAL- 67.496mes m/1,
property e~~ntains 21.04 acres. 11111. and 1
lealld on U)llltr Rt. 7across frum the new
on
Crause-Btcll•Rd. N1ce wooded building
small
home.
Owner
anxious
to
sell.
lltopptng enter. ,
,
stes. rul'll water IIYitlable.
3U ACRES Ill. CLAY TWP. - Froruce.
Ridce Rd. Old hou• on lind.

WOULD YOU LIKE TO OWN AMINI FARII7
- Now you can. Lovely 3.72 acres ofter apple trees, cherry trees, insulated workshop,
24K26 barn wrth loft, cellar house. 12x21
gill'age. Very mce home w1lh some outstand·
mg 1eatures, LR, FR. equ1pped kitchen, cent.
air. Call for more details.
ATTRACTIVE OLDER HOME IN THURMAN
- $34.000 - 1650 SQ. h. home offers 4
BRs, LR. kitchett, bath. 2 FPs. unattached
garage, sateiiHe dish. vmyl s1ding.
141 ACRES 11/l HUNTIIIGTON TWP.- Approx. I mile of ltontate on Raccoon Creel&lt;.
Some bottom land, black walnut.
11~-~ ACRES 1/L. Stction 17 &amp; 18, Huntinaton Twp.. frontage on Jackson Rd. and
Ltltle Raccoon Creek.

lOIACRES. 1/LGUYAII TWP. -Some 1M·
lsble.

�...... . .-.. . .
~·

----· ·
Ohio-Point
21

32 Mobile HolliN

.........

ft. Rearrange '"t
V' words be &lt;O&lt;o

Anne

Kloln

ll'llfnlng

fiXtUNI,

lrond opo~ng,_

opon 1 doya. llr. :ochnoldor
olrlo,.,
otc. eon

EEGUAL

w . iMIOia
=....rtr'-~. CIJdo

15

Rent als

Conimorclol, Homo un"-. From
11tt. Lornpo, Jotlono, . . . . .
po,._t•
low
oo 11. ~~ntl!ly
~tl Today
FREE Color
c.talog. 1-800-22N212.

oon,•.

Real Eslate
.31 Homes for Sale
3. bodroomo, 2 botho, fuU
JlniMocl
baooment,
now fUr•
nac.. central
alrv~~'~•r•"•, t.nclld
• •
d
yor
2414 Ill. ornon Avonuo,
PcMnl, PUunl.
Malee an otter on
lncpoc11on, !104-4175-tn4 .
3br, livinG room willrop!Ke, full
bo-rl W/goroao, dock, CION

Ia t~n, ,_ tiOwn paymont,
·lib OVIr approved MIUmJb..
loon,
Conoldor Mobllo Homo II
down -•monl, • 1• ••• -oa
,...-,
u wHkdaya,
114-446--8718
w-ndo.
4 rooms, t.th, garag 1, 157x151
out building, total electric, Bur~
dette Sl., Point Pleasant,
AM:tucedl 304_.75-5348. ·

17 ocroo-llmbar, paolu,..lond 1
hoy, tobacc ...llalmonl, coula
bo·otevolopod.
4 bodroorno, 1 112

32 · Mobile Homes
for Sale

117a Glonwood. 2 ,bodroorn. Doublo molollo on
~· Excollont condhlon. '-lionwfth ..,.....2_
-rgo room addod on. Sho, 150. Jorao poll bam wUII conemonth 51U67-6nl.
·
n - ond collor. Lorgo ldl~
1178 Shull, 14x70, lood
·
wKh lolanil, doublo - • .,......
wUher lnd garbage c1a·p ~....
tOial - ..... c, 614-24 5871.
Laundry rilorn llltochod. 1 bod1171 14x70 loran P~nco 2br raomo, 21ull .,.,.ho; ,_ carpol,
total • Joe · •xc.
·
1
' total OIOCtrlc,
heal pump. ucond. Sv,DOO.
__..
--.. nl·_.114-4.....a&amp;O.
concr.te ,..... .... on IJ'IiJIIn, ~
In
roar. SOmo now winOok w·-...
..._ , __
1185
- . 14•-. 1'4-2!:5- - ~lod 1 112- 11om
1534, con lllo.
town,- anci ....... L Coli
~or Solo: 10x10, · 2br, mobllo ==~=: ~~~
homo, pa~ly haml-. 814 -441- by 0- - n t.
Oltloftor 4p.m.
for 81111; 12J:80 mobile home,
IT'S YOUR IIONEVII va.i con
.....
-•nowly romocloted"" 1.1 ocre .lot
MVt t.!'A'UJ•- on a new lllngJe at edge ol town. Alto a houN
::w daubl1 wldl home. Call 1e on IM lot, In rMICI of rwpalnl.
800-72HCMJ. Klngobury Homo Llvo In - "'"tho OChM',
SalM.
111,100. 114 ••• D233 aft•
11n 2br, -lrllwood, good cond, 4p.m.
.
atove, ,.trig, couchl chair, F.or s...: 18n Kirkwood 121:11
wathlr, &amp; &amp;fryer, Vlny Under. mobile home, 2-ar, range,
r,:n•:at••• bam bldg. 15,500. retrta, W I D, pl. .o'fumlolllnp,

4-4

715.

1n 111o Ol)lnclo, 11+

1br, -

lor Slle

i*~ti9~Meii;.;;;:-;ibid;o;;;-;iii
2 Story '*-• IIII*OQftL) ret I

I. I.

I. I I I I

deD ,..uiNd,HUO -plod :10+
I~ d.- I

p.m.

~-for,.,., r.~lolly fu,.

' 6·11 ...

1121 .
-- · ""~- · n..-, roor Flrll
A,.-~~~~~~f.•WIIA~
ullllt

' ·,--"-·
ret.•,

_ _,

I

I0

_,._,

•

I-4UI.

.
R RAY

·S 0

I II
•

I

•

-

gl

gorogo.

I
(

· 1 1•• _.._ ~ .•
.,. .,_,_ ruR

5 ,_-

-..,nt,

dlnlngroom,

room,

kllchtn,

blllh,

lull baHment,
ga~ge. Recently rtm&lt;l d1led.
Prtc.d to ..U! C. II for appt. 11.f.
1112-5003.
utiiHy

For Sale By Own•,' 3 Ito~ A·
tr.med, ~. . 2 bathroom•,
fl,..,la~; carpet throughout, all
tlectrlc, With bJMbeard hut
•prial .talrc-, with dllck off
muter bldroom. Over
lqUIN ft . 3

wort&lt;

acr..,

Rodnoy

WHI spprox.
Bob Evans Farm,
5838.

Seven room houH ·wtth 18

1cr" of ~ncl. Ateo nice aar•a•.
Hlnt-tod, call lt4-742'242f.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

BRIDGE
JAMES
JACOBY

NORTH

I

I I
,

.

•

I

'

,.,D ~omp1ere
:;
· .
.
rne c:nuddt cuorec'.
c' lili•n' ·~ rne m&lt;ssing woro&gt;
. vo u

aeve 1o~

rrom sreo

Nc 3 DetOIA
. l ·l.

dIn
Cloo

. Apertment
for Rent

a.

1br, ...... , . •• • ft...a.ca. ' •
furnlaMd, all uiii;IUii paid, ~ • '
&lt;&gt;lllcllng_coblo. ldolllor-,..,.

...., .,...... ........ HOme
Port.,l1~1~

~~oil.

•

,

1orgo khclion, -Jt.dry ·:'
up, ltduMa only. "" pM8. ...
Talol
C.H 114 44a 1127
boloro2:30p.m.

-lc.

polod.

-

I 'M~

Zt
! '.1•~

'} .

I.

f'iiMik
['bl

orrni nl! lf'~rl •

2 ......._
-c:.:·~-·-·· _.....
-.
..,., c10pao11. 1 1In counlry, MWiy rtnUdllld
ltQy .Jonoo - · -JI,
c.ntr.l air, 2 full beth, I bedroom8, lafllll prd and pragL

2br, booth 112 15 Court StrOll, '
kHchon w/otovo lo ro!rltl· C.·
llolod, • - · Pluo ~. ,
Ull..... ,.,, no pete, 11........_ .'.

Answers on - P~gt&gt; D-7

Ae,.,..__l14-1121110.

.-c .. ·•

Unfumlohod opt. 4 roomo a
tooth, ContnJY Jocolod. Ret, '

= ...,. . .... . .

Very - · lorgo""
I
-. .....
0¥1flaoklng lpl.,
, l*'lt,
Oollllallo,-·o l l Ell l

I

RY

J~tm"

.hu·Mt)'

Ttlf: openinf: Wt&gt;ak IWO·bid is I poJJU·
lar treatment. It fDI; usua,lly defined I!

JhoWirill Sll-tlrd l Ull Wilh 1·11

hl&amp;h·

ca rd polnll. The p:neul hrtn.l ll fnr

mn1t of the atrt'ftiOI to be COtk.'t'fllrattd in the IUit tNt ll bid. When proptr

. Iy liM. tbe 1*:1 ean be mo~l dfectivr
8ut dDD 'trm let the weak two--btd rep!"' tho opentoa ..,..bkl. MonJi "'""'
wilb I lil-&lt;'lrd Rlt ·~:, U flf ...
rard pnlnU Aoukl bf.
with one
of the suit. Today'!' ... 1 1!1 1 •Otld
r•ample.
...... Welt opened hM diJimondl .
N«l• twc~ • problem. The 111• of dla·
rnoodJ ... ftll JAced•• .,., the pod
lltatl tall madf iJae haDd too pod lo
simply flm'tlll two helrlt. 5o Nor&amp;l
~ for talHIIt, 1~111 to bill
tae.ull O\"ef fta~ntr SoltJI rapaad.td .,., . ."""""' ...
"'""· llorttl tom..,. ~pt to
reuo.tna tMt u tHUe •• ..., f&lt;Mif
lt&lt;orto ond lllo qooen olopodeo woo1d

. ___
u.--.....,.....,
- ....
-

roer.

,I

Room a
Holol. 11+44&amp;-8580.

Gl·''

·-

Many lllhe1 ~ad lealures. let me show 11 to you. Th rs great !tome 1n anly tfte
low. low40's. Won't list lon&amp;- lei's Oo~ today!
NIW USIIIIG-SYJtllaJSE-tHMIING HOIE-2 si&lt;J) aont sicin&amp; 411Rs,
storm WK'1cilws, ~m g nn., drn.ng rm., ~ltc hen, ~~ turrsce. wei &amp;sulated. Utra lot
245ft. hoOt Elcellentliic.1tl0ri on 124. pt,ced ior quic~ sale in low, IDW 30's.

NIW LISTING - NICE - EICEILEIIT LOCATION 011611AYEL HILL IID-

DLEPOit- 2 story, 2 btd1 oom home, kitchen, hv.ma•oom. bath. utility room,
fa rced 111 gas fu rnace, l.vge garage. Comlortabl e •n low 30's.

BEAUTIFUL HOlE WITH ACREAGE OIISR 124. 2~ MIIESI!TOIID RACINE
- htra niCe newlYremodeled 14 bedrooms. bath, apphnte$. IJ'Iiriaroom,
dunn&amp;roam, krtchen, new luroace, new S1eel garage, new satellite, 4 1~ ICrts.
Prrced absolutely nght - m•d ~O's. ·
SYRACUSE - Close to crty CMik. 3 bedrooms.-2 baths, kitchen, dJninaroom.
lully caq~rted. cen tral u , nice lrv10g roomw /central ceUiftit all elec;., refriaer·
1tor, renee, dtshwas.her and sler"' system. Should be 145.000. but is now in
low 30's.

.

IIDDLEPOII' ~ IIQA.DWAY - 2 or 3 Dedroo ms. tlvmaroom, din ina room,

~liChen. den, 1 1 ~ baths. basemen!. vinyl siding, exha larill! lot, privacy lence,
cl ose to city park. A real nluable property. Should be inthe 40's but ~ now
prad 10 tow 30's.

.- . ......
,....
........ two ...........

....
two--·... ""ol tllornc.ll • ..t • dirt to dtfnt ..,
('Oft·

tfld ~

,

a trkt. 11dl • • IIIU 1ft a molt lor Nor._Sootil, ot....

We CM lrpt lUI ,....,. FAit

Iooft Heo llitl tile - ' t _...,

·· 1111 tllo no1
.,.....
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two . .
wiOI ...... tfOol '"'PI ,..,

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~.-.....,.

...,.011'11~. ,.,...

Utt ......... Mtlltttl.,

LIMIT HOlE ON U . l4l - 3 bedroom ranch sh~. 2 b~h$. iwine&lt;oom.
kitchl!fl, utlity room. firi!C)Iace W/insert, lii"Jf 2 car pup lheMeel , pond,
woods. mtntrll ,,.. s, pod twntint &amp; lehin&amp; 13 aan. I ye• trlfflllld
home. ThiS home was buft It the sft. BnutiM lor.ltion.let IMI show rw rou'N "" 1. Wor undtr prced In till 60'•
IFIL1$TIIG - l ~

•

. ,

lll'lld MOWIIIIC:

.

114-1112-7471.

'

THE PRICE IS RIGHT·- AcamlolllbleA-trameon
a wooded lot. 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms. I \! baths.
O.~led well with submerJijble pump. Rural water
tap ~ paid tor. Discover the beauty and love in litis
home. All for $22,000. Call for an appointment. •
112783
PRICED IN THE -'10 $20s- 41! acres just out of
Gallipolis cit~ limits, SR-141. 5 rooms and bath. 3
bedrooms, city water and natural gas on land. The
land needs to be developed. House needs some
tender loving c•e. This is one you can own as
reasonable as pos~ble. Call us today it the
temperature is above zero.
112792
LOOKING FOR ACREAGE? ...:.. This ranch style
home indudes 21! acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
kitchen equipped w~h range and 1elrigerator. Full
basement, attached g•age. Heat pump/central
air, rural water, private treed settine P1iced to
sell!
12795
IIEW LISTING! 40 ACRE FARM!- All in grass and
fenced. Anice farm pond for ~vestocli w1ter and
recreation. The barn 'is in good condition, has
stables for horses !JI' room lor cattle, tobacco base.
This house is-not lobe overlooked. Dutch victorian
st~le, 2 story w~h all the beautifu f, varnished
o11Jijnal woodworli, not .painted. Weft llndscaped
lawn and above JIICIInd swi111mine pool. Please
cell us for a showmetnytime.
12104

for' .....
:-· nlohod
oponmont,
ii2S""'""
~

month. eornor • PIM,
GoUipollo. Ono bodroom. - ·
llow a NfrlgoNtor provldod.
No pOlo. Dopollt oncl roloroncoo
ntqUired. 11 1 411 12&lt;41, ., ........
4425, 11+441-2328.

REDUCED! OWIIEI WANTS THIS PROPERTY
SOLD IMMEDIAT£LYI ONLY $26.000.00. ~ 2
bedroom frame home srtuated in the village of R10
Grande. Natural gas heal, lui! basement. large
lawn. Call today. '
#2796

For·LM•: Seooncl lloor, unfur·

·
- opartmont, S250 por
IIICMidt. Overhdd~dly ~rk.
GoiUpallo. 'TWo boclioomo. Goo,

llovt I ,........,.... pnwldllll

No
poll. Dopoift
requlrlcl.
,,. .......
1241,
114-4'.14425, 114-446-2321,

.=%~~;. t',;~f.:~l~~:;:~(J¢~

LOOKING FOR A HOME Ill THE K'IGER CREEK
SCHOOL SYSTEM! .,.. If so, then call us about lhis
listin~ 4 bedroom home, liv ing room, eat-in
kitchen, garage, and more, all situated on I acre
approx: lawn. P1iced at $32,000.00. Call tor today
for an appointment. .
82793

POSSIBlE LOAN ASfU.MPTIONI 2sttry h~me in
nice n~aftbo1hood. Mom will save countless steps
with t~1s cozy breakfast nook. 3 bedrooms, formal
dinin~t Must see to appreciate.
IDI2
50 ACI.£ S- More or less. Located in Sprmgtield
TownshiD.
.
. ·
, 112771
$~3,500.00 ·- PRIVATE - Vinyl sided rancH,
n1ce app,rox. !acre lawn. Very mce 24'1124' two
car Rarau. Call for more informaCion. 12714

PRICE fEDUCTIOIII NOW ASKING. $15,100.00
- Appro!. 42. acres of lat4. Hunlington
Township, rural water. Calltoday.*'r more
details.
•
· ·12102

.

~

PRI•E DEVELOPMENT IANDI-Over 74acres.
Private cenveniantlocation, nice view, Rt 35 area.
Call today tor more infvrmation.
12770

'bar .
'lllrthday

LOCATION ALOIIG ST. IT. 35, near Holzer
acre, M. or L, wrth 2-bay bldg. Owner may ass~t fi.
"""'""'g for approved purchaser. Buy now lor $115,000.00.
·ACREAGE!!! 41.9 wooded acres. srtuated wrthin Perry Twp.
Eslimated timbervalue: $10.000.00. Deer .country'! Buy now
for $18,800.00. ·
·.
.
CONDOMINIUM: I st. Floor. 2·Bedrm. Condo.: 2 baths, Cent.
AIC, heat pump., custom cabinets. dishwasher. disposal,
utility rm. carport. Call for more intor7nation.
•
3 BEDIM. HOM£ WITH CARPORT - Approx. 1.4 acre.
Srtuated along Africa Road·. Price wa s $25,000 Quick sale.
Price $21.500.00.

.

now. ~ice

TWO BEDROOM HOllE. Upper River Rd ., Rt. 7, Kyger Creek
School District. Buy now. $46.000. ·

SOPHISTICATED LUXURY Ill NATURAL SUR·
ROUNDING$! - Almost brand new s pacio~s
bi- le~~el. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, family 1oom. 2 ca1
garage, approx. 2 acres and more. Begin a
leisurely room-by-room tour of this remarkable
home today.
82779

NEW l!STING: 10 acr es. Peuy Twp. Some timber. Buy now
f~r $10.000.
6:5 ACRES, WITHIN THE CITY OF GALLIPOLIS srtuated
along Garfield Ave. Srte includes 2 building lots, w/ci\y water-sewer. Buy now for $30,000.00.

YOU WON'T BELIEVE YOUR EYES when you step
into this 2 story home in eKcellent condrtion! 3
bedrooms, 1\l baths, family room, formal dinine
nat. eas fumace, vinyl siding which was recenlly
added. City schools. Call today lor more
inlo1mation and appointment. You'll be im1
pressed.
82717

1973- 12'1150' -2 bedrm. mobile home. wrth rear dedi.
Call Allen Wllod for more info.
118 ACRES LOCATED Ill GREEN TWP., Graham School Rd.
Super view! $44,000.
DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT PROPERTY: Brick structure w~h
3 rental apartments. AISQ. adjacent metal stora&amp;elutilily
bide EsL gross rantal income, $820 per mo.•All priced tor
$65,000. . .

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS! FARM - Approx 10 I
acres, newer 3 bedroom ranch. I \! balh1family
1oom, formal dining area, storage building barn,
40'K56' app1ox. buidinJ. w~h concrete floor.
Above ground pool, saletlle dish and gas well all
induded wrth sale. tall today lor more
details.
--"·
82769

•

WE HAVE BULDIIIG LOTS in Rodney Vill111e II and Mills
Village. Cali for more information.
'

2 LOTS WITHIN GREEN ACRES SID. One is 84'x148' and the
ather 75'1148'. Purchase either for $5,500.1&gt;0.

JUST' LISTEOI 152 ACRES/IMPROVED LAND Recently constructed fence ar111nd 100 acres.
2,159 lti. b!ISic quca tobacco allotment. Llrfl!
ban, cellar, sprinc fed -water1ng trough. For
location and addrtionat information call today.
tlt803

*Ill'•

llflolt 9 ''"" wiJh lhil - whit till! Soiltmilll Ptlll. - 2
3 ..,., prdllll, 11tJ111 - · 5 OC!B. Ibn' I-t bull'ln out ofriiOilllt
'"' .,.,. JIU -. Unbtll.. "• in tile 70's. Pricld sllllltd - ,.._ Jf11 can

REFNET

.

3 LOTS . LOCATED lEAl TYCOON lAKE (50xll5'). Cln
purchase on land contrld. $2,000 down. 10% interlll, PlY
$129.69 for 6 yrs.
.

'·

· AN OLDIE BUT GOODIE - Go back in time and
relive all the charm and personality typical of the
late 1800' ~ $59,000 is a small price to pay for this
updated 4 bedroom on Second Street. Middleport.
8508
QUALITY FARM HOUS[ ON 16 ACRES - A
beaulifuly setting alon.J Raccoon Creek highlights
this property in Perry Township. House indudes 3
bedrooms, large bath, living room and huge
kitchen. Vinyl siding and new roof have been
added recently. 24x32 outbuilding induded also.
Lots of potential if you're looking lor asmaH (arm.
More land possibly available. Southwestern
schools.
8245
COMMERCIAL BUILDING SITE - 1.2 acre lot
with approx 220ft. of 10ad frontage on Rt. 35 west
of the cinema.
.
8505
MAGNIFICENT BI·LEYEL- Space tor I. growing
family is what lhis 3 bedroom, 2 bath home has to
offer. Spi~ foyer entry Jljves easy access to both
the main living quarters upstairs and 1 beautiful .
family room downstair~ ThiS home is IODated on 2
lui size lots and has a view that will absolutelv
take your breath. $64,900. Must see to belieiref

11605

LOOKIIIG FOR SOMETHING OUT IN THE
COUIITRY liut stMI not too f• lr0111 scltoolsl
Here's 1 nice property only 5 mites hom town, I
mite hom Green School, bul w~h plenty of priYicy
and a nice view. Over 1400 sq. ft. indudes 3
bedrooms, living room 1rtd family room, nice
eat-in krtchen. 2 acre lot. Priced to please at
$54,900.
11201

n• c.ttteJWy. $8,000.

I

'i

l\

••

OLD TIME CHARM - There's not many homes
like this stilavailable, ·especially at an aflo1dable
p1i.ce. $29,900 buys this 1901 vmtage house tn
Kyger Creek Schools. 3 bedrooms, large_krtchen
(eat-in), dining room, living room and family room.
Home has had major improvements done, 1ust
needs your finishing touches. Call today belore it's
gone!!
41218
145 ACRE FARM - $48,500 - This Walnut
Townshi~ farm indudes some bottom land, over
· 100 acres of woods, a tobacco base and an old
time 2 story residence. Close lo Wate1loo. Perfect
tor deer hunters or anyone else who wants to get
away from rt all.
, #125
BIRO'S EYE VIEW - One of the mostbeautM
panoramic viewsoverlookmgtheOhiO Rwer Valley
can be found from this Y-shaped ranch. Very
spaciou~ liveable, and well-mamtaml':l home.
Great tor entertainin&amp; indudes 3 bedrooms,
formal sunken living room w_~h lots ol ~mdows,
cathedral ceilina and beaultful stone l11eptace.
Also tellures lamily room wrth 2nd f~replace,
wife-approved ea(·in krtchen, 21! baths and 2 ca1
garage. Make an appointment to see this house.
You'll tali in love.
41246
COlY HOME ON 10 ACIES- Located just south
of Rio Grande. tlliS property lays very nice. 1971
home telllures 3 bedroom~ 2baths, eal·in krtchen
wrth new cabintts, living room 111d family morn. 21!·
car garage only several years old and acouple of
other outbu~dinp. larfl! fenced .yard, garden
space and lots of pine trees. $69,000.
11207
'
.
EXECUTIVE IIOME - Here's one that's
impressive inside and out Very cleat and well
mainllined spll illvel home that's loJ the f11111ily. 4
levels of Hvlnc s111ci (app1o1. 2500 sq. ft.)
indudes 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths, formal
living and din Inc room and fullY. equipped ell·in
kitchen. Outsllnding lower family levels indudes
large IMtily room with brick fireplace and rec.
room 1nd 1nath• full bath. F1mily room opens to
prolessionlily landscaped brick Pllio and
muiHevet deck surr111ndin1 swimming pool.
Grell fo1 enterllinine Close to hospitll and
shoppine $90s. can for more informat1011. 11201

BIG HOUSE,
this fiKer upper
Creek a1ea. If you're
willing to work lor a home that could be a real
showplace, better make an appointment to see
this one on 3.9 acres overlooking the 1iver valley.
Priced 1educed to $21,500.
~502
COUNTRY CONVENIENCE STORE - There's a
heaHhy business opportun~y for you . Gas service
. plus conveil1ent lood mart plus many olheJ
possibilrties. 3 bedroom apartmen.t over store lor
additional income or for owners/manager's
residence. Lots of storage space. Established
business (or many years. Only store in lhe aJea
-lots of potential. $80,000.
· H240
CORNERED? - Not in this "round." hou se located
iust minutes from the hosprtal· and downtOwn
Gallipolis. This 1400 piu s square tom, 4 bedJoom
home has living 10001, family room and 2 baths.
. Unique design and nestled in the trees, you must
see to appreciate. Stucco walls and woodburnmg
fireplace make Ihis a truly cozy spot kif the lam1ly
to confegate. Perfectly priced al $49,500 lo1
young families.
#606
THE WORD 1$ OUT that $49,900 will buy this 2
year old vinyl sided 1,152 sq. ft. home located in
the Kyger Creek school district. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, complete krtchen, air condrtionin ~ The 1.5
acres includes a 30x50 3-bay heated garage with
workshop area. Like new'
11401
BRAND NEW CONSTRUCTION -Located on Rt.
160, t~is home is waiting tor rts first owners.larfl!
master bedroom wrth bath. L11 ge great 1oom
includes family room, dining area and eat-in
kitchen w~h cherry cabinets. . Home has 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car girage and hell pump.
100x300 lot. For $59,900, you cat' alfo1d nat to
look.
1220
PAYMENTS CHEAPEI THAll REliT - Wrth 1
small down payment, you cat be buUdina equily
in a home instud of your latdlord's pocket. This
nice cte111 3 bedroom horne is 11fonllbly pritld
at $26,000. Good size bedrooms. I full bllh, ilr11
eat-in kitchen, 1nd livinl room. Viny! sidillamlkes
fo1 easy mainten111ce. Only $26,000! Only
$26,000! Only $26,000! Well worth the money!!
.
11213

UST WITH GAWA ·coUNTY'S LEADER

·wise

'

David Wiseman, 446-9566
B.J. 11alraton, 448-4240

...........:=••-= ...

,

PRICE REDUCTION!! - Quiet, peaceful and
scenic location along Raccoon Creek. 2.9 acres
just north of Route 7 along Raccoon Creek provide
the perfect setting to1 litis log home. With a lrttle
wor~ it could be something you'll! always
dreamed ol. In dudes plenty of space lor pr~vacy,
Aardens, ~tc .. and has creek trontaRe and larRe
deck to enjoy rt all. Home has 2 bedrooms up. full
basement which is partially finis~ed . Price
reduced to $39,900. Make us an ofler! 41231

Vtla cnn sell youq:nosent homg .'" " w~ can pul yoo: ;,,
· touch with one nl.approxlmtlell' ' '-.l~!ll1eal P. ~lnlf! olfice
lor.alifl11!1 qunllfl~d to help yc,u lh1ci llo 1i(tht htmu 1

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

' J

·::

21.5 ACIES, IIEAIIIOITH GALLIA SCHOOL No structures•
loclled along Frank Rd. $18,900.

1.02 ACIE LOT llone Klicller Rd.

is ltW. low.

. :';
·MIDDLEPORT - Turned •oft"""
by" .. ~'~ ,\'ff:~.i
bles"? It's time to get mited wrth this 2 story
brick located on Rutland Street. Beautifully
tailored wrth 2 bedrooms upstairs and 2 more on
the main floor. Textured plaster walls in both the
living room and dining room help make thisone of
the truly finer homes in Melfi! Countr. And with a
fenced in play area tor the childJen, it sperlect for
a growing family. Alot of extras built in w~h tender
· loving care you must see to believe. Fall in love all
over again fo1 just $54,900.
#604

BI-I.EYEL - Very attractive 4
bedroom brick home wrth over 2800 sq. .ft. of
ariCious living space. Includes features like a
beautfful cherry knchen any WO!IIIn would love
wrth Jennaire range. large family room willl
limestone fireplace across entire room, 2 _large
atllactive baths and much more. Energy etfiCJent
heat pump. 6" eKtelior walls, eKtra insulation, 2
car garage. Located 1~; miles from town in a
semi-private setting on .77 acre landscaped
lot.

For l.ellal

leoond Awe. "itsa all&amp;, OH 114--143S.

LOOKING FOR AFAIM? - Approx. 128 acres
sduated at Addison Township. Large barn.
57'd20' metal bu~din&amp; tie house, tracltr and
equipment shed, 4 ponds. Vinyl sided relt)odeled
3 or 4: bedroom home. Easy access. For more
details and location, Rive us a call today. 12791

.z21

~~~~~~·~·~OH~-----------1"

MDi.w ·a • ,., ....... 11•

'l

METICULOUSLY MAINTAINED HOM£- Beauti·
fut turn of the century home wlh the orijpnal
character still intact. Large livin&amp; dining and
family lor den rooms. all with lireplaces, beauCil~l
open stai1cases
to 3 full size bedrooms, large
eat-in ·
i 1oom and wor~hop . 2very
on 2 landscaped lots prov1dmg
shade and room for the kids.
'

.

Country Mobflo Homo '"""
33, Nar1ll Of Pomoroy.
Lobi, Nnta'*, ptute, ...... call

49

iiii'rlio~ FOR THE NEW OWNER to
o'wmng this vinyl sided
frame and
1anch. 3 bedrooms, family room
wrth fireplace, krtchen wrth dishwasher, bath, 2
car ga1age, only 3 years old. Approx. 2 1/3 acre
lawn. Separate mobile home space. Kyger Creek
schools.
112799
~ '\t:':F)l'%,~~ ~

i spacio~s
surroundinp. 1 mile
on Rt.
325. This 3 bedroom
large living
room-dining room combination, custom -made
cabinets, I \l baths, breezeway and 1 ca1 garage.
Situaled on a I acre lot with edra lot available.
$62,500. Call tor details on financin~
#601

1 .,_, ollloo tar ..,.., t100 por
rDam, All uUIH... Included. Coli
Laloylllo ..... 11+446-4222.

.-

ll.lfSlOFDIIWIIOIItll - This lomi~homeh•

lllord it. c.tJ N lo '" llri ono

'

46 SpaCe for Rent

J. MERRILL CARTER .............. ,............. 379-2184
CATHY WRAY .; .._
..............................,... 446-4255

rt 111. Liwina room, dinin1room. kitcMn, 3 blctliQns, blth -'daues&amp; wWlhe -~~~~ ill&lt;nollod .,d - ....t .. lltdr""" bolb. - 1 M

~~~~

.

si...,.na roomt whh -king. · Counly Appllonco Inc. Good
Aloo troller opoco. All -.upo: uMd opplloncH, T.'v. Olio. Opon
Coli ollor 2·00 p.m :IO+Tn- a o.m. to I p,m. llon.-811. 1145111 llooon Wv
·•
441·11H, 127 3rd. Ava. Gol· l'tQiu;,~i.:'t:

Of''flltfUNtlr

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

ronl·or monlh.
f1201mo. Golllo

Aoomo tar
ot

Stortlna

...

RACINE 011 GIEEIWIIIIII CE.OUIID.

.............. - . - plof

"" pme.

-

....... Nll'd,

$271hfto. l14 4414421.

PRICE REDUCED: I a ~re w~h older mobile home, county
water, no septic· system. located along Rt. 160 near North
Gallia schooL Price: $13,000.
·

trees. alum. SldHl&amp;
You m ~st see 1t. l h•s home has rt. So good we have wananled it ror l Mye11.

........•• llr4:0011-M.
104-4111-1112. '
'

·····~········ ···· ··-······

FALL Ill LOY£ ALL OV£1 AGAIN wrth this picture
perfect I 11 story charmer. located on lite edge of
town: you'll be amazed at the privacy t~e
beautifully landscaped acre yard provKies. You II
tall in love wrththis family oriented home and all of
rts character. 3 bedJooms, 11! baths, eat-in
kitchen and lormal dining room, largeiivingroom
with attract1ve ltreplace and porch. Full basement
wrth family room and lots of storage, Very well
decorated and cared tor home. BONUS: 3 car
garage attached to home by breezeway. P1 iced at
$89.900. Call for an appointment.
~230

loo. Dop. lloq'cl. 114 ... 0444.

Q

Jaom.

-~­

HORif. 11.008.114432-$745.

Tara TOMahll- ADII1Iftll'lla.
I I - :lllr, I - · i1ICI oq. ft .
1 1/lt both, CAICH, d l o - ,
~ ploygroung, 2 poolo,
W"!!!z a aorbla+ Inc..-. soon
. ot - '· f'1+317·71110.

r :~u

- 3 bedroom!&gt;, ktfthen, dimng 100111, livina
garage. full basement. mare than ~ ICA!, frurt
Ja n ~~t. new refr1geratot. new heal pump, central H .

--· .....

2brAlo
apoot.-,
In
Orondo, 11~=~r.ld,
• ,.

NEW LISTING: 2 bedrm.• house wrth upstairs dorm.. 1\;
baths, fully furn1shed, newly remodeled, new carpet, wrth
new range and relrig. Full basement. Near Tycoon lake. Buy
now lor $36.900.

" ~" u•

I

Two
-o
· d
lluiiJ.....
-- _h

laollftloo ovolloblo. Cillll+ta·

mobile·home
i
(garden tub}, buih·in
stereo system,
ce1ling in dining and
living 'roomS. underpinned, plus 2 porches
lapproK. 22'x8' and 8'xl2"). Nice fiat lot
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! Crty school system.
Ideal
today lor.appointment. Priced
in the

Borderline
hand

PH.

Ln'JUTV
BLDO.
SPECIAL:
wlth1ad'
_
_ ,27ll31'
. . ,.

tar ront. Cor- . '
oottlng, ........ '

EISI
Pl!l..\

1111!

'-collolos.__.. ;,.
DONNA ClllSENBERV
E.S .II ., Box 188
Gllipolit. Ohio 41831

oplo.

.Q lfl !! 2
\lulrK't;tbl .. : N~&gt;it ht-r
1'"t~l

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S•v• hUndr-..
thouundo Of
doll oro.

Bulldlrig
Suppllee

EED·'LISTINGS!·

WE

One 111.._. apt. _, c....,,
01~1~~ only. no polo,

.QJ HJ~

Sntll

55

3711 EOH.

I !f·M

.AUU

Snuth

••

furnl-

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

."""'"'
...

Of'~lt&gt;r

101·H39

•''

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j

ovon

1!103

SJ. 110

I!Jooly
- I I houoo.
Claei ID new ·ehapplnt cenlw.
8ultlble ""1 or 2 _ , . . fl+
....0331. '
' ... ....,.\ . '

~'JI..t-.

2 lodraom Apl. $200 por - h ,
f150 dopoolt, 10447WOOO.

2 bod,_

eonlrol liNt, air - l l f !·
514-4141-~.
In E - S c - Qlo1rlot......

'·

deal1.

_....s.-.

Robert ..J now
Sam and

1, 2, ·ar Jbr, ap1. nao t4ao I*
mo. Aft utllhlio pold, Dop0ott ·
ltt'irod. ConiOC1 · ~f~Yo~te
11..._7731, 11+o141-

· D. C. Metal Saln.. Inc•
Connolburg, Inc. -47111
Speciollz In gin Polo
' luldingo• .
D•l.,ed 1 a - your
...... Any liz•.
CHOICE OF 10 CO LOllS
FREE ESTIMATE on

.. ...... ...... _ .. s,........... _ •..,... •. -

TERMS: Cash or check w/ posrtive I.D. Not responsible lor
loss or acciden ts. Food an d restroom will be available. No
view until day of sale. Please call tor further informalion.
OWNER: Carl Crabtree
AUCTIONEER: Pat Sheridan
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
PH . 592·4310

....

., so ,

aoo....... .....,

-~ bldao, ond poc;koao

Fumllhed

.....

............. fl~

...

=r."· 114-44~ 11~ '

Saturday, January 27th, 11:00 A.M.

+AI U14

__ _ lloll

-.-ltNAO.

FARM EQUIPMENT SALE

Carl Crabtree will olfer at public auction the follow·
inglis! of farm equipment and miscellaneous items.
D11ec:t1ons: Rt. 50 West past Albany, I mile from Appalachian Highway just ·before Tennessee Gas.
EQUIPMENT: '87 Case 1394/65 hp. 4 wheel drive iractor
w/842 hours, '77 Case 1175/125 hp tractor w/ 125 hours·
on rebuilt motor. Massey Ferguson 510 Combine diesel
w/ 15' grain head !variable speed, motor recently over·
hauled). 4 row co rn head for MF Combine. American automated gram dryer !Propane or natural gas-155 bu.). Mas·
sey Fergu son .No 33 grain drill. sprayer on tra1ler w/ 500 gal.
. tank/ hydraulic pu~p. lnlernat1onai 6500 chisel plow
w/ d1sks 1n front, 24 corn sweep, bush hog 20ft. Haragalor.
Massey Fergu son 725 haybine, New Idea !before Allied) 51
ft. chain elevator, l abor Saver gravity bed. Omaha 20' standard gram be~ !metal sides/ wood fioor-3door tailgate/650700 bu.-no holst) . !2ft. hydraulic auger for truck tailgate, 16
. ft. auger w/ elect11c motor. Fruehauf 30' flidbed lor semi
trail er, 5th wheel flatbed trailer 120' long w/2' beaver tail &amp;8
ft. deck over hilch), 16' flatbed trailer w/hght ~ New 16' trailer
w/ removable stock ra.cks, vinyl cover, cutling gate. .7' Kins
Kutler blade, John Deer ~ 90 bu. auger wagon, Case6l6sem1
mount plow. Case 18' w1ngdisk !rough). Case4 row cu~ivator~
Badger 1500 li quid manure spreader !rough), New ldealerti·
~er spreadeJ !rough), 2- 1000 gal. lueltanks. 2-500 g~. fuel
tanks, electric pump for fuel tan~ boom poi~ 6grain binjack~
' 78 Ford Van w/ 351 Windsor motor, many used truck and tractor t~res 118 4 38). 5th wheel plate for semi, natu rai gas furnace. Jear end for F600 truck. 8 sets of ste~ trusses 140,x70),
wheel ba11ows, racksfor Che11y pickup and 10ft. bed, grain leg
tubes &amp; tiigfltin&amp; 12' hydraulic motor auger lor truck bei, 10'
&amp; 12' wood truck beds, 2 Topco and 2 John Deere w!Tecumseh mottrs heavy duty weed eaters. Xerox 2600 copier
mach1n~ and other miSCellaneous items.

:lpJII.

-lank,

~;=~;=~~15~'·*::·:o·:B.=O.~I~1~4~441~W~1.:..:_:
Publl· c Sale
8
&amp; Auction

tKU
.AKU O
t k In'

+J

I,..__
nor....... -wiring, ....

-

, • ........., oil - · lllr, 1 ,.
11om otty, on Jorp prl¥lle Jol,

44

w. v•.

•

1177 ......
~,I.C.. -~.i
1171\ t110;
11110; 11+
- ·
..........
...._....., _

I

balh, lrf.Jovol brick A·framo
1\ouN, nntahed blalment and
laundry room. 2 cor dllochod
gafflge,
locat.clRoad,
3 314Glenwood.
out East , _ _.:.__.,::::::::::::::::::.;.;,_ _ __ ,
Aannan Tra~
By appointment only, It lnlt,...
tod,
304-571-21411
uppor
brKket.

By OWIWr'l on Union Av•.. 2
bedroom•,
llvlngroom,

~

r.'l::: MI.... ._ • -

1

._,_ !IOtoronooel.MCurttr .-,

1could tell my friend was nerv·
_ _
_
. ous about making his wed·
d1ng plans. One even1ng we
C I T AI L
were discuSsing the big event
· 1---,..;;,.;;.....;...,.;..;-T-~~- when he · solemnly asked .
19
~~-~--~~uld I ask 19 be my .

41 Houses for
,
Rent

32 Mobile Homes

I_

WHREEB
7 '. I~

---------

WOLFFTANNING BEDs

I I' I I· I

I .I

W

407-4111&amp;-331t .

..

-

l o - D I - . 1 1 . -.

_..,., prtcee r1d

they started
an
i
campaign."
~::="=e:s:to~p:·
:'ind=ln~g~art=~ifatc:ts=ar:o:u:nd:t:lle::l:lm:e::::::i

·~

- - - - .··br., '
2 - . In - -

.'•

=...:=:: ,..,":: ,.:~

o-

ventory,

~

'

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...,

&gt;'

• · - -· · - .

•

torRent
z bod,_ troller lor ":4,:1oo '
~ (Jolal for - ·
.,.. .

1 - . lond, II. Ill. 114, $7,ioo.
114-31+1557.
.

lllcholo, Pinlly'"~Ufllo Boy,' Lavl,
C.mp &amp;overly """ Loollo Foyo,
luc&amp;a, over 2000 brandl: alto,
muMI t'- · prlclrig dllcounl or
ll.mlly Oloto. ~otaM Pri&lt;M
unbollovllllo far top qualhy
. olloM,
ZIG brondo, 2600
lllfloo. $11,100 to 121,000: In-

for Rent

-r

LAFF-A·DAY

' Aplrtment

Mobile HolliN . '• ';

u

SEACEP

,

35 Loll &amp; Acruge

91

11-

11. . . .711.

SliM,

Dljll,
0.ftOeWIIr!Aeroblc:, Iridal Ungerie, lack Sllop or occ...O..•
~~- Add DDioo' onolyolt. Bronc!
no-: Liz Cllllborilo, llonho

44

~~.

...

2

I .

• 1 Houll8 far Rent

.

Ponwoy-Middleport-CWipolls, Ohio-Point

- ...... -tF..
..~.............. .
a.--....-

moke 6

10

21. 1990

--·- --··

llllted i&lt;y CI.AV - · 'OLLAH
C scramble~

LYNE'PT

.

j'""n/!lpootow-. LadiOo, llon'o,

lllnloiUnl,

WOIC ·•
lAM!

11rnple word•. Fru'l' letters c f
eocn in ill line oi souore~.

0.0.-0--··
.._
-=
Lorr.
I
~
"-'ko or llolon y

21. 1990

W.Va.

r::~::'- s~-tlcil~-~t.~st

for Slle

Opportunity

J

.'·

~

'

Real Estate

(614) 446-3644
E.&amp;....._.., Broker
Tom Rusull, 448-2876
Ralph 8h81ta, 448-3844

Lontttll McO.de, 441·7728
.Chri1 Elloeuor, 448-3121

..

•···

..

'

.

�•

Pilga D-6-Sundey Tim• Sentinel
57

Pomaoy-Midclaport-Gallpolia, Ohio Point Pli111nt W. Va.

Mullc:al

lnatrurnems
-·

.....__ , 112

INIIy' 1111

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

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wtn-:~r-· Pttcol110a,

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59

71 Autos for Sale

-.--1-

._ .. - . 1111-......, ••• U ·N.
.

__

71 Autos lor Sale

.

21 1180

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~10414,
...,_41
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............
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Mtl
112.

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1m LTIJ, N;, tac. - · 1110,
loodre'"'-No_A_IMI

2

.

lhtiJtillll

f~"=F

....

lor_, fDrCAIII14-742·
2111-np
!l!ld _ ..._

Owner financing wijh down payment, approx. 7 m1les from
Gallipolis. Ideal location. Excellent condition,.overlooks Blue'
La~hnd Raccoon Cree~ 23 ft. travel trailer, sundeck,.rural
we er• sepbc system. electnc. Ftshmg, boating, hunt in&amp; or
JUS1 re 1axong .
.
584
61'. ACIES VACANT LAND
WOODED LAND - A LITTLE SOUTH OF RIO GRANDE ON
STATEPHIGHWAY 1325 - Building sites. Lots ollarge pine
t rees. need at only $16,900.00.
#6 31

Very attractive and well bu~t 4 bedroom brick ranch
located in a lamily oriented neighborhood close to
shopping, hospital and grocery. Owners have built
another home and are aiuious to move this one. Also
includes large living room, dinlriJ r()Om, eat.in kitchen,
separate utility and 2 lull baths. 2 car garage. Heat
pump efficiently heats and cools. Just off Rt. 35 wiiSI.
Reduced to $69.900. Give us a call. We'd love to show
this anytime.
#239

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

WISEMAN REAL·ESTATE

Conotllonod
-D.. u•w ..U.ble.
• '"-hr.
100 lb.
11444N117.

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• l..t,GII.,
.Wu•~ CIIIM- :-

W.Io!-•'a lllul!il. •
natDntbtr ,....._ ~ .._
1,000 te .,_ I str. •
....,.............._CiM IOW1Ntlt .

~-· u-o IMw.304-

=.PJ.Z..1'"feJ'"'•
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MF

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61 Fann Equipment
1011

e.ctrlcllll
Ael'rlgerlllon

ForSale
orTtlde

Farm Supp1,.'
.l. Li':estoc~

wfth . ••• mo....

Tril nsport Jtion

FOI SIU

.
·
.
41941 SENECA DI.-IOCI $PIINGS, OHIO
CAU LISftNG .IGEIIT, JESSE VOlt
592-2466 01
.
ATHENS IEILIY 5.92-1146
UNll

le,UO. Own« wiiiii!W-.
286-11522.

71 Autos lor Sale ·
1tM Pontile Ternpnt 411 .n~no!'~
liL Aloo 1171
eau,
•
Wlo ..oo ..
lo.11WII.U11.

..

·'-~-lJUfllk .v;;;f. . (Jjllrd(
':-71}..4£
..~'i~

.

.RE!IIJ!i~~ ·INVUfMEN11- eciMMEi.c..L

., _ .

23__lOCUST ST.
446-6806

.

.

RUTLAND - PRICE REDUCED - WILL SELL ON LAND
CONTRACT- 1 acre shady lot tobutld your dream home on.
Electric available. $2.000.00.

CARPENTER - 4 bedroom. 1\\ story home wrth garage on
approK. 1 acre lot Shed. workshop, and root cellar.
$16,000.00.

STARCHER ROAD - POMEROY - 64\\ acres, vacant
grQI!nd, gas and electric available. Spring for development.
CAll FOR DETAILS!' PRICE REDUCED $48,000.00.

ANTIQUITY- St. Rt. 338 -House and lot. Small house.
small price. River view with poten!ial of acabin. $5,900.00.

NEW LIMA ROAD $3,500.00.

81

-BEEF
BO'K80' barn. equipped ·
feeder, 16'x60', 300 ton Meritla silo
more inlo:

MIDDLEPORT- FA~M- FREE GAS PLUS ROYALTIES20 acres. 7 room nouse, 4 to 5 bedrooms, 1 bath, carpeting,
full basement and rural wlter. Also trailer hookup w~h septic. $48,000.00.

ST. Rl33- Right on Kingsbury Road. 2 acrebuildingsites.
Water &amp; electric available. MAKE OFFER - TERMS ARE
AVAILABLE. $6,500.00.

POMEROY- Commercial Site. EKcellent location. All utilities
available. Ask for more details.
MIDDLEPORT- Nice street. 2 storyhome wijh 3 bedrooms
dinmg room, vinyl siding. Concrete Iron! porch and storage
building PRICE REDUCED!! $18,500.00.

OlE BIG SliP FOIWAID. Moke

l~is

-

your profiUille tnvttlment

Bus•nes~ only for sale. Wallpaper. curtains, art suppMes. paint. carpet 1nd ;·

much mOte. I lg. &lt;lJSPii) room, 2 olfices, low tase 1nd ample parkin&amp;.

11463. FMIILY PARADISE- 161 oc. m/ .~~ 9 rm. home. Z' ''"' brlck.l

bedrm., 2 fuN bll~. eKtra lg. din. rm. and LR. outml-&lt;hnp, barn, workshop.
cellar house, lg house. ApproK. 40 ac. tilable. Borders on l ittle and Btg
Raccoon Crk. Tobtcco base. Can drrve over most ol it wrth a tractyr. City
schools.

•

Mil. IUU RUN RD. - VUfTOII -Remodeled 3 bedrm. ranch wrth ellra
kilcher~ w/loaOs ol cab•nets_
, 2 car prage. bu1\dm&amp; 3 ac. $34.900.
Mt2. ¥lCMTLMD- 14 ac. more or ~s w1lh pond. •avme. woods and
pasture. 2 budd10gs. 114.000.
MM. NEW FIEEWAILOCAIIOI- 59 . .
used as commeroal or uact ~ome sil:es. \1 c;,;,,"·•• ·,;"·
MIO. LOT 01 Sl 554 Very good sle to budd. ••

WE HAVE BUYERS FOR MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTY! IFVOU
WANT TO SELL PLEASE CLL TODAY, WE WILL SERVICE
YOUR LISTING. WE NEED NEW LISTINGSII

\

. +--..... . ....

AUDREY F. CAh'.~DAY. BROKER
HilMES, FARMS &amp; COM ..'ERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET
GA~LIPOLIS. OHIO 45631

446 ~636
-~

_

i1 .,,ffi..,.

U\r~IJVVW'

NEW LISTING - APP.ROX. 30 ACRES of gently rollin aland
wfth a barn.style home. Hor11e is only 12 yrs. old and hiS 3
bedrooms, 1\\ baths, and full basement, pond. orchard and
buildin gs. Country sening Asking $77,500.00.
41157
NICE 2 BEDROOM HOME. recently remodeled. Situated ori a
lottie over an acre. Cellpr and nice screened-in porch. Nice
pnce, too' Only $17,000.
#15fi
ATTRACliVE BI-LEVEL HOME in A·l Condition. Located on
approx. 1 acre in Baum Addition. Has 4 bedrooms 2 baths.
central air and garage. $62,500.
' 41134
• APPROX. 20 ACRES with spacious ranch home. 3 bedrooms,
1\\ baths, family room and one car garage. Additional trailer
hookup. Askin~ only $48,000.
411~1

38 Fwnlle ruff

40 .. - Arner1can
In Pari~"

41 One •vtng
44 Recllord 10
411- Na Na
47S~ID

411 Ancient
48 Allamo0o1 aoclal
50 TV'a McCianehan
51 l.8inpqy

53 Printer'• _ , . .
54"- EIIIWMre"
55 Nlme lor Athena
57 Kay lime ~9 Chlldrtn'l game
80 WIN 1*'1011
81 Struthtra 10
82 Sounds lhrttty,
Ullllgpipe

84 Tlll'dler
86 Dwltt
Meadow
70 Wilt - Dllney
72 Sloe - ftzz
73 AnthoxJn
74 Ordinance
77 In mualc, high
78 Glnulne
.

ea

86 land ol calor
17 HIIIIIIW m'na111'11

MMIIealleep
10 'Lair

LOOKING FOR SOIIETHifiG CLOSE TO TOWN AND AfFORD·
ABLET- Make in appointment to see this 3 bedroom home
located approx. H7 miles west of Gallipolis on.Rt 588. Has
maintenance free sidin&amp; nice sized rooms. and carport.
Located on approx. 1 ACRE Green Grade School. Priced at
$37.500.
#129 .
NEIL AVE.- One story w~hmetal siding 2or 3 bedrooms. 1
bath, liv. rm .. big kitchen, dining rm .. bog enclosed back
oorch. storaRe buidin~ All on 40xl39 lot. $25,000. #126
REDUCED Til $34,000- Owner will sell to qualified buyer
on land contract. 3 bedroom. aluminum sided home with
family room. woodbuoner, deck and fenced fat. Located near
Rodney.
Nll5.
WANT A GOOD BUY! - Take a look at this 3 or 4 bedroom
steel-sided ranch with 2 baths, fireplace. 20x40 pool and
much more. Only $43,500. Give us a call on this onetlll2

!It ACRE FAIM- RIVER FRONTAGE- This 'small 'tarm hiS
' over 17 acres of river bonom and 30 acres m/1 ol pasture.
Tobaco base. The log home has ne.~rly 200 sq. ft. of living
area on mam lloor. Includes 3 bedroomt 1'h bitliS. IJrp
family room, solarium, larae decks plus basement wijh finished rec. room, There's more. so cllfl today. Priced II

GEOIGn CREEK ROAD - 3 BEDROOM RANcH FULL BA-

• $11U,IJUU.

.

BEAUnFUL PIOPEITY lEAl EirllllrOI - SPARKLING
CLEAN 4 YEAR OLD RANCH HOME 'HAS 3 BEDROOMS
LARGE LIVING ROOII AND KITCHEN AREA. U_75SQ.
lNG AREA. THERMDPAHE WINODWS. VINYl SIDffiG GAR-

n.uv:

2 btmoom, bath, livina roo~n; Uohen
ac:re m/. Owner Slldtam•ke offer. Prad 1ri

"fft~~ tgVf~E&amp;r~~T:/irl~~~~~LKS ON 2 ACRES.

HMI£111£0UCED: Doner Wll}latotiii!WI lb'*-""'~

I·

36 8esaonlng
36 Troplcel fnllt

c

JUST A FEW IINUlES fiOII TOWN - BRICK RANCH
LARGE FAMILY HOME. 4 BEDROOMS, EQUIPPED KITCHEN"
HAS RANGE. REmiG., DISHWASHER TRASH COMPACTOR
DISPOSAL, FULL BASEMENT WITH REC. ROOM, ATTACHED
GARAGE PLUS .24'x40' GAAAGE/WORKSHOP, GAS FUR·
NACE, CENT. AIR COND. ONE ACRE LOT. UNBEATABLE
PRICE. $65.0QO. DON'T \'IAIT, CALL NOW!

S

Glrlllnkal
32 Employt .
34 LargeCMk

83Moody;~
16 More Ul' 1""1'

»

:

31~and

12 Gulclo'l high nota

JAY DRIVE. JUST OFF RT. 35, 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH RANCH
HAS ~ICE FLOOR PLAN, ATTRACTIVE FOYER, VERY LIVEABLE FAMilY ROOM. KITCHEN AREA WITH FIREPLACE. ALSO
OPENS ONTO OUTDOOR PATIO. DECK AND POOL EXCEL·
LENT VIEW OF SURROUNDING AREA FROM DECK. 2 CAR AT.
TACHEO GARAGE. ATTRACTIVE HOME. EXCELLENT LOCATION. CITY SCHOOLS. $65,000.

If YOU LIKE A CAPE COD STYLING. THIS MIGHT JUST IE
THE HOlE FOR YOUIJ BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS, LARGE FORMAL LIVING AND DINING ROOMS, 2 CAR GARAGE WITH ATTIC STORAGE, fULl BASEMENT, HEAT PUMP CENTRAL AIR
COND. BUY WITH ONE LOT FOR '62 000 OR WITH ADDI TIONAL LOT. '68,000. HOME IS ONLY YEARS OLD AND HAS
HAD EXCELLENT CARE. CONVENIENT LOCATION.

24 Ftllmanta
25 .Exlstl
27 Olear deRanta
28- garde
2$MYM1f
30 Ha dlgto coal

10"'-

MOVING TO .THE CITV? THIS HOME ON UPPER SECOND
AVENUE IS WITHOUT ADOUBT THE BESTBUYONTHE MARKET. 2 STORY-FRAME HOME HAS 3BEDROOMS KITCHEN IS
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE AND REFRIG. AMPLE DINING
SPACE . 9AS BUDGET IS ONLY $4100 MONTH NICE LEVEL
BACK LAWN. JUST $35,000. CHECII IT OUT' .

SEMENT, ATTACHED GARAGE, PULLMAN TYP£' KITCHEN
E8U1PPED WITH RANGE, fl£fRIG. AND DISHWASHER
F LLY CARPETED, ELECTRIC ' HEAT PUMP, CENTRAL AIR
COND., LARGE LAWN. ~9.900.
•

1 Mlilltageable
7 o.nce step
10 "The - Who
Loved Me"
13 Whna pop111r1
19 Llwmlker
20 High mountain
21 MI. Zlldora
the\IIU.t time

FIVE ACRES - BEAUTIFUL 3 BEDROOM 2 BATH HOME
EQUIPPED KITCHEN. OAK CABINETS, SNACk BAR ELECTRIC
HEAT PUMP, CENT. AIR. PLUS WOOD BURNER CUSTOM DE·
SIGNED TO CONSERVE ENERGY WITH 6'; INSULATED
WALL~~,J2" INSULATION IN ATTIC. ANDERSEN THERMOPANE nOOD WINDOWS. INSULATED DOORS CITY SCHOOL
DISTRICT. $65,000.
'

PRETTY 3 BEDROOM RANCH WITH •n•~·
CENTRAL AIR CONO .. LOW COST GAS HEAT. AND EVEN '
THE LOW PRICE OF $45,000 THE WASHER AND DRYER
RANGE AND REFRIGERATOR ARE INCLUDED! LOCATED ON
JAY DRIVE. JUST A FEW MINUTES FROM HOllER HOSPITAL

ACIIOII

22~beyond

.
home
1n city, approK. 1320 sq. ft. One car garage
lot. Call
for more !nfo.
'
. N143
C)JUNTRY SETTING - 1988 24x56 CLAYTON HOME
srtuated on 4 wes m/L There are 3 betkooJ11s,' family room
w/ftreplace, 2 baths and much more. Secluded location in
Green School District. $30's.
.
•
#150
LOOK AT THIS- II YR. OLD 2 BEDROOM. 1 BATH RANCH
STYLE HOlliE- 8x16 building 1.52 acres m/1. Country setting. $17,000, Call tor more info.
#155
HOME &amp; 22 ACRES M/L- 1 year old ranch home located
less than 1 mile off Rt. 7 includes 3 bedrooms 2 baths formal dining, heat pump. Andersen windows,! car garage'plus
lots more $64.900.
·
#149
ENJOY lHIS RIVER VIEW lrom the lar·ge enclosed porch on
this 11\ story home wtth 4 bedrooms, 1 full and 2 hall baths
formal dining fireplace ~ith insert. 3 car garage'and agood
garden area on .73 acres on Rl. 7 just minutes from town.
$66,500. Call for more inlo.
·
· Nl39 ·

Reel Estate General

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Ml21

ASH STREET. MIDDLEPORT- This home is situated on 2
level corner tot~ Close to General Hartinger Park. A brick
home wrth 3 bedrooms, lull basement, and large anic.
$21,50Q.
#117
WHY.BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME? When it is already buitt.
Th os lovely home is just I year old and is situated on aooroK.
3 acres with a river view in the Syracuse area. lnclud_es a '.
· wooden cathedral ceil in&amp; stone fireplace, a self-approved
· kitch-en, donong, 3 bedrooms down and one in the loft. 2
baths, full basement and 2 car garage. Call tor app·ointment •.
.
#142

.

POMEROY - 2 story frame house with 2 bedrooms and
bath, with wood floors and some vinyl covering. ASKING
$4,800.00.
.
HENRY E. ClELAN'D....................................... 992·6191
JEAN TRUSSELL. ...... .. ...................................949-2660
JO HILL ........................................................ 985-44&amp;6
OFFICE ..................... ..... .............. ................. 992-2259

MIDDLEPORT- Here isa lot 60x113. You can get 2tratlers ·
on and have a good rental income. Has electric, water and
sewer_
: $11,000.00.

*146

SUPERB! - 12.5 wes m/1fronts on Symmes Creek and Rt.
141 woth tobacco base. $8,500. Call for appointment.
#153
OWN YOUR OWN- Beet farm, fully stock Oneoflhebest m
the county. Ready tor you to begin operation. Call for details.
#158
LOCATION- 2 acres m/ 1in quiet subdivision. superb location. Just 10 minutes from Holzer. Call for appointment.
..... .. .. .
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#159

SYRACUSE - Nice modular on corner lot. 3 bedrooms 1
bath, laundry room, carpet and patio. Close to school.
$21,900.00.

MIDDLEPORT- 2 story brick home on 2 lot~ with 4to 5
bedrooms, 2\\ balhs, wood floor~ N.G.FA furnace. Garage,
carport and 15'x25' storage shed. $49,900.00.

automatic chain
metal top. Call for

GREAT BUY! -Cabin: with 1.4 acres MIL, easily accessible.
. Great lor IJUnters' retreat or vacation getaway. Only $17,500.
Call tor more info.
·
#160

SYRACUSE- Quality shows in this 3 bedroom ranch home.
1 bath, bea"tiful family room nice kitchen with all applia~ces including dishwasher, washer &amp; dryer. Large yard
wtth chaon hnk fence. New wood storage building.
$45,000.00.

Vacant acre lot in Harrisonville. ·

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MIDDLEPORT- 1 ~ story frame home wiih 4 bedrooms, separate 2 car garage w~h room above, and extra lot. Satellite
dish and more. $37,000.00.
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-Elegant country living on 131 acres
4 bedroom home. Over 2,000 square
teet of livin~ space. includes 4 bedrooms, fireplace, formal
d1mng, equipped kftchen and much more. Land is level to
rolling and includes a beautiful pond, a 2 car garage and a
barn. Yo~ will love tt. Call.for an appointment. $110,000.00.

MIDDLEPORT- Remodeled home, 3 bedrooms. basement
small yard with privacy fence.- Ntce front sittin~ porch:
PRIC£0 TO SELL $24,500.00.

MIDDLEPORT- 2 Un~ Apartment Building in Middleport
Good rental on come. Good neighborhood. OWNER WOULD .
L! KE TO SELL THIS. $24,900.00.
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· IIIIC:fttf'IIJIIV IPI JCiratllf•IOPif'lf I!Mitlrorty•d

'"'' "' loc ..tMovfrtl!tM, LOCIIt~-GO" Rll5 Pr!Ctd

'

llot7

A,nswere
J,'
- Relax by the fireplace and watch the beauti·
ful Ohio ~om this 3bedroom home nell' Pomeroy. lndudeu
fireplace, full basement, 2 car garage, and double lot.
$27,900.
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11125
•• "

·l- ..... . '

91 King topper
92 Native metal
93 Conductor
96 Clever
99 TreniPQrted ·
with delight
101
104
105
107

Inclines

N.Y. subway
Young boy
Dioc:ele-

101 Thole holding
plflce
109Wiremeuure

110 Hindu cymbals
111 Belore: prefix
112 SoU
114 COmpoeltlon
116 Facta
117 Actreu Irving
1111 Eogar 10
120 Exptrecl
122 Slnllt child
123 Be borne
124 "- Cld"
125 Mother
127 Proceed
129 Seperates

131 Bluing
133 SuPIJOIIng that

' 13&gt;4 lillian m.

138 Swtteh position
137P138 Del140 Mimic
141 Torrid
142 At home
143 Romen 52
145 - Vega
147 Moths
151 "FIIYO&lt;Ite -"
152Macaw
153 River In Alia
156 Alrlcen antelope
157 "Tht Tumlng -"
158 -. B, -. -, E
1511 Wute metal
180 Sun god
1111 ..._. 10
1113 Blr legally
1115 Wooden pin
1117 Nw
111 Tellurium symbol
1118 "- By Me"
171 8tllg8 whlllf*
172 Pll'l of
lortlllcatiOn
173 One clefMted
175 Flntahta
1711 Frock

tnWtpaout
171 Prohibltl

on p11Je D-3
.......,.........-

DOWN

92 Spenllh pot

1 Cloteat
2 Join
3 Taverns
4 "-a Uvtng"
5 Behold!'
8 Goddess of
dlecord
1 Father
8 "- My Children"

8Fr8111et
10 Squander
11 Trllllflx •·
12 Tittle Ol football
13 Son ol Adam
. 14 "Let It-"
15 "Nighlmfe"
Street
18 Dapollted
17 Smalt htatll\g
containers , .
18 Soakaln a liquid
19 Fr~gments
· 23 "Field ol -"
28 Chlir
29 Pll'lner
32 Form foundation
of

upper94 Go utray

95 Foray
97 Toll
98 Trials
98 Laeao

World org.

119 The eell

121 ApothcBry'a
' weight
123 Taylor and Tom
124 Newt
125 Teeth
128 Enliven
128 "The - and 1ht
Puuycat"
130 Th,..legged
132 More distant

133 Electrtlled

"-Island"

particle
134 Pittsburgh
b-.b.uen
135 Wild - ollndla

Mode ol rule
Shade tree

Conducted
Poaltloned
correctly
58 Ardent

59 Caretlof
eo MexiCan lhawl
82 Soakl
83 DediCated
115 Aglve plant
66 Geological
feature
87 Simple

II Fall blhlnd
88 Cloth meuure
71 N!l\8

•

group
115 Therelore
118 Oreedlul

Cozy

Aaloclat•
Caudal
appendage
43 Sandar.c trM

45
48
52
58

a still

stands

33 Walk

35
38
37
40
42

93 Keep

,

73 Fr~gmenll
75Suday78'"-and~~~

79 Concerning

81 Spielberg ..len
1141nNnl
117 Anglo Suon

monsy
118 Pinochle t•m

138 Scold
141 Coat lhuttle .
,44 A, E, -, 0, 148 Goller SIIITimln'
SIITI
148 Runt easily

.,

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149 Chi.- dlatanc:e

measure
150 French lor
''between''
151 Play part
152 Paclno ol "Sea
ol Love" ·
154 Tear
158 "Bade In tha

·.

·,

·,

- " (Belltlea
1101111)

158 Word of aorrow
158 Greek portlc:o
182 Pllld nolfell

1114 Even-.
111 Harem I'QOI1I

187 Priest's -ment
170 Article
174 Tin symbol

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Ohio Paint Phu•nt

21. 1990

Marauders ·
lose makeup
tilt, .94·69

Congress must rewrite farm .
policy ·during next jew .monthS
·BJ CIIAJU.BII ' · ABBOTT
resources.
While there Is dlsagreemeai on
UPI hrm 1!'.411111'
"Tbe farm bill needs to bal· environmental tssues. there Is a . ·
WASHINGTON - Coagress ance the Interests ot farmers and general consensus on Capitol HIU
took a dramatic step In 19111when conswtlers,'' says Ellen Ha~ .
and among farm groups to
It told farmers to control erD&amp;ioD leader ot Public Voice tor Food
continue the direction of the 19115
as a condition for getting crop andHealthPoUcy .
law, whichtriedtolncreaseU.S.
subsidies. Public concern over
Some farm leaders, however, competitiveness ln. the world
. food safety and cluimlcal re- tend to view outsiders as hostile market while protecting farm ·
sidues may put more restrictions Intruders who do not recognize
Income.
on the agenda this year.
the sategu11rds farmers already
In his first major policy speech
During the. next · several employ or who want to imp081! of this year, President Bush said
• months Congress must rewrite unrealistic standards.
he wanted "market-oriented "
U.S. farm policy, a task that
Tile 1985 farm law forged the farm pollcles that allOw produc·
often turns Into a complicated ftrst major link between farm
ers more flextblllly to decide
what to grow. " Agriculture se.,
ordeal. This time, lawmakers l)rogr11ms · and environmental
h11ve to renew the feder11l safety goals. It said l11rmers would lose
cretary Clayton Yeutter was
net tor farmers while taking federal· benefits if they failed to
expect~ In E"arly February } P
environmental :c oncerns Into ac· practice'· conserv11tton or If they
provide the details of how to ·
count ,- and dO It at lower cdst converted wetlands or highly
achieve those goals . •
than current t•w.
·
.
~rodlble land to cropland.
;Farmers have compfl!lned that
II will be the first comprehen·)
they are locked Into growing the
slve overhaul of •far[D .'policy ·
There have been sunesttons same crops - at the highest
MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
a$&amp; cash prize from the OhiO.Valle)' Pabllalllnl
since
1985.
.
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for
·•.Congress • to 'Implement jloaslble yields - because they ,
farm, featured b)' the Melp SoU &amp;ad Water
Co. Leave your name, addrella and telepbone
Events
such
as
last
year's
Al;ufifrther
safeguards · 11galnst would lose ellbiUty tor farm
number with your card or Je&amp;ter . . No telephone
ee-rvatloa Dlalrlct, Is located somewhere In
scare have. focused attention 'on grou1¥tjv11ter conta:mtn,atlon by benefits If they exper!rtlent wltb
. Melp Coualy. lndlvldl!ala wishing to participate
calls will ·be 1\CCepted. All conlellt.enlrles lbould
farming practices and the·use of farm chemicals. Lawm11kers . other croPII.
·Ia the wee!IJY contest may do so by guessing the
he tumed In to the newspaper office by t p.m. each
agrlculturlllcbemlcaJ~. Theagrl· ' also 'are looking at pi-opoSills to
A landmark· National Refarm's OWller. Just mall, or drop off your guess lo
WedJiesday. In case of a lie, the wlnaer will be
cultural community ·still ts cop- revantp limits on residues In search Council report made tM.
chosen by lottery; Next week, a Gal Da Co(lnly
the Gallpolla Dati)' Tribune, 823 Third Ave.,
·· food . .•The White House has same point last year In atgulng.
farm will be featured by the GaiDa SoU and Water, lng· with the fallout. " i.
Gallpolls, Ohio, t5831, or the Dall)' Sentinel, 111
. " It's about food and pestlcfdes proposed 'a sqrnewliat flexible farm program rules prevent
Ceurt St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,and you may win
Conservation District.
·
and related to that, farm,lng "negligiJ)lt! ris)t" standard. En· farmers ' from adopting alterna·
practices, which bas merged Into ·vtronmentalists !avo~ a standard live agriculture techniques, such
overall environmental ,coni:erns of a one In 1 mUllan risk of c11ncer : as crop rotations· or less use of
about agriculture," a spokesman over a llfPtlme.
chemicals.
for one farm organization said
recently In ,describing . the. lm·
pact.
"It was akin to on.e
GALLIPOLIS - 'The Gallla able through Gates McDonald
COLUMBUS, Ohio &lt;UJiii) snowball
that was thrown and
County Farm Bureau member- Company with basic information Food prices outpaced lnfldtion In
gr~w
Into
· · 11 very larg ~·.
ship call!palgn Is In full swing. 'and consultlon available at no 1989.
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snowman
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. For the next few weeks, thE' cost
Allan l..i,nes; agrlculiural econConsumer
11nd
environmental
·
membership committee will be
Discounts on automobile and omist at Ohio State University,
have·expressed
an
inli~D·
.
groups
· working to secure new members : property Insurance t!)rough Na· · says grocery prices rose 6
lion
to
try
to
shat)e
the
new
farm
and remind current members to
tionwh!e Insurance Company Is percent, . the largest Increase
policy law so thai It 'responds to
pay their dues. .
·
available for Farm Bur!'au slnce .1981. General inflation rose
their concerns about food safety
Glenn Graham, membership members. C&lt;Jverage when oper· · about 5 percent durimr the vear.
and protection of natural
chairman, reports that new atlng farm equipment Is par t of
members are joining because of the ml'mbersl)lp package in·
: the many benefits IIVailable to eluded when a member joins, as
·
members.
Is the Property Protection Re·
Benefits Introduced In the past ward Program which offers a
J~~mi'S E . Wltherel~ Jr., Phylll.S lyn Boggess to.Timothy Frazier,
few years Include savings up to $500 reward to anyone witnessing
J.
Witherell to James E. Witherell · Caroline Frazier, Parcels, Ml·
50% at 20/ 20 Vision Centers. a felony on a member's property.
Sr.,
Helen F. Wttbeiell, L325 A. ,
nersvllle.
Discounts on the Balkamp line of
For more Information, call the
Margaret Belle Weber, Roger
Salisbury.
parts are IIVaJlable at NAPA Farm Bure11u office at N!00-333All at prlj:ea so low vo,u won'f believe your..,e yesl
'
Paul
Phillips,
Diana
F.
Phil·
C.
Welsll. Ruth Welsh, John M.
dealers. Travel services through
1944, or membership chairman
Ups to /&lt;1\Jerta Robertson, Lots
Welsh, Anna M. Welsh to James
New 2· Pc.
the Member Travel Plan provide
Glenn Grah11m at 446-1148. ·
31,
34,
38,
ScipiO.
Keesee
,
Linda
KE"esee,
Parcels,
special rates for members.
Early American
. Other members of Board of
Ken Trak aka Ken Trak Gas &amp;
Rutland.
.
Feld Drug Company provides
'I'r11stees are Paul Butler, Vickie
liv. Rm. Suitt
Oil to LE'nvlllel R. Harman, Ma· ., Leona~d E . Dalley, Jr. to Ken·
excellent servlcek and prices on
Powell, Shenle Burnette, John
bel J. Harman, RIW Interest, · neth Kerns, Deloris Kerns, Par·
prescription and non .
Carmichael, Bill Fadely, Jeff
Rutland.
eel, Lebanon.
·
prescription drugs, plus other
Halley, Merle Howard, and John
RobertS.
Montgomery,
Aretta
.'
Edna
Coo!)!!r,
dec''d.;
by Atty.,
health care Items. Help with
Jackson.
M.
Montgomery
to
Jay
Hall,
Jr.
,
tJomer
E
.
Cooper
dec'
d.,
A!fida·
Worker's Compensation Is availvld, Salisbury.
· Lillian Marlene Hall, Pt. Lot, Le·
tart.
Edna CoOper, dec'd., to Jeffrey;
r;t
Continued from D·1
Robert Russell, dec' d., to Doris B. Shanlt; Wanda Fay Shank, SaJ.
----------:.---~ , E. Barlow, Richard L. Russell, lsbury.
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federal and state regulations are causing many of ·them
Maurice G. Russell; Kathryn L. r Brenda Sue Vickers. Robert
wblch discourage people from (volunteer technicians) to give
Evans, WU!Iam H. Russell. Jack
Dale Vickers to Tommy Potts,
up their services to our communi· · R. Russell, Alicia A. Bellant, cert.
becoming or continuing as emerParcels, Salem.
gency medical technicians 1~ · ties," which· "creates a danger·
Albert H. Ottenweller to .Ohio
of Ttans. , Salisbury. ·
ous situation for rural resl·
m11ny rural communllies.
Doris E. Barlow, eta!., Richard
Bell Telephone Co., Ease., Salls·
"Increased hours of training dents," the delegates said.
L. Russell. ellll., Neva F. Russell,
bury.
eta!.·, !ofaurice G. Russell, eta!.,
Fred . M~ Priddy,
Barbara
Freda
G.
Russell,
eta!.;
William
H.
Priddy
to
United
States
of
'Continued tr.om D·1
Russell, eta!. , Marlap R. Russell,
America, 3 A., Rutland .
.. Phillip F . Will, dec' d ., to Mary
eta!., Jack R. Russell, eta!., Alicia
try Is parUy to blame for the Immediate danger. She said,
A · Bellant, eta!., J&lt;alhryn L.
W'. Kilpatrick, Atfldavlt , Ches-·
Increase.
Eva'ns, eta!. . Glenn E . Evans, etal.
t er.
however, that the General As·
Initial claims In December sembly may have to be asked for
to KathrynL. Evans; Glenn E .
Norman M. Hysell, dec'd. , to
rD&amp;e by a whopping 230 percent In
a supplementat appropriation to
Evans, Parcels. Salisbury.
·Dora F. Hysell, Affidavit. Ches·
Lorain. Toledo had 8,t00 more furnish between 1()0 and 200
ter.
, James Drew Webster; 'Betty
ftrst-tlme clatins than the year employees to handle the in·
Jane Webster, Jed J. Webster to
Oris L: Frederick, ·dec' d., .tobefore to lead the list.
creased claims.
Betty Mae Morton, Junior Ed·
Jean L. Frecterjck, ·Affidavit,
Other clUes where Initial
ward Preston, Pt. Lot, Pomeroy . ctiester.
. ' ·
·
OBES has 1,S83 employees In
claimS more than· doubled were lts·fleld offices, less than h11lfthe
Richard B . Payne, ,.Sherry L.
,Oris L. Frederick, dec'd. , to
Bucyrus, Manstleld, Defiance, number It had In 1984.
. Pay,ne to Eugene Triplett, Karen
Jean L . . Frederick, Affi&lt;Javlt.
Lancaster, Canton, BellefonR.
Triplett.
5
A.,
Sutton.
.
·Chester,
· ·'
S11unders said the federal go·
taine and Ottawa County. Sou· vernment, which provides all of
Gl11n L. Hensler, . dec 'd., to
Addle W. Norris, C11rroll R ..
theastern and central Ol!io were· OBES funding, Is sitting on $100
Eula B. Hensler, Affidavit, Sut·
Nor~ls to Carroll R. Norris, Ad'
the most stable, according to the mntion Which ltshould distribute
ton.
die W. Norris, 15 A., Syracuse.
OBES.
Margie makeman Babcock, C.
Nora D. Cassady · to Mark
among the states' unemploysaunders said the unemploy. ment agencies. She could not say
Boyd, Tammy Boyd, .87 A., 01· .Christopher Bsbcock, Bonnie Bla·
ment compensation trust 'und
how mucllls owed to Ohio.
l"e.
keman, Deborah Blakeman to A.
bas $727 million and Is not In
Paul W. Mayo, Jacquelyn Mayo .Lewis Schabow• J 0 hn w. Schabow,
to ·Randall E. Zeisler, Katherine · Parcels, Sallsbulj~tpio.
M. Zeisler, 1.005 A., Columbia.
. R. Lewis Schabow. Nancy L.
Schab&lt;iw to John w. Schabow,
' William Dennis Grimm. Jean
Lynn Enney Grtinm to Wayne · Carolyn A. Schabow. Parcels,
James Grimm, rarcel, RUtland.
Salisbury/Scipio.
',
CHICAGO !UPil - Retail In December, rectangular baler s
Bury! E . White, Evelyn H.
Marilyn S. Hubbell to John W.
sales of farm tractors were lower up · 31.8 percent and forage
White to Gary E . White, Cather·
Schabow, Carolyn A. Schabow,
In December compared with the harvesters up 68.6 !)!!rcent com- lne C. White, 80 A., Rutland. .
Parcels, Salisbury/Scipio.
same month one year earlier and pared with December 1988.
Charles A. Boggess, !lr .. Eve.
were down slightlY ·ror the entire
For the entir e year. self·
year. · the Equipment Manufac· propelled combine sales were 52
turers Institute said Friday.
percent higher than 1988, balers
up 24.2 percent and forage
Total sales .o f two-wheel and
harves ters up 16.5 percent.
four-wheel-drive tractors were
The Chicago-based lnstllute
down 1.7 percent In December
represents more than 175 rnanu·
and slightlY lower for all of 1989. facturers ol farm and specialized
Retail sales of self-propelled . indu s trial and construction
combines were up 100.6 percent
equipment.·

Fann Bilreau membership
campaign now in full swing·

$19995

rarmers...

...

ln ..:t:nl... -------:------

,. Buy a spa
that won't soak · ou
~ on .electric bil s.

Fann tractor sales down last month

.

'

ROBERT M. ROLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE
PAIN CONTROL CLINIC

'

Portable Hot Spring Spas are insulated with
heavy-duty foam from top lO bouom. So no matter
.. how cold the weather, you can soak in a hot,
bubbling spa at any time. But, you won't be soaked
with lre.avy-duty electric bills.

)

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FORMER PA11ENTS OF DR AARON BOONSUE AND)
(
NEW PAnE~ WELCOME

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Vol.40, No.'1 71

1110

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• available wtle:=ttl~lel';.:we~
· ~=;=;.;re~tu;m or 'no(

ii

(FORMERLY POINl' PI.&amp;ASANl' MEDICAL CEmi!:R)

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TANKER OVER'n.JRNS
Pomeroy Fire
Department must ge&amp;along temporarDy without a
tanker truck. The department's newest tanker

A jury of 12 found David M.
Persons, 27, of West Columbia,
W.Va., innocent of a charge of
escape following a two-day trial
In Meigs Common Pleas Court.
The trial began Thursday and
ended late Friday afternoon
when the jury returned its
verdict of lnnocept.
Persons was Indicted In Meigs
County in March 1989. However.
the . Incident which led to the
Indictment occurredDec.1.1987 .
According to Information tt:om
the court, Persons was arrested
on Nov. 30, 1987 by Pomeroy
Pollee on several traffic viola·
lions. He was placed In custody at
the Meigs County Jail.
After It was discovered thai an

Pomeroy ,Fire Department's
lfas on Its way to a
Jlre e~~rly Saturday
mamlng when the driver lost
control and turned the tanker on
It~ sl~e In a dltcll o_n Union Ave.
Flre!IP Keith.. Hagen was
drtvi~Jg the tanker In answer to a
7:29a.m. call to the }l:evln Knapp
_ - re.&amp;t4el!te on Wolf Pen Road.
t~nk~r (fuck
stru~llll!

N

C5o4) 67s-s67s

...37 S . . •;

--- -··

..

-.:u.---

NlllloY,

.

~ :eou,a~y .,~lfl!-8

Depart:ment and Ohio .State Pa·
trol1 were
called
to . the accident
•
•
scene.
The patrol Investigated tpe
Incident and reports that Fire-

Actress

man Keith Hagen, 18, was · · Pomeroy Po~ce assjsted with
headed over. Union Ave. toward traffic control whtle Manley's
Route 7 when. 'he (()st control, Wrecking up righted the vehicle
went ott .the right side of the and towed It back to the fire
. roadway, struck a pole .and department. Damages. to the
turned the tanker on Its side In truck are to be estimated later
the dltc.h .
today and a decision made as to
Hagen and Todd Smith, a repairs.
junior fireman who was a pas·
Due to . Saturday's accident,
senger,. were taken.;tQc,Yet.e rans PomerpY E'lr.e Department must
I MeiiJOI'l&amp;l ~spital Wlhn• ,llle.Y .~PQI'AI'J'f a,et•.aM~na• IWlthout
were treated for minOr Injuries any tanker truck. The dejlart·
and released.
. . me~t's secjond tanker was al·
Fireman Bob Jeffers, who was ready out of ·commission for
riding In the crew cab which Is repairs when Saturday 's accl·
located about the ' middle of the dent occurred.
No citations were Issued .
truck, was not Injured.

Barbar~

SANTA MONICA , Calif. (UPI)
- Bartiara Stanwyck, an orphan
who became a Hollywood legend
In a 60-year career that Included
four Oscar nominations and a
pair of television Emmys, was
remembered as a "wonderful
dame" and a monument In the
entertainment Industry.
Stanwyck died Saturday evenIng at St. Johns Hospital, where
she had been for several weeks
because ot reactions · to medication taken for back problems : She
was 82.
Called by some !he best actress

Stanwyck, 82, dies

family In the Old West In "Th~
Big Valley, " and In the 1983
mlnl·series "The Thorn Birds"
with Richard Chamberlain. In
1985, she starred In the weekly
television show, ''The Colby s."
•'She was a human being with a
great sense of humor and a
The Academy of Motion Pic·
tures Arts and Sciences gave her ·rantastlc actress. I think the
a special Oscar In 1982 honoring Industry has lost something very
her distinguished career. The grellt when they lost her ... said
American Film Institute also Dorothy La~our . "&amp;he was Hoi·
gave her Its lifetime achieve: . lywood. She was a great, great
mentaward.
11ctre8s and she would appreciate
this: 'She was a wonderful
She won two Emmy Awards, as
·the matrla.rch of an .lnfiuential dame." '
never to win an Oscar, slle made
88 ·movies and was nominated
four times. for "Stella'Dallas"lil
1937, "Ball of Fire'" In 1942,
" Double Indemnity" In 1944 and
"Sorry, Wrqng Number" In 19t8.

Ohio lws six J:tighway deaths over weekend
' .
BJ United Preas International

'

was County on the same day :
The victims:

Two double-fatality accidents
boosted Ohio's weekend tratflc
death toll to six, the Ohio
Highway Patrol reported
Mpnday.
A, patrol spokeswoman sale)
there were four deaths Sunday
and two Saturd11y . The count
began 111 6 p.m. Friday and ended
at midnight Sunday.
·
TWo teenagers died and at
least two otherS were Injured
Sunday when two cars collided on
Mansfield street, and two Colum~
btana County 111en lostthelr lives
when their pickup tru.ck
slammed Into a van In Tuscara-

Sunda)'

accident on a Franklin County
road.
:
Friday night
None ..

old traffic charge from the Ohio
Highway Patrol was already
pending against Persons, he was
taken to Meigs County Court on
Dec. 1 on th.e old charge. Since
the new charges fell under the
jurisdiction of Pomeroy Mayor's
Court, th,e county court had no
authority to hold Persons on the
new charges .
Alter appearing before Judge
Patrlck ·o :Brten on tile old case.
Persons paid his fine and left the
courthouse. SincE' he was brought
to thE' court house In custody and
was already under arrest for the
new charges. Persons was
chargl'd With escape when au ·
thorltles ·discovered he had left

TOLEDO. Ohio (UPI) - Sen.
. Lee Fisher, D-Sha!ter. Heights, is
making drug dealers, toxic pellu·
ters , con artists and state corruption the focus of·hls campaign for
tile Democratic nomination for
staie attorney general.
Fisher kicked off his campaign
Monday In Toledo, a Democratic
stronghold where he hopes to
. build name r!'cogn Ilion leading
up to the -n.m;,.rj!.tlc
M
r---. ,, .nrlmary
'"'~
~
... In1.'
lly. . .
The senator also pla~ned stops
In Columbus'and Cleveland later
In the day and expects to visit 20
Ohio cities during the next 10
days.
''Today I've goi some bad news
for drug dealers, toxic poilu tors
and thoSe who rip off Ohio's
consumers," Fisher told a group
of 60 Democrats, Including most
of the area' s elected o(flclals, at a
news conference at Toledo's
Government Center.
Flsber has spent nine years In
the Ohio General ~ ~ mbly fight·
lng for the protection of Children,
eihntc groups and crime VIctims.
He Is knoWlJ for his work on a bill
tllat requires drivers to plac'e
children In car seats.
"I worked with famUy doctors
across our state to write and pass
Ohio's clllld sat.;:ty seat law,"
Fisher said. ,
Fisher Is seeking the Demoera tiC nomination to s uccl!ell
Attorney Gener11l Apthony Celebrezze Jr., who Is running for
governor.
He called himself a friend of.
. Celebrezze and p~ged to con·

tlnue Celebrezze's work, while
adv11nctng . his own causes If
elected.
"It's definitely a plus being
Tony Celebrezze' s friend and I'm
proud oi It," Fisher said after his
speech. " But I Intend to go even
further than Tony."
.
Another focus will' be to work
for passage of ethics laws. to
empower the attorney general to
l'O:I Wh!1n, aj"ftlona of corruption surf11ce against state offl·
clals or members of the General
Asembly.
Fisher acknowledged ~Iter his

· By United Press International
New Englanders dug out Mon·
day from the first "nor'easter"
of the decade; which dumped
betWl:&gt;en t to 10 Inches of snow
across the region, while snow
coated the Cascades In Washing·
ton and sunshine settll'd over
Californt11.
After the kind of weekend
winter resort operators dream
of, the snow kept falling In
Vermont and New Hampshire,
piling up on ski slopes and
covering the bare spots left by a
January thaw.
Treacherous road conditions
were reported throughout the
region, especially In Connectl·
cut, Rhode Island and parts of

.....,_...;.Local news. briefs---.
Announce W:IC pifkup dates ·

o•o

"

l

.

speech there have been a1legations of corruption against Democratic officeholders, but said he
does not !'xpect It to become a n
Issue·. Fisher said his plan calls
for taking an active approach
before ques Uons of his stance can
be raised.
" It doesn't matter who's In
otfice. The bottom line Is govern·
ment corruption ls an _lssue.PW.(I.JtL~~~! ,that no!, onl,y are
y(IJ.i ~ii'lli:'!lvls l:rlor only are you
someone WhO ,cares l!i)oUt the
issue, but 'you 're honest beyond
reproach," Fisher said.

New England digs out
of 10-incli snowfall .

Yost 'r esidence .
damaged by b~

Driver cited after accident

the building .
Accor din g to a llega tions
cha rged during the trial by Meigs
Prosecu tor Steven Story, Per ·
sons knew he was under arres t
and In custody on the new
Pomer oy chargE's . According to
Story, ·Persons took advantage of
an oppOrtunit y to get away.
P e rson s. r epresente d by
Pomeroy Attorney D. Michael
Mullen and Gallipolis Attorney
Jame~ Bennett, claimed that the
Incident was a mistakE'; that he
thought he was free to leave after
he paid his fine on thE' old charge.
The jury agreed with Per sons
and found him Innocent of
escape .

State attorney general candidate
Sen. ·Fisher targets drug dealers

.Mansfield: Michael L. Cline,
19, Shelby, and Allen R. Kibler,
15, Mansfield, killed In a two-car
coHislon on a cit}' s tree!.
. New Philadelphia: Jerry L.
Marshall, 31, Columbiana, and
David C. Lee, 27, E11st Liverpool, ·
killed In the collision of a pickup
The Charles Yost residence on
truck and a van on U.S: 36 hi Oak Grove .' Road near Racine
Tuscarawas County.
was heavily dam~~ged by fire
Saturday
Saturday afternoon. Racine Fire
Heath: ·Lelta J. ~alai, 48,
Department ·was called to the
Alexander, killed In a two-car two-and-one-half story home at
accident on a city .street.
3:29p.m . ..
Columbus: Christine Kuhn, 20,
According to Fire Chief Hank
Columbus, kUled in a two-cir Johnson, tbe tlrst noor of the
.home sustained heavy damage . •
The fire, which was electrical In
origin and began either at an
electric heater or fio1'e5cent ltg)lt
In a first .floor bathroom, wu
confined main!)' tothefintfloor,
Johnson said. Tbere· was smoke ·
and water da,m age to the upper
'
Next month's WlC coupon pickup datee will be Jan-. 29 and 30
h6UJe.
and Feb. 1 and 2, each day frcm 9 to 11 a :m. and 1 to 3 p.m., the
-B alhan Fire Department wu ·
Melp Count)' Health ~partment hal anaounced. Makeup
called at 3: S3 p.m. to asillst
date• are .Feb. 5, 12, and 20 a~ the same hours.
Racine.
· ·
Immunization shots are available at the health department
There were no Injuries. MoneFe~. 13 and 27, 9 to lla.m: and 1 to 3 p.m . •
tary 10811!1 were not determined,
Johnlon reported. ·
' ·
Earlier Saturday, at 7;29a.m:,
Pom~oy Fire Department was
·called to a minor fire at the Wolf
Jamee Durst, Middleport, was charged with !allure' to
m&amp;lntaln assured clear diltance follOW! Ill an accident ori West
Pen Road trailer borne of Kevtn
Knapp. Th~ fire w-. Jnalde • wall
Main Street at 8 p.m. Saturd&amp;)' .
·
..
Accordllll to Pomeroy pollee. Durst struck the rear of a truck ·
where a fire box booked to the
cbi!Jiney behind a woodbumer. r
driven by Robert Hlckel, Letart, W. Va. as It waa atopped In
There was no lnaurance, Fire
preparation for makfnl a left hand turn. ·
'
.
There wia Jlgbt dalllate to the tear of the Hickel truck, and
Chief Danny Zirkle reported, but
damages to the home' were
liiavy damaae to the front of the Dunt vehicle.
.,
'
.
minor .

HOME SPAS

.614-tiS..JIOS·

.

was damaaed l!aturd&amp;)' momlng In an accldeat on
.Union Ave. The department's other lanker was
alread)' out of commlllloa for repairs.

Pomeroy tanker .~ck~ 'l1Jrns
over on side enNJute to· fire

'.'THE PRICE WILL MAKE
YOU RELAX TOO"'!!

2STII • .JDI'BaiON AVENUE
PODI'I Pl&amp;AUNT

A Multimedio Inc.

JUry·finds Persons
~ocent
of
charge
.

~ .~~:

~ .

'

.Hot Spring Spa®

• nbcastlneeaed-all fees can ~withheld from
your d'll:tk
'

2 Secti0nl.12 Pou• 26 C.e nta

Po,eroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Janu•rv 22. 1990

·u.. ·.

&gt;

• receiVe your refund anticipation loan in a matter
of dayS

Clear tonJcbl. Low near 38.
Sunil)' TuesdaJ. JUgh near 58.

Kicker

.

Living Room ·Suites in Stock

--

Piek '3
730
Piek ...
94.13
Super Lotto
17-41-29-28-34-9

Food prices
exceed iDflation

Meigs County land .transfers

·--·-··..

Oltio Lottery

i
.
AN EN.tOVABLE AFTBBNOON- Tbe Melp

ual of tbe AmerlcM Cancer lleelel)' lteld a wiDe
ud c..._ tu1111 after~• ·oa llaadar at lfle
-loreltiHMea&amp;eriDPoiiHII'OJ'.,\p............,
t1 people atllldecl tile event Ia wblcli cloll' prllell
· were' w011 b)' Rev. William Mlddleawarth, Pat

•

Massachu setts where fre ezing
drizzle coated slushy roadway s
with a thin layer of Ice .
AI least three people &lt;!led In
weather-related accidents, In·
eluding a little girl killed when
her sled was htt by a car.
Boston and parts of Rhpde
Island , clobbered over the weekend by a savage snow storm fed
by cold·air currents from Canada
and known as a "nor'easter ," got
a dusting of l!ght snow as
residents shoveled out driveways
and sidewalks.
·
Light snow also fell in parts of
Maine, . wh ere the mercury
dropped to the single digits and
below zero In the far north.
Continued on pagE' 12

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