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                  <text>Doiag

Sctiring mark set at Lyne Center- C-1

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for.
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Jamn SancJei
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P.tfim.n w• IDftDber of

Inside

Company F during Civd War-B-6

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B...ileaa ••_•••••••• ••! . . . . . . . . .D-1 .

1n 0ur Town~
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Tribune'• bicentenntal edllion..Page 8-3

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Suaii&amp;J, rain likely, mainly I
the moraine. Hlp 4t to fl
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Vol 24No.l2

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gellipolii-Poitt Pleasant, February 4. 1990

C I i slgiliili 1110

CHEWABLE
OAT B.RAN WAFERS

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$169

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IS EXPOSED
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WITH LOVE"
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·· ·ULTIMAlfS

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photo frames. covered boxes

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786 North:Second Ave. ~;
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Middleport, ·Ohio
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Eacl\ district must prepare a
plan to be approved by lhe Ohl,o
En.vlronmental Protection
Agency . That plan must examlrie
exlsl!ng and, project future solid
waste quanl!tles an~ _composition, as well as exlsl!ng and
· projected landfill capacity. The
plan must also evaluate methods
tor Increased solid waste reduction,. reuse lind recycling, alld
decreased dependence ' on
landfills.
While commissioners .from
each county serve as the District's Board of Directors, the
policy - committee which Is
chaired by Athens Mayor Hendrlc~ter,
Includes representatives from !he municipalities;
townships, and the county health
department of each county.
Tlie formation of the solid
waste management districts and
development of solid waste management plans are required by
House Bll1592 which mandates a
25 percent reduction In disposal
of solid waste In landfills by 1994 .
Currently an Industrial solid
. wa~te &amp;l'l'Ve)' la·und!irvi.ay In !he
six counties, according to Hendrlcker. Thlssurveywasdfsttrlbu:=;~
.r'\1de. the deyel~~~ of

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wute 1eneratlon and disposal
data.
As pointed out by the district
chairman, the cost of solid waste
management Is an ever IncreasIng burden on Industry. As
stringent disposal rules and
waste reduction requirements
become effective, the cost will
continue to Increase. Some of the
data currenily being "om piled Is
expected to help Industry deal
with, and perhaps reduce, some
of Its waste disposal costs,
Hendrleker commented.
S))e said that by analyzing the
Information obtained In lhe survey, the District can design a
solid waste management plan
that adequately addresses the
unique needs of Industry.
Additionally, the District antic'
!pates !hat the survey responses
will yield Information on potential markets .for tuel, e~rgy, or
recovered materials from, solid
waste.
"'Tbe response delldllne tor .tli:e~
Industrial solid waste Information has· been extended to Feb. 7,
the chairman reported .
SCS Engineers, an environmental consulting firm, has been
hired by the District to assist In
the development of the comprehensive plan. Representatives of
that firm will he present at all
four of the public meetings.

l"l

Tlmes-Sentlllel Staff

P~ASTIC ·BASKETS
'

·set Feb. 22

GALLIPOLIS - The GaiUa.T inaD.Nelgler, 31,Raclne,anda
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Meigs Post of the State Highway
westbound 1978 Datsun pickup
. Times-Sentinel ~u
Patrol Investigated an · Injury
driven by Barbara A.. Lisle, 19,
POMEROY - The first of four
accldent.at 7:05a.m. Saturday on
Syracuse.
·
public meetings on a comprehenState Route 7 at the junction of
The patrol sale Lisle was
sive solid waste management
roules 7 and 35, at Kanauga.
unable to stop and swerved,
plan for the six-county area of
Troopers said a 1971 M.ack
causlnJ her to collide with the
Athens, Gallla, ·Hocking, Jack, tractor-trailer driven by George
other : vehiCle. . · Damage was
son. Meigs and VInton has been
heavy tO both cars.
D. Needham, 52, Oak Hill, Ohio,
scheduled for Feb. 22, Sara
atfempted to make a left onto
Nelgler, who complained of an
Hendrleker,. Management Dis·
State Route 7 and pulled Into the
Injury, and Lisle, who suffered a
trlct chairman, announced
today.
path or southbound Patricia A.
minor visible Injury, were taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Henson, 57, Rt. 1, Cheshire, who
Subsequent meetings will be ,
was driving a 1986 Pontiac
Both were treate and released.
held In March, April and May In
·. DRIVEJt IN,JURED- Tbe driver of tllla 19117 Ford Tbaaderblfd
preparation for the district's
_
The 'patrol cited Lisle for
Sunblrd.
waa InJured Friday 11tternoon In an accident on Foreat Run Road,
' HensOn was unable to stop and
failure to maintain control.
final plan which Is to be submitnear Pomeroy. Tllla D. NeJcler, 11, Racine wu trealed for miner
struck lhe left side of the semi.
Both driver~ escaped Injury tn
ted In draft form to the Ohio
Injuries
at.Veteran• Memoria! Hospital and releued. Tbe odler
Damage was heavy to the car; no
acarandtractor-tralleraccldent
Environmental Protection ·
driver, Barbara i\. Llsleo 19, Syracuae, complained of an Injury•
damage to lhe tractor-trailer.
at 3:20p.m. Friday on u .S. 35, ·6.2
Agency by June 24.
waa also taken to the h01pltal.
Mrs. Henson was taken to
miles east of the Gallla-Jackson
An extension on that date can
Holzer Medical Center by the
county line.
be requested tw . the Dls:rlct 11
Ga!Ua County Emergency MedlTrooperssaldThomasS.Moul- rett, 16, .Rutland, driving a 1985 from behind by' a 1977Ford LTD necessary, the chairman
cal Services, ' with . multiple
ton Jr., 19, Gallipolis, stopped In Chrysler LeBaron; turned left driven by Helen F . Potts, 52; Rt. reported.
fractures and Internal Injuries.
traffic and his 1986 Jeep Chero- Into the path of a 1981 Pontiac 1, VInton. There minor damage
All four of the meetings win be
She was admitted to the hospl·
kee was hit from behind by a 1988 T-1000 driven by Bobby J. Rupe, to the van; no damage to the car. held at the Wilkesville School,
'al's )1\tenslve Care Unit, where
Jriternatlonal tractor and trailer, 17, Pomeroy. Damage was minor
..The patrol cited Potts for which Is In the middle of the
'Satutday afternoon her condition
drlv~n by Charles 0 . Smith, 25,
to both vehicles.
failure to stop within the assured District, on Route 124 In VInton
was llsted.as se_t:lous but stable.
Damascua; v&amp;. There was minor
Barrett was cited for failure \o clear distance.
County. Dates of the meetings In
Tlifl patrol charJi!d Ne~ham
damm:\ to, .t~- Jeep, heavy yield the right o~ way when . .No .one was Injured and there March, April .an~ May will ·be
with failure to yield the right of
d~a~ ~ ,lfi'e:traet'or'traller. . , turning lef!. .
. . ·,
, was . no ·Citation In a one-car · announced at a later time,
. .;_. .~
WaKWhl!~ tumlftg ten. . ·"
The patrol ·cited sniltit'.t~f'~ - ~- ~ ·-w~-clted after a , accident ~Hl: 25 a,m,;;rr.t4ayf on• Headrlcker said.
' 'J'wo people were Injured In an -:failure to atop
assured two-vehicle rear-end
at Ro11te 124, three-tenths of a mile
The meetings, she adytsed, wtu
·· ~~~~l,~~~l:·"'~.l clear distance.
welt ·d!B
' ~~~~
~rs &amp;IW •ll 1/!.l«trested parties an
1
Fo~f-'11': -l"'"'~llit cib tnlle
No· one was tnhlroli!llt
said Pr
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j
~11 11 ' OPJIIII:tuJI9' _ ,t~ .partlclpate In 1hz
eut of , ftOute .7, ·,·the patrol
Meigs County acc:~l&amp;ent
Ewinll
•t1 1)-li ~,-1!~', '11~ PJI!II'4!~bllment.
Aid ".
D. curve. His •1.H8 &lt;Jiilsmo!)Ue .88
At the J;'eb. 22 meeting, 'the
'ret!Wie!'· 1 ·
'
p.m. Fflday on Pomeroy Pike,
Queen,
Rt.
.2,
Crown
City,
went
oft
the
road,
over
·an
legal
requirements, the planning
· TJ::t~Qp,ers said the head-ol)
near Pomeroy.
driving
a
1989
Dodge
·
van,
embankment. Damage was process, and the exlsl!ng solid
collision Involved · ~n eastbound
. The patrol l&amp;ld the co Dillon _
waste system will be on the
1987 Ford Thunderlilrd dr~ven by occurrec!' when Jennifer L. Bar- stopped In trafllc and was hit m!Dor.
agenda.
The March meeting will deal
.~
'
with existing solid waste systems
'
and preliminary conclpslons regarding recycling and composition, while at the April meeting
emphasis will be on alternate
solid waste management methods, their Identification and
costs.
At the May meeting, criteria on
' COLUMBUS, Ohio - On Jan.
sites.
financing methods and a
29, State Rep. Mary Abel. State
review
of the sOlid waste man'Sen. Jan Long, Director of the
agement
facility will be on the
Governor's Office of Appalachia ·'
agenda.
Randy Runyon (representing
Hendrlcker said that ali InterOhio Department of Develo!l-'
ested Individuals are lllvited to .
nlent Director David Baker),
attend the public meetings In
COAD Energy Committee Chairorder to Increase their level of
man Roger Patton and Marcy
\lriderstandlng of the project and
Rood of the Ohio Department of
to
provide Input. A portion of
Development (ODOD) Office of
each
meeting, she said, will he
Energy Conservation announced
~served
for questions and
lhe selectlon··of fhe Corporation
comments.
for-.'01110 Appalacb!an, Deveklp- ·. CAMERA STUDY -: ~~te..Betl. ~.IIQ'. ~el •. .lrdlc~lLoncllllll RudyRunycm, dlrecloroflbe
· :As explained by Hendrlcker,
ment (COAD) attheorganlzatton
atudles an Infrared camera as State Sen . .lUI · Governor'• ornce of Appalacbla,'loo•·on: · ·
the Solid Waste Management
to o~rate the Oltlo WeatherizaDis trlct was fonned In response
tion Training Center (OWTC) ·on the 1990 program (the period erlzatlon Programs. Training courses. Courses Include such
to Ohio House Bill 592 which
a statewide basts.
April 1, 1990 through March 31, will take place at the OWTC
baste skills as Installation of
became effective on June 24,
Prevlou~ly, CUAU, a , non1991) will be $550,000. Coad has facility In Athens or on-site caulking and weatherstripping to
1988. The boards of county
prollt organization of 17 Com- hired an additional 7 full-time throughout Ohio, ·depending on
advanced courses l~cludlngheat­
commissioners of the six coun·
munity Action Agencies In Appal- s~rt with these grant funds.
the particUlar course.
lng system Inspect tolland servic- ties formed the joint district soon
achian Ohio, operated one of two
COAD will be J:esponslble for
Energy .Conservation and
Ing using advanced flue gas
after that and the process of
OWTCs In the state, but only In providing technical ·skllla train- Weatherization professionals
combustion analysis equipment · developing
a comprehensive
the Appalachian area of Ohio.
Ing to ODOD's 64 aome Weather: from througbllut Ohio will 'be
Additional Information Is att- solid waste management plan for
The grant Increases COAD's lzatloJI Asslstanc~ Program · trained by COAP Start. In 1990,
ached, For inore Information lhe district began.
1989 OWTC funding from $216,645.· (HWAP) providers and to four as many as 1000 student equivalcontact 'R obert Pitts (614) 594to $373,129 .. Full year funding for OD&lt;&gt;D-supported Utlllty Weath: ents will participate In OWTC
8499.

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public ~eeting

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send .three

Waste district

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.POl HOlDERS
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WITH LIDS

180 COUNT ·

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STORAGE CONTAINERS

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Lyons was on 'routine patrol early .. Ro111ht
. below the cave-In area.
.
Friday momlng when he noticed
By early Friday afternoon,
Paul Hoftrnali, operations .en· ·
PpMEROY - Route 124 at the a utility pole near tl)e White ODOT truckl were ~Ung In glneer tor ODOT'a District 10
· IlPper end of Pomeroy was House Bar was leaning. The 'building materllitsand a tempor• Office, Ma,r letta, reported !hat
i'ellpened to traffic about 7 p.m. cave-In ' Ia beside the bar and ary road past the cave-In bepn repairs were made to the old
extellda for several feet' beneath taking ahape. Pomeroy Street atoneculvertlnanertorttoholdlt
·~lday evening after the Ohio
DepartmC!J!t of Transportation tile r~d's pavement A large Department worken enppd In tnpla~unlllODOTwaareadyto
built a temporary road to bypass tree was also brought down, etrortstolocateamalnwaterllne sfFt !he project. Untorlunately,
a section· of 124 where a massive muchofwblchcametorestlnlhe ninnlnl 'beneath where tbe tem- the amount of moisture 1n the
porary road wquld lay, 10 that JfOundapparenttycallledt)JeOid
cave-In occurred early Friday road.
ODOT could build tbe temporary blockl to Jive way despite the
morn!DJ.
.
ODOT aftkilala weren't aaylng road blah eno111h to protect the 1tate'1 effort to delay a cave-ln.
: - 1be · area aurroundlng the
White House Bar on Pomeroy's Friday morning what would he line from auy poulble duna1e.
Recent wei weatber II belleved
Effqi1J on FrldB)I to build the
Eut Main Street was OUecl clone to reopen the road. Ohio
Power Company, Cc:ilum'* Gas, to have caused Friday momlng'l temporary road lbcludecl the
1-rldQ- afternoon with uiiii\Y GTE
North, POmerOy Street and cave·ln, aJ!hourbODOTbu bllH removal and reloeatiDn of an
truckl, Clump trucks and other
Pollee
Departments, u well as . aware for aometime that an old ObklPowerCompaaypolt.Otber
heavy equipment a1 ODOT beODOT,
were on the IICelle nrty to Wltbtone culvert rwm1111 1» utllltll!l were alao InvolVed In
PII bulldllll the temporary road .
u~e~~ dunacea .and ma•e dec!- · neath the ro8cS to the Ohio I!Jver
efforts t9 clear the path for the
on which to reroute l2C traffic.
1kl1111
a1
to
wbat mlaht be done to wu r.pklly deteriorating, Plan• temporary road.
,
'lbe road bad tobecl01edabout3
remedy
the
lltuatiOn.
were
alreacly
In
tbe
workl
by
Until
!be
temporary
road
coilld
a.m. Friday momlng wllen a
Saalnl ~lepbolle and electric ODOT to . replace the lallinl be built, traffic above the cave-In
~~ · cave-In beneath the
lines
were a concern, aa .well as culvertand build a new section of wu rerouted over county roadl
road wu dllcovered. Receilt an expolecl
IU line running road to eltmJnate an ex lreme tbrouih the Foreat Run and
heavy ral111 are beltevtll to have .
parallel
to
the
road, reported turn where Route 1U and U.S. 33 Mlner::vllle Hill areas ..
caused the lllcldent.

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TEMPOBUY ROAD VNDU ~ON :_ ._..,
wtrl:en • • Olllo .,...,..._ el Tt 1r ar 'Ita orewa nrll 1e
clear the way lor a lllmponlrr ....... l:irt r a1H111ael..... lll
Ia apper PomerOJ. Tile IIC!tiDI of .... Ill Wldte 81 ullar
bad te be el. . . te &amp;nnlc ..., J'll' j IIU:IIq . . . . a PI Jl'tloe •
cave-fa belleat' tile road wu .._......

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·eommeritary and perspective
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~It's

821 'l1llrd Ave., (',.allpolla, Oldo
(114) 4tt-2342

111 Court 8&amp;., PIII1Jft'OJ, Oblo

(814)MUH

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publ..her

HOBART WILSON .JR.

PAT WJDTEII&amp;U) ·

Eue11Uve Edltar

A•at•tant Publllher:Coaii'Giler ·

A MEMBER or The United Prest IJI~r~IIDIIII, laland Dally Pre10 Aloocla·
tlon and the Arnerlcan · New.~paper Publlt heu Au oclatlon.
LETTERS OF OPINION a"' wotcome. Tiley tbould be less tllan 300 w«dd
tona. All leunsare sublect toedittaaud mu.atbestened wlthume. addreuand
leltphone number. No unolfned letters wUI be publis hed. Leiters abould beln
'eoo:l tu te, addrn&amp;lq_~~ •.. not persmallttes.

. RYCJ'UR .

By HELEN 11lOMA8
UPJ White Houe Reporter

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President Bush Is dieting. Dr. B~rton ' Lee, the White' House
·: physician, has advised him to lose iO pounds. He usually holds at197.
:: . The day after watching the Super Bowl game and 9verlndulglngon
:- Fort Worth barbecue and munchies, Bush told reporters, "I !eel
· ·• grumpy."
:- AI times when she diets, Barbara Bush forgoes desserts. But not the
; pres ident. His chef prepares low cal yummy desserts for him and be
• even takes second helpb\gs.
.
,.
Bush, known as the aerobic president, does get plenty of exercise,
:: from horseshoes to racquet ball with friends In the House gym.

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~: The president has In a glass display just outside the Oval office a
:. large slab o( the Berlin Wall, a constant ·reminder of the
• mind-boggling political changes In Europe In the last days of 1989.
:
He also has a gag crystal ball that prOVIdes hopeful answer• to
; • pressing questions.
· • ·
·
. Bush takes an Interest In his surroundings, probably more so than
some of his predecessors. The bright blue new Cjlrpet tot the Oval
Office IS cheerful and eye catching.
,
During the Christmas season, the president had his own Christmas
tree In the Oval Office. Other presidents have settled for touches of
yuletide decorations on the mantle and at the windows.
,

Bush, who adopted Texas as his home state, has taken on some or
the characteristics of his Texas predecessor, Lyndon B. Johnson.
r
Ills well known that LBJ wasamanwhobrookednoobstacleswhen
~ he got an Idea. He was the kind of a man who would look out the
' window and tell his wile, Lady Bird, "Let's have Congress over
: today ." No sooner said than done. The 535 congressional offices
1 would be called· with Invitations tor the congressman, senators and
\ their spouses . ·
; · Bush took on that patina after the Senate upheld )lis veto of the
1 Chinese students bilL He Invited the senators who supported him over
~ to the White House for a beer-and-pretzels celebration.
:
He Is a gregarious man and enjoys having people around him.
Socially speaking, he Is much more prone loglve an impromptu party
I than his predecessor, Ronald Reagan , who played more by the book.
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Planning Is already under way for the Economic Summit, which the
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president will hold In mld-Ju ly In Houston. Such events are logistical
nightmares since they Involve protecting six heads o! government
and the head of the European Economic Community, as well as all
their entourages.
Bush wanted the Texas setting and probably will order up an old
fashioned barbecue for his visitors.
The plenary meetings will be held on the campus of Houston's Rice
University.
·
Bush also will play host at the summit meeting In late June with
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. The main meetings will be held In
Washington. But If he takes Gorbachev anywhere It will probably be
his seaside summer home in Kennebunkport, Maine, not Houston.

Berry's World

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"J'W got In Ideal IMte#ld of putting , .
on • diet, how •bout .,,~ding up my
m.tabol/6m ?"

f'

I"

••

I

•·

rnTllT.'T\

WASHINGTON- President Bush " Is comfortable" about going to
Colombia for the Andean drug summit, but It Is being viewed as a
" war zone" by the Secret Service and thoR planning security.
White House chief or staff John Sununu told reporters that the
agency has to approve plans before the president goes In, which
~ .leaves the onus on the Secret Service.
.. : The four-nation summit will be held Feb. 15 on the Colombian resort
:: 'peninsula of Cartagena. Colombian President VlrgiUo Barco Is
•: Insisting on holding the summit as li show of strength ·against the
:. , violence prone Medellin. drug cartel. In addition to Bush the other
;: nations represented at the largely symbolic summit wm be BoUvia
.-.and Peru.
::; The drug kingpins have been sending messages that they will not
.
;• •,harm Bush.
· · The logistics tor the trip, expected to last only a lew hours, are
' complicated In terms of where to put the White House traveling press
,• corps, which will need modern communication sate!Utes.
.·
II appears certain now that the filing center !or the press wlllnotbe
In Cartagena. The government bas alreadY said Its only obligation Is
;; to protect the president
I

ME "lJUR,

..,_""""____

;Backstairs at .
~ the White
House
:v
'
•

cbarpl. He wu alao_onieled to ' tumed bla tr:aetor·trallel' left
GALLIPOUs - Ronnie ' G.
Woodail, 23, Elkview, W.Va., . pefaml 10 days of community aeroaa the path of 111 eutbound
Cited In !be Oct, JD, 18 do\lble service. Ju. llceale 'It'll sua· van drlveJI by Mrs. Foater.
fatality at Rodney, wuttned...., pe1ll'll tor one YMJ' and be wu
Woodall wu attemptlq' to
and costs Thunday Ia GalllpoUI pt.ced 011 Jl mondls' probation.
turn late the Euoa truck atop at
Municipal Court on eac:ll of two
TheWestVil1ltida truckdriver Rodney. Woodall told the patrol
charges of veldl:ular homicide wu ebarpd fa the deatbs of the ada blinded blm. He did not
and !~lure to yield the riJbt of Pamela J. Foater, 34, Rio iee the o • ""blcle.
way.
Grande, and ber dall&amp;bter, Kim·
Mrs. Foster's busbaad, Narvel
berly
J.
M•nnoa,
5
Rio
Grande.
H.
''Shug" Foster, 43, Rio
Woodall alao received a JO.day
1
The State Hlpway Patrol
Grande, was seriously Injured.
jail sentenCe to cover both
repon of the aecldni stated that He Is currently In a hospital near
Woodall, headiltg west on U.S. 35, Pittsburgh, Pa.

Jack Anderson and; Dale VanAtta

WASHINGTON
judgeKemp's open and agcresstve
ment day for Jack Kemp.
campaign to clean up HUD HUD h¥ become more cautknis new office laJt year, be closed
The charismatil; Secretary of .e arned him an ell tended honey· ' under Kemp and more concerned dowa the private dlnln&amp; room
Housing and Urban Develop- .· moon with. Congress and the about manaeement by the book and spruced up the employee
ment Is winding up hia first year
public.
than creating new housing:
cafeteria. He eata tbere at leu!
In office - a year In which he
He bas since been praised for
Add to that the tact that twice a week. He stands In line at
basked In blpai11san support
bls reform Initiatives and !lie Kemp's tight rein ori the HUD the cub register. And he l!Ven
from members of Congress who
favorable exposu'l' can only help budget means he Is ellrltlnatlng brings guests. A few weeka aeo.
were pleased to have someone,
amanwholsstlllontheshortllst pork barrel projects that HUD employees were buzzing
anyone , cleaning up the mess at tor future Republican preslden· members of Congress count on to about seeing Waablneton Reels·
HUD.
·
tlal candidates. But Kemp' s keep the voters back borne klnsquarterbackDougWWiams
Now Kemp Is starting to draw place on th&lt;1t list also makes lilm happy. ·
In the cafeteria linewltbhlt bost,
But Kemp Is likely to survive _Kemp, a former pro football
fiak.fromcrltlcs whosayheglves a targettorcrltlcism. Democrats
·
only lip service to urban .Amer. know that If Kemp distinguishes the assaults, mainly because, • p(4yer himself.
lea.
himself at HUD, his presidential unlike most others In the Bush
tbecontrutwlth bllpredeces·
When Kemp took over HUD stock can Only go up, .
Cabinet, he ts a shreWd politician tor, Samuel Pierce, serves Kemp
last year, be raced a bigger
We asked Washington Insiders who specializes In people poll!·
well. Sources at HUD ~lUI re·
challenge than most Cabinet what !be future holds for Kemp. lcs. His popularity Is resting
member the time when Pierce
secretaries. HUD was wallowing They say he faces attacks from a solidly on his refusal to be just
ventured Into the cafeteria to
In corruption - a. result of the public that Is growing more another bureaucrat who stays
mingle with the little people,
political favoritism that pre· Impatient with the plight of the behind the desk 1n a plush office.
picked · up his meal and took If
valled In the Reagan years. homeless. Burned bv scandal,
When Kemp moved Into his
back to his otflce.
----';"----;:z:;~:::::"~":~::""~;::~::::.""-,
The face-to-lace style has
'1
hel~ Kemp In Congress I!JO. A
formi!r nine-term conjp'e111man
from New York, Kemp has taken
''
~m
ruu advantage or the Capitol .Hill
111'.~.11 1 (V\JI\.
buddy system. He responds per·
sonally to ·questions from Con·
gress Instead of delegating to
functionaries .
Not everyone on the Hillis a
Kemp fan. Rep. Sidney Yates,
D·lll., claims Kemp and HUD
Vl:'llD'-Tl~~
have · been too tight tn the
aftermath of the scandal. "HUD
closed up shop after the corrup.tlon hearings," Yates told our·
__ t\.1
associate Scott Sleek. Yates Is
RGE
' .
· approve
peeved because H!JP dld,n't
'•
a housing pro1ect or
Chicago. HUD officials, sticking ,
~;;:~~:
closely to the rules for a change,
refused to rush the approval
process.
Yates won't be able to rouse a
chorus of boos against Kemp, but
he won't be ·the only detractor.
Kemp Is running a tight ship and
that Is bound to offend members
of Congress who are used · to
drawing goodies out of HUD for
their horne districts.

HUDD~ED ~
I.£.U-\J\.1'1111\J

BRE..JM'HE.
So &lt;100

m·

C~

'

Are unpopular hymns worth singing
Who Is responsible for the
dissatisfaction of so many
churchgoers with the muslc.sung
In our churches?
Is It the minister who picks the
hymns?
Is It the organist who often
plays so loud that people ·can't
hear themselves sing?
Is It the choir director who
chooses anthems that are over
the heads of the people In the
congregation?
All three got a good share of the
blame In our recent national
hymn poll. But could It be that the
hymnal Itself .Is just as much at
fault?
One or the respondents In the
poll, a trained musician and
choir member In a Presbyterian
church In Oklahoma, took It upon
himself a lew yean ago to grade
each hymn In the Presbyterian
hymnal. He concerned himself
only with the music.
· "Preachers · are concerned
With the theological content of
hymns, but'my-lnterestcentered
primarily on musical conlent,"
he wrote.

This was the rating system he
used: five stars for hymn music
he judged "world class" ; four
stars for hymns that were
"excellent, tun to sing"; ·t hree
stars for "adequate, pleasant to
sing" hymns; two stars for
hymns that · were ' "not very
memorable"; and a single star
for those that .were "just plain
forgettable, boring.''
"I tried to be objective," he
said. "For Instance, I had to give
'Amazing Grace' five stars even
though It may not be In the same
class musk: ally as 'A Mighty
Fortress.' Likewise, 'Silent
Night' had to rate five stars even
though It Is a pret~ylnane melody
compared to '0 Come, 0 Come,
Emmanuel.' Everybody loves ·
it!'

•

.

Of the 302 hymns he judged,
inore than half (53 percent) fell
Into either the "not very memor·
able' or "Just plain forgettable,
boring" category.
The percentage of "world
class" hymns was 6.5 percent.
Those that were "excellent, fun

Moynihan's
After 1 saw my payroU stub
with Its fncrease In Social SecurIty taxes four weeks ago, I was
ready to sell the Statue of Ll berty
to the Japanese and auction olf
Wyoming to the highest bidder.
Most taxpayers shared my
dismay, just as they shared my
shock at the proposal from the
Senate's lisping lepteehaun, Da·
nlel Patrick Moynihan, D·N.Y.,
to reduce Social Security taxes.
First, we had a conservative
Republican president whose
party bas always exalte.d bal·
anced budgets leave us with the
biggest budget deficit In Amerl·
can history.
Then, hls conservative succes·
sor who Invaded Panama to
restore democracy vetoed a bill
to make democracy available to
Chinese students.
And now, a Democratic sena·
tor whose party bu alway• been
accused or raialng taxes hal
Introduced a bill that would
subltantlally reduce them.
One wants desperately to take
Moynihan seriously. Hli econom·
lcs make sense; his statlstlcJ are
Irrefutable. Yet, u you listen to
the furor his lone wolf proposal
detonated, you get ·the feellnl
that IIOIJil!Where In the back of his
mind, an a'lt'ed voice Is lmpllbly
whiaperlne, "I'll be darlled.
They're all taking me
serloluly! ••
He's rlabt. Both partlea are
dueling already becaule a reduc·
tlon In Social Seeurlty taxes
tounda ab Initio lllre an Idea
whose time bu come, especially
when It Is tponsOI'!ld by one of tbe

.

to sing' ' accounted for 9 percent.
Slightly more than 30 percent of
the hymns were rated "adequate, pleasant to sing."
Several ministers who re·
sponded to tile hymn poll de·
fended their choicE! of noo·
popular , hymns for worship
services.
A Presbyterian pastor In Nebraska WFO\£', "Hymns must
serve the doctrines of the church.
Popularity Is Irrelevant until the
prior question Is satisfied, 'Is this
hymn compatible with ChriStian
doctrine?' We strive to be guided
by our theology rather than by
popular sentiment."
This minister contended that
"In the Garden" (which finished ·
No. 3 In the poll) Is a good
example or a popular heretical
hymn. "It takes the arrogant and
sentlnlenial attitude,': he said,
"that one Individual's relatlcln·
ship wltb Jesus Is 'totally unlike
anyone else's .relatlpnshlp to
Christ ('none other has ever
known')."
·
In my reply .to this pjiStor l

h~-wire

engineers of the previous Social
Security tax Increase.
· Moynihan, who holds' a Ph .D.,
has a professional' penchant for
cerebral combat. And taking .
controversial positions Is nothing
new for him. The man who once
suggested that black Americans
be treated with "benign neg·
lect," frequently seems more
Interested In didactically con·
fronting self·evldent truths than
making those truths work.
All economists quickly con·
cede that the government Is ·
blpa,rtlsanly guilty of creating a
fiction with the Social Security
surplu1 of $65 billion. Without
that paper figure, the federal
budget deficit would be an actual
$~ billion. The Social Security
surplus does nothing to reduce
the budiet deficit, except that It
can be used the way any
Insurance company uses Its
lunda - as working capital. ·
· And President Bu$, who
called Moynihan's proposal "a
charade," has been as guilty as
anybody In per jletuattng the
charade that Moynihan's proposal lias exposed.
There Is one value In Moynl•
ban'ucholarly sleight or hand. It
forces an honest national dla·
l0111e on taxation reduction prior·
ltiea. Republlca.na want to cut
capltalgalna taxes, whlclrwould ·
prlmarDy benefit tbe wealthiest
taxpayen. Moynihan, a Democrat, wanta to cut Social Security
taxes, wblch would primarily
benefit nilddle-lncome
taxpayers.
In the 1plrlt of _equal·

George Plagenz
said, "I appreciate your concern
for theologically correct hymns.
But what must be an Important
consideration too In plcklag a
hymn Is tbe question, "Will this
. dog hunt?.' That is, will It ·get
people to sing?:'
If It won't, It's no better than a
hunting dog with ihe' finest of
pedigrees that won't flush a duck
from Ita cover.
I once stoOd next -to a man In
church while the congregatiOn
sang 'For All the Saints" (which,
by the way, was one of the
favorite hymns of this minister) . .·
There was a misprint In one oft he
verses.
Instead ot "we feebly slruggle,
they In glory shine. ~ · the hymn·
book has "stuggl,e ." This man
next to me, dutifully reading the
words before him, sang out
lustUy, "we feeble stoogle."
He enjoyed the hymn tor Its
rousing qualities and none the
less for the unintelligible theol·
,pgy that crept Into that verse.

w. Va.

Sunday Tm• Sr ltinii--Page- A-3

Man sentenCed in car crash deaths Fraud investigation underway

Pllgr A-2·

Is Kemp's popularity op the.wane? · ·

A Dlvlaloa of

Ponwov M'M1p01t 0 SpaRr. OIJo Paint Ptrm"t

.Gallipolis
:man hit
·by tru~k

-·

Municl,pal Court

GALLIP'oLIS - Otis Elmer Vanceboro, N.C., all $41. ·
· Bush, 21, 2007 Cheslllut St.,
. Forfeiting $43 bonds on other
GaiUpolls, was fined 1100 and traffic vlolatlona were:
coats Friday In Gallipolis Munlcl·
Denver C. Lively Jr., 21, Rt. 4,
GALLIPOLIS
GeofJe W. pal ~Court on a char,e of lmpor· Gallipolis, Improper turn;
Johnson, 75, 646 First Ave., tunin&amp; - soliciting a peraon
Brenda A. Cantrell, 19, Rt . 2,
GaiUpoUs, was injured Friday under the age of 13 years to
Point Pleasant, and Angela D.
night when be was struck by 1 eapge In a sexual activity.
Sommers, 21, Rt. 3, Gallipolis,
pickup truck In the 600 block of
Judge Joseph L. Cain ordered ,both tor failure to display a valid
·First Ave., acordlng to Gal Opolis that the ·s berlft of Gallla County
registration; James D. Hannon,
PoUce.
transport Bush· to ~be Athens _ 'll. Gallipolis, failure to yield the
. PoUcesaldJohnsongotoutofa Mental Health Center for 90 days .
right of way; Artis J. Bunch, 18,
1980 Chevrolet pickup truck of treatment and counseling.
Rt. 2, Patriot, a. stop . sign
driven by John P. Drummond, ·
Brlall Mink, 31, Rt , 2, Bidwell, violation; and Curtis Nichols, 30;
69, Rt.1, Patriot, then apparently pleaded not guilty to a charge of Rt. 1, Leon, W.Va., failure to
attempted· to get . back Into the
menac:lq and set bond at $2,500 yield the right of WilY.
vehicle Just as Drummond eash. , No pretrial date was set.
Tammy J. Russell, 30, Rt . 1,
started down First Avenue. ·
J 'a ck V: Borden, 40, Bidwell, Bidwell; Bradley A. Copley, 18,
Tbe truck struck and dragged
was fined MOO al)d costs on a
Gallipolis; and Buddy Ray Eg:
Johnson more ·than 200 feet,
cbarae o! driving Iinder the nor, II, 19, Rt. 2, Letart, W.Va.,
coming to a stop almost In front
tnfhaence, Borden alao received a all $35 for !allure to wear a seat
,or the residence of Mr. and Mrs.
three-day jail sentence and a belt.
Miles T. Epling.
60-day license suspension.
Johnson was stabilized at the
scene by the Gallla County
Robert L. Adklna, 49, Rt. 1 1,
Emergency Service and trans- Ewlilgton, was fined $100 and
Sciulli Central Ob~
• ported .to Holzer Medical Center costs for ,.no operator's license.
Sunday, rain likely, mainly In
' where .he was In surgery late He also received a suspended
Friday night. Joluiiion suffered six-mo!ltfl Jail sentence ~tnd six the mQtnlng. High 40 to 45.
multiple abrasions and Is a monlha' probation. Adkins alao Chance of rain 60 percent . ·
· Eldended Forecut
patient In the hospital's lntenllve was fined $19 and coats for
MoDda)'
&amp;hrou1h Wednesday
Care Unit. His conditiOn was s~rig.
Monday,
fair. Highs uptJer 30s
·reported stable tate Saturday
Forfeltln&amp; bonds for speeding
to
mid
40s.
Lows mostly In the
morning.
were: Curtis Stmmona, 53, North·
Drummond · wu alao trans· wood, Obio, 148; Marjorie L. 20s. Tuesday, a chance ot show·
ers. Highs In the 40!1. Lows
ported to the holpltal. However, Hawley, 39, Rt. l., Nor!hup, $43;
the accident report did not list an William Michael, 35, Woodstock, m lddle 20s to lower 30s. WednesInjury.
.
Ga.; William 'E. Burgess 39, The day, mainly fair . Highs In the 40s.
Pollee cited Drlimmond 'on a
Plains; .and Ronald Norman, 36, Low~ In the 20s.
·charge of driving under the
Influence.
Another accident occurred at
9: ~ a.m. Friday in .fro)lt or. 143 1
Pine St. , where a 1973 Olds
.6
Cutlass: driven by Jeffrey M.
Oller, 31. VInton, ·stop!~!!d In
traffic. · Pollee said Jody L.
Stewart, 20, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, was
unable to atop and his 1973
Chevrolet truck the . back of the ·
'
. -· .
: .OIIer car. Damapwas moderate
EQUIPMENTSALES·
RENTALS·
REPAIRS
'· to both vehicles. No one was
"CDmpletl llld/Cil Equ/pmfnt Fol Home 1111"
Injured.
PoUce cited Stewart for failure
, • ·· stop within tbe aaaured clear

·Weather

HOMECAIE MEDICAL
SUPPLY INC.

,14Jt,..llce.

We're hosting a Surprist 0,... Ha• for Mont,
Marcella Chapie:GI;, an Saturday, Fa. 10 fram 2 till
• in the afternoon. •• ctiHrate her 75th birthday.
. We're all going, to bt at
..,
the "Old" American lt·
gion on 4th St. in Middle•' port.
Come and help us eel' tbrate with her. She'll bt
. excited to ... all of .hll'
friends and reJGtiwts.
See you thtrtl
' The llids
,

IOIIIIICOfrll

• HOME OXYGEN
• YiHE~LCHAfRS ,
•'HOSi'1TAl.BEDS
• SHOWER STOOLS

I"OMEROY - Th8 MeliJ
County Sheriff's Departmellt Ia
ualltlaa the Athena County
Sllerlft's De~rtmeat In tbe In·
vestlcatlon or a fraud Incident
that allegedly occurred Jan. 29.
According to Melil Sheriff
James M. Soulaby, two 1114Uvldu·
ala came to a Columbia To¥'!11hlp
residence In responae to an
earlier telephone call regar41ng
Installation of aiding. The lndl·
vlduals talked the residents Into
paying .batt or the amount as a
down payment. Wh{le the party
was writing the check, the
Individuals advised that ·In order
to save time, to leave the "pay to" section blank and they would
use a stamp to fill In the company
name.
Tl)e residents waited a couple
or days for the contractor lo call
them regarding a starting date.
Several attempts were ltlllde by
phone' to conta,;:t the allegeq
siding represents lives. The bank
was conlacted and It was learned
that the Individuals had written
In a name and cashed the check
the next day alter It was written.
Soulsby reportS thilt officers
from the Athens County Sheriff's
Department are lnveslleatlng
several slli)Uat C'Omplalnts In the
Albany area.
Sheriff Soulsby urges area
residents to exercise caution
when considering a contgact with
strangers to do work on a home.
"Certainly, do not make any
payments prior to bavlng work
done," Souisby' says.
Nanies or the victims In ihls
. , Incident are belngwlthheldpend·
·. fi\g the filing of phaiges.
Although ihe victims live In

According to the report. the
check waa lost or stolen In the
Tupper• Plains area. Bank One
at Coolville reported to authorl·
ties thai an individual had
attempted to cash the check.
Athens and Me igs deputies are
looking tor the suspect.

'

, .Last Days of Our Sale, ;.
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday

•t
.
~'Complete Book Inventory Reduced 20%

"Select'Books Reduced 50%
~American Greetings Everyday Reduced 70%
• American Greetings Halloween,
Thanksgiving, &amp; Christmas Reduced 70%
~;,.merican Greetings Valentine's Day, .
.St. Patrick 's, Easter, Graduation, Moth er's
~Day, &amp; Father's Day-Reduced 50%
.
~Potpourri Reduced 50%
~¥ankee Candles Reduced 50 %

The
Alcove
314 Second A venue

I ,,

Gallipolis, Ohio

..
'i

l •

Jaroik recipient
gets donor heart
COLUMBUS. Ohio CUPI)
Heart transplant aurgery was
completed Saturday on a Morgan
County man . who was on a
Jarvik-7 artificial heart for 34 ·
days.
Ronald Herrmann. 51, of Malia ·
was "doing very well" after the .
9•bour operation, said David
Irwin, a spokesman for Ohio ·
S.tate University Hospitals. He
was listed In critical condition.
which Is routlrie after traniplant
surgery . r
A team of four surgeons
performed the transplant opera·
lion, · wblch ended , at 7 a.m.
Saturday. Dr. Kevin Murray said
the Jarvik·7 heart worked flaw, '
lessly while Herrmann' waited
for a donor heart.
}Jerrma!lll Is onl~ the ~cond
periOD In OhiO to- uJIIIfrlo a
transplant after bellll on •
Jarvlk·7 heart. However, he Is
the 5111 heart truapllllt recipIent at OSU Hospitals, Irwin lf&amp;l$1.

• receive )'OUr refund anticipation loan in a matter
of~ys

·

• no cash needed- all fees can be withheld from
your check
'
.

• available whether we prepare your return or not

H&amp;R · BLOC~
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE
POMIIOY

118 E. MAIN IT.

GAWPOUS

· SECOND. SYCAMORE

112·1174

441·0303

er
fe\Jrdary

CARDINAL
DRYCLEANERS
446-9495

IIIIIIIIMI

• AllULT DIAPERS' •'
• UNDERPAOS (CHUXS)
• BEDSIDE COMMODES
• PATIENT LIFTS. .

MA!~p County, the Athens County
Shel!lff'&amp; Deparlment Is hl!ndllng
the .llleldent due to the lacl that
the check In question was cashed
In Athena County.
A report of a stolen eheck Is
al10 ' being Investigated by the
Melp Sheriffs Deparlment .

•, LIFT CHAIRS
• WALKERS
• DIABETIC SUPPLIES
• OSTOMY

twE BILL ·MEDICARE I OTHI$ 'NjiU:RANCE

..
...
.........
......
--·
....

,.,

Plain S.ks,
.... &amp;
•

~

Sllirts
(PleaII 11tra I

,..,.,...

.... WIIWWiU1....,
OtlllrO..c.•.

,.._,.,..
r.,-.

WlthO.....
lf21/to

till/to

tax ·caper_

opportunity benefits, the , U.S.
Chamber of Commerce has en·
dorced both proposals. But this
Solomonlc resolution Is only a
half· step, since li does nothing to
reduce the budget deficit.
If we can alford any tax cuts at
all, heavy cuts must be made In
the federal budget, and the only
place that can absorb those cuts
Is the obscenely bloatell defense
budget. To maintain the defense
budget at Its current level In the
face o! a mutual U.S.-U.S.S.R.

_..;..ch_uc_ks_to_ne

reduction or arms and a thawing
of the Cold · War Is pointless. .
Arguments ,that It Is necessary
are Just one more example of
Bush admlnJ.stratlon
doublespeak. .
It's time to adopt a comprehen·
slve economic poilcy that cuts.all
taxes and the federal budget.
Only then can we end the
hypocrisy of bipartisan doubles·
peak and restore the Integrity of
my payroll stub. And yours, too .

Today _in history .
.
B)' Ualted..Preu laterlllttonal
Today Is Sunday, Feb. 4, the 35th day or 19110 with 330 to follow,
The. moon Is waxing, moving toward fuU.
The mon\tng stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn .
The evening slar Is Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They Include
Polish-born American patriot Tadeusz Koscluszko In 1748, physician
and educator Mark Hopkins In 1802, French cubist painter Fernand
Le,er In 1881, aviator Charles Lindbergh In 1902, civil rlghtl actlvllt
Rosa Lee Parka ln.1913 (age 77); actresa Ida Luplnoln 1918 (a,e72);
feminist Betty Frledan In 1921 (age69) and comedian David Brenner
In 1945 (age 45) :

On this date In history:
.
In 1BG1, at a convention in Montgomery,Ala., six states -AlabllliiB,'
Georgia, Florida, Loulaiana, Mississippi and South carolina elected JefferiOII Davll president of tbe Confederacy,
·
In 1938, Chancellor Adolf Hitler ~elzedcontroJof.theOermanatmy
and put Nazi officers In key posts aa part o! a plan that led to World
War Two.
In 1974, Patricia Hearst. 19·year-oid dauahter or San Francisco
publllber Randolph Hearst, wa.s abducted from her apartmeat in
Berkeley, catU., by urban guerrlllaJ.
In 1976, an earthquake meuurlnl 7.5 on the Richter Scale kUlecl
nearly 23,000 people In Guatemala and Hoadu~.

--

wrote, "A

A thought for the day: Theologian Dietrich Boaboeffer
GQd who let us prove hla existence would be an idoL"
·

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Our Leading
Producer

Reg.

. 12.90

_..,.

Number One at
Northern Life!
Northern Life Insurance Company
proudly announces that Edgar 0. Barren
led the company in annuity production for . ·•
!988·89. Founded in 1906; Northern Life
is a leader in Tax Sheltered Annuity plans
for public 11Chool and nonprofit orpniza·
tion employees. With over $2 biUion in
assets, Northern Life has always carried
the highest rating (A+ Superior) awarded
by A.M. Best, analysu of the insurante
inaumy.
That he did 110 away from large metro·
politan areas makes hia achievement par·
ticularly remarkable. But then, Eddie Barrett ia no manger to success, having taken
top production honors in 1983 with
Wnhlneron Nartonallnsuraace Company
and apiD tn 1987 with Nonhwarem
National Life. Of Northern Life he says,

Edgar 0 Barreu, CFP, CLU ·
_ _ _ _H_.._nc_.in.:;g;..ron._;__Wi_«_r_~.C_ir;;:.gi_n_ia_ _ __

rtaill

.............
•.....,
~

l

"-'-

'"'"'

&lt;••·· , .., ...,..ONe ..............

Executive National Sales Director

.

( . .1111••• .For Your Drycllaning Nllds
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• •-.

i ,, .

• •

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_.J

-DIYCUANEIS
· - 1:110 a.M,.JitiO P.M. - ..,._
7:110 . .. .. . . , .......
11:00-I:OOP.M. - . ,

~..,

WII~Or ... l ....

•

), Timothy Shdnut

•

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CAIDINIL .

...._,... ••···

• • '!,

•--··

.... ......

20°/o OFF

Our conarar!llations to Eddie on an
ouuranding year!

.. • ·- ·

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1/Jfllf

dciJeeal

NORTHERN LIFE
INSURANCE CO.

. Alttreitiotts
&amp; Repairs

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Sllliilatll'l

"Finally there's a compari\1 that meeu all
of rhe consumer's requirements." For our
part, we at Northern Life believe Eddie
Barrett sen the standard for expertise and
service to his clients.
1989 was a 'banner year for all the
Barrerrs, as Eddie's wife, Be.tty, was
honored as "Ctrizen of the Year'' by rhe
Huntington Herald-Dispatch for her
humanitarian efforts on behalf of the less
fort!Jnate. And to top ir all off, their five
children wiD 10011 have nine colleae

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�Page-A--4-Sunday limee-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlaput-Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

- · .....:.-.-Area·dealhs--------'-------=-=_=_r_=_=_=_=._=_=_,.=..,.._:_:_:_~=:~
~"'
. L-· er~\'ouna
· ' conducted Monday, 10 a.m. at •
Lucllle; and two brothers, Weber • un:M
·-e
Ewing Funeral Ho.me. With bur'
C. and William E. Theobald.
LONG
• · M - Funeral lal .tn Sand Hill Cemetery.
Services Will be Monday at 1 services for Chester Arthur
COLUMBUS - William (Bill)
FriendS may call at Ewing
p.m.
In the Rawll!IIIS, Coats, Young of l'!latey Rlcl&amp;e Road, l'uueral Home 7 to 9 p.m. on
Pugh, 61, of Sprucevllle Drive,
Fisher· Funeral Home, With AI Long Bottom. Ohio Will be Sunday.
Columbus, formerly of Middle·
Hartson officiating. Burial Will
'port. died Friday, at Veterans
Admlblstratton fJospltalln Chilli- be In · Riverview cemetery. ·
Friends may call at the funeral
cothe. .He was a truck driver and
home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
PEEBLES ~ Ohio (UPI) - A Saturday, adding that there were
worked on road conslructlon.
Sunday.
Masonic
services
Will
be
patrol official said Saturday no no supaects In the shooting.
Born Sept. 3, 1928 In CottageSunday evening at 7: 30.
The Incident wu the first In
suspects have been Identified In
ville, W.Va., to the tate WIIUam
the shooting df two West VIrginia Adams County, although some
H. and Pearl' Donuhue Pugh. ·
truck drivers who were slightly violence has been reported. In
Surviving are his wife Marte James E. Silk
Injured Friday night when gun- other southern Ohio counties this
Brooks Pugh, Columbus; step·
fire
struck their truck convoy In week as some Independent
daughter Pat Conner, COII\mbus; .
GALLIPOLIS - James E.
Adams
County.
truckers. dlssatlslfled With rising
step-son Pete Brooks, Columbus:
Silk, ()9, 307 Upper River Road,
Ohld
Highway
Patrol
Lt.
Rex
fuel price~ and lower prices for
two brothers, Charles Pugh of GaiUpolls, died Friday night at
Newbanks
at
the
post
In
Georgefreight,
have refu~ to mak~
Long Bottom, and Gene Pugh, his residence, having been In
town
in
neighboring
Brown
their
runs.
'
Morrow, Mich.; a sister, Grace falling health for the last three
said
he
thinks
the
shootNewbanks.
said
a convoy of
County
Durst, Middleport. Also surviv- years.
·
lng
Is
related
tq
the
strike
by
the
about
14
steel-hauling
semi
Ing are one Stell- granchlld, two
Born Jan. 26, 1921, In Slstersnation's .Independent truckers.
trucks was headed' east on Ohio
step- great- grandchlldren. se\1- vllle, W.Va., son otthe late Harry
assuming
It Is strike Route 32 just east of Ohio Route
"We're
eral nelces and nephews.
P. and Cathryn Curran Silk, he
related, but we have nothing to 73 near Peebles when gunfire
He was preceded In death by was a rettred electrician.
confirm
this," Ewbanks said ra~g out.
two sisters; Louis Ralston and
He was a mem!N!r of the
Dorothea Frazier; and a nephew. · Catholic Church In Sistersville
He was a veteran of the Korean and a World War II Army
Conflict.
veteran. He was also a life
Graveside services w111 be member of Elks Lodge No. 333, a
conducted Monday. 10 a.m., at member of VFW Post No. 6327
Gravel Hill . Cemetery In Cht\.- an&lt;;! a member of IBEW Local
shlre,. with the Rev. C.J. Lemley No. 317, Huntington, W.Va.
officiating.
Surviving are hls wife, PatriFriends may call Sunday, 3 to 7 cia A. Springer Silk; and a sister,
p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home.
Mrs. Marcus (Ellen) Coffman of
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Po.lntPleasant.
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Also preceding him In death
Wilbur E. Theobold
was a sister.
Services will be aonducted
MIDDLEPORT - Wllbur E .
Theobald, 85, died Friday at Tuesday, 11 a.m. at Holy Rosary
Veterans Memorial Hospital af- Catholic Church, Slstersvllle,
W.Va .. by the Rev. Sam Socus.
ter an extended Illness.
Burial
follows In Greenwood
Born In Rutia.nd on Dec. 20,
Cemetery.
1904, he was a son of the late
Friends may call at Cooper
Wllllam E. and Lyd[a Spires
Funeral
Home, SlsteFsville, MonTheobald.
·
day
2
to
4 p.m. and 7 to~ p.m.
He Was the former manager of
Valley Lumber Co. of Middle·'
port, past master of the Racine
Masonic Lodge, a member of the
Columbus Consistory of the Scottish Rite Masons and a Shriner.
He was also past president of the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club and an elder emeritus of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Survivors Include a stepdaughter Mrs. Daniel (Marllyn)
. Awards, Rewards,
Strother of Louisville, Ky.; two
SUNU AR SlllfS' GAIDEN TIACT~
nieces Mrs. Carl (Janet) Morris
A•ailable iii 14•16-18 &amp; 20 .H.P.
.. Rebates, K 'lck. Plates,
of Rutland, and Mrs. · Gene
IModtll!onltrammissien
.... 701 """···- lrtl hp)
&lt;Darylene) Cox of Columbus;
•AvtorMtic
Low ,Payments With : l;tlgh
•No
duldlintlllfinitt
l9fld dtlict
two sisters-In-law, Agnes Theo•O", 41" or 60" st.tt·•it~~rmower •oilbald of Columbus, and Carrie
[)own ·Paymeritsl
aWe. Adt-mounffll lo ftltw pourMI &lt;onKennedy of Ml.ddleport; ·and
f~~Ur.
•Titfrt 76" turning rodiln
close friends, Clay and Geneva
-Come To-Fun-tim• powtJ •t•ing
Tuttle of Middleport.
•Du .. plllah fa ... ti . . hlr-., lwo traMmilIn addition to hls parents, he
lian 5flllll , ..... anti •tf•entiallodr. fw
aMtiDnal trartiDn
was preceded In death his first
......... tlidl custionH ucf
.
wile, .Audrey, and second Wife,
•Fult, •d.011tl engine

Bill Pugh

Gloria D. Fulks

Virgil (Roe) Brown

GALLIPOLIS - Gloria D.
POMEROY -VIrgil Valentine
Brown, 69, of Rock Fulks, 61, pf Bidwell, died Friday
Springs, died Friday at Bonita tn Holzer Medical center.
Born May 13, 1928 In Hun~ng­
Springs, Fla., where he and his
wife, Nellie; were spending the ton, W.Va., she was a daughter of
winter.
·
Cuba Bird Carter of Carrollton,
He was retired trom the Ohio Ohio and the late Harold Carter.
She wa~ preceded In death 1zy a
Department of Taxation where
son,
Stanford~- Fulks Jr.
he worked tor many years. He
Surviving
are· two daughters,
was a former Meigs County Clerk
of Courts and was also the first Donna Collins of Alliance, Ohio
president of the Meigs County and Pamela Calhoun of South ·
Jaycees.
Carolina; three grandchildren
' Among other survivors are two . and one great- grandson; .three
sisters, Eva Moore and Geneva
sons. Tom and Fred.
Arrangements, which are In- Jones of Carrollton, Ohio and
complete at this time. w111 be Frances Henderson of Tennesannounced by Ewing Funeral see; · and two brothers, ; Bill
Carter_of Navarre, Ohio and Jim
Home.
Carter of Maryland.
· ;
Services will be conducted 11
~Walter W. Bunce
a.m. Monday at Hall Funeral
Home
In Proctorville. With burial
r
; MIDDLEPORT - Walter W.
In Mlller Memorial Garden ~.
'· Bunce, 93, Middleport, died Sat·
Friends may call at the fuheral
:urday at Overbrook Center, home 6 to 8•p.m.
(Boe)

~Mlddlep9rt.

• Born In Addison, a son of the

')ateGeorgeW.andMinnleDavls Irene L Klein
,
:f3urtce, he was a former Middle'1
.port businessman and a World
POMEROY - Irene LucUle
.War I Army veteran.
Klein, 68, of Naylor's Run !;toad,
: He was a chaplain and llfe Pomeroy, died Saturday at Plea. member of the Feeney-Bennett sant Valley Hospltalfollowlpg an
j&gt;ost of the American Legion In extended Illness. · ·
·Middleport, a 50-year member of
Born July ·14, 19211n Oa~ Hill,
::Masonic Lodge No. 363ofM!ddle- Ohio, she was a daughter of the
:-port, a member of the Ancient late Walter and Edna Canter
and Accepted Scottish Rite, a Faulk.
. 1· ·
:foniier member of Middleport
Surviving are her hu~barid
ylllage Council and a member of Grover C. Kl~ln; dau11hters,
·the Bradbury Church of Christ.
Elizabeth Roush, Middleport,
~ Surviving are a son and wtfe, · Barbara Ann and Cynthia Ann
"Larry and Reva Bunce of Middle- ·Klein both of Pomeroy;' sons
:por:_t; a daughter-In-law, Lena Johnny R. Klein of Tippers
:Bunce of Middleport; six' grand- Plains, Ohio, Roger T~iiinas
;F hlldren, five great· grandchild- Klein of the Plains, Ohio, yllnton
,,en and one great- great- grand- ·· Wayne Klein of Charlotte, N.C.,
,'child; a brother-In-law, Harry and Grover , Keith Klein of
}\'!Iller of Middleport; and a Pomeroy; three sisters, Shirley
cousin, Mrs. Bob Bunce of Friend of Pomeroy, Garn~t Gold,lialllpolls.
lng of Taylor, Mich., and Ruth
·: He was also preceded In death McKinney of Urbana, Ohio; four
by his wife, Pearl, In 1988; a son, brothers, Charles and Glendon
;Wendell; and two brothers, Mer- Faulk of Pomeroy, Rober1tFaulk
·rill and Max.
of- Xenia, Ohio · and Arlllndale
• .Services Will be 11 a.m. Tues- · Faulk of Columbus; 14 .grandday In the Rawllngs. Coats, children, fiver great- granchlldFisher Funeral Home. Burial ren · and several nelc~s and
will be In Gravel Hill Cemet.ery, . nephews.
,
,
Cheshire. Friends may call at the She was preceded In death by two
~ funeral home from ·3,5 and 7-9 brothers, Ora and Clinton, Faulk;
: p.m. Monday. Masonic services and a granddaughter, Paula
• wlll be held at 7 p.m. Monday In Kiehl.
.·
.
. : tile funeral home.
·
Slie was a member ef Laurel
.
Cliff Free Methodist Church,
::Charles B. Curry
where services wlll.be conducted
Tuesday, 1 p.m., with burial In
Meigs Memory Gardens.
. RACINE - Charles B. Curry : ·. ;Friends may call at . Ewing
··n. of Racine, died Friday at Funeral Home3 to5 p.m. and7to
Veterans Memorial Hospital fol- 9 p.m. Monday.
lowing an extended Illness. He
was a retired carpenter.,
'
, Born May 29, 1912 In Sandy- Floyd
Pompie
ville, W.Va .. he was a son of the _
late John Henry and Nellie
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
Beamer Curry.
Floyd Pomple, 64, Ravenswood,
He is survived by his Wife, Rose died Friday In Jackson General
McCoy Curry; two daughters, · Hospital, Ripley.
Ruby Davis of Hemlock Grove,
Born Jan. 12, 1925, In Mercer
Ohio. and Patty Slgt)lan of
County.
son of the late Joe and
, Sissonville, W.Va.; two step- Phyllis (Fares)'
Pomple, he was
sons, Don and Bobby McCoy or a retired general . foreman at
I Fremont, Ohio; a step-daughter, Kaiser Aluminum. having
: Nola Stump of Portsmouth, served for 24 years. He was a
;, Ohio; a brother, JohnJ. Curry of
War JJ Air Force veteran
: Ravenswood, W.Va.; three sls- World
and was a member of the
; ters, Jean Marshall of Spencer, Greenhllls Country Club at
!'J'.Va., Ruth Street of St. Mary's,
Ravenswood.
';W.Va., and Betty Knlghtstep of
Surviving ue his wife, Maxine
.Dunbar, W.Va.; 15 grandchild'
(T,erry) Pomple; a daughter,
.; ren, 9 great- grandchildren and Mrs. Teresa Barton of Point
;several nelces and nephews. ·
Pleasant; and three brothers.
\ . He was preceded In death by ~ VIrgil Porn pte of Coal City,
:son, lour brothers and three W.Va., Bill Pomple of Fort .
'sisters.
.
McCoy. Fla.; and Angelo Pomple
·. He was a veteran o!World War of Josephine, W.Va.
'· II, a member of American
Services will be 11 a.m. Mon- !Legion Post 602 Racine, and .,: day In the &amp;tralght·Tucker Fun:VFW Post 9926 Mason, W.Va.
eral Home, 205 Ritchie Ave.,
i . Services will be conducted Ravenswood. Burial will be In
:Monday. 1 p.m .. Ewing Funeral
Jackson · County Memory
\Home. burial follows In Letart Gardens, Cottagevllle, W.Va.
&lt;Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
\ Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
:home 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday.

Two trJ.ckers hurt in shoot~

·. Car
Buyers
IF Y·OU'RE
TIRED OF A
·toT OF

HEARIN.G ABOUT

Athens Honda Cars

'

)

11

pOwlf PTO
· -hllle
·
elledri
•4 .........'...._
.... wttll N; ef 1!1 swltdt
1
lift • • - .............
1ffordtsslw
~

•..,... u,

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TIUCIILOAD SALE OF FACTOIJ
DIIIOS AIID CLOSEOm ,

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
"YOUR 'COMPLETE'
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR
STORE"

SHORTS.
GYM SHORTS • SOCKS
BALL CAPS • BAGS
· T-SHIRTS • &amp; MORE
-Custom Transfers
and Lettering-

~'12-5627

MIDDI.£PORT

'

se-

co nd class posrage paid a1 GalllpoUs,
OhiO 45631. Entered as second clus
mailing matter al Pomeroy, Ohio, Polt

O!llce.

Member; Unital Press International,

I

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION.FOR
(tclu!llng Dome&amp;llc and Fo~lgn Subs!dlarles)

HOME
·NAIIONAL
BANK
s&amp;Je

of Racine In the
of Oldo, ·" ' .the cloM! of bu8lnfs8 on De(\eRiber 31, 1988 pub- ·
lillhed '" response calllnade by Comptr.oUer of the Currency, under. Title 12,
United States, Code, Secllon 161.
Char~r Number 98~5
Comptroller of the Currency 4th District

\o

~-T Cash and balances due
'
from depository Institutions:

---~
.
a. Nonlnterest-bearlng balances and cu~rency and coln ....... ..... : ..... l ,898,000.00
b. Interest-bearing ball!nces .................................................... ......... 100,000.00
Securities ........ .......1........ . . .. ... ............ .. . ..... . ... . .......... . ....... , , •••• ••••••• ••• 5,251,000.00
Federal funds sole\ .................... ..... ..................................... ... ........... 3,457,000
Loans and lease flmlnclng receivables:
Loans and leases, lnet of unearned Income .. .......... 20,325,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses ............... 336,000.00
Loans and leases, het of unearned Income,
'
allowance, and resl!rve .............. ... .............................. ................. .l9,989,000.00
Premises and fixed 11ssets (Including capitalized leases) .. ........ ............. 228,000.00
Other real estate ow'!ed ............. ... .... .... .... , ......... , ... .:.................... .'... ... 34,000.00
. Other assets ............ .1............ :............................................................. 505,000.00
Total assets ............. 1..................................................................... :31,462,000,00
~-~1- Total assets and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(1) .......... 31,462,000.00

UABIUTIES

Inland Dally Press Association and the

Ohio Newspaper Assoc!at&amp;on, National

ANNOUNCES THE

Advertising Rer.resentatJve, Bruham
Newspaper Sa et, 733 Third Avenue,

.

GRAND OPENING '

SUNDAY ONLY
1

SUII8CRIPTJON RATES
:
By Curler or Molar Bftte
, g.:e Week .......... .......... ........ 10 Cenu
• ne Year ................................. $36.40
•

SINGLE COPY

:

PRICE

1

Sunday ......... ....................... 50 Cents

OF

' •

llullooJ Ood7

·:

MAIL IVBICJIII"'fllNB

.

......

~

13 weeu .................................. nt.:u
trweeu .................................. P?.,.
n.weeu .................................. S7t.M

13 ,.,.. . .--·c.a~J
................................. 120.10

MWeeu ................................. N0.30

$2Weeb ................................. S7MO

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We, the undersigned director~. attest the correctness of this statement of resources and liabilities. We declare. that It has been examined by us, and to the best
of our knowledge and belle{ has been prepa~d In onformance with the Instructors
and Is true and correct. ,
·
. ·
·

Olio Y•ar ......................, ......... ,:Pf.44

Dol~----

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SUNDAY
FEBRUARY 18, 1990

.

~Ill monthl ............................... Sl9.!1C)

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An Independent Uving Community

MAIL SUI8CIIIPTIONI

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MANOR

;av1Uable.

·maae tp carrtera:.

I

I, Gary P . Norris, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that this
Report of Condition Is t~ and correct to the best of my knowletlge and belief.
Gary P. Norris,
1·
I
,.
· January 26, 1j)90

where motor carrier tervlce 11 .

:-n.e Sunday Tlmes-Seolloel wtll not be
~~1_3CIItlble tor advanee payments

I.

BROOKSIDE

'I No aublcrlptlons
'
by mau ~ttb!d.ln
~reat

Common stock .... ,'....... ~ ...................................... ....... :............... :......... 125,000.00 - - . - .
Surplus ....................... :.................... : ........................................ .......... 125,000.00
Undivided profits and capital reserves. ;.... :....................................... 3,298,000.00
Total equity capital , ,. ...):.................................................... .:.: ......... . 3,548,000.00
Total equity capital and!losses deferred
·
·
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. ¥!23(J) .......................................................... 3,548,000.00
Total liabilities, limited.... life preferred stock, and capital,
and losses deferred pursuant to' l2 U.S.C. 1823(j) ................... ....... 31,462,000.00

1

ON

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. FOR A PERSONAL TOUR CQNT'\CT

KATHY HUNTER, Soci~l Services.

at 797-4661

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~T-~~

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, Earl Cross - Directors .
Way'ne Roush

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THERE ARE ALSO 28 SKILLEO/INTERMEOIATE
CARE BEDS BEING ADDED Wlnt THE NEW WING

,.

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•j

(

EMS lo@s 12 calls f~r assistan~

a.:.nut

Parent conferences set

Hospital

center.
::'
Pearl St. to Veteran• Memorial
Ractnewucalledat11:27a.m. Hoepltal.
to Route 338 for Charles CUrry
At 5:56 p.m., Racine trans·
w~w&gt; wu taken to Veterans ported Elmer Pierce from Rowe
Memorial Hospital.
Road to Veteran• Memorial
Middleport wu called at 1; 46 Hospital.
p.m. to the OverbrOok Center for
Roger Green was taken at 6: 56
Anna Bumgardner to Pleasant p.m. from Horae Cave Road to
Valley Hospital.
Veterans Memorial Hoapltal by
At 1:51 p.m., Pomeroy wu the Syracuae unit.
called to Cheater Road for Kelly . Middleport at 7:21p.m. tra.ns·
Lee who was taken to Vetzrans ported Clara Slater from Page
Memorial HlJapltal. Pomeroy St. to Veterans M,morlal
was called at 4:22p.m. to an auto Hospital.
At 10: 59 p.m., Racine was
accident on Forest Run Road.
Barbara Lisle· and Tina Nelgler called to VIne St. fot Aline
were transported from the accl· Weaver who was taken to Vetedent scene to Veterans Memorial rans Memorial Hoapltal.
Hospital.
Middleport at 11: 10 p.m. went
Middleport ·at 5:49p.m. trai)S· to Beech St: tor j:.ee Reynolds to
ported Mary Bonecutter from Holzer Medical Center. •

· Police probe. burglary
f6

~pelling Bee Jirnifs :set

For Your Dining Pleasure
· The Down U rider
Restaurant

CAA
taking
'
applications
·for training ·
laid-off miners

Is Featuring Its
Traditional
Sweetheart Special

G.

On
•

··aplnl;_,.,.t•.nns taken .

Buck

I.

Saturday, February lOth and
Wednesday, February 14th
5 p.m.-10 p.m.
'
6 oz. Filet with 6 oz. Lobster Tail
Baked Potato, Fresh Garden Salad
Freshly Baked Bread
Black Forest or Sweetheart Italian Cake

·-•2995
I

OR

Sweetheart Prime Rib Dinner for Two
Baked Potato, Fresh Garden Salad
Freshly Baked Bread
Black Forest or Sweetheart Italian Cake

•
Gall•
J0 bles.·s. rate dro. ps ID . 18

'2795
RESERVATIONS' RECOMMENDED - 446-2 4

criticism

,GM dr,u g .raid

MENTONE, Texas (UPI) The recotds clerk In Loving
County, populatiOn' 92, had been
living the life 'of a Maylag ·
repairman until the birth last
month of Amanda McVay, the
first baby born , In th~ county
-since 1951. . · . .
The mother; 27-year-old
Sharon McVay, said Friday the
whole county Is excited about the
birth and has practically ad!lpted
the little girl as their OW'n.
The child's father, Greg, 33, Is
a malntenal\ce mechanic tor a
well-drigging outfit, Mansell
Company·.
. Loving . County Is the most
llparaely-populaied co,unty In the
United States.
, Little Amanda, delivered In the
McVay home by a midwife,
· ~elghed In at 8 pounds, 2 ounces.
Tbe town posttnaster, Mon!Que
Keen, provided the scale, cour, ·
tesy of the U.S. Postal Servlce..It
was the only scale In town. · ·
· "I wanted to have the baby at
home," the mother said. "Our
first chUd w&amp;~~ · born at the
hospital In PeCO$ and I dldn~t like
the service."
.,There are no doctors tn LoviiiJ '
County, no hospitals and _1bc;cllnics. The nearest holpltallltn
Pecos, 23 miles away In Reeves '
County. Becauae of ~be remoteness of LovUig County and tbe
lack of medical faciUttes, most
resldenta go elii!Where to have
tllelr children, uaual),y to Pecos.
'' "We had a baby shower and
everybo!IY c'a me." Sh11ron.
McVay said. "People have been
real good. They've brought food
IIYer aad clothes for the baby 1114
Utue gift&amp;. ·we ·don't need
uythiJI&amp;.''
·
• /4
Coullty Clerk Juanita · Blilby
;,elcomed the activity.
· "When It comes to recording
·births, I'm like the Maytac
repairman ID tbe televtltoa commercial," Bu•by eald.
• .The lalt bli111 reeorded In
Cbvtng County w• on March 15,
~1. lhellld.
· ' •'The 19110 offtclal ceuua say•
we have 91 people IMq In tbe !
county " Bulby MICI. "Now we
biVeli~"

. .o

g:.
ar::l

Loving County Ferrellgas

Deposits:
,
---a. In domestic offices ... .. ....... :.•.......... :... .... .................. ................. 27,490,000.00
Nonlntere.st-bearing ....,;. :................................... 3,043,000.00
Interest-bearing ..... .................. _, ............... .... ... 24 ,44 7. 000.00
~~.~e[ uablllties ..... :.................... ·......... ........ :....................................... 424,ooo.oo
o a liabilities ............................ , .......................................... :....... '1:1,914.000.00

PubliShed each Sunday, 8251bJrd Ave.,··
Galllpol~, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub-

.

· YtVI old eao qualify. Bo•eter, tlley muat 11r1111
POMEROY -Twelwcallltor
piOGI CIIIP u4 dlaalllllt7 papers.
IHIItuce Wftt IIIIWered on
HEAP Ia dalipetl to Mlllt low lnDDme faJDtlfl*
Friday by untu of the Mete&amp;
~ - Tile r..en• O..nt;y lberiff'a to meet tile riling eo.t of Winter bome bealllll- A
County Emergellcy Medical
fl •ltlll'IWIIIITerr)'ti.PoUDck.19 -~ OO.boltl mq qualifY tor ulllataace If the total
Sftvtces.
'II Aft., Gelltpolll, Friday~
bounbold Income tal• wlthiD the federallnc:alle
At -1: 10 a.m., the Middleport
IDdlctmeftt.
.
.
' eulclelt.a. They muat bring proof of Income, 1
Ulilt was called to North Third
· . · Polloak • • ~ 'l'lluiWday by tbe eraiad· udllty· beating bill and the IOClal security
Ave. for Mike Manley and Mike
l'?~~ I eliarle r4 -lbortzed Ul811fa motor numbers of everyone wbo llves In the bolileboltl.
Rathburn wbo were taken to
ve._.., Polloek will be ~ tbfa week tn
Veterans Memorial Holpltal. At
Galla ~ty Commoll PleM Cou,ft.
1:32 a.m., Mlddleportwu called'
Tbt llilrlff'a departmeat al., arrested: ·
to North Third Ave. for Sara
Paw W. ·Nutter, 48, Rt. a, C'•UIJiob, wbo was
Harper to Holzer· Medical
lsslll;d 1111mm0111 to appear In municipal court on · GALLIPOLIS - Parents of all student. In
a cbalp at driving llllder !be tntlueace. •
grades 7-12 at Gallla A-cademy Hleh School Pf1l
Kn11etb J. Adams, 50, Rt. 2, GaiiJpOUs, a ~ave an opportunity to talk with leaclia1 •
Jle!.VS
:1ciiiiUIIOIII.
to appear on a charee of no operator''A concerniiiJ the atudent'a progress and ~ ·
eate.
.
·manee th11a far ln. the 19jl9-90 school year,
Veterau Memorial
Jollli Davtil Altizer, 22, 386 LeGrande Blvd., according to Deanna W. Cook and SallY K.
Friday admissions - Chester
· •
Galllpolll, lncarerated on a charge of disorderly Orebaugh, guidance COUDif!lors.
Roae, Racine; Gilbert Fitzwater,
conduct by tntoxtcatloll.
Conferences at GAHS Will be Tbuiiiday. Feb. 15
.
, .
Vlatoa; Charles CUrry, Racine .
•.
from · 3'6 . p.m. and Friday, Feti! 16 from 9 ' Friday discharges - Nonnan
a.m.-noon. ·
,
Humphreys, Tina Jacobs, Anna
School administrators, COI!lllelora and teacbers
Nixon.
. elicourap all parents to call the high achOOI
. GALLIPOLIS - A burglary ai
Mill Cr~ guidance oHice for appointments to talk with their
Road wu repOrted Friday to GalllpoUs Po Uce by children's teachers.
Mrs. Dovel Myers.
·
·
Parents should c811 446-3250 to set up a '
Pollee saki somettnie In the lUI two weeks conference. Parents should give the student's '
someo~ broke Into the re~ldellce by takllig a· name when calliiiJ for an appointment.
.Window .fan out of a wliidow and raising the
unlocked Window. The burglar made of( With an
AM·FM receiver, two 30-lncb wood ~blnets, and
· two 100.watt speakers.
·
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis City School .
· Pollee are Investigating. Total value of stolen
.
·
. Items was $350.
Dls trlct w!U stage the flnalJ of the 1990 district
CHESHIRE -If YoU were laid
'
., .
.
,
,Wide spel!lllg ~ at ·7, p.m. Thursday Feb. 22 at
off as a result of the Fall 1989 '
PV~'&gt;
Washington Elementar:y Sehool. Approximately
Work Force Reductions at Meigs
- J ~
r ..._... ...,
30 spellers, winners in tlie building contests in tbe
Mine 1 or Raccoon Mine 3,
.district, will competeln tbe final spelldown.
G;Ulla-Melgs Community Action
Aeency may be able to assist you
GALLIPOLIS . :.... Bernadine Stetnebrunn~r. · Asslslant Superlntendt!llt Patrlcl.a Brenneman
liaison aide for Gallla County and the Golden will be In charge of the apelltilg bee. Rosemary
lntetralnlng and obtaining other
B\ICkeye Card Pro~ am, will be at the OhiO ValleY. Gills. Gifted Coordinator, will be the pronouneer. , · employment.
~nk, 420Thlrd Ave., Gallipolis, on Tuesday, Feb.
The judges are ' the foUowtng · elementary
To qualify for free services you
6 from 10 a.m.-2 pdJI. to take applicatiOns for the · principals: Jack. Payton, Washtngloa, ·School;
must be a resident Of Gallla or
Golden ,puckeye Card program and the Federal Marvin McKelvey. Green School; and Ken
Meigs Counties In Ohio or Mason
Ho!t!e EIJergy Assistance Program (HEAP).
Farmer, .Rio Grande. · ·
·
.
or Jackson Counties In West
. Residents must be at least 60 years of age to be
The winner of the Gallipolis City SchOOl District.
Vlrgl11la.
eligible for the Golden•Buckeye Card and bring spelltngbeewtllcompete lntheTri-StaieSpe!Ung
If you meet the requirements
and have not been In conlact with
proof of age, such as a driver's llcerise or birth Bee conducted annually by the Huntington
certificate.
,
Herald-Dispatch, with the ·winner of that bee
the office since Jan. 31, please
· c.o,.m.;p_le_te_i,;.y_·o_r_t;.;o.;;ta;;;l,;:;ly...;;;dl;;;sa;;;b;,;led;;;:.,.,:P;,;eo;p:;,;le;;;..;1;;;8_:,go;;,;ln;;:g::..:;to;.W;,;.a;;;s;,;;h;lngt;:;;o;,;;n;,.•D;.;.;.c;.;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _..J contact the CAA Staff Monday,
..-If• Between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. at
.
(Gallla and Mason Counties)
~t~~~: (Meigs and \Jackson)
Retraining funds will be availGALLIPOLIS - The jobless In Washtngton County to a high of percent, up 0.9 of a percent from able for a limited time.
rate for December i989· In slx 11.5 percent In Harrison County . 8.4 percent; Lawrence County,
In Southeastern Ohio, Athens 4.5 percent, down 0.9 of a percent
Southeastern Ohio ·counties, In·
·eluding Gallia and its adj-~nt County's rate was 6.5 percent, up from 5.4 percent; Meigs County,
neighbors, . dropped , In !)lree !).9,1Jf a percent from 5..6·percent 7.6 percent, down 0.7 of a percent
counties and Increased lri the In November 1989; Gallla from 8.3 percent; and VInton
three others, according to fteures County, 7.5· percent. up 0.5 trom County, 9.6 percent, down 0.4 of a
released by the Ohio ·Bureau of 7.0 percent: Jackson County, 9.3 percent from 10 percent.
EmplOyment Services.
... The six ~ounty area had,.a 'tolal
·~raws
workforce of 114,900 In December
WARREN, Mich. (UPI) -A - GM hired a private detective
1989 with 79,200 employed, leavlqg ~.700 jobless. That's 7.1 drug search at a General Motors from Ohio who pollee said
Corp. Hydra-matlc plant Is draw- purchased marijuana, cocaine
perCelJt.
.
Ing crltlclsm from the United and heroin from Hydra-malic
· '? OBES said Ohl"'s unemployml!nt rate w&amp;~~ , 6 ~nt In Auto Workers uniOn and . the employees while posing as a
worker .
December, upfroln5.9percentln American Civil' Liberties Onion.
A 10-month Investigation at the
warren Lt. John Welch said
November. The U.S. rate In
oe~mber wu 5.3 percen.t. After . Warren. pi8nt led to charges, security of!lclals accompanied.
against 14 GM workllrs. ,who are by di'ug-snlfflng dogs Jearched
seasonal adjustment, Ohio's December rate .w~ 6.2 percent and · accused of dealing under 50 . several thousand lockers.
!!rams of variOus drugs.
.'
U.S. rate was 5.3 percent.
· Ohio's uneri.!ploymellt" rates
ranged from a. low of •.2 percent

-Baby boom in

'•

.COACHES

...

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4TH 8o Main, Reedsville. Oh.
'
. PH . 378-6126

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February 4, 1980

.,

.

.

.

PROPANE NEEDS.
HEATERS &amp; GAS

APPLIANCES .ON SALE
'OPEN 1:00 AA-4:30 P.M.

. .614-992-5097
ST. RT. 7 8&amp; UNION AVE.
POMEROY, OHIO

Special Grouping of Giftware
. ·, · SAVE

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446SAIIS
OliO 11¥11 PUlA -- - . . . . . . . lUI

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SUIIIAY 1110 5 P.M.

Jewelers
404 SECOND AVE.

-

GAUIPOUS, OHIO
:nvs :tJ!tolV11V3"0 - nvs :tJNVHV3T.) r

�w. v•.

Tun1l S1 ltinel

.·the river

I

'

8

'lnn.e.- ieutitltl Section

=

Februery 4. 1990

•

rs

•

•'
I

•

..
'

•

The Mei~· (~i&gt;unty .: .
Cooperative Parish
.Practices exactly·.
~ ·what it ·preaches.

20&lt; OFF LABEL

:.-:;,~•~••••~••

BATH

12 OZ. CAN,,,,,

$

9.19c.

sc OFF LABEL

ASSODED FLAYOiS

lEG. • ADC ·

FOODLA•

.

10.5

oz.

•

·:

~5

.,.

WHY PAY MOlE?

MACARONI &amp;

CHEESE.~ ••••••••••••••••••

WHY PAY MOlE?

.

~~N~~~~~~-.....oz.

16

WHY PAY. MOlE? s.s

.~;.,

'

PABAY

.

9 c TEA BAGS.......
$1
•.
_DRY . -·
9 BLEACH.••••••••••
! .18
9· c COnONELLE
BATH TISSUE•••
5·
_
$
TAGLESS

.·

s oz.

~=:=~LOUR ~5

3
CAT FOOD......

·

.

HOIIEIEST

'

·

.

·s1·19·

$ ] 19

~ ~~ c

oz.• ..

9ft (.
·

·~·

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=:u~i............

ll

GE. . .C

.·

,

SPAGHEnl . _.
SAUCE••••••••e•••32 oz........

WHY PAY MOlE?

SALT~ ••••••••••••••• 26 oz.• e...

.

............. 32

·

~z.••~.l 09

99C

.•

.

.

SHREDDED·
MOZZARELLA••• o~...... ..
WHY PAY MOlE?

.

ROU PKG...... .
~
.

ASST.

28-60 CT...... ...

.

·

·

ITS •••••c~oc. ·
FROSTING...... 16

HOMIIJST

.

LINERS.~········ 20 CT...........

EASTMAN'S...... \'our ·Independently Owned
Supermarket
•

1

.

.

:

"

WE ·ACCEPT W.I.C• .
AND .FEDEIAL FOOD
'
STAMPS . .
'

.

,.

· Prloe1 llted ,,. lwryday Low Pricae and
.,. eubjact to ohllnga without notlca, We
,...rva the right to llmh quentltlee. Not
rMPOnllble for typographical ·lt'rorl.

........

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

- - - -~·-

·-

r- ~·----'

'&lt;
'

·

,_------------------~----------------~------,.
Low-~riced

.

a

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WHY PAY 11011?''

ox ••••••

$ ~]

• r""

.

·'

•
•

••

....-',
•.
•
·.,.
•••
..' .
'

. 'POMEROY - 'II)e.~e.'s an December. "The Christmas dbestabllabment at 311 Condor trlbudon has really mushroomed
'.street In Pomeroy that's doing a·~ ·rrom one year to the next," said
very aood Job of living by the &gt; Rev. G~ace.
Golden Rule. That establishment "1 , Rev. Grace feels the food bank
· Is ·the Melp United Methodist Is so widely used because the
Cooperative Parish and Rev. need Is a continuing need. He
Roger Grace Is IJiedlrectorofthe . went on to say that tile parish
• parish: . . ·
· tries to meet emergency food
Ui1tfJ1~s
· The parish has been at 'Its needs and that the food bank Is
present lqcation since July of''· not 11 feeding program. He added
1988. ~tote that time It operated however, that no one In need of .
out of an office trailer on Forest food would be turned away.
•Run Road. The Meigs United
Who's eligible tor the food you - of the gardenmg program, literMethodist Cooperative Parish ask? I!:Y working with human
acy program, clothing bank, apd
·was started In the early 70's by services and the community
food pantry . but walt - there's
Rev. Bob Card.
action agency people are remore.
Rev. Grace Is QI!ICk to point out ferred to the parish. Individuals
The parish also sponsors· a
however that the S\ICCess of the must also fill out an appl!catlof!
radio program every Sunday, as
parish Is not by his doing only. All In which they state their Income
It has done for the past 15 or 16
of !hi! Method1ft churches In and the basis ofthelremergency,
years, according to Rev. Grace,
. Melp County work together. whether .It be a fire, unemploywhich provides ch~rch an"We can cover 'for bne another. ment, Illness, or o.t her, the parish . nouncements for area l~teners.
'· We are working together to meet will take care of them, noted Rev.
A monthly neWsletter is pubpeople's needs. We aren't com· Grace.
lished by the parish for those on
petlng with one another because
Where does the food come
Its mailing list and the . parish
~ too !lften II appears that churches
from? •It comes -from donations
also coordinates worship serviare competing."
made by Individuals or groups.
ces for the Extended Care Unit at
The parish Is probably best Rev. Gracenotedoneexampleof
Veterans Memorial Hospital on
the third Sunday of each month.
known for Its food pantry and
the Scouts In the area which
"We try to serve everybody,"
. clothing bank, but tile patlsh
collected &lt;nearly tour thousand
otters much more than that.
food ·Items this past year. Some stated Rev. Grace. "If someone
In addition to the above menU- the churches, and also Veterans
comes In who normally has a well
paying job, but for whatever
Memorial Hospital have donated
, oned programs the parish pro·, vldes a gardening program In • food In the past too.
· .
reasqn Is temporarily up against
which seeds · are .' provided to · . Rev.Gracepolntedoutthatthe It and t hey 'don't qualify for help
anywhere else, we try to help
approxl!flately 100 famUies so . parlshfoodbanklsalsoaff!Uated
them."
.·
. they CBJtral!ij! the!r own eardens. ' ~th Second , Harvest, a natiQn .
"We
try
to
tie
a clearing house.
~- t,t:~~ar~,~~~p&gt;rpgr~~ !&amp; for
wide food bank with il b~anch !n
,. lilt , elder,~ or lower:' IDCome . Nelsonvtlle.. -.brough this afflllaIf you c6me to us with a' need, and
-. f~Uie~Jrthat are willing to J:,alse tlon tlie parish can byy food that
If we can't meet that need or It !I
ls a continuing need, we try to
th.i1fr owfl foOd butflnd ltdltflcult Is donated by larger grocery
to · get ; the ·materials .tor the -stores for 12 cents per pound.
refer you to the proper agency
that can help. If we can't take
gardens. .
When giving out foQ!l to needy
~v. • Grace noted that thl!
famUies the parish trtes to keep
care of that need personally
Pllrish :works cloeely wtlh the three things In mind, hOw ma!IY
through our offices we try to ·
Headstart progtam In Meigs peoplearelnthefamlly,howlong
know who can," stated Rev.
Grace.
County which assists the parish .• will It be before they can expect
· In finding famUies that are In to have money .for food, an!! how
. If you're wondering where the
Meigs United Methodist Cooperneed of garden seeds. . .
. much the pariSh has to give.. ,
Now If you think the only type
, When the ·g ardening program
ative Parish gets Its monetary
. started. In 1988 It served' 198 of food distributed by the parish . support, that comes from variOus
sources.
Individuals and ·, In 1989 196 is bree,d, milk, and cheese, then
llicllvlduals were ·benefited, ac- think again. The food bank has
Rev. Grace noted that the
parish is supported by mostofthe
rordlng _to Rev. Grace. .
every kind of food Imaginable,
approximately 25 Methodist
. !lome volunteers at the parish even microwave. food. The only
churches In the county. Other
haye' also served as lpteracy thing the parish can' I distribute
· tu~s teaching people to read is home ·Canned or hd.memade support comes from ·the District
and the West Ohio Conference
alii! write.
·
foods, and .that's because It's the
which senc;ls nearly $9,000 ·per
-~ you;re
t &amp;;;tU!ar with the laW; "W,e try to provide things
year to operate the ministry. In
other than just the necessities In
'food pantry and Clothing bank at
addition to these sources of
·the parish then hE!re's what they
the food baskets. Sometimes we
support, Rev. Grace pointed out
do.
'
·
put In candy, chips, and sodas,!'
that a number of other denoil'l!naThe elothlng bank"Offers free · added Rev.. Grace,
!Ions
and the Meigs and Middle.
If you're thinking, gee - It
clothing to f&amp;lllllles pn ~o days
port
ministerial associatiOns
of each month. This prQirarn has sounds like Rev . Grace has his
give
support,
as well as a number
been In existence ·s ince. late 1~. hands full with this food pantryof
Individuals
and businesses.
Durtne a seven ,monlh .petiOd In · wei), he does, but he has the help
In summing up· the efforts of
1988 a total of 346 families of food pantry coordlna~or , Betty
the parish, Rev. Grace pointed
· benefited from the program, and Weyersm!ller, a layman from
out that it tries to meet the needs
nev. Grace stated that already
the church. In addlt!OD fo
of 'the people In the area. •'There
this year 34 fa mUles have gotten · Weyersmlller, there are the
· Is so much need In the county and
clothes.
· volunteers that also help.
'
we're just trying to do our part."
Let's see, there's been mention
'The clothing bank also serves
.families who have lost Items in
fires , and sometimes the parish
even gets donated furniture
which can be used , to help &lt;&amp;et
families back up after fire.
The hardest thing io cotne by,
stated Rev. Grace, is children's
clothing. "We run out of tbwt as
quickly as we' get' It ln."
~ ·
When do.n ated clothing Is ·received, volunteers work to sort It
Into tile categorle.s of men,
.women, children, and .a dult. The
clothing Is hung on racks so when
people come to get the clothes
they don't have to sort throtlgh it.,
RI!V. Grace pointed out that If·
some
. 1 an article or. clothtne
problen\s, such as stains og
tears, It is not put out. He also .
stated that If there Is ever any
clothing that Is not used It goes to
th11 Mountain Mission In Ken, lucky so that establishment can
benefit also.
The food bank operated 'out of
the parish Is probably the biggest ·
iervlce provided to tile colftmunlty. The parish coordlnatee Its
work with the Gallla-Metgs
Community Action Alfeney In the
commotltlee dl1trtbut1ons. Rev. ·
Grace added that there are al10
many, many volu!JII!j!rs that help
In the dlltrlbutliln.
·
Durinlltsl7 months of opera·
don, food has been etven out to
3,741 Individuals or 1,247

noi

6 5c

oz.......

09
oz..........
.
· ·. s·9 99
19 LUVS
DIAPERS........
~~:L~.?.~~~~~~. ~.l 79
HUGGIES .
_$] 095 TRA$H_CAN · · $] 99
I»I"I'IEII~ •••••••••
BOYS • GIRLS

l

.FOR

WHY PAY MOlE?
PLAIN • IODIZED

.

89(
A 9(
!l · ·

.

2 7c :~~:;.~

IOO CT.......

ASST. COLOIS ·

IAG ......

ASST.
BliGHT EYES

c
99·

4o oz.••••••••

TUNA................s oz.••••
PlAIR 01 SIU·•SIR&amp;

FOODLAIID

WHY PAY MOlE?

WHY PAY MOlE?

.

·

COMPLETE
.. .
PANCAKE MIX .2 ~......

·

.

~.] .09

, WHY PAY HIE? .

.

··. ·

..

MARGARINE . .
.
QUARTERS•••·... , Ll. aox....

TOWELS.••••••• SINGLE ROI1oooU

32 OZ. JAI

3 DIAMO.
•W&amp;TEI • OIL

I

1 .......

CAKE MIX..................

KUn lEG. • UTE

WHY PAY . .E? ·

69.

29
oz....~.]

2 5(· :::::E~:.~. :. ~ 69 c
6.:. 5 (
~~t:.~~~~~~•••ol2
,.

HEINZ
·. •
BABY FOOD••••••!~

....·• 24

,

3 CJ.C RAISIN

.

FOODLAND

. .

.

.IH Dll

·

oz....

$
]
49
C· . MARGARINE; •• ; 2Ll.........
SHEDDS.SPIEAD

oz.•••••

ASST. SIIAINED

OL.... ~.

•

PAPER

.

FOODLAND

~

. TOWELS.ooooonoSINGLE ROI1ooo

•

99C
55-C

~

.

•

IETCHU!...... u oz. an. ..... ~.· ·
RINSO
,
DETERGENt... 3a oz. aox.....

WHY PAY MOlE? .

BLUE IONNO

.

SCALLOPPED &amp; . ., , ( BRAN CEREAL
AUGRAnN POTATOES•• # ".
WHY PAY MORE?

MAYONNAISE

.

ASSODED COLOR

SALTINEs~·••• ~: •• , ~ ~~~·•• ;~.U

.

29

oz.•••••

um •••••

.. .

DUNCAN liNES

.

I LB. PKG.

•••••••• 3901.•••

.

MICROWAVE
POPCORN

·

'

. .

1•• '

~:~~:::~

$1

WHYPAYMOIE?

·

ASJODED BmY ClOCKER

VIENNA ·
SAUSAGES •••••••s oz......

~g~~~-~~~•••••3

· HEINZ .

SALAD
. ·.
DRESSING. •••• 32 oz........ ..

I
SQUEEZE
·. ·
. MUSTARD. ........
· 54C ~~::s ............ ~,.
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MARGARINE
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TISSUE ••••••••• 4 ROll PICG•••••••

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are free' to_, needy; distribution is Feb. 8 and 22

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·311 Condof St., Pomeroy - a necessary sert!ICe

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Director, the Rev. Roger Grace
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Photos and
' text by
Julie.E. Dillon

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Tile busiest month for lhf
pantry Is - · you pessed, II - .,J

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Food has been giVen to 3,141 people in 17 months
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4,1180

Point Plssunt. W. Va.

01*' Point

-Anniversaries-- Holzer chaplains' annual meeting

GALLIPOLIS - The featured . The Rev. Melvill Frailln,
eveiit prom~ to be both plea·
speaker at the Holzer Medical chairman of the Voluateer Cba- . sant and Important.
Center's Volunteer Chaplains' ptalns' emphaslzel the lmpor·
lt offera a time for the grwpto
Aasoc:latlon appreciation tun' tance of this annual meeting be together and enrich frlendcbeon and annqal meeting · on which will Include, In a~ltlon to sblps with other peraons Involved
Feb.8,wU)belbeRev.TbomasJ. the program by Holahan, the
lnhospltalmlnlstryandprovldes
· Holahan,dlreciOJIOfcommunlea- presentation by Thomas R.
.a n excellent opportunity for lbe ,
tlon for the C!&gt;lumbus Diocese of Childs, vice president of profea·
hospital to express Its apprectatbe Roman Catholic Church.
atonal aervlces at Holzer Medical
liOn tor tbe many bours , of
He wut addll!ss the asaoctatlon Center, of Individual awards of
dedicated service given by the
on the theme, "The Pastoral merit for chaplaincy service to
Volunteer Chaplains.
Rese.r vatlons are due to be
CareGiver as Communicator at several members the election.of
the Close of the TWentieth oltlcers and two clergy
confirmed by Monday, Feb. 5.
Century.·"
"
repre~entatlves-at·large, andreHolahan has distinguished porta on the continuing work Qf
himself In the field of church the group.
'
communications receiving sev·
Dlrect'or of Chaplaincy Servl·
eral awards Including the Hu- ces, the Rev. Arthur C. Lund,
manltas Prize' for best prime reminds all of the 41 volunteer
time script In human values and chaplains !rpm a six-county area
'
relationships.
who are actively Involved In the
prol(l'am Holzer that this annual

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BEV. THOMAS BOlAJL\111,
...
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PICQNS 6Ith ANNIVERSARY - Mr. ud ~rs. Eber W.
Plckeu, Portland, will obeerve their 85th wedding anniversary on
Monday. A family dinner will be held Sunday for the couple by their
chUdrt!n, Effie Pickens, Hazel Sellers, and Eber Pickens.

:Swisher anniversary slated

Holiday tnn employees recognized

· MIDDLEPORT - Mae .and
:Paul Swisher, Hysell St., Middle: port, will celebrate their 62nd
· wedding anniversary on Feb. 11.
: Mr. and Mrs. Swisher have a
·son and daughter-in-law, Blll and
' Nola Swisher, Grant St.,
Middleport.
·•
Grandchildren Include Mr, and
Mrs. Dave (Sandy) Swisher,
Haughton, La.; he Is a captain In
the army there and they have a
son, Rcbble; shelsemployedasa

MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Holiday
Inns Inc., Memphis, Tennessee.
has recognized 7,655 employees
worldwide for outstanding customer service. The employees
were listed In a four· page adl(er;
tlsement In USA Today on Jan.
31.
Selections were made by

Reunion meeting
GALLIPOLIS - A meeting to
help plan a class reunion for
195:&gt;-56 graduates w111 be held
Wednesday, 7 p.m., at the home
of Jack and Barbara Richards, 90
Court Street.

nurse In an area hospital there;
Mr. and Mrs. Mike (Paula
Swisher) Bonnett. She Is a
manager at Pizza Hut In Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Doug (Velvet
Swisher) Adkins are both employed as nurses · at Holzer
Medical Center, They have a
daughter, Megan.

Job Bank helps senior citizens work
GALLIPOLIS - The Job Bank
We have so many applicants
· located In the senior Citizen · loo)clng for work a qhe present
Center, 220 Jackson Pl)i:e, is In time. Please help us put a senior
need of applicants SO years and · to work.
older.
For more Information contact
. Especially needed are people the Job Counselor on Wednesday
to live in with the older people,' or from 11 a.m .. to 3 p.m. and
stay. with them on part-time Thursday and Friday from 7 a.m.
basis, also are needed more to:i p.m. at the center's Job Bimk
· applicants for babysitting.
at 446-7000.
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WOMIJI'S

WINTER DRESS
. ·&amp;CASUAL

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.. RIO GRANDE .:_ The Coryton
:_.Trio, a group of musl~lans
' .iledlcated to. the performance of
· chamber music tor flute, cello
0:~and harp, will be the nllxt feature
.; presentation .of the Especially
· Music series at the University of
' Rio Grande on Sunday Feb. 11 at
2.: 30 p.m. In the Christensen
.Theat.-e ofthe Fine aild performl'"ing Arts Center. ·
';:::· Especially Music Is a satelUte
.: program of the Ohio Valley Artist
; - Series, which brings cu It ural
":
events focusing on· music and
I
.• theat.-e to the region.
!: , EM audiences ·are probably

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A PART OF T8E .
'MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY

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~~~The working mothers
~~have special ·prayers_· ·

I have appreciated .the opportunity to use Overbrook Center as
~training .site fo.r Meigs High School students enrolled in the Certi·
fied Nursu1g ·Aasiitant Tr~j~ing Program. The Nursing Management at Overbrook has b8en very supportive in establishing this
Training Program at the High School. and my students are excited
about beginning their clinical experience on-site at Overbrook
Center.
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Mr~:

Margie Blake, RN ·
Nursiog Assistant Training Instructor
And Program Coordinator

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for
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MICHAEL K. LAYNE
; Navy Seaman. Michael K.
. r;ayne, grandson of Ellen Layne
of New Haven, W.Va., recently .
participated In Alll,ed Naval
:Exercises while iieplayed to the
.Western Pacific Ocean aboard
111e guided missile destroyer USS
~rkeley, homeported In San
Diego.
.
Lay~ also visited several
foreign ports lncludln1 Hong
~ong and Sublc Bay, Republic of
:the Philippines.
.
• · A 1981 graduate of Amphl·
, theater lflah Scllool, Tucson, AZ,
lie joined lhe·Navy In May 1987.

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KATHY ,J. JI'OWLI!!a
: Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class
JCatby J. Fowler, wtlosehusband,
Jieffrey, ·II t~ soli of C. Joan
~owler of 404 Cypress Court, .
Polat Pteaaant, W.Va. hal reeD--

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.A 'Taste of Nature~
schedule by q,rea church

PROfESSIONAL
GIFT-BUYING
SERVICE
Find out how easy it is to
keep up with gift-giving
occasions all yea r long!
Mary Kay can help with
gi ft id eas, wrapping and
delivery, i ncluding birthday
and ann iversary gifts.
Call today!

Professional
Mary Kay Consultant

DONNA ROSE

446-8792

SALE! SALE!
SALE!

50-60°/o
OFF ALL

Pecple actively Interested In dishes will be given each night.
achieving good health wlll want
Take home materials wlll
to attend the "Taste of Nature" Include an eight-page parUclpai\NN UNDDIS
seminar to bo! ccnducted ror men lion magazine each night plus
••1989, ...............
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and women In the Fellowship other materials.
Tl•" ~owndlflllf' ' ••d
support our family so I bave to go
A fee to partially cover the cost
room of the Point Pleasant
c
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to work to help pay the bills?
Seventh-day Adventist Church, of the six periods will only be $10
¥d Lord; keep me from
Highway 2, north. The first of the and wUI be payable at the first
resenting those who add to my
series wUI begin Monday, Feb. 12 session. Husbands and wives
guilt
,
at 7 p.m. Additional classes will attend for the one fee. .
Bypresumlng'Iworkbecausel · store without paying for them Is
be from 7 p.m. to 8:15 p.m.
Reservations should be made
iarceny . .
want to 11et out of the house.
. . 1 am a security awareness
Monday and . Wednesday nights by phoning 67~- 7787. Space is
Most of all, Lord, give me the , officer in 'one of 'the largest
for three weeks.
llmlted, so reservatlons should
strength to get all my housework shopping centers In the U.S. 1
In announcing the seminar, he made in advance.
done even though I'm dead tired
lve seminars to sho owners
Pastor Orren Bacheller, states
after a long, hard, stressful day !nd sales associates P to help
the classes will aid In knowing
· (
on the .Job.
reduce shrinkage.'
how to prepare vegetarianAnd, Lord, when .my husband
Do you know that a chain of
protein recipes an,d dishes low In .
yells a! me because I am too tlarired
tat and .sugar by using natural
[1'
to wash .jast · night's supper · arkets throughol!l the country
foods.
This
I~
of
Importance,
he
dishes for the sake of 111
as estimated that 5,000 pounds
says, for most leading nutrition- .
ATHENS - Richard Marx,
•
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of grapes are eaten each year by
precious child, please give ·
peoplewhotake"one"toseehow
lsts have a growing concern rock music performer'who sings
the self-restraint not to walk o I
they t&lt;ls'te? Who do you think
about the American diet. Jlo!ost the popular hlt song, "Angel Ia,"
the door.
.
s ior those 5,000 pounds of
t hi bl
fl ed will present his "Repea:t Of.
ea . . g Y re n
fender World Tour" In Athens at
Oh, Lord, on behalf of all
~i'pes? Not the growers or the : Americans
processed foods w)llch often are
working mothers everywhere, I transportation company that
deflo;lent Iii the essential vitam- ,the Convocation Center on the
ask tor four thltJgs: strength,
shl s the rapes or the wholesalIns and m!nerals ..In addition. our Ohio University campus on Feb.
courage, .patience and a forglvers~ or th! grOc~r. You and 1 pay
diet Is generally high In satu- 23Taltck8e~~:re avalla bleat Memlng heart.
· tor the "shrinkage."
·
rated fats which come from
My marriage depends on lt.
Th ,
A . Fl
anlmal .products:
•
orlal Auditorium In Athens,
1
1
A L de A
t
a s on y ·grapes nn. g·
Dear nn ':' n: re you ou
ure In the cookie~ and the
Each night's program · will Schoolklds Records in Athens,
of your mind· You said people cherries, the nuts and so on and . I I d
ll trated lect
d and Haffa's In Athens.
pc u e l!n I us
ure an
Admission P.r tee 1.s $15 for the
who graze and munch their wa~
you've got a . lot of unpaid-for
through food . markets aren t
·
" color slides. Tasty samples,
exactly shoplifting. What would ;:;:s·~~c:l
Rosie In DearIncluding
p;l;ECJAL
you call it? In Michigan: eating
De;... Ro~le: So I've been told
che~rles, grapes or cookies In a
by about lO,OOo grocers in the
•' U.S: and Canada. 'Thanks for
setting me stralght ~ln language .
ch:an enough to print,
·
We offer complete tuxedo rental. urvice
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FeE&gt;lin, pres~urP-4 to ha~ 8ex?
to help you look your best on that ll)eClel

M~N'S &amp;

WOMEN'S

Zodiac Boots.
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Ri h alid Marx: 'to' Q THE
~ Q
'fl:;
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ESCO
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pe-'orms at 0 u.~CI
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listed for two years while serving
PATRICK R. PARsoNS
with Personnel Support Activity
• Navy Airman Apprentice PaDetachment,
.Naval Air , Base
·trlck R. Parsons, son of Jabez D.
.:ind Waundtrau!l· M. Parsons ol · Little Creelt, Norfolk, Va.
A 1977 graduate of Huntingdon
: 282 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
Area High School, Huntingdon,
·Ohio, recently reported f(lr duty
Pa., she joined the ~avy In June
: with Helicopter Mine Counter1986.
measures Squadron-14, Naval
:1\lr Station, Norfolk, Va.
: · A 1989 gradUate or Gallla
·Academy High School, he joined
4he Navy In June 1989.

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Plltete ...... P1111•w1,
GAWPOUS
'

Ann
Landers

--In the service---

I

. . . 1........

' : ' •Dear Ann Landen: I'm a
: · 21-year-old wife and motli~.
: ':This prayer describes not ollly
: : ~ny life, but the lives of many of.
• · my friends and cc-workers.
: ~· The women of the '80s have
: :"Peen handed a raw deal , I hope
· . ~hlsprayerwlllopentheeyesota
: ·fot of husbands whose wives are
"; ·4olng double duty. I'm keeping
: l11Y fln~ers cros.sed that you will
~ ~Ink It s good enough to run, In
~ yourspace.Signme-AMomln
,Kentucky
' 'Dear Mom: I do and I shall.
·1 He. 1.1 1 •
re s.
· · WorldarMom's I::rayer
t Dear Lord, give me the
strength .this day
·
. · , To do all the things I must do.
1 Please, !&gt;lease, Lcrd, help me
!O get to W!ll'k on time.
.
·_ Even though ,my 3-year·old
C~;les lllil ,doesn t want me to
leave hili
d . •
: I kno\17 .1 have no choice.
, . Dear Ulrd, how~ you expl;lln
•today's cr~~ozy economic system
·to a child?
:~ How do I tell him that Daddy
':doesn't make enough money to
;,
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• Overbrook Center is providing a realistic learning experien ~in f.·
wh•c.h my students can develop their true interests and abiliti sin '
the f1eld of Long Term Care; a vocational learning experience t at is l
the link between Meigs High School and the students in our om" I
munitiesl
· II
.

446-3045 .

MARY KAY

:~fChaffiDer .music to be presented

members of Priority Club, Holiday Inns' frequent traveler
program.
Leis J. Dudding, David Forbus, Mary Mealge, J~yce
Vaughan and Sharon West, employees of Holiday Inn,
Gallipolis-Pt . Pleasant, were
named In · the advertisement.
They have a combined total of 43
years service experience at the
local Hollday Inn.

Above are 1tudents from the Ce•tlfled Nu.r slnr Assistant Tratnlnr Program al Melp mrh
School who are recelvinr their on-site ·e xperience at Overbrook Center. Pictured are Bracy
Korn;Barbara Colemu, Anrela.DC!aohue, Roe Lynn Basham, ·Ml'IJ. Margie .,lake, Instructor,
Dee Shane, Helcl Carutb!!I'B ud Lara Hall. Absent at lime plfure was take were Scott Ogdln
Tracl Bartels, Shelly Triplett and Theresa Philips. ·
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156 TIIRD AVE.

the Better Sleep Council says:
A recent report in the New
York Times undermined a longstanding theory that afternoon
haps are not ad,.lsable for people
wls.hlng to get a good ntaht's
sleep. According to a conseuus
of sleep researchers wbo are
studying the biological rhythms
of sleep and alertne••· the human
body was meant to have an
afternoon nap.
According to Dr. Roger
Broughton, a professor of neurol·
ogy at ihe University of Ottawa,
the afternoon nap Is "generated
by the brain as part · of t)le
biological clock for the sleepwake cycle." An afternoon nap
can significantly Increase a
person's capacity to ·pay sus- .
talned attention to a task, make
ccmpllcated decisions and lm·
prove moods.
I didn't know that. arid I've
been doing it tor years.
Have a Happy Nap;

The Coryton Trio

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FINANCING'
AVAUilE

...By Dick Thomas

GALLIPOLIS - The Groundlike a policeman or bus driver.
hog bas had hjs day. Winter will
'1be picture was taken at tbe
melt ·Into Spring. Things are city park. You can see the brick
looking up. You
sidewalk and the wooden bench
never know
' that usedtoenclrclethepark: It's
what spring will
the bench that was lost tq the
bring. Baseball
rilvfiea of tlin~ and eventually
season .fs just
torn down. 'The present bench,
around the
donated by the late Maybelle
corner, If the
Mcintyre, widow of 0 .0. Mcin·
owners and the
tyre, around the park Is a replica
players get together and there's of tbat earlier fence.
no strike. I never believed In the
Mrs. Saunders, widow of Mer·
Groundhog, One thing Is certain,
rill Saunders, is llvlng with her
· Spring Is definitely around the . .daughter, Marllyn, at Gaffney,
S.C. Marloyn is a graduate of
corner.
II always reminds me of an old
GalHa Academy HighSchool and
is a school teacher. Merrill was
saying, about this time of year. I
don't remember using It recently
associated with the Ohio Valley
... "The spring has sprung ... The Memorial Co., opposite the post
grass has rlzz . ,. Nobody knows · .office. They sold monuments.
.where Daisy lzz." That was a
Remember,ifyouhaveanyold
favorite quotatlon by Daisy Ailkpictures of Gallipolis, 'let us use
rum, more than 30 years ago.
them for the big bicentennial
Daisy was an employee of the
edlton of the Gall1polls Dally
Libby Hotel. You could count on
Tribune. Put your name, address
it every spring.
and phone number on the pic·
Another thing you could count
tures and· we'll 5l'e you ge~ them
. • on at the Libby every sprlpg was
back.
. · Mal!ry Shennan's prediction on · · Speakll!g of pictures, I picked
the- Kentucky Derby. He was
!JP the January 1990 copy of the
AEP Ohio Power Review, the one
ususlly right. But, he missed a
' few. Whenhewasrlght,he'djust
with the picture of the Wlld
tilt. his head and give you a
Animal Preserve In Musklngum
mUIIon dollar grin, offset only by
County on land donated by Ohio
the sparkle In his eyes. When he
Power Co., and on page 9, there's
· missed It, he'd just shrug his
a picture of our James "Jimmy"
·shoulders and lock Innocently at
Gilmore, son ot George and
you. ,
Esther Gilmore, who live across
Carl Cameron was In the office
the street from the Tribune.
the other day to brlng us a couple
Jimmy was hired at the PhUlp
Sporn plant at New Haven,
of old picture postcards. One was
"All that remains of the lll·fated
W.Va., as a utility man· B. In
launch 'Blanche M. • beached at
1970, he advanced to ccal handler
the Gallipolis waterfront." Four . and maintenance helper. He was
llves were lost In the disaster, It's
promoted to junior maintenance
dated Sept. 23.(4907.
man In 1973 ·and to maintenance
The other picture was the
man-BIn 1977.
wreck of the Steamer Henry M.
We got a letter the other day
familiar with the appearance of Is professor of cello and head of l!tanley off Gallipolis. It's dated
from.MarthaandRonnleSt'evens
theCoryton Harp DuolnJal)uary the string departmenyt at. Bald· Sept. 3, 1907. 1 vaguely reof Newburgh Heights, Ohio. ·
1989,ln whlchBetsyO'Haganand win Wallace. Pope is ass~late member reading about the Stan- . They're trying to locate Ruby or
~lao Lei Zhang presented selecprofessor of flute at the Univer- ley. But, I don't remember
Dave Pelfrey who used to Hve In
tions from Ravel, Debussy and sity of Akron.
anything about the Blanche M.
the GalUpolls area several years
Gershwin. The Coryton Trio
The group has been touring
Then Rosina Saunders brought
ago. They say they would appre·
consiSts of O'Hagan, Regina since 1985 with Its repetolre In an old picture that's going to
elate ·it If anyone who knows the
Mushabac anQ George Pope, who · ranging from the classics to lake a bltof research to decipher.
Pelfreys whereabou!S would contogether have been. acclaimed as original masterworks. Individu- It was a picture of a young black
tact them. You can write them at
."a . tine erilll!mble of exce11e4t . ally, the group's members have boys' band and their director. . 4429 Alpha Ave., Newburgh
muslcians.''
won praise for their. musical There are eight youths, all
Heights, Ohio 44105.
In adltlon to. their touring, the endeavors.
dressed alike ... long sleeved
Let's get out of hereon this one.
trio serve on the faculties of some
For ticket Information, contact shirts and ties, knickers, ·dark
Is mid-afternoon napping a
of Ohio's leading schools o~ the· Fine and Performing Arts soc)cs and shoes that came above
natural phenomenon? Here's
music. O'Hagan Is an Instructor Center at 245-5353, extension 364. the ankles. Each Is wearing a hat
what Snooze News, published by
of harp at Baldwin-Wallace Con- In Ohio, th~ toll-free number Is
, servatory of Music and Cleve- . 1·800·282-7201. .
.
.land State University. Mushabac

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The Ohio Division of the physics through hands-on actlvt- ·
American Association of Unlver- ties and experiments. · Other
slty Women (AAt)W) Is sponsor- · camp activities such as campIng Be Wise,' a math/science tires, hiking, swhnming are also
camp at th~'lfDllege of Wooster, scheduled.
The application deadline Is
Wooster, 0;:7..
The came; schlldUied for June Aprll1.
10-15, Is for girls entering 7th or
The Galllpolls branch of
8th grade ln.the fall of 1990.
AA UW would like to help sponsor
Total cost will be $225, which a qusllfled ~tlrl from the area.,
Includes room anil board and
A brochure on . Be Wise Is
educational materials.
·
available by request through
Girls will be encouraged _to Mrs. John Bensler, 6841 Bowerpursue interests In areas of manSt: West, Worthington, Ohio,
astronomy, computer science, 43085.
mathematics, earth scle_nce, and
.

Sunday

In our town...

·February Sale ,

AAUW sponsors Wooster camp .

w.

Hqui well.informPd are·you? Write
for Ann Landi'rs' bookle1 "Sex and 1
thE' TPf'naiP.~ · ." Sent:
"'lfaddreued. lonf(, bu11ineu-11izP l'nve·
lope and a chet;k or money order for ·
13.65 lo: Teens. c/ o Ann Landers, '
P.O. Box 11.&gt;62,. Chicngo, Ill,,
60611·0562.
•

PLANNED
PARENTHOOD
Of
01110
.,
Tllursday

0,. ,....;., &amp; Meaday bllllnts 'tl I P.M.

:

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. GAWPOUS.
414 S.Cand An~ 21111 fll!«
446.0166
'

•so to s.oo -...y.frillay
•so to 12 Sattwday

Ciltlllrhunday .
AlSO: Iackie., Chtt••••ka, Athens, (Jjlketlll, Logan I McArthur .

:.
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, 1 · LOVE FROM
gg
VOURH~RT
J
.The \'ery heart of Valen·
. (X1 tine's Day is in the ex~-

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.................. ,.,............. tJ illllflllty to pay.

CleM~~

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For That Special Oeea1lon · QI
I :
"TH!NKINQ OF
IS WHAf
.
I
REALLY
LIKE
10
DOH :
~
dey.
PIICED FIOM $29 95
5222Jfl
' -

•A'rfENTIONe
•

Confidential Services: ·
Birth Control
V. D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Talting

•so to s.oo Mondly-Frlday

OO:

1

pression of love. for fami·

1 ly, friends

Family Planniltg
It Makes Sense••• ,

POMEROY:
236 E. Mlill St. 21!11 floar
tt2·5911

vegetarla;~~E~e~

&lt;Jv

and sweet-

hearts. you'll find a
Q delightful
gift from The
I
\:10 ENESCO PRECIOUS
.

PCS CAID HOLDERS
WE HOIOI 'ALL PCS CARDS
IIQIDIIG THE RECAP.
YOU OILY PAY THE CO-PAY. ·

'

~ MOMENTS®' Colle&lt;:tion.

0 10 oism.er just.the right gift
OQ that speaks from your
1 own heert Our extensive
seleo:tion offeiS you fine
PRECICXJS MOMENTS
collectibles thet sincerely
convey . your warm.
thoughtful menages.

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Pom.oy-Middleport-Gsllipolia, Ohio Poin1 Plaasnnt W. Vs.

SUNDAY
BIDWELL -The Unroe Fam·
lly will be singing and Henry
Hatfield will be briniiD&amp; tbe
message Sunday night, Feb. 4 at
the Poplar Ridge Church. Everyone welcome.
CROWN CITY - Grubb Fam·
lly Singers at Crown City United
Methodist Church, Sunday, · 7
p.m.
MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Legislative
forum, Senior Citizen Center,
Monday, 11 a.m,

Sunday n1118S'Sentinei-Psga-B·6~

'

school baiul room.
toft meets Tuelday, .,7: 30 p.m.,
GALLJ,POLIS - G'alllpolll Ro----.. Columbua "'Southern: Power
tary· meets Tuelday, 6 p.m. ,
LETART - 1'he Letart ToWII· Company.
Down Under.
ship Trustees will meet Monday
KYGER - Cheshire township ...
at 6 p.m. at tbe offlce building.
Appropriations will be discussed. trustees meet Tuesday, · 5: 30
TVBIDAY
p.m., townsblp building In ·
RUTLANI) - Tbe ~ •
CHESHIRE, -Women Alive Kyger . .
Creek CouervaliCY DlatrtCt will =
will meet Monday at 7p.m. at Jbe
--hold a special meetlq at Its ·
Kyger Creek Clubhouse. The
GALLIPOLIS - The Refllnd
oftlce on Tuesday a\ 9 a.m.
•
speaker .w ill be Brenda Faulk and Coupon Club will meet
and tor tbe ptoject, mini pot· Tuesday from 10 a.m. until noon
POMEROY - The Ladles •
pourrl baskets will be made. at tbe-First Presbyterlan.cburcb
Auxiliary Fraternal Order of •
Members are t9 bring scraps ot
~-Eagles 2171 will meet Tllell(lay at : ·
ribbon, lace, mini flowers, and a
GAI,LIPOLIS Gallipolis ., 7 p.m. Members are to brlnl a .
· hot' glue glln If possible. Also • Lions meet Tuesday, 6: 30 p.m.,
covered dish for 'the potluck.
:.:
bring ' something· for the salad .OsCar's.
_

SYRACUSE -The Sutton
Township Trus.tees will meet
Monday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.

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Pornaroy-Midchport-Gslipolia, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W..Vs.

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Community calendar
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1880

POMEROY - The Meigs Lo·
cal Band Boosters wll meet
Monday at 7 p.m . . at the high

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.WHEN IT co•s TO FEELING
BEllER....
THERE'S NO PL.CE LIKE HOME
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TUESDAY
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GALLIPOLIS '- ,Love Story
will be shown at the Se11Jor
pttzen Center, Tuesday, 12:30
p.m.

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'CIVIL WAR FLAGS- - As a part of a Civil War history
uiiiJIIIDeat, TaryD Doidge, a student In Mrs. Debbie Sebert's flftb
· grade class at Pomeroy Elemeatsry, made theoe -repllcu of the •
varloua Oap tbat Dew during &amp;he Civil War.
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"Home . llaalth · Care"

GALLIPOLIS~ Ope~atlon L!!·

PRODUCTS '

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•llospitsl Beds · . .Oxyaen Concentrators
•Bath room Safety Devices efloloali11n

•Lift Ctwirs

tPortable Oxygen
•
•AitelllltiRI Pressure
•WhHielwirs (Sflndard &amp;
~~d
·•
•Teris Uni1s

Custom)
•Glucose Monitors
.COmmodes
. •IPPB Uni1s ..

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TERRY and BRENDA (BUSH) SHRADER

Shrader-Bush
THE PLAINS- Brenda Diane
:Bush and Joseph Terry Shrader
:Were marrle&lt;l during a Nov. 25
wedding ceremony at The Plains
llnlted Methodist Church, The
j='lalns, Ohio.
• The bride Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Bush- of
9alllpolls. The groom Is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Shrader, also
Df Gallipolis.
: The servic~ was conducted by
the Rev. Norm11n Wright. Nupllal music was performed by
organist Jane White and soloists
Phil Venrick and Chuck Congrove. A buffet reception was
held at Quality Inn In Nelsonville.
· The bride wore a gown of white
satin and crystal organza
trimmed with white silk finished
embroidered lace, sequins and
seed pearls. The fitted bodice had
a basque waistUne and plunging
V back. The VIctorian neckline
featured a sheer yoke with pearls
accenting t!Je English net. The
leg ·O· mutton sleeves were high·
lighted by layers of ruffles at the
shoulders, an\! the fu II skirt of
crystal organza was. trimmed
with organza ruffles. The
cathedral-length train was ac·
cented with a box bow which
flowed into. organza ruffles. She
wore a picture hat covered with
seed pearls and lace with a .
ruffled fingertip veil of crystal
illusion.
She carried a nosegay of pink
roses, white carnations, stat!ce,
heather and baby's breath.
Matron of honor was Tam!
Buckley of Barnegat, N.J., sister
· of the b~de. She w.ore a rose· '
a ·length gown of satin
eoverlay, basque waist

•Walkers .

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MONri'OB ANb MEBiliMAC ..,. Lelah Mub, a fifth \ll'ade
studeat of Mra. Debbie Siebert at Pomeroy Elemeatary, ·
coiiiRIIdecl a 1eale model of the Civil War ba&amp;Ue ol the Monl&amp;or and
lbe Merrlmae. Ttie projecl wu a part of an aslllpment In which '
the aludeallllelll'lll!d a!Joat the Civil War,

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•Respiratory Therapy
Disp011bles •
•Home BP Monitors

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Past Matrons meet
· MIDDLEPORT -The Past
· j\iatrons of ·Evangeline Chapter
U2, Order of the Eastern Star
wlllmeetTuesdayat7: 30p.m.at ·.
the home of Emma Clatworlby·.
A valentine gift exchange will be
held and memb!!rs are to bring
homema&lt;le Items.

BENEFITS
•Continual paitant ravltltl _.nd •No . charge , repl.ment
' · consultation program at no coa

to the

pa~ient.

···

on

backuP equipment. ·

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•No coat raspiratory therapy die- •Oulck re~ponae to new pa~tlent eat
posabl•.
upo, piCkups or repi8Cementa.

•Sen1ittve knowledgeable patient •One phoM c811 can cover •II your
contacts.

(:are,
Inc.
MEDICAL EQUIPMENt&amp; SUPPLIES
. .

ENTERS ACADEMY - Dlaana E. 'White, fonnerly of GaiDa
County, has started tralnln~t to become an Ohio Highway Patrol
officer. While, a graduate of_l~'orlb Gallla High School, attended
Urbana College, and will complete patrol training In June.

Bloodmobile to
be in Pomeroy

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va -The
River Valley Herbalists · w!ll
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the .
. Ravenswood Public Library.
Members are t&lt;i bring dried
material for friendship
potpourri. '

Favorite meat
Tbe most popular meat in the world
is lamb. or mutton !rom sheep, according to Th~ Kids' World Al!nanac.
In the United States, however, a rela·.
lively small amount of lamb Is con·
sullied. Bee! is favored Americans . .

_one.
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GIEG IULOI.OWNEI

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·-CII!rr Tile

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Protects 7 , , . ,

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WOMEN'S COLOGNE

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SPRINGTIME DOWN SOUTH

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Escort: Ava Chaboudy
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grant and colorful cherry blossoms. Join Ava
as she welcome5the arrival of Spring in lovely

Macon; Georgia.
. · 'Ask:about o.u r Early Bird discount!•

Russell Stover

VALE,.TINE
CANDY!

FORT - ltobert Smllll pat a
lato
. , biB Civil Wu' project, a COnfederate fort coltlplele with flylaJ
; . Collfeclerate. flai, whlc• wu ulliped by hla flfUl\ll'ade leacber,
, ; Mrs. Debbie Siebert, at Pomerey Elemealary. , . . ltudenlll'
; : projects were to 1erve as a'I!Jpplement to lbe Civil War aepnentln
· ·their hllltnry class.
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Upper lt. 7

Gallipolis; Oh.

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FAJKII·Y PRACTICE
PAIN CONTROL CLINIC .

PD
101 .

A warm, hand-glazed finish, solid wood, and quality construcllon make Caktowne a practical as well
as beautiful choice for your home. The price
makes it surprisingly affordable.
'

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Reg. -1 3192

Triple drulsr with '-'dlcepe mirror. fuR or
queen llltJ*W bed.
.nd nlte,ll1d .... Now

c:h,.-.

_.,.a .,.,.:a"* VENtrE:
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..,••.,5

. POIIT'PI.&amp;A8Ain' .

992•6669

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MIDDLEPOH, OHIO
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To•aa.

14

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rescriPtion Shop
271 NOHH SECOND

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Now 8

·(FORMER PAnENl'S OF PR AARON, BOONSUE AND)
. ·•
~ PA'l,1ENTS WELCOME •. .
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Bo•'• Elaetronlet .

901/o ~ 101/o • 701/a
REG. PRICED TO •220.00

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r• ..::f~ OlllllCHANtCAL 011m
,...,.....
,._..,.

·NOW

. ROBERT M. HOI.LF.Y, ...D.

CLASSROOM
EXCHANGE
VALENUNES

c
99

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Oaktowne from Keller.
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Byer
Eber

And.Many More!
A Big Selection! .

For those who love the look .
and feel of Country Oak•

S199

.

IN STOCK

Serbin .
Tanner

•

-HOLIDAY
M&amp;M'S

7 01.

Choose from ...
Henry Lee
Toni Todd
Hertry Lee Petites .
Mr. Mort
Schrader .
·vicky Vaughn

Sprin~ comes early in the South, filled with fra-

. MEN'S COLOGNA
PAUl SEBASTIAN GIFT SET ···········~············ .............s35oo
LAUDER GIFT SET ••••• ~ •••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••••:••••••••••••••s3ooo

25C
EACH

OUR BIGGEST SALE EVER :.

March 21-~5. 1990

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DR ESSE

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ESTEE LAUD.ER YOUrH- DEW GIFT SET ....................s22sJr
ESTEE LAUDER PRIVATE COLLECTION GIFT SET ••••••sssoo jl.;
. ESTEE LAUDER CINNABAR GIFT SET...................·....s3500
CALVIN KLEIN OBSESSION GIFT SET.....................~:~S6ooo
CALVIN KLEIN OBSESSION 'GIFT SET••••••••••••••••••••••• s22o
LIZ TAYLOR PASSION GIFT SET............................. $4.0
LAUREN .GIFT .SET ••••••••••••••••••••• ,.............................~S3500
ANAIS ANAIS GIFT SET .................~............~...........s2ooo
.WHITE SHOULD.ERS TRAVEL .KIT ..............................s1s.oo ·

··.. GIANT
·HERSHEY KISS

DRESSES ~

&gt;

.,,•• \
t
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K40'S ENGINEERS SPENT TWO YEARS DESIGNING THE K40
REMOTE .SECURITY SVSTEM ... FIFTY OF OUR INSTALLERS
FROM ACROSS THE COUNT~ PERFECTED IT!

IIIII ,._.

FULL

DRESSES

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Porller.,;; :t='-·
5

S5995

AnORNEY D. 'M(HAR MWEN

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HEADQUARTER.S

class at Pomeroy Elemeatary. Students chOIMl the ·
projects they wanted to do In conjunction with the
Civil War oepnents IIi lbelr history clus. . ·

. .
CIVIL WAR VIDEO - Jodi Sluon made a
. : 41-mlaute. video tape, "The story of the
GeUpburg Adclrea" for her ClvD War project u
·, a fifth ,.He aludeat ..Ia Mn. Debbie Siebert's

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SACHET
SCENTS ENVELOPES

, .,..,,.,

TWIN

KNIGHT, MUllEN LAW OFFICES,
POMEIOY, 992-2090
In Pomeroy with

GUCCI GIFT SET.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~.scaoo

-

POSTUREPEDIC

336 S. High St., Colum!lus, OH. •

..

AlSOITII)

Cash &amp; .Carry

LOC.l CONSULT.ATION

VALE NT·I N 'E'S

FUGIANQS

only
Sugg. Retail $299.95
SAVE$130 :·

AnORNEY·AT -lAW

507 Mulberry H-'thts, P-eroy, 01. 4576.9

.

, . , , . ,cwaouMr

$16995-;-.r.··

L.W. CENNAMO

1614) 992·2310

'

rAcetwaeae

Other Sealy~~~
Innerspring
~""""
Mattresses

614.221-0888

PRESCRIPTION SHOP #4 ,

POMEROY - The Red Cross
Bloodmobile will be In Pomeroy
at the Senior Citizens Center on
Wednesday from 1 to 5:30p.m.
Me.Jgs County needs 11().100 do·
nors to meet Its quota. Anyone
between ages l7 -69 may tie ·
accepte&lt;l as a blood donor after · .
an acceptable· health history Is
given. Actual donation time will
take less than 10 minutes, after
which, light refreshments will be
served to each donor by the
Chester United Methodist
Women.

Herbalist meeting

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BANKRUPTCY

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FUll Sllf

S7995

need&amp;.

Continuity .of

... liThe Ultimate in vehicle security"'

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TO ARMS - Erin Krawaczyn, a fifth grade student Ia Mra.
Debbie Siebert's claas at Pomeroy Elemeatary. For her Civil War
project, Erin wanted to portray lbe tragedies of the wa-;.. She did 10
with her project entitled, "The Glory a! War Soon Changed to a
Terrible Reality."

24 HOUR SERVICE...;_ 7 DAYS A WHK

11nd puff sleeves. The back was
accented · bv a box bow and
cascading ruffles. Her headpiece
,}Vas a heartshaped band · of
rose-colored pearls with nylon
pouf. She carried a nosegay of
pink, white and burgundy roses
and carnations and ba!iy's
breath.
Bridesmaids were Molly Sapp
of Chauncey, Chandra Shrader of
Gallipolis and Debra. Phillips of
Wellston. Their gowns and flowers were similar to the honor
attendant's, .and each wore a
hairpiece of matching satin roses
with nylon pouts,
Best man was Greg Shrader of
Gallipolis, brother of ·.groom.
Ushers were Keith Black of
Syracuse, David Milliken of
Wellston and George Eberts of
·
Athens.
'The bride has a bachelors
degree In social work from the
University of Rio Grande. She Is
a psychiatric social worker at the
Athens Mental Health Center.
The groom has a masters
degree In education from Ohio
Untvers!ty. ·He Is a counselor at
T~I-C6unty Mental Health and
Counseling In Athens.
They.jlre making their hOme In
The Plains.

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$2 02 9
SAVE 35-1.

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50411AIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT

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Corbin &amp; Snyder Furniture
955 Second Ave. - Gal1ipolis, OH. .
(614) 446-1171
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• Pojnt Pleasant Store Open Friday 'til 7 p.m.
· · • Ravenswood Store Open Thursday :ms p.m•

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�1890

Ohio Pant Plurrnt. w. Ve.

Timet-Sentinel

-Engagements--·McDaniel and Laodicea
... By ]amer Sands
"Hark!

Listen to the
·
1bey call for volunteers,
On. Zion's
bright and nowery mount·
Behold the
officers!
trum~tera,

fully as we did, aDd that If they
bad to follow 111 forany length of ·
time It WOIIId kill their bones.
Dllrlngtbat rai.S, 1000's of slaves
belongtng to febel masters were
liberated."
"Oae of the boys beloqlng to
Co. D was captured and bung. He
'1bey look
was f011nd bY our cavatry pickets
men.
yesterday, and ts to be burled
They look like men.
today. We hold oneofthelr "Fair:
They look like men of war.'' ·
Daughters" as tl!ey term them,
. for tbe good behavior of her
It was during the siege of busband, wbo Is a guerilla
. Petersburg, VIrginia In the officer, towardourbelovedsoldlsummer of 1864 (In the Civil War) ers. Our soldier was fouDCI with a
Tile praent 11om alValleJFrecaW•r•tCIIan!ll..,_ • 1M1 ·
wbea llle Laodleea Baptt.&amp; Ceqnpdaa ball&amp; lt. OH aMthatef
that General Armstrong heard . note pinned to bls Desb. Before
lbe Ludteea oommua•J' wu wa.n MeDude. a Yei&amp; . . . crl 1be
black African-American Union this war ends we wUI pin their
ClvUWar. ·
soldiers singing tbe song quoled sentences to them with Uncle
abo\'!!. Armstrong referred to the Sam's leaden pills.':
.
song at the "Negro Battle
"The boys are generally well,
. Hymn'' . Present at the·varlous ·andsattsfledthatthoughtheyare
battles that took place near deprived of all the comforts of
Petersburg were members of the sweet home, and laboring under
F Company of the Fifth Reg!· great disadvantages as regards
ment U.S. Colored Troops, ~orne pay, and having families .to
of whom came from Gallla support on less wages than that of
&lt;·
County.
. white soldiers, still trust that
.,
Company F was mustered Into when they do return tbey will be
'
service on September 9, 1863 at crowned with honors, and a
Camp Delaware, Ohio. They first happier borne prepared for them,
saw battle on May 2, 1864 at New when they wlll be free from the
·~ . --:-:~:· : ~
Kent C.H., VIrginia. Later In abuses of northern and southern
.
~· · ~ · · "
May they fought at City Point and fire-eaters."
Fort Darling, ·Virginia. After
. The Laodlcea· Baptist Church
. . ·•.... ,,,
·
·
their
Involvement
at
Petersburg
met
In homes -and A·school for
JANET LARKINS, MARC CAMERON
' In 1864, came the bloody battle of several years before the bulldlng
New Markel Heights.
of their church In the mid-1800's.
There were 141 members of There was also an AfricanCompany F-32 of whom died Amerlcanschoollntblscommun·
He Is .a graduate of Gallla during the Clvii·War. Eight more lty. Aboutl890 when .boUt church
ROCKFORD, Ill. - Mr. and
Academy High School and Ohio · were dlschar.g~ because of · and school needed repairs, It was
&lt;Mrs. James Larkins, Rockford,
-! nJ. , aDd Mr. and Mrs. Carl state University, and Is em, .. serious wounds: Others were dec!Jied to tear down ·the' old'
. -· .
ployed at · Bentree Apartment wounded but continued wiih the chureh,flxuptheichoolandbold
:Cameron, ·Gallipolis, ·announce
company · after. being treated. both church and 'school In' the
i the engagement and coming Complex In Columbus.
lEG.
The open-church wedding will The company lost 16 men killed remaining bulldlng. That school
IIG.
' marriage of their children, Janet
take place May 19at4 p.m. at the on the battlefield of NewMarket closed In the latel890'sandltwas
: Larkins and Marc Cameron.
SJ.IJ
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NOW
t She ·Is a graduate of Euclid Presbyterian Church In Heights. For the entire 5th probably this fact ihat led to a
Gallipolis.
Regiment U.S. Colored Troops movementtobulldanewchurcb.
School, Euclid, Ohio, and
· the percentage of soldiers killed The present building now us1!4 bY
State Unlveulty.
was 15% of the total of 550 hi the the Valley Baptist Church was
regiment, which Is niuch higher bunt ln' 1899 under· the 'pastoral
than most Union regiments (usu- leadership of Cornelius Mundell.
ally lower than 10%). The figure Some • of . the early members
p'
l
· for Company F wa, 23% killed or Included: Turner Smith, Thomas
•• f
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dead from their •service In the and Wllllam Stephens, Randall ••
war.
Carter, Joseph Newby, Randall
One member of Company F, · Smith, the John Sprigg famlly,
William· McDaniel grew up near the Matthew Evl\!ls family, the
Porter and attended the church Joseph Coleman family and -the
we picture today, Laodlcea Bap- Charles Coyer famllv.
list. McDaniel was 21 when he
enllsl,ed . He distinguished him.
self during the Battle of PetersUQIID I OZ.
20 CT.
burg. It was during one of the
GALLiPOLIS _ The week of
engagements there that General
lEG.
lEG. ·
Baldy Smith remarked pt the 5th February 5th will be the last
NOW
$2~39
.
•2.73
USCT th t " t
did week to purchase the 1990 Gallla
a no roops ever
Ac:·"-.;
better righting."
_ ...., HI""'
,... School "GaJlla.n"
At Petersburg McDaniel was yearbpok.
•
wounded 7 times. One bullet · .
...
passed through the side of his
·1
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face· and out hls ·mou\h, 1 bulle! ,
passed through part of his cbeek
lxine, 1 bullet went through the
side of his neck, one grazed the
back of his head aiid three others
went through his legs. Mlracu·
lously McDaniel recovered and
was qot disfigured. He even Jived
for several years after the -w ar.
•
The movie "Glory" bas
•It OL
brought to light some of the
LORNA~· MONTOOMERY, JASON PATRICK
difficulties faced bY the · black
4
ALLERGY MEDICINJ
NOII·ASPI... DIOPS
troops of the Civil War as well as
their contribution. There · Is . a
lEG.
lEG.
lette~ written by a member of the
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Boston, Ohio. He Is attending
NOW
NOW
S2.59
5th USCT as .It appears In the
Harold G. Montgomery, Rt. 5, Marchall University majoring In
book "An Ohio Reader" by
Gallipolis, are announcing tl),e Biological Sciences.
The open-church wedding will
Thomas · Smith In which the
engagement and forthcoming
.,
take place on Saturday, March
writer .Milton Holland tells that:·
marriage of their daughter,
''Several of tbe white cavalry
Lorna Joy Montgomeroy, to lOth at'6:30 p.m. at Grace United
told me that no soldiers have ever
Jason Edward Patrick, son of Methodist Church. A reception
done .a s hard marchln• throui)i
Mr. and Mrs. David Patrick, Rt. will follow In the church fellow.
swall)pa and marshes as 'cbeer-. .
ship room.
2, South Webster, Ohio. .
.
Miss Montgomery Is a gradu· •
ate of Gallla Academy High
School and a graduate of Rio
Grande College, Holzer Schooi of
Nursing. She Is e!ftployed as .a
Registered Nurse at HCA River- ·
park Hospital, Huntington, ·
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W.Va. She Is al~o attending Ohio
University.
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Patrick Is a graduated of
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Allot
8110011
.
Glennwood High School, New
SllrES
CoH.. &amp; £1111 Tallln
We, at Veterans Memorial· Hospital's Skilled NufSing Fecility,

Larkins~Cameron

GaHian purchase
·endS thii week

EFFERVESCENT
COLD MEDICINE

foundation funds distribut
_ ei to IChoo/I

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"FLU .&amp; COLD IWEF
.. C.NTEI"
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SUPER BOWL WINNER - Bob Bauer, Route 1, Lolli' Botlom,
center, wu the wlllller of Super Bowl oontestco-spo•ored by local •
bullliNIBI and The Dally Senllnel. Here Brian Bllllap, r(IJid, aad
Dave Harris of tbe newspaper advertising department pl'l!lleat a
check for SIO to Bauer.
··

YOU'RE INVITED!

OPEN HOUSES
AT THE

HOUDAYINN
.Route 7, Gallipolis, Ohio

a

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. Maki"g
Your Financial Future?

Life insurance. annu!li'es, and retirement plans from
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linancial security. Find out what's rightlor you. can for

'

MONDAY, FEB. 5 - 7:00-9:00 P..M.
AND THE

.

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CITIZEN'S CENTER
Mulberry Heights,

Pomer~y,

Ohio
TUESDAY, FEB. 6 - 7:00-9:00 P.M.
. Learn about our 1990 tours and vacation package•!
Depollit on any group tour at the Open Hou.e •nd uve
· an additional$10.001
GIFT CERTIFICATES • DOOR PRIZES
TRAVEL PRESENTATIONS • REFRESHMENTS
Win One of Th111 Febulout Door Prlz.e t (given et eoch Open Hou11):

*Two tliO Gilt Cenifl..tH

*Two 126 Travel CanlflC8tll

..... and much, much mora

WOODMEN SOLUTIONS

~~!'At~~
MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA

. IE AN EARlY IIRD AND SAVEll D11p01it on any .
Motor-h Tour by February 21, 1990 •d savi S'lo with
our Early lird Discount. AND...save an additional S"lo if you
. are a Senior Citizen (oHtr.good year round)

A FRATE.RNAL LIFE INSUI\,4,NCf. SOCIETY
HOME OFFICE • ROCK ISLANO . ILUNOIS

NEIL MORRISON

P.O. Boa 3461
Rio Grande, OH . 45674
Phone: (6141 245-8319 '

PINK BISMUTH

$159

program

.

PRESCRIPTION
'SHOP .
MIDDIIPOIT, o• . ,., .
•

uearr

Arranclng for this public eduIii the film IDdlcate.,bow .stress ~sllfeltyle leads to a llear•
cation
program Is Mary Harrican be recoplzed and then &lt;atlf.ck, but fortunately he ' aur·
•
VItal
alleviated- bY a change In our 'Vives and Is able to make the son, R.N., staff development
CUe of
lUe1tyle.
changes necessary during his coordinator.
·T he program Is open to the
bas
It Is Important to comlJrehend • recovery.
public at no cost, and residents of
public· meet·
theanatomyoftheheartandbow . ,
Feb. 1, 'from 2 It works. This particular vfdeo · Priscilla Ferguson, R.N .. coro- the multl·county area served by
~~':n~ p.m. In the French ·:500
does so In language and dla- nary care nurse manager, will be KMC are 11rged to attend.
For further Information, call
:1
gral116, makllli It very easy for " available to .answer any ques• To ci8arly elilphaalze and
the general public to underatand !Ions from the audience.
'
446-5247.
• demonslrate the Importance of
Anyone who has c:Oncerns
; propel careottheheart,avldeo about his cir ber heart would
.·lteart•
pl'elellart'~wUtlonbeen 11bown.tled"I Am.J oe's · Rlak
beQeflt from viewing this film.
facton, such as high cboles·
.
. .
;:• ''J~·r Ia an lndiVtdualllke a l~t terol, obesity and smQklng are · POMEROY The State teachers retirement, leaving a
• pf ur wbo are under a rreat -deal discussed, along wltb the lmpor- School Foundation Subsidy pay- .•Jiet paymentto the school district
of slrell at w.o rk and In our dally lance of good n\ltrltlon and ment for Meigs County Schools . of $12&amp;,240.60.
lives, The lntormatlon contained moderate exercise.
for January totaled $789,641.16,
The direct allotment to the
according
to
a
report
from
State
county
board fQr January was
],
' ••
Auditor Thomas E . Ferguson. . $46,682.28, according to the re....
. The total basic and transporla- port from the State Auditor's
'
..' t!Cm allowance, for the Eastern office.
Local Sohool District totaled
'
$152,696.81 with deductions from
,,
the total allotment of $5,488golng
'
.
for school employees retirement
'
and $17,1110 for state teachers
retirement, with a net payment
'
·.
of
$130,128.81 to the school
,•,
•· dis trlct.
· ·
For the Meigs Local School
1'llltnl's FWIII . . .
.., District the total basic and
lfiiiii)IIIUI'jlll
transporatlon allowance was
bltllg I fl•l) ll&amp;llllw.
$433,279.47 less deductions of
$14,887 for · school employees
retirement and .$53,687 for state
teachers retirement, leaving
net -payment of $364,705.47. ·
The Southern Local School
District. received a total of
$156,982.60 with $7,114: being
ONf fYIIIIIG SHOW AT 7:10 p.M. ·
, deducted for school employees
~11.50 ,
retlr.e ment and $23,628 for state
-

..

to host public

LifE •

NowSl

ANNUITIES • IRA S • FRATERNAL PROGRAMS

Flntl

Clet,ln~e/

50-60°/o
OFF ··

Montgomery-Patrick

ALL REMAINING

WINTER SHOES ..AND HANDBAGS

SUPERAMERICA®
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Group,' Inc. ·
.

CREDIT CARDS

Credit Cards May Be Used
For All Purc)lases

'S

oz.

$119·

sus

Excluding

$1 29

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We Reserve The Right
To Limit Quantities

Specials · Oo.od February 1.·Through february 7

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

Lottery

SuperAmerica Motor Oll SuperAmerica Potato

992-6669
2 71 North .Second
Middleport, Ohio
...

Quart

8 Oz. Bag·
Regular
Or Ripple

.,

lOW-30
lOW-40

~~g

RENT
TO OWN

"0 1110.

$191.00 ... .

Paintings
·on display
at Art Colony
The French Art Colony wlli
exhibit the paintings .a nd graphic
art of William Moats during the
month ot .February. Moats Is a
new artist on the profesalonal
scene, and he Is working quickly
to complete a series of commissioned pieces and entrieS tor fine
arts competitions. •
·
LIVIng In a small town, Thorne·
vllle, near Buckeye Lake, Moats
bas been attracted to representIng the rural Ohio scene;barn,
covered bridge, and landmark
buildings. But he has the artistic
ability to shift from his detailed
pen and Ink atudlea of a quiet
countrylllde to the dramatic,
· colorful representation of man
aDd machines In full oil paint- ·
IDp. Formula one te,ce cars, The
caruae of tbe Pearl Harbor
bombing, or an old time steam
tbi'etblng machine are painted In
vtvld color and a powerful
pablterly style.
There wUl be a reception for
tbe artllt Feb. 10, from 3: 30 p.m.
to 5 p.m. wbJI:b will ,pravtde an
oppol1ulllty for the public to meel
and talk with the artllt.

,.

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Goldstar
·samsung

Soundeslgn
Zenith

Emerson

. Shlntom
Multi Tech
Scott

fully understand that the need to enter a nursing ~enter can be an
emotional and difficult decision for the prospective resident as well ·
as family members.
·
·
.
· ··
. ·
Thtt choice of a facility must be made with the ealurance that the
prospective resident will .b• "cared for end cared about"- the philoJOphy of our competent, well-trained profe11ional ataff. .
Since our Skilled Nursing Facility ia a dapertment of Veterans
Memorial ,_ Your Hometown Hospital - FacilitY residents have .
the advantrage of 24-hour physician coverage plus acce11iblllty to
atate-of-the-art equipme!"t· emergency and operating .rooms, xray, laboratory and pharmaceutical services.
,
.
Our Facility offers ~ variety of pleaunt e~ivlties to promote the
general wetl~being of each resident. ~.11 of our residents er• encouraged to participete but are not pressured to take part;
.
.
· We encourage fam,ly members and .friends to vleit their Jove'd
ones- and th,re li no age limitation. Nutritionally balanced meals
are served under the direction of our regllltentd dietician.
·
We offer a pre-admission'orientation which l.,cludee a tour of our
Fecility and answers·~o all_ptlrtinent queatlona al a l'tep towards
hel~ing wit~ this "diHicult~ecllion"."
· -· ;,
·
Get in touch with our Facility's Adrninllltratlve Staff by callirtg
992-2104.
.

., '
VEIIUIS
.MEMOIIAL HOSPitAL ,., .

·WE IEPlllllL' MAlES

IIOME
ENTERTAINMENT (ENI£1
391 MST MAIN STilET
PO.IOY, OliO
"2-3524
_...__

__

I

·~ 15

lart

•
'·

••••rial Dllwt, •••.,.,, ..... .
992-1104.
'

SAVE 20c

•

SAVE 30¢

Regular·Diapers

:

. ''

..
.
.'

.

.

.'• .
r

•

'

· ,,... ,
'· " " " ' oOD

•

'

,,

SAVE 20c

Gas Can·

Fix~
12 Oz.

'

.
'

.

cooF

t

.

•

20 Lb.
Ba
·g
·

SAVE

Ct. Large

Joe

48 Ct. Medium

SAVE
$1.00

497 General Hartinger Pkwy., Middleport,. 08
28th St. &amp; Jackson Ave., Point Pleasant, WV
Route 7 &amp;35, Kanauga, 08
279 West Main St., P~meroy, OH
509 Jackson Pk. Rt. 35, Gallipolis, 08 ·
801 2·nd Ave., Gallipolis, OH ·.·
SUHIDIARY

ASHLAN,D OIL, INC.

�ports

.Graveyards
·~threatened

---- --

POMEROY -Two bills before
tbe ObiQ Legislature threaten the
prewrvatlon of remains In local
graveyards.
That ls the charge of Keith D.
Aahley, ti'IIBiee of the Ohio
Genealorlcal Society for Meigs
Couuty and c halnnan or the
Meigs County First Famllles of
Ohio.
.
Aahley says that House Bill720 ,
and Senate Btll 244 would "allow
for a state·btred archeologist to
excavate any place where burial
over 50 years agO ·took place."
1be Ohio Genealogical Society
of which the Meigs County
·G enealogical Society Is a chapter
says thla law bas overloo.ked one
major problem, according to
Ashley .
.
· "Most currently operating
. cemeteries have burials more
iban. 50 years old. Many of
today's senior · citizens have
parents or grandparents who fit
·!his criterion. U these bills pass,
this means that the State of Ohio
·can come Into any c.e metery and
dig up a person for whatever
purpose It deems necessary,"
Ashley said.
1be Genealogical Society trus·
tee further pointed out that since
genealogical societies are not
permitted by law to engage In
anY lobbYing as organlza,tlons,
they want the public to be aware
and act through their local
· legislators. Ashley .sUggested
that comments on the bills be
directed to Rep. Mary Abel or
Sen. Jan Michael Long.
Hearings are currently being .
held on the two bills, Ashley said.

Olildren's
Dental Month
to be noted
GALLIPOLIS - The' month of
February 1990 marks the 41st
observance or the National Child·
ren's Dental Health Month with
!he national theme, ''Smlle,
America! There's Magic In Your

·

· . National Children's Dental
Health Month began In 1941 as a
local observance In Cleveland
and Akron, Ohio. It became a
riatloaal pi'Oifam In 1949 and was
obser-ved In a single day. In 1955,
the obeervance was extended to a
~k. and bY 1981 to· a month.
Through this anpual . observ,nce, state and local ·socletJes·
focus attention on the lmpor·
lance of dental health through a
variety of community-based programs and activities.
The Rehwlnkle Dental Society
will spousor li wide range of
dental health activities throughout the month of February,
Including
drawing contest,
school presentations, educa tional messages will be promoted
by using handouts and distributIng posters, Children' s Dental
Health bookmarks will be avalla·
ble for . use at the Bossard
Memorial Library and the BoOk·
mobile, according to the Gallla
County National Children's Dental Health Month Chairman Dr.
Johnna' .Jorgeusen.
·
"Tbll month provides us with
the opportunity to get our message to as many, people as
possible," Jorgensen sal.ld.
"Prevention Is a matter of
education, and we want to
provide learning experiences
that are both fun and
Informative."
A healthy smile Is Important to
a person's emotional and physical well-being, she said. Four
steps to preserving dental health
are: brushing and flossing dally,
dally use or fluoride, a balanced
diet with a minimum of between·
meal snacks, and regular dental
villlts.

We Reserve The
·Limit Quantities

, RIO GRANDE - The Unlver- set by the Redmen on Dec. 7,1984
_slty of Rio Grande men's basket- durlng .the Bevo Francis Classic
ball team shot from the tbreeover . Edward Waters (Fla;).
.poln( range often and to · Coach John Lawhorn's club
maximum effect Friday during came the closest to topping It on
·Holzer Clinic Night when it
Nov. 24, 1987 when It Scored 124
defeated Lake Erie 140-85 and set .over Bluffton.
·
a ilew Lyne Center reC!Ird for the
The standlne Rio Grande remost number of points scored cord In any game Is 150, estabthere.
lished Jan. 9, 1953 over Asbland
. T)le previous record, 125, was
(Ky.) Junior College. Scoring 116

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH·,
PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., FEB. 4 THRU SAT.,,FEB. H),

the

1000.

COUNTRY STYLE

S.p.are Ribs ••••••••••••
)/
p
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4
9
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TYSO~ ~~OZEN C•HI~KEN BR~~~Toz. $
9
3
2
Patt1es/ Fdiets·••• :•:,.•
LB.

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29
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U.S. #1 IDAHO

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2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
NEVI COUNTRY.
.. '
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$
Yogurt ....~••••• ~:!·.~ 4/ . 1
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GALLON

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Frozen ~otatoes ... 3/8.9&lt;
I

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BANQUET

.

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MAXWELL HOUSE - 12 OZ.

INSTANT COFFEE
SANIA

' $398

INSTANJ

$299
• oz.
, hill Only At hwlll's S.,. Vatu
... s.. .......... S.t• .lin. 10
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JOAN Of, AI(

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3/S lu.sv-.oz.

Gelll1 Cl.ly At. hwlll't S.,.
.......... Jaa. 4 tlwu s.t...... 10

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CRISCO

SALAD OIL

GALA TOWELS

oz.

II

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$179

hod Ch!IJ At l'ew.U't S.,. Yalu
IIIII S.• .!aft. 4 ·ttn s.t. &amp; I 0

I

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Eried (hicken •• ::.o:~ $2~9·

;

. -..a,

'•

. 2/Sl .

. . . . At
... s..; &amp;

.....
Sat; -., 10

•

.

a p.m.
against Wilmington, and play
ClnciMatl Bl ble away Monday at
7:30p.m.
Lake Erie (1-26) travels to
Central State on Feb. 8.
·
RIO GRANDE (1to) - Gary
Harrison, 7-4·0-26; Mark Ershin,
1-4·0·14; Brad Schubert, 2·8-0-28;
Jeff Brown, 1·0·2; Troy Donald·
son, 9-0-18; John Lambcke, 3-0-6;
Darius Wllllams, 6-1·0·15; Lyn·

are home again today at

dell Snyder, 1-2·1·9; Tim Chrll·
tlan, 1·0·1; GreggFrllt, 2-04; Joe
Edwards, 0-2·0·6; Terry Farley,
4'2-10 . 1'0TALS- S"/-11-J.ltt
lAKE . ERIE (II) ·- David
Whittington. 2·0·4; Sha11nol)
Rucker, 6-2-3-21; Matt McEI·
wajn, 9-4-22; Chris Fleming,
6-0·12; Doug Irwin, 8-2-0-22; Eric
Janke, 2-0·4. TOTALS- 83+7·8$
Halftime score ..:. Rio Grande
68, Lake Erie 42

•

DRIVING FOR TWO - Mark Eralan ··(00) scores two for Rio
Grande u Lake Erle'a David Whlltln(Jion (10) and Rio's Gary
Harrison brace tor action durtn1 Frld&amp;)'~B Dlslrlcl '2! contest at
Lyne Center. The Redmen won,140-8$. (Photo by Kazumllwue).

.

J..LA'\'ii.lENCE, !&lt;an. (UPI) . Mlchl1an 17, Wisconsin 83
P9lnts to become Syracuse's
ftlck Cii'IRIWil:Y'lt~d·a dt'C!Sive ' ... 'At' Madlsi:ln, Wis., TerrY. "MillS ' secoild all-time leading ·SCOrer
iecond·half run that powered "fo.
~red 20 points and pulled down ·behind Shennan Douglas. Re. 2 Kansas to an 85·74 victory over , a season-high H rebounds Satur· · serve DavldJohnsonadded13for
No. 8 OJtlahoma In a Big Eight
day to lead No. 4 Michigan to an the Orangemen, 16-3.
conference game. '
easy 77·63 win over Wisconsin.
"We did an excellent job
' Trailing by 11 points In the
Mills made 10 of 15 shots from defensively," Syracuse coach
second half, Oklahoma scored
the floor and contributed four of Jim Boehelm said. "But I •think
three layilps In a 30-second span
Michigan's seven steals In the we won the game with our big,
but the Haybawks, with Callo·
game.
guys. I think our big guys are
way scorlng·etghl points, pulled
Loy Vaught and Rumeal Ro- among the best In the country."
off a 15·6 spurt for ~heir biggest · blnson added 18 and 17 points,
For the Seminoles, 13-10, Ml·
fead otthe garrie, 68-54, with 5:53
respectively, as the Wolverines chael Polite had 20 points;
to go. •
Improved their record ' to 16·4 .Chucky Graham 1i and Irving
,. Oklahoma closed to within nine
overall and 6·3 In the Big Ten.
Thomas 10. It WjiS the second
Wlscousln, 11-11 and 2-8, which straight loss for the Seminoles
points, but the Jayhawks were
able to put the game away at the
dropped Its fourth straight game, slnct! the Jan. 29 suspension of
free throw line.
.
was led by Danny Jones' game- guard Tbaro11 Mayes, who had
, Kansas, wl!lcb Improved to
high 25 points. ., '
been FSU'ldeadlng scorer.
22-1 overall and 5-1 In the · . Both teams played .,.-Jthout a · "We knew we ·ne'eded an
conference. made 36 of 48 free starting guard. Michigan was ultimate effort, ... Florida State
throws lncludhig' all15 attempts without Se11n Higgins who sui· :coach Pat K~nnetty said. "But
· in the first half.
fered a stress fracture In b!s left Syracuse Is a very powerM
CalloWay finished with .20 foot during Michigan's loss to team. They 'were too much for
points, Including 12 In the final Purdue Jan. 31.
us."
9:13, while Kevin Pritchard
For the Badgers, Willie Simms
Syracuse went on a 24·11 run In
added 14, Mark Randallll and was ruled Ineligible to play for the last 9:30 of the first halt to
one game because of a dropped iead 42-27. The Orangemen
Jeff Gueldner 10 for Kansas.
' Oklahoma, 15-3 and 4·2 In the class, which temporarily put him started the second hal( with a 13·5
conference, was paced bY Jackie under the 12-credlt minimum.
burst that made It 55-32 after
Leading 5-4 with 16: 00' left In Coleman's dunk. The Seminoles
Jones' 18 points, 12 coming In the
second half. . .
the flrst,half, Michigan blew open never drew closer than 16 points
·
·
.
,
tile ~~~me with a 23·4 run over the · again.
HeldelberJM, MarleUa.:JI
next 7:04. Mills scored eight
"We came out and did what we
At Marietta, Ohio, Tom Gillson . points during the surge.
ha(l to .cio early on," Kennedy
Wisconsin closed the gap to sald. : 'Buttowardstheendoftbe
's cored 25 points and BIU .Dufur
had 22, plus 14 rebounds , In 39-30 at the half, but the Wolve- first l)alf, they took over. •'
i)eadlng Heidelberg to an 86·75. ; rlnes scored the first eight points
Ohio Athletic Conference victory · of the second halt, and the
MJchlpn st. M, Purdue 13
Saturday over Marietta.
Badgers got.no closer than 11 the
At West Lafayette, Ind., Steve
Kris Foster scored 11 points restoftheway.
·
Smlthscored22poin!sandmade
and Marty Kimbrough 10 In
Michigan's tight man-to-man · seven clutch free throws lri the
helping the Student Princes defense held Wlscqnsln to 37.11 final 1:42, and .Mich~¥.o.. ~tate
lmproveto14-7overalland1~·3ln
percent ahooting from the field
snapped No. 9 Purdue's nine'the league .
(17-45) ..
game winning streak with a 64-53
The Pioneers, now 3·16 and
victory Saturday, banding the
2-12, were lea bY D.j. Valentine
Georaei'owa 74,
Jolua's 6'7.
with 20 points, Ryan Williams , 'At New York. Mark Tillmon
with 13, Drew White with 12, Jef1, scored 20 · points arid No. 6
.Caldwell (Southern '88) with 11 Georgetownmade23foulsbotsln
.. $d Mike Radich with 10.
the seccind half Saturday for a
• Radich also had 11 ass!s ts.
7417 victory over N:o. 19 St.
joluj'g In a Big East game.
The Hoyas, 17-2 overall and 7·2
In the· con~rence, overcame a
WILMINGTON - Employing
flve·polnt halftime deficit thanks
a
physical game and a 22·polnt ,
to strong free throw shooting and
performance
bY Lori May, Wll·
a fr011tll11e able ' to exploit the minpln'a Lady
Quakers handed
OveQII&amp;t!!bed Reclmtlll.
Unlvenlty
of Rio Grande .
the
'l'he Reclmen, 17-6 and 6-4, lost women's buketbsll
team · an
leading scorer Jayson Wllllama 86-75 10111 Thursday, atretchinl
early In . the fil'llt half after l!e
the bpata' wlnntna ltreak to nille
a&amp;8J'ava'ted a root Injury that bas
coli~ta.
'
1ldellned him fqr 10 ptneJ thla
Debbie
Fredrick
Jed
an~seu011.
live · offeDSe for ,tbe Redwomen
Mournlq finished with 15 thatp~~tthemwltlllntwopolntaat
polnta and Dwayne Bryant added the half, but faiJed tree tllrow
10. Malik Sealy led the Redmen
whootiJqr ultimately put the Rio
with l9 polnta. Boo Harvey added , ladlel beblnd.
13 polnta alld Billy SIJ!IIeton bad
Fredrick led all acorera for Rio
13 polnta and 12 rebouncla.
Grande wttll 20 points, whllee
Fl...Walia&amp;e •
MIDdy Montaomery J)Oited dou·
At Orlando, ~•• BIUy Oweu ble ftprea to help the oftenalve ·
scored ~ polnta Satuntay to lead effort.
No. 7 Syraaull! to a 96-D Victory
WllmiJIIIOD, ranlrad tlxth In
·over Florida State.
Dlatrlct 22 tilts week, Improved
Oerrl!:k COie!Dan added 21 Its record to 12·5, wbtle the ' ·

st.

INTERSTATE SHOESTRING - 20 OZ. PKG.

Pvt. Douglas ;a. Flinner has
completed basic training at Fort
Jackaon, S.C.
A 1989 graduate of Gallla
Academy High School, Flinner Is
tile - of Doqlas R. and Unda
K. Flinner, Rt. 3, Galllpolla.
Durin&amp; tbe training, students
recetved Instruction In drill and
eeremoniel, weapous, map read11111. tactics, mDIIary courte~y
.and Juadce, first aid, and Army
hiatorY and trad!Uon.

Rl!l Grande' a Brad

· '

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'

•

of thoae markers - and writing
"I think the way Coach Lablmself Into the record books whom played his bench puts him
was Clarence "Bevo:' Francis.
In the record books as one of the
Total points scored In Friday's . true genllemen of tile profes·
contest, 225, are three shortofthe slon," he said. "He didn't pretJs,
current Lyne Center standard set and while I know that's part of his
Feb. 25, 1970 when the Redmen gaine, I appreciated It and the
hosted Urbana. ·
, team appreciated It because
The Rio men scored on 21 of 40 nobody II k e s to . be
trlfecta shots (53 percent) over embarrassed."
Lake Erie, with the bulk of them
The second hal! saw Schubert
- eight - coming from Brad record his remaining tour out·
Schubert, the 6-3 starter from
side baskets. Erslan, Snyder and
Bellevue, Ohio. Gary Harrison
Edwards netted two threeand Mark Erslan canned four pointers each and Harrison had
each, Lyndell Snyder and Joe
one. The record-breaking basket
Edwards had two apiece and
came at 2:58 when freshman
Darlus Williams tossed In one.
forward Gregg Frls t hit two to
'To put that many points On the
place the
at 126-81.
board, we had to ~un our
.Jn total,Schuberthad28polnts, ·
guards," Lawhorn · rem11rked. . Harrison 26, Troy Donaldson 18,
'They ma&lt;le goOd decisions and
Williams 15, Erslan 14 and Terry
put the ball into the hands or the
Farley 10. Donaldson also hit the
peopl~ who needed to have it."
boards 10 times and Harrison
The first of the three-pointers
supplied 11 asslsis. On Individual
carne from Schubert at 18: 37,
field goal performances, Schu·
snapping an early deadlock with
bert was 83 percent (10-12),
Lake Erie and starting what
Donaldson 81 percent (9·11) and
Redrrien offensive ccordlnator
Harrison 78 percent (11·14),
Earl Thomas called "a game of
while John Lambcke hit all three
momentum."
or his attempts.
From there, the Redmen rnaOverall, Rio Grande was ~1
chine took off to post a 66-42
percent from the floor (58-95).
advantage at the Intermission.
which lnclu&lt;led 37 or 55 attempts
During the period, Rio Grande . on two:'polnt field goals (67
scoredninethree-PIIlnters-four
percent). The Redmen went to
by Schubert, three .from Harrl- ·the foul. line orily three times and
son and one each from Erslan
hit on.each occasion. In adl;lltion;
and Williams . ·
they held their turnovers to eight
The remaining half opened
and bad 35 rebounds.
with three consecu dve buckets
Shannon Rucker poured In 21
from the outside, two by Schu·
points for Lake Erie and was the
bert and one from Erslan. Rio
team's top rebounder with eight.
Grande ou\fan the Storm 53·26
lrwlnhadflveasslsts. TheStoi'm
bl:fore the visitors' offense,
connected on 37 of 72 field goal
keyed by 22-point performances
a~ tempts for 52 percent and was
by Matt McElwain and Doug
successful on seven of 14 free
Irwin, took hold In the final five , throw tries for 50 percent. They .
minutes of the game - a fact
finished wllh 22 rebounds and 20
Lake Etle mentor Wll Shuster'
turnovers.
·Rio Grande went to 9-1~ on the
didn't appear to mind too much.
Shuster, In his second year at
season and carried a 3-4 Mid·
Lake Erie, said the team's total
Ohio Conference record Into
was "a blgoutputtorus;" adding
Saturday night's conference
that the Storin ls.lmprovlng.
matchup at Tiffin. The Redmen

Calloway pushes Kansas ·to· 85-74· win over O~ahorna

$1
59
BQI~gna •••••••••••••••

ECKRICH

,.. •

SHOOTS FOR TliREE -

{If). llhooill oue of bll eight Sop~inflllll4 roata ag~l
Brie Friday • tile Storm'I! Chris Flemlnt (ttl attempq to
il jpW'Ciadl_tedml!ll plaJer John Larnbcke ( '1l awih. ibe'rebouad.
Tbe Rio mea defell&amp;ed Lake Erie, lfG-85, breakinl ibe I-year-old
~ .:re.oord Ill!.,*be moat number of poln,ja scored bY tile Redmen In Lyne
~:Center. (rbota b)' Kumnllwa.se).
.

Chuck Roast •••••••• $1 .89
·U;$.p.A. CHOICE BONELESS
. $
RUMP ROAST ••••• ~~. 199'
KENTUCKY BORDER
.
. . .1~ oz. ,,G:.. 8ft
c
W~,·en·.er.. .s.. .................
:rJ; ,
'

DOUOIAII R. FLINNER

•.

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score

service~-

•
OI&amp;BOOBY T. ROBBINS
· Navy Petty Officer 1st Class
, Grepy T. RObbins, son of
Aaqua H. and Betty J,. Robbins
ot 100 Seventh St., Point Plea·
I&amp;Dt. W.Va., recently reported
for duty aboard the aircraft
eltl'ler USS Saratoga, home. porled to Mayport, Fla.
A 1972 araciUate of Point
Pla-t lllJh School, he joined
tilt Navy In May 1972.

'

Rio Grande calms·I ake Erie in .140-85 rout

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
. 8 AM-10 PM

a

~In

Febru.-y

- - · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - ------.

Jn record-setting pe~for~nce,

by bill

imDe!' . · · _

----- ·--- ---- -----------

Section 4. 1990

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cold·shootlngBollermakers their spu~t that carried UNLV to a
first Bl.g.Ten toss.
78-69 advantage with 4: 01left.
Blg Ten scoring lead~r Kirk
But ihe Wolfpack, using every
Manns added 13 for the Spartans, second on the clock, climbed
who rose to 17·5 overall and·&amp;-3 In · back Into it. Brian Howard made
the conference. Michigan State's a pair of ftee-tlwows and Monroe
Ken Redfield also contrl~ted 13 a jumper before Gugliotta's
points, all in the second half.
· three-pointer cut the UNLV lead
Purdue fell to 16·3 overall and to 80-77 with one m lnu te
8-1 In the league, but remained remaining.
.
two games ahead of the SparUNLV grabbed a 43-42 lead at
tans, Minnesota and Michigan at the end or the first half after
the halfway point of the Big Ten trailing through most of the first
schedule. The loss snapped 20 minutes. The Wolfpack's abll·
Purdue's . 14-game home win lty to !!rive the paseline against
streak.
UNLV's man-to-man defense
the Boilermakers, who shot 70 helped North Carolina State pull
percent from the field over their out an early 13·6 lead and chen a
past four games, were led by ·22 37-30 lead late In the half.
.
points tram Stephen Scheffler,
North Carolina Statemadeflve
the nation's most accurate of seven three-pOint attempts In
's hooter entering the game.
the first half, Including three .of
four by Monroe.
UNLV 88, N.C. Slate 112
At Las Vegas, Larry Johnson LSU 148, Loyola·Marymount 141
sct&gt;red 24 points and grabbed 16
At Baton Rouge, La., freshman
rebounds and No. 10 Nevada-Las Shaqullle O'Neal scored 20
Vegas made eight free throws In points, grabbed 24 rebounds,
the last minute Saturday to post blocked 12 shots and fueled a 14·3
an 88-82 victory over North'
Carolina State.
Johnson and Greg Anthony
each hit four free throws In the
last 37 seconds, to help the
.RuMin' Rebels liold off the
Wolfpack, who got back,lnto It on
three-point baskets bY Tom Gu·
gllotta and Rodney Monroe.
•.
The Wolfpack, who dropped to
15-6 were led bY Monroe's 31
,
points. ,
The Runnln' ·Rebels; 16-4, who
bad trailed 69-68 with 7: 32 left,
!limed to a smothering zone ·
defense that quickly converted
Wolfpack turnovers Into a 10-0

surge ln. overtime Saturday to
bring No. 13 Louisiana State a ·
wild i48-141 win over LoyolaMarymount.
The Lions rallied from a
12-polnt de!l'lt In the final six
minutes of regulation and had a
chance to win In the final seconds .
only to let the Tigers escape Into
an extra periO(I.
Loyola-Marymount scored the;
first four points of overtime and ·
then wilted under an LSU rush·
that boosted theTlgers' record to:
16-4. The Lions are also 16-4.
.
The 148 poln ts were the most;
ever seared by an LSU team and ,
their 61 field goals were the most ·
ever made by a Southeastern .
'
Conference team.
.
Sophomore guard Chris Jack- .
son scored 34 points for LSU, but:
fouled out early In the overtime • · ·
period.
•
Loyola·Marymount's Hank :
Gathers led the Lions with 48•
points and hauled down 13;
rebounds. Bo Kimble. the na-:
lion's leading scorer, added 32. ,
'

Wilmington .bea~s
Redwomen 8~75
Redwomen, rovno started the
weekatseventh,wentto15-9.The
Lady Quakers played Findlay
Saturday and the Redwomen
were on tlie road Saturday at
Wa18b.

Box -re:

WILMINGTON (N) -Deanne

Arnold, 9-2·20: Lori Mal'. H-22; ·
Sally Groran. 3-5-11; All&amp;le Aua·
un, 2·2-4; Suzanne Coyne, 6-4·16;
Peggy Middleton, 3·5-11. TO-,
T.US D-INI.
RIO Gllo\NDB (71) - Jennl
Couch, 3-1·0.9; Cindy Rldpway,
0.1-1; Debbie Fredrick, 5-3-1-20;
Kerr! Kidwell, 4-l)-8; Mindy
MontaomerY, 1-3-1·12; Renee
Ward,, ().2-1·1; Katby · Sn~r.
1·5-7. TOTALIJJ.t.ll-11.
, Baltltma
Wlbtqtoa
- Blo ... _ ......

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�·Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleeient, W.Va.

February 4. 1980

w. v•.

Athens ·holds off GADS for 15th win

.,

Hannan Trace ;beats
·Southwestern 64-50
'

T

THE PLAINS - Athens took Its offense most of the evening, with 16 points. LoMie Flelda bad · 3-0-6; Ryan Smrih, ..0.12; Juldn
advantage at 10 first ~f tumov- but easy soalsearly as a result of 12. Scott Jividen had 11 for Fallllll, · 0-0-0; Dopale Haynes,
0-0-0. 'JO'l'AU 11-(1)-Nl.
ers by vlsltllll Ga!Upoll8 to post a Blue Devil miscues and some Gallla.
Galllpolls will host Logan and
· 58-51 Southeastern Ohio League clutch shooting late In the game
ATBBNIJ (Ill - Scott Strickhardwood victory Friday night In by AHS resulted In the BuUdogs' Wheelers!)urg: . this W4!1!kend. lin, ·s-2-12: Joa ~. 5-5-~
Athens play,s at Warren Friday.
the Charles McAtee gymnaslunl.
fifth straight victory.
Broad Toadvlne, D-2·2; Scott
Varsity box: .
Decamlada, 5·(1Hl-13; Nate
The triumph lett Coach Fred
Athens led · 12·5 after one
GALLIPOLJS (II) - Scott SChaller, 2-04; Shad Patttr-.
Gibson's Bulldogs 15-1 on the
period. It was 31-17 at halttlrne
year. Inside the SEOAL, Atbens
and 42-27 10ing Into the final Morgan, 0-0-0; Allen Elliott, 5-2·12. TOTALIIIt-(1)·11-11.
0-(1)-0-3; William Strait, 1-(3)-0remained tied tor first place with
staha.
Score b)' Qlwrter~:
.
Logan with a 7·1 record.
AHS placed tour players In 11; Gene Sheets, 0-0-0; Bryan Gall!polls........... 5 12 10 24-51
12 19 11 1s-..58 ·
doubletlgures,ledbyJonReed's Pace, 2-(1Hl-7; I;:rlc Murphy, Athens .........
Coach Jim Osborne's crew
0-0-0;
Josh
Wt!llams,
2-2-6;
Chad
a-rves
·,Athens
39 Gallipodl'opped to 5-11 overall ana 3·5 15 points. Scott DeCamlnda
lis
33.
.
Neal,
3.0-6;
ShaWl)
·
McNeal,
Inside the conference. GAHS
added 13 while Scoit Stricklin and
played Point Pleasant at home
Shad Patterson each had 12.
· Saturday night. Meigs played at
· The Bulldogs hit 23 of 44 field ,
·,
Athens.
goal attempts (52 ·percenl) and
"You might say the key to cashed In on 11 of 16 charity
Athens' victory was our e3.1:ly
tosses. AHS had 10 personals, 19
. turnovers," said Osborne. After
rebounds, six by DeCamlnda and
the poor Blue Devil start, GAHS
five by big Nate Schaller, and
played AHS on even terms the committed 11 turnovers.
remaining three periods, but the
Gallipolis coMected on 22 of 46
damage was .too much for the
field goal attempts tor (47
Galllans to .overcome. ·
percent) andwas2of5atthellne.
Osborne said, however, " Our The Galllans had 17 personals,18
boys didn't quit. We finally , rebounds, four by .McNeal and
started doing In a game what
three by Smith. The Galllans has
; we've been working, on In prac14 ·turnovers, 16 assists, nine by
' lice," he continued, referring to
Josh'Wllllams, and 11 steals, four
the Galllans. play In the final
by William Strait.
quarter when they' outscored the .
GAHS placed two 'p layers In
horne team, 24-16, and commit: double ligures. Ryan Smith had
ted only one turnover.
12 aqd Strait added 11.
Gibson said, "You know you
Athens reserves rallied ttom a
won't be able to;&gt; do a lot otthlngs 13-8 halftime deficit to edge the
you normally do when you play
Blue Imps, 39-33. GAHS led 33-32
one of Coach Osborne's teams.
With 53 seconds lett, but failed to
We like to set up and down the cash In on several scoring
floor, and they wouldn't let us do opportunities. AHS won It at the
that tonight," he added. ·
foul line In the closing seconds .
TheGalllanskeptAthensoutof
Scott Hlllklrk led the. Bullpups'

wuu-

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• • '

JACKSON - Warren Local
' The 13-4 Chiefs drilled &amp;even
remains In the hunt for possible tllree-point shois, Including four
.SEOAL honors by virtue of a by,Shawn Allender and tllree by
73-59 . triumph over the Jackson
Ironmen Friday night.
The victory ups the Warriors'
records to 14-4 and 7·2 In league
(8EO,Oppoaeals)
play as they tralll.e ague leading
(AIJ.Gamea)
Logan and Athens by one game TEAM
W L
P ' OP
with two loop contests Athens ...... ......... 15 1 1133 . 900
remaining,
. Portsmouth ....... 13 2 1265 978
Friday's win· was easy as the Wheelersburg: .... 12 3 997 680
Warriors led by quarter scoures Warren ........... ,.. 14 ' 1298 1129
of 21-8, 45-26, and ~9-41, even · Logan ................ 13 4 1218 1035
though Jackson drtlled s!J( three ~utb Polnt ........ ll 4 1051 971
point goals.
Greenfield .. , ...... 12 , 5 961 794
Curt Plummer led the way with Waverly ..... ,'...... Jl 5 959 791
20 points, Including one trey with Chesapeak~ ..: .... 10 . 7 1136 10~
Larry Ryan adding 13 more Southern............ 9 · 7 1111 998
· coming ott the bench.
Pt. Pleasant ...... 6 8 843 893
Clayton Valentine and Steve VIIitOil .... .. .. .... ... 7 9 984 943
Walburn accounted tor ·40 of GalUPOlls. ........... 5 11 804 923
· Jackson's points as Valentine Marietta ............ 2 14 928 1054
scored 21 points, with a pair of Jackson ............. 2 14 856 1055
treys, and Walburn swished
~AL. VARSITY
· three trltectas enroute to a 19 TEAM
.W L
P OP
point effort.
Logan. ........... 7 1 590 463
• The · Warriors hit 27 of :50 Athens .... ,.,;,,. 7 · 1 538 461
• fielders, made 15 of 33 at tlie line, Warren .......... 6 2 543 497
: and pulled down 43 rebounds with Gallipolis....... 3 5 397 455
Jackson ......... 1 7 '408 539
: Kevin Fausnaugh getting 1'1.
• The Ironmen dOWned 23 ot 68 Marlet&lt;a ........ 0 8 440 501
:· noor .attempts, converted seven TOTAL'!
24 24 !916 2916
· ot nine charity shots, and had 32
Friday's acores:
·rebounds with Walburn and Athens 58 Qalllpolis 51
; Valentine each grabbing eight. · Logan 80 Marietta 67
. WARREN (73) - Scott Mil- Warren Local 73 Jackson 59 •
. chem 5-0-10; Curt Plummer
: 7-1·3~20; Jert Ontko 2-2-6; Kevin
8EOAL RESERVES
·w. L P OP
TEAM
: Fausnaugh 2-4-8; Rick Rhodes
· 2-1-5; Brian Bowe 0-3-3; Steve Galllpoll8 ....... 6 2 361 361
: Knowlton 0-2·0·6; Larry Ryan Marietta ........ 5 3 425 380
4-1·2·13; Mpnte Stollar 1·0-2. Athens ........... 5 3 388 373
: TOTAL'! 23-4-15''73.
Jack$on. :....... 4 4 392 384
: JACKSON (511) - Steve Wal· Logan.: ..... ..... .4 · 4 · 376 372
; burn 2·3·6-19; Clayton Valentine Warren ....... ... o 8 331 .403
24 ms 22'73
• 7-2·1·21; Mike Moore 1-0-2; Shane TOTALII
Frtdq's
resulll:
: Prater 1-0-2; Chris White 4-0-8;
George Smalley 2-1·0-7. TOTAL'! Atbens 39 GalUpOiis 33
Logan 51 Marietta 43
. 17-&amp;-7-59.
Score by Quarters:
· Warren .............. 21 24 14 14-73
• Jackson............. 8 18 15 18-59
: Reserve Score - Jackson 42,
· Warren 34.

Chad Shuttleworth.
Big Pete. Suerken took game
scoring honors as he netted 28

----Cage standings.---Jackson 42 Warren Local 34
.

u

Friday's results:
Trimble 71 Vinton County 63
Ceredo-Kenova 72 Chesapeake.62
South Poln.t 68 Rock Hlll62 (2 ot)
Circleville 65 Greenfield 56 '
Portsmouth 7i Ironton 70 (ot)
Southern 71 Eastern 62
Huntington 73 Point Pleasanl 60
Waverly 65 Northwest 48
Wheelersburg ·SO Portsmouth
Wesf59
Lut night's games:
Point Pleasant at Ga!Upolis
Meigs at Athens
St. Charles at Logan
Southern at Federal Hocking
Waverly at Circleville
Wheelersburg at South Webster
· Mlftlln at Portsmouth (makeup)
Tuesday's games: .
·
Nelsonvllle,York at Vinton
County
·
Buffalo at Chesapeake
Marietta at Cambridge
Coal ,G rove at South Point
Friday'a lUDell:
Logan at Gallipolis
Jackson at Marietta
Athens at Warren Local
Fairland at South Point
Waslllngton CHat Greenfield
B!lyd County at Portsmouth
Southern at Southwestern
Point Pleasant at Wahama
Waverly at W~lersburg
Feb. 18 aames:
Wheelersburg at Gall!polls
Tug Valley at South Point ,
Brookhaven at Portsmouth
Point Pleasaant at Parkersburg
Gatllollc

iiQii~DED D"WAT _
•• ( •) reac!IMs ~0 &amp;o awa&amp; away a Mot liS'
Trace' a
=- B • ~Poe (he~ ·¥e&amp;laer), u WaN-nfzn Brad Br)'aal (11) aail
,;
twr (.,.) erowd the lane In 1M !tart~! quarter ol Frlllay
~· a!Pfa SVA() pme oa lhe Hlp!eednl lleme eo,lll'l. However,
: 'BOodle came tllr-11 with a "'L... e hhh ·~ po...~ 1o p--....._
·
.._
• - -.- _, ....,
Wlldcala to a M-Ill vldory. (Timea Sealblel pbolo ·by G. Spencer

11 1

&lt;

;. .O.horae) .

•

'••. '

.. · •: ' CHESH:nu; - . N'orth Ga:tlla
•
" &lt; ·put five
111811 · In the scoring
·
;•column In taking a 101-75 cake•.walk .over Kyger Creek Friday
; ·nigbt. ·
•
...: - COupled wtth Soutbern'.s win
..,.; over. Eastern, tM Pirates (11~.
;;• 9·3) stand 1% games beblnd t1u!
• : . front:runnlng Eagles. The loss,
· .· ~ the· J;'klbcats' ninth straight this
·;sfas0lli and their 20th In tbe
"-· 1eague,drops'thernto1·16overall
,;- and·0·12' In ifle conference. '
.
&lt;· ~Unl.or guard/forward Brian
, .. Stoutledthe8ucswtth25pplata,
, · J5 "of . ·which came on three: pointers. Teammate and fellow
,.:).unlor Chris Tackett was the
· · : ·Other major stockholder In the
: -Pirates' fortunes with 23 points,
,· 15 or which also cjliDe on
: trlfectes. ·Also scoring In double
• figures were Shane apd Darin
: Smith (14 and 11, respectively)
It and·D.J.Hamrnel (10) , .
~ Kyger Creek plvotman John
• Sipple, who lied Stout tor gam~
{ hollors ' with 2~ polnta, was
: fo(Jowed by Sh8J!e Swisher's 14,
• Bryan Hall's 13 and Sean Den,
:. rtey's 11.

·Enjoy the flexibility of commtting for only 1
week, the liquidity of a CD whi&lt;;h is · ·' ·,
automatically rene.w able :or redeemable at e.ach
7 day anniversary, and the security of FDIC ·
insurance up to $100,000. yet earlz at !I rate
normally found with much longer term CO's.

Top Prleesl

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• • prlnclpt• wll be expllinad In oompl... delell In •

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free - • !If orlent.tlon lectu,..IOhadulad beloW.
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•BRAKES •TUNE-UPS
•MINOR REPAIRS II
,

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110 GRA*, OliO '

February&amp;, 9 &amp; 10

9a.m.to5p.m.
We're ...~nlng Protect Yourself.
out •oors · Purcha-.• any huilcling
acrost fn. ·c·l\litnciing or
the co•ntry. ;uf«&lt; on l&lt;lnwuy t ,r;

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Daily doclr prizes.
Rebeslunents served.
Call today to ta~e
· advantage of our hesl
prices oflhe year now

Steven Reynolds and Brian
1 gt d e G
• tta k
enn n on rov
races a c

.w ith offensive efforts of 21 and 20
Mints, resJI!!ctlvely.
The Defenders will return to
Gallipolis to host Souihwestern
on Tuesday.
l$00re by quarters .
aves •
20 23 20 14 77
............
Grace ............ 26 18 16 23-83
GRA.CE (83) - Reynolds 7-1-4·
21; Pen!llnl!on 9-0·2-20; .Davis
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TOTALII "- u-t·lNI
Free lbnwl- 10-21 (47.6%)'
OBI() VAU.BY (Tl) _ Hill
S-4-3-31; . Hall 4-4-!1-20; · Wl'IIY
6-0-0-.12: v•at're :lr0''-7; Ra·
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OFFICE 1606) 921·3906

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Free dlnwl- 4·9 (44:4%)
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. HUN'l'INGTQN. W.Va.
• Grace ·ChrltUan survived a
• court-h'-h 31-potnt perto.'r mance·
•
' from junior guard Dax Hill to
· poilt an 83-77 comeback victory
over bhlo Valley Christian Ffl·
• day night.
•
The Defenders, 5-8 overall,
also got a &amp;olld game from junior
guitrd Benton Hall, who scored 20 ·.
and "pta~d the best game of the
season,'' said OVCS coach Wll·
!lam Aabury. "He's comma illlve,,
. fo~~:-~render's tell behind by
·
. ; .. six at the elld otthe flntquar11er,
but Hill and Hall got IOIIIe help
from Junior guard Greg Wray to
., cut Grace's le!ld to one ,a t ,the
halt. In round lbree, the BuCkeyes erased the deficit and led
63-80 a.t the end ot the frame, but
off-target passing, poor shot
sel~tlon and other various mental mistakes were cited i1Y
Asbury as reasons for Ohio
Valley's downfallln the lastthree
minutes of the game.

. •The Bank That Makes Things HaPPen.

Corner of Third

0

~

TI-lE CENTRAL TRUSTCOMPI\NY

CliiOIL SNOWDEN

11

~ i Grace Christian hands:.·.
.~. Def~d~rs 83--77·1oss · :.

p01 id (u pr incipal ~nd comp(~nded week ly. Races dfl"Ctive Jan. 19, 1990, and
subjt:et tu ch.ihge without nmice. Yield assumes rhoir scared rate remains runsranr
for a fu ll year ~ith nu wirhdrawal.s of interest ur pi'in("ipal. ·

P'

real value

•

, '~~n
.· n' . ~· .· .
.,..

Noi'ti!Gall\!1 ... 9' '3 . , 898 773
Hannan 'Trace ~ . 6, F~ 679
0
S-Valley .... , .... 5 6 6p5 722
. ..
.
: Continued from C-2
Southwestern .: 4 8 831 833
IUII1dote the Buca uaed to chase • Suerken.
3 8 660
' 7.84
_.._ th lr third
bl ba
Oak Hill .. .... .. . '
.
. a ...
y
~
·
·quar~r
a
.
In
the
reserve
contest
Logan
K
c
k
o.
12
~
In th
yger ree . ..
.;:;; · 1 929
Mf•·h e reser:ve game, trtbe downed MarJetta 51-43 to drop the · TOTAL'! .......... 48 41 ""' 1088
... .lpmen got 31 pplnts om Tlaers Into a se,cond place 'tie
, .
Ch·a rlel Peck to post ·a 49-20 with Athens behind league,
(Reserves) r'0 1· .
victory over the Bobcats, their leadlng·Ga~lis .
TEAM
w. L ff' PA
g: •~,:~ ~~~games. ' JkmSeore.
N.-GaiUa .... ... 11 1 ~~- 442
•
In
e.
ats wltb
MARIE'fl'A (I~) ..,.-Mike Hut· Southern ......... lO 1 ,$111' ~
. $,x W t:s. •
· frpan 7-1-0-7; Rich Slley 1·0·2; · Hannan Trace 7 5 '826 455
- '!'he~~~ will be Idle un\11 . ~ad).lncoln 1·1-0-5; olosh McKI·
Oak''Hill ......... 6 5 . ~93 '476
~xt
I . ...s gamTue sdal Hanna11 t :eli 4-1-91 JeftSmltll1-0-2;-Pete
S.Valley .~ ....... 6 !I , ~~ 449
uac&amp;, w111""on
e ay . n 1ght . Suer!ren 11-&amp;:28; Jett Hunsaker Southwestern .. 3 • 9 4~ 565
the Bobcat&amp;
Jeremy· Stutler 3·0·6: To- E, astern.......... . 2 9 ....,
527·
vWill play Waharna at . 4"'-8·,
-v
~
,_.on, . · a.
,
TALS 21·Z.1'-I'J . . '
Kyger Creek ... 1 i1 1·3;18 · 554
NSOI~~~ilfla&amp;rCaJ;! n
29- '
·t, LOGAN (80)'~ - ShaWn AI- TOTAJ..It ... : .... :.4&amp; '48 3U't·8817
101 , leader 2-4-4·20i Chad Stiverson
or,.. uaiita ......... ~ 2 25
,
,.
, ,, '
' •
Kyger Creiek.....21 16 14 2'- 75 '· a-:8-6; J.R. Cordle 3-4-10; Ian •
., , Frlil8f~• .-...._~4 i
. No&amp;'m GAU.IA (111) -Stout - lllddlebarger 1-0·2; Chad Dennla Southern 71, Eastern s~ .. ~ •·
'-5-2.211: · Tackett 4-5-0-23; S. 3'-2·8i Chad Shu't;Ueworth 0·3-0-9;
Hannan Trace 64, Soutllwestern
Smltb 5-1-1-14; D. Srnith·H-0.11; . Jim Redd 7-1-15; Trevor Unger 50
.
~ ',
Hammel 5·0.0·10; Fuller 0-2.0.6; • 4-2·10. TOTALS 23-'7-13-80.
North Gallla 101, Kyser d eek 75
'J'wyman 0.1-3-6; CanadY 2-11-0-4;
; Seore bJ qaarlers:
Symmes Valk!y 64, Oak 'f!.I,U 61
· Hunt 1-0-0-2. TOTALS - 11-111-6- Matletta ............ 12 16 17 22-67
Tuesday's lUDell ,
~01
· LOgan............. .., 18 20 ·19 23-80
Hannan.'ftace at Fairland· ~~
Fleldaoals- .39-84(46.4%)
t ' Reserve Score- Logan ~1. KygerCreekatWahama o
Foullhols..:.. 6-9 (66.7%)
Marietta 43
Southwestern at OVCS
\ ~
Rel!oaacl8 - · 31 ·
!
,.
Blooked llheCa - 1
·
Asllllta - 19
'~
SleU.- 3
'·:•
Tllmo\lel'a- 14 .
.
, .
Kl'GitB CREEK (75)- Sipple ·
11~~25; Swtsher 2·3;1;14; Hal)
6-0-1-13; .Denney 3-0-5-11; Btr&lt;!h·
field 1-0-4-6; Polcyn 1-0-1'3; Kingery 1-0-().2; M. VIllanueva 0-0-I·
1. TOTALS -15-3-18-71
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- ,..__ w

"They were popping us In our
zone In thdlrst half, but 'when we
' went to man dt!tense, we held
~ them to 14 points In the third
· quarter," said North Gallla
skipper Tom Riccardi of the

Allstate announces

Logan 841 Martelli 6'7
LOGAN - The \989-90 SEOAL
baskt:tball chalnplonship race Is
-; still hot !ollowlng Frlday's .slate
:. ot games, Including an ~-67
-: Victory. by the Logan CblettalliS
;. ,pver Marietta.
~ .;. Combined with the 511-51 vic·
• ·.tory by Athens over Galllpolla,
; . ·and Logan and Athens are sttll
~;·tied at 7-1 with two games left.
•: At Logan the Chieftains
:: Jumped to an 18-12 first period
;. &lt;lead, stretched It to 38-28 at
•: .JJalftlme, and took a 57-45 lead
: ;:Into the final quarter.

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Galli

Ga1lir.olis

446-0902
992-6661
or visit your neatest Central Trust office for
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four seconds left In regulation,
tying the game at 44.
With 2l261eft In overtime, SW's
Adam Blair canned a pair of
one-and-one sHots to give the
hosb a 46-44 lead. which was
erased 21 seconds later by a
game-tying jumper from the
right baseline from Wildcat
Bryan Brumfield: After a series
ot unfruitful trips ~wncourt by
both sides, Trace's Dean Cremeens slipped Inside and scored
on a layup to giVe the Wildcats a
48-46lead with 1:24 lett. Another
layup by Cremeens and a pslr o!
foul shots by John Woods sealed .
the Wildcats' win.
SW guard Adam Simpson led
all cagers with 23 points. Swain
connect~ for 16 to lead the
Continued on C -5

•

~:;:ln~~~~r~:C~~~~!::r~~:
:~:n
..... ..... ~ ~ 1 ~ ~~
I
,
.
Southern ......... 9 · .' 2 . . 652

.. "K
'
.
c
'
.
k
101
75
'~:1 ;
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MTS

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..I~N:orth.Gall.ia ~.· und8
. ..

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We Need To
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po\ilts for ttie losing Tigers, who
had 1)0 other player In double
digit scoring.
Allender finished with 20 and ·
Jim Redd added 15 as Logan hit
on 30of 53 attempts, made 13 of23
at the line. and collected 27
rebounds.
M3.1:letta made 29 of 66 fielders,
seven of 12 free throws, and
grabbed 36 rebounds, 14 by
Continued on C.J

dldl!'t get people open, and they
denied the ball wen, .. he added.
Trace kept working the ball
Inside throughout the contest
wlth quick pu-, butto Southw·
eitern'• credit, the 'Highlanders
only letlt the Guyan five to the
line for elghl tries. But 26
tllrnovera uailally have a way of
keepina a team from· winning.
· •
Wlldcala win Ia OT
For the second time this
season, Southwestern's reserves
found themselves In a11 overtime
game, ana tor the second time
they found themselves on the
short end o! a 52-46 decision. ·
In the last mlituti! of the fourth
quartet, the Highlanders were
ahead 44-42 when Wildcat Jimmy
Brace connected on a jumper
from the lett side of the lane With

SVAC standlnD'Ii

Logan, Warren post SEOAL hardwood wins .
•

.

from reserve pla)-er'Citad Swain
J'lal• 8 IHII&amp;aff
Ia that frame helped push the
GAGE - A comi1111aUon of a
Wlldcata to a 13-polat lead at
quick-draw puling at tack,
halftime.
tougb defensive pressure and a
However, there was a change
g&amp;ffle· and perrpnal season-blab
In the wind In th~ third qllarter,
M-}IOIDt . performance from junu the Wlldcata' defense llqan to
lor forward Todd Boothe gave
.slacken juat enOUfh to allow the ·
Hannaa Trace a 64-!10 victory
Hl&amp;'hlanders to . .ce tbe.rnsrover Southwester I) Friday ntabt.
&amp;In to 10 on two ocriPioJla'aDd to
ftlr!!C!'POinter
''We played a godd Southwest· . eight. foUowln,g
ern team, but we put some
from the lett Willi . by, senior
lll'"Sure on them that created
forward John Ehman with 5:48
thoie goofa, •: aald Hannan Trace
left. Ehman, who returned . to
sklpper Mike Jenkins or his
action after his !l~k!e Injury In
te8JII'S ,defense, which enjlbled
the Eastern game on,Jan. 19 and
theWildcatstotakeadvant,ageor
had missed the Sy~es Valley
·some early Highlander turnov- ·and Hannan gamea, aaw limited
ers and swap a five-point deficit
action and finished· with live
tor a five-point lead at the end of ' points.
~ ,
the first quarter. It didn't hurt .
''Though we got outhustled In
Trace's cause that Southwestern
the !lrst halt, we; did better
kept coming away empty In spite
defensively In the second ·halt,"
ot strong moves Inside against said Southwestern head coach
the Wildcats' thick defense In the
Jim Walker . "Ho;.vever, we
paint.
.
'
&lt;
In addition to what It did tor
Boothe, quick·passing spread the
.
,
l ~~Highlaaders' defense thin
enough to allow junior forward · . TEAM
(All fwam~) PF . PA
Riehle Cornell to rack up 12
"'
points ·a nd junior· center cr·atg Eastern·.......... l2 . 5, 1233 1209
North Gallla . ,, U•· 6 1234, 1093·
,R ankin to get 10 as ·well as to
three to pass to their
Southern .... ,... , 9' 7 ' 1120 1001
allow tho •a
~
Hannan Trace · 9 8 ! 1024 961
!:=::~;ef~~sc:~~g oppprtun· S-Valley ......... 8 8 1004 1019
Southwestern .. 6 11 1230 1210
Highlander postman Chris
0 k Hill
3 14 972 1180
Met7,1er; who led the hosts with
a
.........
,
18
tnts
d 12 bo nd
Kyger Creek ... 1 16 •, 932 1292
1
PI
an
re u s, cu
,
Guyan's lead to 16-13 with a
(SVAC lUDell) i
turnaround hook. In the first
r

0 .....

BLOCKS SHOT -Gal.,_., lbanllj,Neal (f!) blocked lwo·
alloCa ud picked off feu Galllpolla reblilllllllltn FrlllaJ'• 18-11
SEOAL Gallpoll delellt lit A&amp;be-. MeNeal aa1 oul aearly two
q~ra after plcklq up &amp;Uee q ..ek peraoaalsla tbe flnl period.
Be flillllbed' tbe aame wltll aJx poilU. 0. left Ia Gallla'a Chad
WllllamA (34) wltll Geae Sbeeta (20) bebla4McNeal. JMb
(D) Is '!" rlahl.

.

11r 0, &amp;PW'BR OIBOIIHE

w

�Ponwoy-Middleport-'-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pluunt. W. Ve.

Page C-4-Sunday Tm• Sentiuel

February 4, 1880

McConkey all-time Golden Eagle soorer
a

early In the first quarter and the Belzlng hit
jumper to pull
Eagles heid a~ lead at the 5: 28. · Meigs to within 32-25 at the half.
But Belpre went on a 13-3run the
In the third quarter Meigs was
rest of the tlrstquarter and held a able to stay close, as Van Meter
19-71ead at the end ofthequarter. had the hot hand In !he paint and
In the second period the Eagles . controlled the boards on both
had as mucb as a 13 point lead on sides of the court. Belpre maintwo different occasions. But tained a lead of six to 12 points In
MeigS refused· to roll over and · the third quar!l!_r and held a ten
play dead. Mike Van Meter's
layup, Cary Betzlngs free throw
andVanMeter'sfollowupbucket
Stan I~
cut the Eagle lead to -27-19 with ,
·
2:15 remaining In tl!e quarter.
(All Games)
Belpre Increased tl)e lead to 11 at
TEAM
·
W · L ~ OP
30-19 with 1:30 left. Ajumper by
Miller ..... ... 1.. ..•14 3 1120 1208
Robbie Fields and a steal and a
Wellston ... ..... . 13 3 1136 935
bucket by Fields with 54 seconds
Trimble ..: ... .... 11 6 1048 995
lett cut the lead to seven (30-23) .
Belpre .... .., ..... lO 7 1206 840
After Tim Baker's bucket made
Alexander ..... . 10 8 1146 1074
It 32-23 with 40 .seconds lett,
Fed-Hocking ... 8 ,9 1202 1197
Vinton County. 7 9 984 943
Meigs ............. 2 15 918 1247
Nels-York . .... .. 2 16 944 1308

T C

_ d"

V

point lead at47-.17 at the buzzer.
Belpre came out In the fourth
quarter and quickly went on a
10-2 run and went on. top 55-39
with 6:06 left In the game and
coasted the rest of the way for the
victory.

Belpre placed a trio alpiayera
In double flguift led by JikConkey wlth22, Tin! Baller addld 17
and Clu1a to'lc Greaor aeored 12.
Belpre bit 23 of •9 trom the floor
good for f7%, anci 23ot33trom tbe.•,
line for 70'JL. McConlley Jl'abbed

·

..

y4, 1180

Pon'.-o~

Mldrleport-GIIIpolll, Ohio Point Plansrt. W. Ve.

'

, lle'Ven of 1!Je Eagles' 28 rebounda.
VIlli Meter bad a oulllalldlq
game for Mei&amp;lleadlll&amp; tbe way
with 18 points otftbe bellch an417
of the Marallderl 35 rebounds.
Melgl bit 17 at 51 from the floor

I
,

I

.

Belpre soars-to 71-47 victory over Meigs Marauders
By DAVE HAR•us
T-8 CorreBpolldent
ROCK SPRINGS - Ryan
McConkey scored In double figures fo r the 4Qth consecutive
game and broke the all-time
career Belpre scoring record In
leading the Golden Eagles-to a
U-47 victory over the · Meigs
Marauder s Friday night at Larry ·
R Morrison Gymnasium.
McConkey hit a -foul shot .wlth
~ : 01 remaining In the third
·quarter to give him 1,079polnts to
break the record held by Skip
D~wls , McConkey finished the
game with 22 points. The ga_me
.was stopped at that point and
:McConkey was presented the
-game ball.
· The teams traded buckets

Ft

(8ee IIELPJU!: DB C-1)

)

.'

The ALCOVE Will Close At
Our 314 Second Avenue' Location
On Thursday, February 8,

'

SvtAMB. .FARMs,. INc.-.

.

I .

Sponsors .

The ALCOVE Will Reopen at
The Ohio Valley Plaza
On Thursday, February 15.

.University of Rio Grande Bask~tball .
vs.
Mt. Vernon Nazarene

•

Frkl_a y's results:
Belpre 7l Meigs 47
Miller 72 Alexander 70
Wellston 78 Nelsonville-York 51
Trlilible 11 VInton County 63. Last night's games:
Southern at Federal-Hocking
Meigs at Athens
Belpre at Wellston
TUesday's games:
Miller at Wellston
Nelsonville-York at Vin-ton
County
Meigs at Alexander ·
Federal' Hocking at Belpre
Friday's games:
-Meigs at Federal Hocking
Trlmbl~ at Wellston ·
Netsonytlle-York at Alexander
Miller at Belpre .
·

We apologize for a_ny inconvenience to
our customers during our temporary
c/o sure,

THURSDAY, FEBRUA•t 8 AT 7:.3 0 P.M.
•See Biscuit ;ri, Gra"v "l.IVEi • Wln.a Color T.V. ·.
•Win a University of Rio Grande Bas.ketball Camp Tripi
•Win Free Meal's •Much Morel

•I

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.

•Electronic Filing Available
•Direct Deposit of Refund Check

SEE YOU

THERE II

· For complete, professional individual and business
tax preparation assistance call

·Lynn E. Angell
Certified Public Accountant
736 second Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

(614) 446-8677
Open 9-5 Weekdays, Evenings and Saturday by Appolnbnent

PUTA
YOUR

LEAVES HJS FEET - Melp Marailder Bobble Flelda (00)
leaves his feet as a Belpre eager by~ him durlllr Friday
night's TVC contest at Rock Sprlllp,' which the .:aales w011 '71-47.

.GARDEN

,·
Now 1s the tint to ..., 1
, _ . ,, ,., Ill tillll. ,., -

........ .our
'*"'""'to

1.

.

'

••'

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.'

Tuesday's action
Both teams will play their last
no!!· league games of the season,
Hannan Trace will play
Fairland al Proctorville, and
Southwestern faces Ohto Valley
Christian In Gallipolis.

~o~:'d.::,O;!,~"

,Y('h•(lel

1688

! AlUMINUM

HOUSING ,,;

24•

Hannan Trace ... 16 19 12 17-64
Southwestern: .. .. ll 11 15 13-50
· HANNAN ,TRACE

OIL fi.TIR5
Fi t~ mc;~1t 'domet tie

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• From the-floor -28-64 (43.75%)
Beyond the are·- .2·3 (66.7%)
At the line- 6-8 (75%)
Olf the gtau - 32.
Blocked 111ot1 - l
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(Continue from C-4)

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MEIGS COUNTY

TIII'DOVel'll-21

Belpre.~.

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r"'' rno••~'"' ....,d".

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Potter 2-0-4-8; Hamniond 2-6-2-6;
· .. John Ehman 6-1-2-5; Sltea1-6-6-2: . 1.
TOTALS- 18-1-11·11
.
. ..
From the floor -1148 (•.61111)
BeyoDd tile arc":"" 1-4 (2!1fli)
AI tile lle-11-15 (73.$1111)

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Rankin 5-0-0-~0; , Lloyd 3-0-{)-6;
Swain 3-0-0-6; BeVan 1-0-0-2;
Black 1-0-o-2: Unroe 1-0-0-2. TO-

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El'BS Bl!lCEIV)!:R - Eaaiern'l Tim BlaNII (left) eyea a
recel-yer In the lane aa Souiheripard TOdd Grtnclataff tries to cal
orr. hla' prorres• durlllg Fl-tciay nilld'• Melp Cowity rivalry at
· · Tupper~ Pial•· South~o won n-o.
·

Contln11ed froin·. €-3
.

.•

, ..

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..... ow ........ ,.,_.... "'_.,.,

H:arnwn. ·.

..•

11m1r n

for 50%.
·
Belpre held off Meigs In the
reserve game to post !I 84-59
victory. James• H()Werton led
Meigs with 23, Terry McGuire
added 11. Tony Bradley led
Belpre with 21.
• The Marauders' record drOPII
to 2-12 In the TVC and 2-15
OVerall. Meigs plAyed at Athens
Satllrday nlaht and travels to
Alexander on Tuesday to batUe
Coach Jay Reel' $partans. Bel·
pre Is naw 7-61n lhe TVC and 10-7
overall.
SqOIN! by quarWa . '
. Belpre ......... :..... 19 16 12 24-11
Melgl ....... .......... 7 18 12 1D-47
BBI.f1m (n) - 8aker 6-0-5171 Bradley 1-0-&lt;1-2, Ryan McCan- .

key 8-0-6-22, Gladee 2-0-2-6,

._..,U, Hall 1-6-1-8,
Wllcolii!D 1-6-W; WilloD 1-0-.1-5.
- TO'l'ALII - II til 11
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PPaomm-~IIIOIVY- Middleport G "

Sund.y n--a. Sentinel

iJiis Ohio p . t PI

nt. w v

•

Area sports briefs----. wah~.~~~-w~~n;· Ex..ress downs;:;.~·...

Bob Evans Night coming Thursday
RIO GRANPE- Bob Evans Farms Inc. announced that Bob
Evans Nllbt has been ~ for Thursday at. 7:.30 p.m j at the
University of Rio Grande's Lyne Center, with the Mt. Vernon
Nazarene-Redmen game as the centerpiece.
Tickets are tree, but supplies are lltnlted. They are available
at the Bob Evans Restaurants near the Silver Bridge In
GaiUpolls and at the Sausage Shop on the Bob Evans Farm In
Rio Grande. Some tickets will also be available at the door the
night of the game.
_!\mong the prizes slated to be gt•en away are one colllr and
one black-and·wblte television, a scholarship to the University,
basketballs, Bob Evans Farms SausageGittPaksand Biscuit •n
Gravy stuffed anltnal sets.
Biscuit 'n Gravy mascots will also appear at the game to meet
with chUdren and pose lor pictures. Chlldrencan·aJsollne up at
·halftime to shoot a basket trom the foul line of the court. For
each basket. made~ a child will win a dollar bill. . '

Donkey basketball game slated

M~DLEPORT - A donkey basketball game between the
Meigs Junior High start and the coaches will be held on
Tuesday, February 13 at 7: 00 at Meigs Junior High School In
Middleport.
·
·
During the Intermission there will be tree donkey rides lor
children who are 12 and under. The children must be with a
guardian or parent.
Tickets are $3.50 In advance or $4.50 at the door. Advance
tickets are available at Meigs Junior High, Johnson's Variety,
and Middleport Department Store, all In Mlddleport,lnRulland
_at Rutland Department Store or at Swlsher-Lohse Pharmacy In
Pomeroy.
·
·. '

Southern...

-=:-=---

s:r:ouYciAitll
T-8 (ianwpoadetlt
MASON, W.Va. - The Wabama White Falcons snapped
their three-game losing skid
Friday evenlq after blistering
the nets for !18 polllta durlni
first-half actiOn before coasting
In the final twoperiOdsenrouteto
a 90-71 Little Kanawha Conference triumph over the visiting
Walton Tigers.
.
The While Falcons shot a blazing
65% from lhe ft~ during lhe first
16.minures of lhe league contesi 10
take a 27-15 advan~e at lhe first
tum before increasmg its lead 10 an
overwhelming 58-29 margin at the

~~~Ben~~=~

offensive unit was the second
highest 10tal in ten seasons for the
local cagers as Wahama improved
its ovelllll season slale 10 9-7 on the
current campaign and 5-6 inside
league play.
WAHAMA (90)
Q-aig Coon (1)8-5-6-24; John
Barnitz (2)7-2-8-22; Chris Zerkle
(2)1-2-3-10; To01 McDermitt 3-12-7: Philip Upton - 2-3-4-7; J&gt;J.
Gibbs 3~-0-6; Shannon Barrett 22-2-'6; Quis Oldaker · 2-0-3-4;
Jamie Burris 1-2-3-4; Rodney
Bumgarner 0-0-0-0; Brent Fields 00-2-0; Scott Pierce 0-0-0-0.
TOTALS (5)29-17-33.90

o.s; B~nt Lalck

3-1-2-7:

Jilllmy
Goodnite 3-1-2-7; John Johuoa
{1)1.().().5; Scott Pierce (1)0-043·
1'bomas l-0-l-2; Troy 01:
dater ().().2~; Scott Jones ().().1.():
Shawn Ross 0.0.:0.0; Jamie Dolui
~; John ZQspan 0-0-0-0.
TOTALS (3)22·1·10·55
C
.
b r i
•
s

WALTON (a)
Burgess 7-1·5·15; Osbane 5-3·
6-13; Bush (3)0-().().9; Hunt 2-1·3·
5; Chaney 2-0-0-4; J. Hamer I-0-1·
2; HaD 0..()..().(); Crinfield 0-0-0-0;
C. Harper ().().().0, TOTAlS
(3l17;$.f5-41
.
SCORE BY QUARTFRS:
l234Tot
Walton
14 12 13 9 48
Wahsma
18 II 14 12 55
Tot Fouls: Wahania 11, Wal10n 13
Fouled Out: Osborne
Officials: B. Skeen &amp; R. Hudson
Expreu '71, B11 Blacu 84!
By Rick Slmpkias
At Point Pleasant, Leron Chapman led the way for Huntington
High to defeat Polilt Pleasant
73-60 In a · Pioneer Athletic
Conference game. ·
1
Chapman Scored a game-high 22
points, pulled down 13 rebounds,
and dished out six assists for the
Pony Express, now 8-6 on · the
season. Chapman had plenty of
help, though, as Micah Stone
scored 14 points and J. .J. Johnson
came_ off the bench to score 11 fot
Hunnngron.
"Talent-wise, Huntington is
probably as g9Qd a tea1i1 as we will
. play an year," said PPHS menror
Lennie Barnet~. ''They are extnjme)y quicli: . inside and lhat is
where !hey beat us tOnight," added
. Barnette. The' Pooy .Express outrebo!Jilded lhe Big Blacks by a 3719 margin. In addition to Chapman's 13, Keilh Layne snared 11
for Huntingron and Micah SlOne
IBIChed on10 five. Bryan Morrow
led the Big Blacks wilh nine
rebounds while Jason Swain grabbed fow: and Bryan Faber pUlled
down three. Twelve of Huntingron's reboUnds were of lhe offen~i~e variety and lhe extra opportunlbes 10 score proved fatal for the

--==-&lt;C_o-:nU::;:n:::ue::d-;;fr::o.m:-:-::-::C::-:;-5;--::)
seniOr dominated the Inside
where they held on 71-62.
game. A Maynard tree throw and
Eastern hit 4 of 13 three
Baer jumper made It 17-14 before
pointers (all Caldwell's), hit 129
WALTON (71)
Fitch sank an baseline jumper to of 43 !rom the fioor, and 10-16 at
pull close at 17-16.
the line. EHS had 34 rebounds,
M!":ew;.l~~~~- j·9-11Mace-23; Ro~rt
_. erry
""'"""
Just when SHS seemed to build
led by Frost's lland Murphy's 8,
10;
Jonathan
Kizer
4-2·2-10;
Mark
momentum they would come up
while bavlng 21 turnovers, 10
G~wm 3-0-l-6; Bl'l!d Harper I~with. an off color p(ay that put steals (Blssell3), and 20 fouls.
0-2,
Jason ~r l~-0-~; . Eric
their lead In jeopardy and stifled
Southern bit 3 or 9 three ·
Chaney
0-2-2-2, Doug Shafer 0-0't heir momentum. One such case
pointers; 22 of 46 from the fioor
TOTALS
24-13-31·71 ·
2-0.
was when going lor the las I shot
lind hit 18 ol ~ ·at the line .. SHS
.6 f the quarter and having a
had 38 rebounds led · by MaySCORE BY QUARTERS:
chance to go up by four It turned
nard's 16, Shuler and Grlnstaff6•
1Z34Tot
the ball over. Tltn Bissell was a
bad eleven steals, 18 turnover;,
Walton
15
14 13 29 71
sure shot at a layup, .but a foul
and 13 team fouls.
Wahama
27
31
13 19 90
saved the goal, and _Bissell hit
Maynard, Baer, and Grind·
Just one of two for an 18-17 score.
starr each had tour steals.
. Again the atmosphere was
Southern won the reserve Tot Fouls: Wahama 20, Walton 23
there as In days of old, and the
game 74-39 as Coach Ronnie Fouled Out: Goodwin
game was a lhrUier throughout
Quillen's crew moved to 10·1 In . Officials: J. Pauley &amp; J. Cross
as evidenced by the exciting
the SVAC over former SouJUNIOR VARSITY
!berner ·zane Beegle,' coach of
second quarter, where Eastern
WAHAMA(55)
Eastern.
·
.·
knotted the score at 29,29 before
Robbie
Board 1-0-0-14; Phillip
·!)outbern went on to open up a
Jeremy Roush paved the way
Baley
(1)3-0-2-9;
Greg RlfSSeU 4.().
38-31 score, complltnents of some
with F points, Illlly Davis,
tine Inside play trom Rose. That
Joshua Codner aild Michael
pitted Rose and Maynard In
Evans each had 8, and Chad Wise
tandem on the blocks, a,nd posed
7. Matt Flnlaw )lad ·10 for
Eastern, Wes Holter 9, and Chad
a duel threat for the Eagle
defense.
·
Savoy 8.
: In that stretch Brent Shuler
Eastern plays at Oak Hill
connected on a key bucket as did
Tuesday, while S~was at
Taylor, while lor Eastern Gandy
Federal Hocking Ia t night.
Moore had a key goal. along with . Score by quarters
Fitch and Savoy.
·
Southern ......... ... 18 26 3 14-71
Delense was great by both
Eastern .............. 17 20 17 8-62
clubs as SHS was successful In
80Vl'BERN (71) - Baer 4-1·
eontalnlngtheEHSoutsldegam~
10-21, Grindstaff 2-2-4, Taylor
and hlgh-scortng Sbaun Sa11oy,
1-2-0-8, Rose 3-0-0-6, Shuler 2-0-4,
who was limited to just six.
Maynard 10.0-8-21!. TOTALS 2!-a-18.71
Meanwhile, at tltnes Intense
pressure from Eastern seemed
EASTERN (62) - Caldwell
unbearable as the three quick . 1·4-4-18, Fitch 6-0-1-13, Savoy
guards P.Ut Immense pressure on
3-0-0-6, Frost 4-0-2-10, Bissell
1·0-2-4, Dusrst 0-0-1-1, Murpphy
the key and elbows, while at the
same time tagging the Inside orr 3-0-0-6, Moore 2·0-0-4. TOTALSlltnlts. In fact, there was a thin 10+1W2
line between perfect defense and
Victory. but Sou tbern threaded
the needle to precision, mostly on
the power pljiy from Maynard. .
At the hall, SHS led 44-37.
The third . peri9d sputtered
along, with EHS quickly cu ttlng
Into the lead 46-42 on goals by
Fitch and Caldwell.
Mike Frost who blocked at
IIC'ast three shots on the night,
also hit a key goal, but not before
SHS used the line to lead 52-46,
~ndlng the frame at 57-54 alter
another miscue allowed Bissell
tO score with lour seconds left, ·
tJ!en with three seconds left
another untimely miscue allOwed Fitch to bit the first of a
bonus. That came after SHS had
Jed 57-51 with. the ball and 49
!ieconds on the clock.
ON ALL
: In the last round Baer hit an
early FG lor a 59-54 score,
,,...
lirlnglng us to the polllt where
88 FO~D hoort Wogon . , . . . . . . . . . .
S1,416
~HS fizzled at the line and let a
·
14
CHEVY
ColaiMIIJ;.
.....
,
...
,
..
.
12.415
chance at the lead slip away.
H DODOE·IOO .. ~ . .'.c E. '!E.I:!!J.c!l\1;1
113,: Eastern, playing Intense "D"
17 NISSAN S.ntra -~~~-~~- -~~-~~.«?!ED ' n.1H
1!11 the way arour.d the perimeter
M CHEVY C•valler Station W.-gon . . .
13.111
matched wits with Southern's
IS MERCURY Orond Morqulo . . . . . . . .
t2MI
&lt;3elay game plan. Normally turn·
lng up the wick to Its highest
ae FOAD Eacon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
·14,715
pinnacle, the Tornadoes turned It
85 NISSAN Sentr• , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
14,4111
4own to a small, but yet fiery
17 FORD T•urua .. ~~~~~. ~-~~':'~~D
M,llfi
llame. As the two clashed, sparks
Par Mo.
17 CHEVY Celebrity. P.~~~-~ - ~-~~-I.!~ED M,lll
tJew In the Intense battle, spark87 DO DOE Ariel Statlort. W-eott . . .• . .
114.111
lpg excltment' equivalent to that
. ae BUICK Contuoy ... : . . . . . . .
· 14,185
or an upbeat tempo.
S4,181
88 MUKU R XII4TI. ....... , ,
15.411
88 PLYMOUTH Horizon . . , , . . .
: Southern patiently worked It
H NfiSAN 8t1nu Wagon . . . .
115,... 5
vound the horn, then as thing
87 NIII&amp;AN Bontre icE . . . . . . .
15,411
opened up timed a drive toward
H» NIII&amp;AN Pickup ... .. . : . . . . . .. .
15,qs
(be goal.
17 OLDI CUtiHI . . ~.':'!~.~ . -:'.~~.\!~I!D 11.. · From 7:04 to 2:03 no one had
H NIII&amp;AN Pickup . .. ...... , . , . . . :
icored with the score stagnant at
H NIII&amp;AN Pickup 4JI4 .. .. .. . . . . . ..
11,17 CHEVY Camere . ~~~~~ . ~-~~.':'~ED H.IH
61-57. SHS finally succumbed to
J!ressure and bad a turnover on
lbe elbow, setting up an Inside
U NIIIAN Pickup . ........ ... . ... .
11,2t5
aoal by Frost 61-59.
18 NIBSAN Sentr•. chOice cif 3 .. . '
'11,115
• Southern quickly ·r etaliated
.. ~0111! lbanoo " 4•4 ....... . . . .
lind just 20 seconds later col1)!cted a Maynard drive Inside for 1
a 63-59 score.
"·17 PONTIAC B_.,tlte .. ...... , .' ..
11,181
: From 1:48 down .io the wire
. 88 NIII&amp;AN M-1 IE .. .. ... .. . . . .
. u ....
H NIIIAN Btonu OXI! . .'....... .. .
urne was ~~ill at the line, where
. ·
Per Mo.
H NIII&amp;AN BtiNI .. .. . . ... .. ... . ..
SHS was near perfect u Baer ·
and Maynard bit the tree tosses
'Nw vtlltclf peymenla biNd Oft $1 ,000 down plut lax &amp; una au., rtllllto
eemontlll.
'
·
l!etween pbues of three point
tries by Euflern. With 1: 30 left
Kenny Caldwell rave EHS ltalaat
&amp;lbnmer ot hope and pulled
Coach Howle caidwell to the
l!d8e of his seat, the ICOre 65-62
l!fter a 23-foot three-pointer.
. Misled EHS triM aDd South'l!rn'a free throw auceeu thoucb
~lftecl the tempo back to SHS

3

CASH REBATES

..

·UNDER sgg

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

0~~$12-4 77 *
New

19~9

BlgBiacb.
·
' POINT PLEASANT
S-"-~FG 3pt FT
..... ..,.
0 0 0-0
Blain
4 0 0-l
Faber
7 0 6-6
Swain
3 2 2-2
Wood
4 0 1-5
Morrow
5 0 0-0
'foUl
·13 l 1-14

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Layne

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BES1'
SELLING CAR'
IN

ACCORD
'

j

'

''
ODOT AWAJms VAN TO WOODLAND CEN·
TEB8 - W.,..Uaad Cealea:-, lac. - pure~ a Fon ECoaoate vaa lor &amp;he
Chllclren'a lleal4eallal Treldme~~t ~
(CRTP). Tile VID trU f111111aUrfuded bJ !I P'lllll
from· the Oldo •Deparaneat of 'franepol1atlon .
(ODOT) ~ Cbll$ BIUllpMn, malnteaance, faciJity .

The.Rareoon ;~ree~

lllld aafety administrator, reports thu lhe vaa II
air condltloaed aad will hold 1$ pauea&amp;ers. It will
serve u traaspor&amp;a&amp;lon lor lhe realdente or CRTP
to appolalrneate, sebool lunclloiD, etc. CRTP,
division ot Woodland Centers, aervlcee emotion·
ally lroublell youth from Gallla, Jackson and
Meigs Counties.

~tary....

BY&lt;WENDEU. TOPE on eartb·I!IUI not be 11ble to exist'
· RACCOON (JJSEEK IMPROVE- · within .. the next .one hundred·
·. I· ,
years.'. . , .,
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. ME"""
• ,,. couvrrnE
no:-'••
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· · ···
,
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,
.Today we buman.s ~m to
GALLIPOLIS- This beautiful · have very !IItle regard lor the
planet called Earth, and we call ·-way· we pollute, maim and
home, and perhaps the most . destroy the very thing so very
beautiful ot all eternal existence
essential to our lives. · ·
Is In grave danger of becoming~
They are fresh clean air, soU
death trap. to all existence. thatprooucestbeloodthatweeat
Mankind, animals, plant life and ·· and water we drink. Even as this
all living tblnga tha~ are living on Is written there has already been
Its surface or beneath Its surface world wtde destruction or some
today are In danger.
· 50 species of animals, 40 species
· Ifthlsdestructlonandpollution' of plants, hundreds or acres of
· or our earth, air, sou and water land _and millions upon millions ·
con,ll~ues at the present rate,. life of cubic
leet of depleated oxygen •
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from the air.
Today only 15 to 2Q wild and
be au tituI Be nga I Tlgers exist In
the mountains oflndla. Less than
1000 e)ephants exist In .t he plains
and mountains ol Africa.
We,orten have little Interest In
these matters since they are so
far removed from our dally ll!e.
But, Raccoon Creek has been
badly abused and when one
observes It today, It shows In
many ways the negle~;t It has
been. given. 1t bas the potential
for thousands of timber trees,
many mHes of excen..nt fishing
&lt;::ontlnued
on D-8
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Seedlings ~Or consenraii~n pla.,ting available

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THENS' HONDA CARS.
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HAPPY HONDA PE. . .~,..
1Q·E. State Athens, Ohio • 594-8555

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January sales brisk
despite some troubles

an.

C9me see.the

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February 4, 1990

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lUIS: Buen 1 t-2 ts. Davis 2
.4, Hively 3 0 6, Daniela 1 0 2,
Niceler S (0 0 13,
7 3-5 17,
Oordoo S 0-2 10, 'ByrDID 3 0 6,
BIICkus 4 S-8 13, Touchan 3 1·1 7.
TOTALS 40 (1) 10.18 93.
Hill
3 0 ().0 6 Tot. Foub: PP IS, HHS 10 ·
.
.
McRae
0 0 ().0 0 f:ouled Out None
Totals
34 1 2·5 73 Officills: J.'IU!:ter &amp; B.Hickman •.
'
ScorebyQurten:
:
Fouls: PP9, HHS 14 .
1234'10t
·
Fouled Out: None
pp
8 9 14 3
Officials: B. Neal &amp; B. Hickman
21 26 18 28
I-DIS

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while posting net sales ot $711
'By NENA· BAKER
"Th~ key to their earnings Is
·the top line (pi an Income · mUllon, up 12.1 percent from $634
United Press lnleraatlonal
The nation's retailers, unfazed state111ent) and sales have con- mU!Ion 1ast January.
The May Deparltnent Stores
by troubles at the giant Feder- tlnued strong," Mangano said.
Throughout the Industry, sales Co. or St . Louis reported a
a ted and Allled department store
chains, reported brisk JIIJluary gains at stores that were open same-store gain o! 2.6 while
sales .gains spurred by mark· one year earUer, known as same- overall Janu11.ry sales jumped 5,2
downs tlial captivated bargain- or comparable-store sales and percent to mi.Ymllllon com'
conscious shoppers.
considered by analysts to be the pared with $448.4 mUIIon a year
'
Despite the relatively ·strong best Indication of performance. earlier.
Dallas-based J.C. Penney Co.
retail sales gains In January, a were better than expected, anasaid
same-store sales rose 7.6
month In which specialty mer- lysis said.
percent.
Net January sales were
The nation's largest retailer,
chants generally lared better
·than department stores and Chicago-based Sears, Roebuck &amp; aheatl 8.9 percent to $857 million
.dlscol!nt chains, analysts said Co., which has been struggling !rom $787 mllllon.
price-slashing . cut Into profit , after · switching to a policy of · Jef:lrey Edelman ot Drexel
margl~ .
everytlay I()W pricing last year, Burnham Lambert Inc. In New
The Jan. 15 bankruptcy fllll\g said same-store sales were up3.3 York said many department
stores could have posted even
by Federated Department Stores percent.
·
Inc. and Allied Stores Corp. ,
Overall, Sears' sales were up stronger sales gains had they not
which are seeking to reorganize 2.3 percent In · January to $2.17 simply run out or merchandise.
Dayton-Hudson, May and J.C.
while protected from creditors, billion !rom $2.12 billion. Most or
lifted some or the lndustrywlde lbe gains were attributable to Penney all dl:l a good job of
pressure to discount, said Rl- strong s~owlngs In homeappUal\- clearing merchandise early; accbard D. Kartunkle, a seniOr vice ces, other bard goods and cbUd· cording to Edelman. "If they had
president with Provident Mutual .reo's apparel, said Michael had more Inventory, they might
Management Co. In Wilmington, Bo.~lc, chairman and chlefexecu- · have done even better In J anu·
DeL
live olllcer of the company's ary," be said.
But the best performers In
Cash-starved stores · hi the merchandise group.
·
Federated and Allied told · No. 2 K mart Corp. of Troy, January were specialty merlnclJldlng the irendsettl~g Mich., said same-store sales ro!ie chants such as TbeG!ip, based In ,
Bloomingdale's '- bega11 dis- 3.1 percent , while net sales or San Bruno,.Calif., which posted a ,
counting deeply In December, $1.79 bl!llon In January repres- phenomenal 24 percent sameand many retailers quickly fol- ented a 13.3 percent Increase store sales gain. Net sales
!rom $1:58 billion a year earlier, Increased 34.2 percent ot $94
lowed suit. Federated andAllled,
now known as Federated Stores
Fast-growing Wai-Mart Stores mUllon !rom $70 million.
Another apparel merchant,
Inc .. . are privately held by Inc. of Bentonville, Ark., cbal·
The
Limited Inc . of Columbus,
lenglng K mart for Its runnerup
Toronta:based Campeau Corp.
and do not report their monthly ranking, posted a comparable- Ohio, also showed noteworthy
sales.
store gain In January o! 10 strength with a same-store sales
January Is generally viewed as percent. Net sales for the month gain of 9 percent In January. Net
a low-profit clearance month by . amo.unted to $1.84 billion, or a· sales Increased 11.2 percent to
the Industry, but Janet Mangano 24.3 percent gain over $1.48• $285.6 mUIIon from $256.7 mUllon.
" What you're seeing Is a
of Josepbthal &amp; Co. In New York billion a year earlier.
Minneapolis-based Dayton- continuation of trends estabsaid retailers should take heart
In the evidence that consumers · fludson Corp. said comparable- Jished In 1989 with strength In th!'
Continued on D.S
are willing to spend. ·
, store sales were up 5.2 percent,

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· BY .CONSTANCE'WHITE
· whether urban or rural, an hardwood offered this year ts the
QALLIA SWCD
essetttlal reason lor planting f)ybrld Poplar. A Fruit Tree
GAI:;LIPOLrS ~ Conservation · seedlings and ground cover Is to · Packet Is offered again this year
l.s _a, broild IIUbject · and fast
control soli erosion. Sediment and cqntalns one apple two swj!et
beco'!llnr a . vital ni!Cellslty for control, Ill' urban areas Is becom- cherries trees. · .
·
t be care and maintenance of our
lng a' major concern as It greatly
Crownvetch seed· packetS and' '
natural resources. Conservation
eff~ts our water"supply.
myrtle (periwinkle) lor ground
Another. aspect Is the esthetic cov~r .l\l'll also available.
.
l
pl4ntlnas are becomlni more
~~r.
': ·:·· - •·, ~t '"· , ,v~uf:! added to your property. .
F~r .'JnformaUoll tont· packets ··": •
Soraereuo!JSforthese(Y.pesot. The U.S. Forest Service bas" sizes ana costll,"please contact
' plantlap;.~re *!I pr?v.kle a wind·.. estlma\ed 't he conservation tbe Gallla SWCD office at 529
- ·b re-"; .. to' , purify ' the .air, to pllln{4 can Increase tbewalue of - JacksonPike,Room '3 08-Corcall . Provide fOod and shelter tor . your property by 10% to 20%. · · 446-8687. Orders must be paid for · .,.... .
wUdllfe,- to be used as a ~reen·
This year the GallIa SWCD has ·: · In allvance and ·placed before
against unpleasant or undeslrato oflerln their seedling program March 14, with pick-up dates
ble view and as a bulfer against
White and Scotch Pine, Colorado planned tor March 29 &amp; 30. Start
sound.
Blue and Norway Spruce and - planning {or your spring planting
In cart.n g for your · land ,' Mugho Pin which Is a shrub. The now.

594·3528.·
FOR YOUR TAYLOR .MADE DEAl ,.
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·. to~acco . indus·try, ·to be in

UP
TO
NEW TRUCK DEALS
,_,.

C. F. Bittner·

retires from :
Ohio '"Power

c~tv$13577
.

\ . ·

Per Mo.

.

New 1990 Nissan 4x4

11~.77

......

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1210.77
1217.17
t211.77

T,he Pesticide Use Certlllcation process Is a major effort In
February each year. You will
probably be hearing a lot about It
GALLIPOLIS - A part of the ·In the coming weeks. Two sesOmnibus Budget Reconciliation slqns are planned for people
Act of 1989 was a requirement needing to havp their cards
that wages paid to Farmworkers renewed. Those sessions will be
are now subject to I nco me Tax · Thursday, Feb. 22 at 1 p.m. or
)l'llhhpldlng. My understanding Monday,Febru~ry 26at 7 p.m. at
Is that tarm wages are not the University of Rio Grande
• s11bject to FICA If the.employees . (pavls Technology Building,
wages ,a re less than $150 per year Room 138).
.
' '
or the total farm payroll Is less .
Three training 'sessions are
CHARLES BITrNER
than $2.500. The Extension Ser:
planned lor people who want to
vice has finally received a supply become certified as private pestiQ! Form W-4 and Employer's Tax ·clde applicators. P~rUclpants
Guide, Circular E.. Stop by lor may attend any one of the
your COllY·
training sessions. These will be
. As of ' the end of markets on
held Thursday, Feb. 15, 7p,m. at
/
. Jan. 25anestltnated87percentof
Hannan Trace . Hlgb School;
the 1989 burley tobacco . produc- Thursday, Feb. 22, 7p.m. Univertion bas been sold. The season
sity or Rio Grande (Room 138,
average price at that point was
Da,vls Tegpology Bldg.) or
GALLIPOLIS - Charles F ~ $167.18 per hundred. Onlv 24
Friday, Ft!lf. 23. 1 p.m., same
Bittner, . or Rt.· . 2, Gallipolis, · .m arkets In the ent,re Burley belt ·location at University of• Rio
Thur~ay concluded a 32-year . remained open this Week. Less · Grande. ,
,.
career with Ohio Power Co., . Ulan one quarter million pounds
' All testing for private appuca·
retiring as a shift operating ' of Burley Tobacco have gone to . tors · who want certlllcatlon·.'for
the llrst time and those who viant
engineer at Gavin Plant.
the "pool" this year. That
compares to nearly eleven and
to add categories will be conHe joined the company as a • one ball million pounds at .the
ducted by lhe Ohio Department .
,,helper at Kammer Plant same point last year.
or Agriculture on Monday, Feb.
.Information from Lexington,
(Moundsville, W.Va.) Ia 19!18and
~6 !rom 1-7 p.m. (arrive by 6
was promoted to auxiliary equip- KY this week suggests that next
p.m.) at the University of Rio
ment operator at Cardinal Plant years' Quoto amount will be
Grande In the Davis Technology
(Brlllla.nt, Ohio) In 1966.
anoounced soon. The most recent
Building. The whole certification
The following year Bittner was Information suggests a , very
process Is often ve~y conluslng.
named unit foreman at Mitchell small Increase. This Is quite
U yop have questions, please call
(446-7007 ) •
•.
Plant (Moundsville, w. va.) different than originally thought.
where be worked untU being . Dr. Furney Todd, retired PratesFeed cattle prices are . ex-named asalltant sblft operating sor 'lrom North Carolina State 1 pected to average In the upper
engineer \furlnr lnltlalslafftna at University, Ia expected to 1M! In
$70' 1 durin&amp; the current ql!arter.
Gavin Plant. He advanced to Gallla County next Thursday. He
Tbta •would be the highest In
shift opei-atlng en~tneer In 198G. Ia being •ponsored by Industry.
bl~tory and about4 percent over
Dr. Todd hu been blply
year'earller. Some economists
Bittner and bla wife, Diane, respected 1n the·tobacco Industry
feel that once auppUes t.Dcreaae
have purcbaled a home at 1
enough to allow the packen and
Semlnok!, Fla. They also plan to- or years. A aeasion II being
retailers to restore marama.
vlalt their 10111 ID ·Coailecticut plaMed at T: 30 p.m. on Tbursc_attle
prlcell wUI take a quick bit
and 'California. Bittner en""ys clay, Feb. 8 at the Terminal
,.,
Bulldlur located lletween the
of several dbllars.
•
tllblng, IIWimmlng aDd tennis.
Steakhouae and Evans Moton on
The January 1, cattle ·on feed
Bllldel tbllnons, Charles and Eutern Avenue In Gallipolis.
report ihowed a plus 3 per cent
Mark, tile BtltJ)era have two Reservations are requetted and
for all were dramatic IR the
dauahten, Jaelde and Lori. Lori may be made by noon on
lighter weight eattle. The. catt)e
Ia a IID~r at Gallla Academy \Yednelday by calllna River Cjty
Inventory report was released
Htr!l SchooL • .
Farm Supply at 446-2985. •
· . late Friday afternoon.

..

111.77
117.77
115.77
117.77
, 111.77
111.77

1114.77
1118.77

"

_Gallipolis ori. ·February 8

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. BY EDWARD M. VOLJ.pORN
COU!'IITY J!:XTENSION AGENT
~GRJCULTURE It CNRD

·

.. UNDER s249

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Dr. Todd, well knoWn in

"

1101.77
1111.77
1121.77
1121.77
1122.77
1122.77
1122.17
1111.77
1132.77
1132.77
1132.77
1114.77
1111.77
1144.77
11 ...77

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Farm Flashes

UNDER S199

0~.¢- $1.89·7 7 ~

Farm/Business.

0
JlJNIOR
'8
POIN'I'l Hay_alft 0 0 4, B n .
20 0 1-2 l, \VeclaiO (4) 0 12, ICnlbl 0
14 oo.~ 1 02,LcportOoo,
9
2 (l) 0-1 7, Pl&amp;e 0 1·2 1,
10 NeYille S 1-3 11. TOFALS 11 (5)
~ 3-134.
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HUNTINGTON
Hornbuckle
I 0 0-0 2
Chapman ·
9 1 l-4 22
Delll!ison
3 0 0-0 6
Johnson ·
S 0 1·1 11
StQne
7 0 0-0 14
Layne
'
6 0 0-0 12

UNDER s149

Nissan Pulsar

•

!ianbJQ.....d:
. 1134'10t
PPHS
13 14 16 18 60
HHS
· 16 19 17 21 73

I'll

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P~ESENTED COMPUTER PROGRAM Mike Perry, llfl;b 1rade selence teacher and
Leonls McCartney of Green Elementary beln1

prete~~ted

wHh the SoU aad Water .C omputer
proiJ'IIm from Co011iance While, District Pro'
gram Administrator, Gallla SW(;D.

-.

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Green Elementary, placed llrst , ,
In the county for the Gallla SWCD . •
Poster Contest.
Dl'nUD
.
She not only won a cash award . '
a ·
~ ,...
lor bersell, bel:ause or her efforts •
Green Elementary School was . ·..
presented with the Sou · and .....
~
.
Water Conservation computer • ·
and ground cover plants does not
program · entitled "Farm and · .
MEIGSSWCD
Include
any
plants
·
which
are
Food
Bytes" .
BY OPAL DYER, DPA
likely to spread or become a
This program covers activities , _
In social studies, language arts, .. ";
I
GALLIPOLIS - The Meigs nuisance. Each should encourage
wildlife,
control
erosion.
or
...
math and science which relate •·· •
Soli .and Water Conservation
beautify'
your
area.
'Information
tor baste under- : ,
District Ladl,es Auxiliary are
For
more
Information,
or
to
·standing
about
our soli and
ofwtng lor sale tree packets and
order any ol these P.ckets,
water.
grl!nd cover plants.
send
check
or
money
This year the District chose to . please
We are offering 72 crown vetch
award the school ol the winning
plants for $20.00 and 50 English order to Meigs SWCDLA, P.O.
Box
432,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
or
.
student
as well as the student.
.Ivy or Pachysandra plants for
stop
by
our
office
on
the
second
T_be
school
and county winners
$15.00:
Farmers
Bank
were
provided
their prize montes
floor
of
the
Crown vetch Is a pererinlal
building
In
Pomeroy.
from
the
Star
Bank
or Gallipolis.
legume wltli dark green foliage
and pinkiSh lavender to white
clusters of Dowers. This Is a good
ground cover plant. II chokes out
weeds, resiSts drought, disease
and Insects.
CHESHIRE - · F.r eddle L . was promoted to equipment
New this year, we have one
assistant shift operating operator and In 1968, to unit
Moore,
once packets ot Wlldtlower seeds
engineer,
and CharleS E. Fields, supervisor. In 197ll he was
for $2.50. Tbta packet. wtJI plant
crane
operator,
at the Ohio promoted to assistant shift oper- , •
250 square feet area. The blend of
Valley
Electric
Corporation's
a tina' enatneer. Moore and bla · •
Dower seeds_ consists of 10-12
,dltferent annual and 10-12 c!Jffer· Kner Creek Plant; received wife, Della, live at Box 150,
ent perllfllllal varieties. This Is a their annfversary awards for 35 Cheshire.
years service to the company, as
Fields joined OVEC on Jan~ ·17,
11ure Dower aeecl blend.
· Tree packets avl!llable thll announced by Raymond H. Blow- 1955, as a coal handler In the Yard
department. That same year he .
year Include stnrle varieties of 25 . ers, Jr., plant IIWiaaer.
Moore
Joined
OVEC
oa
Jan.
17,
was promoted to tractor-diesel
white pine, SCotch pine o~ Co~
1955,
aa
a
coal
handler
In
the
yard
operator,
and In 1981 he ,..
rado blue spruce for f1 or 10 white
department.
Thai
same
year
he
promoted to crane operator.
bll'C!b, common purple !Uac or
white Dowering dogwood for tran~teu ed to the o.perattqns Fields and hll wife, Nancy, live
department as an auxiliary at Rt. 1, Galllpolla.
$5.00.
, .
. The
of tree seedllnga equipment operator. In 1959 he
. selection
.

d
T •ee packe'ts,
cover pIants ao .o.n sale.

Moore, Fields. receive awanls
for 35 years service at OVEC

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4, 1

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Ohio Point Ph mn( .W. Va.

Four at

1880

Ohio Poi;t Plnunt, W. Va.

I

32 Ml»bble Homll
for8ale

Wtihama

BCAl WOUTOIY TICHNIOAN·
-hrt thM pa IdonIa aVIIIlable for 1 MediNI
LlbordOry Teohnlclan to work rotnno
shlfta taU lllihl). Require• Independent

make

All-State

wodlar wllh C8PIIIti111aa In alla'flll of cllnlCIII·t.bot ator t. Exoellent fringe benefits.

MASON - Four members of
the Wa)lama Hlp Scbool White
Falcon Balld w:ere recently
chosen All-state Band or Orcbes·
tra members.
S~pM!ie Halbour, daughter or
Pat and Sue Ha-bour of Lewt, was
chosen first chair E-flat alto clarinet
in the hoiiOn band.
·

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1fir

Also chosen for the AII-Stste
Band were Samantha Maynard,
daughter of Russ l!xl Patty
Maynard. Mason, solo ~ E-llat
soprano clarinet; and Jan tMc:nitt,
son of Bn:nda and Michael Mc:niu,

t:.flll . l'o!ew Ha_ven, founh chair

pe~Cus-

SIOD section.

PIMII~act:

...... -.... .
23 PIGll ffll»illtl
SarvlcU

• 71U,I1UII1111.

Ceoell Lllle, '-oratory Supervltor
y.-,_ Memorial Haplt•l .
111 E. Memorial Drive
Po-iot. OH. 46789
(114) 992-2104; Exten.ion 2111

MAKE ALVSTATE BAND -Fourm1!1111Kinof·
&amp;be Wabama White Sehool Faloon Bud·. made
All Stale Bud ree'ently. Above, left to•rJrllt are

Announce dates for
.
grape-wme ·course

.

Jon Merritt, pel'elillllon; · 8amaD&amp;ba Mapard,
clarinet; Stephanie 'arbour, alto claiine&amp; anjl
u.a Starcher, tnunpel. (OVP pbolo) ·.

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111Mb to
my
frlencll, co-wortwra.

118tipn Club, V.F .W.

HYDROTEX .

at fh4!mc•

CARD OF THANK$
I -.ld lllte to thank
~ who llllped

u•lll'l-ltayn
Holni Medlcll

11101:8 ph

1"'t. .

c.m.r

4W11a County Cor!W-

DALLAS, TX.

1144114.
811d Good
News
Blptllt Church.
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Ralph Durn

2

•
In Memory Of

Lottery numbers

lATRISHA
ANN HURT .
on he1 birthday.

•

We Re~~~tmb•r You ...
We-loved You ...
, Deai, Dennis,
Sabrina, Dennie
Jr.• 8a B.J.

.

Hlo being , _ whon wo
nHdld film. •
Knowing .. folth In God

j :

And tho ntllly tlrna ...
hato- llx&gt;utQocfo

. -ondHiomorw.

Ephnia01 4;32
,,
And ' lw '\¥' kirtJ tihf:' w

GllOf~.

retiderhe.i(&gt;d. fo,..

pw.~

one another. Pllf'~ at
God for Chri.t'• ~akr .Je•lt
forpvm you.

Lovingly
hmly&amp;.

3 AlmOU11C8!118nta

PATRICK'S
WATER HAULING

-llfl, ......
a., c... Conlor.
attoa dlllll, ettllclure. 11-F

1,000To2,000GAL DI1MIIID
Poolo, Chl8m, W.Uo
R...OIIIbl~ • Qulck·7 Doro
614 44&amp; 4016 • 304-576-2311

• . Lm. - 1:10 ·p.m. Aaoo 2\ol-10.

. - . ••• Olboo[ Drop.lno

II :C:IIIIL 114 4411224. ,

Wonlod To luy:

a..., Child Core In

4p.m.

.,.., t14 ... 1311,

Pine Pool, Dyer
· - 11--1117 ...... lo

11

1 •

In thon - · Doy "'
114-.141-1411.

Help Wanted

.

-104-1.
lo on TV .,.., noedod 1er
cormnarollla. NDw 111r1nc1 aa
,__ l'or -Ina Info, olfi1&amp;T71-71 11 oat. Tll«&lt;. •

firlilllCiill

An 110U ll CCilll' IllS

21

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• w11 be
"11M Ohio.
1110 But11111
.........
intlpectlon
by
...
,...lofoitram
1 :.0 0 o.m.

=......--..

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Mllll lound M1111Df'111 U·

t.ry.
;

Ill I1111H1

M. -2 ,4

A-.

DololCltyMM-

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF .
TRANSPORTATION
Cotumbuo. Ohio
JlnullfYZI,1110
Coiiliiatlel•

....., Copy No. 10-171

UNfr PRICE CONTRACT

ITATE OF OHIO
DEI'AIITMINT OF

TIIANII'OIITATION

Colu!Uua. Ohio
Jo-ry 21. 1110
Cuebwt ...•

Lltlll Cow .... 10- t 71 .
UNfr I'RICI COIITIIACf

11111111 po ap 1 sF .,. be
""""'" ot .... ofllao of till'
Dlroator of 1M Ohio o.,.rt_.ofT.............._Col-

umbua. Ohio ullll10:00 A.

M .. Olllo ........ TloN,

w••••t;,
,..,_,ll11.In:
1110. for
Gotllo

11'0¥1ti...

County,

Ohln,

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,

....

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73 ACRE FAIM Ill HARRISOIIVILLE- 8 yells old, 3 bedrooms, grm room. oak staircase, lireplace with 'insert. 2
baths, 2 ~ond s, outbuilding. Peaceful setting. Call Shirley
594·7533 or Athens Realty 592·1146..-linea Warmke,
Broker.

:::.~~ ... wllhow.-~
I2QO

...... tlldroon\.

.... whl• • : : n.

MCIIIIIA
.
··~·5!4·7905

•• En_,.....

ATTENTION OHI.O WOMEN AND
OTHER MINORITIES
Hocking Technical College Is curr•ntly re·
crultlng Ohio women end other minorities,
for a 1p41Cially deslgn41d cooperative between the United Stlltes Dept. of Agriculture/Foren Servlc• and HTC. This i. . twct'
year program with paid practlcums, tuition
financial allinance and guaranteed plac!;;
ment upon completion of the prQgram. AI""
plicante mun demonnrate •n lntereet In
the outdoors, natural resourcea. and tht
environment. succeuful caildidatee will
·be trained to be For"' Service Technicians.
'
0
For more information pilau contact Mrs.
Myra Bolden by February 12, 1990, from
9-6. at 1-800-282-4183, ext,. 2~6.7.
Thlo II on Affirmotlve Actlan Progrom with ihe
·
tlwme of work lorco dlverolty.

PHYSICAL THIIAPIST
Position a11ailable at Amll'icare Pomeroy
NU!IIng and RehabiUt.tion Cent•r. Position
· in11olves treetment of .geriatric patient•
with primary amphaaia on neurological and
orthopedic admlssiona.

acr-. Na,ooo: La.llcl on
11oc1nor cora 1141. 011 111. •

--

_ . .• . 1 1 1 1 - lob . . . . ,.,.. Call 304 ttt

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: HELP WANTEO
. locll truc)i[W COlli·

•·::.:is lddlnc 20

Whi.. IIIII FNiatltll•
en to Its •listilc fleet.
TRICU 11M_. llr
lllft•l• plus llr
lldi llllf••lon. Excrl·
lllt.IMII_. pk' I

• .... I 11ion.
EXPERIENCED
TRACtoR
TRAILER
DRIVERS ONLY
Phone
114·112·7773

2 ......... ...

14iiir' ~14 ... 4134, 114, ... bodraom homo. 1 1111!11h,
Out al· hlah wator. Exoollorll
oonclltlan. On 10x230 lot. Aloa
lnct ~td In u1e: ~ - ~p~'riiMnt:

'pol--....
*""'""' .......
~

familii~ye:~.~~;e:i1~:. 5f~'~~~;

ot poo.lor
month.
114-1113-:11211
.,..

rooms, baths,
lijnily location! Call Jesse
1146. linea Warmke, Broker.

U.n=

()ne 8tary, S lildrooiJM, 1 1r.l

......... lurnooo, -~~~~ ....
dlclc.
I 011: .,.....,
lonl Prliood 'to
oo!11114-jlllo3727 . . . . . .

..-.o

Big Mac!

CALL LISnNG AGENT, JESSE VAlL
592·2466 01
ATHENS IEALYY 59%·1146
LINEA WA. .E, BIOKEI

I Love You,

Real

rB

Jud~

REALTOR•

CA1rli1f \ArltA1f ...................................... ~Ei~-4~:!!i;;;!i..........................................
RESIDENTIAL BUILDING SllES - Each tract,
ranging lrom 6 to 61? acres. Excellent location.
Restricted to ~ootect ~roperty values. Little, if any,
excavation needed. Ruial water and electric avail·
able. Green Townsh1~. If YIJ!I're looking lor an
1dea1 home s~e w~h acreage gove us a calltoday 1
82807
•
LOOKING' FOR A FARII? ~ Approx. 128 acres
s~uated: at Mdison Township. large baon.
57' x120' metal bu~ding lie house. tractor and
equi~ment shed, 4 ponds. Vinyl sided remodeled
3 or 4 .bedroom home. Easy access. For more
delail~ and location.. ~ive us a call today. 82798
. THE PRICE IS RIGHT - Discover the love and
beauty in this home. Treed lot, 1\? story construe·
lion 5 rooms 3 bedrooms, 1\? baths, drilled well.
submergible ·~ump and a circle driveway. ONLY
$22,000.00 .
82783
JUST LISTED! 152 ACRES/IIIPROVED LAND Recently constructed fence around 100 acres.
2.750 lb. basic quota tobacco allotment. large
barn, cellar, spring fed . watering trough. For
location and addrtional inlorn\at1on call today.
#2803
-·----.- -···-

NATURE'S COLORS SURROUND THIS STONE
TRIIIMED CHALET - CHAROLAIS LAKE- Loft
wrth patio dooos leading loa large deck overlooking Charolais Hills lake. Gracious great ooom fea'
turin gcathedral ceiling floor-to-ceiling stone fire·
place, masteo bedroom wrth connectin gbath, eHi·
ciently designed kit chen, recreation room. walnut
trim throughout, central vacuum, attached gar· •
· age. plus 2 car unattached garage All this
srtualed on ap~roxlmalely 2.44 acres, professio·
nal land sca ~ed. Don't miss seeing it Today! .

400 First StrHt. S.E.
Washlnctoa, D.C.
.
Attn: Hu111n Reaources Department
'"

YOU WON1 BELIEVE YOUR EYES when.you step
into this 2 story home in e•cellent cond~iotli 3
bedrooms. I\? baths, family rOjlfii, formal dinin&amp;
nat. gas furnace, vinyl siding which was recently
added. C~y sc hools. Call todiiY lor · more
information and appointment. You'll be Impressed.
· .
· 82787

JUST LISTED- 558JAY DRIVE- Far more than
just a house, lhis 3 bedroom ranch ~a true home.
S~acious eat·in krtchen, family roo111. I \l balhs.
li\:ing r!JOm. attached garage, deckin ~ In ground
pool. Storage buildin&amp; Nice landscaping. Call today to make an appointment to view this exceptionally 11ell maintained hoine.
. #2808

POSSIBLE LOAN ASfUMPTION! 2 sloty home in
nice neighborhood. Mom will save countless steps
wilh this coz ybreakfast nook. 3 bedrooms.lormal
dininR. Must' see to appreciate.
#2782
PRICE REDUCTION! NOW ASKING $15.900.00
_ Approx. 42 acres ol land. Huntington
Township, ruoal water. Call today lor more
details.
·
#2802

-

PRICED IN THE MIO $20's- 411 acres just out·
siije of Gallipolis city limits, SR 141. 5 rooms and
bath. 3·bedrooms, city water and natural gas. The
land needs to be developed. House needs some
tender ~ving care. This.is one you can own as rea. sonable as possible. Call us today olthe tem perature is above zero.
#2792

NOW IS THE TIME TO IUYI Spring will soon be
here · and everybOdy will want this one. Neat.
· clean, 3 bedroom ranch style horne. Clay township. like new, 2 car garage and utility area. Over
2 acres. good garden aoea andsoom for yourlamily to enjoy. Paved road and close in. Please call
for more informationon !his one.
82776

ma&amp;

BEAUTIFUL FARII
home w~h
car.mg for
I
i
modern baon used as feeder
10 Guyan lownship. A~~rox .
rand surrounds larm buildings.
show1ng.

of this remodellll I \1 story home srtuate&lt;
at edge of town. 3 bedrooms, bath,livingroom,
kilthen, natural gas heat. Carport. 211 acres. Call
today.
.
~2801
$33 500 00 - PRIVATE - Vinyl sided ranch.
n1ce apP,o,. 1 acre lawn. Very noce 24'x24' two
car aaraae. Call tor more information. *2784
REDUCED! OWIIEi WAITS THIS PIOPERTV
SOLD IMMEDIATELY1 DilLY f26,000.00. - .2
bedroom lrame home situlled Ill the vollage ol R1o
Grande. Natur,l gas heat. lui basement. large
lawn. Clll today.
12796
A~poox 1Q1
acre, ·newel' 3 bedtoom 11nch. m bath, family
rtllll lormli dinina•arll. stonge bu~ding barn,
40'66' approx buldinJ. with concrete floor.
AbiiYe around pool. 51tetlile !llsh and gas well 111
1ndudlll wrth Slle. Call tOIIay lor more 82769
df4••1~

. KYID ClEEK SCHOOL$1 FAIM -

LOOKING FOR ACREAGE? - This ranch style
home includes 2'h acres, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths,
kitChen equipped w~h range and r~oigerator. Full
basement, attached garage. Heat pum~/central
air, rural water, private treed settin~ Priced to
sell! .
*2795

50 ACRES - More o~ less. Located in SprinRiieid
TownshiP. .
#~771
PRIME Df'IELOPMENT LAND!- Over 74 acres.
Private convenient location, ni ce view, Rt. 35 area .
Call today for more informaliGn.
~770
NEW LISTING! 40 ACRE FARM! - AU in grass and
. fenced. Amce !arm pond for livestock ~ateo and
recreatton. The b11rr IS in good tondltoon. has
stables lor horses or room forcettle, tobacco base.
ThiS house IS not to be overlooked. Dutch v11:tonan
style 2· story w~h all the beautllul, varmshed
oriiinal woodwork. not painted. Well landscaped
lawn and above $round sw1mm1ng pool. Please
call us lor a showtng anytime. .
12804
NEW LISTING! PRICED IN THE MID $20's- 411
acres just outside ol Glllipcilis c~y imrts. SR 141.
5 rooms and bath, 3 bedrooms. city water and na·
tu11l 1e. The land nllds 10 be dfteloped. There
are buildtng ste. ThiS one can be owned as rea·
sonable a POSSible. 1sugaest that you look at this
bar•n now!
1!2792

j

JUST LISTED! WAITING FOI THE NEW OWNER to
have the enjoyment of owning lhis vinyl sided
frame and britk ranch. 3 bedoooms. family ooom
~~~h fire~lace, krtchn wrth dis hwasher, bath, 2
car garage. only 3 years old. Approx. 2 113 a~re­
lawn. Separate mobile home space. Kyger Creek
schools.
,
ll27tl
ALMOST NEW - ·very nice 1988 mobile home
{14'x701. Livin&amp; rm., 2 baths (lafden tub), bui~·ln
stereo system, cathedral ceilinc In dinin1 and · ·
living rooms. underpinned, plus 2 pen:he
(approx. 22'11f: and 8'd2'1. f.lice ftel lot.
iMMEDIATE ~SION! C~y school syllem.
Ideal location. Call todi!Y for appOintment, Priced
In the upper $20s.
127M

'

·,

ANTON'S

LOOKING FOR A HQIE IN THE,KYGER CRHK
SCHOOL SYSTEM! - If so, then call us abOut th1s
listin g. 4 bedroom home, living r119m. eat-in
kitchen, garage, and more. all s~uated on I acre
approx. lawn. Priced at $32.000.00:Call for tO!iay
lor an ap~ointrioenl .
·
82793

'

Contract candidatas wNI be coneider41d, salary competltl11e. If interen41d contact:
, M•ry Boylan
Rehabilitation Coordinator
· Care Entarprlaea
600 Wen Wilton Brldg• Road, Suite 246
Worthington, Ohio 43088
·

Fabulous job opportunities with immediate employment. Anton's Group of
award-whininc restauJants. one of
Washinatoa's top hospitality compa~
nles, has major expansion in procress.
We seek hllhly motivated, responsible
people for manaprs, assistant manacel's, bookkttpert. ceshlers, bartenders,
servers, cooks altd kitchen ttillty peo·
pie. Excellent pay alona witll benefits
and ~!lOtions for a·jo\ Will done. ·
'
love to die natlo11's cepltalaitd be·part
of the ucitlllllll and vitality of this
pow"" Wtsltlnaton, D.C. oranization.

COewiU . .: CBr10b.e~

J. MERRILL CARTER ........................ ,... 379-2184

Thla facility haa excellent ancillary and
nunlng aupport for • true team orlen1od re·
hablllt•tion phllotophy .

•..u·

..

dllft. AWIIIJblt
42

lmmediata openings are available for ·
regiltared nui'HI to wOrk in the Spacial
.Care Unit and the Operating Room. Salary commensurate with experianca.
Excellant fringe benefits.
Contact:
Rhonda dailay, R. N., B.S.N.
DiriiCtor. of Nursing
Veterans Memorial Hospital
116 E. Memorial Driva
Pomer9y. OH. 46769
(6141992-2104, Exten•ion 213

. . . . - f o r onlw
Coli

I CGIIVtlltiollal

co'm~~~cf..a

__ ......

1111111 1:00 p.m. Mondoy
IIi ....... Frldoy In tho City
()flloo, Glllllollo
lu'tlng. ., •••

=
.... Limit_.....,_

Act and yau con be
aubiiutHI In .,.,, • wry
own
E 1h31' 0.0.
flmly . . . . . ~ .....
ocw1 : '
w/dldl,

-andlhonenn
-11WI72.

1--------

lm~YAGANIA

' .... tht celll .......,

H

........... .Point PII

I-IMiliCN.i;tic;81

SWIIIMIIIG POOL
"''"
dDwn? ,
fiiHISU.II

Bualn...

•

FEB. 4, 11

245-5575 -

•

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AVW~ue. CWI~

..Wootlol

NowWirlotlowi-.......

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•'

::-..-;-___::-;;.c::&lt; •

•tl luand

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Will do bobrolltlna In .., homo, . :
lull • Pll!l~lmo. Cocotod In t.. •
Orondo
· Expor'-"1, &amp;_ •
Aottr-,- 114-441-1111.

'!...~~folo}tl~

o6 TueelloV. Februery I,
18M, ot 1:00 p.m. In t!oe
Munlolpol Cou-. Gill~
1161111 Mullldpll lulling.

COII!S!IICTIOII &amp;
lWIIf8WICI

Nlfjht.. •'

NOl'ICE 1'0
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF

Public Notice .

SIMONS IUC111CAL

W.nllo Core fer Eldorly Poople

AVON • All ~Colt lloriiJn
'

1!0rM.

·--·-~Sbooi :

Employm rnl Serv1ces

hold • public
.,._lng on tho 1HO 8uclg11

f11,100. Col 1-

,_ lolo ltr Ollnor, I II.., ,_,.

,.,_lod

'

:111e Golipolle City Com-

4~

114-44f.ll10. .

MEDICAL ASSISTANT

rvwo

minion d

:;t

- .. -·
--I . . . =:Lorl14

REGISTERED NURSES

Ohio UnivorottY Poroonnol lorvlcoo II curr~tY ec- ·
coptlng opplleotlono for 1 i&gt;ort·11me perm1nont Modi·
col Aooldlnt. Thlo lo olloot paoltlon whlqh mOMo 1hot
tlw omployee wll bo
In the dlffONnt ope.
cliilty ore• 11 nHdld in tho Ooteotoetltlc Mltdlcol
Contor. IAthono " Noteonvllolorenoheol-Houro to bo
orrengod by lllfiOIVIoar. Job Dutllo : A- the dtnlcol
otoff of tt&gt;e DotoOpothlc Modlcol Conter wi1h midi·
cotty.,.._ tlutllo tl.o.. uomlnotlon ond ourglcol oet·
up, outoaiiiVo op-lon, bliftdoglng. vlluet oculty 11111·
lng ond vit81·-.lgn -urom111tl .
Quollftcotlotto: An AIIOCioto Dogree in l\!leclcet Ao·
olotlng roqulred;·cortlfleotlon preforrod. Knowledge of
- - oltlco procoduru lild dlnlcot technlquu
with ono yur uporlonco proferrod .
' IUrtlng hourly roto lo f8.42. Oucllno far making
op~lon lo Frldliy, Fobruooy 8, 1990. Molcuppticotlon to Em~ Me~oger, Univorolty Peroolll\ol
lorvlotl. OhiO Univorolty, 44 Univorolty Torroce,
McKee Hou•. Ath;.i;,~~~~ .
A-o.Oitlo
M Alftrmollvo Aotlanllquol Opportunity Emplayor
~-io Apply

)-SII8rinli our Joyo ond oor-

NOTICE OF 1880
BUDGET HEAIIING

I "' 4 ~-r looool1r

-IW-

Judy

- ..

-·
· -•

1111.

wlth 11 ......

Expanding product lina - HYDROTEX,
a mulll·rrtlllion dollar N11tional Lubrication Co .• 188klng additional sales per·
tonnal tO cal on Commercial• Agricultural accounta in and around your surrounding area. If you dellre auccass are a~rellive and salt motivatad . We .
have H~gh Commillion • Bonusa•. Pro·
duct Training. No Over-night traval.
Call 1 -800-999-471 2 for an
·
·intarview.
·

1 Card

-Meigs S&amp;WCD receives
.~uperior Senice Award

Public Notice

AI......_.-. .,....._

*·-

lfi?:M'
11ft
-·-1---

..... - · • • 1 111 liltho,

1

· Lisa Swcher, daughter of
George and Judith Starchcl', West '
WOOSTER, Ohio (UI'l) Columbia. was chosen as second
RECEIVES AWARD -Thomas Theiss, at left, a member of lbe
Current
research. on grape prochair
trumpet
in
the
AU-Stste
OrMelp SoU and Water Conservation District, accepl8 on bebaU of
chestra.
duction.
and
wine-making will jle
tl!e district, a Superior Service Award which Is presented by Lynn
featured.
at
the
18th Ohio Gtllpe·
Both
the
orchestra
and
band
will
Meyer, President -of the Ohio Federation of Soli and Water
Wine
stiort
Course,
Feb.18-20, at
perform
f&lt;X
the
West
Vilginia
eo-rvation Districts. The award was presented at the 47&amp;11
the
Holiday
Inn
on
U.S.
23 in the
Music
Education
Association
Con·
·
Annual Meetlog of the Federation held recently ln'ColumbWI.
Columbus
suburb
of
ference in Morgantown on March
22-2A.
.'
Worthington.
The course Is for the commer··
Students will practice several
hours on Thursday and Friday, then ctal producer and the seriOus
amateur, says James F . Galperfonn on Sarurday afternoon, aplander •.. Ohio State University
proximately 3 p.m., on the concen
enologlst. Enology Is the study of
stage at the WVU Oeative Ans
.. : POMEROY - The Meigs Soil dy~ar Tire and ~ubber Com- Center. .
wine and wine-making.
·
·
l(nd Water Conservation District pany , encourages district
General sessions on Sunday
. received a Superior Service supervisors to evaluate their
will cover wine-making tech·
Award as part of the Distinctive natural resources program on an
nlques, econo~lcs of grape proCtEVELAND (UPI) - Fri· duction, marketing and wine ·
$.ervice Goodyear Conservation annual basis. This year, 53 local
day's
wlnnlilg Ohio Lottery
Awards Program at the 47th districts rated superior, '2 5rated
promotion. Sessions ·run conc\l.r·
numbers:
Annual Meeting of the Ohio excellent and 10 received a rating
rently from 1 p.m. to 4: 30 p.m.
PICK-3 ,
Federation of Soil and Water of good.
Sessions on Monday and Tues·
453.
Plstricts, held Jan. 16-18, in · The 11nnual meeting · gives
day wUI explore the technical
PICK-3 ticket. sales totaled
Columbus.
district soil and water conservat.
aspects
of viticulture and enol· .
- Thomas Theiss, a member of pon supervisors ;tn oppOrtunity $1,577,367, with a payoff due of ogy. Topics range from "GerRECEIVES TOP AWARD- BtiiSiaockey,meatm&amp;J181eriD 198t
$754,598.
Meigs SoU ano!'Water Conserva- to gain new Insights into local
man Training and Cultural Sys- · at Ohio Valley Foodland, Rt. 35 recently was preaeated Ute lop
PICK-4
tton District, received the award program development as well as
tems" to "Base Wine Making and
award In &amp;be Trl State Area by Wetterau of Weal Vqlnla during a
1893.
from from Federation President learn about natural resource
Champagne production." A wine
recent Beef Stampede C(lntest. Tbe Olllo Valley Foodland meal '
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
I:ynn Meyer.
awards banquet will be held
managment programs on the
department
ellemputled "oul&amp;landllll mercbaadllllng, point ·of .
$284,354.50, with a payoff due of
- Other district supervisors who county, state and federal levels.
Monday
evening.
purehue
dlaplays,
ln-..~re promo&amp;lons and salea" during the
,,
$278,400.
_attend the · meeting are Ron
Registration Is $60 a person for
promoUon.
Ed
Burchett,
direCtor
of
meat
al
the
dlstrlbuUon
Eastman, Alan Holter and Rod·
the entire conference ·or S20 a
Gallipol~ Lions to obserVe ladies ni8fot
fac!Uty, presented Shockey with &amp;be department's award of
· ney Chevalier.
person each day . New to the
ellcellency
on a recent vlsl!. In November of 18118' Shockey was .
:. District employees Opal Dyer
GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis 6:30p.m.
program will be .speclal tastings
promoted
to
meat manager of Foodland's· new Wellaton laclllly.... • •
ii)ld Blair Windon, as well as Soil
Guests will include Junior of Eastern champagnes and ·Pictured abcive, left to right, are - ·S&amp;IIJ Loomis, Wellalon ;
Lions will observe ladles night on ·
eonservatlon Service employee
Tuesday, Feb. 6, according to Deputy District Governor DWaln Vidal blanc wines. Winners In the
Foodland manager and fonner Ohio .Val,l e)' Foodlalld aslllalallt
1\!lke Duhl, attended the threeClark, and his wife, Martha, and Ohio Wine Competition will be
Fred Wood, president. .
manager; Ed Burchett, director of meal operations at Wetterau ol · •
~Y meeting.
This week's dinner meeting speaker Pam Matura, Director highlighted at a wine ~ tlng
Weal
Virginia - Foodland's supplier, and Bill Shookey, meal . ·
- The Distinctive Service Prowill be held at Grace United of Area Agency on Aging, Div- following Monday . evening's
'
manager.
, , ·
·
· ' ~ '.
jiram, sponsored by . the GooMethodist Church, beginning at Ision 7.
awards banquet.
'
'

.-.

1ldl '" In*••• f'lilllllf

f i l l ' ' 1 . . . . . . . . 1tll
31 HomM for Sala
Cl•»* ' t on CenM Mr
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oily
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SALES REP
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Public Notice

32 Moblll ttom•
for Sale

REFNET
lltlf111111n'llao91tt

~lo"otnelworlolniJ •ysttm

We cnn sen yom poosent home ·""I w11 can po~ yoo : ;,,
touch with one ol ,approxlmtiOI\' • :;.(~ ~ltealtoslntn &lt;&gt;lli1:e
k&gt;r.atlnns quAifi'!d to help yr.u jltwlth •l!Jht

ht'"'"

'

�T11'1'181-Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddiiPort-Gallipolis; ~Point Pleuant, W. Va.

4,1180

Ohio-Ntt PleeAnt. W. Va.

1o llD

se

-~ -~ '""~ filo(I\1"14E f.II;W$1~

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simpl• wordr.. Print letters of
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CEFEDT

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36

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Pete for Sale ·

---..--·--

~CAT:

Sunday T11'1'181-Sentinei-Page-D·6

_~_

Real Estate
Wanted

Prlnlo - . . . , wiU buv olngto
fomlly -

. ·TRIROD

· 114-441-

Rentals
41

I
I 'I I I .1 I

"' ............

Wllto, Oolllpollo QI2.

"That old waltz sound track
blended well with that IOOdern
H 0 C U L S . sci fi movie," 1 commented.
..1,,...,r=-;;...:;.,.:;..;:;;....;;...--:-~
"Modern!" my teen said
~-~~~·
"Thatmovieis····the
I
1

Colllo .lull
-I100.IDUIZ-3503
- · 11 ..manthto

PROfESSIONAL SEIYICE AWES filE DiffERENCE
. VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER. 388·8128
RUTH GOODY, REALTOR. 379·2821
DIAN CALLAHAN, REALT.OR; 288-A2&amp;1
EUNICE NIEHM. REALTOR. 448-;897
RUTH BARR. REALTOR. 448-0722 ·:
LINDA SKIDMORE. REALTOR.: 379:2888

Housel for Rent

i

DrqCJiwrnd

Callery

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Comp lete the chuckle quoted
by Ml ing In !he ini.,;ng words .
_ you develop 'from step No. 3 below . .

•r;.. r r r r r r r r r 1· r 1
t::J I I I frHij I I I I I I I·

Joe~

_,plotoMUI.
Fui blocdtd, ewk1 old. Cocker
IIDonlol
1100 ooch.
llH'II-21ot:

101'1.
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for Rent
Zbr, mobllo h-. In Port!~.~ 2br1 lllobllo homo lor - · rol.
poy utllhloo &amp; Dopoll, It_,.,, ona dopoolt roqulrod. 114-441-

114·311 8804.

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-gol 101
·
304.e75-2(113,
10
up 114.118 ond 10 1111

2 bedroom troller "" ~~ ~
(Jato) klr -

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Kennel.

PerOiol\
oncl
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Cllow otucl
11• 441 tt44 alter 7

II-"'· F1olt Tonk, 2413
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42 Mobile Homes

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Answers o.n

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Pa~e

D-6

; 48 . FOr Lull

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!~- lloond
llulltlng 1'of !.MM. 314
Aft., Giillllpolil, OH 114-

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2 pto ooloo, 1
CrOnk
PhOno, 1 boby crodlo;'t14-441luy 1!! ooll. Rl'l.,._ AnllquH,

mM E. lllln a-,, P-.
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T.W. 10:00 U1. to I:GO

CARPENTER- DYESVILLE ROAD- Are you looking for a
Iarm and seclusion? Here is a 45 Acre Farm with approx. 22
acres cleared, and a3 bedroom, 2 story house. Afarm pond
and all minerals including coal rights. $26,000.00.
LANGSVILLE ~

In excellent condition, you can move into this

2 bedroom home right away. F.A.F .O. Beautiful modern

kitchen wrth built·in range, oven and refrigerator. Alsoa satelirte dish lor a wide range of TV reception. Situated on two
tots.wrth storage bU1Id1ng. $25,000.00.

POMEROY- A business for sale wrth all fixtures. A.chan ce
to own your very own business. Just lake over where present
owner leaves off. 'Call for more details.
POMEROY - 5 Acres, vacant ground on lop of a hill near
town. Great location for houSe or trailer. $3,900.00.
RACIIIE - PORTLAND ROAD - 2.15 acres and ranch
home wrth 7 rooms, large living room. family room wrth Buck
stove insert, heat pump wrth central air, 3bedrooms, kitchen
with dishwasher and range. Recreation rooln. Lots of yard for ·
the kids to play in the country. $53.500.00.
POMEROY- Older home with 2 bedrooms, I bath, front and
rear porches screened in. Ha&gt; N.G.F..A. on approx. I acre.
$10,900.00
POMEROY- A. 2 story home with a large lot, big krtchen, 3
bedrooms, buill-in china cabinet, nice .deck in back, and a
part basement. $25,000.00.
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. SYRACUSE- RUSTIC HILLS- A home to be proud of! 3
bedroom ranch, I ll baths, family room, fo'rmal dining room,
garage. elec. ~ . B . heal, lireplace, on a 112'x99' lot. Very
nice., Reduced to $39.500.00.
·

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pirk,

• llow I ......,.. P.'&amp;uldall.
' No~ Oopoilt..............
' ,...,.., 114 141 t241. 114-441..... 114 441 2217.

MINERSVILLE RD. -RACINE- 2 story house wrth 2 bed·
rooms, bath, carpet, paneling and in Southern School Ois·
lrict: Recently remodeled and in good condition.
$29,500.00.

L1rrcll&lt;Hldlse

MIDDLEPORT- Ranch ~orne wrth 3 bedrooms, I bath,
elec, B.B. heat, carpet. Washer &amp; dryer plus a !Ox12 shed.
$22,900.00.

51

HoulehOid

POMEROY- Double wide trailer, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, car·.
pet, F.A. elec. heat. Built-in corner cabinets and bar in
krtchen. Ready to move into. $34,900.00.
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CiUiftl.

GU)M..rde,

polntlngoo, • •

PlollonaF.UmH...
NowoUHd
304-875-14110
loby 8oclo Conolieto, Twl,. full

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I pc. - llvlntl
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oulo, eullel,
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dNHirl,
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dln-11,
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....., h•-· 172 milo J«.
-Rd. Pt. Pie-, WV.

271 11'1. .... all tonic .........
3114475-23341.

ola mott1010 oncl box
oJNtnao. ~ cond. 11110. -

BROKER.- 446.:.0008

:tOGO Golklll Vorticol Ptlltlo
w.tor Tonk, Exvot p....,..
..., ... Pump, 11400 lor
IN 114--2451181. • .

IJS.IU4 oftor 5:00PM. • ,
RCA,._ T.V. Voty -

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RENT TO OWN
· TopQvoltty ...... NomM

Al!roYI lho

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pnotfljltlon

potooo, 11 K-Morl'o Pho-cy.
ooll todoy lor pr1oo quot.. 114-

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l11hiL, -.a388.
cholll tT.-. bunk
Couch • choir, rotrlg., - . . ., plolo 11M, t.. ..
,bod, WOod dl-. .... lUI
- - -IVIIIoblo.·VI'Ro •h, lwln bod, 1111. 114-441.
l'urnlt- lit. 14), 4 mlloo. 0pon
7 doro o ~ •on. thno e.t. t

RACINE- Ranch home w~h 3 bedrooms, l'h baths, carpet·
in~ and 2 car garage, sitting on 3.2 + acres. Woodburner to
supplement heat and spring available. $28,900.00.

..,4

...... . lp.oo.,-12-·1
p.m.l1~111.

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PRICEIEDUCEDI :....11 you have been took·
ing lor a home that will give you room Iii
stretch,out. this ~ ~.Features in this home
are equipped k~chen, lormal dinine, den, lovely iving room wrth fireplace, dinette, bath,
3 BRs. The full basement ~ finished and off·
ers bath, ' laund•y. roomy, attractive family
room.
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SPLENDID AOME AIID 13.37 ACIES. M/[
.-Spacious ranch style home features 3·4
BRs, 2 baths, equipped k~chen,.FR, OR, LR,
l~reptace, c•pet. heat pump plus wood, central healing system. air cond., 20x45 pool,
unattach~ garage. This could be just the
one for you if you want privacy and sPice.

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Henry E. Cleland ............................. ,............. 992-6191
Jean Trussel ... .. :............... ........................... 949-2660
Jo Hill .. ............................ ........................... 985-4466
Office ....................... .. :................................ 99N259
YOUR PROPERTY COUlD BE IN THE NEWS!! PROSPECTIVE
BUYERS READ THIS AD. WE CAN1 PRINT IT IF WE DONT
HAVE IT. LIST WITH US!!!

REAL C.HARIIER.- 1.87 acres m/1, and
an attract1ve country style home just a cou·
pie of miles from HMC on Rt. 35. Features include 3 or 4 BRs, bath, LR, kitchen, OR and .
FR, fireplace, gas heat, 2 car garage

BERNICE ·

· Real Estate G-ral

BEDF. OSOL

Real Estate General

•&amp;"''

®CANADAY REALTY

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AUDREY F. CAII'.4DAY, BROKER
HOMES, FARMS &amp; COM~ERCIAL PROPERTIES
~5 LOCUST STREET
GAl. LIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
FARIIOT£: OVER 9 ACRES, 12 YEAR OLD. 3 BEDROOM
HOME WITH A COUNTRY KITCHEN, DEN HAS WOODBURN·
lNG STOVE, 1,316 SQ. FT. LIVING AREA. 2 CAR GARAGE.
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS. $52,000.
SHHHHHHHHHI DON'T TELL ANYONE THAT WE HAVE A.
NICEL 3 BEDROOM 2 STORY WITH FRONT AND SIDE PORCH
, ON , EVEL LOT IN THE CITY FOR $35,000. JUST CALL ME.
' '
SOMOHING · DIFFERENT: L·SHAPEO RANCH HAS STEP
DOWN ~ROM FOYER INTO MAIN LIVING AREA COMB
KITCHE /DINING/FAMILY · ROOM WITH FIREPLACE AND
SliDIN · DOORS OPENING ONTO PATIO. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 ·
BATHS.I2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE. CONVENIENT TORT 35
HOllE~ HOSPITAL. $65,000.
.
.· .

rustic ranch, 1 HoOf plan, 3 It
bedrooms, 2 lui baths, livln&amp; room,
dining room, kitchen, nrpeting, fuly

1525. GO YOU liKf SIClUSIOil: We ltJH1k y001 •~ lu this holo~ 3 bod·
room$, lovely kit., tivina room, batt\ hiS n• barn w/stds. bas . . furnKt.
20 ac. m/1 could be waluable timbrr. C.lt tar 1ppointment today. Priced in
W's.
N513. THIIINIIFMI- For Gentlem111 larmO' ondhO lamilj, ~"~coo·
temp&lt;rary hOinl! has 3 to 5 be$'ooms. farnily 100m, 2ffri!JIIIces. oft ice. I&amp;. uti·
ity, mpound pooL tenoed ln. 17'h 1t. m/1 with IPII''*· 10 ac. fenoecl. New
b•n br all your equipment old bl(n w/stlls. Pond and ~n~nr more1meni·
tO.. C.lllo! "'" oppointmeJll. Over $10~11110.
N!12. NIW liSTING .-lOOIIINGlOR AN llftiSTIIIIT." woo~ 1111~e a
comrurt.IH home fit ·mir~ coujM 01': starter home. Loaeted in city lmits, 2
bedi'OOIIll, ~uhen, lR. I~ lois. fenced in, I outbl~ Pricedlo 1011 intlit$20s.
11441. T1l1s NIW UlltUioc•oclin a-. Townsliip wilh~tplill)oo when
you see inside. HI~ open ~·m ceilings with w~tern tf!dlf, hiS ~bedrooms.
lot, .lovely stone fireplace 10 llv. rm., tlfpel if1 bdrrnS.Ind h1tdwood floors.
:21~ ac. M/1.

room,
room,
,
room. garage, lull buement.
in~ullted, 1 ~ acre m/1, beaatiluly
linished inside, woody acres, se·
,, .,:.::c 1.~ acre, lrurt trees, ilum
range. nl!« re:lrigerator.
eluded but only 5 mi les out' ollown.
n:.,.:::&lt;.;·:pump. tent111lair. Manw
larse wraparound dec~ . We couldn'l
other pd features. Let me show 11
believe a Dut owner wWiinrto sen '"
to ·~. This J'Nt home in onty me
only the $'40s.
low,.low 40s. Won'tlntloftg - ll!t's
"kil!~ IOdly!
,
iiiW liSTING - NICE - DCillENT lOCATION ON GRAVEl Hill
IIDDUPOIT- 2 story, 2 bedroom home. kitchen, INini room, bath, Util ity
room, lorced air ps lur•e. large pug~ . Comfortable. m low 30s.

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VILLAGE OF RIO GRANDE-' 6 room home
and :7666 acre, m/1. Features indude LR,
. kitchen, laundry rm., gas heat, vinyl sid·

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DO YOU WANT
This may just
Green Township, close
home offers 3 8Rs,
ace, carpet. Aiso off·
garage a~d a 20x30

IIDDUPORT DIIIICIADWAY- 2or 3 bedrooms.livlqa room, dinlnaroom.
lute hen, den, I y, baths, basemlfll, vinyl sidmt. u.tra t•ae.lot, privacy fence,
close to ely l)lfli. A real Valuable property. Should be in the 40S but is: now
priced io ow 30s.

• --:-:.;,.J.:fa...;~

. ''= ·~;;-!\%Jt;W;
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SMALL
llinlitHtD downtownhome at the ectge of town offers tR
with woodburning fireplace, very mce ,
. kitchen, dinette, bath, carport. gas heat· .
/cent. air, basement, many more features
also. Call for an appointment and details!

lOwE\Y HOI! ON S.R . 143- 3 bed1oomranch •Ill•, 2 blihs. livin&amp; room,
kitchen. utMitv room. lireolai:e w/inserl, large 2 car Ur111e fhe1ledl. oond.
woOds, mintrlt rithts. good twrtinl and tishlnt lJ ar~ . l year warranted
home. Ttn tllme was bult II the s ~e. Beautiful lOcation. Let me show youyou'llave I. Way under priced in the 60$.

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PRICE REDUCED TO $65,000! Beautiful L·
shaped brick. All rooms large. Eat-in kitchen,
LR w/FP, 3 BRs, Ill baths, at·

BUIJTIFUl HOI I WRH ACIIEAGE ON SR 124, 2V. I IllS IEYOUND RACINE
- E•tra httf newtv remodeled 4 bedrooms. bath. aoofianr.~ · livin1 1M"'
dining room, kilhen, new iurnace. oew llfel a-••e,new satel.kte. ~~h aeres .
Priced obsdutely r~~ -mid 40.. I 1£111 WAUMTY.
'
SYMa.t SE - Close to City park. 3 beltooms. 2 baltl5, kitchen. dimna roo!Ti,
fuRl carpeled, central a1r. nice livina room w/central ceilin£ ail elec.
refneerator, rJOit. dishwashet and stereo system. Price is no"IW only jn the low,
low30s.
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~tHE

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F.b• • • ttiO

FEEL
ELEGANCE AS YOU STEP INTO THIS STONE
RANCH PLUSH CARPETING. CUSTOM DRAPES, ~ IONt
FIREP CE IN THE DINING AREA, BREAKFAST PORCH, 3
BE ORO ' S, 2 BATHS, FULLY EQUIPPED KITCHEN
CARPORT, PLUS GARAGE APT. SUITABLE FOR RENTAL OR
GUEST HOUSE. $85,000.
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MAKE THIS YOUR CHANGE OF ADDRESS!
- Attractive home just minutes from town
offers 1368 Sq. ff., 3 BRs, 2 baths, eat·in
kitchen, dinette, family room, living room,
laundry, ~ athedral ceilings, fenced yard.

'1bur .

NIW liSTING- wtlCIITOIN RD.
- r•EROV - Beautiful n!'K

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4.9 ACRES. 11/L, JUST AT THE EDGE OF
TOWN. BEAUTIFUL VIEW - 1260 sq. It
home offers k~chen, living room, 3 BRs FR .
2 fireplaces. 'ttached garage, workshop'and
a 12~60 mob1le home that would be ideal for
mom or rental. Call for more details.

: . .. cBarthday
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. BEAUTIFUL P~OPERTY NEAR EWI~GTON - 1SPARKLING
CLEAtlj 4 YEAR OLD RANCH HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS, LARGE
LIVIN.: ROOM !ANO KITCHEN AREA.t l,\75 SQj FT. LIVING
AREA, THERMOPANE WINDOWS; VINYL SIDING. GARAGE,
COVE ED REA~ PAT 10, NICE SIDEWALKS, ON 2 ACRES. THIS
· IS AN EXCELLENT. ~UY AT $42,000.

All BliCK&lt;- JUST OFF IT. 35 - CLOSE
TO HMC AIID SHOP~IIIG - Altradive
lwme. in a nite neighborhood, offers 3 BRs,
bath. equipped krtc~en. LR, dinette, fireplace, niiW carpet, 2 car attached garage,
· liS hell aod central air.
LOTI OF POTEiiTIAL- 67.496~eres mil,
on Crouse-Beck Rd. Nice wooded building
sles, rural wller lvllllllle.
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GEORGE'S ClEEK lOAD - 3 BEDROOM RANCH, FUU BA·
SEMENT, ATTACHED GARAGE, PUllMAN IYPE IIITCHEN
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE, REFRIG. AND DISHWASHER,
FUUY CARPETED, ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP. CENTRAL AIR
CONO., LARGE LAWN. $49,900. 1

IF YOU LIKE ACAPE COD STYUNG, THIS liGHT JUST BE
THE HOllE FOI YOU! 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS LARGE FOR·
MAL LIVING AND DINING ROOMS, 2 CAR GARAGE WITH AT·
TIC STORAGE, FUU BASEMENT, HEAT PUM!~CENTRAL AIR
CO~D. BUY WITH ONE LOT FOR '62,000 Uti WITH ADDI·
TIONALLOT. 168.000. HOME IS ONLY 5 YEARS OlD AND HAS
HAD EXCEU.QIT CARE. CONVENIENT LOCATION.

RANNY BLACKBURN

aoll 304-121-1275,
. . . .21 11!1.

Merehandl..

.

·REALTY

on.ne.1,

hdO, loddlna, l jlo. br. oulloo,

hut-.

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Top Cu h po~ Old tumil~n

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ROCK S~RINGS ROAD - Approx. 80 acres of vacant
ground. Approx. 20 acres tillable: all minerals, water and
elec. available. ,Good hunting land. $29,000.00.

PORTLAND - SHARON ROAD - MINI FARM IN THE
COUNTRY - In Southern District. 14+ acres, 117 story house
with.4 bedrooms. 2 kHchens, 2 baths, 2 living rooms, carpet,
natural gas heat. garden and well water. $39,500.00.

Ci'::i.-= 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.

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POMEROY - Approx. 3\lacres, vacant ground. Good build·
ing srte. Close in. Water may be available. $7,500.00.

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3M4oftorlp.m.

"- ·~unlur­
,,,;l'of
,.,.......
PI '
b;wnt,
NEW LISTING- ST. RT. 124- MIDDLEPORT- This 4
room, 2 bedroom home near town would make a good rental
or starter home. Situate!! on approx. 1h acre lot $11,500.00.

BLACKBURN

Kol-

Pfne,

r·GIIIpila Onlllall...... Willer,
' ..... ' ........... 11!8'1did:
' . . . . ~_-illwiWlatl
l ?Niit' ed.114 Ul 4141,114-441.
•'.tat.ltt441
:.

LOCATIO 011 IT. 611 in Miip County this

prilpllfy conllins 21.04 acres. m/1, and
sm111 home. Owner anxious to sell.

2.4 ACIE TUCT;..; COJIERCIAL SITE" Loclt~ 011 Upper Rl 7 across from the new
slwpprng center.
BEAUTIFUL PIOPEin IlEAl £WINGTOII - SPARKLING
CLEAN 4 YEAR OlD RANCH HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS,
, LARGE LIVING ROOM AND KITCHEN AREA. l,175 SQ. FT. LIV·
lNG AREA, TliERMOPANE WINDOWS. VINYL SIDI~G. GAR·
AGE. COVERED REAR PATIOil NICE SIDEWALKS ON 2ACRES.
I HI~ 1~ AN I:XtHU:NT B Y AT $42,000.
,

JOtflc:l-·
··=-•-=•delc:f::lilll tlil2 starr..,""' dUe. 4
flo llcll Sevtlloolollro Sclllot ....

$15,000. ..._ 19.143 ICI'es m/1. Approx. \7
mile from crty lim~s. All utUrties available.

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4 SALE - Lots on Rodtley·Cora Rd. Very

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dose to St. Rt, 35.

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36.5 •ctES Ill, CLAf TWP. - Fronllp.
on Friendly Ridee Rd. Old house on llrid

$18,000.

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lit.• ACIES 1/L. S.ctioll17 &amp;11, Huntinflloo Twp., lrlllltage on .lacksoo Rd. and

Little Rlccopn Cree~

141ACIES 11/L'HUNTINGTOII·TWI'. -Ap.
pr011. I m1le of fronteee on R1eooon Creek.
Some bottom land, .biJICk w1lnut. ·

LOT$ FOR SALE 011 DEBBY DRIVE- Call br
lOcation and more details. ·

4 ACRES lORE 01 LESS ~ Harr~on Twp.
Cali br detlils.
·

n-tMr'IE With a.tn .lats. 3 BRs, blth.

LOT FOR IALE - Marpn Sisters Rd. 111d
Chetlwood Wlfl• Rd. Call lor dlllill.

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72 Tnlcka tor Sale

D-7

Sunday Times-Sentinel Paga

Ohio Point

4, 1110 ".

Ohio Ploint M tap d. W. Ve.

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73 Vena I 4 WD'a

74

llaiOrcycln

1114 _..,. 4 ...........
1. . 1117 HoMI MIIAIIJIII

. ANSWERS TO· S(C\\JJ\oA-4U"S t · 'I
SCRAMLETS
DEFECT
.. That oiO .waiiZ sound track bleoded
OXFORD
well with that modern sci li movie." I
BISHOP
eommentad. "Modernf' mY' teen said
TORRID
SLOUCH · amazed, ."That movie 1s FRO~ the
WARMLY SIXTIES I"

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73 Wnai4WD'a

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1171 .......................

. . . Arlo, Dune ..... . . .
wt.... l14-74z.a!N.

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FROM the SIXTIES
R1gi"UII'M Poa•w.... 01111

PUBLIC AUCTIO.N

lflir -1:10 . . . . . 1112.

OrMd..,... poJ;:

lclww- .......... •R I
per cttJMJfln
1110

AT RUTLAND AM. LEGION HALL

==·II, AkC, Cootvilte.

57

BEACH GROVE RD .• RUTLAND, OHIO

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1990
10:00 A.M .

Musical

.... ...

.......

Instruments

,

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Cam--

·Koflllr llld
•con uta
D1ono:
nc
·
St
,IIOO.
304r~Wi!CI

lei ol Ill . . _ DniEM wlh
iJ4t
all, $471. 1:':.1 t14-tl2·

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........ 1 mol ....... 114 Ml1431.

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.Fann Equ-...
11
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From Pomeroy, Ohio, take S.R.l24 west to Rut·
land. turn ri&amp;ht onto Peach Grove Rd. Sale is
. approx. l'a mi. on left. Signs will be posted.
The Ellis' are movinc to Florida so will be olferin1 the
follow inc which has been moved to the HEATED Lt~ion
Hall for your convenience. Therewill also bealew con·
sianments includled.
COINS: Over 60 coins including 1867 31, 1874'31 1880 0
Silver Dollar, some uncirculated.
'
ANTIQUES: Oak Hooshier k~chen cabinet, small oakserpen·
ltne dresser, square parlor tabl e, old store showcase, iron
bed.
LAWN &amp; GARDEN: Gravely walk behindw / mower &amp;blade,
blade for J.D. garden tractor, rear tined tiller.
AUTO &amp; MOTORCYCLE: 1980 Ply . Horizm, 1985 Yamaha RZ
350 (very clean &amp; good condition).
H.OUSEHOLD &amp; MISC.: Dinette set w/5chairs, While West,
inghouse FJ. relrigertor, Gibson chest Freezer, rocker. LR. ·
su~e. coffee &amp; end tables, twin beds, full beds. Home Interior
. pieces, double overi el~ range (lessthan 5 yrs. old), May·
tag wnnger washer, 5,000 btu aor conditioner. Franlijn lire
place, wood &amp;coa.l heater, ~ot~ pans, dishes. baby bed, high
chau, playpen, mrsc. baby rtems, plus much more 1110 n~m·
erous to mention.
Please plan to remove Ill purchaes d;~y of ult.

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Doublo oot .1o11n cftog

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~7.
- . 31110 cllol

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Poaitlve 1.0 .

Real Estate General

=·~-!...'1,

11122

"ICOIOO,,

Call

bedrooms,
room
k~chen . Vinyl' siding and new roof have been
added recently. 24x32 outbuilding included also.
lots of potential if Y.ou're looking for a small farm .
More land possibly available. Southwestern
schools.
· 11245

llltt- Duol-.
,.,._

110 ~
Troclor,
f4110• UO
llaNIIJ F.gunn 0..... treo-

._,...,.._...,rlfr'd·t'r

pool,

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

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

near

more info.
. ,
.; #165
P~IC£ REDUCTION. 1988 24x56 Clay tori ~ome s~uited on
4 .acres m/1. Nestled amonR the trees wrth 3 bedroo,ms, 2.
tiaths family ' room with fireplace in Green Schooi .Drstncl
SJ~.uilu.

COL. RICHARD WORKIIAN-AP. DAVID BOGGS
614·742·2048
Now bookina Sprinc &amp; Summer sales.

=
.....

aDO

someone. the first to ll!e
which has a living room.
cathedral ceilinp and· more.

BIRO'S EYE VIEW
One of the most beautiful, panmmic views'over·
looking the Ohio River Valley c~n be found lrom
this Y·shaped ranch. Very spaciDus.liveable,and
wei~ maintained home. Great lor enllllaining, in·
eludes 3 bedrooms. formal sunken IMng room
dh lots of wi~dows, calhedril ceiling and beaut~
ful slooe ,fireplace. A!so.teatures family room w~h
2nd fireplace, wife-approved ,eit-in kKchen, 211
baths and 2 car garage: Make an ap~ntmenMo
see this house. ·You'll fall in love.. "
8241'

HEAR IE OUT Oil THIS 011£!
Read until you come to the part about Summer
Cabin on the River! If you're one oflhose families
that would like a nice 2 bedroom home w~h 2
·extra bedrooms in the hall story, a really nice,
very attractive living tooin and a modern custom
buih k~chen;· ~ome on in! In addition you get ase·
cond 2 bedroom home which you can sell or use
·· a,s a rental. Watch out now, I'm going to ZAP you
wrth the bonus!.Tell me:you like to fish off your
own pier, plant a garden and grow all kinds of th·
inp, have a horse or two for the kids. How about
everything above located i~ town on 2 acres thai
runs to the river and already has the cabin down
at the riverside? You can buy it all lor $69,900.
.
#123

:

· .

.

mo

PRIME BUILDING LOTS- Three 5 acres m/1 tracts, Rural
water available. Frontage on hardtop road. Green school dis·
trict Call for details.
*168

OH. #4311 W. VA. M863 .

Dooro '
ptow, z,_ oom pllnltr,

-

cozy HOlE ON 10 ACIES
located just south of Rio Crande, this property
lays very nice. ~ 1971 hOme features 3 bedrooms, •
2 baths, eat-in krtchen with new cabinets: living
room and family room. 24 car garage only several
years old and a couple of other 011tbuildinp.
large fenced yard, garden space and lots of pine
treJlS. $69,000,
#207

OWNERS: MR. &amp; IIRS ••GEORGE ELLIS &amp;·OTHERS
AUCTIONEER: COL. W. KEITH IIOLDEN

I~::::==:::;~:,:;;;:::=;:::;:==~===-=
.... -I·

-. _,., w1-

•••111 art

Here's one that's
· inside and out. Very '
spl~ level home that's
• clean and well
•for the family. levels of living space (approx.
2500 sq. It) includes 3bedrooms and2 full baths
formal living and dining room and fully equipped
eal·in k~chen. Outstanding lower family levels in·
eludes large lamily room w~h brick fireplace and
'rec. room. arid another lull batho'Family room
opens to professionally landscaped brick patio
and mutti·level deck surrounding swimming pool.
Greatlo~ entertaining ctose to hosprtal and sho]r
prng. 90 s. Call for more mformatiQn. . #208

,,

··

mt

Holloncl .., • • ft. ..,......

_ , .-!, :IIIIWT.I-4215.

!14

~ea!n~~:;;~~~~a;~quiet

ttey ,l Grain

-

A nice view,
peaceful
neighborhood and Ibis of room roafllawaKs you
about 15 mi~utes from town al this comfortable 3
,bedroom, 2 batH•home. lndudes family room, for·
mal dining and 'nice krtchen. Hull 2 car garage
(plenty of room for a shop) plus a sinall barn and
dandy cellar house. Gallia Count·y local schools
(bus stops at Iron! dlio~.
,
#704

ntludltoy lttr .... -

114-74NZZ1.
- . , - -11.00 por 100

"'!!. -

Flllm, Rt. 31, Piny.

..._,z:GD ....
1117..:1011.

tltrU Sol, -

•

- - .. =o

.1GIIIttleI

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

1171

~

~MriCtAl

LOCATION ALOIIG ST. Rl, 35. near Holzer
acr.e, M.. or l , wKh 2·bay bid&amp; Owner may assist fi. ·
nan1dng for approved purchas~r. Buy now for $115,000.00.

71 Auloll tor Sale

ACREAGE!!! Siluated w~hin Perry Twp. Estimated timber va·
lue: $10,000.00. Deer country!! Buy now for $18,800.00.

He part. 14,000

Ollalnol
A-1 - t12DO. 114-- .....

CONOOMIIIIUM: Ist. floor, 2·Bedrm. Condo.: 2 baths, Cent
AIC, heat pump., custom cabinets, dishwasher, disposal,
ulirly ·rm, carport. Call for more informallm.

3. BEDRI. HOME WITH CARPMT - Approx 1.4 acre.

Situated along Africa Road. Price was $25,000 Quick sale.
Prrce $21,500.00.
.
·
1m 01111- II •1, PI, PI,

--AC..-I•ontl.-1114.
, ... 01111- ...

4-

....._ . . - . ""'"· qtw o::oolllttL VI. fiiiO. t1.....-nl.

54 Mlli:elleneous
· Merchandise

ACROI8
1Snaree

8 ..Sonny 7"'" ..
11 Rlln 11nd haU
16 Vapid
21 Cowboy
c:ompe\HIOn
22 POIIIIOn correctly
23 lnatrunwita
24 ·Domlcl. .
25 Time gone by

30~. clty

Livestock

13

Answers on Page D-4

. lls.tvedOr"

Mow""'-'" - I I i . ..

flEW LISTING: 2 bedrm. house with upstairs dorm., 1\?
bathS, fully lurmshed, newly remodeled, new carpet w~h
new range and refrig, Full baSement Neil Tycoon Laka Buy
now for $36,900.
·
PRICE REDUCED: I acre wrth older mobile home coun\v
water, no septic system, located along Rt .160 near Nort~
Gallia school: Price: $1~,000.
·
IIEIUSTIIIG: 10 acres, Perry Twp. Scme lill)ber. Buy now
$10,000.
WITHIN THE CITY OF GALLIPOLIS s~uated
aloriR Garfit~d Ave. Site includes 2 buildonglots. w/cily wa·
now lor $30,00d.OO.
:
.
1973 -12'x50'- 2 bedrm: mobile home, with rear deck.
Call Allen Wood for more info.

Ul ACI~ LOCATED IN GIIEEII TWP., Giaham School Rd.
Super VIeW. $44,000.
.
DOWIITOIIIIIIVESTIENT P.RO;ufY: Bnck st~ure wlh

3 rental apartment!llt AISQ, adjacent m!UI ston&amp;e!Uii~Y
bldg, Est gross rental income. $820 per mo. All priced lor
$65,000.
..
.

.

.,, '

WE HAVE BULDING LOTS in Rodney Vill111e II and' Mills
V~l~~~ CaH for more information.
·
2 LOTS WITHIN GREEN ACIES SID. One~84'~148' and the
other 75'd48'. Purchase eHher for $5,500.00.

40's BUYERS, BEAT THIS!I
NEW LISTING - GREAT LOCATION!
Clean 3 bedroom ranch will make. ou the pertect
~tarter or move-up home. Features indude large
livong room, eat-1n krtchen. handy util~y room and
1\l baths. I car attached garage. Situated on anat
lot, just ri~llor kids. Nice neifhborhood d~~Yetop­
. ment that not all "scrunched' together. $49,900.
Call Chris lor more information.
.
M.700
'
FALLIN LOVE All OVEI AGAIN
With this picture ,perfect . II? storv charmer.
Located on the edge .ol town, you'll be amazed at
the privacy the beautifully landscaped acre yard
provides. You'll lall in love wKh this tamily ori·
enled home and all tscharacter. 3 bedrooms l'h
baths, eat-in kitchen and formal dining room,
large hv11g room wrth attractive fireplace and
porch. full basement w~h famUy room and lots ol ·
storage. Very well decorated and cared lor home.
BONUS: 3 car (arac.uttJched to home by breeze·
way. Priced at $89,900: Call ,lor an appoin,tment.

mo

nos

buyers. So list
with us.
We're the
difference between
"For Sale" and

~
'ANT A HOUSE &amp; SMALL ACREAGE?
Here It Is!! If you're tired of ·living IS feet from

. , BI.CENTE.IUAUPECIALI!
• '
Bu1lt rn 1834, lhts, without a doubt. is one of the
more speaal homes rn the area. Grained wood·,
work and doors. antiQue hardware and fixtures
and a cherry'lrill!jried stairca!e is bound to fight
· .up y011r eyes. \Vitftin tfril approxiniatelv 3,800 sq.
11, home are 3\? balhs, 3 lo 5 bedrooms, formal
~rmng room and klchen. LoCIIIed one block From
marn busrness area. A diamond in the r(llllh lor
only $69,900!
- · .1&amp;01

your neighbors, you'll love this new vinyl sided 3
bedroom ranch on 7.4 acres. Home also has 2
baths, .eat·in Uchen, util~y room and 2 car at·
!ached rerige. You can decorate inside home and
.lindscapie. outside in your own style. Priced ' at
$52,000. .
.
#500

AN OLDIE BUT GOODIE

· sonality typical of the lale 1800'~ $59,000 is a
· small price to PlY, for this updaled 4 bedroom on
Secood Street, Middleport.
.11508

OWIIER OFF£RIIIG GREAT
FIIIAIICING PACIAG£!
Attractive country ranch wHh SIJiciOUS SUJrOIIOd·
inp. I mle south of Rio Grande on Rt. 325. This 3
bedroom hoihe offers large livinr roorn-dinina
room oombinalioo, custom made· cabinllls, I\?
baths, breezeway and I c.ar g••lt Situated on a
I acre lot wnh extralotavailablt $62,500. Call lor
details on finan~ing,
HOI
'

.

COUNTRY CONVENIENCE SToRE .
There's ~ healthy business oppartunHy for you.
Gas semc:e. fltu.sconvement food mart plus !lllnY'
other IIOSSibiitoes. . 3 bedroom apartment over
store lor addrtiOnalrncome or tor owners rn•ac•
ment residence. lru of slllljl space.. EDblishid
business lor 1111ny yeart Only siore in the arealots of potential. 180,000.
1240
I

•

•

'

IAGIIIFICEIIT 11-t.lVEL
Space lor agrowinc lafllily is what this 3 bedroom •
2 bath home has to olfar. Split,... entry liVeS
easy access to both tile m• llviita qlllrler Ul"
sllirs•and abeautiful family roomdeiirllllllrL Tbrs
home is located on 21ul size lots apd haa vitw
that will absolulely like your blealh. $64 900.'
Must see to believe!
iiii.
'

'

.

.,..

• r

•

1.02 ACI~ LOT llonr Klicker Rd. near Centenery. $8,000.

MAbovl
87 Mour~Win on

em.

,-

•••

FOUl I£.,.. ~1£ FOI S4t.lool
What's more, it's (1111 on the edJe of town Nice
lar&amp;t bldlyard,lul baement, screened In Porch.
,Couldn't ak lor ,much more. tots of imprments hwe been medeto this home.
11201

....'

•

'•

"

hookup. ' · i

APPROX. 24 ACRES wrth colonial home overlookinr Po·
meroy. Executive style home wHh formal entry, family room,
formal dining room. Basement has rec. room w~h stone fire·
place. There's an in·ground pool. Many more amenities. Ask·
ing $155,900.
·
· 8104
lASLEY STREET, POIERoY .:_This newly ~sled home in·
eludes '2 or 3 bedrooms, full basement •rthgarage, small
corner Ill( and very convenient. Askine'$24,900.. N138
LOCATION,LOCATIONt Aqual~y buih ~o'me,lob. Ranch wrth
3 bedrooms, formal dininJ familyroom, ftill basement and 2
car garage. Located in Mrddleport.
11135
GENTLEIAN'S'FARM- Elegant country living'on 131 acres
m/1 w~h a lovely cedar 4bedroom home. Over 2/000square
leet of living space includes 4 bedrooms, firep ace, formal
dining, equipped kitchen and much more. land is levello
rolling and includes a beautiful pood, a 2 car,arage and a
barn. You will love it. Call for an appointment. 110,000.00.
'
'
'
iltH
243 ACRE FARM - Rocksprilip Road- Over 50 aaes of ·
cropl~d, approx. 130 acres of potential pasture and bal·
ance
. rn woodland. the land lays level to rolling and includes
an older log home w~h 3 bedrooms plus an additional col·
tare w1th 3 rooms. T~is is a good one lor $1081000.
.

•

~

•

•••

-•
•

' t

• over 17 acres of river bottom and 30 acres m/1 of pasture.
: 1obaco base. The lor honie has ·nearly 200 sq. It of livong
on mam noor.. lncludes 3 bedrooms, 1~ baths, ~erge
•.••,...., room, solarium, large decks plus basement w~h fin·
room. There's more, so call today. Priced at
.
8147
187 ACRES 1/L CAtTL£ FAll -Complete wrth Charolais
. cattle, barn, machine.y. Good 6 room house and much more.
Call fo( more info. !
#158
HOllE &amp; ~2 ACRES.M/L - I year old ranch home located
• less than I mole vff Rt. 7 indudes 3 bedrooms, l baths, rOr·
• mal dining, heat pump, Andersen window~ I car garage lllus
lots more. $64.900.
8149

•

21.5 ACIES, IIEAIIIOITH GIILLIA SCHOOL No struct~~
Lacaled along Frank Rd. $18,900.
,
•
3 LOTS LOCATED lEAR fYCOOII WE 150x115'). Can
pun:hae on land contract. $2,000 down. 10% interest, pay
$129.69 for 6 YrL
··

~ BLt lngredlenl
84 Sewi:1Q line
65 Singer Don -

to50 ACRE FAIIM- RIVER FRONTAGE- Thissmall farm has

•••

..

jp~

APPROX. 30 ACRES OF GEI'f!LY jiOL~IIIG LAID
with a barn style home. Home is onl~ 12 yrs. old and ba 3
bedr~s, I~ baths, and lull baemen~ pond, orchard and
buildinas. Cou,ntry lltllnJ ~kine $77,500.00.
H157
IIICI21EDIOOIIIIOI£, recently ,_modeled. Slualed on 1
~le OVIIr an acle. Cellar and nice s' reened·ln porch. NiCe
PIICI, too! Only $17,000.
,
11'51

1011 Redford 10'
110 Teutonic deity
111 lndellnHe amount
11211.114 Penpolnt
1111 Conaumed
117 HH

118 Mexlcln laborer
120 Biker's products
122 StiQII playa

138 Mineral
138 Vlhlcle

ermlnet
64 -lrte

home. 3 bedrooms,
Additional trailer
~151

100 o.nce style
102 Sout,_t wind
103 "- Are There..
104 Indian weight
105 - Tyler Moore
101 Crataa
101 Chlrt

Mlndlntt
50 Mllkt'80 Hlllth *«!

51Eur~

.,.

89 Hide
90 Burghoff role
92 "TheAccording
, to St. Matthew"
84 Extrt;
. aupptementary
88 Abovl
119 Theater box

55 "-Of Gold"

47 Tidier
48 Win
50 GuidO' I high note

,
. PRICE IE~IlCED ~- . \
Very attractrve aod well burR 4 bedroom brick
ranch located in a fam~y oriented neiahborhood
close to .shopprnl, hospital and ll'otery. Ownm
have built anolher home and ire anxious to move
this one, Also _indudes large l~ing room, dining
room. eat·rn kHchen, separate ·.ut~ny and ~ tu•
baths. 2 car gara&amp;e. Heat pump efficiently ~eats
and cools. !ust off ~ 35 Wl!$1. Reduced to
$69,900. Grve us a c~l., ~~e'd love to show ll)is
anytime,
• -.
#239

.. Den
68 Shower

124Su0ybrew
125 Kind of lock
128 Utma
128 Arlblln garment
128 Gtmlng cubes
131 Short hH
132 "-lelheep
133 lndlnallon
·135 "Thl - Who

45 Frozen wtter

We've got what it
takes to find more

11101

Go back in time and relive Ill the charm and per·

MUik::"
37 Utilize
38 Sin
40Seputtel
42 Seed contal~ Al!tludl
44 Winter Vllhlcle

. t......

DICOVER THIS "CLASSIC"
Close to Perllct - Close to DvwwiOWII
.
MIDDLEPORT
Value is obvious in this qualrty buill oltfer brick
Turned off by "Tiny Affordables"?lt's time to get
home. It's had excellent care, is professionally de
exded'wfth this 2 story brick located on Rutland
· corated and provides a warm, lnendly impression
Street. BeautHully tailored wijh 2 bedrooms up·
. to. those who enter. The house has just been fitte~
stair sand 2 more on the main floor.Tex luretf plas·
wHh all new Andersen thermo windows plus
ler wfiiS in both the living room and dining room
storms. You'll enjoy a beauiHul modern krtchen
help make this one of the trulv finer homos in
I ~ baths, larRtliving room with working fireplace
Meipi:OIJnty, And w4h a fenced in play area for
and formal dmina room. There are 3 bedroom•
the chjldren. i)'s pert~ for a arowin~lamilv . Alot
and 2 walk-In closets, tun basement and garage. of extns .buill rn •ijh tender lovms care y011
· You ca,n ,walk all over town toshoporexercTseaiid . must see to believe. Fall in love all over again· for
just $,54,900.
·
·
'IOU woo I spend muchltmebehindalawnmower
Ike Wiseman says this one will please the persoo'
.,
#604
who wants a sood home in a gOod neiaflbcirhood
downtown. • '
··
•· ·

'

32 "-the World
Turna"'
33V--CIIIo
' 34latgt_..
. 35 Femllt deer
38 11Cin't - tM

OUTSTAIIDIIIUE* LllnNG
. IU$JIC C81TEI~URY
·
"
,Tired
ol
the
regular
ranch!
Thil3
bedrooms,
Bl
'
· starr cedar home will pluse you. Vauhed ceitinp, ·
skylights, open oak slaircae, custom·buiH oak
cabinets in .kKchen and bath$ give this home lots
· of appeaL 3 ~edroems, 21? baths, living room. din·
ing room and family rilom,·large ~ c'ar garage. En.·
THIS!
•
err:t savi~gga1heal pump fwrnaci Green Town.
2 year old, 3 ""'
, 2 balh home 30x50
shrp, 3 miles from town. Nice neighborltood.
heated garage with workshop !now a body shop!, ·
1.5 acres, hardtop, road, short drive lrom town. • · s99.5oo. :
$49,900. lnterest~d! Give us a call. . 11413.
· OWN A,PIECE DF THE BUICK!
.,
· You can walk all over town
or r;~~c:=~
you won't~pertil much time
II
,J .btdloori·hOme hai plenty of s~~~te rfoo~r;:lrt~:'-1
family, yet the ·warmth and comfort re
retirees.· eat·in kHchen and dining
room on second Door could be used
• i'
be.droom or plaj room. Must see ·to
we llfld
pnced at only $59,900, and avaHable immedl•
tely. .
- 11603

446.9539

SUNDAY PUZZLER

261"-pert
28J-of

1122,

-

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 446-

fireplace, full basement, 2 car ·garage, and double lot .
' S27,9oo,
·. . .
· m5
·: ATTRACTIVE SHEVEL HOME in A·1 Condition. located on
approx. I acre rn Baum Addrtion. Has 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
central aor and garage $62,500.
#134
WHV BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME? When it is already built
This lovelv home is iust 1 year old and is situated on approx.
3 acres with a river view in the Syracusnrea. In dudes .a
wooden cathedral ceiling, stone fireplace, a self·approved
krtchen. drnmg, 3 bedrooms down and one in the loft, 2
baths, full basement and 2 car garage, Call for appointment.'

- · , _ Ill ltuolt hog1 1141110;
wll ........, ....

-

116~

a

ASH STRtET, MIDDLEPORT - Thos home is situated on 2
level corner lots. Close to General Hartinger Park. A brick
home w~h 3 bedrooms, 11111 basement, and large attic.
521.500. .
•
#117
APPR()X••2
) ACRES with colon ial home overlOoking Pam·
eroy. Executive style home with formal entry, family room,
formal dining room. Basement has rec. room w~h stone fire·
place. There's an in-ground pool. Many more amenities. Ask·
'
#104
· rng $1~5.900.

.

LOG HOllE
With ~- acre olland, beautiful view of the area around and
the Ohro R1ver. 12'x 12' storage bldg, rural wate. system,
large front porch. 4 room s, 2 bedrooms plusa bathroom and
shower, doshwasher in k~chen . See this one now. ,

88 CMirl
70DtnllllmtUUrl
71Turl
72 Alllttty
74Worlh... mttter:
lltng
711 Whlll !liCk

n

M81u*

78 Soup lngftdlent

7t Flteltlg
112~

84LAgpiiJA

65 In good order

Lovwd Me"
140 High card
141 Anglo-Suon

monev

142 Fra'ICh article
143 u _ law"
144 Wtg-/'I'&lt;Pollllw.-.erns

TV rote
145Worn-y
147 ExCUII
141 Ch'- ptgoda
150 Upper regions
, ofl!*l
152 l.twNI
164 P•aga•ay
168 Pan tl,.
pronoun
158 Applin
150 Kind of bini
180 LOCI! of h*

181 Quairilla

DOWN

1 eaner
~ "Who Framed Rabbit?"
3 Bother
4 Hebrew letter
5 Soak up

6 II has nine
aatellltaa
7 Sowed
8 Caator9"rm.-

Sunday"
10~1

H-erltCI
12 Mine WEin
13 O...god&lt;*&amp;

14 Spenllh anlcle
15 Sleeplngstckneaa
fly

16Veaael
17 Pedal digit
18 Pan of "to be"
19 Renter's
document
20 Ancient Chariot
27 Scheel. abbr.
29 Sniell
31 "- va. Wide"
38 Auction word
37 Mounted lancer
39 DtaturlmlC:e
40Fond._
41 Go by wtter
42 Annoy
43 Shtet of gl.... Shutting
46 Calcium aymbol
48 Golf mounda
49 Moccuin1

n-

so verve

51 Gymnaatlc laat
52 Candle
53 Enthualaam
55 llretd epread
56 ''The Bad-··
57 "Thl - l!lrds"
58 Soft dr1nkl
61 Mine entrtnce
63T84 Winter Vllhlcle
68 Acknowla dgement of regret
70 Thing to be done
71 Very thin
73 Anger: colloq.

74 Former FluUIIn
rule
75 Wipe out
77 Stage whleper
78 61Jckeye State
80 Approach
81 Yelp: colloq.
83 Mqtorlala' org.
84 Snow runners
87 Keep

89 Slow-witted
90 "-are red, ... "
91 Avoid
92 BlOOdy
93 Young girl
95 Tlll\ran'a country
96 Chief ertery
97 Entlcea
99 "Superman"
chllt'acler
101 "Ruth... _ ..
105 "Let's - a Dial"

.•.

toe Chicken house ·
107 Cut

111 Dtstancemeuure
112 Nuisance
113 Chair •
115 Wire nail
11&amp; Wlmi cups
118 "The Great-"'
119 Gasp for br111h
121 Rolla ot
parchment
123 BancroftiD
125 Rush suddenly '

..
'

128V_.ataa
127 Etg._' -·•
129 Apportlon1

130 Angry
131 Prohibit
132 School: Fr.
134 CatCh: COlloq.
138 Int.,..,._
137 "The Wonder -"

-."

139 "Uiied ~;,
140 Sila In Alia
144 Drlla border

145 Orneltt Ingredient
148 Corrode
147 Pill' Gynt'l

ma)hlr'
148 " - A Uvlng"
149 Afternoon 10e1.t
161 That mtn
153 Alnlr 10
155 Negative prwflx
157 Prince 10

..

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�...,,

•
\

D-8--Sunday T1111a1 Sentinel

.

Febru..-y 4, 1180

Pomeroy-Midclaport-GaMipolia, Ohio- Point Ph n r 1t. W. V•.

Gallia County Cattlemen's Association to .meet
TheGalllaCountyCatileman's and "Selling Forage · Through
Auoclallon and the Galli a Cattle."
County Elttenslon Office are ·
Special guest speaker will be
planning an event on Monday, .J im Clay. state extl!nston animal
Feb. !I, at the Columbus Southern science specialist Randy Nelson
Power meetlnJ room at 7 p.m.
of Guernsey County wUI also be
with Mr. Clay.
Topics of discussion will be:
"Has cross-breeding gone too
Nelson will discuss tec'hniques
far!", Are EPD's the answer?", of managing large cow/ calf

operations on strip mine land In
Eastern Ohio.
The state extension specialist
Is responsible for development
and delivery of educational beef
and sheep progtams In Ohio.
Clay . ts also responsible for
Ohio's IRM (Integrated Reso1,1rce Management) program.

The IRM Ia a multi-dlsctpHne
and multi-departmental ap·
proach to Increase returns on
cow/calf operations.
With the cooperation of county
extension agents and the district
agrooomlst, thll specialist CQJI·
ducted several on·farm demonstrallons In Southern Ohio
.

Obi~

1-

..

.
a $5 cash prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
number with your card or letter. No. telephone
calls will be accepted. All conteat entries should
be turned In to the newspap~r office by 4 p.m, each
Wednesday. In case of tie, the winner will be
chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallla County
far"' will be fealilred by the Gal~ SoU and .Wal~r
Conservation District.

MYSTERY FA~M - This week's mystery
flll'lll, feaiured by lbe Melp SoU and Water
c-rvatlon District, Is loca&amp;ed somewhere In
Melp Coqnty. Individuals wlshln1 to partlclpale
Ia llle weekly contest may do so by guessing the
flll'lll'l -aer. Just·mall, or drop off your guess to
tile Gallpolls Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave. ,
Gallpolls, Ohb, 4114131, or lbe Dally Sentinel, ll1
&gt;Coart St., Pomeroy, Qhlo, 45'789,and you may win

a

.(

:, Mounds, ridges and plants
:can tum homes into hideouts
COLUMBUS, Ohio .&lt; UPI ) - . an experienced builder of
Homeownerrs wishing to make
mounds and ridges. That person
, their houses Into hideouts should
will choose the right slope, shape
consider screening them with
and material.
soli. Mounds and ridges covered
· " J;'roper construction accounts
with plants are effective-barriers
fo r soil settling, possible erosion
and can add visual interest to the
and the time it takes plant cover
to become established. The idea
property.
"There's · a growing use of is for the mound not to flatten or
mounds and ridges as sight and
erode across the ~idewalii. •·
sound barriers, to separate parts
Soil screens can be built with
: of yards, 11nd to add another excavated materlal, Himes says,
dlmenslontoflat property," says but'they must be covered with a
. Frank Himes, agronomist at .,layer of rich tiipsoli. This lets
Ohio State University.
plants thrive.
"l'here are also artistic and
"Shade-loving plants are.often
. aesthetic aspects to this trend," grown on the cooler north side of
he says. "A .Properly sculpted ~oli screens and sun-loving
and landscaped soil screen lmplants on the hotter south side.':
· proves the looks of a property. Himes says. "Grass Is also
Screens can be made during grown on gently-sloping mounds
'COnstruction of buildings or or ridges. Because of their
... afterwards. "
.
prominence, many soil screens
Soil absorbs sound better than allow gardeners to · highlight
. plants. It hides homes and unusual ground covers or speclbulldlngs from busy streets and men plants in the landscape."
creates new landscape possiblliSoil brought In from other
ties. Some people use mounds·or areas for screens can allow
ridges t&lt;! separate ,gardens from ·homeowners and landscapers to
play are.a s or give property a expand what they ~;(TOw.
more "rolling" look.
"Gardeners in western Ohio
"Soil screens will usually stay where alkaline soil inhibits acid:
the same size, whereas plant loving plants, can bring in acidic
screens grow ~d need regular soil from eastern Ohio to grow
maintenance to remain effec- plants such as azaleas and .
tlve,'' Himes says. "However, rhododendrons," he says. "This
most mounds or I;Jdges will have Is often more effective than·
plants on them that will require applylng a steady dose of acidic
1
some care."
fertilizer to alkaline soil."
·
Mound and ridges drain much
quicker that flat land, so plants
•
grown on them are ~:~suaily
mulched. Himes .s ays. Some soil
screens can become quite dry.
Continued from D-1
''That's why proper construe·
tlon is critical," Himes says. and excellent wildlife habltate.
Now Is the time to get involved.
"For the right results you need
You can plant trees to help
protect eroding , stream banks
along yo!'r portion of the creek.
For proper erosion control and
watet flow , trees are thE' only
Continued from D-1
answer.
Trees may be ordered
specialty sector and stores that
through
the
local Soil and Water ·
were ·struggling a year ago Conservation
District or through
Sears being the first among them
- still struggling," said Sarah private nurseries depending on
Stack of Bateman Eichler, Hill . the type you want.
You can also become a
Richardson Inc. 1!1 Los Angeles.
member
of the Raccoon Creek
Chicago-based Montgomery
lmprovement
-Committee. The
. Ward a, Co. also fared poorly. Net
first
annual
meeting
will be held
~les were off 3.9 percent to
on
Monday,
Feb.
5,
at
.7·p.m. in
:$278.2 million from $289.4 million
the
Gallia
County
Courthouse,
. ,a year ago. Same-store sales
were not Immediately available. second floor meeting room.

Natloaal Arcltlvea
The Declaration of Independence,
the Constitution of Uu! United Slates
and the Bin of Rlpts an! on perma·
neut djaplay in the National Archives
Exhibition Hall In WasblniiOD, nc.
They are sealed In 1lass-and-bronze
cases, explains Tbe World Almanac.
The National Archives allo boldl the
federal records of · the U.S.
government.

Super Lotto
5-16-38-39-40-44
Kicker 503316

.Page 5

area in jusl a . few days If th~ can -queen hOney .bees w)th the
should hitch a ·ride on a ·~eml· more docile European ·queeg
truck carrying honey bee colo- bees every year In regions-where
nles," he notes. • 'The danger 10 · African honey bees have been
our. honey Industry is not . the foWid can IOW\)r the occurrence,.
prevalence to stinging but the and Impact of African holleY:·
lower honey yields that African bees," S!IYB Kr!tsky.
·,
honey bees produce."
As for physical fear from the;,
. K.rltsky predicts that lost ,re- . killer bees. K~ltsky says "Afrl' ,
vet~~Jes due to lower honey ~Ids,
Cl'JI boney bees lu'e not lbe kWerJ
beeswax· and pollination or crops that science fiction movies wquld
~ould reach well over $100 million
lead you to.beltev~.
,
•
a,;year.
· •
''They a.re slightly ·s maller
However. It Is possible for bee· than the honey bees we are usecl
keepers to try .to manage the to and the venom In their stings I~ ,
killer bees.
not any more toxic than our local
"A practice of replacing Afri- bees.
· ·"-

ewh..l ' ..
Alignn~ent

•Brakes &amp;
Shocks
eStrut~
•Used Tb·es
•Gpodyear Tires .

.,

'

MEIJOIIfll
IGSPULTZ
.TIRE
'
.
CENTER
- J. UlCUS fUlTl
242 W. Main

OWIIEIS

or j.C.

G

mo~

than five years o f experience

Vol.40, N~. 188
Copyttghled 1880

,_'

Lawmakers to continue drug problem ~ork
COL~BUS, Ohio (UP!) State lawmakers ·wm resume
work Ibis week on a major Issue
carried over from 1989- dealing
with Ohio's drug problem
through education, treatment
and law.enfotcement.
Both the House and Senate
have adopted separate bills on
the subject, and one ofthem must ·
make It throu'gh the second
chamber before It can become
law.
·
The House Select Committee
on, Drug Legislation will hold a
hearing Tuesday .afternoon on
Senate Bill 258, which focuses on
building new prisons to accommodlitl1 drug offenders and establishing a· grant program for

local communities which develop · tlon·, provides harsher penalties
anti-drug programs.
for corrupting children · with
The House will reconvene at 11 drugs and makes It easler'for law
·a.m .. Tuesday and the senate at enforcement officers to raid
1:30 p.m. the same day .
"crack" houses .
· Rep. John Shivers Jr., D·
Shivers said Lucille Fleming,
Salem, chairman of the Hou!ie director of the new Department
drug panel, said provisions from 61 Alcohol find Drug Addiction
the House-passed bill will be Services, will testify on the
added· to the Senate bill for the legislation Tuesday. Fleming Is
purpo!le of getting a version that an outspoken advocate of treat·
both senators and representa- ing drug addiction.
tives can agree with. ·
Another 1 possible witness Is
The House bill, wlllch,Shivers' George wuson, director of th.e
committee spent two · mont.hs Ohio Department Of Rehablllta·
drafting, emphasizes a state lion and Correction.
Drug Advisory Board wh.ich is
Lawmakers already have decharged with pref'ating a state termined that the state does ·not
plan of action. It also provides a have enough money to build and
source of money for drug educa- oce.rat:eall the prisons that would

several neiJhborlag states partlclpaled, as well
PROUD RECIPmNTS - El1ht-year·old Ryan
as other Meigs County youngsterS Including,
Ramsl)urg, son of Robert and Christy Ramsburg,
.
Adam ·and Howard Johnson, Josh and Macyn
· of Klnpbilry Road, Pomeroy; Is extremely proud
Ervin, Larry Ritchie, Jeremy and Justin Roush
or the troph~ he received for outstanding efforts
and Adam Chevalier. Dan Smith, of Racine, a
daring lhe recent Nailonal Kiddie Tractor PuD at
local
promoter of kiddie. tractor pulls, Is .also
Columbus. The puU was held during the Power ·
proud
ox the plaque which he received during lbe
Show at the· colosseum on lhe Ohio. State Fair
· Grounds. Ryan finished first placelnSundayopen · Columbus event, In appreciation of hill support of
kiddie tractor puUIDg and tbe N atlonal Kiddie
class competition for his age group, and placed
~hlrd hi Saturday competlllon. ChDdren from .-' Tractor Pullers Association.

.

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future retirees.
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PRICE TAG

ONAIIAYTAG

PEEBLES, Ohio (UPI) - A
. patrol. official said Saturday no
suspects have been Identified in
· the shooting of two West VIrginia
truck drivers •Who were slightly
Injured Friday night when gunfire struck their truck convoy in
Adams County.
Ohio Highway Patrol Lt. Rex
New banks at the post in-Georgetown in neighboring Brown
County said he thinks the shooting Is related to the strike by the
nation's Independent truckers.
"We're assuming it is strike
related, but we have nothing to
confirm this;" Ewbanks said
. Saturday, adding that there were
no sup5ects In the shooting.
The Incident was the first In

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forth_elrachesa~ pains, too?Then you remember the family doctor.
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The comm ittee also will hear a
bill requiring that the state's 5
percent sales tax be collected on
mall order sales or home shopping television. Sponsors say the
state is losing $100 million In
revenue from the exemption.
The House Public Safety arid
Highways Committee will meet
Tuesday afternoon for the first
time under Its new chairman,
Rep. Robert Hickey, D·Dayton.
Hickey has replaced Rep, Marc

Guthrie, D-Newark, who was
elevated to the posi tion of assistant ma jority whip.
Five Ohio River senators have
introduced a bill calling for an
Ohio River office in the Depart·
· ment of Natural ResQurces. They
are asking for equal treatment
with Lake Erie, which received
an office in a law signed last week
by Gov. Richard Celeste .
Sen. Robert Burch, D·Dover,
sai d the Ohio River Is as valuable
a water resource fQr the·state as
Lake Erie. The office · would
promote education about the
Ohio River and · its resources ,
coordinate Ohio River Issues and
serve as an·advocate for the river
area.

.

'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP il undecided.
George Votnovlch leads fellow
The candidates' r unning m11tes
Republican gubernatorial candl· ·were not included in this poll'
date Robert Taft II by 14 since Ceiebrezze hadn 't chosen a
percentage · points In the first running mate when the survey
· Columbus Dispatch poll of the was mailed. Celebrezze last
week piCked state sen. ·Eugene
1990 gubernatorial campaign.
The poll, released Sunday, Branstool of Utica to run with
gave Voinovlch 51 percent of the him.
vote In the GOP primary, comVoinovich is running with Rep.
pared with 37 ·P~rcent for Taft.
Twelve percent said they were Michael DeWine while Taft has
chosen Franklin County Com·
undecided.
The n~wspaper conducted a missiOner Dorothy Teater . .'
Voinovich led Taft by large
mall survey of 1,732 registered
voters between Jan. 26 and Feb. ratios in most of the metropolitan
couritles, but Taft had a 2-1lead
2.
:.
Those polled were also asked in Hamilton County, 11nd the two
who they'd vote for If Voinovlch were nearly even In the 76mosuy ·
.
'
were running against. the Demo- rural counties.
cratic candidate Anthony Cele:
In the Voinovlch-Celebrez~
breeze, and if Taft were running matchup, Votnovlch led In all
geographic regions except the
against Celebrezze.
Votnovlch came out ahead in city of Cleveland, where Celethe matchup against Celebrezze, brezze has a slight lead.
getting 4li percent of the vote of
In the Ceiebrezze-Taft matthose responding, while Cele- chup, Celebrezze had a 2-11eadin
brezze got 39 percent and 15 Cuyahoga County and Taft. had a
5-3 lead in Hamilton County, The
percent said they didn't know :
Celebrezze edged out Taft In two were nearly even In· the
that matchup, 42 'percent to 41 f!!etropolitan counties , while
percent , with 17 percent Taft led in many of the rural

counties.
The poll will add more fuel to
arguments by Republican leaders that Taft drop out of the
governor's race for secretary of
state. GOP leaders would like to
see Teater run for auditor.
In . statewide races, Democratic Auditor Thomas Ferguson
ran strongest among candidates
who could be matched in the ·
three races. Ferguson held a
26-point lead over Teater.
· In other possible matchups, ,·
Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown, a Democrat, lleld a
5-point lead over Tan , and state
Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
had a 11-point advantage over
state Sen. Lee Fisher, 0Cieveiand , In .the attorney general's race.
Ohio Democrats have Fergu.
son seeking a fifth term as
auditor and Brown runnl,ng for a .
third term as secretary of state.
The attorney general's office Is
being vacated by Celebrezze.
Fisher is the front'runner for the
nominati9n for attorney general.
The. filing deadline for state
offices In Feb. 22.

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in October , November and De· 3.9 percent, compared to an
WASHINGTON &lt;UP!)
Worker productivity slowed in cember compared to 2.7 percent increase of 2.9 percent. In 1988the last three months of 1989 to in the previous quarter, . the the largest increase since 1982,
Darrell Clagg, 30, Milton, W.
the Labor Department said.
Adams .County, although some
finish the year with the smallest Labor Deparlment said.
· Productivity of manufacturing
violence has been reported in Va., was .treated for a gunshot · gain In th'e nation's hourly output
Hourly pay rose 6..~ percent In
other southern Ohio counties this wound In the neck and Bud Wills ,' of goods and services since 1982, . the fourth quartl!r, or 2.8 percent workers In the fo·u rth quarter
week as some Independent 44, Huntington, ·W. Va., was
when accounting for inflation, · 'increased· a good deal more
the government said Monday.
truckers, dissatlslfied with rising treated for a leg wound.
about
the same as in the period rapidly," surging to 3.2 percent
1!1 Its report on productivity
trucks
were
Newbanks
said
the
fuel prices and lower prices for
and costs ; the Lab&lt;Jr Department covering July , August and and adjusted for such seasonal
hauling
steel
to
the
Armco
Co.
factors as the weather, tbe
freight , have refused to make
said Inflation danger signs September.
plaqt in Ashland, Ky.
·
their runs .
For the year. the inflation government said.
loomed, while worker output
"After the two drivers were
Their
hourly
pay
of
factory
Newbanks said a · convoy of
gauge
increased
3.9
percent,
decreased by 0.2 percent and the
workers
also
increased
in the
· about 14 steel-hauling semi treated at the Adams County
compared
to
2.
7
percent
in
1988.
ilumlkr of hours worked fell by
fourth
quarter
of
1989,
by
7.2
trucks was headed east on Ohio Hospital, the drivers regrouped
Hourly
pay
for
the
year
rose
5.5
0.4 percent - the first decline
percent
or
3.1
.
percent
when
percent
In
the
non-farm
sector,
Route 32 just ea,st of Ohio Route and continued on·. their .way,"
since the second quarter of 1986 .
73 near Peebles wheh gunfire Newbanks said.
The productivity of workers. an Increase of only 0.6 percent accounting for consumer prices .
Lt. David Peters of the Ohio excluding those on farms, in- after inflation.
But output fell, by 1.3 percent, ·
rang out. He said It appeared the
Highway
Patrol
said
most
of
the
·
as
did 'the number of hours
gunshots came from some westWhen including farm prices,
creased by 0.2 percent in the
violence and vandalism had been fourth quarter, compared to 2.4 · the price deflator finished 1§89 up worked, by 4.4 percent
.boqnd·vehlcles. . .
One dr)ver was struck In the reported in Lawrence, Scioto and
percent in the third quarter. For
neck by shotgun pellets, while the Pike counties in southern Ohio.
the year, productivity edged up
other driver was hit in the leg · He said one driver was slightly · by 0.9 percent, compared to an
injured by flying glass
with a .22-callber bullet.
Increase of 2 percentln 1988- the
smallest gain In seven years.
A key Indicator of Inflation, the
Implicit price deflator for non"farm businesses, rose 3.9 percent
Three accidents with moderate Syracuse. failed to stop for a red
and minor damage and no light and struck the front rlgbt
Injuries were inves,tlgated Frl- side of the Riggs car. There was
.'
day and Saturd!lY by the Pome· light damage to the rear quarter
roy Police Department.
panel of the left side of the'Bentz
South Ce"tral Otilo
At
10:48
a.m.
Friday
pollee.
car.
Bentz was. cited for running
Mostly clear Monday night,
an
accident
otl
a
traffic
light.
lnvestiilated
with a low between 30 and 35.
.
Kroger's
parking
lot.
According
·
In
an
accident
at 1: 40 a.m. on
Partly cloudy Tuesday, with
to
police,
Beverly
Bailey,
Reeds.Saturday
billh
cars
Involved had
hlgha In the mid 50s. Chance of
ville, backed her car from a moderate damage. Leigh Andrea
rain Is 20 percent.
parking place Into tlie len side of Myers, Langsville, backed IDfo a
EDI!ided ,Forecut
a parked vehicle owned by car driven by Allen Mlcllael St.
WedDMd&amp;J Ulroqb FridaY
Brenda Manuel, Racine. "There John, Clifton, W. Va. on tile
was light dama&amp;e to both Pomeroy parking 1ot. Pollee
vehiCles.
.
.
reported that Myers wuclli4..r .
chance of raiJior snow on Friday.
The
second
accident
Friday
·
'
Improper bicklng ud St. , _ ·
.
Hlgha will be In the 40s Wedllesoccurred
atll:38
a.m.
on
West
fornolnsuranceco,.....,,...
d.y · and Tburld.y and r&amp;nge
trOm the mid ;lOa to the mid 40s Main and Court. Ira K. Rlgp, was moderate damqe
f'rlclay. Overnight lows will Mulberry Ave., Pomero)' was rlghtlldeand rearQUa1'111'»iaall .
tile..,. AllnaiR...-IIIIriM A.w.,. pr111 nt1d
range from the lqw30s the low .Oa makblg a len tUrn as he caml' orr of the St. Jolm car, •lid
bJ the· 11o111e of 110,. fa '"'IJIIIH for tbelr . Wednesday and 'rhursday mom- . the POmeroy parking lot wh~n a damagetotherearq!IU'W__.
·
pner- lllld coatllluoa• npport. (UPI)
lngs and In the 20s early Friday. , car
. driven
. by James M. Bentz, . of the Myers veblele.
.
J

Police probe three
mishaps
·in Pomeroy
.

Weather

wfth~:J'r":a::;.a~=~.:fa

»--.

llH ~~~!,~~!!~~~~LEY HO~PITAL
'

Point

'

consider a House-passed bill
eliminating the requirement that
meetings of · the Ohio Lottery
Commission be held In Columbus. The, game's headquartl!rs is
in Cleveland .

Worker productivity slows
No .suspects ar~ identified in in fourth quarter, report sl!ys
shooting
of
highway
truckers
.
.

.WASHERS
.
'

GET ALOW

be required If the Increased
prison terms ill both the House
and Senate bills were Imposed on
convicted drug dealers and.
abusers.
The Senate bill calls for siX
·minimum security prisons in
urban areas.
·
Shivers said it will be late
March or early April before a bill
Is ready for action, mainly
because legislative leaders must
determine how much money Is
available·for the drug programs.
That will be determined after
the state Office of Budget and
Management makes new revenue estimates this spring.
The Senate Ways and Means
Committee will meet Tuesday 'to

Voinovich has early poll lead
in Ohio~s . race for governor

992-1101

PR~C~TAGQN ­

as' an investment broker, he has
placed under management
over SI2 .000.000 in asse ts rOr
individuals. small businesses,
and corporations.

.

2 Sectlono, 12 Pog" 25 C.nto
A Mu"imediolnc. N _ _.,

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday. February 6. -1990

Pomeroy

ALOW . ·

Low lonl1ht Ia mid 3011.
Tuesday, hllh In mid IIOa.
Chuce of rain 21 percent. ·

•

Presidem in the Ashland ,
Kent,Uck)' o ffi ce
,Qradford &amp; Co. Wilh

'

'I

in overtime

biologist lakes on 'kill~r.. _ bees'

CINCINNATI •(UPI) - An
Ohio lilologlst Is tJ:ytng to make
sure "kWer bees" don't bring
- their financial and physical sting
lp the Buckeye State.
. GeneKrttsky,a blologyprofesso~ at the College of Mount St.
Joseph In Cincinnati, Is setli)lgup
an identification system to enable sclentls Is and bee keepers to
determine If killer bees have
Infiltrated regular honey bee
colonies.
·
·, Killer be~ are more aggres·
alve than regular honey bees and ·
are quicker to sUng peQple. But,
they're also financially dangerous to bee keepers because they
. produce lower honey yields than
other !Jees.
Killer bees are actually African honey bees brought to Brazl)
in the 1950s for genetics experl. ments. Inadvertently released In .
1957, they have migra.ted north- '
ward across South America, over ·
the Panama Canal, through
Central America and into Mex· ·
leo. Last month, they .were 150
miles south of Brownsville,
Texas, and · are expected to
arrive · In southern Texas this
spring.
·
.
Ohio bee keepers are con·cerned, says Krltsky, ''because
thousands of honey bee·colonies
spend winters In Texas a'nd are
transported north for the sPring
and summer.
"That makes It possible for
African honey bees to reach our

A family .approach

I

applied research demonstrat!Qu
where son and parasite dyl!llmics, forage quantity and quality,
and animal performance data II
being coUected.
All beef producers are Invited
to attend. lndivlduals who have
questions concerning tbla event'
.should contact the Gallla County
Extension Otfipe at 446-7007.

Pick 3
587
Pick 4
1855

Do ug is an Investment Vice

January~··

..

around the IRM approach.
On several demonstration
farms, !Heier calf sale weights
'I ncreased greater than 150
pounds per calf and cow numbers
tncreased by 10% tn three years
with no additional forage
acreage.
·
Mr. Clay Is also responsible for
coordlnatl~ twenty on-far'm

,

MEET A
'
BRADFORD
BROKER

The Raccoon...

'

~onday

Ohio Lottery

OSU knockS
off.Louisville

muw-.

WV 25550 ·

..

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