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                  <text>10-lhe Dlly 81 lli1tl

I

.-.---Weal news briefs...---eontlllued from page 1
and Henry .Wells, RepubliCan, Clark, and~ Hunter.
The new board members were glven .the oath .of oHice by
Secretary of State Sherrod Brown last Friday at the HoUday Inn
In Lancaster. Others altendlq that meeting were Mrs. Hunter
and Mrs. Frymyer.

Squads make_5 Thursday

runs

Five calls were answered Thursda~ by units of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services.
· At 1:33 p.m., Pomeroy went to Court St. for Jack Lance who
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rutland Fire Department at 3:04 p.m. was called to New
Uma Road extinguish a hay wagon. At 4:36p.m., Rutland Fire
Department was called back to the hay fire.
·
Middleport at 7:20p.m. went toRoute7forEariWinesJr. who
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
· Racine at 10:13 p.m. was called to Sharon Road for Dennis
Irwin to Veterans Memonal Hospital.

Panna. couple claims $3 million prize
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
_w inners of Wedresday night's $3
mUIIon Super Lotto jackpot
wasted no time In claiming their
grand prize,. surrendering their
tiCket Thursday.
Marlene and Norman Pa·
cholskl of suburban Parma went ·
to Ohio Lottery Commission .
:headquarters _T hursday mo111·
-lng. They will receive the money
over 20 years, In annual Instal·
bnents of $114,750 after manda·
· tory federal (20 percent) and
state (3.5 percent) withholding.
The Pacbolskls,' who have
:three children, told Lottery off!·
:clals they will use the money to
yay off their bills and to purchase
-a new car or pickup truck.

Pacholski, 42, Is a foreman for
, Cleveland Pneumatic Co., which
makes landing gear assemblies
· for airplanes, while his wife: 40,
Is a file clerk at Fo~t City
Enterprises Inc., the developer.
-· . Lottery spokeswoman Anne
Bloomberg said they bought the
winning ticket al Dairy Dell on
State Road In Parma, letting the
computer pick the numbers. .
Bloomberg said there's still no
sign of Saturday's $3 mliUon
winper, or the person who had the
single jackpot ticket In last
Wednesday's $15 mllUon drawIng. Saturda~·s winning ticket
was purchased In Orrville, whUe
the big winning ticket was sold In
Cincinnati.

.
h

----- Area deat
Vivian Titus

Margaret Priddy

Vivian K. Titus. 74. of Pomeroy, died early Friday morning
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
following an ex tended Illness.
She was a former employee of
~I berfelds and during World War
II was emploj&gt;ed by the West
Virginia Ordinance Works. Born
on Sept. 6, 19151n Mlddlepor(, she
' was the daughter of the late John
Allen and Carrie Massie Knopp.·
She Is survived by three sons,
Frank Allen· Titus of Columbus;
·Stephan Edward TliUs of Chilli·
cothe, and Robert Bruce Titus of
Pomeroy; four sisters, Mrs.
Wlllhim (Nola) Swisher, Middle·,
port; 'Mrs. Harold (Lera) Jones,
Syracuse; Mrs. John (MarUyn)
Fultz, Middleport; and Mrs.
Harold · (Evelyn) Vogelsong.
Wheelersburg, and several nleo .
ces and nephews.
· Besides ·her parents she was
preceded In death by her hu s·
band, Frank E. Titus In 1972, and
two brothers, David Allen Knopp
and Marcus Delos Knopp.
Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 4 p.m lit the RawlingsCoats-Fisher Funeral Home with·
the Rev. James A. Seddon
o!flclatlng. Burial will · be In
Riverview Cemetery. Friends .
may call at the' funeral home
Saturday, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p:m.

Stocks
Dally stock pried
(As of 10:38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark SmHh
ol Blunt, Ellis 1: Loewl ·
Am Electric Power ............. 30')1
AT&amp;T ... ............................ .. 40%
Ashland Oil .................... : ... 35%
Bob Evans ....... ............... ... .ll%
Charming Shoppes ............... 8%
City Holding Co..... ,. ... ......... 13
Federal Mogul. ................... 17%
Goodyear T&amp;R ... ... ... ....... ...33%
Heck's .............. :....................3
key Centurion .... .. .............. 13~
Lands' End ........................ .. 18
Limited Inc ....... .......... .......36)'e
Multimedia !nc ........... .. ... ... 75~
Rax Restaurants .. ... ... ........ .. 2~
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... ......... 15%
Shoney's Inc ... ...... .... .... .... .. 11~
Star Bank ..... ............... ;.., ... 18%
Wendy's lnt'l .. .......... .......... .' 4~
Worthington lnd ........... .... ... 20%

Margaret Pr kldy of Pomeroy,
Route 4, died late Friday mornIng at the Holzer Medical Center.
Funeral 11rr;mgements will be
announced by the Rawling·
Coats· Fisher Funeral Home.

V eteranJ Memorial
Thursday admissions - Guy
M. Thoma. Rutland; Mary M.
Hysell, Pomeroy; William
Pickens, Racine; Francis An·
drew, Long Bottom; Dennl$ R:
Irwin, Dayton.
Thursday discharges - Dale
Smith. Ernest Brewer.

.

To bury phone drops
•
· ·GTE North Incorporated has
announced that they are ln. the
process of bu rylng all telephone
service drops that werepl!lcedon
top of ground during the winter
I)'IOnthS.
.
• Occasionally, said a company
spokesman, one II mlued. To
ensure thll does not hap(len, any ·
GTE customer In Pomeroy,
Racine, Rullud, Letart Falla,
Portland or WllkelvUJe· areas
lfMa k!Jepbone lervlce drop
1flrt ll on the ~. Is reql811d to call 1192·2510~Lea
)lOUr name and te
on
Dumber, tbe Jpokesm
.. •
IIIII OTE wtll follow up to ensure
wrk Is compll!led.
·
1

Frldlly, PMdiZ.

•

· By United Pnu lnternatloul
With the mild air that cowred
most of Ohio this week being
pushed south; It looks like
another cold weekend, but certalllly nothing like last weekend's
blizzard
A large arctic air mass Is
poised across soptheril Canada,
ready to drop south and across
the Great Lakes region and the
Mldwes t. The edge of the colder
air Is marked by a cold front that
will move through Ohio tonight.
Meanwhile, conditions were to
be quite mUd today across Ohio.
High pressure that dominated
the midweek map has moved
east and a _southwest flow of
milder air from the Gulf stales
was to push north and across

Ohio today.
Some coudlness In this now
covered much of IOUthem Ohio
early in tile momma and radar

Indicated 10me shower activity
In the extreme southern end of
Ohio.

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~GAHS

Cottrell

The high temperatures across
Ohio were expected to reach the
50s by Jate afternoon.
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Voinovich...
Continued tJ:om page 1 ·

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Continued from page 1
to $112,500 and $138,300 In 1988.
In an earlier· report, the Com·
merce Department said Thurs.
day new construction jumped by
1.8 percent during January's
warm spell to an annual rate of
$424 b!Uion - the biggest In·
crease In 13 months.
That report said private construction, which Includes new
homes, Increased, In Jan11ary to
$333.1 b!Uion from $321.7 bllllon In
'December, or by 3.5 percent.

II·.

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MUG INCLUDED
WITH PURCHASE

~eQt~
.

Stall
,
' MARIJ;:TTA - When the Vln·
ton bddge on State Route 160
, closes June 1 for demolltloh,
' there will n9t be a temporary
. span to accommodate drivers,
according. to state highway
officials.
Joe Leach. District 10 Deputy
Director, said It became ODOT
policy Ill 1987 to eliminate temporary bridges from Its budget
except in certain circumstances.
''We ~ound there was not
enough money to maintain the
bridge construction" at a good
level with funding temporaries,
Leach said last last week from
his offices In Marietta.
Each temporary bridge ac· ·
counts for between 30 and 50
percent of the total project cost.
Leach said .
There have been grumbllngs
from local residents as to a
temporary bridge being placed
at the site, but according 'to
Leach, there will not be one built.
- To add a tem~rary · bridge,
Leach said It would cost an
AW'AY - .As Athena forward _Becky Sostarlch watches
additional $300,000 and delay the
a&amp; left,
Academy ·forward Krlstl Thomas (28) shoots from
project for up to two years. There
tile buellae during ~he seeolld qUIU1er ol Friday niKht'sDivlslonll ·
dlsA'Ict toumameJJt . c.llll!nplojullllp gaine at ChUIIcotlu\
· would have to be · additional
rlghts.:.of-.way . acquired and.
In
another el\lrlronmeftllll Impact
study completed, he ~ld ,
. At ihe pre&amp;ent tlrrie, tlie brldge
proj~t Is estimated' at $500,000without the temporary bridge.
'
e'
.
I
e
Trame will be detoured via
State
Route 325 at Rio Grande or
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State Route 124. ODOT will not

CANOI..ES

(304) 675-3400

tzes conttnue
search for suspect

i

.. car pulled up alongside Jol)nso?.

:e

a 33-year-old WilkesVIlle man
0

~':;~!~Y f~~oo~:::';tld e~~; e~~lle~

An occupant of the car fired ;a

~~~~g~,e f~~:~~w~':sd~~~;noh~

In the week.
LlfeFIIght to Oak Hill Commu11·
. Lt. Ron Klier of the Ohio
ity Medical Center, where sl)e
Highway Patrol's Jackson Post
was pronounced ~ead.
1•
said the patrol Is looking for
The patrol ·has Issued a threeRlcl!ard Butcher in connection
state alert in Ohio, West VIrginia
with the ~ealh of Melinda John·
and Kentucky for Butcher and
59n, 24, Oak Hill, op Wednesday.
the maroon 1979 Oldsmobile
No warrant for his arrest has _. Cutlass he was reportedly drilv·
been Issued, Klier said.
lng at the time of tire shooting.
Johnson was reportedly shot
Butcher Is described as 5-10 iln
sometime betweep 6 a.m. and 7
height, welghlng-185 pounds and
a.m. Wednesday as she walked
having brown hair: He posslljly
along State Route 32, just east of
has a moustache, the patrol said.
the U.S. 35 bypass. Johnson hail
Hlsvehlcle'sllcensenumberWas
been a passenger in Butcher's
given as 828-SXV.
·
!
car and was either ejected from
The J.ackson Journai-Hera)d,
the car or · jumped out of it
quoting Klier, said In Its FridiiY
edition that Johnson was ' a
foUowing an apparent argument
between her and Butcher, report·
student at Hocking
edly Johnson'sformerboyfrlend.
College and was scheduled
·
Johnson was seen limping
attend classes
along the highway by two motor·
car was disabled and
IsiS who stopped to see If she
(See AUTHORJTJE8, pa11e

through that route. The$4,525for
By LEE ANN WELCH
the trip has been raised In the
Tlmes·Sendnel Staff
private sector - local businessGALLIPOLIS - The face of
Eastern Europe Is changing . men and community leaders who
see this as a good opportunity for
almost dally, and a group of 35
Ohioans will have the opportun- the city.
Ity to view It first hand in May. , What's happening In Eastern
The State Leadership Initia- Europe Is a "new threshold In
world poUtlcs," and I man said
tive Is a program that sends the
the Interaction with officials
brlghtes t and best local leaders.
there may bring new understand·
businessmen and state officials
lng and problem solving methods
abroad to exchange Ideas and
to Galllpolls. He also expressed
expand the economic bases of
hOpe In expanding the economic
·
their regions.
base
of Gallla County, but added
Gallipolis .City Manager Dale
may
not be realistic.
that
E. !man Is one. of those 35 from
Nevertheless,
he will be armed
Ohio who wiil be venturing to the
with
the
surveys,
sitings and
Eastern Bloc In May, along with
other
Information
about
Galllpo·
Lt. Gov. Paul R. Leonard.
Us and Gallla County to present
"It's . a tremendous opportunto the buslneess community in
ity," Iman said of the 15·day trip
Eastern Europe.
that w_!lllnclude stops In Russia,
The trip will also give !man the
Yugoslavia and Poland.
opportunity
to- get acquainted
Although lman Is city manwith .state leaders - like the
ager, he will not ~ financed

Director of Development. David
Baker, as well as others.
That will help in the long run
when the city approaches the
statehouse for projects. State
o((lcials will know who they are
dealing with on a first name basis
and be able to attach a face to the
proposals.
Additionally, lman can get
ideas from other state leaders
and officials to bring -back.
"With this kind of caliber
group, It can't help but rub off,"
he said of the learning opportuQ·
lty the trip presents. ·The delegation will leave from
Columbus on M-ay 5andreturnon
May 20. In between, !man said 70
pE:rcent of their waking hours
will be spent In meetings.
They will visit Moscow and
V&lt;ilgograd (SIElingad) In the
Soviet Union. War w. Poland
and Belgrade,
avla.

Among- discusSions with the
Soviets will be the recent innova(See Crt'Y, page A3)

DALE E. IMAN
To vl&amp;H Eastern Europe

Newly-formed arts council's goal
is providing cultural opportunity

1983
Mercurv
Lvnx
.....
$1695
Station W•gon. Auto., Pif, PB. "lr.
1983 Chev'ette
............. S1495
'

Auto .. Pl. PB. Air.

JUt!.~!. 5.~~~,~itation •• S1695
1973 Ford F·1 00 •••••••••• •795
V-8, Auto., PS.
.

ODOT ofllcla:Is, there will be no temporary brld11e
for tratnc, and detours will be set up lo 11et'people
In and out of VInton. (Times.Sentlnel photo)

City official to ·visit· Eastem Europe

Pleasant Voley Hoopital MldCII Olfica Building t Suit8 215
·
Voley Drlw. Point Pieaant, WV 25650

........

REPLACEMENT SCHEDULED -The bridge .
at Raccoon Creek on Slate Route 160 Is scheduled
for replacement thla swnmer by the Ohio
DepiU1ment of Transportation. AccordiDII to
.
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llff ~!~~~~P~t~~~LEY HOSPITAL

1988 Cant•r •••••••• ~•••• S9,000

route traffic on county or town'
:,apt. 15, and tor each day the would have been tremendous,
'ship roads, Leach said.
contractor Is not finished, they and the only detour route for
Although built In 1928, Leach
will be assessed $1,500 (n liqui- commercial trucks was W.Va. 2,
Which entailed cross.lng the river
dated damages.
sal'd that while the . Vinton
bridge's trestles are structurally
"We have to look at the overall at either Point Pleasant or
sound, the deck rs Inadequate and
responsibility as to the state's Huntington.
In addition. Leach said the.re
Its width and . helghth are not
bridges," Leach said.
was
no convenient ·d etour for
large enough.
Each year, ODOT Is rebuilding
loca,l
traffic. The number of
The project was bid last 130 bridges, and Leach said
people
affected was too great.
October and completed to give
they'd like to finish 300, but the ·
With the lack of a temporary
the contractor adequate time to
funding Is not available.
bridge; there will bean Impact on
order and acquire materials for ·
There was a temporary span
the people of Vinton, especially in
the project. so the job can be
constructed at Raccoon Creek on
terms of emergency services.
·finished quickly.
State Route 7, but Leach said that
According to Gallla County
was an exception.
Leach said the construction
time Is scheduled from June 1 to
(See BRIDGE, page A7)
The Impact on the community

u

~el~~~~i~ ~ tnei!ded help. Soon afterward, /1

MAXWELL
' HOUSE
FILTER PACKS

••

-\NN WELCH

Tlmes~enUnel

7 ·oz.

1-

Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology

A Multimedia Inc. New~~MPer

No. temporary- span for Vinton

'

SHAVE GEL

•GEWNG CURLS
•a.EAN GEL-MAXIMUM HOlD
•CLEAN GEL·EXmA HOLD .

·:::&gt;

=

13 Sectiona. 86 PotiM

· Bridge would delay project 2 years: ODOT

Burlingham.
Meat will be provided and
coffee and rolls will be free.
FollOwing the dinner, there
Will be a safety program lnclud·
lng a flbn by Columbus Southern
Power.
Syracuie Youth Leape
The Syracuse Youth League
will have an organizational meetIng on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Syracuse Elementary School.

24Ft. Long, s.tf-Ctilbined, Awning. Pullecl18•than 100

onals·-

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallip(,lis Point Plaalant. MarCh 4, 1990

Corr.fllulad1910

~--Meigs announcements----

Complete PTe-Natal Services
Annual Gynecologic Check-Up
Pap Sm~ars +Breast Examinations
. Family Planning
&amp; Other OB/GYN Procedures

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Volnovlchoutilnedplansforan
,, "Ohio Tomorrow" program
under which the state's top
corporations would help him
reorganize government.
"We'll get them Involved In
education," said Volnovlch.
"They're the ones who are
complaining• • about poorly edu·
cated workers.

Graveside services for Carl
Dawn Partlow, stillborn Infant
daughter of John and Tresa
Kuhn Partlow, Feb. 28 at the
Holzer Medical Center, will be
held at 11 a.m. Saturday at the
Rock Springs Cemetery .
Besides her parents she Is
survived by a s Isler. Mary Jane
Partlow and a brother, Jesse
Levi Partlow. Arrangements are
being handled by the Ewing
Funeral Home.

Blue

D-1

Weather
South Central Olllo
Cloudy Friday night, with a
chance of showers toward mornIng and a low between 30 and 35.
Chance of rain Is 30 . percentMostly sunny Saturday, with
highs In the mid 40s.
Extended Forecaat
Sunday lhrough Tlieaday
Fair through the periOd, with
highs ranging from the mid 20s to
the mid 30s Sunday, In _the 40s
Monday and between 45 and 55
Tuesday. Overnight lows will be
between 15 and 25 Sunday mornIng, In the 20s early Monday and
the 30s Tuesday morning.

•

store to
close March 15

'

Housing...

Eutera Board to meet
·The Easrern Local Board of
Education' will meet In special
session on Tuesday at 6: 15 p.m.
In the high school cafeteria, to
deal with personnel matters.
Modern Woodmen to meet
The Modern Woodmen! of
America Camp 7230 will have a
potluck and famUy life activity
· on March 10 at 6:30 p.m. at the
Modern Woodmen Hall In

'M

Ohio ·braced ·for another cold weekend

Cari Partlow

Hospital news

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· lng the Ml,ddleport Arts Council.
treasurer.
By C~LENE HOEFLICH
According to the ordinance a
As for donations to the group or
Tlm.Sentlnel Staff
special fund was created lor the
funds earned from any activities
MIDDLEPORT - Mary Wise
Arts Council monies within the
of the group, all will be deposited
has been n~med chairman of .the
vlllage
treasury.
It
provides
that
in .the Middleport Arts Council
newly organized Middleport Arts
all- expenditures of the Middle·
Fund with the clerk-treasurer,
Council, a new department of
port Arts Council shall be ap·
just as with . all other village
Middleport VIllage Council
.operations.
proved by the board of directors
funds .
·
and then submitted to VIllage
The new Council will also be&gt;
Primary goal of the new
village department Is to promote Council ffor consideration and
required to submit to MiddlepOrt
(See NEWLY, pa1e .U) ·.
and provide cultural opportunl· · payment through the clerk·
lie$ for the community.
Meeting at Middleport Village
Hall Thursday ntaht, the sevenmember board of ddlrectors
appointed by Middleport Village
POMEROY - Family histories. are now heiDI compUed for
Council, alOIIJ wttb a group of
the commeratlve edition of The Dally !Sentinel to be published In
charter members, elected offlc·
April as a salute to the 150th anniversary of Pomeroy's
ers tor the new organization.
Incorporation. The major portion of Information for these
Besides Mrs. Wise, the other
hlslorles Is coming from the Meigs County History Books,
officers elected were Dewey
Volumes 1 and II; and Edgar Ervin's Pioneer History-of Me~
Horton, vice chatnnan, Shirley
County.
Quickel, secretary, and Bob
Families ln~;luded In the special ~Ilion must have lived In
Glbnore, treasurer.
Pomeroy either betore or at the time of the Incorporation of the
Both Glbnore and Horton are
village In 1840.
·
members Qf Middleport VIUage
There may be some families who )Vere In Pomeroy at that
Council which Monday night
time yet not mentioned In any of the above hlatorles. If 10,
dilouued at length the purpoae,
descendanta of thoae famWes should contact The Dally Sentinel
goals and objectives of · the
with the Information as soon as possible. Hopeflllly,'no fimlly
proposed Arts Council before
will be missed.
.
adopting an ordlnanca establish·

Histories being compiled

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,PIICIS.
GOOD AT
'

992·6491

•IDLIPOn

.786 l!llorth
C!-, ....
ond, I :;'

SIOII
OILY.

Ml~leport,

Ohio

GIBBS MltiiOBLU. &amp;oii1DI 11M a . . ' ld db
bJ lit late tllarlea
wa • fonner
1aperlatelldent of tile Pomeroy Exempted VJIJap
I'

8eiiDoll
1111 wile, lit late EDell Glllbl, wu a
lo•athne
u lit ..._rOJ ICllooL JoM
U.le,, PttmerOJ prlllclpal1 dllp1871 here two
apeaken,and the lOud box of the new sylltem.

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Mild• 4, 1990

Pomeroy-_Middlaport-GII~il. Ohio Poii'lt Plan It, W. Va.

~.

:Commentary and perspective

....

·(;eologists meet

March
4, ' 1910
.

SYRACUSE, N.Y .. (UPI) _
Global warming and ground·
water cont-amination will be
major topics as some 1 000
geologists gather for a meetln'g of
tbe Northeastern Section of the ·
Geological Society of Amerlc;~,
an oreanlzer said Saturday. ,
Wallace Broecker of Columbia
University will give the keynote
address Sunday on "Global
Warming: What does t-he Future
Hold? •• at t-he Qpenlng of the 25th
annual meeting.
"He Is one of the major players
·In the global warming game, and ,
he Is widely consulted for. his

A-2-

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~unb-~ ~intts - j~ntin:el
A DlYialon of
A~

~m~
~v

1121 'lblrd Ave., Galllpolk, ObJo
·

(614)

111 CourtS&amp;., Pomeroy, Ohio

ue-zsu ·

(61') 99!-~156

.

ROBERT L. WINGETf
PAT WBti'EftEAD

Aulatut Publllber-Conlroller

A MEMBER of 'Ibe United Presslnternatlonal, Inland Daily Press Association and tbe Amerlcaa. Newspaper Publllhen AasCI!Iattoa.
LETTERS OF OPINION are wrlrome. They should be less than :nl wonts
l q. Allletterspesubject: t oedltlngandmuat beslened wtthname. address'and
: telephone number. No unslpstletlera wUI be publllbed. Letlers ~uld. be In

110«1 tute.

WASHINGTON - Tbe Food
and Drug Administration man. aged to get through an embarrassing generic drug scandal '
without learning Its lesson.
Tbe agency still doesn't adequately track t-he approval process for · new generic drugs,
I betraying the same sloppiness
that allowed crooked FDA chemIsts to hustle gifts from drug
1
makers in trade for preferential
treatment.
' ~
In fact, .four months after one
of those chemists was fired, the
FDA records Indicated that he
was stU! reviewing generic· drug
applications. He wasn't, of
course . Charles Chang was
1 awaiting sentencing for ac.c eptlng gratuities from drug
companies.
, ·
The FDA hadn't cleaned up Its

I

1'11blllber
HOBART Wh.SON JR.
ExecuUve Editor

.FDA still not on track after scandal

addreiiiDI_~A!f· DOl pen&lt;IIOIIUa.

l::==;;;;::========w;;===========:::::!.!.

Backstairs ·at
:the· White House

act enough even to remoVe
Chang's name from t-he review"
roster.
·
Federal Investigators who
mopped up after !-be scandal
found that two other departed
chemists In addition to Chang
were still on the records as
reviewers. One FDA official whO
left the agency last May was still
lis ted as the reviewers on 60 drug
applications last fall. The report
does not list those chemists by ·
name, but an FDA source con-firmed that one was Chang. ·
Our associ ate Jim Lynch obtained a copy of the Investigators' draft audit, which for the
first time documents the Impact
of the ~lshonesty and dlsorgapt,
zatlon at the FDA. The report
was produced by auditors for t-he
Inspector genera!' for t-he Health

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

and Human Services Depart·
~ent, Richard Kusserow.
Tbe conclusions vindicate sev·
eral drug companies that
bumped their heads against a
!!rick wall trying to get. the FDA
to Investigate its own collusion
and favoritism. Three FDA
chemists and three officials of
generic drug firms have been
convicted of crimes related to
st-acking t-he deck in !-be drug
approval process.
After looking at one single
graph In the report, It Is easy to
see why My !an Laboratories Inc.
- a company t-hat didn't bribe
anyone- hired a private Invest!·
gator to find out why Its drugs
were put on t-he slow track.
Tbe · FD.I\. took almost tlll'ee
·

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While Ho111e Reporter
WASHINGTON - President Bush's daughter, Dorothy, whose
· marriage hit t)le rocks, Is expected to move to Washington.
. The 30-year-okl mofher of two children Is reported by friends to be
·moving out of her Maine home.
"Doro, " as she Is called, Is the apple o! her !ather's .eye. It' s
doubtful she will move Into the White House, but she has been glvet\
' her first ceremonial assignment on behalf of her father . .
.
• Her dad named her to the U.S . . delegation. headed by former
,Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, to at!l!nd "Throne Day"
•ceremonies In Morocco.
- The non-paying assignment Is out of the realm of nepotism.
· Presidents In recent times have put their children and relatives on
such delegations since former President Jimmy Carter sent his
mot-her, Miss Lillian, on such ceremonial missions.
Former President Ronald Reagan often selected his daughter
Maureen as his emissary.
The presence of a member of the first family on such delegations
apparently Is flattering to the host country, which considers It a
special homage.
Reporters could not help but observe the extra tight secul;'lty
surrounding the president during his one-day tnp to Cartagena,
Colombia, to attend the Andean drug summit.
·
Colombia called up 5,000 troops to secure the peninsula and
compound where Bush and the leaders of three ot-her Latin American
countries conferred on stopping narcotics trafficking.
·
· Tbe Secret Service also had extra agents to protect t-he president.
. But the day after Colombia, Bush flew to J{ennebunkport, Maine,
where his Secret Service detail got stuck In a snowbank.
'They must have sent t-he first team to Colombia," a reporter
quipped. •
·
Speaking of secunty, the White House press corps was told not to
stray from the secure filing cen!l!r area at ~n airport In BarranquUia
while waiting for t-he drug meetings to tireak up.
But some of them could not. resist going through the airport
terminal where aromatic Colombian coffee was being ground and
sold.
Tbe White House ordered that none ofthe Colombian coffee could be
carried on Air Force One. Repor!l!rs. flying on the president's plane
passed their purchased coffee on to t-heir colleagues riding the press
plane to bring It back to Washington.
·
Reporters are under no Illusions . thai they are loved In any
administration.
' In the Nixon era, they were called "the enemy." Secret Service
agents, often · annoyed lvlth the press getting In their way, call
reporters t-he "newsies."
-;-,
In jest, John F. Kennedy referred to the reporters and
photographers pouring Into his of!lce as ''the thundering herd."
What some prestilents have called them Is unprintable.
But It Isn't often t-hat they are called "animals. " which is the way a
frustrated member of the first lady 's press staff recently referred to
the pack o! reporters who cover social events at t-he White House.
President Bush, wrapping up a day's work In the Oval Office, poked
his head Into the press room on his way to the presidential residence
and told the cameramen waiting for him to officially leave, "You're'
on overtime."
Reporter~and photographers do not leave the White House while
the presklent Is In his ottlce.
However, too o!ten when they think he Is securely In place In the
family quarters In the evening, t-he president gets a yen to step out !or
·some Chinese !ood and the media that travels with him when he
!eaves the White House Is summoned to go along for t-he ride.
,•,

· When the NBC·TV crew, headed by anchorman Tom Brokaw, came
•to the White House one day to film "A d'a y In t-he life o! President
'Bush," they had the run of the place. Reporters also noted that t-he
vresld~nt's dally schedule was expanded to lengthen his work day .
As a memento of the special event, the NBC crew all wore badges
reading " A Day In t-he Life of President Bush."

I

Berry's World··

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CRUSt\ 't\\E SP\~\'l' '
Of 't't\! i'£.0~\.E

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\ODJ\Y

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_

years to approve one of Mylan's
drugs . Yet another company got
approval for the same genertc in
less than siX months. Chang's
trial revealed that he received a
b dl f lfts froni the company
u~h e ~ ~ track · ·
.•
onTl~e al~ money In the highly ',
tit!
eneric drug indus_compeSo ve gexasperat.ed drug
try·
me ·
of dollars
makers lost mUllons
.
walling for t-he inexplicable FD~
approval process
~be r .
competitors breezed t
ug · .
The report shows _11,1
numbers whl!l was ha_p))l! tng. ,
Barr Laboratories, for example,
walled 593 days for approval of ·
one of Its drugs, while the same ,
d'r ug made by American
peutlcs Inc. was reviewed In ~-.
days. Tbe Chang 1J111l reveal.... ,
that an American TherapeutiC• ·
official had given · Chang an ;
around-the-world trip, furniture •
.
',
and other gifts.
·
Sources Inside the FDA have.;
expressed frustration that the •
agency Is stUI. disorganized, ;
Ousted FDA Commissioner ,
Frank Young has not been
replaced. , The inspector gener;
al' s draft report says the FDA '
generic drug division still ~ 'doet l
not track the progress-. 'o f an (
application," nor «toes lt. "d~t ~
Indications of possible manlputa: :
tlon of tile generic drug review •
I
and approval process. " 1
Tbe FDA likes to think of ~ ,
scandal as an unforeseeable :
surprise. The fact· that . fired •
chemists were stUI listed as
reviewers for drug applications
was "a technical oversight," :
according to an FDA spokesman. •
The little oversights and sur• ,
pr~s reflect a poorly managed ,
agency th'a t still won't admit Its '
problems.

w:::

on global warming

expertlstqncarbondioxlderecy·
cling on a global basis," said
Henry Mullins, associate profes, ·
' sor of geology at . Syracuse
University .
... The ppbllc presentation will set
tile tone for the four-day meeting,
which will also offer a public
· forum on groundwater contaml·
nation 'l'llesday, said Mullins, ·'
who along With colleague Don
Siegel chaired the committee
which organized the meeting.
' • The general public has to deal
with geolOgy on a , day-to-day
basis, and one way In whlchther,
. do is with their groundwater,

said Mulllna.
''Tills is the first time that a
publiC forum 1has even been
presented at a nort-heast regional
meetlne. " said Mullins. "We
anticipate some lively discussion
and debate."
.
Mullins said he expects be-tween 900 and 1,000 geologists to
attend the meeting, Including
some from Canada and Great
Brita! 'I. The meeting, which Is .
being hosted by Syracuse Unlverslty _ and four other upstate ,
coUeges, will be conducted at t-he
SheratO!I. University Inn and
Conference Center.
"

Newly-formed... .
VIUage Council for their approval t-he by-laws which are to be
formulated by the Arts Council
Board of Dtrecton.
The role of the village In
providiJli mo~ for t-he Initial
'operation was discussed at
length by villllge officials. As
pointed out by Horton and
Gilmore It Is Important that the
arts council be given some
funding so t-hat t-he'if11up will be
able· to establish some sort -of

City officiill... .

(From CITY, paae At)
tlons In their economic sys tern
giving more authority and auto·
nomy to Individual enterprises;
development and plat\ning of
B:y Uqlled Preaslnlernatlonal
and In some places, zero. Motor- Oregon, with snow In t-he higher . joint ventures; flnailclng, repa·
Thick fog settled over much of. lsts were advised to use extreme
tnatlon of profits, foreign ex ·
elevations of the Sierra Nevada.
t-he East early Saturday. reducchange
requirements; developcaution. ·
A snow advisory was posted for
lqg yislblllty to zero In parts of
.ment
of
export market and the
Fog also enveloped New York, .up to a foot of snow above 7,000
.Kentucky, while a Paclflc .cokl
Philadelphia and · Washington
feet in t-he Lake Tahoe area and emergence of Soviet banking to
front spread rain·and sri0w over
D,c., the NWS said. In the West,
!rom 3 to 6 inches below that support commercial needs.
nort-hern.Callfarnia and Oregon.
In Poland, discussion will
fog was reported In .L os Angeles
altitude. Cold air moving Into theThe National Weather Service
arid Eugene, Ore.
·
region W@S expected to drop the center on currency laws, the
Issued a dense fog advisory fo r ·
APacl!lccoldfronispreadraln
snowline from 6,000 feet to 3,000 government regulations of joint
5(lutheast Kentucky through mid
venture operations and a comfroin central California to
feet by Sunday, the NWS said.
morning, wlth visibilities tl!'
parison of Polish and American
NATIONAL WEATHER FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 3-4--VO
economies.
·
duced to less than one-half mile
'
When t-he group Is In Yugolsa·
via, topics will Include the
economic climate and Impact of
that ·country as a -Most Favored
(USPnHtl)
Nation by t-he United States; the
business community's decision,
PubUshed each Sunday, 825 Third A""··
Galllpdls , Ohio, by the Dhlo ValleyPubmaking process. and the oppor·
ll.lhlnl COm polly /Multbr!edla, Inc. Se·
tunltles that exist for developcond Cllisl P&lt;Jil.lie pold at Gallipolis.
OhiQ 45631. Entered at second class
ment o! joint ventures .

Fog blankets ·East; West gets cold

:ard:

Ther!· ..

maill~g matter

Offlre.

at PomeroY, Ohlq, Post
I'

,Mem~r:

Weather

•

&lt;From NEWI&gt;Y, .,.,e AI)

" track record" In cultural act! vi·
ties.
Tbls, It was noted by Horton,
could help the local group In
becoming eligible for grants
from various agencies Including
the Ohio Arts Council. Once
established, the Art Council's
gOal Is to become a self·
supporting organization.
Goals of t-he local Arts Council
In addition to promoting and
providing cultural opportunities,
will be to encourage pride ln. the
community, to ~nr!ch and pre·
serve jhe local heritage, to
encourage tourism through the
recognition of local artisans. and
to fost-er fJne arts opportunities
for yout-h , according to Mrs.
Wise,
·
Plans discussed at .t-he organ!·
zatlonal meeting Included the
possibility of offering classes In
sweatshirt painting, sculpting,
Instrumental music , vocal
music, photography, dance, rnacrame, painting, theater and the
performing arts, calligraphy,

stenciling, and cake decorating.
Cur rently· the group Is In the
process of trying to locate a
sulta ble building for classes.
Fund raising pr ojects Is another
facet of the group 's conc er ns;
Mrs. Wise advises .
Meetings of the group have
been set lor the first Tuesday of.
each mont-h at 7 p.m. with the:
location to be announced prior to;
each meeting. Mrs. Wise says. ·
that the board Is open to all.
sugges ti o~ and Ideas which will
help l o Impleme nt a program of
cultural arts in Middleport and ,
t-he surrounding area.
Appointed to the board of '
directors of the MiddlepOrt Arts
Council are Mary Wise, Marilyn
Meier, Margie Bla~e. Susan
Baker, Jeanette Thomas , Shirley
Quickel, and Nancy Cale. Other
charter members are Na ncy
Klme, Mike Gerlach, Debbie
Gerlach, Judy Crooks,. Pauline
Horton, Bob Gilmore, Dewey
Horton, Roger Williams. Charles
Kitchen, and Fred Hoffman.

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Virile females, new death ' threat.o.-S__._C__;_huc_kS_to_ne:
waiting for Dakota to help bury :
Untu now, a great debate has
Secretary Louis Sullivan, the that loves virile females enough
them.
.
•
been raging over which group Is
to
help
bury
Dakota
-Instead
of_
American Canncer Society and a
an "endangered species" tlcked · off African -American
white males (due to the expand·
community shot down the R.J.
lng emphasis on pluralism In the
'
Reynolds strategy faster than an
work place) or black males (due
• -J
American P-47 In a dogfight with
to a deadly· combination- of
a German World War II fighter
I ~
\
self-destruction and social
plane.
'
.
~
J
ostracism).
Dear Readers.
They sent Uptown downtown.
aired 011 ABC on Ma,rch·18 at 7{
Argue no longer. A major
March 5-9 Is Ohio Right To
p.m. In order to encourage many ,
But nQt to worry. Dakota will
cigarette company has resolved
Read
Week
and
the
area
school
more to step forward and ask to,;
soon be taking the - "A-train"
the question. Tbe new endanteachers are charged with excltback.
·
learn.
;~
gered species Is a heretofore
StU!, you ' ve got to give the . lng programs for t-heir classes to
If you would like to help just:
uncategorlzed species known as
turn kids on to reading. Dinacompany credit for being truly
one adult or teen In our countY,-;
mite!
the "virile female ," If R.J.
egalitarian. They make no dis·
become a reader, call379·2722for ..
Reynolds has Its way , this group tinctlons between race or sex at
The Gallla Co. Literacy Counlnfo.rmatlon about the March 10 ~
could be t-argeted for extinction.
R.J .- · Reynolds. It they caii' t cil salutes not only all the young
Tutor Training Workshop; the '
Maybe your Immediate coterie persuade dumb black people to readers and their teachers but
first step In becoming a literacy :•
of fr lends Includes one or more self-destruct, hey, how about also all the adult learners In ABE
light for someone In the shadowl &lt;
VFers. It not, you are a culturally dumb white broads. That kind of classes and the council's tutoring
of his or her potential. And If yolj
deprived snob whose member- noble commitment to democracy
program. It's challenging and
know someone who would like to :O
ship In the Sunday Morning 'causes my eyes to water.
rewarding to learn how to read at ·learn how to read or write;.~
Wine-Tasting, Quiche-Sampling ·
So what If the company fattens. any age.
encourage that person to con~cl '-'
and Oaviar:Nibbllng Society of Its wallets on the skinny lives of
The council Is not alone In
the Bossard Library for the ~
Middle-Aged Blbliophillc Con- lung cancer patients? . The cl·
paying tribute to new readers
GCLC tutoring program.
. ..-;
versationalists could be subject
garette Industry provides em- this month. On February 11 the
Reading Is for everyone, and '
to revocation.
President and Mrs. Bush hOsted
ployment, and that's better than
the dinosaurs would tell · usr ~
Your group - the VITers · welfare, Isn't It?
the 1990 National Literacy Ho" Read today to avoid extinction •
(virile Independent thinkers) nors at the White House. The
But who Is this virile female?
tomorrow! '' DinoM
mite.
·:
has a problem. It t-hinks for Itself.
According to a market survey, videotaped program · "To Be
Sandra Doubleday. Director :
VIrile females are susceptible to she Is a white woman of 18-20, a Free" made at t-hat event will be
'
,
being conned and brainwashed.
non-aspiring blue-collar worker
'
That's why R.J. Reynolds Is
' ..,
with a limit-ed education and a
going after the virile females In devotee o! TV's "Roseanne,"
&lt; •"
•
•
an effort to expand Its share of drag races; tractor pulls, wresBy Jo'red Crow
don't
believe
St.
Valentine
wou14::
the SBS (Suicide by Smoking)
tling and heavy-duty libidinal
Pomeroy Attorney
approve any of the afo~ementi· ;
market. To attract vlrUe females
activity with her boyfriend.
Valentine I:!ay, February 14,
oned . "Nuff' said. ·
•~
to Its cash registers, R.J. Rey·
R.J. Reynolds IS counting on Its
1990, was full of surprise~ and ·
One
of
the
most
unusual(
nolds Is developing a new civirile females not to .use their
unusual events.
Valentine Days happened qUite a •
garette, Dakot-a, that neatly tits
brian muscles for anything more
First of all I did not receive any
few years ago. At t-he time Edison~
Into t-he virile-female mlndset.
strenuous than watching telev!·
unusual valentines this year,
Hobsetter was president of the_:
Whatever your feelings about slon and listening to rock music.
althOugh I received a few and
Pomeroy National Bank and.Ted ~
cigarette smoking, R.J. ReyIt virile females don' t read the
these' were for ·the most part the
Reed was president of tht ~
nolds deserves your respect. It newspapers, they won'-t learn
conventional type. However the
Farmers
Bank and Savlnga Com· •
epitomizes the never-say -die that 125,000 people died last year
newspapers, TV and radio did
pany
.
Some
of their frlenda~
spirit that buUt one otthe world's of lung cancer and heart disease
offer same variety. For example,
thought
that
It
wou
kl be very nice:
most dynamic economies, able to caused by smoking.
In the Columbus 'Dispatch there
It they would exchange valen· '
wit-hstand any catastrophe exWomen who smoke as little as
was a photo of a Bob Rohan who . tines. Neverbe!orehadtheydpne·,
cept Japanese competition and one to four cigarettes a day tuli
gave his wife .a heart shaped
this. Some of their friends ..
hos!Ue t-akeovers.
two or t-hree times the risk of
potato as a gift. Tbe normal
decided
to change this format so~
By choosing to market Dakota,
suffering. heart att-acks as non•
housewife would pr\)bably co'n·
a
big
flowery
valentine wa.S lll!n~:·
a resilient R.J. Reynolds
,
·
Smoking women.
slder this gift as unique and
to
Edison
from
Ted. This valen ;.:
bounced back !rom the Uptown
I'll confess. ! don' t count a lot of
would accept It In the spirit ' tine contained many of tbe usualJ;
debacle. The company recently
R.J. Reynolds' virile females
intended, however, since most small valentine greetings from '
tried to market Uptown , a
among my acquaint-ance. But the
housewives spend most of their the Farmers Bank. bill valentine ~
proposed new cigarette aimed
census says there are 14 million
time In the kitchen there are
was extra large In size and waS"
almost exclusively at Africanof them; that's a lot of virility.
some who would consider this
addressed to Edison from Ted. •
Americans. But a coalition of
Somewhere In this country, I
gift as an Insult. Wouldn't It be . The signature of Ted was very~
Health and Human Services
hope there Is another coalition
better If Mr. Rohan bad given his
authentic. At the same time an.:
wife some small heart shaped
equally large valentine from..
pot-atoes made with a cookie ~dlson to Ted was delivered wit~
cutter. Tbls would be more the same small Pomeroy N• •
ortK!nal. ,Sometimes the -spirit of tlonal Bank holiday greetll!gi~
giving moves In mysterious together with an exact replica'
B:y United Press International
ways. This wou,ld be more Edlll,on' s signature.
. _.
Today Is Sunday, March 4, the 63rd day otl990 with 302 to follow . . original . I would bet t~at most
Tlie
day
after
valentine's
da~
The moon Is In Its first quarter.
'
· ·
holisewlvn would prefer flowers : they met on the atreet and lhr~'
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Instead of a pot-ato. Men, don't flr~t thing Edison asld to Ted wu~
The evening star Is Jupiter. ·
·· approach your lady frleild with a
to thank him for the valentla.:.f'
Those born on t-his date are under t-he sign of Pisces. They Include . valentine and say "Happy Spuds. Ted .w as puzzled but laid t.b~
composer Antonio VIvaldi In 1678, Pollsh·born American patriot
to you."
.
you to Edison for 1t11 valentla8. j
Casimir Pulaski In 1747, Notre Dame football coach Knute R!lCkne In
In reviewing the classilllld Both were very happy with tllelt•:
1888, actor John Garfield In 1913, English auto racing champion
sections of a_rea newspapers totwns of affection.
:•
Jimmy Clark In 1936 and actress Paula Prentiss In 1939 (age 51) .
there have been some unusual
I heard about this valentlni·~
mnsages print-ed. For example:
exchange from Edison who wat:,
On t-his date In hlstor.y:
Mopsy,
.
pleas"' but wondered who was::·
In 1789, the U.S. Congress met for the first time,lnNewYorkCity.
You .have a beautiful ta!e.
I'E!IIpon&amp;lble for t-hese gifts. I to!atn 1801, ThOmas Jefferson became the first pre~ldent to be
Peter Cottontail.
·
Edlson tbat I beard about th.;:.
Inaugurated In WasbiDaton, D.C .
.
'
Tbe, printed mesaages of love exchange and I also wondered•
In 1917, Jeanet1e Rankin, a Mont-ana Republican, was sworn In as a
are Inexpensive and gives the . wbo the good Valeattne 1a1ry
member of t~e HoUle of Representatives and became the first woman
world DPtlee pf one'• affection. I ·was. I have a tape r,cordiDg ~:
·
,
.:
to lll!rve in Congress,
bellew that I would rather give a whicb he blamed me tor tills lift)
In 1958, the U.S. atomic submarine Nautilus reached theNdrt-h Pole · 'potato as a Valentine. I guess It I can't understand ,why.
·'
·by passing beneath the Arctic Ice cap. ·
depe'"!s on what turns you on. I
I,

Six months ..... ..... ..................... $19 .50

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Frid!ly's winning Ohio Lottery
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PICK-3
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PICK-4
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Letters .to the editor

Literacy lights up your life ·

',•

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Valentine Day, 1990

Today in history

SPECIALIZING IN:

MONTHLY PEST CONTROL .OF R'ESIDENTIAL AND
COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS FOR: .
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1980

PorlMJoy-Middeport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point PleMant. W. Va.

..-- Area news briefs·- __.......___..._____,;...___...____·----...;....,
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TOLEDO, Ohio. (UPI) - Rep.
Michael Oxley says he's optimist tc In light of a published report
that says the Pentagon can sell
enough Ml tanks to U.$. and
foreign governments to keep the
Uma plant open.
'Oxley, a RepubliCan whose
district Includes Lima, said reports In a trade publication
Defense News offer encouragement that the plant will not be
forced to temporarily shut down
once M-1 tank production ends In -

19933.

The Blade newspaper reported
Saturday that Oxley con~lders
the repcirt to 1!e the first stron1
signal recardlng the fate of the
plant, which employs about 2,500 '
people.

Patrol cites Bidwell man
GALLIPOLIS- A Bidwell area man wa.s cited In a car-truck
cruh Friday at 3: 48 p.m. In Gallipolis Township on S.R, 218 at :
tile junction of Neighborhood Road, acrordlna to the
GatUa·Melp Poat of the State Highway PatroL
.
Ralph W. Young, 30, Rt. l, Bldwel~ wu cited for failure to
yield after his 1978 Ford F-150 plckupcoll.lded l"!tb a 1987 Horida ·
.Acco~ driven by Jane A. Jordan, ~1. Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
Jordan was driving south on S.R. 218 when Young, heading
east and coming to the end ot Neighborhood Road, pulled Into
' Jordan's path, causing the collison.

The plant Is operated by Genert
DynamiCs, which assembles and
provides machine work for the
tanks In Warren, Mich. The
Michigan plant employs 1,400
workers and Is the first facUlty ·
that General Dynamics will close
In 1991.

'

Sheriff 'fJU1kes arre~ts ·
'

.Allstate announces
from
Mason County thai traveled to Cbarleaton Friday to meet with the.
leplature are shown here. According to Julie Bibbee, president of

Couaty Teachers' Association, a strike vote will be
next week. Mingo teachers were to decide Sunday If they will strike
and when.

reachers flock to W.Va. Capitol for rally
By UPland staff reporters
CHARLESTON, W.VL (UP!)-

Mingo County teachers are expec·
lfd to vote Sunday on whether to
make history by becoming the first
county to Slrilce over pay issues.
The vote is scheduled for 2 p.m.
at the county's vocational school at
Delbatton, said Mmk Jewe~. ~
county's educabon assocllltlon
president.
West Virginia teachers have
never staged a state~ide strike~ ~d
do not have collecbVe baJgainmg
rights.
.
JeweD was . among . several
thousand teac~ers w~o flocked 1D
the state Capttol Friday to show
;their frustration over Gov: Gasto,n
·~rton's and the LegtSiature.s
failure to address teacher pay, eqwty and othc:r educabon _problems.
Julie Btbbee, preside~ of ~
~n C01m.ty Teac:Jlers Associa·
uon stated thiS morrung of the local
teachers, "I can't teD what they are
going to do. They are disgruntled."
"A lot of the teachers were
hoping' the legislature would do
something yesterday or today, to

avotd any acbon next week, but . "There are a number of counties in
I'm aftaid ~isn't going to hap- the process of taking a strike vote,
pen," she connnued.
and as soon as Monday there is a
"I'm sure we'D (Mason County possibility there
be some
teachers) take a strike vote next · counties that will go out on sttite." ·
week, but I couldn't guess the out·
come." Bibbee concluded.
Bryant would not identify the
- Teachers were ex pee~ to stage counties but said there are at l~t
another. rally at the Capttol ~Y five or six counties talking about
when the House and Senate wtD be such a move.
in session.
"Once it slllrts, I thinlc you're
"ll's nothing we want to do, but _ going 10 see it mushroom," Bryant
our backs are to die waD." JeweD said.
said. "We have come up here ~e:uJewell said tlie 55 eounty (lduca•
, after year and have been ~ld we D tion association presideniS wiD
be taken care of next yeru:.
· meet with west Vuginia Education
~~go teachers v~Jed Thursday Association officials Monday even'to strike and Sunday s vote will be ing to vote on whether aU counties ·
on when to start the walkout. should participate in the walkout.
JeweD~d65percentoftllecounty
WVEA officials are expeclfd to
teachers voted for the strike.
meet with Caperton Mond;ly in an
"Does Mingo Count)' want to be attempt to defuse the situation.
~one to tak~ the first Slep? 1 thinlc
"He has agreed to meet with
1t's really split on ~hether ~ go them," said Gordon Morse, CaperMonday or Tuesday, Jewell satd.
ton's spokesman.
Teachers in several other
"The feeling of the office is we
.counties are considering similar ac- prefer it (strike) not happen. The
tions.
.
feeling is those people would be
"The fruslJa!ion is rising, .. said better off staying in the classroom,"
WVEA lobbyist Perry Btyant.

will

MOI'lle said.
"The prospects for substantial
sums of money are not telribly en·
couraging ... However we will lis·
ten to what they have to say on
Mondny."
Bryant said teachers will not set·
lie for equity pay, which would equalize salaries from ·county to
county, but are looking for across·
the·boatd pay hikes.
It would cost the state $6.8 million to fund each percentage point
increase in teacher pay, Bryant
said .
· Friday',s sll'ik\: talk followed a
rally by at least 5,000 teachers from
across West Virginia The number
rivaled a rally at the Capitol two
weeks ago.
·
Unlike the earlier rally in which
lawmakers criticized
for
their behavior, Friday's assembly
did not disrupt the legislative sessions
su;te police stationed 20 1100pers
at do&lt;)rs leading to the House and
Senate chambers NonnaDy four
troopers are assigried to the session.

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Hostess: Nancy Krug

Kenneth Bennett, 45, of Oak Hill, was

Co~nty. Court

: POMEROY - Twenty-seven
: cases were processed this week
• .In Meigs County Court by Judge
: Patrick O'Brien.
! Fined were Janet L. Nibert,
· • Galllpoll!r, $250 and costs , 6() day ·
' license suspension, ihree days In
: jail, with $150 of fine and jail time
• to be sus_pended upon enrollment
, In a residential treatment pro·
• ~tam, DUI; $75 and costs with
' $50 of tine suspended, no opera; tor's liCense; Edward J. King,
'Dexter, $250 arul costs, 90 day
· Jlcense suspension, 10 days In
: jail, DUI: costs only, 10 days In
· ~all to r.un concurrently with
:~ther sentence, no operator's
·r license: Eddie R. Smith , Syra;J;use, S75!lnd costs, three days in
•P,all \vtth Jail time to be suspended
·;If a valid operator's license 'Is
• ol)talned within 60 days, no valid
: operator's license; Michael
• Burke, Pomeroy. $50 and costs.
: 10 days In jail susjiended, one
: year probation, for kno.wlngly
• and Improperly transporting a
., loaded firearm In a motor
•
: vehicle.
• Edward M. Wood, Long Bot·
,tom. $10 and' costs, following too
;closely; Angela Sharpe, Langs·.ville, · $25 and costs, failure to
:control; Clare~'ce Lee, Pomeroy,

..

momlng and charged with DWI. He was released later that
momtnc on a summons.
Shawn Michael Robinson, 22, of JackS!&gt;n, was arrested by
deputies Saturday morning and charged with DWI a nd reckless
driving.

Sheriff probes theft .
'

CHESHIRE - The Gall!a County Sheriff's Department
Investigated a theft of $1,350 In Items belonging to Marrl Apne
Campbell of 10 W. Poplar Ave.
.
Campbell told deputies SaturdaY morning that four
collector's dolls ($1,150), a Fisher VCR ($1QO) and a Brother
sewing machine ($100) were stolen from her trailer Friday
night.

..........-~Municipal .court.:....
· --

costs only, disorderly conduct;
Bryan K. Bentley, McArthur, $25
and costs, safety violation; ·
DavldL. Grate, LongBottom, $20
and costs, fal)ure to control:
Michael Connolly, ReedsVIlle,
$20- ~nd costs, failure to control;
Deanna · Haggy, Pomeroy, $10
and , cos~. failure · to yield;
,Michael Brace, Thurman, $5 and
costs, following too closely;
Joseph W. Pullins, Coolville , $20
and costs, seat belt violation.
Fined for speeding were Cut,
· ford Griffith, Reedsville, $25 and
q&gt;sts; _GienKnudson,Athens,$23
and costs; Brian K. Holley,
Middleport, $23 and costs; Roy
·~- H~rmon, Gallipolis, $20 and
costs: ·Christopher R. Deemer,
Syracuse,. $30 and costs; Max E. ·
Hill Jr:. Racine; $21 and costs ;
Betty ' BOrresen Prince: . Marietta, $22 and costs: Oscar
Dickson, Selmer. N.C., $20 and
costs: Beverly G. Harris, Mechanicsville, Va. , $~2ancosts;
Stephen Hesson, aldwe ~2
and costs: April awhorn, Charleston, W.Va., $19 and costs.
Bonds were forfeited In counly
court by Laura Portaro, Broadview Heights; Benjamin Kasler,
Amesville; and John Herbert
Smith, Clarksville, Tenn .. all $60
and all for speeding.
'

GALLIPOLIS - In Galftpolls . and a red light ; Mary L. Johnson,
Municipal Court Friday , Karen
41, VInton, $25, Improper park· ·
L. Pierson, 32, RL 1, Gallipolis.
lng; and William E . Province, 69,
· and James W. Walton, 37, R,t. 2,
1224 Second Ave., $43, tailgating .
VInton, each received $400 fines,
Speeding bonds were forfeited
thr~l!-day jail terms and 60-day
bY Delmar c. Cook, ·33, 2004¥.!
·license su~~nslons for DWI .
· Chat)lam Ave. , $51; Pamela D.
Various bonds were forfeited
Hopper, 28, Huber Heights, $43;
by Brian K. Newell, 21, Rt. 1,
Joseph C. Hurlow, 25, ·Rt. 2,
Ga!Upolls, $43, r unlng a stop
Crowri City, $43; Ray,mond S.
sign; William R. Miller, 25.
Gibson, 30, Rt. 2, Crown Clty,$44;
vandalia, $43, not maintaining · Nellle C. Ford, 76, 231 Jackson
assured clear distanc e; Richard
Pike, Galllpblls, $44; ·
E . E l kins, 31, Barboursville,
Charles F . Daugherty II, 26,
W.Va . . S56,loose U-clampon axle
Columbus, $77; Robert E. Ste·
of tractor; Edgar Lambert, 56,
wart, 24, Wellston, $40; Beth M.
Ona, W.Va., $43, running a red
Wa:.Sh, 37. Southern Pines, N.C.,
light:
$48; Grace E . Jones, 28, Well· .
Theodore G. Warne r, 75, Wa·
sten, $44; Lewis A: Albdght, 52,
shlngton Court House, $43, tallScott Depot, W.Va., $43; and
Ballnda Lea Nance, 22, Gallipolis
gat.ln g: cynt hi a L , R oss, 28 , Rt . 2,
'Patriot, $43; running a s top sign
Ferry, w .va. , $51.

EMS responds to 12
calls in Meigs County -

ported to HolZer.
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medi·
At 10: 37 a .m . l_he Middleport
cal Service responded to 12 calls
unit went to Spring AVe. for
. for assistance on Friday .
Audrey Arnold who was taken to
At 1: 59 a .m. the Pome roy unit
Pleasant Valley HospitaL
went to Ame ricare for VIvian ·
The Rutland unit atll: 24 a.m .
Titus.
was called to Happy Hollow Road
At 2:01 a .m . the Rutland unit
for Michael Richmond who wa s
was called to Meigs Mine No. 31
taken to Veterans.
for Keith Sargent who was taken
At 6:48 p.m . the Racine and
to Pleasant Valley Hospital .
Bahsan Fire Departtnents were
The Pomeroy unit, at 3: 36 called to the Roger Beegle
a.m., was called to the sheriff's
residence on a rekindle of the
Flats.
department
lor
Dink
Kennedy
before
mentioned hayflre .
The Racine Fire Department
Finally,
at 9:55 p.m. the
who
.
was
taken
to
Veterans
and the Bas han Fire Department
Mem'orlal
HospitaL
Syracuse
unit
responded to a call
were on the ·s cene for approxl·
·
At
4:
34
a
.m.
the
Racine
Fire
at
D
&amp;
M
Pizza
where· Debbie
· mately fhree hours. Thl! hay was
Department
responded
to
a
call
Moriarity
was
taken
to lfolzer.
owned by Roger Beegle 11nd some
on
County
Road
35
for
a
hay
fire
25 large round bales were
at the Roger Beegle re_sldence.
_destroyed.
·
COLONY THEATRE
The
Bashan- Fire Department
The fire department were
was called at 4:54a.m . to assist.
FRIDAY THRU THURS.
called again on Friday evening
The
Racine
unit
transported
KEVIN COSTNER.
when the hay rekindled .
Randy Friend from County Road
ANTHONY QUINN
According to Soulsby this Is the
35 to Veterans at 6:40a.m.
· first report of a hayflrethls year.
At 8:32 a.m. the Rutland unlt
Carla Whaley reported to the
was
called to Route 124 on an auto
departtnent Sa1urday morning
.
accident
In which Faye Kimball
that sometime during the night a
was
taken
to Holzer Medical
bench on the porch at. Whaley's
Center.
At
8:35a.m
.. the Rutland
Grocery on Route 681 at Darwin
Fire Departtnenl ·and another
had been damaged. She also
reported that ·a pop bottle had unit were called and D.ennls and
Phillip Edmiston were transONE E¥ENtN SHOW 7:30
been broken . .

~peputies arrest wo.m an

Man sentenced for forgery,
grand theft after guilty plea
POMEROY - A!ier entering
pleas of guilty to charges of
forgery and grand theft, Ricky D.
-Colburn has been sentenced In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to six months In jall oneach
charge, with tall terms to run
concurre ntly. Colburn Is to re·
celve credit for six d ay s (Ire·
vlously served In the Meigs
County JaiL
He IS'Io serve his sentences at
the SEPTA Center, Nelsonville. ·
He has also been ordered to make
restitution In the amount of $600.
A fo reclosure action has been
filed ln common pleas court by

Licenses issued
POMEROY - Marriage ilcenses have been Issued In Meigs
County Probate Court to Joseph
Ray Conley, 21, and Stephanie
Kay Nuz\11!1, 28, lioth of Pome·
roy: Hollis Eugene Peguese, 33,
and Chellnda Denise Miles, 27,
both of Pomeroy .
·

Citizens National Bank, Polm
Pleasant , W.Va ., agains t Charles
W. P11gh and Betty J . Pugh, Loll&amp;
Bottom, et aL
In another foreclosure action,
Diamond Savings and Loan Company has been awarded a t $31,635
judgment from Don C. Becker. et
al.
.
The cases of Thomas R.
Thornton against James L. May•
field, administrator of the Bu·
reau of Workers Compensatjon,
et al; and Tamara Hawley, a'
minor, by her next bes t friend ,
Linda Hawley, ·agains t James
Acree. have been se ttled and
dismissed.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions -Robert
Beegle, Racine; Arthur Ro_ush, ·
Mason, W.Va . .
_Friday discharges -James
Bentz.

"Pro Walker" ·
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Each spring, in the Canadian capital bf Ottawa, :
millions of tulips and daffodils burst forth in a riotous .
display of color. Join .Ava this May for the vibrant ,
Canadian Festival of Spring.
. May 14-19,1990

POMEROY -Tammy K. Wat. klns, Maple Street, Pomeroy, Is
• being held In the Meigs County
.~'!!!on a felon lous assau tt·charge
~~-::trom an ' liicldeilt at a
~Cole .Street residence In Middle·
~port, i!CCOrdlng to Meigs County
. s~etlff James M. Souls by.
·
"" According to the report, It Is
alleged that Watkins stabbed
• Paul R. Steinmetz Jr. , 104 Brick
Street-. Pomeroy. around 2: 45
: a.m. on Friday.
·
: Steinmetz was taken by prl·
: vate vehicle to Veterans Memorial Hospital where he was treated
l and released.
·
At 4:30 a·.m . Friday, the
·department was notified that hay
; bales had been set on fire on
--: County Road 35 at Old. To~ne

~ AAUW poster contest slated ·
' '
,. POMEROY March Is ·" ohomeaddressandphonenumber
:women's History Month and the
should be placed on the back
: Middleport Pomeroy Area
upper left-hand corner of th~
· Branch of the American Associ a-, poster.
:tlon of University Women Is · Essays must be 100-500 words
' sponsoring a poster and essay
In length,!landwrltten, and refer,
•contest regarding the role that
ences used In preparing the
· : women have' played In A!Rerlcan
essays must be cited. All factual
statements or quotes must be
' history.
: Participants must be students
referenced. and failure to do so
: In ~tades three through eight at a
will result In disqualification.
:school In Meigs County and the
Entrants should list the IItle.of
•entry categories are grades
their essay on a cover page, and
' three lmd four , grades five and
Include their · name, grade,
;six, and grades S{'Ven and eight. · school, home address, and tele-·
; March 12 Is the entry deadline
phone number. .
' and all entries should be lurned
Essays will be judged on
•In to 'the teacher. Each' school
accuracy, creativity , and
''district shou)d turn In entries to
conciseness.
the Cou11ty School Board Office
by March 13. Winners will be
notified by mall .
~
o·"
'• Studel)ts should select a .
POMEROY - Divorces have
;woman In history as the basis tor
been
granted In Meigs Common
their entry In either contest.
Pleas
Court to Marks. Williams
; All posters .must be no smaller
from
Trudy
M. Williams; Bobby
. 'than eight ancl one half by 11
Gene Swiger Jr. from Cheryl
Inches and no larger than 14 by 22
Lynn Swiger; and Rober~&lt;\ Ann
)hches. They may be produced
Ridenour from John Buel
using medium bu I the use of
Ridenour.
:COpyrighted characters (such as
Pamela -A. Honaker, Long
'All or Garfield) will not be
and Dwight C. Honaker,
Bottom,
accep~d. The posters may be
have been granted a
Athens,
:.Oade at home or at school and
dissolution
of their marriage.
names, ~tade, school,

'•

RALLY SCENE - Shown Is the acene outside
the Weat VIrginia Capitol Friday as raiiHOalteci
teachers rallied for'more pay and benefits. Many
Muon County teachers were on the acene, and
although 8eeurlty was enhanced at the doon
leading Into legislative meetlnp, JuDe Bibbee,
president of the Mason Teacl!ers' Assoclatl_on

propriate approach," he said.
. In addition to Marion County,
l , Doddridge, Brooke, ·
Ham ire, Minerai, . Morgan,
eton, Calhoun, Ritchie and
Tyler counties Were to -make
presentations Friday.
authorized the authority - fo seD
bonds to fund school building
projects statewide. The agency has
about $80 miUion, o( which $38.8
million is to be split between the 55 school systems based on enroll·
met\~ while another $38.8 million
is to be distributed bared on need.

described the group as "docile." County teachers
staged a one-day walkout Friday to go to
Charleston. School was clUlcelled at 8: 30 a.m.
Friday when oounty officials dllcovered there
would not be adequate supervision for students In
school facilities.

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SBA hears Mason proposals during m~ting
By TOM SEARLS
MORGANlQWN, W.Va. (UP!)
The state School Building
Authority closed its meeting to the
public Friday while hearing presentations on 11 of the 21 projects up
for funding. . ·
Clacey Williams. executive
director of the board, said .the
hearings were closed because of the
potential that jliOpetty site values
would be affected. The projects already have •been openly presented
to the eight Regional Education
Service Agencies.
,Williams said the board refused
to admit the public "because we
feel at this point the discuSsions are
at a circumstance where the discus·
sion of property values has reached
a definite level of concern because
Qi Slate moneys that are involved in
purchasing the properties."
· School officials of 21 counties
are vying for a share of S3U mil·
lion the agency is allowed to grant
baed on need. Eleven of the
counties were to make presen·
tations Friday, and the remaining
10 are 19 meet with the board
Saturday in Beckley.
"I'm certain there's been some
discussion in each of the locations,
but not before the public hearing or
the public board that we're having
today," Williams said.
State Schools Superintendent
Hank Marockie, who sits as pm;i·
dent of the authority, was unable to
aaend Friday's meeting. Vice
President Dan Marshall chaired the
~ and said the board volfd to
clole the sessions on advice by its
aaaney who also was not present. ,
Maiion County Schools SuperinICOdent Jolm Myers after bts .appearance before the board that his
~tation contained little . about
pioperty. locations. WiUiams,
however, said the board did not
W&amp;nt to open only part of the meetiflg.
'
. "WeU, that's part of the discus91011 and we would be in and out of
executive session aU day long and
didn't feel like that was an ap-

GALLIPOLIS -

lower auto rates!

.......
COUNTY TEACHERS RALLY -

.arrested by the Gallla County Sheriffs Department Saturday

Sundlly TII'T18I-Sentinai-Page-A· 6 .

...
r •

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.

SPIING YAUIY PLAIA • IAIIIPOUS, 01•
16141446·11"

�•

March 4. 1980

Ohio-Point Plenent W. V•.

-------------··"f
POWELL'S COUPON

: rr

PRODUCTS
2~,:z~ $499
CANS

STORE HOURS

GOoD OIIT AT POWEll'S
GOOD SUN. MM. 4TIIIU SAT.MM. 10

Monday thru Sunday

--·-··~--------

r-··-·--·-·-------·-···

8 AM-10 PM

POWELL'S COUPON

. 298 SECOND ST.

DOVE

POMEROY, OH.

DISHWASHING UQUID

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., MAR. 4 THRU SAT.~ MAR. 10, 1990

22 oz.
IOTTL~

79&lt;

.

GOoD OIIT AT POWILI'S
GOOD SUN. MAll. 4 THIIU SAT.JIII.1 0

'-··------------

soc·
OFF
GROUND
POWELL'S COUPON

$ 99
R1beye Steak ••••••• .4 ..

US~ A CHOICE. BONELESS BEEF

BEEF

Ll.

2 LIS. OR MORE

FLAVORITE ASSORTED .·

·.

10

LL

POWElL'S COUPON

GRADE. A WHOLE

Ll

GOOD ONIT AT POWILI'S
GOOD SUN., ••• 4 n•u SAT. MAl. 10

CHICKEN

$ 79
Boneless Ham ....... 1 .
SUP~RIOR FRA~KIES
.·
.$
W1eners ..........~.~Ze.. 109 ·
· GOLDEN CRISPY .
$1l9
Cod .Squares
COUNTRY LEAN

.

.

.

. LB

rpatr~IX'scouFON"

LB.

50C

.OFF

1-LB. PACKAGf

FLAVORIH

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•

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LB.

soc

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Sandwich Spread ..!~...

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GOOD SUN., MM. 4 l ..U sAT •••• 10 ·

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PORK STEAK!

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.,II
SUN.
SAT,

Med. Eggs ••••••••••••• 69&lt;
1-~ 99c~, 50C OFF
TV
Dinners
·
•••••
~;,':.~
fKidney Beans.~~!:!· 3/Sl
TYSON CHICKEN
e
Apple Pie .........~.o;•• 9.9&lt;
P1e Fdhng •••••• :~~~~•• 69
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OF ARC LIGHT RED

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MIL 4 fin
MM. 10

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TOILET TISSUE

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410ll
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5/S2

99&lt;

36 OZ. FIIENCH IOAST or

U OZ. ADC, EP ., riEGUW

MAXWELl HOUSE

BUNCH
BANANAS
'

Star· Ban.k

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TELLERS '
Fronl Row Seated: Left to Right, Debbie Fllh•r,•Peggy John10n, lhrb Patrick. Second
Row St.nding: !,.eft to Rlght. Wa11etta Dennie, Loretta Atha, Vickie Allie, Salley Wal·
d•n. Sublna Veith, Sh•rt Sayre, ca·rol Ridge. Third Mow: Standing, Left to Right. W.var_ly Hively, Cathy Boltlc. Mindy Arrowood . Joy Atwood. Nancy Hoke, Glenna Snyder,
RICk Hudaon.
.

'A famiity ~pproach
to hea~lth ·care ...

Friendly, eHiclent service by people who care.
Star Bank employees are committed
to customer service. Our tellers
are friendly and efficient, and are
here to help you with all of your
.routine banking needs.

I ,

•

Rememqer when .the same ph}'81Clan who treated you ror the
snifflesalsotOokcartclfyourbabystster,andawyourMomaridDad
for their ac!+ and~. toO? Then you remember the iamily doctor.
At ~ym Farily~Hetiltll, we're comblnine,that old-fashioned
·family ·tpPIOICh td health care with toclay'a &amp;tlehnology. Underline
famjJy. bet'all!e ~ emphul• It on (Oftlprebllllive diagnostic and
medical care from lhfan.i:y tlvough geriatrial for your entire family.
&gt;

•

~

:\

'

'

I

~

-..

I ,

· David R. Ayers, ~.D. . H. Edward Ayers, M..D.
·

Family .,Practice

.

.

,ttr.~~. ~LlY ~OSPITAL.
,,.

• • . 10

.

'

Stir a.nk, N.A., Tri·State

Medicine
. Pediatrics &amp; lnter71111
~
.

.

'·

Time •

T..,_.ure:

$utte 12, Vale Drive, Polnl Pleilsant, WV 25550
. r.

I

'.

•

•

"

Whether you need to make a
deposit, or just need information,
Star Bank Tellers are here to' help.
We're committed to Gallia County.

Call (304) 6'15-6o1S for an appo~t ~· And let us take care of your family.
"
•

' ... ............. ... . ~.. .

• ... -

•• ,J.., ..... ·- · ·· -

.

Family Plannhtg
·It Makes Sense•••

GAwrcnis,

IIODI,olllY If I'OWIU'S

. . . Sill., . . . 4...

LOGAN MONUMENT CO.

Gall board
reoru. ' •

olio

.

$499

Onlr At Powell's 5uplr Yalu ·
.IIIIISull., Mar. 4
Sat~ Mar. 10 .

•'l·lu !· GOld

COFFEE

Wt ~~~~~ ~~~ w~~~ ·~m~lt ~~~t ~~ ~t~t~~t~

'PLANNED PARENTHOOD

·50&lt;. OFF
'

For best selection and special prices, see us now.

to allow her to
·
. ~ .
,
, j{J!er said Butcher reportedly
Confident•! Services:
\Vent from )lis' home in Willies· '
Birth Control
~Jile to Oak. HUI find pfc,ked up · ,
'•
J~hnson. Johnson was to drop .
' V. D. Screening
~utcher . ft 'at his job at McAr- f
Cancer Screening
lhur Lumber Co.; and she would'
Pregnancy
Testing
proc;ee(! wi!h lhe car to Jfocktng
Tech.
. ·
·
_lltl!tg fie .._ HI- rwf..l • •ices
ta inalliity to pO,•
: However, i&lt;IIer said, the two
' argument and
Etngaged In .an
-!obnsol) ejther Jumped out · of
~Uit:her's car or was pushed out.
'
'The Journal· Herald, checking
OF SOUTHEAST ' &gt;.'~I
court records, ~ported that
B11tcher ·and , Johnson .. had ,a
POMEROY:
IJ!story of domestic disputes
236 E. Main St., 21111 Floor
414 5econd An~ 2nd FIHr •
dating back to 1987. Published
992-5912
446·0166
report,&amp; during ,the week quoted.
·
1:30
to
5:00
Monday-Friday
1:30
to 5:00 Moncloy-Fridciy
Larry Johnson Sr., the victim's .
Closed Thuncloy
1:30 to 12 Saturday
father, as Sl!Ying Butcher had
Closlll
Thursday •
'
threatened to kll.l his dau~hter
.when she ended her relallonshlp·
AUOs Mcboni CheMJIICikt, Athens, Clillketht, Logan &amp; llcArthur
~th Butcher last year, ·

FILLETS OR CHUNKS

OODD O..YAT POWIU'S
IOOD SUN., MIL 4 IIIIU SAT, U . 10

Celeb. rezze 's
. .
'campaiun. d.irector
resigns Saturday

herr ¥

POWELL ·s couPoN

PACKAGE

Chs~~~orslncludeherhusba~.

'

re~rtedlyoflered

PORK CHOPS

GALLON

Baptist

Jack Stumbo .

P.

use hiS vehiClE'.

.201o Ml.lk •••••••••••••• $189
'
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WINTER" SALE
IN PR OGRESs

Coffman, Jay Myers, Ed Larson,

ORDER NOW FOR SPRING SETIING

AUTHORITIEs. Al)

'

.

Freewill

of the

Lind, • of 387 MetdQw LaDe,
.
•
.
VInton. died In Holzer Medical Guy L . Priddy; tour sona Dale
Jr., D·Wbeeler•l'l· haa bieen Center Saturday after an ex- Prldctyo!Georgla,JamesPriddy
trying todtscoW'qethelnclualon tellded Dlneas.
'
of Rutland, Jack Priddy of
.
of many local c:OQitructlon proFuneral arranllll!mentl will be Georvla, and Timothy Priddy of
Jects, He said more than $1.5 annoUDCed by the McCoY·Moore Pomeroy; four daughters JeanbiUIOn worth of ,projects were Funeral Home, VInton Chapel.
nleBuckleyofMlnersvtlle, Char·
.
requested. ' i
·
Earl Mullin8
·lotte Ne\Yell of Middleport, MarThe supplemental approp~... ·
jorle Rife of Albany,, and srenda
tton will cover an $86 mliUon
VINTON_.. Pallbearers for the Jeffers o! Middleport; 36 grand·
Medicaid shorlfall and make up funeral of Earl MuUins were Bob c h 1.1 d r en , 4 6 g r e a t ·
for deflclenciel in the l&gt;ulillc ·Newhart, Archie Gilman, Em· graildchlldreil.
.,.
defender's office, the Depart· mitt Loq, Sam Maynard, Rl·
In addition to her parent$, she
ment of RehabiUiatlon and the ~hard Maynard and Grubb was preceded In death by a son,
Department of Development. ,
Caldwell.
P"aul Lecmard; a daughter,
Swee!ll'y said $10 mliUon will
Services were conducted Sat- Wanda Stewart; one grandson,
~ Infused into the bUiines$
urday at McCoy-Moore Funeral one great· granddaughter and
development account. He also. Home, VInton Chapel.
two sisters. .
.
.s aid $1 .mwton wtii be made ]e88ie C.· arker
· . Ser'&lt;!ces wlll be Monday at 1
available for the controversial
p.m. at the Rutland Freewill
"So n or Heaven " Cb lnese arls
Ba
THURMAN_ Je••ie ChriStina
Pt1 s t Churc h, wlth t he Rev.
display whlch 1ost $16
IIU
Paul
T ~lor and Roger Stewar t
·· m on In Parker, 71, Rt. 1, Thunnan, died
Colurn bu s 1·ast· summer.
!!I
I
Saturday in l..o&amp;an Elm Health Q c a II ng. B ur1a1 w11 I · be 1.n
1
The !14!nate Energy, Natl,ltal Care Center. Clrctevllle,
Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire.
Res ources an
· d Envtronmenl
·;
Fr1ends . may ca11 at t he Ra·
ao~n Feb.· •, .1 19 In Dekota,
Comm 11....
•· she was
• a daughter of'the wlings, Coa1s, Fls her. Fu
We have all colors of granite - beautiful blacks,
"""' 1s expected to vote W.Va.'
. nera1
out a bill Wed
·
· nesday cracklng late Frank and Stella Bailey · Horne, Mlddleport, Sunday
from
deep reds, pinks, greys, brown -every brand name
down ori violent protest demon- Woodson. In addition to her 6-9 p.m. and Monday ~fore 11
available! .Choose your memorial now and have it
stratlons agalns t the sale of furs
am
· ·
an d·other consumer goods; ·
dparents,
th by. she
h ·waste ,preceded
falh
n~In
Henry
Lee St bo ·
beautifully sculptured· or personalized with an et·
The bill has been modHied to
ea
. er s P
er a&lt;:rt
um
Impose ·a maximum 30-dav Jail Sexton, husband Orville Parker,
GALLIPOLIS - Henry Lee
ching. Stop in and see our profe.ssional people at
53
term . and $250 fine for threaten'
two
brothers
and
three
sisters.
St
bo
f
R
1
Sc
Surviving ,are a son, Harold
urn • , o oute
ottown.
Work. All Of·OUr carv- r······---- ~ ---········· - ·-·
lng, cursing or spitting at fur
Ohio, died Friday at Holzer
ings ·&amp; lettering are :
COUPON
:
customers, 1&gt;ut 11 no longer Edward Shortridge of Thurman;
Medical Center. He was a retired
.ed
locally
by
I 0 Pt.au \ • nd me ~1!£1; boakl•n 'howil'l!jl ~'~•moriOI~ I
singles out fur protesters. or a sister, Ruby Walker of Pr!n· Chief Petty Officer In the United
Complet
pr•nlt d 1n fuli color w 1th '''e onci p11U\ h~ t ed
I
I ·
l!rnlts their signs and literature.
ceton, W.Va.; four grandchild· States Navy. He also worked for
.
'
hove on Clu'*!~~~ ~"d logon Mon~m•nt Co 1
A House subcommittee will ren and seven great· Dayton Malleable Iron as a ' experienced CraftS• :I 0 llondt,
•tP,.~tn.tot•ve coll ,or mv homt .
f
start hearings Thursday morn·
grandchildren.
supervisor In Ironton.
·
men.
.Y
0
u
do
not
I
0
PltiUI und .,... dt !O ol' obotJ1 mo u«&lt;IO!umt w otiloul:
lngonnew·,~,..
'""'slat!onglvlngOhlo p.m.
~rvices
~Monday Fun·
at 1 c Born Mav
In thew!ll
McCoy.Moore
v' 30 ' 1936
· in Logan have to ·wait while : N ''"''"'"
·
:
1
ame
·
1 ·
veterans. pnority tn· hiring . and · . eral Home, Vint.on Chapel, with . · ounty, W. a ., he was a son of
job training.
·
Thelma Thompson Stumbo of
your order Is being : '"""o•Ro"• _ _ _ _ _ _ _ :
the Rev. Johnny Jeffrey of!lclat· Scottown, Ohio, and the late ~c!l
lettered and S,hipped : CilyooTown
:
Clng. Bturlal Fwilell ~d In Campalllgnt J. Stwnbo.
.
•
·
,
· erne ery: r n s may ca a
He was a veteran oftheKorean
.1n f or se tt'1ng.
' .................................
"'..
.
L
.,' .•.
I
.
the funeral home Sunday from Conflict and served In VIetnam,
5·9 p.m.
"l:'"and was a member of the
Margaret .Priddy
American Fleet Reserve.
He is also survived by his wife
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
POMEROY -Margaret Eliza· Nelda Lou Myers Stumbo, whom
The mastermind ~hind sta~e ~th Fife Priddy, 79, Hysell Run he married May 23, 1957; two
Attorney, General Anthony Cele· Road, Pomeroy , died Friday sons, Randy Lee Stumbo and
brezze',s Democratic gu~rnator- morning at Holzer Medical ce·n· Richard Dwayne Stumbo, both at
lal campa.lgn has resigned to ter, following a brief lllness.
home; a brother, Ernest Stumbo
pursu11 non-poUtlcallnterests at
Born Jan. 31, 19llln Cheshire, of Crown City; a sister, Kay.
the national level.
·
!l!le was the daughter ofthe late Larson of Scottown, Ohio; sev ·
Jerry. Austin's resignation as
in
eral nelces and nephews.
CALL TOLL PilE 1-100-143-411 ..
campaign director and media
ou
Also preceedlng him In death
consultjint was effective !mmewas a brother, Daniel Stumbo.
dlately1 a Celebrezze spokesman
oanr,~s
Services will be conducted
VINTON. OHIO
POMEROY, OHIO
said Saturday, addlnghedldnot
GALLIPOLIS - Sylvan H. Monday,Jp.m.,PhllllpsFuneral
Gallia County
Meigs County
know what!nterests Austin plan's Gardner was re-elected chair· Home In Ironton, the Rev. David
Display Yard
Display Yard Near
to pursue.
,
man and Jeffrey A. ·Halley vice Saunder~ and. the Rev. Billy
James A. Bush·
Pomeroy- Mason Bridge
Austin could not be reached for chairman when the Gallla Payne offtclatlng. Burial follows
Manager
· leo L. Vaugh•n, Mgr.
comment.
·
Cou11ty Board ot Elections reor· In Old Baptist Cemetery.
388-8603
Phone
Phone 992-2688
"Jerry Is a friend who has been ganlzed last week. Other board
.Friends may call at the funeral
a key part.of my campaigns for
mem~rsareR WIIUamJenklns home Sunday, ~to 9 p.m .
secretary of state and attorney
and Elaine B. Rouse.
genera~" said Celebrez~ .
Mr~. Dave (Charlotte) Seamon
remains thed!rectorottheGalUa
i. d . ·
l
'
· · County bOard. Mildred Stevens Is
iTP'
F
'
deputy director.
• .
l:l -::;'' • • _...:.;&lt;;.;ro..;;.m;;.;.::B:::~:::IDG==E,_,P~~:~~l~e.::A::.l)~---,..--All pet\tlons of candidacy and
Emer$ncy Medical Service ,DI· ·Depa,rtment trained .. as .first resolutions to place levies on the
Tecto( Keith Hankins. response r~ponders · by the time the May prilnary ballot were veri·
.
l!rne throughllilt the county Is bridge closes. At the present fled . when the board met ·
poor, but by having to travel to'. time, therearc tworespondersln Thursday.
·
,. Monday, 65 days prior to tbe .
·--.-------··-~------------.;. Rto Grande and then take SR 325 · VInton.
1o· VInton will Increase the , . He said the group w!ll go election, 1s·the final day partisan
.tfslxm~ per(od. • .
directly to the scene of a medical candid at$ may withdraw from
,
'
4
1
l Hankins did say he plans to emergencyandbegtntreatment, the primary ( p.m .). Also,
1
·have the VInton Volunteer Fire prpvidlng basic life support until protestsagainsta partisan candl·
1
•
the ambulance can ·arrive.
date's pe(lflon must be filed by 4
l
p.m. Monday .

Authorities
...
'
.
(~rom

FAMILY PAK

FLAVORITE

Rutland

mem~r

Committed
, to Customer Serv•·ce.

$1. OFF
BUNCH

. VlNTON-HarwyF.McFar57

was a 29-year

t-.---...

POWELL'S COUPON

.

iley), This thlq 1s lllbt."
House Speakef V•rnal RUle

•" CQLUMBUS. Oblo (UPi)- A
:two-year capital conatructlon
•appropriation In excess of •
.mmlon Is expected ·to be lntroduced In the ObiO General
Assembly and passed \ly the
•House ~fore the end of the week
AI the same time, the
' ildmin!stratlon of Gov. Richard
•Ce~te will offer a $100 mtlllon
,IUpplemenlal appropriations
·btU to take care of a Medicaid
fundiqlbar1tall and aeveral
other budget deflclenclee.
;) That biD will. be Introduced in .
:the Sena.te, probably under the ·
~ponsorshlp of Sen. Theodore
fhrayF,l R·CQlucm~~· chairman of
;. e nance Ouuulttee,
: In addition, the adminiStration
IS expected to reduce Its revenue
esjlmates
· $5Q for._flscal1990-9fby
· at
,Ieast
mllnon, chlefiv' li...,ause
·
~
I
of
.
ower· than-expected corporat~. profits.
·
·
·
·.• . !J'!te ~ovse will reconvene
at
11
. ,.
a,m
- . .Tuesday. and
,, the Senate .at
1:30 p.m, the same day.
; Cel~te will brief reporters at
9:30.a.m. Mo~yonthecontents .
of the blenillal capital ilnprovements bill.
bill and .the
. Both the capital
.
:.\IPPlemental' appropriation,
:dubbed a "budget corrective"
biU by the administration, are on
;!he fasl tl'ack.
·
• Tbe terms .of each have
worked out ~hind clOsed doors
.· tn advance by the ottJce . .of
, Budget and . Management and
,legislative leaders, and !ew ·
ll f:hangee are anticipated. ,
The capital constructiOn biD Is
'a shopping list of projects for
varloUi state agenclee and local
governrne~ The bulk of the ·
,spending. close to $500 mUIIon,
·will lie on ollege and university
..tacllltles.
. .
' "I hojle hi er education (con,structlon) Is really · the corner'lone of what we do (In the
·~apilal blil) ," the governor said
last week, adding that the Iilnil· ·
•J.ng factor w!ll be 5 perc'ent of the
' state's operating , budget for
Interest payments on the bonded
!Jrojects.
• The House Finance Committee ·
has scheduled hearings ·on the
capital bill for Tuesday .after,noon, meaning the blU . could
t each the floor Thursday,
. "We hope to move the bill,"
said Rep. Patrick Sweeney,
D.Cleveland, committee chair· ·
~an. ''t.l\erelscertaln!ynoroom .
""~· maneu.ver.lng (adding mo•

III"IUIU

Comm•ltte
· d to Galll·a County

·TOMATOES

• .

'

e

.
Br

PACKAGE FRESH .

·Celery •••••••••••••••• 2/Sl

r

.-..ney '

been

Sl 89
Rump .Roast •••••••••
·
S
OC
$ . 2.9
CHICKEN
Lunch Meats ......... 1
----·----Leg Quarters •••••••• 49&lt;

USDA CHOI(E BONElESS BEEF

Sunday T•n• Santinei-Page A·7

Ohio-Point Plen=rtt, W. V•.

~~i~b~S~~ent·~---.-F~MF~-~~!~&amp;-s-~~i-~-~n-~-.-~-e--P-a-1~-~-~-w-m-~--.A-rth_u_r_B-~-n·w--trn-~-s.-h-n_e_M-~-~-.-~.

'annronriation to move

RC
We Reserve The Richt To
tlmit Quanlilies

Pomerov-Midcleport-~ellipolil.

llr Gh 4. 1110

... ~ ... -

·-

••

'

~-· .. ... '

I

.,.;

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...

_., . ....·1 ...

....

'•

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

'

.,... ••. , . .....

- "

,, '

448-STAR
448 B.t.HK

Member FDIC

'

·-'·•,.••
•'•'

�..
P-ga A-8-Sunday limes-Sentinel

Men:h 4, 1980

Pomaoy-Middleport-Gallipolia, Ohio-Point Plan 1t. W. Va.
I

•

B

·'Vfimu· -entintl Section

(

~

~--------------------~~----------------------------------~~
WE ACCEPT

M.-c:h4,1.Q9,f)

•

ConvenienCe card
•

•

•.

SUPERAMERICA®

'(

•
••
•'

•

,on the

SuperAmerica Gro1,1p, Inc.

•'
•

~

'

iCREDIT
l CARDS .·

•

For All Purthases
Excluding lottery

.

.

·~2 Hot Dogs &amp;
16 Oz. Fountain Drink

COKE

·7UP OR ·n R. PEPPER
12 Oz.
12 Pack
Cans

SAVE
60C

Not Available At

28th St. &amp; Jackson f\ve., Point Pleasant,.WV

SAVE

40C
Not Available At SuperAmerica

2 Liter

28th St. &amp; Jackson Ave., Point Pleasant, WV

· Lawn Boy Motor Oil Valvoline BIA 2 Cycle.Oif
'

8 Oz.

16 Oz.

·sAVE 55¢

l .

Gumout Carburetor
" Fuel InJector ·Cleaner
~

'

.

•
·12 Oz.

SAVE 30c

SAVE 20c
2· Gallon Gas Can

. -·- ·- -

Fix-A~Flat

Wynn's

Tune UP
•

12 Oz,

SAVE SOc
497 Gen. Hartinger Pkwy., Middleport, OH
.28tb St. &amp;Jackson Av.e., Point Pleasant, WV
Route 7&amp; 35, Kanauga, OH
279 W•.Main St., Pomeroy, OH
509 Jackson Pk. &amp;Rt. 35, Gdipolls, ·OH
801 Second Ave., Gallipolis, OH

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The two mid·19th century · !or dress shli'ts were linen and.
shirts refiect this change. Both, cotton and were almost unlver·
the traditional square cutand the sally white in color.
·
POMEROY . - As a part of tltte.d cut, are 'of the "dress" or
The &lt;fr.ess of women during-the
Pomeroy-'s . Sesquicentennial "Gen!lemen's" style featuring 1840's also had speCific charac·
Celebration there will be 11 plaited fronts. In one view, the terlstlcs. According to lnformapioneer costume contest during square &lt;;ut of the body produces lion by Joan Severa from toe
Heritage Days Weekend In June. the characteristic "dropped State Historical Society of Wls·
Now If you're wondering 'what shoulder." It .features a· gusset · · consln. one such characteristic
type of clothing people wore under the arm and' because of the was a tighter fitting sleeve.
during Pomeroy's pioneer times · presence of some machine stitch·
These narrow sleeves were
then check out these suggestions. lng and.a narrow collar band the neater !or active working d'ress,
According to lnformatiOII by stylj! dates ·from the 1850's and and remained In use Into the
Wlllla'm K. Combs for the Past would be fashionable Into. the 1850's for house wear.
·
Patterns Company, few fashion 1860's.
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The choice of fabric for dresses
periods of history can point to as
Another view Is an example of during this time was wide,
·many changes In fashion, and how men's dress coats became
according to Severa. Checks and
fashion technology, as the period · better fitted around 1840. This. small plaiHs In quiet colors were
between 1840 and 1870. One such· may explaIn the lntr6dtictlom of
used In cottons for house wear
change, ·not to therillon : the · the' fitted cut shirt, according 'to
and for daytime, and In silks or
Invention of the sewing machine, Combs.
.
woolens for dress. · Brown was
was In the cut of men's shirts.
The most common fabrics used
commonly the basic color for
1840's dresses.
Hair was divided In ·a center
part and most often smoothly
dressed. Often It was done Is a ,
bun of braids or curls, and
medium high on the back of the
Two Mid-19th Century ShirtS
head. Corkscrew curls hung over
includes cravat8 ·
the e.ars of young women.
Shoes, which show very little,
should be almost without heels
and have narrow, square toes,
according to Severa.
· Petticoats are also Important
to the 1840's dress. No hoops were
worn, Instead a full hipped
domeshape was created by gath·
erlng the petticoats heavily on
top and at tachlng them to snug
waistbands.
During the 185Q's the costume
was dressy and the hoop, though
some.wyat varlaple, was the one
constant feature. except for
elderly 'ladies.
.
Ac¢?Mlng tb Severa, the
skirt's pro!Jer shape can be
d~cr\!led In a· qu9te ,from Go·
dey's Lady's Book, ' 'The sklit
should hang In long, full folds.
and expand gradually to the feet,
which It should touch, but not
entirely cover." This shape was
enhanced by a tiny waist, ac·
compllshed, In spite of doctors'
warnings, by rigid corseting.
Tartan plaids, · especially in
silk, and stripes were popular.
Border printed designs resem·
bling embroidery and many
hand-embroidered edgings were
· the desired materials .
One papular hairstyle of the
1850-1860
times was parted In the center,
covered the ears, and was gently
waved or crimped. .A large soft
bun was worn rather low on the
crown, and 'side fullness was
stressed, according to Severa .
During the 1860's the dress
shape Itself was constant, ac·
cording to Severa ..It featured a
high, round, smig bodice, sloping
shoulders, curved tubular
sleeves. a la.rge skirt ·usually
somewhat longer In the back
over a very large oval hoop and
ruffled petticoats. A corset was
worn under these dresses.
Did you know that the unreal IS·
tic Ideal shape of these times
sometimes required the overlap·
p'ing or evwn surgical removal of
the foremost ribs. Well, It C:ld!
All daytime and some evening
occasions demanded a head
covering and onee popular hair
style was the "waterfall." Ac·
cording to Godey, this was done
by tying the hair back rather low
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Darted Bodice

11 Oz.

SAVE $1.00

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By JULIE E. DilLON
'nmes.Seatbl~l Staff

We Reserve The Right
1b Limit Quantities

7

1 Through

frontier

Stylish in 1840,·Pomeroy ·. pringing back heritage for celebration

Credit Cards May Bt Used

Speeials Good

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COSTUME COMMJTrEE
Tbe floneer
Costume ConiAlst of Pomeroy's Sesquicentennial
celebration will be held June 9. Participants may
eniAlr Ia 10 cll1egorles. Costume commltiAle
members are,
, sealed, from left, Susan Clark and
"

Joan WoUe. Standing, Rod Pullins and John
Foster. Tbe bat that Pullnsls holding belonged to
0.0. Mcintyre and the hats wom by the other·
committee members are replicas ofhatsthatdate
from the 1800's.

on the neck.!f a braid is required, never have crossed her legs or hair, ribbons, clips, pins, ·and:
tie It under the hair and let It r~st spread her ~nees when sltllng, or headwear.
All other categories will be:
on the neck. Then roll the front have stood with feet braced
apart,'
or
have
walked
with
long
judged
on all ha.l r and headwear'
hair and fasten It at the back.
~trldes.
She
was
expected
to
have
Items,
all
clothing and foolweaf.; •
Comb the front locks, pin on a
a
modest
demeanor
at
all
times.
and
"props."
For examptf!: ::'
frlzette and turn the hllir up over
The
judging
of
tl)e
costume
b:oom,
cane,
rifle,
shepherd's:'
the comb, which must be entirely
contest
will
take
place
on
June
9
crook,
pitchfork,
hoop,
doll, etc: .
concealed. Then put on a net and
at
3
p.m.
This
contest
will
feature
Mama
and
Papa
Pomeroy
wty:
tie a ribbon around the waterfall.
Another type of dress was the competition and prizes In ten be judged based on one man and "
prairie dress, or homestead categories with three groups. one 1!/0man, both residents of .
· dress, which was worn In .the Everyone is Invited ' to begin Meigs County. Judging will be on
preparing 1800's style costumes all of the above Items, and the 1
latter 19th century. It was a 'full,
and
growing hair for particlpat- . winners will reign as Mama and
yet practical, housedress of
lng
In
the contest, which Is open , Papa Pomeroy In heritage
washable cotton, usually with an
to
people
of all ages.
events for the remainder of the
apron. It normally fell to the
The
categories
In group one year. This category Is the orilyankles In gathers fr_om a rounded include . boy, girl, man,
woman,
yoke. It had long slee,ves ga- senior man , senior wpman, and one with residency restrictions.
First, second, third, and honor.
thered at the shoulde~ Into family, which will consIst of a
able
mention prizes will be
buttoned cuffs . Thec9'll~rw
t minimum of one parent and one .
awarded
In each of the ten
Into a ' band and the dress · d
child
.
Group
two
calegOries
categories.
pockets. There was deep
Include brothers of the brush,
The judging criteria for every: ·
opening typical of this era at
and
women's
hat
and
hair.
Group
closed IIIIth buttons In the y e. three consists of Mama and Papa category will Include appear.; .
ance, authenticity, and .llnlqu'
The flounced apron featured Pomeroy.
eness. There Is no deadline for
pockets and a waistband that
Each person can enter In group entering.
buttoned In the back.
one,
and three competition.
Businesses, organizations, and .
As with all 19th century dress; Theretwo,
are no age · or gender nelehborhoods are encouraged to :
gesture and attitude are .Impor- restrictions, but each person can
tant for a period look, Severa enter In only one of the .age and sponsor entries In the contest, for •
special recognition. For lnforma· .
noted. It was quite scyllsh to gender categories In group one.
tlon
regarding this contest call~
appear demure and serene.
Brothers of the brush will be the Chamber of Commerce 0(·~· ·
Today's casualness would
judged on beard, moustache,
have been shocking to the women hair, and headwear. Women's, flee at 992-5005 during business' '·
of thiS earlier time. She would . hat and hair judging will Include hours.

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lOOOJo Premium Grade A
Cypress ·Rose Mulch

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1860s

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Dress

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SAVE
$1.00
Sli. .DWr( OF ASHLAND OIL, INC.

Bags .

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�March 4. 1990
~~

B-2-Sundey Times-Sentinel

Ponwoy-Midclaport-Gallipolil, Ohio Point Plnnnt. W.Va.

~eystone FurQace~ ..

Fas ion show tickets on sale now

Ware's father killed the plpons easily was tlllt IIIey ate enor· the practice of tul'lllq hoplooae
With a club, eltber by cllmbiJI&amp; a moua fJIIGUIItl of food In the fall In the forests took away the
tree or waiting for them to fee\'1 In p~atlon lor the winter; pl&amp;eonl' main supply of food,
on the ground. People would 1tu11 thus hecomtna quite slow an., Forests were also gradually
·
By James Sands
clumsy. In night together when cleared o! trees. Others belieVedhundr~ olthem at a time Into
: One of ttie inost Intriguing
bags and take them borne lo · they numbered In the millions a~ the coming of the railroad and
r(lysterles In American blstory
cook. It was said that !bey had a Keyatoae FUrnace and on Poplar · the production of !ron In the area
was the sudden disappearance of
nutty navor. Dur{ng aome lalla, Knl)b the noise o! the . wings scared away the animals. ;I'hen
~be passenger
fammes could live lor · several sounded even louder than there are those who credit the
Wlfeon. Famous
demise of the birds tO some
weeks on nothing but fresh thunder.
naturalists J&lt;lhn
unknown dlaeaae that spread
~ last time the passenger
pigeon.There
were
even
times
.fames Aubodon
when men came fioom the large pigeons roosted In any great through the pigeon population.
and Alexander
cities of the east coast to aboot the number In Gallla County was In Another explanation as that the
Wilson wrote
pigeons and then ship them lor 1861. Reasons for their disap- continued IDdiBCrlmlnate kUling
about seeing
food. For Ioiii distance shipping pearance are numerous but none of the an lmals by man brought
streams o! pas·
the birds were dressed and totally Convincing. Some believe. about extinction.
senger pigeons of between 1 and 2 .
salted.
.tillllon In number. For some
· Every morn1111 the animals
l'!!ason the birds bred iogether In
would fiy west and then fly from
great numbers. Near their breed·
the west In the evening, ranging
lng grounds In Michigan pioneers
up to 30 miles during the day lor
reported ·t hat the sky was darWHEN COMES TO FEEUNG
food. It was mostly at evening
~ened lor hours at a time as the
that persons who hunted pasBEl lEI.... .
The.remalns of Keystone Furnace are pldured ~.Prior to . senger
passenger pigeons flew
pigeons with clubs came
overheard..
the building of tbe furnace here, the area nearby wu tile roMtllll
to the roosting ~ound. Hawks
.THERE'S NO PlACE UKE HOME
ground of the .now exllnet pUBeDIIer plceon. Pop~ J(aob near
By 1878 the last large breeding ·
and other wild animals also'toolt
Patriot wa!i another favorite 1'0081lag place lor the creatlll't!ll.
colony In the U.S. was spotted
their share of the bll'da. Some
and the last bird to be shot was
historians remember seeing
a;round 1898. The Cincinnati
thousands
of the pigeons dead on
For the Gallla Times In 1934 a
Zoological Gardens had the last Creek, Wolf Run, andPineRunln
Mr. Ware, then 90, told abolit his the ground after a day o! hunting.
((Down passenger pigeon. It died VInton County, Keystone Fur·
lather
who kept a sawmill at · Usually more were ·killed or
lnl914 thus bringing to extinction nace lands ln. Gall Ia and Jackson •
what
would
.later becom~ Keys- maimed than could be taken.
Counties, aild Poplar Knob near
•Hospitsl Bids ·
•Oxygen Concentralors ·
a whole species.
Those who hunted with gunil
toile
Furnace.
The
pas~nger
Patriot.
·
ellalhroom Safety Devices olloWizW1
· .
: While the animal did not breed
For several generations per- . pigeons wer~ so thick at thai came, 'of course, In the daytime I
In great numbers In southern
elift
Chlirs
•Portable
Oxygen
·
and on~ hunter In VInton County
Ohio, It did roost here, mostly In sons living near Patriot remem- point In the fall that the sky was reported killing 56 passenger
•Tens Units
•Aitel'llltina Prtssura
the !all due to the adundance of bered the year 1838 as the "great darkened from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. pigeons With (lne discharge of bis
eWhulcllairs (Sbndlfd &amp;
Ptd
every day. So many of them
beechnuts, acorns, haws and pigeon year". The old timers
CustOIII)
•Walkers
roosted In the trees that tree shotgun so close together and
oGiucose Monilors
•Respiratory Therapy
.grapes. Among the favorite remembered seeing thousands of
limbs a~d branches ~ave' way, numeroua were these creatures;
eCommodts
Disposables
roosting places In southern Ohio these purple-gray birds swallow'
breaking off . to the , ground. . One reason they
·
.. could
. be killed so
. were Pigeon Creek, Elk .Fork lng beechnuts whole.
•IPPB Units
oHome BP Monilors ·

... By ]ames Sands

iT

"Home· Health Care"
PRODUCTS

Tragedy happens to Cather people'

I

Dear Ana Lahders: I am a life
from Dayton: The woman ·who
· insullllk;e salesman. My job involves signed herself "Poor But Proud in
rejeclion that most people .never Mississippi" should use lhe reexperience.
sources available to her and track
Illy hard not 10 lake the rejection down her · no-good husband and
personally. What I have trouble make him support ·their three chilundci'Siallding is the husband, father dren. She should also get off her
or family provider who thinks that I butt and go to work. The welfare
am out to take advantage of him or system is meant to.he a temporary
her.
·
crutch, not a long-aerm brace.
I have delivered many death . Bangor, Maine: The government
benefit checks 10 widows, and I should not be giving people food
cannot describe how difficult it is stamps. It should he giving them
to aell a woman with small children
food. This would ensure decent
that her husband left qnly $5,000.
nourishment for the poor rather than
(;;ven though there are mahy more • expensive junk and empty calories.
females in the ,wade force today than
Flint, Mi!;h.: Do !get angry when
ever before, some have no market- · I see people paying for luxury items
a~le skills and must take low-paywith food stamps? You're darned
ing jobs to support their families.
right I do. I'm managing on Social
. I feel compelled to aell the folks
Security and what's left of my
I call on that they are the "other meager savings. I don't remember
people" that tragedy strikes. I was . the last time I had a cupcake or fresh
the "other person" myself several
strawberries.
years ago. My wife and I lost our
son. We thought such tragedies
happened to others. We had no
insurance to cover the funeral, so
we had to borrow. I remember that
an. insurance s&amp;lesman had tried to
sell me a policy on rriy child, and I
thought he was a slick operator
Dying to unload something I'd never
·use. After all, the child was perfectly
liealthy, and besides, parents are
supposed 10 die flfSL
Ann; let people know that insu{ance isn't a racket. It can be a .lifesaver at a lime when they need it
most.-- AN INSURANCE REP. IN
NEW YORK
DEAR REP.:. Thank you for a·.
· ICiaer that could make a big difference in the lives of many. Better 10
pay premiums on an insurance policy for a long time and not need it.
than to need it and not have iL ·
Dear Ann Landers: That letter
(...___;;:_,_:E
from the welfare mom in Mississippi really bu(ned me up. She can't
understand why people give her
MEN-s~
funny looks when she uses food
stamps 10·buy cupcakes. fresh strawberries and soft drinks. Doesn't she
realize that some of us consider such
iaems luxuries?
Five Years ago, my husband was
a sergeant in the militaty. After .
paying the mortgage, there was very
liule money left. We bought our
clothing second hand. I shopped at
places that had double and triple
coupons. Our $50 washer-dryer
came from GoodwilL I cooked .
everything from scrau:h. including.
the occasional cupcakes. The vegetables on our table were grown in
the backyllfd, from seed. We walked
everywhere.
: My sister-in-law, on the other
)1and, had a baby five years ago by
a married man. He pays her nothing
and is not listed on the birth cerlificate. She is on welfare and gets food
Slamps. She rented a tiny apanment.
and her IIUIITied boyfriend lives with
her. She could always afford thipgs
r couldn't. .such as disposable diapers, baby fonnula, frozen TV dinners, potato chips, cupcakes, soft
drinks, fresh strawberries, lotaery
tickets and movies.
Butlhinp IUmed out fine for us.
My husband was promoted, the kids
are healthy and sman (honor roll).
and we can afford 10 buy new
clothes. Last year, I got a new .
washer and dryer. My siSIU-in-law
is still on the dole . .Her child is
lOCally undisciplined and weighs 87
poundl from all the cupcakes and
soft drinks.
Do I give theae ladies funny looks
when they U1C food Stamps 10 buy
fd suawberries and cupcakes?
You bel I do. It's our laX money
!hey 1re lpelldinJ. -- ALSO POOR
BUT PROUD (JLLINOIS)
DEAR ILLINOIS: An eslniOrdiIIIIY lllllllber of readcn (mostly
RIPLEY
. IIIJIY) hid a pea deal 10 say on

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS

Cheyenne, Wy.: OUr government
is getting crazier and erazier. They
do not let ~pie buy toothpaste;
soap or IOI.Iet paper with food
stamps, but pocato chips and ice
cream are OK. Who makes up these
nutty guidelines?
Detroit: Welfare grants are not
realislic. They barely give you
enough 10 gel by. So how come
some people can affOrd luxury
items? They CheaL They buy stamps
from other welfare people who
would rather drink beer than eaL
Wausau, Wis.: It doesn1 bother
me when people bUy soft drinks and·
cupcakes with food stamps. Of
course, I wish their kids were getting betltr nutrilion, but I was on
welfare many years ago, and it's a
lousy and bumilialing feeling. If
fresh Slfl!wberries and cupcakes can
give them some pleasure, it's OK
with me.

•Continual potienl • -illts end · •No
c.onauttation pr.ogram 1t .nO colt
to tho pltill"t. . · ·
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, Tlm~M S¥ .... •~• aad
u. .. ..:. !yndlf'....

chl(ge

replocem-

com.cta.

SUNDAY
LECTA . - Walnut Ridge
Church has services 6 p.m.,
Sunday wlth Rev . Keith Adkins
preaching and the Little Kyger
Valley Boys singing.

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. GALLIPOLIS - Rehearsals
for Anne Fischer's musical will
be Sunday 2 p.m., In the GAHS
choir room. All former choir
members are ,asked to
participate.

Continuity of Care, Inc.
.

MEDICAL EQ'IJIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES

GIEG IIAYLOI.OWIIEI
'
16141 M2·2Sf0
507 Mulberry llllthh, ,_.,,,, 01. 45769

. .,

Bar-B-Q Ribs, Fried Chicken,

Seaf~d Pa~ies. Steak and Gravy,

;. MERCERVILLE - The 'Mer·
Missionary Baptist
Cqurch will be having a revival
,t.farch 4-10 at 7: 30 p.m., with
p:vangellst, )lev. Joe Donlan and
special singing l!y the Queen
. family.
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P0W81iMJZZie

Cleaning System

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l::iJ:-:.
.:. =

ogltotar

INCLUDES
ATTACHMENTS!

1M

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; CROWN ,CITY - Good Hope
'\)nlted Baptist Church special
service, Sunday, 7 p.m., . with
Rev. John Mellon, who'llpresimt
~\ldes on his mission to Jamaica.

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Mig. Sugg. - 1 $99.99

Houn ·far March,Will

UVI'GIN'THE'VMI.MII-4 OF GOO'S tOll

LllllllliiM Ulll'llhl

Clllllr

II SSe II 111111"

LADIES' ....

• Brulhecl edge
cloanlng on bOth sldet
• Ea11&gt;' change, lop-1111 bag
• Automatic height adjustment

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U IJu- Agltab'
• •· 11 t ar a:IIY OCICII* 10
maolcorpol '

• ·lruiMdeclp elsa ••
• lelf p pat.. d claa Mill

.37.-2145

HOOVER
VACUUM
CLEANERS
NOW ON
SALEII

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If you're. retiring, changing jobs or

rece1ying an early distribution of your
pens10n, you can invest in a high-yield
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BANK ONE and keep
your funds tax-deferred
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The interest you earn
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remember-it's only taxable when you withdraw it.
Don't wait to take
advantage of this special
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regulations give you Q'il/y

to

'J ill 11 fll

UIE*'Ia:t.~99

lhdlend

' 742·2888

CN\.;(l St~u.t 03ooks
.

All Sales Final - No Layaways··,
No Retums or Exchange•

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Middlepoit, Ohio 45760

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INGELS

ISCMIIAIK STREET
POINT Pl&amp;A8ANT

106 N. SECOND AVE.

Furniture and Jewelry

RAVENSWOOD

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MIDDLIPO~,

OH.

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dlilsubjecL Rqd on.
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Eighteen Thousalld ~

~Care. .

BANK ONE, ATHENS, NAIA PART OF THE CARINO TEAM
Alhonr. Ohio
Member FOIC
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· JESUS' DESIGN FOR FR.IENDSHIP
.· IN A HI·TECH WORLD .
:

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BANKEONE.

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BANC&lt;WEBROKERAGE
~rian RDioeon, 1•800·874·1536

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Coolville
667·3115

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93 Mill StrHt

992-6657 1998-00IS)

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a BANK ONE Pension Protector IRA
or they're automatically considered
taxable income.
One more thing. Every
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else extra_ .. a qualified
BANK ONE customer ser~
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can answer all your questions about this important
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Stop by and see us
today about a Pension
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ofdepoeit
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display ,from Standard Publishing and
,..ht.
·~ ..... gifts and rafr...mentl
all wlio attend:

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All

LAST
CALL
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PenSion Protector IRA
at BANK ONE.

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~ou'ro Invited to view, at your convenience, the
oxating naw v~a.s. coune1 of 1"0 we will have on

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Call Now fqr an
Appohliment

Friday, March 9 and
Saturday, March 10
9 A.M.-5 P.M.

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2:00' 1'11·.1:00 ••

V~\Cation Bible School
· Open ·no use .

Ill I •
•IS

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-MILL STREET BOOKS'
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WILL BE OPENING
MO~DAY, MARCH 5th

ISLAND IN THE SON

HIOVEI® Elb~" 280

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w1t axesoti.a
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our enston.

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Mig. Sug;. a.lall $269.99

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•~t#IIOTDI ~~~~~·- "" -,

$479

132 Washington St., • RaYinlwood,

. .

THE .

I

t.,

:' POMEROY -There will be a·
weekend revival ·at the Faith
Tabernacle Church ori Bailey's
~un Road with David Wedlund,
Columbus, · as evangallst. The
revival . runs through next Sun·
~ay and services start at 7 p.m . .
_, li.lghtly'

saaaa
••*70

ONLY

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. . ........"· .. .

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·,

2.2PEAKHP*

AND

F ned Chicken Livers, Lots of
Vegetables, Salad Bar &amp; Dessert Bar
and lc~ Tea.

1

~ervllle

I

· March
.·
Birthdav Spa.clal

All You Can Eat For One
.
Low Price!! ·

.....

Hoover Invented It

MOM PERRY'S
SMORGASBORD
3:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.

__

..·

fir YIIU ltlrtl,.
... It"'

Canvas Boards

TUESDAY, MARCH 6th

MONDAY
, CROWN CITY - Mt. Zion
ATHALIA
- Dillon Chapel
.C\Iurch has special services
revival
contlnues
·through March
Saturday, 7 p.m., with Paul
:Martin.
·1i, 7 P·Jll· ~ pre!lchlng and special
...._,
singing nightly.
·~ GALLIPOLIS . Green
CADMUS -'- Cake decorating
Summer Ball Association meets
Su.nday, 2 p.m., at' Green Ele- class at Cadmus Community
~~~tY .School. AIJ .students Center Is each Monday &gt;through
'N!shlng to participate should Aprll .16. Cost ls $35 per person,
have their parents attend.
·
.(S,ee CALENDAR, pa11e 87)

,,,,,.

Q

~edi1,1ms

POME~OY - The Meigs Plo·
neer and Hls(!lrlcal Society Is
spon5orlng an herbal workshop
this Sunday, at 2 p.m., l!t the
Meigs County Museum on Butter·
nut Ave., Pomeroy. Connie Hill
and · Janet Theiss o! the Rl ver
Valley Herbalists Club will pres·
en t the program.'
.

.

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RACINE -The Southern Boos·
ters will have a chicken dinner on
Sunday 'at ·11:30 a.m: Menu Is
$3.75 and Includes, bar·b·cued
: GALLIPOLIS - Providence spare ribs, · creamed . bake
Missionary Baptist Church has · ch!cken, mashed potatoes, green
Monty Sheets preaching 11 a.m., beans, cole slaw~ dessert and
drink.
Sunday. N!&gt; e~ening services.

An AtlriRIIli'B
In HllrrllriRIB
TWO-MOTOR
HOOVERt~

CHECK OUT OUR
ART SUPPLIES

on

backup equlpm.nt ..

n....

POMEROY - Tickets lor the
1990 Fashion Show, "Oblo River
· Refiectlons", are now on sale,
Susan . Claik, Pomeroy Area
Merchants Association show
cbalrtnan, announced today.
The filth annual show will be
held In the Meigs High School
, a:udltorlurn on Friday. April' 6 at
7:30 p.m. with fashions and
· accessories to be shown by
Buttons and Bows, Chapman
Shoes, Clark's Jewelry, Corky's
Classics, Corner Collections of·
MlddleJ)ort ; ~an 's of Middleport,
Dollar General Fa·brlc Shop.
Hoocl's Family Shoes, and K&amp;C
Jewelers.
Tickets which will sell at $4
each have been distributed by
Clarice Krau tter of K&amp;C to
Andersons. Bank One, Buttons
and Bows, Chapman Shoes, 'chateau , Clark's Jewelry , Corky's
Classics , Corner Collectoln,
Dan's, Davls-Qulckel Insu·
.ranee, Dollar General, Fabric
Shop, Farmers Bank, Gallery
Hair Arts, Hood's Family Shoes,
K&amp;C Jewelers, and WMPO.
According to Mrs. Clark, the
.show promiSes to be' 'bl~ger and
better" with ·about 85 models

Community ·calendar

•&amp;enoltlve kn-lodgublo potient •One phone coli~ cover ell Y -

Is that AM IAIIders col1111111 you
clipped yeiJTs ago yellow with age?
For a copy of htr mos1 frtq~lllly
rrq~sttd poems and essays, selld a
self-addressed, /o"g. bKSiuss-siu
e11velope aJtd a chtck pr . mo~~ey
ortkr for $4.85 (this i11clutks postage alld haiJdlillg) to: Gtms, clo Ann
Lailders. P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 6061UJ562 . .(/" CIJIUUUJ. stlld
$5.87.)

showing clothing and accesiorles
available In the Bend area .
In addition to seeing what's
available lOCally. those attending
will have the opportunity to win
one o! the nearly 80 which will be
awarded during the evening.
Members of the Ohio Eta ·Phi
Chapter of. Beta Sigma Phi
$ororlty will be assisting with the ·
door · prize dlstrlbu Uons during
the evening.
·
In addition to the. numerous
door prizes, packets of diS&lt;:ount
coupc)ns wlll be given to everyone
attending.
Again this year Joe Struble will
be the .e'mcee. Clndl Oliveri will
. add variety to the show wlth a
segment on sesquicentennial costwnlng.'Another feature will be a
clogging routine by Paulette
Harrison, Rhonda and Ashley
Hannahs as a par't of their
modeling of costumes In the
show.
·
Kathy Reed, a teacher of home
economics at Meigs Hl·gh Schol
assisted by Becky .Baer and
Gloria Van Reeth, also teachers, ·
will work with a group of FHA
students to serve refreshments
at th~ show. .
.
·Again this year the fashion
show wUl be vldeoed 'by Paul
Gerard and a booth will be set up
take orders.

been scheduled for April 6 at 7: 38 p.m. aJ Melp Hlp SchoeL Joe
Clark producM tb- attractive. alps pram0tlp11lbe ahow and
ticket sah• lor each window of pardclpallngmerchanu. His wile,\
Susan, Is ~~erving u show chairman a11aln lhll year.
..

•No colt mpiratory theropy dis- •Quick r•ponM to now pot lent 001 ·
pollbl•.
ups, pli:kupo or ..,......,.,to.

N....:...:T~IR~E-=-=ST:....:::O-=C..:.:..K__....)

.SPORTSWEAR
COATS
DRESSES
SWEATERS
BLOUSES
SLACKS

ON SALE- Ticket• are now on Uhfortlle FlltiiAnauJFuhlon
Show of tile Pomeroy Area MenlhallU A.aoctatton. The lllow bas ·

BENEFITS ·

.. 1919, to. A• ... •

FINAL WIND-UP
FALL &amp; WINTER
FASHIONS

..
SWEATERS
SUITS
CORD SLACKS
SPORT COATS
SPORT SHIRTS

'

24 HOUI SERVICE- 7 DAYS AWEEK

"
Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page
B-3

PonwoY-Middlaport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va. ·

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�Page B-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

----

. M8rd1 4, 188Q:

Pomeroy-Middleport . GallipoliS, Ohio-Point Pltlllnt. W. Va.

- WVa~

-Anniversaries

minister to host trip to Holy unds ---

MiUer repreientative SpeicaJ Iervice
CROWN CIT¥ - Good .Hope
to visit area
United Baptist Church ·s pecial

•

Mars Hill and Corinth where
Paul preached wUI be part or the
sightseeing. Also, there will be a
one day crulse to three G!eek
Islands.
In [srael, where tourism Is
again gaining momentum, the
group will . be staying at the
Intercontlrientsl Hotel on the Mt.
o! Olives, two nights along the
Sea of' Ga!Uee, and one n~ht ~t
Tel Aviv, on the Mediterranean.
Upqn leaving Israel, the jour·
ney continues south along the
Mediterranean, ·crosses the Suez
Canal, and travels the desert
route to Cairo where the last
three nights will be at the
Ramses Hilton' overlooking the
'
unforgettable Nile.

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. The Rev. James B, Arbogast,
• Superintendent or the West Vlrgl·
nla Masonic Home, and a United
Methodist Minister along with
his wl!e, Rheba, wlll bost a tour
consisting or two work weeks and
three weekends making a total ot
16 days o! travel and fellowsb,lp to
Greece, Israel, and EKYpt, June
15·30.
Rev. and Mrs. Arbogast are
experience&lt;;! In European and
Middle East travel. Passengers
will be plpked up at Charles ton
and Ravenswood.
Four days and _three nights will
be spent In Greece. They wlll be
staying at the Divan! Paiace
Hotel just below the Acropolis
and the Parthenon ln Ath~ns,

Egypt, the Land o! ·the Pharaohs, Pyramids, and Sphinx, Is
steeped In a long and glorious
bls!ofY. Cairo IJ a fascinating
and exotic city. An opportunity
wUI be given to ride a camel, and
take In the "Soun~ and Light"

Ids . There will he 111m! tor.:
shopptna In eacb o! the~
countrln vlllted.
.-.:
Inquiries concerning the tour~
may be made by contacting Rev Arbogast at 2110 LewiJ Ave.::
Parkersburg, WV 26101, (304).:

~~on;e~~~:M~th~e~~~.!~~

Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page B-5

W.Va.

service, Sunday. 7 p .m., with
GALLIPOLIS - On Tuesday,
· March 6, a representative from · Rev . John Mellon, who'll present
sUdes on his mission to Jamaica.
U.S. Rep. Clarence Miller' s of·
flee w11J conduct an Open Door
session from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in ..
the Gal11polls Courthouse.
If anyone has any questions ·
concerning the Federal Govern·
ment, please stop by to dlseuss
them with the representatives.

- ·

TUXEDO SPE(:IAL
· ~ ;· . For Th1t Speelll Oeeltlo•

I·

'

~~ ~· I We offer complete tuxedo rent.. I8I'Vice

WALLPAPER AND

to help you look your bellt on thet ..,.clel
95
day.' .
PIICED FIOM

$29

. Open frlda' &amp; Mollllay Enlll. 'tl I PA ·

52,7 5

-

$

WALLPA'PER AND
BLIND SHOP

•

•
~

Memorial Bridie Approach On
Gorlitld Au. Parktnburg, WV.
Central Cent•
OH. 45601

•
RACHEL HARRINGTON, BRIAN SALLEE

•

Rankins celebrate anniversary

Anderson-Sanchez
.
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the

NEW CHURCH- Ground for
new Hllllllde Bapllat Church on ·
Route liS was broken on Feb. 18 and the church 18 expected to be
completed by Easter SundaY. Posing here . before some of the
heavy equl pment used at the site are from the left, Joe Humphrey.
Ron Clonch, and Dan Hood, trustees, Pastor James R. Acree, Sr.,
and Assistant Pastor Mike Willett.

Groundbreaking held.
for Hillside Baptist
.

·'

POMEROY - Groundbreak- school superintendent ls Joe
lng ceremonies were held re- Humphrey .. ,
cently for the new Hillside
Services are currently being
Baptist Church located just off held at the home of Acree, first .
Route 7 on State Route 143.
house on the right just below
Completion of the church is set · where the new church Is being
for Easter Sunday.
built. The services are Sunday
Prior to the actual beginning of schoo.l 10 a .II\. followed by
construction, a new bridge was morning wqrshlp at 11 a.II\.
bu Ut acres~ the small creek Sunday evening service at 6 p.m.
. which js between the road and Ute and t.he W.ednesday evening
building slte. All of the work on service at 7 p·.m. A feafure Qf all
the bridge was done by members Sunday services Is singing by the
of the churclr.
"Children of Gbd·. " A staffed and
Pastor Is the Rev. James R. equpped rrursery Is provided at
Acree Sr., wlth thP. Rev. Mike · all' services, according to the
Willett, asslstan.t pastor. Sunday pastor.

•
,,,

There's no 1An;;..&gt;,,,
need to pay II --uQ'.~:.
-~r'-8 '~,,
a fortune lor a great haircut. perm 1:·~
IBQif
.
or color.
I ·~~...,
'95 1
At Fantastic Sam's, you'll get C, ""' ·
.!,~•·I
everything you expect from an
T'k;;;_~~'"/
expensive salon. except the price. . I "'&lt;OJ'. n;;~:..:.~:t
You don't need an appointment. /:.,.....,. -~ r'-8 QJi.'7
we'rewaitingforyou now.
;:~ .... .IA'9; I

•

7

Q

cn

. '-'".....

.-s:i&gt;nt~c:f1c OO.J•LS"
~~ .
lhe Oilulalill Family Haircullers •

••

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...,_ •
I
'',,,,,
9.&gt;-.._ . ·lit'!,: 1
-~ __ _, I

&lt;

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'',~o·l

446-SAIIS
MON. 1lltU fltl. 9 TO 9 P.M.
OlftO IIVEI PLAIA
SAT. 9 TO 6 P:M.
BETWDII IIW I BIG lEAl SUNDAY 12 TO 5 P.M.
G.ALI,.IPOUS, OHIO

•••

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GALLIPOLIS- The Gallipolis
Dally Tribune Is seeking a
picture (glossy) of the first
Ga!Upolls Post Office. located at
427 First · Avenue, In 1924. If
anyone has a picture, they are
a:sked to contact Krls Cochran at
the Tribune. 825 Third Ave ., or
cal1446-2342.

GALLIPOLIS_ Activities and
menus for the week of March 5-9,
at the Senior Citizens Center 220
Jackson Plke, wUl be 'a s follows:
Monday -leglslatlYe ln!orma·
tlon,ll a.m.; advlsorycouncll , ll
a.m.; Chorus, 1 p.m.
Tuesday -STOP/ physical fit·
ness , 10: 30 a.m.; VIdeo Matinee,
"Tootsle" 12:30 p.m.; Lenten
_. 'service. Rev. Luther Tracy,
• : 11:15 a.m.
•
Wednesday - Birthday party
• 1 (Blll Fadeley); armchair travel
(Scotland), 10:45 a.m ..
·: Thursday - Bible study ~ 10: 45
~
a.m.; herballst class, 1:30 p,m.
Friday - Art class, 10-noon;
· craft class, 1-3 p.m.
Menus consist of:
Monday - Sauerkraut &amp; weln·
" ers. whipped potatoes, bread,
vanilla pudding.
Tuesday~ Pepper steak, tster
tots, spiced beets, bread,
brownies.
Wednesday - Beef tips with
gravy, mashed potatoes, sllced
carrots, br.occoll, roils , Ice
cream and ~ke.
Thursday. - Lasagna, cheese

.-

New Fast &amp; Flexible

Prog•-a1n is ~a1't•..• ·
'71's smart beaJuse ifi Fast."'·

Spring Valley Plaza • Gallipolis

You'D take off FAST the very t1r1t- and keep right on losing weight WMk after
· · weeki Get going,_ and~ could 111 111111111111' ,_YOU thia SPRING.

(614) 446-2134.
446·7000 before 9.a.m. the day you
wlsh to attend.
,
,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;...;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;.._ _. .
.

'7t!f smart becaUJJe ifi Rexlble."

Easter Outfits Arriving Now!

Ruffled Slips (mos. sin-141

Here's one e xciring example ,

All UNDER S170°

many more wai'ting for you in
store!

Layaway Now 1OOfo, Down!

SERTA SPINE SAVER

Frie.nds Forever

S129 ::.~.. ·

400 S.C:ond An.
Golfipolis, OM.
Mon. &amp; Fri. ~:30•1:00
Tuts..Sot. 9:30·5:00 .
614-446-6969

.

••• •2os ..

FVU. Ea. Pc. I•• 1269
a.- 2 '" s.t a.. •us ,

I

•169
, 385
'619

••• 3 ''·.Sot . . '"'
· Quolll 101d
sizn sold in 1111 •nly.

Corbin &amp; Snydt!l'
Furniture Co.

955 2nd Ave., Gelllpolla
~614)

446·1171

LA~Z-BOY~ MORE THAN

ACHAIR SALE.

S399

.

CUSTOM
ORDER

' The A~ · con1ecnDorarr Strlfl
klatures a buslle l»ck. Av~ a!;
1 Reelila-FlCo.el" Al!diner or 8S 1

RecW.w,., w. en..,

AT .
SALE

PRICES I
•

Weight Wmchert hal~ mlllont of people jult llw ~ loee millions of pounds.
JOin the Smart 1111. Joir1 welghl w~t~:~~~r~ today ror on1y ., 2.

·.

right frotn the ·

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••.

. ONLY STORE NAME AND LA-Z-BOY"
COULD PUr SOMETHING THIS GOOD TOGETHER!
It started out as a chair sale, now it's much more! Save on 1...1-Z-Boy'home furnishings!

.'' .
•'•

.......

RUTLAND F·URNITURE
ST. RT. 124
THREE MILES OFF RT. 7
·stci'r, Hou...: Mondey..s.turday, 8:30 a.m..a:oo P:""

FURNITURE
GALlERIES

.

•CARPET
•INTERIOR DESIGN
•CUSTOM DRAPERY
•WALL COVERING
•FINE FURNITURE

COINEI SECOND
AND GIAPf 51'.
446-0332

GAWPOUS, OH.

~~----~----~--------~~~~
.I

'f

........'-' . ... chance to
save o n quality Serta
matresses a nd foundations.

'7t!f smart because U worlu."

salad, rye bread.

Friday- Fish sandwich, tatar
sauce, green IImas, boiled pota·
toes, cole slaw, 'bun, pineapple
UPiide down cake.
Make reservations by calling

·-

Do you ilkepatlle? Do~ ~dlr*'Oout?Wel, go !Nad...Wilght Wmchert New
Fut &amp; Flexlbte Plln fill you' lllellytepol1ectty. Thai- yroi 181 oat the foods you
. lovo,llve you' ragular lite with IMIIy .-.d friende and llilt !ole weight. 1ft 1 WINNER I

.·

~:::~h~z~~

Pre·Teen - Junior
For Your Hard to Fit Girls
With Great Looks to Pick From

f':,

WeigbtWatchet~4

'•

D.J. 's CRAFT
SHOP

Senior schedule slated ·
.
: ·
::
-.: ·
•
: ,
•·

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Instructor: Betty Plymale
Be taught by a profetsif:?n'al.

Also

photograph s-ought

Come in today and register for
our tatting· class.
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
He Is retired from the GDC.
Lewis Scott will celebrate their
She Is the former Geneva Roush.
50th wedding anniversary with a
They were married March 13,
reception given ln their honor by
1940 at the First Baptist parsontheir sons at 2 p.m. Sunday,
age by the . late Rev. George
March llln the fellowship hall or Sagen.
·
The First Nazarene Church of ·
Their sons are Alan, Allison,
Galllpo\'ls. s ·e cond Avenue
Richard, and Randy all of
entrance.
Gallipolis. .
Gifts should be omitted.

(Toddler 4·71
for Dr•• and Play
In All the (GREAT mLES)

Posi office- ,,

ATTENTION!!
Scott aimive.rsary to be noted

Kite String

MIDDLEPORT -Mr. " and
Mrs. l&lt;enneth Carsey. Middle·
port, ars.annqunclng the engage·
ment of their daughter, Kenda K.
• Carsey, to Steve A. White, son of
Mr. · and Mrs. · Lewis White,
Reedsville.
·
·
, TJie open church wedding will
take place May 19, 2: 30 p.m . at
the Middleport Church of Christ.
Miss Carsey Is ·a graduate of
Meigs High School and Is em·
played by the Meigs County
Department of Human ~ervices
(Children Services).
·
White Is a graduate of Eastern
Hlgh School and Is employed with
Zeoll's· Recreational VehtcleCen·
.ter In ·Gal Upoll.s. ~.
·

•

Date: March 12
Time: 6:30 P.M.-8:30 P.M.

Looking for That
Great Outfit for Your
Little "Boy".
Well It's Arrived.

BHil

Carsey-White

,,

MR. and MRS. LEWIS SCOTT

"Attention" Here! . -

.

.

•
•

POMEROY -Mr . .and Mrs.
employed with Ohio's Center of
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Gene CJennl!er) Jewell, Letart,
Science and Industry and the M~rrlll Davis, GalllpolJs, . an:
W.Va., and Wllllam R. Anderson. · Capital University Modern Lao- nounce the engagement and
Stoutsville, .are announcing the .. guage Oepartment
· forthcoming marriage of their
engagement of their daughter,
Sanchez Is a graduate of Un.Jon daughter Rachel Harrington, to
Erln Marie Anderson, to Lorenzo
Hlll High School In Union Clty, Brian Sallee, son of Rev. and
Sanchez Jr., Columbus, son of
N.J. and St. l'eter's . College, Mrs. Maryln Sallee, Vinton .
She Is a graduate or Gallla
Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Sanchez · Jersey City, N.J. He Is presently
Sr., Union City, N.J.
attending Capital University Academy High School and atThe open church wedding will
Law School. He Is employed with tends the University of Rlo
take place July 6 at the St. Paul
the Franklln County Prosecu- Grande.
He Is a graduate of Frontier
Luthern Church In Pomeroy.
tor's Office. He was previously
Miss Anderson Is a graduate of
employed by Wall Street Cit· Hlgh School and Rio Grande
!Bank In New York City, 'N.Y.
Meigs High School and ls attend·
College and Is employed by the
_.lng Capital University In ColumMlss Anderson Is the grand - U.S. Postal Service.
bus. She Is a mem~er of the
daughter .Of Mr. and Mrs. George
An open-church wedding Is
Capital University. Education
Morris, ·. Pomeroy; and Mrs. being planned for June 30.
Society, and the Ohio Student
Esther
Marletts, and the
.
Education Assoclatlori. She Is
late Herrbe.rt

.,

SERT4
SLEEP
SALE

HarringtonSallee ·

•

Marcia Browning was also
Instrumental In making the
preparations.
A t•hree-tlered cake, complete
with fountain, was baked by
Dorothy Leach of Cheshire. while
.David Freeman, Anthony Gibbs
and Maryanna Browning helped
with the decorations. A pot-luck
dinner was served.
The Fumlas were unable to
attend, but sent a video tape to be
played for the occasion. .
The Rankins have flve
grandchildren.

Roll

Borders S9.99 Retail

•
•
•

CHESHIRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd (Dutch) Rankin were
given a surprise party on Feb. 4
commemorating their 40th wedding anniversary which was Feb.
9.
The event was held at the
Kyger Creek Employee clubhouse with the couple's family
and friends ,
. Their three children hosted !he
event, Patty Gibbs, Cheshire;
Vinton Rankin o! Addison, and
Dreama · Fumla, and husband, ·
Skip who live In Boston. Mass.

AND

Sale Price

'·'
I

. • . Thul'lday • Clou at NOOn

.

·

•BANK FINANCING
•ON-SJTE SERVICE DEPARTMENT
Coli Out CUifom.,
At
(614) 142·2211 Fot~lniOIIiiallun

s.mc.tM

i:
,'..

.'
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.&gt;

,GAl UPOLIS
•

.•
•

iUfllll'l EfiCGI'AL atiiiCH
541 8ecGnd Mnut '

Tue~ 7:00p.m ..

Wid: 9:30 a:m.

o':" Daslly

Moncley

&amp; Frilly

9to I
COINEI Of 3RD &amp; OliVE
to

GAWPOIJS

446·3N5

�Page B-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

'- Pomeroy-Midcleport-G..Iipolil. Ohio Point P11111nt. W.Va.

Beat of the Bend

Ml!fdl 4. 1990

Mllda 4. 1880

.Job Bank aids
seniors' work

Good intentions fail

---~-

Right:to-Read Week set
at :Sidwell-Portet school

unless tpey're written

I

B)' BOB HOEFLICH
WARNING! This column may
contain thoughts that you. find
objectionable or at the very
least Irritating.
If you we sensl·
tlve to base realtty, please fhld
another column
- maybe one
dealing with politics. That surely
will take you out· of touch wlth
reality.
If you have decided . to plunge
forward after belog warned,
travel at your owri risk.
Unfortunately, the time has
come for us to talkaboutour stuff
- and you know that we spend a
considerable amm,mt our Uves
coUecting lots of stuff.
Like myself, . you probably
thl~k that, everythiog you have
saved Is real goC~P sttiff: But ask
an expert and that know-It-allis
gonna tell you that you have good
stuff, bad stuff and In-between
stuff. Of course, you've got to
'take Into ·consideration that the
expert apparently doesn't under·
stand that one man's trash is
another man's treasure. So we're just gorma forge ahead
knowing in our hearts that our
stuff Is all good - every last
piece of it.
·
Now I h·ate to be the one to
break the news to you but toputlt
bluntly, nobody Is here forever.
If you came into this world with a
guarantee, Ihen you are even
more special than I thought. It's
not a case of here today and gone
tomorrow - in some cases, It
turns out to be here this second.
gone the next. We just never
know when we're gonna get that
BIG SURPRISE, do we?
And -we do know that It 's not
too healthy to concentrate too.
much on death . - and taxes.
Those kind of thoughts really go
agai nst the grain and who knows
- too much concern might even
hurry us along.
.
Now- the big pr()blem here Is,
what is going to happen to all of
our good stuff when the time
comes - let's be dainty- for us
. to ride off Into the sunset? No
problem, you say,- you've got a
will. Okay - so you think you
have the problem by the seat of
the pants. But let me repeat the
quesUon - just what's go 0 na
hap.pen to your good stuff which
has become almost unmanagea·
ble over the years. Every nook
and cranny Is filled,. the closet
shelves, the basement and the
attic are loaded not to mention
that hard- to-clean mirrored curio cabinets you bought to really
show off some of your favorite
stuff.
·
So suppose you are way out
there beyond the sunset. Just
what happens to the good stuff?
Does someone call for a big truck
and have It all hjiUled to the
landfill? Whatta ripoff after you
spent all of those years getting it
· all assembled under one roof.
Of course, . your will may
provide that the someone taking
over the'reins actually loves good
stuff too. In that case, your good
stuff is In good liands and will
. remain Intact at least for a while
longer so you can quit spinning.
However. if your heir turns out to
be your 32nd cousin from Ko·
kama, Indiana, who never really
liked you in the first place and
likes your good stuff less - it's
off to the landfill, we go.
Now, just for the record, It
doesn't matter that you told 100
people that you .wanted Alma
doody down the street to have
your jewelry, especially the
Indian stuff you bought through
QVC . Alma was real good at
bringing you some of her baked
· goods and always looked In on
you when you didn't feel well.
And - It doesn't matter that you
left a note that your coUectlon of ·
all of those tools - my, they did ·
get rusty - are to go to George
Goodboy who was always ready
to give you a helping hand and ·
never charged.you a dime. Nope
~ these remembrances were not •
. spelled out In the will so Cousin
Money Crazy who Is real fond of
the Yankee Dqllar Is in all

probability ·going to care less
about honoring any statements
or notes that you lett behind
before taking that glorious ride.
After all, the law Is on his side
-and while he might have the bad
stuff and the. in-between stuff
hauled away, he can make out
pretty wen with what he considers the gen\!IJ1e good stuff.
Now. - speaking ofthat ride
Into the sunset. Do you sometimes wish that you could
LEAVE SOMETHING IMPRESSIVE TO POSTERITY. I meanwhat about a great book or play
~Sha kespeare handled that well
an Impressive world acclaimed painting- Van Gogh
has stayed with us - ·a brUliant
piece of tousie 'to be sung over
and over again for generations?
Unfortunately, .ihere are few of
us with enough talent to come up
with anything that will be re-·
membered by most people for as
long as a half hour after we make
·
the ride.
If you would like to be remem bered a bit longer than 30
minutes, there is an ·alternative.
While It won't take you deep into
posterity, It will help keep your
memory going for a while.

BIDWZI.L - Oblo Rl~ to
Read Week II ICbeduled for
Marcb "'· f!d Bldwell·Porter

tltn

DANCE SLATED - Tile GalUpolls Jun..,r WoiiiUI'I (JI!lb II
SJIOIIItOI'InJ a spring charlt)'clance, 8aturday,March 17 at the Elb
Loc!Je from I p.m. to 1 a.m. Tickets are 116 .per couple ud lacludetl
snacks. The dance wW celebrate the wearlaJ of the green -St.
Patrick' I Day. The blllld FortuDe WUI provide live millie. Tlclietl
are available at Empire .,_rurnlhire or' from &amp;n)' club member •
Proceeds 10 toward locat cllarl&amp;les. Pictured are clubwomeu
Becky Jolmaon, Anne Sickles and Jeri Rowell.

. BOB SHACKLEFORD

Fellowship
to feature

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wblch Includes materials. Call
379·2268 for Information.

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ENO -:- Gallla County Pomona
Gran~ · meets Monday, 8 p.m.,
Eno Grange Hall. Potluck refreshmel!ts follow.
. . REEDSVli...LE - The Olive
Township Trustees . will meet.
Monday. 6:30p.m. at the Reedsville Fire House.

pareata,· retired teachen and
other pest wUl be Invited to visit
the acbool to observe, teach, or
reid to tile students.
Cbab Gulhrle from lbe Samuel: · '
L. Boalll'il Memorial Library
wUI be· presenting dinosaur stories to all il'ades.
· Paul Barker trqm tbe Gallipo- ·
Ill Tribune wUl give a presenta· ·
tloil on the newspaper to all
erades.' All students will reeelve
·a ''Reading Is Dlno-Mite"
booltbal.
.
WedDaday Is "Coolde and
Reld-a·Badge Day." Cooks will
serve dinosaur coqkles to every~ne regardless o! whether they .
buy lunch. Everyone Is Invited to
wear all the badges they have appropriate ones only.
1'h11rsday Is "Read~a- T-shlrt
Day.'·· Students are encouraged
to wear T·sblrts with writing on It
MATTJIESS.
- appropriate ones only.
$49.95
Friday Is "Movie and Certifi4 DIAWIR
cate Day." "Reading Is DinaCHEST
13.50 wk.
Mite" certificates wilt be
awarded to all students who
IUNI
participated ln. Right to Read
Week activities.
The mOvie "The Land Before
•DIOOM
SUITES
Time" will be offered to all
classes who 'w ish to see lt. ·
All I'l)malnlng contests w!H
end,· winners will be announced,
and prizes awarded.

COMMmEE - Rlabt·to-~ead Week cornmntee litellldea
(seated) Lynn Arnott, · Betty Hollingshead, Roberta 811rlver,
Sharon Saunders and Jean Cassidy. Standing are Corllll MlDer,
Phylll• W.-Jght, Mar~ha Butcher and Patricia Diamond.

Gr~duating

SENIORS
lOW CAS~ PRICES

RENT

SOFA I CHAIR
.S10.95 wk .
REPO DINEnE
• CHAIIS
5149.00

......

.,.. 141

TO OWN

. Bt&gt; at thP li&gt;p

class

with classy graduation
annuuncel"ltents.
Cuml' see our wide line
of graduation supplies · -

Gal1lpelis
(614)

Gu•nAIN
Cofftt I Eild Tallln

·or the

bvstylart
20% Off Month of March

·$191.00 ...

PAT'S POSIE PATCH
388 -9311

RUTLAND -Meigs A'rea Hall·
ness Association will hold indoor
camp, Monday through Sunday
with services nightly at 7 p.m.
and 6 p.m. on Sunday . Special
speaker Is Rev. Gem~ Grate and
song evangelist Is "The DumIres" from Tennessee ..
FOREST RUN -Forest Run
Methodist Church will Jiave a
rummage sale Monday, 9 a.m. to
a· p.m. and Tuesday, 9 a.m. to
noon.
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COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
-The Board of Trustees of
Columbia Township will meet
Monday, 7: 30 p.m. at the fire
station.
•
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· 'POMEROY - The Meigs Local Band Boosters will meet
Monday, 7 p.m. In the band room.
CHESHIRE . -W!imen Alive
will meet Monday, 7' p.m. at the
Kyger Creek Clubhouse. Speaker
will be Cathy Howard. There will
be a quilting demonstration and
refreshments will be served.
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Garden ·o,ub will meet
Monday, 7:30p.m. at the home of
Mrs. William Morris.

So we've talked about. our good
stuff and it appears that in the
bargain I tnay have drummed up ·
business for the local attorneys.
That wasn't 'the lntenUon, 'but
come to think of it, there's no .
harm In being on their good side.
After all. some of them are
judges and you just never know .
'Lots of luck· with your good
stuff. While someofusfeel that If
we can't take It wjth us. we're not
gonna go, It just. doesn't work
that way . However, you and I
know that our good stuff certainly deserves a fate better than
the landfill. It really Is good stuff.
Do keep smiling.

LETART TOWNSQIP -The
Letart Township ·Trustees will
meet'Monday. 6 p.m. at the office
building..
·
RACINE -Racine Village
Council will meet Monday, 7 p.m.
at the Star Mill Park.

fflV/'h.

w ..

ere You Are Cared' For .: __
And Cared About."

·.

This is the well-applied motto of the Skilled Nursing Facility at
Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·
At Veterans Memorial -Your Hometown Hospital- the Skilled
Nursing Facility is a department of the hospital which means that facility residents enjoy the availability of 24-hour physician coverage, im mediate accessibility to state-of-the-art equipment, emetgency and
·
operating rooms, x-ray, laborarory and pharmacy services.
·.- our cbmpetent well-trained p~rsonnel has beentrained ~nd licensed
to provide specialized care while at all times respecting and encouraging
the individuality of each resident.
And, of course, our facility is "right at home" so that family ·and
friends.(an visit frequently with their loved ones without' a great deal of
travel involved. In fact, we encourage rbtese visits.
A variety of activities is provided residents through our Activity Di, rector to promote the general well-being of each resident. At the same
time, no resident is pressured to take part.

~airstylist

AT

We do offer a pre-admissic:m orientation which includes a tour of our
·f~ciliry and answers to all pertinent questions.
·RemeJllber at Veterans Memorial .,

HAIR HIGHLIGHTS
e446-4597

SARAH McCLINTOCK.

Graduate of Huntitgtdll School of 11auty Clbura, Spadalizing in Cull &amp; P.-.ns ilducl.. cWgn Gild spiral. ·
. S.. Sarlh Now tllroUth •rch 17th for ··
200fo off ....,.., Pricft.
')
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(From CALEND~ pa1e 83)

wl•- a Will . be aniiOIIIICed the
prlzei awarded Ill the 'mOl'lllni.
1'r•hy II "VIsltatloJI 81ld
Boollbal Day." Pwents, erand-.

SYRACUSE - The Sutton
Township Trustees wllf meet
Monday, 7: 30 p.m. at the Syracuse Municipal Building.

And how do you go about doing
this? Well, !'in told that it 's a
simple mat,ter. You don;t go to
the trouble of making.a new will,
you just have a what is called a
codicil added to the will listing
the remembrances and the per..
sons who are to receive them.
You could have leaflets dropped
from a plane In the sky Indicating
what your Intentions, but that
won't do it - It has to be all
wrapped· up officially with this
codicil thing.
.

432 Pike St. • Rt. 7 • Gallipolis

llr7 School hu many

acUvltlll pleaned for t1111 week.
All actMtles are lpoDIOred by
!be Pro &amp;1111 COOrdinated by tile
Cbapte'l ataft.
"Rer11ng II Dliio-Mite" 11 the
theme, and buDding actlvltlel
Include poster tu1d buUeln board
contests; anent readlna·siudents
tu1d ltaff wm be Involved In 15
mtautrs of anent reading dally;
boOk readlq activities; library
program; new~papera In education p!'Oitllll; buolanark, bldJe
boOkbq, IJid certificate daya;
coolde dly; ·dln011ur , fact and
trivia _actlvltlel; vlmtatlon day;
assembly, movies, Photographs
and videos.
·
Monday, II "Badge Day." .Students wlll receive a "Readlqls
Qlno-Mite" badge. The poster
conteat and bulietlrl board

Calendar ·

We all have relatives and
friends - some of them we even
like. So, if you do want your
l)'lemorytQ live with th~e people
why not arrange fcir some of
them to receive . your favorite
lamp 1 that antique Chair, a piece
of crystal. an old watch, the
coUectlon of 500 ceramic dogs
that you dusted for 40 years, the
rusty tools or some other goodie
from your good stuff. A personal
remembrance many tfmes
means so much to the receivers
- every time they use or display
the bequest It becomes a delight .
for them to detail just how you
personally remetnbered them
when you took - a !fain, that ride
Into the sunset. Everyone within
earshot Is Impressed by your
· thoughtfulness and you're remembered - and gee, what a
swell person you were-. It 's not
.as good as being remembered
across the nation or the world,
but what the heck, it's a little
reminder to a few that you were
around at some pplnt In time,

Introducing Our Latest

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"You Are Cared For And Cared About.n

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VOEIINS

GALLIPOLIS- GaiUpolls Ro·
tary meets Tuesday, 6 p.m.,
Dowh Under.

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115 last . . .,,... Dri••• POIMI'oy, Ohio

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GALLIPOLIS GaiUpoUs
Lions meet Tuesday, 6: 30p.m. ,
Oscar's.
RAciNE -The Southern Local
School District Chapter I Pro.g ram wil be sponsoring a Newspaper 111 Education Workshop to
be held at the Southern · High
School cafeteria on Tuesday
from 6-S p.m.
POMEROY -The Ladles AUX·
illary of the Fraternal Order of
Eagles 21n will meet Tuesday. 7
p:m. All members we urged to
attend and bring a covered dish
for the potluck.
. 'sYRACUSE -The !!yracuse
Youth League will have an
otganlzatlonal meeting on Tues·
d~ at 7 p.m. at Syracuse
'
Elementary School.
.REEDSVILI...E -The Eastern
Local Board ot Education will
meet In special aesslon on Tues·
'day at6: 15 p.m. in the high school
cafeteria to deal with personnel

matters.

·MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
992·21-04

.'

TUESDAY
CHESHIRE - The Cheshire
Township Trustees w!H meet ·
TUesday at 5:30 p.m. In the
Cheshire township building.
Operi to the public .

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MIDDLEJ&gt;OitT ..:.There will
be a regular meeting of the
Middleport Lodie t.lo. 313 F and
AM . on Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m.
Plana will be made for lodge

ID*pectlon on April 6. Inspection
wJII be Ill the fellowcraft dfti'H

' and retrestynenta will be aerved.
.t

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30$
. IMANUFACTURER~ I
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COUPON

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~cow:-,,-

EXPIRES 3·31-90

3. 0~
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Good On 2 Liter Diet Pepsi or Dl•t Caffeine Free Pepsi Only

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To tile Nloltor. To receive -•nt, oonct thla coupon to Pepll.Colo Company,
20tl1 Eut Stile Street, Athena, Ohto 45701. For each coupon you iccopt • our
outhorlzect 111ent tn accord., .. with the termo or thla coupon ottor, we wtn poy
301 ptua 8 cente '-dUng. lnvolcoa piovlng purchue eo deyo prior to oubllll•
alon or aulltclent arock to covtr coupont p-ntect muot bllhtwn upon requeot. Cooh votue 1120 oft cent. CQnoumor muwt pay any ..... tax n110r dlpaolt
charge. Olfer limited to one coupon. per purch-. Any other uot conalttutn
fraud . Coupon moy not be oulgnect. tronaroi'Nd pr reproduced.

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registered trademarka ot t)le NutraS-1

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pany, 2001 Eat State Streelo Athet~s . Ohio .4S70L For ucPI CIUJIOft
1
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1 cordanct W1ttl the ttmis ot this coupon of· _
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ter. we"'" N'f !II l)lvsl unts hlndliflt.
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duct lftd OICkiOI -.loci ond tht '"'
o&lt; '""titling
""""'price,
1110 Ot ltoclu&lt;lict rrarn
tnYDien l)f'Oiriftg
I your rttall
1 purdtall 10 d1:y1 prior 10 IUbmission o1

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50~
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DIET PEPSI. CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI ancl

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!lttm!t'1:•1t1. :~:~~~~~:tJ..-.:."r:..':.oi..;':C::~retnc.
Comp1ny,

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mult bl shown upon rtQutl\. Cuh qtue
fi!O ol 1 ""'· COlsumtr mu" PlY ony
"~' Ill&lt; lndlor d-11 chorgo. Ottor
timiltd to one co~.~pon per purcnue. Mr
othtr u11 constllulnlravd Coupon lniJ 11111:

be mi9f1111. 111nlllrrod"

ler uplrn 4-30·90.

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Mlrdl 4. 1180 :

Plga . B-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

ports
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~mu.- imti•ttl ·Section

£:

M.-ch 4, 1990 '

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':W ith 76-65 win over Athens,

'

Gallia Academy clainjts district championship
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Ttmea-Seallael staff
CHILLICOTHE -With a personal season-high
33-polnt scoring performa~e from senior Lori
HamUton, Gallla Academy s Blue Angels claimed
the~ second straight Division II district champiDIIIhlp by posting a 76-65 triumph over SEOAL
,!rie Athens Friday night In the Ellis B, Hatton
Memorial ~ymnastum . , ,
·
.
Hamilton s offensive Investment, which was the
thltd l!me a Blue Angel eager has reached this
season s altitude ce111ng !Krlstl Thomas scored 33
. -against ck Hill on ~c. 4, 1989, and against
Marietta onJan.18), was only the second tlmethls
season she has scored at leas-t 30 (she had 31
against Portsmouth on Jan. 29) ·
The opening act witnessed Bulldog guard Krist!
Skinner score the first basket on a long jumper
. fr_on;~. the-left wing 12 secoilds after tipoff, setting
· the stage for Thomas to tie the game 12 seconds
later. That was one of four times the Angels would
Ue the game In tllat quarter, which saw Gall1polls
t;.ke the lead twice, the first when sopl\omore
guard Dena Greene sank a l~foot -Jumper from
the left side.of the lane with 5: 441eft, glvingGAHS
a6-41ead. The second time the Academy took the
lead was when '! he 6-0 HamUton took a pass from
.Tiiomas and.connected on a layup with 1: llle!t,
glvtng the.'Angels a 13·12 lead.
.
Bulldog point guard MoUy Rlestenberg; a 5-4
sophomore, dropped In a three-pointer from the
rlgh\ wing with 1~ seconds left toerasetheAilgels'
-lead and allow the Bulldogs to take a two-point
lead at the end, of round one;
· • Poor foul shooting plagued the Angels In the
llrst quarter, as they went3 for 9 from the line In
that frame. But foul trouble began to cast a
shadow on the Bulldogs, as Becky Sostarlch, a 5-9
juulpr forward, was ticketed tWice In act one, an~
, shortly after Thomas drllled a three-spot from the
right wing With 6:55 left In the second quarter,
Sostarlch was whistled for her third foul, thus
earning a seat on the t;oench.
"We got In foul trouble In the fl'rst half, and we
put In people that weren't In foul trouble," said ,
·Athens chief Tim Smith. "We had people that
weren't Used to playing In those positions.
Ahead 17-16, Athens and Gallipolis traded .
baskets before senior forward Melissa Calvert,
Rlest~:nberg and senior center Kathy Bruning
scored on consecutive baskets to -put the green
squad ahead 24-18 with 5:30 left. Then the Angels ·
' ·
. .
· came back.
· Hamilton scored on a,layup 10 seconds later.
and after Bruning, who was fouled In the paint by
Hamilton with 5:01 left; missed a pair of free .
· throws, HamUton was fouled by Bruning (her
· third) and sank both one-and-one shots with 4:13
, ·left. Then Thoma$ hit ii long jumper from just
,, ' lnsjdethe arc' to tletlle g&amp;!lJe at 24 with.4: 04left. A
, pair of free throws by Greene (coming on
Calvert's secoll4 foul) and a Hamilton layup,
which came on a Thomas pass, gave the French
City five a 28'24 advantage with 2:27 left. The
margin was tile Angels' largest of the first half.
· Nineteen seconds later Rlestenberg passed to
freshman front-liner Jennifer Merriman, who

came In earller for Sostarlch, and Merrllnan•s
layup cut the · Angels' lead to 28-26. A!tfr the
lnbounds pass by the Angels, Merriman stole the
ball and passed It to Calvert, who connecttd on a:
layup to tie the game at 28 with 1: 58 left. /
. On the following lnbounds pass, · ~alvert
received her third traffic ticket when &amp;hej fouled
Thomas, who went to the charity stripe a~d san II
both one'and-ones to give the Angels a 30!28 lead
with 1:39 left. Sixteen seconds later Rlestenberg
took a Skinner pass and !)ailed a 12-foot jumper In
the lane to tie the affair at 30.
t·
.
Hustle wasn't an Ingredient excluslv~ to the
Bulldogs, as with 1:15 left. Thomas knllfked the
ball away from Rlestenberg and Greene reco·
vered it. In the process of recovery, Gr~ene was
fouled by Calvert (her fourth), and Gr~ne wentto
the Une for the one-and-one. She mlsse~, and 11
seconds· later Rlestenberg- used her .· set-shot
· deUvery to launch a tr!fecta from the right wing to
give Athens a 33-30 lead.
,
In .the final minute of the first half, ~ostarlch,
who had returned to action, grabbed a rebound
· and scor&amp;! op a layup to boost the,'Dogs' lead to
five with 31 seconds left. But Hamllton tllilk a pass
·

,

RIMS US1ED 81\0W
111 nuow
TAGGED EVEI1Dl'f
LOW PRIC£Sl

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. WE ARE 111E_CHAMPIONS! +- severaiGallla
Academy eager. S1li'I'Ouad the Dlvlllon II district
champion's trophy held by Blue Ancel• Lori
HamOton and Krill II Thomas (kni!ellncl following
the Angels' 76-85 vlctoey over Atliena Friday al(lbt

111 ChUllcothe High School. The Angels will take on
·· New Lexington Wednesday night In the regional
tournament at Lancaster H.S. (Times-sentinel
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Athens (65)
Kathy Bruning .. ......................... .. ... 6
Molly Rlestenburg .. ............. .. ... .... .. 3
Melissa Calvert ....... ...... ..... .... ... ..... 4
Krlstl Skinner .... .. .. .. ......... .. ............ 5
Jennifer Merriman .... ... .... ........ ..... . 4
Becky Sostartch ............ .. ... ,.... .... .... 3
Melinda Binegar ........... ....... .. ......... 0
Tolals .......... ..... .............. ... .... .. ..... ..25
From the field - 27-72 (37 .5%)
At the stripe- 9·18 (50%)
On the boards- 31 (Calvert 9)
Blocked shots - 2
Assllta- 5
Stellls- 10
Tumovers - 26
Fouls- 24
. Foaled oul- Calvert, Sostarlch

0
1
0

o

7-33
9-28
4-10

2- 4

0 1- 1
1 23-78

0
2
0
0
0

4--16
1-13
2-10
0-10
0-8
0 0-6
0 2- 2
2 &amp;-65

'

t

'

'

oz.••••••

·

260Z......

BATH TISSUE••
BOYS • GIRLS .

GaiUpoUs (76)
Lori Hamllton .. .... ......... ..... .. ......... 13
Kr.lsti Thomas .. .. .......................... 8
Dena.Greene ....................... .. .. ..... 3
Gwen E111ott .................. . ........... ... 1
Karen Kerns ............. .................... 0
Tolals ................ ... .............. ..... ... ,, 25
From the field- 26-60 (43.3'/f )
Beyond the arc- 1-3 (33.3'1&lt;)
At tbe stripe- 23·36 (63.9%)
On the boards- 25 (Hamilton 12)
Aullts - 12 (Thomas 5)
Steals- 2.
Tumovers - 16
Foull-16
Fouled oUt - Young

~
-

M1Liooooooooooooooool2 OZ.ouooo

loo

·'We knew we had to go Inside: but we usually
walt for a wake-up call," said GAHS skipper
GOrdon aakei', whose charges began once again
to chip away at the Bulldogs' lead. But with
Athens ' Inside game proving quite productive
(layups ;~ccounted for all bullS of t!Jelr 53 points
from the field), the Angels faced an uphill battle.
But face It' they did, as the Academy outscored
· their opponents 17-10 In the last6: 30 ofthequarter,
as the scoring firm of Thomas&amp; HamUton scored
12 points In that time. But It was the Angels' Gwen
Ell1ott. a 5-5 junior guard, who followed up a
. three-point play by Hamilton (who was fouled by
Riestenberg after the Angels' center-connected on

a layup) with a layup of her own after getting a
rebound off a missed shot by Greene to give ihe
GalUans a 49-47 lead wUh 58 seconds left.
That lead was extended to four afte'r another,
HamUton layup, but Athens came right back with
consecutive layups In the last 28 seconds. with
Skinner scoring the pivotal layup with three ticks
left, to tie the game at 51.
Prime lime
It took Thomas 15 seconds to get Inside and
score on a layup to break the tie, and shortly arter
E111ott picked up her third foul, Skinner slipped
Inside and hit a layup to tie the contest at 53 with
7: 281eft. Thomas broke the deadlock when she
dropped In a jumper-from the left half of the lane
to give the Academy a 55-53 lead . From that point,
the Angels outscored the Bulldogs 21-12 and
executed an 11-for-U effort at the llne, which
Included the first point of the season for freshman
guard Karen Kerns (: Q3), to seal the victory.
Athens, which ended the season at 14-8, bid
rareweU to Bruning. Calvert and fellow senior .
Nanoy.Malcolm.
.
The Angels (l9-4), who extended their winning
streak to five games, wUI oppose New Lexington
(whO knocked off Jackson 58-461n the preceding
upper-bracket title game) Wednesday at 8 p.m. at
Lancaster High School.
Quarter totals
Bulldogs .. ............... .. ............ .15 20 16 14-65
Blue Angels ................. ...... .... 13 19 19 25-76

uol lB. IOXuoooo

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ASST. STRAINED
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'

from junior forward Jennifer Young and scored
on a layup with 14 ticks remaining to cu 1 Athens'
lead to 35-32 where It remained at halftime.
With a jumper from the left baseline, Thomas
scored the first points of the third quarter to cut
the green squad's lead to 35-34 at the 7: 43 mark. In
the next 1:38 Athens responded with six straight
points, all on layups, to post a.41-341ead, Its largest
of the night.
Wake-up call

.

99
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20 a ..........

SPL~

THE SEAM - Gallla Academy center Lori HamDton
aeam .In the defense ol!ered by Athens Bulldop
, ' Mellua Calvert ·(left) ud MoUy Rlestenbei'g (rlcht) to score on
: the layup In the fourth quarter of FridlloY night's Division II district
· tournamenllllle game. Hamilton IICOred a gam~ and seuon-blgb
' 3S polllta to help propel the Blue An&amp;el8 to a '76-415 vktory.
' (Times-8enllnel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

•

.

••
......

.'

SPOT8 TABQET - Gal1lpolla front-liner Krlsll Thomas (28)
spollllbf bullet.whlle Athena guard MoUyRlestenberc (11) moves
Ia to preveal the allot In tbe third quarter of Friday nqbt's
. 9hamplo•lllp eonteet. Tllomu ecored 28 to help pub the Blue
1\apll to a 76-81 triumph ud tbelr second stral(lbl dlllrlct IItle• .
(Tim~enllnel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

TAKES AIM - Gallla Academy 111ard Dena Greene (31) talles
aim before ebooda&amp; from the b-llne, 11 Albeas forwan! Mellllsa
. ,Calvert'(SG) defends oa t•e play, In the fourth Cjuarler of Friday
nqht's came al Chillicothe. Greene, one of three Blue Angela to
register In double fiiUI'M, chipped IIi with 11 points to help give the
GaiUans a 7H5 win and their flflh district IItle. (Times-Sentinel
photo by G. Spencer Osborae)

'o hio ·state downs · Northwes~m; Miami beats OU BObCats
-

:: EVANSTON, Ill. (UPI) •Perry Carter scored 21 points
-and freshman Alex Davis added
20 Saturday to lead Ohio State to
·a 95-86 Big Ten victory over
.Northwestern.
..
, : Ohio State Improved to 15-11
"and 9·7 In the Big Ten, while
Jail-place Northwestern dropped
tb 9-18 and-2-15. Rex Waltersaod
Wilker Lamblotte each had 23
.Points fbr the Wildcats:
·. Northwestern got Into foul
lroJible early In the ~eoond half,
puttlq Ohio State Into !he bonus
'ltlth 1~: 56 lett. The Buckeyes hit
lB tree lbrDWIID the aeconcl half.
· A tbree-pblnt fteld p i by
Cbr1J Jent had the Buckeyes on
top 61-'t. But Wallllra COUDiered
wtlb a three-pointer, then eanlt a
Pair of free tbrowl to cuI tbe

.

"

'

"''

deficit to 61-54 with 11 minutes to
play.
'
Ohio State, ahead 63-!55, putthe
game away with 10 itralght
points. Davis' three-point plAy
with 7: M togocappedthe'runand
put the ·Buckeyee ahead 73-55.
Davll bad a string of nine
straight Buckeye points In the
second half.
The Wildcats cut the lead to
79-72 whe.-. Lamblotte converted
a three-point play with 4: 19 left,
but that was the cloeest the
Wildcats came.
In the first half, David Hollhes
put the Wildcats In front 23-20 on
a ~ort jumper at 9: 24. But 1~
Buckeyes roared back, scorllll!
13 C:OIIIII!CIItlve points·, five bY
Mark Baker, In a 2:39 span to ·
open a 33-23 aclvaniage.

~···

'

~ate's

t

6hto
biggest lead Ill the · deficit to a 35-24 lead tn' little Nate Craig 11 for thli Bobcats,
who finished the regular season
'first lllllf was 37-25. bUt' Northwmore than three minutes.
Miami led 44·33 at the half and at 12-15 overll and 5-11 In the
estern
able to chop that to
44.18, th lcl to a three-polntfleld stretched It to 66-54 · at 12: 19 MAC.
Both teams will play In the
19'1 by , n Pollte at the haUtlme before gotna on a 20-4 outbilrat to
. bilzzer. •
,
· take an ~58 lead at 4: 41. Cratr league tournamen! next week In
Carie~- led the Buckey• With 10 Mlcbaelll ICOred nine of thole 20 Detroit.
· polnta ljt the lntermlllloa, while
Noire Dame 88, MliHurl 11
polnta.
'
•
At South Bend, Ind., Monty
LambiQtte
the Wildcats
Scott led the Redsklns With 24
with lOt potnta.
'
polnta white Mlcllaelll and Jim WIDiams scored 1C points, lead·
iillual., Olllo 'J8
:
Paul each had 19 and Tim lag five double-figure scorers,
At
0~- David Scott Stewart had 15 ~ Mtaml ended and Notre Dame atunned No. 2
came kff tbe hench to lead a tbe ~euoa13-U CIVI!I'all and 9·11a Mlssourl98-67 Saturday ,Improvflrat-ll•lf outburst al\d power
Ing tbe Irish's chancel for a siXth
theMAC..
--,.
Miami to a 93-76 Mld-Amerlcaa
Tbe league's leadlq ICOrer, stralibt NCAA tournament bid.
l)almon Sweet aparltllld 1 1H
Confe!jeace win Saturday over .Ohlo'a Dave Jamer100, scored 33
OhiO ·l(Jntverllity to cloae out the points to rallll! blllverqeto31.2.. lrllb run early In the aeconcl half
He flnt.shed the replar season wttb four points and two ste•l•.
replar IHIOII.
SbottlY After Scott entered the with 844 polnta, two sby of tbe LaPhonao Ellll also scored four
gameJ trtaered a ~1 Miami MAC mark of Howard "Butch" points In the spurt, which lasted
.jlist 2:58. Kevin Ellery sank a .
run by scorlq ~n of thoee i&lt;omlves of Bowling Green.
pobits to send Miami from a 23-20
Dennis Whitaker added 14 and · three-point shot with 13:48 re-

v-cec1

oi'iont,

he

.

I

lr

malnlng to end the streak and
give Notre Dame a 63-411ead.
Missouri came no closer than
17 points after that. The Irish
stretched the lead as high as 91-58
on a d11nk by Scott Paddock with
4:43 to play to cap a 24-9 run.
Notre Dame, 15-11, averted lti
first four-game loslq streak ,
since 191N and clinched Its eighth
straight winning season with the
nationally televised triumph.
Missouri, 26-4; loat ror the
second lime In three games,
having dropped a 107-90 declllo.-.
laer\ileek ,to No.7 Oklahoma. The ·
Tlpra, regular·lll!aaon cham- ·
plonl of the Big Eight, joined No.
1 K&amp;IIIU, No. 3 Nevada-Las
and No. 4 Duke aa
top-rated lolerl this week.

vecu

(See COLLBGB .. C-8)

�•

Pail• C-2- Sunday•lime.Santinll

Pomeloy-Midclaport-Gs11ipol'l. Ohio Poi It Ph a

March ~. 1980

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio Point P1e111ant. W. Va.

position to win when he banked In
a three-pointer with 5.5 seconds

meoqt, Slxer Mite Gmlnsldtrled
to pass to Hersey Hawkins but
Thomas Intercepted, drove to
·the basket , and touml ou~s
who was drMng from the left

lett to bring the Pistons within
103-102. Retuslng to call a ti·

OVCS bea.18. Grace
• . 79
Chri81180
. • 76

side.
Charles Barldey of Phlladel·
phla was then fouled with ·0.2
seconds lett, but he made only
one of two free throw&amp; to send the

game lnlll the extra period.
1n overtime, the ICOn! was lied

110.110 wileD l)wnan took the
ball on the lett wiDi lnd drove tile
. (lee NBA • Cl)

.

CROSS LANES, W.Va. - Jun·
.
tor guard Dax Hill bombed Grace boards with 20 rebounds. Fellow ·
Christian for a. game-high 27 senior Tom Rawlings was the
points to propel Ohio Valley set-up man, dishlhg out elgbt
Christian to a 79•76 victocy assists In addition to his 12 poJnts.
Friday night in the consolation
In addition to Rawlings ·and
game of the West Virginia VanMatre, the Defenders, who
Christian Athletic Association ended the season at 7-12, said
tournament
good-bye to fellOw seniors Jum·
Grace, which was· led by mie Espino and Kevin Peck.
Steven Reynolds (26 points) and Score by quarters
Brian Davis (23 ),led 20-14 at the Ohio Valley .... . :.14 20 20 25-79
end of the first quarter, but the Grace ................ 20 14 15 27-76
Defenders did unto Grace as
"
GracedlduntoOVCSinacttwoto
.
OHIO VALLEY (79)
tie the game at 34 at halftime. In
Dax Hill .... .. .. .... ... 7 2 7-27
the third quarter, the Buckeyes E.T. VanMatre ..... 11 0 0-22
took advantage of a slight offen· Tom Rawlings...... 5 0 2-12
slve cool spell by Grace en route- Greg Wray ........... 5 0 2-12 ·
to edging the Huntington five
Kevin Peck ........ .. . 2 0 o~ .4
45-42 In the second half 10 claim · Jeff Peavley ., .. .. ... 1 0 0- 2
ihevlctorv.
.
TOTALS ... .. .. ... ,., .. 31 2 11..:.79
Senior center E:r : VanMatre,
Foul shots- il-20 (55%)
whoscored22!or0VCS, ruled the
Rebounds- 44 (VanMatre 20)
Blocked shots- 7
Aaalsts- 18 (Rawlings 8)
S&amp;eals- 6

•
·SChU bei1 receive
HaJTI800,
.honors from MOC coaches
In

r

Tumovers-7 ·
GRACE (76)
Steven Reynolds ... 10 . 2
Brian Davis.... ...... 9 0
Brian Pennington .. 5 0
Doug Sammons .. .. 1 0
Ben Summers ..... .. 2 o
Brian Trippett .. .... 2 0

addition,' be ended the season
0-26
with an 18.5-polnt scoring aver5-23
age and was 47.3 percent (2010-13
42!!) on field goals for the season.
4- 6
From the free throw line, he
O- 4
was 75.3 percent (73-97). He
0- 4
played In 30 of .Rio Grande's TOTALS :.............. 29 Z 12-76
games.
Foul sho~ling: -:-12·19 (63.15%)
Schubert, a 6·3 sophomore
!rom Bellevue, ended the season .
with an average of 18 points and
3.9 rebounds per game. His total
field goal percentage was 44.2
(190-430), Including 43.4 percent
' (129-297) on three-point field
goals, an area In which he
specialized.
Schubert was . 78.1 percent
(50-64) !rom the foul line and
played In 31 games .
The R(ldmen, coached by John
Lawhorn, finished the season at ·
15-16 and 5·7 In the MOC.
Conference coaches selected
Tyrone Trbovich, a 6-6 senior
forward lor Tiffin, as the MOC
~ ~o-ed
Player of the Year. Trbovich's
coach,
Jim Hammond, was
: .(.Reported by 0.0. McintYre
: Park Dis trlct as of Feb. 23) , chosen' the Coach o~ the Year.
' .
RIO GRANDE - Cary Harri·
son and Brad Schubert, starters
· for the University of Rio Grande
· men 's basketball team. were
honored by the coaches of the
• Mld·Qhlo Conference for their
· work during the 1989·90 season.
Harrison, a point guard, · was
named to the MOC Second Team
and Schubert, who started the
season as shooting guard and
was later promoted to small
forward, received honorable
mention.
·
A 5-11 junior from Gallipolis,
Harrison completed his first year
under the Redrnen banner by
• es ta bllshlng himself as one of the
· NAIA 's top men on assists.
• He totaled 256 assists for , a
. l'f'r·game scoring average of 8.5. ·

· 1EAM

Appa1ac. h.laD. s ·t··a1·e .bea•"" The c·Itad eI 8u- 71 •
·Fu tlan hands Mo111Qhall 82-77 overtnn".e loss

.WANftD

•
(Continued .from C-2)
r,on.,, _·_.,......;._-:------;.;....-......,_-"-___
.:.._____

mlddl~ fo~ a layup. lie was reuled . triumph. Wilkins bit his last 13

W L

...

Sports Dlustrated award . "It's really more joyful ' Abtlui·Jabbar or whomever you want to name "
games, compared to the 960 Douglas had In 138
for me because Ore10n State II getting a lot ot
said USC coach George Ravelln&amp; after the gam~.
games.
publicity because of me. It's IOini to just
'"l.'be only three ways to stop Gacy Peyton are
StU!, there are a number·of candidates who are
skyrocket Oregon State's proeram."
ll!eJJclblllty, to kidnap him or to shoot him. l don't
probably also deserving of the top player award ,
There were probably times when his high school
think tbat's iOing to happen. So the only !!ling you
Some say Michigan's Rumeal Robinson Is at least
coaches, teachers and his father. AI; would have
can do I811J8rd him and vray."
·
as good as Payton, and others say Chris Jackson
liked to put Payton on a skyrocket. He ~as ·
, Payton, who Is aver&amp;ilni 27.1 points per game,
of LSU may be even better. But both have had
suspended tor half or his sophomore season at
, IS not the natlon•s·top scorer (Bo Khnble of Loyola . erractlc seasQns . Lionel Simmons of La Salle also
Skyline High lor bad grades and an attitUde to
· Marymount will win that honor), but the Player ot
deserves considerable attention, especially after
match.
· the Year award seldom goes to the top scorer.
moving Into third place on the NCAA career
'1 messed up, fighting, trashing teachers and
It's the other parts .o !Payton's 1ame that have
scoring list.
.
coaches, evecybody," he said.
won him considerable pr'aise. He Is also among
However, most coaches and scouts are quick to
It got to the point where Gary's father would
the nation's leaders In assists and steals;
say that Michigan, LSU nd La Salle still would be
storm Into his clesses and blast him In front of the
ln assists, he's seco.nd on ihe career NCAA' list
respectable teams withou t1liservlces .of ·their
oth~r students. That's when "I started growing
trailing only Sherman Douglas, who gradu,ated .
star player. Oregon State ce 1 ly wouldn' t be
up; said G81'Y.·
last year from Syracuse. Goinglntotheflnalweek
21-4 without Payton, and 1 1~ WO'\IId be
Even though Payton spends most of his time
of the regular season, P.aytonhad918asslstslnll6
struggling for an NIT bid.
hundreds of miles away fr.om his famuy , Al still
£.
hasahanduponhlsson. "ltold(theOregonState
1;0
coaches) II the boy ever gets out o!line, slap him
'
upside the head and tell him It's !rom me ... said
AJ ,
£1
u.a o
·
.
Discipline Is less likely to be handed opt under
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (UPI) - .Seed Marshall. · .
four-of.tlve shots · In the extra
OregonState'sflrst-yearcoachJimmyAnderson,
Kemp Phillips scored 26 po'ints
·
The Paladins, 15·15,
made
T. c •
now that Miller Is retired.
andSamGibsonadded20asNo.3
SC TOURNAMEN •. -.)
But Anderson Is hardly a bump on a log, either .
seed Appalachian State held-of!
· · Mom.ents before pulling Paytono!tthecouttln ihe . off No: 6 seed The Citadel, 86·71,
final minutes of his last home-eoourt game, In
In the last game ot the first round
.which the Beavers l;leat UCLA, Payton and
of tJje Southern Conference tour. ·Anderson were standing Qn the sldellpe giving
nament Friday night.
each other hlgh·flves.
.
In Saturday's seinl·flnals VMI
Two nights before, Payton had the most prolific
played East Tennessee, · and ·
game In Oregon State h.lstory and the second-best
Furman played Appy State.
· scoring game ever In the Pac-10. His 58 points
ASU, 18-lO,.Jed 70-68 with 4:40
were ,only three short of the record set by Lew
left but outscored The Citadel,
Alclndor ln1967.
12-16,16-31n therestof.thegame.
''The players kept getting the ball to me,"
The bulldogs held a 21-13
Payton said, "I 'm really grateful for that. When
acjvantage with 10:38 left In ihe
I'm getting that much confidence from my
first period but the Mountaineers
. players, I've got to deliver for them."
pulled to 40-38 at Intermission.
190115TH AVENUE, PARKERSBURG, YN 26101 • 304-422·1000
"That was as good a one-ma11 performapce as
ASU started the second half
100% FINANCING AVAILABLE
I've ever seen In the conference · be It Walton,
with a 9-2 run to build a 47-42lead

t' •

.·.

• Jividen's .. .. .. ........ .. .........14 4
· Last Chance .. .. .. ...... .... .. .. 13 2
: fruth Pharmacy .. ......... .. 11 1
: Oan Tax .... .... .. ... ............. 11 4
; Johnson ',s .. .... ...... ... , .... .... 9 . 9
• ~lo Mini Mart .... .. ........... 7 8
: carl's Jammers .. .... ...... ... 6 9
· McDonald's .. ....... .......... :. 6 12
: vmage Quick Shop .......... 1 14
;~oodland Seminoles ... ...... 0 15
'
;.
Last week:s resalls
: Carl' s Jammers heat VIllage
Quick Shop 15-4, 8·15, 15-4
. Fruth Pharmacy defeated
McDonald's 15-9, 15·12, 15·10
: Rio Mini Mart upended Food')and Seminoles 15·9, 15·8, 15·13
Last Chance Carey Out stopped
:Johnson's Supermarkets 15-4,
·15-10, 15'2

B,. BIU. STEWART
·
PORTLAND , Ore. (UPI) - Lou Carnesecca
must cringe every time lie h~ars Gary Payton's
name.
·
St. John' s was the school Payton want,ed to
attend four years ago, but at the last minute,
. , Carnesecca decided not to give the Oakland
na.~tve a S&lt;;holarshlp. . ·
. .
When I make a mistake, It's a real whopper,"
tarnesecca admits now.
·
.
: No. 2 on Payton's list was Oregon State
University, a school that · appeared to be an
lncongruous choice. At the lime, Payton's almost
llbraslve personality and the serene setting at
9SU S!!emed to represent an impro~able mix. ·
fn addition, Payton would have to play under
~lpll Miner, the definitive task · master.
Something had .to give. and everyone knew 11
wouldn'tbeMIIler.
'
· . To 'play for Miller, one had to play defense until
you dr~ped frlll!' exhaustion. Miller said Payton
wouldn t be In the starting lineup unless he
leatned to keep his opponent under wraps . . ·
: No' sweat, coach.
·
Payton knows defense like Bo Jackson knows
footl)all and baseball. ·
, As a freshman, Payton was Defensive Player of
!he Year In the Pac-10. (It was also the last time
t he award was given out.) He's alsosiarted every
game since the ~!me he first steppe(! foot on the
pregon State campus.
.
· :
,
~ Not only did Payton prpve he could play
llefense. he's also shown he can score points, and
~metlmes In bundles, like the 58 he reeled off last
week against Southern Cal.
In his senior season, there have been few
:achievements tieyond tits reach. Payton bas
.$!ready beeq named_College Player oil he Year by
.Sports Illustrated. ·P ayton said NBC Sports will
give him the ~me honor on MoJI(!ay.
· "That's a great · honor," Payton ; aid of the

'NBI
.4 ac
·l
·,
.If '

; Park District ·
volleyball
.

on the play. and completed the field goal attempts. Cliff t.eving·
three-point play with 39 seconds ston scored 19 points and Kevin
left for a 113-110 lead.
Willis added 12 points and 12
"I don't like these exciting ,rebounds . Newly-acquired
games,"Thomassald. "Jllkethe KennySmlthdishedoutl2asslsts
ones where we are up 10 and il~d scored · 11 points In 21
everyone Is happy, having a good minutes. RlckeyPierceandGreg
time."
Anderson led the Bucks with 24
Dumars made 18 of 19 free points each.
Mavericks 108, Suns 102
throws , Including six on techni·
cal fouls. Three resulted from
At Dallas, Derek Harper sank
Illegal defense callS ' and one a three-pointer with 1: 54 remain·
resulted from having too many lng and the Mavericks notched
players on the court.
· their lOth straight home victory.
James Edwards . a dded 26 HerbWilllamsmadeafreethrow ·
points and Thomas 21 for the · with 2: 28 to go to give Dallas a
Pistons.
98-97 lead before- Harper's
Barkley led. the Sixers with 26 . basket. Sam PerkinS led the
points bu t did not score In Mavericks W\lh a season-high 27
overtime. ·Rick Mahorn and Scott points. Harper had 25 and Ro·
Brooks each added 20 points for lando Blackman added 24. Toni
Philadelphia.'
Chambers and Kevin Johnson
''They .know that they're going scored 28 poin)s · ~ach for the
to see us in the Eastern Confer·
ence Finals and we know that
wf·~ gping to see them," Bark'ley said. "This was our Cllrist.mas present to t)lem . We out·
played them In every phase of the.
, game."·
· Elsewhere In the NBA, Chi·
cago blasted New Jersey 112-91,
Atlania pasted Milwaukee 132·
110, Dallas topped Phoenix 108·
102, Boston downed Miami 122110, San Antonio handled Golden
State 13p 15, Seattle crushed
Minnesota 99-83 and the Los
Angeles Lakers routed Cleveland
124-93.
Bulls nz. Nets !n
·AI Chicago, Michael Jordan
and Scottie Pippen scored 23
Gold star
points each to power the Buns td
their 'seventh consecutive vlcScimsung
tocy. With the Bulls leading 87 '61
Soundesign
entering the fourth quarter, the
Bulls sal Jordan as the Nets
Zenith
dropped their 18th In 19 games.
Sam Bowie and Dennis Hopson
scored 18 each for the Nets .
Rookie Stacey King scored a
season-high 19 points for .
Chicago.
Hawks 132, B11cks 110
At Atlanta, Domlitique Wllklr
made 20 at 23 shots fr0111 the floor,
391
.MAIN STilET ,.
finishing v.;lth 44 points to .pace
Atlanta 111 Its fifth straight

Suns.
CeiUcs 122, Heat 110
At Miami, LarcyBirdscored28
points and Kevin McHale scored
22 of his 26 points In the second
.half to help the Celtlcs to their
fourth triumph in a row. McHale
scored nine points during a 15·5
t bird -quarter run and Boston
never looked back. Rony Selkaly
led the Heat with 25 points.
Splll'll131i Warriors liS
At San Antonio, Rookie David
Rc;&gt;blnson scored a career ~hlgh 41
points, grabbed 17 rebounds,
blocked five shots, made three
steals and added two assists to
lead San Antonio. Terry Cum·
mings added 29 points and 12
rebounds for San Antonio which
· had seven players reach double
ligures. Cllr!S Mullin Jed Golden .
StaleJ with 30 points, eight
rebounds. and seven assists .

. with 17:58 remaining. The Moun·
talneers led bY as many nine unlll ·
The Citadel pulled ·within two.
.' Broderick Parker addo!d 17
points for ASU while Aaron
Nichols paced The Citadel with
17
in the first game of the night
session freshman center Derek
w h
" 1
h.
27
aug poure... n a game lgh
points
grabbed
12 rebounds
to
leadand
No.7
seed Furman
to an
82-77 overtime win over No. 2

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Sundly Tmas Sentinel- Page C·3

n State's .Payton named SI Player of ihe Year

Dumars' layup· ·gives Detroit 104-103 victory over Sixers
By TOM WITBERS
UPISperU Writer
When Joe Duman saw lslah
Thomas steal the ball, he knew
exactly what to do. He had seen
the play before.
Dumars, who scored 34 points
to lead the Detroit Pistons to a
115-112 overtime victory Friday
night against the Philadelphia
76ers, made a layup oft a Thomas
steal with 2.5 seconds lett that
gave the Pistons a 104-1031ead In
regulation.
"It was the exact same situa·
lion," said Dumars, referring to
a playoft game against Boston.
''I was on the opposite side of the
court when I saw lslah steal the
ball and I just we'll to the basket.
I thought of the Boston game
when I went to the bench. ".
Dumars and the res I of the
· Pistons will never forget the
Boston game.
.
With the Pistons leading the
Celtlcs In the closing seconds of
the 1987 Eastern Confernce Fl·
. nals, Larry Bird stole Thomas'
inbounds pass and ·Dennis John·
' son went In for ·a layup and · a
Boston vlctocy. ·
· Thomas put the Pistons In a

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. 614-245-5151
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�Sundly Tim11 Sentinel-

!1, BnU . . . . . .kk, IU.UL II.
Ur,.,. ......... •tr:k, Ul.t11. D, N.U

Pro lllandi~JW!

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. . . . .. ...... JU.JIL tl,
lla.
. . Irk, UUI I. U. Rlc:Q ..... OM"·
r.W, 1"-1... H. 1111Uft1' SpeKd'. Pt ..
Uac,tu.. .. fl', M•rt•8•~·F•nl,
t4i.... a , Terry Lat..-, 01.-neblle.
••-un a, R1t11. WilMa. Ol._,obl~e.
itUII. •• Mike .\IHUdH, lllllck.
t&lt;I.IL Mlcker GU. . , Ford, tU.U4. :11,
•1~ Pttl)'. Ptlllac:. uuu. sa.
.JimiiQ' Me... PoaUac, t.l.tH. U.
Cll•le Bailer, .. . lel, 14Ltlt. h.l'hrk
!kalll. h"', ID.TU. II, ~.D . Mcfhltnc,
Pt ... ac, IIUIIt. n , lllteh Miller, OC'V·
n~. •• tlme. 38, J .T. •aytl, f'DI"'II • ..,

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Mnic:l*8t (N.I.) 17, KeMe (N.I. ). ft
llel_.berl H, Wit~ H

GB

lltall ............................tl 11 .'JM Su Mtllllll&amp;o .................sa II .111 t
Dal ... ........................Jt u ..HI , ,..
De•wr .......... ..............» H .1• 11 ·
H•u&amp;ii ...................... J I Sl .t. IS
III•~~H&lt;U

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Clt•l.ue .......... ............ . .4
P adftc Dlvllion
lA La.ken ...................U II
r.rtluNI ............... ...... JI II

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PIMnbl: ......................
I !I
Se.UII! .,;., ................... JI %7
O.Ntn 8aale ............... ,I:S Sl
IA cup~u .................u
Sacnmftlto ....... ......... .ll st
Fri.,. R.n ....

.118 IS

.JMi "

Men'• Colle&amp;e

Rei'*•

Buketball
Frtd.,Tour.mi!IM
American ~uth
Firat llo•MI '
fAll Amerk .. Ill!. Lamar lit
SW' Lou II Una 83, Ar - - St. h

.711 .171 .. %
.Ill

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IS ~

.SJ8

.441 11 %

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·:a~ ~tt

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BlfSOUIII
Sftlliii.UII
C. Car~la lt. Wladlrop41
NC·Aihevllle711. R ...... 1f
Cenln~J Florida Ciani~
Flrll ~und

. . . .It _...,, nt
..\llula. IJt, Mllwukfe I II
Detnll ~US, r.•UadelpNa lit. OT

Chllt'ICO Itt, New .ler~ey II
Dallal Ill. Pltoenb: II!
Su Allloalo 111, GoldtaSCII e IU
Se.n~ t!t, MlaWII Gta U
LA LUera 1U, Cl"'rlaad 13

p. norldalll, Ub!Yty1t

Jlldro "-IIMII~ "-lhletk
· FirM Round
Army 58, Sc. Peter'1 H
Ca•lllu II, Manhattan !» ·
Fairfield. N, Nllfara U, OT

Sat...,~ Game~

Atlula • New lerw)' , 7: 3t p.m.
LA Dlppel'lat laclaaa, 7:st p.m.
SacnlhftltoatChartottr, 7:31p.m.
WMtllltllo..tOrludo, 1: •p.m.
Golde• St•e a&amp;Houlioa.B:• p.m.
New Vorlt 11 MJI.-aultee, I p.m .
Dalluat Deawr, t:JII p.m.
Su ..tatoalo a1 Ulall, 1: st p.m.
SeMtlt at Portt.IMI, II:JI p.m.

Fonlh.m 81, LoJoi•Md. •

Mlf.EMI!rn "-ttaletk
SemlflMII
Co piN• Sl. fl. S. C&amp;J'oll• st. T1'
N. Cu-oll• AATI$, ,orlda .UM 14
Semlflral&amp;
Mo..-..IICII1J,W.,...a
Robert Mont• 11, F. Dlcldll80n 511
So allier a
F'lrll BoiiiiCI
ll'll.mu 8!. M..... all n, DT
.
.-\ppllaclliUI St. it, Tltr Citadel 71

SlandQ Gaml!fl

....... at 'D etroll, nl&amp;hl
MII... Gla

al

LA Lallers, niJhl

E. Tenat~~et SC. 75, W. Carolha M
VIII II. Ttt~n.-cii.W.ooca It
Eut
Brown 80. Hlf\IU'd 10
CcUwnbla 'ft. re ...l
,
P~ ... LI!MoJne Cell. M

NATION"-L HOCKEY LE"-GUE
Frldq Result.
NY Rupn~l, NY Ialaaders3
DetroM J, Toro.ao 2, OT
New .Jertey I , Ptta.tllutb 5
Hartford 4, W•lllaton 3
Whml~l

Edge .takes two-stroke lead .
at Kemper Open Tournament

Noi'Mie•t

Ollcaro at Boatoa
Clevelud .u Pboenb

Priaeet.oa 18, C.nell41

Valt II. Dutmo... IS

t , LH Mpl8 J

Tr&amp;ll8actions

s•-.dQ GaRJei

Clllr:ap&amp;llloflt-. I: II p.m.
S..H .. oatQue\lel!, 1:SSp.m.
NY RuprA• Hu-l:fonl, 1: 3S p.m .
DetnM at Tontlll .. 8:15p.m.

Fl-ld&amp;r Spwb Tran•~u,,.
....... t

'l'rBaiU~MrP
t..._,. a. -a 1-,e.c. .t,.d.
11.-d •eull b-.emu

Atluta- 81pedMeCOIIII haaemMJeff

lle .... llatMI•_.oa,l : l~p. m.

PllllH,Wa at Etllmctlltoa. 8:11 p.m.
VancouVH lit Calpr)'. 8:15 p.m.

11111 RlpB ud plte.., C•rt Scldlllnr to

NY blanden a SC. LGul1, 8:35p.m.

lllkaro (NLJ - SIPfd pitcher Dean
WII•"'•Ud ouUiehlcr Doua- O..C...to

l·,e•co.,..ct._

Suiii.I~Gune~

l·)le• COPlracta.

New .Jer.,- al W.tlllaaton. I; IS p.m.

,

Clacia_.l - stpetll plklllen ladl
Arm.. .-.., Ntrm Ch ...._ aad Mike
Romttr, c llkller-1 Tn-,. ~('(;riff and JoeOIIwr a .. 0111flel~ . .
Ro01nt11 to

Boston at Clilh:&amp;fo, 2:35p.m.
IA!i Anpleul WlonlpeJ, S: SJpm
QIM!'~ at Bulf.. e, 1: OS p.m.
MlnHata at Pllblbut~b, 1: U p.m.
Y...couwr at Eclmonloo. 8:01p.m.

lu.
'

1 · ~- COIIfr&amp;cts.

Kansu City - ·SI-d plkher11 Tom
Gonlo Ill ~~~ D61e-t-. IMIII Aqulao,
desl,..atd bitter Pa&amp; Tabler qdca&amp;cher
Mite Mactarlaae.
·
Lo11 .411.,1!11- Biped lnllel*r l.e•llf
Rarlls. ollillt!lder lruUo Cutillo anc1
plklher lll*lo Mar.-ez to l ··)'ear

M.UOR INDOOR SOCCER LEI\GUE
FridQ' IUtllltl
K.. - City I, ltallboft -t, OT
WlchM&amp; I , Tacoma f
81. I.GIIII• t, San Dtep S
s.tmq Gamea
H'lctdla a1 Dallas, 8:Ss,.m .
f;leveland a&amp; san Dttao. 11: 31 p.m.
S..ciiQ' Gema
Baltlmo ... at Dallu,I :IS , .m.
&amp;u. . CityatSt.IA.... 7:05p.m.
Cln-eland at Tacoma, 1:11 p.m.

comrach.

Mllwaubr- Sl petll ou'd lehler Darl')'l
HamUt011 anll pltd•er.Steve MoMOn and ·

J.,..

Alan sa•er to
co•n~cta.
Ml . . .u - SlpPd lnftelder Gene
Larlda ud plkhen Mull tA•rtt and

Da~e~ H'esl.

New Yerk CALl - Slpcd ca&amp;chw Bob
Geren Md oulfldder Roberto KeliJ· to a

Racing

l ·,ear cOIIfrads.'

A.uto Ractnc RaiAll
Goc:lllrrene• 5tt q~allfJI•r
"-l loddlllllam. N.C., Maret!.!
IU•II!d wtth driver, make of car ..til

.

Ue RQ'eM udTom Barrett, uu&amp;fltlderSII
Cam,....oa.nd p•cller "-mllllloCaun!no

to l · ,earcellfrads.

Sutlle

cpaalllyln1 a,e~4)

-

Slpe.tll pMc..,.-•

Mllw .

Scboole-r a•d GeiW Barril and Infielder
Jll.-lo Dlaz to 1-)'l!ar conlracts.
Tau - A!l'rt"ecl to terml'i on l· )'eu
co•raeb wllh plkhH11 Brad ArnsberK
•d RIU11on Muon: renewed to'. cracl of
CM~hr.r Mike Ktan}py.
Bulrdball
Mllwau'Jioe-- Slpe-4 a..htaal coach
Mike nu•avy to a 114110' pla)'er

1, ~I! Petty, PonU11c, lf8.'7Sl mph. t,
Mark Marda, Fonl, 141.HS. 31 Alan
Kutwlckl, Ford, 147.181. -I, Dale Ear~
III!Nt, Ole¥Niel, U7.178. I, D~~ll
Wal.rlp, Olevrolft. 147.178. t. Ken
Schnider, O.C"Vrolel, 141.118. 7, RuJI,

wataace. Poldae. 1n.en. 8, Geol

llodllll!, Fonl, ltl.llt. I, Roh MOI'OIIo,
Oldttmohlle, 141.8U. 10, Sterlln1 Marin,
01•mublle, lfUM.
11, 8111 Elliott, Ford, ul.-111. 1:1, PhU
Par.e-. OldunobUe, IIU II. 13, IMck
'l'rld.lt, Pulitae, 14LH~ 14, Mlchlltl
Wdrtp, 0161moblle, ID.III. HI, Derrlke
.c.,, Oevrold, 115.181. 11, Da"e Mlll'ell, ~tvmlet, 141.1U. 17, £1-.-e lrvan,
PoN. UU!t II, D~eJ' All*!n. Ferd,
lfUil · It, Harry Gut, Olcllmoblle,
145.$81. tl, lUck MMt, Pollllac, lfUI7.

'·

nuad~plllla-Sipedlnftdder•Char­

'

~o•ract: reiU~~tdpani.JerrySichtlnl.

NBA - Flftfll Golden State'K Tt&gt;rl')'
Tupe SU.H a.,. Mike Smftk S54IO; and
san Afthlftlo'~ Fran It BrlckowKkl SI.OOD

ferflrtalnl.

.

'

ilodiey

N"HL - Flntd Edmonlo• forward
c,eaa Andtr.oa . . . far. mattb penalty
to.r •etll)e,... lnjul')'. ,
·
Phlladel~s- 'l'ratlett tell win~ BriM
PropP to Bo.tori fer a eecond·round pkk
•l•ltM.

·Friday's ~tourney. scores
Boys

GettrpiGWI17, t1111111an Hill

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HamDt• • • • It, •ancesttr •

Br Unltetll r , . ... ter ..t ....J
F'PidaJ. Marela 'l
Touname.t
Dlvls .. nl ·
Akr Central Hewanllllt, Allr Flrnto.'

Cl• Oak Hlll•1ol. MIMet...,..,
Cl• H' Ted 11. llra•wlc:::lt •
Cle UIICOI• W ~1. OeSouth '7t

Me..,

..

Dlvltlon IV
Arllnahn 11. Mc(:efttb u
Atllla ..... .Jolin 71, Cle'Catb LallnNd •
-'l'l"'•wlllt 'tJ, PeUI&amp;vllle- M
Btt-1• Rllaall7!, Tu*J Cl'ntraJCath II
Catllrlrfftll!, Lakeland U
EllnSA, ID~kavtlle 51
HaNie Northera liS, lhafh• It
Rlllop 11. St l')t_"' 51
JUIW ale- II, lndepende.:c 72
RolcMe •· Farettr n
Bo)III'WeiiLollllo•ll. Fl'emolll Joe MOt

~

nu::n• II,
t1
Fl . ..,. 11. . . . . . Gl'ftlll 4S
HaMil• II, Ode,. Tatawanda n ·
Howl ... II.
JC.t 'II
Kut le.,...fll•, W&amp;n'l'a a.Mrw 14
lA paii, Luc..-.r .ft

Y••

(Arai•IU•M, t\mhtrllt 11 (ot,
M••llkll N, -'kl' S,.rf1..lelcl 4t
Nil• M, ........... ft4!11 II
s..... Ill. h181u111
str..p~l~ II. Ltral• .•
T•l.l••ll. ll•mee II
To I Fr•d•ll. Hoi .... 8prt•11: 41
. Dtvlllo•ll
""on Lab n , llq' Vllllrt"
BelleY Ill' II, Wll ..... AI
BeUel'olllllll• tl. Kelltn altl«f' U
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Miller Cll y 78

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Po 11 CUnt011 11. 0 a1t llarfJo r til
8oJo. U, h ·IIDI'I' II

• CORRECTION •
SPEAKS WITH PLAYEit8 - Donald Fehr,
, bead of the 'baieball players' uliOdatlon, 1pe&amp;ks
wllh bMeball players prior to a meeting of the

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TANNING LOTIONS •
PANAMA JAC~ AND TREVOR ISLAND•.
WI CAllY ALL TilE LATEST MOVIES.
oFIIDAY THE 13th ·
•HALLOWHN

PAn a

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s·

992-5118

· Frl~ .

(

FORMER PA11ENJ'S OF DR AARON BOONSUE AND)
NEW PATIENTS WELCOME .

•Wheel
Allgftftllnt
•Brakn &amp;
Shodls
•Struts

L

..

•uset~nr

·, SQUEEZE PLAY - The Washlnpon Capitals' Alan · May
: _ (center) Is sq~Jeezed by Hardord Wllalers Scott Yo1111g (left) and
.:' Dave Ba.byc:h ( rl1ht) u May .attempiiiiO go for the pook during the

~t'JHL roundup

-

25TH a: JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT

•
· .•
By JOHN SWENSON
. :~
UPI Sports Writer
•; Last season, Tony Granato of
::tbe New York Rangers· was the
·~p rookie goal-scorer In the
league with 36, breaking the club
~.ecord for goals by a rookie In a
year.
• This season. It Is Darren
:i'urcotte' s turn. He scored twice
![nd added ail assist Friday night
oil his 22nd birthday, helping the
:Rangers overcome the New York
tillanders $-3. Turcotte has 27
gpals this ~ason, tops In the
league ·amoni rookies. · He has
icored hi' five straight games,
Including a hat trick .a gainst the
toston Brilfils.
·
:: "Everything I shoot seems ·to
10 In,'' Turcotte said. " I can't
'xplaln It, but as the Year goes on
I go through these hot periods
and hopefully I'll be able to keep
It going for the last 14 games and
. ~arry It Into the playoffs.
·
, "I've scored a hat· trick on my ,
birthday the last couple or years.
t ·almost got-one tonight."
.&gt; rurcotte's first goal sparked a
fqur-goal rally and tied the score
$'3 with just 32 seconds left In the
f.eCOnd period. The Islanders had
ltased a 2-0 dtflc!t with three
~econd·perlod goo.ls.
•: John Ogi'odnlck stunned the
Qlanders 48 seconds lntq the
tlllrd period with a tlp·ln power·
pJay goal to give the Rangers a
i-3 lead. Turcotte sealed the
VIctory wltlt a breakaway rush
from mid· lee and a superb move
on Islanders goaltender Glenn
lfealy, who lie deked to the Ice
betore threading tbe puck lpto
lb, top of the! net.
.
I "Carey Wlllon made' a .great
Lass up tbe middle,'' Turcotte
kid. '!! .protected the puck wit~
my bOdy, 1ave Healy a little
inove alld made him go down,
Cllen put It up top. That's the spot
UUr.e to put !tin."
' Tun:otte nearly &amp;Ot his hat
at 5I of the thll"d on the
r play, but Ulf Dahlen
t1ected hla lbot put Healy for

'

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owrns

ttt-1101

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.... ll«n to ·'\118.,.,.

•AIIO VIdeo Wedtllap. Bllliadll)' Patloa,. r.tc.
oblVfiiiiOI')' ADtlqaM Ud llollllll'Did lt.elu

uo4) 675-%675

~iiiliiiiiiiiiiiii

Why walt for our Inc••• tax refund to purchaH
your new Toro Wh_, Horse Tractor.luy now and
pay
. . when JOUr refund ilrriYOI at no COlt to you,

••

Pay Nothing Until the 4th of July!·
During the Toro Tough n-acoor Sale. there's no money
.down. no payments and po interesr If paid In full by the4th of tuly. 1990 when you buy ~ny wugh Toro tractor
l.)r riding mower.·
\'is it us during th~ Toro laugh n-aaor Sale and see
th~ i omplrteline of durable Toro Wheel Horse riding
&lt;quipnt&lt;nt. Buving conditions this good can only last
for a limited time.
·

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BAUM LUMBER
CHEST!It .

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·;~angers _ post

(POINT PIJI;ASANT MEDICAL CENtER)

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first period or Friday night's NHL contest at Landover, Md. The
Whalers )VOD 4-3. (UPI)

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Ha~n·•youdoM
without altlro

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t•t

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IIUCICLOAD SALE OF FACIOIY
DEMOS AND CLOSEOUTS

REED'S COUNTRY STORE

4TH ·tit Main.

Readsv~la,

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PH . 378- .6 125

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E C.lon 71, Cehmllll- Crnt \tew t7
We~trtlelt

M9ntreal right-hander Dennis
Martinez said the meetln~
simply reinforced the togetherness between union members.
"The owners have been pre·
pa r!pg for a lockout for a couple
of years." Martinez said . " We've
given tlie union the right to
negotiate for us a nd I think they .
are doing the right things for us
r ight now.

FAMILY PRACTICE
PAIN CONTROL CUNIC

.&amp;.at Palmtl• II, CaatHCC"3
G'wlllt G11rfttltlll1',

can"t."

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

MIU'(!h t

£1Jrt• C.U.II. Ave• II

Angeles . , the 1988 National
League Cy Young Award winner
who also was scheduled to make
his first spring start Friday.
"We're not making any demands
- we're willing to go and play
baseball right. now. But we

Cy Young Award winner Bret
Saberhagen of Kansa s City, who
likely would have made his first
Grapefruit .Le.ague start Friday
afternoon. ''Tonight 's meeting
was productive because when
you hear things third· or fourth·
hand, they're often blown out of
·proportion. People tllfnk · tile
whole problem Is over th.e arbl·
tratlon Issue, but It's not. "
Instead of facing the Red Sox
Friday. Saber hagen tossed base·
balls softly to a fr iend.
"It's nothing like spring train·
ing, though," he said . "I'm
throwing off mounds with ho les
in them."
Fehr will return to New York
on Saturday · and said negotia·
lions are expected to resume for
the first time since talks broke off
Feb. 26.
·'Talks ended because we have
to meet with our players and
keep them up to date,' ' said an
exhausted Fehr, slumped In a
seat at the head of the conference
room . "We 've had three meet·
logs and seen nearly half of all
the players the last t hree· day s
; and my feeling about our solidar·
lty hasn't changed a bit.
"Nobody 's come up with a
bright Idea to bridge the prob·
!ems Of salkry arbit ration, but l
expect a meeting of some sort
Monday. I have no particular
expectations for that meeting.
We're going to go bacl\ to the
table. review where we are and
take It from there ."
Fehr said no single topic
dominated the meeting, with
players asking a bout the possible
length of spring training, how
much time they would have to
report to camP. if an agreement Is
reached and general questions on
the progress of negotiations.
"The main thing we accomp-,
lished tonight Is that ·we made
sure the actions of the negotlat·
lng committee are consistent
· with what the players believe."
said Ore! Hershiser of Los

· MIDDLEPORT, OliO

Glrll Ohio HIJh Seltool BMIIetball

W toe-wan, O• Oru~e -12
Dlv'-le•ID
••ord Cll..-1 n . Peri'J u
Cl• MarlttMIIII 1'3, Ff'IAdiJH
Colo.el cra.ro~ 11. New Lo • • tJ
O.)iftllo.-• 11, Lolllloln'llll: II

playera' association a1 a hotel In Tampa, Fla. The
players are locked out of spring training- over a
labor dlltpule. (UPI)

By IRA KAUFMAN
UPI Sports Writer
TAMPA, Fla. ( UPil - The
head of bas~ball's players associ·
atlon said Friday nlght he
expects" a meeting of some sort' '
with owners' representatives
Monday In New York.
Don Fehr made the comments
as his baseball caravan stopped
.In Florida, with the ·union chief
brieflng 125 major-league play·
ers on the labor Impasse that has
shut down spring training. Fehr
m et with players Jn Arizona and
California earlier this week.
After a two-hour , 15-mlnute
session with Fehr In a hotel
conference room, playe rs
emerged emphasizing the solid·
a r lty of the union as the lockout
continued Into Its tnlrd week.
" Whether an agreement Is
re ached tomorrow, next week or
In the mldqle or the season, l
think we'll ··stand strong to·
gether. " said American League

••

UFE • ANNUDIES
Ill'S
FIATUNAL PIOGl.&amp;JAS

Yanlut 1'1, Old Fori A
'
8!, N~ Bremen lt

.,

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HOME OFFICE • ROCk ISLAND, ILLINOIS

W~Q"~~mflr:fd

../

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A FRATERNAL LIFE INSURANCE SOCIETY

, Van lu~n '73,. Cot)' ·Rawllfla f8

Col llriJP il, Ord.-vUit It
· Edl1t0• S 51, Cari'Olllon $1 (o~ )
fellorlalll, Nfrwaltal)
Otrartll74, l'o• Ur..n• t$

know, he was Intolerably neell·
gent " said The Charlotte Ott. "
se~r' s lead editorial. "Either
way, for the sake of a creat i!pOrt
and a ·great lnstit\ltiOn, Jim
Valvano has to a:o. Now."
The Winston-Salem Joui'IUII
said althougn the allegatloDI of '
point-shaving are still unproven, ,
" Valvano's continued asiOCiatllm With the university CaD no .,
longer be .justified. For all those&gt; •
people who still love and admire '
him It's time Coach V took the ~
gra~eful way oui and resigned."
Shackleford, meanwhile, wu
released from jail Friday foUow·
lng his arrest on a misdemeanor
charge of marijuana possession
in Orange, N.J.

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA

Mar•ntecal A. Uacola\'lew U
MDpdGre IS, Flfrle O,tn -Door IS
S Ce-alnl 81. Pl)'llleudl It
SandiiM)' Slllarp 71. Wotlllmore- It
8e•n E IS, nrna Calver11-t
Up Seloto \ ' alft, Coh... bu• Grove H

wBrutell.

'

~iiam41-~~ ·

'M&amp;III.IIfleli'l Pelt 1!, M....-'letd Chr 52 .

C.•a.• S H. Navarre l'alrlea5 51

'

"Mr. Valvano either dldn:t
knoW or didn't care; If be dldn t

MODERN WOODMEN SOLlmONCl

Uma CC N. Lim1 Perl')' 17

..

Valvano's rate.
''The mood In Las Vegas Is
shock and concern. I have
children or that age. I'd be
shocked and concerned If It were
my children and the feeling In
town Is the same,'' he Sllid.
In Raleigh, furor ·over the
scandal bas grown to a frenzy as.
authorities focus on allegations
that Shackleford, now with the
New Jersey Nets, and three other
players took cash from gamblers
to fix games durt.ng the 1987-88
season.
A shaken Valvano denied any
knowledge or point shaving after
Wednesday's 96-95 loss to Maryland. The flamboyant coach has
not been beard from since. but
plenty o! other people are expressing opinions that Valvano's
career at N.C. State is finished .

SC Tournament ...

~cftre 7!, Blllldllle 12
1Urtlant117L Newb.I'J 41

Broollallle 71. N . .,..._ 1t
Cdl'l~tl

WAILEA, Hawaii (UPI) Cathy Gerrlng finished with
Mitzi Edge battled strong winds her second consecutive 71, for
Friday to card ali even-par 71, third place. Cindy Flgg-Currler
taking a two-stoke advantage Is a stroke back at 143.
over Laura Davies after two
Sixty·six golfers made the
rounds of the $500,000 Kemper S-under 150 cut, the highest this
Open:
year on the I.,PGA tour.
Edge. a co-leader after the first
round, finished with two bogeys
and two birdies on the front nine
and then pan-ed each hole on the
ba!ck side to ·· accumulate a
· (Contln\led trom G.J)
two-d~y total of 3-under-par 139.
period while Marshall, 15-13, only
D.avles, who started the day
three stroke&amp; behind the three hit two of eight shots. The
Paladins moved ahead for good
first-round leaders, finished with
at 77-75 on a hal!·hook by Waugh
three bogeys and three birdies
with 2: 37 left.
lor her 18 holes for a two-day total
Marshall did not score until the
or 141.
'
final
three seconds.
Strong winds made the 6,139Center
Greg Dennis scored 22
yard Wailea Blue Course on the
points
and
grabbed nlite reIsland of Mauldlfflcult, with no
bounds, both team-highs, to lead
golfer breaking par.
top seed ETSU to a 75-60 win over
'.'When you have strong wind
out there, you have to work bottom seed Western Carolina,
10-18.
harder at what you're doing The Bucaneers, 25c6, took the
you have to concentrate more,"
lead for good at 55-52 on an Alvin
said Edge, a member of the
West three-pointer. That started
LPGA Tour since 1984.
a
23·8 run to close the contest.
''The ninth hole was the high,
.
In the opener, twins Ramon
light of my round." Edge said. "I
and
Damon Williams combined
putted off th.e f~lnge - 60 feet
to
score
46 pofnts to lead VMI to
fl·om the pin. There was about a
an 83 -69 win over UT10·foot break and I had togo from
one tier to another. It was like Chatanooga.
The Keydets, 14·14, only 34-28
you see on a putt-putt course at intermission but cruised to the
and I made it for birdie! "
Davies won the 1987 U.S. win with hot second half
·
Women's Open with an 18-hole shooting.
Williams,
who
sacred
·
Ramon·
playoff victory over JoAnne
16 of his game-high 26 -In the
Carner and Ayako Okamoto.
second half while Damon Willi"I hate playing In the wind! "
Davies said . ."This was probably ams scored seven points ·at the
half but finished with 20 points.
one of my best rounds In the wind.
Percy Covington chipped In 14
I hit the ball high and everywhere
you look. there are white posts for VMI.
UT-C, 14·14, was paced by
(out of bound stakes). The wind
was so strong behind us at the Der.rlck Klrce who ·s cored 24 ·
18th hole, I hit an 8-iron 181 points and grabbed 10 rebounds,
both team hlghs.
yards."

Ontarki '71, aru Fork 3!1
Oreren Card hal Klrttch n , Gen• 13
Or nUll' 'Jt, Way•dalt •
Ptbbles •• Paint VII M
Pymalwll• Y.a 71, OrrweiiGnnd Val
WheeiC'J'OI'I Sl,llnloto Sl

Cl'- Mal'llhall 7S. P•lnl Val Fo'le
E Oe 811• II, Maplt Hb 11

'

a

Huron Ill, Elmwoacl 5I
Ke)' llltoat11, Loral1 Cath h
lJIII!rl)' Ill, ReotiiO¥rn ~

ao,.s Ohio HI rt1 Scbtol 8&amp;11 lid hall

By TERRY DONAHUE
Friday In Charlotte, N.C.
RALEIGH, N.C. (UP!)
Editorial writers across the
Embattled North Carolina State
Tar Heel Stat~ Friday urged
basketball coach Jim Valvano,
Yalvano to reslgn Immediately.
engulfed ill a storm or controv·- Some called for N.C. State to
ersy over allegatloils gamblers
drop Its basketball program
paid players to fix games, will
altogether.
lead the Wolfpack Into next
But Lenny Del Genlo, director
week's ACC tournament, his boss
of Bally Casino Resort's race and
said Friday.
·
sports book operations In Las
But Opinion .makers urged
Vegas, refused to give odds on
Valvano to reslgn Immediately
Valvano being !Ired or resigning.
and Las Vegas oddsmakers re" People tend to make llght of
fused to take bets on whether be
tragedy," Del Gen!o said. "We
wlll step aside, · calling allega·
don't do that. This Is a tragedy.
lions of point-shaving by Wolf- This Is about young people' s
pack players "a tragedy. ~ ·
'lives."
"No one has yet said the coach
Del Genlo said oddsmakers are
was Involved,' ' said Larry Mon- still taking bets on Sunday's
tieth, Interim chancellor at N.C. game betw~n N.C. State and
State.
Wake Forest -thetwoschoolsat
"It ithe ACC tournament) will
the heart o! allegations former
b~ painful for us because or all
Wolfpack Charles Shackleford
this, but I can't find any reason to
and three teammates took c asn
exclude our team from going to
from gamblers . to shave points
the ACC tournament," . he said . from a March 1988 game.
"It would be unfair for them not
Bettors can still wager on
to participate In this. "
Sunday's game between N.C .
Montieth said no decision will State and Wake Forest, the
be made about Valvarw's future
regular season-ending match for
at N.C. State until law enforceboth teams.
ment o!!lclals complete their
"We're still taking bets on that
ln'vestigatlon. He said he expects game. There will be limited
Valvano to· still be coach when · wagering," Del Genlo Said, ad·
. next
the" ACC tournament begins
ding there will be no bets on

Fehr expects meeting with
owners' spokesmen Monday

e:

tlllllb of tilt 1111011.

• '1'111

915-33C1

I

'

rune

wu marred 11y
ltveral brawls, urly e:~~cberea
\Itt- player• aJid f&amp;Da, and
uuate Ice colldltlolll that forced

•

~~·

I

p.,.,.,-

BRO"CO II DEMO
WAS'l4.900

I Power l.oettl
ITitICtUieConiTol
ITopLug. Rack
II&gt;:. Condition
I Railey-

6-3 win over Islanders
.

lengthy delays while patches of cellar, one point ahead of Minne· five road games.
Whalers 4, Capitals 3
the surface were repaired. Is· sola. Detroit has lost only twice
At
Landover,
Md., Kevin Dl·
landers ·Coach AI Arbour ver· in Its last · 11 games (5·2·41.
bally abused referee Rob Shick Toronto remained five points neen ·scored goals 30 seconds
repeatedly, and had to be res- behind the division co-leader s apa r t in the third period to give
Hartford Its first victory In 27
trained by Madison Square Chicago and St. Louis:
tries this season when trailing
Devils
6,
Penguins
5
Garclen security from going after
aft
er two periods .
At
East
Rutherford
,
N.J
.,
Jon
Shick following the game.
Jets 9, Kings 3
Morris scored his first NHL goal
After the second period, Shick
At
Winnipeg,
Manitoba, Tomas
one day after his promotion !o
handed out a bench minor
.
Steen'
score!!
on
his first shot
New J ersey and Pat Conacher
penalty against .Arbour. The
after
returning
to
the active list ·
added his first of the season 1: 55
Rangers scored the winning goal
later for the Devils, who won for from a bad back and as sis ted on
on the ensuing power play.
only.
the third time In 16 games. two other goals to lead Winnipeg.
"AI came to me at the end of
Pittsburgh
remained winless on Doug Evans scored a pair of
the first period to complain about
.
the
road
since
Mario Lemieux goals. to push the Jets eight
the ice and a bout my calls,"
left
the
lineup
with
a back Injury . points ahead of fourth·place Los
·Shick said. "He did the same
Pittsburgh fell to 0-4·1 In Its last Angeles in the Smythe DivisiOn.
thing at the end of the second
period. I warned him and he was
assessed a penalty for unsports·
· manlike conduct.
" The Ice was just awful. There
were chips all along the side even
after It was cut ."
Islanders General Manager
I
Bill Torrey was-furious afte.r the
game, claiming that several of
Who .Have Honorably Serviced Their Country
his players had been Injured by
··
In Time of War- or Peace
the unsafe Ice surface.
·
· ''This place .fs a joke," Torrey
said. · "We have three players
. hurt In the locker room and we
can't get a doctor yet. T.he ruts In
the Ice Injured my players."
Elsewhere In the NHL, Detroit
nipped Toronto 3-2 In overtime,
New Jersey l;lounced Pittsburgh
6·5 .. Hartford nipped Washington
4-3, and Winnipeg bombed Los
Angeles 9-3.
Red Wlnp 3, Maple Leafll2 ( OT)
· At Detroit, Steve · Yzerman
scored his second goal or the
game 3:44 Into overtime to lift
Detroit In a fight-marred game.
' Ohio VII.. Momao\1 011- .. -.iiftl- to VttiM ...... tMollll(-""
c
..
..,
·The victory moved the Red
Almod- vou morlloq.-lltloiltor , _ _
llo •e11110nwt1
Wlnga out ·of the Norris Division
.....,_torthto. Yov,...otllo*oto-proGiaf

LOO FOR IT!

NOTICE TO ALL
VETERANS

'

Anoo.,..., •-"" •=::S:Bmrr

...._....,...,v.t.......

.-~...._c..,.

. . . aornt. .............. To .......,

Sports briefs
Hoekey

Edmonton forward Glenn Anderson was fined $SOO as the rea ult
of a match penalty for deliberate
Injury aJalDit Los Angeles' ToIJIII Sandltrom In a &amp;arne
Wednesday nlrbt. Sandstrom
suffered .a eracked cirbltal bone
and alll,aa damage as a result ot
lbe flpt. The fine Is the lll&amp;hest
.
allowed Ill the NHL.

Ohle

van.,.._, hr•ni

a

•t:: ..,
Dloolt••
..,,__..... ._....,.

.... ,.. ...................... to;

Mllp

co. .._., ........

400 CMol llvd.
.
Rt. 3
Oalllpotle, OH. 111131
'
P-oy. OH. 41718
(114144..3111
.
(1141..8~440
PI-• lend My Veteran of hr•lco EllllbllkYIIo8te

.tmf- OIIO'&lt;l
I.ITAII 1

The 7th Anntiel Edition of The Ohio Valle)
Phone Book is now on its wey to your
home end business by U. S. Mell. Look •or
it, look through it, end look to it for 111
. your buying n"ds, Ohio Valley!

Tire 0• Tht Wflbl
· Your lulinols Is Our IUii•a

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ltAIICII OF SEIYIC£ - - - - - ': - -- - ' --

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PUBliSHERS OF MARKEf·LINE PHON£ BOdKS

P. 0. Box 22
226 Stitt Itt. 61 E.
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l·IOO·SU-ItiO

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Pcxu•ov-Mkld'aport-G

-Rain delays fmal qual·
hospital for tests after passing
ROCKINGHAM, N.C. (UPI)out; and the engine In Brett
Rain washed~ut the final rounds
Boc;IIne's Buick caught fire in the
of qualifying for this wei\Kend's
garaee area.
NASCAR races at North Carolina
Allison passed out while roughMotorSpeedway,butthedaywas ·
housing with a crew member and
·nat without Incident.
was taken to the Infield-care
A wreck involving · Ken
center,
where ne was treated and
Schrader sent the Missouri na·
relea&amp;ed.
su t at the suggestion of
Uve to a backup car for the
his father, Bobby, the younger
second time in three races;
Davey Allison was taken to a. Allison later went to Charlotte

''a•. Ohio

Point Plauant. W.Va.

M.ah4, 1110

rouDds of NASCAR raees

(N.C.) Memorial Hospital for
additional testa by neurologist
Dr. Jerry Petty.
•
"During the rain, Davey was
playing lll'OUDd, wrestling with
one of the guys, got held in a
headlock, and a couple of min·
utes later, Davey passed out,"
team owner Robert Yates said.
Schrader's crash occurred
when the dtlvers were practicing

for Sunday's 'Goodwrench 500 came out of the tiU'Il thJnkln&amp; the "My car'• OK."
,
·
F'r!Uy'a t!M'Jdat wu tile 11!and Ernie Irvan' s Ford spun ofi · track wu blocked.
"I didn't bit Kyle. l. wu rtpt colld time 1D just
a weelltllat.
Tu rn.
4
Cll
"Hewasn'tgotngtocomeback behlllll\.llmandeotontbebi'Uet Scbnder hu erubed a
up the track or nothing," and ·started brake-bopp!D&amp;. rolet at tlle 1.017-mlle track.
Schrader said. " Kyle's (Petty) There wun't room to eo around DuriiJi a practice aeulon Feb.'
spotter screamed bloodY murder him 'liP hJ&amp;h, so that's why I 21, Scbrader alimmed Into thej
to him on the ra'dto, so Kyle started btakl!-bOWID&amp;· I didn't outlldt wall and then tbe lniiJde•
stopped quick and 1 was rl&amp;'ht choole the wall over his (Petty) · concretebarrierbetweenTul'!ll3: ,.
behind him. I dkln't have a radio rear end. The first tbl!ll Will and 4. That wu btl primary car. :
·
Tbe oae be wrecked Friday wu·
,in my car, but Kyle probably ~elf-preservatiOn."
. Petty won bls ftrat career pole the Chevrolet btl drove to a :
Thursday with a lAp of l.S.751 · lOth-place ftnlsb ·last SUII!Iay at!.
mph In a Pontiac.
RtcbmOIId, VL
•~
"He · (Schraiter) probably
.At Dayto..- Beach, Fla., lasfiC.
INDIAN WELLS, Ci~llt. (UP!)
opening set, · Herre.man hit a
point becpue I hit the guy.' I · McGrath, outplaying the Stanwould have done less damare to month, SChrader wreeked·on Ule4
- Top-seeded Martina NavratU- smash Into Navratllova's left wanted to· play two, I thought ford freshman from the baseline.
his car If he bad hit·
" llllld :flaallap i1 a 125-mlle qlllllfYiq.
oya and No. 3 Helena Sukova of corner. She chased it down and
that's what the rule )Vas. Butlfhe
· Her only complaint was tlie
Petty, son of NASCAR
r~ and ·had to eo to a backup '
Czec-hoslovakia raced to prepared a return, but cracked
stands where be's suppOsed to oversight of the tournameut to
victories
car for tbe Daytona !100. ._ ,
straight-set victories over Capron In the head with her
st_and, that's your tough luck."
French opponents Frid.ay to .. racquet.
Sukova, who meets Frazier In
cruise Into the semifinals of the
Capron, of Glendale, Ariz.,
Saturday's semifinals, didn't .court, "especially since my sis$350,000 Virginia Slims ot Indian suffered a bump and was taken to:~ need luck to get by Demongeot. ter (Manuela) won the title last
Wells.
a hospital for treatment.
She needed a chiropractor.
year."
Navratllova, yielding only ·
"Unfortunately I 'took out a
"I pulled something In the
Officials said the problem
seven points off her serve, ousted linesman," said Navratllova, 33,- bottom of my spine. I didn't have would be rectified:
Nathalie Herreman, 6-2, 6·1, In almlng for her third title In as · trouble playing, but troubl!! walk··
Frazier, 17, knocked off No.2
lust 47 minutes for her 12th many weeks. "lie had a big bump
tng until my boyfriend fixed it," Conchita Martinez of Spain
consecutive straight-sets vic- on his head, but no blood. I don't
she said.
Thursday and continued · her
OPEN iiOo A.li.-4110 PJI.·
tory . Sukova overcame a stiff draw blood.
Said Demongeot: "The key upset run wlth the triumph over
back to eliminate Isabelle De·
''I didn't collide wlth him, I was
was tbat I couldn't return well Fairbank. · ·
614·M2·5M7
mongeot, 6·4, 6·3.
planning on smacking the hell out
•
today. I have a good return jlut
"She's . tough mentally, and
Meanwhile, No. 11 Amy Fraz· of it, and had no Idea he was
ST.
RT.
7
I&amp;
UNION
AVE.
started off slicing It back Instead didn't make a lot of errors," said
ier registered her second upset In · there."
POMEROY, OHIO
of coming over It .and moving Fairbank. ''I didn't have a game .
Navratllova admitted she was
two days, knocking off No. 8
forward. I was always off my plan against her. I was ln a
Rosalyn Fairbank, 6-2, 6-3; and shaken when It happened. "But
back loot."
dUemma. I served poorly In my
No. 5 Katerina Maleeva of then I realized, 'Hey I lost the
Maleeva had .no trouble with last match, ·and didn't feel
. '
Bulgaria outplayed amateur
confident I could win with 11."
Meredith McGrath with a steady
baseline game for a 6·1, 6-2
·triumph.
Navratllova's toughest obstacle Friday turned out to be
linesman Bob Capron.
Ahea.d 4-2 and 30.() In the
ROCKHILL, S.C. (UP!) -The Chants ' scored the 'final five
Big South Conferen~e ·B asketball points of the half to seize a 23·22
Tournament championship advantage.
·game Saturday will match deWlnthop led 29-28 when Coastal
fending champion North put together a 10·polnt run five
..Carolina-Asheville against two-minutes into the second half,
time tournament bridesmaid grabbing a 38-29 lead. Winthrop
"YOUR 'COMPLETE'
Coastal Carolina.
never got closer than five points
ATHLETIC
FOOTWEAR
UNC·Ashevllle advanced lathe afterward.
STORE''
Winthrop, closing out Its third
title game Friday with a 78-72
winning campaign In the last four
victory over Radford whlle topseeded Coastal Carolina finally years, finished 19-10.
notched Its first tournament
Coastal wlll take a 22-6 record
COACHES SHORTS
victory, 62-49, over Winthrop into Its matchup with UNC- .
College.
Asheville, 18·11.
GYM SHORTS • SOCKS
After three years as the No. 1
UNC-Asbevllle led wlre- toBALL CAPS • BAGS
seed,. the Chanticleers won a Big wire against Radford as senior .
South Tournament game, pull1ng Milton Moore tos&amp;ed In 16 points.
T-SHIRTS • &amp; MORE
away from Winthrop CoUege . · Juniors Brent Keck and Darryl
'
wlth a 10-point run five minutes Sanders added 11 apiece, al-Custom Transfers
·.though the Bulldogs were unable
lnto the second half.
BOBBY KINCAID
Robert Dowdell spearheaded to shake Radford after qartlng
and Letteringthe Chants wlth 17 poilits. Fresh- . out to an U-4 lead at the outset.
man Tony Dunkin and sopho-Tyrone Travis pumped In a
more Eddie Lesalne added 15 and game· high 20 points for Radford,
· 13 POints, respectively.
7-22, which tralled·only 59-57 wlth
8:23 remaining but was unable to
Winthrop got 15 points from
PO.EIOY
GAWPOUS
overtake the Bulldogs .
• Bobby Kincaid of Mason will sophomore George Henson.
818 E, MAIN ST . .
SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE
Tom Gallaher added 13 points
Winthrop led 22·18 three min.We the field for Concord College
9.82-8874
446-0303
Mountain Lions in their 1990 inter- utes before halftime, before the and Ron Shelburne 10.
collegial!: baseball season,.IIC()(Xtl.
•
ing 10 Baseball Coach Doug Fuller.
Kincaid (6'3, 180 lb.) is a freshman outfielder for the West Virginia
.'
t:onference team. He is a graduate
pfWahama High School.
The Mounlain Lions begin their
season with a six-day, ten-game
.'
slate in Pluiama City, Fla., during
Concord's spring brt&lt;lk (Mar. 18- ·
23). The team has
seven
doubleheader dates at Anderson
Field in Athens, W.Va., concluding
&amp;UP
Jbe season at home on April 28.
This year the team hopes 10 continue the Concord · championship
•
stting established by last fall's
football ·team (conference cochampions), volleyball team (conference champions), and the 1989
men's baskelball team (state
915-3307
CHESfEI
tournament champions). · ...

over

ev·;

Navratilova, Sukova advance to semifinals

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Pegs C-8-Sunday Times-s.ttinel

Ponaoy-MiddlePort-Gdipolia, Ohio-Point Planrnt.W.Va.

•

.:College hoops...

•
Keith RobiiUIOil added U points
JDrthe lrlsb, whoalsorecelved12
from Sweet and 11 each' from
Ellery and Paddock. Doug Smith
led Missouri with 13 points,
scoring only one In the second
half.
Missouri opened an 8-3 lead In
the first 86 seconds, but the
Tigers missed fl ve of their nex I
six shots as the Irish went on an
11·2 run over the next 3:19 and
never trailed again. Elmer Bennett ·scored four points and
lobbed a pass to Sweet for a dunk
during the spurt.
Another 11-2 run midway
through the first half put the Irish
ahead 28-19. EUery scored two
last-break baskets to start the
streak. Missouri m issed 9 of 1Q
shots during the 3: 38 span, and 18
· or 30 In the first half, as Notre
Dame's zone defense denied the
·Tigers Inside shots and disrupted
Missouri 's passing.
Smith converted a 3-polnt play
with 4:05 remaining In the first
half, pulling the Tigers within
, 33-27. But Joe Fredrick scored
six points In the final 3: 31 of Jhe
hall and Williams sank a shot
!rom the right corner baseline at
the halftime buzzer to give the
Irish their largest !lrst-halllelld,
46-33.
• Oklahoma 107, Oklahoma St. 94
• At Stillwater, Okla., William
Davis .s cored 27 points Saturday.
.pacing No. 7 Oklahoma to a 107·94
Big Eight Conference victory
over Oklahl)ma State.
·
Davis was 10 of 16 from the
field and 7 of 7 from the !outline
for the Sooners, 11·3 in the Big
· : Eight and 23-4 overalL Damon
Patterson chipped In 16 points
and grabbed 11 rebounds, while
Tony Martin added 15 points.
Byron Houston had · 23 points

(Continued "f rom C-l)

open with a .22·11 run In tiU! first

seven mlnutell ot tbe leCOnd ball.

Stanley Roberts added 18
'
points
tor LSU, Maurice William·
and. pulled dow!i 11 rebounds to
son had l&amp;andHarold Boudreaux
power the Cowboys, 6-8 and 15-12.
added 10. Ole Miss was led by
John Potter bad 21 points and Glass With 30polnts, Tint Jumper
. Royce Jeffries chipped In 19.
had 18 and Patrick Eddie and Joe
Corey Williams added i3 points.
Harvell each had 16 points.
Leading 51-48 at halftime, ·
hullaaa 'l't, Wlseolllla 88
OklahOma uied a pressure de'
At
Madison, Wis., .Gal.bert
!en~e earl)r In the second half to
Cheaney hit a 15-foot baseline.
shut down Oklahoma State and
.eventualfy built a 26-polnt jumper with two seconds left
advantage.
" , Saturday, capping a 10.0 run and
· The Cowboys,, ho'wever, fought lifting Indiana to a 70-68 Big Ten
victory over Wisconsin.
back and cut tbelead to97-94 with
Indiana', 17-9 overall and 7·9 ln.
1:16 remaining on Williams'
Big . Ten, beat Wisconsin,
the
jumper. The Sooners connected
14-16, 4-13, fo.r the 21st consecu·
on eight consecu Uve free throws
live time and kept the Hoosiers
to seal the victory.
NCAA tournament hopes alive. ·
LSU ltl, Ole Mlaa 94
The Badgers bid for a National
At Baton Rouge, La., Chris
Invitation Tournament berth
Jackson scored 37 points aild ended with the loss.
··
Shaqullle O'Neal added 20 and
Wisconsin guard Tim Locum
set a Southeastern Conference canned two free throw.s with 3:21
season record tor blocked shots to play, giving the Badgers a
In leading 15tb·ranked Louisiana
68-60 lead. But Eric Anderson,
State toa103-94 victory Sa\urday who led Indiana with 19 points,
over Mississippi.
.
scored the next two baskets to cut
LSU, 22-7, 11-41n the SEC, had a
the Badgers' lead to 68-64 with
94-75 lead With 4: 20 remaining, 2:30 left.
but Ole Miss mounted a comIndiana·~- defensive pressure
bllQk, powered by Gerald 'Glass then forced two.turnovers, leadwho ha~ 13 points In tlie flnal3: 08. Ing to baskets by Cheaney and
The Rebels twice cut the Tiger Greg Graham. Graham:s lay-up
lead to seven ln -the.Jast minute,
lied the game, 68-68, with 1:34
but could get no closer.
lett.
·
·
Ole Miss feiHo 11-16, 8-10 In the
Wisconsin's Billy Douglass,
conference:
with theshotclockwindlngdown,
The Rebels jumped out to a 7-0 t.hen threw up an alrball; setting
lead to open tbe ganie, and led tbe stage for Cheaney's game19-18 with 11:44 remaln,lng In the winning shot.
first half before LSU took
Wisconsin, which led .34-29 at
control. ·
O'Neal, whO had 10 points In the
opening half. to lead LSU, set an
SEC reeord In lhf first half with
three blocked sbols to give him 98
(SEO,Qpponenta) .
on the season, eClipsing the
(All· Games)
record set by Dwayne Schlntzlus
TEAM
W L
P OP
or Florida with 97 In 1987,
Athens ......... , .... , 19 2 1499 .1183
The Tigers took a 46-38 half·
lime lead, then blew the game x-Portsmouth .... 19 2 1539 1314
x-Wellston ......... 18 3 1415 1154
x-Wheelersburg .18 4 1537 1131
x·Soutb Point ..... 17 5 1659 1363
x-Greenfleld ...... 17 5 1270 1052
Warren .............. 15 6 1511 1325
x-Logan ........ .. ... 15 7 1545 1360
x-Southern ......... 14 S 1580 1353
Waverly ...... .... .. 13 8 1255 1120
x-Chesapeake .. .. 12 10 1469 1380
Vinton ................ 11 10 13:.1 1265
. Galllpolls...... ... .. 8 13 1067 1192
Pt. Pleasant. , .... 8 14 1316 1467
Marietta............ 3 18 1243 14:.1
Jackson ............. 3 18 .1160 1382
x..Stlllln touney
Friday's results:
(Divllllon I Sectlonul Finals)
Logan 61 Lancaster 48
(Divlaloa IU Dlatrlct)
Wheelersburg 52 Unloto 51
Peebles 46 Paint Valley 40
~ast nlgbt's games:
(Divl,llon II District)
Portsmou tb vs. New Lexlng·
ton, at OU, 3:30p.m. ·
Fairland vs. Sheridan, at ou..
5:15p.m.
Greenfield vs. We~t Union, ,a t
.ou, 7p.m.
Wellston vs. South Point. at
OU, 8:45p.m.

halftime, went on a 14-.1 run over
a 3: 30 1pu In tbe leCOnd half.
Kurt Portmann eapped tbe spurt
wltb a short Jumper with 7: 28
lett, slylng the Badgers their
biggest lead, 63-50.
Pat Graham finished with 17
points for the Hoosiers: while
Cbeaney added 15 and guard
Jamal Meeks 13, alobg with 8
assists.
Wisconsin senior Danny Jones,
playing In hla lila! borne eame,
led th~ Badgers witb 17 points.
Locum chipped In · with U,
Including tour th~polnt shots.'
Teua 88, DePaul 79
At Rosemont, 111., Lance
Blanks scored 30 points Satur·
day, Including six three-pointers,
and Texas survived a second· balf
scare en route toltsslxthstraleht
win Willi an 89-79 ~eclslon over
DePaul.
'
The Longbo~ns, 20-6, nailed a
dozen three-pointers !or thl!
game, Including a 30-toot buzzer
beater by Blanks Just before
halftime. They aiso received 19
points !rom Joey-WrlgQt,'1G tr~ri\
Travis Mays arid 14 from Locks·
ley Collie.
. Stephen Howard•paced DePaul
. with 25polnts, while David Booth
added 18. The Blue Demons, ln.
real jeopardy of no\ being Invited
to the NCAA post-season tourna·
ment, dropped to 16-14 with two
games remaining.
Ball St. 84, Cent. Mich. 57
At Muncie, Ind., Chandler
Thompson scored 17 points Satur·

day, 1eac11111 Ball State to u IU7
blawout of Cent:raliiJ,.,Ipn and
cllllcblng tile reeular aeuon ·
Mid-American Conference Utle
tor the Cardinals.
Ball State (21-6 overall, 13·3 Ia
the MAC) jumped to a 33-17lead
with 5: 13 to play In the first half,
wben Roman Muller capped a 9-1
run· with two free throws. But
Central Mlchlglln (11-16, 6-10)
came back with an , 8-Q run,
cutting the margin to 35-30 with
one minute remalnlni on a
Melvin Kelly three-polnler. .
·The. Cardinali used two
second-half runs to turn the game
Into a blowout. An 11·2 spuri,
finished oft by a 'l'!lo!Jlpion free
throw, gave Ball State a 58-38
lead with 8: 43 to go. Tbe
Cardinals later embarked on a
1f2 run, takJni a -7fi.411advantage ·
witb 3;09 to go on a Shawn
Parrish basket.
. .
·Billy , Butll and 1Emmanuel ,
'Cross each ac!ded 10 points tor •
Ball State, which. h&amp;d 13 of Ita 14
plaY.ers score. Sander ScOtt led

the Chtppewu with H
Bill State Jlladl 27 ot
a l!U peroceat . _ .
rate, and held the ChlppeWU to
37.3 percent on 19-ot-51 sboOtfllr.
The pme attracted 6,~'11 tUI
, to U11lveralty Gym, Jlvln&amp; Ball
State a bome 11euon attenda~~~:e
record.of 87,300.

Tllledo 77,

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r

By Stan Evans
GALLIPOLIS - General !'!fators announced fourth quarter
and full year results In Une with
.expectations.
For 'the quarter,
revenue fe'll
' 3.3% to $31.4
billion.
Profits .eased
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net Income fell
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'

GW beats
Bonnies
85-77
PHILADELPHIA

(UP!) ~
Sonni Holland scored 24 points,
, Ellis McKennie had 21 and Mike
uones added 20 Saturday to lead
· George Washington to an 85-77
.v ictory over St. Bonaventure In
the first round of the Atlantic 10
't6urnament.
• George Washington, the seventh seed and 14-16, will play
·second-seeded Penn State In a
quarterfinal game today at 7
p.m.
. Jones scored seven points and
Holland had six as GW outscored
· the Bonnles 19-4 to take a 66-48 .
lead on a three-point play by
Jones with 13: 08 to play In the
second half.
' St. Bonaventure played the
game with only eight players
because Tony Tate, Donald Burnett and Lovell Doyle did not
accompany the team to Phila.~el·
pbla for disciplinary reasons.
Michael Burnett scored 27 points
and Kenrick Hamilton 20 for tbe
Bonnles.
. St. Bonaventure, 8-20 and loser
· of Its last four games, used a 16-3
· run to close within 73-68 on a free
tbrow by Hamilton with 5: 18 to ·
.play but got no closer as GW
scored 10 of the next 12 points to
In front 83-70.
Holland's follow shot gave the
'Colonials a 45-40 halftime leaa
after GW led for mos I of the first
20 minutes.
.
'
· ·: St. Bonaventure had scored
. -etiht straight points to tie the
4core at 34·34 on a jumper by
· iurnett wltb 3: 54 to play but
. l!olland hit two tree throws to put
• OW up .39-34.
'
G w used a 9-3 run to take a
34-26Jead on a dunk by Jones with
6: 07 to play and Jones's fastbreak layup gave the Colonials a
25-191ead.
St. Bonavepture jumped out to .
· a 7-2 lead but GW scored nine of
the next 11 points to go In front
11·9 on a pair of free throw• by
McKennle witb 14:52 to play.

eo

•

'

~-

ATl'EMPTS STEAL- Minnesota' s Willie Burton (right)
· attemptll,lo take t!le ball from
~lcblgan . State frontman
~au SteljJellga during the
flrllt ball of Saturday's Big
Tea contest In Minneapolis.
The vlsl&amp;lng Spartans won
75-731n overUme. (UPI)

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off 11.7%. In addition, car and .·
ANN Rivers, a nearby resident, rtglit, says she has shopped.at
truck sales totl\led r.9 million
tbe .E. '-· Cottrell !fore lq Porter for years. Tbe &amp;tore is clos!Dg
units, down 2% from ,1988's level.
aroUIId March U. ·
.
•
GM continues to ~lifter !rom
bloated Internal expenses prim·
arlly associated with excess
'
'
capacity In Its North American
CHESHIRE - Four veteran
Council.
,
automotive operations.
employees, Harold E. Bowman,
' Folden, a !)alive of Gallipolis,
I
For example, altliciugh 70% of . shift operating engineer; Gar·
served In !he U.S. Air Force from
I the Company's sales are derived land F. Folden, safety supervl· 1950
to 1954. He and his wife,
North :America, earnlngs'from
..• In
sor; Shlrtey R. M!lls, yard
Joan, reside at Box 143-A Patriot
these operations for the full year
supervisor, retired Feb. 1 from
Star Route, Gallipolis.
were margjnal at best. ConverMills joined OVEC In 1954 as a
theOhloValleyEiectrlcCorJXlrasely, GM's· International bus!tlon's Kyger Creek Plant and
guard In the personnel depart·
. , pess continue's to grow, posting
Charles E. Fields, crane
men.t. The following y~ar he
record levels of profitability once • operator.
transferred to the Yard Depart·
, again In 1989 of $2.7 billion (plus ·
Bowman
joined
OVEC
In
1954
ment
as a Coal Handler and
3.8%).
.. . .
'
as an Equipment Operator In the
advanced through the various
Consequently, ' given
weak
Operatlorts Department, and tbe
Y .a r d D e p a r t m e n t
U.S. automotive market for the . . following year be was promoted
classifications.
first hal! of this year alopg with
tounltsUPI\rvlsor. Iil1959hewas
.In ' ~981 he was promoted to
high North American break-even
promotedtoAsslstantShlflOper·
Yard Supervisor. Mills Is a
levels, we are mahitalnlng our
atlng Engineer and In 1981, to
member of the First Southern
per share earnings estimate for
shift operatlne engineer. :
Baptist Church of Meigs County.
, 1990 at $5.50. '
Before joining OVEC, he
the National Arbor Day Feiunda·
Longer term, however, we
worked for the Beech Bottom lion, the Prison Fellowship and
believe GM's stock could · proPower Company In Power,
the American Tract Society.
' duce an attractive total return
W.Va., for 10~ years, &amp;lvlnghlm
. He has previously served as a
I .. since management COntinues to
a combined record of 45Y.a "years SCoutmaster and Cubmaster In
close out-dated •facilities while . In the electric utility lnduftry. ,
the Boy Scouts of America and as
also dlt!erentlatlng the ComA native or Short Creek, West President cit the Athletic BoOs·
pany's product line.
Vlrgtnla, BOwman and his wife,
ters at Eastern SChool In Reeds(Mr. EvaD&amp; Is an. lnveiltment
Nancy; currently reside at Route ville, Ohio.
Broker tor The Ohio Contpaay In
1, Leon, W.Va.
Mills, a native of Middleport,
' their Gallipolis ot!lce.)
Folden joined OVEC ln-1954 as served In the U.S. Army !rom
. ~n Instrument maintenance 1951 to 19~. He and. his wife,
mechanlc-C In the pertormance Joyce, reside at Route 3,
department. In 1956 he was Pomeroy.
,, .
promoted to Maintenance
Fields joined OVEC In 1955as a
·"·•
•
. Mechanic-A and In 1977, to coal handler In the yard depart1 gt'OWIDg m
perfoFmance technician. In 1985 ment. That same year be was
:
he was promoted to safety promoted to tractor-diesel operasupervisor ' In the personn~- tor, and In 1981 he was promoted
1
,
department. \
·
·
.0: • • , to tractor-diesel operator, and In
'
He Ia a member otthe St. Lo~ 1981 be was promoted to crane
COLUMBUS, Ohio ' (UP!)
. Catholic Cburcb •nd the tlks operator.
Growing sentiment among gar·
Club In Gallipolis and a past
Fields Is a native of Catletts·
secretary to the Mld-Oblo Valley buJt, Ky., and he and his wife,
.: deners that pesUr.ldes pose marl;!
, risks than be~flts Is spabodrklligf
Industrial Emergency PN""""" Nancy, reside at Rt.1, Gallipolis.
• demand for organic met
s o
.
• ~..,
,
.
' pest and disease control.
plant~•
"We handle rhore and more
requests for organic methods of ·
i
·.
' controlling gard!!n and home
By Gall
Flni'plantlnll&amp;. of nuts and acornS
•
pests .." says Julie Steele, an
Earth Team Volallteer
can be sUccessful If planted In
entomology specialist · at Ohio
"
good .so!l and protected from
State University's Plant and Pest , GALLII'OLIS- Reforestation squlrrela and ml~.
·
Is 1enerally · defined e,s "tbe
Trl!!l plantlnJ Is recoJ11111ended
Diagnostic Clinic.
· She helps Identify ·insect pests· proceaa of plantJna new trees on In the early aprJni, beiJnlllq In
' and ' recommends pelt manage.
land bnce forested''. Many toretb1J ~ ofOlllo 1n tbe first part
, ment and control methods.
ated t1ere1 In Ohio wert! cleared of Marjlb.
·
I ·•Some callers tblnk pestl(ides for agrlcu1tu~al 8lld o~ pur·
Fall , plaitttna Is not usually
po111. Over the year. many of
recommended. This Is due to the
hurt ·tbelr kids, themlelws or tbe
environment," Steele18ys. "Oth·
these acrea proved to be unfltfor fact that the seedlings are ·not
ers expreu coneern tbat Insects
llll'lculture and ollie~ depleted
larp eDOIIIh to withstand 118\18re
becorrte IIJimune to pesUcldes,
~ poor farmllll practbla.
rrost heavlnJ.It tbeaeedllnp are
··We womJ that few iard-rs
Ratber tban !lee tb11e acrea
In light aollll tboqh, frOIIt heavread pesticide labels, and .t hat
COIItltlue to be abandoned and
1n1 darnllllt! 11 1eaa aevere. With
gardener care1es1111ess andliDOr·
cl~ unproductive, reforest&amp;conifers, tbe winter IUD and wind
,nee maY be ~olng significant
Jlon provides ail 1!11Cellent way to ·can cAUJe the needles to dry out
envlronmenta'l harm."
r e I ar n the 1 e a c res I o
sllule the root&amp; do not become
OrganiC lartlenlni methnds
llfoducttvfty.
properly eltabllahed until
and materiaII llaYtl grown. ~aGenerally, In Oblo, 1'8(oreata·
·
,
1~,
, slderably over the past 20 )'elll'l.
tloll Ia done lly the plantlilg of
D!!CidiDI Wblcb · species to
Jteele says.
bare-rooted ~k or aeedllnp.
on D-8
.'•

5 speed, air, stdreo, rear
wiperldelrosler.
1

MIIGS

CENTER
IIPSAYMAIU
v

Hatchba&lt;;k,- 5 lpeed, air,
cassette, sunrool.

'185 por

• 132 ,.......

1110.

89 PLYMOUTH

89 DODGE
DYNASTY LE

· GRAND VOYABER

Automalic, air , casSIIIe. pow11
windows &amp; locks , lealher.

7 passenger, air, stereo. Hh.
cr~ise, pciwer windows &amp;IQcks. •

V6, --~- ilr, stereo. power
windOws &amp; locks. til(, cruise.

. '172 , ......
'

'312 ,.;, 1110·

'25~--.

89 NISSAN
SENTRA

88 CHEVY

89 NISSAN
STANZA

5 aPIId,alr, attreo, crulss,
rear wlpe~defrllaler .

4 door. automatic. air, illreo;
tear detroster. 3 10 choose .

'145,..-.

. '184 ........

•New .thk:lt ptymlnfl tt.td on ••.oooctown piUIIP I Ulle, 111tr !Will,
II monttte. lt.IOO down on SIMI&amp;
•

·992·2101 .

87 NISSAN
SENTRA XE

5. speed, . a1r, cauat)e,
cruise, tonneau cover.

119 per

85 JEEP
GRANO WAGONEER

~

CAVALIER WA80M
Automatic, air, etereo,
powar steering &amp; brakea.
1

_

105,., ...:

.....

~~

4l'ilo-

Autom ..lc, 11r, stereo,
rear defroater, llka new!

IINI •IIWIINII fqlit)lus Ill

* ·361!11..,._ Mt«&lt;ftl Mt'

'225,., ....
-••17.54 •.:....
~- · tuai!IIIIMI. ·

to Samuel Lewis a~d his wife,
store at that Intersection for 47
Lucinda Will Lewis .
y~ ars .
Third owner was Monroe
Cottrell leased the structure tq
Grover, who tben S!&gt;ld It to a Mr. Paul and Bill Phillips 23 years
Welker (flrsi name not known)·. · ago. When Paul died In 1972, Bill
E. L. Cottrell became the fifth and Sophia took over tl)e operl'·
owner In l921 , and operated the tlon on March 6. 1967.

. BIU AND SOPliiA PbWlps, who have operated tbe E. L, 0:~~:~
Store In Porter ·ror 23 yean, will cloee for the final time •
March 15. The buUdlag Ia being sold ·by Its owners . .

NEW HAVEN- L. G. "Larry"
Clark, Nashport. ha~ . retired
from the Ohio Power Company
as 811 assistant · shift operating
engineer at Plllllp Sporn Plant In
New Hayen, W. ~a . , fo)lowing 42
years service.
Clark began Is career as a
laborer at Philo Plant In 1947 ahd ,
transferred to Sporn In 1960. He
was named unltllty man-A .In ·
1965, utility operator later that
year and auxiliary equipment
operator In 1966.
Clark advanced to equipment
operator In 1970, unit supervisor
In 1973 and assistant shift operat·
lng engineer In 1982. For tbe past
two years, he was Involved with .

training younger employees with
the plant's operating systems.
Clark served in the U.S. Navy
from 1944-46 and is a member of
the American Legion Posl 39 in
Pome~oy and t,he V.FW Post l_n
Mason.- W.Va. •· ~ .. ........ ·, \ ..
He and his wife, LaDonna,
recently moved from Pomeroy to
Nashpil~t. north of Zanesville, to
be nearer other family member,s .
When not enjoy!ng time with
family, Clark plans to spend
more time fishing and
gardening.
Clark has three stepchildren,
seven stepgrandchildren, and
three step great grandchildren.

·

DeG.....,.

''

..

Charles ''Laddie" Burdette, Jr.•
has been promoted to vice-presi-

dent of phannacy operations for
Fruth Pharmacy, Inc. In this newlycreated position, Burdette will be

ON DISPlAY LOCALLY - River Front Honda Y~ntaha
unveiled the first new JHO GLlHCISE (made In USA) Ia tbls area
recently. More than 100 Individuals from the tri-state area were on
. band for the event. TheSE came In a new color - pearl white. It Is
· on dllplay at tbe'River Fr~t Honda Yamaha shop In ·Kanlluga.

Farm Floshes

,

Spring fann activities begin
' and
BY EDWARD M. VOLLBOBN , and will probably lose weight
COUNTY EXTENSION AG~, may not cycle In time to keep a 12
month calving Interval. In the
AGRICULTUU a CNRD
dairy Industry, It Is well known
'
GALLIPOLIS
...., All those
If for some reason the cow
spring farm activities bave
ri' I milk well In their first 60
started. March 1, usually II tbe , ys, her potential for the entire
moat common target tor spring lactation will be limited.
CalVInl Of beet herda. Many
The Marcb·Aprll period Is
farmers have coll)llltlited on
oftell the time wllen beet produc·
poor quality of lhjlir big round
era bave the moet dlmct~lty
bale bayJ tbJa year. Nutrition
meeting the nutritional needs or
needa ot cows really cbanp
thetr COWl.
durlllr late patatlon alld early
The total coat or f~ng 5-6
lactatiOn.
pounds of a concentrate mix per
Many beet cow1 need to have
day over the next 30-«l days
some concentrate IJt Bddltlon to · would be around $15 per cOw-. A
hay In order to attalll lbelr
calf welgblng only 25 pounds
genetic potential tor superior
heavier at weanlnJwou!d pay tbe
·milk production. IF tbll Is not bm. Just little better mllk prodone the cow:~ will not milk well
r.t-ntlnued on D-8
.

'

\

'

••

BUrdette
promoted

. Organic gardening

Tree

'¥)~ . .

/

L. G. CLARK

a

.popula.rily , ·

88 NISSAN
KING CAB 4x~

PORTER - When Bill and
Sophia P~llllps close the doors to
the E . L. Cottrell store In Porter
(set tentatively for March 15) one
of the area's final "mom and
pop" operations handed .- down
from generation to generation
tbe past 130 years will come to an
end.
·
The Gallla County landmark,
located, at the Intersection of old
State Route 160 oU State Route
554, Is being sold by Its trl·
owners, Harold Cottrell, Cincln·.
nat!; Harold's sister-In-law ,
Ruth Anna Cottreil,.of Delaware
and Mrs. Donald · (Bobbl) Cal'
trell, another sister-In-law ,
Route 160.
During the Civil War, when
Porter was known as Pine Grove.
the building was used as part of
the underground railroad for
escaping slaves from the South.
"I've shopped here for years,"
said Ann Rivers, who lives
nearby. "We'll really miss this
place," remarked another
customer.
"We're !Bill and I) not ready to
retire. yet ," said Sophie . . The
, Phillips' were assisted by their
daughter-In-law, Carol. "We
don't know what we're going to
do. We've been so used to
working here for so long. We
thought of buying It, but the
upkeep and Insurance on the old
building Is too·much for us." she
added.
The original building was constructed In 1860 by Aaron Quickie
for a George Payne, who was
born in England.
Payne was an ardent abolition•
1st and one of the organizers of
the underground railroad In
. Gallla County. Payne later sold It

Clark retires from Ohio Power·!·.·

Four O~C' employ~ retire

BANKRUPTCY

•

'

'~

,,

Cottrell store in Porter to
close doors after 130 years

)

many

Ill new mobile ond IRIIIufiiC·
lu,... h o - bull tod1y . .
•Thon- P.C.S.D. HoltPumpiHt""": '100% 2-yr. porto and
lobor _,.llty: 100% ll·yr.
peru and labor W.rronty on the

lafartttt . .1 • Gallipolis, oh. .
T, W, IH, Sat. 9:30-S: M&amp;F 9t30-1

.

D

Mi.ch 4. 1990
------

-- - :

At Toledo; Ohio. J.C. Harri1
scored 18 points and Crall
Sutlers added 17 points and
grabbed 17 rebounds, leading
Toledo to a 77· 73 Mid-American
Conference win over We.iern
Michigan Saturday attemaon. . . ,
· Tbe Rocket&amp;. who trailed by as '
as 10 points early In the
game, acol'ed the first 10 points of
tbe second b&amp;lf to. take • 49·39 ·
te.d. they Increased their niar·
gin to 65-50 with 8: llO to play. ·
Still tralllrtg 71-411 witb 3: 3lle!t
In tbe.1ame, tbe Broncos cloeed
to within two points, 13-71, with 5r
seconds remaining witb a 10-2

run. ,

Section

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

l

Cage standings

'-----~

-

·

•Intort"""" lo found In over I~ of

7he 0hoe

-------·----

I

'

NilE All TECH
CHALLENGEI R Jf•

Farm/ Business

aoat•.

responsible for phannacist recruit·
ing, maintaining ~y price
tables and enhancmJ! .pharmacist·
customer ~elations.
.
· He also ovc:rsees, witb the help
of store managers and pharmacists,
lhe total opcntion of the stms ln
Nitro, Hurricane, Milton. and Win·
field. Burdette will supervise the
new Charleston location when
opened.
Bunleae's career with Fruth
began in 1976 when he worked as a
cled; before his first year of pharmac:y school at wvu. He then
worked as a pbarmacy intern in the
Point Pleasant llld Gallipolis
stores, and upon receivina )lis
license, joined the lllllf of registered pharmacists in 1979.
Jact Fruth, !liesident and CEO,of
lhe (X)IIIplllly be IOundcd in 1952,
cmlils the energy llld dediciMioa of
Burdeue llld the other vicoJnlidellts and their aalfs. with
inaintaininalheiiiOIIIIIIIUIDtbathas
made Fruth Pbarmacy I vital llld
powing corporalion.

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

M..:h4,1990
Pom«oy- Middleport- Galipolil. Ohio-Point P1eaunt. W. Va:

Page-D-2- Sunclay limes-Sentinel

M.-ch4,1990

Sunday Ttmes-Sentinel31 HOnlel ror

11 wamecl to Do

~~~:t;~' S©RJ.l~-~c t/' ~~

0

Tribune- 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
:Register - 675-1333

WOlD

S
lA, _Lfl, I'll. 011,
I - ......
·-onoAC;
_of
-

-~~111,100.114·,.., ~-r:::,c. M::

GAM I

Edirod br CLAY R. , OLLAN - - - - - - -

Reorrcnge the 6 s.cron'lbled
word ~

be low

rc

make

-

6

not .

-I.

.
tt._,In .:

9 bod- - . Rutland. 21 _ , IlL lt7,100. CoU 114-742-

simole word5
Pnn· letren of
each .•n 1 1~ i1ne of !Ou9'~~ .

TOFESF

I I

1

1l
'

RENKUJ
Public Notice

Public Notice

.

Public Notice

Public Notice

notify tht owner of whet It
Coda.
Plena ond opocificatiilno Hliev• to be the Fair M•r·
NOTICE TO
are on file in the Department kot Voluo of the lend.
CONTRACToRS
The lend offered """t ot
of Transportation and the ofSTATE DF DHIO
fice of the District Deputy . minimUm meet the follOwDEPARTMENT OF
ing crfterle:
Director.
TRANSPORTATION
1 . Ba locoted within the
The Director rnlfVH the
Columbuo, OhiO
rigttt to raiect any and Ill City of Gallipollt.
Fobrulry 18, 1110
2. BolocetOd ouch thit all
bide.
Controot ..... Leall Copy
BERNARD B. HURST, public utlltllo oro avollablt
,
No. 80-211
.
DIRECTOR to tho alto. Prllfom.ly utll·
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
tleo ohould be currently loFEB. 28; MAR . 4
p - 1 1 will. be
Citld •dlacent to or on the
·-•ed et 1he offloo of the
alto.
·
Dlroctcw of the Ohio DoPIIrt·
PubIic Notice
3 . Be located on a dedmont of Tronoportation. Col·
icated ttroot.
umbuo, Ohio, unt110:00 A.
NOTICE TO BIOOEAS
4. The topogrophy of the
M., Ohio Stondlrd Timo,
L.
alto ohould be ouch that h
T-doy.
March 13.- 1990.
Nat lc0 11 horoby g..
en by moy·· be devol. o--' without.
for lmr.ovementa In:
the Bowd of Educotion of
,.....
Moigo Loool School Oiatrlct conildoroblo tho dovolopGall 1 County. Ohio. on
thit aold Board of Educotion mobt coatt lcut • Fill).
nriouo ooctlono of Stote
on ~arch 26. 1980, ot
5. No lhared proji.ty,
RoutH 7, 141 , 110 end
12:00 Noon. will ofler at a~ch 81 · drNet, mln8r'lll
88BI City . of Goilllpolit,
public ouctlon, on the pro· rightL or prlvoto oc...t
Ooll o County, by roourfocmian. echool groUnds bli· euamMts with other pri~
lng with oopholt concreto.
l'rolect and Worll Length : ,
concr-. surface cour• on a longingtouidboetdofedu· vate property.
8. Moot other crltwio ••·
10,2811 foot or 1 .91 mil•,
bi1UI)IInouo aggregate bHo, cation. 1nd tltuated in Solio·
b
T
hi
1
tobliohed by the Authority
Pwomont Width: Yorlouo
and by constructing;
urv owna p, Y liege of ond/ or the Deportment of
'' Tho dote oot tor compl•
Bridge No. GAL-36-0879 Pomeroy, Village Lot 82 • Houoing end Urben Dovoi ·
lion of thlo worll. ahlll be oo
LAR - • 3 IP8n non-com· Meigo County. Stete of opmont.
eot fonh in the bidding propoaite concrete box beam Ohio, end being In Froction
7 . Ba lor- onou"" lolzo
P:OMI!'
Ji
brldgolopono 3 ot 62 foot · 6 10, Townohlp 2 Renge 13 of
"''
Eoch blddior ohall be ro·
inch• center to center bea·r- tho Ohio Company Purch•e ond conflguriltion) to oc·
and being a pert of the 2 . 34 commodate the conltNC·
quirod to fMo with hlo bid a
ing~ , roadway 39 feet - 8 incertified chock OJ CMhilr' I
ch• face to face J)lrlpetJ}, ocrolot doocrlbed.ln Volume lion of no '-er the~ twenty
chocli for on omoufl\ equal
U. S. 36overC. R. 8 -B; and 138 Pogo 379 of tho Deed tingle !emily unlta. A miniof five acr•. .
Bridge No. GAL-35-1164 roco rda · 0 f M8191 ,County; mum
Thia notice It otollcltation 1----------.,-.---------~ to !Iva porcentofhlobld, but
In no event morol then fifty
- ·• · 3 spen continuoua steel commendng at an lfon pin
oouthwaot ond the . Authority hao the
thou•nd dollora. or 1 bond
gi"rdtlr •u.,.Rructure with marking the
for ten I* aent of hit bid.
reinforced concrete deck corner of tho Firat Baptltt right to ICCipt or reject ony
Public
Notice
Public
Notice
.
for lllo oubmltted.
poyoble to the DINCicw.
1nd tubltNcturo ltpona 70 Church (Vol. 88 Pogo 682) property
Soloctiono will be modo by
Blddaro muotopply, on the
foot · 0 inchoo, 90 •toot · 0 in· lhonco 8 ou th 82 d our- 10 thodlocrttlonofthiAuthor;
PfOI*
forma, for .,aliflcacheo. 104 foot - 0 inchoo minutoo 08 ncondl 46 .11 lty booed on nogotlotiono
NOTICE TO
olong
tangent. roadway
center to center bearinp. foot to 1 P.K. Noll. llld P.K . with tho ullor ond t h o CONTRACTORS
width varloblol, U. 8. 311 tloft ot , _ , _ dayo prior to
roodw1y 27 loot · 8 inchH Noll being tho true point of offoro modo. Tho Authority
STATE OF OHIO
wer Uttle Indian Creek reiOj the date_, for olionlnD bide
, _ to loco fNIFIPotl). U. boglnnln~ thence South 82 oholl ot Ito clocrotlon ulect
In occordonce with ~hepler
DEPARTMENT OF
cotion: ond
16211 Ohio AeviHd Coda.
S. 36 undar T.R . 20; ond
TRANSPORTATION
Bridge
No.
GAL-326·
dogr- 0 mlnutH 06 ... end purch•• • tile or t~Plont ond tpoclficetionl
Bridge No. GAL-36·1246 condo-237.28-too
·0899 - t 3 open contlnuouo
Columbuo. Ohio
may tolect • tile cw oitoo
oro
on lltln the D&lt;lportmant
LiaR - A continuoua stool P.K. Noll; thence North 28
FobfUory
11,
11180
ltHI beom 1Aii88) ouper·
of Tronoportotlon ondthe of·
beam bridge auperam.cture dogreoo 00 minuiM 00 •• 10 a pr•ldontilled '"o for
ContiWCt
Sal•
structure
with
reinforced
with reinforced conCrete condo , Woot 272.11 foot development ond nolan Itt
Logol Copy No. 90·276
concreto dock. cepped pKe flee of tho District Deputy
deck 1nd
aubatfucture olong tho ooot Uno of the open to · ptirchooo tho alto
pier's and integral abutments Director.
UNIT
PRICE
CONTRACT
The Director rooervoo the
(opono 46 ioot - 0 inchoo. 50 Groce Church property IVol. .loiltoo) to • developer teSooled propo•lo wll be lapoint 42 foet • 0 lnchoo; 112
26
Pogo13
and
Vol.
38
Pogo
locted
to
eonttfUct
the
proright
to rojoct ony and oil
foot • 0 inchoo, 40 foot - 0
received at the office of the foot- 0 Inch•: 42 foot · 0 ininchet meisured along cen· 724) to o point; thence i~io 18 lin open-ended lnviDirector of tho Ohio popan- ches CMter to Ceilter bear· · bide.
BERNARD B. HURST,
09
terlina of survey. roadway North 61 dogr001
ment of Transportation, Col- lngs along tangent roadway
OIReCTOA
39 feet - 8 inches 1t and 49 minutoo 29 socondl Eott tetlon. A ltgol notice may be umbuo, Ohio. untM 10:00A. 44.2 foot foco to foco fNira ·
FEB
.
26:
MAR.
4
loot - 8 inches RT. face to 221.42 feet to a y, Inch r• iooued. but Ia not ,...ulred to
M.• Ohio Stendard Time. Fri. pota) , S . R. 325 over lndlon
face
parapets). U. S. 36 bar p•aing e Yz inch rabar terminate thla · Invitation
dey, Morch 23, 1990, lor Crook; end
4.10
foot:
thence
South
29
upon··rtcolpt
of
'
a
oufflciont
over . relocated
Chickalmprovemonto in :
Bridge No. GAL-36-0647
dagraee &amp;2 minutft 47 sec- nu,ber of acceptable oHerl
mauga Creek; end
Gallia County, Ohio, on LilA - 1 3 span continuouJ
ownero.
·
Bridge No. GAL-35-1261 ondt Eott 314.48 foot to the from
IIC'Iion OAL-36·3. 79, U. S. ttool beom IA5B81 ouperindividual ownbeginning containing 1.630 ., Interested
1 5 span continuous
and
rRI
•tate
brokers
Route 35 in .Raccoon -.d ltruoture with reinforced
1
welded steel girder super· acre more or las.
Springfield Townthlpt, Gol· concreto deck. T typo plero
are invhed to ob..in more instructure with
reinforced
r,rms of Nl~ are Cllhand formation from :
llo County, by ,eroding, end lntogrol obutmonto
concrete deck and substruc- the board hereby reservea
draining,
p.~~ving with IS·
lopona 10 foot - 0 lnchoo;
Mo. Juno R. Wllllamo.
ture (s,-ns 78 feet - 0 in- tho right to reject ony and oil Executtve
p._lt
conctfte
on
1
bitumi·
100foot·Oin-; BOf-·
Director
Ar111oun c' ,, nw11 s
choo, 97·1oot - 0 lnchoo, veri· bide. Tho boord oloo otipu· Glllio Metropolitan
nout aggregate • L ond by 0 inch• center to canter
oblo, vorloblo, end 68 foot · 6 1 - that tho Mol go Locol
Houolng Authority
conatructlng: !lrldgo No. beorlngo, roedwoy 40 foot ·
inch•, roadway 57 teet - 0 School Dlotrlct WOIJid retain Route 2 • llullding 14
GAL-36-0413 - 1 2 opon 0 inchH foco to foce poro·
inch• aver~~ge face to face rlghtttoporkonthagrounda Bidwell, Ohio 411814
_
co'ntlnuoua ~mpoa:ite ateel potol, U. S. 31 over r• 3 Announcements
poropet) . U . S . 35 over behind the building at foot- Telephone: 814·441-0261
girder IAI721 IUpoJitNC- located Roccoon C...,.; and to Dlotola YDU! _ , l c
Chnopaako Railroad endS. ball gomoo end other ochool
ture with reinforced conBridge No. GAL-36-0722
, ... Confunctiona.
The
board
also
or
the
Consultant:
I, detolll 1'01:
to.Ho-rch
A. 160; ond
crete deck and ~o&amp;~batructUre - a 2 spen contlnuou1 com ~ I
Harrloon C · Joleph
P.O.
Box
1043,
Qolllpollo,
OH
Bridgo No. GAL-36-1263 ttlpulotn to tho buyer that Conooc
lopeno 120 foot - 0 Inch•: poaito otool girder tupor·
- 1 4 span continuous the building containt ••· 90 Eut Goodolo Stroot
120 foot - 0 inchoo center to atructure whh reinforced 41131.
.
welded steel girder super- beat01.
center beorlnge, roodwoy 44 concreto dock, cop end colBoard of Edueotlon of the Columbuo. Ohio 43216
structure with reinforced
foot - 0 lnchoo loco to ·face umn piort. end lntagrolobutMoigo
Local
School
Dio.
l
tric:t
'
ITelophono:
814·
471
-41
14
concrete deck _.nd Jubltrucporopotal. S . A. 36 under S. ments (1pan1 121 feat . 0 in·
Jono Fry, Treaaurer MAR. 4 , 12, 1990
ture (spans 90 feet - 0 inR. 326 rolocotion; ond
choo; 130 foot • 0 Inch..
ehH, variable, variable. and 12126:1314.11,18, 4tc
center to cantor ~oringo, 4
Bridge No. GAL-C .R. 3 6B foot - 6 inchH. roodwoy
a 3
contlnuoua con- roedway 28 foot · 0 lnchoo
Public Notice
Public Notice
39 feet, 8 inc:hn facetofllce
crete tlob tuj*ltnlcturo foco to fiCO pwopettl
fNIJIPotl), U. S . 36 over
with copped pile obutmontt 35 undor C. A. 33. rol""'"Ch. .poll&lt;o Roilroad and S .
end ploro Capon 28 foot· 0 in- tion.
LEGAL NOTICE.
A. 180; ond
Project Length: 24.079.14
PUBLIC NOTICe
ch•: 311 foot · 0 l n - f 28
Attention: Ownera 1nd
Bridge Not.
GAL-36FOR SALE .
foot • 0 Inch• olong C/1 , lin. toot or 4.611
Rool htate Brokera
. 1330/ 1331 Loft and
Work Length: 38,762.84
THE OHIO VALLEY JANK
roaclwoy 28 foot • 0 Inch•
You aro Invited to tubmlt
right continuoua ltlf!ll girder propertiel for canaideratkm COMPANY, 420 Third Avf - to feet -eta), c, R. Mn . foot Or 8 .981 mil•.
superstructure w;th rein- of purchMe to the G1llia M• enue,
Pavement Width: 2 ot 24
OoiiiPotlo.
Ohio
Llttlo lnd1en Crttk;
3 forced concrete deck and tropolitan Hou sirig Author- 461131, wMI offor for oalothe
loet:
. end
oubltructurnltfNinlloft : 72 ity.
"Tho dote oet for compl•
folh:&gt;wlng doocrlbed propBridgo No. GAL·C.R. 117B
foot - 0 inchoo, 91 loot - Oin- o 3 open contlnuouo con- tlon of thla work oholl be u
Pursuant to the Depart- orty :
chH. 72 foot • 0 inchM at ment of Housing and Ur· 19B8 Dodge W1110 PU,
crete tlob oupor_,.rw eot fonh in the bidding proC/ Ltui'VI'/: right : 651oot · 6 ben D.Velopment' 1 Regula- Sorlol II
with capped pMe obut-.,t polol.' '
inchoo. 86 foot · 61nchoo. 66 tions. the Authorrty is an- 1 87HW14Y6JS791128
Eoch bldllor ohal be re'
.end pltrt Copont 342 foot • o
foot · 6 inchoo at C/ L ourvoy. no~ncinga public invitation 1988 Ford Ronger PU,
lnohoo; 40 foot. 0 lnchot; 32 qu~d to file with hlo bid 1 -llooglo jlupa, ~7117.
rO.dway wMith variable) , U. .olicit ing the purchui of Soriolll
·
foot 0 lnchoo olong c/1, certlfted chock or -hlor' t
s. 36 ovoroxitting U. s : 36; land for the development of 1 FTBR10TOJUE218ZII
roodwey 44 foot - 0 lnchoo chock for an omount equol IIIIo. 11(-711N1D ollor lp.m.
and
flea to flee poropott), C. A. to flvo per cent of hi• bid, but
Thole vohld• wll be told
appr~ximately 40 units of
Bridge No. GAL-36-1388 single-family construction.
It the Jockaon lliko Offloo,
1178
Little lnclon CrHk In no ovont mora then fifty
L - 1 , 3 span continuous
thOuoond dolloro. or 1 bond tii·Utl. pu~1.r1 v:.-.,~
~~~~~;end
Thl!' ICquisition of tt;iis 370 Jockaon Pika, 0 . .1.
steel be•l!' bridge with rein - lend 11 on a voluntary b•il.
for
ton per oont of hlo bid,
Ohio 46831 . ot 10:00
No.
OAL-32&amp;forced concreto dock end Thot io, if a mutually ootiopey1bl1 to the Dlrectcw.
l'ullllloo to ~ homo. Pill
Saturday, Morch 10,
- 1 3 apan continuous
Blddoro muot opply, on the Auiolrollonlhiphonl. I wtoo. old.
-..Mtructure fi.-ns 47 feet· factory egreement c..,not 19110.
beom IAIIIBI oupor.
0 lnchoo, 17 foot - 0 inchoo, be roached botWHn the
oold · otNcturo wtth reinforced proper forma, -for quellflco- lt4oft:I.Mt.
Tho prOperty will
54 foot • 0 inchoo mO..urod Authority and· the aollor, the to tha high•t bidder "u il"
concN!t dock, T Typo plora. . tiona It .._t ton day a prior
along centerline of survey. Authority will not acquire whhout ony axprooood or
and lntogrol lbutmenta to the date set for opening
Employmcr1t Sr:rvrces
roadwoy 39 foot · 8 inchoo tho property.
lopeno 42 foot· 0 Inch•: 12 bide In occordonca with
Implied -rronty. Tho vohiloco to loco plfopotol. u. S .
foot - 0 In-; 42 foot 0 ln- Ch11pter 111126 Ohio Rovioed
Solloro will be required to cloo moy be 11 the
3&amp; over existing Ramp F.
ohn canter to •-=-nter bear· Code
11 .Htlp·w.nttd
waive any and all relocation Jockaon PMco Office of the
Projoctlength - 29.590.00 benoflto they may be eligible Ohio Volley Bonk ComplfiY
Plena end apoclflcotiono
lngo. roiodwoy 44 foot . 0 inin. f .. Of 6.604 mil•
choo f - to foca porllpeta). are on file in the Department
for under the Uniform Relo- up to tho doto end time of
Work length - 45,245.00 cation Auiltanee and Real ule.
S . R. 3211 over Unla lnclon of Tronoportotion end the ofCroak; ond
fice of the Dlotrlct Deputy AVON • An lin . feet or 8 .589 mlloo:
Tho OhiO Volley Bank
Property Acquisition PollCol llorllyn
Pavement w idth - 2 at 24 cl81 Act. except that the Compony ,...,... the rigl&gt;t
Director .
Weaver 301 1114111.
. ,Bridge ~a. OAL-311-0437
Tho Dlroctor ,....,.. the
foot.
Authority will bo required to to occept or reject ony or oil
Lla A - • 3 open coo1tino•ou:al right to reject any and all Couplo to live In nice '.' The date set for complebidland towtthdrawthiaw·
concrete alab supentruc- bide.
tion of this work Jhall be ••
hiclo from oalo prior to tho
turo with copped pRo obut·
utMM~-ondaot forth in the bidding pro· 2 ··. In Memory
BERNARD 8. H.UAST.
lllo. Tormtoflolo:CASHor
in on
lady, -nooo
montt ond ploro Ctpont 31
poul ."
DIRECTOR
CERTIFIED CHECK.
~
rs-ca~T•III•
loot
0
inchoo:
38
.
9
inFEB. 26; MAR . 4
Eoch biddar thali ~ reMAR. 4. 7, ond 9, 1890
lufti7H!IIichoo; 31 foot · 0 lnchoo
quir.ed to file with his bid a
In ~emory of
certified check or c•hier's
Auguttll J.cltoon
chock ·f or on omou nt equol
3 / 4/22-12/20/83
to fiva per cent of his bid, but
ANSWDS TO &amp;l:t'-.41~-,U.&amp;-s ~-'t
1nd .
in no event more than .fifty
Robert
Morrioon
ihouupd dolloro. or a bond
SCRAMLETS
3 / B/ 60-12/ 12180
for ten· per cent of his bid.
o~sa
on their bitthdoya.
payable to t!'e DirectOr.
JUNKER · 'Boy YC!U talk about a rough day, •
Today
we
thed
a
silent
Biddersmustappty, on the
MINNOW
guped the youngster. ' I hed a math
tur
I
proper forms, for quallfiC.ALMOST
quiz, aapelllng quiz and for lunch we
As
we
think
of
you.
tions 8t INit ten d1y1 prior
HELIUM had CAULIFLOWER!'
Thoro will bo no blnhday
to the date set for opening
cake;
bids in accordance with
SUCKLE
Onty dear memoriea of
Chopter 6525 Ohio Rtviaod
CAULIFLOWER
you .
•
Sedly miosed
June,

LAFF-A-DAY ·

NOTICE TO
CoNTRACTORS ·
STATE OF OHIO
OEPAATMENJ OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbln, Ohio
FObfUOIV HI. 1990
Controct Sol•
IAgol Copy No .. B0-277
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
~ P - I a will be
...,eluod at the office of the
Dlrectcw of the Ollio Depart·
mont ofTronapo-ion, Columbuo, Ohio, untl 10:00 A.
M., Ohio StMdardTlma. Fri·
day, ·March 23. 1990, for
improvement• in:
G ..tlo C'ouritv. Ohio. on
HCtiOn
GAL-36-8 .22 Ph111 II, U. S . Route 36 in
Springflold, Gr_, and Galli poli• Town•hips.
Gallia
·County, by groding, draining. paving with ••phalt

Public Bale

8

_

I

-

booldt!t ........ •·
0111ot. lf•o If, Woot

-1-

Wlnttcl tO Buy

-to11¥aln-en~

lldr. lllahl houaa ssorll

.,....Ill
----~~- ....
oor-Mp

to IIIIa In with -.y
eel Mon. thru
~&amp;.4:1117. Ill I ....

.

-

0111..roorto 0111o
Pallt Co. Puouaau,. OH.
~.
...,,~

-or\ ..

'PI D)ICta. 114-J41.1171.

''*'

0

u. a.

---P"PPI'·

:: "::'

..e

----pey

II

1 Cerci of Thank•

The family of Howerd
Wtll sends our sincere
tlllnkl to our fri111d1
tnd femily who helped
In eny WIY- with food,
cuds. visits, calls, etc.
Allo. Dink fOil to Dr.

htttl'lon end StJff at
Vtttrans Memorial Hospltll, Pomeroy Elltrpncy
Squid, 1nd
Friends from Glvin. Everythilll you hln done
1111 helped llllkt the
lllock of Howard's PH-

j

IIIII mort but1blt. MIY
Qod with •cb of y011.

Ttunlll, Amblr,

EIIDbttll, Doris,
Gwin•lt

3 Announc:emeng

In Lovin&amp; Memory of

MACK LAYNE'

who passtd away
March 4, 1987

5

Adl

POSITION ··
AVAILABLE IN ·
MEIGS COUNTY
Experienced .in Typing, Filing.
FULL nME EMPLOYMENT ·
IENIFIIS

8

-.,

••

.

.

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

:• .

Clllld Care in my - . rnuot be
· - hDme.
or ..,_.ncea
- oloift,
Chrtltliln
114-4411-ZIM• .

APPRENTICESIIP OPENINGS
CAIPINTD LOCAL NO. 650
POMEROY, OHIO
REQUIREMENTS:
Not loostliao 17 pwo of ego.

AGE :

•

High Sohaol Oipl- or Gontral
Eoluoation llowliaprn..t E~uluoiMOt
C.tificatt.
·

EDUCATION:

1oko •d ••• tho Qoolifyirog l•t

TEST:

•

_ ...

APPLICATIONS .

s15.00 Apfoli. . looo ... r.......

COST:
0

payable to South Ctotral

PUBLIC AUCTION

01

Dirodoll •4 .,1wwlorr.

Jindra Winecy..Restaurant. .

2701 Camba Rd., 6 mi. S. of Jackson on SR. 93.
then west 1 mi. .
.

ciloia Dillrict

c..nc11 Jalot APIIf.,.laolito

Sat., March 10, 10:00 A.M. ··

Camn11oo.· Only Mtnoy Ordwt. •4

STAINLESS STEEL: 3 sec. sin~ Jables. Janks, !able service.
COOKING: Microwaves. range. heat lamps, deep fryer,-.bun
, warmer, 6 burner w/double,oven griddle &amp; brrn1er. elec.
gridtjle, 2 bay fryer, grease finer. slit:er &amp; .car~ iron pot &amp;pan •
• rack.
.
·
.
'
, REFRIGERATION: Counter lop, 15 cu. It ref.. pop cooler. 3
' lreezers, double freezer. sm, walk-in ref.. 6' hood 2 fans. I'
. hood w/ fan.
·
·
' KITCHEN: Bowls. plales, glasses. alum. pols, misc. suppli es,
. 3 comm, dishwashers, cash register: .
,
; WINERY: Carboy~ botllelrees, spray washer, corker. bottler,
' seales. centriiuge, bottles, winemaker crusher.
FURNITURE: Counters. lables, over 150 chairs. shelves,
fans. cabinets. beds. sola &amp; chair. hall trees, 110 btu a.c.,
·Somma Qu.' water mat &amp; springs.
.
ANTIQUES: Icebox, lard press, church pew, old signs, dis·
play case. W oak table. crates.
FARM TPOLS: 6' scraper blade. 60 gal. sprayer, post driver,
6" hole digger, farm gales. Iorch, wire, transi, birdcannons,
·s· stakes. pine piJsts. 5 hp. motor 31 converter.
LLOYD AUCTIONS:Jerry L. Lloyd, Auctioneer

Apjllctliono wl bo 1ok01 .........
....,, Aprl 2, 1990, lor twt 121
....... """" lor .. ,. llw ••
...... W I tl ;. frl4or toOO AM. to
11:01 AM. •41.00 PJI.tt SoOO PJI.
Apply at tho South C101ral Ololo
Dio1rict Coord tf Cllf,.nt•t JAC
Olfico 11. U94 C.trltht l1oH:
Colu...~ Ololo 4S227.
16141 216-4205.-

WHEN:

WHERE:

EQU.AL OPPORTUNITY

Our rapid growth as the area's ~ewest and fi·
nest Skilled Long Term Care Facility has
generate&lt;) opportunities for RN's, arid LPN's,
to become a part of a responsive, well m~­
naged Health Care Delivery Team.
Come for a visit, talk to us about your experience, and we will talk to you ab;Jttt Overbrook's competitive wages and benefits offered on what is truly a "State of the Art"
Nursing Facility.
. ,
Stop by for an interview, or phone Sally
Gloeckner, D.O.N., at (614 ) 992-6472, and let us
show you that all nursing homes are not alike.

.

.

••

·E STATE
AUC'i10N

••

SATUADAY, MARCH 10, 1990 =·· ~
10~00A.M.

333 Page Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760

LOCATED AT 2408 UNCOLN AVENUE,
POINT PL!ASANT, WV
TIN bat. Of 17M .r.t. U.

I.

. EOE

·••'

.

•

U.S. Health Corporation of Southern
Ohio opportunitocs..., the ulk o(thc
rown. We olftr nunes the opportUnity to
pnctia: their skilla in a wick variety of
oreos. nx.. include:
• Critical Can:
• Emergmcy Services
• Swgical Services
•Home Can:

•Hospice
• Pcdiatric:s

..

chars and Chlr)a hutch, MahOgany trunk. beoulifiA 2
pc. Metcalfe Bras. Early Am8flcan lvlng room rtUte.
same as new. telephone stand, MahOgany coffee
table and end tables. reclin8f. corner shelf. 25" ZeMh

•

•.

-'
c

color console TV. black ald white portable TV, maple

••"
•..

roCker. tables, Hat Pont Frost Free refrlgerotor. KeMnaelectric range. water fall &lt; t - and Chell.

lo&lt; 40"

~

maple Mille bed complete. 3 pc. !&lt;roehler IWin ~
loom rUte. 3 pc. maple bedroom rtUte. metal cCJt1inet •.
Whi~paol wolhel and dyer. ll.tll. g(OIIWCI!e, Fenton

...
•

•~

•Mcdicall~

• Hcmodialysia
• Psychiatric Services
•Women's Health
• &amp;habilitnion ·
'
Ow' benefit pwty
indudos • com~· tiw:·
salary' acdlcnt health and dentll
'
· eip wub individaalized orienta11011 .
wtth prax:ptot, Nilion lllimnc:c, lllx·
cldC:u~ annuity, and much lllllll:.
Send your lO lCan=n Wtlbum,
u.s. He.lth 'Corporarion of Southern
Ohio, ll48l(lnneys Wlc, Poramouth,
Ohio 46662, or Ail (614) 353-.2131,
0

ll•

•'

-•per.

electric broom. cloCks. m1-: broler oven. colfH
mak•. lneN. tawelt. bedlpeod. step
2 hi~
~

•001.

chan. lew hand looll. stepladder, coot.

and more.
0

AVC1'10NWHIIC1CIU lit·
, RI~ P~N .AUCTION CO.
! .. LUNCH
MAlON, \W 773-6)86 . .

EDCUTOBI PAVL~Y
IEIMI: Calli 01 CMck wiCh I.D.
Hoi IIIII DT ltll ror Anl~lllll Or

a. 01 Ploperly

l.lotttH'Itiii ..... IICllllt.K• .. ,W..VliiWo ....

"•"'"
I

,.

.,

1;11a11 type bo011. r~. Pink o.pr.-an cupe. a.
18111. 1r11 pitcher. Pink Deprelllon craCk• jar, GnMI
pepr81110n IUgCir and creomer. large balket. KeMna-:•
tor dehumidifier. heater. fan. HOOY8f
Hoanr
bOCk

•

•• Lift YH.

wn•a.•fd

r•at,

HOUSOIOLD6MI'Cfl1 HIEOUS: 8p¢. 8r1Ckwedgedning
room rtUte. cOfllisllng of &lt;top leaf Iable and 6 carved

f

• Matmlai/Chiid Can:

(614). 2$6-1229
Licenslll &amp;Bonded in Ohio

Lunch .Serwd-C.1h or Ohio Ched!
Plrt ial Ustin&amp; for all diY sele.

OVERBROOK CENTER
""

~

Louis V. Jindra, Owner

C•tifittl Chtckt Acaptt4.

, , MClr.IICIMJ ......

WOLFF TAIININQ BEDS
Commerclll Home Unhe, From
1118, LAmpo, Lolionl, AeCH- .
· Monthly f'!iy . .nt. Low
ao .tl.oo Col TOdaY. FReE
Color Colotogl 1-I00-221-t2t2.

Comp lete

the

HolMe, 111118 13140.

Tho llaanl or Truat- al Oolo •
Hill Commun"y _ , c.Mr •
Ia ollorlng tor ulo end -

tlng bkle lor the prapeny c.n- .
liltl~ of I re 'd 1101 1NI . .
proximatelY lour ocrw
on old Rt. .S5 _ , lha l n l tlon O! • • IOUII 271, juol loot •
ol lho - l c Bulldlno In 1111

chvckle overed

-ad

oy fdltnQ ir~ tke m•n•ng words
..1---'----1. you deve lop !rom step No. 3 be row .
1

'

W/,~ .'&lt;if ~-d
' -~~~~'.

.54 MiacellaiiiOUB
Mlrchandiae

Directions: From Pomeroy, Dh.take s.R: 124-Westto
Rutland . Sale is on main draa. Sicns will be posted.
•
ITEMS.NOW CONSIGNED
.
, 1976 International 1700, 345 engine. 5 &amp; 2 trills .• 10'
dump. 1967 Ford F600. 300 6 cyl.. 4 speed, a· dump, 16· tri·
axle dove ·tatl equip. trailer. 1980 Ply: Horizon.
New &amp; used lurnitpre &amp;•rpli111e11. tools &amp; miie. items. .,
Consianmillts , takMI til 12:00 aoon. diY of sale. .
· Sale will be outside roin or shine.
AUCTIONEER: COL W. kEitH MOLDEN
Ohio #4318
W. Va. #863
614-742-2048
Now Boo kina Sprina &amp;Summer Siles
UCIIIsed in Ohio &amp;West Yir&amp;inia
Eats
·•
Cash
Pos. I.D.

•

a.-.

J·Y

vllltgt of Contorulllo. llliio ·
bl In wolllng oddroo- to 1111
Admlnlolnlor of 0.~ Hln Com- .
munl1y -lcol Ceft!!!o atCI .
Chlrklttl AwnUJ~, OUI ,.., Ohio '•
411151. Bleil will be I o p1M ....,

1111111 .1 1111

•

SALEM ST., RUTLAND, OHIO ·

Help Wanted ·

·:Boy you talk about a rough
day: · gasped t he youngster. "I
had a math quiz. a spelling

111 12:00 ,_.,, Frlcleyc:::.:; '
301h 1110. 0011 Hill
.
.

haa lho rlaht to accope or ,...
any or Ill tildl.
.

Public Sale

SUNDAY, MARCH 11, 1990
1:00 P.M.

11

Colllt4-ft2.ZIIII4.
Lo1 wllh 2 - . I n III-Io.
!lcoriouo
, _ .....,. Coil .,...
112-2211 , ClooRoducod Skyline · ....ionl!l.
;lk48, dloploy . ..... .
aaoo. Fronch c"' ·

q
__u__iz____a__n_d1., for lunch we had

9

l 0
L._ _.___._
_ -J.--

.., - · - -. - 1 1 4 117·7441.

&amp; Auction

•

'

O. . k. Firat- Child Care In

-llno-

711011.

In PoiMI'Of• ....., NIIIOIIIIId.

...

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Uruft

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'liory 8"":11opponun11y ~an'"' poro 117.._
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ng to
lor lo ...., "" non
ollloo. Tlolo w • training,
...... llciiOift.

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BCEPTIONIST .POSITION
NOW lVAIUILE

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.
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Land conti'IICt. 3 'a I I ADM hDina

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"Never mind, the phone
stopped ringing."

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•HoiP
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up ond worft around 11111)

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tilollio ·'t
ouanlL
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peiliple .lair
jobl • -~ llooli!llo •

A L L - - - 1 1 - I n Pro 1MO. ~ Atw oond.lon. "
DEAIJUIII: J:(IG p.m. CMtl Paid. C.l 114-MI .M I7 or
lito dey ....... lha ld lo .. ""'· l14-lt:llatl1 .
~ .,
.,ndoJ
II:IKI ~.m. .
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p.m. lolurdo)·.

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~-:,.....,.;17,....:;..1..:..:..,;1;.....:yl-::..,lr-1

Will do oleonlng. or
- . . . Doyt or avonlngo. 11'241-1171 .
'

~..., _ . .,

I" ,.

I I

841 . . Rood. £ ....... ,., I
,...,.., , 114-44WMI.

-

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a VIcinity

ana

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1:10 1:10 ....... ....,
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lnlonnlllon

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Vlrglnll, -71M711.

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Wonllll to do:.
..... .....,..,. . 114-371-22tf.

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....... - 1 :10 p.no. . _ 2'ol-t0.
- . oft• llllocrcr[ llnlpolno

a Auction

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

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-

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Bf.~to!~ '. INvt.SfMENlS · cOMMeRCIAl ; fNWI:I

. 23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

.BUVOUTS..ClOSEOUTS~SECON0$1
.

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER , 388· 8826
RUTH GOODY. REALTOR. 379· 2628
DIAN CALLAHAN. REALTOR , 266-6261
EUNICE NIEHM. REALTOR, 446-1897
RUTH BARR. REALTOR. 446-0722
LINDA SKIDMORE, REALTOR, 379-2686
DEBORAH SCITES, ASSOCiATE , 446· 8382
LYNDA FRALEY , ASSOCIATE, 448-7499
11\QB MOBI~E HOME AND LOT OYER LOO~NG THE RIVER on Rl. 1 il&lt;llh 101
thf' l~w nn~e ot Sl6.000. Call us for delails and an aooointment to set 1ns1de

•G DISCOUNTS

Owner wr ll .land cont ract. Don't mrss·thrs deat

11441. OWNER SAYS LETS MOVE IT - REDUCED DRAS11CAUY - Has 3

1/l'x4'd' PANBJN&amp;:
.
four pattii'M to chOOH from .............." .. 14.99 eo.
MASONITJ HAIDIOARD PANEliNG 4'ri8'
Reg. 112.95 .- .... .................... NOW 15.95' &amp; 14.95
lATH TIE IOAIO 4'd'
ThrH calon te chooso from ....................: 15.99 eo.
All WOOD PANBING
.
St..-al pattii'M to choolt from ..............,l6.95 up
7/16"x4'xl' WAFIRIOARD ........................ '6.95 .a.
·
25 pes. up 15.95·
ll..'.x4'xl' mx PlVWOOO ..:.. 113.95 25 pes. up 112.95
·llt"x4'xl' T.. ROUGH SAWID !IDING ..........I13.95 ea.
·•
25 pts•. up 112.95
1/l'x4'xl' ExTEIIOR GlUED PLYWOOII
c
Smooth on one side 'll.95 1111 .
PlYWOOD .PANElS 'll"xl71/4''x61 I{• .............. 11 .50
? •
. f•
25 fltlo ilp IJ.25 IIIIo
4'xl'.' TIEATBI LAnKEIPANElS . .............. I8.95 1111.
.
25 pts. up 17.95 1111.
'l•~'x4'xl' OAI PlYWOOD Clllinot Gt'lllo 139.95 oa•.
EMIOSED, WOODGRAIN HARDIPAl.D·SIQING
. .
Silver gray, l"ir7/16" long J2.99 1111.
BRUC£ NMEI 1 COMMON RED OAI FLOORING
11.75 to $1.95 sq. fl.
. PREFINISHED, NO. 1 SB.ECT ~ED OAI FLOORING
13.99 to 14.35 sq. fl.
PREFINISHED RED.OAI PARQUn TILE FLOOIING
· 5/16"•12"xl2" S1.60 Ia 12.00 sq •. fl .
BROWN EXTEIIOR PUSnC SHunERS
.
Mort si111 lo choose from. 14'x67" 19.95 Pain.
INTERIOILOUVERED PINE SHUnERS )"x36"
Mort sires to choose from:
S2, 10 eo.
PATIO .DOOII GlASS PANRS
Insulated. 'll"x46"x76' · w/Grid1
135.00 eo.
TUn -SHELD COftUGATED PVC ROOF PANELS
GrHR, 5 OL 11'.11.95) 110'.110.95) (12 -'12.95)
7 ftc. MAHOGANY TEARDROP CASING ............. 11.00
7 PC. PINUOLONIAL CASING ................. :........ 11.99
PREFIN1St11D ....o................" ......................... '1.•99 ea.
(lase) ICcning) (Crowl) Cove) Choin-raill
THERMAL PANE ALUMINUM WINDOWS .......... 149.95
White &amp; brown. Examplo: 36"x60". 500 hundred
· tom- from •
6:'xl"x12' snROFOAM IEAMS .......... .129.95 eo.
GAll VAIIIIS ... Ex.,.W. 35" w/onorl!lt top SS99.00
14 Calm: Nattkal, Almond, While, Silveri
60" 0A11 STAIRI IITCNEN ........................I166.45
.With 2 wallt (lase) ·&amp; Countor Top.
STEEL, FIIEIIGlASS ar PVC lATH TUIS- •• '59.95 ea.
Wlite or eaton. Whll1 supply lasts.
WllllPOOliA'111TUIS. w/1/o hp molor ...... 1399.95
0

c........, plumlltd.
.
3 VERY GQOD USED MEL OFFICE DESIIS

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

beclrooms , bath, hardwood floors. carpet rn bedrOOms, ooen beMJ rPthnP

western cedar cerl mgs. u\rlt~ roolfi, closed 1n pmclt Has 27 lt. m/ lrn Green
T own~ h rp Reduced' 11om $65.000 to ,lU st $49,000.00. W(NI! They do want to

se;ll.
11544. \IIY ESTORS LOOK AT THIS. - Two st!J'y homern the crtww(h 5 Units of
rental property It you need tu wule ot1. you mrRhl consrder 11!ntal pl'opertr.
kikrng $65,0QO.OO. Income !rom renlill appro~. Sl lOO11 month.
#5.3 BEAUTifUL OLD£R BRICK HOM£. In town. 2 1rreplaces. beaulrhil
hard~ood HoorS. lu ll anrc, lOvelydrnmg room wrth burll·m hutch. No dnYe·bys·
- Appo~ntments only. Over $100.000
1147. THE HOME WITH PRESIIGl OUlSIAIIDINGAMENIIIES. lust nave to
see mslde to ap pi'ecr;Jte the beaut~ and Quahty ol lhrs tovel~ 3 or 4 bedr oo m.
tovetv eauiooed k~che n. 2 hreotacts . IM.r&amp;und oool. unat11 ched Rall ~e.le.
pond. Can buy acres ¥nth house. Appomtmenl only . Over S100.000. Call and
m11ke your apoomtment to se4! ou r Best HOMES.HAVE OVER S100.000 homn
m town and out wrth or without acres.

•

eu•

11446 THIS RA•CH HAS
iiEDUC£0. Would make ucellent retirement
nom e', tust a lew tmn. from hospital, s.hoppiOH. bank mg, an d entetta rnment.
ths 3 bedrooms, 11.!;! batl\5. lovely yar d. Pnced at $47,500. 'h ~ c. lot more or
less Crty school d1s.lrd.
J~

..........".....

W
465. ALL BRICK 'RMOI - ThiS rs a nrce home and a f111 P'r:te. 2 Ig.
bedrooms, lg, bath, I~ pantry. livrng room 12xl7, nrce lg. eal·tn kit., 2 Clr
~ar au attached with breezewa y. approx. 8 1111. down St. Rt. 218. Can lor
siiQwing loda~. As.k rng 145,000.

.

150.00-175.00·S1 00.00
INTEIIOI HOlLOW ·CORE DOOR lilA MIS
lirch, O.k, Lua~ 1-G"*t •5.00 to''10.00 oa •
OAI &amp; MAHOGANY LEAD GlASS DOORS
.
1-Gradts
1199.95 oa.
,PIEHIQIG INSULATED STHL PANEL EXTERIOR DOORS
175.00 Ill.
PIENUNG INSIR.ATED SlHL DOORS w/GlASS
1119.95
PIEHUNG INSULATED STHL DOOII w/sWtlito
.
1119.95
PIEHM ST&amp;l DOOI-DOOilE SIDE LIT£.... 1325.00

'.
1514. NIW US! lNG - LOOI WHM 1&amp;.500 CA118UY!I - 1913 .
motile home wrth LR. 2BR{, bath, eat·rn ktt., JJORe. ref., oult)ldg. Call
rnforiNIIton.

,..... sr• DOlE DoOIS u a~-:......1299.95 .
PIIIUIII All WOOD PINt &amp; HEaOCI PANB. AND
8WS iliUM ~-~-·- ..,...1175.00 11•
1'1111111 Ill WOOD .._ 1101115 _ ...-.1139.95
lbtlrier)WIIIt ....,.11111,
..
l'llliiiG All MIDD fW OYMIUIIED GWS DOOIS
Oalt F ' '299.95
PIEIIIING INTERIOI PINE PANB DOORS
Fr1111 159.95 to 11 U.OO
I'IIHUNG INTIIIOI HOllOW COlE DOOIS
. S.. ,_.,AI Sbot and Fi*ltn
, 129.95
DIEIIGi Pnll11/l' 111CI DOOIS - ......199.95 11.
9 lte, ~ and crot1llur:k.
29 GA. PAINTID IOOflNG AND SIDING 35" wldo
(1'.111.95) 110'-113.95) 112'..S16.951 114'.119.951
29 GA. GAL . IOOFING AND SIIING 31" widt
. (I'.SI.9SJ 110~·111.95 112'.113.951

1512 STill -IIG 10 ll'lt IN THE CDUIITII'I1 Now o lhe " "' to do
someitunaaboot ~. Mt ke an appon'ltmenl to see Ills lovely home .nd the 25
ll:ftl Mlf ll's satuat.ed on Perllrd place tor anvone whD ~kn the bell!ty and

q""' olllol cooiiiY Ctll uotar """' d&amp;Un. SIJ.OOO.
_
AfiVIDMLi QUALm on Wolllfilo Tho - home hos '~"
wDom. and one bllh. new vrnyl srd1~&amp; an ~ "•~ hl:at.. You coukltrw
in it as DDt restore to ill termer be111ty. House rs ;tlllted oAtwoiCitS and hts • ..
lorllf 11\rtbUd~n&amp;lpr•llf on ~operty . $28.000.

-

�.'

•

~.

•·

Pllge--0-4-Sunday T1111811-Sentinel

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

m

'N' CARLYLEe .,. L1rry

44

j

1980

--

Aplrtment
torRent

••

Mlrchandlll
1&amp;11 ...... llllllod lar • I lan

lruok.ll--

45

Fumlehld

•

11~1117.

tor Sale

...........
,...._..
... O!IIY
.......
n-.
Four

Rentals

100111

.........

POO.

41 Houses tor Rent

148:'70. turnllilhed, ...,.. Cl, 2bt,
pootlollr, lun*hod, muot -•o
-!ole. 114~-. 11 ..
~11L

·

1m laftultz 1ZXU . ,•• .,..,.,
CIA, WMCI bu.,.,, opplflncot,
.. _
111c1g, :~~~W75-3010 or
'

3 . llodrliam houoe

In Muon,

1250. month 1150; depooh.

.

1173 · 2 BR, ~ condftlon,
~ · tumlolled, porch, vinyl
10odlfplnnlna. hi born bldg.

$11oe:I1......,_L

-·~
ft• .,, ............. L. .

.-.ulloetlll..f~

..... -..... ...... . 1111_,,

32 Mobile Home~

....

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

'

:·••.......
.,.,., Cllao
-·
,....; "...........
17.10plllo
....- ........ - · l l · ·
CoMo T.¥.11 ......... 1.

81'1 I Ihi I Apartlnlftte. 1 lA,

~,

Racrn•

Sllown o...,lllgo SOWTI-3000
or 17W277 """' 1:00.

_

1 - - · 14•72. 2 br, 2 full
Mtha, tat81 •ectlrc:, 111 MW fur·
nlllft, CA, diohWuhar rock
..,., - · 114 44i 1187,
114-i...-,L.-ve ~·•·

.....

:'.:.:·"''.:::=
~:""'

"*1111, ... ulllhiM

p.~&amp;d.I14-IU .. .I.

PI ...
•
~
¥1•

Fum. Apl. 1111· ulllhloo polcl.

Uplltalrw.e14 ~·· 1123.
,1br, Nil wa adbwnlng fJrerMce,
luml-, d ulllllloi pofd, InCludinG ....... kiMI .... - ...,..
~ l'OIIor'o • - 110m&lt;1

....... 1~1802.
'

IOUJI.
1 or lll•n

No.1·Two ll11hotft ·apt 1280.
llo.
:1-1\oo
b
,...,.,_
and ......
114 ....
1

-

•

""'

1:1110. Town _, COunlrJ Roll
Eelolo, -f-65411.

.

2 llodroom aptio. tor nnt ci~
pllllld. Nloo -Int. laundry
laolihloa ovolla..... Ciolll1 ..11112-

3711 EOH.

.

LMp1aat d-lumlolllcl

!led.

rwnilhld
Elltoloncy, . 701
l'aurih Qollpollo, - . .obltll,
1110• . UIIAIIM pold, .,....._

1---------,........;------~ ..:.":..:.ll:..:•;;.:ftor:..:..:.!7p.m=·------,

..

. Extellent for

Hou• In Point PIMaant 2 llodrooma, •m•ll ttou. In aood
cond. alto mobUe home c.on, .

1.240 ACRES·More or Less Some woodland. Hot res·
tricted. Emllent buildihg s~e. Only $4,000. . .

WV, 3 blldroomo, 1200. monthly,
goad cand, lully oloctrlc, a~

3 wHh 121110 lrtllor With for Nlo ~,soo. &amp;1-...&amp;-1130 ot.
12124 _ , llddHion. Socond lor 5:30PM.
lraUor hook-up on laf. Phanl
114·74:1-2413 doyo; IIH42·
2114 ...nlngo. .
Ront or Salo: EuNkl 3 or 4br
houao, 1 112 hlltho, 1285/mo.
Far
cfeF. r.q'd. 81 ......222.

NEW

Beautiful cou11~
in Langs·
viii!, l lh story hOme with 3 bed·

2.150 PLUS- Not restricted. Hannan Trace School Dis·
lrict. , ·
·
'

Jooms. l.R .• O.R., eai·!O k~chen. One
car gantt. Good OOy In mid 20's.

RENTAL- 3 bedrOom mobile home. Country setting. Se.'
cur~y depos~ and reference. $225.00 per m~nth .

'""''"_,I

o.:;.=,.=·.""•"'~,-:-b::-uo"'Hot:--mo-:-••-.-=OUoi--=IIY-I 42 Mobile Homes
~~.. ~ O:tl..-.,:
tor Renl

•-Ina

211odroom- honrolarrom
Sond till! Rood, 304.ji7Wi34.
2 llodroom trollar lor Not, allo
· - Clolo) lor ,.., 31M:41 7•
1.071. ..

=. . . . . .-. -·
2

bodroomo,

~odu~r

home, 2 bedroomS, LR·DII.

kitchen. Excellent tomition. Elce~
lent location. Abo new ·apanment

tll lldin11 on S~me property in real
good condition. All loCated on 1·1/S
acre. Well insulated, plenty, of park·
·
to sell Quick in on\~ the

lB

.~

REALTOR'
'·

.Judy

1..:1

- ({?hobeh

IIIIIM lllfSIIIIC
rJrPDRtUNIU

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

HOME FOR RENT with option to buy. City properly. 3bed·
rooms, !Yibaths,lR, nice backyard. 2 car g•age. Deck
area; Call tor more details.
·

Two
-on
m
form Rd.
-ono
·
Locotlld
Ita CrMk
milo - h lit e-n Chp.
Pllone:l1 .....1232.

bridal, Jet..~
77aRL 2, 304.z73.5135.
KI-BURY HOME SAW.
.113,100 Will bu~
now 141170, 2
or 3 bldrQOm
, fumlshed,
ca~ •ncl cabineta.
.,.:...,.~.!.0: Ill
P
··~
Sol: 1188 Clayton, 14.aO,
Zbr, Wilking
. dlol111&lt;0.1. lo Rio
G...... Unl,.,.IIY.
owollabla.
French
Chy
· - - · 11-1340.
s.o.. • 11000, now a.p~an;
14il~!~ 1 112 baltr, cllln l
Ill.
City Mobllo IU 411 8340.

You've aot to see 10 ap~Je:'iate it!

•

lum-. AIC,

JUST LISTED! - LOCATED AT SR 5,1 APPAOX. 1 IILE
FA~M TOWN - ·1 acres plu$ a 3 bedroom vinyl sided home.
livin~ rotim, Mchen, family . room. basement. Excellent
buil'dmg s~es.
•
· #2815

SPRING IS JUST AROUND THE CORNEA - Now is the
time to take a look at this well kept home. 3 bedrooms, 2
bat~. living room, family roo(n, complete kitchen w~h
appliances, 2 car garage. Nice ffat yard, easy to mow.
Also top of ground. swimming pool. City schools. Priced
60.'s.
·

SOUTHERN HILLS REAL ESTATE, INC.

THIRD AVE. - Nice 3 bedroom home. Ideal to raise a
Living room, family room, new kitchen. Priced in

JUDY hWm, 110111 .

r.1erchand1SC

..... !

··· -----~-1

.

.·: 51

446-6624

2br -~~ HorMin ANL
D.po111 Roqulnlld. 814-311-

'

2br - ' " " . . _ . raqUirlld,
114-:IN-11122.

.

Mobllo Homoa lor Nil or Nftl.
...... 1878 Ford 3/4 loft plclc-up.

THE PRICE IS RIGHT - Discover the love and
beauty in this home. Treed lot, l 'h story construe·
tio~. 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, I ll story construction,
5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, l'h baths, drilled well, submergible pump and a circle driveway. ONLY
$22,000.00.
#2783

SOPHISTICATED LUXURY IN NATURAL SUA·
ROUNDING$! - Almost brand new spacious
bi-level. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, family room, 2 car
garage. approx. 2 acres and more. Begin a
leisurely room-by·room tour of this remarkable
home today.
#2779

.ALMOST NEW!!!- Very nice . mobile home
·114'x70'). Living room, ·2 baths {garden tub I. builtin stereo system. cathedral ceiling 1n dining and
living rooms, underpinned , plus 2 porches laP·
prox. 22'x8' and 8'!12'1. Nice flat lot. Immediate
possessiOn. City school system. Ideal location. Call
today for appointment. Priced in the upper $20's.
#2794

PRICED IN THE MID $20's- 4\l acres just outside of Gallipolis city limits, SR 141.5 rooms and
bath. 3 bedrooms, ctty water and natural gas. The
land needs to be developed. House needs some
tender hving care. This is one yi!Ur can own as rea·
· sonable as possible. Call us today if the temperature is above zero.
#2792

114-tez.7471.

Real Estate General

Al39
OWNER WANTS OFFERS - MUST SEll •
Newer 3 bedroom ranch on 3 acres,, large country
kitchen, 2 full baths, large fireplace located between
Pomeroy &amp; Athens.
CALL Kim 698·1082

-•

ATHENA HILLS, REALTORS
1010 Cook Drive: Athens-$94·3543
Resl Estate General'

PRICE REDUCED!- If rou have been looking
for a home that will give.YI!U room to ~tretch
out, this is it. Feat4res in this home are
equipped kitchen, formal dining, den, lovely
living room ~ith fireplace, dinette, bath, 3
BRs. The full basement is finished and oHers
bath, laundry, roomy, attractive family room.

ALL BRICl- JUST OFF RT. 35- CLOSE TO
HMC AND SHOPPING- Attractive home, in a
neighborhood, offers 3 BRs, . bath,
-equipped kitchen, LR, dinette, fireplace. new
2 car attached garage. gas heat and

air.

JUST LISTED! WHY WAIT?- Here's.the home for
Y.OU. Situated at the edge of town. 11h story vinyl
sided 3 beejroom home. Extensively remodeled.
Step saving kitchen complete with appliances in·
eluding dishwasher. 2 baths, family room, natural
gas heat, well insulate~. 2 storage buildings. Over
I acre lawn. Plus much more. Act now'

~

Appllt ~ _Inc. Good
.... tppllaRctt, T.V. HIL Ollen

,..., I Lm. to l cp.m. Mort-8111. •1+
- 1 - . 127 llnL A¥1. Qol.
llpollo, OH

2817

-.

•.
'

23 LOCUST ST•
.4.46-68.
06
t: .. :N\t
,.,

\, r _,,
'''. i !

'"

. "\;

acres, approx.
,
Gallipolis city school Olilstrllct,
sale. .. $48,000.00.

...

A REAL CHARIER- 1.87 acres m/1, and an
attractive country style home just a couple of
miles from HMC on Rt. 35. features indude 3
or 4 BRs, bath, LR, kitchen, DR and FR. fireplace, gas heat, 2 car garage.

lAKE THIS YDUR CHANGE OF ADDRESS! Attractive home just minutes from town offers
1368 sq. ft.,'3·8Rs, 2 baths, eat-in k~chen. di·
nette. family room, living room. laundry,
cathedral ceiings, fenced yard.

•

BLACKBURN 'REALTY
514 Second Avenue
""····...
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
·:··· ''Phone: (614) 446-0008
. Ranrty Blackburn, Broker

_,, ,. .
... . .,.,.•· .• ·~;':"'~~t
.-o'+'"
;( · ,o;;.&gt;&lt;·
_

I home includes living

1

new hardwood floor, ceilingian, cou ntrv kitchen wit hwalrtul
· 3 BR . 1''1 baths. lull basement, wood 1urnace and

24.1.48 new barn. Lots of fruil treees. Pnced at only

ALL BRICK,+ 2.15 ACRES +SMALL POND
and JUSt 5 minutes to downtown - Lovely
home at the edge of town offersLR with wood·
burning fireplace. very nice k~chen, din ette.
bath, carport, g;IS heat. cent. air, Hasement.
many more features also. Call for.an appoint·
ment and details!
.

.

-~
--::~~~-~~·

,. .

'

I

DUE TO 'fHE SALE
OF SEVERAL.
HOMES, WE' NEED
'
N,EW LISTINGS. •

COMMERCIAL LOCATION· AL_~~:~~~~n~
Hosp.. I acre, M. or L., w'1th 2
rriay assist fi·
nancing lor approved purchaser. Buy now for $115,000.00 .
ACREAGE!!! 4-1.~ wooded acres. situated within Perry Twp.
Estimated timber value: $10:000.00. Deer country II Buy now
for $18,800.00.
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CONDOMINIUM: 1st Floor, 2·bedrin. Condo; 2 baths, cent.
A/C, heat pump, custom cabinets, dishwasher, disposal, util·
1ty rm., c arpo~ . Call for ·more.information.
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3 SEDAM. HOllE WIHT CARPET - Approx. i .4 acre.
Situated along Africa Road. Price was $25.000. Quick sale.
Price $21 ,500.00.
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SPLENDID HOME AND 13:37 ACRES,Ii/L~
Spacious ranch stY.Ie home features 3-4 BRs, 2
baths, equipped k~chen, FR. OR, LR, fireplace,
carpet. heat pump plus wood, central heating
system, air cond., 20x45 pool, unattached RBI·
age. This could be just the one for vou if you
want pnvacy and space.

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GIVE US A CALL IF YOU WOULD BE INTERESTED'
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IN SELLING YOUR HOME.

NEW LISTING - 2 bedrm. house with upstairs dorm., 1\\
baths, fully furnished, newly remodeled, new carpet, with ·
new range and refrig Full basement.,Near Tycoon Lake. Buy
now for $36,900.
PRICE REDUCED- I acre with older mobile .home. county
water, no septic system, located along Rt 160 near No~h
Gallta school. Price: $13,000.
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83.2 ACRE
SALEM TWP .. IEIGS , .. ~...,-)~.:.,&gt;;,.,
COUNTY- Large two story home with 5 BRs, p'R C
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LR, kitchen, vinyl si~in&amp; storm windows. Two
I EREDUCED TO 65, .1- BeaultfuiL·
barns on property
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shaped bnck.,AII rooms large. Eat·tn kttchen,
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•• formal dlnin&amp; LR w/FP, 3 BRs, Ill baths, at·
' lathed gaiage.

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NEW LISTING: ·10 acres, Perry Twp. Some timber. Buy now
for $10.000. ·

VILLAGE OF RIO GRANDE- 6 room home
and ..7666 acre. m/1. Features include LR;
FR, k~chen. laundry rm .. gas heat, vinyl sid·

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6.5 ACRES, WITHIN THE CITY OF GALLIPOLIS situated '
along Garfield Ave. Site in eludes 2 building lots, w/city wa·
ter·sewer. Buy now for $30,000.00.

in~

' LOCATED IN GREEN TWP .. Graham School Rd.
118 ACRES
Super .view! $44.000:.

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LODK AT THIS! JUST $34,9001 - Very nice
home near Greeo Elementary School. Allrac·
MAY BE IN YDUR PRICE RANGE- Very nice • tive felllures include LR, k~chen w/stove and
home offers 2 BRs, LR, k~chen, b.. h. attached ·.refngerator, 2 8Rs, bath, 2 car attached gar·
age. Call today.
garage. small hot ho~se. concrete block shop.
Corner lot.
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36.5 ACRES Ill, CLAY TWP. - front11e. on
friendly Ridge Rd. Old house on land.
$\8,000.

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Linn

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Broker.

CAll US1111G Aflllrl, JESSI VAIL
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592·2466 01
AMJIS IULR 592·1146
UNIA w.-r, IIOIEI

4 ACRES 1011£ DR LESS- Harr~on Twp. Call
for details.
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141 ACRES M/L, HUNTINGTO!fTWP.- Ap· lOT FOR SALE ..:. Morgan Sisters Rd . .
prox. I mile of ~onta·ge on Raccoon Creek. l:fll for details, Some bottom land, black walnut.
119.16 ACRES 1/L, Section 11 &amp; 18, Hun· LOCATED ON IT. 689 in Meig; County this ·
tington lwp.. frontaae on Jackson Rd. ahd Lit- property contains 21.04 acres, m/1, and a
smal! home. 9wner anxious to sell.
tle Raccoon Creek.

2.4 ACRE TRACT - COMMERCIAL SITE Locllled on Upper Rt. 7 across froln the new
shopping center.
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$15.000- 19.143 acres m/ 1. APProx. 'h mile
from ctty limits. All util~ies available.
4SALE- Lot on Rodney-Cora 'Rd.Very close
to St. Rt. 35,

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DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT PROPERTY: Brick structure w~h
3 rental apartment~ Also, adjacent metal storage/ulil~y
bldg. Est. gross rental income, $820 per mo. All priced for
$65,00D.
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WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Village II and Mills Vii·
Iage. Call for more information.
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2 LOTS WITHIN GREEN ACRES SID. One is 84'xl48' and the
other 75'x148'. Purchase either for $5,50o.qo.
21.5 ~CRES, NEAR NORTH GALLIA SCHOOL No structures.
Located along frank Rd. $18,900.

WAITING FOR THE NEW 0Wfi£R to hwe the en·
' joyment of owning this vinyl sided frame and
LOOKING FOR A FARM? - Approx. 128 acres
brick ranch. 3 ~edrooms, family room with fire·
s~ualed at Addison Township . .Large_~barn,
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place, kitchen with dishwasher, bath, 2 car gar· ·
57'xl20' metal buildm&amp; tie house, tractor and
age,
only )years old. Approx. 2 1/3 acre lawn. Se::
equi'pment shed, 4 ponds. Vinyl sided remodeled •
, parale mobile home space. Kyger Creek SChOOls.
1 or 4 bedroom home. Easy access. For mnre·
#2799
details and location, ~ive us a call today.ll2821
L·O·O·K AT THIS PRICE ONLY 1230.00 PER
ACRE. OWNER NEEDS TO SELL QUICK! Approx
152 acres improved land. Recently constructed
fence around 100 acres, 2.750 lb. approx. basiC
quota tobacco allotment. Large barn, cellar, spr·
ing fed watering trough. Call at once!
#2803
NEW LISTING! APPAOX. 30 ACRE FARII border·
tngRaccoon Creek. l'h story frame 3 bedroom re·
modeled home. Large barn. Pond, fenced.
$44,900. Call today lqr a showing!
#2818
A IIONEY MAKING FARM!· 83 acres approx. Twenty acres approx. level I til able land in production level offertiity. 53 approx.
acres pasture, most of it improved and will appeal
to your eye. 10 acres tillable and pasture acres50 fenced. large tobacco base and good land to
raise ~ on. Large pond with two 12) round cement
waterinj troughs. Averag.e barn and country
home.'6 rooms and bath. Owner needs quick sale.
Our staff~ farm oriented . We areabl eto help you.
Pleas.e ~all: '
112805
RESIDENTIAL BUILDING SITES - Each tract,
ran!Png ~om 6 to 6'~ acres. Elceltent location,
Ralrtcted to protect property values. Little, if any,
excavation needed. Rural water and eleCtric avail·
able. Green Township. If you're looking for an
ideal home site with acreage give us a call today!
112807
REDUCED! OWNER WANTS THIS PROPERTY·
SOLD· IMMEDIATELY! ONLY $26,000.00. - 2
bedroom ~arne homesituated in the village of Rio
Grande, Natural gas heat, full basement. Large
tawn. Call todliy,
#2796

LOTS FOR SALE ON DUBY DRIVE- Call lor·.
locllion and more details. · ·
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LOTS OF POTENTIAL- 67.496acres m/1 on
Crouse,Becli Rd. Nice wooded building sites
rural Wlhr aVIiflbfe.
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3 LOTS LOCATED NEAR TYCOOM LAKE (50xll5'). Can
purchae on lefld contract. $2,000 down. '10% interest, pay
$129.69 'for 6 yrs.
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1.02 ACRE LOT alon~ Kiicker Rd. near Centenary .· $8..000.
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lEAL mATE-IS liiiBUSIIESS. ...cALUN

woeo WLTY W.ESP£1101.

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BEAUTIFUL FARM SETTING- Seven room DrtcK
home wiih 2 ~ baths. Apartment building used for
caring for elderly and h·andicapped people. large
modern barn used as feeder pig business, located
in Guyan township. Appro• . 50 acres level tillable
land surrounds farm buildings. Call today for
showing.
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82758
40ACAE FARM!- All in grass and fenced . Anice
farm pond for livestock water and recreation. The
barn is in good cond~ion, has stables for horsesor
room for cattle, tobacco base. This house is not to
be overlooked. Dutch Victorian style, 2 story w~ h
all the beautiful, varnished original woodwor~. not
painted. Well landscaped lawn and above ground
swimming pool. Please call us for a showing any·
time.
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#2804

SZ2.900.00 ~ · OWNER JUST REDUCED THE
PRICE of this remodiC!Id Ill story home situated
at the edge of town. 3 bedrooms. bath, living
room, kitchen, natural gas. heat. Carport 2\\
NEW LISTING! - LOnA LAND - Approx. 160
•cres.. Call Ieday.
112101
acres. Rural water availabl~ mineral rights inTHIUING OF BUILDING?c!uded, road frontage along two roads. Call today
Get a jump start on building yi!Ur new home by . ,. for more tnformatton!
1121.16
finishing t~is recently conslr!!Cied'28'~70' flame
PRICE lffDUCTIONI NOW ASKIMG $15,900.00
home shell- 40 acres parltally wooded,.tillable
- ADprox. 42 acres of land. Huntington
acreace. .Several feel of rilld frontage. Call today
Townslup, rural water. Call today for more
for locatton tnd more dellils.
N2110
details.
*2802
V•lltTf Jl

SMALL HOME wth extra lots. 3 BRs bath
. $21.000. '
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BUDDING. Buy now and settle in time to view
nature's mqic at work as all the trees bud and
the flowers bloom. This spring you will enjoy na·
lure's beauty around this well maintained 3 or 4
bedroom home. I ll baths, more closets than
usual. Modern home with the usua I conveniences,
even a large screened in porch and two utility
bu ildings. Green Township. You need to see. Call
for appointment.
82813

H Yf'IJI: flliVIN[, OH ',fl
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LODKIIIG ?lor 1 place to live and h1Vtyour01111
busitess? This ~ a small farm with an attractive,
modern one story home wrth full basement. Offers
hJgh exposure for business. A spacious block
building for car repairs or other lines of work. Thts '
is a modern home, forced air heating. ~entfal air,
rural water. Block building in good condition '32
by 48 ft. The center ~ divided:.also extra room in
back for parts or storage, 2overhead door~ one is
12 ft. high to clear supply trucks. IM~EDIATE
POSSESSION. With transfer of deed. MUST BE
SEEN!
112791
LOOKING FOR ACREAGE? - This ranch style
home indudes 21h acres 3 bedrooms 2 baths
krtchen equipped w~h range and refrigerator.Futi
basement, attached garage. Heat pump/central
atr. rural water, pnvate treed setting. ·Priced to
sell' c
82795
TWENTY-TWO THOUSAND DOllARS is all~ takes
lo purchase this premanufactured home. approx.
24'x60' which includes 3 bedroom~ 2 baths for·
mal dining area, family room, living room, kitchen
w.tth butH·tn range and do~b l e ovens. Utility room.
Sttuated on easy to maintain lawn. Rural water
gain equrty by doin g some repair. Call today. '
#2814
NICE CORNER LOT enhances this 3 bedroom 2
bath bHevel. Includes I car garage 2 ftreplaces
large deck leadingtoabove.ground pool area sur:
rounded by a chain link fence. Start the year out
right with an appointment today!
82106
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NEW LISTING! - WH~T A BUY!- 112.2 acres
with one story kame home. 3 bedrooms. bath, eat·
in kitchen. living room, utility.Home needs repait.
Land . has been reclaimed. Only $39,000.00.
Kyger Creek Schools.
. 82809

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$33,500.00 - PRIVATE - Vinyl sided ranch,
mce approx. I acre lawn. Very ntce 24'x24' two
car garage. Call for more information. 112784
LOOKING FOR A HOME IN THE KYGER CREEK
SCHOOL SYSTEI! - II so, then call us about this
listin~ 4 bedroom home, liv ing room, eat·in
kitchen, garag~ and more, all srtuated on I acre
approx. lawn. Priced AI $32,000.00. Call for today
for an appointment.
· 82793
OWNERS JUST REDUCED THE PRICE ON THIS
LOVELY HOME '6.900.00 - You won't believe
your eyes when you step into lhiS 2story home in
excellent condition! 3 bedrooms, l'h baths, family
room, formal dtntnJ!. nat. gas furnace. vinyl siding,
Call lodl)', you'll be impressed!
#2787

t [)'; VI! Ill HI I\ flY H• '•I ll'/lf'l I I! I M

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We
sell your present home a,,; W') can put you in
touch with one ol appiOXImately 15,000 real eata:e office
locatfona qualllec!, to lteip you find the right home.
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�Sunday Times-Sentinel- Peg• D-7

Pomeroy- Middlapon- GIIIipolil. Ohio
M

71 Aulol for Sale

HtyaOraJn

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_,...,.. . ....... 114••-

IINulllllloi ...... 110.
1 f t - - : ; ;... 110.

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1m....., 111'""- • ""·. ••

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AY REALTY .
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AUDREY F. CAh'.ADAY. BROKER ·
HOMES, FARMS &amp; COMIIIERCIAL PROPERTIES
. 25 LOCUST STREET
GAlLIPOLIS. OHIO 45631
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OUmANDIIICI IIEW LISTI~G
RUSTIC COmMPORARY ·
Tired ot the re.,lar rancll? This 3 bedroom, 110
1tory cedar home will please you. Vauked ceilings,
skyllglrts, open oak staircase, cuStom·buiH oak
. cabinetf in krtchen &amp;baths give this home lots of
appeal. !bedroom~ 21! baths,livingroom, dining
room &amp; family room, large 2 car garage. Enerrt
saving gas/heat pump furnace. Green Township,
3. m1les kom town. Nice neighborhood. $99,500.

446-3636J\~
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BIG HOUSE,
Over 2700 sq. ft. in this
upper in Swan Creek
area. If you're willing to work lor a home lh al
could be a real showplace, better make an~ appointment to seethisone on 3.9 at res overl.ookmg
the river .valley. Priced at $21,500.
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"RENTAL UNITS"
Located just a mile from hospital, 4 miles from
town. Two unils, both wit h 2 bediooins, billh, liv·
ing room, full carpeted, range. oven, refrigerator.
Occupancy level at 100% lor lasl l1ears. Make
this your firs! step to finan ci al security. A.small
piece of the rock for only $53,900. Income stale·
ment available upon request.
H609

. . 1106

74
GREEN TOWNSHIP - Country atmosphere but yet only 5
miles to town bn 1.1 acres m/1 is a lovely 3 bedro6m home
with living r.oom, famjly room, eat-in kitchen. All just u~der
1400 sq. ft. Beautiful view with plenty of priva cy. Prlelid m
lower 50s.
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2lx70· FRIENDSHIP HOME is s~uated on 4j cres m/ 1in '
SOuthwestern School District. Has living room, dining room ,
family room, 3 bedrooms, 2 bi!lhs. County water. Under.
$40,000. Call for ,appointment.
#176
10 ACRE LOTS - SOUTHWESTERN SCHOOlS - Near
Wayne National Forest. Not restricted. $7,500 each. Call lor .
appointment.
#175

PRETTY 3 BEDROOM RANCH WITH ATTACHED GARAGE,
CENTRAL AIR COND. LOW COST GAS HEAT AND EVEN AT
THE LOW PRICE OF $45,000 THE WASHER AND DRYER.
RANGE AN D REFRIG: AND DISHWASHER ARE INCLUDED'
LOCATED ON JAY DRIVE. JUST A F EW ~ MINUTES FROM
HOllER HOSPITAL
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JAY DRIVE, JUST OFF AT. 35. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH RANCH
HAS NICE FLOOR PLAN ATTRACT IV.E FOYER. VERY LIVEA·
BLE FAMILY ROOM, KIT CHEN AREA WITH FIREPLACE.ALSO
OPENS ONTO OUTDOOR PATIO, DE~K AND POOL qCEL·
LENT VIEW OF SURROUNDING AREA FROM DECK. 2 CAR AT·
!ACHED GARAGE. ATTRACTIVE HOME. EXCELLENT LOCA·
! ION. CITY SCHOOLS $65,000.

111115 Y1m1ha, VJrogo, mt»&gt; - 1

New tlrM &amp; battery, MrVIced
11 ,100 o.a.o.114-241-1137.

Fou!lhondPN

NEW LISTING - A little over an acre. with. a 2 bedroom
home. Alsoa den with woodburner 16x32 inJJound Pqol w~h
privacy fence and satell rte d1sh, 2 car· garage wrth overhead.
· storage, located on St.Rt. 124. SeiiS•for $45,ooq. #.193..
NORTH SECOND STREET - Th~ 3 bedroom home
beauti:
ful hardwood floors throughout Large90xl20' lot Con!!~~t
ent ·to stores and shopping. $37,500.

O.lllpollo, Cillo
114 441 ?W

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PEIFECT LY PRICED FOR YOUNG FAMILI£$1
Smart 3 bedroom boasting 2.5 acres, large eat-in
~itchen with dishwasher, range &amp;refrigerator. 2
car &amp;Irate, fenced yard and aU for $53,900.

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!IREAT
Very nice home for
erty, etc. 3 bedrooms,
kdchen w~h nice cabinets, bath and separate
util~y room. Nice Hat lot. Convement location.
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. #115

1503

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Electrical &amp;
MIDDLEPORT
Turned off by "Tiny Alfordables "? It's time toget
e&lt;cited wrth this 2 story br ick located on Rutland
Street. Beautifully tailored with 2 bedrooms up·
stairs and 2 more on the main floor. Te1tured plas·
ter walls in both the li~in g room and dining room
help make this one of the truly finer hom es in
Me1gs County. And with a fen ced in play area for
the chidren. rt' sperfect for a growing fam1ly..Alol
of extras buill in with tender lovinacare vou must
see to believe. Fall in love all over again for jusl
$54,900.
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#604
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YOU WOULD HAVE TO HAVE A HOR$E HERE! OVER 16
ACRES BARN JUST AFEW MILES FROM DOWNTOWN GALLI·
POLIS.'THE HOME HAS 4 BEDROOMS, I BATH WITH SPACE
FOR A SECOND BATH, LIVING ROOM HAS HARDWOOD
FLOORS, FIREPLACE, NICE DINING AREA WITH BU ILT-IN.
CHINA CABINET, SIDE•PORCH , BASEMENT. LOTSOF SPACE
FOR A FAMILY. $65,000.
THIS .110M£ IS WAITING FOR A FAMILY! FEATURES 3
BEDROOMS ON MAIN FLOOR AND A4TH IN THE BASEMENT.
I\\ BATHS. EOUIPPED KITCHEN WITH• LOVELY DINING
AREA LARGERECREATION ROOM. ATTACHED GARAGE PLUS
DETACHED GARAGE/ WORKSHOP. GAS FORCED AIR
FURNACE. CENT. AIR COND., LOW MAINTENANCE BRICK
EXTERIOR. ACRE LAWN. CITY SCHOOLS. $65, 000.

OLDER HOME
ON
NICE LOT. PRICED LOW
AT fl&lt;,,UVU LUonou
CUSTOM BUILD RANCH - OUTSTANDING FEATURES IN· ·
CLUDE OAK KITCHEN CABINETS, 6" WALLS FOR ADDED IN·.
SULATION, ANDERSEN WOOD WINDOWS, FIR SIDING, 3
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, CARPORT. AND2 CAR GARAGE. SUR·
ROUNDED BY 5 BEAUTIFUL ACRES. CITY SCHOOLS.
CHECK THIS CUSTOM RANCH. 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, EATIN KITCHEN. FORMAL DINING ROOM. LARGE LIVING ROOM
WITH FIREPLACE AND FRENCH DOORSOPENING ONTO SIDE
PORCH. COZY DEN WITH FIREPLACE, LARGE LOT WITH RIVER
VIEW. $85,000.

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REDUCED _ REDUCED - The owners have lowered the
price to $30,000. 837 3rd Ave. The hOme offers3 bedrooms,
1bath large uti~y .room, mce backyard. lnclud1ng outbulld·
ing haS good potential for rental property or starter

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by the lireplace and watch the beauli·
ful Ohio from thi~ 3 b·edroom home near Pomeroy. Includes a
fireplace, full basement, 2 ca: garage. and double lot
$27,900. ..
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Nl25
ASH STREET MIDDLEPORT- This home is situated on 2
level corner 'lot s. Close to General Hartinger Park. A brick
·hol)le with 3 bedrooms, full basement. and large atllc.
$21,500.
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#117

GENTLEMAN;$ FARM.:...Eie gant coutitry_livinton l~l .a cres
m/ 1with alovely cedar 4 bedroom !tome. Ov.er ~.000 square
leel of living space includes 4 beorooms. fueplace, formal
dining, equipped kitchen and much more. Land ISlevel to
rolling and includes a beautiful pond, a 2 car garage and a
barn You will love it. Call for an appotntment. $110,000.00.

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LOCATION
LOCATION
Ask anybody' "Location is m.osl important when
selecting a home." Here's a 6 room home on I
· acre·with a great view oft he river and onl y 5mtles
from town. indudes 3 bedrooms. fireplace. fu ll
basement. garage and barn. You'll have acces ~ to
tile river. It' spriced at $59,500,and should not be
on the market long.
#116

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HERE ME
011 THIS ONE!
.Read until you come to the part about Sum!"er
Cabin on tile River! If you'reoneolthoselamlltes
that would like a nice 2 bedroom home w~h 2
extra bedrooms in the half story, a really nice,
very attractive living room and a modern custom
built kitchen, come on in! In addition you get ase:
cond 2 bedroom home which you can sell or.use
as a rental. Watch·out •now, I'm going to ZAP you
COUNTRY SERENITY BUT'CLOSE.TO lOWN
with the bonus! Tell me you kke to fish off your
Flat
corner bu ilding lot located in Clearview Es·
own pier, plant a garden and arow.all k1nds of lh·
tales.
6 miles south on Rt. 7. County waler availa·
ings, have a horse or two for the k1ds. How about
ble.
Maintained
public sewer system. Nice vi ew.
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-everything abov.e localed 10 town on 2 ac.res that .
all of this for only $6,600.
#600
runs to the river and already has the cabm down
at the riverside?You can buy it all for $69,900.
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11123

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BUSINESS· HAS BEEN

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We Have D·epleted Our
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NEW LISTING - NEW .LIMA RO~ - Very neil! and very
nice!! 3 bedroom ranch, 2 baths, central air, back deck on
large lol. $42,000.00.
NEW LISTING- SYRACUSE- Abeautiful bi·level home in.,
e.cellent condit1oh. 3 bedrooms, 2baths, alarge family room '
with ljreplace. Attic fans, storage workshop and lenced yard.'
All this lor only $47,000.00.
NEW LISTING - SALEM CENTER - A nice 3 bedroom
Shuttz mobile home, 14x70 wilh attached family room. Elec·
tric heat pump .Plu s coal combustion stove. Equipped
kitchen. Storage .buildin gs, orchard and grap e arbor.
$19.500.00.
NEW LISliNG - 50 Acres of vacanlland, T.P.C. water avail·
able. Gas well $19,900 00.

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POMEROY- SPRING AVE. - Old frame houseon 100xl30 .
lot. $6,500.00,
ROCK SPRINGS RD . - Appx. 80 acres of vacant ground.
Appx. 20 acres lillable. All minerals, water and elec. availabl e. Good hunting land. $29,000.00..

OWNER WILL TAKUN OFFER - POMEROY - l'h story
house with 3 bedrooms and bath. Carpet and wood lloors.
New shin ~ ed .roof and nice front sittingporch. $21,900.00.

MIDDLEPORT- Woulq make a great rental or a home lor a
young couple. Has 2 bedrooms, dining room, one floor, all
carpeted, new rool. and 2 lot~ $14,500.00: '

MINERSVILLE RD. -RACINE - 2 story house w~h 2 bed·
rooms bath carp~anefing and in Southern School Dis·
, · lrict. ' Recent~ 'remodeled and in good cond~ion. ·
$29,500.00.
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MIDDlEPORT - Ranch home wrt h 3 bedrooms, I bath,
efec. B.B. hell. carpet Washer &amp; dryer plus a 10•12 she&lt;f.
$22.900.00.

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WP. ROAD 348 ~ Approx. 93 acres of vacant land with 2
· story barn, stocked pond, old house site with well. Approx.
25 acres tillable with balance in timber, abundance of wal·
nut. Get a return on your inveslment from sale of timber.
$60,000.00.
HEIIRY E. CLELAND ................ , ..................... 992·1191
JEAN TRUSSELL ........................................... 949-2860
JO HILL ........................................................ 985-4466
MAE HUPP ...... :................................... ..........,9-2257

APPROX. 20 ACRES wdh spaciou sran ch home. 3bedrooms,
1 ~ baths, family room and on ecar garage. Additional trai!er •
hookup. As~ng only $4B,OOO.
#151

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Ill THE MIDDLE OF EVERlTHING!
; Small home one-half hour from Huntington and
Gallipolis. Within walking distance to the super·
1 market and post office. Needs some wor~ but rt
• would be a nice starter home for a young couple
' or a single person. 2 bedrooms, I bath, located.in
a nice quiet neighborhood. Best of al)5 the pnce
, of $12.000. Call Chris for more inform~ion.
". . '
.
.
: -701

~.

t;

•.

••
•

.

•

of gently .rollin g land with a b! rn style
home, Home is only 12 yrs. old and has 3 bedrllOms, 1\\
baths and full basement, pond, orchard and bui:dings. Country selling_ Asking $77,500.00.
~157

•'
•
i-·

•'
••:
•~1

LOOIUM
FOIan -~r~~~~~~~~~
ABLO Make
ap
located on approx. acres just
Rt. 588. Hass maintenance free · i
carport, Green schools, priced at ~·•.uuu.
MAIN ST. CROWN CITY - This 2 or 3 bedroom home has
bath, living room, Uchen, partial basement .on two lots wrth
~orage buildings. $25,0000. Call for more mfo.
#16_3
NEW LISTING- 1.95 acies m/llot plus 18.765 acres m/ 1
on Rt. 14llncludes small tobacco base and timber. Borders
Raccoon Creek CoUnty Park. Rural water available. Just
$19.500.
.
1112
IT WILL 50011 BE TIM£TO RELAX BY THE POOL and what .
better place than your own backyard. You also get the conve·
nience of a 3. or 4 bedroom hqme, I car garage, fenced
backyard. Salell~e dish and more. Call ' now. $43,500.

PRICE REDUCED - LETART AREA - App&lt;. 2 acre mini
ROCK SPRINUROAD - Beautiful! ranch type house in Ihe
farm with small barn, fencing lothe sheds, plusa 197B mo· • country. 3.98 acres with scenic vi ew. TwoW.B.F.P., Iull basedular urtil with 3 bedrooms, satellite d1sh. 2 good garden 1 · menl. garage, many other features. $84,900.00.
areas. Orilled well. $14,900.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS - .The perfect building srte wrth
LANGSVILLE - In excellent condition, you can move into
free gas, water and electric available. CALL FOR INFORMA·
this 2 bedroom home right away. FAF.O., beautiful modern
TION!' $25, 000.00.
kitchen wtih buill·in range, oven and refr igerator. Also a sa·
tellite dish for a wide range of TV reception. situaled on two
LETART - .7 room house, 3 bedrooms. I bath, carpet throu·
lots w~h storage bu ildmg_ $25,000.00.
ghoul. l arge krtchen and patio. Gas heat and hot water heat
.
2 car garage. $29,900.00. Owner will take pay off.
Ml DDLEPORT - Nice I floor homewdh 2 bedrooms. I bath,
carpet, with basement and a nice block garage. S1t11ng on a
RUTLAND - 26.2 acres in the country. 6 room, 3bedroom
double lot. $21,500.00.
home. Private aM secluded. Needs some wor~ $28,000,00.

POMEROY - Appx. 3\l acres, vacant ground. Good building
sde. Close in. Water may be available. $7,500.00.

less
mal ....... ~.:c-:··-&lt;::·r
lots more.
. .
LOG CABIN- Situated on a lovely 3 acres mi l wooded lot,
screened in porch, 2 bedrooms, I bath, family room with fi·
replace, c~y schools. $24,400, Shouldn't last long, So give us·
a call for your appointment
.. .
.
#189

PORTLAND - SHARON ROAD ~ MINI FARM IN THE •
COUNTRl- in Southern District. 14+ acres, 1\\ slory house
w~h 4 bedrooms, 2 kdchens, 2 baths, 21iving rooms, carpet,
natural gas heat. garden and well water. $39.500.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Morlon Addition - 3·4 bedroom
ranch in ·excellenl condition on alarge 1acre lot Alarge lamily room makes ivingherea10y. Electric B.B. heat plus wood·
burner. A large shed. Call for appointment $41,000.00. ·

SYRACUSE - RUSTIC HILlS - Ahome lobe proud oft! 3
· btdroom ranch, l'h baths, family room, formal dining room,
garage, electric B.B. heaJ,.fireplace, on a 112' x99' lot. Very
nice. REDUCED TO $39,:&gt;U0.00.
,

If You ·VIant Yours Sold
WISEM4N
We Would Love to Sell II.
.
·Call o'ne Of Our Agents Today.

?,

NEW LISTING - SUNNY HOLLOW- Appx. 30 ~ acr es va·
cant land. Id eal hunting and campingsit ~. Electric availabl e
an d all minerals. $13,000.00.

POMEROl - A 2 slory home with a large lot, big kitchen, 3
bedrooms. built-in china cabinet. nice deck in back, and a
part basemen!. $25,()()0.00.

SOlD

••'
r
•'

POMEROY - FLATWOODS RD. - 10.73 acres of vacanl
ground. Would make nice home s~e . Call for moreinforma·
- tion. $21,500.00.

Ul2

BatiTIFUL RIVER FRONT- You can't beat the vie\¥ lrom
this 1800 sQ. ft. 3 bedroom home. 2 acres m/1 with a lantaS·
tic view of the river. Large hil,hway •nd river frontage. The
hOme has family room, formal dln1ng, 2 baths, t1replace, cen·
tral lir 111d 2 car aaraae. Lots of extras lor only $59,500.

1141

•

· REDMAN SECTIONAL approx. 10 frs. old. 3 ~edrooms, 2
baths, s~uated on appro•. ! .acre in Hemlock Grove. Aski;J
$39,900.00.
·
~I
.

•·:

...

GREEN TOWNSHIP HOME
Looking for something out in the countrybul sillI
not too tar from schools? Here's a nice property
only 5 mHes from town, I mile fr001.Green School,
but w~h plenty of privacy and a moe v1ew. Over
1400 sQ. ft. includes.3 bedrooms, hvmg rOI)IIund
• family room, n1ce eat-1n kitchen. 2 acre 1~. Pnced
to please at $54,900,
IZOI

•

.

PRICE REDUCED! -Not only have we reduced the price we
are also going to offer aland contract to qualified buyer. 3
bedrooms, full basement with drive-in garage. Home 1ust
needs a little paint and minor repair. Now only $22,900. Las·
ley St .. Pom eroy.
11138
LOCATION, LOCATION! Aquality built hoiJle, too. Ranch wrth .
J bedrooms, formal dining family room, full basement and 2
car garage. locateil .in Middleport:
1135
ATTRACTIVE BI·LEVEL HOME in A·1Condition. located on
approx. l acre in Baurri Addition. Has 4 bedrooms, 2 baths ·
central air and girage. $62,500.
ul4
.
. .
'
NICE 2 IEDROOII HOME, recent~ remodeled. SKuated on a
little over an acre. Cellar and nice screened.'1n porch. Ntce
price, too! Only $17,000.
1151

....

Auto Parts&amp;

C.30, 350, 1 ton,
811 Z IIMI bod. Oood condlllon.

79

$1400. 014-8112-1173 or 114-8112·
1201.

1870 Modol lnlemotlonol,. por·

.
NEW LISTING
59 Acre farm located on Rl. 775 approx. 6 miles
, from Rt. 141. Attractive 1\l story home has.new
•vinyl siding and new roof. 3 bedr.ooms, I'h baths.
den, new cabinets in the eat·ln k~chen , pantry m
the utility room. Parttal basement. 36•52 shop .
building plus barn, guaae and storage bulldi~CS,
Amust to see at $87,500. •.
11706
COMMERCIAL BUILDING SITE
1.2 acre lot with approx. 220ft. of road frontl&amp;e
on Rt. 35 west of the cinema. .
· *505

•

•

out motor, tnuwmiHion,
-=~· 30...75-l:m ohor 1:00

IF YOU THINK THE LANDSCAPING
IS ADORABLE,
•
wait unt~ you seethe new, tastefu lly decorated in·
terior. The main floor offers 3 bedrooms, I lull
bath, formal living room and eal·m krtchen wtlh
pantry. Patio door leads to .a screened·tn porch. ,
Full basement has large family room, I bedroom
an~ complete bath, huge storage room and spa·
Cious utilrty room. Forc eda1r heat and. central a1r.
One car garage with door opener. Th1s home hasa
warm, cozy and attractive envir onment lor any
size family . lj.yger Creek Schools. Call for an ap··
pointment today! $59,500.
' 1801

WAS THAT A DEER I SAW?
Capture the wonder and beau ty ol nature 12·
months a year in th is 3 bedroom ran ch located
just a few miles from town. Nice starter home I hat
needs a'little TLC. Over 6 acres of wildlife habHat
. will Jive you hours of enjoyment, and the cozy
family room will be a great place for famtlygather·
ings. An investment in your luture for only
$43,400. .
"'10

•

David WlMman, 448-3181
1. J, Hairaton,,441-4240

'

Cllmpers &amp;
Motor Homes

J.A.'I Houllna, clump 1NOII lor
hlro, _ , hlullng, - ·
•ncl, i:Urtt..l'~ill, r
Fltft
...... 304..
1.
. , . _ . , - Hlullna, 1000 or
2000 g~l. - . ....... I
Willa, rEEI=1111M
quick
dollvory, 7 dlyo, . , _
40M or :J04...11'1.U11.

WILLOW DRIVE
Close. Convenient. Qu iet. Very nice maintenance
free home on the edge oft own can't be beat Ow n·
ers have made many improvementsto this 3 bed·
room ran ch includin g remodeled kitchen with
· beautifu.l Gherry cabinets, new roof, sidin g deck,
carpet &amp; hardwood floors and cenlral air. !BOO
sq. ft. of living spa ce features large lamily room
with stone fireplace, eat· in kitch en, livin g room,
dining room &amp; I ll baths. Thinking of bu il din g'
DON'TII You couldn 'l get nearly the same house
for th e money. $67,500.
#200
OWNER OFFERING GREAT FINANCING PACKAGE•
Attractive country ranch wrth spacioussurrou nd·
ings. I mile south of Rio Grande on Rl. 325. Th 1s 3
bedroom home offers large living room-dinin g
room combination, custom made cabmets, I ~
baths, breezeway and I car garage. Siluated on a
1 acre lot with extra lot available. $62,500. Call for
details on linancing,
#601
82 ACRES OF ROLLING HILL LAN!)
No buildin gs. Located 1ust off P;easant Valley on
Tick Ridge Road. 4\'i mil es to RioGrande, 2 mil es
to Thurman and U.S. Rt. 35. Ideal location for
home and part-time farm. Good growing wooded
area, cropland and pasture. Good hunting area on
·th is land and surroundin g area. Rural water line
on adjoining property. Road fronlage. All for
$3.4,000.
#301
I

OWN A PIECE OF THE BLOCK1
You can walk all over town to shop or exercise and
you won't spend much time behind alawn mower.
3 bedroom home has plenty of space for ra1smg a
family, yet the warmt h and comfort required for
retirees. Eat-in kitchen and dinmg room, large
room on second floor could be used as children 's
bedroom or play room. Must see to believe and
priced at only $59,900, and av ailable immediately .
·
#603
145 ACRE FARM
$48,500
ThisWalnut Township farm includes some bottom
land, over 100 acr es of woods. atobaccobase and
an old time 2 story residence. Closeto Waterloo.
Perfect for deer huntersor anyone elsewho wants
#125
to get away from it all..
YOU DESERVE THE BEST .
and this one ·offers you quality construction. e&lt;·
cellenl neighborhood in a convenienlloc atlon. A
. handsome (lOOkSbrand new) 3 bedroom ranch
• whicll mcludes alarge living~oom, formal dmln£,
big kitchen w~h lots of cabmets and buth·ms.
Handy uti~y areaand 2lull baths. You'll love the
decoratinll and the openness of the floor plan. On
Debby Drive and, pnced to sell quickly by an
ownl!l' that's moving out of th e ar ea.
#112
,
BIRO'S EYE VIEW
· One of the most beutrtul, panoramic views over·
looking the Ohio River valley can be found kom
th is Y-shaped ranch. Very spaciou s, liv.eabl e, and
well·maintained home. Great for entert11mng, 10 ·
eludes 3 bedrooms. formal sunlcen living room
wrth lots of window' cathedral ceiling and beauti~
ful stone fireplace. Also features fa.mily. room w~h
2nd fireplace. w1fe-approved eat·m krtchen, 2\l
baths ar~d 2 car garage. Make an appointment to
see this hou11, you'll fall in love.
·1246

(614) 446·3644

L &amp;.Wise...-. Broker
Lorette llllcDade, 446-7729
"':hria Ellceuor, 448·3621

111• Ford F·150, PS, PB, AJC,.
30W7S-24&amp;4.
1111 c~~evy s -10, pickup. &amp;14·

HH~.

nue.

R&amp;RWitotllorvloo. .....
Wolvtrlnt tilde-In ov1rhMd tem1, wetta. lmmedla...1,000 or
caml*. Slltpo I , 1800. 814- 2'i000 g~lono diUv.y, CoM 304-·
·
381-8021 .
. I 1-1370.
W11tort0n't WI... Houlln.g,

................. -

ohlh kh, Tlh, cruiH, olr, I Inch
lift kit. Mony oxtro'o. $11000 ·
trode fur lito modol Ford Ron·
goror 1fl.lon 414. 114-742·2373.

·an .l eal ·Estate
Tom AuiMII, 448-28715

85 General Hauling

COmpiMety Hlf contllrwd. 114992.6t73 ... 614-1192-1206.. .

11171 Ford Bronco XLT •x4. !100,
rebuln IIUto. tranaml•..on wfth

.
.
'
'
Ust -WIIH GALLIA C0Uft1Y'S LEADE~

Wi
•

SPOILS YOU FOR A/'lYTHif'!G ELSE!
Historical residence wrth grand entertain ing
spaces and cozy hideaways. Plu s luxurieS like a
fully equipped kilchen, sunporch and pra ctically
mamtenance free exterior. Call to see th is out· ,
standing Middleport home today. Priced to sell at ,
$59,000.
.
#508

Accessories

tiMID No!Nid C.mpor. Z6 h.,
tllfpo 8. Vory ge&gt;ojl condhlon,

tl~

., . . . .-1208.

•

~.

Refrigeration ·

111• lniornot10111i. z opood ,..,
ond, 3-45 onglno, goOd body.
Fllr. $1100. 51._.-8173 or

'

room,
~idin~
2 car garue. central air. In ~annan Ttace School 01slr1ct.
Only $49,500. Call for. more mfo.
··
. . #190
· IIEW LISTING- RT. 1411N GREEN TOWNSHIP is this home
nn .91 acre m/llollncludes. ·~ving room, eill·m k~chen , 3
bedrooms, block ga~age with workshop and cellar, county
water. $27.000.
·
#197
'LOCATION ..,. 2 acres m/1 in quiet subdivision. superb Iota·
lion. Just 10 minutes from Ho~zer. Call for app01~1me~ls

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
Plumbing
endHIOIIM

.·•

3 bed·

82

C.~ot'e

.•.

'''"i"r" 011
M/L
finished basement, maintenance

Motorcycles

countl, z.ooo lo 4,ooo.a 1
c111trn1, - · · wtllt, f10.
304-171-21118

Serv 1ces

87

Home

Uphollttry

Mowroy'o

2• -.

Upholol.....

vlclng 1~ count' ,,..

__1_m..:p:..ro_v_e_m_e_n_t_s__
1Ill &amp;So

ll'dli'
.1l

Tho
tumllwe
upllolllortng.
CIHIn3CM-8'71-41M
lar .... Olllliilll!"·

rry

n Pointing. Pointing,
1!117 Nl..., SE, outo1 • AIC, Bulkllog, Roofing, C.rpont~
owri:lrlvt, ntdlo, price w ,OOO. worll:, Sund O.Ckl, FrM £a..
nogoao~&gt;~e, 30W75-1m.
11 ........ 814-3711-2320.

o-

u,.t~o~~~ory

conw, ...,

+•.:••..

HIIMOD Dr. c.lt ... I
I eetlma•. Cll111~ 441~M.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
I Frull al lhft oak
fJ t ranqullll y
11 T.mlng groond1
HI Aale; elevalt!

21 Cowboy
competiTIOn
22 Showy flOwer
23 Demean
24P1 11~AY

25 HaM!
211 Squanct&amp;r

21 Reputse
30' Rutrle; 'ttl
32 Above ,

33A, - .C. 0 . 34

8r ~ tyn

ending

35-

31 Clodt fillet
37 MMure

38 Pigpen
40 Propagate
42 Tltte of respect
&lt;3ChlceVO
IOC1blller
44

stpe!Ous

45 t.vetn ltOd:
47 Stings
49 River duck
50 Unc:ovth person
51 C~lc a l
54 PortiCO
55 "- to BAll "
58 Cttu!MI IG ~

-

51 Got!

eo cuttinG 1001
82 Not fllpplnl

84 Farm bultdlno
es NldleiiiYf'lbol
te Nelf'
'
87 Mlddlt East org.
89 Hlrvftl t
10 lenient
7-t LUA18f lfl!lll
72 SUtCh

74t P•ll'l rNm

7•
77 Oftpllc:Md
EJ:plre

78 s-.ti6H
71 EJ:IIrplled

12 Endured

.. Seot"

agen11

_

liS apu,. IOJth ·
Hilty

.. Dl¥f,g ""d

........

n Afltrnoon

'*""

80 Cupllcl .iiPO()n

stond
94 Agreeably
· 98 Unempl~ed
99 Kind of c:heese
100 Meactow
102 Chemica l

comPOund
103

Diocese

11J4 Pedlll digit

105 The tUnoston 108 Alrlcan antt!tope
108 Small ehlld
109 Old Oomlnlrm St.
110 Teutonic deity
11 I Cle aning

substance
112' The skull
II .. Greek leiter
116 lndli n weiQI\1
11 7 Hold bacli
1t9 Comely
120 Average
122 A.ctor Murph~ .

et at.

••s- -

6 Ad i'IH!ve

substanc:es
7 Hotds In high
regflrd
8 Devoured
.Q '"Dirty ~arry"

alcknew
l1y
ItO MetriC metiUI'e

9t WOflhlp

alar: ln lla.
10 Do wr ong
11 FrOliC
12 IJnct.r the CDYefl
13 - de mer
1.( Potltc;rlpl; llbbr .
15 ContinUed l tOry

16 can
17 Lubricate
18 ElliSIS
19 Htts hln d: colloq :
20 Indian lfml
27 - condii!Ofler

'29 Godtress ol
diSGord

31 P1ddle

t 2SlCe nter

&lt;110 Phi - t&lt;appA
&lt;11 1 1roplcallrult
~2 Looked n... ec~y
~3 Whip
&lt;114 Gtve QJIQJ not ice
~6 French a rticle

t33 Shabby : collo q

HO Hwse addition
14 1 Oenms Of Doris
142 Italian r ~
143 Coole!! lava

56

144 Filets
145 " - Nnllon ""
14 7 Ascends

57

H9 Pe. mll
150 Helmsmen
152 " :- Witness "
15• Pointless
Iss Cognizant
I'll Protecllng IAelh
159 Set firmly tn
ploet
1110 Loud noftel
181 Lone S tar State
DOWN

1 hdCMJint
2 Desire
3 Poem
4 Co&amp;ernlnO
5 At present

" lh elo~st -'"

48 BelloW
49 Hurl

SO
· 5I
52
53
55

Pasteboard
Fk.lfl lhe heir

Go In
Look lorwa rd to
Amend
Jt rgon
Rfltated on
mothet 's side
Baseball teams
Lamb 's pen name

511
61
63 Metattastener
64 Tie
Ill Ca nadiM
provtncf

70 sruwpeSt
71 BlOuin
.
73 Walk like a duck •
7~ F1ther

75 \ln&lt;......
77 Shoutdlf wtap

.._

78 Bridge
60 Smltl vllley

81Piungo
83 Solk up

,...,....

9e RIY« bft
97 "'lheWoncttiJr - ··
99 Davit of

··Midnlgh1
EI PfHI'"
10 1 '"- HOUM "
105 Ctril ln jury
106 Grill Like
101 ~lal dub
p1ymtnll

Go&lt;mony

39

13$ Orunkllrd
138 Ometel tngredtent
139 Weary

•-oon

95 AOOV.and

Ill Dlttrielln

36llleleu
37 A.n ls ta nt

124 ··&amp; othf!t - "'

126 L~ht c: olor
121 "'SIIem"s - '"
129 filament
131 Aabbil
. 132. Cron y· coltoq.

92 JO\Ifney
93 Rfchlld -

.

er 100 pennle• ~,

112 Sotlcltude

113 Smlll ruga
115 In I llty IQnnef
118 POleS 101 PGflrtll
118 Nell
119 001, ct y
12 I Wenllng
123 FuHIII
125 water bollte
126 f lint
1'2 7 Renten ·
documents

129130 Onctl f'I'!Gfe
13 1 Strlkl
132 Worked 11 ont't
lrodo
13 4
ooeor or
131 Muliell
137 c.rrttl
139 ~·k" !tot
140 ''"""""""
144 C1nlne
145 Prlrnf1 ¥ftlfMnt
141 Penpolnt
147 Hurried
141 FOIIOwl Frt.
141 No118nM
151 ··- Ltw"
153 Early mcwn
155 Sodium ¥"bell
157 ""Tht W.y -

a...,

w., ...

*""'

. _,

�Paga D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

-

Medl 4.

Poma'Oy-Midclepott-Gellpolil, Ohio Punt P1111111t. W.Va.

Tree ...

'

1110 ~

_.....,..eo_n_tin_uect....:..:tr:..;om:.:;
· .:..;D:-..·:..I_ _ _..;.·_..:..._ _

plant II another Important decl·
slon. Tile Information tbat II uiled
to make that selection would
Include climate, slope, expoaure,
sol~ aoU mollture, exlltln&amp; vegetation .a nd the landowner's objec·
tlves. In eeneral terms, conifers
would be more sqcceslful than
bardwoodlll\ worn-out fields and
pastures; Ill iandy, bllmed-over
and eroded a~; or .Ill shallow,
heavy or cloddy aoUa.
Hardwoodl tend to irow better
In deep rather looae, crumbly aoll
which provides plenty of room
for root development. Often on
poor sites conlfen are planted
f!rst, wblch over time belpa the
sollllhprove and tileD hardwoodl
can be grown on the site. Moat

Ohio

College ·
case player

tbe control of c:ompltattve veae-Z
tatlon
(releUIJII) . For COIIIPJeti:
trees, espect&amp;ny the valuable
detalll
and toalp·up. contaet the:'
hardwoodl found ln lbla area,
county
ASCS otllce. · ,
,.
Dee!~ conalderable moisture on
For
free
ualltaace
with
lllllec:t·
:
well-drained aoll. !t II allo not
1111
wblcll
apeclea,
wllere
to
pltn.t:;
uncommon to plant a milllure of
and 11ow to order from tbe state&gt;
species toaether on cine site.
nursery contact tile service fore- .
"oat o! the species tile average
srer
for ~ county.
· .,.
landowner would like to plant can
·
Plaatlnl
trees
provldei
many;
obtained from tile state nuraery.
Alao, coat·lharJna II available . different benefits bealdel mak·-:
lng \lnproductlve land productlve,for landowners Ill Olllo 11\tereited
agaln. Alk any one who hasr
In tree planting. Tile AJrtcultural
plaJUed ~. and tbln .,UV
· Stabllzatlon and Coue:vatlon
Service (ASCS) hu two coat· prObably be a different comblna- ~
tlon of reasons to plallt from e~h~
sharJna progra1111 a landowner
one.
So, regardlell of the reaaonr'
may . participate ln If be/abe
to
plant
trees, now II the tltne t!f.:
meets the requirements. Costmake
the
_declllona and plani Joz
allarlng II •vallable tor tile
be.
ready
to plant trees n~xt -:
purcbue.lablpptq bd llantlltniJ
spriJI&amp;.
• :
of tbe trees, 111e preparatiOn Ud

~ttery

Pick 3

933

dies

Pick 4

5086
Super Lotto
.. 4-5-32-33-34-40
Kicker 979506

Page4

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'

e

1 Section. 10 Pagoo

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, Mar~h 5. 1990

FARM BUREAU, MEMBERSHIP COMMIT·
TEE - The Membership Committee o! the Gallla
County i'arm Bureau met recently to organize the
1890 campaign. . Bene!lts ol Farm Bureau
membership . were reviewed and discussed.
Committee members were glven ·materlal to. use
Ill.contacting _prospective members and encourag·
lng present members to renew. ln 1989, Gallla
· County had 385 farm 'Bureau members. Glenn
Graham, membership chairman, reports « new
members · to date. M&lt;lre new members are
anticipated. Individuals .should contact the Farm

Sprin".

•

Bureau o!ftce at 1·1100-333-1944 for additional
ln!onnatlon. Farm BIU'eau represents eveeyone
who lives In rural Oblo, whether they are Iannen
or Just rural rea !dent&amp; Pictured above, !Irs&amp; row,
left to right are: Sbeale Burnett, Iackie Graham,
]\ernlce Wood, Merle Howard, Sandr.Jl Erb, VIckie
Powell, Joyce Shong aud Mary Withee. Second
Row, WUIIam Fadely, Glean Graham, Paul
Butler, Hermau Wood, lim Howard, Bob Powell,
Larry Shong and Charles · WUIIee. Abient from
photo - Kay Michaels and John lacbon.

Continued from D-1 ,

di!Ctlon __could acco mplisl1 those
additional pounds.
Animal scientists have also
said thateach 3 week delay In a
cow rebreedlng will reduce calf
weaning weight by 40 pounds. An
excellent computer program is
available at the County Extension Office (446-7007) to calculate
the nutritional needs for your
beef cows.
A cow that is severely e nergy
short can have major problem
when suddenly fed an lnc&lt;"eased
amount of protein. Almost without' exception corn is the l e;~ st
expensive source of energy_ The
computer program requires only
some baste information such as:
cow weight; s(age of reproduction; milking ability and hay
quality. Lab analysis for the hay
Increase accuracy but table
value estimates have bee n used
successfully. The computer program Is a free service of the
Extension Service.
A lot of educational actlvltles
have been conducted over the
past couple months. We have had
, excellent attendance. · Farmers
are really Interested In staying
on the cu tUng edge oftechnology.
Several farmers recently at·
tended classes to retain or gain
cert!llcatlon as private pesticide
applicators . Som e 20 new
farmers took the testing for
certification this past Monda'y.
This should bring to over 200
farmers certified in Gaiila
County. We will be planning
another training-testing session
In a few weeks. Cat! if you would
like to take part In this session.
The final session of the four- .
part winter meeting series sponsored by the Gall!a County
Cattlemen's Association and the
Extension Service will be held at
· 7:30p.m. on Monday , March 5at
the Columbus Souther n Power
Building meeting room. Re-

source person for the evening
will be Elizabeth Harsh, managIng editor tor the Ohld Cattlemen's magazine. A special activIty will be the crowning of the
Gallla Couniy Queen of Beef.
Other topics of Interest will
lnclud.e hlghllghtlng the Ohio
Beef Expo to be held In Columbus
on March 15-18. You need not be a
local Cattlemen's Association
member to attend the Monday
meeting. Everyone Is welcome.
Mark your calendar for the annual tobacco producer meetIng at Hannan Trace HighSchool
on Tuesday, March 20 at 7:30
p.m. Complete details wlll be out
in a few days. The prtlnary
resource person will be Dr.
Phillip Hunter, Director 'of the

University of Tennessee Tobacco
Research facility at Greenville,
Tennes~;ee .
.

MYSTI!:RY FARM - Tbla week'• III)'Mery
farm, femured by the Melp Soli · aud Water
Co~~~ervatloa District, Is located 11011Mwllere Ia
Melp County. Individual• wllblng to participate
Jn ihe weekly contest may do so b)' -peulng tile
!arm'sowner.luatmall, ordropoffyour gueu to
the Ga!UpoUa Dally Tribune, -821i Third Ave.,
GaiUpoUa, Ohio, 41631, or tile Dally Sentinel, Ill
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, .4J789,and you may win

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bold tbls time." Tile tremendous Impact of the

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Maynard w]1o was bleeding ran nearly two miles
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velllcle. Maynard should be able to play , In
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By N:ANCY YOACHAM
CJe to eScape serious Injury and
Sentinel News Stall
the truck continued "on across
The Meigs Gallla Post, State Route 124 and rammed the power
pole. If the power pole had not
Highway Patrol · and Meigs
been there, the truck would have
County Sher!f!'s Department
were called to Mlnersvi'lle gone Into the river, Trussell
shortly before 7: 30 this morning speculates, since there Is no
when a pickup truck struck and guard rail along the road at that
snapped a power pole along the point. Norton was slightly Inriver on ~oute 124.
jured In · his jump, Trussell
Although the patrol · officially reported, and there was heavy
investigated the Incident, no damage to the vehicle.
'
Information was available Iron\ · · Approximately 1,100 Ohio
the patrol prior to The Dally Power Company customers beSendnel's 11 a.m. deadline.
tween the Ashland Bulk-Plant at
However, according to Meigs Minersville and Racine were
Deputy Ralph Trussell, whO was without electricity lor some time
also on the scene, Todd Nogton. as a result of the accident Power
had to be restored in a piecemeal
the driver of the truck,' was
coming down Welshtown Hill manner to the affected custoRoad when his brakes failed.
mers, reported Ron Ash, manNor,ton jumped from the vehi- ager of Ohio Power's Pomeroy

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TOLEDO. Ohio IUPI) - A·
farm labor union, citing an
example set by the city's black
community , said it will issue a
challenge to Toledo institutions
to take specific actions In support
of the ci t y's Hispanic '
community. ·

.•

.. ~

Cleveland bus workers· say
Greyhounds are·llot safe ·
CLEVELAND ('UP!) ·.,.. Striking. Greyhound Lines, Inc.
workers In Cleveland have accused the company of ))lacing
Inexperienced "scab" drivers
behind the wheel, putting both
pickets and passengers In
jeOpardy.
The three-day-old strike affectIng more than 9,000 Amalgam. a, ted Council of Greyhound Local
Union employees and tho\lsands
of ' travelers nat.lonwlde, has
alreadY cl_a imed one life. The
strike was called early Friday
· morning after negotiations In
Scotts&lt;lale, Ariz. broke down. No
new talks are planned.
Striking bus driver Robert
Waterhouse, 59, was crushed to
death ag~lnst a wall In Redding,
Gal!f. Saturday as a temporary
driver tried to maneuver the bus
around a pickup truck. Two
pickets In· New York were arrested for throwing rocks at a
bus, while a substitute driver In
Indiana reported being fired on.
').'wo Locall043 members Sunday warmed their hands over a
makeshift fire In (ront of the
Greyhound bus terminal on 13th
Street, complained about low pay
alftl bene!lts· and worried a b&lt;iut
the threat of more violence.

Inside , the nearly . deserted
_lobby, - about a dozen weary
travelers cooled their heels walt·
Jng lor drivers. Most were told
there would be a ''slight delay of
about an hour."
James Ondtejcak, a 37-year
striking maintenance mechanic
said, "I'll tell you the truth. I'm
kind of scared - especially since
that guy In Redding got killed."
Ondrejcak reported that earlier that afternoon a "scab"
·driver pulled Into the exit
driveway . ·
·
· "He was confused, " Ondrejcak
claimed. "He didn't know what
he was doing."
'- Mathew Peoples, an 11-year
Greyhound driver said he took an
eight-week driving course be!ore
he was allowed to -get behilid the
wheel.
'"It' s just not safe, now,"
Peoples said. Greyhound has
imported drivers from California
with only six days training, he
said.
Peoples makes $6.50 an hour as
an on-call driver and gets' an
extra 30centsa mlle. Before 1987,
drivers were getting 37 .5 cents
per mile, he said.
. Ondrejcak said he ma~es $9.75

The vehicle that was driven by
the suspect wanted for questionIng In last week's killing of the
young woman .on State Route 32
in Jackson County, has been
recovered In Meigs County .
According to Meigs Sheriff
James ~~ Solllsby , the vehlc)e
was recovered Saturday In Salem Township. !I had been placed
inside a locked barn near the
·Meigs-VInton County line. The
locll had !Jeen broken from the
hasp and then just hung back in
place, Soulsby reports. The vehicle has been Impounded by the
Jackson Post of the Ohio Highway Patrol. which is handling the
Investigation.
.
Sheriff Soulsby also reports
thaf deputies took a nu!Jlber of
accident reports &lt;j/et . the
weekend.
On Sunday morning ·at 7: 15
a.m., Raymond E . Manley , Mi~­
dleport. was . traveling east on
Route 124 near the Intersection of
Route 325 ,when he went off the .

an hour. Salary and penef!ts
were cut in 1987 when Fred
Currey took over as Greyhound
··
chairman, he said .
Local 1043 president Charles
·Flanagan claimed reported Incidents of union violence were
"plants" - tactics by management to make the union look bad
and sway public opinion,
"Our argument Is wlth the
company ... for blatantly run·
ning over one of our members
with a bus," Flanagan said. ···we
are not going to do Infantile
PLEASANT HILL, Ohio (UP!)
things like that. We are trying to
- A big unknown among the
retain o~r dignity and our jobs."
Local 1043 members Guy Se- splintered Republican Party In
· the 8th Congressional District Is
llnka and Richard Mason were
whether Rep. Donald "Buz"
. struck by buses in .separate
Lukens
· can revive his election
· incidents Friday while picketing,
campaign after being convicted
Flanagan said. Both were taken
.on a misdemeanor sex c)\arge.
to a hospital, and treated' and
"There's no quit In the guy .
released for a knee and back
He's not giving up," said Don
Injury, he said.
The company Is underplaying Birge!, Butler County Rep\lbllthe delays and the number of can chairman.
"! know Buz, and he can be a
-available drivers,
Flanagan
competitor," Birge! said. "I've
claimed.
"The'truth Is, (passengers) go talked to many people who say
tl)ey, wlll vote for him. They like
when they can find a driver," he
the way he's voted, and that's
said. Cleveland Greyhound has
·10 to 15 substitute drivers to more Important to them than
anything else. There are a lot of
replace 130 regular drivers, he
closet Lukens supporters."
said.
Lukens has !lied for re-election
In an ef!ort to buy time while he
apJlt'als his conviction for having
sex with a 16-year-okl Columbus
girl In November 1988.
Lukens' support among conof. the economy, " and Is not
stituents belles·opllllon polls and
necessarily a reDection of how
conventional wisdom, which sugvoters perceive Bush's abilities
gest he cannot survive the
wltb tbe economy.
political fallout from the trial.
"The president's high rating on
"People expect their congresshandllllg domesdc Issues other
men to be good role model," said
than the economy suggest that
Shelby Warren, prlnclpal of tile
political analysts are not correct
Newton Local School. " I think
In usumtng tllat voters are
what he did Is a real Issue wlth
unea.sy wlth the way domestic ·the people bere. They look upon a
Issues are being l1andled," · he
congrealllllan as a person they
laid.
.
reallY look up to."
·
Tbe preslden~ scored highly In
The stiffest contender lor Luk·
forelen affairs, a rating Tuch- .ena' 8tb District seat Ia fellow
rarber attributed to tile success- Republican Thpmu Klnduesa,
lui overthrow of Manuel Noriega
the former COJ!Ifeiii'IWI tram
In Panama.
MlddleiOWD wllo cave up Ills seat
Tile Olllo PoJi Is conducWcS for
Ill ·1986 to rWI unauccealful!y
Tile Claclnnall Post, Tbe Dayton
aplnat Sen. Jolin Glenn. PoDs
Dally News and WKRC.TV.
show Klndnesa has • solkllead In
Tbe ran.dom teii!IJhode survey
the race.
ot 802 reatatered voters wu he~
Kllldneaa, meanwhile, Is deFeb. 2·12. Tbe poll hu a margin
tendiJ11 hlrnaelt aplnat attack&amp;
o! error of plus or minus 4 by state Rep. ,John Boehner ot
percenta1e points for tile l'verall Weal Cheater, who Is calling for
.sample and WOI!ld be somewhat
new, blood In Congress. Bolehner
lareer for subgroups.
trails botll Kindness and Lukens
In tbe district.

CINCINNATI (UP!)
blacks. President Bush's perfor·
Ohioans surveyed in a recent poll - mance In of!lce Is rated posl·
give broad support to President tlvely. By contrast, President
Bush's jQb performance, but are Reagan seldom had maJority
less enthusiastic about Vice approval from Demcorats In
President Dan Quayle.
Ohio and never approached ma·
The Ohio Poll, rele~~sed Mon- jorlty approval among blllcks."
day, shows 74 percent of respondAm9ng Democrats, 62 percent
e11ts approving of Bush's job apprated of 1 Bush's perfor·
performance, 20 percent dlsap· mance; amqng blacks, he had 58
proving and 6 percent neutral or percent support.
with no opllllon.
But the vice president fares
• AI Tuchfarber, director of the less well, wltb45 percent approv·
Uutverslty of Cincinnati' s Instl- .Inti o! Quayle' a Job performance,
tute for Polich Research, said the 24 percent di$Bpprovt~g . and 31
president wins a majority of percent lleutral or . with no
support In all major demogra- oplnloJI.
·
·
plltc and polltlcal .groups l_n the . Dipping below a 50 percent
.Btate.
approval ratlntl can be a .,_d alp
Bush's rating Is only slightly for a politician, leadlnJ Tuchbelow the m•rk he received In farber to predict tllat Buill mJ&amp;ht
Septelnber of Jut year. •nd Is replace Quayle on the 1892 ticket
above hll ratlllg last April; · ' · lfhlspopularltydoean'tlncreaae.
"The president's t:iaae of supBuabrecelvedbllloweatraUnl
jJortls surpriSingly broad at tills . on hll han.dlln&amp; of tile economy,
polat In hll tetm," TUchtarber but Tuchfarber said that may be
said.
related to the relative weakness
. · "Even among Democrats and
I,
_.,_.. __

.....

·-'"

..

·- --- ...

office. As of 11 a.m., Ash was
hopeful that all customers were
goll\g to be restored In a short
period of time.
The sheriff's department and .
Pomeroy Pollee detoured traffic
until the accident scene could be
cleared.
Another accident took place at
the scene of the first acclden1 and
was lnves tlgated · by Deputy
Trussell. A Pomeroy lire truck,
driven by 'Fireman Brent Zirkle,
was preparing . to leave and
backed int.o the car of Assistant
Pomeroy Fire Chief Jeff Shank.
There was no damage to the fire
truck but there was moderate
damage to Shank's car. Shank
was not In the vehicle at tile time
the accident occurred. No citat Ions were Issued.

Murder -suspe-ct's vehicle
-recovered in M e~igs . County
' the
' '
roadway on the right and,over
embankment. His vehicle. a 1987
Ford station wagon, came to rest
in a field and ' was lightly
damaged . Manley was transporkd by. Rutland E1\1S to
Veterans MemoPial Hospital for
treatmen t. ·
·
·
A!! 7 p.m,"'Saturday, Leigh A.
Myers, of Langsville, was travel·
tng east on ~oute 124 In Rutland
Township when she struck a deer
that ran into. tbe path of her 1988
Ford. There was moderate damage to the vehicle.
Also around 7 p.m . Saturday,
William H. Coleman, of Reeds·
ville, was traveling north on
ROute 7 when several deer
crossed the road In front of him.
Coleman applied -his brakes, th·e
vehicle skidded off 'lhe road on
the left and he struck one or two
of the deer before hitting the
embankment. His 1988 Nlssan
truck was moderately damaged.
Shortly after midnight on Sa1 ·
urday morning, Kevin White was

driving north on Hill 'Road in'
Letart Township when he also
st~uck a deer that ran lnt.o the;
path of his 1984 Chevrolet truck.
T)lere was light damage to the'
front end of the truck.
The first accident Investigated
by the sherlfi'~ department over
the weekend occurred around
7:45p.m. Friday. Sheri L. Young, ·
o! Pine Grove Road, Racine, was
traveling east In her 1989 Chevrolet when she was unablfil to st.op
and collided with a deer that had
jumped Into the roadway . There
was moderatz damage to her
vehicle.
There we~ no lnjuri~s In any of
the deer-vehicle accidents.
Also over the weekend, depu- .
ties arrested J. F. Young, of '
Gallipolis; Gary R. Cooper.
Portland; and Robert B. Drain, of Belpre, for driving under the
Influence. The men are scheduled io appear this week In ~
Meigs County Court.

..

Lukens' standing in race not. cle~
"Overcoming name Identification_ and trying to deliver a
message In this district Is very
difficult,"· Boehner said.
After his 1986 defeat, Kindness
remained in Washington, where
he opened a government affairs
consulting flrin. Boehner points .
out that Kindness did not vole at
all in 1988.
"Tom represents everything
wrong with Washington: revolv·
ing · door and an Inside-thebeltWay mentality," Boehner
.
said.
Some Republicans said

-

·J

'

Boehner's attacks may weaken.. .;
Kindness and boost Lukens'
chances ..
On Friday, Kindness repeated
his call lor Lukens to withdraw
his candidacy petitions and not
seek re-election this year. Kindness said voters had suffered
enough.
"A cloud of disappointment ,
embarrassment and anger hovers over the people of our area
because of the extremely negative publicity surrounding you
over the past year," Kindness
said.

'

Local news briefs-..
'

Two'injured in two-car crash

Ohioans approve of Bush's effort

- ,

25 C.nto

A Mukimedlo lno. N-opopor

POwer·is disrupted
after truck ·hits pole .

-

a $5 CMII prize from tbe Ohio Valle)' PulllllldJig
Co. Leave your aame, addr-Qa aad telejllloae ~
· number with your card or leiter. No teleplloae -;:
c.a lls wiD be accepted. All contest entries lhould ;
be turned Ia &amp;o tile newspaper oHIC!l by 4 p.m. each ~
Wedneeday. In cue of a tie, tile winDer will be ~
chosen by lottery. Next week, a GaiDa County ;
· !arm wiD be femured by tile Gallla SoD aad Water -·
,· .·
·
.-. :;
Conservailon District.

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··

Two Rutland residents were Injured In a two-car crash
Saturday at 7:16p.m. at the junction of State Routes 7 and 124,
according to the Gallla·Metgs Post of the State Hlghw;~y Patrol.
Lewis E. Kennedy, 64, and hlspassenger,AllceR. Kennedy,
58, were taken by tile Meigs County EMS to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Lewis Kennedy was treated and released for· neck
strain, and Allee R. Kennedy was treated and released for a
back Injury. Neither was wearing a seat belt.
.
·
· ,
Lewis Kennedy, driving a 1984 Ford Tempo, was travelll\g
nor til and waiting to turn le!t.at the junction when a 1980 Pontiac
LeMans driven by RlchardL. Chapell, 25, of S.R . 143, Pomeroy,
hit the Tempo lrom behind.
Chapell was cited tor not malntalnlng assured clear distance
and not wearing a seat belt. Lewis Kennedy was cited for not
wearlne a seat belt. • .

Pomeroy police probe vandalism
Vandalllm at lbe Excelllor ServiCe Siailon on Eui M•ln St.
In Pomeroy Saturday nfCht Ia UDder laves Illation by Pomeroy
Pollee.
.
.,_c~~lllJ .to. Cbtef '!! Pollee Gerald Roqht, rocks were
~own lhtOIIIIi lbli..(ptif lfl ,.llldowa andd· tile window In the
door of 1M bulldfnl sometime Hlween 9 and 10 p.m. after the
station bad cloaed.
: Kettll Kline, alation mana,., reported the Incident to pollee
early Monday mo"'tar. 'lbe vaudala entered tbe bulldtaa,
accorctlnr to Chlefi\OIIIbt, butlheonJy thln&amp;mllalqwu a few
dollars from the cub register. Keith Kline, station maqa,
reported tile Incident to pollee.
·
.
Continued on pare 10

....L_------------------~~----~------~i ·

1

.

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    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35524">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35523">
              <text>March 4, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2796">
      <name>mcfarland</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="815">
      <name>mullins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="467">
      <name>parker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1141">
      <name>priddy</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1447">
      <name>stumbo</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6665">
      <name>woodson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
