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                  <text>Fri«My, u.d'l 8,

Pllga 12-llw Deily Sa ttiuel

Southem five eliminated

Fighting
the d.mg ·
problem.••.

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Inside

Bell 'of ttiiBend: ·
I.
Relatiolllhipa 8ft more eomplieated
u time
_p ;;;..B-8;;;;..;;_· -~----1

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B-1

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James Sands:
Women•s suffrage movement
around 1874 in Gallia Count

C-1

Alo111 the River ......... 81·8
Buallletia ...... ; ............ D·1·8
Comics- .................. laaert
CIMallleda ................. 02-1
. llea&amp;ha .•••....•..•.•.•.•.•..••.A-3
began ·
Edltorlai ................... .. A-2
-e-- ,
Farm ••••.•••............... D-1·8
..•P ~B-4:::,""'":'--~_.:;S:!:;por::m:.::.;
...~
.. ·~
· .. :.::.·.. ~··..;;.;;·..;;.;;·..;.!:c::!
-1-:!.
8 --1-llll:tWL-

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tS
Vol.'21 No. 1
~OP\;aWalld 1110

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12 Seotkino. .. Pili•

Middleport-Pomaoy-GaUipolia~Point .Pteaaant, M•ch 11, 1990 ·
--------------------- - - - - -----

A Multlmedlo Inc. N - -

lftiddlepOrt ·receives ARC housing grant

Congratu at ons, out ira or a oas On
Another Seetional Cro n. • •
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Good luck Saturday Afternoo .. Jn the
D1str1c:t
.
Championship vs. Portsmo·uth·· Eas.t
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GAME ·TIME 3:00 P.M. AT OHIO UNIVERSITY CONVO,CATION CE8TER
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ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLE'Y
MIDDLEPORT TROPHIES·
. MIDDLEPORTI OHIO

992-6128

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·RACINE1 OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

992·5432

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FARMERS
BANK
992-21:16
985-3:185 .

Fs

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MIDDLEPORT, OHiq

EWING FUNERAL HOME
POMEROY, OHIO

.

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POMEROY, OHIO

992-2057

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KOUNTRY K.ITCHEN
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PAT HILL FORD
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·2196

AnOINEYS

992-6455 .

Ho•

PO-OY,
OHIO
•

992·6059

.BAUM .LUMIER.COMP

t

949·2613

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1&lt;992-6421

CHESTE,,

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.Dl•.:MARGIE
.
.. 4t LiWSON
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -A
simple bill ~signed to protect
the owners of fur shops, depart·
rnent stores and their customers
has been turned Into a package of
political dynaml~ that may be.
put IntO deep storage In the Ohio
House of Represenf8tlves.

ROSES~

to

:EXCAVATING &amp; TRUCKING

UCiflt o•o

·• ·

I£11BER FDIC

upgrad~

facilities

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GALLIPOLIS - The rest area on State Route 7, near
Kanauga, wiD be closed beginning Tut!lday, March 13, to
u!lllfade the park'a fac111tlel, &amp;CilCOrdlng to Joe Lelt)l, Dlatrlct
10, ~eputy director for the Ohio Department of Tranaportatlon
(000T).
·.
• Tile newly conatructed rest area will have a heated motorial
service blllldlne with nulll·type faciUUes, laclud!D&amp; a
handicapped accessible reatroom and diaper cbaDIIDI table.
Leach aald conatnactlon Ill to belln lmrnedllltely upon doaure.
1.n expected c:ompletton date 18 let
Sept. ~. 1990.

.ror

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who want the bill may be able to
salvage it.
·
The House reconvenes Tuesday at 11 a .m. and the Senate the
same day at 1: 30 p.m.
Top lteiJ!Pn the Senate agenda
Is a $140 million liupplemental
appropriations· biD presented by
the Celeste administration last
week, mainly to· offset a projected $93 million ahortfall In
Medicaid funds.
That bill will receive a second
hearing Monday evening In the
Seoate Finance Committee and
could be voted out Tut!lday, Sen.
Theodore Gray, R·Columbua, the
' · committee chairman, ' aald the
bill may reach tM floor
WednesdaY·
The ao-called "fur ,bill" had
unantmoua aupport when It
reached the Senate noor last
week from the·Eneqy, Natural
(See FtlB. p&amp;le ~~

FmHA, 8S' well as Runyon. ,!.,ong
and Abel for th ~ letters or support
'and contld~ expresiiillir the
application of lhe VIllage or
Mlddleport.

Annex, dining hall included in
capital _improvements budget
. RIO GRANDE- Part of Gov.
Richard Celeste's $945 million
capital improvements bl!dget for
1990-91 Includes $3.9 million for
tlie University of Rio Grande to
build a new dining hall and an
annex for Lyne Center.
·
. The budget, announced March
5 is now under the consideration
of the Legislature where action
is expected to
taken next
month. The spending plan, If
. approved. will gei into effect on·
July 1
·
As ~ result, planning for the
new structures will begin soon,
explained Dr. Herman Koby,
e ecu tlve assls tan 1 to Rio
cfrande President Paul c. Hayes
and secretary/treasurer of the
. Rio Grande Community College
Board of Trustees.
Koby said committees of raculty, staff and students will
begin discussions so . detailed
plans can be presented to an
architect on July 1.
Koby said the university Is
pleased with the·· funding. "because the need Is there.·"
One of the committees will look

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Into the possibility of making the
dining hall an addition to the
present student center, or a
free-standing bl!ildlng located
near the center. The governor' s
budget calls for $1 million to be
spent on the urolect.
A new dining hail ' would
replace the current facility In the
basement of the student cenler,
which has become too small for
the estimated 1,500 commuter
•stlldents• and 500 resident students; and, for those students
who wlllllve In the new dorm!,
tory planned for later this year.
Koby said a new dining facility
would mean some reorganization
of the student center. It's ·posslble, he said, the current dining
room could be used for banquets.
The rooms upstair~ which are
now used for banquets c.ould be
then used for ,meeting rooms or ,
additional office space, he said.
The Lyne Center annex, est!ina ted at $2.78 million, would be
built between the present physl·
cal education complex and the
at_hletlc .fields, d,epending on soli
tests, Koby said.

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The Ohio Senate passed the bill
last week, sharpen lng the ·penalty:for violent demonstrations
against consum~ products, not·
ably fur coats.
But the senators so confused
the Issue that not even the retail
merchantl and the sportsmen

SR 7 rest area closing

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-HaM, OliO

l
,.J

a braas
SIT DOWN AND BB COUNTED - Parllelpat- . )'0111' aame permanen&amp;l)' IIIICrlbed
plaque.
Accordllli
to
Lora
Saow,
&lt;rflhl),
artiStic ·
' ln1 Ia ille Ariel Tblllter'a theme, "Sit DOwn and
director,
&amp;he
Ariel
hM
reaelled
the
w8)'
mark
Be CGatM," llm ... BecQ Daile)' parc'-ed
of
the
511,008
appropri.Uon
from
of
Ohio.
two MMI for &amp;be Atlel'a fund drive. Fer a Sl,OOO,
(Times-Seatlnel
photo)
tax dedudable donation, reaklenll can II&amp; dewn, ·
·once se.Ua1 18 lutalled, Ia• • - AtleiiiPOt with

alternooa to make the anao~meat to Ma7,et
Fred Hoffman, second lrQm ·left, and other
officials were, .from left, Randy Runyon, director,
Gov.e rner's Office of Appalachia, State Rep.~
Abel, and . Stale Sen. Jan Michael Loq.
(Times-Sentinel photo)
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merce, the Gallla·J14elgs Communlty_I\~J I.Qn Agency, . ,the
Vlllap Of fiaclne, tile Bucke')'e
Hllls·Hock,Jng Valley Regional
Development District and · the
Meigs CQunty office of · the

lous agenCt!'S arid goverllmental
authorities . In the suc.cessful
~ndJJtg of tbe proJect: .
, He mentioned ,speclflca!ly lhe
Meigs County Commissioners,
the Middleport Chamber of Com-

Fur bill tangled by Senate changes ·

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HOME
NATIONAL
949·1111

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. DCIIE, OliO

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949·2493

DR. DOUG HUNTEI .M.D.

. POMEROY I

~\

POMIIOY, OHIO

• RAWLINGS·COATS-FISHER

AT LAW

POMROY, OHIO

POllllot, OHIO ~

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CROW AND CROW

KENNETH R•.. UTT

992·3671

VETERANS .
. MEMORIAl HOSPitAl .

992-6454

~OMEROY, 0~10

992"~7559 .

AWARDED GRANT- AMI,8881"antfremlhe
.Appalachia Regional· CommiBelon Housing Op·
portunttles Prolf'aln hu been awarded lo the
village of Middleport. The money wiD be used lo
hire a houalng special lilt to . f aellltate loans
throfllh the Famier's ~ome Admlnllltrailon and
lor site developmeat. In Middleport Friday

be

•r

fllllllfllt AI'PUAIICIS. I'V1. ROlli Cm.G

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·POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
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POMEROY, OHIO

.,. ,111(/t/I'~OIIl

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949-2324

992-2104

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CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT

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MID~LEPORT, OHIO

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RACINE, OHIO

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99~·37.5

Oltlq

RACINE CUT RATE

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992-2174

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PLEASER'S

'f
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K&amp;c·JEWELERS

992·6661

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-SMITH-NELSON MOTORS, INC.

MARKS AUTO..SALES·

QUALITY PRINT SHOP

992-2121

&lt;;,

,../tit

POIIIIOY I OliO
1UPPEIS PWIIS, OHIO
.
.MIEI FDIC

992-3345

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RACINE, OHIO .

949-9200

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POMEROY,

992-2342:·

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· CENTRAL TRUST.
Q;, ~D:mkThatMalces'17q$~.

FRUTH PHARMACY
992-6491

POMEROYI ·OHIO

EBER'S GULF

CROW'S.FAMILY RESTAURANT

OHI~.

'DOWNING·CHILDS . ·.
·MULLEH.MUSSER INSURANCE ..:

992-2975 .

SYSTEM

. '

MIDDLEPORT,

992-2635

GRAVELY -TRACTOR

SWISHER-LOHSE PHARMACY GRAVELY

I

INGELS· FURNITURE ..
AND JEWELRY ·

"· RACiNE DEPT. SIORE .·.
949-2800

. MIKE SWIGER .
' MIDDLEPORT,

992·6685

I

POMEROY, OHIO

.

STATE-FARM INSURANCE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ' .

992-6669

~THE

992-2955

.

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

POMEROY I OHIO .

992-2556

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that the goal Is to assist In 20 perspective buyers as they seek
FmHA-flnanced h\&gt;me and 10 avenues .toward affordable
MIDDLEPORT - A' $43,868 remodeling project/' thlli year.
hpuslng.
.'
ll.pJ)alac'hla Reg!pnal Commlll·
!3oth Abel and Long spoke
In Wist years, residents have
slon Housing i()pportullltles brlefiy after being commended )laddlfflcultylnobtalnlngFmHA
Grant deslpll!d to help expand , · by the director of the Governor's loans, Hoffman said, explaining
hOUSIIlJ'Opportwlitles for low and Office of Appalachia ''for their that It Is the Intent of the
' moderate Income ·families In support In obtaining the grant. proposed project to solve some or.
· Meigs County hall been awarded Abel commented on the frustra- those problems.
tlons of paperwork when·applyThe housing specialist will ·
to MldCiiepcH't VIllage. · '· ·
A joint ·announcement· of the ing for loans an!l talked about assist with loan appUcatlon prep'gr'an ~ came rFrlday afternoon
how the grant would alleviate · · aratlon packagirig, facilitate ap,fl'om Randy Runyon, director, .some of the problem.
·proved loans and serve as a
·"t::overno.r 's'OfflceofAppalachla.
'This grant really deals with liaison between residents and
. · State Sen. Jan Michl!-el Loi!J the lssueofprovidlnghouslngfor FmHA officials, It was pointed
. · D.Cir,clelillle, and State Rep. some who are finding that out. Through hie utilization of
Mary Abel D-Athens at a meeting dl!!lcult," said Long, wbo then such skills, eligible residents all
of village officials, banking and
expressed his delight at bringing over the county will have the
business representatives ga- the " good news" to Meigs opportunity to obtain · FmHA
·thered at Middleport VIllage County.
loans and Improve their quality
· Hall.
··
In talking about the grant, of life, the mayor continued.
· Runyon. Introduced by,Middle- Hoffman said that It will result in
Although these services "(Ill be
. port Mayor Fred Hoffman, noted hiring a housing specialist whose available to all residents of
that the .villagewillusethegrant ' office will be located at Middle- Meigs County, the prime target
to "package" Farmer's Home port VIllage Hall and ·who will area for new home construction
Admlnstratlon (FmHA) low- provide services to all of Meigs ..will be on Art Lewis Street In the
· · VIllage of Middleport, .Halfman
. Interest home ownership· and County.
housing rehabilitation loans.
· H~ said that the goal of the said, where funds will be made
The gr811t, Runyon said, will project is to stimulate the use of available for site development In
: provide 1\ind$ . to staff loan FmHA. loan programs throug)l· - order that vac.a nt · sites · may
· packagfng . actiVIties -and site out Meigs County ,by .hiring a qual lfy for FmHA -financing.
developn'lents.
housing specialist . to package
The .Middleport Housing Cor.• H~ explained that $25,000 ofthe and facilitate the loans and to poration presently owns .eight
' grant money will go toward develop s'ltes foP new yacantsiteslntheareawhlchare
1
. setting up an Office and hiring a construction. ,..
·
8\rallable for new homeconstruc.. person knowledgeable 111 FmHA
One df the IJlajor. community ~ tlon. According to current plans,
loan .,procedures. to guide appll· . Issues · affecting the vilJage of luods from the sale of those sites
canta thrO!!ihJ!!e process. .
Ml~lepqrt as well as the remainwill be used for the purchase .and
Tl!e.otbJJ:,IJ.!J,llf8, 11M! cllreetor ·1111 ar-tNIB of Meigs County Is · ·d~opm&amp;nt· o~~ajtea wl.thln
said; will go towar4slte d!!velop-, · securing financing for.new hous- . tbe Vlllate of Jjllddleport.
n:tent Cllsts,11uch aa,cona!Jilcting lng, the mayor said, noting that . . Jio~an exprH,aed . ~precla' sewers and 'dl1veways: •.
the lacli of flnancl~ mecha·
tlon for the .liUpPort Which the
• It was pointed oul by Runyan ·nJsms has caused grief among
village · hal tecJel~ from varBY CHARLENI!l HOEFLeR
Tbnes-Sellllael Maff

RBI~-· '1'1111 GIBL ICOVI'I - IIII'Gia
11-l'JJI_........k. Till ......... _Girl
1aoat *rMIII ... t11e1r lellera ·are lllaanr 1
wlu wuadplualai&amp;P!elaleveaa.te•n en
orate Gll'l Seaall•· 8eft, _ . . _ " •1111

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1'he proposed two-story • 28,000
square foot building may Include
up to six classrooms or labs, 10
faculty offices and · a multlpurpose area for · indoor sports,
IIK'IUding lntramurals. In addl·
lion, there may be four dressing
rooms and showers.
As ln the case of the dining hall,
Koby said·that due to·expanded
athletic activity by the· campus
and the community, Lyne Center,
is estimated·tobetnasetrorn8:"30 ·.
a.m. untllmldnlghtonweekdays.
"As our student populiltlon
continues to grow, this addition
has the potential to _becom,e a
student activity center. as well as
a· first class lnstructlonal.~aclllty
for physical education, Koby
said.
.
The bulk of Ce.leste s budget,
more than $500 mllUon, was
directed to bull~lngs and equipment for Ohio s colleges and
universities.
"This Is a solid bill," Celeste
said In mak~ the budget
announcement. II responds to
the needs of our colleges ~.nd
universities across the state.

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·c ommentary ·and pers peetive

March 11, 1990
Milch 11 •.1810

hi•: A~2·

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jU.Wq 1!inul • jentinel

(llt) IU-IlM

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Pablllher
HOB,.UCT WILSON IR.
.Execullve Editor
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PAT WBii1KD'D
· AM11tant Palll...._.v..triller

A MEMBER ol The Uat~ Prftalnteraatlollal. llllaD4 Delly Preu Auoola·
tton aad tbellml!"lC811 Newopeper Plllllllben AaiiGCI•Uoa.

LETI'ERS OF OPINION ore weloome. They ibould bel... t1wt 300 woniJ
10111. Alllett2uarenbject. toedlt~Daud muatbesPed wUhiW!le, addr.,an4
, teiE~&gt;hone aumber. No ~llllpod 1 - n will be publllbld. IAiten llllould be In
pod taste, ad-IIDi_ll_ll!l!l• not peniiWIU•.
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: Backstairs·at
the White House.
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By HELEN THOMAS
UPI Willie Bo- BeJOrter
WASHINGTON - Many viewers reached the conclusion that
Barbara Bush differs with her husbaad on the question of abortion
after watching NBC·TV's ''A day In the life of. George Bush."
The first lady artfully dodged the question but made it clear that s'he
was avoiding It simply because sbe did not want to appear lo differ
from her husband on major public Issues.
Bush' Is adamantly against abortion, tlut In recent montbs be has
been taking a different tack, aa&amp;erting that there Is room in the
Republican Party for
points of view, Including pro-choice
supporters.
·
·
Mrs. Bush, so far, except for a brief sUp 'o n the question of
automatic weapons, has basiCally been able· to avoid controversial
Issues. It Is not required that theflrstlady mustal-ysaj~reewlthber
husband. But she has decided that II the way to avoid headlines.
She religiously keeps a diary and ma)obe Iii ber 'memolis she will
express her views more frankly. ,
.
·
Right now she believes the better part of valor Is to go along to get
along.
.
Furthermore, she. contends that she only wants to express .iier
views on Issues where
·
. she can' make a dJfference.

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NBC had nine camera crews at the Wbtte .)louse the day of the
filming of "A Day·in the Life of President aush" and they covered all
bases. The editors had to crash all night to edit the film 'a fter some 12
hours of shooting. It 'was all reduced to one hour, and much of lt.
apparently landed on the cutting room floor.
As usual, MIIUe, the Bush spaniel, played an Important role In the
; documentary.
When reporters want to tease the powers that be at the White House,
• they quip who was "General Vessey."
Vessey was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during President ·
Ronald Reagan's administration, but Reagan, In giving videOtaped
testlmony In the Iran Contra! scandal case of former national
security adviser Adm. John Poindexter, could not remember who
Vessey was. "The name Is very famUiar," said Reagan.
·

' swing
President Bush loves.to travel, as evlden~ bY his flv.e·day
that began when be flew to Staten Island on Feb. 28 and ended on
March 4 when he returned to Washington from Palm Springs, Calif.
He also made stops In San Francisco and Los Angeles.
A reporter, signing up for the trip, deCided to put a CO).Iple more
stops on the llstj1S a gag. He added Little Rock, Ark., and Dalton, Ga.
Bush did not make those stops but there Is 4 feeling when he learns of ..
the joke, he may just decide to add those·cttles 'to futu'r e trips. He Is '
bOund to break his presidential travel budget again this year.
President Bush has a l!ldden talent of mimiCking; which he exhibits
only In private. He does a good Imitation to Clayton Williams, the
front-running GOP "good 'ol bOy" candidate running for governor of
Texas. Bush, who claims his adopted Texas as home, .has mastered
the style and accent after years In the oil b~slness In Midland. And he
Is relishing stories about Williams' freewheelllJg go·for·broke style of
politicking.
White House chief of.staff John Sununu has become a lightning rod
for White House critics, especially activist environmentalistS, who
consider Sununu a Rasputln of sorts In dealing with environmental'
Issues .
SUnunu gets the flak on other Issues as well. But press secretary
Marlin Fitzwater dismisses the heat that Sununu Is getting from
11\any quarters, te!Ung reporters that "It goes .wttb the turl."
He ought to know. Fitzwater Is In hot water with another group, the
nation's lawyers, after gratuitously telling reporters that lawyers ·
''deserve all the criticism they get."
'

Berry's.. Wo'rld
WELCON\C. TO
TttE t.\ORN\NG NO~.. FlCTlOH
ENTERTAlN~ENT SKOW,

FORM.ERLY,
Tt\E NEWS . .
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WASHINGTON - If you want cbtidren should·attend the ''least
the best education for your cblld, expensive adeq ilate schools ·tlon stipend, auditors round an warranted for 127 of the 145 poets
andyouwantsomeoneelsetopay nearest to the posts."
array of Inflated perks. DlpJo. . that qualifY for b~p pay.
In a fit of phllanthrophy,
mats are entitled to a dlzzylng84 The government pa)'ltiiB mlllloa .
for It, join the diplomatic corps.
' American diplomats serving Congress·designed an elaborate polislble allowances which cost In hardahlp bona11e1 aloq each
abroadgeta$1.,900peryear,per system of fringe benefits to the government $1.3 billion a year.
.child education stipend - three eneourage overseas service. In year.
•
The audit .w on't warm any
times theamount·thattaxpayers addition to caah bonuses for
Onlynlneofthe84wereaudlted hearts In the diplomatic corps,
pay to educate cbUdretl at home hazardous duty and stipends 'tor .In the recent study. The auditors but 11 will vlndlcate the people at
or children of military personnel schools, diplomats get· vacation,
came away skeptical about some the Pentagon.l\Ulltarype!'IOIIDel
stationed
over~~eas.
sick
leave,
home
leave
and
rest
• ..-..bl
·
have 1ong' comp'•'•'""
The high ·rate Is apparently
oft·he a 1Iereel b..
...., ps at some
.
__.. about the
''
and recuperation leave.
overseas posts.'
. ·
second·class treatmeat they aet
based ·on the lofty notion that '
An Internal State Department
Dlploma'-canpocketuptoa25 on overseu aulpments when
·
children of foreign service offlc- audJt obtained by our associate percent salary bonus juat for compared to dlptomall.
ers are entitled to attend the best Jlni Lynch 11141cates that the working In outposts where "unus·
No Issue Is more dJvlslve than ·
boarding schools. Never mind Statei&gt;eparlmentbasgoneover· ual hardships exist." The audl- tl\at· of schools. Children of the
that the State Department pol·
board wltb Incentives.
tors bad their doubts about soldiers overseas alliiOII:'always
Icy, worth no more . than the
Along with the sky-hiKh educa· whether the 25 percentbonuiwas 1 attend Defense Depar't ment
paper It Is written on, says t:;he~:;rlll!'~--------:---------· ----~,· scbools. Those 8Chools try, but
~
don't always succeed -at gtvtae
I
studenll an educ11tlon on a par
With stateside ppbllc 'ICbOOis.
.,
That
program cosll abOut $5,000
,.·,. '
per pupU per year.
·
· Our sources say some dJpJo.
mats look down their npses at the
•
Defense Dep~tment sohools and
butead take advaataee ,of tbelr
$14,900 stipend to send the kids to
fancy boarding scboois back
home. The audJtors found that
the State Department set the
stipend after averaging the cost
of 21 pr.tvate schqois over~as two thirds of wblch w~e pricey
European boarding schoois.
'
The bureau chlef..for, the State
Departmenes African .posts
bristled at the suggestion that the
schOol stipend should be "cost
beneficial" to the government.
·,
"This Is an Insult to employees,"
Irving Hicks wrote In response to
the audit.
On thi! contrary. It Is the
taxpayers who are Insulted when
public servants expect an·educatlon three times more expensive .
than the children of the peqple
· paying the bills.

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Rush .to .judgment
For the last tew days, my
conscience has nagged me about
the possibilities of a wrongful
crusade on my part - my
strenuous support of Dr. Eliza·
beth Morgan to , prevent her
divorced husband, Dr. Eric A.
Foretlcb, from seeing their
daughter, Hilary, because of
alleged sexual abuse. .
With Hilary turning up ln New
Zealand with her maternal
grandparents, new evidence has
raised disturbing ·questions
abOut the merits of Morgan's
accusations. I couldn't help but
think of one of . Paul's most
· cdmpasslonate ep,lstles, which Is
also his shortest. In a leiter to
Philemon, Pa111 writes abOut an
escaped slave, Oneslmus, ~ho
. stole money from Philemon.
escaped, met Paul In Rome,
converted to Chrbtlanlty lind
agreed to return with Paul's
letter.
'
'.'If be bath wrcil!ged tbee, ,or
.QWeth thee aught,~· Paul' wr&lt;tte,
"Pill that on my account." · T
If Foretlch has been wron11ed
by spurtou• cbarees . of iexual
a bull!, on wbose account do we
put wbat II owed?
So IIWIY ofu~ tlbared Elizabeth
Moreau's Olltra.e. We ·admired
her ~tetaal 1Utllnees In serv.lnl 25 moathlla jail rather than
comlll7iaa With a court ordi!r. ·
Alld n applauded CoJqP'els for
P&amp;llinlalaw limiting the lepJib
oC time ODe can 1en1e for
contempt of eourt In Waab1af0n.
D.~.
.
.
Further cloudJnr the ll!nie~
wu the prlmordlalltubborllltess
of the judae In the cue, Hel!bert
B. Dixon. Every tltrle [JJKon
opened hla surly mouth, venptul
~nallty rather than 1ud1clal

.r,
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'"
'

George 'Plagenz
•
childhood stories -of Skin Horse
and the Rabbit. Skin Horse Is
speaking:
.
·
'
"Real'ls a thing that happen. to .
you, Rabbit. When a child loves
you for a long, long time- not .
just to play 'with but REALL:Y
loves ·you - then you become
Real.
.
"Becoming Real takes a long
time. That's why ' It doesn't
happea to' peqple who bre11k
easily, or bave sharp edges, or
who have to be,carefully kept.
"Generally, by the time you
are Real; most of your h8lr has
been loved off and your eyes drop
out and you get loose lq the joints
and very shabby. But the5e
things don't matter at all ~ause
once you are Real you can't be
ugly -excepttopeoplewhodon't
uDderstand."
.
Doyouunderstahd?Ihopeyou
do, •

abuse ease

QD

Chuck Stone

evenhandedness seemed to .lace Interests called the elder Mor· · 'wana Brawley conned a nation.
his remarks. Elizabeth Morgan gan, "extremely unstable' ~ and I'm just relieved tbati was one of .
was our Joan of Arc. Dixon was said be could be · '·'a danger to. .the first journalists to call her
the Grand Inquisitor.
_.
Hilary's best lntere~t."
allegations a hoax. ·
A year ago, I wrote a strong
In this escalating barraee of
But right nol\', I'm feeling like
.defense of Elizabeth Morgan, "a charges and .counter·chaqes,
the pollsters \Yho ' predicted a
loving mother, rational, edu· It's far too early ·to make a
lanclsllde for Ortega In Nlcara;
cated and Intelligent." who re· judgement. • Ent.rencbed bitter· gua.•'The only consolation may
fused to comply with what she ness may bar resolution. But I lay In Pojle'sadmonllbment, "A
felt was an unjust court order. I feel dJrtled by thll tangled web of .man should never be ashamed lei
compared her courage.to that of · deception, iome of It Intentional, own he has been In the wrong;
Susan B. Anthony, Mobandas K. some of It Innocent, but'all of It , which Is but sayln1, In othe.i
Gandhi and Martin Luther King Incendiary.
words, that·hellwlsertodaythali
Jr.
None of us are Icons of· he was· yesterday. :•
Now ·evidence bas surlaced perfection: Frallltles facilitate
My, how the Hilary case ·haS
that could· absolve Foretlcb. ·
guUiblllty, Look how easUy Ta· deepened my wisdom.
(1) The then 10-month·old
Hilary's reddened thighs may
have resulted from a diaper rash
caused by riding In a car on a hot
day, as an examlnl1lg p)!yslclan
concluded at the time, not sexual
abuse.
·
By United Prl!ls International
Toilay
Is
Sunday,
March 11, the 70th day of 1990 with 295 to fol)ow. ,
. (2) According to a 1~87 civil·
The
moon
Is
full.
.
•
..
court proceeding, EllzabethMor·
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
gan's mothllr told a psychiatrist
that Elizabeth's father, William,
The evening star Is Jupiter.
.
.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Pisces. They Include
bad a "violent temper" and had
film director Raoul Walsh In 1887, sUent movie llefres's Dorothy Glsh
abused her and her children
throughout their marriage.
In 1898
newspaper publisher Dorothy Schiff and bandleader
Lawren~e Welk In 1903 .(age 87), former Brltllh Prime Minister ·
(3) Elizabeth recounted In her
Harold Wilson In 1916'(age 74), ctyll rlgbtsleader Ralph Abernathy In
1985 boolt, "Custody," that sbe
had ,forbidden her father to take ' 1926 (age 64), newspaper jlubllsber RuperfMurdocb In 1931 (age 59)
HUilry out alone after he re-. and TV newsma11 Sam Donaldson lt:l .19~ (age 56).
turned several hours late from an
outing. That should have sounded
On this date In history:
·
·.
a public warning bell. But nobody
In 1888, more than :m
died u. four-day snow s~rm crippled
New York City. It came to be known as the Blizzard of 118.
bothereil then to Investigate
further.
In 1930, William Howard ·Taft became the first president of the
United States to be burled In the National Cemetery In ArUngton, Va.
(4) William Morgan revealed a
In 1941, after a long debate, the Lend-Lease Bill to belp Britain
dllturblq lnatabUity In hll sea·
survive
attlck by Germany was passed bY COIIJI'etiS and llgned tnto
thtill denunciation of the jud1e,
the court and the "lazy and
law bY President Franklin RollleYelt.
In 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev, then 54, succeeded .Konstantln ,
Incompetent" Judaes on the D.C.
Court Appeals, who be said are ,Cbernenko has leader or !be Soviet Union. Gorbachev .pledged to
"pr01ec1lbll thlli Jlldp" because
purs11e eco~lc prcc• esl'and detente with the West.
of bll race.
,
(5) The attorney appointed by
A thought for 'tile day: Bandleader Lawrence Well! said, ''if you.
the court to protect Hilary' •
make mlllakl!l, the audience feeis you're human." • ·
:
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,1,

County. she was a daughter of the
late W'Ullam and Lucy Knapp.
She wu preceded In death by
by her first husband, Pearlle F.
Sayre; her second husband, Don
R. King; her third husband,
Cloyd A. Barnette; a son, Fran.
cis V. Sayre; a daughter, Ulllan
J. Ison; two stepchildren; Elsie
Dillon and Goldie Simon; three
sisters and six brothers.
Surviving are two daughters.
Mrs. Lucy ~- Jackson of Point
Ple&amp;$ant, and Mrs. Roy (Jean)
Fisher of Gal Up(, Us Ferry; two
sons, Cloyd H. Smith or Point
Pleasant, and James B. Sayre of
Ashland,,Va.; a stepson, Herbert
King of Columbus; a half·slster,
Bessie Tucker of Point Pleasant;
nine grandchildren, 19 great·
grandchlldren and two greatgreat· grandchildren.
Services will be 1: 30 p.m.
Monday In the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home, with the Rev. · Eldon
Shingleton officiating. Burial
will be In Pine Street Cemetery,
Gallipolis: Friends may call at
the funeral home from ~·9 p.rri.
·
Sunday.

Not Voli~ ·.w;, h
. Aor Oihw

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GALLIPOLIS - Sharon Le~
~echlen, 37, of Gallipolis, died
Thur,sday at her residence.
:
Graveside services Wtll be bel~
Monday 10 a .m .. St. Louis CathoUe Cemetery. The Rev. Wtl·
llam .. William /&gt;i. . Myers
officiating:
:
· There will be
calling hours;
Arran.ge111ents are by Cremeens
Funeral Chapel.
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Sharon L. Mechien

SPRING
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SALE

446-9495

.*·

may be made to Grace United
Met)lOdlst Church Youth Group,
" The Cellar."

------~,

'
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CARDINAL
DRY CLEANERS

POINT PLEASANT
Billy
Smith, 69, Rt. 1, Point Pleasant,

Another · advantage of the I·X "·
Center, located In suburban
Brook Park 20 minutes ftom
downtown Cleveland and only
fe~t from ihe city's southwest
border, Is that ll?ls lmmedlat~ly
adjacent to Hopkins lnterna·
Ilona! Airport and Is close to
three Interstate highways .
''I think we have any excellent .
shot at It," .Brook Park Mayor
Thomas Coyne Jr. said. "We will
m~et all the requirements that
are necessary. We'll have more
.new hotels•In ful~ area than any
other l:lty wllll, the .excj!ptlon of
Las Vegas·. ·

.

died Saturday In Pleasant Valley
In the Crow·Hussell Funeral
Hospital.
Home, wllh the Rev . George
Born March 6, 1921, In Leon,
Hoschar officiating. Burial will
son or the late Harry G. and
be In the Creston Cemetery .
Nancy (Sayre) Smith, be was
Friends may call at lhe funeral
also preceded In death by i
from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m. Sunday .
brother, Beauford Smith.
He was a retired malnten·ance
employee at Lakin State Hospital
HaJTY K. Mills
and a member of Salem Com·
munlty Church.
Gl\LLIPOL!S .. - Harty K.
Surviving are his wile, Goldie
Mills,
Jr., 77, or Bob McCormick
(Berkley) Smith; four daugh·
Rd., died Saturday at Holzer
ters, 'Bonnie Stewart of Gallipolis, Beulah Smith and Betty . Medical Center. · Arrangements
will be announced later by Willis
Smith; both of Columbus, and Jo
Funeral-Home.
Ann Hacker of Proctorville; a
In lieu of flowers, donations
son, ¥Ike Rodgers of Letart; a
sister. Esther McDade or Grove
City; five brothers, Sumner
Smith of Leon, Donald and Floyd
Smith of Columbus, Brice! Smith
ofWestColumbla, andHarryLeo
Smith of Grove City; eight
grandchildren · and 13 great·
grandchildren.
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday

Billy Smith

Financin For·The
·rotal omfort ·
stem Will
Hi yWith You.

•

'

J.

Jeff Cartel

by factory closings in the early
1980s but, they say in Cleveland's
case, making a comeback with
service jobs.
The proposed site Is the 2.5
million-square-foot Internationa! Exposition Center, billed
as the l{lrges·t single-building
exposition cenier In the world. It
\Vas bulltto make aircraft during
World. War II and was used to
make tanks during the Korean
and VIetnam wars before being
converted into· a convention
!acUity in 1986.
,
During the 1988 convention at
the 17,000-seat Omnl In Atlanta
up to 50 percent of the conventlo·
neers were forced to watch from
television but Cleveland promo·
ters claim that "at the I·X
Center a in one facility. on one
floor, file Democratic .National
Committee can accomplish vir·
tually any convention space
configuration desired.

'

or

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and Mark Carter.

Our LoW-Intere&amp;

Today in . hi~tory

people

er

CLEVELAND ( UPI) - The
site selection committee for .. the
1992 Democratic Na tiona I Con·
vention this . week will vjsit
·Cleveland, a blue-collar Democratlc Party stronghold being
: promoted as tbe logical choice
· tor the party's rebirth.
"
. Party officials In late May will
make . their choice among final·
lst.s Cleveland, Ho'uston, New
Orleans, Detroit and New York.
They ,visited Houston earlier ·this
month and plan to visit New
York, Det.roltand New Or leans in
Apr11. Their three-day 'tour ofClevelanclls to begin Wednesday.
"It's the final process of the
site selection for the 1992 Democratlc National Convention,"
: said Robin Schepper, a party
spokeswoman In Washington.
c !'This ls .tq ~Ctlll\lly· see the cities
- -cheek drive times between the
. hotel and, the facility. see how
··much the city really wants us."
:, ' A national political conventlo~ .
has not been held In Ohio since
1936 when the Republican Party
: nominated Alfred Landon ·In
·Cleveland. The last time the
~ Democrats met in Ohio was 1880
in Cincinnati.
In 1936 Cleveland was stronger
poltlcal .f orce- ranking sixth In
. population among American cit ·
, ~es In the 1930 census compared
..with 22nd currently - and the
. city offered 14·year-old Public
. Hall, also host of the 1924 GOP
: Convention.
' Now promoters of Cleveland
talk of the clty being a symbol of
't he so-called rustbelt weakened

Kindness to animals purely, unselr18h.: ·.
·

Cart

:Cl~eland makes ·pitch
for Democratic Convention

.

Of people and animals ...
The tale of the white cat .. .
directly to the bishops and
Sometimes I think the best way
A white cat wandered up and
sniffed at their feet. j3elng
to discover the level of a person's down the aisles of the Church of satisfied that the stran11ers posed
no danger, they walked out."
humanity Is to observe his or her the Holy Spirit on the Kenyon
behavior with animals.
.
College campus In Gambler,
The service proceeded and no
Watch outfor the person who Is Ohio, during one of the dally
one bothered thl! White Cllt after
that.
.
mean to animals. Being mean or worship ·serv'lces at a church
·on being Real (a parable)...
Inconsiderate to other hUman conference I was attending.
beings for selfish motives Is bad
One man even chased the cat ·
A minister friend of mine
enough. But there Is .sC?methlng around the chu~h and put It out' recently came across a little
even worse. That Is being mean - only to have to come back In
stuffed Pooh bear that some child .
.
through a side door and Jay dowri
had left In one of the Sunday
for Its own sake.
· school. rooms of his church.
.
Meanness to animals falls In on the chanCel steps.
that category.
.
· Finally the minister at the
About two-thlrdsofthesurlace ·
If you are looking for an service got up and. mUcUy cen·
was bare cloth, the .o ther third
uqselflsh person, look for some- sured tbe DetVOUS ones In the
stU! fluffy fur, the way he had
bOdywholsklndtoanlmals. Vfe congregatlonllSthecatwalkedoln
been all over at the beginning. ·
are nice to other people for all · circles arqund him:
·
The loving of the years had left
sorts of reasons -many of them
"It Is a tradition In this church
him "leeline quite well, thank
selfish.
to let the animals In,·~ he said. He · you," as Pooh himself no doubt
. But kindness to animals Is a told ot the time he was cond11ct- would have put It -except for a
purely unselfish gesture. There lng a service In tlie chUrch when sprained left ankle which had
can be little self-seeking Involved
three visiting bishops were been carlngly bandaged w:tth ·
In being kind to a dog.
seated In the chancel behind ·Scotch tape.
·
While all this Is true, I' am still him:
.
HOlding \.!te crumbled·looklng
troubledbYthosepeoplewhoare
"Three dogs frbm · the neigh· animal took the pastor back. In
nicer to animals than they are to borhood walked 'In and went memory to one of his favorite
the human beings In their lives.

e

:t&lt; (Dick)

Jack-Anderson and Dale VanAtta

Ill Cc!ian II&amp;., Poml!l'IIJ', Ohio

Rieh~ (~k) d~~ch'tecarter,

GALLIPOLIS - Richard A.
Carter, 58, 103 Mabetene
~.:. Drive, GaiUpolls, died Friday at
Rudolph (Doc) Miller
Holzer Medical Center following
VINTON - Rudolph (Doc)
, a lengthy Illness. He was the
· owner of Carter's Plumbing and Miller, 86, Bidwell, died Friday
In Doctor's .North Hospital,
. Heating, which •he founded In
Columbus.
'
.· 1968.
Born
March
26,
1903,1n
Morgan
'· BornFeb.12 , 19381nPatrlpt,he
Gallla
County,
he was
Township,
' was a son oftbelate Claretfceand
Ada Mae Swain Carter.
a son of the lateJames Oliver and
Mary Evans Miller .
~ S\lrvlvlng are·hls wife, Bonnie
He )s survived by his wife,
• Cook Carter; two sons, Mike
Sylvia Elizabeth Jackson MIUer;
· Carter of Gallipolis, and Rex
a son, Glenn Miller of Bidwell; a
, Carter of Westerville; a . daugh·
... ter, Charlene Carter of Galllpo. daughter, Mrs. Herbert (Eva)
lis; six grandchildren; four · Lear of Columbus; 10grandchlld·
. brothers, Geo~e C,arter of Bid· ren, several great· grandchild·
well, Charles (Chad) Carter of ren; one brother, Hollis Miller,
' GalUpoUs, Don Carter of Pome· and one sister, Sadie Cordell,
both of Bidwell.
roy , and Bill Carter of Patriot;
He was preceded In death .by
one sister, Elizabeth (Sis) Rl·
two brothers and se\ien sisters,
· chards of Gallipollls.
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday
· He was preceded In·death by a
In . the McCoy·Mo 0re Funeral
.brother, Ray Carter.
· He was ·a member or Elks Home, VInton, with the Rev.
,' Lodge 107 and the Loyal Order of Calvin Mjnnls officiating. Burial
wl(l be· In Morgan Bethel ceme· the Moose 731.
SE-rvices will be 1 p.m. Monday tery. Friends may call at the
In the Waugh-Halley-Wood Fun· funeral home Sunday between 5
· .era! Honie, with the Rev. Gomer and 8 p.m.
Jenkins 9fflclatlng. Burial will be
. In Salem Cemetery . Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2·4
Wavie J. Barnette ·
and .7·9 p.m. Sunday.
. ·' In lieu of flowers, contributions
POINT PLEASANT - Wavle
·,may be ·made io the American
Jewell Barnette, 85, Point Plea·
sant, died Saturday In Pleasant
Cancer Society.
· Pallbearers will be Daniel Valley Hospital following a short
· .(Tuck) Carter, Charles (Cap)
Illness.
Born Oct. 14, 1904, In Mason
Rlchards,.Charles (Woody) Car·

Diplomat's ·ch11dren get pricey education

A Dlvilllon of

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�Page A-4-Sundlly nmee-Santinel

Madl 11. 1880

....---Area news briefs--__;_·- - - - - - - . . , Theft reported from
"'h ree hUrt ln
' ttVO-Car eras h
•
~Hobson building
l ,

POMEROY - Three people were Injured In a two-car crash
Friday at 6: 15 p.m. In SaliSbury Township on SR 124 at the
junction of CR 5, acordidg to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the State
Highway Patrol.
.
llpnnie M. Searles, 39, of Rutland, a passenger of Cindy S.
Haye, 20, of Rutland, was taken ,by the Meigs County EMS to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. Linda S. Ryan, 39, of Stow, and her
passenger, Elizabeth C. ·Shiflet, 58, of Rutland, were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs County :fi:MS. .
Searles was treated and released for bruises. Ryan and
Shiflet were treated and released for bruises and strains.
Haye, driving a 1986 Ford Escort, was heading north on CR 5
when she iried.to turn left onto SR 124. Ryan , driving a 1989 Ford
Thunderbird, was beading east when she hit Haye's ·car In the
fron t.
Haye was cited for failure to yield.

Police, sheriff make arrests
GALLIPOLIS - Keith Ramon Gravely, 19, of Millwood,
W.Va. , was arrested by the Gallipolis Pollee DeparJment -"
Saturday morning and ·s ent to the Middleport V!llage Jail
beca use of a lack ·of room ·at the Oallla County J!lll. He was
cti,.rged with two counts of breaking and entering.
.
Cheryl L. Ferguson, 31, of Langsville, was brought to the
Gallla County Jail by the Meigs County Sheriff's Department
Fri!lay afternoon ori a bene h warrant. She was charged with
failure to appear.
.
Mark W. Gh~. 27, Rt. 1, Bidwell, was arrested by the,Gallla
County Sherltr's Department Friday afternoon. He was
charged with (lomestic violence.
John Emerson Rutt, 27, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was arrested by the
· Gallla County Sheriff's Department Ftlday afternoon. He was
charged with menacing.

Horse equipment theft reported
GALLIPOLIS - Marvin Wickline Jr. , Rt. l, Gallipolis,
reported to the Gallla County Sheriff's Department Friday
night that unknown persons removed a saddle, bridle, ·chest
strap and other horse .riding equipment from his barn on
Polecat Road.
The dollar amount of those Items was not determined.

Police cite Vinton County man ·
GAI.:LIPOLIS - A Vinton County man was cited in a
two-truck crash Friday at 2:08p.m. on Eastern Avenue at the
entrance to the Ohio Ril(er Plaza,, according to the Gallipolis
Pollee Department.
.
Jerry L. Murra~, 42, of Ray, was clted'forfallure to yield after

Meigs EMS rendel'S help
POMEROY - Six .calls for
assistance were answered on
Friday by Me!'gs County Emer-

hiS Chevrolet C-20 was hit by a 1982 Ford 9IXXl truclt owned by
Jones Transfer Co. of Toledo and driven by . Ronald G.
Merriman, 55, of Reynoldsburg.
· Merriman was heading north on Eastern Avenue when
Murray. coming out of the plaza, pulled Into Me~rlman's path,
·causing the collision.

Court cases concluded
GALLIPOLIS- In Gallipolis Municipal Court Friday, Danny
Wagoner, 38, Rt. 1. Vinton, was fined~. sent to jail for three
days and handed a 60-day license suspension for DWI. He was
fined an additional $100 and given a suspended six-month jail
term for driving without a license.
·· · "
Thomas P. Broo~s·, 38, of Cheshire, was fined $100 a lid given a
suspended six-month jail term for driving' without a license.

· 'Sleeping Beauty' .auditions set
RIO GRANDE - Auditions for the classic children's play
•'Sleeping Beauty" will be held 'at the University of Rio Grande
on Wednesday, March 14 at 'I p.m.
Auditions, which will be open for ages eight through adult, will
be held In the A)phus R. Christensen Theatre of the Fine and
Performing Arts . Center. Particlpants ..are asked to bring a
non-returnabie photo for submission at the time of the audition.
Further Information may be obtained by caltlng 245·5353,
extension 364. The toll-free number In Ohio is 1·800·282-7201. .

RG Alumni functiOn Apr.il 7
RIO GRANDE -The University of Rio Grande Central Ohio
Alumni Association. will hold Its annual dinner meeting
· Saturday, April 7 at DaVincl's Rlstorante.
Alumni wishing to attend may contact the Office of Alumni
nelatlons at 1-800-282-7201, extension 431 f?r reservation
information .

Publis hed each Sunday, 8~ Third A:'of'.,
Galli polis. Ohio, by the Ohio Vallf;.')" Publis hing Company/MultlmedJa. Inc. Seco nd class postage paid at Galllpolts,
Ohio 45631. Entered· as second class
mailin g maner at Pomeroy 1 Ohio, Post

Office.

Member: United Press Internallonal,
Inland Dallv Press Association and the
Ohio NewsPaper Association, National
Advert ising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

New York. New York 10017.

.

SUNDAY ONLY
· SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Mol or Route
One Week ....... ....... ........... . .. 70 Cents

One Year .. .. ... .. ... .... ............. ... . $36.40
SINGLE COPY
PRICE.

Sunday ......... ................. :..... 50 Cents
No subscriptions by mall perlnltted in

areas where motor carrier service is
available.

·

The Sunday Times-Sentinel wm not be
responsible for a~va nce payments
made 1o carriers .
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
S.nday Only

One Year ...................... ........... 137.44

She months ............................... $19.50
Dally and Sunday
MAIL SUBSCRIPrlONS

lnskle County
13 Weeks .. ....... .............. ........... $19.24
26 Weeks.:........................... :.... $37.96
52 Weeks ........... .... .. .. ............... .174.36
Rates Outside Cout!lfy
1.1 Week s ... .. ... ...... .............. .... ,120.80

26 Weeks ..... ... ... ...................... $40.30
52 Weeks ................................. $75.40

POMEROY - A divorce has
been gran ted In Meigs· Common
Pleas Court to both parties In the
case of Hermetta Kay Hyi!ell
against Giles Lee Hysell Sr.

..

WILD TURKEY
SEMINAR
MARCH'
17, 1990.
..
..

Squads have I 0 ·runs Thursday

gency Medical Service units.
POMEROY - · Units of the treated but not transported.
At . 3:57 ·a.m., Pomeroy was
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
called to the Overbrook Center
cal Service responded to 10 calls
for Clero Baker who was taken to
for assistance on Thursday.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 2:12 a.m. the Middleport,
Syracuse at 9:40 a.m. went to
unit was called to General
AT \
Dusky Alley for Mjirk Duerr to
Hartinger Parkway for , John ·
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
HarriSon who was treated but not
4: :U p.m., Syracuse was called to
translf.'rted, and at 12:33 p.m.
Second St. for Debra Halley to
the uqit went. to Mill Street for
Upper liver ld.," Gallpolls,
Veterllns Memorial Hospital.
Mae lJightfoot who was taken to
Oh. br the In da.IJ• ·Parte
Middleport ji:MS and fire deVetera11s Memorial Hospital.
. NOW IN STOCK
partment were called at 6: 16
The Raqlne unit at 1: ~ p.m.
p.m. to an autoaccldentonRoute
went to Portland Road for
.UVE MINNOWS
124. Elizabeth Shlfiet and DarDarlene Shane who was ~transMULWOIMS
lene Ryan were taken from the ·l ported to Holzer Medici! Center,
· CIAWLEIS
scene to Veterans Memorial
and at 2:04p.m. the unit, assisted
Hospital.
by the ·syracuse unit , responded
•
to'acallinLetartforDwlghtHIII .
At 6:20p.m., Pomeroy was
called to Beech St. iii Middleport who was transported to Holzer.
for Barbara Bolin to Holzer '
At 4: 50, p.m the Tuppers Plains·
Medical Center.
·
unit went to Route 124 for Kathy
Rutland at 6:26p.m. was called Barringer ·who was taken to
.
to asslsi Pomeroy at the auto Veterans.
accident on Rouie 124. Rutland
At 4:'50 p.m. ·the Middleport
tran~t,lorted Bonnie Searles to ' . Fire Depart:rilent was called to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Hysell Street for a structure fire
at the Donna Rice residence.
The Pomeroy unit, at 8:21p.m.
went to Overbrook Center on
· Page .S treet for 'Joseph Le!lch
who was transported to Pleasant
Valley
Hospital.
.
GALLIPOLIS - Reslden IS of
The Rutland unit, at 8:24p.m.
Gallipolis should be advised that ·
_ the City of Gallipolis Is not went to Meigs Mine No. ;l for
conducting a survey of water Gene Oller who was taken t9
Holzer.
sampling In the area . .
At 9 p.m the Pomeroy unit was .
If citizens are contacted by
called to the sheriffs office for
phone or In person to set up an
Cheryl Ferguson who was taken
appointment to let someone Into
to Veterans, and at 11: :)()p.m. the
their residence to. take water
Pomeroy
unit went to the Rainsamples, theY sl!otild contact the
bow
Inn
for
Bill Arnold who was
Gallipolis Pollee Departm'e nt.

COUNTRY
CARRY-OUT

,DOORS OPEN AT ·.1:00 P.M:
SHOW AT 2:.0 0 P.M.
NORTH GALLIA HIGH SCHOOL
State Rt. 160 -

10 Miles North of Gallipolis

Guest Speaker: BILL EPEARQS
QUAIEI BOY GAME CALLS

GALLIPOLIS - It was announced Friday that the Ohlo
Arts Council has voted to give thli
Ariel CUltural and Performing
Arts Centre a grant for the Ohio
Valley Symphony's 1990-91 performance season. The grant will
be In the amount of $7,658.
"The 01\i~ts Council had
only good things to say about the
Ariel and our performance
plans," sal.d Lora Snow, ,A.rlel
Artistic Director.
·
·
"We Intend to make . musiC
·accessible tG the peopk1 of
southeastern Ohio by providing a
beautiful performance space In
· the Ariel and quality performances on the Ariel's stage. The Ohio

Valley Symphony is the only
proteulollal orchestra In southeastern Ohio and the Arts
Council looked very stronrly at
that u well as our outreach
plans, the variety of programs
and tbe number of m !norIlles we
reach."
The first concert of the season
will lie a Halloween Celebration
on October 27, 1990. Selections
Include the "Witches Ride'' from
Hansel and Gretel and selectiOns
from the movie "E.T." Subse·
quent concert are a Holiday
Concert on December 22. A
Concert for Lovers on February
9,1991 and All That Jazz on April
20, 1991.

.

Sponsored by tlorth Gallia Athletic Boosters . !·In Conjunction with. Vinton General Stor~
.
••:
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL
'.

.•

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EQUIPMENT • SALES - RENTALS· REPAIRS

• ADULT DIAPERS
• UNDERPADS ICHUXS)
• BEDSIDE COMMODES
• PAltENTLIFTS. ~

Trustees to meet

: Peraonal DellkMate 2·

~ '~

• HOME OXYGEN
• WHeLCHAIRS
• 'HOSPITAl BEDS
• SHOWER STOOLS

COLUMBUS - Secretary of
State Sherrod Brown reported
today that articles o! lncorP,Orat!on have ben flied with his olflce
In· Columbus by Gallla -Jackson
CHESTER -The . Chester
Data Services, Inc., GreenTownTownship
Trustees will meet
ship, Gall!a County. The lncor- .
Tuesday
,
7:30 p.m. at . the
porator and agent Is Sherr! S.
townhall.
J arvls, of 429 Lewis Dr.

Low Mltl Per Month•

HOMECARE .MEDICAL
. . · SUPPLY INC • . _

BILL OILER 388-9671
' OR CINDY ROBEITS 388-9820

Articles of
incorporation filed

· CT-301 By Rae!io Shack

~

...

By United Preu Jnteraallonal
South Central Olllo
Partly sunny and warm, high
75 to 80. The chance of rain Is 20
percent.
Extended ForecMI
Mollday tbrourh Wednesday
Chance of rain. Highs will ~
between 65 and 75 MOnday and in
the 60s Tuesday and Wednesday .
The low throughout the period
will be between 45 and 55.

Season tickets go on sale June
9, 1990 at the ~\riel's Grand
Opening. For more Information.
call the Ariel office at 446-ARTS.

Our Lowest Price Ever! ·
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A'riel receives ·performance grant

POMEROY - Thirty-four Pleasant, W.Va., $25 and costs,
cases were processed on Wednes- restitution, passing bad checks;
day In Meigs County Court by Madeline Moore, Pomeroy, $25
Judge Patrick O'Brien.
·
and eosu, restitution, on each of
. Fined were William J . King, two charges of passing bad
:'fhe Plains, $300 and costs; one ·. checks; Gene Thoma. Long Bot·
-l'ear lpcense suspension, six · tom, costs and 40 hours of
]IIOnths In jail, DUI; six months community service, conveying
. In jail to rua concurrently wltb contraband to a detention
~ur charge, costs, driving with· ractitty.
. .
·
out a llce,nse; Gregory H. RuneJune .Powers, Middleport, $50
.vltch, Athens, $~50 and costs, and costs, failure to control;
't hree days In jail, $150 of fine and · Charles :ryree, Pomeroy, $10 and
jail time to be suspended upon ·costs, failure to display valid
enrollment in a residential treat- reglstra'tion; Carol Folmer,
· ptent program, OUI; Tammy Pomeroy, $25 anil costs, tailure
Watkins, Pomeroy, costs, six . to control; Kevin D. Thoma,
months In jail suspended to time Ru Uand, $10 and cos is, assured
served, five years probation, clear distance; Dale Grim, Carassault; Robert Drain, Belpre, roll ton, S15and coati, overwidth;
$250 and ' costs, 30 days In jail Kenneth Nelgler, Mlddleport, $20
suspended to three days, 60 day and cosiS, seat belt violation;
license suspension and report to Robert F. Lay;son, Reedsville,~
the Personal Development Instl· and costs, no muffler; Martin
tute ·for alcohol · abuse assess- Carter, Nelsonville, $10 an!l
ment, one year probation, DUI;
costs, failure to control; John S.
$75 aqd costs, three days In jail to Thomas, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
be served c()ncurrently . wit~ seat belt ·violation, Gregory
~ntence.- on DUI Charge, no
Fields, Hartford, W.Va., $20 and
·operator's. llcen~; Imo Jean costs, failure to control; Ver. ·Blevins, Pomeroy, $:l50 and nolca Adkins, &lt;:hester, $5 and
costs, thri!e days in jail, 60 day costs, 110 muffler. ·
license suspension, $150 of fine
.FJned· tor speeding were
and jail time to be suspended Sharori Dorsey, Pomeroy, $23
upon enrollment and completion and costs; Stephen Ritz, Rom·
of residential treatment pro- ney, W.Va., $20 and costs; John
gram, DUI; John Yo\lng. Galli· R. Schnltzlj!r, Bridgeport, $20
I!OIIs. $300 and costs on each of and costs; Mary N. Gould,
two charges, 10 days 'tn jail, 9o Huntington, , W.Va., $21 and ·
day license suspension .on first costs; Tod~ · Spradling, Point
~harge; 120 day license suspenPleasant, w.va., $24 and costs;
.slon tin csecO'nd charge, QUI;
Paul SChaeffer, Cincinnati, $15
COS!S only on two charges of lett ., . and costs; David Persons, Long
of ceriter; costs only on two Bottom; $31 and costs; Amy
charges of drtvlng under sus pen:
Lelgh Johnson, Point Pleasant,
slon; Thomas Stevers, Pomeroy,
W.Va., $21 and costs.
$350 and costs, 20 days In jail, 90 .
Bonds were forfeited in county
day license suspension, DU:I;
court- by Jeffrey D. Grate,
costs only for' failure to control.
Pomeroy; $40, for failure to
Debbie Rhodes , Middleport,
display valid registration; and
$50 and costs, 10 days In jail Warren L. Price, Columbus, $80,
suspended If Uttered area Is
for speeding.
cleaned up, discarding trash on
highway; .Robert C. Saltsman,
Racine, $100 and costs, 10 days in
jail suspended, one year probation, petty theft; Edith Watso~.
Racine, $100 and COlts, 10 days in
jail suspended, one year proba·
POMEROY - A representa· .
tlon, petty .theft; David PersQ.ns,
tlve from U.S. Rep. Clarence
Long Bottom, $75 and costs, three
Miller's' office will conduct an
days In jail to be suspended if open door session on Wednesday
valid operator's license Is obfrom 11 a.m. t01 p.m.lntheCourt
tained within 60 days; Teresa
House In Pomeroy. Anyone with
Wise, Middleport, $50 and costs,
ques lions concerning the federal
· discarding bags of trasb· along · government are encouraged to
roadway; Sheila Hodges, Point
stop by and dlscuus them.

Divorce granted

R~gister appoints .news ~ditor : ·
POINT PLEASANT - Mindy Kearns has been promoted
from reporter and photographer at the Point Pleasant Register
to the position of news editor.
.
·A former employee of the Register for more than six years,
Kearns returned to the newspaper business in October 1989
from the Mason City PubliC Library, where she served as
branch librarian.
Kearns and her husband, Chris, reside In Mason with their
daughters, Brooke, 12, and Klra, 8.
She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dayton Raynes of Mason.

Meigs County Court

County Jail after being unable to
POMEROY - Around mid ..
post
an appearance bond.
night Friday evening, Meigs
County Sheriff's deputies ,were
notified that the Sutton Clfurch
near Racine had possibly been
entered. When deputies arrived
on the scene, the building was .
locked and no evidence Indicated .
forced entry. Apparently, a vehl·
cle had gone Into the parking
area and stopped when the caller
went by. ·
Sheriff James M. SouiSby
reports that the department took
a theft report from Eugene
"YOUR 'COMPLETE'
Facemyer, Middleport. FaceATHLETIC FOOTWEAR
myer reported that a building at
STORE"
Hobson had been entered by
breaking out a window. A battery
was rejlorted stolen. Facemeyer
told authorities that some wires
COACHES SHORTS
had been cut from some of the
machlni!ry.
·
GYM SHORTS • SOCKS
Clayton L. Millers, .34, Mound~­
BAll CAPS • BAGS .
v'llle, W.Va., was arrested Frl·
day evening by deputies· tor
T-SHIRTS • .· &amp; MORE
· operating a motor vehicle while
his license was under suspension.
-Custom Transfers
Millers was lodged In the Meigs

and

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Page A-6-Sunday Timas Sa11tinal

Pomaeov-Midclaport-Gallpolll, Ohio ·Point Plm 1t.

w. v •.

M..ch 11.1990

DOUBLE
COUPONS

Mason superintendent meets with Caperton aides Saturday
~ximatcly 7 p.m. thi$ evening
(Friday) fiorn the state board,
saying it will not approve any
change in the calendar. We will run
buses on Monday even if they an:
empty, if the strike is not resolved,"
PoweU concluded.
Powell noted, however, that it
·u
be
·
I--'WI
necessary to .,.... at esch
school on an ·individual basis. If a
school has no teachers present on
Monday, that school will close,
whereas if 1eaehers an: present
school will be in session. He said
classes may begin on ·a two hour
delay, if the strike is not se111ed by
Monday. Parents should listen 10
local radio and television Stations
on Monday morning for. further information.
The memotandum n:ceived from
the state board said: "Any request
for changes in county school calen- ·
dars involving dates on or after
March 12, which this office deems
tO be made in response to the strike'
wiD not be approved."
PowelliiOied the 1ioard of educalion had received many complimentary caUs from Mason Countians
who felt the board moved in an ef- ·
fon to try !JJ pro_vide a cooling off
period, while trymg not to give in.

PoweU aid he wu auemptjng to askinll whether strikin ltaCIIen teiiCha1 are covered iintil the end tion must be answered by their
cbange Muon County'• spring will CCJOtinuc to be etgible for of the month. The longer . _ ques- employers.•
break fiorn the week of April 9 to health care coverage.
:
next week, in an effort to keep
"In ~ to these questiona,
studeniS from havinB to go to the Agency waniS to clarify what
school longer, and in an effort to ai- the law goveminll the PEJA says."
amoUDC81
low 1eaChcrs to cool off. ·
·
•
By. law, elijlbility for PEIA
•
''We were aaempling to n:move · coverage Clepends upon conlinuinB
a problem bef01e we had one."
•
PoweU S81'd, H• S81'd the -'-dar employment · with a public
. Find out how much you could
'
employer. If the · emplo)'IIICIII
~
,._,
•
Change would have given time of a ceases; coverage wiU ultimalcly
save with new, lower AUatate
'
day-to-day basis to n:move any cease, although how quickly
Auto
rates.
negative perception of the strike, depends upon how the employetwhile attempting to maximize the . ·employee n:lationship ends, · ·
IIAIYIIII IOXIOIFII
calendar for students. The superinIf an employee is invollmtarily ..
tendent said he was strongly think- terminated for reasons other tluKI
•$0 S.CIIIII Aw-, II OJ
ing of all types of school misconduct. then coverage may
G.,, • ., 01, U6U
e~ployees.and the advene effects a continue for three months. If misllw.61._..1·11M
strilce can create, although none had. conduct is involved, and the
employee appeals the termination
been cleated as of yet.
Meanwhile, teachers have a lot then coverage may still continue
to consider while striking, includ· for three months. But. if the
ing their insurance. The foUowing employee loses the aODeal. the
Allltat.e Ja..u · Cgmpuy
news n:lease was. received by the employee must ~eimburse his Or het
..
Point Pleasint Register on Friday employer for the full cost of that
. '. .
coveroge.
.
from PEIAoflicials:
S!llly K. :Richardson. Director of · What this means is that thC
the
WeSt
Virginia
PUbliC length of continued coverage will
Employees Insurance Agency, depend upon if and .how the local
staled today that the PEIA has boards of education decide that a
received many calls in the past strilcing teacher's employmlll!t has
.
·
sev~ days ' from teaA:hera, sc_bool ceased.
Under
the
circumstance
of
either
officials and health .care prov1ders
voluntary termination or li:rmiriation for · mi.sconduc~ if the
employee is te·hircd, he or she will
be considered a new employee by
the PEIA and be subject 10 the
By SUE MORGAN
Earlier Friday, . West V~inia final day of the regular session of pn:miums set forth in the · 1988
. . CHARL~~N. W.Va. (UP!) Ed!lcation Association President the Legislature. ~ ·
. . revision of our statute. And undet
. West Vu~ma s two largest Kayellil Meadows issued a plea for
Education Secretary Steve Haid any circumstance,. an employee
; teachers' umons wen: to deliberate an end to the stalemate in the said his conversations with tcachen who ceases emP.Ioyment in any
: Saturday over Gov. Gaston Caper- state's first 1eaehe,s strike which indicate that supjlort for the strike, manner is eligJble 19 continue
;. ton's latest offe! to end the state's idled !!Chools in 24 COU11tles and be~ Wedn!lSday, is waning. · · . coverage for 18 months .under the
. first ever educauon strike.
.
had educators marching on piclcet
It is increasingly clear the·strike · federal COBRA law. The employee
Caperton held out an ohve · lines in 42 counties.
has lost its momeniJJJn," Haid said. must pay the full cos1 of such
b~c~ late Friday to strilting. West
American Federation or Teachers "There is no..intaest in being puni- .COBRA coverage.
"At this poin~" Richardson conVJtgJ~18 teach~, recommending ~ President Bob BroWn said he was live, and no feeling that we
counues that strikers not lose pay if encouraged by Caperton's offer, but feel that we an: squashing anyone.'
cluded, "we can say that striking
they Jetum 10 the classroom Mon· it would be up to his group's J11J1k G ubematorial spokesman G.C.
day.
..
and file to dec1de.
Morse said Caperton could call a
"I think it's a positive step for special session to offer a com•
, The conc11ia!J&gt;ry offer followed a
. day o~ diSCUSSIOns l,!etw~ Caper- the govemll'," Brown said. "The prehensive . package to address
:. ton, h1s staff and leg1slative leaders. question is what son of . reaction education problems, but it could
; . I9 respon~. both t!Je.West Vtr- will it get from the J1IJik and file."
not take place until a consensus is · ,_-J!IIIII~
, g1ma Educa'!o~ Assocmuo~ and the
Many teachers are expected to developed about addressing the
: West Vu-gmm Federauon of travel to Charleston Saturday, the situation.
· Teachers wen: to hold separate
·
: meetin~s in Charleston on Sawiday
· to cons1der the Caperton proposal.
: The WVFf planned to meei at
: 10 am. inside a Charleston hotel,
; .while WVEA spo~swoman Jackie
ONE EVENIIG SIIOW 7:30
334 SICOIIID AVEJIUE
ADMISSION $1.50
· Goodwin said her association
GlWPOUS .
(61-41 ••6·1413
: would likely make. a decision on
· the offer Saturday afternoon.
: Caperton said he has recommen: ded that aU county school boards
: not dock striken any pay or
· benefits if they return to the
''•
: classroom Monday.
"With our teachers back in the
.,.
'
: classroom, we can begin 111 com- .
.
.
: municate with the education· com: munity and others to plan and im. pruve education in West Vu-ginia in
.'
: a comprehensive way 8!Jd specifi: Cally address the iSsue of ttai:her
: compensation." Caperton said.
I:'OINT PLEASANT - Mason
County teachers met at the Polnt
Pleasant' Junior High School
Saturday morning to discuss the
current teacher's strike.
Julie Bibbee, president of the
Mason County Teachers' Associa- ·
tion had earlier announced a meeting of the 1eaehers for Sunday, but
apparendy felt an earlier meeting
was necessary. .
Mason County Superintendent of
Schools Rick PoweU met with
rqJ~sentalives from Gov. Gaston
Caperton's office Friday afternoon,
including Phil Reale, Dr. Steve
Haid, and Tom Hayworth, in an ef·
fort to assist the opening of
negotiations between teachen, including those in 'Mason County,
• and the state government.
· . "I have reason to believe the
strike will be n:solved very, very
soon," PoweU stated Friday evening. "Our message to the governor
and his staff was we want to have
school in Mason County and do
everything we can."
; ~·I feel bettet coming out than I
• did going in. I am optimistic that
. the strike will over over soon, possibly as early as Monday," Powell
continued
·
·
"We did receive a directive at

..
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Checking,
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After years of resean:h, ·· . .

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$·

·COUNTY LINE 16 IWS

•

Front Row S.•Md. Left to Right: Anita O'Oonn811, Aile• .
Stovlll', W~ellka Wtly. Sundlng, Left to Right: Mergo
Swlaher, Cherlotte M•rrlner, ENzabeth Rumley Patty
Hap'ney, Mary Evant.
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�~~~~~~~~~~TI~w~rn~I=I~~~~-~~;;~~;;~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Oh~~IO·~~Pok~-nt~~A~a~r~s~ant~VV~.~V~a~.~::~~;;========~::~~~::.::r::::::
Fur bill...,-~(P:!!!,·I:=.':.:111=··~=
- .u~....._.,...~·:.....
·
. mplete
Cham. ber meet;ng plans co
..
w!ll be

.,

The guest speaker
GALLIPOLIS - Reservations
Daniel E. Evans, chairman of the
for the 53rd Annual GalUpolls
Area Chamber of Commerce · board and chief executive office
or Bob Evans· Farms, with
meeting must be made no later
than Thursday; March 15, accorporate offices In Columbus.
cording to Tom Wiseman, GalUTo make a reservation,
poUs Area Chamber of Com- members should .send In the
reservation form from their
merce president. ·

.

'

letter of Invitation.
Others Interested In attending
may contact the Chamber of
Commerce Office by Calling .·.
...
"""".Tickets are $17-liO each'}
nv"V..,.,
and this Includes the reception at
6:15 p.m. , followed by the ban- .
quet at 7 P.' m · Both will
In ·
· be h"'ld
~
the Rhodes Center at the Unlverslty of Rio Grande. Valet parking
will be available beginning at 6
p.m.
The banquet committee is
co-chaired by Marianne Camp-bell and Jack RO!lerus, with Dan
Davies. Thelma E!Hott and Beth
Vandawalker.

Bank fails

PREPARE FOR BANQUET -Tom Wiseman (seated, center),
• president of the Gallpolls A-rea Chamber of Commerce, listens to
• .plans by the co-ebalrpersons oi the 53rd Chamber of Commerce
meetlnr, Jack RoderUA and Marianne Campbell, (right), along
with Beth Vandawalker, '(left), banquet committee member and
executive. director of the local chamber.
,

..

~:e

budget nu;ry help

CLEVELAND (UP!) .- A blink
In the Cleveland ·suburb · of
Warrensville Heights failed Friday and was closed.
.
But the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation said deposl- ·
tors of the First Bank National
·Association would have access to
their fUnds· beginning Monday-.
The board of directors of the
FDIC approved paying off the
Insured depositors because there
were no acceptable bids for the
failed bank. The bank had assets
of $35.3 million. The FDIC was
namtid receiver.

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regional jail

.
,·,
f/ex!6iilty

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"~

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The 7-D~y-Pren'liqinCD · ..
:is al)orh~-cx~mpfe -()f our_ ..
... Coriu'(l:itment ,T o Cu$te.mers.' ,-.

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M:nr.:imum d~~it $99,9'99.99. Substontial pefla[ty for early. ~ithdnw:aL
!merest paid to principal ,and wmpnunded weekly_. Rnre~ cffecrive M:irch 9, 1990, ,+
and subjecr ro change ~irhour nmice. Yield 'assum.CS rbat stared rare·r~mains
· constoam fur a full year Wirh nn wifhdn'~o.ls of irirer6t or prihcipal.

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AND WOULD LIKE MORE INFORMATION ..
I NAME:
I
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I ADDRESS: .
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TltE ..CEr-mtAL musT GOMPANY".; The Ba~k Thor. Molies .Things Happen.
992-6661
446-0902 ....

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

(304)

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...... t44=m•

25TH a: JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT

'

. Enjo&gt;; rii~
which is. automafic~lly re~'Yable and ·red.e~mable
at each 7 day anniversary· . ..
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PARKERSBURG Window Co.

CENTER) •

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a'rld ;tiq"Nidityl of a ,CD , : · .
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Middleport ·

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.RUtl4ND

Gas·

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742-2511

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eNorMal
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Pictured with loxdorfer are Rellla Japn, '
Cheryl Basil and Terri Weier of the adVIsory
committee.

'•

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...•
..
:- CLUB MEETING - Addavllle El-&amp;aey
·. School has a formally-orranlzed chill oftheGa..a
: County Anti-Drur Chapter, and coadlacts ache-

duled mee&amp;lllp dqrlng the school )'f;&amp;l'. Here,
~nta u .e pictured at a meetln1last week, and
later In the·-rrlou made pGIIteralo promote lbe

.•

'club.

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•Heating &amp; Water~ li•ati~g . ·: : -~~ · •· : · . ~~$fsl•v•c-.?? ·.:.
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FOR HOME, FAU, BUSINESS ' .
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NOW THRU .,.,,,,~~ l;~ '·" ~ ~,~_-;· ,: ·.'
t:..,

OYD 40 YEARS OF DEPIIIDAI,LI SDVI(E,·

HEAl YO•

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cost-efficient propane gas.

· \\a

When the kids figure that out,
' they see there are others just like
t.hem, who. don't- give Into peer
pressure to "try It just once."
·Ever, feel like just one person's
Idea can't go anywhere•
'Just remember a little girl's
· question that blossomed Into an
organization to promote drugfree actiVities for young people In
Gallla County.

;

big energy jobs, choose right

l(lrby and a shldeat role play, with her trytar lo
get the ofncer le aecept drup. The )'ounr people
learn bow to cope wllb peer preslllll'e and not to
: give Into It, dabblllll In drugs or drinking.

(j

'•

Why waste money? Use clean,

J

schools (AC)davllle and Green)
By f.EE .\NN WELCH
develops a bond between the
and another In the formative officer and studentl -a bond of
Tlmell-8~tlnel Staff ·
GALUPOLJS - What starts stages at Rio Grande.
trust and respect.
out as a child's simple question
AC:cordlng to pollee 9fflclills,
Kirby _Is conducting the class at
can deyelop Into something ·one or two of . every ' 10 young Bid,lllell, Jlilnnan Trll9e ,,jlnd
_,•, larger, -a s.every parent knows: , people get into drugs by tl)e sixth Cheshire-Kyger. Next' year, he
.'-. Last , -year, a Rio Grande grade on a national averaae, and will take It to Vinton, Southwest: Elementary student asked her GaiDa County r11ns close to that ern and Addavtne. . ·
,
:-; mother why there wasn't a Just es tlmatlon.
Each grade has· us pwn curricWhile the anti-drug chapter ulum, and Kirby follOws It tp the
::- ,Say No club in 'the area -after
takes
care of outside activities, letter. Within the lessons are
•• all, It was Nancy Reagah's pet
there
Is
a program of the Galllll games, quizzes and rqle playing
:;. pro,l ect. .. . .
.
County
Sheriffs
Department -to : activities.
.. : The mothe:t, didn't have an
•
·&gt; answer, llut vowed tp' tSo some- educate. young people about The students learn about the
; : -thing to combat thedrugproblem drugs ;~nd tile consequence of role of pollee officers, the harmtl!elr 'abuse, In addition, It ful effects of drugs, p~r pres;:- In Gallla.c;ounty.
-: : Pamela Matura made that · provide&amp; tljem the tools needed to sure and how to say -no, .self·::,promise to her dau~hter Megan a · deal with pe~~r pressure' and - esteem, stress management
make kids realize It's normal to without drugs, decision-making
-- year ago, and since that time, has
• spearh~aded a . group called the• not take drugs. .
and risk taking. , .
DARE, ·o r' Drug Abuse Resist• Gallla, 1Cotinty. Anti-Drug ChapPeer pressure Is tremendous at
ter, wlllch operates on the same ance Education, Is o!ierated by the elementary level, Kirby said
• principles as Just Say No.
the Sheriff's tlei&gt;artment. an.d . - the temptation to try drugs,
It Is an activity-oriented organ- · provides a 17-week course on the
es peclally alcohol, Is great. He
• izatlori, and theY held a skating elementary school leveL One reinforces the young person's
partyonSuperBow!Sunday. If90 offlcer, Chip Kirby, devotes his choice to remain drug-free In the ~
kids showed up, Matura said entire o,yorking day, every day, tb classroom.
the task . .
, th~y'd be happy .
DARE was started In the
More than 300 walked through
Sheriff Dennis Salisbury said it GaiDa County Sheriff's Departthe doors.
creates a hardship on his department last year, seJidlng Kirby to
The goal; she said, Is to provide ment It·. takes.' a full-time
a training school, and preparing
' an alternative activity to drugs deputy off the road, and his
him to take'it to the classrooms of
and alcohol and promote self- . budget must fund DARE to the
the county:
,
•
es leem - showing kids they .tune of approxlml,ltely $20,000 ·
The program "was developed In
a!"en' t the only young people not · annually:
1983 In Los Angeles as a partnerWANNA SMOKE A JOINT?- No, a simple and
doing drugs, and give positive · · Bur It's wprth It, Sallsb'ury
ship between the pollee departemphallc answer Is taught to elementary students
' reinforcement for their choice to said.
ment and educators, Salisbury
In the DA~E prOifam, sponsored by the GaiDa
remain (trug-free.
There are both Immediate and
. County Sheriff's Department. Here,' Deputy Chip
Slll.d. In Ohio, 175 officers have
It's
OK to be different - to future benefits to the program, .been trained in DAftE, to take It
'
·
stand
up for your rights, to say no· he said.
to students as young as kinderteachers, families and society as
,Salisbury said that down the
to, peer pressure ·and be called
garten and as old as ·the eighth
a whole. ·
"chicken" or labeled ''funllo/," road, he expects drug abuse to
grade.
Not everyone does drugs ; because you choose to be drug- decrease and consequently vanthat's the message both groups'
W'hen kids are exposed to the
dalism should also diminish as
' ·free, she said.
.,
.
.
teaching sei!JI'\.en t, and have. It
are trying to get young people to
There are formal chapters at the younger students get older,
reinforced with activities. the
realize. And, It's fine to not take
-: two of the C!lunty's elen'lentary
But rl11ht . now \ \he course
result c.an benefit the students, . ~rugs or to drink - to be

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Gallia U&gt;unty programs tell kidSzit's OK to be drug-free

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ElectricitY is expensive. And
will cost more ·au the time• _
Your bills will be huge.
Shocking. Electric. To
generate electricity in most
areas, monstrous quantities of
fossil fuel burn, and' almost
87% of the heat energy is lost
forever. It doesn't provide you
heat or hot water or cook your
meals. But you pay for all of
it. Use electricity where It
should be used - lighting and
small appliances. For all the

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Mlrch 11. 1110

DARE
be
ifferent

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1rnMt· ientintl Section .

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·(FORMER PATIENTS OF DR MRON BOONSUE AND)
NEW PATIENTS WELCOME .
.

(POINT PLEASANT

r1ver

EaYiroa111e11_1 . ~mtaoi , _1108 • -

llld

The mercbants and outdoor•- tl6a cllllle&amp;, but SeD. ,-Jellrey
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) _ Gov. -men bad aJI'ft(l to IOfteu tbe JobnSoll, Q-Oeveland, did'- , .
c
d _.
measure by removing lllnguare
"I don't believe any~ •
· Rlcl)ard eleste's propose .~ 5
U
-~etb they're- go•ftw Ia ••r a
that could have had a chi lng w.. er
...,
'"'
million capllal construction
I.... or . m Ink s tole or an abortion • s~...
th
r1z
1
effect
on
peacetul
picket
,......,.
budget contains an a~ o at on
•.,
ld J hns
·
that would help pay for part of the
singled out anti-fur protellters.
be harassed," sa
o on. '
eounty
fail
projects
underway
Sen.
Gary
Suhadolnlk,
RFurney's'
amendment
to
44
arma
Heights·,
proudly
bald
all
__
........
_
failed,
but
only li.Y
·or In the planning stages.
.
""'y•-·
Planners of a regional Jilll
al~t a note .from animal rlgb$1 , tWo votell, and the dool' was opetl
under·construction near Stryker
activists praising his handllng of to challenge the bill. . . ·
•
lp ·williams County s)!ld some
tb!! bllJ, Two weeks ·before; they -- Sen. Charles · Butta, 0const;ructlon money may . be
had worn mouth gags In his . Cleveland, objected to ~~J)llahavailable to them to reimburse
committee, complaining they · mg a crime of conapJ[acy to
~~
f b 11,. 1
h
were being muzzled. · .
.
Interfere with the '!llle of conau•
f::.~ ~Jiionc~~~l!t. u " ng t e
But on . the floor, ·the trouble . mer gQOdl: He wa~ned that no
Candace Peters, bureau chief . began:' ; · .
'
,qne could SaY what Is on the
of corrections In the Governor's
Sen. Unda Furney, D-Toledo, mllld$ of pro.tes~rs.
Office of Criminal jusUre Servlsaid that If violence wa5 prohlSome . Republ-Ican attorneys
ces,' said she believed the agenblted against the 'sale of consu- agreed with -. Butts that conaplcy's $44 million request would be
mer goods, 11 should
racy Is dealt with In a_sepata~
fully approved,
.
blted . against
' c~apter of Ohio law; and Butta s,
"W.i!'re optimistic ~bout atiout
that otter
-amendmeilt remQved' the refer- ·
the bill's passage," Peters said In
such
landfills . e~ to conspiracy·
a telephone Interview Friday.
and
· treat ·
·
'
The monflY would on!~ partially offset the need expressetl to
the state by county o!flclals to
help pay for new county jails.
Peters said full funding of ~II jail
requests ' would require a $13~
million appropriation.
Ben Lehman, the regional
jail's director of security and .
· operations, said the mpney would
represent Income above what the
Corrections Commission of
Northwest Ohio had placed In )Is
construction budget.

ROB~T M. ROLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE
PAIN CONT-ROL CLINIC

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treMarw.
meeUar II Mareb
at
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AddavDie
fourCII tllrourb llxtll rrade~•

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delltlln the DARE prorram Ieana tlNirrlrhtlud • Ben, Jrl"r
reepollllbllltlea from tbe IMtructor, Deput)o Chill
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T•• 11 Santinel

Actor arrested
for possession
of heroin
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!Zed matUag ~~)'Stems located IU Oblo ilelra·Akron
Data Center. The new units are dealpled to
accommodate the new telephoae biUa Bell has
Introduced lor Ita cuatom~rs.

HiGH TECH. MAILING SYSTEM - Karen
Ulwlckl (rlcbt) a Bell &amp;: Howell Installation
coordinator, shows Ohio Bell administrative
a&amp;IIOCIUes Donna Carroll and Kenneth Hill how to
operate one of lour recently installed computer·

New format _makes reading your
phone bill easier, officals
GALLIPQLIS - Ohio Bell
customer~ in GalUpolls wlll s~e a
new look in their next phone ~ills
because that's what they said
.
they wanted.
"The customers have spoken
and we're . responding to their
ney&lt;!s,"saldOhtoBellspokesperson Dave Dean.
For residence and small bust·
ness customers, the. new forma(
Is easter to read and understand,
04lan said. ,
For large business customers
w!lh regional interests, the new
format. to be adopted by Amerttech companies in Illinois, lndl·
ana, Michigan and Wisconsin by
the end of 1990, provides convenfence through uniformity.
:rhe new format is larger,
_

~ay

·. · ·

.measuring 10 Inches 'by 61)1.
"This serves tlle consumer's
Inches, and lncorjiorates blue
Interest ' b:y providing, ·a clear,
and beige highlighting . . It re·
detalled account of each mon!h's ,
quires a larger envelope, meastelephone ch&amp;rges," Dean said.
urlng about 5~ Inches by 7~ ..
In 1987, OhloBellbegan~ooklng
Inches. The bill is perforated tn
at alternatives to the exlsdng bill
the upper portion of the first page
format . An Amerltech tntercomfor customers to tear off the top ·· pany task force was formed to
and return witMhetr payments.
oversee the tmpleme!ltatlon -of
"As comparisons go, our new· the new format..
,
format Is similar to a credlt,card . , Included on the task force were
statement," Dean said.
representatives from Ohlo ·Bell,
The tope . of the first page_ .Amerltecb Technologies and
includes the total amount due Amerltech Services.
.a nd · the past due date hi large
Ohio Bellis the first Ameritech
print. Below, a bllllrig summary oj)eratlng comjlany to adopt the
Is provided. On the second page, regional billing format.
detills of current charges, In"We are providing a format
eluding a breakdown of monthly that will benefit customers from
service plan and information across the spectrum, from reslcharges as well as all other dence to large business," Dean
charges , are lnclpded.
'
said.

feople in the news._
.· ________;,_~,
: By WILLIAM C. TROTT
"We're all excited about 11." Part
portions would be used as a &lt;
:United Press International
of the building Will be c-onverted
~anctuary a~d office space.
MADONNA . SPEAJQ&gt;: Ma· Into a television studio and other
donna bares her sbul and .a good
deal of her skin in the AprU Issue
of Vanity Fair, disc'ussing her
relationship with Warren Beatty,
her failed marrt age with Sean
Penn and her career. ''Sometimes I'm cynical and pragmatic
Career changes. Medical costs. Accidents. Build a nest
and think It will last as long as it
egg fqr life's. emergencies with insurance protection.
lasts'," she says of the Beatty ,
Cash tor emergencies-One of the · .
romance. "Then I have moments
MOOE~N WOODMEN SOLI:mONS
when I'm really romantic and I
• • l&gt;
think, 1We're just perfect to·
\;'
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....
gether."' Ma,donna, 'who shows
~-,..oi~~ ·
~
~ ~· _, _.: .' ,
lots of· oleavage on the Vanity
MODERN WOODMEN
Fair cover ;ind l'xposes a breast
,·.
OF AMERICA
ori tl\e Inside, says Beatty's
.
sexual history is a little daunting
i
to her. "He's been with the
· "world's ·most beautiful. most
......I
glamorous, most talented
women, " she says. ; •1 mean, how
{
UFE • ANNUniES
can I ever be as fabulous as
NEIL MOlliSON
Brigitte Bardot when she was 25?
IU'S
P.O. lor 3461
Or Natalie Wood? Or any at those
Rio .G...., OH. 45674
FIAIERNAL PROGRAMS
people?" Madonna's eyes filled
Ph. (6141 245-9319
with tears when she talked about
Penn. saying they do not see each
other anymore. "It's too pain·
ful," she said. "It's horrible. I
, hope someday we can be friends
again. Time heals everything."
FORBES FORTUNE
WHEN IT COMES TO FEELING
SPREAD AROUND: Malcolm
Forbes left a posthumous bonus
BEnEI-••
for: his employees at Forbes
magazine. The late mllllonaire' s
THEIE'~ NO PLACE LIKE HOME
son, steve, sen I ou I a memo
•
Thursday announcing that his
fatller had left Instructions to
give workers an extra week's pay
and to forgive all personal debts
to· the company up to $10,000,
Forbes emplayees of more than a
•Hospital Beds
•Oxygen Concentralors ·
year were permitted to borrow
•Bathroom Safety Devices eilellullain
·
money at low Interest rates and
•Lift
Cha.irs
· •Portable Oxygen
.
thr~ dozen staffers took advan•Tens Um(S
.·
•Allllllltiq Prnsu11 .
tage of the offer, which left other
•Whttlclll~rs (SIIndlrd &amp;
Pltl
employees wishing they had gone
Custom)
· •Walkers
lor the loans, too. "As Pop put It,
•Glucose Monitors
•ReQ!qtary l'llttapy .
'Like a lottery, it's pure chance
.Commodes
Dlspollltln
as to who benefits,"' Steve's
•IPPB Umcs
•Home BP MoniiDrs
memo said. " In accordance with
my father 's wiShes, you are
receiving one .e xtra week's pay .
24 HOUI SEIVICE- 7 DAYS A WEEI.
.:. Aa for your extra pay; his
BENEFITS ..
advice should be no surprise:
•Continuel pattlnt rtvilite and t!No ch•.. "PPrnmlftt · ~n
'Enjoytt!'"
.
conoult8tlon provrom tl no coot "'"*up equipment
,CHURCH OFTAMMY,FAl'E: ,
, · ., to the patl!"".
'
Tunm1 Fare.Bakker I~ about to
be back In the church business:
oNo C911 -pir.Jtory therlpy dlo- eCiuicllrMponMtO-pat~Mt
Sbe'ulped an agreementtobuy
POHIIIM.
.•
up'~u- or NIP.._ _
,
........ ' ,., l&amp;lliitaltl.
a'-U.OIJO.IQuare-toot building In
Oflando, 'I'll., U I borne for her
•ler~~•lw lln-ledg..lllo pillion! •One , _ a.11 """ -~~~ YOUr
N.,. eov.nant. Chureb, which
contaato.
• noodo.
bl( bftJI 11114quar1ered In' a
cJYIIIJ' •bcW"I mall and a plano
tllllle amc. tbe downfall of
f'~~YQ and 11m •wtrltel"s
JlllaMtr)'. Doule, Becll, who
1£DfCAL £Qliiii£NT &amp; SUPPLI£5
.
flild.ralltngoperatlonafor
N;. QMaant Church, said
Gill IAY&amp;III.OWW .
(61 4) "J·JJIO
.ifTvlcel would be beld In the new
507
·
I 'lllo, Ptllller, OIL 4J76t
, liUIIdiJII tbll SUnday. "We are
bU)'Iq tile building,'.~ he .said
without reveallni ·the price.

Emergencies?-

Peddler's Ppntry
340 Second Avenue
Gellipoll•. Ohio 46831
l'hone 1114·448-2755
•

AI· Maxim Products
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Spring Rug .Special

liter~

Life 'seminar set
MIDDLEPORT -An abund·
ant living seminar wtll be held ,
March 1S.21 at -the ·Bradford
Church of Christ. Guest speaker
will be Dean Mills : Services will
be 7: 30 nightly and nursery will
be provided. Derek Stump, min·
Isler, Invites the public.

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Pigs on the homefront? Why notti·

meesing pklnned · .

we've been told , is not as good a('-·
NORlll KINGSTOWN, R.I. regular pigs, which have curled
potbellies."
·
• ~_,
tUPH - America once lfluabed tails.
Beeman says pigs will never:":;-c
at Fred Zllfel, the ecceRiriC
According to Beeman, a breedcharacter on TV's ' 'Green Ing sow will weigh a bo ut 70 , reach the po pu larity level of dog _- • .
or cats, but there Is still
Acres" who kept 1 pig named pounds, but a pet will average
substantial market lor pet pigs. :-:
Arnold as a house pet.
around 50, and some have been
"The only thing slowing them: :-:
But today, hundteds of potbel· bred even smaller.
down
Is city ord inances t restric t- :.
lied pigs are living In hOmes
Potbellies are expensive. The
ing
hoofstock)
."she said, "Some;- ··
across North America. ,
price of a mal e piglet In New
we
lcome
them
and some are :·
01), how Urnes have changed,
England and on the West Coas t
against
them.
whic
h we are : :
and · so have our piggish will start a t about $1,000 and a
perceptlo115.
working on."
. ·
breeding sow will be $4 ,500,
''They are just 1111&lt;1er the Beeman sald . .A sow with babies
Jarrow. who, with her hu sba nd -·•
J ohn, owns Bay Cliff Fa rm ori.
primates In te~ms ol lntelU· has brought, up · to , $35,000 a t
Nar raga nsett Bay, spotted a 1Jig;
genc,e ." . says Amanda Jarrow, ai.tctidn.
in a magazine three years ago _
an Arabian . horse breeder from
"The price is a little proh iblanq decided to look into the theif. .- ~
North · Kingstown who came Uve,'' Jar row adm itted. "But a
across the potbellied pig explo- · good pedigree dog Is in the sa me
pet potenti a l.
•.
sion in Its Infancy.
~
price range. "
' 'They all have their own
For $12, 000, the Jarrows IJUr-~ 7~
It costs $5 to $15 to register a
distinct personalities, but overall pig with Beeman's se rvice c hased a boar named Alber I and•
they are all genUe. all very depending on whether It Is a
a fema le named Amelia for . ·
friendly. ·and really like human litter, neutered mal e, gUt, or
breeding, Then ca me Watson, a· .. ·
companionship, " she . said. . boar - and there is a $20 annual barrow Amanda Jarrow wa nted
"That's wbat I really like about
as a house pet.
membership fee.
•them. They really like people."
Registering a potbelly In·
in Ja nuary. Albert and Amelia
Potbellles. Jarrow stre's sed, creases it s value, she said,
are quite different from regular · because it documents the lineage IJroduced two fem ales, whic h
' pigs. They are!ar smaller, do not
of the animal and gives owners were bought quickly by a doctor
root, and have a more pleasant
Ideas on how to best breed it. It hi Burrlllvllle. R.I.. a nd a woman
disposition.
also proves a . po_tl)elly is pu- in Lakeville, N. Y, The next litter ._
. The . breed came to North
rebred. Beeman said there have is a lready spoken for, Jarrow' ·
America In 1985,- when Keith
been cases where potbellies have said .
" We have three definite reserConnell of Oshawa, Ontario,
bowl chalnplons In the 1990 Tri-Valley Confer·
1990 QUIZ TEAM CHAMPIONS · - Aaron
been bred with Mexican ha irless
va
tions and I have20 io25 people
Imported 18 potbelUes from Viet·
Sheets, ' Daa Kennedy, Ed Croolta, and Heldt
ence. 'B ita Slavin, pictured rlgbt, Is advisor of the
pigs and guinea hogs . then
on
my waiting list . bul J have n' t ·
team.
nam.
Most
went
to
zoos,
accordCarntiJW; left to right, display the ladlvlchlal and
fraudulently sold as purebreds.
go
tten
back to them yel ," Jarrow ·
Ing to the Potbelited Pig Registry
school tLi!~Pbtes which they received M the quiz
"They get much bigger," she
said.
Service in Lakeville, Ind. Then,
said. " And the temprament.
in 1986, private buyers began to
take notice.
A California woman was' the
.
.
,
first to breed the pigs as houst&gt;
Making up the Meigs team are finals before losl!lg in a sudden
POMEROY - The Metes High
pets, and the West Coast state
D;m Kennedy, Ed Crooks, Heidi Heath tie-breaker sl(uation. The
Quiz Team won the 1990 annual
has the highest concentration of
Ca,r l!thers , ·and Aaron Sheets. team then came back ·and beat
T-rl-Vahey Conference Tourna·
pet potbellles, In the last eight
menf held Wednesday at OhiO ·Rita· Slavin Is the team advisor.
Warren twice . In the champion- ' months', three other breeders In
Whll~ expectations were low
University.
ship rounds for the victory.
Indiana and Texas have lm·
going Into the tournament the
The Meigs team came out·over
This win now qualifies the
P&lt;&gt;rted potbellies.
team came from the loser's Meigs team lor the regional
Alexander, Federal Hocking,
Betty Beeman, who started the
Miller. Nelsonville· York, Vinton bracket with a five and one competition of the Ohio Acaregistry service 18 months ago,
record to take the tournament. demic Competition on April 28 at . es I! mates the~ are now at least
. County, Warren, Jac,kson, and
Wellston to be named the 1990 They faced Warren, the defend - Shawnee State College.
6,000 potbellies In the country.
Ing champion, in the quarter
champions.
Most of them are breeding but
hundreds have found their way
Into American homes.
·About 1,200 l!I'e · registered
individually with her serVice,
which she said operates similar
,to the American Kennel Club. Six
hundred litters, · averaging six
· pigs each, are also registered.
"They are just beginning to
take off (in New England),"
Beeman said . "It .seems like we
are ··getting more calls from
there, more reglstry opapers are
coming In from there. ' '
Potbellies are typically black,
·' though some have white lea·
lures, !lnd they have straight
tails, differentiating them from

MIDDLEPORT -The Middlepurl Uterary . Club will meet
Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. at the
home Mrs. Elleen Buck. Mrs.
Daniel .Thomas will review' the
book, "Fatal Shore. " Rl\llhcall
will be answered with an unusual ·
fact about Australia .

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a-:·-

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Stan atra01hon ot your OMl wnh 1h 1s fabulous COifed.ono!
to-the-m,nute delaJIS rpake tnese the spectators to keec
"'-'! tt. '«'h1te- ·

ooth eye sonth1s 5easonJ In !'\JI)" tt. IX' hu4•,
'
Hlxk li '«&lt;hirc.-

OJ9

lllfc.llll-GS

"""""" •a•1:81aiC
.--.ewporc

IJ,trl·,,
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Meigs ·Quizzers win tournament

~-

11011. I,._ Ill I PA

Mi.. ....... 11 , ,...
!AIIII..IY Ill l PA

h ·EARLY DETECTION
ISA KEY
Mammography often is a way of detecting
early breast cancer in women.
A quick :x:-ray procedure, Mammographyis
a process in which all women, 35 and over,
·
s'hould be interesce9.
Alarming; to s·ay the least, is the fact that
one out of. every 10 women will develop
breast cancer in her lifetime and breast cancer
is the leading cause of cancer deaths in
women between the ages of 35 and 45. Early
detected.breast cancers have a 90 percent ture
rate:
This · life-saving procedure is ..avl!:il~ble
Mon~ay_ chrguglH1tiday at' Veterans _Memorial .-· Yt;mr !Hometown Hospital ~ u,pon
the ,~~quest.
of your physician ...
.

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.liJtus II class
planned
March · 21

.

11 S Ent 11•-"'l Drlwe, P-•Y• Clllio

992·2104

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MEET THE FLAG LADY - Mary Eckert will
he d!SCUIIIIC the hlatory of the U.S. flag 1U the
Catbolk Women's Club meeting 7 p.m. March 12,
at St. Louis CathoDe Church, 91 State st. Mrs.
Ji;ckert begaa selling nags eleven years.a goand Ia
now the owner oi"The Flalt Lady'sstore'' located

"Home Health Care"·
PRODUCT.S

Continuity of Care, Inc.

at;

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"

A daytime class in Lotus II
(Intermediate Spreadsheet Applications) Is being offered by the
University of Rio Grande Office
of Continuing Education.
The class · wlll meet Wednes·
day, March 21, 'rom 9 a.m. until4
p .r:n .. in the College of Business
Computer Lab, Roor:n 108. Cost of ·
the workshop Is $95. Pre·
, registration deadline is March
20.
.
Lotus is the leading application
program for MS·DOS computer
spreadsheets. In this Intermediate class, participants · will
learn more advanced functions,
sucti ·as Introductory · macros,
graphing, database functions,
windows, range names and Rrlnting functions.
. Participants should already be
fa:mlliar ' with the baste Lotus
functions.
• Further Information on the
workshops and .registration in·
formation may be obtained from
the Office of Continuing Educa·
tion, University of Rio Grande,
Box 878, R1o Grande, Ohio 45674,
or by calling 245-5353, extension
325. The toll-free number In Ohio
Is 1·800·282·7201.

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VETERANS
·
MEMORIAL HOSPTIAL'

New Btthttl

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Plauant. W. Va.

g1'0Nfl

untr ad•t•onal spectatOI'S New-tasr11oned shapes and up·

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'· . -2 5Ofo OF~

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LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Mallon picture actor Corey Feldman, who starred In the movie
''Stand By Me," wat arrested
after pollee who stopped him for
a traffic violation found heroin In
!lis car, authorities said
· Saturday .
· ,
1
Feldman, 18, of Beverly Hllls,
was booked on suspk;lon of
possession of heroin for Sale after
he was sto~ about 7: 15 p.m.
Friday south .of downtown, Sgt.
Gene Leary .said.
'
Alter posting $5,486 ball, Feld·
man was released about 2:30
a.m. Saturday. POllee said the
ball Included several unpal~
traffic tickets. ·
Feldman was stopped for an
undisclosed traffic violation by
Metropc)U~n Division of~rs on
a special crime patrol In the
area. Ofi!C'trs found "numerous
balloons ofheroin'' tn the vehicle,
~~ the exact amount of drugs
seized was not .disclosed, Sgt.
Tom Jones said.
Feldman, who appeared In the
movies ''Lost Boys, .. •tGoonles, ''
and two ofth'e series of "Friday
the 13th" horror llbns, was
handcuffed to a bench at the
. Newton Division station before
' be was ~ken to the jill division
for booking, Sgt. Doug Tantee
said.
·~He WI\S sitting· there shak·
lng,," Tan tee said of.the actor.
Feldman, who .was born lri the
San Fernando Valley community
of Resedli, began performing at
the age of 3. Besides his movie
sredlls, he h&amp;s appeared In over
100 commercials and numerous
television slJows, including
"Love Boat," "Mark and Mindy,
''Eighlls Enough'' and the series
''The Bad News Bears."

Milch 11

. Man:h 11.

Olok» Point Planant.. W.

••rry
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at 082 Indianola Ave.. ColUmbus. 'r:he Flag Lady,
Inc., is CotUmbas' leading manufacl'urer of
cUIItoiiHieslped banners and flags as well as the
leader In retail sales of USA, state, International
and historical nap.
·

Rio .Grande to offer second
set of classeS, in WordPetfect

·'

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• Everting classes In WordPer·
feet 5.0 and 5.1 (Intermediate
Wprd Processing) will be offered
by the University of. Rio Grande
Office of Continuing Education
on Tuesday, March 27, and
-T hursday. March .29.
. . Classes begtnat6p.m . and end
at 9:30p.m. Cost of the classes ts
$95 for both evenings, Classes
wlll meet in the College of
Business Computer· Lab, Room

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Willing Workers
'plan meeting

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·This class IS the second tn p
series of WordPerfect word processing. In 't he class, more

At Shoney;s Seafood Festival we make sure our delicious seafood dinners like Fried · '
or Baked Fish~ Fried or Charbro_iled Shrimp, Seafood Platter, arid Shrimp Scampi aie
mo~ than affordable. And that 10Ciudes unlimited trips to Slxmey's Soup, Salad and
Fnut Bar., Next tlme you want great seafood at a great price, head to SOOney's. We'D
make sure you 'get a tab that won't blow you out of the water.

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POMEROY -The Willing
Workers Class of the Eaterprlse
U.lllted Methodist Church will
meet at tbe home of Agnes Dixon
onW~ay.
,•

•

SPRNG &amp;
SUMMER

·-·'- ·-·--'-- ..,......_"'
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PARADE OF . STARS CONTEST

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advanced functions will be covered, such as developing rna•
eros, changing formats within a
document, printer control op·
ttons and use of the spelling
checker and thesaurus. A basic
uDjlersliiDdlng of WordPerfect Is
bnportant.
·
Further lnfonnation on the
workshops and registration Information may be obtained by
contacting the Office of Continu·
lng Educl!lion at 245-5353, exten·
slon 325. ibe loll·lree number In
Ohio Is 1·800-282-7201. ·

Literary c;tub
meeting set
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport 'Literary Club wtll meet
Wednesday at 1: 30 }).m. at the
home of Mrs. Eileen Buck: Mrs.
Daniel T.homas Will review the
book "Fatal SI!Ore." Rollcall will
be answered wilhhan .unusual
fact about Australia.

.

MOlE THAN SS,OOO' '
IN PIIZES

I

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Professional Photographers Guild .
Grand Prize: '1 rOOO Scholarship
I

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Summer Catalog Today!

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ThrH Local Wlnnars.

AGES 12 AND UNDER

PHOTO SESSION AND l·DESI SIZE (Sx4)

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POITIAIT·POI CONTEST ENTIY OIILY

TWO WUIS ONLYl CALl NOWI

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1614) 446-7494 er TOLL PI&amp; 11-110) 272-LEAI

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LEAR;
P+IOIO&amp;RAPIIY
SPFIINO VALLEY PLAZA • GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Closed MondiJI
'.

"We're NEVER closed!"
SHOP BY PHONE
1-800-222-6161
·:.;..,_ · 1

_.. · ~-

--~

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11.2 . !r.rll

JG

~ -- a · ~

11 it's essential for Spring, yeu'lt·
Hnd it in the JCPenney Spring
·and .Summer Catalog . Shop
over 1,200 pages filled with
fashions lor the family. Plus
home furnishings , sporting
goods, electronics, cameras,
and much more! You'll enjoy lasli .
2·3 day delivery to your neamv
Catalog Department. Or ask for'
c-onvenient home delivery.
.
Purchase your catalog lor just
· $4 and get a merchandise
·certificate gOod lor $5 off any
.
Catalog order.
For great N!ection and haaele· ·
free shopping, purchase your ,
JCPenney Spring and Summer ·
Ca!aiDg today!
..

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�:'-~~g~a~B~4~S~u~~~~TH~m~a~a~S~a~m~m~a~~~~~~~p~~~m~.r~oy~-~M~~~~~~~~~~~-;G~~~~~~~-~·~0No-~·~~~·~A~a~n~t~~~W~.~~:•·~·~==~==~~==~==~==~M~NW~~ch~1!1:~1~8~80~ ·:

No place
is perfect
but 'Frisco
·is just fine

Women's suffrage move~ent...._~.,._·.....;..By_Ja_me_r_Sand~. s -.. Ip the $ervi~..• The women' s suffrage movement In Gallla County probably
began In 1874 when a group of
women began meeting In the
home of Mrs.
W.Y. Miles to
plan a campaign
to close· down
the saloons In
Gallipolis. Their
efforts were at
least partly successflll as for about 3 months in
.18'14 tile saloon business came to ·
a standsUII. l3y the end of 1874,
however, the liquor traffic In the
"Old French City" was bac.k in
full steam.
Several women then organized
a chapter In townorthe Women's
Christian Temperance Onion. It
was through . this organlzall6n
that women attempted to Impact
the political process. Growing
out of this movement came the
desire of women to campaign not
just ta.change thf liquor laws but
. to also give the vote to women.
The National Woman Suffrage ·
Association was , organized In
Philadelphia In 1876 and through
the years some Gallla ladles
became active In It
·
Beginning In 1894 the women of
Ohio were allowed to vote In
school board elections. They

finally won the vote by the U.S.
Constitutional RatWcatlon process In all elections In 1920. ·
In the fall or 1920 the Gallla
Times reported that following an
address by Judge Mauck at the
Court House ·on the duties of the
voter, Dr. Ella Lupton presented
the alms and purposes of the
National Organization of Women
Vo!ers. Nearly every woman
present signed up. The first
women voter In the eJection of
l920 was Mrs. Walter McCor·
mlck. She cast an absentee ballot
On October 12.
·
During the 1920's the League of
Women Voters made endorsements or proposals on the ballot
as well as endorsements lor city
council. It will be remembered
that In Galllpolls City Council
elections no party affllations are
given. The League did not
endorse candidates and Issues
Involving political parties.
In 1924 Mrs; Margaret B.
McCormick ran for cl¢rk oi
courts thus becoming , the first
Galila County woman to run for
office. She was defeated In the
August Republican primary.
Women took a very active
Interest in the 1925 fall election.
The Gallipolis Dally . Tribune

Tbonl.,_

Air Force Bile, Fla.
Is the· IOD of Ola L.
'l'llomJIICIII of Rural Roule 2,
Helldenan, w. Va, llld brOther
of Judy D. Jordall of 123 w. Ftr1t
Ave.; Plain City, Obkl.

CILUI' M A. WEEDLE
l.aJ!.ee Cpl. Charles A.
Welldle, 10n of Ode!Jsa B. Prottlt
of Route 1. Portland, OH, re- ,
ceatly departed Camp Lejeune,
'N.C., on deplo)omen~ to the Far
Eut wbUe llei'VI!Ig With 2nd
Marine Division.
During the !lepioyment, Wed·
die wW participate In various
exercise. Including Team Spirit
and FIREX. He wlll also 'visit
several foreign . ports Including
• locations In, the Republic of
Korea and Japan.
·
·A ,1987 gradupte of Soulberil
High School, Racine, be joined
, the Marine Corps, In December
.
. 1987.
MICHAEL K. L\YN.E
Navy Seaman Michael K.
Layne, grandson of Ellen Layne·
.
.
of New Haven, WV, Is currently
. THEW. Y. Miles home was buDt In 1872.1t waa here In 187• ~.
deployed to the Western PaCific
. the GaiDa women's m'ovement lor ~e ~ole bad H• orlgla. At lint,
aboard the guided mlssUe des·
the movementS prbnary aim WBI lbe .ciOilnw: of aaloolis. ·.c troyer USS .Berkeley, home·
Eventually, 'however, the lrancblse for women became an equallY
ported· in San Diego.
l~portaot goat.
•
' ~ring a port visit to Slnga•
~
pore, Layne and fellow ship, • , '~ mate. celebrated . the · holiday
reffered to lt ·as the "hottest feated the Republ,can Ern~t J , ' :se1150n' ,with British sailors and
election In the hiStory of the Riggs by Ja95 to 2949.
· _; ; · · local .,Amerlc:~Jn ·families'. The
city". The League of Women
Perhaps the retolutlonadopted · families' 'Invited several of the
voters endorsed the Incumbent by the Delphliln Club ot which crewmembers from the Berkecouncil In full detplte much Mrs. Harding was a member
ley to spend Christmas day at
x:tubllc criticism of the council spoke for most Gallla women:
their homes treating them to
over a variety of Issues most of "In view of the fact that our . home ·cooked meals and making
which centered around the water fellow Delphian, Mrs. VIrginia them feel at home during the
department.
Barker Harding has been elected _ holiday season.
The election for the seats on the to represent Gallla County In the
A 1987 · graduate of Amphl·
Board of Education was actively Legislature, thus becoming th,e theater High School, Tucson
pur.sued by two women - Mrs. first ~oman In the county to be so Ariz., he Joined the Navy In
.
Leo Bean and Mrs. Allee Wolfe. chosen, we regard It nttlng as 1987.
In fact both were elected, thus
members of the Delphian society ·
RUSSELL A. THOMPSON
becoming the first two women hi of Gallla County, t~ tender l)er · . Master Sgt. Russell A. ThompGal!la · County to hold Pl!bllc . the congratulations of •this .so- son has graduated from an Air
office.
· clety. Further we hereby express Force major command noncom·
It was also In the 1926 electlori our belief that Mrs. ·Harding wUI mlssloned officer academy,
that a women was elected by worthily bear the honor that has .
The sergeant received adGallla County's representative to come to her and so perform her vanced military leadership and
the Ohio House of Representa· duties as to win tlle approval of management training.
tlves. The woman's name was
Gallla's citizenship." ··;
He Is a law enforcement
Mrs. Vlglnla Barker Harding
As a matter or fact ''he was supervisor with the 31st Security
who was a Democrat. She de- later elected to a second term.
Pollee Squadron at Homestead
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f

Marble

Tlle~reeanttsatl!ltaraduate,

of Buckeye Valley High SChool, •
Delaware, Ohio.

THE EASTER BUNNY IS COMING - Scenic Wlls wtil once
again he seiUng one,pound chocolste and peanut butter Easter
ens personalized with the name of your loved oue; Tbe colt Is $4
per en, or th~ Easter BuniiJI blmsell will deliver an Eu~r egg
along with a picture to a friend or loved one for SIO. Allproceejlago
to c,harltable GaiDa County organizations. To place an order for an
egw: or a visit from .the Easter Bunny, call446-7150.
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Blood Pressure
Clinic scheduled

Representative .

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.STOREWIDE
T() 70~/o OFF
~-----------------··$---­
•TRADITIONAL .SOFA
.

SOFAS

In a -uve, blue 'l .belge fab·
ric. Perfect for any fllllllly room.
lEG. S899.00
· ' CLOSEOUT
. ·

4 4900

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neutral .tones. ·
lEG. S1028.00

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Berna4ine. 's

REG. S429.00 .

.New Sportswear
For Spring ...
Jantzen
Alfred Dunner
]ones of New York
Eagles Eye
S.K. &amp; Co. Sportswear
New Spring Suits

•CARRY OVER OF
BUY ONE
GET ONE FREE IECUNER SALE
~~JW SHIPMENT OF
LA·~·IOY &amp; LANE ACTION

RECLINERS
01

WALL

SAVERS
_ $299~ 0

(

REG. ' 75.00

NOW

135° -14 500
0

.ALL LONDON FOG

]A CKETS &amp; COATS

Jj3 OFF

(As Show11l

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SALE

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•1 ONLY BARCLAY WALL SAVEl
RECLINER. VAlUE OF 1599.011
SAVE 50"!.

JIOW

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$295°0

SALE

•MAGAZINE LAMP TABLE
. REG. $149.00
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.SALE

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•B-ASS BAKERS RACK
SALE

$3800

•TAPESTRY FOOT STOOL
lEG. '39.00

SALE

Sl 900
I

S199

lEG. ,$319

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•La-Z•Boy Swivel Rocker

::~;

SAVE bO"'o

$15 9

•Contemporary
Fairfield C.hoir
IIG

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sn9
CAKI~

SAVE60•t.

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S139

&amp; COFFEE!
llOUIS DAILY
9 TO 5
MON. &amp; FRI.
910 I .

VISA
MASTERCARD
DISCOVER

Soles and
Service with
lqw,low

TIIRD I OUVE

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DEAR M.G.: Wlllll a wonderful
ideal Yaur suuestion is SW'e to add
a reWIRiillg dimension ro !he lives or .
manywuples. Thank you.
I;&gt;EAR READERS:.In Illifember,
I printed a letler from Gisela T. Jo·
seph, a young woman in San Juan,
Pueno Rico, who was born with
Crouzon's Disease, a·condition !hat
can cause gross'facial disfigurement.
, Gisela wrote to Jell me how her life
had changed after surgery .arranged
by the National Foundation for Fa·
cia! Reconstroetion.lt was a moving
~nd heartwarming story.
I asked you, my readers, to send
whatever you could spare to support
this excellent foundation that docs so
;much for so many. Here is an excerpt
from a letter from tlie' executive di·
rectlir•.Roben Rochat:
.
"Dear Ann: The response has bten
tremendous. We havereceiveddonationsorover$1 00,000, and IhecheclcJ
are still coming in. Your rcade11 ~ ,
both loyal a!ld generous. There are no
words ID thank you." ·•
So, once again, dear readers, I say
to each and everyone who responded
to my plea I am enormously BJllleful.
Ifeel blessed tohavesomanyfaithful
friends. You are file ones who make
lllegooddeedlpOssible. Withoutyoll'
confidence and support, I could do
no~ing. Bless you.
. Dear Alia Landen: I was shocked
and disappoillled to read your com·

LOW OR HIGH-BACK
CANE CHAIRS

$6800.
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el!pCricncc. ··M.G. IN MD.

$29900
•LAMP TABLE
,00
568
lEG. 1169.00
· SALE
lEG. '698.00

OUR 9TH YEAR

OR USE OUR EASY
· CREDlT TERMS.

Prices! ·

446-3045

,...

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$38800

$19900

PAlliNG .
· ••REI.DELIVERY.

GALI-IPOUS, OH.

el!JRSS.

... _ _

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Mylandlordbas~inthiscoun·

ever I wanfromt
somh.ethin~, I must ak
1 ~ nabverd;try to
~
no:.tpmecommtllllCale
toaec
.
. _:,
,
this I
a!Qngeaer
willl iL··
E.F.,....
MILWAUKEE
tn pnnt
your vtews
DEAR MILWAUKEE: I have a
sneaking suspicion that )'0111' landlord is capable of spe,nng some
English, but he~ not to speak
toyou. .
.
·1~ thlt people woo' come heR
from other eountties should make a
serious effort lli learn our lani!Uiie.
Obviously many of them have gone
beyCIId simply learning the language.
Tbeyhaveworlcedhardandachieved
considerable success. I say, more
power ID them.
Dear Alllll.al141ers: The beloved
man to whom I WIB manied for 41
yeirs died suddenly last year. Since
that time. I bavc been rereading the
leUtB he wro1e 10 me when lie was
stalionedovcneaswiththeU.S.Navy.
As I read, I wish that we had teread ·
. :•
together. And this is why lam
wr)ling.lfyourreaders whoslill bave
each Olher would get out those old
lcum and read them together. they
will find it a loving, enriching

OCCASIONAl
CHAIIS .
,.,,.

•StURDY OAK BUNK BED

REG. S79.00

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LAPAYEITE MALL

$79900

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'1,

'~"· d good jobs,l'lill' f1milies
• :l.e~vcr learn to speak our Jan.
My grandfather came from East·
emEurope.Hedidn'tllllowawordof
English when he landed here, but he
w81)troni1Jtuchoolllldnowspe•h
tltC langulge pcrfecd

,1·

dark . h!Jhlalid plaid

SALE

.CA:SH &amp; .C·lRRY
REG. '445.00

.ROCKER
RECLINERS

Bea·u;tiful DreJiei

.•Group of Jackets

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•MOHOGANY VANITY · · ·

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Have you ever seen a bat, Miss

Landers.? I mean, upc Iose. I doubt tl
. ·
Otherwise you could not have writ·
ten those words. Actually, bats have
beautiful little faces, lovely, soft
brown
eyesandaclorablepointedears.
.Bats an: the most misundmtood
creatures on the face of the carib.
Th
do
eyll!e ·gooders in the best sen~
of the word. One bat can devour
. 3,000night-flyinginsccts. Theirprin· •- prey tS· the mosquito.
ctp.,.
Ignorance about the bat abOund§.
Most people think hl!-ts are blind. Not
true. Another old wives' tale is that
baiS like to get into women's hair.
False•
In so111e pans of the world;bats ate
valued as pets. People put up bat
houses the same way we put up bird
houses. II would be wonderful if you .
wouldpromole this idea. Ann. I would
be happy to send you a bat house !lnd
a couple of baiS if you wiU accept
them. Please let me know· your address.-- SINCERELYYOURS, Y.C.,
NEW ORLEANS
DEAR Y.C.: Thanks forthe offer,
but I don't think my neighbors would'
approve of a bat house on the prem·
ises. I appreciaJe your letter, howevcr,.andyouwillbepleilscdtoknow
that · tho~sands of others wrote to
defend the bat.
Please, dear readers, no more brochurcs and literature about ba!S.I am
going batty trying to son them out
from lbc letlers about human prob·
!ems. In spiJe of jour noble efforts to
get me to like bats, people still come
first.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
and I just received a wedding invita·
tiqn, bllautifully engraved on fine
quality paper. The~J~essageread: "Mr.
John Doe and' the lale .Mary Doe
• rcqucstl)lehonorofyourprcsenccat
the marriage or their daug&amp;ter Jane 1o
· Robert Smith ... •
Mary Doe passed away 10 years
ago. Yo11r opiniqn, please . •• N.J.
QUERY
DEAR N.J.: I can understand the
sentiment, btit it is not only illogical
but socially incorrect to include the
name. of a d~ceased parent on a
weddtng ,tnvttallon. The pnnter
, should .have gently discouraged It. .

wOrdofEn li'sh. He understands but
is bnable
himlelf When

In

$29900
NOW
·
·

Multi-color Fabric

.

. SALE

fabric.
lEG. i799.00

·.

•CONTEMPORARY ·PUB 'STYLE LOVESEAT

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•TRADITIONAL SOFA·.with

POMEROY - A representa·
tlve from Congressman Clarence
Miller's office will conduct an
open door session from 11 a.m. to
1 p.m. in the Court House.
Anyone with Q\lestlons concern·
lng the federal gQ:vernment Is ·
encouraged to attend ..

11ery old sttuctures collapsed. So
wbal?l don'tllllow of a pllce 011 the
face of the eMdi.lhll is 100 _""""'
.--··
safe from the unpmlictilble vagaries
ofSouth
Molhcr
Naaure. llld Florida hive
CIIOiina
·
hlariclneaand floods. SOdoea Texas.
There are daJc 11011111 in Okllhoma
andbua.lcelkllmainNewYork
mid New Janey caitCripple II'IIISpOt·
tatioilfor dlya, A1arka is so dartt four
I!IOIIIhs outot''lhe year you lllink it's
m\dnipt whea il'IIIC1UIIly noqn.l've
seen pictures of MinneiCll&amp; in Janu·
lllj ··dozens of tan sliding lnt.oeacb
other 011 the icy hiahways. Moulrisu
in
nwooacd in snow
drifts, and people have been known
to~todellhinlhcircan. Scn!ch
· COnnecticut lild Wisconsin. Tiley
· have Lyme di1e11e. Beautiful Ha·
wail bas volcanoes.
,5o whcK is i! any belief !han San
Frimcill;o? Cenlinly not Los Angel!:$. wilh Ill that .Siilog and thole
I~ 011 the fleeway who would
f1!11er slloot you lban honk. Please
dcin'l say Chicaso. Ann. I've seen
pii:tures of ropes by the Drake Holel
for pedestrians to hang onto so they
~·t get blown inro Lake Michigan.
The·more JloolttiiOIIIId, the betler
llilce San Francisco. Thanks for Jet.
· tiria me have my say. I feel better
already.•• BAY AREA BETI"Y
DEAR BAY: Gild 1 was able to
belp. And now wbatam I going to do
with Ill the ll)lill get from the chambdsofcomrnerceofaboutSOOcities
toUting their very own? Thanks a
bunch, pa~.
Dear Abn Laaders: 111 bell am
not lhe only American bothered by
flliS.I refer to immigraniS who come

ments a recent column. You slid,
"I know of few living creatures as
~~:.epealing and just plain ugly as the

. tri sinc:e 1952 llld ean't speak ·one

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•CONTEMPORARY SOFA and LOVESEAT

tO VISit

HARRISONVILLE -There
will be a free blood pressure
cllnlc on Tuesday, 10 a.m. to noon
at the town house in Harrison·
ville sponsored by the !;Iarrison·
ville Senior Cit lzens. Following
the clinic there will be a meeting
and celebration of three month
birthdays lor members.

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Fine Upholstery by:
•LA·Z-BOY
•BARCLA Y
•TEMPLE
•FAIRFIELD
DRASTICALLY
REDUCED!
.

c,..... S,.IMIIr*

lncliua--.

nn·1·v·e rsar.
j

Tlm ... ~~adi,.... ....

M-·~-.

May

'

4NN LANDDI!I

foolilbl am lD stay in • pllce that bas
eardlquabs. 1 think ru IICfellll.
we llad a few-- and some

house, yard~ and preparing the
Dower beds and garden.
The service Is al•o Je!ttn1
people lined up ror gra~&amp; cutting,
window cleaning, palnttn1. rak·
lng tbe lawns and elc.
· The Job Bank can take orden
and put a senior citizens to work.
For more Information call
Grace or Frances at the Center at
446-7000.

HOLlO CUNIC
and

HOLlER
MEDICAL CENTD
OFFER FUU DIAGNOSIS AND
. TREATMENT IN A
· CONVENIENT,
STATE-OF-THE-ART SEniNG.
· Ask Your Phjlician For A Referral to Holzer

PHONE (614) 446-5131

COMING SOON

JUANITA and CARL CURNUTrE

Curnutt~- Arrington

IN THE

OHIO RIVER PLAZA ·
· GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

,GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Arrington announce tM
marr~ge _ of their daughter,
Juanita, to Carl Curnutte, son of ·
the late G.E. Curnutte and
Margaret Curnutte.
Mitzi Margaret was the organist. Solos were by Jenn Ross and
Karen Polcyn .
The wedding took place at
Galvary Christian Center and
was officiated by T.W. Lawrence
on Jan. 16.
·

As's.oc;..;~ion

m
.
e

uu-,

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NIKE All TECH
CHALLENGER H lf4

et,;n:g
•

RACINE - The Racine Ball
Association will hold an organ!·
zational meeting on Sunday at
5: 30.p.m. I!I the Southern Kindergarten building In Racine. All
per!l(ln~ Interested In coaching
should attend the meeting.

---.,----

.....

...

'IG.95 wk
REPO DINEnE
4 CHAIRS
$149.00

lt. ,"

Golllpols
(6141 .

'

Qu.,. Ailtt
(offH ~ End

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March
-ecials

SOfA &amp; CHAIR

.....

· RENT
'TO· OWN

M:IBQUITI B.B.Q.

Lafayotto Mall o Gallipalll, Oh. ·
T•. f• TH, Sat. •:30· S111!&amp;F 9:30·1

Bureau dosed

LOW CAStf PRICES

THE WORLD'S BEST lASTING
CHICKEN AND BEEF MARINATED
IN JUICES AND SPICES THEN
BROIUD OY~R MESQUITE•••
•••THE HEALTHY ALTERN ATIYEI
7k dut ~ ~·a WtA ~ /Mtf

R

60611=~~~;~;;~~ ~~--------,

tUN!(

Job Bank serving.senior citizens

WE HOPE YOU DON'T ...
BUT, IF YOU DO NEED
RADIATION ONCOLOGY,
~~ OR OTHER CANCER THEIAPIES,

Feelmg pressured .to luive sex?
. How we/1-infor~d are JO.~? Write
for Ann {Anders .~ooklet S~x and
, . . .
, ,
th~ Teen-ager. ~end · .a - self·
POMEROY -The License Bu·
addressed. long, busmess-me enve- reau In Pometoy will be closed
lope and a check or money order for • ·wednesday and Thursday due to
$3.65 (this includes postage and construction' Inside the building.
handling) to: Teens, c/o Ann Lan· The bureau will reopen Frld~y at
·
·
ders, P.0 , BoJC 11
. Ill. 9 a.m.

4 DIAWa
C..ST
53.50 wk.

Sunday

GALLIPOLIS- The Job Bank
In the Senior Citizens Center, 220
Jackson Pike, Is stUI serving
applicants and employers;
Interetted employtrs or appll·
cants over 50 years old sboukl
contact the Job Counselon from
7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through
Friday . .
This Is the time of the year to
start thinking about cleaning

. .....,. t.... "•-'•

Now
for my pipe.
lflgetonemorelea«orpbonecall
hom a rellllive who !liDs me how

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
VFW Post 9053 and auxiliary cif
Tuppers Plains will have a
spag_hettl dinner on Saturday· at
the post home at 4 p.m. Price Is
$3.50 for adults and $1.50 for
children 12 and under. AIIJO .
served will be gar Uc bread, ·
tosSed salad, desserl, and tea or
coffee. The public Is hivlted to
attend.

--Wedding--

Ann
Landers

D.arAD' mden:lliveinNonh·
emc.Jifomia.llove it here and WOQid
never t'-ID live MywhcR else.

Spa:gheH,;
d:l'nne..wo' .
~-'~-'•

•

w.

Ohio-Point

TabiH
'191.00 ...

2 Rooms

BUY DW!.

&amp;

Hall

FREE

Bathroom .Only

lad -~~ ~· April.
Prlca ·laaraasa

Couch ..................... $3 995
.
Loveseat
............... . $2995
Chair ...... ·.......... ~ ......s2495

Purchase Your New Home N0W and Take Delivery ·
Before June 29th to Avoid the Price Increase.
Choose From Over 150 Dlffer91:1t New·Home Plans.

'

•rr.......
.
..

FREE Fabric .ProtectQr added to
all :upholstery cleaned for the
month of March.

Prlcell
*li;lll~•·
lncladlnl P•ndnllan
';b;u Lill
. Da......,.
',,

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CALL NOW:
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''Tbe Quallt7 Houslna People"

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ADVANCED aEAN!NG

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OHIO: 446-3915
w. vA.: 675-3915

lecoad aad Ylaad ltNets
~IDt Pleue•t, WV 111110
(SCM) 871-4414 ·
HOURS: 9 a.m. •
9Lm. ·IS p.m..

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Page B-6-Sundav Tmaa'Sentinel

March 11, 1~·-.

Pomaov-MidclepOrt-Gr"pa'il. Ohio POint Plment. W. Ve.

....;..__Engagements

11,1110

Ol:lc Paint PIIIJIM,

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.JENNi SUE BURKE

Burke-Dail~y
LONG BOITOM -Marilyn
Sue Bu~ke, Tuppers Plains, Is
announcing the engagement and
upcoming marriage of her
·di!ughter, Jenni Sue, Reedsville,
to ' Leonard Edward Dailey Jr.,
' son of Leonard annd Helen
Dailey, Reedsville.

The open church wedding will
be · held Saturday at the Long
Bottom Church.
'Miss Burke Is a graduate of
Eastern High School a!ld Is
employed with Pizza Hut in
Ravenswood, W.Va.
Dailey is self employed.

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.Parker-Lorn
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to Improve th~- drlvlng habits ·qf .
young drivers and· reduce the
number of acclderita they bave; It ·
Is jointly sponsored by the Gallla
County Farm Bureau, JuniOr
Leaders, and Natlqnwlde.
Insurance.
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For more Information on the
free program, contact Jackie
Graham at W&gt;-7007.

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ONE OF SIX ....:. Displayed here Is oae of six
electrle nap&amp; wlllcllllave beea.provided for uae
by llome eeonomlc atudenta I!* Melp HI lit Sebool.
Plclured with ,Jon Buck, Colambua Soutbern
Power Co.'s marketing and ~ulllomer services

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POMEROY -Mr. 'and Mrs.
Lutheran Church, Pine Grove at
l.Eiland Parlier, ·Poll)eroy, and . 1 p.m.
Miss Parker Is employed with
Mr. and Mrs. Freddie L. Moore,
Cheshire, are announcing the
the Coldwater High Schoo.! in
Coldwater. Moore is employed ·
approaching marriage of their
chlldren, Kathleen Sue and Jef·
with Hondo Manufacturing of .
frey Lorn.
America, Inc., Marysville. .·
The open church wedding will
The couple will reside at ·
be March 17, 1990 at St. John
Russells Point.

-~· Anniversary-.
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Wi5e-Durham

RUTLAND- Rebecca' Renee
Wise and Brian Eric Durham wlll
be united in marriage on Monday
at 7 p .m. at the Hobson Chur;ch of
Christ in Christian Union.
Miss Wise is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Wise,
. Rutland. '
Durham Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Theron Our)lam, Pomeroy.

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ALL ABOARD THE
BIRTHDAY TRAIN
has a wonderful wey to
commemorate a child's
special day. It's the ·
"Birthday Train Series"
circus. and it's rounding
the bend with a ast of
adorable characters
featuring baby t~rough
age eighl Start a colle&lt;:·
tion now fi)r aspecial per·
son in )ilur life who is still .
young at heart: "·
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soon and .see the
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addition to our entire
PRECIOUS MOMENTS
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us .about joining the
PRECIOUS MOMENTS
Birthday Club!

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LONG BOITOM - Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Hayman, Long Bot·
tom. are announcing the upcom·
lng marriage of their daughter,
Ginger Marie, or Charlolle Har·
bor, Fla., to Matthew Cummings,
son of John Cummings, Punda

DALLAS and MAXINE NEAL · ALLBRIGHT

Gorda, Fla.
The wedding will take place
. March 24, 2:30 p.m. at the LOng
Bottom United Method'tst
Church.
The couple will reside In
Florida.

-In the service... - - - SHERRI L. CORFEE
Air Force Airman Sherr! L.
Corfee has arrived for duty at
Altus Air Force Base, Okla.
Corfee Is. an apprentice aerospace ground equipment special·
1st with the 443rd Field Malnte·
nance Squadron.
She is the daughter of Owens A.
and Marjorie M. Corfee of Rural
Route 1. Leon, W.Va.
The airman Is a 1989 graduate
of Point Pleasant High School.
W.Va.
CHARLES R. WITHERS Ill
Army National Guard Private
Charles R. Withers IIJ has
graduated from the combat
signaler course at the U.S. Army
Signal School, Fort Gordon, Ga.
The course provided lnstruc..
tion on field wire construction,
troubleshooting field wire lines,
operatiOn of field type switch·
board and frequency modulated
(FM) radio communications and

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. GALLIPOLIS - Dallas and
Maxine Neal Allbright will celebrate their sbth wedding anniversary with an open house March
18, 1: 30-4:00 p.m. at their home
121 Second Ave., Galllpolls,
They were married March 14,
1940 In Greenup, Ky., by Judge
Wllllams Flannigan.

They are the .parents of three,
Shjrley Doss and Kay Allbright,
Galllpolls and _James E. All·
bright, deceased.
They have three grandchild·
ren, James Jr., Jonathan and
Joanne Allbright •.
Gifts should be omitted.

systems In combat and combat
service support. ·
He Is the son of Charles R. and
Brenda S. Withers of 1470 Jerrys
Run Road, Apple Grove, W.Va.
The private Is a 1989 graduate
of Hannan High School, Ashton,
W.Va.
FREDERICK L. DENNISON
The u.S. Air )force has an·
nounced the retirement of Tech.
Sgt. Frederick L. Dennison after
22 years service.
He served as chief of the Public
Affairs Division with the 833rd
Air Division at Holloman Air
Force Base, N.M., prior to
retiring.
·
Dennisori is the brother o!
Gordon L. Dennison of 14 Eliza·
beth St., Proctorville, Ohio, and
Maxine Whitley of Rural Route 2,
Chesapeake, Ohio.
The sergeant Is a 1965graduate
of Fairland High · School,
Proctorville.

Au.••·

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stAfUY A.

S~lftrlnl Awe.

MONUMENTS
Pl. 446·1317

G. . 1111; OIL .

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OVER 70 LIVING ROOM
SUITES DRASTICALLY .
REDUCED .

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a.cl, Dresser I Chest.

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LARGE SELECTION OF
·., LANE ACTION RECLINERS

FAN FAIR•
Nuhville Weekend
May 9-12, 1990
June 5-9,-1990
Lois Jones, escort·
Donna Murphy, escon
Your leisure weekend in- Meet your favorite cou11iry
at the 19th' An· '
cludes Grand Ole ()pry, music
"Nashville Now," Opryland nual Fan Fair, now bigger
USA, and more!
than ever!

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Ia euur~ with Rock of
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HouiS by Appolntmlnt-441·2327 or .183-11188

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BIOYHILL

'LARGE SELECTION

..oc:ll of Ages offers you e choice of 8 different colored

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By.BUSHLINE, LANCER AND VAUGHAN . .'· .

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-::The Office of Financial Aid at
the Unlv'erslty of Rio Grande, In
ci)njunction with the Of!lce of
GontJnulng Education, will offer
s~veral free, day and evening
financial aid workshops during
spring quarter.
:-rhese individual presenlatlOD$
will include step-by-step lnstr)lc·.
tibns on how to complete the
1990·91 Financial Al.d Form and
wl.lllnclude Information on other
fiiianclal assistance programs
fOr higher education.
·.These workshops are designed
to: be!lllflt parents . of students
p~nnlng on attending college
and returning. college students .
cO'nslderlng financial assistance
tot their education.
:pay sessions will be held on
March 21, Aprll4, 11, 25 and May ·
Hrom 2-4 p.m.
:£venjng sessions will be
Mitrch 15, April 19 and May 10
fr6m.7-·9 p.m. Classes will be held
tri• Room 113 of the James 'A.
Riodes Student Center.
:Further information on the
workshops may be obtained by
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performance set

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", · ksh
financial aid wo'r ops.
·at ' Rio
s·cheduled
·.
· .· ·Grande.

GAWPOUS, OH.

Allbrights to·note.anniversary .

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422 SECOND AVE.

Hayman-Cummings

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,~10 GRANDE - The Grande
selections from the many differ· .• "0 Beauteous Heavenly Light".
Chorale-of the University of R,lo
ent seasons of, i.he church year.
"Operator", "Just a Closet walk
Grande will be presenting a
Songs of j!Jy !llld comfort, songs with Thee' ', and "The Lord Biess
prOgramofsacredrnuslctonlght ' f~om ·our past, songs from · You ,and Keep You".
(Sunday) at the Heath United · Advent and C::hrlstmas, · and
The Chorale .is a select ensem·
Methodist Church 'In Middleport , songs from Lent and Easter wlll ble whose purpose is io educate
at 7-p.m.
.
' all be represe~tell.
students and the community in
The concert. i!r .entitled "SeaAmong the more familiar the more sophisticated contem·
sons of Song" and
feature
selectlonswlllbe"BreakForth", porary styles of vocal jazz and·
gospel !]luslc.

Tawney Studio
GINGER MARIE HAYMAN

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7 pc. Wood Dinette .................:.......... $26500
' 'pc:. Wood .Dinette •••••••• ~~.................. S19500
5. pc. Metal Diilette••••••~······•··=············ 516500
5 -pc. Tilt Back Dinette. ...................... ~ S47 500
· "us Many Other Sets ......... S165 oo to S9 7500

THESE ITEMS iEDUCED:
TABLES - DESK - REOJNERS - GUN CABINm .
HUTCHES - CEDAR CHEST - LAMPS
90 DAYS SAME AS C.SH
(With Approw.. Credit). ·
S MI. OUT IIIUYW ••, GAWPOUS, OH.
HIS.: 9·5 IIONDAY ._. SA'IIIIDAY '
.....322

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H..omemakers meeting

·..GALLIPOLIS

- The Gallla
CoUnty Extension Homemakers ·
Council will meet 10:30 a.m.
1\lesday Ma~h 13 at the Presby·
tel'lal' Church. The program will
be "House hold Safety." Those
atJendlitg will be working on a
quilt that is to be auctioned off at
thil! May 5 B&amp;PW Pioneer Day
Dinner. Every homemaker
wtilcome.
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S?,rorriy meeting

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ba~~~~"~e~:b~:~:~da::p:~~
the vocal styles required, read

PoMEROY
Pl)t ·. Chapter,
Sorority will
p.in . . at the
CJtumh.
. .. '

~The Ohio Eta
Beta Sigma' Phi
meet Tuesday, 7
Grace Epllcopal
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,
CIJamber
meeting
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pOMEROY The Melp
C•ty Chamber of Cammer~
wiH liold Its regular luncheoa
~~on Tl!nday, noon, at tile
seiQD! citizens center In Pomeroy.; Guest ape~er will be Jtoaer

Muley. ~

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contacthtg tne continuing educalion office at 245·5353, ex tension
325. The toll-free number in Ohio
Is 1·800·282-7201. .
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BEDFORD -The Bedford
Township Trustees will meet
Monday, 1 p.m. at the townhlll.

GALL~OLIS - Mt. Zion MIS·
slonary Bap!Ut Church has Rev.
Bob Colvin In aervtces Sunday, 1
p.m.
.

MON.DAVc
POMEROY -The Meigs
County 4H Club will hold Its first
meeting of the year on Monday .at
I
7 p.m. at the Meigs County
GALLIPOLIS New Life Extension Office in Pomeray.
Quartet alnp Sutlday at Eliza· Any boy or girl between the ages
of nine and 19 wishing to take
beth Chapel Church.
market lambs or sheep breeding
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CROWN CITY - Dr. Kenneth · projects this year Is Invited to·
E . Cote; miUionary to Jhe join the club. Advisors are Herb
Philippines Speakes at VIctory and Sally Ervin and more lnfor·
Baptist Church, Sunday, 11 a.m. matlon may be· obtatned by
callln~ 949-2136.
Mt;:RCERVILLE .- Mercer·
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
ville, Hannan Trace Alumni
Assoclaiton meets at HTHS Sun· Elementary PTO wlll meet Mon·
day, 2 p.m. toplanalumnldlruier. day at 7 p.m. at the elementar
school.
POINT PIXASAi':lT- Narrow
Way Slnaers at Gospel Light·
house, Sunday, 9: 30 a.m. at at
•
Dillon Chapel In Athalia, Sunday.
.7 p.m .

POMEROY -A skla teltlnl
clinic wlll be conducted Motlday
at~ Pomeroy Fl11! Station frOftl
4:30-6:30 p.m. All .area reel·
dents, tnc:hiding boosters clubs,
PTO' s, church groups, and oilier
residents who are In food service
are urged Ill -lake advanta1e of
this free $ef\1ce. There will also
be a blOQd pressure clink: con·
dueled at this time. CaJI992-3722
for more information.
TUESDAY
. POMEROY -Toe. Ohio Eta
Phi. Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Tuesday, 7
p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
&lt;:;burch. ·

GALLIPOLIS- Rehearsal for
Anne Fischer musical, Sullday, 2
p.m. Gallla Academy choir ·
room.
POMEROY - Pomeroy firemen will have a chicken and rib
barbeq ue Sunday at the firehouse with serving to begin at 11
a.m .
POINT PLEASANT, W,VA.The OH-KAN Chapter of the
Pioneer Rlvermen will meet 2
p.m. Sund!IY In the meeting room
of the Point Pleasant Library. All
former and present men and
women who have worked on the
river, and their spouses, are
invited.
RACINE -The Racine Youth
League will have an organization
meeting on Sunday at 5: 30 p.m.
at the klndergarden building In
Racine. All other interested
coaches are urged to a!tend.

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There's no 1Ali,:.&gt;-need to pay 1........
1 - --u
_q:-..
~----.r~ ~;;::,
a fortune for a great haircut. penn .1
IB"f.f.f'/
or color. . ·
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At flmtastiC' Sam's, you11 get I__ ""'
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~erything you expect from an
Tk-~!"!! ,.~I
expensive salon, except th~ price. I ·vgy~&lt;.L.,_ .
You don't need an appomtment. 1:.,....,
Qii &gt;.
we're waiting for you now.
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MIDDLEPORT -The Highway Gospel Singers wlll be at the
Middleport Christian Union on
Sunday at 7:30p.m. The speaker
wlll be Sam Anderson .

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Gr~ndel Cho~ale

as ae West

Gallijlolia,

POMEROY - Home econommarketing and customer servl·
and operating characteristics of,
students throughout the · ces manager, the company has
today's modern electric cooking
Coumbus Southern Power ·Comprovided 89 ranges to 20 schools.
appllal!ces," Stevens stressed.
pahy's service area are discover·
He explained that the program
The ranges are leased by
1~ the joy of cooking through the
has two goals.
·
Columbus Southern from the
electric utility's school range
" On one level, the program
General ~Cleat ric Co. Their use is
program.
.
allows us to make a significant
provided free of charge to
The company has provided six
contribution to ·the communities
partlcipatll!g schools. To qualify,
new ranges at Meigs High School ' we serve. School systems often the schools are required to
and five at Eastern High School.
operate under financial con·
provide for the care and malnte·
. 111 central and southern Ohio straints that hamper their efforts nance of . the equipment and
Col~mbus S!lulbern has provided
to upgrade and Improve the
assume responslblllty for lnsur:
a total of the free use of 467 equipment used in the class·
ing the equipment against liabll·
modern electric ranges.for home
room," ·.he said. "The- school
lty claims·.
economics. and career de:veloprange program relieves the
In conclusion. Stevens said
ment programs in 107 middle,
schools of some of that financial
that school officials are pleased
junior high l!nd high scho61s in
burden," he continued.
with the program and that . It
central and southern Ohio.
"On ano)her level, the pro- · proves, once again, the value of
In the Athens division, accord·
gram allows Columbus Southern
programs that are built on
ing to Howard Stevens, Colum·
to .acquaint students with the · public-private· cooperation
Southern's Athens Dlvlson · eleclric living concept by famll·
where everyone benefits.
.l!.us
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iarlzlng them -with the features

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Fruth Pharmacy

See Our Complete line of
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The EJ'ESCO PRECIOUS
MOMENTS® Co)lection

PENTAX.

representative, Is Melp llome eeoHmlea teaCber
Becky Baer. The new aillvee are provided free of
charge to the ~hools. Besides the siX at Melp
Hlgb, five were provided lor Easter a High Sehool.

(Dltunbu5 Southern ~akes rarige.
~onations to. Meigs schools _,. ·

"TO MY FAVORITE li\l'f'
5&lt;1043

garden buldlng. All persons
interested in teaching are urged
to attend.

lUNDAY
PT. PLEASANT - Grubb
Family SIJIII!I'I at Gospel Light·
house, Su*y, 7 p.m.

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KATHLEEN stJE ·J&gt;ARKER

7

Community calendar ·

Farnt Bureau activities
geared toward .150 youths
The 'Gallla County Farm · Bu·
reau is serving "summons" to
150 area youlha requesting their
''
presence et a defensive driving
seminar and · pizza party. The
gathering will be March 12 ~
beghinlng at 7:30 at the. Senior
Citizen Center. The program will
Include Trooper Hopkins, and a
film "Just Another · F;r.lday
Night."
·
• ·
, Jackie Graham, FarmBurea11
youtli advisor said, "During the
month of December, 1989 accord·
lng to the Galli;! County State
Highway fatrol, ll!ere were 146
.traffic accidents. Three of these
were alcol)ot related, one of
which was fatal. This meeting
'
will be an Important meeting for
, · eur young people to attend and
develop an awareness on the
importance of defensive driving
for young people.
The purpose of the meeting is

w. v•.

POMEROY -The Disabled
·American Veterans Ladies Aux·
mary will hold Its regular m~t·
lng on Monday .at 7 p.m. The
dlstl'ict commander .of the ladles
auxiliary will attend. Refresh·
ments will be served.

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,_._.he QW•t.S" -------~ ,,'::!: 1

CJ;:....,...., •

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'Ve the Oo lltlwl Family Haircutters e
446·SAMS

RACINE -The Racine Ball '
Association will have an organl·
zatlonal meeting Sunday, 5:30
p.m. at the Southern . kinder·

01110 11¥8 IUZA
IETWDN HIW I IIG an

GAWPOUS, OHIO

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MON. 1H1U FRI. 9 TO 9 P.M.
·sar. 9 ro' P,M.
SUNDAY 12 TO S P.M.

.....---.-RoyW '}\t-Horne" Special_

music, and maintain an lodependent vocal line. Members are
provided with tuition assistance ·
for their ,particlpallon.
The Chorale is available for
concerts In schools and churches.

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AU AmFICAL FLOWERS, WREATHS
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M.dl11.1110

Beat of the Bend

Continuing
Education offers:
two classes in
lotuS 1 usage·

Communicate, relate!

I

Br BOB BOEn.JCH
sKunk - and they'll remember
POMEORY -Communicate!
that forever. These people just
It's 1990 and that's what we
don't allow room for any horse
gotta do. After
play. We know we've got to be
.all, how else can
careful not to let them get our
we maintain ·
goat or they may get stubborn as .
o f t h o s e
a mule. Keep ln.mind tbat some
relationships?
of these people are strong as an
Time was
ox and could decide to communi·
when malntajncate by punching us out. So the
Ina a relation·
bottom line Is that we have to
ship dealt with keeping from
keep an eagle eye on these
relationships at all times pr we
exploding at an aunt, a self-:-ap·
may get some communication
pointed critic, whose main ambl·
·lion In life seemed hell-bent in
that wedon'tllke-stralglltfrom
te~lng down -and here's one of
the horse's mouth.
Of course, as we move along,
today's goodies - your sell
~teem. Idldn'tknowaboutsell
ilow and then we communicate
esteem way back then. - I just with someonewholsascuteas.a
knew she made me feel bad kitten and who enjoys giving out
real bad.
And, of course, · with a bl!lbearhug, but overall In
relationships way back then also the back of our mind we've got to
meant maintaining some sort oi remember that the leopard
tranquility with a first coilsin doesn't change his spots and as a
wbo would attempt - and result, some people are just
sometimes was successful - In going to be as mean as a snake
besting you to a· pulp.
over the long haill. Let's face It,
But- as we grow a.mlteolder,
we can count on them to be
relationships have become .bit . downright catty. So we can't get
more complicated and we drink caught like a rat In a trap hi
In therecommendatlons.ofallthe communicating wi,.!l these peo.
advice magazines and articlespie - sometimes we have to play
a llttle cat and mouse game with
we're trying to communicate.
Yes Sir!
them. However, it does tend ta
Now there are a whole batch of make one sick as a dog wll'ne ·
us· who know it's a jqngle out trying to cope .wfth an lndlvpdual
tliere- and we're glad the word .who Is as dumb as a bwnk mule.
got out because without our On the other hand, If we do
consistent references to the
succeed with that we can feel as
animal kingdom- and our hands
proud as a peacock.
-our communicating would be a
I guess my advice forcommunwee bit · limi~d. · The animal
!eating l.s tO move along at a
kingdom expresslqns do convey . snail's pace while you keep as
our feelings and e~.peclally so
busy as a bee and as happy as a
since many of us haven't really . lark. Somehow I tlilnk you can
gotten Into today's upbeat lingo. · handle this communication busl·
As we move along In the rat
ness. Ift iact, J tllirik you might
race, we use our horse sense and just take to it like a duck takes to
trynottomakeamountalnoutof water and you could end up
a mole hill even thoiogh we may having a whaleofagoodtime-a
get dog tired of playing-possum real eager beaver. No need to be
when we'd really prefer to roar chicken -it's not really a sacred
like a lion.
cow, you· know ..
We know In our communlcal·
Lotsa luck -try rubbing the
inr lila tit's sometimes good to be rabbit's foo.f - with your relaquiet as a mouse because some tionshlps and your communicat·
people have the memory of an lng. Now why do I feel I have a
ek!phant and if we really speak tiger by the tall?
out with our true feelings they're
But do keep communicating .
going to th'ink we're a lowdown and like the Cheshire Cat, do
•
.
keep smiling.

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a

LITI'LE BUCKEYE PERFORMERS - The
Dlustrated Theatre Tourlag Company, seen.here
In rehear!lal for one of Its prOdil'lllons, will.ltage

.,

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-._t,.~,,;•.i~'I"T .: .

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'-'Simply' Grimm ~orlea" for tbe Utile Buckeye
Tbeatre Series at the University of Rio Graude.on·
Sunday, Marcil 18 at 2: 30 p.m.

.

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LBTS planning -'Simply Grimm Stories,
Based In ·Evanston, Ill., Illus·
RIO GRANDE - '"Superb and
innovative" are the words used trated Theatre Touring Com·
bY Chicago Parents News Maga· pany has a repetoire of original
zlne to dsecrlbe the work of the adaptations gel!n!d for children.
Illustrated Theatre Touring such as '"Bea:uty and the Beast,''·
Company, set to present '"Simply · and versions of the chlldren's·
Grimm Stories" on Sunday, stories penned by the BFothers
March 18, as part of the Little Grimm.
The group exposes children to .
Buckeye Theat-re Series at the
the world of theater by not only
University of Rio Grande.
The performance is set for 2: 30 performing, but 'bY conducting
p.m. in the Christensen Theatre · special classes on the art of the
of the Fine and Performing Arts stage, covering such fac~ts 'as
maskrnaklng and storytelling . .
Center.
The group has performed lor

. ' A two-evening workshop , itl .
Lotus 1 (Introduction to Spread··
sheets) Is being offered by tl!e
University of Rio Grande Ofttce
of Coptinulng Education.
The Class will meet on Tuesday, AprU3, a~d Thursday ,'April
5, from 6:'30·9:.30 p.m., In the
College of Business Computer
Lab, Room 108. Cost of the
workshop ls$95. Pre-registration
deadline Is April 2.
Lotus Is the leading application .
program for MS·DOS computer
.. spreadsheets. In this introduc'•
tory class, participants wnvearp
the basic functions , such as data.
entry, worksheet organization, .
worksheet commands, ·entering
formulas and printing reports.
Take-home workbooks and sam·
pies of spreadsheet applications
are lnc;luded.
'.
.
Further Information on the
workshops and registration in'
formation may he obtained from
the Office of Continuing Educa: .
tlon, University of Rio G.rande,
Box 878, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674,
or by calling 245-5353, extension
325. The toll-free number in Ohio
Is 1·800·282·7201.

Bureau closed

'

more than 600 presenters across
the country, including The Chi· POMEROY - The license
bureau In Pomeroy will be closed
cago Symphony Orchestrfl, tlie
Toledo Junior Theatre Guild, the , · Wednesday and Thursday 'd ue to
Huntington Endowment for the construc;tlon Inside the building. ·
Arts of West Virginia. and the · The bureau will reopen Friday at .
IndIan a p o II s· C 11 i I d r en ' s 9 a.m. ·
"
Museum.
FREE VACATION BIBLE
Admission Is $2.50 per person:
More Information on 'the Little
SCHOOL WORKSHOP
Buckeye .Theatre Series Is avail·
FRIENOimtnslon ·.
able by contacting the Frne and •
Jesus' design fDr lritndlhip.
Performing Arts Center at 245·
KRODEL CLUBHOUSE
5353, extension 364. The toll·free
TUES. MAR. 13- 7:00P.M.
number In Ohio Is 1·800-282·7201.

Door Prizes • Refrfshments

Senior ·Citizen Center slates aaivities .

.
.
'Menus consist of:
446-7000 before 9 a.m. the day you
GALLIPOLIS - Activities and
Monday
Chilli
with
wish to attend.
menus for the week of March
crackers,
boiled
egg,
tossed
12·16, at the . Senior Citizens
Center 220 Jackson Pike, will be salad, bread, pear halves.
Tuesday -:- Baked steak with
as .follows:
gravy,
oven brown patatoes,
Monday . - Chorus, 1 p.m.;
ATHENS- Ohio University Is
be earned. Robert D. Borchard
Italian
v~etables,
bread, sliced ·
.offering "Art In El!gland" from
and. Eric H. 'Forrest of Ohio . Blood Pressure, Health Dept., 1 bananas In orange juice.
June 18 through July 16.
University's School of Art will . p.m.;
Wednesday - Ham and navy
Tuesday - Stop/Physical Fit·
Art In England consists of
lead .the workshop.
.
t&gt;eani
with onions, spinach, II,P· ,
ness,
10:30
a.m.:
Lenten
Service
visits to selected gallerk!s and
For registration, call Annie
plesauc~ . with Cinnamon, corn·
(AI
Earley),
11:15
a
.m.;
Pretty
museums as well as lesser known· Weaver. Office of Continuing ..
bread, peanut butter.cookles.
Punch, 1: 30 p.m. ·
coilections an&amp; art exblbltlon
EducatIon, . ,MemorIa I
Thursday - Beef liyers with
Wednesday
Attorney
(Call
areas of specialiZed Interests In
Auditorium-LL, Ohio University,
whip!Je!! pbtatoes, peas,
onions',
for.
Ap]ioln.tmenl),
1
p
.m.;
London and Edinburgh. Partlcl·
Athens •. Ohio, 45701, . at
hot
rolls;
sliced peaches.
pate In' opportunities for on-site
614-593-1776, or, In Ohio, 1·800-; Garden Club, 1 p.m.; Armchair
~
Friday
- .Ham, · green beans,
Travel (Spain), 10: 45 a.m.
sketching, drawing and waterco· · 336·5699.
augratln
potatoes,
cole slaw with
Thursday- Bible Study, 10:45
lor, as well as enhanced potential
For further Information about
carrots,
bread,
cake
with green
a .m.; Bd. of Trustees, 1:30p.m.;
for study of local themes, Issues
the program contact Robert D.
Icing.
and historic perspectives of the
Borchard.. l!\chool of Art, Ohio Herbalist Class, 1: 30 p.m.
Make reservations
by calling
Friday 7 Art Class, 10-noon;
., ;.,
.
United Kingdom. Either gradu·
University, Athens, Ohio, 45701,
Co:an Class, 1~3 p.m.
.. .
ate or undergraduate credit may
at 614·593-4292.

S]IOIIIOrlll ly

·

WILLA'S BillE IOOKSTOR(
,

Point Pleasant, WV.
and
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,

STANDARD PUBLISHING CO.

Art tn England offered by OU

WordPerfect classes scheduled
by RG Continuing Education
RIO GRANDE - Evening
classes In WordPerfect 5.0 and
5.1 (Introduction to Word Pro·
cesslng) will be offered by the
University of Rio Grande's Of·
flee of Continuing Education on .
Tuesday, March 13, and Thttrs·
day, March 15.

Woi"dPerfect is the toP"setling
word prOcessingprogramavailable for MS. DOS computers. Par·
ticlpants wllllearn all the basic
functions, such as creating and
saving a document, editing,
setting and changing formats ,
and printing.
Further information on the
Classes begin at 6 p.m . and end workshops and registration in·
at 9:30p.m. Cost of the classes is · formation may be obtained from
$95 for both evenings. Classes the continuing education office
will meet In the College of by calling 245-5353, extension 325,
Business Computer Lab, Room or toil-free in .Ohio at 1·800·282.
108.
7201.

Miniature hearth basketing set

RIO GRANDE - ~e Office of
Continuing Educatoon at the
U!llversily of Rio Grande will be
offering a course in Miniature
Hearth Basketlng during spring
quarter.
·
The class will be held on March
22 and 29, from 6: 30-8:30 p.m. in
the Fine and Perloo mlng Arts
Center, Room 124.
The Instructor will be Helen
Armstrong of Jackson. The
course , Is an introduction to

· basket weaving, Upon compte·
lion of the basket thestudentwill
paint decoration's on the r.ee.d.
Bows wlll be placed on the
handles .as a finishing · touch.
St uclen ts are asked to bring a pal r
of scissors. All other materials
will be furnished.
For further Information, con·
1act the conlinu.lng education
office at 245·5353, extension 325,
or toll·free In Ohio at 1·80IJ.282·
7201.

Introductory needlepoint class set
RIO GRANDE - The Office of . designs.
Continuing Education at the
The spring doorplece project
· University of Rio . Grande Is will be held March 12 and 19 from
offering an Introductory needle· 6: 30·8: 30 p.m . .in the Fine and
point class . during spring Performing Arts Center, Room
quarter.
124. Cost or the course Is $20.
The non-credit course wlll · For more Information and
feature needlpolnt on a plastic reglstratlcm, contact the continu·
. grid. Participants In this ·class log education office at 245·5353,
·- wlll complete a doorpiece with a extensloh 325, or toll·ftee In Ohio
spring decor....
at 1·801J.282·7201.
·
The instructor for the co11rse Is
Helen Armstrong of Jackson. She
has . studied the needle arts for
WALLPAPD
many years and continues to take
various classes and worksllops to
keep up with new techniques and

AND

DAIRY DELITE
SANDWICHES, SHAKES, ICE CREAM,
YO.GURT, ETC.
. Open Deily 10:30 a.m.-9:00p.m.

MARTY'S I,IUFFET HOME-COOKED FOOD

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so .low you won't l:lali'eve .vour eyasl

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Early American·

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DAIRY. DELITE

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lpHi.
you mull 1'111111« ~ tNI. You mult bt 1bl1 to lhow pioot of
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limited num._ af•pac•well11111&amp; Cert • • tar • .., will bt .._.on 1 firlt oom~t flrlt MrWd ba... To ....
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Portsmouth East hands
SOutllem 64-59.~loss
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8p.m . . ·
ATHENS
Pottlmoutll but; came backto evaporate the
Complete details on the Ports·.
· .Eut'a Tart8ns erased' a seven· .• Tor.nadoes' lesd to one at balf·
mouth
);:ast·Southern· contest
pointdeflcltattheendoJ:t~tbltd
time. But after SoutJI.e rn In·
will
be
seen
In Monday's paper.
q\18fterof!l4turday'sDlvlaloniV creased Ita lead to seven at the
lowl!t'~bracket c!lstr~t c.hamplon· · enc!'of act u.r'ee, East did unto the Seere br quartek-a
PoPI. East ....... ,. 9 16 15 24-64
. ship .IIIIJII! at Ohio UD tverslty's Tornadoes as they did unto them
.Convocation Center anr;il survived fn. the beginning to secure the Southern . ............ ~8 8 21 .12-59
l'ORTSMOUTB JtAST (64)
· a seuon·blgh 38-polr\t perfor· victory.
. .
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manee frDI'I! Racine I SciUtherJI
·Ray Bear and Kevin Monroe.
Ray Bear ....... :.::.7. . 8 ~ o 1-17
' forwardleuar&lt;J Andy , S.er to \vbo were· the twin cannons. In : Kevin Monroe ....... ;. 4 3 0-17
hand the Tornailoes a 64-119 loss. , East's offense with their team· ·John Wright ....'... ,, .. 7 0 1-15
~tll''l pirfomi~: llla._tlllrd .. blgh 17-polnt efforts, got offen-' Randy Abrams ....... 2 0 2- 6
straight :!11-polnt-plus ~ffortofthe · slve help from teammate John Jeremy Cantrell ..... 1 1 0- 5
· Greg Ga:mpp .. ..... .. .. 2 · 0 0- 4
season, was the highest by a Wright, who sco~d 15.
player on an SVAC team In any . . Th,e Tornadoes, 15·9, bid fare· TOTALS ............ ,....!4 4 4-:-64
·· game this season, sur.-passing his well to seniors Kevin Burgess,
SOUTHERN (19)
. 37·point Clinic agalns!t Reedlvllle . Brad Maynard, . Chris Murphy,
Andy Baer ... 1........ 8 5 7-38
Eastern in ·tile Melgs .SI!Ctlonal Brent Shulet 81\d •Chad Taylor.
In the regional tournament at Chad Taylor ·.:....... 1 2 2-10
title game.on Feb. 28.
The Tartans, 20-3, 'scored·Only the Convocation Center, Ports· · Brad Maynard ...... 3 0 2- s·
half as many points us the Racine mouth East will play the Steuben· Bren I Shuler .. .. .. .. . 0 0 3-3
ville district winner Thursday at TOTALS ............. ,. 12 7 14-51
'five at tile e.nd of the' first frame,

(J,Ii~, .S~ate posts 93~

vic_tQry.ove.t Minnesota
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - Perry Carter
championship.
Smith scof~!d 10 of Louisville's first 15 points,
scored 24 pOints and Ohio State held off a
second-half rally by No. 19 Minnesota for a 93-83
including a pair of three-point baskets and a
, Big Ten victory over. the Golden Gophers
three-point play. The Cardinals went ahead 28-18
- Saturday aftern~•on.
·
.with 5: 19 remaining when Spencer stole a pass In
· The victory for Ohio State, which finished 16·12
the lane and Smith fed Harmon for a-left-hand~
"ovei"ali and 10-8. in the Big Ten, assured the
dunk.
Buckeyes of at le·a sta sixth·place finish In the Big
. While Smith was hitting all seven of his
Ten and kept alive their hopes oflandlng an NCAA
first-half field goal attempts, the Golden Eagles
Tournament bid. ·
'
·
missed 13 of their flrst20 shots from the floor and
The Buckeyes led nearly all the way after a
hit only four of their fii'St 11 attempts from the fo)ll
basket by JamaaUirown put them up 3-2 with less '. · line.
.
,
. than a m~!ite g'&lt;:~ne ·fio the game. :
·
· Spencer,•duel'lii$.Weatherspoon ln,the trenches,
A d~peratlon ·three-point field·goal by ~.rown at
added 11 point$, seven rebou!)ds and four bl~ks
the halftime buZ.ZI!r gave Ohio State a 52-38 bulge ' before Intermission while Harmon SCOI'I'd eight
at the lntermlss:lon and tlie Buc]leyes threatened
points off the benCh.
to bloW the game open ear)y in the secoll" half.
WeatherspoOn,.Chancellor and Marcus Crowell
Phio State J()jlk a 6547 lead with 15: 30
led SoUthern Mississippi wUh nine points apiece in
remal. nln~t; tiS blgt,est of 'the game. Bu! a 12.0
· the opening 'hall.
'
¥ '
Mlnneso~ run •dui:jng the next four minutes got ·
Ole Mlai IS, Vanderbilt 62- At Orlando, Fla.,
tlteGophersba•~k to~thin65·59at"the tr: !!0!11a~]\.
· all-SEC ~nfor fcinvai"d Gerald Glass,' apparently
After a paillol .r ebound baskets by Ohio State's ·
headed ton the worst game of his college career
7.0 Bill Robtu:)n made It 69·119, Minnesota rot It
latter~ twice having to be helped •off the court
.Jim Sblknjaaskl In lbe first hall of Saturday's
TO ntE HOOP ·- Oblo state Jlllllrd Jamaal
back 1'0 '111;85 ~ill•. baaket by MeMn Newbern. . · . becalile of. injury, scored eigbt straight points In
Brown (30) goetj te the hoop agaiDSt Mklnesota's , Bll Ten contest at st. Jpl!n'&amp; Are11• In Columbus.
'i(',l!lllbl!Ubl•114 tly.• RA••t,wiA1181J*-lltll!di;;·, · e.l;)., closing 51 seconils . Saturdll)' ~ to · alve
·Tile ilol&amp;ltllekeyes '"" u-a. (VPI) . •
'
Stafe blbk •toAJt3;Poliltm•allludtlle-liWo , · Ml~slppl. a 66-62 . temiflnal• .. vtetory -over
m~~tUtes of the pml! saw a 'parade of Buc~eye . .V~bllt il! the Southeastern· Conference
tlielr second semifinal In ihe tournament's
Campbelll3.
.
_
Plil:Vers at ,the, ,~ree throw line,
''
basketball'tournament.
ll·year history, adv~nce to Sunday's final where
Mtcbllan 12'7, Iowa 96- At Ann Arbor, Mich.,
Mark Bak~&gt;!lvltO fouled out wlt)l3: 18left i~ the
Mi~sisslppl, 1a:16, meets the winner of the
they will meet the winner of Saturday's second
seniors Tercy Mills, Loy Vaught and Rumeal
game scored . ~6 points for Ohio State, Brbwn
·second game between 2nd· seeded Alabama, 22·8, ·
semWnal between No. 4 Syracuse and Villanova.
Robinson Saturday closed out their regular
added 1f, Rob.nson 13 and Jim Jackson 12. , ·
and · Auburn, 13-17, in today's championship
The Huskies ·OutscOred the Hoyas 14·0 and 9.0
season careers by leading 14th·rated Michigan to
The game's leading scorer was Minnesota's ·
contest. ·
during two s !retches of the second haif. The Hoy as
a 127·96 Big Ten victory over Iowa.
Willie· Bursotl who had 31, 20 of those in the fjrst
Mlsslsslpjli tra11ed by five points with less than · ·made three field goals during an ll·minute
The Wolverines finished 1H and third In the Big
]lalf to keep the Gophers within.striking dlstaJ1ce.
a minute to play'bef~ Glass, the No. 2 scorer in
stretch.
·
Ten - ·the same record and position they were In a
· 'N;ewbern, ':flth 16· pOints: was .fhe only Othfr
. theSECbutwJtllonlysevenpolntsovertliefirst39
'rate George, Nadav Henefeld and Chris Gwynn
year ago when they started their drive to the
playez"" In doulile figures for Minnesota, which
minutes, .hit two three-pointers In an ll·second
added nine points apiece tor the Huskies, while
NCAA tournament championship. .
'
would up the regular season 20,8 and 11·7.
span to give the Rebels a one-point lead and then
Georgetown, 2l·6, 1\'as led by Mark Tillmon with
Mills scored 24, Vaught 23 and Robinson 22.
Loulsvllle .ll3, Sou. Min. 80·- At Biloxi, Miss.,
made two free throws In the closing seconds.
23 points and Alonzo Mourning ad&lt;!ed 12.
Vaught had 16 of Ills points and Robinson 15of his
Keith WI!Uilins, £nVtslble In the opening half, .
Vanderbilt, :ovhich had to win a qualifying game
The teams split their two regular season
In the second half as Michigan scored Its most
defused Southern Mississippi's comeback bid by .
against Flor.lda to reach the quarterfinals, where
matchups. Early In the season, the Huskies
uoinls ever In Crisler Arena .
.scoring 10 points In the final 2: 24 Saturday and .
the Commodores upset loP"seeded and regular·
surJ)rlsed Georgetown, earning a 704i5 decision.
Michigan, 22-7 overall, had little trouble:gettlng
leading 18th-ranked Louisville toils fourth Metro
season . SEC . champion Georgia-, led 31·23 at
The Hoyas avenged the loss, admlnisterlpg an
through lol"a's press and less problems beating
Gonference Tourname"t title !n five years with an .
halftime ~nd was ahead by 10 points with less than
84·64 beating oil their hdme floor r
the slower Hawkeyes down the floor.
.
83-80 triumph.
., .
.
eight min~tes to play.
.
•.
Iowa was led by James Moses and Les Jepsen
Vlrclnta 68, Cle11111on 68- At Charlotte, N.C ..
The Cardhials, 26· 7, cll!iched .an automatic
. A three·polriter by Tim Jumper, w.ho tied Glass
John Crotty scored 16 points, and '{lrginla held on
with 15 points apiece. The Haw keyes finished 12-16 ·
.berth .tot tl;l~ NCAA Tournament.
..
for the team scoring lead with 15 points, closed the
despite missing the front of six one-and·one free
overall and 4-14 In the Big Ten.
LouiSville, the conference'.s top see&lt;l. led 66·53 ,
Rebels to within three, but two free throws by·
throws In the finall: 15 Saturday to knock off No.
'DePaul84, Notre Dame 59- At Rosemont, Ill.,
with 8: 33 rf!m~iBing beft&gt;re Southern Mississippi's
Scott Draud gavf! Vandy that five-point margin
15 Clemson 69-661n th·e Atlantic Coast Conference
David Booth scored a game-high 26 points .
15-5 spurt rnade !t 71·!18 with 2: 40 left. Williams, a
with 58 seconds left.
,
.
Tournament semifinals.
Saturday and Chuckle Murphy and Terry Davis
Sel!ior gua·r d who luid no points, assists or steals in
The Rebels hustled down the court and Glass
. Crotcy scpred five of the Ca.valters' last eight .
aided a second·half resurgence that lifted DePaul
10. first· hal( minUtes, responded with ' thtee·
fired a 20·footer from .the right side to ·close the
points, but VIrginia didn't score alter taking a . ··. to a thrilling 64·59 victory over Notre Dame In a
pointer and il steal that led tohls three-point play.
gap to 62·60. SeConds later, the Rebels picked off
69-60 lead wlt,h 1:35 left on Crotty's two free
rematch of the major Independents still vying lor
After Wlntarps added two free tbrows'to make it
an errant Vanderbilt pass al)d quickly got the ball
throws.
NCAA Tournament bids.
.
79-70; theyolden Eagles, 20-ll,doaed wlth,ln8J.IIO
again to Glass who hit his second three-pointer
Marion Qosh's basket brought Clemson to
Booth scored th£ first 14 points for DePaul,
on ~usseU Johnson's jumper with five seconds
from almost the lde'ltical position of the first.
within three Wl~h four seconds left, and the Tigers
18:14, then nailed a pair of key free 'throws down
· left .•~lllia'"'sanktwomore(oul,shotsJustbefore
Patrick Eddie, mak]Qg three straight field
got possession gain when VIrginia overthrew a
the stretch. Davis scored eight of his 12 points In
goals midway th~pugh the second half to keep
the buzze;.r for. the fin~ m.argln as !he Caf(linals
· long lnbounds li$S. But Clemson's lnbounds pass
the secoiul hali, and Murphy scored all nine of Ills
w\'ejlped up thetr ·e tghth' Metro Tournament title
Vande~b!ll frolr!'plllling awa:y, had 14 points for
went offDavld 1~oung;s liands In the left corner . .
In the flnaf:2Q minutes.
In 15 ye~rs.
·
· .
·
•
the Rebels and Joli'Harveli added 13.
Virginia, 19-10, Is In Its first tournament final
Melvon . Foster preserved the victory for
l.aBradford Smith scored 17 of Ills 24 points as
Draud led Vandy scoring witlo 15· points,
since 1983. Clemson, 24·8, ·was trying to reach Its
DePaul, hitting both ends of a one-and-one with 15
Louisville grabbed a 39·31 halftime advantage.
.followed by Eric Reid with 11 and Todd Milholland
first final since 1962.
(
se.corids left after Notre Dame closed to within
with 10.
Felton Spencer added 21 points and 10 rebounds
Kenny Turner added 15 points, Bryant Stith 14
62-59 .
.
while Jerome Harmon chipped In 14 points off the
Conaectlcut 85, Georcetown 10 - At New York
and Anthony Oliver 12 for the Cavaliers, who are
Keith Robinson paced the Fighting Irish, 16-12,
seeking to give (leparting Coach Terry Holland a
Louisville ~nch.
·
.
Chris Smith scored 18 · points and No. 7
with 20 points .
·
Metro Play,r f!.f the Year Clarence Weathers·.
Con~tiC~Jt. buo)'ed·by a secqnd-llalfGeotgetown
memorable farewell. Holland becomes !lthletlc
Both teams were considered to be on t.he bu~ble
poon ledSouthernMisslsslpplwltll19pblntsand16
scot!hg ilrought, earned Its first trip to the Bfg
director at Davidson following the .season .
for NCAA bids, to be announced Sunday. The Irish
rebounds and Darrln Chancellor ad&lt;\ed 17 points .
East Touf!lament ,final with ·a ~ semifinal
Dale Davis ·scored 21 _polnts for Clemson, but
were considered to be In a better position going.
as the second·seeded Golden Eagles nearly · ,
victory over the sixth· ranked Hoyas.
Davis had only one flelll goal :tn the last 12
Into the game after upsets over UCLA, Syracuse
rallied for their first Metro Tournament
The Huskies, 27-5, who were playing In only
minutes. Cash added 16 points and Elden
and Missouri . .

,

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'·

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two playoff games for TV, tiut league
· '."There really has been nooccassion
keeptng 't he-replayasltwaslastseason,
officials will try 'to shorten the ,games.
to get five or siK officials In the same
rather ill an modifying the rule. Still, It
The averaae time of NFL games has , r~ .as coaches .In ·the calm of the
'Will only U,keelght votes against replay
lncreali!d from 2: 57 In 1979 to 3: 11 lasf , ot&amp;euan," Browne· said. ''There Is no
ORLANDO, !Fla . .(UPil - Commls·
to kill it.
.
seuon, and the owners would Uke to
reason for animosity between the two
The competition commilt.ee will also
sloner Pa11l Tagltaliue hopes the NFJ,
brlq the time back clos'er to three
groUJI'."
look at the quarll!rback·ln·tbe-grasp,
will emerge from Ill annual owner.s'
boun.
. New Orleans President Jim Finks,
Intentional groUIIdlng and crowd noise
meetings a richer league With shorter
games. better offfclaUq, a stricter
Tagl~bue hopes tbe owners . will
chairman of the Competition Co'!'mlt·
rules.
.
tee, asllecl Taallablae to look Into the
Tqllat:Ne will announce a stricter
approve. •bortenblg halftime from 15
steroid policy and no change In Instant
minutes ·to 12 and make tlmeoull
recndiJ!Ient, training, off·season prepa·
sterOid policy at the meetlDP- He
replay.
.
--.
Those are included am~ Tagll·
shorter.
. ration and ln·season performance of . cotllldets steroids af least·as lll!l'lous a
''The commlllloner·feelutroqly the
leaaue. C1tftclals. .
problem u at:Nae of ·~ drUIII,
abue' 1 g'oals ·l!llterl" Ilia firlt leape
leqth of aameubould be three boun,"
Inallllt replay, wblch has resulted in
becau• slit!rolds alve players unfair
meeting as commllsloner, wblcb bealnB
said Joe Browlle, NFL director of
much o1. the criticism toward officials,
competatlve aclvutaaes and endanpr
today and runs untU Friday.
communlcatlona. ''The exceptlotl wiU.IIaln come up ·f or a vote. Fonner
their bealdl. Last year, ptayen were
• lie will present a four-year televlalon
(pmel owr tbree boun) .. becomlnl
Commlnf.o•l Pete Rozelle and former
tes.l ed once for s.teroldl in prweasan.
deal with CBS, NBc, ABC, ESPN and
tberule,,.peclaib'•nllbtpmel61111
~~~~~ eRclltlveTex Schramm lle!Jiell
Tqllabue .. expected to uk the
newco""r ~ w011h a total of lUll
Conunlploner
Taallaliue
want~
to
take
pum
l11tant
replay
tbroulli
the
~t
owner~
to approw random steroid
biUion, wblch comes lo 13U mlWO!I pii'
aam~aatton."
·
folll'
years,
and
CIJIPOII!!III.s
see
their
•
testbli
foull
ptayen. '
ch1li each season. The 28 NFL. teiiDI
In
an
effort
to
Improve
relatiollllllpa
ebince
to
vote
It
out
o1
tile
league
aow
Tile
eonuillllloaer
Ia allo seeking a
were paid 117 mUIIIIII each tram TV ln.
betw-coacbel andometala, tbeNFL !hat RaRile lllld Scbl'llmm are aoae.
reptaeenweJforOr. ForrestTeuantas
19811. .
hu IDYlled five pme officials to meet
Btat Tqllabue maintaiDI the fana like
head of the Ntt.' I dMIII prclll'lftl. He
The owners will likely approve the
witll coacbef Wldntlsday In OrtalldO. !natant replay and Jl'lnlcl, who replaced
al10 wants to hire - a l couultanll,
TV packaae at Sunday's opening
Referee Jerry Markbrelt Is amOJII Scbramni u bead or the Competition
Including a counaelor·treaunent spell!lslon.
.
clallst and perllapa one team doctor. •
The NFL hail agreed to spread Its . those expected to attend, and all head Coll'linlttee, ·~ Is a supporter of instant
replay. Ta&amp;llabue and Flnltl favor
·Also on the agenda at the meetingS
18-iiame season ·over 18 weeks an4 add · coacllal 'bave been Invited,

'

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

By DAvE BAFFQ
VPI lltl1111' Writer

'

iT. J5 WIST

•

Tagliabue.' Iooks fo~ · sho~e~ games, to~gber stero~d· policy

MARCH SPECIAL

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PriTSBURGH (UPI) - The
Copperweld Corp. said Friday It
has completed a S!!O million
facility to produce welded tubing
at Its Ohio Steel 'rube Division In
Shelby, Ohio.
.
The expansion il the first phase · +-_.
o( Copperweld's Vlslori 100manufacturing excellence plan tar·
geted for Ohio Steel Tube,
celebrating Its lOOth anniversary
this . year. It manufactures
welded and seamless mechanl·
cal tubing. '

HOURS: 7:00 A.M.·9:00 P.M.
Hot Food hr • Full Salad hr
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Expansion' finished

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Super Bowl XXVU after the 111ft
. season - Los Angeles, Sa~ Diego and
Phoenix are the candidates.
Ex]Nlll81on - Nothiqg will be set until
the league and players' union reach a
coUectlve barplning agreement. No
formal presentations will be made bUt
represenlatlves of eight 'Cities wllllobl)y
the owners at Orlando. They . are
Baltimore, Oaki&amp;nd, St. Louis, Mem·
phis, 'Mo.ntreal, the Carolinas, Sacrjl. mento and Jacksonville.
.Jutdor el...,..r - Owneu wlll
dllcuss and perbap1 adopt a pemianept
pole)' regarding college julllon wllo
. WUt to enter the draft. Tlllfa]lue his
already set a policy lor 1989, whe{'e .
juniors have until Marcli 22 to a11p1y far
· the Aprll22·23 draft.
:
Tile •••••r• - AI Davia mliJ!t
an110unce an agreement to mow lila
ll!tm back to Oaklallcl. Davll lip
Indicated he waniJ to work wltbla the
league rules ~laW • • !lllllke
tfie
Raiders moved to Loa Aaplel in 1182:

wlHin

\•

I

..

••

�.

a• C-2-Surav Thl•• Sentillltll
With 43 points from M~r;te.

P

Pomeloy-Mkldi~PGFt-GIIIipolil, Ohio

Pomelot MidJI~PGFt~G '"l»lll, Ohio PoMt Phril 11. W.Va.

It's conference tourney time!

Washington Bullets hand Boston Celtics 11_5 -108, defeat
·

B1 JOHN IWBN&amp;ON

UPI8pula Wrk

The Boston Celtlcs, VIrtually
unbeatable before a home-crowd
for years.. endured a third·
stralpt loss as the home team
Friday night when Jeff Malone
scored 43 points to lead the
vtsltlni Washington Bullets to a
11.5-108 victory.
The loas, coming after set·
back$ to Chicago and PorUarod
earlier this week, marked the
flnt time since Larry Bird joined
the team In 1979 that Boston has ·
dropped three·straight at home. ·
The Celttcs are now 19-11 at
home this season after never .
lostnr more than nine horne
games during a campatrn In tbe
1MWls. '
.
., · ·
'"This Is the low point for us,"
said Boston forward Kevin
McHale, who scored 3l points.
Bird, who played the entire
game, added27potntstorB!&gt;ston.
Malone,. who connected on 17 or
25 attempts, nailed his first four•
shots In the o~nlng quarter. ·
"Jeff was shooting the lights
out ~nd when that happens
there s a good chance we're
going to win," said Bernard
King.
. "When he's doing thatltopens
up a Jot of things for me," said
King, who scored 29 points of his
own, Including llln the final five
minutes of the game.
.
"Jeff was getting a Jot of open
~hots and we don't see that very r
·o ften," said Bullets forward
:M ark Alarie. "Jeff.s very quick •
l!nd none of their ruards could
)ilay with hlnn."
'
. : "We had no answer for Malone
'&amp;r King," Slid Boston coach
Jimmy Rodgers. · "It's been a
tough week for us."
· After Boston took the lead, ·
95-94, on Charles Smith's jumper ·
with 5:52 to play, Darrell
Walker's three-point play trig·
gered a 12·4 Bullets' run.
King followed Walker's threepoint play with a jumper, Grant
hit two free throws and King hit
'another jumper· before capping
,the decisive run will\ a three·point play with 3: 19 left.
. "We did a good Job of spread·
·l ng the floor In the fourth quarter
.and took · advantage of their
;double-teaming," said King.
. ~ ·we controlled the tempo for the
.most part tonight."
· After Washlngton took control
for good, Boston never closed the
'g ap below $1x the rest of the way.
• Harvey Grant scored 17,
Walker 12 and Alarie added 10 for
the Bullets.
· Trailing 87-81 early In the final '
·q uarter, Jim Paxson scored five
points during a 6·1 Boston run.
closing the gap to one with' 9: 38
left.
The Bullets, who trailed 59-57
at the htl,f, opened the flrstl: 55 of
the third quarter with a 10-2 run
to regain the lead. Malone
connected on his f!rstflve shots to
key the run.
After Washington moved
ahead, the lead changed hands
seven limes before the Bullets
pulled In front, 85-80, after three.
Bird, . who scored 20 points In
the first hal.f, hit a three-pointer
wllh 12.5 seconds left In the
second qilarter to give Boston a
59-52 lead at the Intermission.
The Buliets jumped In front
18-8 behind Malone's eight paints
early In the first quarter and
moved to a 31-25 lead after one.
Washington hit 68 percent of their
field goal attempts In the opening
quarter.
·Boston used a 10-4 run midway
through the second quarter to
take Its first lead of the game,
42-41; on reserve ruard Smith's
driving' layup.
Elsewhere In the NBA, Detroit
rallied past New Jersey 99-95,
Portland beat Philadelphia 104·
100, Atlanta topped Seattle 10797, Phoenix edged Indiana 134·
. 130, · Utah took Milwaukee
1011-100, and the L.A. Lakers
whipped Golden State 131-115.
Pll&amp;o1111 18, Nela 91
.
At East Rutherford. N.J., lslah
Thomas scored ten of his 20
points In the fourth quarter to

rally Detroit to Its seventh
straJptvlc:tory.JamesEdwards
had 21 points to lead Detroit, with
BIJJ Latmbeer "lllttlng for 13 and
·

Sunday Tmet-Sentinei-P!ga C·3

Point Plun fl. W.Va.

Joe Dumanacorblg 12. The Nets
were paced by Dellilll Hop10n
with 21 points, ~rll Morrll wtth
19 and Charles Shackleford Wtth

1

-..----==-,...,...-""t

15. Shackleford also posted a ·r:==·~·~~~~~....;.-..:...
·
game-blgb 24 rebounds.
TnU a-. lN, 111h
At Phlladelpbla Jerome Kersey hit a baseline jumper with 27 '
seconds remaining, 'breaking a
tie and llttlng Portland to their
fourth straight victory. Charlea
Barkley led Phllldelphla with 31
points, while Oyde Drexler led
Portland with 25 points.
Bawb 111, Supei'IIOillca 17'
At Atlanta, Dominique Wilkins
and Moses Malone Combined for
48 points to rally tbe 'Ha~p.
Seattle beld a 5346 haltttme ftad
before Atlanta went on a 13-5 rua
to beiJn the l!llrd quarter and
hold a 59-58 lead. Atlanta never·
trailed from that point. Seattle,
got 26 points forin Dana-Barroa,
while Michael C&amp;ge added H
points and 10 rebounds.
!luna 134, Pace,-. 130
At Indianapolis, ,Tom
Chambers scored 41 points• and
Jeff Hornacek added
Friday
for PhoeniX. Chambers scored 13
. points In the final quarter as the·
Suns, 40-19 and winners of 26 or
their lasi 31 games, held off an
Indiana rally. Reggie Miller
scored 32 points, Vern Fleming
bad 22· and Chl!Ck Person added
Uiee NB~ on t:-31
·
1

1"

Missouri drops 92-88 decision to Colorado in first round

'
'..

"

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BANKRUPTCY
614-221-0111

· r

'
BANDS-ON DEFENSE - Portlalld frontman Buck WIUiams
( rllht) exercises huds-on der- qalnat Pblladelpllla forward ·
Cbarles Barkley as Bar)!ley droves around WIIUuns durln1lhe
llrat half of FridiQ' nllht'e NBA contest In PhUadelphla. The Trail
BIU«e won lOt-100. (UPl)
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ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
336 S. Hip St., Columbus, 011.
LOCAL (ONSULTAnON
KNIGHT, MUllEN LAW OffKtS,
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C..ntry Corner! Shopping Centw The Plalno

TEAM
W
Last Chance .................... .15
Jividen's ......................... 15
Fruth Pharmacy .............14
Pan Tax ................ ......... .14
Johnson 's .................. ...... 10
Rio Mini Mart ................. 9
McDonald's .......... ........... 8
Carl's Jammers ........ .. ..... · 6
VIllage Quick Shop ... ........ 1
Foodland Seminoles ......... 0

trnm 1...,; 1rom
Rt. 682 e•hff '
State Roull 33.

Less

L
2
6
1
4
11
9
13
12
17
18

1t)-polnt halftime deficit.
. David Young hit a three-point
shot with 1: 161eft, his only basket
of the game, to help No. 15
Clemson turn l)ack a Wake
;Forest charge and emerge with a
179-70 victory.
·
·
' Anthony Oliver scored 8 of hls
career-high 23 points In over,tlme, leading VIrginia to a 92·85
vlctQry over No~th Carollna.
. Oliver hit conseCutive Jumpers,
the second with one mtnuie left ,
to give VIrginia an 88-85 edge.
Southeastern Confereace
At Orlando, Fla., John Caylor
hit a three-pointer with seven
seconds left to glye Aubum a
78-76 upset over Louisiana State.

That's what they
said .when a little l;land
of colonists took on the
British Empire In
1775. And won.
That's what they're
saying today about
A.L. Williams. In 1977,
this brand new
company took on the
largest, most powerful
Industry In America · the life Insurance
Industry.
And won.
In 1988:
.
$92.3 bUUon ·of Individual life Insurance placed
ln force through MILICO* ·
·
$25'7.9 biUlon total in force (more than any
other Ufe Insurance company In America)
Our competition calls !.t "a fluke" .
We call it a revolution.

.
Fumily Plannhtg ·
It Makes Sense •••
Confidential Services: ·
Birth Control
V. D. Screening
Cancer Scr,.nlng .
Pregnancy Testln~

Pool schedule
Monday - CLOSED
·Tuesday - 6:8 p.m ., college
swim .
Wednesday - &amp;-8 p.in., college

•

Last week's resUlts
swim
• Last Chance Carry Out beat · Thursday - 6-8 p.m., college
Ylllage Quick Shop 15-7, 15-3. 15-4 . swim
·
· Rio Mini Mart edged Johnson 's
Friday - 6-8 p.m., open swim
Supermarkets 15·9, ,15-11, 8·15
Saturday - CLOSED
Dan Tax defeated Carl's
Su ..day, March 11- 1·3 p.m.,
Jammers.15-12, 15-7, 15-7
open swim; 6·8 p.iri., college
McDonald's upset Jividen's
swim
·
~arm Equipment 15·13, 15·17 ..
1~-7
Home alh1etlc evenll
~ Fruth ·Pharmacy knocked off
Wednesdq - Baseball vs.
Foooland Seminoles 15-7, 15-5,
Marshall (DH), 1 p.m.
- 15·5

. Sliding .. -

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AND ASSOCIATES
614-992-7066
657 High Street, Middleport, Ohio

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AND Repairs

Auburn trailed bY as many as14
points but charged back behind ·
the :W-polnt performance o1 Der·
rick Dennison and 22 points from.
freshman Ronnie Battle.
•
Scott Draud and Derrick Wll·.
cox made clutch free throws tn·
the closing seconds of overtlm~
to give Vanderbilt a 78-74 victory ,
over top-seeded Georgia. Van·;
derbllt outscored the Bulldogs 9·5
In the last 1: 45 of overtime.
David Benoit and Melvin Cheatum spearheaded an Alabama ,
run at the start of the second half
to spark the Crimson Tide to a ~
59-44 victory over Mississippi
.State.
(See TOURNEYS on C:4)

REVOLUTIONARY

Lyne Center gym
and pool schedules

'&lt;Reported by 0 .0. Mcintyre
Park · District as of Feb. 23)

.. ·-··-- Petites'; Misses, Women's and Half Sizes_·- ...1
All SALES
No RETURNS,
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.NBA action.•.

Park District
co-ed volleyball
'
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OP. IOD.f 1·5 ..

.... tliru nl.
, lln DAY, SAT. ,

L.W. CENNAMO

erson scored 24 points and No. 11
Oklahoma on the road and scored 26 points, Including the
Duke used a rare ~ne defense to
rebounded to scrape by "KaftiBs basket \)lat rave Oklahoma the
thwart Maryland 104-84. The
State at home before being lead, boosting the top-ranked
Devils became the first
Blue
bombed at Jl!otre Dame to end the Sooners to a 78-65 victory over
team
tq reach 100 points In an ·
Nebraska.
season.
ACC
Tournament
game since
Pekk&amp; Markkanen scored 16
The Joss to Colorado spoUs· the
1983.
Tigers' likely top seed In one of points and seven other Kansas
. Dennis Scott scored 23 po,lnts
player•
scored
In
double
figures,
the NCAA Tournament region·
·and
Brian 0\tver had 22, propell·
paclfti
the
secood·ranked
Jay·
als, to be announced Su~ay.
Ina
Jl!o. 13 Geollfla Tech .past
hawks
to
a
record-iettlng
118-75
"I think we can regroup and do
troubled
Jl!ortb CaroUna State
thruhlng
or
Iowa
State.
Kansas'
the things · necessary to be
76-67.
Scott
and Oliver combined
118
points
topped
the
old
mark
of
· betlf!r," he said .. "(Colorado)
.
tor
29
second-half
points u the
116
set
bY
Oklahoma
In
the
1985
played · good and won , t()e
Yellow
Jackets
overcame
a
tou'
r
nament.
ballgame."
Bll Eaa&amp;
After Colorado lost Feb. 28 at
At Jl!ew York, Derrick ColeNebraska, forcing the Buffaloes
lnto'a fifth consecutive.last-place man hit a shot from the lane with
flnllh, Miller was fired. He 21 seconds left and · made a
(Continued from C-2)
brought a 33-78 four-year record game-saving block of a dulilt In
the
final
aeconds,
allowing
No.
4
·
·
20.
for
Indiana. · Kevin Johnson
as the Colorado coach Into the
Syracuse
to
escape
with
a
58-55
had
23
points and 13 assists for
tournament . .
victory
over
Pittsburgh.
the
Suns.
''The kids Just refuse to give
Dtkembe Mutombo struck for
Jaaa 118, Bella 101
up," Miller said. "I'd prefer you
18
points
and
H
rebounds
and
No.
At
Milwaukee,
Karl Malone
don't call this a 'Win one for the
6
Geollfetown
withstood
a
gutty
·
scored40polntstoleadUtahtolts
Glpper' thing because since Oct.
15, this team has really worked comeback by Providence In the third victory II! a row, while
:tor lt. It was a total team effort." " closing · mtnutes, giving the Milwaukee has lQst five games In
a row Including Its last three
Also In Big Eight action at Hoyas a 78-77 vlciory.
Tate George scored 20 Points · home games. Ricky Pierce, Fred
Kansas City, M!t., William Davis
and No. 7 Connecticut's · lena- Roberts and Paul Pressey each
claus defense recon!ed 17 steals, had 15 points for Milwaukee.
lifting the Huskies to their first
Laken 111, Warrlon 111
conference semifinal since 1980
At Los Angeles, Magic Johnson
with a 76·58 victory over Seton scored 33 p()ln~. pulled down 13
Hall.
rebounds and added 16 assists to ·
RIO GRANDE -The schedule · Tom Greis scored 16 points and lead Los Angeles. The "triple
of events for the coming week at VIllanova made lUree throws In double" was the 120th of John·
the final 2:20, sending the Wild· son's career. James Worthy
Lyne Center Is as follows:
cats
to a 70-60 victory over St. added 24 points for the Lakers,
Gym schedule
John's. The Wildcats hit 26 of 30 who remained 3~ games ahead
Monday - CLOSED
Tuesday ' - 6·8 p.m., college free throws, tncludl!li 14 of 15tn of the second·pll!ce Portland
· the flnal2: 20when St. John's was Trailblazers In tlie Pacific Plv-:
-r~creatlon
·
lslon, and Improving their home
Wednesday - 6-8 p.m., college forced to foul..
ACC tournament
record to 27-4.
recreation
. At Charlotte, N.C., Phil Hend- ·
Thursday' - 6-8 p.m., college
recreation
.
Friday - 6-8 p.m., open
recreation
Saturday - CLOSED
Sunday, March 11.:.. 1·3 p.m. ,
open recreation; 6·8 p.m .. college
recreation

By JEFF SHAIN
·
UPI Sports Wrller
No. 5 Missouri, blown out by
Oklahor.na and Notre Dame In the
uast two Weeks, ·extended Its
nightmarish stretch run Friday
night with an overtime loss to
lowly Colorado In the opening
round of the Big Eight
Toumament.
. The Tigers, who were ranked
Jl!o, · 1 on two occasions this
season, became the first top seed
In the 14 years of the Big Eight
Toumament to lose In the first
round when they fell 92-88.
·
.. Stevie Wise scored nine points
!!I overtime and fed Rodell Guest
for a clinching ll~nk to propel
Colorado, 11·17 and playing
under lame-duck coach Tom
Miller, Into the semifinals
&lt;tgalnst Oklahoma State . The
Cowboys defeated Kansas State
82-78.
.
· "We just couldn't get over the
hump/' Missouri coach Nonii
Stewart said. . "We ' made a
~remendous effort to get back In
the game. We were jus( a little
out of sync. That happens. If we
could have gotten the lead, It
might have tumed out different. ·
But It didn't and we lost."
The loss was the third In four
games for the Tigers, 26-5.
Missouri was blown out by

,

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1990 at City Council

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Page C-4-Sundey T1n aa Sentinel

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Pol••ov-Midclapcwt-Galipolil. Ohio--Point Plaaulf'lt.

Conference tourneys ... __

..;_(co_nll_nue_d_rro_m_c.a_)·.......,__

won 14 or Its last 15 games .
Gerald Glass scored 28 points
Keith Gafles scored U points to
and freshman Joe Harvell hit
three last-minute tree throws to
lead Dayton to a 97-95 victory
give Mississippi an 87·R6 victory
over Loyola or Chicago. Galles
hit 16 of 28 shots from the floor,
q,ver Tennessee.
· Including 4 of 9 from three-point
Metro Conference
range.
·
At Bilol&lt;l, Mls~ .• Jerome Har·
.
Soutbwest
mon·scoi'ed 22 points and No. 18
Louisville took command late In
At Dallas, Todd Day scored 25
the first haU In posting a 76-73
points and Oliver Miller added 22
to carry No. 10 Arkansas to an
semifinal triumph over Memphis
State. The Cardinals will seek 84-61 victory over Southern Meth·
the.Ir fourth Metro Tournament odlsi Nearly half of ~MU's
output came from the career·
title In live years.
high 30 points or senior John
Darrln Chancellor . scored 21
points and Sou)hern Mississippi Col borne.
took advantage of a startling 30-4
Lance Blanks scored 27 points
advantage at the tree-lhrow line to pace a Texas offensive exploto earn Its first berth In . the s ion as the Longhorns beat Texas
tournament finals with a 75-63 A&amp;M 92-84. Each Texas starter
victory over Cincinnati.
was In double figUres five min·,
utes Into the second half, negatMid·American
At Detroit, David Carter Ing a 26-p9lnt show by Texas
scored 22 points and Sander Scott A&amp;M's Tony Milton.
A three-point shot by Derrick
added 20 to lead Central Michl·
gan to an 82-65 upset over Kent Daniels with 2: 29 remaining
State. Central Michigan held the .broke up a Rice comeback and ·
Golden Flashes scoreless over a helped carry Hou~ton to Its 12th
period of 3: 44 late In the game to straight victory, a 92-81 triumph '·
clinch the ·victory. ·
.over the Owls.
Dennis Llnd$ey and Julius
David Scott scored 21 points
and Miami IOhio• set a MAC ' Denton hit clutch shots late In the .
Tournament scoring record In a game to halt a Texas Christian
rally, carrying Baylor to a 72-62
108·80 drubbing of Toledo. ·
Paris McCurdy scored 19 victory over the Horned Frogs.
Paclflc10
points and Billy Butts sank six
At Tempe, Ariz., Jud j3uechler
thtee- pol~t shots on his way to 18
points to lead Ball State to a 77-70 scored 20 points and Sean Rooks
added 18 to lead No. 16 Arizona to
victory over Ohio University.
Lorenzo Neely sank two free Its 12th straight conference vic- 1
throws with five seconds lett to tory, an 80-57 rout ·of Southern
lift Eastern Michigan to a 62.60 Cal . Arizona's Matt Muehlebach ,.'
added a triple-double-' tO points,
victory over Bowling Green. '
11 rellounds and 10 assists.
Midwestern Collegiate·
Alex Austin scored 9 of his 17
· At Dayton, Ohio, Michael Davenport scored 22 points to lead points In the final 3: 10 to rally
Xavier (Ohio) toa89-78semiflnal Arizona State to an 83-75 upset of
t riumph over Evansville. Derek Oregon State. The Sun Devils
Strong added 18 points and Jamal trailed 60·51 with 10:57 to play,
Walker 17 for Xavier, which .has but Austin sparked a 24·8 burst

that enabled the tournament
hosts to advance to Saturday's
semifinals .
Don MacLean collected 25
points and · 11 rebounds and
freshman Mitchell Butler keyed ·
a first-half surge, helplnfi UCLA
to a 94·76 rout of Oreeon. Butler

w. Va.

finished with a season-high 16
poJllts .
Stanford's Adan\ )S:eefe
muscled his way to 26 llOints In
the Cardinal's 77-61 triumph over
California. Stanford wlll race No.
16 ArizOna next.
--'
BlgWest
At Long ~ach, Call!., Larry
Johnson scored 32 polpts .a nd
pulled doWn 14 rebounds to power
the No. 3 Nevada-Las Vegas

Madl11. 1910

M.-ch 11, 19SJO

Runnln' Rebels to a 115-93 victory
over the Titans from Cal State
Fullerton In the second round l&gt;r
the Bll West Tournament. Stacey Augmon had 23 points,
reserve Moses Scurry had 17
points, David Butler added 14
points and Anderson Hunt added
13 points for UNLV. Cedric
CeballOs led the Tjtans with· 25
points, Wayne WIUiams had 20
points and Ron Caldwell added 16
points for tbe Titans.
Michael New scored 16 points
to lead No. 17 New Mexico State
to a 72-66 victory over Fresno
State. Reggie Jordan added 15
points and James AnderSQn 14 lot
·the Aggles. ·
Del Demps scored 19 points
and Don Lyttl~ added 18 to lead
Pacific to a 65-62 up~t over

Pomeroy Mldrlaport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Plmant.

t

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Cage standings ·
(SEO,Opponenls)
(All-Games)
TEAM
W L
P OP
x-Portsinouth
21 2 1677 1446
)\thens ... ...... ......19 2 1499 1183
Wellston .... .... .... 18 4 1473 ·1224
;.:wheelersburg . 18 4 1537 1131
x-South Polnt.. ... 19 5 1794 1438
preen!leld ......... 18 6 1396 1166
Warren . ..... ... :.... 15 6 1511 1325
x-Logan ........ .... . l5 7 1545 131iQ
x-Southern ......... 15 8 1666 1420
Waverly ........ .... 13 8 1255 1120
~&lt;- Chesapeake .... 12 10 1469 1380
Vinton ............... 11 10 1330 12&amp;5
Gallipolis.. .. ...... . 8 13 1067 1192
Pt. Pleasant .... .. 8 14 1316 1467
Marietta ............ 3 18 1243 1430
Jackson .. ........... 3 18 1160 1382
x·StUiln toomey
Friday's results:
(Division II)
(Semifinals, at OU)
Portsmouth 80 Fairland 75,
Portsmouth vs. Columbus upper
winner March 13, 6:15 p.m., at

PREMIER CRUISE

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Hostess: Kelly Murphy

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KIDD SHOOTS- Ball State's Curtis Kldd (rlgbt) shoots In the
face of tbe defense offered by Ohio University center Rick .
Hoffman In the llrst half of their Friday night Mid-American
Conference tournament game In Detroit. The defending MAC
champion Cardinals downed the Bobcats 77-70. (UPI) ·

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5 Rio track athletes
named All Americans
Renee Pec.k (fresnman, Balli·
more, Ohio) placed 11th In the
two mile run and teammate
Bonnie Evans (freshman, King·
ston, Ohio) piaced seventh In the
three mil~ . Tim Murphy (sophomore, Zanesville) was lOth in the
high • jump . and Eric No~ns
(sophomore. · Newcomerstown~
placed fifth In the 440-yard dash.
Mark Cline (junior, C,hllllcothe)
was fourth In the1,000-yarddash. ,
All five had quallfled for the
Nationals during the Indoor track
season, and while indoor activity .
has been geared as a dry run for
spring tr~ck, Wllley was pleased
with the athletes' performances.
"We don't emphasize ·indoor
here because we do a lot of It to
prepare people for spring," he
explained. "Everyone competed
well during Indoor .season, but I
think everyone has kept that in ,
perspective."
·
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RIO GRANDE Five
members of the UnlversltyofRlo
Grande Indoor track team te·
turned from the NAJA Nationals
at Kansas City, Md ,, with All
American honors.
"II was a great week," Coach
Bob Willey said: "We went out
there with five pe(Jple, we got a
break here and there, and we
•r eturned with five All
Americans. ''

Sentinai-Pege C·6

''Today 'there Is an asterlak on to shut this Industry down tor solve the dispute over salary
days he could be hitting line · season. 11
Hernandez, In a visit to uniOn
the 1990 season," union chief Don what will be a very long lime, to · arbitration, with both parties
drives . Pitching Is a little bit
Fehr said, pointing out that, . break the p·layers~ Longer than dismissing the other.
different. Today's pitcher. war- headquarters, aceused manage- .
when the season finally starts. any or them Imagine In theirA spokesman said the commisrles about his arm. It would ment of trylngg to break tlte
some players wori't think th~y Wildest imagination. l.n thel~ , stoner's office has not even set
probably take at least three Players Association.
"It's liDlon l)ustlng," Hernan,
had enough tlmetomakea team. worst nightmares It's longer than aside a briefing room for the
weeks for that pitcher to go out
"The asterisk Is already there."
that, over one half yejlr of salary . weekend. O'COnnor said a meet· · there and feel comfortable dez said. "Titey're trying to
In a conference room overlook- arbitration?"
lng might take place early next
throwing the fastball, breaking squeeze the players. I can tell you
that It's not going to happen. No
lng the East· River and the
Both parties said they were Week, leaving no more thai) 21
ball, spUt-flngered pitch."
borough of .Queens, Fehr . even willing to talk, but neither days to the scheduled season
Cleveland first baseman Keith way." .
More than half the scheduled
raised the spectre of a season In , Indicated It had anything new to opener.
Hernandez ae:reed.
Grapefruit
and Cactus League
J~plirdy .
.
offer. Club negotiator Chuck
"Today's player takes ex. "If I'm (Mt;!.ts owner~ Fred
games
have
become victims of
'Somebody on the other side of O'Connor conceded, ''We've tremely good care of himself.~' Wilpon and I'.ve got Ron Darling
·
the
lockout.
·
this ~as go tin look and ask
worn ourselves out" on .some National League President Bill · an.d Dwight Gooden," said HerIn
.
a
briefing
attended
by
himself a very simple question,"
Issues.
.
Whi.te said. "Don Mattingly has
nandez. "I'm not going to want to
TALKS
on
C.-)
(See
Fehr 'said. ''DO they really Intend
Each .side has offered a plan to his own batting cage. In a few
risk their arms rushing
. Into -the

.,
87 MDlE TULLY
lJPI Natlllnal lluebatl Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)- Negotlatol'll scheduled no further talks on
Day 23 of the spring· training
lockout Friday, meaning that
sometime over the· weekend the
· las! chance for starting the
season on time will probably
disappear.
.
In the absence of talks, both
sides took thelrcasetothepubllc.
Owners Issued a fact sheet on
their latest l!roposal, and players
charged that this season has
· already suffered damage. ·

~

&amp;

Sundey 11rnaa

Players, owners shaw no new offers to end lockout

Cal-Santa Barbara. The Tigers
used a 20-8 streak In the final
minutes or the first half to take
cotnmand.
Conference Freshman of the
Year LuciOU$ Harris scored 23
points to lead Long Beach State
lo Its elgbth straleht victory, a
86-69 triumph over Ut!lh State.
Kevin Cutler scored 19 points and
hauled down a game-high l2
rebounds for the 49ers.
Western Alblellc
At El Paso, Texas, Terry
Ho\lston' scored 21 points to lead
Hawaii Into the finals of the
conference tournament for the
first time with a 66·60 triumph
over Utah. The Rainbows, 23-8,
likely w111 play In the NCAA
tournament for the ftrst tltne in
18 years.

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~ 11,1910

11. W. V..

w.

Commentary

.Ba•·adtz, .Coon,'· MeDennitt named all-LKC

Could public shock over Gathers' collapse have killed him?
By WILLIAM D. MURRAY
UPI Sports Writer
The shock of seeing Loyola
Marymounl's Hank Gathets collapse just seconds after a thunde~ous dunk many have contributed as muc h as any other factor
to his death.
Gathers, one o[ the nation 's
best players. seemed to be the
' ep !tome of gocl(l neal II). He was
lean·, muscular .and explo~lve . So
when he collapsed onto the court
. on March 4, lt was no surprise
that there wasn't a more lmmetllate response from those around
him.
According to the Los Angeies
DallyNews, Gathers collapsed at
5: 14 p.m. and was removed irom
the court at 5: 19 p.m. Somewhere
In between he lost his pulse.
It was not until at least 5:20
p.m. that that those working on
him could have used a deflbrllator - an electrical device used to
shock the heart back Into a
normal rhythm ~ to try io revive
him . Gathers was shocked three
times, but It was too late, he
never regained a pulse.

·'When I watched the tUrns or seen him being wheeled as tastas
But even If Gathers would have
his collapse, I -wondered· why
possible down to the hall to a
been ilven a shock Immediately
they seem to be reacting so treatment room."
after hiS heart stopped, he still
slowly 1" said Dr. Robert GinsIn cases like Gathers', time
may have died.
burg, a cardiologist who special- ' becomes the enemy. The brat n . " We ·lose some patients even
izes In arrhythmia at Stanford
and other organs can be without
when sometl! lng like this
University Hospital.
oxygenated blood for only 11 few
happens In a cardiac care unit,
''They knew he had a previous minutes before they suffer
with the best care immediately
condition," said Ginsburg, nol- damage.
available," Ginsburg said. "But
l ng Gathers was being tre;tted for
"He had just been running up
at least they have a chance. Here
an Irregular heart . beat that and down the ~ourt and certainly
I don't think there was much of a ,
caused his collapse during a
had bull! up a lotoflactic acid (In
chance."
game In December. "They didn't
his muscles)," Ginsberg said.
Chip Schaefer. the head trainer
have time to walt. They should
"Because of that, he needed to be ·at Loyola Maryri!ount, was one of
have done the paddles (deflbrUa- converted rtnto a normal
the first people to reach the
llon ) right tl)ere on the court."
rhythm) quickly. After two or
striken Gathers.
. Dr. Dean Edell; a San .three minutes of hypoxia (lack or
' 'On the ·floor, he had a pulse, "
Francisco-based physician who oxygen In the blood) he's not
Schaefer told the Los Angeles
hosts a health segment on KGOgoing to be resuscltatable."
Times. "At first, he felt responTV, agrees. Edell was one of the
first to raise questions ~bout
Gathers' Immediate care after
viewing a film clip the day after
the player's death.
" What struck me when I first
reschedu~d
'
saw the tape was how casually
people seemed to have reacted,"
GALLIPOLIS - Because of the .Blue ~gels basketball
he said. ''They seemed. to take
te11m's patticlpation in the regional tournament -wednesday
their time getlil!g him off the
night, the Gal)la Academy High Sc~ool winter sports banquet,
court. If that had been a patient ·
originally set for Thursday, March 8, has been rescheduled for
In a hospital, you would "have
Monday, March 19 at 6: 3~p.m , at Buckeye Hills Career Center.

-.Area· sports
Banquet

..

'

Wife-beating, weapons charges
against Strawberry dropped
By MICHAEL D. HARRIS
LOS ANGELES (UPI)- Prosecutors Friday declined to file
spousal battery .o r ·weapons
charges againstNew York Mets
outfielder Darryl Strawberry,
whose wife had accused him of
slapping her and pointing a gun
ilt her.
City Attorney James Hahn said
In a prepared statement there
was Insufficient evidence to file
misdemeanor weapons charges
against Strawberry, 27. Hahn

briefs-~

said misdemean-or battery
charges would not' be filed
because Strawberry had com. pleted the initial step of an
alcohol abuse program.
Hahn said that after Strawberry . met with clty attorney
hearing officer Michael Lou thian
on ' March 2 to discuss the
altercation at the couple's En- '
.clno home In January, prosecutors concluded his drinking problem was the cause of the fight.

slve, and you don't perform CPR
on a person who has a pulle. (Dr.
Benjamlll Schaefl!r, the team
doctor on duty) said let's move
him aomewhe~ where 11-'e can ·
monitor him."
Schaefer went to get a
stretcher and carry Gathers out.
"It was determined quickly
that we should iet Hank removed
from the noor," the. trainer said.
"He &lt;Dr. Schaeffer) thought it
· was f'llOre appropriate to treat
him not In front .of 5,000 people."
Schaefer estimated It took two

bo111 ~Dalwda _. Cool - ......... nniion lllltllln the 13
lelllllllpe. .
·~milO~
WltlwHa ..........,die 1989-90 .
Cac!t ~ l'CCCitllly bo1Qe4 ~ llilciCoiMt Ill tau widl I 12.-10 Cip
emu oe Jellc•iont Ia die IJIU- I'IICilld -n willie compililla us
~ ':: ~ , X..wba B"kedllll lila wiDIIill
M' ill ,_. ialidD
•............., dle·QCI!Ciu- LKC ...,..........,..
~•---- play M 7-&lt;i wblcll
11' .ce, 1'-vwJ
.._ l'C""'- - - ,.. _~ . W1S __, _...., ·for a llixtb J)1ICe
•

minutes from the time Gathers
coUapsed to when he was taken
from the gym. But a vtewlni of a
tape by ESPN showed that It too~
longer. There was even time tor
Gathers' mother to come out ot
the stands and kneel by her son1
There was also a deflbrllator
available. LOyola Marymount
had had one .on Its bench since
Gathers. came back after his ·
collapse In ~cember, but there
was no ambulance with a crew
trained In revival tecbrliques
. · (See GATHERS on C-7)

.

IJ~'CIIrll

J• ·

;-....;..,~ ,.._....
I.&amp;ni*-:;.. IOI IC ol die
• ..... 111e Wbi
best b l•t"ell - • In the
!be lint

while

lean)

•

i. \.

;

'

·'
Calh!&gt;lic.

•---•

(8ee F ALCON8 on C-8)

.-

i "·

'

'

Bamitz is belieYod 10 be tbC lint
_.,~~to be lllllled U

a lint team dele&amp;IIO on die AllLKCteam. Thcjuniorsblrplbooler
IIICMd onto the lint 1e1m after
elllling second team lo•" 1111
yar IS a ·SOIIbonlorc. BlllliiZ WIS
the
second
IIIIMl• LKC conrerenc:es
•
~
mg !COl'Cr behind M
Rmmwood; ~-Auxier IIJd Parkersburg Calbolic with
Sam Iones or SL Marys IIIII winning the scoring crown with a
Thmmv McCarty or ......_..,,_ 25.0 per game average while B•·

M.~·-'• State. Ra·. -"""' .Wil-...""'"'1""""'
lilmslown, ~L Marys, Go!mer .

..t... """
tc.Falcons lea!!-.
'!'I lliOI'er die put two ru'ons,
WIS JIIIIICd

· Cowlty IIIII Wilt Colluy CCIIIIpleleci
the CIOilfeatiU ~ a tba LKC
~·
JatddiciontoB Djt&amp;~Wiblma
on die AU-LKC. lint 1e1m IIIIi&amp;
were; Quia Nrllollllld Brent Killcaid Qf lelpo ~ W'll"·----·
_,.....,..., llotbcu Scott D81e llld
Briltl D8le of ,__ clltmplon

3 PC.

CHISEL SET

•Famous Fuilef o.lty
•c.t.oft&amp;IMI ~·

(C9ntinued from C-5)
. O'Connor, Wilpon, and bOth · Tbe PRC said the owners'
league presidents, the PRC de- latest proposal wouljl raise the
pled that Fay VIncent's plaD to · SaiiiJ'Y of players with more than
open camps was a public rela· two and less than three · years'
tions move.
servlce ·~n average 9f $60,000 per
. "Fay VIncent's proposal was' year. According to Its fact sheet,
· sincerely mad.e and sincerely Mllwaukee Brewers owner Bucl
eonsldered by the Player Rela· Selig would ,recommend that all
lions · Coq~mlttee," said economic ten:ns of a new agree- .
O'Connor.
·
ment be retroactive.

. MEASURING TAPE
•% " x1B'IIpt
•CuthloMd ~*de rltll'n
• Toggle lOck

ll" SUPIIDUII
110011
band~

.eWhHI
Alignment
•Brakei &amp;
Shocks
•Struts
•UIId Tires
' •Goodyear Tires .·

Aerobics class offered
GALLIPOLIS - The 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park District Is offering
an aerobics class starting Tuesday at 5: 30 p.m. in the
multi-purpose room of the GalllpoUs Developmental Center,
The classes, which wlll be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays
from 5:30 to6:30 p.m., wilL run until AprU 19. The fee tor the
class Is $18, which will cover the expenses of certified instructor
Donna Mitchell~ · ·
·
·
·
·
To pre-register, call the Park District office at 446-4612,
· extension 256.

3!."x16'

'

IT..AII
LCSDUII

1799

MEIGS
tiRE
CENTER
.10•

Hunters' semirurr scheduled
VINTON- Bill Epea:rds will be the guest speaker at a turkey
hunters' seminar Saturday at 1 p.m. at North Gallla High
School.
'
Door prizes will be offered at the 'event.

.

nLTI- J.IIAICUS FaT!

242 W. llala

ORBS
H2·2101

For

PURCHASES 'ftCKET - lelfrey E. Smltlo
'· · (ceater), ~enlor vice president at Ohio Valley
·Bal!k, purcU.. his ticket for the third annuai
ScoU Collndley.MI!mor!411 Tournament from Tom
Goocb ( o'lgbt), admlnlltratlve
at Holzer
Cllrilc, as Bill Gray,
'
for Ohio

Po...,.y

Valley Bank aad the tournament's muter of
ceremonlea, holda some of lhe proleulonally
autographed Items that wiD be raffled during
halftime of tbe Beapla-College All-Stars game on
AprU I.
I

'

' So•..::-,:~=~k

College soore$
Ohio Collep .Buletb.U 8coftl
Marchi
Ml~rn .Collepate Coaferenee
Al DIQ'to•
SemUlrllla
DQton 17, LoJolatll
Xavltr M, Evaaa¥1Ur 18
Mlcf.Amerkaa C..,ererK: e

..........

Qurterl-.1•

Miami II&amp; "o~ M

.

,\lcorn 9&amp;. lit, Alab..... sa. II&amp; OT
Mlu. \I alief St. 8S, Gramb1111(81. OT
Soudlera·BS. J•klen 8&amp;. 73 '
Tnu SouaHnll, Prairie View M
w.~er. ~lfJac

8emlftrllla
Ha•all • Utab •
Ta:u-II!:J Puol'7, Air Fon:e Sol
Dl"li ..•IDEut
Roehfll&amp;.rr II. SE M.uachull!ltallfl
Nor1b Ad.,.._ St. U, .UbuJ St. M

Central Mldllpa Ill:, Kent state 15

V"

BaJIState 17, Oble
EuteraMttlll.- a, Jltwln1Greealll
NCAA (NYI•fulll
Sou• GreM Lake ReiiGral ,
AI stuta&amp;fleld
SemiRMI$
Cah1D' (Mich.) AI, IEmtr)' eGa.) 73
Wltte•berrll, A"Vefttt (Va.) &amp;4
NMiotal To'uraame.ts

Tourney score$
Bo)'!l

Oht. Hlfh Scr.ol Bllllllrtball

Frlda,y, March I

Tourument

. Olvlllon I
Cia Oak Hllll5i, On Moeller 5I
Cle St Joe n •. &amp;.did 'FD

Clell)8oa 'll, WUe Fonat '70

Shaker Hta M, Oe S 88
Staw M, War~n Hawl ..... 58
Stroap\tUe53, LoralaA.dmlraJHin140
DMaion II
Belin• 5!. Fo•torla 51

Gtorwta Tetll'lt. N. Caroll• 511. 61

Belley 7t, Cel Brien n

AUaiiUc C01111i
.... rterfl . .l

Vlrrl-.laiZ, N. CAr oil• II~ OT
Duke 114, MarJIM.. U .
~ ..

Eut

QaReri.-Ja
Co n•dk:Ut 11, Set011 Hall»
Geoi"Jdown 18., Pro\lldeace n
Syn.c:tur 51, Plttlhu flh 55
ow. it, Sl . .~o•··
lllsEI(N

..

vu ...

Qurlerfi-.Js
Okltlloma 81. 12, KU!III St. 78
Colorado ft, Ml111011rt Ill. OT
Ok&amp;ahoma1'8, Nebnuka 85
KaJIIM 118, Iowa Sl. 7S
Bla.Sk,y
Quarterfinal~

Idaho 80, Mo . . . st. 11

E. WallblllltOD 81. Weber St. 17

Canfteld IS, Salem 4,
otmlle• Falltlt, lor 11roeblde.6S
Pa1Det\111e Barwr 11, Newkla Falls M
Port.moullli 81, Fatrland 11
S Pohat 11, GreeufleN McClain 51
Van \\'ert 11, Umaii•Jh II
W GeM~~ a 15, Oe
'73
WMidna Memorial II , Col Crn6enlall0
Dlvls,on m '.
Bar .a \tile 78. ~Mi!undn~ 14

Bowling

&amp;emln .....

PlldDt: II
Quarterfhalll

tJCLI\ t4o' Orepn 11
Arb:o• St. 834 On: so• Sl. ·u
t\r .. o• U, Southern Cal S7
Sian lord 77, Callfonlafl
!k111&amp;he•tern

Qurierfllals

Mlu lulppl 17, T8. .Rf 81
.Ublln 7&amp;. LSU 71
V..-rtltlt 'm, Oeerrta"ft, OT
Alab.,.. 51. Mla. . .ppl st. -14

...........

.... rierfl ..ll

Tri:u .. Texas UM 8t

HoU.on II, RICf! 81
Arllaft . . 84, 8. Metllodl11t II
llaJior '1t, Tnu Ct.r-.1111 &amp;2

,

March I

loTVII-.11.)
I, .'.mldo Moratelll, VeMZurla, 11-5,
I.MS. ! , Ton) Marrer.e, JIUtoa Jlud

Jette, Call., 11_-J, 1,581.4, MarlWihiun11,
lleMIIM.t, Tau, IJ.U, t ,• l 1. Drill
Warrna, DaiiU, IS.I .. I, l,llf.
I, Dave Afnoid, M. ., Arb., 1... 8,
Uti. 14.... 7, Ted Han•M. Z.MIM¥611e,
Ohio, 1S.I, !I,JJt, A,... tl, hnb
Granter, Cohnbu, Olllo, U-11, Uti,
I3,3H. 1 1 Tolt)'We&amp;pike, Edmond, Okla ., ~
Ol~lliOn,

Edmo ... , Okla ., IJ.II, 1,!22, lt,lll. 11,
Bryan Goebel, MerriiUTI, _Kan., IJ.ll,
I ,It&amp; 12,1._ IJo Harry SU.IIM, All n
1\rbor, Mlcll.., IZ..f!, 1,151, U,tll.

13, (Uri MfW Edwarda, ,.. ... , Okla ..
8-111, - • PhUip RlnpMr. B11 Sprtna,

Tnu, 11·11, t,ISS. IS, Todd ftempaon.

Reno, Nev . , 11-lt, l,ltS. It, Marc
McDowell, Matlson. Wis., S.ll-1, 1,137,
ltHI. n ,.llmPencu. MillflfliiHelcM"ohto, f.lt· l, 1,114,11,. .. 18, Bnd8ull,

..

Elk Grow, 111.. lt-lt 1 l ,la. SJ,MI.
II, Roa Palombi Jr. , Frle, PL , 8-U,
1,127, l1 ,7tl. !t, RUMI:r Peder••· Su'Marla, Calif. , l-IS, ll,t71l, Sl . .. tl , Tim
Wellbrllll, Clncluatl, Ohio, '·17, &amp;.171 ,
II,S... H , Gar1 Schlurh~l'. Frf'mont,
Ohle, ... 1.. 1, 8,147, 11,4H. !3, Da~ld
Whitehead. Lu Veps. 8-11, R.,II11.1.,SSO.
2-l, Brad HI11WWIId, Buft ..o, N.Y., Boll,
B.KII. Sl.381.

(Cont:jnued rrom

ri unl~er!ll- ~

ciatlon.·,,"I'lhlnk m
.
,)les do, . , .
·
, .,
" But Smah!l also said there Is a '
~tural tendency to be a "Mon· .
'jtay mOrning doctor" in cases
'~Ike Galhera' . In !li.s experience,
Smaha .h as been able to 1J8Ve two
;!lthletes by uslni CPR and lost
'fiii\Other.
: "It's a. tough _call," be said.
"Since I've been h!!re we'.)le had ,
·~nree
wbere we· ~ -:
·~ulrec! to use CPR on atbllltes. .
"""o. .thoole ,JivloA ,ai14 !lDOthet: ,.
:'ii~
Jll tllriiiuet·we
were '
1m dieIB.iell•
tmmldlately alld , .
~!l._terinll' '~e to the ..

.742·2888

~

·, ' .

TAX IA1I w•K FOR Y••

BANCCM:BIIOKDtAGE
Briu ....... 1-800-874·1536

667·3115

'cases

-

«

..

HIR.OCIIt
TttiiiCOMI TAX fiiDIILI

'

.

.

SECOND. SYCAMORE '
448-0303

I

·;~~-:'.:0~ fPQl'tieacl· .

J
'

'

·a·

·
.,;

,..

W' LAWN. GUDIN
FAUCI!
.
(023060)
~. .... .... .. *249

DUE TO·
. ULENCE, THE
BLOODMOBILE
DISCOUNT·
COUPONS .CAN NO.
lONGER\BE
REDEEMED.

,

.....
..........
~~-~·

LAWMIIUII.DIR
27-~.

*5''
*799

PGII CICilag. IWida thiCk. Ma:lm.y lcrwDI. (7113)

raD ilk ill UD

\

,·

·

·

Here'swheretogetPROMvlce
~price

.

;C:.t!~)l61s-60ts foranappo~-ttoday. AndletustakecareofyourfaDilly. .
...
·

'.
•····· , .. ,, ,'

David ·R:;,· Ayers, ·M:P·
Fllmily Prlldice .

H. 'E dward Ayers, M.D.

LINA lUMBER
SUPPLY

Pediatrics &amp; Inttn111l Medicine

Dd PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
IVl The Family oF prole••lonal• '

c

-~-

.

,i;:eater
Aeeordlaa'
to ·., \lie NatiOnal
, ~~~~~~~~~~~!!2..J
~ ~~·lrophJe
~ ............................._ _....__ _ _......,....;;_;.;

'

JOHNSON

EFFECTIVE 3/8/,0

..
·

'

..··.·-

.. ......
-

(023075)

\

•

.

-·

*699

*1''

IIISTIRLING

·=·.

.

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

.

..

•

. ' -J

IU,JJOW~
(1261)

5tate Farm F1re and Casual!~ Company Home Oft1ce Bloommgton. llhn01s

• e e
, : .'c. '· · •l , ':'
• ·
.
.
· ' . ~when the same physician who treated you for the
.siilfflisaliotaokcareofvn.urbabyslater,anduwyourM.omandDad
'"
l·' for', ihejr--andplinl,'top7Thlmyoprememberthefamllydoctor,
.;. • · At ..t,.,..F••ltv H••ltll; we·~ combining that old-fashioned
. ·: ', furilly
to halth ~re with ·. today'sl«hnooogy. UnderU•
·
i - I i:
·
· · and
,. : "¥"'if:
-. our eftlphula ,Is on• ~prehenllve diagnoltiC
. ..
~~i:are.from~lliCYthroUghgertatrlcaforyo~entirefamlly.

•thletee,llut tlle..,rii.U~aree

·11iw..- wt1o ~tetn lltab

'.

~~-· .;CAlf $399

R, .' "

Ealf ;riP """d1e, Won, IIIII. Flell:lble spout

'

·

.
:·';'

~potlllbt on llld4ID . deatll , lA
)uchdeiltllltmr.• J11tlfla!Yfllthe

GIWPOUS ·

.
.

• aat!Hft'dftthbe'ocO·•t~~e

BANI&lt; ONE, ATHENS, NAIA PART Of THI CARING nAM
Al,.nl, Ohio
Mem,.r FDIC

IUI!IC Wiidi8

Black,( 12-4CH108), Oear (12-4CHIO)

·
t
:
·
.
.
n ' .mt y .a
.·p.· pro ac.h
t·:0"· .:. 'h;
' ·e'al th care·

r~=.ltn you can do every·
thhll ·'rllbt·and the •athlete still
wm-."·
·. '

\

• ICK 011 M I&amp;Jl

fill uru.aded tanlr.L 6 year warranty. (1226)

c~i

,
,

$599

Ct''"!'I'. . . . . Wfi ••••

c..- of l'lllrd
Awt. I Stale St. ' .
. GaHipellt, Oh.
Phoooi 446-4290
.._ 446-4511

)A_-.,,~
··:.

, .

10'1121'

WOil~

' ,
. '
.,

,' . , ' ~

; t'!tr~~~~~::::.t~~~~ ".

1111 ILDCK CAN MAKE THE,

118 E. MAIN ST.
H2-1174 ·

'~

.• ·

oiir

RutleM

,.
,

standlRiby at the llC.ene. pnebad . Injuries at the ' University uf
!o be summoned , froin. a fire , ,North Carollna, 26 coUege ath·
$tatlon t."2 miles or rouh'llinutes . ·l,et.e s suffered sud&lt;Jen death beilway .'
. •
'"
· , · , IWeeri 1982 and 1~ . Another 7~
: 1 "We got the· calJ a.t 5.: 17 p.m . . · died .on the hlih llChoollevel.
11nd arrlvcect at5!2l p.m.,"' sald
Still .~6 death&amp; , would. seem
~re Department Chlef-Lori Pur- ; enough to m,Bke ~QUege ~thletic
~en: ••we worked.'on hlm &lt;at the, , .administrators aC!'Oss .the coun-scene until5: 34 p:m·. I cannot say ·: try take, a dOle look . at their
anything about wl\at tra.nsph'ed proc~~~~~ .fo.r dealing with
111 the scene .because there Is a · emergencies of this nature. That
'contidendality between a patlel!f· ·.. wo11ld lnclud• purch~lng deflband those treating him.'.'
. tUators which Smaha says most
• IJBvlriganl\mbu\llncestanding · UJ!Iverslties do noteltherllaveor .
;ey a~rdlng to officials-at other _ have anyOlle traliled ,to use them .•.
!liniversl.tles,ls'a standard prace- .: . '~t's .a !Sei;lalon .!or each
~ure at qtosl maJor sporing ·· schools niedlcal Staf~, he said.
' events.
· , , . ·
,"I till~ . lhls will ,start a lot of
"We have an ambulance on the , , scho!ll s thinkJ.ntaboutwhat they
'ke~ ·at all
.mbjoi' ellen ts," ' have li? ha~d." • ,
,
·
said · Washington . Sta~ · tral\oer
.
.
.

111-..... s.c., 11-7, 1.... 1, DoaMo•r,San

.

POIIIIOY

!

~Gathers.,

IU11troy

For qualified homeowners. we offer
discounts which can make our already low
premium even lower. Cali for details.

'

..

matclf.plt, rec.'Ona aad mo~ w•n tor
Mx ro•lldl - tta:amea. Top live advance

APPOINTMENTS IYIIUBLE

~

m

992-2133

discounts·
from state Farm.

'

te.arir ·to 'take·· on the Cincinnati
'Bengals traveling . basketball
te~m in · the,_:itr~t game. 0ui1ng
halftime o1. 'thiS game the Ben·
gals will sign' autographs, and a
'J!everallocat~ns thr~ughoutC,.a}s~m-du!ll!_ l!l'hlb!tion will be ,
lla, Jacklon, &lt;, Lawrence, Meigs,:,;. conduct~· HY, th~colli!gecagers.
&gt;A.n d Milson·Coilnties,
· · ' ·,:·, IlL addition; ·~a.Iued' . collectibles
· .~ 'fick~ts are $4, ea~h 11-nd wm be. fl;oin. professlo}llll sports te11ms ,
11vallable • at aU Holier' Clinic . Wlll .be raffled. ' .
. ''
t)lcations,
which
.inofude
.:
the
..
·
The
...
~lid
.
ganie,
slated
' ,to'
·'
'
..
:Jackson Pike and · Syc;amore· · start 1!19p.Jil., will feature North
clinics in GalUpC?U~ ;. in Jacuop; ,' ··and SOuth teams :of high-sohool
Middleport, ' Proct~.rvUh! , and...'.' players, 'W,ltli. SouthJ!Qlnt chief
(Point Pleasant, all 11r.l!jl Fo~·· . Ric~. Huckal!Y-l!ladbl( the South
land stores in GalUs.. Jackson, " squad 'and Columbus ,Wehrle
Meigs and Mason Cou11ti~, all pUot Jerry Franc!~ guiding 'the
.m ain offices and .brancH loca- )ilorth, tea~ . : .,., ·
· ,
tions oflhe Ohio Valley Bank and
The HolZer Clinic and the
'S tar Bank, several GalUpolls · HolZer Medical Center are han. retail merchants ani!.' all h~h dllng :the arrangements for this
schools tn Gallla,· Jacksori; Law- event, As in the past. all proceeds
:renee,. Meigs · a nil" : Mason .• from the tickets will be ilven· to
Counties.
· ·. 'i- ' ·. . . ·. ,:;·' lc,pah unit~ . ·of-' · the Amer,lcan ,
: Colleges and universities f!: 0
Cancer Soci~ty.
'
:ohio, West VIrginia. a'nd Ken- . . 'For ino~ 'lqformatlon. cqntact
tucky · are expected to sepd ,Kenny Cough,e nour at 446- 52~ or
:players te form a college all·stsr · Tom Gooch at 446-5194.

·-'

..

~

Honneo~rsinsurance

-RIO GRANDE -Tickets for ·
third annual Scott Connelley
Men'i9rlal 'l:lllll'n1lment, . ,which •
;will be neld on Ap'I'U'6 at 7 p:m. at
'Lyne Center, will be sold at

Profnlioaal Bow1111 Clulic

14-11, 1,2H. 13,911. 10, Gary

:Tickets for S,cou·Crinriel~ey,
Memorwl.
To~rnQment on,·sale
..
(he

Bowihte R6u1111

I The top tt howlft"A wlb pialall totaJs,

Oqtont7, LoJo6a (111.)15
"IIVIer (Ohio) 81, Eva~~a...tlti!'JS
Nol'lllle•-11
Semlfhah1
A.mHk:Minl1 84, 1\11"mpil~n 71
St. Allwlm 'It, Merrtmat:k T7

\ et 1
w1 taxesona·..
~sum · tri ·ution
•

.

rus.• CoiUiilhu1

Patlflc IJ, SlUM Bartlan 1%
Nevad•L• Vepli liS, Fullerton St. !J3
Metro
·

q...rt.uft-.1!1
Miami (Ohio) 118, Tole• 8t
C. Mh:tllpn a, Ke• Sl. fl
Ball St. 77, Ohkt 11
IE. Mlt:hlipll 12, llowllar Gr~ n ..
Mldwe*ra Colle(late

.,

'

At Col~mhtlaSq..-e Bowline Paiace

Louls¥6Ue 71. Mempllls St. 73
8. Mls.llppi 1S. O•lnnatll3
·Mici-Amerk:•

•

IUia.dale 1'2, IO&amp;nn Chr 5I
Obtrl11'l8, !l,rlaCathl1
Southlftl&amp;•n 52, S•udler• Loc 11

Lon1 fth1.: h Sl. H. Vlah St. 611

s..mn....

I

•••etlne

BI&amp;We~t

Qun&amp;erfhal11
New M~l~ St. 72, heuao st. 66

~

-312 8th lb lit

�.

;~:'II:':;:C~.~~~St~...-~-~~f~Ti~Hn~~~~~S~an~lt~in~ei~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~Pol~m~•~:OV-Midclaport-'GIIIpcllll, Phio

Paint

P11111nt.

W.

Bissell, Keams
:spur Rio
to 4-1 win
INSTITUTE, W.Va. - Brent
Bissell's two-run RBI In the ninth
Inning broke OPI!n a narrow lead
for the University of Rio Grande
baseball team Friday and was.
credited as one of the key
components In the Red!nen's 4-1
road victory over West VIrginia
State.
The Rio men got on the ·
scoreboard In the firth Inning
when a Jimmy Kearns single ·
sent home two players to lead2·0.
The competitive Yellow
Jackets, who had opened their
season earlier In the week with.a
win over Morehead State (Ky.),
scored what was to be their only
run _In the sixth on a home run by
Morrison.
Darrell Marcum, whOse season pitching record .f or Rio
Grande went to 3-0, held the ·
Yellow Jackets down untU the .
seventh inning, allowing · West
VIrginia State only four hits and
striking out seven Yellow Jacket
players. Marcum was r~lleved
by Bucky Spindler, who recorded
·a save and kept the bosts from
gaining further ground
offensively.
''The defense picked up a little
bit, and, of course, the pitching
was excellent," Redmen Coach
Dave Oglesby remarked. " We
almost shut them out. We hit the
· ball pretty well, well enough to

Ve~.============:J·~dt~•~11~,~1g1~1~0
Roher' Clinie holds initial Conference
GALLIPOLIS - The Holzl!r
. Clinic's Sports Industrial and
Rehabilitative Medicine Center. .
and Physical Medici~ and Reh8b!Utatlon Department held the
first -Foot/A!Jkle Conference at
Holzier Cflnlc and .Holzer Medical
Center on Feb. 3.
Drs. Charles· J . Beaver and
Linda S. Bellot covered topics
such as abnormal and normal
blomechal)lcs of the fOQt and .
ankle and neutral cast molds ..
Ken Combs owner of Ken Combs
Running Store, demonstrated the
corrective measures for. foot and
ankle abnormalities and the
types of shoes 9n today 's market
suitable for ·varlous condlllons.
Continuing Medical Education

CONDUCTSFOOT/ANKLECONFERENCEHolzer Clinic aad Holzer Medical Center served
as lhe slaJe lor lhe llrst Foot/ Aakle Conference,
held by the Clinic's Sports Industrial and
Relu!.b!Uiatlve Medicine Center and Physical
Medicine aad Rehabilitation Department on Feb.

'.

credits were e•rned by those
attending the e&lt;&gt;uteJence, which
attracted 3~ physiCal therap_lsts
!rain Athens. c;;alllpoUs and
Huntington, W.Va., as well as
physical therapy .stUdents tr,om
Ohio Up!versltY· · ·
The conference was sponsored
by -Geigy 'PIIarmaceuttcals,
Johnson &amp; JoimaOn, Medtronlc,
the firm of Merck, Sharp &amp;
Dolurt, Upjohn lind Wyeth-Aerst
Laboratories. ·

NHL resulls
•ooaa LaOlliC '

..................
'NATIONAL

.

-1110...

.......11, &amp;lnl · - ·
CaJ...,.l._·Y~•_.

t, Ill

,3. Here Lori Ward (seated) haa her ankle
examined by Dr, Daniel Blaek, Holzer Clinic
' phyllatrllt, as clinical physical therap!Atll
Tammy Wall ( cenl(!r) and Joaa Andenon (behind
Black) obierve.
·
·

nam.

. ..

.: '...,,

'·'

•

~;.... '
I

•.,

\',
"\

1715 East... ,,.... .
Gollpollr. OH.

1
•

lhe LKC honors
l!z IIIII McDermitt wae aiJo
• _. 111e new~r . folllled. All-

'•,If"'' . !

"lnltla,l unemployment com·
lng Ohioans last month, u.p . The number.out of work lias risen
pensatlon ' claims taken In our
fractionally from 5.~ million In by 34,000 from 277,000 . .
Among the 1i ,biggest states,
local olflces showed a ..41.7
January. The numb\lr of w.orker s
!)hlo's
February unemployment
percent decline over the month," · , 11nemployed In February was ·
rate
was
fifth highest.
she said.
311,000, down lrom 366,000 the
most
recent data for all ·
The
Saunders was somewhat ·sur· · month before,
·states
show
Ohio
had the ninth· ·
· The 's Uite'sclvlllan labOr force
pr[sed, however, bY ihe magni·
hlghesi
jobless
rate
In December
tude oi the decline:
Included 5.372 million workers
1989.
"Since the ·labor force est!·
last month, down by 54,000 JrQm
Steady Nationwide · ·
mates are derived from a rela·
5.426 million In January. l'he
The nation's civilian jobless
lively small national sample,"
share of the working-age populasald Saunders, "a one-month
tldn In the labor force was 64.9 .. rat e. held steady at 5.3 percent In
o;:haJ!ge Is notnecessarUyslgnlft:
percent In February. compared . Feb.r uary for the ninth consecu·
cant. Because of the lnconsisto , 65.6 pe).'eent the previous live month and the number of
tency 'Shown during the pas~ few .month.
:
· ·. jobs Increased by a dramatic
372,000, the Labor Department
months In ·auto and auto-related
Ohio'~ February jobless rate
·
said
Friday,
inan.u(acturlng employment,
exceeded the 5.1 percerit of the.
The
surge
In
jobs
was the
·
OBES. wlll eontlnue tO closely
corresponding month last year.
largest:slnce
a
gain
of
470,000
·in .
monitor Its claims and employ- · Over the year: the number ot
June
1988,
the
depa·
r
tment
said
.
metlt·by Industry 'd ata."
Ohioans working
fallen }JY
"Special
circumstances
led
to
There''were 5.061 mUI.Ion work·
48,000•. down !,rom
million. ·

the unusually large employment
Increase In February," said
Janet Norwood, commissioner or .
the department's Bureau of
Labor Statistics.
Norwood attri buted the Jn, ·
creases In the civilian' sector to
an estimated 90.000 automotive
·Industry workers called back to
thel}' factori es after temporary
layoffs, and said the construction
Industry benefited from warm
weather.
There was also more hiring In
the service Industries, especlall;r
health care and and business
services, Norwood said.
Officials said the reason the ·
jobless rate remained at 5.3
percent, despite the increase In
jobs, was because the ratlo of

,_

people workinll' versus those
looking for work remained essen·.
!IallY the same.
'
Counting the military, the toti!l
jobless rate last month stood pt
5.2 percent.
"The unemployment rate for
auto wor kers, which ~ad soared
to 20 percent In January because
of temporary plant shutdowns,
fell back to B percent In February," the department's monthly
report said:
·.
There was also a rebound In the
closely related fabricated metal$
industry, bu t otherwise factory
employment was weak. especially In the textile, apparel, .
rubber and plastics Industries,
the government said.

t.:

H.........

'D emand strong for 1989 burley tobacco crop :~~~i~~~~;s,c~r::~ar~~· fi~~i~~ ~~~-~our~:;~~~~ i~v:;:!r;!!:'~r~

wv.

Grahams
attend
semr.nar

'D 'llons purehase b 'ld,tnu tn
,
TY/_ellstOn lo·r· new
· bus:nesS ·

is

Woodland Centers, .Inc., .
honors staff .members

Compare This BCS
Tiller ••• It's Superior
To Any Other Make!

20" Ba TILLER
Sale $1495

BAUM LUMBER
and HARDWARE
\.

.

GALLIPOLIS - Judy DeWitt,
Hoffman has also, taught daughter of Judy DeWitt, Galli;
Broker, Sou.thern Hills Real ' cou..Ses In real estate law, polls , and Larry DeWitt ,'
' Estate, Inc., announced Samuel , finance and investment, and Gallipolis.
Overby Hoffman, Tammie De-'· business at the University of Rio
Jeannie Tolliver, a lifelong
Grande, Florida ·International resident of Gallipolis recently
Witt, an'd Jeannie Tolliver has
joined their professional sales
University, and Southeastern received her real estate license
staff.
Business College.
. fr,o m the Ohio Division of Real
Hdffrrian has a Bachelor .of
Tam111le ·DeWitt has been a
Estate. She holds certificates of
ArtsDegreefromEmoryUnlver- lifetime resident of Gallia completion In Real Estate Law
sity, A,lanta; a Doctor of Juris- County. She recently received and Real Estate Principles and .
her real .estate sales license from
prudeme Degree from the Unl,
Practices from Southeastern·
verslty of Florida and has
the Ohio Division of Real Estate.
Business College.
completed graduate law studies
After receiving accredldation for
Tolliver Is currently a membe~
at Exeter University' In England.
taking,real estate principles and of the University of Rio Grande
He has an extensive background
practices, and real estate l~w College Symphonic Band. Jean.J In real estate, finance and real
from The John Hondr.o s nie Is the daugoter of Mr. and
SAMUEL HOFFMAN
JEANNI,E TOLLIVER
TAMMIE DEWITr
estate values, having done real
Ac'a demy of Real Estate, ln · Mrs. Paul E . France and the wife
'
'
estate title· examinations and Columbus.
of J. Rodney Tolliver.
.
.
abstracts, for numerous title
DeWitt has been the secretary ·
All three sales .agents will be
serving all the Gallla County and
1
· the surrounding areas, specializ·
,
·
. ·
Gallia· County and all the sur- also enrolled at the Southeastern Ing In al! fields of real estate sales
By Edward M. VoUborn
cooperatives "pool" received
be concerned about groundwater rounding counties.
. · .Business College. She ts· 'tl\e . and services.
County Extension. Agent,
just· over a · quarter million
levels. The next few weeks
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
pounds this season compared to
represent the remainder of the
water-supply recharge iJerlod. ·
15.5 million pounds last season.
•
The Gallia County Tobacco ProAlthough ground water storage Is
• GALLIPOLIS- Demand was
ducer's Spring meeting will be
In a favorable position at this
-very. strong for the 1989 burley
hE;'ld .at Hannan Trace High
time In Ohio, ·t he level could
.crop. Auctions ended March 1 SChool. on Tuesday, March 20, at
change considerably over the .
•
·after 43 sale days. The volume of 7:30 p.m. Dr . . Phillip Hunter,
next few weeks. Levels through ;
-tobacco placed under 'loan was . manager· of ·the University of
January remained noticeably · ·
GALLIPOLIS - Jackle Granegligible. "Gross" sales aver· Tennessee ·Tobacco Research
above levels of a year ago In most
ham,
Gallla County farm . wife
aged $167.18 per 'hundred.
.
Station at Greeneville, Tennesareas of the state, .ranging up to
and
business
perso!l . ,recently • .
Thts average t. ~U~,1 $6,}4~
.·
.s ee, will~- therespur~.e person.
3, .~ fee. t above,~.,. Ja_ nu~ry· 1989 ..
returned from ·a seminar that
tast III!M&lt;&gt;n. "~'-'htoillflsl"'
1:\ier:Yoll&amp;-k ~(come. ' ·
'
l~els.
YJ '
,...
addressed the Issue of food
were considerably below the last
Ground water levels. The past .
A local avid gardener recently
safety.&lt;The
seminar was sponcalled to my attentlon .t}je .f rlght·
production estimate. ·The burley three s~asons have caused us to
by
the
Ohio Farm Bureau
sored
enlng fact that I991ls the,year, ln
Federation
In
cooperation with
l
Ul
which the 17-year ctcadas &lt;Ia. •
the
Ohio
State
UniVersity
Cooper~
cust) · wUI appeal' In much of
ative Extension Service.
Gallla County. Few Insects
T,he seminar reviewed scienW 1
J'
"
create more excitement and
tific material available on farm
.
. .
-curiosity than the 17-year clcachemicals and crops and how
WELLSTON - According to a
riot Indicate fhat she will be das when on a warm day in May •
they rel·ate . to food and
story In the Wednesday, March 7,
associated with the new Medical they emerge from the soil.
agriculture.
'
Shoppe.
Cicada damage appears as a slit
edition or the.Wellstqn Te,legram,
A review of work by Dr. Bruce
The Olllons plan to eventually along twigs and canes of fruit and
a Gallipolis couple have purAmes, chairman, biochemistry,.
chased The Baron Building in
build. four apartments In the landscape plants. Young plant·
University of Cali·department,
that co·mmlnity an~ they plan to
second floor of the building.
lngs often suffer the most. .You
fornia at Berkeley. revealed thar
start a new business.
The Wellston Medical Shoppe might want to COJISider the
the natural carcinogens found In
will specialize In medical and potential damage when making
Herman and Oee Dillon of
food are many times more
Gallipolis purchased .-th'e struc·
surgical supplies as well as In new plantings this ye'a r and next.
prevelant than those found In
ture last month from Dwight· custom braces and shoes, bbspl·
The Ohio Beef Expo Is scheman-made chemicals.
.
Pugh and will open a · Medical
tal beds, osto.my supplies and duled In Columbus for March
The seml~ar participants re- '
!)hoppe lnoneofthetwoavallable
other related Items. A local 15-18, 1990, at the Ohio Slate
- HONORS STAFF- Members of Woodland Centers, Inc., elan
viewed various consumer sur· '
spaces. ·
·
·
manager has not yet been Fairgrounds. Activities start
were honored recently. lleft lo riJhl are Dr. Bernard Niebm, ·
veys that Indicated, because of
· The building currently houses
narned,
Thursday with meetings and
. $an~ra McFarlal)d and Larry ShonJ. .
poor lnlor:mation, most people
Ohl,o Avenue Jewelry at tHe nor·th
The DU!ons· have owned Toe seminars at the Radisson Hotel
are concerned about chemicals
end and The Teddy ·Bear Club, a
Medical Shoppe in Gallipolis near Morse Road. The Friday
and the safety of their food.
childrens clothing store, ls ·schesince 1977 and offer physical .• activities will be at the State
In an effort to develop better
duled to Ol'fn In the south section.
therapy, sports medicine; back Fairgrounds and will feature 11
understanding Graham Is availaThe Medical Shoppe will be
rehatillltallon, work recovery , beef breed shows.
ble to speak .to grouP&amp; In Gall !a: ·
cardiac rehabilitation and adult
A 1 p.m. Friday seminar tilled
located In thesectlol! next ,to The
County
~n the Issue. To schedule ,
GALLIPOLIS
Woodland
lene
¥oung,
Allee
Jacobs,
Glprla
Teddy ~ar Club and will utilize
fitness In thiu location.
"New Trends In Beef Cattle
such
a
meeting call 446-11&lt;18 or
Centers,
Inc.
hosted
.
a
staff
Evans,
Kay
Rowe,
Lllle
Murray,
the loft area ofthe store as well as
They ·offer the above services Production'· will feature a panel
Lana . Fer.rell, Lynn Arms alid cOntact the Gallla County Farm ·
the first floor.
.
to various Institutions such ,as discussion on the topic. Marion recognition servlce .on Feb. 27 at
Bureau at 286-4598.
-Carol Saunders.
·
Dee Dillon, the former Delores
Jenkins Memorial Nursing Caldwell, Gallia County Cattle· the Ga!Ua Center locatfon.
Executive Director, Dr. Ber- . Ten years of service - BarRowland, Is· a Wellston · native
Home, Huston Nursing Home, men , will be one of the panel
bara · Cox , Laraine · Newsome, Winner nillled
and -a graduate of Wellston High
the Jackson County Health De· members. Saturday; March 17, nard F. Niehm severed as the
.'
and Velm'a Williams.
School In the class ·of 1954. 'Her
partment's Home Health I'ro- will feature some 13 breed sales Master of Ceremonies. Dr.
POMEROY - Joyce Werry of ..
parents are Leslie · and' Freda
gram and to various others in starting at 10 a.m: At least four. . Niehm and Board of Trustees · · Fllteen years of service Chester
was the winner of last '
c11 iua and Meigs Counties.
· purebred breeders from Galli~ Chairperson, Larry'S!long pres· . Sandra McFarland. .
Rowland, resldents·of TheComei
Sunday's
mystery farm contes\ ·
Awards to contract staff
area.
·.
Dwight Pugh bought the build- County will sell In these sales. en ted awards for perfect attendIn
The
Sunday
Times-Sentinel. '
Included;
Their daughter, Deborah Dillng from Ed Tewksbary In 1982 The Sunday activities will be the ance and service of five, ten and
She was one of 11 persons to ·
,
~lx years - Sheri Foster.
ion Grant, recently received a
and operated Baton ot Wellston, Ohio Preview Show of Steers. A fifteen years.
correctly
Identify the farm a(
These awards were presented
Seven years - Doris Sheets.
graduate assistantship from Syra clothing store, there untll1988. reminder to all persons attending
that
of
Joe
Bolin located on New '
to both full-time and contract
Nine years - Ella Mason,
acuse UniVersity and Is a doc·
The building sat vacant until
Continued on D-8
Ll
ma
Road,
Ru !land. She be:
staff.
Malvllle Maxwell, and Paul
toral candidate in clinical psy·
last month when Ohio Avenue
came
the
winner
ol the contest ,
The lull-ilme recipients were:
Dovyak.
Jewelry moved Into the north
chology with ·an empha~ls on
sponsored
by
the
MPigs
SoU and "
rehabilitation. Present pla'ls do
section.
,
·
Perfect attendance - Tim DaTen years - Virginia Adams
Water
Con!ietv~tlon
District
by ·,
vis, Barbara Stump, ·Pat Tope
and Lucille Skldmor~.
lottery
and
will
receive
a
$5
prize'
and Dr. Barbara Wiseman; Five
Speciality awards were pres·
the Ohio Valley Publishing:
yeljfB of · service - Chris
en ted to Frank DIClemente, from
Co.
Zl!p~. Stndy ,Brown, Llllla
Laraine Newsome, Dr. Randy
. •''
By Stan.Evans
ter ol 1989 and In the early weeks
Han~r. Garnet 'Hurlow, Linda
Dygert and ChriS Zimmer,
&lt;
· of 1990 suggests that thllatrategy
KlniJ, ~lena Underwood, Cip'~
. ,
·'
GALLlPOLIS- For ·the past Is still quite appropriate for the
GALLIPOLIS - River CitY: '
two yejlrs we have argued .that current market. ·
Farm SupplY, Inc., of Galllpolla· ·
the equity market would become
During the 19WJ's the equity
was honored recentlY at an:.
Inc rea s lng
market &amp;eneratecl superior reCHESHlRE - Raymond L. became a laborer In the laborawards banquet In Indianapolis, ·
selective.
turns. Over the past tour years,
Ind. The'flrm was recoplzed for
Walburn, Instrument mechaniC· /janitor department.
In 1974 he tranlferred to the
Investor at·
the s&amp;P .00, excludln&amp;• dlvlB at the Ohio Valley Electric
Ita Olltltandlne Illes and ~erv!ee'
tention would be
denas, real~ a . compound
Corporaljon's Kyger Creek performance department, where d11rlq 1989 by Kent Feedlt, lnc.·Of,
average
annualn!tulil
of
15%.
fix11!l. not o~ the
Plant, received his anniversary he advanced to the poaltloa of ,Mideatlne, Iowa.
.
direction o( the
award lor 35 yeare' service to the · lnlltruml!llt mechanic-S In 1980.
During the. early years ol.the
Twnty-IIINe banquetl were:
equity market
new decade that return, aa
comp~~~~y recentl;y.
"
. ·Wilbllrn and his wile, Mary,
lleld ~~ l(ent J'eedl
· Ateflned by the broad market
Walburn joined OVEC on t.eb. reside at 639 Grant Street,
or the , percen
marlcetlnl area wit!! a total
2Si 19!15, as a guard In the Middleport.
tage of cash reaerves In portfo- aver8tes, Ia Ulcely to declllle to a
al' h'!Ot of more than 3.4110
lna than -10/ lncreaae, compersonn~l department. In}959 he
lios, but on :
IIIII,_,, Knt Feldl bu been: '
(1) Identifying companies that poUnded .annually, u the. major ;
tllele ballqlleta for 39
:r-ar•.
·,
can generate a rtsiag ~ on market avera&amp;ea adjust to the
OPEN HOUSE
Linda
Incremental capital employed. · average perfo111)aaee or nonDameWood, 'l'Uppen . , . _
COLUMBUS, Ohio ·(UP!) they hope will become standard
. (2) Those stocks that are · llldeli stocks. lmportantl;y, thta
Ohio's
shepherds
can
Improve
bu
'Dfllll!d
a
new
beiiiiiJ....,,
on
all llheep !arms. ·
that llldtdundl, which
valued at re&amp;lonable multiples of
1•
Ullda'l
Ralr
Loft,
OD
Loeull
wool
shearing,
handling
their
"When
wool
Is
clean,
highIn recent yean have attracted a
current earnings.
and storage by at tending Wool
Orvve RoM. Mrs. Damewood
CLEVELAND (UI&gt;I) grade and the proper length, It's
(3) Stacks that are not, · on larp pool at capital are likely to
day's
wlnntna Ohio Lottecy.
Wlll'llave
a..~o~SaJ
Handling
and
Marketing
Day
on
a very high-value l!fodUCI and It
average, excesalvely owned by realize lOwer relative retlll'lll
nU~Rbers:
(IDIIII&amp;J)
frCID
1-4
p.m.
Sbop
March
20
at
the
Eastern
Ohio
· should be treated as such," says
when t:omparecl to thoae !hall
Institutions.
'
PICU
holirll will be 'l'lttldQ, WedResearch and Development CenJim Clay, Ohio State ·sheep
That atrateeY &amp;et)erated super· ~lze atock selectiOn.
125.
ter In Belle Valley.
specialist and coordinator of the
lor returns over tha put two (Mr. Ev- Ia .. .laY..tm•l l rv•ar, ...,_ udSII&amp;urciQ,
8 Lm. tolj.m.aniiTbu,ndQ,.
Ohio ·State University sheep
'•
Pi~?.K-t
years. The performa~~~;e of the :Broler •• Tbe Oldo C. lljoiiiJ' In
event.
9110,
11
a.m.
to
I
f.m.
·
specialists
will
use
techniques_
equity market In tht final qiiiJI. their o.m,.u. olllee.)

:Farm Flashes

107 (hlslllut St.

'Bamitz has how scaed in double
fijures in 44 consecutive contests
and became only the second
Wabama eager to top the 1000
point scoring milestone in the
locals final fegulai' season game. ·
Barnitz concluded the 1989-90
campaign with 1053 career points ..
011 61 three point goals, 320 field
pis and 239 Cl 283 from the free
tm&gt;w line. He also moved into
tbUxl pllte in poiiiiS 8COlcd in a
Mlltlllf
lle8IOII at Wabama wilh his 522
•All gear drive (no belts)
point 10181 ranking him behind be•Electric Ignition
hind Gary Clark's, 545 in 1969-70
, •Kohler Magum engine
IIIII Roger Dingey's S40 in 1972•3 spee.ds forward,
13.
1 reverse
McDennitt. the While ·Falcons 64; ~enior, c:etUr and Coon, a 5-9
•All bearing construction
IIJilllolnCR, wae named as
•Easy 2-nut attach system
IIOOorlble menlion ~eJecilons10 the
•Variable track width
AII-LKC lqtllll willl McDermitt
• .Eas)' to use handlebar
rankinlr 11110111 lbc liOp rebounden
mounted controls
iD the
wllile ·c:ompn~n,a 12.6
ICOI'ins aYCIIfP. Coon Jlllbd
111111111 the lcadiiiL dlree POint
Retell
lh•IWS In lbc LKC • wen as
$1639
lilllshin&amp; near lbe liOp in assisls and
saa1s while IIXIrin&amp; 81 a 13.1 per
Only A.l
-.
clip in llil rookie nm111 on

cneWifS-ty.
Ia llldldoa 10

Meu:h 11,1910

H(Jjjman, DeWitt and Tolliver ·
join ~outhern Hills Real Estate firm

..

uc

·

Gaflia's December 1989 figure
was 7.6 while. Meigs was 7.7.

'l'AKES POSRION- ·M elp wrestler Aaron Sheets (right) takes
his position u he prepares to begin his match against Claymont's
Chad Polland In the heavyweight division la81 weekend at St.
Clairsville Wp $ehool. Sheets won lour ol six matches before
IO&amp;Ing to PoUand.

.

•

COLUMBUS - The Labor '
Department said Friday the
state's unemployment · rate last
month fell to 5.8 percent from 6.7 :·
percent In January.
Nationwide, tile February jobless rate was 5.3 percent, unchanged from the previous
·
month.
Ellen Sa'\nders, administrator
of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services; said she was not
' surpriSed by the decrease. ·.
Gallla County recorded 10.3
per,cent, down from the·lOA mark
. of January, 1989 whlle MeigS
reiJorted 10.4 percent, down from
11,.1 l&gt;ercent lrt January a year

:ago. ·

ST. CLAIRSVILLE - Aaron
Sheets won four of six matcbes In
·the heavywe[gbl division of the
illstrlct wrestling tournament
last weekend at St. Clairsville
. High School, but failed to qualify
for the state tournament.
Sheets, a junior heavyweight,
lost to Chad Polland of Claymont.
High School In triple overtime In
a match decided by a set of 10
f!e-breaking criteria. Sheets then
lost In the consolation bracket to
Norman Ayers of Bellaire.
The tournament combined the
top four place finishers from the
~llalre, Tri-Valley, Washington
Court House and Warren Local
s'ectionals. A total of 208
wres·tlers took part In the two day ·
tournament with the top three
TOM McDERMITr
finishers In each weight class
advancing to state competition.
Aaron finishes the season with SWAC first team. Allhough the
SWAC (the Southwestern Alhletic
an outstanding record of 35-2 .
Conference, a newly formed con-·
ference of which Wahama a charter member along with Buffalo
,Falcons~
Pulllalll,
Vinson, Hamlin, Duval, .
(Continued from C-7)
Charleston Catholic and Van) won't
nilz completed the 1989-90 cambegin competiting as a league unlil
paign wilh a 23.7 scoring average.
the upcoming 1990 baseball season
In only his JUnior season, Barall conference team was chosen
an
nitz a S-9 guard for coach Lewis
for
the recently completed 1989-90
HaJi•s Bend Area cagcn scored in
baskelball campaign wfth Bamitz
double figures in all 22 of the
and
McDenniu of Wahama named
White Falcons hardcowt oulings
·
10
the
first team along wilh a 1oost
this year for a total of 522 points
of
players
from the remaining conand a 23.7 per game average. The
ference
schools.
WHS scoring leader experienced
five 30 point outings and 12 conICSIS with 20 or more tallies wilh
his 1989-90 ~ high being a 36
pQint effon against Buffalo Put-

AU-LKC

D·

Gallia, Meigs jObless rates down in Janu~

'

West Virginia State's B. Collins
took the loss and was relieved by
Elswick. The Yellow ,Jackets had
four hils and one error, with
Morrison's homer, which he hit
on two of four appearances at
bat, the only offensive high point.
For Rio Grande, Kearns was
one for five and Bissell was one
for three. Mike Coman was one
for two and posted a pair of
effective defensive plays In tlie
final inning.
Now 6-4, Rio Grande hosts
West VIrginia Tech In a doubl~­
header set (or Tuesd~y at 1 p.m.

matches

'

Section

•

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

,

win. "'

.Sheets .wins
four of six

:F al-m/ BusinesS

Mo~y Id~ ·- ~ities :
•

Finn honored

Walb~

honored for 35 years service

-·

S~p seminar set M~~ 20

nn.sta

u.,..

SMITH BOICK
1900 Eastern Ave. ·
i

'

(614) 446-2282
'"

Ga1Upo11s, Ohio

(,

•••rlne

Lottery numbers
Fr1::

�'
Times-Sentinel
Notice

MM:h 11, 1980

.......
r\111111t

I
LEGAL NOTICE
Tho Boord of Alcohol,
Drug Adtlctlon ond Montol
Heolth ....,_ ....... of
Golllo, Jocltaon ond ~
countloohooonnou.-lllo
looking propo... fllr tho
llfOVIoion of ~ • - - in the community.
Controcta wit bo
to
community. ogoncl• whc
wUI _ , _ OM or more of
the ~ln,J :;'icn:
1. Cou
Ptyahothoropy S.VIco
•
2. Dlognootlc 11-omont ·
Sorvlce3
. Modl-~lon/Som-lc
-·
••

---· """""·-=--·
............
_.,... - ..

OaHipolls
&amp; VICinity

..... "l:OO ALL---IoPoldln
Pll.· JOW7N1M
.

I

-•clod

Lost &amp; Found

-

Pound: ... . " . _ ..
OIMiilloM 4:JO,'I 1~
-.

·.

boatoa.
4. Pr•Holfll!ltllzllion
r-rdo of Meigs County;
Boord of Education of tho
Soroonlng
celjlm.ncing at an iron ·pin Meigs Local Sch~ol District
5. Day Treatment tPin..,
marking the
aouthwett
Jane Fry, TNMurer Hoapitllilltion)
corner of thl Firat Boptill 12) 25: Ill 4, 11•.18, 4tc
6. Doy Activit"" Sorvlco
Chinch (Vol. BB Pogo 562)
7. Hotline Sorv ...
thence South 82 dogr... 10
Public Notice
8. Emorgoncy Strv ... .
mlnuttl 05 oocondo 45.11 l &lt;r--~iBLicN(i;n(;E__ , 9 . Roaidoritlll TrMtm.,t
f·- t 0 1 p K N01'I 111'd p K
Strv ... (ShOrt/ Long T""')
""'
10. Roo~t·~
·
Noll
being ·tho
true• point • of•
Elfoctlvo
1990
- · - Su7:
. beginning; thtinco South 62 tho Galllo County Rurol Wo- Sorvioo (EMC, RHpilo, oadogr- 10 minutoo 05 . . tor Auoclotlon poaold 0 re· tor Core, Crlalo. Suporvlood
condo W01t 237.28foot too solution thot from hence- Aportmtntl) .
P.K. Neil; thence North 26 lorlhtheouociotlonwlll not · 11.. Community Rllldondegr. . 00 minutes 00 seenter into II:'IY additionAl WI· 1111 Service
Anno unee me nts
condo Weat 272.16 feet ter customer ogreomonta
12. CUeMonog-Soralong the ••t tina of the
with ten..,ts. The board wMI vice
13· Conaoltotion Service
Gioco Church property (Vol. from Morch 15. 1990. on3 Annour.c:en.-.tta ·
28 Pogo 1 3ond Vol 38 Page word require tho landlord14. Mentel Health Educo·
th onoo .fproportyiJwnortoalgntho tion Service
ArM · ..........
724) to a pQont:
--.for
·
15. ProvontionStivico
Njlrth 51 . dogr...
09 woter uoor lgrHm.,t on4
~.~~
,..Unutes 29 seconds_ East
remain lllbfe ·tor that water
18. lntonn.tion and Ra· 1'1
WlhCNIMW.
b'll AU
!errol Strv...
.
.
, P.O. In 14M~, Got' .
water billa wHI bo
17. Foronoic Evoluotion· llpollo, OIUIIJ1.
1 . Card of Thanks
.PI_ Nlrol. collocttd di~ly from tho Service .
londlord/ propeity • owner.
Priority wll bo given to homt.l--loomuclt. ld.
Thla reoolutlon do• not
•apply to tenant w•ter u•r tho.. tpplicants who• pro·
The Family of Monogreomoril a entorod into poula odllr•• tho n - of 4
GIYIIW8y
tow Shetrta wiah to
prior to March 15. 1990.
"apoclol
diont
populotlono"
Antiquo
U-'·h1
· e.1WIIor who will deliver
"II
think eoch and everMarch 11 . 12. 14
in
undw'·
•rvad
........
11137
•
.,.... during the illnaae
"Special cu... _
.._ ......... , . """ Lib
and dMth of our loved
tio~s'' are defined 11:
Aatrfv• perfbtnl dOg, 1 yr old~
o·ne. Thenka to ever2
In Memory
. 1. Sawrtly Mentally Oia- 104-1711-1171.
•
yone who brought food
•bllld
Auw Dd left cMr from tlmlilr
and flowers. to the
2. Children
Fay to got to • ·- .
nu,_ and doctors II
3. Subltonoo Abu•
114'~"1141. '
In
Lovin&amp;
Memory
of
Holzer Hospital. the
4. Vlctlmo of Dom01tic ViDotchfund 1 112 yr.
lowell A. Gfe.ene,
ilngera. pall~a and
olonce
- 4411M7.
...-,wei - -·
who departed this life,
6. Older Adulta
114
enyone thllt helped In
kch
16.
1978
and
6.
MI/
MR,
00
/
MI
iny way. Thenu 1o1he
7 . Veterans
IIIII oat, long hiiiMI,.,.,.
Wealtha G. Greene.
Waugh- Halley-Wood
Application•
may be ,with ONftlll IJII, I monlllii,
who dll!arted this life
304..711-21101.
.
Funorll Home, and aaobtained ony tlmo by coiling
March 10, 1980.'
pecially the Elizabeth
(614) 448-3022 or moy bo Port New glen Ilk A
Tht ...,, ., softly pardinc
Chapel Church and
picked
up at
tho Boord
office
-~-=II,~I:M:IOI=·M=old~,
two quill ond silantcnoves,
PMior Holley.
It
4t4
Second
A..
nue, [Coi~~H~IO~
104 _
,,
For in them II• two precious
. : The Sheete Family
Room
202,
Gllllpolla,
Ohio.
ones,
·
In accOrdance with our
11
Wo loved but could not save.
Boord policy. oppllcotioM
S.dty missed by d..Chltrs &amp;
ohall be provided to ogond•
_ CARD OF THANKS
hmili•. Naomi Wllcox111 &amp;
whooo orgonlzotionol atruc·
fomily. Irene Shaff• &amp;fomily.
lure. operotlng/ollclaa end
· The family of Charl.as
procadur•. •n HrVice de·

==

~-. 1:00 ......

::t

PubiiCS.Je
• Auction

I
!

- ·r~s family of Harvey F.

icfarland wishes to exjlftss our sincere appreciittion to our friends,
il~ctdlors. tnd relatives
for the many thinp !hey
did lor Harvey durin&amp; his
illness and for the family

of

s

wanted to Buy

March 16. 1.982.
Nothing could be more
beeutiful
:r~en the memories WI
have of you
You were , someone
very special
God muot havethcught
10. too.
AU our llvu we wUI
mi.. you
Though
.years may
• come and go.
But in our· hearte you
will live forever
Because your memory
is our keepoake ·
With that we'll never
part.
God has you in His
keeping
We 'have you ·in our .
hearts.
'
Sadly milald by
husl&gt;and. John Val1h,
daughter, Doro1hy
Ann Leech and
family, eon. Carl
Veith and family.

.

Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity

after his·death.

: Thanks for the prayers.
tards, floral artana•
ments, food donations.
visits. and calls. and lor
pr love and support dur,
ina this tryinc time.
: -~cial thanks to Ors.
llirk Wallllr. Holmes. and
kltosla, Holzlr ltlfl. Fe-

A hi~h
cl'tr.

working world. High, t«h

rn.ining in rhe Army can help
uk e you a. lor fun her.
Todoty's Army is on rhe leOOo
ing ed,ge of tHgtt.t«h CU'eeT opportunities in the most ~M·
iicaced t«hnokl~ Here are
jusr a few examples of over 50
hi~h-rteh sp«ia.kies offered:

!Communical&gt;ns El«troiiia
+Aurom:uic I&gt;.ua
Communications ·
:tDigital Communications
!'foaical Sarcllilco

Oh, myl· Could it
be. Ka'fc is 431
Lordy, Lordy.

·

Microwave Systems
..
:tAvionics
!(.omr.urers
So, 1f yw want m~Jre than o
high sehoul diploma, finduut
about, the high. lf'Ch upportu-•
nicics available· in the Army.
See your, local Army !lec.w:fii·
.tfr· today.
'·

... 446·3!43

who's over 40?
11

Help

LABORATORY TECIIICIAN
· Full time politlon for reglltered mecllcll
technician on rotating ahlfts. Requires In•
dependent worker with capebllltlee In all •
areas of clinical laboratory. Excallentfrlnge
benefits.
Pleasa contact:
.
Cecelia Lilla, Laboratory Supe..Viaor
. Veteran• Memorial Hoepltal
116 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy. Ohio 48719 ·
Phone 814-992-2104. Ext. 216

dnl 110111 Corp.. llemb-

•• UAW Local 1685, Gall~
polls Parts W•tltouit.
Gallia County EllS, end
llcCoy-lloon
Funnl
Home.
111111 special
thanks to Pestor Robert
W'rth

Colvin for all of his support

end the beautiful service.
God bless yo~ all.
Wile. children, lflndchlldren mother and siste,rs

3 Announcements

.··'

Open House

': : Baby Shower
·-~ Mary Edwards

:

of

: • Headquarters
Sunday. March 18,

.

2·4

12 Belmont Dr.
G..,., by:
Rita Ed·
_.ta, JIMniUI Seun. - . , Shello Seundlro ,
All frlancla. femHy &amp;
eultornw. welcome . •

KA YJ,.A NIC:HO
MAYES
It hes been o~e year
ago today.
That God took little
Kayla away.
We didn't want to see
her go
And the reaoon He did.
-don't know.
But '!"e d~ know that
1he' a on a better
place,
Than thio world could
ever offer.
,
And we love and mi11
her very much,
H~
little brother,
mother and father.

Low ~ ..... logo. .....
.....-. ~to Ollto

-y
.•,_,... - ·-·

- _
II llutlonol
Amorloon
!;eglon.
, 12 .... PollOI Co.-.,, OH• .
,._,,-11.

EARN

lllallrt F• lrw&amp; W.'t fill

37'-2113 ....

S:M .... ~

MAllEI

IOWIOOIIIIG IISIIVITIOIIS

2 COIIIOIHIUMS OYaOOIIIIG
OCUI • I. MRIU IUCI

ol-•

2 BR ' t. 2 belhe,
1111. Klngolll bodo.locuul
, In muter beth. outoldt owlmmlng pool. ,Neor
- "R~tteuron1 Row" • Oolf Cou,.... .
· Bum- WHidy rlttl- 11100. 11110 diocoun1 for
- ..ty bDoldng with dopoeh pold prior to March
. 1tllfi.)(UB .a-nt foreorly booklngwhh dopooh
. prior to Aprl 11hh.l
lpeclll Spring Rlrl11 olao Awllllblo.
.

C..t•t: The Weal Shoppe, IIIL
555 - Oh.-446·2206

IIOIIAA.

10111.

-Don'f houlPortobto
101J1 to o- NW MIA
miil
ooll -·n _,. to roul :104-tl'll-

1117.

Aeldtlll· llooloat

1-

Give plano, orpn and kaytloard
'
rw tn
.h olM. To ~

mr

~·

Re~l

Estotc

31 Homes tor Sale

Mul
- n g SIR lpiJI-- Lll, ~':!"'•
R,l!_
::le\~: II Int.-ed, ·KII"*i.lAPOI..,_
............ , . Cont. Air ~

acfnriUII
0 1 - . Allo
IW'I,

'

MCI

Holll
...,.
·- , !'
..... ~
......
AMMRIIM
,...._ JloaotiQio. Coli onvtlmo

'""'

End --

:&amp;.'?.·

· 1m Schunz 12x11 w/expando,

for In - ,
117,000. -727-1010.
,
........ 112 4Ut St. Hoven. Cllf1 ..14-IIII.U14.

~~.

·Dilello. C11 _ . ,. . . bt. Y-

~..-c.

CIA, wood bumor, tPOIIanoot,
ororaao bldg, 304-e75-:roet or
e?a-4UII.
:;
1m
==
abr
=-r.-=
gaaod
=can=d:-,{i.
= rt:,,,
:--:fur~nllhod. WIOiorogo bt , M,OOO.
NeodtaMII. I14'-44f.8111.

~ · 2 bedroom
houle, el_.lic l.at, 1.28 acrea
::,.11'01~ Road, 304-112~ 1174 Klrtwood. 80.112, kltchMt
-·..
•r,pll•noaa,· heat pump, central
or t~~. ~. . a r, ••tillite dllh. 1 acrt 101 In·
·nr• - · - "
cludH whh 24x24 pole bam.
- '., n1W1Y rediCOI'IIted, large $20,500. 080. &amp;14.902·2208 or
b
10111 .
1170
Uncoln . 814-tll5-3537.
Holglllo. ,, 4-m-11111.
=~:-T:::'--::-c-::-c-:-:':"':'-:c-

TWo ~l 3 . bd oo.,.., 1 112
flniOnoo lUI ...,...I, I
107
Otk
art
..
... Vollor- 114,1100. 11.._ llllh,
go,_. la,!L.J30lltllll In
lloolna. lf4-ll411-i1Urr.

•

t4•70 Foltlvil Mobllo
Ham•. Lllrga living room , 2 full
bllho, CA, mull bl moved. Cell
ovonlngo.l14-441-2478. .
1977

Sky11ne HomM •• rnon•ble.
oricoo.
2
mllol
tram
llovo- brldot, Jet;~ '

771Rt. z. 304-271:-5136.
- ·'
Mutt SOli: 18116 CIOytan , 141811,[
2br, . .lklna diSianae lo liD
Ononda Unlv.,.lt)'. ~lnoncln~
naltabl•.
French
City
Broklrogo, 114'-44f.l340.

lll!e Poula'a Day Clro Conlor.
SOlo, oflaldobto, chi-. 11-F
e 1.111. - 1:10 p.m. - l"'-10.

a-,

aftoo: ooltoo[ Onap-lno
ttll nnaJ14 4tll224.

pando sH-ualtld on 1.78 .ern Ira.

Polnl Plaaum, 3

~rootM. •

largo bolhraom With ganton tub, ;
total electric,' cantra.-·atr. tqufpo
ped kttchen with Hr, undarpet't:.' •

nlng, split rail fence, manr ••~ '
tras, ahown by appolntrnertt. ·
304-e7S.78t7.
.

...

Real

cu~ ~

rifnu/A'

9e.af' ·OJ-1-tk

..

G:r
[B
,~.w:rn

REALTOR '

RESIDENTIAL - INVESTMENTS ; cOIIIIERCIAI. • F~RMS

SltUitlon

Fmanc1al

wantid
Bualnen

""I'OeTALJOMH

-t-·-...
. ,.:, .....,c..
OIQI. A ,.,, an ,..
. - . 30447&amp;-4102.
.

··

11111 or an.41Mr. ,..._ ond

Wlll·tlo biWollll"' In my homo.
Mon. lhru ~ri. Qjyo antr. Ceil

IPOIIollion •oluwllon Coli
(:1111 ae.l117, a1.1147. I A.M.
to I P.ll. CC81} 7 ...,._

SUNDAY PUZZLER

8

PubliC Sale,

'1 Divide inlo
two paris
7 Lively dance
12 Encourages
17 Barks
21 Public speaker
22 Choice
23 Minnie24 Kind of coliar .,.
25 Sun god
- 26 Landed
28 Saperate
30 Teachls
32 As far as
33 aoal
35 Sprint
• '
37 Blouse
39 Citrus fruit
40 Prohibit
4 f Sponl$h aiticie ·,
·" 43Dtn ·
45 Wldeawake
47 Tellurium·symbol
48 Memorandum
49 Turn away
52 Papar measure .
54 Stings
56 Church council
57 Current·59 "- Trek "
61 Paradise
62 Escape
63 Ga8p for breath
64 Helium symbol
66 Baseball stat
67 Born

68 "Oas-"
69
71
72
74

78
79
81
82
63
84
85
87
89

16 ozs.
Sum up
Fuel ·
Large quantify:
slang
Small valley
Toll
Old pronoun
Deslgnales
The self
Repair
Spare
Frlghl
Male Sheep
A continent
Cook In oven

90

Europeari

·
92
94
95
96

herrlnge
Dlslurbance ·
Tart ·
Plogues
At that place

76

77

·'

.

..

•

1 Wearying person
2 Tehran's coyntry
3 A continent: a~br .
4 Sched. abbr.
5 "In ~ Blood "
6 Test
7 Certain physician:
abbr.
8 Macaw
9 Face' parr
'10 City in Nebraska
11 ''The - of
Pauline"
12 News-gathering
org.
q Weger
14 l!lobleman
15 ·Characteristics
16 Moist earth
17 Alflrml!llve
18 Near
19 Salad variety
: 20 Brealhed loudly
'
in. sleep
·
27 Former Russian
ruler
29 Terrifying
31 Neon symbol
34 Rely
36 Haslens
38 Barters
40 'Skeleton part
42 Fasting period
·44 Evaluale
46 Woody plant
48 Gorbachev'.s
''no"
49 Recompense
50 Escape
51 Army off.
53 Planet
55 Thoron symbol
56 Wild plum
58 Scissors
60 S~d contesl
.62 ,Pieal
85 Dine
· 68 Poison
69 Rerit
70 Tendencies:
proclivities
72 Dinnerware piece
73 Shock with fear
75 Mature
76 Lessen the Ioree
ol
77 Sumptuous meal
79 Scorches
80 Suoon - James

IN011CEI
OHIO VALLEY PUILISHING CO.
rHOII'IIMI1dl lttat rou •do
bullneoo wt111 poop11 you know,
and NOT 10 Mnd money
through Jhl moll until you llovo
ln~od tho ofloring.

.Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SAT., MlRCH 17, 1990
9:00 A.M .
.

SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 1990
. 10:00 A.M. · · : .

82 Mickey or Minnie
83 Bank
transactions
84 Violin parts
86 Witty remark
88 Fish eggs
89 Prepared
90 Leather bell
91 "Penally 93 Concludes
95 Handles
97 "- ',Em High"
98 Pair
102 Skating·arena
104 'Pieces OUI
106 Crafty
J07 &amp;'lmlels cap
108 Tears
tio High ·
111 Skids
112 Verve ·
11.4 Disclose
116 Slory
117Dry
i 19 ·King of beasts
121 " Born - "
l22 Pound down
123 Apothecary's
wgt.
125 Cleaning
'
subslance
127 Brinier's measure
128 Fastener
.129 Experiences
130 Teresa 131 Foot pedals
. 133 " Death on the

Kimble baby grand piano, cherry gateleg table. oak rolltop
desk (S. roiQ , round meat block, pie safe. grandfathers clock,
marble top wash stand: alol of good collectible glass &amp;china,
several old guos. a lot of Welsh items. only parttal llst~n~
·
llrp 511•. plan on stQinc 111 dlf.

....

Terms: Cllh 01 Chectt w/ptep« I.D.
OWner is llqd Wlm11, trustll for Rachel Warn11.
PRESTON MUSTARD, AUCTIONEEI
2'86-5868. licensed

-""'"'.'

AUCTION

ANTIQUEHOLLECTIBLES-HOUSEHOLD

&amp; Bonded Stitt of Ohio

FRIDAY; M'ARCH 16, 7:00 P.M.
. GALLIPOLIS JAYCEES BLDG.
RT. 35 (BYPASS) AT KANAUGA

AUCTION
Saturday, March 17th. Be1innin1 at 10:00 a.m ..

GtASSWAIE: OYer 50 pes. of. depression glas~ Heisey !plate
w/.ftuled bowQ, green depression lamp. Imperial, Fenton. Blown,
Eme(ald, Blenk~ Occupoell Japan, V1r~n ia Rose platter. Jewel
- Tea custard dishes and S&amp;P, Fostorlaidivided bowQ, other old
dishes:
•,
.
OTHEI ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: Blue / whrte gran•e
pucktt, other gran~eware, McCoy Pelican coo~e jar (1940's) ,
Coca-Cola sign, chiclien &amp; iurkey S&amp;P's, old pictures, old marbles, Jolly Doll, bookshelf, small oak cabinet, iron s ~llets,' several
silver coins, Eversharp pen &amp;pencil set Ea slman Kodak vesl ca·
mera, Himyar cigarette maker, ~uilt lptc.- 1900).
IIOUSEHOLD: Dinnerw,re, small curio cabinet, Home Interior,
small tables, utll~y cabinet. ·p~cher &amp; bowl stand w/ drawer.
wood wardrobe, several other nice hoysehold rtems.
· THIS,ISA PARTIAL LISTING!! SEVERAL OTHER ITEMS COMING
Ill DAY OF SALE!!
.
'
ConslpnttntsllkMI DIY of Sale 9:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M.
LESLIE A. LEMLFI. AUCTIONEER ·
. · Uconllil &amp; Banllod in Fov« ol Slole ol Ohio
Cosh/Approved Cttadt wijh Propor ID
Ests
Jfot Rutloltsiblt for Accldants or loss of Property
· For moro inforltlllion, colllesllo A. Lemley 614-367-0171
"llo Smoijnc Permijtad in Bid'"
Checll wMh u now lor bao~nuour sprln&amp; &amp; summer IUetionsl!!

located 2 miles. north of Reedsville, Oh;, 3
, .. miles south of Hockin1port on S.R. 124. Will
sell the followinJ:

ANTIQUES &amp; C.O~LECTIBLES
·
Oil lamps, quilts (I new star pattern), corn knife, glass top table, Wedgewood plate, carnival butter dish, McCoy di_s h. por·
- celain coffee pot, and handmade dis hes.
HOUSEHOLD
. •
'
Living room suke. sofa with velvldeen chair, stands, end Ia:
bias, odd chairs, 2 chests of drawers. 2.metal wardrobes,
· wood &amp; metal cabineta. 2 complete metal beds, Electrolu•
. sweeper, electric tans: table lamps, bedding, linens, pots,
pairs, dishes. etc.

MISCELLANEOUS

..

Located on St. Rt.l24, Portland, Ohio. ,
Consianm•nts aution 3rd Sat. each month .
.Open Mon.-Fri. 8:00 A.M ..-4:00 P.11.
Dwi&amp;(lt Corbin. OWner-Phone 614·843-5256
Consipments Welcome. Come One - Come All!
Refreshments
Cash
Positive I.D.
Dan Smith-Auctioneer-57-68-1344
Ron Johnson-Apprentice Sponsor-57-88-4289
Gary Sturler-Apprentice

LOCATION: Intersection of Carr St. &amp; lain St.,
. Jackson, OH.' behind KFC.
·
Antiques. collectibles &amp; household items of
Rachel Warn11.

..

136 Roynded, convex
moldi~g .
136 Carouse
140 Big
143 Teulonic deity
144 Firn
146 Nevada clty
148 Baked clay
150 Toward Shelter
151 Young srilmon
153 Type of cross
154 Meadow.
156 Short .steep
158 Goddess of
· healing
161 Sodium symbol
163 Actor Flanders
165 French article :
167 Roman gods

OpportUnity

PORTLAND' EOUIPMENT AUCTION

PUBLIC·AUCTION
DOWN

VIRGINIA SMITH . BROKER . 388· 8826
RUTH GOODY, REALTOR. 379-2828
DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR . 256 -11261
EUNICE NIEHM. REALTOR. 446 -1897
RUTH BARR . REALTOR . 446-0722
LINDA SKIDMORE. REALTOR, 379-2686
DEBORAH SCITES. ASSOCIATE , 446-6362
LYNDA FRALEY. ASSOCIATE, 446-7499

&amp;Auction

1
97 Suggested
· covertly
99 Japanese ending
100 Rage _
101 Rodents
102 Float
103 Regret
105 Ancient chariots
107 He's B.L. Slrytcer:
In lis.
109 Beast of burden
110 Wee
111 Fumes
113 Kill
114 Female ruH
115 Hebrew tetter
116 Zest
.
117 Mohammedan
leader
.118 Cloth measure
120 Yltrium symbol
121 Flowerless planl
122 Speech
123 Facial expression,
124 Capycflin
monkeys
126 Wailed on
l28 Bog down
130 Perlainlng to
groom's partner
132 "High134 Encount!lrS
135 Domesticate
136 Aliernauve· word
137 11inder
139 Metal fastener
I ,41 Babylonian deity
142 Viper
143 Leval
145 Cut
1'47 Real estate map
149 Once around
track
152 .. _ 109"
153 Mason's tool
155 " Lucky" number .
157 One or HOMES ·
159 "'-Law"
160 River In Siberia
162 River bank
164 Pertalfling IO
· the kidneys
166 Mo1orless
airplane
168 Brother of Jacob
169 MO!lntaln nymph
170 Incline
171 More uncanny

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFfERENCE

. 114-t112-t1101.

8.

ACROSS

23 LOCUST ST.
·446-6806

· ..

Nahua 141170 wfth Tx21 · •••

e1.3lla21 .

.

Lot vinyl trailer underpinning, 100 amp alternator for motor
home. windows. hand tools.

GUNS
Model 33 Remington .22 rifle, 410 ga. single shot shot gun.

Lunch by Eastern Band Boosters
OWner: ~f. &amp; Mrs. Vir1il llol$inl8{
.Auctlon11r: 1.0. "MIC~• IIcCoy, 915-3944
iiOT IDI'DIISIILE fDI ACCI DEIllS 01 LOIS.

PUBLIC

AUCflON
Saturday, March 17
-~· ·

10:00 A.M.

'

.......

LOCATED 14 ..U SOUTH Of IW.L.FOUS, OHIO,
ON RT. 7. WATCH FOR SIGNS.

Ill AN) liAS. CALDWELL HAVE IOI.D 1HEJII HOlE
WU E SELLIIQ TIE I'CIU.OWING:

Atl)

••

..,.. .. ,..;a
and onci....,.,I'Nnlllt
book thalf,
"':~~:.-==.~~~~~~~::· illk lll1wy illble, 11110 1830'1 112
moon llblll. Meltag••Y lltd....; -.Ill llblea, 7 po.
lining-..... ,_,. 1111111. Ulan. rna-. mMIII
1n11r1 '"'"'· 1ND'Itht•. pc. blqnde blaoorn auill,
4 pc. Queen Size belftocon ou118, OE -hlr lrtd dryer, 17
cubic fl. San 'I!Wur. Alldilin ilmpl e1ecttc, Allddn

a

1 • PH. -·~6·3343.

lamp,3oillarnpl,ceatlndbrua~chlndllltrt,brua

3 Announcements

lEW sn
COIIIaHIIICIEI
IPIAIEIS - 1300

11 ..........a, 11 4-441-03to.

Pon
tlmo
liN .........., ""'" but
_
... ....,. .............r

old,

only rakr you m

Who could' this be?
She's 431

-......... ....
::-r ":"'·
--·--R.N.

.PofMI'OY,

-=

--oily'-.-room,. .
In""'--

•-

lEal........

.,.

HappyAds

DOROTHY VEITH
who passed away
eight years ago,

.-...CIII(II

32 Mobile Homet
for Sale

121141- - 2 "'· Col 11's • Ctoyton WI...., 14•70l J ,24WOIOI IR, Lll1 fR, DR, I llllr., -OIIOAC,Iotool.._ - 1 112
bllno,
~ndl. undorponnlng.
-1-~oC"11 112,1100.
For
tii!IO lllOIIIIO - ..
104..78-7843 or lt._ ntwty
,.modeled on 1o1 a~n tOt·.
lt~ai-. AIIoo houeo .
=-~1~· M?,tllll: lt'- 441-tl11.
on thi lot, In neod of -irtc
U... In one ond ronl tho ather.
1-..io
.....,., _ -oot air, fhU R 14x711N7 Norrie. 211r~_~ll both, 111,100. 114-446-02:11 ollor
"'
-to 8CihOole.
.......,,.l;!121o!!o,
olooa garden tub1_ largo llv...,..:::.':l 4p.m.
,.1111
Mt-lrl
knch.,,
C1
·For
ul• oi rent double wlde .on..
'
'
aolllngo. VInyl undlrplnnlng,
llllr1 f!nch "" 2 toto llongo building
lnoludoil. :r:·::rir!.~·=h~O:,l;:w:
"
A
:
S
.
~od
on
t/2
ocro
rontod
lot
13211. or .as.oao. tow~
, _ wtlh. CIA. Gill
Cit
wMhln cit)' .IChool ,dloirtct. 11'- · In niol nolahborl
. 441-8701aRor 4p.m,
-=o.~-_;,."'·•"'M:::-a"'bi"'IO"""I~o~
"'m
::,.-.,c:-,_-,ou
="*
-:::'-Y.:

.---.
......
. ----==llvii

t1.:1

~":t=?=

~-·2:10
"""'
,.
9
-

32 Mobile HD111H

31 Hoqles for Sale

lor Sale

..,~

"-""·

Help w.nted

0

Moll

In Loving Memory

11

H._, Wlntecl

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

lilt-.

sincere
thanks to
friends,
family and
neighbors who helped in
iny way - food. flowers. cards, visits, etc.
· A special thank-you
to John Sowers and the
Gallia County Emeraency Squad. Charles'
friends of local 543, the
2nd shift carpenters and
tarpenters' helpers. and
second shift at J.L.R.
The corisolin&amp; words .of
Rev. Ed llincus. the lovely music of Jan Duncan. and the pallbeartls
fof their kind help. May
God bless you all.
Neoma Wiseman
Nadine Phillips
Alice Salisbury
Dottie Byus
.-.

11

Ponwoy-

--:a

0

181'V.,_

Pound:
•• : ..
llutnllollll.-.11

IIIADUIII: 2:00 ,_,._

tltldtr ............. II to...,,

:."':i..w..,.
,::::. .,"::t
1111.

Tr•tm8nt

the building contain• II·

II. Wiseman sends theif

tt.lpWMied

11

Public Notice

' NOTICE TO IIODERS
221 .42 foot too 'II incll r•
Notice lo hereby givO.. by bor ·pooolng o 'II incll roller
tile ....,. of Eduaotlon of 4.10 ' " '' thonoo South 21
Moitlo Locollcllool Diotrlct dogr-112 min- 47 - ·
tlwlt Mid Boord ofEducotion ondo E11t 314.48foouothe
on Morch 28, 1990. 1 , beginning contlinlng 1.130
12:00 Noo!\. will offer ot acre more or ,..a,
public ouction, on the pnoTorma ot'oolo.,. cooh end
mi-. echcol grounclo bo- tho boord horoby r....,eo
l&lt;lnalng to.ooid boord of odu- the right to rej~ ony ond Ill
codon ond duotld in Sella- bide. Tho board 0iao otlpubu!v Townahlp, Vlllogti of lot• thot the MIIIJI Locot
l!otnWO'f; Vlllogo Lot 82, School Oiatrict woulcii'MOin
MeiiJI County, Stoto of rlghutoporkonthogroundo
Ohio, ond being In Froctlon behind tho buHcling ot foot10; T-riahlp 2 Ron1J113 of boll gem• and other achool
tlje Ohio Compony Purchooo fu nc11ona. The boord o!Oo
end being o part of the 2.34 otipuloteo to tho buyer that

acre lot deacribed in Vol-.me
1 ~~~ · Page 379 of tho Deed

01'-h
wu

..

M.-ch 11, 1990

•
Our rapid growth as the area's newesi aod fi·
nest Skilled Long Term Care Facility has
generated opportunities for RN's, and LPN's,
. to become a part of a responsive, well ma~.
naged Health·Care.Delivery Team.
Come for a visit, talk 10 us about your experi. ence. and we will talk to you about Overbrook's competitive wages and benefiti offered on what is truly a "State of the An"
Nursing Facility.
Srop by for an interview, or phone Sally
Gloeckner, D.O.N., at (614) 992-6472, and let 111
show you that all nuning, homes are not ~-

AUTOIIOBIU!: BeouttiiJ garage kept 1984 Chevrolet
Celabrlly. 2 ct .. hotel lop; ;t.5 Fl. l.aocltKI. ~.293 oct.
mlleo. Automobla Wll Sel At 12:00 Noon
,

ADCIJ(JIIt'CGNDUCI&amp;D U

RICK P&amp;'RION
WNCH
'

'
;

'

•

MASON, WY 773-5715

OWNIRit
......,. aad ••~tt caldweU
18IMI: Clall or CltiGII IIIII LD.
Jlot llnpo•llll l'of ..111~11 11• LoMOI, Pnpu.., ·

' ·-····· 'rtf I ....

I

I

'

~t~

11nch hou!i! 1n M.C. school diSI:. All for $60,000. C.ll for rnot'e 1nto,
~10, IllS I"'CIOUS HOI£ hoi Y"le&lt;dlfi chO'm . H l l - floOI~ 3

Uol,.ldllln~ldJnOIIII,ICit IMDiiJ,IRIIWIItVIfllttll.lll

1

....

1!1111. T.U OF Mille .lltl ..... -llnl cloo&lt;rtut ond oHordo'*'
MB111n ICIPDilltmtnt to Sllth1Sl2J65nbde homet~y. SC111tledon 1.,-.,
lot d~ialliul ,• ., YIIW. l~O CONIIIICLDn~ 111.000.
14M. TillS !111111 ACII:S. IUdr tv buill on ulj!!fS mi ll~t. llllso hts •
lovely ,..., Bffle Hftine .. d ten thin lfttlft m.n. trom town C.l tor Cit·
toils. 122.000.
,
l!lt..IIIT-IIJTU TMM MIW. 2st"'Y "" lull drl bos.....,t.Comp~to~
luoniSIIed, s!uoted on l.lJOr,., dy sclloOs,OWN(!! Will HElP FINANCE.
SJ6.901l
~31 . II' GlAD YOU *'TID: We hove """" lorm ln dochterlu\ roomu

AUCftONCO.

333 Page Street, Midd~pon, Ohio 4'760 I
EOE') .

.....-

'

.OVERBROOK CENTER
·. •
\

I

cenclalabra, brau lighting _...,._ ooqtpOdl. _ , .
figurlnn. owlllgurlneo, Ho1110 lnlerior, kiii:Mn U1tnoll1, got·
pel1'800rdl, Hornelill •• ~. gu grll~ yWd - ·
ftower pota, pk:nic 1111111. llwn c:hlirs, untbrellll fallll outfit.
concreltl rwd piecaa, wilh'n well, fllw hind toofl, llhovolo,
16 It axt.llddtr,llllllltlblll, VIII, 111wn atuuper,trimmlt', 2 bntao and """""' bucQta, lnlt cUtltlr, Cll&lt;e
pllle, llllllideltMpot. ironpot t.na, boot ICIIfllf, 314 HP
pool pump, Ignition -lizer.Haneo. plua maN.

1t111 of Olrlo
Sprillc 111d Summ•

P?.tllllll M

I;

•

'
'

'•
•

•'
...,

'
bedrooms 1nd 11111 room,. k1cben. Un lo ~ as is or .restore to ts forar
;
beauty. S~uated onln ~$ 1nd has t~Jp outbultdrftlltlrltt on cnl*ty . ._. "'
Symmes Volley !Chool dot . On~ S2l000.
•
•
~22. '"" · · -•• k•hol ttle ............ ltllatlnlbltklllla
•
and 2llolhl, otbCited 2 •• IW'Il "'"'olomenlos.llor•on tho proPO&lt;Il.
•
3 .~ oa... o. ... 11 ..-Reduced to175.000.

•

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

"

�Times-Sentinel .

Ohio Point

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

32 llloblll Hornel
tor Sale

51

a:. of...,.._ Mldng

LlrliiiUM.
.,. . . .14 3 •••••

54 Mltcelllilloul

Goodl

' M.ch 11.1910

54 Mllceiiii!IC;IUI

llerchlncllll
eat.
tt.._.

I

1111 .

No .... ...,.., on ,..

--All,...""' ....

'

53

Col-1.... IIIIoU.
- your
10 tu
- ,.lund,
10
.t

23 lOCUST

IO .... lot. UIII1ID CFFifl 3 t I I oom, 1•110 horN:

........
cubu'*t

qui ..,

....
- ..... -..._L.......

........_

-

polnllngo, toyo, or antin Millo
oall OOIIId 304-621-3211, or

0

•

ST. ~

~ I ri~Rrl"r

.

I

'

......., 111. - · Clollrl'o

loloyelo, I1J..
Goad. 1M -

'

dnao. Baooolllul.

I I' I

f

nw

QO,

KOVNIE

\

-·-·--··1144G-7211.

31 lncn, $31.

I

ClooiJ -

· For ln-lcrro ... 114441220;

1'

I

I

-lorlala. tit 1tUI11 • .

I

Aeatetaud · Poled H•lfoN
lulo,-AII_._

......
T•fiOIIIIIWs*•---a.
--·~~~
. ••f.·ttla14.'

S1

uncia had.

I

a.IIMI ooudlllan, Moo. flmt
- . 1104-e71-3021,

~- l:t0-1:JO.
, _ ......... . . ,.._

thr~

luclwlde 1
....
. lftl-

s.le: Eurakl S or 4br
- . 1 112 bollia, P151mo.
dop•..-c!'ol. 114 441 1m

. :rwo ·

b1drpom1,

2

.,I--.ilt;:
_
l.E_.,..:.F-r,O:....:;L,...:L:.,II'
;.
I'j..-lli 'G Compl.~te
_
by
In the missing words

··-·

SS3NISn8 NMO
M0113:1
"SS3NISne NMO 1noA snSI:I31\
~!W pue ree}; e BO!MIIS!IUBP 941 ees
lHl&gt;t18
"!89W lo.Jeh9 19118 48018 :lll991 poo6
3&gt;101\NI
!lu!dea~ Mil se1n1 991111 PBil epun Ar4
snOI:IOd

'

'

BROKER' ~ 446~0008

RENTTOOWN .
Top Ouiolhr l n n d U.lng room 8\lh• 11 0/Wtc.,
awlvOI oockw P.IOIWII, dlnnot·
ta/1 ohaln $7.110.'!':k-,' bunk

Hloo 1 br. trallor, $175/mo.
a.-lei In,_,_. , _ , _

Jurn-

bedl:, compllle I1VIWIL, Low

211&lt;,
tnllor, L,
Yonl. cor- Rand &amp; Pori&gt;h 81.
K - , OH 111-411-7171

collcuh- avalto~. YI'Ra
Fumhwo. 111. 11_1, 10111M. Open

7 clop a - . Mon. tloru SOt. I
a.m... I p,m., Sun. 12 Noon .. I

Apartment .

Y

·54 MIICII18iwoul

P·"!-11io111-3158.

PRICE REDUCED! - It you have been looking
for a home that will give yoo room to stretch
out, this is it Features in this home are
equipp'ed kitchen, formal dinin&amp; de'n, lovely
l1v1ng room w1th fireplace, dinette, bath, 3
BRs. The full basement is finished and offers
bath, laundry, roomy, attractive family room.

'

Colll11 ... -1001.

Wlntar· Uvtiatoo~
Tral'l i f t - , WV. 31)4-273-3117.'

hay lor -

11WJt.llle2.

: $1 pw btlo.

"R-ound"'"
· -:-::l:..oiM...;...ot..,.,..Joay-:-lor-aa- 11-:-110

lteo 'luloll c;,ontuoy, PS, PI air
oonol, ndlo, E... cOnd, 11 ot-1!151212.

par btlo. IIWI7·1158.

Judy COewiH - CB~oben

446-6624
.

.

738 2nd AVE. GALLIPOLIS

Pltl.for Slle

MERRilL CARTER
CATHY WRAY
SAM HOFFMAN
~~·:;:.4_ _ _. .;4;::;:4:,::.6·;;;:4:.:2:.:..,._ _ _3:.:..:79-2449

dNia. Sovo hundreola,

' oven lhouunda of

'

'

dCIII•o.

Local Sal• ... _ •.,;.. ·.

OONNA CRISENIERY
· E.S .R.. lox 116

REF N..E T

Gdlpollo, Ohlo 411131

$1751101.
:15 w. .,.,. 2 br., 1 boih, ........
encland pitlo. CioN to
dopaaft. 11

PH. 614-256-6511

Thenationl&amp;largoet
refa&lt;rll-int oyolom

'

. -f•,
· - ' ....,
lillopplng
.....
tnt.,,
. trHh
proddad. ..,.... C.n e1c.
441-G213.

MA' BE IN 'OUR PRICE RANGE- Very nice
home offers 2BRs, LR, k~chen, bath, attached
garage, small hot house, concrete block shop.
Corner lot.

4.9 ACRES, 1/L, JUST AT
TOWN. BEAUTIFUL VIEW 5(1 . .
home offers Uchen, living room, 3 BRs, FR, 2
fireplace, attached garage, workshop and a
12x60 mobile .home that woold b.e ideal for
tnom or r\!"tal. Call for more details.

'

•

MAKE THIS YOUR CHANGE OF ADDRESSf- .
Attractive home just minutes ftom town offers
1368 sq. h., 3 BRs, 2 baths, e.at-in krtchen, di·
nette, family room, . living room, laundry,
cathedral ceJinll$, fenced yard.

.,

-··-·

t.

~.150 PI,US- Not restricted. Hannan Trace School Dis·
trict. ..
·

........

- nCorhoot
t on
....

-laL Ef!!
"'· Hoon-7:111 Pll,
Fri.
......
lalialod

HOlE FOR_RENT with option to buy. City property.3bed·
rooms, II! baths, lll. nice backyard. 2 car garage. Deck
area. Call' tor more details.

.........

SPRING IS JUST AROUNO THE CORNER- Now is the
time to take a look at this well kept home. 3 bedrooms 2
baths, living room, family room, complete kitchen with
appliances, 2 car garage. Nice flat yard, easy to mow.
Also top of ground swimming pool. City schools. Priced
60's.

E-,. Apl., -lira, qulot,

' clo1hlna. . _......
Juncl. lndl~•nce Rd, Rt. 21.

"""· A,it. All utiiMIM paid.

- · potRiool odv.t~ng
oppotntmonta
•
'
'
'!Wol- WI-n~ _ .....

-.
....... .-r-.-c::.rr-.......
,.,....•,..

u....,

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

....... ~144412!?!.
l'lllnilltlcl . Apt. 241

.PRif(REDUCED TO $65,000!- Beautiful L·
shaped brick. All rooms large. Eat-in krtchen.
formal dinin&amp; LR w/ FP, 3 BRs, 1Y, baths, at·
tached garage.

.

Ja-

- . Oollpotlo, 111&lt;

$250.
UINIIIM poi.I111111C11 alllr
7p.m.

==-·
.
............, - .....

I

VILlAGE OF RIO GRANDE ~ .6 room home
and .7666 acre, m/1. Features in dude lR
FR. k~chen. laundry nn., gas heat, vinyl sid:

eeci. 114 ta ••·•· W, 11oft.

Willi SIIITAL OElECTORS
11oft A1111!...1210 I u ancl Ave,
Oolllpotlo, .... l11 ... 1331.

· 55

THIRO AVE . - Nice 3 bedroom home. Ideal to raise a
family. living room, lamily room, new kitchen. Priced In
$40s.

· Building

•Rio Grande area, 36 acres more or less. Some tim·
ber-and woodland with 14x65 mobile home. Call for
more details. ·
•2'A Acres with very nice home, over 3,000 sq. ft .
Located at Rt 35 area . Call for more details. .

:'"... brlall, -

.. _
wlnCloudo WinOnndo, OH Call 111-

r..!'n'*&gt; ....

.... -

A...,_

IJIO- II ~logo
llo,and
Aplrt....,.llrt UldC part.,,...
1111. lhnouah April 30.

~121.

---hatot-

. UTIUTY

:DO

LOVE
HOM EST DO YOU WANT
SOME LAND TO GROWN ONT Thts may ilisl
be the ticket. 27'.6 A., .Green Township, close
to town. Very nice log home offer ~ 3 BRs, ·
bath. LR, krtchen, fireplac~ carpet. Also off·
ers a 25&gt;30 detached garage and a 20x30

' who quoiiiJ. Coli 111-112-7717.
EOH.
.
Large 1 1 2 bad oom tumlehed

~~1142:15. par.:::""'~

~='A..lt,.
:IOW75or,,....,,

4100 dopl754111
nlgloto,

,,_.~-;)

' ,.,;,••·,..

ILDG.

IPECIAI.:

:IO!It0to10' ..... 1h10' -ng

-·«.·':t:.:~~
v .· '"·" ..

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

DKt~ot~. t 2.15 ACRES+ SMALL POND
and
minutes to downtown _. ~ovely
home at edge oftown offers LR w~h wood·
burning fireplace, very nice krtchen, dinette,
bath, carport, gas heat, cent. air, basement,
many more fellures al$o. Call for an appoint·
ment and
, .

[g .
..,

k

h'?tllill

n

MDV£ IN
Attractive home "
locajed 'on Debltv Drive. This one has abeau·
tiful kitchen, family room w~h corner heartll
tor woodburner, LR, 3 BRs, 1Y, baths. dining
room, carpet: "1rh lois..

'ff:IMflta.

All BRICit- JUST OFF RT. 35- CLOSE TO

.. -. ll~-7110.

-

IIW IISTIIII
HEilOCIGIM

. .........

......... lout anti
............ All ...- . 1271.
........ . ,. - 1111.

FumiiMd

.
-------·
.,Col..........- ..........
Roomt

•lor _ , Cln:lo llolal.
....... , . 2 _ . . . $17.10 ......

.... _.,...,.,. .,.
c.MIT.Y.IIt 111-1.

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Giallo

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.. , _ ....
r r, •••
Alllaall upe.

-~

.. ..,..... tor Rent

Grell moclul• home. ful~ tllpele~

3 bt&lt;lrooms. 2 Dlllw, d:ninl room. .
lrwNIJ room, frorf pctt h
biCk
JNIIC~. T.P. orrter. I ocr&lt; l50 11.
101d lrontlat, Oftt year warranty on
ttt1s Une homeeml on~W 1n !he IOI!W.
low 40's. l:et me silO• thi! to you.
Need liuncin&amp;1 We t in hetp
·'

IIW Um141-IEIOSVIllE

Qoeo1 F..., Gnrrt LoclliNt

-till -

2-~"Y

'*"' ""'""" -&amp; CIIPII!d,4

..m
liN'- 111111 W.O.

Plin&gt; -

-

Will, TuliP"

~.... dislrroJSh«,

.. r:oidlio"" included 122 .,..
wilh II&gt;P''* · 50" petur~ b•• 2&lt;•

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., _eou~..
... ...aAi.t-• strA.~utn ...
.....
" lloemils
... ~
Md cbe to IMJfllltJ cbfl
bl:
onol
io ... !IO'l
my potclt.ll "" -

Uo-111·--

Vou·ve &amp;OliO see rt to appreciale it!
Modollr ltome, 2 bedfooms LR·DR
k~chen. Excellent con~ bcel:
lent lotttion. Also new Jialrtmenl
build1na on same oroperty in rell
aood condition. Alll!xated on 1·115

HMC AND SHOPPING- Aftractive home in i
nice neighborhood, offers 3 BRs, bath.
equipped krtchen, LR, dinste, fireplacil, new
carpet, 2 car attached garag~ gas heat and
central air.
·

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Lit

Lt&gt; odln~

'laoml". 3
kitt hen,

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1n.lf~t Wd~.. ,oothW.e
,_~•

buy i11 thl!' low 2t'L

R•N CH 1'YP/i: HOME:.
MIDDLEPORT, PARK ST.
Corner lot, 4 bffflrOCJmJ, lc41·
C"hf'n, diri in- room .
jtJIIy
.:orpf'ffl'd.. ,_ hl'flt, t'l!'llt W ,
alum. 11d'ln~ utUhy btUidht~
Cnm}ort•Nr. rDOfny, fau'wo
'"' to •• th i• onf'. You won't
Wi.-. U. only ria. ,..., JQ',

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.

Main Office-388-1826
Branch Office-446-6806
'

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...........
,
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'

446-6806

LOT

LOT

#2
5~000

#3
7.264

ACRES

·ACRES

LOT
#4
5.000
ACRES

ATTRACT IV£ HOME AIID TWO LOTS- 3BRs,
bath, k~chen w/range and DW, LR, c•Ptt.
alee. heal, I car detached ..aae. S~uated on
two lois. Very nice.
NEAR TYCOON lAKE- 44 ACRES. Home on
property offers 2 BRs, blllh, LR, !lichen'. Land
is fenced, has apond andsprinadevelopment.
SMALL HOME dh' extra lol~
. $21,000.

3 BRs. bath.

lOCATED ON RT. 689 in Meill$ County tllis
property contains 21.04 acres, m/1, and a
small home. Owner anxious to sell.

THIS COULD THE ONE FOR YOUI- Very
attractiVe home s~uated on u ·acres. Fe•
lures include 3 BRs, L~. kHchan, 2 baths, full
bas,emenl. gas heat, clll'pet and hardwood,
uti~y bldg.
2,4 ACRE TRACT - COMMERCIAL SITE Located on Upper Rt. 7 across f(om the new
shopping center\
·• ,

.

$15,000-:- 19.143 acres mf.l. Approx. I! mile
from city 11111~.~ All ut~~ies avaiable.
141 ACR£5 1/L; HUNTINGJON TWP. - Ap.
prox. I mHe of frontage on Raccoon Creek.
:
.Some bottlim lan.d. black walnul

LOT

LOOK AT THIS! JUST $34,9001 - Very nice
home ntlll' Green Elementary School. Attrac·
tive felltures include LR, krtchen w/atove and
refrigtllalor, 2 BRs, bath12 car attached gar·
age. C21119'11Y·
•

36.5 ACRES Ill, CLAY TWP. - Frontace. on
Friendly Ridge Rd. Old hone on lind.
$1B.OQO.

ACIES

•

·LOTS OF POTENTIAL - 67.496 acres m/1 on
Crouse-Beck Rd. Nice wooded building siies
rural wall!r available.
'

-4 SALE- Lot 'on Rodney-Cora,Rd. Very cluse
to St. Rt. 35.
''
.

#5
5.310

•

w

-

NOT TO $CALE
•

011 CHMOIAIS LAIE ID.
· U!l 411. J.GO ICJII • $27 !100.00
Lt1 15, UlO • $27,.0.00 .
Ltllf2. 5.000 • Slt.IIIO.OO
~- 6, 5.010 • SZZ.OII.OO
..
'

.'

'.

LOT

LOT

#7
5.000

&gt; - #6
a: 5.000
Q

'

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't

.ACRES

ACRES

ON 0. J. WHITE ID.
·
tot 114, 5.000.80 •111.100.GO
·
LuU7•.UOO.OO • d,IIIO.OO .........
AH loti IR=W Hill Ja1 -·ilion
lectiolll,
lid TQ., 111111 Co., Ohio

Slllllllt I

•• nltllctiN C0....-11 .

wltiC!I•IIIIIIII\ wl!h tllll.d...tlllt l tll'oIUP 14.
.
. '
. '
l,

·WHAT ABUYI- 112.2acres wrth one story Ira me
home. j beqrooms. bath, eat·in kitchen, living
room, ut~~y. Home needs repair. Land has been
recliimed. .Only · $39,000.00. , Kyger Creek
Scho~s.
•2809
NATURE'S COLORS SURROUND THIS STONE
TRillED CHALET - CHAROLAIS lAKE - l?ft
w~h patio·doors leading to ·alarge deck overlook·
ing Charolais Hills Lake. Gracious great room·fe•·
turing cathedral ceilmg, lloor-to-ceiling stone fireplace, master bedroom wrth connecting bath,effi·
ciently designed kitchen. recreation room, walnut
!rim throughout central vacuum, attached gar·
age, plus 2 car unattached garage. All this
s~uated on approXImately 2.44 acres, professional landscaped, Don't miss seeing it Tnday!

NOT TO SCALE

~CRES

30376 MURRAY HIH RD ..·
MIDDLePORT

bedroom•. bat II,

~ LOT

·5.000

NEW LISTING ,

THINKING OF BUILDING?,;_ Get a jump start .ott
building yoor new h01tte by finishing this recently
constructed 28'x70' frame home shell - 40
acres partially wooded, tillable acreage. Several
leet of road trontage. Call today for location and
more details. .
·
412110

,,

40 ACRE FAIIII!- All in grass and fenced. ~ nice
PHONE

23 LOCUST ST.

: #1

acre. Well 1nsulaled. plenty of PI'•
ing. Priced to sell quic~ in only lie
m~ 30's.

Real nice vnf'

'(.)/'
; ,{' '
:%_ . y/1;,11· .

' . .ffrtTI

'

'

TMI ToaihoUM
·~ 211&lt;, 2 - . 158 .... ft.
1 1i'l ..... CNCH. ....... .
.1'&amp; I 0', (llllenrouna. 2 DOOia.
wol..!!!.,&amp; giriiOio lnoiidad". ....

A MONEY lAKING FAIIM!83 acre5 approx. Twenty acres approx. level tilla·
bl eland in production level offertilrty. 53 approx.
acres pasture, most of~ improved and will appeal
to your eye. 10 acres tillable and pasture acres50 fenced. Large tobacco base and ~o!xl land to
raise it on. Large pond wrth two (2) round cement
watering trouglls. Average barn and country
home. 6 rooms and bath. Owner needs quick sale.
Our staff is farm oriented. We areabletohelp yoo.
Please call.
·
. 112805

Rea Estate Ganaral

.

Rofo1g. pr
. -·
aarJoogo paid.
o.aoa .-q'andd. 11l11H311

car garage, 2 fireplaces,
large
to above-ground pool area, sur·
rounded by a
link fence. Start fhe year out
right wrth an appointment today!
412806

&gt;

REALTOll•

&amp;
-

We con aoll ~our pr•ont homo
ond we con put you in 1ouch with
one of •pproKimlltely 11,000 rNI
nt1te office loc.dont
throughou1 tho United Stotao,
quollflad to help yoo flnd 1ho
right home.

tad. IRON HORSE ILDOS. 114o
3ZI.. 711.

... ~r--:~:W'

on. llr, unlum~Jc»1.'· Jlantla

'

TWENTY-TWO THOUSAND DOLLARS is all "takes
to purchase this premanufactured home. approx.
24'x6Q' which includes 3.bedrooms, 2 bath s, for·
m~ dining area, family room, living room, kitchen
withbuilt-in range and double ovens. Utility room.
Situated on easy to maintain lawn. Rural water,
gain equ~y by doing some repair. Call today.
#2814
.

Suppllea
Qncloualv. . . 1 .... 2llool-

:.

RENlAL..:. 3 bedroom mobile home: Country setti n~ Se·
currty deposrt and reference. $225.00 per month.

•

....,..
clothing.
... '-Y'"'
......

r

JAY DRIVE- Far more than just a house, this 3
, b~droom ranch is a true home. Spacious eat-in
krtchan, famtly room, -1 ~ baths,. living room, at·
!ached garage, decking. ln·grtoond pool. Storage
buildin~ .Nice llltdscaping. Czll today to make an
appointment to view tllis meptionally well main!·
amed home. ·
Jl2808

· 1.240 ACRES More or Less · Some woodland. Not res·
tricted. Excetlen,t building site. Only $4,000. · . .

•

- . . . at

Two ,_ Jolon Dooon P-o
Plantor. ltv- Air llaalllpnoyol. -

rn·

n . . .. Anyaize.

·-to ,. .

45

Loop ....,_ loiN ol Hoy, $10
bell. will toed,l14 411 • • . '

CHOICE OF 10COLORS
.FREE ESTIMATE on
polt,blolge_ ond package

2~ohonlumlollod,

jt .

lot. Ull Noon.

:T: -

,11 .~.

.

luldlnJII.
DMigned t~ mHt yOUr

I

r:ioa~':~..::.·8t..

' I

aotl, tndo. I:ON:oo·-.ya,

Coinnolburg. Inc, 47519
Spociolizing in Polo ·

..·'
.'•.

3711 EOH.

-

-Jon-. . . . . . . . .

.D: C. Metal Sales, Inc.

YOU .
. WANTED A BEAUTIFJIL
HOlE ON FIRST AVENUE?- Make plans to
view th1s home which offers 2 baths, .large LR
w"h fireplace and view ot river, L-shaped
Kffcnen,, formal _ent(y, FR, summer porch,

2 bedroom apb. lor ..... Car·

Upotaln,

Statton
W,p~.:"·• • - l o , nona
........
. 11W71.2101.

Jlm'o Farm Equlpmo:'l :R. 35, · Hay lor - .· . ........ llaloa. 114OoiRDOIIo, . ~1 1 -tm; .-orll-·771:1.
Wlda
nd h' ·~
,_oni • lmplonoanla. Bur, ltofil. lo·
~-r

-

REALTOR'

for Rant

-

1m """' ~ SJOO. J04.
.,._,,

.

Alao 1171 Fonl 314 1on plckoUp.
111-lp-7171.

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· Con
, - · 114-

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MercNindiM

--lor-ornm.

lolf. 11100. •aa.
llay lor -

and -

'

·RANNY BLACKBURN

ltCWY.

Refotgorotor and al..... IIOO&gt;koy
Run - · Ooool-.dftldn. John
Hunoooll, 11 WIU027.

.

..........................nka
pi
II I ll'tUeh oh r thlin
- · J&amp;ll .....
l'tono 301
-.
,
30;(.a7WISI
....
2321, 1111 w.nl: ·~~ 411 1111
F1Jih loobi 111111 IM7, Mil

~-11 ·

.Rent •

openiflll,

PIANO CARl

f1lhng
L....L.,;;..L......L......JL-....1...-l you d&lt;rvolop from stop No. 3 below.

.

...........
lnllllllllor, 114o

.......Th....,laL

•

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BLACKBURN
REALTY

-

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Joft -1ft
'1"'ti'-'I"'D'"17. 1 . . _

tho chuckle quoted .

,.

2

.,---·-with.....,....,.-.
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rul._ for

I;:=::===:~
1

DBI Feed .CuuaplMr Fulltrt,
Fuii 'IIM, - · filii ,,..., 84
Y ...
Grain
-lmo orjool _ , llaor ::--~·......:-';_~~~~
....,., 111 111 am
11ay ..., nio ... 1:111 PM

a

liNd K-1 Splnll olono. Eo·

keeping good teeth: Brush •
ER
after eveJY meal, see the
1--,.:.1...:;..I=-nl,~::..:..,,.....l. =~~-~~~-~- year and mind

y u s s.

...-.Colllt--

Mullcal
lnlltrumenta

,-1, My

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lor - · .....

and up. 114o7Q.

AaiHACim•laJL 11w.p t= "

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lr,-r-IT,....:Iy.l7 L:...;:..t-=j;....:H:.:......

.

loCIIId fro11 Rt. 7 10 to Rt. U8 approx. 8 111111 out to
llrumfllld Rd., to ri&amp;ht 10 2 111., homt on rlpt.
'
'
. Enchlnling·log home sets on 11 ac., includes living roqm
· w~h cathedral cei~n&amp; ~tone hearth aild hardwood floor,
cozy kitchen, 3 bdr., I y, bllths. New wood barn,.properly
fenced..
your hostess Is Di111 Catlahllt

Rentals

SOORUP

71 AUIOI fOr Bile
, ......... IIX1. .... 11. . . .
1111.

·
-· au....
Jonuory '!!!"!'!...!!OM
,.,. ...
Aoa'ad
li

.........,1:.._;;..1.::;.. . I.;.:. ..;....:;.I~1. ,

- . . . . . 1110: ,...,
Coooi1WJ; $1100. Nloa. ....

Tr dli'&gt;pur!,,ltOII

io~~~~=

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•'

OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, MARCH 10, 2:00 TO 5:00

-oaii:O
.E .-·-·

Top Coal! paid. Old ....,.._

0

- · .... , . _ 110
·.,
oll141.10
IUS.
Clll.,·
..
. 1041 APR
l.

anti 21:111.

446-6106

Ci'4.4a.&amp;u;:l:' :00 IO 1:00 p.OI.

-

All ...........
a.

,6:1
La
_ _ , AEAlTOR'

./' ' ((
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Antiques

'"''*""·

P ECIAL PUIICHAIE. Ftlctooy

Llvlltock

llSIIitWliM · IIIYtSIIEIIS · 'COIIIfKIM · FAlliS

IUJ '"' .... Rhwlno Ani...... .
1124
Main. 10:00
•IMI.0.111. ICII:GO
Houn:E.II.T.W

c:.nlw.

}?

m.

(,f. Q/,,1.1· ~

1'/i'to•i 'l l,.,.

• Mlrchlncllll

Zonfth
' T.V.
Recllnw ......,, 1121.

Cor!lol.

, ... llolddr 14111 -

HoUMIIokl .

Pfee1~ W.Va.

SPRt'NG VALLEY AREAt' RT. 35 WEST. Prime de
velopment land waiting for tllat right developer.
Two tracts consisting of approx. 124 aaes, access
to public water, and sewer. Gently r~lin!l- good
dramaae. For more information and locatton call
today.
*2811, 112112
NEW LISTING! W~NT TO BUILD A HOUSE? Then
why not consider this perfect building spot! All·
prox. 2.94 aaes, several feet of road frontage,
land has already been surveyed. Asllinl
$9,500.00. Czll tod.Y!
11211

$22.908.00 - OWitER JUST REDUCED THt

PRICEol !his remodeled 1y, story home srtlllled
II the edp ol IO,.n. 3 bedrooms, bath, living
room, k~chen, natural &amp;as heat. Carport 2\1
•aes.. CIII today.
412101

$6,000.00 1£DUCTION...YACANT ACI£AGE, approx. 8.12 wooded acres. Srte cleared for mobile
home or house. Loclled at SR ·7, view of Ohio
River.
,
412120

•

NEW LISTINat APPROX. :10 ACRE FARM border·
in gRaccoon Creek. 11! story Ira me 3 bedroom re·
mlll!eled home. Large barn. Pond, fenced .
$44,900. Call today for a showing!
112818
.
LOOKING 1 for aplaetto live a~d hweyourown
business? This is a small farm wrt~ an attractive,
modern one story home ~~h fuR basement (lifers
high exposure tor bus10ess. A. spaCIOUS block
building lor car repairs or olher ~nes olwork. Th_1s
is a modern home, forced air heatin&amp; cenl!al a1r,
rural water. Block bu~ding in good cond1t1on 32
by 48 11. The center is divided, also extra room'."
back for parts or storage. ·2overhead doors, one IS
12 ft. hiRh to clear supply trucks. IMMEDIATE ·
. POSSESSlON. With transler o,f deed. MUST BE
SEEN!
·
Jt2791
VACANT lAND- 18.80 acres by survey. Lots of
road frontue. Manv lots could be developed.
Much ot the land is treed, a small pond is used
much by wild life. A small stream runs through
land. Rural wat11 and electric lines run close by
land. It is close to Raccoon Creek Park, Green
Township. $12.000 buys rt all!
412790 ·
. . VACAIIT LAND LIQUIDATION
Huntintllon Township .............. ,................ 12 Acres
Huntlntllon Townshrp ............................... 80 Acres
Huntinl!lon Township ...............................50 Acres
Ohio Township ......................................... l33 Acres
Harrison &amp;Walnut township...................81 Acres
CALL TODAY FOI PRICE AIID
MORE· lltFOIIATION
.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT - Discover the love and
beauty in this home. Treed lot, 1\I story construe·
tion, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1y, story construction,
5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 11'1 bllths, drH!ed well, sub·
mergibte pump and a circle driveWty. ONLY
$22,000.110. '
12783
t

farm pond for fivestock water and recreation. The
barn is in good condition, has stables for horses or
room tor cattle, tobacco base. This house is not to
be overlooked. Dutch Victorian style, 2story w~h
all the beautiful. varnished original woodwork, not
painted. Well landscaped lawn and above ground
s_wimming pool. Please call us for a showing anylime. ·
•2104
NEW LISTING! - .18,000.001 - Approx. :10
acres, frontage along SR 160, partially .,ooded
mineral rights included. Call today!·
112823
ALIIOST NEW!!!- Very nice 1988 mobile home
(14'x70'). Living room, 2blllhs (illl'den tub[ bui~­
ln _stereo system, cathedral ceiling in dinine ~nd
llv1ng rooms, underpmned, plus 2 porches (approx. 22'x8' ~nd 8'x12'). Nice flat lot. lmmedtate
possesston. Ctty school S!slem. ldeaiiOCIIion. Call
today for appOintment. Priced in t~e upper $20's.

..

U794
WAITING FOR THE NEW OWNER to hwe the en·
joymant of owning this vinyl sided fr~me and
brick ranc_
h. 3 bedrooms, family room w~h file·
place, kitchen w~h dishwasher, blllh, 2 c• 1•·
age, only 3 years ~d: Approx. 21/3aae lawn. S.
parale mobil~ home space. Kyger Creek schools.

.·

12791
SOPHISTICATED LUXUIY IN NATURAL SURROUitDINGSI - Almost brand new sp~cious bi·
level. 4 bedieoms, 3 batl•s. family room, 2cir ...
age, approK. 2 acres and more. Belin aleisullly
room-by·rooiJI tour ot this remarkable home today!
~tnt
POSSitLE LOAM ASSUMPTION! 2 story homt in
nice neighborhood. Mom w"l save countless steps
w~h this COlY b1eakfast nook. 3 bedr-.lonlill
dinint Must see to apprecille.
llfJit

..

�'
Ohio-Point

M.ch 11, 1990

W.Va.

Ohb-Point
71 AuiCIII lor 8aJe

71 . AIIIOI lor Sale

lnl-... . v.... . .crt.......,
. ._.. .,

112

·--=2A, _.._

•rn
=-~~"-=-'=

71

c ,..,.,

1111101' 11om II

Plumbing &amp;
HMtlng

- ---...-

......
cen-..........
.,.__

~ . -~

.

,..,

1144-'11.1 or .....

ILEW LISTII!G- RACINE - Vine Street- 1 floor frame
house, needs some work but has a nice 50xl90' lot w~h all
· ut~~ies on srte. MAKE OFFER $12,500.00.

SYRACUSE - Nice modular on corner lot. 3 bedrooms, I
bath, .laundry room, and carpet. Patio and close to schoOl.
. $21,900.00.
.

NEW LISTING - POMEROY - 1\7 story frame home wrth
vinyl sidin&amp; 3 bedrooms, some carpeting and patio. Nice
front porch. $20,000.00.

POMEROY - 2 story frame house w~h 2 bedrooms -and ,
bath, with wood ffoors and some vinyl covering,· ASKING
$4,800.00. REDUCED.

MIDDLEPORT- GOOD STREET - OWNER WANTS AUFFER, NEEDS TO SEll: This nice 1\7 story home features 3-4
bedrooms, modern kitchen wrth dining -bar, all storms &amp;
many other features. Includes trailer lot. Call for an appointment. REDUCED $24.700 00.
:

MIDDLEPORT - 6.09 Beaut~uiCountry Acres close to town.
3 bedroom mobile home, small barn and a 12x~5. 2 bedroom
mobile home w~h all hookups. Live in one, rent the other.
$21,900.00.
'
. .
.
REEDSVILLE- 2 bedroom, I bath ranch home sitting on \7
acre, carpet and screened in-rear porch. 1 car garage and a
. building for produce. $19,000.00. ·

LETART - OWNER WILL TAKE PAYOFF - Nice 2 story
home featur~s large kitchen, TV room, large living room, dining room, 3 bedr ooms, 1 bath, patio and 2 car garage.
Carpeted ·thr oug hout. Gas heat and hot water heat.
$29,9DO.OO.
.

....
..1 !'*'lor ............
1111 - ...
~.1 -

_._lV . . uloo, 1 l"fna

In -~~~~ mail
-lnndo.HooioOaolll,
IOW'IWHI Ohio 11.._

_. .....,.,....._wv

place, living room w~h tireplac~ large laundry room, patio,
gas_heat, c~y water. All this and more in nice neighborhood
close to hospital. Only $59,900.
.11200
- NICE....20.5 ACRES OF VACANT LAND - Lays real nice. •
Great for 'pasture land or better:yet put your country home in ·
the middle of it. Greenfield Township. Priced to sell at
$8,900. Don't mrss out on this one.
8199

MIDDLEPORT- 1\7 story frame home wrth 4 bedrooms, separate 2 car garage w~h rdom above, and extra lot. Satellite
dish. and more. $37.000.00.

RUTLAND :... Beech Grove Rd. - Appx 107 acres of l~nd
with 4 room hou se. Appx_30 acr es tillabl~ bal ance wooded.
Good huntin ~ $31,000.00.

REEDSVILLE- Would make' a gooo hunting lodge for hunters. 23 acres, wrth 2 mobila.~omes, 3 to4 bedrooms, ! bath,
carpetin&amp; woodburner &amp; F~. B .G . heat. With extra hookup
lor camper. $18,900.00.

RUTLAND- 3 trailers in the country on 7 acres of ground.
EKcellent rental potential. CALL FOR APPOI~TMENT!!
$26.500.00.

NEW LIMA ROAD - · Vacant acre lot in Harrisonville.
$3,500.00.
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FLATWOODS ROAD - Nrce 3 be~room, 1 bath mOdular
home sitting on 1.)1 acre. Carpet and vinyl flooring wrth heat
pump and central air. $39,900.00.

ST. AT. 33 .- Right on Kingsbury Road, 2acre buildingsites.
Water and electric available. MAKE OFFER, TERMS AVAl LA·
BlE" $6,5DO.OO.
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HENRY E. CLELAND.'..... .. ........... ;................... 992-6191
JEAN TRUSSELL.. ... ....................................... 949-2660
JO HILL ........................ ............................. ,.. 985-4466
MAE HUPP .................................................... 949-2257
OFFICE ........................ .'.... :........................... 992·2259

POMEROY- Older home with 2 bedrQoms,-1bath,front and
rear porches screene(in, Has N.G.f.A. on appx. 1 acre.
$10,900:90•
MIDDLEPORT- 2 Vacant Lot s, all utilities available. Ready
togo for amobile home or build anew home. Just $7,500.00.

THIS SPRING LIKE WEATHER HAS PROMPTED BUYERS TO
PURCHASE WHILE THE SUN SHINES. WE NEED lOR~
LISTINGS TO BRIGHTEN OUR DAY AND YOURSi! LIST WITH
CLELAND REALTY F9R BEST R_ESULTS!!

FIVE POINTS AREA- Three-one acre bui)ding s ~e5. Elec.
&amp; water available. Good _location lo~ your new home.
$5,900.00.
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LANGSVILLE - 6.35 acre Country Estate - Barn, sheds,
two pond~ and a nice I \7 story home in good repair. Electric
heat plu s a . woodburner for cheap heat. $43,900.00.

WE NEED LISTINGS
..
Real Estate General

GO_RGEOUS 2 STORY Mll.GOKIIIG THE IIV£R
lnterestin1 stylin1and decor,hlgi11ight this turn of
the century home. Remodeled throughout ~ includes 2 bedrooms; each w~h own bathroom
suite,.formal dining, large formallivjng room eat- .
in kitchen and more. 4 workinggas fireplaceS, upstairs balcony overlooks river. Guest house bonus:
small 3 room house would make nice office, workshop, etc. PLUS 30 xlOO shop building with large
overhead doors and several other smaller outbuildings. Cln all be bought for unbelievably low
_price of $81 ,000 or purchased separately. Call for
more details.
#104

,.,ontlf• remodeled. S~uated on a
and fiice screened-in porch. Nice
#156 '
ATTRACTIVE BI-LEVEL HOME in A-I Condition. Located on •
approx. 1 acre rn Baum Addition. Has 4 bedrooms. 2 baths,
central air and gataJlj!. $62,500.
.
#134

MIDDLEPORT - 2Unit Apartment building in Middleport.
Good rental income. Good neighborhood OWNER WANTS TO
SELL NOW. $24,900.00.

POMEROY - Split entry home sitting on 1.26 acres. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, c arP,~! . electric BB. heat, .Built-in oven in
kitchen. $45,000.00.
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NEW liSTING I~: S,RING VALLEY
i
home w~h 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 24x22 family roonl w~l

RUTLAND- 1acre shady lot to build your dream home on.
Electric avail able. REDUCED $2,000.00 WILL TAKE LAND
CONTRACT.

POMEROY PIKE - Forty-one acres plus a 1980 liberty mobile home. Beautiful view. 2 car garage, porch on 3 sides, 3
• storage buildings. and barn. 2 good s~ed bedrooms, bay
window, equipped kitchen. Real privacy. OWNER WILL TAKE
OFFER REDUCED $32,000.00.

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BEAUTIFUL liVER FRONT- You can't beat the view from
this 1800 sq. tt. 3 bedroom home. 2 acres m/1 with a lantas- ;'
be view ·of the river.large highway and river frontage. The
home has family room. formal din in&amp; 2 baths, fireplace, central air and 2 car garage. Lots ot extras tor only $59,500.
814B
LOCATION- 2 acres m/lln quiet subdivision, superb location. Just 10 minutes from Holzer. Call lor appointment.

,../ '

1"' Rod llllllp 1Mir. 414,

-.. ,....

ITlL - . , - · will
=::-'~'
1n. -11•
112? OIIC Trt-ulell4 baac.,_

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#159

1!01t. 11 IL --

REDUCED- REDUCED- The owners have lowered the
price to $30,000. 837 3rd Ave. The home offers 3 bedrooms,
1 bath, large utility room, nrce backyard. lncludingoutbuild·
ing has good potent ial for rental property or starter home.
• 8143
.
LOOK!IIG FDA SOMETHING CLOSE TO TOWN AND AFFORD·
. ABLE? Ma~e an appointment to see this 3 bedroom home
located on approx. 4 acres JUSt 1',\ miles west of Gallipolis on
Rt. 588. Hass maintenance free siding, nice s~ed rooms and
· carport, Green schools, priced at $~1, 000.
. #181
.PRIME BUILDING LOTS- Three 5 acres m/ 1tracts. Rural
water available. Froni~ge pn hardtop road. Green·schpol dis:
trict. Call for. details.
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8168' .

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NEW

ASH STREET, MIDDLEPORT- Thrs homers s~uated on 2 :
level corner lots Close to General Hartrnger Park Abrrck ' •
home w,~h 3 bedrooms, lull basement, and large attic.
$21,500.
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Cleaq -3 bedroom ranch i
the perfect
starter or move-up home. Felll~res include large
living room, eat-in k~chen, handy utK~y room and
11h baths. 1 car attached 11111e. S~uated on aflat
lot, just right for kids. Nice neighborhood development that's not all "scrUnched" together.
$49,900. Call Chris for more information. #700

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APPROX. 30 ACRES of gently rollrng land wrth a barn strle ·'.
home. Home is only 12 yrs. old and has 3 bedrooms, 1?
baths and_full basement, pond, orch ard and bu ildrn gs. Coun _try settin&amp; As kipa_ $17,500,00. ,, , *157,
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5.06 ACR.ES 1/l VACANT LAND in Greenfield Township.
Rural water available. Wildlife abounds. $4,500.
#180'
I

LOOK AT THIS- 11 YR. OLD ZBEDROOM, I BATH RANCH
SJl'LE HOME- 8xl6 building, 1.52 acres m/ 1. Country set,
ling. $17,000. Call for more info. #155

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NEW LISTING .:... A l~tle over an acre wrth a 2 bedtoo~ • '
ho.me. Also a den wrth woodburner 16!32 ~ngroulid pool w~h- :
"
pnvacy fence and satellrte ~dis h, 2 car garage wrth overhead -.
storage, lo,cated on St. Rt. 124. Sells for $45,000 #193 • .
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NEW LISTING: APPROX. 3 ACAES'wrth t •• story home and
lnobile' home also. Excettent 1nvestment prOPerty. On C35.
Call today. Asking only $27,000.
#192
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7S:; Boata &amp; Motors

for Sale

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I'h bit hi, 2 car garage,
·
acres, lflprox. mHes, U5 min.l from downtown Gallipolis,
Gallipolis city school rlistrlr.t. Green Elem. R~rlu~~d lor quick
sale ..... $48.000 00.
··•···· ...... ~: :~·· ~~-~"'::~~":'·-:- ... , ... '::"":-:··--·-....

- 169.900
Owni!fs have cut the asking price on this turn-ofthe-century 2 sti)ry home. Welt ·cared for over the
years - ready for anew family to enjoy. Features
indude large elll·i~ kitchen, formal dining, living
room, family room, den; 3 l11ge bedrooms 'and
workshop. All the originlf nwor and character has
been maintained. Extra big lot Would make anice
antique shop or other busines1lmmediate occupancy.
#221
BRAND NEW CONSTIUCTION
Located on Rt. 160, tllis home is !'ailing for rts first
owners. Large master bedroom with bath. large
great rOOII! in dudes family room, dining area and
eat-in krtchen with cherry cabinets. Home has 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car garage and heat pump.
100!300 lot. For $59,900, you can't afford not to
look.

mo

REDUCED ....SO
eludes large log
room.
&amp;3
bedrooms. 1'.; baths. I amity room. lower level has large recreation· room and laundry. Also rnclud ed are decks, solarium and 2_car garage. Over 17 acres of river bottom, ~nd 30
acres m/1of pasture. Only $95,800. Need to see th1s one!
~147

BUILDING LOT- Nice 1.8 acreM/L lot in Green Township.
Rural water available. Give us a call·on thrs one. 8196.

MINI. FARM- with 7.25 acres on Rt. 325 adjornrng Galli a.
County. Includes small barn wnh loft and attached shed. Also .
new fence as well as a 1979 Windsor mobile home 1n excel- •
lent shape with large front porch. Much more. $26,600. Call
lor more info,
·
#198 • · ·
PRICE REDUCED! - Not only have we reduced the pricewe, are also going to oHer a land contract to qualilied buyer. 3
bedrooms, lull basement wilh drive-in garage. Home just
needs alittle paint and minor reparr. Now only $2Z.900.la~-­
ley St., Pomeroy.
#138 ·
LOCATION. LOCATION! Aquality burtt home. too. Ranch w~~ .
3 bedrooms, formal dining tam1tyroom, lull-basement and 2 ~
car garage. Located in Middleport.
· N~35 '

COMMERCIAL LOCATION ALONG ST. RT. 35. near Holzer
Hosp., 1 acre, M. orl., with 2-bay bldg, Owner may as~ist fi·
nancing for approved purchaser. Buy now for Sll5,00q.oo.
CONDOMINIUM: 1st Floor, 2-bedrm. _Condo; 2 baths. cent.
A/C, heat pump, cuslom cabinets, dishwasher. disposal. utility rm .. carport. Call for more rnformation_,

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MOVING TO THE CITY! THIS HOME ON UPPER SECOND
·AVENUE IS WITHOUT A DOUBT THE BEST BUY ON THE MARKET. 2 STORY _FRAME HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS, KITCHEN IS
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE AND REFRIG. AMPLE DINING
SPACE. GAS BUDGET IS ONLY $41.00 MONTH. NICE LEVEL
BACK LAWN. JUST $35,000. CHECK IT OUT'

. PRETtY 3 BEDROOM AAI!CH WITH ATTACHED GARA~
CENTRAL AIR COND, LOW COST GAS HEAT AND EVEN AT
TH£ LOW PRICE OF '$45,000 THE WASHER AND DRYER,
RANGE AND REFRIG. AND DISHWASHER ARE INCLUDED!
LOCATED ON JAY DRIVE, JUST A FEW MINUTES FROM
HOLlER HOSPITAL.

JAY DRIVE, JUST OFf RT. 35, 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH RANCH
HAS NICE FLOOR PLAN, ATTRACT IV£ FOYER, VERY UVEA·
BL£ FAMILY ROOM. KITCHEN AREA WITH FIREPLACE. ALSO
OPENS ONTO OUTDOOR PATIO, DECK ANO POOL EXCELLENT VIEW OF SURROUNDING AREA FROM DECK. 2CAR ATTACHED GARAGE. ATTRACTIVE HOME. EXCELLENT LOCATION. CITY SCHOOLS. $65,000,
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KERR BETHEL ROAD: HOME PLUS RENTAL APARTMENT. 2
BEDROOM HOME HAS LARGE LIVING ROOM, EAT -IN
KITCHEN, BAS(MENT. PLUS 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT,
$44,000.

SMALL FARM- MODERN 3 BEDROOM HOME HAS LARGE
FAMILY ~ITCHEN AND LIVING ROOM, DEN, 1.316 SO. FT.
LIVING AREA. 2 CAR CONCRETE BLOCK GARAGE OVER 9
ACRES. MOSTLY PASTURE. KYGER· CREEK SCHOOLS.
$52,000.
CUSTOII BUILD RANCH - OUTSTANDING FEATURES IN·
CLUDE OAK KITCHEN CABINETS. 6" WALLS FOR ADDED IN·
SOLATION ANDERSEN WOOD WINDOWS, FIR SIDING, ~ ·
BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS. CARPORT, AND 2 CAR GARAGE. SURROUNDED BY 5 BEAUTIFUL ACRES. CITY SCHOOLS.

GEORGE'S CREEK ROAD- 3 BEDROOM RANCH, FULL BA·
SEMENT ATTACHED GARAGE, PULLMAN TYPE KITCHEN
EOUIPf'iD WITH RANGE, REFRIG. AND DISHWASHER,
FtlLLY CARPETED. ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP, CENTRAL AIR
COND., LARGE LAWN. $49,900.
CHECK THIS CUSTOLI AAJICH. 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, EAT·
IN KITCHEN. FORMAL DINING ROOM, LARGE LIVING ROOM
WITH FIREPLACE AND FRENCH DOORS OPENING ONTO SIDE
PORCH. COZY DEN WITH RREPLACE, LARGE LOT WITH RIVER
VIEW. S85,000.

JUST A FEW IIIUTES FIOM TOWN- BRICK RANCH. LARGE
FAMILY HOM£. 4 BEDROOMS, EQUIPPED KITCHEN HAS RANGE,
. REFRIG DISifflASHER TRASH COMPACTOR, DISPOSAl., FOU
BASEMENT WITH REC. ROOM. ATTACHED GARAGE PLUS
24'X40' GARAGE/WORKSHOP GAS FU!!NACE, CEN. AIR COND.
ONE
LOT. UNBEATABLE PRICE,' $65.000. DON1 WAIT,

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THIS IS ONE BIG HOUS£1 BIG KITCHEN, BIG.LIVING.ROOM,
BIG FAMILY ROOM, BIG DINING ROOM, BIG BEDROOMS, BIG
PORCH ONLY THE PRICE IS SMALL $38,000. LOCATED IN
'MIDDLEPORT.
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I lovely 3 acres-f11/l wooiled lot,

replace, city
a call for your

I

I bath. fam ily room w~h fi.
I last ion P. So g;ve us
#189

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65.5 ACRES MIL IN CITY SCHOOLS w"h bea~tiful homesite,
scattered trmber, 5 acres mil tillable. Rural water available.
$24,000.
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#184
1.95 ACRES 1/L LOTPWS 18.-765ACAESM/LON RT. 141.
lndudes small tobacco base and timber. Borders Raccoon
Creek County Park. Rural · water available. Jus! $19,500.
I
8182
HOME &amp;U ACRES 1/L - I year old ranch bQme located
tess lhali I mile oft Rt. 7 mdudes 3 bedrooms, 2 bat~ tO!·
mat dining, heat P.ump, Andersen windows, 1car garage plus
tots 'more. $64,900.
. 8149
better place than your own backyard. You al~oget tile conve nience of a 3 or 4 bedroom hQme, I cal" garage, fenced
baclly1rd. S1teU"e dish and more. Call now. $43,500.

8112

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APPROX. 163 ACRES WITH TWDSTOAY HOME- Extra nice:
barn. rural water. located on C-20 Rocksprings Rd. Askin&amp; ·
$75,000.00. '
#167- '
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GENTLEMAN'S FARI.:..Eiegant country_lrv1ng_on 131 acrel: '·,
m/1 wKh alovely cedar 4 bedroom home. Over ~.000 square •
feet ofhvrng space mcludes 4 bedrooms, fireplace, formal
drnrng, equrpped k~chen and much more. Land~ level to .'
rolling and i~dudes a beauliful pond, a 2 car garage and~ ·: barn. You writ love rt, Call for an appointment. 'UO.OOO.OO. :

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LASLEY STREn-:- Two story wnh 3 bedrooms. 1bath.-Gas ;
heat, large lat with g.-den area. Storage buildmg. Only :
$1-6,000. GIYe us a ~all.
11201 ;
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Pom11oy, Ohio
-;. (614) 992;3325

-·
Nlw

LfSliNG -

RIVER

YIJW - With 2 bedroom

hbme. Nice location near
, lciwn. 3· porches and ·tall
shade trees. Fish from your '

REDUCED - I acre w~h older mobile home, county
water, no septic system, located along Rt 160 near North
Galli~, school. Price: $13,000.
~RICE

118 ACRES lOCATED IN GREEN TWP .. Graham School Rd .
Super view! $44,000. .

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DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT PAO~ERTY: Brick structure w~h
3 rental apartments. Also, adjacent metal storage/utility
bldg. Est. gross rental income, $820 per mo. All priced for
$65,000. .
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Ul East Second Strtet

NEW liSTING- 2 bedrm. house wrth upstairs .dorm.. HI
baths, fully furnished, newly remodeled , new carpet. w1th
new range and refrig, Full basement. Near Tycoon Lake. Buy
now for $36,900.

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REAL ESTATE .

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3 8EDRM. HOME WITH CARPET - Approx. 1,4 acre
Situated along Alri ca Road. Price was $25,000.'Quic~ sale.
Price $21 ,500.00.

NEW LISTING: 10 acres, P~rry Twp. Some timber. Buy now
lor $10.000.·
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6.5 ACRES, WITHIN THE CITY OF GALLIPOLIS situated
along Garfield Ave. Site includes 2 buildrng lots, w/city water·se)Oer. Buy now lor $30,000.00:

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EXCELLENT STARTER HOME - Has 2 ~ice tots. back deck,
fireplace, 3 6edrooms, city schoois. Asking $34,000. Can be ·
assumed wrth very small down payment.8118

tT Will SOON BE TIME TO RELAX BY THE POOt and what

FHL THE BREEZE- But not the sun as you s~ in
the shade and enjoy country living this summer.
Vinyl siding and a 2 year old roof will cut maintenance to a mrnimum and leave plenty oftime tor
swimming in the 24x40 in ground pool. This home
has 3 bedrooms, oversized living room and a3.55
acre l~t. $48,500.
H506

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· QUICK POSSESSION: ROOMY CAPE'COO IN NICE AREA.OF •
NEWER HOMES! 3 BEliROOMS. 2 BATHS,- FORMAL DINING, .
2 CAR GARAGE, FULL BASE!IIIENl SHOWS LIKE A MOOEL
OM£. $62,000 OR BUY WITJf EXTRA LOT FOR $68,000.

. CHARMING
2-STOIIT
Has lots of character in every room. Very well decorated home throughout indudes formal living
room and formal dinin g room w~h corner fireplaces, large eat-in kitchen with toads of cabinets,
full baths, family room with woodburner. Upstairs
is complete w~h 3 nice bedrooms and second
bath. House hiS vinyl sidin&amp; new plumbing and
new wirin&amp; 174ft.' deep lot. $79,900.
H210

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. dump llod,
W I:GO
- pm
or 11...._
wtlhoul
Colt oft•

446-3636J\~ .

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STEP BACK IN TIME! TH~ ABOVE TURN OF THE CENTU~Y SKETCH OF THIS BEAUTIFUL OLD HOME ... PROVES
IT ONCE WAS ONE OF THE MOST ELABORATE HOMES IN GALLIPOLIS. IT COULD BE NOW, WITH SOME WORK
AND IMAGINATION. IF RESTORING AVINTAGE HOME IS YOUR DREAM, CALL US FOR ATOUR OF THIS ONE:.:
AND MAKE YOUR DREAM COME TRUE'
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COUNTRY COMFORT
There's a splendid country view in any direction
from this 2 story home near ChampiQn Farms on
Rt 554. Home rncludes open krtchen and living
room, 3 bedrooms, one nice bath and utUity room.
Over 1 acre of fairly flat ground. Possible 9.5%
loan assumption. P(iced at $34,900.
#224

CANADAY.REALTY l.Jl.

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114.900

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' ' YEIT'DESIMBLE HOME
Now used as a double rental located in the city at
the corner of 3rd and Soruce. Ran~ and refriRerator furnished in-both unrt1 Separate front and
back entrance. Storage building and children's
play area behind home. $40,000.
. #300

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7.23 A~RES 11/L VACANT LAILD in Greenfield Township.
County wller available. Grell
hunters. $4,500. 8179

@

W. Va.

71 AuiCIII tor sale

1117 UP, PI, - , A I C , - 1. . a . y - . ..... roof, ...... 17'14134.
. . . . ....
17,100. ....
4
1117 Oldo CulloM ¥-1, 40,000 :la~~:1101:=.-:--:--;--=-:-c::·k -. .u. ....
IIIII'"""114--446- 1. . Hondo
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--~Of--- 114~ ... s,. ...

._.............
. . . Of ...... - -

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WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Village II and Mills Vii. Iage. Call for more information. ·
2L5 ACRES, NEAR •oiTH GALLIA SCHOOL No structures.
Located alon1.Frank Rd. $18,900.
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3 LOTS L~ATED NEAl T:YCOON LAKe' (50d15l Can
purchase on land tontraet. $2,000 down. 10'11 Interest, pay
$129.69 for 6 yrs
.
1.02 ACRE LOT along Klicker Rd. near Centenary. $8,000.

"RENTAL UNITS"
Lo cated just a mile from hosprtal, 4 miles from
town. Two units. both with 2 bedrooms, bath, livmg room, full carpeted, range, oven, refrigerator.
Occupancy level at 100% for last 3 years. Make
this your first step to financial securrty. A small
piece of the rock for only $53,900. 1ncomestatement available upon request.
8609

WOW!!

Did you really think you could buy a 3 bedroom,
l'h bath, "brick'' home for under $50,000? Well.
you can and it's only about 4 miles from town.
located in a quiet
friendty'neighbor~ood, this
would be a great place to start housekeepin&amp;

and

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11611

OWN A PIECE OF THE BLOCK!
You can walk all over town to shop or exercise and
yoii won't spend much time behind alawn mower.
3 bedroom home has plenty of space for raising a
family, yet the warmth and comfort required for
retirees. Eat-in krtchen and dining room, larll"
room on second floor could be used as children s
bedroom or play 100m. Must·see to believe and
priced at only -$59,900, and available immediately. ·
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#603

DISCOV£i THIS "CLASSIC''
Close to Perfect - Close to Downtown
Value is obvious In this qual~y buih older brick
home. It's hid excellent care. is professionally
decorateed and provides a warm, frrendly impression to those-who enter. The house·has just been
!~ted w~h all new--Andersen thermo windows plus
storms. You'll enjoy a beautiful modern kitchen,
1\l baths: large living ropm with working fireplace
and formal din ing room. There are 3 bedrooms ,
and 2 walk-in closets, lull basement and garage.
You can walk all over town to shop or exercrse and
you won't spend much time behind alawn mower.
Ike ~iseman says this one wil!.£1~ase the person
who wants a good home in a
neighborhood
downtown. ,
#lOB

p

EXCELLENT BUSINESS POSSIBI.LITIES!
Located' in high traffic area on st. Rt. 7 w~h 80'
frontage and 180' deep. Includes aresilience with
2 or 3 business rooms and 2mobile homes. Drilled
well and 2 septic tanks. County water available.
Owner ~ v~ry anxious to sell. Asking $54,900, but
would consider any reasonable ofter.
#203
NEW LISTING!!
TRYING TO,START SOMETHING7
Well, start with this small ranch on Rt. 7. tust a
couple of miles from tHe new shopping center. Living room , kitchen, 2 bedrooms !could be 3). partially remodeled. Beat the landlords and look at
this before you decide to rent. Nice hometostarl a
family for only $21,900.
11613

.

SOUTHERN STYLE 2 STORY
Owners are being transferred but have really enjoyed living in thrs private, spaciou s home at ·the
end of-the lane. Large, open great room featuresa
dining room/living room combinaiion w~h fireplace. In addition, there are 4 bedrooms, 1\7
baths, family room, open stairway, front porch
and stora1e building. The well kept lawn includes
a perfect spot on a terrace lor aswimmina pool o!
garden. Follow up quickly on this one by giving us
- a call. $53,500, wrth $3,000 wish list!
8402

.

., TWO SrORY VICTORIAN FOR ONLY 127,700!!!
Remodeled 3 bedroom home styled from adiffer·
ent 111. Vt!ly attractive inside and out. Features
include large eat-in krtchen, dining room, living
room and,lamily 100111. It has been rewired, re·r·
LOCATION -' LOCATIO• - LOCATION
oofed and resided -lvinyQ . New furnace. whole
Ask anybody! "Location is most important when · house fan, new deck. large tree shaded lot.'Kyger
selectinA a home." Here's a 6 room home on 1
Creek Schools. MUST SEE BEFORE YOU BUY or
acre with a areal view olthe river and only 5miles
you are making a mistake'll
8218
from town. In-dudes 3 bedroomt lireplace. lull
basement, garage and Jlarn. You'll have access to
the river. It's priced'at SS9,5DO, and should not be
IA&amp;NIFICENT BI·LEVEL!!
on the market long.
·~16
Space for a··growina lfmily is what this 3bedroom,
' both home hiS to ofter. Spirt foyer entry Kives
LISTING ON LeGRANDE
eesy access to lloth the main trv1n~ quarters upVery nice and well ke~t 3 bedroom home in pleostairs 1nd abeaut_
ifut family room downstairs. This
sant neilhborhood. W1ll makun excellent buy for
home is located o~ 2 lull siZe lots and has a view
someone. 8e the first to see t~is charmin• home
that wit·absolutely take your breath. $58,900.
whic~ has a living room, n1ce eal·in k~chen,
Muat see to believe!
11605
cathednl ceilin1111nd mort. Priced at $45,900.

.

1212

l

- ~•

· PAYMENTS CHEAPER THAN RENT
With a small down payment you cen be building
equity in a home rnstead ol your landlord's
pocket. This nice, clean 3 bedroom home is aftordably priced at $26,000._Good s~e bedrooms, 1
full bath, large eat-in krtcheil; and living room.'
Vinyl siding makes for easy maintenance. Only
$21\,000! Only $26,000! Only 126,000! Well worth
the money!!
'. 8213
CHAROLAIS LAKE ESTATES •
Arare opportun~y to design and complete the interior of a home in an excellent neighborhood at
an affordable pnce. The completed exterior olthis
l 'h_story log home includes a deck, 2 car gara1e.
• and basement. Buyer would own !/20th of an 8
acre stocked lake with full privileges. $75,000.
t401
RENTERS, STEAL HOME
.
Gel a tump on other aspiring owners by calling·
now for an apporntment to see this 1\7 story, 2
bedroom on 2 acres: m/1. Basement, garage and
rmmedrate possession are features you are bound
to appreciate. $34,500
#501
OWNER DESPERATE - NEEDS AN OFFER!!!
Make us an offer. Seller owns two homes only
needs one. Sett ing at a toss. In last 3\l years, this
has had anew roof, new central air unit, new vinyl
srdrng. new carpet, new bath, beautiful new
kitchen cabinets, new finrsh on hardwood noors
new deck, new landscaping and even a new aera:
tor seplic motor. Nearly 1800 SQ. tt. of very liveable floor space. Large family room with stone fireplace. located on quiet, dead-end street on the
edge of town. Was as ~ng$69.900. Reduced price
to $67,500, but wrll acceptareasonableoffer. Colli
_Dave for more (nformation and appointment
Don't overlook thi ~ home!
t201i

• PEACEFUL LIVING ON RACCOON CREEK
Perfect setting for relaxation and enjoyment of
Raccoon Creek. 3 acres, m/1, with good access to
the creek and plenty of room for recreation. Log
home includes 6 rooms including basement.
Large deck overlooks the wonderful setting, Perteet for weekend get togethers or full time country
tiv i n ~ $39,900.
8231
MIDDLEPORT
Turned off by "Tiny Afford abies"?It's time to get
excited w~h this 2 story brick located on Rullend
Street. Beautifully tailored with 2 bedrooms upstairs and 2 more on the main ftoor. Textured plas- .
ter walls in bo_
lh the living room and din ina room
helu make tllrs one of the trutv fins homes in
Meiet,Coonty. And wrth a fenced in play area for
lhe children, rt' sperfect for a growmafamily. Alot
of extras buih in with tender loving cart! you must
see to believe._Fall 1n love all over again for iu_st
$54,900.
*104

Deeparafely Nee~· Llatlnt•l

UST WITH GALiiA COUNTY'S LEADER
~

I

man Real Estate

PIICES DRASTICALLY UDUCED on 3properties w~hin the
Villaiof Porter: #I - Old Cottrell grocery buPdlnl- Now
SJ5. .00! N2- 2 storv homeadlacenttostorebld&amp;. Now
125. 110. N3 - 3 bedroom home next to above: Now
$20.000.00. Cell lor more info. Will setl111y or tftn ·

(614) 446-364··

' .

_L L .,.._, lroktr
..

'

David Wleem-n. 441-3798

B. J. Hairston; 448-4240

Tom Rueeell, 441-2875

'

Lol'lttl McDade, 441-7721
Chrla Ellce110r, 441·31~1

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�P

p•

M.-ch 11, 1990

D-B-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Exports of bip-value products

for poultry f*odu(Jel'l

mean mOre job&amp; for United States

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPlJ Lower· feed costs shollld }lelp
poultry producers In 1990. But
Alan Lines, agricultural economist at Ohio State UniVersity,
says 1990 feed costs could also be
bad news to an over-expanding
Industry.

cop Big 'IO
crown

European Community exports,
but less than half the value of
u.s. shipments. European food ,
processors export nearlY ll per·
cent or their output; U.S. proces·
sora only about 3 percent.
Most or the leading EuropeaJI
ollseeds.'
Yet the United States trails Community firms are subSidlar· '
well . behind other countries In les of u.s. firms. but Henderson
exports of sellll·procesRd and says the export behavior of these
processed products, ,says' Ohio subsidiaries differs slgnlflcantJy
State UniVersity agriCultural from their U.S. parents, thanks
mainly to European CommunitY,
economist Dennis Henderson.
.
For ~~a,:~j
prO'' poUcy.
dUctl8l

COLUMBUS. Ohio !UPII Exports of high-value agrlcultu·
ral praducta ~~rate. substan·
tlally f!Wre lobi and Income for
tbe United States than da..baslc
commodities·such as gr&amp;llll and

With corn priced around $2.30 a
bushel and soybj!an meal much
redu~ In price at $160 a ton,
production costs could be as
much as 12 percent lower ,than In
1989, IJnes says.

MYII'l'EBY FARM ·-

· a II cull • • ,._ tile
Valley hNi+hl
.Co. Leave )'0111' IIJIIIIe, adlbwa aad &amp;ellpllolle·
npmller with Yllll'· oard or leUer. No tellplto•• ··
eo-riatloa Dllltrlcl, Is .located somewhere In
' Galla Couaty. Individuals wtshlnl to parllclpale . call8 wiD be accepted. All coatesl ea""' lboald
be IIIJ'IIH Ia 1o lh' aewlfl&amp;per office by 4 p.m. eaeh
Ia lhe weekly contest may do so by guessln11he.
Wedllellday. In cue of a lie, the winner. will be
farm'• owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
chosen · by lottery. Next ,reek, a Melp Coualy
tile · G&amp;llpolls Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave.,
farm
:wUI be-featiln!d by·tile Melp SoD aad Water
G&amp;llpolill, Ohio, 4$831, or lhe Dally Senllnel, lll
Conservation District.
Court 81., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,aad you may win
.
Tbll week's mystery

··Consenration ·plantings
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
SoU and Water Conservation
Dlltrlct's tree packets will be
arriving soon. When they do
arrive, you should be prepared to
properly handle your seedlings.
Your seedlings should be
planted as soon as possible.
However, as soon as possible for
many people still means having
to do something with the seedlings for awhile till they can get
them planted. The most lmpor·
tant thing to remember Is don't
ever let the roots become dry.
Tbe best place to keep your
seedllnp Is In the ground, heeled
ln. To heel them In, dig a
V-ahaped trench In a moist,.
shady spot.
Then, loosely Jay your seedllnp along the trench evenly. If
they . come with any type of
moistened moss arouod the roots
lay lllal .with the roots In the
trencll, Replace the soU In the
trench and wa,t er well. Pack the
soli -down on the roots i.vell to
remove any air pockets.
When you are ready to plant,
dll up a bundle or two, no more,
wJth lbe mou and put them Into a
bucket with enough water that
covers all the roots. Do not carry
the seedlings around In your
haad as you plant. This wUI dry
the roots out too much and could
cause the seedling not to survive.
Whether you , prefer to plant
wl!h a dibble bar (planting bar),
mattock or shovel the two most
Important things to remember
are 1.) plant the tree at the
correct depth and 2.) make sure
the soli Is firmly packed around
the seedllnlf to prevent leaving
an air pocket around the roots.
The depth of planting Is Important because If the seedlings are
planted too shallow roots are left
expoaecl and If planted too deep
the roots are bent which lnterfers
with necesaary root a bsorpUon
and restabllshment atter the
shock of being transplanted. The
coz:rect depth Is, Ideally, the
depth they were at the nursery or
up to If' deeper with the roots
spread as naturally as possible.
The white pine seedlings In the
packet can be planted on a wide
variety of sites. However, It will
. do It's best on moist sandy loan
soils; also, those . with a small
amount of clay. As a general
rule, they do well on good and

·DelfUJnd...

poor sites and at all exposures
but they do not like to be on wet
sites, well-drained or not. They
are very hardy when It comes to
surviving being transplanted.
The Color.ado blue spruce Is
very adept at surviving droughts
and extremes In temperatures.
This · tree can be used as an
ornamental since It can be
shaped_very successfully and It's ·
foliage Is a lush, beautiful silvery
blue.
The Norway spruce does bette~
on good sites and will proaper on
bottomland that Is well-drained.
This is ~ large tree, many times.
used as a windbreak.,This tree Is
best not put right !lex! to a home
or building due to .tbe size It may
achieve.
. The hybrid' poplar Is a tree that
was developed specifically for
fast ~owth. It Cll\ grow well on
soils.that ra11ge from sandy loans
to the-beavler soils. They also are
very tolerant o~ extremely
acidic soUs right on through to
the very ackaline soils.
Tbe mugho pine Is best des·
crlbed as a shrub. It will do well
planted around the home or yard
as an ornamental. It can be.
successfully trimmed to main·
lain a smaller size If desired.
With this combination ol speC'Ies available, you will have 'at
least one species for every
different type of site you have to
plant. And with proper handling
and planting techniques, yAare
on your way to successtuT"tree
planting.

IRONTON - Danny Montgomery of Waverly, represented
the Ohio Valley RC&amp;D Executive
Committee at the North Central
Association of RC&amp;D COuncils
annual meeting In Bloomington,
. Minnesota last month.
The Ohio Valley RC&amp;D In·
eludes Jackson, VInton, Gallla,
Lawrence; Scioto, Pike, Ross,
Brown, Adams, and Highland.
Tile conference, entitled
"Working Together for Rural
Dev~lopment," Included representatives from 34 RC&amp;D areas
In seven ·s tates.
·The topics Included the role of
the Cooperative Extension Ser·
vice, U.S. Forest Service, and the

GALLIPOLIS - Burley to..
bacco growers will get a 2.5
~eat Increase In ~elr 1990
marketing quotas. The national
marketing quota for 1990 ln\J:ley ·
tobacco Is 602.3 million ·pounds,
14.7 miiUon pounds higher th8!1
the 1989 quota.
After adjustments for over and
undermarket lngs are taken Into
accilunt, the 1990 effective quota
could total about 743 million
pounds, or 82 million pounds
more than the 1989 effective
quota. Under the tobacco price ~
support prQ~P"am, farmers who
produce less than 'their quota or
tobacco In one year - an
· un4ennarketlng ..:. may market
tbe underage ·for the following
year,
The U.S. Department of Aerh ·
culture also increased the price
support level tor 1990 crop burley
to $1.558 per pound,-2.6 cents per
pound more than the 19891evel.
The 1990 crop loans ta..prddueer.
associatiOns will be subject to a
1.4 percent reduction .under the
budget deficit sequester order.

.Y OUR TAXES .••

Personal &amp; Business -Returns ~
Electronic filing
Fast Funds·· 3-Day_Refunds
···student ~~king Club Discou_nts
.

:

~

BY OUR OFFI,CES.

'

r

MQTI'IS--·"·.

SPRING
PLANTING

TIME!

Pulsar

"1·1164

, ......

t.:!'.•

. Tht ltort With "AI Kinde of Stuff" Far,_., 8
L..rge • 8111111 Anlmell, Lawnl • ~·n~nt.

,

•

Carter begins
Middle East
tour today

New 1989 Nissan ·240SX

.
.
~~
~~~Spring~
' •

'

/$pectalsj:

'7.~

Warm temperatu·res
to continue in Ohio

$251 77 *'

o~"~ .

Par·Mo.

SPORTS

85 NISSAN
SENTRA XE

88 FORD
ESCOAT

4 speed, air, cas$elte,
'

sport stripes.

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'96,.......
89 PLYMOUTH
HORIZON
Automallc, only 1,400
.miles, LIKE NEW!

5 speed, air, stereo, reaf'

5 speed, air, casselte ,

wiper/defroster.

cruise, 1onneau

'119 per MO.
85 JEEP
GRAND WAGONEER

Automat•c.·a•r , casseue , power
windows &amp; locks. leather.

'129 --·

'172 p..-mo.

OLDS
CUTLASS SUPREME

87 DO
ARIES WAGON

Automatlo, air, eteleo, lilt.
cruise &amp; more.

'133 ,., .....

86 NISSAN
KING -CAB 4x4

Automatic, air, stereo, on·
ly 32,000 miles.

'121 ,., .....

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co.ver.

.. 87 NISSAN
SENTRA
5 speed, rear

det~.ster,

red, like new.

185 po~ mo.

'121 ...~-.

67 FORD
TAURUS

. 86 MERKUR
XR4TI

· Automatic, air, s•ereo,
tow miles .

'121 --·

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CAVAUER WAGON .

Automatic, air, stereo.
power steering &amp;brak~s .

'105 - ·- .
~~'ll!nl~ l.;~fftl

5 t~ 4l !Ill

:_

...---Local news

briefs~

Trailer destroyed by fire

,

Iitie, afJtt' rebll:e,

J" •. ..

COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI)- A lack of name recognition, money previous record, the Dispatch
reported, and Celeste made
busy schedule of speaking trips, and organization.
contacts
with a number of major
The
speaking
and
trade
trips
fund-raising and organizational
national
Democratic .
are
helping
address
the
recognl·
activities point to a possible
contrlbu
tors.
lion
factor.
·
presidential bid by Ohio Gov.
In addition, Celes(e formed
Celeste said the speeches.
Richard Celeste, The Columbus
Participation 2000 In 1988, a Participation 20()()' and organlz·
Dispatch reported Sunday.
Among the moves to Increase federal political action commit· lng boost his chances as ·a
his profile, Celeste has arranged tee. It haS' placed Interns In 25 candidate.
"All of those would be valuable
to send "news" reports of his campaigns .cross the country In
foreign travels to more than 4,000 the past two year, with plans to If I choose to run," Celeste said.
radio stations across the nation. place 35 more this fall. The "But they also have Interest to
Even the leader of Celeste's own Interns would be key organizers me, In and of themselves, not as sort of stepplngslones or any·
Democratic Party, Chairman In a presidential bid.
As the new chairman of the thing else."
James Ruvolo, questions the
"I have to be really honest with
Democratlc Governors' Assocla·
practice, the newspaper said.
Celeste, who Is In the final year tlon, Celeste made calls to help you," he said. ''I'm not a
tenure as organize an $800,000 fUnd-raiser candidate for president, at least
\ of his
been out Q( the · Fel),.26 In 'f{ ~S!!J!lgtOn. The !)Vent as .long a~ I wear thJs beard and
oitheiast38days, made twil!e as much as the · havE!'Ywo dau'ghlers In college."
Including attending a national
governors' conference and lead·
lng International trade trips.
He returned during the weekend from a trip to Seoul, South
t'
Korea, where he attended a
five-day conference of the World
Convocatlpn on Justice, Peace
and
Integrity of Creation, spon·
RiGHTTOREAD-RonaldMcDonaldspeniRD
·observed last week In aii11Chool&amp; In Melp County.
ever, he said crack Is still the
DAYTON, Ohio (UP}) - Au·
sored
by the World Council of thorltles say a new form of
afternoon with the sludenl8 at Tuppers Plains
He pointed oullhe many benefits and Importance
drug of choice among most
Churches.
· smokable heroin, Called "tar," Is
Elementary for Righi to Read .Week which was
of ~adlng. (See story on page 5).
Dayton addicts.
The governor's office defends showing up among the city's
Users have begun a potentially
Celeste's schedule, saying It addicts.
dangerous
practice of mixing
.
.
· boosts education, human servl·
crack
with
tar and powdered
The drug Is said to be even
ces and jobs In Ohio.
heroin to make coming off the
more destructive than the CQBut It . also Is helping place calne derivative "crack" and Is
drugs less harsh an experience.
Celeste In a more favorable reportedly at tractlng crack us·
Heroin Is a narcotic depressant
arguing over words and phrases
WASHINGTON (UPI) - An
U.S. District Judge Harold
position
for
a
lry
for
the
Demoand
cocaine Is a stimulant.
ers
because
Ills
priced
competiangry federal judge Monday Greene was clearly In no mood
In Webb's questions.
cractlc presidential nomination. tively at about $25 a dose.
Like he did Friday, North
ordered retired Marine Lt. coi. for a repeat of North's behavior
He considered running in 1987
Before tar, the standard unit
Oliver North to answer ques- during more than five hours of
repeatedly said he could not
Mixing the two can lead. to
alter
Gary
Hart
dropped
out,
but
dose of heroin was $70 to $100.
tions, and stop· arguing o9er arduous questioning Friday,
remember key details of his
Increased hea ith risks, said Dr.
decided against It because of his
''The truth Is, crack Is so cheap Mark DeBard, emergency room
words and phrases ..' at the Iran·
dealings wlth Poindexter. who
that It caused the price of heroin director at St. Elizabeth Medical
North took the stand Monday North reported to at the White
Contra trial of, John Poindexter.
to go down," said Abdur Zafr, Center.
North's former White House as Poindexter watched and re- House.
who runs Project CURE, a local
,
fused to respond when lead
boss.
St. Elizabeth has had about a
To elicit the Information, Webb
drug and alcol)ol treatment dozen cases of users suffering
11 was North's second day on ·prosecutor Dan Webb said.
had to keep referring North to
progran.
''Good morning, Colonel North.
the sta,nd at the !rim-Contra trial
side effects from mixing the two
stacked
transcripts
of
his
trial
North, who was convicted of
of Poindexter, who was national
Although tar has !Jeen avalla·. drugs, he said. The benefits from
security adviser to Ronald some Iran-Contra crimes during testimony and what North told
ble outside the United States for combl1!1ng them are questionaReagan.
a , trial last year. ·then began Congress during nationally tele·
ble, he said.
~everal years, ..It's new for us,
vised hearings In the summer of
new for Americans," Zafr said.
"In other words, If they bal·
1987.
CAIRO, Egypt IUPI)
. One of tar's main.lures Is that It ance the doses exactly right, at
Greene quickly became angry
Former President Jimmy Carter
doesn't have to be InJected like the right time, lhey can mentally
at North.
arrived Monday to start a Middle
powdered heroin, said Dayton have a rather pleasant trip
"The witness, every time .a
Eas 1 tol!r aimed at rekindling the
pollee Lt. James Finnigan. How - down," DeBard said.
ques don Is asked of him, almost
stalled peace process In which he
every time, says he doesn't
played a key role more than a ·
remember," Greene said. "It's
decade ago.
By Unlled Preas International
most of Ohio during the day like pulling teelh. His recollecThe diplomats said Carter, his
Tuesday.
lion has to be refreshed."
wife, Rosalynn, and an a! de were
After a weekend of the warm·
Despite the threat for wet
When North again began quill-&lt; · on a two-day fact·flodlng visit of
est temperatures of the year.
weather , Tuesday, very mild bllng over a minor point abou' a
Egypt as guests of the Egyptian
Ohio was facing another week of
temperatures will continue. · conversation with Poindexter,
government. Carter Is also sche·
The Skinner Run Road home or Jeff Beeker was destroyed by
Highs Tuesday should be com- . Greene began qiles tionlrig the
high mercury readings, with
duled to go to Syria, Jordan and
!Ire before midnight Saturday. John L, Ridenour, of the Chester
records expected to fall today _ parable to loday's, but additional retired Marine himself.
Israel on his nine-day tour.
Fire Department, reports that his unit was alerted ~Y Meigs
and Tuesday .
·
· clouds and an Increased threat of
"What's the difference? ...
"President Carter' s vlsllls not
Emergency Medical Services at 11: 35 p.m. By the time firemen
At dawn, temperatures ranged
showers and thunderstorms will Those were lies, right?~' asked
spo,nsored by the U.S. .govern·
arrived, the mobile home was practically destroyed, Ridenour
shave a few degrees off the highs Greene.
ment. He Is a guest of the
from the high . 50s to low 60s
says. No one was home at the time the !Ire started and Ridenour
across the Buckeye State. Sun· Wednesday.
"1 did not tell the truth," North
Egyptian government," a U.S.
was not sure who a·lerted EMS. He also wasn't sure If Beeker
day, record highs were set across
Thursday's highs, under 11 said.
diplomatic source said. "Carter
lived alone of had a family, or If the home was Insured. There
all ot the state except for the
threat of rain. will be 55 to 65, but
"Let's not try to be verbatim,."
has always taken a keen Interest
were no Injuries reported. Firemen believe the blaze may have
northeast counties, where
the mercury will reach only 45 to Greenesnapjled, glarlng.down at
In the Mideast P,eace process and
started In a woodburner.
· temperatures were k~pt chilly by 55 Friday. Lows will be 45 to 55 North from the bench. "Let's try
obviously would like to see It
~em Township Fire Department was called at 2:11 ·p.m .
Lake Erie.
Wednesday, In the 40s Thursday to stick to the facts and give
progress." ·
Saturday to a structure fire on the Charles Jones property on
answers to the questions,
Today, readings were ex· and In the lis Friday.
Carter, who mediated the 1978
Route 325, Dick Lambert, of the Salem Department, reports
peeled to be a little more
On the early morning weather ·please."
Camp David .accords that led to
that Jones had been burning doWn an old bulldin~ when It fell
11nlform, . with highs spanning .m ap, a warm front extended
North, sounding contrite, said: . the subsequent Egypt-Israel
against an old chicken house and caueht the chicken house on
from the' mid-70s to low 80s.
from eastern Pennsylvania "Yes, your honor."
·
peace treaty, Is ·scheduled to
fire. Firemen saved the chicken house which Jones had been
Galllpolisrecordedahlghof81 through western New York arid
Poindexter, who was North's meet later Mooday. with Egypusing for storage purposes. Lambl!rt guessed there may have
Sunday,. breaking a 33-year-old central Michigan Into deep low boss at the White House l"nd
tian Minister of State for Foreign
been $200 to $300 In damages to the chicken house.
record of 75 set March 11, 1957 pressure over the Dakotas. High reported directly to Reagan, Is
Affairs Boutroa Gbali, as well as
and justmlsstng Gallla'sall·time pressure just off the Georgia acculled of five felonies -lnclud·
members of business, rellgtOUI
high March reading of 86,-set on coast continued to occupy about lng conspiracy, obstruction of and academic communities.
March 22, 1938 and equaled on the southeast third of tbe nation, Congress and destruction of , He Is Interested In bearing
Milrch 16, 1945 and fVIarch 27, with weaker high pressure over documents.
their views on current attempts
A GaiUpolls woman was cited In a car·truck crash Saturday at
1950. .
New Engjand.
Poindexter Is the highest rank·
to reform and decentralize .
11:20 a.m, In Salisbury Township on C.R. 3, just west of the
EIYPt' s economy, which reA shot of moisture and a weak
The warm front should stay lng Rea;an administration off!.
Junction ot S.R. 7, according to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the
ceiVes almost $1 billion In U.S.
upper level disturbance will be wellnortho!Ohloforthenexlfew clalto staad trial In the scandal,
State Highway Patrol.
economic aid a year, Egyptian
approaching . Ohio late tonlg~t days as the Dakotas' low moves Involving the secret sale or U.S.
Linda L. Lanham, 42, was cited for Improper backing after
Foreign Ministry officials said:
and this could trigger a few very slowly east. By late Tues- . arms to Iran In an effort to free
her 1988 Nlsun pickup truc"k hit a 1982 Dodge Challenger-driven .
On Tue\l(lay, Carter II sche- .
showers, or p.osslbly a thunder- day afternoon the low pressure American hos!Bges In the Middle
by Carol J. Ramsburg, 27, of 34281 Titus Rd., Middleport. .
East, and the diversion of some
duled to meet President Hosnl
storm, before sunrise Tuesday will be approaching the west end
Lanham and Ramsburg were driving eut wben Lanham
over western parts of the state. o!LakeSuperlorwith a cold front
of the profits to support the rebel
Mubarak and then fly to Damas·
stopped and backed up on the road, hlttine Ramsburg' a car In
cus Wednesday. the ministry
The tl\reat ror this scattered type back Into eastern Kansas and
Nicaraguan C«&gt;ntras when Con·
,
tile front. .
or wet weather will expand over central Texas.
gress bamled direct ald . ·
officials said.

North ordered to answer questions

'

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO.

resumption _of . negotiations, a had been made for a special offer, and he urged educators to
return to work Monday.
special legislative session and a . session.
''The WVF'T leadership ac·
pledge that no punitive action be ' ''It appears thai we are now at
In principle the proposal
.
cepted
Impasse," the WVEA president
taken against strikers.
of
the
governor as a fair and
The WVEA represents a bout said. "The governor has given
honorable
way for all parties to
16,000 of the state's 21,653 West Virginia school employees
resolve
this
strike situation and
teachers, most of whom have ... no cho\ce but to continue the
to
return·
to
the classroom, and
been Idled since the walkout statewide strike."
its acceptance to
recommends
began last Wednesday. Teachers
Legislators ended a 60-day
the
general
membership,"
became Incensed when Caperton rrgular session Satqrday night.
first offered lale.Monday- then but the session was extended ' Brown sa19 . .
Jackie Goodwin, a spokesman
rescinded the following day- a 5 three days to finish work on the
for the WVEA, said Caperton Is
percenl pay raise.
.
state budget.
"going to have make (the next
Meadows said she was forced
Bob Brown, executive director
to ask the teachers to disregard of the state's federaton of move). We're at an Impasse. He
thelrearllervlJtesilfterCaperton teachers, which has about 3,000 has to do something and some·
thing fast. "
appeared on a television news- members, said his union's lead·
cast and said no commitment , ershlp supported Caperton's

Crack addicts tum
to heroin for 'tar'

FORMERLY TAVLOR 'NISSAN

FOI ALL OF
YOUI PLANTING
NEEDS•••••

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.
' ..

Gov. Celeste may throw hat
in ring for president in '92

"' ..
CALL .FOR
. . APPOINTMENT 01 STOP

'Rural Electr111catlon Admlnls·
tratlon In rural development.
Training sessions were held on
overcoming barriers to effective
communications and on how to
work effectively with policy
·makers.
·
The Oblo Valley RC&amp;D area
through the conservation .and
development of natural resour·
ces. The ,council is made up of
representatives ot the SoU and
Water Conservation Districts,
county commissioners, and an
at-large member !rom Jackson,
VInton, Gallla, Lawrence; Scioto,
Pike, Brown, Adams, and High·
land Counties.

•SEED POtATOES
•ONION SETS
•BULl SEEDS
•PACiAGI SEEDS
•G~SS SEIDl
•POniNG SOIL
•PIO
•FIITIUIEI
'•UIIII CIIIPS .
'eWES1EINIAII
I•GADIN TOOLS

1

__

. CHARLESTON, wf:va. (UPI) rank·and·flle to stay off the job,
two cooler heads step In and take
-West VIrginia teachers; accus· Caperton denied ever making · over these negotiations or the
lng Gov. Gaston Caperton of any ~uch agreement.
whOle state will go down the
reneging on an offer, agreed to
"We made absolutely -no com· . tubes." he said.
extend a strike that has Idled mllment to a special session,"
Lale Friday , Caperton urged
thousands of educators and Caperton said. "I am so deeply
teachers
to ret'urn to work
forced public schools to close disturbed and disappointed by
·
Monday
morning.
In exchange
statewide.
this statement -that doesn't tell
The West Virginia Education the truth. It Is difficult to he offered to recommend thai
Association charged late Satur- cqmmunlcate with people who local boards of education · pay
teachers for time missed as a
day that Caperton backed out of a don't tell the truth."
promise to call a speclalleglsla·
Secretary of State Keri Hechler result of the strike.
But late Saturday, Meadows
live session to address demands entered the dispute Sunday,
for higher pay and Improve- saying Meadows and Caperton said, "teachers In an averwhelmments In Insurance and were acting "like playground hig maJority of counties" had
retirement.
name-callers" and should let agreed to a settlement based on
An hour after WVEA President
other negotiators try to resolve three con&lt;,lltlollll not mentioned
Kayetta Meadows urged the . the dispute. "It's high time that by _ Caperton: the Immediate

Burlei@h elected

'

Partly ciOady loatpt. Low
In mid 1108. Tuesday, hlllt near
80. Chaace of rain 341 percent.

West Virginia teachers agree to eXtend strike

were Serious

CINCINNATI &lt;UPI) - Wll·
llam R, Burleigh has been
elected executive vice preslden t
of The E. W. Scripps Co., and •
nominated to the company's
board of directors, It was announced Friday.

9302
Super Lotto
10-17·24-25-34-36 ..
Kieker 416447

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SEE US SOON

EtJ8 production

COLUMBUS, Ohio {UP!) ·E11fprodi1Ctton wlll be up about2
pereent In 1990, with most of the
Increase coming In the second
hall of the year.
Allan Lines, agricultural economllt at Ohio State University.
expects that upturn In production
to continue through the first halt
.ot 1991. He expects wholesale
prk:el to drop to 75 cents a dozen
by tile end of 1990, ·
Total eeg use continues
dowlward. About 83 percent of
thaf total Is for ts ble use but thai
percentage Is declining as eggs
uledln proces~ed products take
on 110re ottbe' market. · •

inc~

Pick-4

2

Seven ·states represented ·
.in recent RC&amp;D ·conference

Continued from D-1
to enter the Ohio Stale Fair·
grounds from the 11th Avenl!e
entrance, since the Expo actiVIties are on the south edge ol the .
Fairgrounds. Other activities
are probably planned from the
'north end making entrance to the
~xpo from 17th Avenue very
dlfflc:ult. ·
Farmers are reminded that the
revlaed copy of the "Ohio Field
Crops-Weed Control Guide" Is
available at the Extension Of.
. flee. Cost Is three dollars. There
are scime maJor revisions and
several new options for weed
control: Stop lor a copy,

•
to ~rease
_

Burley tobacco
market quota ·

Daily Number
891

Page 4

Th~ lower prices are likely to
encourage more expansion In
broiler, egg and turkey produc·
·tlon. And that's likely to com·
pound the profit problems currently faced by the fast-growing
poultry b!IS~esa. .
·
'

farm, leatared by the Gallla SoU aad Water

Ohio Lottery

Spartans

Feeds COlla to drop

Automallc, air, cassette,
sunroof, leather &amp; more,

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.

'119 ,....
89 NISSAN
STANZA

Aolomatic, air, stereo,
rear defroster. like newl

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at r:IMid'IIIIIO! ~11111111 &amp;Itt 9C &amp; &amp;9 &amp;IJI'IIO - a&amp; &amp;!I ~ ~ 84. &amp;111W 361111l l'lr\lfiS ID 'ollllor:lrS Mf 11000 1111 Solli!K11Q tt-¥1U i)llrMI

Patrol .cites Gallipolis woman.

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