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Psa

10-llle Dilly Sentinel

•
•

Continued from page 1
a two tolle grey Ford pickup truck had struck a stop sign. The
1-dptlon II continuing.
· Sheriff James M, Souls by reports that deputies were called to
the racetrack. area of the Meigs County Falrgrounc;ls !or an
lncldeat between horse trainers. Sheriff Soulsby reported that
the complainant was advised to contact the prosecuting
attorney's ofltce.

Legislation introdueed .
Rep. Mary Abel (0 -Athensl and Rep; Michael C.. Shoemaker
&lt;D-Bournevllle) have Introduced addltlonalleglslatlon ill the
Ohio General Assembly to fund payments to school districts for
. maintaining and repairing !acllltley,
·
House Blll812 would provide $50 nillllon annually lor building
maintenance, -$50 million annually for low Interest (3 percent)
loans lor school building construcilo'h, and $100 million annually
for construction of classroom facllllies In needy districts.
Fund!Qg for the new legislation would be provided from the Ohio
Lottery profits.
·
"For years we have played games with the lottery money and
our schools. The time has come to put those monies dlrecily to
work lor the benefit o! our kids," said Rep. Shoemaker.
Abel added. "Many of our buildings need basic reports and
maintenance and the districts l:;~nnot always afford to do this
annually. This money would be an asset In Southeastern Ohio." .

- --Area deaths-•

:Kenneth Haley

..

Kenneth L. Haley , 59, of
'Gl!IUpoUs, formerly of Rutland,
·died Thursday at Holzer Medical
Center to Uowing a lengthy
Illness.
Born at Carroll. Ohio on Oct.
29, 19:ll, he was a son of the late
Leland Haley and Chris Stilwell
Haley, who survives·and lives on
Happy Hollow Road In the
Rutland area. He was employed
at .Bob Evans Restaurant at
GaiUpolls.
In addition to his mother, Mr.
Haley Is survived by tour daugh·
ters, Mrs. Wendell &lt;Debra I Norris, of Bidwell, Mrs, David
(Kimberly) Warren, of Crown ·
City, Mrs. Steven (Tammy)
James, of Galllpolls, and Mrs.
John (Christie) Barcus, of Mid·
dleport; five grandchildren;· Qne
brother, John Haley, of ~ew
Lexington, Ohio; one sister, Mrs.
Robert (Judy• Mlller, of Ru ·
tland; and also a special friend ,
Yvonne Sextog, or Gallipolis.
· Besides his father ,' Mr. Haley
was preceded In death . by his
~· Doris Liter Haley; an Infant
son, Jeff; and one brother,
Ro~rt }Jaley.
. Services .will held S~itday , 2
p.m., at the Hunter Funeral
Home In Ru lland with Rev. Miles
Trout otrlclatlng. B!Jrial will be
at Miles Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 on Saturday.

EMS has 12 calls Thursday
Units of the Meigs County
At 1: 39 • •m. the Chester and
Emergency Medical Service re- Bashan Fire Departments were
sponded to 12 calls for assistance called to County. Road 28 on a
on Thursday. ·
·
brush fire.
. At 8_:33 a.m. the Middleport
The Pomeroy Fire Depart·.
unit went to Story's Run Road for inent was called at 4: 11 p.m. to
Darrell Thomas who was taken Route 7 on.. a!l auto accident.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
There were no Injuries,
At 9: 17 a.m. the Pomeroy ·unil
.;.t 8:31 p.m. the Middleport
was called to Cole Street · for unit went to South Second Ave.
Belinda Gray Who was tran$- !or Zelda Riley who was treated
portetfto Holzer Medical Center. but not transported.
The Rutland unit at 10:29 a.m.
At 8:37 p.m . tile Racine unit
went to Chase Road ior Thelma was called to Sellers Ridge Road
Chase who Wfi.S taken. to for an auto accident In . which
Veterans.
.
Ji;rica Guinther and Jackie
The Pomeroy unii transported. Guinther were taken to-Veterans.
Benjamin Buckley from Page
The Rutland unit, at 9:14p.m.
Street to Veterans at 10: 31 a.m.
responded to a call on Carsey
At 1:13 p.m . the Rutland unit RQ.ad for Thelma Chase who
went to Meigs Mine No. 31' for transported to Veterans.
Donald Marcum who was trans·
Finally, at 10:01 p.m. the
ported to Veterans.
Pomeroy unit was called to th,e
The Pomeroy F,lre Depart- sheriffs office for Charles
ment, at 1: 14 p.m. , was called to Aelker wh.o · was taken · to
Route 33 on the Athens County Veterans.
line for a br11sh fire.

___ Meigs announcements _ __,_

Weekend
~rvleesPilgrim
. Chapel
. . ·1 program,
at 2 p:lil.refreshmel)ts,
.T here wtll and
be aa
The Calvary
have weekend services be- ' card shower .
Buckley. He was a retired
ginning
tonlghl (Frh;lay) . God's SOup supper
farmer and he als9 worked as a
Bible School 'luartet wlll sing
The St. Paul United Methodist
production manager with. Put·
and
·
DQn
D11vldson
wlll
be
the
Church
will have a ~oup supper
nam 011 Company In Marietta.
speaker.
Thechurchislocatedon
March
23
from 5-7 p.m.
He was a marine corp veteran o! ·
Route 143 and Rev. VIctor Roush License issued
World War II, a member of the
Invites the publiC.
Pomeroy American Legion, and
Appreciation
service
A marriage license has been
Reedsville United Methodist
be
a
service
of
Issued
In Meigs Probate Court to
There
will
1
Church.
appreciation
'for
Lee
!YJcCotnas
Jeffrey,
Lorn Moore, _ 28, of
He Is survl)led by three sons.
on
Sunday
at
the
Heath
United
Russells
Point, Ohio, and KatGeorge and Chester Buckley,
Methodist
Church
In
Middleport
hleen
SJJe
Parker, ~6. of
B.eedsvllle; and Roger Buckley,
Pomeroy.
Pomeroy: six daughters, Eloise
Ll!dwlck, West Jefferson; Vivian
Humphrey, Ree&lt;jsvllle; Martha
Orr, Columbus; Bet·ty Meredith,
Phoenix, Ariz.; Zetah McCain
al)d MarUyn Coulson, both of
Coolville; and two sisters, Verna
Rose, Belpre; and Leona Ruth,
Reedsville.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded In death by his
wife, Hazel Martin Buckley In
1976; a son, James; a daughter,
Florence Cowdery; nine broth·
. ers. three sisters, a grandson,
and a granddimghter.
Services will be Sunday, 2 p.m , ·
at the Reedsville United Metho· ·
dist Church with ministers Wil'
liam Hatfield and tharles Eaton
offlclating. Burial will be In the
Reedsville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the White·
Blower Funeral Home In Cool·
· ville on Saturday from 2--4 p.m.
and . 7-9 p.m. and also one hour
•
Prior to the service at the church.

Ben Buckley
• Ben F. Buckley, 93, Reedsville,
die&lt;! Thursday at Veterans Mem·
orial · Hospital · fo Uowi ng and
extended Illness:.
··
. Born In Wadasvllle. W.Va., he
was the son of the late Charles
Wesley and Florence Ann Lucas

,.'

FNt.y. Masch 11, 1880 "

. Pomaoy-Midclaport. Ohio ·

Local news briefs... .
I

' •.

Stocks
DaiiJstock prices
(As·of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce aad Mark Smith
of Bl•nt, Elllll A Loewl
AT&amp;T ............. ...... .. ............ 41%
Ashland 011. ,. .'.... ................ 36%
Bob Evans ...... ..................... l3
Charming Shoppes :... ........... 9\'i
City Holding Co. ..... ... ........ ... 13
· Federal Mogul... ....... .. ........17%
Goodyear T&amp;R ... ... .. ..... ......37Y,
Heck's ........... .... ..... .. ... ..... ... 3Y,
Key Centurion ...... ............ .. 137;
Lands' End ................ . :...... JBJ's
Limited Inc, ........ :... .. ... .... 39)•
Multimedia Inc: .... :.... ... ...... .81
. Rax Restaurants ............ ...... 2'4
·Robbins &amp; Myers .. ...... .. ...... .. .16
- Shoney's Inc . ...... ...... ..... .... ,12%
Star Bank ........................... l9 \(i
Wendy's lnt'l.. .. .................. .4Y,
Worthington Ind ............. .... .. 21

New Sp~lnt
ere han~I·••
_.Arrlfing Dally.·

South·Central Ohio ..
Rain, possibly heavy, Friday
night , with a low near 50. Chance
of rain Is near 100 percent. Rain
continuing Saturday, with highs
between 55 and 60. Chance of rain
Is near 100 peroent.
Extended Forecast
· Sunday through Tuesday
A chance of rain or snow
Sunday and Monday. wllh fair
weather on Tuesday. Highs Will
be mostly In the 40s Sunday , In
the 30s · Monday. and In rbe 40s
again Tuesday. Overnight lows
wlll be In the 30s early 'Sunday
and in the 20s Monday and
Tuesday mornings.

' '

112

wm IWN

~==::::::::::::::::::::::::
1

Tlh. Crulu, Air. AM-FM-St-o
C. Ratte.

CALL 992-2174

'

·- 1985 Oldsmobile
Cutlass ·
2

Door. LOw mileage. Vary CINn.

'

'

'

'

1988 P.ONnAC
GIAND .· AM

4 Dr.. Tilt, CNI... C8Aette, Lugg~~ge
Rack. Silver with Grav. Interior.
.

.

)

'I·

'

SEE RAY RIGGS

915-,4200

.

1989 BUICK··
.
SKYLARK
Tilt, AM-FM-Stereo, poW.r wlndowa.
Len than 23.000 actu81 mllea.

1916 Ford Mustang ......................... Now S4995
·
.
1916 Grand AM .....................;......... Now S5995 .

JULIA

ROBERTS

She walked off the stree~
into his life
and stole his heart.
l

1915 Plvmauth Duster..........'........... Now S2'-95
·
'
1915 Iuick CtntQrv ~....................... Now $3995
LIMITED. 4 Door. V·8. WU 4896
1915 Olds Firtnza ....,...................... Now S3995
· 4 Dr. Wu '48111
·
1914 Ford TemDO .......,.................... Now S2495
. Low MH•. Waa •:zti'll
.
•
$.
1912 Olds Delta 88 ........................ Now 1995
2 Door.' W••" 211811
'
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:Z Dll. HATCHBACK. Waa ·U4811,
0

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~-··.,;j·~............._.,..:..._ __;__~_ _..,:__ _ _ _ _ __J

Thru March
2Ton

• ,. .

DON'T
WAITI

,

.

~.' N

'

'·

'

·Call 99·2-2174
SPR!Ni:

'J.~i

l·1h 4 ·., '·

• ., .''Nf M~

.'

Waste district resolution questioned
by-Meigs County Commissioners

St. Pat's Day hoopla amid sorrow

1914 lhitsun King Cab ......\'f.!ft.!M-11!. Now SJ89 5
1912 Chtv. S-10 .............rt!i:f.,!!.. Now SJ995

For Oo-tt·YourseNers

LOWER I

.

~ritQ,,,vlew

·1915 v.w~ Golf ...................'!······~···· Now 3_99 .~,.

4 whwl drive. w.. '11111111 '

$799'

';I.,

differs little from one Caperton
offered earlier ·In the week.
Meadows said the key to Saturday's agreement was "an abso·
lute commitment" by state Senate President Keith Burdette
and House Speaker ChUck
Chambers to authorize a special
legislative session once a teacher
pay package Is put together.
"Beglrinlng Immediately, the
House and Senate leadership, the
education community, 11nd the·
(Caper toni administration wlll
develop a plan for meeting both
the Immediate and loQg-terrn
needs of schools," Meadows said,
"We believe the plan wlll be
completed prior to the beginning
of the school year. Tbe legislative
leadership will then recommend .
to the governor ... that a special
legislative session be called to
a dopt the plan."

BREAK DAMAGES NEW SIDEWALK - The 20CJ&lt;block {f1U.II.
side) of Second Avenue wu flooded Saturday momlng and a
sectklo ·of the new streetscape project was damat~ed wben an
tupdergroua~. wai~~11!1e ~r~ke . .('!'!~~l!,llll,n~:l ~hoto) . ,
By NAJI1CY YO~Qif~ ..
~fUJ.. .
.. .•. .••..• ,,. , .., .11 .~"-·'"·~_
"~~- .... ,....! ~--- ... --1?\:.·- •
·-.-·~- ·tlon · of the landtill . at · West'
district.
.
•
;,• r•~
- -···'J"4" i ""'..._._ _ ·-; "too~~.,.'
e
-~
· • '·
· (1;~,.._ ,.1 ..{ -,
,_:_- 1 : ,, ;r.tmesiSe.o&amp;lllel Sllltf •
·
Roush and oth~ Meigs County Columbia. At their regular meetPOi\'tltROY - "What ever members of the pollcy commit· .. lng tl!!s . P,l!Stl Mollday' night ,
h&amp;P!llltie!l, tp free enjerprlse?" tee feel the resolu lion may have , Middleport Council look thl'lt
asked Meigs Commls~loner Mail· been developed because a large ,feelil\gs a step fart~e~ and voted
GALLIPOLIS- When the Ohio filed specifically with the court
Tbe 'Court's Members
nlng Roush.
portion of Meigs County's solid
t6 rl!ject tue resolution to control
Supreme· Court conducts it s These include writs of habeus
Moyer, whO has served as chief
Roush, a member of the waste Is bell!g landfllled at West the flow of waste.
one-day session In Galllpolls on corpus (the release of persons
justice since 1987 and Initiated
I Athens, Gallia , Hock·
Columbia, W,Va . - resulting In
;fhe· resolution stated speciflWednesday, April 18 as part of l!llegedly "nlawfully Imprisoned · the court.'s traveling sessions, c•. AGHJMV
ing, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton money going out of the district caHy that the " district shall
the .city's Bicentennial celebra· or committed), writs of manda·
received his juris doctor degree
Counties) · Solid Waste Manag· money that co uld be used to control the flow of all solid waste
In law from OhloStateUnlverslty
lion. those In attendance will mus !Ordering a public official to
menl District Polley Commlnee, cove r district. operations generated In the district and,
learn how the highest judicial do a required a cO, writs of
in 1964 and served as an assistant
was speaking In reference to a expenses.
where practicable and cost !'fleeprohibition !ordering a lower · attorney general. In addition to
panel in the state operates.
resolution
passed
at
the
March
8
Apparently.
members
of
Mid·
tlve,
shall control this flow·so that
The ,court, consisting of Chief court to stop an unalwful act),. his• private practice, .he was
meeting
of
the
policy
commlltee
dleport
Vlllage-Councll
also
feel
the
solid
waste remains within
Justice Thomas J . Moyer and six and writs of quo warren to, which
executive assistant to Gov.
to
regulate
the
flow
ofsolld
waste
the
resolution
may
have
been
a
the
district."
justice~, will hear arguments on
concerns Itlisuse or abuse of
James A. Rhodes and sat on the
going In and out of the six-county res ult of Meigs County's utlliza.
(See WASTE, pa1e AS)
. five cases that fall -into the public office.
Tenth District Court of Appeals
'
.
court's guidelines of "all constl.
Setdng Procedure
from 1979 until his ·election as
Among !'Is many other dulles,
chief justice.
tutlonal questions and questions
of publlc or great general the court sets rules and proce- · Justice A. William Sweeney ·
dures for ali courts in Ohio,
received his L.L. B. from Duke
Interest. "
'. Following a morning session lp including county, municipal,
University In 1948. After serving
In private practice· In Young·
which the arguments will be be common pleas, claims and ap·
· presented, Moyer and the just!peals bodies. In addition, .the
stown for two years, he worked
with theJudgeAdvocateGeneral
ces will go behind closed doors to court appoints judges 'to courts
debate the .merits, of the ar'gu- for temporary duty when the. Corps Agency untl'11968, when he
ments, prior to making a sitting jurist Is dlsquallfleil from
returned to private pratlce, re'decislon.
hearing the case .
malnlng there until his election to
Court's Powers
In addltlon, the court has
the court.
Justice Robert E. Hobnes , a
Empowered with the admlnis- authority -over the admission of
tratlon of the judicial branch In attorneys to practice law and
former majority leader and
Oplo, the Supreme Court decides disciplines attorneys who vlola,te
speaker pro tem In the Ohio
appeals of cases which have the rules governing the practice
House of Representatives , reorlglnated ·. In the 12 District of law.
celved his juris doctor degree
Courts of Appeals. ·The court
The .chlf!f justice and his
!_rom OSU. He was appointed td
must also admit appeals from
justices are elected to six-year
the court In 1979 after serving 10
such administrative bodies as
terms on a non-partisan judicial
years on the Tenth District Co9rt
the Board of Tax Appeals and the ballot . Two justices are cbosen
of Appeals. He won his own term
In 1980 and was re-elected In 1986.
Public Pili Illes .Commission of during each generaj election In
Ohio.
even-numbered years. The just!·
Hobnes had bee11 In private
The court also has the power to ces must have at least six years
practice In Columbus from 1949
Issue "special remedies" to of experience with the law to be
until his election to the appellate
certai-n legal Issues whjch are elected or appointed to the court.
(See C9URT, pa1e All)
QVES1tON
- Rorer Manley, of
Manley's T.ruh Service, Middleport, standing,
qllf!!ldons II a reaoludon p - d earUer this month
by the AGH.JMV Solid Waste Manarement Polley
Committee, will protect the lade~ndent trash ·
waSll't found until around 3 a.m.
City maintenance ' crews finally
,;gat s.~~.t~!I.'~Jk atjl: 45 a .m.

. '1917 D~ Dakota ........ ~:.............. ow, S4595
wuoaeee
·
• ·
1915 GMc s. 15'-..............~........~.... -~ow s399 5
2 Whell Drive. V"'Y CleM. W11 '4881
.·
r
1915 GMC 5~15 ............................~;; .Now .S459$ .

$999

CHARLESTON, W.Va . (UP!) pubitc scnoo1 teachers. Botll
- West Virginia's two ma}or leaders said, however, It would
teacher unions called off an ' be up to the teachers in each
11-day strikE' Saturday, saying county to decide whether to
legislative leaders had agreed to return to work and end West
~all a ~pechil session to deal with
VIrginia 's first school strike.
teacher demands for , better sa·
Teachers In 46 of the state's 55
!aries and benefits.
counties walked out beginning
West Virginia Education Asso- March 7, accusing Gov . Gaston
ciation President Kayetta Mea· Caperton ol reneging on a plan to
dows and West Virginia Federa· provide $35 million for a 5 percent
lion of Teachers President Bob pay nilse and an extra $6.5
Brown said they wlll tell their million for health Insurance.
mel)lbers return to public sc hool
State Education Department
classrooms Monday .
figures showed 14,746 of the
The union leaders said leglsla· state's 21,653 public school
tlve leaders agreed to call a
teachers were honoring the wal·
special session once a package of kout - illegal under state law - .
long-term 'salary and benefit a· week after It began . Some
Improvements Is ~eveloped . The 238,000 of the state's 340,000
two said that work on such a plan sturjents ·were not rep,Prtlng to
would begin Immediately.
schooL
The two uniOns represent alThe proposal for a special
most. all of.West
Virginia's
21,000
session
accepted by the unions
.

···"""

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0

W.a"48111

. . .......

... ."

.

----"- "-

2 Dr. V-11. W11 '811811

'
........

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16 Section11. 98 PaGes
A Muttimedil Inc. ~ewtp~tper

West Virginia teachen
agree to·end strike ·

,,

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.· ... QJt..r:t.,f!Eeratton . cot;tt,~g

2 Dr. Wu 0 118811

lnf11Htd .

j

) he lellk sllor'tly afterward, but it

.\ c··

1981 Chevette ..... ~.............
S695 ,
2 dr .. auto., V-8, rune good.
.
1979 Dodge Sta. Wgn ....... S895
318, PB. PS.

RICHARD
(;ERE

Along the River ......... Bl·8
Business ................... D-1·8
ComiCs~ ...... .. ........... Insert
Cluslfleds ............. ~ ... DM
Deaths ........................ A-8
Editorial ........... ..... ..... A-2
Farm ............. .... ...... D·1·8
Spor!ll ............. .......... C-1-8

-Pomlroy-Gallipolia-Point Pleasant. March 18, 1990

Break in
water line
damages·
-sidewalk

a.'&lt;!;ffl~lals began serching for

'

New L-tiool Allo11 lutn llltlh Schall

M'

GALLIPOLIS - The City of
Ga!Upolls lost- approximately
600,000 gallons of water early
Saturday due to a water line
brea~t.
.
Officials said the ally .lost
approximately 1,165 ·gallons of
water per minute over an 8~6 ·
hour period.
The Incident was reported on
the 200 block of Second Avenue,
on the park side of the street
under the just-completed Streets·
cape project.
When .•water from the. broken
line finally reached the surface,
It flooded .the curb section along
entire park side of Second
Avenue. Portions of the new
Streetscape near the historical
marker spot were damaged.
A spokesman at the James A.
Northup Water Treatment Plant
told the Times-Sentinel Saturday
, a loss of press,l!ri;! ..W!IS f)rst ·
noticed on the charts aroun(J 1: 2U'

.1918 GMC SAFARI

.1986
Chevette ................. .s1 ·7 95
2 dr. II speed. PS.

St. lt. 7

C-1

Inside

l&amp;ea
~~~------------~--~
James Sands:
The hard life of

Cot&gt;vriullllld 1990 .

1984 Mere. Grand
Marquis .......... S3895
4 dr. Loaded.
.
19 86 Mere. Marquis B,rougham ... S32
95
PB, PS, Air. Good Condition.
·

·ICiGS·
....!'="-. .

.*

'Beat of the Bend:
Mareh: In like a lamb-.out

B-1

lu!.~f p!!~P!. ~~!~~~! ••••~~. ~4295

'

Runnin' Rebels

Vol. 26 No. 6

Speelaft Of the Weeki

''The office of lreasurer re·
quires the unquestioned trust of
,this state's very important cltl·
zens - Ohio's tax!&gt;ayets," said
Brachman.
·
She said no more than half of
the $500,000 could come from
private contributions, and at
least 25 percent of those ll)dlvld·
'ual donations should be $250 or
less.

OSU ousted

New support_
group to hold
rmt meeting

-

CALL 992--6677 .

Contlniled· fro~ page 1

50 cents

B-5

FOIINFOIMATION LEADING TO ,,
THE AIREST AND CONVICnON
OF PERSON OR PERSONS WHO
HAVE VANDALIZED 2ND FLOOR
OF THE.DAVIS-QUICKEL
BUILDING ,AND STOLE·A 4"
, • SEARS BELT SANDER.

Brachman ...

Sund.1 y

cemeterlel In that area and they
are reqllll!ltbti tbaterave deeo- •
ratlona ~ re~ 11Y Mareh 31. ·

The Ollw Townahlp Trustees
are preparlne to . clean the

REWARD

Weather

. . Am Electric Power ... .... ...... 307;

wlll

l

eeme&amp;., rlee•••c

CIIIE SEE 'PUTTY IOIIEll"
AT 7:00 iw
AND STAT AS CIIIR GUEST
TO SEE ·~[•
AT I:IS' PM

·

~

'l'IPW£ TRBOVOR 'l'IIB 'ftJLIPI - D'a...,
It but &amp;lti!R &amp;tdiJIII at lite Pomel'G)' UaW
odllt Church lltlak I&amp;'•IPI'Iq. AdmlriD111te

.,

.

Be'
"
Teliord. bw,· aacl
BletUMr Llourd, a member of lhe clturch. ·

......,.. a..,.n 111'8
-~

By DENNIS O'SHEA
About 150 bands and more tMn
Plaza ran green Saturday morn150,000 marchers lined up for the
United Presalaterllltlonal
Ing and the city dyed the Chlcaao
Natural-born and would-be 229th St. Pat 's parade In New
River green - or greerleer than
Murphys, Kellys and O'Flaher:
York, led by two honora ry
usual -just before the parade.
tys celebrated the Old Sod and
Irishmen, Mayor David Dinkins
Honoring AmeriCan capitalIrish contributions to America
and Gov. Mario Cuomo.
ism more than than Irish hOiplSaturday, but the traditional St.
Dlhklns, who sported a bright
tallty, green-clad a!ll!lldanta In
Patrick's Day hoopla was muted , green double-breasted blazer,
St. Louis charged driven double
by contro'Versy, politics and the
said Irish-Americans help make
the normal prices to park their .
tragedy of the continuing " trou·
his city more than ·'just a
cars for a downtown parade.
meltll!g pot."
·
blea" In Northern Ireland;
Even as the green beer and
Irish-Americans and the irishNew York, the mayor said, ''Is
good times flowed acrosa the
for-a-day marched aloQg Fifth a gorgeous mosaic, and the Irish
United States, Violence conAvenue In New York and main are tbe brlgbt shining emerald In
tinued In Northern Irel8nd,
street• across the nation' In the
that mosaic."
where kHUngs and Prote. tantannual Marcb 17 tribute to a
Mayor Ric bard Dilley, son of CathoUc emnlty have prevailed
British-born 5th century mission·
the lepndary Chlcalo "boss" of over the true spti'lt of St. Patrick
ary credited with bringing Chrls-· the same name, 'made his first
In recent years.
tlanlty to Ireland and -I! legend appearance as chief executive at , Pollee fired plastic bulleta at
be beUevecl -driving tile snakes the head of bis city'a parade, The people pelting them with bottlel
. out.
late 1\f~or Richard .J . Daley led and rocks after experts defuled a
"II you ain't Irish, you should St. Patrick's D•y celebr•nts · 200-pound barrel bomb Satl!l'd8y
be today," said Shawn O'Brien In
through the Loop for mQre than Jn Coalisl8nd, weat or Belfut.
Batcm Ro~,~&amp;e, La., where specta- two decades until his death In Three pollc_e oftlcers were
tors caught, beads, wooden niCk- 1976.
slightly Injured. There were
els and ereeti panties ~brown
In keeping wltll the spirit ot the Isolated shOOUnp In Belfut, but
!rom floats alcmg a parade route . day and limptandiJti cuatom, no Injuries were I'1!POI'Wd.
In fuU aprlng bloom.
the filunmln In· O.ley Center
(See
PAT'S, ~ .U)
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Cominentary and perspective

Msdi18, 1880

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SundayTmee

Holzer Clinic earns accreditation

Man:h 18, 1990
Pega A~2-

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Ci!nie,

Through exercise science,
physical restoration and lnstruc·
three-YI!Br accreditation from
lion on body mechanics and
the Comm1111on on AccreditatiOn
lifting techniques, work hardenot Rehabilitation Facilities Ing also reduces the risk of
(CARF) accordlna: to an anre·injury when the Individual
_nouncernent made by Dr. ·J.
returns to work.
Craig Strafford, president • of
AccordiJII to Robert Daniel,
Holzer Clinic.
clinic administrator, !he benefits
The prestigious three-}'l!ar ac- of CARF accreditation to area
crectltation"ls tlie highest feCllilll·
patientS are numerous. Most
!ion oHered by the commission
importantly, the commission aswhose sole co~~rn If to promote . sures that the Work Hardening
services for people with
programs and services offered at
disabilities.
.
•
Holzer Clinic have met national
Jn Its Inspection, CARF fostl!te-of.lhe.art performance
cused on the clinic's Work
standa:rds and . that the clinic is
Hardening proerarn, an ·occupaclimmltted to the best · possible
tional • rehabilitation program
outcome tor each patient served.
designed to help injured workers
· In ·addition, the Industrial
·return to work more quickly,
Commission of Ohio requires
Safely and ln better physical
CARF accredlt.ation to provide
condition.
.work Hardening services to

Inc., has been awarded a full

Energy chief takes democracy literally

iunb~ ~im,es - ientirrel
A DIVIsion of

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(6lt) t46-2342

WASHINGTON - Adm .
James . D. Wapdns runs the
Energy Department the way he
ran the AIDS commission, treatlng the nation's energy problem
as though it were a new plllgue.
He has roamed the country

some answers.
Soon after he joined the Bush
Cabinet, Watltlns blred the executive director from his old AIDS
commission, Polly Gault, and
made her .his chief of staff at the·
Energy Department.
hostlngloWI!meetlng~tofindout
Then . he ordered his policy
what the public thinks he should makers tO come up with a
do about dwindling energy re· "National Energy Strategy." It
sources. Watkins is so enamored could be called "AIDS: The
. of getting a • natiOnal consensus Sequel." The nation would be
that he has told the energy · canvassed, and Watkins would
experts on his sial! tli'at the· again be praised as a man who
national energy policy will In· can reach a consensus on contra- ·
elude only the ideas suggested by verslallssues. A copy of the AIDS
the public and nothing else.
commission report was attached
The admiral is taking demo- to Watkins' game plan for the
cracy a little too far. Town Energy Department to use as
meetings and a national forum guide for preparingsiinUar lhfor·
are fine, · but : at some ' point, mation for the National Energy
Watkins will have to stop asking Strategy,'' .
·
questions and . start providing
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111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

(6U) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
ROBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Puhllsher·ControUer

A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Assrelatlon.

..'

LETTERS OF OPINION au weloome. They should be less than 300 words

"a

long. AU letters are subJect toedltlng and must be signed. w1th name, address and

telephone number. No unslgn.OO leuers will be published. Letters should be In
good tastr. a~dresstng_lt_~ . not perscnaiUIH.

.Backstairs

at

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
Watkins is understandably
proud of the AIDS commissiOn. It
vaulted him into the national
spotUght with its bold and compassiOnate recommendations to
President Reagan. ·
.
But someone should teil Watkins that en~gy is not a disease
and that sewing up a neat
package of recommendations
about how to solve a problem .Is
not the same as solving !he
problem. He is a Cabinet secretary now, not the .c hairman of a
hlt·and·run lask force.
Sources told ciur associate Jim
Lynch · that tile White House
Council of Economic AdviSers
has seen a draft" ot Watkins'
"National Energy Strategy" and·
panned it. The experts say it

..

the White House

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
• WASHINGTON- President Bush will probably start planning his
re-election campaign early next year, aides say.
. They insist that Bush has not yet set. the political Wheels churning
for a second term. that the machinery Is not yet in place, and that it Is
' 'too early" to swing into a campaign mode.
: But even though Bush has not announced his plans to run for
~e-election- which no one on the Was)lington scenedoubtshewiildo
- he has ail'eady said that Vice President Dan Quayle wiil be hls
running mate again.
•.
: Why he made such a premature announcement is a puzzlement,
unless he was trying to head off other contenders such as Secretary of
State James Baker, who undoubted!¥ has higher political ambitions,
: and Housing Secretary Jack Kemp, who aspired to the presidency in
' 1988.
. While Bush is enjoying a high popularity rating and reveling in the
. presidency, the picture ·is not so clear with Barbara Bi.tsh. Her
;. popularity rise in the White House was meteoric, but some of her
:.: comments indicate that four years in the goldfish bowl is enough for
,~ her .
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,. White House chief of staff John Sununu says there iS a possibility
;.that Bush may travel abroad in late July or early August. between the
; end of the Ec.onomic' Summit in Houston and his summer vacation at
• Kennebunkport, Maine.
! Bush, who traveled to79 countries as vice president during his eight
::years. has t)le travel bug. Sununu says he "wants to go everywhere
• and he wants to go everywhere now."
: The blg ticket items are South America, Africa and back to Asia for
; another swing. Europe·ts also in the picture as the day nears whe"n .
·. there is an agreement in Vienna on superpower troop cuts on the
: continent.

.

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'
• Like many of his predecessors, perhaps st.emming' from the"feeling
;. of isolation, President Bush has telephonltis. He has made some 3,000
: phone calls. 500 to heads of govrnment. since he has been in office.
• And there are more to come..
.
~
The president believes In personal diplomacy, and getting on the .
: horn is one way to solidify friendships. It also provides the direct
• approach for a president who has something he wants to get off his
:chest.
: Rarely, unless Bush says so himself. are the contents of the phone
• calls leaked. But sometimes the White House wants to get the word
: out and the call is leaked. '
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Preparations are Well under way in HOI.!Ston for the Ju.Iy 9·10
Economic Summit meeting with leaders of the seven Western
industrialized nations.
"It's the first tjme we've had an Economic Summit meeting in an
American city and it's going to be world class," said Peter Roussel,
who is handling many or the communicatjons arrangements for the
hundreds of journalists.who, will converge on Houston.
,
What's Texas without a barbecue? The foreign leaders can all
expect to be treated to such fare, !lOt to mention Stet~ons and other
symbols of the Lone Star State.

There's another Jackie Kennedy in the White House. Not as high
; profile as the former first lady. But as an assistant to White House
· chief ofr staff John Sununu, this Jackie Kennedy can wield some
: gatekeeping powers of her own.
. The attractive New Englander carne to the Whit(! House with
· Sununu, having served with him when he was governor of New
: Hampshire. Her name does give newcomers a start.
. The original Jackie Kennedy has only beell'back to the White House
· once in recent memory. That was during the Nixon era when her
: portrait .was presented to the White House.

The Oseai!S and 'the great debate
If the odds on the early . undoing. The black guys were the
At the turn·of t.he century, the
favorites hold up, lhe 62nd heroes.)
erudite and impatient W.E .B.
Annual Academy Awards will
- "Driving Miss Daisy" drew DuBois challenged the vocamake history, make a statement you lrito a womb of tender. loving tional mindset and accommoda·
and make more cynics.
memories of . "the . good old live patience or the founder otthe
Cynicism comes naturaily this days." and its success was due as · Tuskegee 'Institute, Booker T.
year for many black Americans. rn·uch to its timing as
theme. Washington, who called on his
Those in·the know are predicting Aft~r years of affirmative-action fellow Negroes to -de-emphasize
tli&lt;~t the golden eunuch named
equal rights and -concentrate on
ha~sles and racially contentious
"Oscar" will be awarded to a politics, Americans y('arned to manual skills. DuBois . urged
movie that makes emotional embrace a genteel chariot of them ·to exercise their right to
eunuchs out of black men.
vote and educate their minds.
charm and grace that would
How do you explain "brivlng softly purr along at 15 miles iJer,
Over the years, the protagoMiss Daisy" being nominated for hour.
nists and ihe issues have
nine Oscars (five in major
"Driving Miss Daisy" Is a changed. But some variation of
categories), while Spike Lee's reminder of an era when life was
the great debate has persisted "Do the Right Thing" was as gosh-darned pleasant as a cold the polltics of Integration vs. the
nominated for only two, and that glass of lemonade on a hot economics of self-determination
lnsplrational tribute to black summer day and as reassuring .. . the irenic nonviolence of
Civil War heroes, "Glory," was as an easygoing black chauffeur Martin Luther King Jr. vs. the
nominated for only four (three of who knew his · place. If it does "by any means necessary" strathem in technical categories)?
carry off the top prize, the golden tegy .of Malcolm X· .
I saw aU three films:
eunuch wlll celebrate that legacy .
In a paradoxically curious
-"Do the Right Thing," was a as much It commemorates cine- way. ali three !Urns - "Driving
brtlliantly conceived and innova- matic distinction.
Miss Daisy,' ~ "Do the Right
tive slice of black,,sociology.
But this lovely ,fllrn represents Thing'' and "'Glory" -:- add more
- "Glory" touched a lodes tone another accomplishment. It un- understanding to the great deot patriotic commonality by intentionally dramatizes what bate. Anybody, black or white,
exalting the capacity of men to has come to be known in the black who sees ail three lilms will gain
triumph in war, even though they community as "the great a smidgen of insight Into the
were defeated In peacetime. debate."
debate's historical antecedents.
(That irony was also "Giory'"s

its

Appreciates support

Today in history

Chuck Stone

But blacks are "invisible men"
in the cinematic fra·ming of the
great debate. They can authenticate the spokespersons within
their community, but they are
powerless to Influence who · receives ,awards in · the movie
industrY or who gets honol'ed in .
·
.the arts and letters.
I enjoyed "Driving Miss
Daisy" in the same way that I
appreciate the brief refreshment
ot a cold lemonade on a hot
summer day. But "Do the Right
Thing" nourlshed the depths of
my soul. Am I an unusual black
American? Or do I articulate
what most black Americans are
feeling?
1
The answers could inaugurate
another great debate. But the
differential of nine golden eu~ ·
nuch nominations tor '"Driving .
Miss Daisy" and only two lor '"Do
the Right Thing" already prove!
that Hollywood has yet to come to
grips with the accuracy of that
delicious observation in "Cool
Hand Luke'": '"What we have
here is a failure to
communicate."

When the censors ruled Hollywood

Mae West's double entendres
.(in songs like "I've F~und a New
Way to Go to Town ) an~ her
insinuating walk and talk ( 'Why
doncha co~~. up and see me
sometime ·
Is her best·
remembered classic) were
; Dear Friends,
while we were part of Cliffside.
prime largets to the movie
. Two years ago when we moved We wili always remember yoll
censors in the 19ros.
· to Gallipolis we were complete and the good tii)'les we had.
When the righteous arm of the
: strangers but you took us in and Although things did not work out
film Industry known as the Hays
: welcomed us. During our time the way we hoped they would, we
Office (after its president, WUI
: here you made us feel part of the want you to know that we always
Hays) began implementing its
. community., As we get ready to worked bard fOr Cliffside and had
Hollywood cleanup, Mae West
: leave Gallipolis we would ilke to the Club's best interest at heart.
got top billing from the censors.
· have the opportunity to see each
We are moving to Florida to
Tw9. of )I~~ films, "I'm N~
: of you individually to thank you continue our cal'ej!rs there !)lit we
Angel and Klondike Annie,
: •for ali you have done lor us, but will never forget Gallipolis or the
eventually got the censors' Seal
there are so many of you that it people who made us feel so at
of Approval. By then, the blue
just isn' t possible.
·
,
pencils had done their work.
horne.
To Clltfslde membe~ we
The H~,YS Office found "unac·
Again, thanks to ali of you.
want to especiaily thank au or
ceptable such lines as, "She's
Sincerely
you for the support you gave to us
Galen .&amp; Kathleen Herath the only girl who has satisfied
mor~ men tha~ Chesterfield's,"
and When shes caught between
two evils, she likes to take the one
she never tried.before. "
By United Press International
· Every movie that carne out of
Today is Sun~ay. March 18, the 77th day of 1990 with 288•o follow . ,,J Hollywood betw~n 1934 and 1968
The mqon_1s wax ing. moving toward Its lirsl !l"arte~.
went. through the same \aunder·
The mornmg stars are Mercury, Venus. Mars and Saturn.
ing when called tor, as General
The evening star is Jupiter.
·
Gardfler tells in"his book, "The
Those born on this date are under the sign of Pisces. They Include
Censorship Papers" (Dodd
John C. Calhoun, the first U.S. vice president to resign that ottlce, in
Mead, 1987). This is a collectlo~
1782: Grover Cleveland, 24th president ot the United States, in 183'7;
of the turn censors' letters to
Russian C'omposer Nikolai Rimsky ,Korsakov In 1844; German
movie producers who, in the
engineer Rudolf Diesel. inventor of the engine that·bears his name, in
censors' opinion, ·had crossed
18~; . British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain In 1889;
over the line of decency and
clairvoyant and therapist Edgar Cayce in 18'77; actor Edward
propriety.
··
Everett Horton in 1886; racecar driver Andy Granatelllln.1923 tap
Vulgarity of every kind _
67); authors George Plimpton In 1927 tage63) and John Updike In 1932 ·sometimes ot the mildest sort _
(age 581 ; and Michael Reagan, President Reagan'seldestson, in 1946
drew a no-no from the frowning
•· (age 44).
guardians of· the country's
:
-~
morals.
•
•·
··
, u...
th
On this date in history:
·· 1
e script tor the movie
•
• ....en
,
~
In 1922, Mahatma Gandhi was sentenced to six years In prls.on for . version of "Born Y-terd8 "
called for Broc
. ' ·civil disobedl~nce agalnll tile British r\ll~l's of India.
. · k, tbe Ju~nk· de81Y
er
1

~ Letters to the editor

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reads like the tape recording of a ,
town meeting Instead ot concrete
marching orders.
Some of the seasoned energy
experts In the department ar~
frustrated that !heir expertise
has been brushed aside in favor
ot poilcy by polllng. A spokesman
for Watkins, David Benton, told
us that the staff need not fret.
"They're going to be in charge of
puUinglt all together," he said.
Energy ~laffers a:enulllely like
Watkins, but his military demea·
nor makes some uneasy. Watkins
may be the first person to shove
aside the coveted Cabinet title of
"Mr. Secretary," in favor of
rank. Inside the department,
Watkins is strictly referred to as
"The Admiral." He slgnl bls
leiters '' Adrn. James D. Watkins,
U.S. Navy . Retired." As ope ·
source observed, "People
wonder why they're getting mall
from the Navy Reserves on
.Energy Department
slationery." .
The military title Is a constant
reminder to the department that
Watkins is a veteran of the
Navy's nuclear priesthood. He.
1\'as a strong advcicate of nuclearpowered ships, and he has
carried th~t sa111e .pro-nuclear
zeal to the Energy Department.
Insiders tell us-that Watkins'
mantra on the national energy
strategy is "Start up Seabrook,
slart up S,horeham," two nuclear
power plants. The Seabrook
plant in New Hampshire was
licensed last week after 17 years
in mothballs. The Shoreham
plant in New York is still waiting..
Watkins may have succeeded
in warming the nation's heart
about the AIDS crisiS using the
town meeting approach. It wlll be
a far more amazing feat to warm
the nation to nuclear power using
the same gimmick.

· tycoon played by Broderick
Crawford, to belch, the censors
let out a loud noise of their own:
· ''Eliminate the burp from
Brock." It was cut.
Not even a wholesome movie
lik,e "Going My wa;r," ln which
Bing Crosby and Barry Fltzgeraid slarred as two amiable
parish parish · priests escaped
the censorious eye ot' the Hays
Office.
, Alter Father O'Malley (played
by Crosby) is transferred to
another parish the bishOp sends
. Father Timo~y, a happy-go. lucky cutup played by Frank
McHugh, to take his place. After
10 minutes with Father Tim, the
aging parish priest Father Flizgibbon (Fitzgerald), shakes his
head in dismay
"How did he ~ver come to be a
priest?" he asks. Father O'Mailey replies "We blindfolded him
and he tho~ht he was joining the
Elks .,
·
Se ·
th
d H 11

George Plagenz

Republican National Committee
and was considered a dark· horse
candidate for the GOP presiden·
reporter who had also served
tlal nomination in 1920.
with the U.S. consulate tn the
Warren Harding got the nod,
British West Indies. A genial
but later rewarded Hays for his
sort, he was nevertheless relentsupport by naming him U.S.
less.ln thepursuitofhlswatchdog
Postmaster-General. Hays lefi
role.
·
that job a year later to take the
His opposition to Hollywood's
movie post. He put Joseph Breen glorlllcatlon of the "sweater
in charge of the day-to-day
girl" in the 1940s caused conster:
operation of the Hays Office on nation in the sweater Industry
the West Coast.
whicll charged that Breen wa:s
Breen was a former newspaper
hurting theh' business.
·
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Berry's World

IRONTON -A lengthy inves tt•
gation resulted In the Indictment
of a 34-year-old w~;ne County,
• ·W.Va. man Thursday in connec.tion with the death last summer
of Palila. Kelley, 24, Athalia.
Mich~ei Copley was placed in
the Lawrence County Jan liter
the indictment charged him with
robbery, kidnapping, assaulting
""a police ornl!er and ~ggravated
murder. He faces arraignment in
'·Lawrence Cqunty Common
·Pleas Court Wednesday at 1 p.m.
The indictment was handed
down by the grand jury fotlowing
. a $lx-hour session Thursday.
Sheriff · Dan Hieronlmus told
area media in a press conference
:following the indictment that
Copley had been In jail, serving a
· 90-day sentence for assaulting a
. pollee officer. He. was scheduled
to be released Monday.

kter

, Prosecuting Attorney J. Ste- convenience store In Athalia
wart Kaiser said the' assault was operated by her family on the
not directly related to Kelley's m·ornlng on July 28, 1989, was
murder.
·
abducted alter an attempted
Kaiser said Copley was driving robbery "went wrong. ;, Follow"in the Hecla area on Nov. 4 when ing a month· long search by police
two deputies spotted his car and and her family, her body was
called In the license number. The found on an old logging road near
license didn't match the car, the Gallla County line.
Kaiser said, and when deputies
The cause o( Kelley 's death
attempted to stop Copley, he fled. · was attributed to stab wounds to
At the end of a 21-mile chase, the heart, with the possibility of·
Copley repprtedly rammed the sexual assault.
deputies' Crl!iser.
Kaiser said Copley was famiiCopley had been a suspect in lar wit!\ the area around the store
the case lor approximately three and had frequented It in the past.
months, Kaiser said. Testimony He added that on one of his visits,
presented to the grand jury the Kelley family was "uncomcentered around eyewitnesses, fortable with his presence and
who chose Copley from photos behavior .... There were some
and "in person" lineups, Hleronl· comments made."
mus said.
·
·
Kaiser will ask that bond 'tor
Officials believe Kelley, who Copley be denied at the
was working at the Route 7 arraignment.

· . COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -An
:Sntl-abortion demonstration organized by Rescue Ohio Coalition
resulted In .123 people arrested
Saturday on charges of .dlsor·
derly c011duct at a clinic on the
'city's east side.
Demonstrators at a second
'clinic dispersed on police orders
and were not charged.

move and they didn't move,"
said Mat"tei. 'The demonstrators.
were then arrested and taken to
the police station for booking.
Several demonstrators who re·
fused to· give thetr names were ·
held in the Franklin County jail.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -

produ~tion.

·

'·
' Member:

"So far, the United States has
carried the burden of maintain·
ing a grain stockpile for the world
at th,e exwnse ot our producers

UnUed Press lntPrnaltonal,
fnland Dally Press Association and ttl~
Ohlq Newapa_per Aslorlatlon. National
Advertising R.fprnentatlve, Branham
Newspaper 511 ... 733 Third Awnuf,

--.....· OR OTHER CANCER THERAPIES, ,
"'"" •&lt;\

HOllEI CUNIC
and

HOL1EI
·MEDICAL CENTEI
OFFER FULl DIAGNOSIS. AND .
TREATMENT IN A
CONVENIENT,
STATE·OF~THE-nT SmiNG.

Ask Your Physician For A Referral to Holzer

PHONE (614)

446~5131

bombing,"
said. "We're
calling It anMartin
explosion."We
don't ...- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
know lt they ~re related."
The fBI dispatched a team of
forensic ' Investigators from Washington to determine wl)ether
~ IN 1HE
the .explosiOn was caused 1&gt;Y a
"possible incendiary device,''
said Larry Curtin., · spokes,man
for the FBI in T11rnpa.
T.he firstblastoccurredoutside
a home In central south Fort
Myers near the DEA office. "It
.was -probably like a front yard
. ·~ype of thing," Martin said.

Mattei said. the police department was aware that the Rescue
Ohio Coalition planned a demon$tratlon at one of Columbus's
four clinics Saturday, but author- ·
Illes were not sure in advance
which clinic would be largeted.

World ·grain supplies
lowest since 1970s
The world has the lowest grain

WE HOPE YOU DON'T•••
IUT, IF YOU DO NEED

IADIAIION ONCOLOGY,

FORT MYERS, Fla. WPI)A Drug Enforcement Admlnis·
tratlon office was destroyed by
an exploSion early, Saturday,
authoriUes said, and investiga·
tors were trying to determine
whether the blast was caused by ..
a firebomb.
.
No injuries were reported .
The exploslt~n at the DEA
office occurr~d just ·after 2 a.m.
and foUowed a blast in a Fort
Myers residential area · a bout
11:30 p.m. Friday, said Jerri
Martin, a spokeswoman for the
Lee County Sheriff's office.
"We don't know that it was a

-123· arrested at anti-abortion action

and taxpayers," Lines says.
"Policymakers are going to have
· to make a tough decisiOn in"this
farm bill debate. It's the moral
issue ot keeping people fed · .
against the budget Issue of
, cutting government supports to
U.S. farmers."
Ohio State farm economists
· project 1990 will be the fourth
consecutive year that world
grain and oilseed consumption
will exceed production.
·
Typically, American farmers
produce enough corn, wheat and
soybeans to feed the~~~~elves,
.supply their export cualoiners
,and hold a surplus for food
disasters. But bad weather in
1988 and 1989 cut U.S. production
and caused thecountrytodlplnto
surpluses to meet baste clemand.

Sl!NDAY ONLY

Sllii8CRIPTION RATIII

Education fund ··

BJ Carrier or Mot« &amp;otlte

OnP Week ........... .. ..... .......... 70 Cents
One Year ................................. $.16.10
SINGLE COPY
.
PRICE
SUnday ................................. 50 C.nlo

Enough money at the righl"llme. A llfi lnaura11ce pfan
can aaaure your child's oppOrtunity for college or tech·
nicallr!lini!lQ. Education fund-One of the .

No oublcrlptlono by mau permitiH Ia

al"eta wh«e mot or curler wrvlce 11
available.
'

WOODMEN soUmoNs

Th• SUnday Timeo-Sellllllel wUI not be
for adVance payments

1J"'Jt ·..,;r.ll . . 1ti}tl~t;

·r~lble

·made to carrlm.

0

MODERN WOODMEN·
.OF AMERICA

ll.tll. IIJBICall'ftONI

.
....., lliiiJ
One Year ............................ :.... 137.14
Six moatlla .............. ................. $19.110

A FRATtANAL LlfliNSURANCl SOCilTY
H()M[ OffiC[

IIW~NI .

t~ of "n::rlcta::; ~= ~

An

Holzer Clinic, Foodland Stores, Olilo Valley Bank,
a number of Ga!Upolls retail merchant. and area
high schools. All proceeds go to lh" local u"lts of
-the American €ucer Society.
.
·

, .

NOW OPEN
OHIO RIVER PLAZA'
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

THE WORLD'S BEST TASTING
, CHICKEN AND BEEF MARINATED
IN JUICES AND SPICES THEN
BROILED OVER MESQUITE•••
.. ~••THE HEALTHY ALTERNATIVE!
7/e /ut ~ tPue'ft ·W M tpt.·/Mif

GOLD
WEDDING BANDS

I

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30°/o OFF
Tawney Jewelers
422 SECOND AVE.

MISQUITI 8.8.Q.

GAWPOUS, OH.

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
20°/o OFF REMOUNT .EVENT
.

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A

opportunity to bring
your diamond up to date!

Diamonds ere forever, but unfortunately the eeme isn't true .for mountings.
Our apeclel ~0% Off Remount Event makes it po11ible for you to re~tyla your
diemonda or
find a pace for your loose stones.
•Over 600 different 14 kt. gold
•20% off loose diamonds in C81e
man's end woman'• mount·
your new mou"ting requires
inge to_choose ftom.
additional etonea.

to

Ntw York. New York 10017.

:

~~:'!t en
~
1
Preabyte:ian Cb~rcb ~eeto~
'
toater and non· smoker who never
awore comini. from amall·lown
'
•
· rose
AmeriCa
(Sullivan,
Ind.), of
Hays
to become chairman
the

halftime durtn1 the BeaiaJe-Collep .(U-stars
11ame. Tickets are $4 each, and are available at
Star Bank locatio•, as wellu all branchea of tile

Suspect indicted in .Kelley murder

Oftlco..

wOO: 5~~- sc!n~&lt;;:;:eonf! ~~e sc~e%~

were destroying the film cap!· .
tal;s image · with the public
Threatened wi h
bo ot of
1 a
Catholic
hyc 1 le
moguls ~~::r::i ~ =~
police their own mora~ befo~
somebod
dd
it tor th Yelse step~ In an ld
They e~rlantzed the Motion
Picture Prod
d trlbu
to
ucera an 011
·

BENEFIT TOURNEY SLATED - The Tlllrd

supplies since the early 1970s,
which should force U.S. j)oUcy·
makers I.nto an ethical debate
dur!Qg .discussion ot the 1990
farrn blll.
Agricultural economists at
Ohio State University say world
grain stocks are so low that
reduced yields or a natural
disaster in any of the major
grain· producing countries -would
(VIiPIIMifl ·
quickly ca)lse a food shortage.
l'llbllllled •ach SUndly. 825 Tlllnl,\"" ..
Allan Lines says that raises the
GoUipdll, Ohio. by. ll!rOhioVaii~Pui&gt;­ "
U.IIDJ Coml!lll)' /Multlmi!dla. Inc. Se·,
ques tlon of · whether or tlot
&lt;ODd &lt;IUS PQI!IAKe paid it Galllpdil.
American farm . policy should
Ohio ~. Ebtered 11 aeoond claas
continue its focus on Cu. tting
111a111n1 mantr at Pom«o;&lt;. Ohio, !'ott

I

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DEA office
:destroyed
·by explosion

Annual Scott Coaaelley Touriaament will he April
1, at 1 p.m. Ia the University of Rio Grande'• Lyne
Center. Star Bank'~ senior vtce president, Dan
Davies, right, aiODil with Mary Evana, teller, left,
and Kenny Coughenour of Holzer CJinlc, dlspl~
one of the autographed coUectlbles to be sold at

(2nd from left) congratulates
.
M.S., director of the SIRM department, on •
receiving tbe maximum certification from the ·:
Commlssl&lt;)n on Accreditation of RehabiUtatlon :
Facilities. .
·
·

Admlnllltrator Robert
Daniel (left) ud
Phylllatrlat Dr. Daniel R. Blaek look on as the
eliJ!Io'l Board President, Dr. J. Cratg Strafford
'

Police Lt. William Mattei said
no one was injured and the
arrests outside Capital · Care
Center were made without inc!·
dent. Unlike many previous
demonstrations, 'the Columbus
· ;protesters did not chain themselves to objects to hamwr the
proeer;s, he said.
'
·'They. were read an order to

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Injured Oh-Io patienll.
"We are v~ pleued about
recelvtna: this honor and are very
appreciative of the tremendous
support shown to us by area
Industry," Dr. Strafford stated.
The ci!Jilc' a Work Hardening
program 'ts UDder the supervision
ot Tim Betz, sports, Industrial
and rehabilitation medicine directot, and Joe Duffield, exercise Pl\Yslologlst. Or. Dan Black,
physic):! medicine physician;. Is
medical director for both SIRM
and Work Hardening.
·Infonnation on CARF, the
Work Hardening program and
other occupational and rehab!Utalion programs can be obtained
at Holzer Clinic by co ntacilng the
Sports, Industrial and Rehabllit·
alive Medicine Center at 446·
5244.

...... C.oiJ

Ufl .• AIIIIUmES ·
IU'S
FIAIEJNAL PIOGIAMS

13 w..u ................................ " $19.2t

~.... '"Jr
e 1110 "- NIA, tnc.

26 w..u ...................... :........... 137.96
~2W..U .................................. $7UI
. . . Ou~ C..IIIJ
.

SOUTH AFRICAN POPULATION
BAR CHART
,.

13Wtttco ... ,............. ,.... ., ......... S!Il.80
................................. $40.30
52Wtelco ................................. $7!!.10

' 26 w..u
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• ROCK ISLAND. ILLINOIS

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14 IT. WHITE 01 YEJJ.OW GOLD
YOUR CHOICE Of fOUl .01 SIX PIONGS

.$119°0

J
ON ALL

SAVE

LOOSI DIAIIOIDS
COLOIED
.

If you need
181111 to fill out
your ""' OI'Mtlon, pui'GNI• new
ltonae end ..,. 20 to .~'"·

1/l)(

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�_Page A-4-Sundey T1n111 Seittine1

Pomeroy-M~eport-Gal'ipolil,

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Ohio Poirit Plsm •t. W.Va.

.....--Local Briefs:

Midwest :compact wants in suit

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - A place the dump in Rfaa ToWIIIhtp
seven· alate ·c ompact has -.sked a in t..nawee County. His acUon II .
federal Judge to allow it to .baaed on the contention the dump
~ a de~nt in a -suit
WOuld be too c:J01e to Toledo'~
delll81y
populated area.
County
baa
filed
&amp;Jalnat
Lucas
GALLIPOLIS - WUliam Glen Collins, 30, Rt. 2, Vinion, waa
.. the Michipn Low-~el Ra·
The reque~t flied by the Midwarrested by the Gallla County Sheriff's IlePI!l'tment Friday·
·
dloacllve Waste Autbority over ,est c:Ompact Friday Aid tbe
cited for notdflving without a
night on a bench warrant. He
. the p!'OIIOied location Of
DU·
Uce~~~e.
.
_ .
agency may not "entirely em·
cleardump.
•
brace the action o( the MlchJaan
In a report submitted by deputies Friday, James Davis, 31, of
The Midwest Interstate Low- detendiln ta nor .entirely oppose
~36 Flaminao Dr., wu charged Thursday night wlfh DWI and
Level RacUoactlve Waste ·eom- the efforta of the Ohio plaintiff:ll."
fleelnland eluding !l police oftlcer and cited for running a stop
mlaalon Hid it flied 1!8 motlon in
sign.
.
·
·
The Midwest compact, which .
u.s.
Dl•lrict Court in Toledo u a selected Ml~hlgan 1,1 the aite for ·
.
•
I
way to. ·~promote an equitable tbe nuclear wute ·dump, has
and twlft r~solution .to ' the been at . odds with Mlcb~an ·
m&amp;.tter."
officials over moriey the au thorLast · i'iovember Proaecutor tty saicllt must have .to continue
-GALLIPOLIS- F)'ank A.D. Henson, 18, of 1735 Chatham
Antbony Pizza fUed a suit on the site selection process.
Ave., w-.s Cited Friday night by the GaiUpoUs Pollee
behalf of Lucas County to preDepartment for driving without a license.
vent tlie Mlc:lllgan au lbority from

waa

a

.

Police isSue citation

uu

Abel co-sponsors school funding

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Sent,ertces, convictions handled .·
GALLIPOLIS - In GaiUa County Common Pleas Cour.t
Friday, MOI"l'lS Hesson, 24, Rt. 2, Patriot, was fined $1,500and
received a suspenaed one-year prison sentence following his
conviction for cultivating marijuana. ·
The conviction stemmed from an incident on July 29, 1989, in
which he was discovered tending marijuana plants In Gallia
County.
' JohnS. S_heets, ~. Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was fined S1,500followlng
his convtefion for cultivating marijuana, which stemmecr from
a May 15, 1989, Incident In which he was discovered tepding
these plants.
· ·
· .
On Thursday, James Duty, 24. of 41~ Lin.coln Ave. / pleaded
no contest to drug trafficking. The conviction stel)imed,from an
August 21, 1989, Incident In which he sold marijuana .to ·an
undercover agent,
·
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·

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: Golden Buckeye Card sifwup set

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GALLIPOLIS - In GaiUa County Common Pleas · Court
Thursday, Mark E. and Mindy J . Sims, both of Rt. 1, Bidwell,
were gran ted a decree of divorce.
Mindy Sims' malden name of Frazier was restored.

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Divoree granted

ATHENS -State Rep. Mary Abel, D·Athens, and State Rep.
Michael C. Shoemaker, D-Bournevllle, have Introduced
additional legislation In the General Assembly to fund
payments for school districts to mahitaln and repair facUlties.
House Blll812 would provide $50 million annually for building
maintenance, $50 mllllon annually for low interest (3 percen()
loans for school building construction and $100 million annually
for construction ()f classroom facilities In needy dlslrlcts.
· Funding would be provided froin Ohio Lottery profits. ·
"Many of our buildings nl'ed basic repairs and maintenance,
and the districts cannot always afford to do this annually," Abel
said. 'This money would be an as5etln soulheastern Ohio."

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GALLIPOLIS - Bernadine Steinbrenner, liaison aide for ·
.,
GaiUa County and the Golden Buckeye Card Program, wlll be at
• :~ &amp;ssard Memorial Library, 641 Second Ave., GaiUpoUs, on
• , Wednesday, March 21 from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. to take applications
~·
for Golden Buckeye cards.
· · ·.
~ , , To qualify for a Golden Buckeye Card, applicants must be 60
;. years of age or older and bring proof of age, such as a driver's
· ~
license or birth certificate. If the applicant Is totally disabled,

t ~:;t~~~r~~~~n~~~~~pr~~~r:~

'

t are handled at 367.7341 and
~ 446-0611 In Gallla C&lt;1unty or
:- 992-6629 and 992-5600 In Meigs .
r County·
:· ·

SUNDAY ONLY
··

NO C-ONSI

Pancake SUP'P'"
. er
r
\f:.,:,; set by church

•o•m

l•.'

BOTH LOCATIONS

'·
,. RACINE -The men of the
•· Racine United Method!st Church
~: will be serving a pancake and
!·.sausage supper ,on Wedn_e sday.
~~ March 28 · Serving. wlll start at 3,;
I· p.m. and continue until everyf" thing Is _gone. Donations wlll be
, , accepted for the . dinners - and
•. everyone is welcome.
· .

'·

1 •. _'·

Neiv voting
•
prectnct

n. 35 WISt, IAWPtUS, 011.

446·1611
1446-1611

SICOIII AYL, fA"'"I.IS. 01.

Drivers cited
~.'by Patrol ·
•

•
meett~Jg

'

' . A1RPJ..ANE AEROBATICS - Grer PfeU, a
;. profe&amp;aional pilot and flnt officer for tbe u.s;
:: Air IDea on a · B-73'7 will fly his 1974 Pitta Special

.

8-18 factory built alreraflln the 1198 Bicentennial
All'lhow at the GBlJia.Melp RerfoiUil Airport
Sunday, July 15.

Ohio's forest facts •.•

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By Gail DeGarmo
ftrth Team Volunteer

: GALi.IPOLIS - People all
•across the country Jlre becoming
.more Interested In forestry a!Jd
·all the !'Spects related to it. That
holds true here In Ohio, too. With
1990 being the 20th anniversary
year of the first Earth Day
·Celebration, the Ohio Society of
American Foresters has complied a list of some facts about
•Ohio's forests and It's · forest
:industries. Presented here are
~some of those facts.

I~~~~~~~:r!~~e~~~~~~~

;of
:less than 12% in 1940. Ohio has 7.1
•million acres in forest area, of
:that, 97% are hardwoods (decidu·
:ous) trees and 3% are conifers
•(evergreens) . Ohio has two coun·
!ttes that are more than 70%
'forested those being Law~ence
and Vinton County.
Of this 7.1 million acres, 94% Is
~owned by private woodland
·owners. There are 332,600 of
:these owners In the state. 1,714
;woodland owners are Tree
·FarJilers (certified members of
;the Tree Farm System sponsored
:by the American Forest Council)
-and these Tree Farme~s manage
;383,647 acres of Ohio forestland.
•Ohio ranks fourth nationally in
:maple syrup production with an
;average of 100,000 gallons pro•duced annually from a total of

. about 4,200,oo0 gallons of sap
gathered each year. In Ohio,
approximately 750,000 Ch_r-l stmas tree~ are produced each
year.
· Ohio also has state and federal
~wnership or fares tland. The .
Wayne National Forest owns to
date 190,000 acres. Ohio has 19
state forests with a total or
177,000 acres. Ohio has two state
forest nurseries to pr(/vlde lowcost seedlings. 7.5 million tree
seedlings are produced, sold and
planted each year for reforesta·
lion purposes.
In relation to forest industry In
Ohio, the C,OSI of goods sold from
· the wood products inclustry ex· ·
ceeds S5 bllliqn 1!-nnually. Ohio
has about 329 sawmills, nearly
, 900 secondary wood . products
Industries with about 55,000
Ohioans working Jobs In the wood
products Industry. The direct
pay~ll of the Industry In Ohio Is
more than $1 billion annually.
Ohio is growing 3 times as·much
tilnber as·we are harvestinl each
Year with that harvest being300
mUUon.IIOanl feet of timber.
Cona14ei' lh* other facts:
- some ofthe finest hardwoods
in tbe world -g row in Ohio
..t. one walnut tree, trom
PIOneet, Ohio, sold for $35,000 In

19!1

t/' • .,.;

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has nine national
champion big trees growing in
her 1011 •
•
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I

REEDSVILLE '- Two of the
candidateidor Central Qommll·
tee for the newly formed South
Olive .Precinct were present at
the Monday nlghthmeeilng of the
Committee to Restore the Reeds·
ville voting precinct held at the
Whitehead home in Reedsville.
The two candidates there were
Kirk Reed, an Ohio University
student, Republican, and Alison
. Cauthorn-Krless, attorney with
Houser and Cauthorn In Ma·
rletta, Democrat.
At the meeting both candidates
pledged, their support to the
committee In their struggle to
regain the Reedsville precinct.
· Kt~k expressed an Interest In
politics and stated that he would
like to follow ·in the footsteps of
his grandfather, the late · Alvin
Reed, who served the old Reedsville Precli\ct over 25 vears. ·
During the meeting the committee members reviewed and
discussed Section 3501.18 of the
Ohio Revised Code. Maxine
Whitehead said that section of
the code states'that "nochv.nges ·
In the number of precincts or In
·tlie boundaries may 'be made
between the first day Of January
anrl the day on which the
members of county certtral committees are elected In the years
In which such committees are
elected."

-Ohio's Urban Forestry-program ts the best in the nation
· - 111 Ohio communities are
certified Tree City USAs for the
past eight years in a row
- Ohio's only wilderness area
is located on Shawnee State
Forest (8,000 acres) - hiking,
camping, climbing, hunting, and
many more recreational activities are abundunt in Ohio's ·
The committee also made
forests
plans to hold a public meeting on·
.....; The Buckeye Trail and April 19 at the Reedsville fireNorth Country Trail both travel house.
•
through states, federal, lndustcy,
Attending the meeting besides
and private forests
the
two candidates were Ruth
While these are only some of
Anne,
Balderson, Grant Smith,
the facts that could be presented
Hugh
Martin,
Geraldine Holsinabout Ohio forests, 'the more
ger,
Maxine
Whitehead, Mareveryone becomes aware ·of how
garet
·
Cauthorn,
committee
forests effect their lives the
better off we and the forests are. members. Others serving on the
We need our forestes but perhaps committee but not present at the
more importantly our forest need meeting were lla Westfall, Inez
Boring, and Ethel Murtdry.
us.

'

"Frequent' Bf-!yer·" ·
Program

The Alcove i's introducing~ "Ffequen f Buyer"',
Program" for pocket (standard) size paper- ,
back books!
Whenever you purchase a paperba_ck; please
keep your receipts. When you have purchased
12 paperbacks,. bring your recf!ipts to our •
store to receive a free paperback of your
choice valued to $4.)0.
·
·
I

The Alcove.

'

17 Ohio River Plaza
Gallipolir, Ohio ·
Phon.e 446-7~53 ·
Open Daily 10-9
Sunday 12-6

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lad leal fte lprU
Prlca lacreaaa

'

Purchase Your New Home NOW and Toke Delivery
Before June 29th to Avpld the Price Increase.
Choose From Over 150 Different New Home Plans.

........ ,... .•,.....

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lachu'lng F•n..IIIGn. " - LDI

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lftq,ol.-

YOUR DENTURES IN ONE DAY

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omc:ee. ·

V1Joa1n1a D~e~rdill...,.._
-IMVII i:REEIIII!l
n.41:1Z

• HOME OXYGEN

IGI Plli'UIII FORie

. ·d..

·

Fred Wllllama, Sue Murray, lerry Back, BriAn
Rice, Kathy Keenan, Mark Palmer, Paul Queen
and Darin Peck.
,
. ·

Oh •

r-rest ma e in .

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~unicip~l

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wan s stabbing .

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a1ainst Oretha Snider. Racine. ·
In other court matters, the
parties In the case of Susan R. :
Cunningham against Michael E -:
Cunningham have re11-ched an agreement regarding a consent
order. Each party In the case ts
restrained from the other, and
thel.r respective residences, for a '
period of ont' year.

FAMILY PRACTICE .
PAIN CONTROL CUNIC
(

FORMER PATIENTS OF DR. AARON BOONSUE AND)
NEW PATIENT$ WELCOME

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL Cf&lt;NTERi
25TH~

JEll'li'ERSON AVENUE
POINT PLitASANT

uo4) 675-1611

court news

GALLIPOLIS - In GaiUpolls
Municipal Court Friday, Debbie
Fleeup of · GME, Bidwell, was
found not guilty of disorderly
·conduct.
Keith R. Gravely, 19', of Mil· ·
lwaod, W.Va., had his bond set at
• $l~.ooo a"d his case. bound over to
the Gallla County Common Pleas
Court. · He was charged · wilt)·
breaking and entering.
Ottle V. Lucas, 38, of Cape
Canaveral, Fla., was tined $400,
gtveil three days · In jail and a
60-day license . suspension for
DWI: He was tound not guilty of
driving left of center.
Charles E. O'Neill, 53. of
Huntington, W.Va., was fined
$400, ordered to spend three days
in jail and handed a 60-day
license suspension for DWI. He
was also flned ·$12 for having an
open container.
·. Terry L. Sanders, 25, EsR:
Ga!Upo)is, was fined $250, or·
dered to. perform 15 days of
·community service and handed a
one-year license suspension for
vehicular homicide.
Corey E. Armstrong, 20, of 49
Spruce St., was fined $100,
sentenced to 30 days In jail,
ordered to perform 30 days of
community service and make
restitution ·for breaking and
enterin~~:.

'Richard J. Chapman, 20, Rt. 2,
Patriot. · was fined · $100 for
driving without a license and
forfeited a $43 bond for not
maintaining assured clear

distance.
Deborah R. Litchfield, 35, of
Racine, was fined $100 and given
eight days In jail for writing a bad
check. She also forfeited a $43
bond for having a defective
exhaust on her vehicle.
Audrey Mae Mullins, 24, of Rio
Grande, was fined $100 and given
five days In jail for shoplifting.
Leo L. McCombs, 20, Rt. 1,
Northup, 'w as fined $100 and
given a suspended six-month Jail
term for driving without a
license.
Denise M. Jordan, 24, of 41'h
Lincoln St., was fined $50 for
disorderly conduct.
Michael . Kllnglesmlth, 18,
ESR, Gallipolis; was fined $12 for
failure to yield.
·
Other various bOnds .were
forfeited by Ricky Jones, 24, Rt.
i, Crown City, $43, squealing ·
tires; Ralph W. Young, 30, Rt. 1,
Bidwell. $43, failure . to yield;
Pearson E. Clifford, 18, Point
Pleasant, W.Va., $43, running a
,
stop light.
Edward E. Borden, 27, Rt. 2,
Bidwell. forfeited a $43 -bond for
running a stop sign and a $49 bond
for speeding.
Other speeding bonds were
forfeited by Kevin J. Munson, 29,
Columbus, $44; Arthur C. Rtepenhoff, 19, Wellston, $41; James
0 . Saunders, 28, Rt. 2, Gallipolls.$50; Rodney V. Morgan, 23, Rt. 5,
GalUpolls, $41; Gregory D. Harmon, 21, Clyde, $43; Charla F . .
Watson. 28. ESR, Gallipolls, ·$43 .

Free
• 2nd Set of
KODALUX
· Color ·Prints·.:

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qualtty . developln&amp;

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prin~na.

Ask lor I(OOALUX ProceSSina Ser·
vices. and when~ order ont set ,
of color prinll II rt~ut• price, you

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The 7-Day-Premium CD
is another example of our
Commirmem To Customers.

Ill a free secofld set to share.
01

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Enjoy rhe f/ex;bi/ity and /iqMidity of a CD "
which is aucoma.cically renewable and redeemable
at each 7 day anaiversary •

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Call or visit you nearest
Central. Trust office for derails today.

110,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

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Tawney Studio
424 S.C........
0 lit 111, OIL
1'1414U·I615

_ Maki~um dt~os.it $99,999.99. Su~r:anctal pen:alty fnr c:~rly witt'ldrnw:.tl. ·
Interest p~1d w ppnctpol nnd co mf)O!Jndtd wcekly.R;arrs eHm i~ r M..rcll, 9, 1990.
und subjecr W change wirhout nor ice. Yirl~ assumes that mrtod rm.• remains
conuanc for~ full yrar With no Wirhdtawal~ of inttrest or principal.

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
.

The Bonk Thai Maku ThinK• Happen .
441·0102

992·8111
Middleport

Glllllpolie

Momber FDIC

31d ANNUAL SCO" CONNEllEY

.

MEMORIAL BASI&lt;ETBALL TOURNA,MENT ·
;

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7:00 P.M.1 TIPOFF
Lyne CenterI Uniwersity of Rio Grande
.

ht GA1U-7:0o P.M.
Cincinnati ltngals ,
Tranling laslrttllall THm

I

I ,

All pr~da from
ticket and conceulon
sales go to local units
of the American
Cancer Society for
research, education
and aervlce• for local
cancer patient•.

YS.

Tri-Stat1 Colltgt
All Stars
2n.. GAMI-9:00 P.M.
Ohie VIlify High School

AI St•s
"North" rs. "S.Uth"
r.... Comp•tltioiJ

--------'

Aut..,lphS.sion

.....MIIfTIMeOf

,...

IIRJI 'g

hlllt .

(ICM) .,."'". .

aw.r.,
~

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ftCIITS AVMAU AT '
Hob• Clnlc (Ill '-ti•••IO
Ohl.t v•y .... IIIII St_..
. . . llllltlllirlllhCuiLiy

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

............. s... Ia

.... C•••lill. ""••• 11at1

. , .. . ftllfch&amp;tll, . . . . . . ..

COOADINTED BY: Holzer Clinic and
.~.·

• - .. '

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'·

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. Slam Dunk Exillitlon It~ . tlctpetiftl ..............
·_ S4.00 DOIIATIOI
Cellltt AI Stan
••

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ROBERT M. HOLLEJ', M.D•

·
.. NEW YORK !UPI) -One man.
St. Marks rlace, In the heart
, His two companlons,-Michael
was a'n-ested and two others of Manhattan s East VIllage, ha~
McManu~. also from .Georgia,
were being sought in the stabbing seen an Influx of wealthlel
and Stephen Kovlan , of Ohio,
death of oile youth and the residents In · recent years, restwere also stabbed In the dispute
wounding of his two companions dents said.
at 116 St. Marks Place that broke
In a trendy East VIllage neigh·
Even the proximity of Tomp·
out when they went to the aid of a
borhood, police said Saturday.
klns Square Park, a notorious
black friend who was being
All Salahuddeen, 20, of 130 E . haven Cor homeless men and
chased by a group of 15 blacks
Seventh ·St. was charled late · wome,n !IS well as drug addicts,
and Hispanics .
1
•F riday with first-degree assault doesn necessarily make the
McManus was In serious condl·
intheThursdaynlghtattackbya neighborhood dangerous, the~ . Uon in Bellevue Hospital and
group ofhlackand Hispanic men. ~a~~·
.
.
Kovlan was In stable~ondltlon a)
1'he three victims, who lnvestl- ·
. It does upset me a bit, and I
Cabrlni Hospital. pollee said: ·
gatcirs say )lad been traveling amallttle.~oreconcernedthan_I
Sgt. Mary Wrensen, a pollee
.. around the country vlsl!lng punk woul.d be, said Robert Cogllatt,
epokeswolrian, said the unldentl·
rock clubs, may have "mol!thed who works In a nearby vintage, fled black man was also Injured
off' at the group before the jewerly and ceramics store.
In the dispute which began when
attack on St. Mark's Place, the "But I generally haven 't had
he accused ~ group of men of
residents said.
problems worktn~ at the store
getting him tired from a punk
''Obviously, they were looking
~don the block.
.
rock club. Pollee said they would
'A lot of people in this
not release his name because he
for trouble and dldn't know what
neighborhood ,take things very
was a witness to the murder.
they were messing with," said
Suzie Zabrowskl who works In a
nonchalantly,
Cogllatl said .
fashionable clothing slore on the
"It's like, 'Oh wow. someone got
block where the murder took .. stabbed." '
place.
Pollee said th~y were still
. She said someone had ·placed a
searching for two other men
respotlslble for the attack, In
bouquet of flowers on the blood·
stained sidewalk where the atwhich 20-ye!!r-old Lee Wells of
tack took place,
G~!orgia was fatally stabbed.

Fcl.. fll• I H I; WV 111110

j

"

POMEROY - Farmers Bank ·
and Savings Company, Pomef!lY, has Clled a foreclos11re action
1!1 Meigs Common Pleas Court
against Wallace L. Reuter,
Fayetteville, N.C., and Judy E .
Reuter, now known as Judy E.
Oleson, Middleport; et al.
A judgmen·t action for $8,043.90
has been flied by the Amerltrust
Company, Brooklyn , Ohio,

'. .

lean I ....'VIMd ltNeta

. HOVRS:8&amp;1L

C.•.

apr, Mn. Beaver and Mary
8eeoad row:
Debbie Norlh, Jay Jar vii, Andrea Lewll; .Juon
Cbeaa. !tarab Miller, Amy CarDet, lodle Harer
and Joabua Wood. Third row: Mn. Mock, Dr.

I

ea.a.-e

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A.

H

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT OI.STOP .
BY OUR OFfiCES·.

• ADULT DIAPERS

• LIFT CHAIRS
• YrHEEI.CHAIAS
• UNOERPADS ICHUXSI •WALKERS
•'HOSPITAL BEDS
• BEDSIDE COMMODES • DJA8ETIC SUPPLIES
• SHOWER STOOLS • PATIENT LIFTS.
•OSTOMY
"V(i: BILL MEDICARE &amp; OTitiERifi!ieiiMCj
THIRD &amp; PINE ST.
GALUPOI.IS

WllllamV.

•
FOa BIBLES - .Ohio Valley
Cbrlllllan
s&amp;aft and atadenta recently aent
doaatlo• (PM) to Rulilaa Goajiel Mlnlatrtea for
31 Bibles Ill be aeat to Balllaa people who now
bave MOle frtedom of rellrton.
Pictured from left to rtrht, front row are: ,Carol
Dalley, Lori Skidmore, Ann~ Hamric!!, Jenny

"'

IAMB MTMRVW 011---AliD IID'AIUI

Wed

· Foreclosur.e filed

•

For An Appointment or lnbmiiiJon.
Our ReJIIlar SeJ !liCe Ia Annable At All

...... Addldoul CJwp,... . . . . Day . . . . .

who was tl'lC'ated but no!
POMEROY - Four calls were
.
transported.
answered on Friday by units of
.
At
12:
12
p.m.,
Pomeroy
was
the Meigs Emergency Medical
. called to Second St . for Linda
Services.
Pc&gt;rsons who was taken to VeteMiddleport at 12:36 a .m. was
rans
Memorial Hospital.
called to South Second Ave. for
Syracuse
at 9:37 p.m. went to
Ciedlth King who was taken to
Yellowbuth
Road for Tommy
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Lane
to
Holzer
Medical Center. :
Pomeroy at 2: 23 a.m . went to
Brick St. Cor Paul Steinmetz Jr.

ut
We're &amp;erious
YOUR TAXES·•••
· ~ Perso-nal .&amp;· Busi·ness·-Returns
Electronic Filing
Fast -Funds .. 3~Day Refunds
s,udent Banking Club ·Discounts

CALL TOIL J'RB&amp; 1·800-tr.l6-00211
.
.
.

DBN'tUD8 &amp;TAitT AT $129 PER D&amp;N'tUDI

••

FRIDAYI APRIL 61 1990

;.

EQUIPMENT • SALES :RENTALS.-REPAiRS
"Complell Medlcll Equipment For'*'"" u.•

Custom Fitted Dentures In One o.y·Aiour Teay. VaUcy ()111ft
· By Our ProfeNional8 Alii~ Stall.
Made In Our Dental Lllboratory~QI•DI!ecl TechnlcianL .

::; GALLIPOLIS ·- Three drivers
I', were cited in three crashe,s
~·Friday 'In Gallla County's Green
Township, according to the
r GalUa·Melgs Post of the State
' Highway Patrol.
·
. The first occurred at 6:30a.m.
• on 'U.S. 35, just we~ -, of. milepost
, 12, resulting tn an improper
passing citation lor James · D&gt; ·
Yingling, 68, of Columbus.
;, Yingling, driving a 1987 Chev; rolet Caprice. was behind a 1981
.· Pontla.c Grand Prix driven by
~ Jack L. 11urst, 47, of Waverly,
; when Hurst srarted to make'a l'elt
turn Into a driveway. At that
• point Yingling tried to pass
.Hurst, and the colllsslon .
~· occurred.
; A GalUpolls area youth was
· ~ cited ~n a sideswiping Incident at
.:3: 21 p.m. on Safford School Road,
:about a mile south of the juncli9.1'
of S.R. 588.
·, Tammie L. Warren, 17, PSR,
•GaiUpolls, was cited for .not
·; wearing a seat belt after her 1982
:chevrolet S-10 pickup truck sl·
· :deswlped .a ~981 Plymouth Ho·
• rlzon driven by ·Michael K.
··:Johnson, 17, Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
&amp;th vehicles made contact in a
narrow stretch of the road. ·.
A Vinton area man was cited in
a
car-truck-crash
at 6:46p.m. on
I .
U.S. 35 at the junction of T.R. 268.
'Ronald E. Oller, 18, Rt. 2,
VInton, was cited for failure to
yield afrer his 1~ Pontiac
Flreblrd collided with a 1977
Chevrolet C-10 pickup driven by
Willie . W. Wllson, 26, PSR .
~aiUpolls.
·.
,• Wilson was driving west when
~Oller, driving north and coming .
•to the end of 'l'.R. 268, pulled Into
;wnson's path. causing the
• collision .

A-5

EMS ·responds to caDs

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HOMECAIE MEDICAL
SUPPLY INC. ·

CHESHIRE - There are only
10 days left . to apply for the
Emergency HEAP Pl'OJI'am du ring the 1989-90 season. Emergency HEAP can ,p rovide assiSt·
ance toeiJaible households whose
neat-related l!tllitles hve been
dtscoft/U!Cied, threatened ·with
disconnect, or whose bulk fuel
supply is less than 10 days.
Assistance continues · to be
, )ilnlted to once per healing
d eason. The 1989-90 application
;; period began las 1Oct. 30 and wUI
t· continue through March 30, 80
; households previously assisted
.: duri'!llthis time should not apply.
;· · Regillations require that an
~- aclult househoJd member complete the application ·In ilerson,

· .f;

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ALL DAY

s....y Tim II Slntluti-Peal
- · - -

HEAP
deadline
is March 30

Man a"ested by sheriff

VINroN- Tlln!e GaiUa County students won first place In a
regional media production contest for their video, "Play ·o n
Crack."
Betty Olier, a North GalUa High School junior, with fonner
North GaiDa students Tonya Dall and Lori Holley, designed and
shot the video as part of a video production mini-course offered
at the high school.
.
They entered the video in theOhloEducatlonal Library Media
AsSQCiatlon (OELMA) Media Production Contest and won first
place in the Southeast Ohio region.
OELMA sponsors the contest annually to encourage the
COJ.ltl'!ued development of mee!la proiluctlon skills. Entries are
accepted from grades K-12, higher education and professional.
Media categories .Include board gam!!$, slides and videO tapes·.

•

'M8n:h 18, 1810

· Emergency

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thoae 18 yean of age rriay alae ljuality. Proof of age aii::J
disability, papers are required.
.

Student video wins first place

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Madt 18, 1180

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PLAN NOW TO
ATI'END THIS
EXCITING EVENING
OF ALLSTAR
BASKETBALL TO
HELP IN THE
hGHT AGAINST
CANCER.

oaaer Medical Center.

.I
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�llaa•

MM:h 18, 1990

Pomeroy Mjddleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleaaant. W.Va.

A-6-Sunday Timea-.Sentinel

Meigs County Court

Substance ·abuse prognim offers awareness

Sunday Twnes-Sentinei-Pega

•

schOOls and to people who have
RIO GRANDE - During the .o.steem Team from Columbus.
effective. lt Involves the concept
POMEROY- Forty-one cases
T·homas J. Eakins, Syracuse,
an Interest In the ·peer advisor
past school year, the University
A library of audlo-vtsual mate- of students · helping other stu·
were processed this past week In $25 and costs, failure to register;
program. Selection of parilcl·
Meigs County Court by ·Judge Charles Higginbotham, South of Rio Gr;~nde has Initiated a rials has also been set up by the dents. ·The peer fldvlsors are
pants Is competitive due to a
Patrick O'Brien. Fined by ,Judge .Side, W.Va.,$25and costs, safety Substance Abuse . Prevention · Prevention Otflce, which distrib- trained students w!ho offer suplimitation or the size of the group
Program,
made
possible
through
utes
pamphlets
and
other
lnfor·
port
lllld
help
educate
others
to
O'Brien were the following
vlolaflon; Tennis Edmiston,
a
2-year
federal
grant
from
the
matlon
on
the
effects
of
alc6hol
belli&amp;:
trained. ·
make
infonned
and
responsible
Individuals.
Langsville, $20 and costs. failure · [)epartment of Education'.
and
drugs.'
Coat
for the program Ill S50 for
.
choices
about
use
and
nQn·use
of
· Roger Dillard Jr., Pomeroy,
to control; Richard Cl)apell,
the
weekend.
Persons Interested
The
Office
of
Substance
Abuse
CHOICES
meets
weel\IY
on
·alcohql
ud
drugs.''
.
$500 and costs, 30 days In jail
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, assured Prevention Programs Is located campus following the Alcohol
Orth at 24~5353,
should
contact
Tbc
Camp
Asbury
training
suspended to 10 days, 90 day clear distance; Wayne Howard,
In
the
Counseling
Ceo
ier
at
the
·
and
Drug
.
Education
Program,
extension
279.
..
also
open
to
area
blgh
program
license suspension, one year Albany, $20 an(! costs, stop sign;
Rio Grande campus and ·Is which Is conducted on Wednes·
probation, DWI; $50 anti costs,
Rose Causey, Reedsville. $20 and directed by ·Robert . Orth, a day mornings at Wood Hall.
possessiop or marljua11a; John rosts, tint viola !Iori.
certified Chemical Dependency . CHOICES Is affiliated with a
E. Carl, Albany, $350 and costs,
Fined for speeding ·were John counselor.
.
national student organization
30 days In jail suspended to six
Dudderar, Holland. Ohio, $22 and
As part · of the prevert tion called BACCHUS, which stands
days, 60. day license suspension,' costs; Ronald Reynolds Jr.,
activities, a student organization · for Boosting Alcohol Conscious·
one year probation, DUI; $75 and Middleport, $21 and costs; Betty called
CHOICES was established . ness Concerning the Health or
costs, six days In jail to be ser'ved Pugh, Long Bottom, $21 and at the university, which .helps University Students. The organl-1
,,
concurrently with other sent· costs; Margaret Story, Middle· . sponsor events such as National zation:s primary purpose Is to
ence, drlvlnl! UJide~ suspension;
port, $25 and costS; Glenn Carr, Collegiate Alcohol A\Vareness Increase awareness about a!CO·
Raymond Klein, Shade, $250 and Greenup, Ky., $23 and costs;
Week, programs.on drinking and .hoi' and drug abuSe 'among ·
.
costs, thfee days In jail, 60 day John L. Morrison, Albany, $19 driving, education programs for college students and develop
llce111e suspension, DWI; $20 and
and costs; Ralph W. Metz, students, and alternative recrea· · preventlon'arUcles on campus.
costs, left of center.
. Ravenswood, W.Va., $23 and Ilona! activities which are non·
&amp;UP
At the •end · of March, . the
Elmer Bowles. Pomeroy, $100 costs; Arthur R. Bush, Chesa· alcohol and drug-free events.
'
.
Prevention
Office
will
offer
a
artd costs with fine suspended, peake, $20 and costs; Tracy L.
The Prevention Office will be .Peer Advisor Training PI:ogram
one day In jail, one year proba· Green, Rutland, $20 and costs;
developing a comprehensive pro- at Camp Asb1.1ry near Rio
tlon, disorderly conduct; 13¥ney Constance Witt, Rutland, $21 and gram Including activities such as · Grande.
Hiles, Middleport, 60 days In jail costs; Ray E. Howard, Kitts Hill, es
&amp;
tabllshlng an advisory council,
Orth described the workshop
suspended to time served, one $19 and costs; Patricia Weaver,
faculty ·orientation, training of by saying, "The peer advisor
year probation, resltution and
Middleport, $23 and ·costs; Ka·
costs, criminal damaging; Rl· theryn E. Thomas, Middleport, residence hall staff pnd offering program has been used on other
915-3307
CIRSID
substance abuse · education· camp~ses and has been very
chard A. P.eyton, Dexter, .: $100 $23 and costs; Sarah H. Philson,
classes as part of freshman
and costs, reckless operation;
Syracuse, S25·and costs; Joseph orientation.
$100 and costs, failure to control;
Broce, Barboursville, W.Va., $25
Alcohol and drug counseling
r Lyle B. Haning, Albany, $145 and and costs; John C. Kuhn Jr.,
services
are also available at the
( costs, taking a deer with a gun Marietta, $23 and costs; Gregory
Counseling Center.
i during closed season; $100 and Ashbrook, Grove City, $21 and
The prevention program has
~ costs, taking a deer with a 3030
costs; Terry C. Bowie Jr., been Involved in promoting na·
· rifle; VIrgil Phillips, Middleport, Fleming, $21 and costs; Ben·
tlqnal campaigns on campus
; $75 and costs, disorderly con· jam In Hickel, Pomeroy, $29 and
as the .Red Ribbon Cam: auct; James H. Smith, Racine, costs; Robert D. Carson, New such
paign [In support of drug-free
· S75 and costs, three days In jail to Haven, W.Va., $25 and costs;
·: be suspended If operator's II· Joseph Beech, Belpre, $22 and choices, the Tie One On For·
• cense is pgovided to the court costs; Clifford Sluss, 'Groveport, 'Safety Campaign to avoid drink·
within 60 days, failure to control; $29 · and costs; John L. ·Null, ing and dr.lving, and the National
Collegiate Drug Awareness
Clayton L. Miller, Reedsville. $75 Coolville, $23 and costs.
Week, which will be held on
and costs, three days In jan,
Beth Gollihugh, Athens, forfe· campus at the end of March.
suspended operator's J~cense .
!ted a.$60 bond for speeding.
Events for awareness week
will include showing recently·
released movies with drug abuse
themes and staging a "natural
high party" and dance at the
GALLIPOLIS - Steven Zon·
class "happening" can provide a university gymnasium on Wed·
ars, Director or Marketing for
wider variety of chances for Ohio nesday, March 28.
the Amerlflota '92 project spoke
artists and entertainers than
In.the past year other activities
m•Af'IIIC Nillllllr'IIIIIM•to the French Art Colony annual anything else In · Ohio's atts' have lhcluded completion of a
PRDVIN U:AOERSIIIP-More than 7.000 USA locations. 39,000 REUAIU: QUALITY-More than 1.500 engineers and techniciaps
dinner audience. He told the history. Ohio Is so rich In survey of alcohol and drug use .
employees. seven R&amp;D centers. 27 USA and four overseas
develop, evaluate and lest our exclusive products to our exacting
manufacluring plants-NOBODY COMPARES
standards-NOBODy COMPARES
·
•
people listening that this '!early professional, amateur, and com· among incoming. freshm~n and
• Seventy·tl!ree mlllion dollar In· . rnunlty art resources that Amerl· educational assemblies, such as
· ternational plant and floral event Flora '92 Is fortunate to be a presentation by the Self·
.
"Instant Office"
: '1s golne to be financed in almost located here."
System for .
equal amounts coming from
Zonars described the Intricate
Qond
$el
gove~nment, corporations; and
and lengthy negotiations that are
. earned Income during the event unaboldable when trying to seIn Gallla CoQnty &lt;;:ammon
Itself.
•
'
' cure funding for community
Pleas
Court Wednesday, Terry
The twenty-five million from
events on a large scale. Jan
.
M.
Pollock,
19, of 2004% Chatham
. state and,local10vernment fund· Thaler, French Art Colony Trus·
Ave.,
had
his
lx&gt;nd set at $25,000.1
; • IDe lA the only public monies that tee, discussed with Zonars that
He
was
charged
with
theft. .
;··• wW be spent on this project by the bicentennial celebration In I
,
~ ~ ·10verament. If there are any Gallipolis has actually been
Man arrested
~. Seplrate lttlma 2411.75, , L.oW"" Mt !'ef ...nth• ,
~: ~lnanclal dlfflcultles associated planned for. as long as AlTieri·
.
'
With t~e 286·basad Tandy 1000 TLI2'a built·!"
.•• wltb ttie event, they would have Flora '92. He argeed that most
Ricky A. Jones, 24, Rt. 2.
OeskMate lnterfacae, you can gat right to work whh
,~ io be taken care of by the
·Gallipolis, was arrested by the
people never see or understand
/! ·Corporate sponsors or this six all that goes Into the planning and
Gal )Ia- Co4nty Sheriff's Depart·
a point and a clicklll25-1602110431104511333
!~ month long event.
men! on a bench warrant Thurs·
preparation of events on this
io
CM-5 Color Mon~or
The third part of the funding Is scale.
day afternoon. He was charged
~ 20MB BnlllrtDrlva"
all of the licensing, concession,
· !'with failure
. to appear.
• 2·Button MouN
·: and aales related opportunities
: that will occur. Many businesses
~· and corporations In Ohio the
· other states, and even Foreign
Includes Software!
: companies will be making major
LOIUI Spreadsheet for DeakMate,
DaakMate Q&amp;A Wrne word
: Investments In Ohio as a result of
processing and Oet~&lt;Mate
· this project.
150 qualified homeowners in the general area will be gi ·
pr(!ductlvity software . .
: Columbus will benefit directly
van the opportunity of having installed in their home
: by over fifty million dollars being
America's most up to date custom-made replacement
• Invested In capital Improve·
windowi at a very special low cost for their pilrticipation
: ments .. The Frapklln Park con·
in this Umitad offer. This window is benar than 11lumi·
' servatory Is being enlarged ahd
num, stronger than vinyl, certified by architects; and, al:. enhanced. When It ls'done,ltwlll
though has the beauty of wood.ls not made of it. So. if
: be one of the most advanced
you are tired of thole dirty old windows that stick, slip
· conserva)ory buldlngs In the
' and are hard to operate. take advantage of this offer
entire world. There will be
now.
·· Innovative play-space environ·
ments built to keep children
happy and busy In a safe
environment while their parents
1-800~444-7792
enjoy AmeriFlora '92. ,
Beeperless Answerer
Fax Machine
Unlveraa14-ln·1 Remote
Zonars said that the arts .a nd
1901 15th Ave.~ WV. 26101, 304-422-1000
• entertainment are a crucial pa~t
100°t. financing Avcilable
Rig.
•Cut '40
111.115
· of making AmeriFlora '92 ''more
• than just a flower show" . Around
Control from any Touch·Tone
LowAalll .... - ·
Controls an entire ayatem. Made
every corner, they want to have
Our lOwest price ever! Time·
,
telep~one. 1143·396
and patented bY ua. 115-1902
0
YES,
Wj;'RE
IN
THE
MARKET
FOR
WINDOWS
I
aaving features. 1143·1200 ·
• some event to ~atch your eye,
'..,
---II!"
I
AND WOULD LIKE MORE INFORMATION.
'entertain, and please you. This
~~~
.
I
•will mean that many artists and
•
entertainers from around -Qhlo
I
I ADDRESS:
: will have an ppportunlty to
; perform for this national and
CITY:
HONE: .
I
.
-·
·International audience.
I
YOUR HOM£ W1U IE THE SHOWPLACE OF YOUR HEIGHBORHOOO AND I
~
Tim Nyros, Executive Dlrec·
WI WILL MAKIIT WORTH TOUR WilLE IF WI CAN USE YOUR·NAME. .J
L.
L
tor of the French Art Colony. Who
has also served on the arts
sub-committee of AmeriFlora '92
•
~ since 1987, said, "This world·
Six-Disc CD Changer
Dlgltlll AM/FM Stereo

RIO GRANDE - For the sixth
consecutive year, students at the
University of Rio Grande .are
offering free Income tax preparation as part of the Volunteer
Income Tax Assistance (VITA)· ..
program sponsored by the Inter·
nal Revenue Service.
The program Is offered at
various locations in Gallla and
Jackson counties until Apr1U5.
"VITA Is a service to the
community, for people who need
help but feel they can't go to a ·
professional tax preparation ser·
vice," explained George H. Ul·
rich, associate pri)fessor of .ac·
counting In the Emet'Son E.
Evans School of Business Man·
agement, who Is also the tax
education coordinator. "It's a
program designed by the IRS to
help people with certain credits
gel the benefits tl)ey're entitled

Satellite .Sales, Service
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APPLIANCE

BBNEFif .. CONCERT - Youth United For
• Chrlat will . ~ pvt~1 a concett AprO 1, 1980 at
Paint Creek Baptist Church. The concert which
bep all:• Ia a benefit with all proeeedll cohig
to the restol-atlon of the Ariel Thealre. Dlaner Ia
Immediately foUowlng 'the concert at the church.
Tickets for the concert aad dinner ue $18 for
adults aad S25 for a famUy. Tbe choir Ia shown
, here Ia front of the Ariel's decorative alcove.
.
.

oas sEav•cE ·

FA C annual IJleeting held

RIO GRANDE - Ten area
;. educators met recently at the
: UniverSity of Rio Grande to
formulate pllins for a workshop
: later this year to promote eco·
: nomic education In public
:· schools.

TANDY®
lOOOTL/2

• Home/Business

1599

00

Save
'8197•

' The Idea of Individual work·
, shops arose from · recommenda·
1
ttolls ·made during a joint meet•
, lng of bualn115smen, teachers and
,. Industrial groups front GaiUa,
, Jackson. Lawrence, Meigs and
, VInton counties last December, .
•. Gust said.
· "It's exciting to see the rela·
; tlonshlps which have developed
• between business, Industrial and
educational . leaders and
• teachers," Gust sald. ·"No one in
: the group ever asked ·why we
, should be engaged In this effort,
; the question. was how, and then
: the Ideas came forth, followed by
· rapid action."
!
·: I;' au! Lloyd, dean of tl)e College
, of Education. Hea)th and Physl·
: cal Education at Rio Grande,
; _;;aid the workshops are ''impor·
' tant to the future of everyone
~ living In our (eglon.
·,, "We can improve our eco·
· nomic well-being 1 only If we
). understand · •the prtnelples of
: economics· as they apply to the

~

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PARKERSBURG Window Co.

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.A family approach
to h·ealth cart:·•· ·o
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Remember when the same physician whO treated you

for the
snlfflesaliOtookcareofyourbabysister,andsawyourMomandDad
for their aches and pains, too? then you remember the family !!octor.
At Aynw Ft~mily HeAlth, we're combining that old-fashioned
family approach to health care with today's technology. Underline.
family. because our emphasis is on comprehensive diagnostic and
medical care from infancy through geriabics for your en,lire family.

Call (304) 675-6015 for an appointment today. And let us take ce~re &lt;I your family.
'•'

With Remote Control

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DavidR. Ayers, M.p.

H. Edward Ayers, M.D.

Family Practice

Pediatrics &amp; Irternal Medicine

239!.

Low Aa Ill P e r - ·

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choices imd decisions we make School; Jane Steele. Hanna11
every day," Lloyd said. "Em· Trace Elementary; and Karen
ployers are mq~ Interested In Thomas, Bidwell-Porter
people who understand and value Elementary .
The Berry Center was estabwhat It takes to operate a sound.
'profitable business. Employers lished to promote the principles
also appreciate people who prac- of economic education and the
tice sound economl~s In their own free enterprise system. Among
personal lives. And people who Its objectives Is an outreach to
practice sound pl!rsonal econom· . schools within the area. repres·.
lcs Bl'e In a better position to en(ed by the workShops. The
contribute to the well-being of center also hosts the week-long
American Free En terprlse
their fellow man."
The fli·st workshop received . Workshop for students and
financial assistance from Austin
teachers each summer.
.Powder, Columbia Gas, Colum·
'
bus Southern Powerr, Goodyear,
Lottery
Merillat Industries, Ohio Valley
Bank and Robbins &amp; Myers.
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Fri·
Teachers who attended the day's winning Ohio Lottery
first workshop Included Sandra numbers:
Baer, Syracuse Elementary; Jill
· PICK·3
Baldwin, South Street Elemen·
052.
PICK·4 ·
tary, Jackson; Randy Ferguson,
5071.
Licit Elementary, Jackson; John
Kirk, Vinton County High
School; Fa~nie MeiCi!lf, . VInton
Elementary; Dennis Reinhart·,
· VMH
Jackson High School; Debra .
Friday admissions - Thelma
Roush, Racine Elementary; Tim
Chase, Albany.
Scarbe~ry, Hannan Trace High
Friday dlscha~es -Ian Wise.

numbers

.

$799

COLONY THEATRE

br~ont
H E.1TI'JG~

Hospital news

SPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA
446 . 4

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ALL SEATS SZ-75
BARGAIN NIGHT TU~SDIY
ALL SEATS $2.75

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Committed to Gallia County :

VOLCANO
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Committed to Banking Convenience.

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ADMISSION '1.50

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At Veterans Memorial Hospital, we understand chat surgery can
be a traumatic
experience especially if it requires a hospital
stay of
'
.
several
days
or 'more.
.
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Sheila Wood
Spring Valley Office

That's why we now offer our patients undergoing many "minor"
procedures the option of choosing "Siu~e Day" or Outpatient Surgerr. .
For ~xample, for her~ia repair, :which used co require hospital admi~sion prior to surgery, followed by three ~o five days of recovery
in the hospitahnd up to three weeks'of limicc;d activity at home, the
.
option of "Same Day" Surgery is id~~l.

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

And for more ·information on Same Day Surgery for hernia repair, or other minor surgical procedur(!S, call
Jack M. Levine, D.O.
General and Gynecologic Surgeon

At 992-6690

DaYkl Shaffer, Dan Davies
&amp; larbra Cole-n

3 'convenient Banking Locations

If you suffer from external type hernia•, ask your family physician
or surgeon if
you may be a candidate
lor "Same Day"Surgery.
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«&amp;-ARTS.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!i-An ' to the Toledo legislator, harshly
Ohio House ethics panel has
criUclzing Czarclnski. ·
cleared Rep. Donald Czarclnskl
of· an accusation that he violated
federal postal laws by falling to
deliver copies of a letter to other
state lawmakers.
The Ohio House Legis Ia live
Ethics ,. Committee said Czar·
clnskl, D-Totedo, did not Illegally
divert mall In which Ralph
Gersper of Columbus criticized
him for his stand on gun control.
The committee's report Issued
Wednesday said Czarci nskl did
not violate federal laws by
sending the letters back
undlstrlbu ted.
Czarclnskl . responded 10
Gersper's letter, but returned the
140 letters the Columbus man had
sent him, asking that the leglsla·
tor deliver them to his
colleagues.
Thru March
The lssue·began last May when
Gersper wrote a letter at large on
2 Ton
. gun contro\legislatlon to all 132
state lawmakers. Czarclnskl re·
sponded and defended his su(J"
port for gun control.
In .Au~st Gersper wrote back .
Installed
For Do·ll· Yoursellers
tNOmllllns~~ona~lon)
DON'T
Mod. 590-024
WAITI

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and mirlinlum ....,. com-

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~Off

The program Is offered at the
Bossard Memorial Library. 641
Second Ave. , Gallipolis, on Tuesdays from 5·9 p.m.; . Davis
Library on the Rio Grande
campus, Tuesdays from 5·9 p .m.
and Wednesdays from 1·5 p.m.;
the GalUa County Senior Citizens
Center. Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
Wednesdays !rom 9 a.m.·l p.m.;
ahd the Jackson Public Library.
21 Broadway St., Mondays and
Thursdays from 6·8 p.m.
Students volunteering their
time to the program are Debbie.
Cline, Mary Ann Crago, Heidi
Erb, Lori Grigsby , Larry La·

vend.er, Lori ' Lyons, Cindy'McKenzie, Cathy No.lan and
. Michelle Wears.
·
· VlTA provides free tax assist·
ance to taxpayers who file Forrrr
1040EZ. ·Form 1040A or basic. Form 1040 tax returns . VITA ·
volunteers also alert laxpayers ·
to special credits and deductions
for which they may be eligible.
such as child care or earned'
Income credit, I he tax credit for
the elderly , or deducllonss for
certain medical and dental
expenses .
Taxpayers who visit one of the
VITA sites should bring this
year's tax package, wage and ·
earning stalements Worm W-2)
from all employers, In teres f statements from banks ('Form
1099), a copy of last year's taX"
return. ·ir available, and other·
relevant lnformallon a bout in·
.come and expenses .
VlTA volunteers complete an
IRS training course in basic'
Income 1ax return prepa ratio n of ·
Forms 1040EZ, Form 1040A and1040 before assisting laKpayers. ·

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~;~;~~~~~~=i~~rijust

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· The meeting was the first of an
: ongoing series of workshops for
; teachers to develop practical and
' hands-on· methods to teach eco: nomlcs 'lo elementary and hlgb.
' school students.
~ The .-...;orkshops are sponsored
i bt the Loren M. Berry Center for
: Economic Education and are
, coordinated by Jerry Gust, dlrec·
.;~ tor of _ the ·center, and Kay
1Michael. superVIsor of student
, services at Buckeye Hills Career
Center. A larger workshop for
) teachers has been scheduled for
: the week ot June 24 af Rio .

to.
" For the students, it's a chance .to serve the community ; gain
experience in dealing with
clients and meet their financial
needs," Ulrich .added.

· Ethics panel.~lears Rep

!Educators fonn .plans ~o promote
:economic education in.··sehools

I.EI

~A·
~

"nls . Ill aa exelt1n1 ~~~td dynamic music
enaemble," aald Ariel Artistic Director, Lora
Saow •. "'l'bey clve new mean Inc to the phrase
'Make a joyful nolle unto the Lord.' We are so
'pleaaed to be offering Ibis perlonnaace In
cqnjunetloa with the Youth United For Cbrlst."
Tlcketi are available at Peddler's Paatry and
Branleardl Music or by calling t)le Ariel orrtce at

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STAR

BANK

'

Star Bank, N.•A., Tri-State
I

Time &amp; Te~p&amp;}ature : (Gallipolis) 446-S:rAR

446·BANK

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Member FDIC

�~·fill

A-8-Sunday Ti, I I Sentinel

·&gt;~-Area

deaths--------

~ Florence Bauerle

Services will be 1 p.m. Monday
In the Ewing Funeral Home, with
the Rev. Duane Sydenstrlcker
officiating. Burial will be at
Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home on
Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

Linda K. Persons

-~

POMEROY - Linda K. Per. - POINT PLEASANT - Florsons,
46, of Old Portland Road,
e~ Bauerle, 92, 10 Windsor
Racine,
died Friday at Veterans
Court, Point Pleasant. died Friday In Pleasant Val lily Hospital. Memorial Hospital following an
Born Sept. 17. 1897, In Wheel- extended illness.
A homemaker; she was bprn Thomas W. Spradling
lq, W.Va., daughter of the late
William and Frances (Stanton) Aug. 2, 1943 to Clifford Mays, of
PO !,NT PLEASANT- Thomas
Rice. she was a homemaker and South Point, and Pearl VIrginia
Saba,
of
Cleveland,
both
Wheeler
Woodrow
Spradling, 71, 2807
was active In the Girl Scout
of whom s urvlve .
Maple Ave. , Polnt Pleasant, died
program,
Survivors Include three sons, Saturday In Pleasant Valley
She was preceded In death by
C. Clark Jr _of Cheshire. Hospital, following a lengthy
Robert
her husband , Cecil Garth Baue0. -Clark of Chester, and Illness.
Timothy
rle, In 1,78,
Christopher
A. Poulton, of Long
BOrn July 10, 1918, at CharlesSurylvhig are a daughter. Mrs.
three
daughters, Connie ton, W.Va., son of the (ate
Bottom;
Lee S. IMa;Jorle) Good of
Wbeellng; a~d two grandchild- L. Osborne of Reedsville, Tracy . Thomas B. and Mace! Price
ren, Lee S. Good III of unIon- N. Klaiber of Long Bottom, and Spradling, he was a World War II
town, Ohio, and Andrew S. Good Melinda D. Persons of Racine; Navy veteran, a-retired constructhree brothers, Clltford Charles tion worker, and a member of
·
of Cleveland.
Mays
of Cleveland, Donald L. Millwright Local 207 at Ironton.
A private service will be held
Mays
of
Coal Grove, and Chris·
He was preceded In death by
Monday at the Greenwood Ceme.
topher
Allen
Mays
of
.
South
his
sister, Agnes Hdrne; and a
tery, Wbeellng. There will be no
·Point;
two
sisters,
Brenda
Fields
Fred D. Spradling.
brother,
visitation. The McCoy Funeral
and
Peggy
Sue
Starr,
both
of
Surviving
are his wife, Helen
Horne, Wheeling, Is In' charge of
South
Point;
and
four
(Lallalhln)
,
Spradling
of Point
arrangements.
grandchildren.
Pleasant; two sons, Robert W.
Spradling Jr . of Point Pleasant,
__
c_oUR--:T-·.:.P,.;ag:...e_A_1-:-!______.:_____ and Robert Gary Spradling of
Morgantown, W.Va.; three siscourt.
conducted a private practice for ters, Betty Lee Ahrens of ChaJustice Andrew Douglas. a 25 years after receiving his juris rleston, Ji(orrna Jean Devoe of
graduate of the University of doctor degree from the Univer- Kanauga, and Pat Warbureton of
Toledo College of Law. was In sity of Michigan, left the field of Mount Hope, W.Va. ; and five
private practice for 20 years. law briefly before his election to grandchildren.
during which he served on Toledo the Su prerne Court to write
Calllng hours will be Sunday
City Council. He was elected to novels. In addition to being a
from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. at the
the Sixth District Court of Ap- federal land commissioner,
WUcoxen Funeral Home, Point
peals In 191l! and to the Supreme Brown served with the Judge Pleasant.
Advocate General Corps and as
Court four years later.
The body will be cremated and
· Jusdce Craig Wright received an arbitrator.
burial will be In New Matamoras,
Justice Allee Roble Resnick, Ohio. In lieu of flowers, the
hiS law degree from Yale University and served one year In Army who joined the court in 1989, , family requests donations be
Counter Intelllgence. He was In received her law degree from the made to the American Heart
private practice from 1957 until . University df Detroit in 1964 and
Association or the Kidney
1970, whe he was elected to a ·practiced law while serving as an
Foundation.
bei)Ch in the Franklin County assistant prosecutor In Lucas
Common Pleas Court, where he County. She was elected to the
remained until his election to the Toledo Municipal Court In 1975
and to the Sixth District Court of
high court In 1984.
Appeals
In 1983.
Justice Herbert R, Brown, who

Court .. , ___.....:..:Cf~•o_m

(From ST. PAT'S, page AI)
St. r1 t's····----'------:---In a Saint Patrick's Day pipe band's marching order

nQ·

message, the Anglican primate because of a feud with the state's
for Ireland, Archbishop Robin · chief judge.
Eames, · warned that Northern
Despite protests, women were
Ireland Is In danger of reverting banned from Saturday night's
to pagaril.sm.
Friendly Sons of St. Patrick's
The "troubles" wore on the dinner in Albany. N.Y. Some 550
minds of Irish-Americans as people purchased $60 tickets to
well, both those sympathetic and
the event; which has been·closed
those o~ to the underto women since it began 84 years ,
·ground war for reunification of ago.
Ireland waged by the Irish
Albany, N.Y., Mayor Thomas
Republican Army_
Whalen and Roman Catholic
,\,; ~Qrdl!r of Ancient Hlberni- Bishop Howard Hubbard both
.,.. In 'Columbus; OhiO, _ seheplanned to 'boycott the fall-male
;filed-a &amp;remonlal cutting out.of bash. ·Wb!llen · said he. would
~ pol'tlon of the Br\tish flag that
that the organization
· ~Dis Northern Ireland.
Friend Iv Sons and
·;;,,SuRrters hailed Joe Doherty,
Patrick.
-'-~~ suspect wanted for the
'IIIY!.iii of a British army capfain. who has been held In a U.S.
·f ederal prison l!urtng ali extradllon batde of more than 2;600
·.il.ays. "Remember that as you go
}bout the 1St. Patrick's Day)
"'dvltles," Doherty's lawyer·,
fllary Pike, told sympathizers.
~ lrlsh descendants In Boston
~owed to keep alive the memory
at another tragedy In Ireland's
~orrow-fllled history_
.
• Mayor Raymond Flynn announced plans for the first
Amerlc!ln memorial to the more
1 million victims . of the
jlotato_famine of the 1840s. The
}2;foot_ "Great Hunger Memor' lal 1" ' to_ be built with about
''$2!iu.OOoln private funds, willa! :;a
~onba' , those · who have died In
recent ·Ethiopian famines ..
; ''The experience of the Irish Is
got necessarUy a unique one,"
_n ynn said . '1'he scourge of
Ounger persists In our time."
t' Another controversy m)lch on
the minds of Irish- Americans
OJIS year was the alleged lnjusl;lce of U.S. quotas on new Irish
Immigration and treatment of
trltb Illegal aliens. For the first
time, the New York parade
TRADE ANY OLD MOWER
featured banners reading "Im·
&amp;CUT YOUR COST
migration Reform Noo/-"
ON A NEW SNAPPER
Cardinal John O'Connor told
worshippers at St . Patrick's
GET AT LEAST
Cathedral In New York that
~pcJana who stlfie lmmlgraOden ; quote the "!lend me
- · AOGt" Inscription on. the
S t!R of Liberty without honorTRADE ALLOWANCE* ·
ldJ Its spirit.
'
maybe more, on self-propelled
"Most who come here are very
mowers.Snapper walk mowers
p6or," the cardinal said, "and
are built to do the job better
tM&gt;y come. for the same reasons
and last longer. Spe·
'-~'- '"' cia! features include
a£ -dllcrtmlnatiOJI that brought
6 forward speeds,
the Mayfiower here In the first
differential for
place, or have we forgotten?"
easy turning,
A newspaper report before the
disc drive
New York parade cauSf!d a
·and Hi·Vac."
liliCkus In the highest levels of
New York state government.
Aides to Gov. Cuomo, In a
atatement attributed to his
"second-floor leprechauns," dismilled as worse than blarney a
New York Post report that
.Cuomo had ordered a change In a

than

atrend tbe March 8 meet!JII, said
he too would have voted against
the
resolution.
the term " practicable and cost
Wlgelns
later pointed out that
effective" would pro'tect trash
no
matter
what
the Meigs County
haulers who, for financial readelegation
would
have voted, the
sons, needed to dump outside the
policy
committee
already had
district.
·
the
majority
of
yes
votes ,needed
However, some Meigs County
to
pass
the
resollltlon.
haulers are doubtful of this
In addition to oppaslng the
protection. Some haulers, and
also policy commpttee newly passed resolution to regumembers, believe the phrase late the flow of waste, Middleport .
VIllage Council also went on
"practicable ahd cost effective"
record Monday night against a
Is unclear and places unreasonaproposal to Increase surcharges
ble res !rainI on small Independon
landfill dumping fees within
ent haulers. They feel the phrase
the
district. •
could be a double-edged sword.
Middleport
Council decided to
" Practicable and cost effective
exercise
Its
veto
power on the
for who?'-' asked Roger Manley,
dumplng
location
restriction
and
of Manley's Trash Service, at
Tuesday 's meeting o( the Meigs surcht~rge proposal after It was
pointed 'out that the veto option
County Chamber of Commerce,
"the Independent hauler or ihe · might not be available much
,
. longer.
S\llld waste district Itself?"
Current law requires the supManley reported Monday night
portofthecountycommlssloners
to Middleport Vjllage Council
"In all" counties In a solid waste
that he Is currently paying $12.50
a ton to dump at West Columbia. · .management district, !!nd the
support of council In the largest
If he were required to du~p at
municipality " In each" partie!the closest landfill "within" the
paling COUI1tY In order to pass a
six-county district, he would
managmentplanandsurcharges
.
have to pay $19 a ton, not to
tor
the
district
.
mention increased mil~age costs .
State · Rep. Mary Abel (Dto the district landfill.
Athens) has Introduced a leglslaIncreased costs to the hauler
tive bill which would take away
would eventuallY. mean inthls local control by amending·
creased costs to the hauler's
the state solid waste Jaw . Her
customers, Manley pointed out.
proposed legls1atlon Is the result
Paul Gerard and Jon Jacobs,
of
Jackson City Council's veto of
Meigs County' 111embers ofi, the
uro1&gt;0sal.
district policy committee, voted
against the resolution at the
March 8 meeting while Meigs
members Ken Wiggins and Il-lchard Bailey abstained. Commissioner Manning .. R,oush, t'be
filth Meigs member of the policy
committee, 1\'hO was unable 'ito
Durtng discussion at the Mal":h

8 meeting, It was explained that

Ou-r Price 18.43
Ou-r Price 1 7.63

YOU SAVE 1 1.55
YOU SAVE 1 1.35

Janet Jackson, Bad English; Biz Markie,
Tommy Page, Kiss, Hank Williams, Jr. ,
Tom Petty, Calloway, Cher, Metal/ica , and
the list goes on and on!

_________
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su:~ING

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Sl9 999~~INAl

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to help ·cope with death'. ~

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By JULIE E. DilLON
Tlmes-Sentlllel Staff

help people ,to dt?al with ' the'ir.
grter and to ' possibly find an
outlet ~o express themS!!lves.
Grief, according to the artlcll!,
POMEROY -It's late at night.
The · phone rings. You answer It "Understanding , Grier• from
with heartbeatingqulcklyonlyto The Compassionate, Friends,
learn the.worst possible news you Inc., With Its many ups and ·
could ever hear; The person on downs, lasts far longer than ,
the other end of the line tells you society In general recognizes.
that a loved one of yours has just Each person's grief Is ll)dlvidual
died.
•
and every person will COJl!! with It
· So maybe this Isn't an accurate differently. . ·
.
,
scenario of what happens when a
Crying ' Is · an acceptable and
lpved one dies or Is killed but It healthy expression of grle( a.nd
caught your attention didn't It?
releases built-up . tension for
Have you lost t~loved one and moihers, fathers; 'sons, daughsometlmes feel that you just ters. or brothers and sisters, as
cail't deal with It? Well- you're -wlll friends .
The article cited some physical
not alone. If you've lost a child,
parent, brother or sister, or reactions to the death of a loved
friend, you know that the pain one. They may ln~lude loss of
appetlt.e or overeating, and sleeand grief you feel Is real.
There Is a person In Meigs plessness. The bereaved may
County, that wishes to remalri. find that they· have very little
anonymous, who Is starting "The energy and cannot concentrate .
Grief Group. " This bereavement
Angelica stated that one of the
group Is open to anyone who has hardest'thlngs to deal with Is the
lost a loved.'one. For the purpose fact that sometimes friends and
of this article, she will be called relatives feel uncomfortable
"Angelica."
around someone who has just lost
,
The first meeting of this group a loved one.
will be held Thursday at 7 p.m. In
They want to ease your pain
the basement of the Racine but do not know how.
United Methodist Chureb, and
She went on to say that these
the group will meet every Thurs- people shouldn't be afraid to
day of every month. ·
gpeaJ&lt; t~ a bereaving Individual,
Angelica stated that . It Is and that many times just a .
Intended to serve .a five county simple "hello" does a world of
,
area, Meigs, Gallla, Jackson, good. .
Mason·, and VInton. It Is also
The group will deal with th·e
hoped that the~:~roupwlllexpand many emotions- grief, anger,
Into even more areas.
depression, and isotatlon - that
· Thegrouplsbelngdevelopedto' surface following the loss of a
encourage people who have lost loved one.
loved ones to express their
Guilt, real or Imagined, Is a
feelings with other people who normal part of grief. It surfaces
have experienced a similar In thoughts and feelings- of· "If
situation. ·
only." The coordinator pointed
Angelica said many times out that In order to resolve this .
people don't want to talk about guilt, one must learn to express
how they feel when a family and ,share these feelings,, -and
member or friend dies, bu'tlfthey ., learn to forgive themsel\-es.
are In the presence of others who
Anger Is another common
been In similar situations It Is reaction to_loss, .and like gull t, It ·
much easier to · 'e xpress needs expression and -sharing In
themselves.
a healthy and acceptable
This person went on to say that manner. . , ..
"It helps tobecomelnvolvedwlth
The death of a loved one often ·
a grollp of people having similar causes a person to examine his or
experiences because sharing. her faith orphllosophyoflifj.', but
eases loneliness and promote• -don't be disturbed It old ~llefs . ,
the expression of grief In an
lire questioned. '1'alk aboutlt,"
atmosphere of acceptance and stated the group coordinator.
understanding."
And remember, faith .o ffers help
' Brochures, video tapes, and to accept the unaceeptable. ,
t:er materials from The ComOne point that Angelica wants
slonate Friends, Inc. will to make clear Is that It helps to
serve u the bul.s for Information become Involved with a group of
prl!vlded at the meetings. The people who have similar expeCompasslonate Friends, lnc : Is rlences, and that sharing eues
"a nationwide support group for loneliness and promotes the
bereaved parents."
expression of grief In an atmo•··
pbere of acceptance and .
The cOordinator of the Grief understandiJII.
Group stated that although the
The COmpassionate Friends,
. literature and other Information Inc. states that bef!!aved fami' II geared toward bereaved parlies can find heal!nland hope for
ents ihat It , would · •1111 be -the future as they reorganiZe
extremely beneficial to an)'one their lives In a polllive way. The
who has lost a loved one.
1M Grief Group hopes that this
·It Is her hope tha~ the group will organlzailon Will do just that.

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When a child dies....

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A member of

IJH PLEA~

17 Court St.
Gallpells, Olt.

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VALL£Y HOSPITALFam//y of Professionals

The _clergy assists.:. .

VaHey Drive, Point Pleuant, WV 25550 (304) 675-4340

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our community for otir progressive and family-oriented
maternity services. We're taken the concept of ·
f.imlly-centered maternity care one step further with the'
opening this month of 'Creations'- ow new maternity
unit.
1 From th~ moment you ftJSt learn yoq're expectlrig, ~~~~e're
here to guide you through your pregnancy and help make
the experlenc,e of·gMng birth a positive one
you and
your family.
Our private roomS are warm and comforting as ~~~~en as
medically sophisticated;and ow ~dally designed birthing
be~ allow you to labor, deliver, recover and bond with
your baby In the same room.
1You and your baby may spend as much time together
as you like. Ow skilled nurses. who care for both you and
your baby. are always nearby to provide support In Mry
. aspect of newborn care and parenting techniques. ,
Dad Is Invited to participate In labor, deliVerY and
bonl~Jng and may room In with Mofn and baby - a comer
chalt reclines for comlbrtable sleeping. Grandparents and
big ~rather and s1sten1 are special guests, and are ~~~~elcome
1 to v~t MOm and the ,new babY ilght In t!telr room.
·
~or more Information about famlly-«!ntered maternity
care at Pleasant Valley Hospital, Gall (304) 675-4340.

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· Monday, cold with a chance of
north and rain or snow
- • · Lowa mostly In the 201 and
Jdllll mainly In the 30s. Tliesday,
fill'. Low• In the 20s. Highs 43 to
15. Wednesday, a · chance of
lboif\!11. Lows In the 30s. Highs
Ira U./tllo
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OPEN DAILY 10-9, SUNDAYS 12-6

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17 Ohio Rive-r Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446-7653

501.
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The Alcove

lloulll Cenlral Ohio
Partly sunny, high in the mid

M8n:h·18, 1119

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We also stock r;assette singles, 45's, and discs.
SPECIAL bRDERS ACCEPTED!

Weather

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~mu.- tentmel Section 8. ·--

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(.

The veto by JacksOn - held up
passage of a surcharce schedu~.
thereby holbllll up n~ revenue to pay district expenses.
To cover expenses during the
'ume prior to approval of sur·
charges, each of the six parttclpatlng cquntles was asse~aed, on
a per capita basis, for the district
expenses.
As yet, onl)l Athena and Meigs
, Counties paid their -a ssessments.
Abel's propo$ed bill requires
that the management plan and
accompanying surcharges be
approved only by the commlssloilers "In a majority" of
counties In the district';! and the
councils In the largestmuDlclpalIties ·"In a majority" of the
counties.
.
The consensus of Middleport
Council Is that some local control
Is essential and that they (Middleport Council) will do whatever
needs to be done to ret_aln SOII}e
control rather than rellnqulsh 'lt
all to the district.
The next public hearing of the
Solid Waste Management Distrlct will be 'held 7 p.m. on
Wednesday, March 21, at McArthur, where proposed Increases
to the surcharges ·wm be
discussed.
,
Another public hearing Is scheduled for the following Tuesday,
March 27, at the school In
Wilkesville, where an update on
plans for the solid waste dl.strlct
Is to be presented . .

l990. CADILLAC
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MM:h 18. 1880

Pomerov-Middleport- Gallipolia, Ohio-Point Plaaaant. W. Va.

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The missing elder-loved one.:.

·Accepting the
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�Pllga B-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

M.ch 18, 1910

·Pomeroy. Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant W. Va.

,~-Anniversaries--

~arch

Eastern school lunch menu set

•

The lUI)Ch menu for the East- ern tocat SchOOl Dlstrl~t flo ·
been announced for the week Qf
March 19.
Monday: plzzaburger, french
tries, fruit and milk.
Tuesday:· grilled cheese sand'
wlcb, tomato soup, relish tray,

.· ® :-. 0

fruit, ~ llid illllk. ·
~
Wedlle.day: chleken. bmd
and butter, maahed potatoes and
gravy, appleeauce 81!11 milk
Thursday: taco saladwlthcol'll
chips, peal, fruit and milk. .
Friday: fish, tater tots, fruit
and' mllk. ·

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ntE
ENI!SCO

A CELEBRATION
OF LOVE

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Reach out to family and friends with
thoughtful gills that e•press your warm t)
wishes. A cherished pir.:e from The
ENESCO PRECIOUS ~OMENTS"' Col· ~·
lection offers you the ~unity to make ·J
any time a time for sh~ring.

·',
"'THE OOOD LORD
ALWAYS D£LIVERS"
~

Dlllllfl'DmJ~

--~. . . . . . . J ....... U..f...-

G&gt;

l
FRUTH
PHARMA{;:Y 0
Rt. ~5

160

&amp;

.\

Gallipolis, Ohio

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Prather-Blevins

Shafer anniversary observed

: CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs.
· Ferry Shafer of Rt. 2. Crown
:City, celebrated their 66 Wedding
·: Anniversary on March 13.
Mr. Shafer Is 90 years old and
has been a farmer all of his life
·and still works on the farm. Mrs.
Shaler · is 85 years old and ·bas
devoted her life to be!n!: a
homemaker.

PATASKALA, Ohio- Mr. and French aitd Spanish and plans to
Mrs. John Prather of Pataskala teach In the Columbus area.
are announcing the engagement
Blevins, a graduate of Ohio
They have two sons, Falrrell
of their daughter Paula;&gt;rather Valley Christian School In GalliShafer, of Crown City, and to David V. Blevins, son of Mr. polis, holds a·Bachelor of Science
Francis Shafer of Columbus. . and Mrs. Jam¢s\ V, Blevins of · degree In Ufe Science from
They have .two grandchildren
Rodney.
Otterbein College and Is a stu- '
and three great-grandchildren.
Miss Prather, a graduate 'of dent In The Ohio State University
Mr. and Mrs. Sha·f er celeWatkins Memorial High School,
·
School of Medicine.
brated thefr anniversary with a
Pataskala, will graduate l.n June
The wedding will be June .16 at
dinner and an anniversary cake
from Otterlleln College; with a
Kirkersville (Ohio) United Meth·
at thebome .of Randy and Sharon
·
Bachelor of Arts . degree In odlst ·Church. .
Shafer.
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MAR~
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~Woodard

AND CARA WOODARD
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POMEROY -Martin and Cara
:woodard will celebrate their 50th
:wedding anniversary on March
-30. '
.
: . The couple was marrled In
:PomeroyonMarch30,1940by the
-late Louis RusselL
They have two children. Mar-

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•SIIICik Prtvitw of
Pool &amp; Patio furnl·

Eyen tho1.1gh r'nosl people agree-that a legal will
saves time, money and aggravation when settling
an estate, the vast majority of Americans never get
around to having one drawn up. If you've been put·
tlng. it off, here's your opportunity' to have a legal
w~l free of charge. The self ·help legal will kit now
makes this possible.
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These kits come complete with forms for both husband and wife, as well as easy to follow Instructions
enabling even the layman to have a will that Is legal in ·
all 50 states, wltho1.1t the expense of hiring an attorney.
In our efforts to better serve tlte Gallla/Melgs and
Mason County areas, Ohio Valley Memory Carden's
and Meigs Co. Memory Gardens are making tliese
wlll kits available free of charge, along with lnfor· ·
mation on cemetery pre-arrangements·to residents
of the surrounding areas who do not yet own their
cemetery estates.
•
We hope In this way to better prepare Y0\1 in the
event of a death, and.to acquaint Yt&gt;u with the beautiful
surroundings that all these cemeteries have
. tp\ offer.
Of course, there is no cost or obllga tlon for this
.service, but this offer is limited to those who are at
least 21 years of age ; the head of ahousehold, and do
not ;vet owl). their cemetery property. To get yours or
· for more ~nformation, simply fill in the coupon below and mall to us, or phone one of the numbers
listed below. Coupon must be filled in or It Is void.

i

1---------------------------. YES! I would like to receive a FREE self help kit.:
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Ati~htercary

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' MON. &amp;f.l. 9•30 11l I
lUES. WID, THill. 9:30 T1. 7 P.M.
SAlUI~AY '1130 'li 5 P.M.

tin Jr., o! Bidwell, and Wanda
Joan Look. Grove .City; . four
grandchildren and three great
grandchildren.
They resides on Hysell Run
Road where they have lived !or 50 ·
years.

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ADDRESS:--::----....:;,.---'---...,--:_
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400 Cabot Stvd.

Galllpol", OH. 45631
(614) 44&amp;.3615

Meigs Co. Memory Gardens
Rt. 3
·
Pomeroy, OH. 45769 '
' (614) 992·7440
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SHOPPitG PLAZA
SIAIIIOUII 7
fAII•OUS,
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NEW HAVEN -Kimberly gowns . matched that Qf the W.Va . Their tuxedoe$ matched
that of the best man.
Lynn Btaden and Robert Lewis matron of honor.
Rlngbearer was Heath HofZerkle were united in, marriage
flower girl was I;:rln . Marr,
. on Feb. 3, 1990 at the United New Haven, W.Va. She wore a fman, Letart, W. Va, cousin ot
Methodist Church In New Haven , pink satin dress trimmed In the groom. He carried· a white
W.Va.
.
.
white lace.
satin pillow with lace trim.
1
Carrie Zerkle, Amanda
. She Is the daugh(er of Harold
Thegroomworeawhlletuxedo
BradenJr.,Mlllsap,Texas,and with a white tie and Easter, and Amaris Easter,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim H!lyes, Ne· cummerbund.
, sisters of the groom, greeted and
wark. He Is the son of Mr. and
The best man was Jason . registered the guests.
The reception was held at the
Mrs. Paul Zerkle, New Haven, ·Hysell, Mason, W.Va. He wore a
church.
The three tiered cake
W.Va: , ·and Mr. and Mrs. John , black tuxedo with a black t!eand
Easter, LamberMile, ML
cummerbund.
was decorated In white with plum
The service was conducted by .
Ushers were Elvis Zerkle, New · and P(nk roses. It was topped
Rev. Clifford West, and musi c , Haven, W.Va., cousin of the with a traditional 'bride ancl,
was provided by .Kathy Draper, ·' groom, and Kevin Roush, Letart, groom .
pianist, and · Dana Johnson,
vocalist.
Escorted to the altar by her
stepfather, the bride wore a
floor-length gown of white satin
with a cathedral train. The
'bodice and neckline were ap·
pllqued with pearlS and sequins.
Attached to the fingertip veil was
a band of pearls that came across
the forehead, and pearls and
flowers along the right side of the
veil.
·
The matron of honor was
Tammy Lewis, Hartford, W.Va .
She wore a plum ballerina length
gown. The appliqued lace bodice
was ·accented with a v-shaped
neckline and pUff sleeves.
Bridesmaids were Michelle
Young, New Hayen, W.Va., cou ·
sin of the bride, a nd Lori Braden,
Newark, sister of the bride. Their

REWARO

FOR INFORMATION LEADING TO
THE· ARREST AND CONVICTION
OF PERSON· OR PERSONS WHO
HAVE VANDALIZED 2.ND FLOOR
OF THE DAVIS-QUICKEL
BUILDING AND STOLE A 4"
SEARS BELT SANDER•

_,,

" Annabel has gone beyond the
~ call of duty and has .composed a
; most interesting book that C()n.j: talns activities that have taken
,. place since plans for the reunion
: got underway. '
.
· • Annabel has all correspon' dence that has been received
; from graduates neatly placed
·~ along with a picture of then and
, now . Anna bel you did good.
;~ The ·letters are most lnte~est ·
~ ing to read as most give a brief
' resume of the graduate's lives
~ since leaving old Pomeroy High
; School. ·
! Plans call for an Informal
·:gathering of graduates on Satur{ day, May 26, from I to 4 p.m. at
;. the former. Pomeroy Senior High .
•~ School. This will be followed by
• the annual 6: 30· dinner a\ Meigs
. High SchooL By the way, this
• includes your spouse - both
....
'
. • events. ·
·1· We hope · all graduales will
make the necessary reservatIons
,
to attend the dinner.
,: Now "'e &lt;1!&gt; . neect some addl~Uonat. jiddresses for the fOlloW·
r: ing: E;dlth K~rns Honchell; Mrs .
•• Wa!d · ~Mina Mae Sinclair)
;:: Gorby; Mrs. John (Rosella Dot. n~~ue);· Folen and Mrs, Lloyd
!"".
(Mildred • Foley)' . Morrison" all ,...
4&lt;'
~' supposedly or London, Ohio.
"', , If you ha"e any lnformalloll on
...; the above, please give An11abel a
.r; call. Her number IS 614-446-4637.
;. N~llle Fugate Brown, wHO Is
;:,serving Qn (he committee, re·
! cently lost her. husband while In
'; Florida. Nellie, we think of you
'i·.often and you certainly have our
it friendship and support Knowing
. you we know you will carry on
: like the fine person you are.
• Walter Grueser, another grad,
:: is haying some health .Problems
:;. and we certainly wish you the
,::: very best. Walter, do take care ..
':!: Annabel doesn't know this yet
C but I received a nice note from
: Dorothy .June Cook Cdrcoran of
~ s.outh Wihdson, Cl. 1
::; She writes that she heard a bout
• our plans from Carolyn Smith
: and wants more details. We had
; the wrong address but now we
-;_ are on the tight track. ·
;: Dorot~y Is recuperating from a
:• broken hip which happened No·
·~ vember 2. She· hopes to return to
.; her teaching position ;~i Rock·
;: ville Hl!:h School in April.
·
,&gt; She also stated that she has
•' read the Dally Sentinel and ha·s
·· enjoyed keeping up with the news .
, of Pomeroy. She also sent Sister
; &lt;:;rae~ Graber's address, and
knows the addresses of Leona
cPriode and Ma•lne Russell. She
~has kept In '.touch.
With this said I hope we hear
': from each and everyone. Now
.come on gang lets go, go, go
; You know it will be fun- can't
, be anything but- fun that Is.

CALL 992-6677

ROBERT L. AND Kll\IBERLY BRADEN ZERKLE

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PORTER - Porter UMW ·
,meets Tuesday, 2 p.m:·

.c;roup 2 to meet
' MIDDLEPORT -Group 2 of
the Middleport Presbyterl!ln
Church wtll meet at the IIOme of
Eltzabet~ Burkett on Tuelday at
7: 30p.m.
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Some folks think that when you
.retire you have lime on your
hands. Not so. Sometimes I wish
·there were more hours In the day.
I am busier now toan I ever was .
, I am very pqor at sending
cards and letters to those who
need to hear from people. I think
. obout what I should do but I never
·seem to get around ·to dojng the
-necessary things. Please forgive
:me. My Intentions are good but
' fullfllling them Is poor.
''
'
' My apologies to the fifth grade
' basketball team at Syracuse. At
'the banquet last week I took all
:Several pictures and II just so
:happened that the one of the fifth
grade'boys dlc;l . not turn out.
; I plan to take this plctqre over .
,this coming week. Sorry.
, And so It goes.

SI.YII
.

•'

Sunday Times-Santinai-Paga

_,

Hey you Meigs County grads of ' ..
P.H .S.- class ofl940·-we need
to hear from you.
The commll·
tee has met
twice plus a
short meeting
with two of the
· mem'bers o!' the
' commiHee to
furt.herpj:rnsior .
· the up coming celel!ratlon ....
: .Annabel Lewis Houdashelt of
• Gallipolis has l)lalled letters to
·, all membl!rs of the·class.and per
response has been good from out
of town members, that is.
Memflers. o{ the class that live
in Meigs · Coun"ty are dragging
: their feet. If hometowners aren't
there who Is going to greet the out
of towners?
.
Good Q,uestlon, right? We have
heard from 14 out
c(lun ty
grads. They are most anxious to
,.attend · and most are juggling
• schedules to keep the May 26
~: date .

w. Va.

\

By Katie Crow

t,

AGE; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

1 MAll,. TO:
·
1 OhiO Voll'!l' ¥em~ Goonlaio

Katie's
korner ·

.

Sl$000 OFF ANY ABOVE

HANDBAGS $1200

.

Ponwov-¥idcllport-Gallipolil. Ohio-Point Pleasant.

or

DA1VIDV.
MR. AND MRS. FERRY SHAFER

18. 1990

. CECaMt

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We're elcarina stock of a tremendous ISSOI'DIICnt of qualitY Sena
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�••

'
Page-B-4-Sunday T~mes-Sentinel

~-Wedding~--

fhelps- Robbins ·
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph T. Robbins Sr. announce
the marrt~ge, of their daughter,
Kimberly, to Larry William
Phe!Jis, son of Estle Phelps,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., and the
late Wllltam Phelps.
The wedding took place at
Gallipolis Christian Church and
was officiated by Rev.- Denny
CobiJrn of Feb. 17. A reception
was held at the home of the
bride's parents.
. Escorted by ])er father, the
bride's matron of honor was
Christine Hines-RobbinS.
Best man was Rob Robbins.
The bride wore a dress of white
satin, with a Queen-Anne neck·
line, f!tted bodice accented with
seed pearls and ~ulns, cascad·
lng Into a cathedral train; the
tralll havhig scalloped lace trim.
Bustled bow trimmed the back
from the waist down and.her long
sleeves, with beadln!ll and open
.lace cut-outs. .
Her veil was ·fingertip length,
with a beaded band, hlld 'a n array
of seed pearls and·snap dragons.
She carried a bouquet of pink
rosebuds, red m!nature carna·
lions, baby's !&gt;reath, Jlly of the
valley, with leather leaf greert·
-ery and pink and red satin
ribbon.
.
The groom wore a pearl gray
tuxedo with tails. He wore , a .
boutonniere of pink rosebuds,

i
DOUGLAS AND DIANNA FORGEY CRABTREE

·Crabtree-Forgey
OAK HILL - -Dianna Jewel
:Forgey became · the bride of
:Douglas Michael Crabtree ·Jr. on
·Jan. 13, at the St. Paul United
:Methodist Church, Oak Hill,
:Ohio. Rev. David Crabtree. per-formed the ceremony.
: The parents of the cbuple are
·Mr. and Mrs. Maurice E . Forgey
:or Thurman, and Mr. and Mrs.
pouglas M. Crabtree Sr. of Oak'
·Hill.
: ThemaidofhonorwasLovelD.
·Forgey, sister of the bride.
: The bridesmaids were Melissa
.:Moore of Gallipol!s, Lisa Forgey
-of l'l!dwell, and Sandy J"orgey of
:Rio. Grande. The flower girl was
:Kyle Conroy of Oak Hill.
· The best man was Avery
.:Allman, friend of the groom: The
:groomsmen were Kevin Crab-tree of Oak Hill, Stephen Forgey
:of Bidwell, and Dwayne Forgey
-of Rio Grande. The ring bearer ·
:was Kyle Forgey, nephew of the
:bride.
,·
·
.
· The bride wore a gown of white
:Satin with hand-beaded basque
:waist bodice of satin and llluslon·hlgh beaded neckl!ne-pearl dro:Plets at the neck and waist,
-self-covered buttons to back
:waist !eg-o-mutton satin and
Jllusion sleeves with scattered
yearls and re-enbto!dered lace
.motifs, full Skirt with scattered
:medallions. Th.e gown also had a
·candy box bow at the back waist
:with a wide ruffled e.dged sem!·cathedral train . .
: The b~lde wore a special
:wedding band, given to her by
. ·her grandmother, Love!
· :Hamilton.
TI(e bridesmaids wore tc;lVely
floor length gowns of black velvet
and Daphne Rose satin, tilted
velvet basque waist bodice,
, sweetheart neckline , short
shirred pour . s.Ieeve of black
· velvet, full skirt with black
. velvet and daphne rose bustle
and candy box bow' and back
. waist.

March 18, 1990

Pomeroy ft.1iddeport-Gallipolis, OhiO-Punt Plaealnt. W. Va.

The groom wore a black tuxea,
with tails with a white vest and ·
tie.
The groomsmen wore tuxedos
with tails with qaphne rose
cummerbund and ties.
. ·
Hostesses were Regina ·. con·
roy, Roberta Duncan, .Cindy
Hypes, and Beth· Carman. ·
The cake ·was baked and
decorated by Jewel Franks, aunt
oft he bride, 11nd ,B renda Fcirtne'r,
cousin or the bride.
The bride Is a teacher for · .
Gall!a County Local SchoOl$. .
The groom Is student- at the
University of Rio Grande, major'
lilg In Mathematics.
The couple reside
... In Oak Hill.

Wedding policy

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards ~dings · of Gallla.
Meigs and Mason counties as
news and Is .happy to publish
wedding stories and photographs
_without charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of tlmell·
ness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published In the Sunday
edition, the wedd!tlg must have
taken place within 60 days prior
to the publication.
Alf material for Along the
River must be recieved by the
editorial department by Thurs·
day, 4. p.m., prior to the date of
publication.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories.
LARRY W. AND KIMBERLY
If desired. Photographs may be
either black and white or good
. ROBBINS
. PHELPS
baby's breath, w·lth leather leaf · quality color, b!IUold size or
larger.
greenery.
Poor quality photographs will
Matron .of honor wore tea
not
be accepted. Generally, snaplength dress of pink satin and
shots
or instant-developing phocarried a bouquet of pink rosebtos
are
not of acceptable quality.
uds, red mlnature carnations
Questions
may be directed to
accented with baby's breath,
the
editorial
department from 1
The br-Ide Is a graduate of
to 5 p.m. MQnday through Friday
Gallta Academy High School and
at
(614 ~ 446-2342.
attends Rio Grande University.
The groom Is a graduate of
Point Pleasant High School and
attended Marshall · University
and Texas Tech.

~

HAMBURG, N.Y. &lt;UPI) ~
Town pollee have decided to
grow some marijuana In their;.
campaign to ·r id the COinl'l!unity
or the evil weed.
·
Hamburg pollee said they w!U
plant ·marijuana seects pur, .
chased In ~ mall-Qrder catal~
and It a ·cropcomes In, they will •
take the pot to parents' groups to.
· Illustrate bow easy It Is for
teeilagers to come across the
drug.

•

Salt Price

S2.75'
Borders S9.99 Retail

press these problems.
Dr. Morgan, a board-certified
surgeon, received his medica)
degree · from .Harvard Medical
School and Is a founding member
of the Ameri~an Trauma Society
~s well as a fon;ner pr.esldenl of
the Ohio Chapter of the-American
College of Surgeons. Dr, Morgan ·
also ·s erves as one of · eighteen
Ohio delegates. to the American
Medical Associatlo'n and was
reeently elected to membership
In the prestigious . International
Society or Surgery.

iic.iiOUQjh. R.Ph.

Ch•l• Rlffto. R. Ph.
RDnlld Henning. A.Ph.
Mon . thru Set. 8 :00 • .m . to 9:00p.m .
Sundll'f 10 :00 a.m. to .a:oo p.m . •
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992 -2955
E. Main
ffitndty Service
Pomeroy, OH.

PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!) Tile chemistry Class . assignment:
D€monstrate tHe
mushroom-shaped cloud of a

9 ·

Carl Podeyn and John .Jubb
wanted a more realjs~ c simul&lt;~­
GALLIPOLIS ....: Dr. Thomas
tiort, so they tr.!ed t~ .blow up a
W. .Morgan, ge'neral and· vascuturkey stuffed· with black • lar surgeon at Holzer Medical
powder. "
.
.
Clinic and Holzer Medical Cen·
They should've stuck with the
ter, has been appointed to the
posters;
Amer!cim"Medlcal Association's
..
Podeyn was ]losp!lallzed In fair
Coffi!lllttee on Rura-l Health. The
condition Friday w!tii burns
committee wm play a key role In
suffered Thursday night after the
development of AMA proposals
Sunset High Schoolstudents'tried
to Improve acces~ to and financto set off the bird bomb with a
Ing
of health careAn rural areas
match.
of the na"tion.
The two 17-year-olds, planning
Dr. Morgan, a pastpresidentof
to videotape their experlioent,
the
Ohio State Medical Associahad· stuffed 5 'h to 6 pounds of
tion and long time member of the
black powder \nside!l raw turkey
Surgical
Department at Holzer
and then run a trail of gasolineC!in.ic
In
Gallipolis,
was one of six
soaked powder 30 feet from the
physicians
nationwide
who were
bird to act as a fuse. said Jefl
named
to
this
committee.
The
Johnson of the Tualatin Valley
committee
is
charged
with
the
Fire and Reascue. · .
.
responsibility
of
Identifying
the
VVhen they touched the fuse
underlying
causes
of
health
care
with a match, it flared into
access and financing problems In
Podeyn's face. Johnson said.
rural areas and developing pol·
Jubb was not injured, authorities
icy
recommendations that ad·
said.

' '

LIMITED Till ·

, jt again, and

Their presentations wi)l high-

SUNST AI SEIIU GARMN TRACTORS
Avcilablo in 14·16-11 &amp; 20 H.P.
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twllilllg rocliu•
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siln tpttd r.ng~~ .... 4iff•lftfiallodt for

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aEMctri no Ia .... •d dil•fll!l• att.ch·
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BERKLINE~S BISCUIT-TUFTED,

HIGH-BACK SWIVEL .ROCKER
Ci .handsome chair·that rocks
and
turns in a full ·circle!
'

I

"' 90 Models NOw in Stock

RUCILOAD SALE OF FACTOIY
DEMOS Alii CLOSEOUTS

liED'S COUNliY STOlE

4TH 8s Main. Aeadsville, Oh.

.,

light (ashions from the 1840
period to the present In commemoration of the Sesquicentennial
. this ~ear. Models will wear
period costumes and contemporay · outfits .featuring the same
lines as those worn In teh 1840's
and 1850's. Silhouettes of clothing
styles .of the sesquicentennial era
will complete their portion of the
program.
.
Cindy Oliver!, Meigs County
Home Economist and 4H Agent·ts
working with the Fas hlon Board
to coordinate their presentation.

Time: 6:30 P.M.-8:30

.

THE EASTER B1.1NNY IS (10MJNG .;_ 8cealc Hills wUI oace

en11 personall:letl with the aame of your loved oae. The cost IaN
per en, or the Easler B. .ay himself will deliver aa Euter en
aloar wltll a piCture to a.frlend or loved oae for 110. All prooeeds 10

DOte: March 26 ' .
'Instructor: Sheila Blake ·
CAKE DECORATING caeginner',~) ·
Diltr. April. 5
·
'time: 6:30 P.M.~8:30 P.M~
· ·Instructor: Shell llake · ·

'-(lharltable GaiDa Couaty OJ'I&amp;alzatlons. To place 1111 order for an
or a visit from the Easter Buaay, caii _H6-7UO.

err

··----·~~--~-------------------,
1
fts I would !lie to pu~&lt;hat
FHitr
1
•. fu(s). Tile Mml(s) I would ilkt tilt ells) dttOrlltd w~h 1ft:
1

PHONE

. r .

••

. '

l.S million valentines. This year the
count was nearly S million.
cheerful and lively gentleman who
At Hines Vereraos Adminislnltion. greeled us at the front door was a
Hospilal in Olicago, the centtal mail- survivor of the l'lataan death man: h.
ing point. mare than 100 volunteers ' There was a great deal of laughter,
worked hard and long for three weeks handshaking and hugs. Then the
to box the valentinesand·shiplhem to WOIIUI!l at theelccaic organ who had
the other 171 VAhospitalsandmedi· been playing background music ancal cenrers aroll!ld the /latiqn. More . nouncedlhalaveteranhadcomposed
volunteers were on hand at these fa~
A h bed 81'I
~ U
' s to disttibure the valentines to ' over
a song or me.
us
ence
e
Cill·ue
the wan! as.Charles Branham, a
patients. More than 2,300boxes,each World War II vereran, took my hand
containing 2,000 valentines, were and in a marvelous meUow voice
mailed to abotit SO,OOO hospitalized · ·began rp sing, "Ann, Ann, you are so
veterans. That's about 90 valenlilies beautiful." I loOked across the room
for every patient!
at Kathy and saw tears in her eyes. I
· Cards llld 1et1.en arrived from in- . coofess, there were tears in mine too.
dividuals, schools, .churches, comso, thank you, !"""
A&amp;• • - A &amp; - •
.........., . sOl'
:munity organizations and businesses helping me.bring so much pleasUre ti&gt;
.aU over the World, including Saudi thousandsofveterans. Wemustnever
Alabia. Taiwan, Apstralia, ·Tokyo, foraet that they fought for our f~ee~
the Philippines and Ger- dom,andweowethemadeblthalcan
many.
never be'repaid.
TeacllenonceapiomadclhisceleWhe11 plaiJIIing a w~dding, who
·bralion a class pojecl Thousands of p11ys for whol? Who sttJNls whert?
children sent brilhdy decoraled, 'TheAIIIILaluUrsGIIideforBridd'
handmade cards aad Wrote lcaers. has all the ~rs. Stnd 11, u/f-lld·
. Many enclosed poemsllld pictwes d~tsstd,lollg,bllSWss-sizttll~lo~
of themselves and their pets. Several and a chedr.or MOMyorderfor $3.65
schools made banners and JIOiiers (this iltC/udes postagundlttutdlillg)
that the lleiS tacked up in the wanls. 1o: Brsucs,
'~- co
I nM
• .......,...,.,
• ---'- • P.0.
Readers sent beautiful handmade Bo~l/562,Chicago,ll/.60611~562.
afghans, quilts, pillaws, bedroom (In Canoda, stnd $4.45.)
slippen and floral arrangements. It
was obvious that a gre~t many
people spent a lot of lime and money
to make our veterllls feel loved on
Valentine's Day.
· TootSie RoD Inc. shipped 100,000
TootSie Rolls to Hines VA Supply
Depot for disttibution 10 the SO largest VA medicalcenten.Onceagain,
I
the Nollh Shore Hilton presented
Hines with a S-fOOI valentine lhlt had

......:..... :......,.....................................,................ I will pldltlltm 1pon Ibis
dll
1 -w~ld like to ·~~from the Elster Bun~ to:

I

l

Adilrtst:

1

I

- - --

$199:

.by hundreds of IUCSII. The Hilton
'',pastry chefbakQd a huge calie. beau•tifully decoralCd for the ·veunns to
:enjoy. (I pigged out shamelessly, and
it was delicious!)
; ~lhy MiiCh\111. my exec~live as-

'sistant, wentwilhmeiOHineiHotlpital (in a raging bliuanl) to band 0111
:valentines, visitwilh the vetmnund
.join in the Cun. We spoke with aolI
dien who had served in
chatted wilh two vetei'IIIS of World
:w~r1,9'illltl9Byenold. 'l'beYwae
:smilina and a1c11t. IIIII yw would
.have atiC"ed they- intheitearty

Date to bt dtllvtnd:_·_ _ _ _:...___
'DtliVIfld.dll" wWI bt Apr~ 2 lhr011h Aprill3.
•~.sad~•:

________________________

·I
.I
I
I

r
I

-

might lOse their towels. Some
actofS al'o stole salt shakers,
sUvenware, spittoons, floor rugs,
and water pitchers.
· In many hoteis actors were
given the top floor In the back
corner so as I!Ot to trouble the
other patrons, One actress re·
ported that she . had been as·
signed 21 cities In a row a hotel
room that contained the main
heating pipe. She was not only
unable to regulate the heat , but
she was awakened every morn·
lng at 4 a.m. by the snapping and
expanding of the Iron.
At th,e other extreme some
hotels had rooms that were not
heated at all save for· the heat
that came In through the hal·
I way. VVhen the actor s.aw an·
unusually high pile of quilts In his
room, he would .be so warned.
These "bad" rooms were re·
!erred to by the actors as
"murderers .row." In, many hotels, the Innkeepers reserved all
the ragged towels for the actors,
· thus figuring he could- possl)lly
lose only what he was ready to
·throw away anyway.
. As to baths one actor became
much desirous ofllnally sitting In
a bathtub and he had wired ahead
·

to the next town to reserve ~
room that had tub privileges. He
took two baths and was Informed
by the Innkeeper that the actor
was being charged a·n extra 50
cents for the extra bath. The
. actor 'became so lnsensed that he .
' asked for hi~ bill for one-half day
Intending to move. to another
hotel. He found that no other
hotellnthattownwouldtakel!lm
In so he had to spend the night on
the floor of a nearby saloon, and
this seemed arelle!afterwalklng
around the town several hours In
the cold toting his luggage.
VVe note .t hat many .hotels In
early 1900 had separate entrances for men and women: How ever many hotels refused to let
actr~s.ses go through . the 1
. women s entrance, Instead maklog them stand with the inen.
One very famous actress was
given a very expensive hotel
room. She found the floor Uttered
With · ma.t ches and clg&lt;~rette
stubs. She rang for the chamber·
maid and suggested a broom.
"Just remember", said the
maid, "It's your kind that makes .
the rooms like this."
Such was the hard life of the
traveling actor In early 1900 who
might see 60 towns In 70 days.

.....,..

The buDding at Tblrd and Grape which has housed the NAPA
Motor Parts for aboul4e years was erected In the 1850's by Solomon
Frost as a hotel at the turn of the century. The hotel had reasonable
rat·e s and the only showers In town, thus making It popular with
traveling theatrical people.

JUST ARRIVED.•..

FRUIT .TREES

FROM STARK
BROS .

"A GOOD VARIETY"

A bake sale will offer a variety
of treats to eat there or take
·home . .Food and beverages will
be ·sold during all hours of the

carnival In the cafeteria. The
menu consists of many Items that
can be purchased separately or
as a plate special.

4 DRAWER

CHEST
. '.
Suggested
Ret oil
$~9,9~

CARNIVAL FUN. - Uzzle Bi'elineman takee aim at the
Basketball Shoot, one of lhe many games al the Sprlnr Carnival at
Washington Elementary on March 3l.from 3 lo 7 p.m.
1

..

0

,

I

a'UXEDO SPECIAL
For That ·special Occaeio11
We offer complete tuxedo rental Bl!rvice
to help you look yo11r belt on that special

PIICED FIOM

..

$2 995

Graduating
SENIORS
.8.. at

the top of the class
with classy graduation
announcemenis .
Come see our wide line
of gradualion supplies

bvstylart
20% Off Month of March
PAT'S POSIE PATCH
388-9311

Ntncy F1rr1ll, RN
.
Staft llurii·DIItylil
2 yttra nperlenca In Dlllylil

Take a close
look at
nursing
careers with
U.S. HeaHh
of Southern
Ohio

" Mainraining life: ~ That 's what dialysis is all
about, and that's wh v I ' hose the unit . 1 could

sa\' that it's rtwarding. challcn¢ng and self·
fuifilLng, bu t r~osc words can be used to
describe any area of nursmg .
D1al\'sis otfcl'5 hope to people who orhcrw1sc
\\Ou.Jd have none THis 1s wh\· I lo\'&lt;.&gt; diah·sis and
whv t;.S . Health of Squrhcrri"Ohio f1as ffiadc a
coffimitmcnt to pro}'idc tl'tis \'i,rallifc mainu.ining

service.''

80s. Several10ltlien who had RrVed

in World W• n won~ their ribbou
and medals on their bllhrobes. One

'

·

Tom Julr. RN, 8SN

Nuru Monqer·Suopry
14 ytlrl IIPiilenCI In SUI'!JtiY
OR nlll&gt;ing is acquln:q throujgll!':lining A• "' OR

1

nurse you have a one-to-one rcbtionship "~th your
pl[icm and the QPportunity to sec halthon: in 'its
m~ tedmic:al environment .

A• a local person. I like working tor a small "'""

h&lt;&gt;!pital. whicl1 1 belie.&lt;. pbccs W""l&lt;r emphasis on
the pari&lt;nt a11d &amp;mil)• relationship. I kro&lt;M· th&lt; people
I work u-'ith. 1l1crc\ a rc:aJ comkn in rhar."

l'lm Kelly, RN

Still Nurlt·OB

3 ye111 lllltrlltlce In OB Nuralng

" I enjoy 08 nursing very much. and r cspc:dall~·
cnjov being a part of the happ)' birth experience.
lt's vcn• ni&lt;c to help J modicr have a more
comfortable labor and to toy to help ease htr
.l
fears . 'OB is a vc:~: rc\\'arding department and o ne . ·
I am ·proud to be a part of.,
· 1}

'

four .-..

. let Ws stylish 'SWivel rocker add new, comfortable !&gt;eauty to
your IMng room, den, or bedroom! GI'IICIIIuliy ttiyled with high,
sotllptutttl beck, genlly cUMid arms and T-cuahlon eeat. Handsomely upt;ul 1!1 lid wilh bultDn IUftetl dltall, kick pleat skirting
and generous welt seaming. Good looking, and oh, so prac•.
tical. From Berk~ne~ Ypur direct line to comfort and va!uel

1715 r.tn Aw.-

Galipels. 011.
············t·······
107 Clltstnut St.

,...,.,_,wv.
.

/

I

•
:' .

..
For mort infunnation on rour profasional

I

Advan~ legistr1tlali ....ulred

D.J."SSPIIIG.VAUIY
CRAFTPLAZASHOP

••

~ala be seiUa1 one-pouad eboco~e 1111d p~aaut butter Easier

P~M.

-: 1989. Lo. 4•...-lfM
ThnH ~yndiftlf' 4lhl
c,..... ..,. Syndlrllf'

beenmounlCdinthelobby'and~

ATTENTION!!
CERAMIC CLASS

Landers
ANN LANDERS

:canada.

PH. 378-6125

!

I

!lien: are no wcrds to

adequately lhlnk you. I'm talltiog .
.about your generous ~se to the
second annual Vllentincs for Vets

· prosram. It was a stunning succ;:ess.
l..a$1 year, we wm thrilled to recei~~e
•Aut...tk ,,........
'
•No dukhillg.llthit• '.-4 -~

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page B-6

Thanks for Valentines
·for Vets Ann

Fashion Board inclUded
in show modeling everzi
POMEROY - A new addition
to the Merchant's Style Show this
year will be a presentation by the
Meigs County 4lt Fashion Board.
Members are selected each year
. on the basis of modeling ability,
. appearance ana total look.
Members include E!iz;lbeth
. Downie, Debra Frost, Penny
:. Aeiker, Jennifer Mora , Sarah
· Frydman. Ruby Burke. Erin
; smith, Michelle .Laughery, and
Debbie Brooks .

By Jam• llaadol
man's telegraph would be the
· CALLIPOLIS - At the turn of
time of departure and arrival,
Galllpoll&amp; heated
and the names and rates of
the
numerous
· hotelll. Actors had to pay for their
ers. Those wbo
own lodging.
came here tO
·About 1915 wben the VVedeperform at the
. meyl!f became the Hotel Jordan
Opera House usIt coat $t per night to stay here.
ually had to
The price Included bed, shower,
walk to one of
ancJ breakfast. Ifyouorilywanted
thetown'shotels
a room (no shower or food) the
all the way from
cost was 50 cents. Dinner and
the traln 'depot which was at supper In ·the hotel dining room
ran 35 cents. There were then 21
Third and Olive.
· Actors who had made some rooms In the hotel which has also
· money In their careers might
been known as the Frost House
choosetostayatthebetterhotels . National Hotel, St. Wendel Hotel:
which In early 1900 would have· Farmers Hotel, Merchants Hotel
been the Park Central or the and the Geneva Hotel.
Ulsamer.
In 1915 the Hotel Jordan had
ACtors just starting out In the the only hot and cold shower In
profession . wou Jd probably southern Ohio. ·This fact · was
choose one of the lesser exclusive quite attractive to traveling
places .like the Wedemeyer Hotel actors, some of whom reported,
which was located In the building having once found a reasonably
we have ·pictured today.
priced pate! with bath or shower,
Mos~ travellf!g t·heatrlcal'
would take 3 or 4 bathlngs a day.
groups worked lodging b'y "the
By the turn of the centUry the
caii".Thenlghtbeforethetroupe reputation of actors had lm·
wouldleaveapartlculartqwnthe proved greatly though there
_advance man w.ouid wire b'a ck to were still hotels that- either
the troupe Information about the refused to house actors or
next town. Given on the slip of charged them more than the
paper as Interpreted by the stage general public for fear that t hey
manager from the advance

DEAR READERS: WeU, you did
DR. THOMAS W. MORGAN

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Hotel Jordan popular with traveling actors ·

· GALLIPOLIS- The WashingA tunes room will be featured
ton Elementary School P.i.O. Is . where children can dance and
sponsorlog·,a Spring Carnlval ·o n· . listen to tllelt favorite 'songs.
~aturday, ·March 31 ftom 3 to 7
Th!!re will be two new -features
p.m. Proceeds from the funthis year. Eachchlldcanexp!ore
dralser will be used to purohase
a Fun House and visit the Mad
S\lpplies ani! equipment. The
Scientist's Lab.
.•
public IS Invited to atten~ . ,
A used chlldrens book anc! toy
; TI!ere Is· no admission 'to the ' · sale will be set up. Most of the
c.arnlval. ~ckets inay be' pur·
toys a~e In very good condition
chased to play a variety of games
and In working order. A general
~~the cost of 5 for $1. There will
store wiJI offer a variety of Items
b;e .. a fish , pond, ring . toss,
dlfferentfrom thos~ atthe school
store. Mos! of the items .can be
basketball. shoot, cake walk,
cfuck pond and several other
purchased for under $1.
games. There will be &gt;poriy· rides
Face painting will offer many
for the younger children If the
disguises for all ages.
, weather per.mlts.
··

· THREE REGISTERED PHARMACISTS TO
$ERYE YOU

O.pen Week Nights .

Pometoy-~iddleport-Galipolis,

Washingto~ Schoot.·· carnival is scheduled·

QUALITY PRESCRIPTION
SERVICE AT
COMPETITIVE PRICES.

Nuke turk{o; backfires

n~~~ ~~~~~~~":drew /i~~ers.

..•'

Cops grow 'pot'

"'

Morgan .named to AMA
rurat·health group post

a

March 18, 1990

Corbin &amp; Snyde~ Fur~ture '
955 Secolid An.
't

' ''•

W•tl 14

(

'

·
(614) 446·1171

CICil

Gallipolis, Oh.
.. :
'

I

..•

~Homt;J1141eei-s

meet

SYRACUSE- The Third Wed·
oesday Homemat~ers of Syra·
cuse Will meet Wednesday at 10
.a.m. at tb&amp; municipal building.
Members are to bring necestllll'y .
Items for ~fed toys.

..

rururc, call Km:n Walburn

(61~)

:153-llll, ext .

607. or Knd vour n:sumC' to U.S, Hc~th

of

Corporation Southern Ohio. 12.S l&lt;inncys
, l...lnc, Ponsmouth, Ohio 45662.
hutl

O!liKJrlltli!r e""""

..•

llS~rHC~

.

�•

I

Page B-6-Sunctav 'Times-Sentinel

Ponwoy-Middleport-Gallipolil, Ohio-Point Pleaeant. W.Va.

March 18, 1990

Community calendar
SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS ..,.. Trledstone
Baptist Church 38th anntve1'84ry
Is Sunday, 10:45 a.m. , with
m lnlster Gene Armstrong
preaching; Afternoon service at
3 p.m. with Rev. Edward Buffington speaking. - Dinner follows
morning worship.

COMME:NDS ~RSING STUDE:NTS - Lee
Ailn Baker of GaiUpolls, at podium, commended
freshman nursing students In the Holzer College
of Nursing at the University ol Rio Grande for
choosing nursing as a profession during the
a~.tnual capping ceremony. Baker is a 1989
graduate of the Holzer CoUege of Nursing.

Hospital. Huntington. W.Va., reminded the students that "doctors treat diSeases, and nurses
treat people."
Due to the current nu rsing
shortage and its burnQut rate,
nurses can lose sight of the
human .factor, she said. Baker
urged - the students to rern~in
caring, in spite of the illness or
the problero . ··
·'The greatest resource here is
yourself. Ypu.can make a differ·
ence, " Baker said. "There Is a
nursing shortage that causes
nurses to burn out or to.not care.
Thank God all of you are here.
"My close friends refer to
nursing school as the best and the
worst of times," she added. ·'The
bad news is, nursing school
does;t' r get any easier, but the
good news is that these lnstruc·
tors will help you If you ·are
willing tomake an effort. "
Baker concluded her address ·
by commending students for
choosing the nursing profession.
The students were introduced
by Janet M. Byers, R.N., M.S ..
dean of the Holzer College of
Nursing. The pres'entation of the

Beat of the Bend

.•

Feline licenses?
By BOB HOEFLICH
In like a lamb and out like a
lion. March has certainly been a
lamb to this
· point but look
out, the lion's
roar is a bou r to
be heard.
It
would be nice,
however, is
somehow those
beautiful spring flowers we have
' all been enjoying
survive the
lion's roar,
.
·
On the bright side, of course.
for you cat lovers Is the fact tl\at
the proposed legislation to get
the cat owners to license their
fellnes has gone down the tubeat least for the time being.

can

Recently in an emergency run
report. it stated that Faye
Kimball had been taken to the
t Holzer Medical Center following
an accident on Route 124.
However, her name is actually
Faye Campbell. She is at home
now but Is still down and out and
would really appreciate hearing
from friends.
·
------~-

Middleport's Crace Prat.t underwent surgery Monday at the
Holzer Medical Center. Grace
will be confined there for about
another week. The room number
Is 222.

-------One resident reports that there

Is a lot of shaking going on again
these days - like blasting that
occurred a couple of years ago.
but she has been unable to secure
any information as to where the
action Is originating. Glassware
is rattling along with other Items
In her house.

You .can forget about your
problems today by at tending an
appreciation program to be held
at 2 p.m. at Heath Methodist
Church in Middleport in honor of
Lee W. McComas.
·
Mr. McComas has been a gem
In his community aitd the county
You can either do the spring
over the years. Talk about a . cleaning or pull the drapes a little
supportive person- he's it. He's ' tighter. The latter sounds good.
a long time church leader and Do keep smiling.
educator. He's certainly deserv.
ing of the honor being paid him
·today. The program is open to the
public. by the way.
·The family tree search goes on.
Jerri Grimes Houston. Route I.
Tennyson, Indiana. 47637. is
looking for someone who is
working on •the Grimes. Salts·
man. and Hornbeck family tree.
Jerri is particularly looking for
an Elsie or Alice Hornbeck who
married a Grimes about 1828 and
married a second time .to Peter
Saltsman sometime between
1837 and 1842. So if you have
knowledge would you get in touch
with Jerri at the above address?
Former resident, Floyd Clark ,
who frequently pens a letter to
the editor of The Sentinel, and
now or. Portland. Ore., will be
attending his 50th high school
graduation reunion In Racine In
May. Floyd hljs sent letters to all
of the 1940 class graduates and
has made contact with all but two
of the living grads. Fifteen of the
class of 50 members are known to
be deceased. Fioyd hopes to g~t
all of the living members together for a real good reunion
.· come May.
...._

__ ____

j

, Mr. and Mrs. Eber Pickens
, send along a big thanks for all of
the cards you sent them recently.
They recently, as I'm sure you
· remember, observed their 65th
. wedding anniverSary - now
. that's a long~tlme.

•

GALLIPOLIS ~ Gallipolis Rotary meets Tuesd&lt;!Y, 6:30 p.m. ,
Down Under.

GALLIPOLIS - Ralph W,ork·

G~LLIPOLIS Lafayette
White Shrine meets Tuesday,
7:30p.m.

f:RrE

Auxlliarv Fraternal Order or
Eagles 2i7J will meet Tuesday at
7 p.m.

"
GALLIPOLISOperation LH·toff meets Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m.,
Columbus Southern Power.
.

..

MEOA~~.-10 ~

--r---c-

THIS SHOE $4 900
NOW ONlY S4400
·,-::.:;;':'.'·OI''EN MONDAY Til· I P.M.
COIN CLUB OFFICERS :._ Hosilog the coin
sliow to be. •taled al: the GaiUpoU. Holiday Inn
next Sunday Is the OH KAN Coin Club. The'
' offlcel'll are from the left seated, Ruby Vaughan,

MIDDI,.EPORT - Thf 27th
annual spring coin show hosted
by the OH KAN Coin Club of
Middleport will be staged Sunday
March 25 in the banquet room of
the Holiday Inn In Gallipolis.
Coin collectors of all ages, coin
dealers, and the public from
O~_to, West Virginia .and Kentliqky .will liave their ~aY when
upwards of a. million dollars
worth of rare . coins. paper
currency. precious metal~, and ·
related Items will be put on
exhibit: for sale or trade. There Is
nO admlssion .llharge.
·The activities will begin at 9
.a.m. and continue until 5 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT -There w)ll
be a service of appreciation for.
Lee McComas on ·sunday at the
Heath United Methodist Church
in Middleport at 2 p.m. J'here will
be a program, refreshments, and
a card shower : .
MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS - American Legion Auxiliary 161 will meet 1
p.m. at the Legion Hall.
GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis
Business and. Professional
Women meet Monday, 6:30p.m .•
Down Under.
GALLIPOLIS .,.. St. Peter's
Episcopal Churchwomen meet
Monday, noo11; · Missy Davis
speaks on Life In J?razil.

National ·
-Avon
Representative

KANAIJGA - The Kanauga
Neighborhood Watch will meet'
Monday. March 19 at 7:30p.m. at
Holiday Inn. Members urged to
atf#!nd.

. Day · ·

CONGRATULATIONS
to the Avon Representati.v~s
of District 341 whose dedication_;md spirit have
touched the lives of their friends, neighbors and
co-woitlers with warmth, caring and profetislci'nal pride .. ·
..continuing an over- 1 00 year tradition ·o f bringing
beauty i"'o America's ho.t.es .
You, too, could become part oi the ('.~on family

or hove on Avqn Representative collqn you .
CALL DISTRICT MANAGER
· '
· CALL EliZAIETH McDANIEL TODA Yl
C-790
CALL cower 614-691·7111
A'

]'jon

.l'"l..." ~

Allon Procluels.lne.

DS-80858-9

I.

.
THE· PRESCRIPTION SHOP
WANTS TO HELP YOU RID
YOUR HOME OF ANY TYPE
OF POISONOUS SUBSTANCE
DURING ·· ,.

POISON PREENTION
WEEK :~
PRISM

WITH ·
MATCIING
HANDIAG .

Allstate •nnouncas
autoravs!

Fiad o~t how much you could

save with new,lower Allstate
Autoratea.

..........

IUIVIIIIOIDOIRI
450 s.••• AY-,IIOJ
0 ....u, 01. 45611
...........11 ..

DO YOU KNOW TO
. ~keep aU medicines out of the reach of chil·
dren
..
.
•never assume .that child-resistant contain·
ers C!re child·proaf containers
•carefully store drain openers, solvents, an·
tifreeze, kerosene, gasoline, pesticides or
any other toxic material well out .of a
child's reach.

MARCH

IN CA$E OF ACCIDENTAL. POISONING, KNOW WHAT TO
DO! TIME IS VITAL Q'UICK ACTION CAN SAVE A LIFE!!
Bring.in any bottle of an old prescription you're ~o longer using
or household cleaner that could be poispnous. We will discard
this for you and give you a bot,tle of IPECAC SYRUP "FREE"II
"T..II SHOULD a A BOnD OF IPECAC SYIUP IN EVElY MEDICINE CHEST"
OFFER GOOD THRU 3/24/ld

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
SECOND

9914669

~~tate

classes ·scheduleq

·Celebration meeting
meeting scheduled
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Sesquicentennial Committee will
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
JJ'PA office In Fomeroy.

Revival slated

A.,~tastic

'
Ohio

MEIGS -The
Valley
Church of God, Route 50 East.
will hold a revival Wednesday
through Sunday at 7: 30 nlgh.tly.
The evangelist will be Joe
Beasley .

pr.

There's no
need' to pay
a lortune lor a greafhaircut, perm
or color. ·
·
At Fantastic Sam's, you'll get
everything you expect from an
expensive salon. except the price.
. You don'\ need an appointment.
w~'re waiting for you now.
•
'

San7.'s •

the Oot..... Family Ha•rcurters •

446-SAMS
MON. THRU FRI. 9 TO 9 P.M.
OHiO 11¥11 .PLAIA
SAT. 9 TO 6 P.M.
IETWHN HILLS &amp; liG lEAl
SUNDAY 12 TO 5 P.M.
GAWPOUS, OHIO

North Gallia Alumni event
slated
of

MARCH19.JS .

---.

W. Va.

GALLIPOLIS ·- Southeastern · Estate Commission.
Admissions Depar tm ent at Sou·
Business ColJeae wUI be offering
ror further details or to
theas tern Business College 'at
lour pluues of pr,e-Ucensing Real re
. _gts;;t;.;e;.r.;.;fo,;,r..;,c;.;la;.;sse;;.;,;,s;.
, .;c;,;;a;.;ll..;;th;;e;...4•4•6-•436_7•. - - - - - - - - .
Estate clasBI!!i with the first one
li
to begin March 30.
The coUege will be trying a new
approach by offering three-day
accelerated clasBe!l. Normally,
the four Real Estate classes
would require the student to
attend a mlnlnjum of 20 weeks;
however, with )this approach a
·student can achieve all phases In
four weekends.
· Instructors for the classes will
be the· broker of Southern Hills
Real Estate, Judy DeWitt, and
Sam Hoffman, agent for Southern Hills.
Classes will include Real Estate Principles and PractIces to
be held March 30-Aprll 1; Real
. Estate ·Law, April 6-8; Real
Estate Finance, April 20-22; and
"' ,,,,,N•:'" ''""'
·
Real Estate Appraisal, April
•
27-29. All classes will begin at
8:30a.m. and end at 6:30p.m.·
treasurer; Dave E~wards, president and show
These classes are beneficial to
chalnilan, Dr. Jame~~ -Witl!~ll, s4lC)retary; 1.11d •
those wishing to enter the Real
John Bryan and ,f.:d'BurkeU, vt.ce presidents. .
t
.
-:. ..
Estate field or for real estate
agents In the area to continue
their education. Ali classes are
approved by the Ohio Real

'
According to Dave Edwards , hundred years. Hourly door
show chairman and president of prizes of U.S. dollars will be
the Mlddleporf.!::lub, this shOw Is given to. the public. Souvenir
the only one scheduled In this wOOden nickels and free coin
area this year.
publicatl?ns will be given away.
Edwards reports that 14 coin
A grand prize of U.S. gold coin
dealers from three states have and paper currency will be
re.served table display space and awarded at 5 p.m.
have a vast assogtment of col!ls.
Anyone .may exhibit material
and other materials for 'sale or ' at -the ·show . Locked . security
trading purposes. De;~lers will cases •Wlll be provided and all
offer free appraisals and will exhibits are non-competitive.
accept in trades, old pocket
Current officers of the club are
watches and other Items made of Edwards, president; Ed Burkett
gold silver, or platinum.
and John Bryan , vice presidents;
Exhibits will feature co iris and
James Witherell, secretary,
paper cu~rency of the United and Ruby Vaughan, ueasurer.
States issued during the pas t two

. ,

GALLIPOLIS - Advisory
Council, Gallla County Board of
Health meets Monday, 7 p.m.,
Courthouse basement.

P1111ant.

Spring coin shbw ~ schedUled March 25 ·

The Ladles

GALLlPOLIS - Rehearsal for
Anne Fischer's musical is Sunday, 2 p.m ., Gallia Academy
choir room.

'

Sports banquet

\

' ---

POMEROY -

~--

1-- ·Real

i

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande VIllage Council .and
Board of Pljblic Affairs joint
meeting; Tuesday, March 20 at 8
p.m.1in the Municipal building.

GALLIPOLIS - There will be
a Christian presentation of the
Jewish- Passover cele.bration,
Sunday, 6: 30 p.m. at Providence
Missionary Baptist Church.

caps and chevrons was conducted by three of the college's
instructors - Amy L. Swango, .
R.JII., M.S.N.; Lila R . Buckley,
R.N., M.S.N., C.; and Barbara
Harbin, R.N .. M.S.N.
The freshman class, by county,
consists of:
A(hens - Jon Poulson; The
Plains; Kim · Poulson, The
Plains; Pat.ricla .Sams, Tuppers
Plains.
·
·
·
Fairfield - Kathleen Santarelli,' Pickerington:
Gallia - Steve Bradbury,
Gallipolis; Wendy Bradbury,
Gallipolis; Judy Burleson, Thurman; Leesa Clark, Gallipolis;
Cassandra Crites; Bldw;ell; Kelly
Davis, Gallipolis; Andra Dennl·
son, GalllpoUs; Lisa Ehman,
Gallipolis; Keith Eleam, Vinton;
Shari Elmore, Galllpolis; Cathy
Grate, Gallipolis; Bonnie Harri·
son, Gallipolis; Carey Hood,
GalUpolls; Glendlne Johnson,
Bidwell; Katherine Lane, GalU·
·polls ; Lisa Gibson Lasseter,
Gallipolis; Shelley Mingus, Ga!Upolis ; Teresa Roush, Gallipolis;
Margaret Schultz, Vinton; Terri
Stanley, callipolls; Teresa Tawney, Gallipolis; Kimberly '
Thacker, Thurman; Bill Wllll- .
ams, Gallipolis.
Jackson - Lori Bryan, Well·
ston; Elizabeth Potter Faye, Oak
Hill; Diana Milliken, Wellston;
Jenlfer Monroe, Wellston; Don
Osborne, Jackson; · Barbara
Sharp, Jackson.
·
Mason County, W.Va. -Jamie
Alexander, Fraziers Bottom;
Gerri Simpkins, Point Pleasant.
Meigs - Heidi Beegle, Syracuse; Angela Bostick, Racine;
Elizabeth Smith, Racine; Tracy
Wolfe, Pomeroy.
Pike - Jane Mauk, Beaver;
Cindy Miller, Waverly; Lisa
Ragland, Beaver.
Ross - · Victoria MorrisonLel)ew, Chillicothe;· Melody Pontious, Hallsville.
Scioto - Beverly DeVoss,
Minford; Judith Kelly, South
Webster.
Vinton ...., Christy · Green,
Hamden ; Amy Snider,
McArthur.

REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
High School Winter Sports Ban·
quet will be held March 21 at 6: 30
p.m. at the high school. Each
fam lly Is to bring one meat, one
vegetable and a salad or dessert
dish. Table service and drinks
will be provided.

GALLIPOLIS Dickey
Chapel will have Marvin Wickline preaching Sunday at 7 p.m.

CITY - Rev. Bob
Colvl preaches at Mt. Zion
Mlssl nary Baptist Church, Sunday, 7 p.m .

Human factor ·topic of address·.
at nursing recognition ceremony
.RIO GRANDE - In one of the
largest recognition ceremonies
ever held by the Holzer College of
Nursing at the University of Rio
Grande, 48 first-year students
enrolled in the assocla te delri'ee
nursing program were honol\&gt;d
during the college's annual cap-.
·
·
p)ng ceremony.
The ceremony was held March
8 In the Christensen Theatre of
the Fine and Perform\!ng Arts
Center.
Members of the freshman
class each received a nursing cap
and participated in a candlelight
ceremony, reciting The Florence
Nightingale Pledge. Thf' students committed themselves to
· endeavoring to aid the physician
In his work and to devote
themselves to the: welfare of
those committed to their care.
It was the human aspect of
nursing, particularly the care of
patients, thatformed the focus of
the address by the ceremony's
guest speaker.
Lee Ann Baker, R.N., a 1989
graduate of the Holzer College of
. Nursing and a staff n_urse in the
, operating room : at St. Mary's

GALLIPOLIS . Gallipolis
Lions meet Tuesday, 6 p.m ..
Oscar's.

Mlna Chapel.

Ohio:......Point

TUESDAY
VINTON - VInton Friendship
Garden Club will meet 1 p.m. at
Marlon McCarley's home. .

. GALLIPOLIS - Historical Society will meet 1 p.m. Sunday.
March 17 at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church. Soard meeting only.

man preaches Sunday, ·7: 30p.m.,

Listening to her address, from left, are
insb'uctors Barbara Jlarbla, R.N., B.S.N., lJJa
Bucki'ey, R.N.; M.S., C., Amy Swaugo, R.N.,
M.S.N.,Janet Byers, R.N., M.S., who • also dean
of the college, and Ray BOggs, Ph.D., vice
president for academic affairs at Rio Grande.

RUTLAND -The RuUand
Alumni Association officers will
be Monday 8 p.m. at the borne of
Richard Rupe, Wright Street.
Pomeroy.

1\ttBdi 18, 1880

VINTON - Officers of the
North Gallla Alumni Association
met March 13th to finalize plans
for the annual banquet to be held
Saturday, May 26 at Bidwell
Porter Elementary School · on
State Route 160 near Porter.
The doors wUl open at 5 p.m.
for registration and visitation.
Dinner will be served at 7p.m. by
the North Gallia Barid Boosters.
· Registration · fees are $6 ' per
person IIPii must be turn~ ln to
the secreiacy lay May 21.
· •
There 'is an· Open House ancl .
reception planned for Sunday.
May27frorq1to3p.m.atNortb
Gallia High :SChool. All graduates

Kindergarten
registration
scheduled
in.
.
city schoo.ls ·
. · GALLIPOLIS - Kindergarten .
registration lor the Gallipolis·
G!ty School System will be held
on the following dates from 9:00
A.M .' untO 3:00P.M . each day:
It Is important that children be
registered during this week In
order to plan for classes and to
provide materials for all stu·
dents. Parents or guardians
must bring their new kindergarten child(ren) to the registration.
'
·
.
Students will be screened for
hearing, vision, speech and com·
munlcations, health and medical
problems, and for developmental
disorders.
, This will allow school person·
' nel to work with parents to get
any assistance the child may
need.
A child must be five years of
age on or before September 30,
1990 to be eligible to attend
kindergarten for 'the 1990-91
school year. By law, children
now must. attend · kindetgart~n
before entering first grade. A
child must attend school If he or
~he is six years of age on or
· before September 30:
• Registr{ltion wlll take place at
ibe school in which the child will
be attending kindergarten.
.To register, a parent or guard·
llln must bring the child's birth
~ertlflcate and record of immunl·
Zillions. Each child Is ~uired by
~tate law to haV!l four dlptherla,
whooping cough, and' tetanus
vaccinations (OPT's); three
j)ollo vaccinations; and one measles. mumps, and rubella vaccl·
nation &lt;MMR). II Is also recom·
mended that each child haVe a
t.ubei'Culin skin test before enter·
ing kidergarten. The test must
tiave been given after Jan 1, to be
accepted.
ChUdren may obtain these
Immunizations from their family
tjoctor or free of ch81'[1e p-orn tbe
Gallla County Health -Deart·
ment. The Health Department Is
located In the basement of tbe
courthou~. Immunizations are
J!Yell on Tuesdays and Fridays
from Jl: 00.11: 30 A.M. and from ·
l·lk30 p.n\. .
~

I

•

and their families are welcome to. . current addresses and help is
attend.
needed. ·
The North Gallla Alumni AssoTbe secretaries. are: Bid~eli- ·
elation consists of graduates of Porte(': Donna Broyles , 85 Lo·
Ill dwell-Porter, VInton and cust Street, Gallipolis, OH 45631,
North Gallia High S&lt;;hools. Sev- phone 446-2071; Vinton: Laura
erQ.l classes are planning reun- Cozart. P.O. Box 293, Racine, OH
Ions to be held In conjunct ton with 45771, phone 949-2195; North
Gallla (58-69): Diane McCarley.
the banquet.
The group Is asking the assist· . Rt. 2, Box 48, Vinton, OH -45686,
ance of anyone knowln,g rif a phone 388-8319; North Gallia
graduate living out of the area to
(70-89): Jean Petrie, Rt. 2, Box
notifY them of the date. The 208B; .Vinton, OH 45686, p)lone
lecretaries have a limit~ listing 388-9771.
.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _........,_ _ _ _ _ _ ___
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certification
: POMEROY The Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society, Inc., has completed all
requirements for organizational
· certification by theOhloA·ssociatlon of Hlstoricai Societies and
Mueums.
·
_
Certification
Is
awarded
by
1
·OAHSM to historical organizations In Ohio that have achelved
basic professiona·l standards In
governance, nnance, collections,
-management, and educational
programming. .
The Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society, Inc., will
receive Its official certification .
award at the OAHSM region 8
annual meeting to be held at the
Vinton County Historical Society
In McArthur on March 24.

--

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Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

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SALT LAKE CITY (UP!). - All-American
J,.arry Johnson scored 23 points and grabbed 16
reboWids Saturday and Greg Anthony scored .a ll
14 of his points In the second half In leading No. 2
Nevada-Las Vegas ro a 76-65 victory over Oblo
State In the NCAA West Regional second round.
The Rebels, top seed In the West, will meet the
winner of. the Louisville-Ball State game In the
regional semifinal March 22 at Oakland , Calif.
With the score tied 43-all 3: 19 into the second
half, UNLV took control on a 14-1 run. The
Buckeyes were able to cut the Rebels' lead down
to five three dltterent tfmes. But Olllo State could
not get closer. ·
David Butler also scored 14 points for Las Vegas
. (31-51, while Anderson Hunt had 10. The Rebels
forced the Buckeyes into 21turnovers, Including
11 on steals.
Perry ·Carter's 15 points led Ohio State (17-13),
. while Jimmy J.ackson and Jamaal Brown each
had 11 and Treg Lee 10. The Buckeyes shot just 34
percent In the game, comvared to 45 percent for
·
·
Nevada-Las Vegas.
UNLV started slowly, trailing 15-11. But then
the Rebels forced Ohio State Into seven turnovers
in l.t.S1next 13 possessions and vulled ahead 29-19
with 7:541eft In theopenlnghalf. UNLV, hltUng62
percent through the first 12 mlnut.es, then went
cold and finished the half shooting 53 percent.
The Buckeyes came back to within a basket of
UNL V three times- thelastat39-37 on TregLee's
seven-foot baseline jumper at : 05before halftime.
And Ohio State then fled the score fOI the only. um_e
In the second hall on Brown's two foul shots with
16:41 remalnlnl!.
Ball St. 8!, Louisville 60- Chandler Thompson
and Bill Butts each scored 15 points Saturday and
Ball State's defense held Louisville to just 38
percent shooting as BSU upset the LU Cardinals
62-60 In the second round of the NCAA West
RegionaL
The Ball State Cardinals wiil meet No. 2
Nevada-Las Vegas next Thursday In Oakland,
Calif., in the .West R!!glonal semifinals. UNLV
advanced Saturday with a 76-65 victory over Ohio
State.
·
Curtis Kidd added 11 points for Ball State (26-6),
· which outrebounded Louisville 38-27 and dominated tile tempo.
Jerome Harmon and 7-foot Felton Spencer each
scored 14 points for Louisville 127-.8). and
Lal3radford Smith 11. But, in the final two
· minutes, Smith lost a bailout of bounds, Harmon
missed an easy layuv after a steal and Felton
failed to connect on a short jumper, al)·lowing Bali
· State !o stay just al!ead.
· .... C

.

~ ·· ····~~ ~

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tU$lt;81li'H,4lai~"""'.;;: ':M :Ka~1i!IIJ.;II:?; Oi,

No. 3 Co®ect!Cut-u~d·tts harassing press to force
·- 28 turnovers by the University of California at
Berkeley for a 74-54 viet ory In the second round of
the NCAA East RegionaL
The Huskies, 30-5, forced eight turnovers In the
. -'·' first 4:14 as the~ built a 17-2 lead while allowing
~ the Gol~en Bears just two shots from the floor.
Connecticut, Which vlays a full-court press
. throughout every game, had forced 27 turnovers
by Boston University in t.he opening round. This
season, the Huskies have forced· 760 turnovers.
Connecticut, the winner in -10 of lis last 11
games, plays Thursday at The Meadowlands In
East Rutherford, N.J. against the survivor of the
matchup between No. 13 La Salle and No. 17
Clemson.
· The Golden Bears, scoreless over a 4:44 span,
were never again closer than 12 points .
Connecticut led by as many as 20 voints three
times In the second half and finished with 25points
off turnovers.
Connecticut, which has built its best-ever

job Bank aids
senior workers .

Tomatoes .. ~· •••••••~•••
FLAVORITE

2°/o ·Milk

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season on streaks, had taken control of Its
Urst-round game with a 21-1 surge.
California, 22-10 and playing In Its first NCAA
tournament since 1960, was led by Roy Fisher's 17
points and freshman Brian Hendricks' 12.
. Cle11111on 711, La Salle 15 - At Hartford, Conn.,
Dale Davis scored 26 points and grabbed 17
.rebounds Saturday as No. 17 Clemson recovered
from a 19-polnt deficit to post a 79-75 victory,
ending No. 13 La Salle's 22-game winning streak
and setting up a meeting with No.3 Connecticut in
the NCAA tournament's round of 16.
sean Tyson added 17 points and 11 rebounds for
the Tigers, 26-8, who held a 55-36 rebounding
advantage. They shot 64 percent In the second
half, hitting 18 of 28, after shooting only 32 percent
. before halftime.
·
Clemson plays Thursday against the Huskies .
the region's top-seeded team, at The· Meadowlands In East Rutherford, N.J .
La Salle, -30-2, held a 43-27 halftime lead but
missed 27 of 41 second-half shots. Lionel Simmons
scored 28 points to lead the Explorers, but was
held scoreless during an 11: 13 span of the decisive
,
second half.
Slq1mons, a 6-7 forward, finishes hlscareerwlth
3,217 points, third-best In Division I history.
The Exvlorers twice held 19-polnt leads In the
first half, the second time, 41-22, at 2:41.
The Tigers scored nine of the first 11 points of
the second half. La Salle held a 55·44 lead when
.Clemson took the lead with a 21-5. surge which.
lncllided six points each by Tyson and the 6-11
Davis. Four baskets during the surge came pff
offensive rebounds, including the final basket by
Derrick Forrest. whose lay-In provided a 65-60
· edge with 5: 46 to. play.
· In the second half, the Tigers hit 15 of 26 free
·
throws while La Salle was 0 for 1.
Clemson played sloppy basketball In the first
half and turned the bail over 13 times, but
regained Its composure in the second half and
committed just six turnovers.
For the Tigers, Marion Cash scored i4 points
and Forrest contributed 12. La Salle's Randy
Woods scored 18 points.
N. Carolina 79, ·Oklahoma 77 - At "Austin,
Texas, Rick Fox's baseline drive and layup with
one second remaining Saturday brought North
Carolina a dramatic 79-77 upset over No. 1
Oklahoma, moving the Tar Heels Into the NCAA
tournament's ·Final 16 for the .lOth consecutive
GET OFF ME! -'fhal's what Ohio Slate guard
game In Salt Lake City, Utah. The Runnlu' Rebels
year. ·
Jamaal Brown (30) seems to say as he fl~hts off
posted a 76-83 victory over the Buckeyes to
The victory was a huge boost to a North
UNLV's Greg AnthOny In the first half of
advance to the West semifinals. &lt;UPI)
Carolina team that struggled this year - at least by
Satll1'day's NCAA West Regional tournament
Its standards - and almost failed to reach the
20-win ·plateau for the. first time In 20 seasons . ..,.,
, - ~a ~product· t:lf~tl!e-~onal trlurpph, Nort!J!l "
·
~arollna becllll)e the ~A?nnlilgest school In college·....
basketball history, producing Its 1,479th win to
.
•
pass Kentucky.
Fox, who gave the Tar Heels a quick start with
four three-point shots in the first half, took a pass
near tile corner with tour seconds remaining after
North Carolina had in bounded with eight seconds
togo.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Amy Slefrlng added two free
and t.here were three 'lead
Ok.lahoma had taken a 77-76 lead with a
Vonda Ward scored 19 points and changes in the third quarter
throws, followed by another pair
three-point play by William Davis with 39 seconds
Melissa Jurecki added 17 votnts before Kim Scharf's basket put
by Allg, capping an 8-0 run and
remaining.
to lead Garfield Heights Trinity Trinity ahead for good, 49-48.
giving Coldwater a 58-51 bulge
Michigan St. 82, Cal-Santa Barbara 58 - At to a 70-60 win over Elida wit.h 2:46 remaining in the
with 23:18 remaining.
Knoxville, Tenn., Steve Smith scored 21 points,
Saturday afternoon in the cham- period. The Trojans'· biggest lea&lt;;)
Allg, who was eight of eight
and Michigan State used its stingy defense pionship game of the girls' of the game was 70-56 shortly
from the line and also pulled
Saturday to stop Call(ornla-Santa Barbara 62-58 Division II state high school before the end.
down 14 rebounds. hlt1our more
and advance to the semifinals of the Southeast basketball tournament at St.
Trinity, which wound up its · free throws In the final minute to
Reglorial. ·
John Arena. ·
•
keep the'Cavs safely ahead.
season 25-3, shot 55.6 percent
Michigan State, 28-5, moves Into the round of 16
Ward, a 6-6 junior. scored eight from the field in the second half.
Brookfield, which finished with
and will play Friday night in New Orleans against . of her 19 points In the final
a 21-6 record, three of those
hitting 15 of27 shots. Elida . which
the winner of the Georgia Tech-Louisiana State quarter when Trinity pulled was making Its first appearance
losses early season forfeitures,
game. Cal-Santa aarbara goes home 21-9.
away frorn the smaller Bulldogs. in the.state tournament, was just controlled ihe game In the first•
Trinity,. which lost In the title 11 of 29 for 37.9 percent.
Carrick DeHart led the Gauchos with 23 points,
half, with Erin Scoccia· scoring 12,
but Eric McArthur had only eight.
game a year ago, led Just 49-48 at
off her 20 voints before the'
Coldwater 62, Brookfield 55
the end of the third quarter, but a
Intermission.
·
12-4 run, with Ward scoring five · Connie Allg scored 22 points
But the Lady Warriors, who.
of those points, pushed the and Nicole Mustard 15, rallying
shot 48 percent from the field the' •
Trojan lead to 61-52. Elida never No. 10 Coldwater to a 62-55 win first half (12 of 25), cooled off: :
got closer than seven points the over unranked Brookfield Saturconslderbly in IJ!.e second, mak- ·
rest of the way In bowling out of day In the championship game of
ing only eight oJiol attempts for
the girls Division III state high
the tournament at 24-3.
25.8 percent, m lsslng many close
Ward and the 5-11 Jureckl, school tournament.
In attempts.
The Lady Cavaliers, down
another Junior, gave Trinity a
Brookfield also played much of
53-28 rebounding edge. Jureckl 37-28 at halftime and ·n-28 a
the second half without junior
finished with 18 rebounds and minute Into the third quartet, . guard Latasha Jefferson, who
went on an 11-0 run to take a 48-47
Ward liad 13.
went to the bench with her fourth
Elida, paced by Cindy Baker lead on Altg's basket to open the
foul with 3: 11 leU In the third
with 19 points and Julie Hell with fourih quarter.
quarter and touted out or the
The lead changed hands four
18, led by as many as six points
game with 2:59 remaining to
three times in theflrst.halfbefore more times before a basket by
play. She finished with 12 points.
Trinity grabbed a 35-33 halftime Karla Thobe put the Lady Cavs
The title was the first for
up 54-'\_with 4:05 left. in the
lead.
Coldwater, 25-2, which lost In the
The score was tied five times game.
semifinals In !985 and 1988.

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Cold~at~t. ·cap trite~--,

Minnesota, L.A.· Kings post victories

BORDEN'S

WESSON

---- ---

girls' state basketball crawns

FRESH

n~s.

GALLIPOLIS - The Third
Annual SVAC Quiz Bowl Tournament will be held MQnday. March
19 at Buckeye Hills Career
Center's Human Resource BuildIng In Rio Grande, Ohio.
Competing for a first place win
will be the varsity quiz bow I
teams of the SVAC High Schools:
Eastern, Hannan Trace, Kyger
Creek, North Gallia, Oak Hill,
· Southern, Southwestern, and
· Symmes Valley.
·
The winner will advance to the
Regional Scholastic Competition '
at Shawnee State University on
April 28.
.Officials . for this academic
competition will be: Betty
Cantreii-Asslstant Director, Da·VIJ JJbrary, University of Rio
Grande; VIvian Johnson-Public
Relations/ Advertlllng, Galllpo111! Jerry Simpson-Music Director, WJEH/WYPC Radio; David
· Mauer-Director of Library and
!;.earning Resourc~, University
of Rio Grande; Tim SnowReftrence Librarian, University
of Rio Grande: and Cathy
HeJnke..Coordlnator tor Home
Bl&amp;ed Theraputlc Foster Care:
AltbOtr A: AaiOclatetl, Gallipolis.
Competition wm begin at 7
. p.m. and the public Is Invited.

--

~ Conn., thrls Slnlth scored 24 potdfs Saturday and

GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizen Center Job Bank 220
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, has
continued to serve employers
and senlorss In the area.
Employers find the older
workers to be mqtlvated. They
have a reliable attendance record, an !I they bring with them a
vast value of experience.
With Spring right around the
corner, the job has many qualified applicants, 50 years and
older eeklng employment to
help people In the community
·with . springtime home maintenance, like window cleaning,
yard work and basement
cleaning.
'
If you need this kind of help,
call the Job Bank at 446-7000. The
Job Batik Is open Monday
through Friday from 7 a.m. to 3
·p .m. to assist with employment

'

season with 76-65 win

.. 298 SECOND ST.
PRI(ES EFFECTIVE SUN., MAR.

- -----

Section
Mlrdl 18, 1980

. N ends Buckeyes'

Wt ReSine Tile Right To
LIMit Quentilies

Senior
• •
aettvtttes
planned
GALLIPOLIS - Activities and
tor the week of Marcl;l26,
' .thru March 30, at the Senior
Citizens Center 220 Jackson Pike,
will be as follows:
Monday - Chorus, 1 p.m.';
Potluck, 4 p.m.;
Tuesday - Stop/physical Fitness, 10:30 a.m.; Lenten Service
(Sister Judy and June) 11: 15
a.m.; VIdeo Matinee (Gorillas In
the Mist) 12:30 p.rn.; Pretty
Punch, 1: 30 p.m.
Wednesday -:- VITA (Volunieer Income Tax), 9 a.m.-1 p.m.
Thursday - Bible Study, 10: 45
i\.m.; Herbalist Class, 1•30 p.m.
Friday -Art Class (Seminar)
10-noon; Craft Class, 1-3 p.m.
Menus consist of:
Monday - Cubed Steak with
gravy, whipped potatoes, green
. ·beans, bread, butterscotch
pudding.
Tuesday - Baked Chicken,
parsley potatoes. broccoli,
bread, pineapple slice.
Wednesday - Beef stew with
crackers, cottage cheese, biscuits, applesauce In Lime Jello.
Thursday - Ham loaf with
glaze, sweet potatoes, kale,
bread, bread pudding with sauce.
Friday - Macaroni and
cheese, buttered cabl)age, waldorf salad, rolls, cherry cobbler.
. Make reservations by c'l}llng
,.446-7000 before 9 a.m. the day you
wish to .a ttend.
·

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~im.es- ~.entintl

a--·•

GET THE BALL! Dale Davia
(left) trlel to ret the ball while La Salle'• Bob .
.Jolmlaa tries to get a handle on tblap clurlnr
fi

...,

Sa&amp;III'IIQ'e secoad-I'OWid NCAA Eut Belloul
tOIII'IIuneut rune In Bartlo"", Colli!. The Tlrera
edretJ &amp;he Exploren 11-71. (UPI)

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - Mike
Modano scored his first hat trick
.Saturday and Jon Casey made 27
ot 29 saves to power the Minnesota: North Stars to a 6-2 victory
over the Pittsburgh Penguins.
The North Stars, 5-2-1 in their
last eight games, posted their
seventh road victory of the
season, but second straight since ·
snapping a seven -game road
losing streak In Toronto.
Modano scored the only goal of
the first period at 5: ~- Alain
Chevrier, making his third start
as a Penguins goal tender, made
tbe Initial aave on Nell Wilkinson,
but tbe puck went to Gaetan
Duchesne who puled to Modano
all alone In the len circle.
The Penguins managed three
shots on Casey In the first period.
Minnesota also tailed to capitalIze with the man advantage. The
North Stars had three shots on
goal In 5: 53 of a ~er play.
Minnesota led 4-0 after two
· periods. Modano's Rcond goal of
the game went ott the body or
Chevrier at 5: 21 on a shot from
the left point.
BasU McRae scored his sixth

goal of the year when his shot
from the top of the left circle went
through the legs of Chevrier ar
7:27.
Minnesota made it 4-0 at 12:34
on Modano's 29th ot the season on
a shot !rom the right circle that
Chevrier never reacted on .
Brian Bellows' 46th goal, a
power-play scote 21 seconds Into
the third period, gave Minnesota
a 5-0 lead.
Pittsburgh broke through
against Casey early In the third
period. Barry Pederson scored
his fifth at 1: !50 and John Cullen
picked up hla 31st at 3: 22.
Dave Gaper's 35th goal, on
the 1J0Wer play all7: M; gav11 the
Nord! SIF• a ·s-2 edte.

Lei.~ I, . .toa.
At Bolton, Waye Gretzky
picked up a l - puck and ahot It
past Reggie Lemelin at 18: 20 of
the third period for bla 40th aoaJ
ot the season ~ the Loa ,\nplea
Kings roared back from a H
deficit to defeat the BosiDn
Bruins, 5-4, Saturday.
The win was Los Angeles'
fourth In a row: Gtetzky also had

"'

two assists, boosting his season
total to 101. the lOth straight year
Gretzky has recorded 100 or
more assists.
Defenseman Ray Bourque
scored twice for Boston, which
lost for the second time In nine
games and missed an oppo•tunlty to oven up a 9-polnt lead over
Idle Buffalo In the NHL Adams
Division.
Los Angeles' comeback began
after Bourque gave the Bruins a
4-llead at4: 36ofthethlrd period.
Two minutes later, on a power
play, Luc Robitaille scored hla
47th goal of the Ruon to make It
4-2.
Tony Granato brouaht the
Kings to within one, at t-3, at
15: 11 of the tblrd period when bla
slaplhot beat Boston goalie Rae·
g1e Lemelin on hll abort stde.
Granato struck again. at 16: n,
atufflng a goalmouth feed from.
Gretzky past L~lln.
. Gree Hawaoocl made It 1.0,
Boston, at 8:25 ot tile flrlt period.'
Defen~emaa Garry Galley
picked up the puek at C:eldlrlce,
skated in and put a l'llllalmd..,
behind Klnp aoatle Roa Scott.
\~

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Paga C-2-Sunday Timea-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midclapon-Gallipolis,
Ohio-Point Pleasant.
•

w. Va.

~18.

·. March 18. 1990

1810

NCAA Tournament roundup

.
.
Dllke 81, alclunoad 41 ·- At Hartford, . Conn .• Alaa Ab(lelnaby
. muscled Inside for 22 points and fresbman 8\l&amp;rd Bobby Hurley
provided relentless defense In leading the No.l4 Blue DeVIls In a romp
over the Spiders. Duke, 25·8, Is seeking their fourth Final Four berth
, in ij)e last five years. Ken Atkinson led Richmond with 12 points.
. St.loba'a 11, Teptp1ell- Malik Sealy led a balanced attack with 18
· poiDts and the Redmen's defensive pressure contained Owls star
guard Mark Macon. Boo Harvey added 17 points, Jason Buchanan 16
and Robert Werdann 14'for St. Johns.- ·
·' . UClA 88, ~abama-Binn1D1ham 58 - '-Trevor Wilson scored 23
points and freshman Tracy Murray added 14 points, helping the
seventh-seeded Bruins hold off UAB. Elbert Rogers scored 11 points
. for the Blazers, who were plagued by dismal outside shooting.
, KaaiiU '19, Robert Morrta 71 - The second-seeded Jayhawks
needed ~ season-high 22 points by Ricky Calloway and 60 percent
shooting from the floor to subdue pesky Robert Morris. The Colonials
couldn't overcome the scoring balance of Kansas, which placed live
players In double figures .
·
Midwest Regional
Geof'letown 70, Texas Southern 52 - At lndlanapolls, Diliemhe
Mutombo scored 18 points and pulled down 16 rebounds, sparking the
· No. 9 Hoyas to a first-round victory. Mutombo made 8 of 9 shots,
Including his first 8 from the field, and grabbed 11 rebounds. Texas
· Southern, .which never led. made only 20 of 74 shots.
t
Xavier n, •••••• Sta&amp;e19- Tyrone Hill scored 29()91nts and pulled
,. down 14 rebounds to lead the Musketeers to their school-record 27th
victory of the season. Steve Henson scO~!l 1a game-high 35 points IQr
the Wildcats.
.
.
.
·
:rexu 100, Georala 88 - Travis Mays scored a career-h lgh 44 points .
· to become the Southwest Conference's ail-time leading scorer with
.;. . 2,211 points, breaking 'ferry Teagle of Baytor:s previous mark of
• 2,189. Mays aliw matched a NCAA tournament free throw mark,
: making 16 stral&amp;ht In the second half, and 23 of 27 for the game.
:
Purdue 15, NE Loulslan11 83- Stephen Scheffler scored 23 points,
• pulled down nine rebounds and set an NCAA career shooting
~
percentage record. Scheffler hit 7 of 11 from the field, giving him a
~ 69.5 percent success rate and surpassing the mark of the67.8 percent
~
set by Steve Johnson of Oregon State.
,
Wl!flt Regional
~
Arizona 79, S. Florida 67 - AtJ..ong Beach, Cal!! .• Brian Wiilfams
: scored .21 of his career-high 28 points in the second half, rallying the
• Wildcats irom a seven-point deficit. Williams sank 12 ofl5 shots while
: Jud 'Buechler contributed 16 points for the Paciflc-10 champiOns.·
~
Alabam• 11, Colorado. St. 54 - Roben Horry nailed his first six
10
three-pointers Ol! his way to scoring 27 points. The Crimson Tide,
Eut~

.

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(Continued from C-2)

seed Northern Iowa a 74-71 upset of 11th· ranked Missouri In the first
round of Southeast regional .
·
The Panthers, 21·8, making their first appearnace ID theM-team
field, advance to tbe second round of the Southeast Regional and will
meet Minnesota today. Tbe Golden Gophers, 21-8, received 18 points
from Kevin Lynch and gained the second round with a 64-6,1 overtime
victory over -Texas-El Paso.
Minnesota's scoring leader, senior forward WIIU!! Burton, W!IS
hampered by foul trouble throughout the game, but scored 5 of his 14
points In overtime.
·
Texas El-Paso freshman guard Henry Hall sent tile aame Into
overtime tied at 53· 53 with a three-point.jumper from above the topot
tl\e key with 26 secpnds leftln regulation for the Miners' only field goal
In the flnallO: 44 of the second half. But Minnesota.•which shot just33
percent lor the game..opened the extra period with a .5.0 burst and·
never relinqulshed_the lead.
In other West Regional action:
Syracuae 70, Coppin State 48- Stephen,Thompson scored 19 points,
including six during a decisive 14-0 · second-half run. Syracuse
· forward Derrick Coleman chipped In 14 points and 12 rebounds to
power tpe sixth-ranked Orangemen , helping to shoot down Coppin
State 1n Its first-ever NCAA Tournament appearance. . .
.
·
Virginia 7G, Notre Dame 67 -John Crotty scored 28 points and his
three-point play sparked a key second-half run that carried VIrginia.
Vl~glnla overcame Notre Dame's superior Inside game with
penetration by Crotty and strong play by Bryarll Stith, a sophomore
sw!ngman who scored
21 .polnts.
'
.
. ·
(See NCAA on C-3)

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SCRAMBLE - Xavier guard Jamie Gladden '(to white) and
Kansas State guard steve Henson ( 1%) en11age In a mad acramble
lor the ball during the first hall of their Friday night lh'llt-round
NCAA tournament game In lndlanapolill. The Musketeers
survived Henaon's game-hilh 31 points to win 11-'79. (UPI)

.

ATHENS - Portsmouth's Tfo.
jans, southeastern Ohio's basket·
bail powerhouse, battled their
way Into the state tournament by
defeating Steubenvllle 72·64 In
the Division II regional championship game at Ohio University's Convocat1o11 Center Friday
night.
'
The Trojans earned the right to
face Van Wert (22-4), who
knocked off West Ge~uga 63-571n
the Un tversity of Toledo re·
g!onal, next Friday at St. John's
. Area, · on the campus of Ohio
State University.
The Trojans u~d a 15-0 scoring
spurt In the first and second
quarters and a 14-2 eruption In
the third and fourth stanzas to
overcome the Big Red.
Steubenville, who finished at
21-3, led 18·10 after one quarter en·
route to taking a 35-31 lead at
halftime, but Portsmouth surged
Into a 50-471ead in the third frame
on its way to building a 67·52 lead
midway through the quarter .
Senior Darryl Lisath led the
Trojans with 19 points, followed
· . by Phil Whitehead· (161, D'Ammond Mannon 1141 and Brian
Kelly 1131 . .
Seniors Shelton Carley rgame-

high 21 points ) and Charles
Hythen 119) led the Big Red; who
placed two other players In the
scoring column.
Score by quarters
Steubenville .... ..... 18 17 12 17-64
Portsmouth .. .. ... 10 21 19 22-72

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~~.

By DAVE RAirlrO
arch Art Rooney and ltozelle.
UPI Sports Writer
Tagilab~e
Impressed tile
ORLANDO, Fla. (UPII
.coaches l&lt;tst week by ·watching
Three months into the 1990s, the and discussing a ·tape of ail 65
NFL already knows Its Man of instan) repi&lt;\Y reversals from
the Decade: Paul Tagliabue.
1989 and by bringing in game
Tagllabue, a 48-year-old law. officials to meet with coaches.
yer, wasted no time in putting his
•,•A lot of owners knew me as a
stamp on the leag\le during his lawyer and they knew my views
first ·annual owners meetings on business matters," Tagliabue
since becoming commissioner. said. "The main unknown area
Tagllabue proved willing to con- was in football and football
front all the NFL' s problems operations.
.
head on, and shows the vision to
"A number of owners and even
anticipate the future.
coaches told me they were
. Five • months Into the job; Impressed with my knowledge of
· Tagllabue signed a record $3.64 spci;rts. -The' reactloh was
billion TV contract, strengthened ~ vosltive."
the steroid policy, proposed
expansion and realignment and
en·tered the messy bibor
negotiations. .
The 28 club owne~s have come
to see Pete Rozelle's retirement
after 29 years as a blessing .
· "Paul Tagllabue could not
have done better this week II
things were scripted for him,"
Cleveland Browns owner Art
Modell said. "He's arrived, in
terms of owner acceptance. He
had to establish his own stamp,
his own credent!ilis. He took
charge and has taken hold of the
league."
Tagllabue admitted the first
few months of his · tlve-year
contract were likely the most
important. He not only had to
prove himself worthy of the
position; he had to heal wounds
from the' batlle waged between
the old guard and new guard. of
owners over Rozelle's sucessor.
"Anytime you take on a new
job, it's lmP.Jrtant to get a good
start," 'l'agl(abue said. "If we
hadn't done things right, I
wouldn't .have had a honeymoon
period. We, were lucky 'spm~
things fell into place."
Modell, one of Rozelle's closest
friends in the NFL, and a
TRADE ANY OLD MOWER
supporter of Jim Finks for .
&amp;CUT YOUR COST
commissioner when the owners
were split. has become TagllON A NEW SNAPPER
abue's main booster.
GET AT-LEAST
''He's a little more organized, a
little more structured than ·
Pete." Modell said ofTagliabue.
"It's the attorney 's mind at
work. He has a whole different , ,
'
, style than Pete. Pete was a public
relations man:
"i don't think Pet~· was in the ·
· be's t 'o f health In recent years·.
Pete was tired physically and
emotionally. The litigation look
its toil. I was a (New Orleans
President) Jim Finks man, but
we lucked out. We got a good

•

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In the 1980s, J;trizeile became
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,
"Paul Is obviously energetic,
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II
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'l'aglla bue said II was his
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victory. Rumeal Robinson contributed 24 points, Including two
throws with 43 seconds to play.
·
Playing Saturday at Hartford In 1he East Regional were
CoMectlcut vs. California and Clemson vs. LaSalle.
In the Midwest Regional at Austin, Texas, It was Oklahoma vs.
North 'Carollnll and Dayton vs. Arkansas .
At Knoxville, Tenn. In the Southeast Regional , It was Michigan St.
vs. UC-Santa Barbara and Louisiana State vs . Georgia Tech.· •
At Salt Lake .City In the West Regional, It was Ball State vs.
Louisville and Nevada-Las Vegas vs. Ohio State.

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ALL-TOURNAMENT DEFENDERS - Ohio Valley ChrlsUan
. cagers E.T. VanMatre (left) and Dax Hill, who provided the
primary thrust in the Defenders' offense throu~hout the 1988-:90
season, were named to the WVCEA all-tournament team at the
conclusion of the Association's basketball tournament, which was
· held recently at Cross Lanes, W.Va.

Sunday T~rTM~S-Sentinat-Paga C-3

Portsmouth in state toomey

!Tagliabue puts personal stamp

GOE;S TO HOOP- Loyola Marymount's 8o Kimble (30) goes to
the hoop against ~ew Mexico Center Jason .T rusk (left) during
Friday night's first-round NCAA tournament game at Long Beach,
Calif. Kimble racked up a game-high 45 points to lead the Lions to a
lll-92 victory. (UPI)
,

•

•

~

.

t et it
taxes 0n a·. ,·"' ~'"
-sum ~·tri• ution

ranked seventh In the nation In scorinJJ defense by allowing onlY 61.9
poiDia a game, permll11!d just 22 flrst-ha!l points. James Sanders
scored 18 points lor the Tide and Mike Mitchell led the Rams with 24.
Mldllpa 71, Dllnols St. 10 - Sean Higgins hit a tie-breaking
three-pointer with 73 aeconds left and Loy Vaught collected 18 points
and a career-high 21 rebounds, allowing Michigan to escape with the

•

MEIGS
CENTER
.JOHN FULTZ- J.IIAICUS FULTZ

SECOND. SYCAMORE

Pomeroy-ft41t1111port-01111Jtolil. Ohio Poill Phannt. W.Va.

NCAA tournament~
· ,. .----~~-------------....__ _ _ _ _ __
tree

Wyola Marymount hammers New Mexico State 111-92
By MIKE BARNES
Jeft Fryer added 23 points for Loyola, 24-5, which boosted Its NCAA
UPf Sporta Writer
record of scoring at leas 1100 points to 26 times this season. Fryer h'a d
Twelve days after the death of Hank Gathers, the Loyola
three three-pointers In the run that covered only 5: 55 and made It
Marymount Lions Friday night found a most fitting way to pay
74-52.
homage to their fallen teammate- by winning In the first round of the
In today's other West Region second· round games at Long Beach
NCAA tournament.
Arena, Alabama will meet Arizona.
Bo Kimble, honoring the memory of his best friend, poured In 14 of
Kimble had, 33 points In tile second half &lt;1nd also contributed a
his 45 points In a 2S.6 run that opened the second hal.f and sent Loyola · career-high 18 rebounds, His 45 points put him In a tie for 11th on the
to a 111·92 rout of New Mexico State.
·
ali-time single-game scoring tournament list.
The Lions used the staggering burst to snap a 46-46 halftime lie and
No. 20 New Mexico State, making Its first trip to the NCAAs since
cr uise Into today's second round against defending NCAA champion
1979 and seeking Its first tournament triumph since 1970, Qnlshed 26-5.
Michigan.
·
·
Reggie Jordan led the Aggles with 22 points.
" !knew the tragedy would help this team (In the tournament),"'
Kimble, who became the 16th player In major-college history to
said Kimble, who hit 17 of 35 shots to move past Gathers Into 11th place
surpass 1,000 points In a season, nailed a three-pointer 63 secol)ds Into
on the NCAA's all· time scoring list. ''In the second half !looked Into
the second half to trigger the decisive spree.
our guys' eyes and knew we had a lot to give. " ·
As a tribute to Gathers...;. who switched shooting hands during the
The S-5 senior guard, the nation's leading scorer, was tagged with
season to improve his free-throw accuracy -Kimble took his first
his fourth foul with 4:45 left In the first half- he had just 10 potitts at
foul shot of the game left-handed. It found nothing but net, bringing a
the time- but never fouled out.
wild ovation and a 60.50 bulge.
''I was definitely not going to get my fifth," he said.
Fryer's three-pointer basket with 14:051eft then made It 74-52 with
H: 05 to go. New Mexl~o State, which rarely handled the Lions'
fuUcourt press In the run, neven threatened again.
"They went after the ball like a one-eyed dog In a butcher shop,"
New Mexico State coach Nell McCarthy said.
The Lions and their cheerleaders wore black "44" patches on their
uniforms, and many players inked Gathers' nwn~r on the backs of
their sneakers. A fan held high a banner that read, ''Hank's Here.''
In the Southeast region, reserve gilard Maurice Newby drilled a
three-point jumper from the left side with two seconds left, giving 14th

.

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II

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�•••
•

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Page C-4-Sunclay T11

111

Sentinel

After blowing 19-point lead,

.

SHADOWING DUMARS- Chicago guard Michael Jordan (left~
shadows Detroit guard Joe Dumars, who reach.es for theballln the .
first quarter of Fridajl night's NBA contest in Chicago. The Pistons
won l~lto claim their lOth straight victory. (UPI)

,Area

sports briefs--

WYPC to air boys' state tourney
'

. GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis radio station WYPC·FM
(101.5) will . carry this year's Ohio state boys' basketball
tournament,' whlch will begin Thursday at 10:30 a.m. at St.
John's Arena In Columbus.
·
. ,
, Mark Martin will be the chief play-by!play announcer of ihe
DivisiOn I and II' games, while former PortsmQuth announcer
Sam McKibben will do the Division III and IV contests.
,' The state tournament will run until Saturday night_
,.'
.•

Cage standings

NKU nine in NCAA top 10 .
HIGHLAND HEIGHTS, Ky. -Mark Jenkins (H;mnan Trace
[88) , a sophomore on Northern Kentucky University's baseball
~earn, will begin his second season wltn the Norsemen, whose 8-0

record at last report put them ninth in the NCAA Division II poll.

'

Hanover falls in finals
: INDIANAPOLIS, - Ind. - Hanover College's Panthers
claimed victories against Oaklan\1 City College (71-63), Bet)l\!1
College (82-77) and Franklin College (85-78) to earn Its place
oppostte Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis
In the finals of the NAJA District 21 championship game on
Wednesday, March 7, but IUPUI posted a 71-70 overtime
victorv.
In -'to games, two of which he started, sophomore .
forward /center Bill Loveday !Kyger Creek "88) was 9ofl7from
the field , 5 of 9 from the foul line. grabbed 11 rebounds, and ·
recorded his high game (10 points) against Spring Arbor on
Nov. 25, 1989.
·
,.
·

All-star wrestlillg match
scheduled for March 28
NELSONVILLE - The fourth annual Southeastern Ohio
All-Star Wrestling Match will be held on Wednesday, March 28
at 6: 30p.m. at Nelsonville-York High School.
The top two vote-getters from each school were selected by
coaches from 17 area high scllools wtil com~te a~talnst each
other. In addition to host N-¥.. Other competlng schools at the
meet will be Athens, Belpre, Federal Hocking, Gallia Academy,
Jackson, Lancaster, Logan, 'Marietta, Meigs, Morgan, New
Lexington, Philo. Sheridan, VInton County, Warren Local and
.
Waterford.
Warren Local coach Marty Santini and New Lexington chief
Mike Halaiko will lead bOth teams. Lancaster resident John
Young will serve as an honorary official. ·
For more inforrnalion, contact RobbWelnfurtner at 1-753-1087
odaysl or 1-753-4276 (evenings) .
The event is Open to the public.

NAJA Tournament

·David Lipscomb.
routs Pfeiffer ·
By JOHN HENDEL
UPI Sports Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo: CUP!) After years of giving his team·
mates a show , Phillip Hutcheson
was finaliy able to sit back and
enjoy the David Lipscomb
fireworks.
Hutcheson became college basketball's all-time leading scorer
while piling up 23 points on tile
inside, but It was the outside
shooting of the top-seeded Bisons
that did the scoreboard llglitlng.
David LlptComb advanced to
414 and a semifinal berth Satur·
day against No. 4 Slrmlngham-'
Southern (Ala. 1with a 125-IJrout
of Pfeiffer (N.C. 1. Birmingham·
Southern was an 87-80 winner
over South Carolina·
Spartanbu1111n Its quarterfinal.
In aames late Friday: secolld·
seeded Wlsconsln·Eau Claire
pullld away In the aecond halt In
posdlll an N-57 victory. Tbe
BhiJOIIII will . meet 11th· Meded
Georptown (Ky.), who BIU'VIved

•

~

a record shooting night in upsetting thlrd·seeded Oral Roberts
(Okla. ) 80-78.
·
.
The David Lipscomb Blsons
. were 17 of 31 from three-point
range, both marks being records,
which was lost In the hoopla
surrounding Hutcheson's all·
time scoring mark.
"A lotofpeoplethlnkablgman
wouldn't like the three-PQint
shot," Hutcheson said. "But It's
really opened things up In there
for me.'1
When themlddlelaopea, DaVId
LIPKOntb goes Inside to Hutcheson, where be has amaued 4.064
points• When Hutchi!IOII pulls a
batch of defenders, tile rest ofthe
Blsona just bomb away from
beyolld - and sometimes well
·beyolld ..:. the arc.
David Upecomb shoots tlie,
three-pointer 10 often even Hut·
cheson, who rarely wanders
from t.he basket, was teued
about it.
·
(See NAJA oa Col)
j
I

(SEO,Opponents)
(All· Games)
TE.ul
W L
P OP
x-Portsmouth
23 2 1834 1581
Athens ........... .. .. 19 2 1499 1183
·Wheelersburg .... 19 5 1629 1244
Wellston ........ .... 18 4 1473 1224
South Point.. ,.... ·. 19 6 1859 1523
Greenfield ........ . 18 6 1396 1166
· Warren .... .. ....... 15 6 1511 1325
Logan .... .. .. ........ 15' 8 1598 1417
Southern ..~ .. .. ..... 15 9 1723 1484
Waverly ............ 13 8 1255 1120
Chesapeake ...... . 12 11 1536 1454
Vinton .... .. .. .. .... . 11 10 1330 1265
GaiUpolls .... ....... 8 13 1067 1192
Pt. Pleasant ...... 8 14 1316 1467
Mailetta .. :... .. .... 3 18 1243 ·1430
Jackson ......... ..... 3 18 1160 1382
~-Ia alate tourney
(Thursday's results)'
(Division IV)
( JJeiJional Semis)
Columbus Wehrle 92 Beaver·
E11stern 58
Berlin Highland 84 P.ortsmQuth
East71
Friday's result:
Division II '·
Championship Game
Portsmouth 72 Steubenvllle 64
March %1:
Portsmouth vs. Van Wert,
semifinals, state tournament, at
OSU, Columbus, 5:30 p.m.

final two m Jnutes.
Nets coach Bill Fitch credited
his bench with the late run.
"Our starters took too many
shots and weren't hustling like
our tiencli." said Fitch. " Guys •
like (Lester) Connor, (Chris)
Dudley, (Pete) Myers, (Jack)
Haley and (Purvis) Short did a
. great job. Phllly Is shoptlng tba
ball really llllod now."
Philadei'phla had seemingly
taken control e;u-ly IJ!, the third
quarter with ~ 9-3 run that
stretched Its lead to ~1 with
10:07 left In the ·quarter. The
Slxers led 97-81 after three
quarters.
Philadelphia had used a 13-4
run In the final 3: 24 of the second
quarter to take a 67·58 halftlme
lead.
New Jersey trailed 32·30 after .
one quarter. The Nets,.who have
now lost fiVI\ straight games In
Philadelphia, dropped their fifth
In a row and 24th In th~r last 27
games.
- .
Haley and Connor led the Nets
with 17 polnts · eac~.
Elsewhere Friday night, Bas·
ton nipped Orlando · 130·127,
. Atlanta edged lndlana 106-104 In
overtime, Detroit whipped Chi·
cago 106-81, Dallas stopped
Denver 104·97. Phoenix outshone
Mlaml129·103. Portland overpowered Charlotte 125-109 and the
Los Angeles Clippers downed
'Houstoo 118·95.
Celtlcs 130, Magic 127 . ·
Earry Bird scored 10 unans·
wered paints in a 20-polni fourth
period that helped the , Celtlcs
erase a 12·polnt deficit in' the last
six .minutes. Kevin McHale
added 30 points. Orlando shot a
season-best 60.2 percent from the
floor.
·
Hawks 106, Pacers IN (OT)
Atlanta opened the extra pe·
rlod with a 6.0 run and held the
lead the rest of tile way. Moses
Malone scored 27 points, Kevin
Willis added 17 and JOhn Long hit
the free throw that Iced · the
victory. Chuck Person led Indiana with 22 points, but he only hit
fo\lr of 14 field goals.
Plstoas 106, Bulls 81
Joe Domars scored eight of his
19 points early in the final
quarter to break · open a close
game, reading Detroit to its lOth
straight win, the 23rd in its last24
gaq~es. The Bulls, led by Michael
Jordan:s 20 points, lost for only

the second time In their last 13
games.
Mavericks 184, Nuuet• 97
Roy Tarpley scored 25 points
and grabbed 18 rebounds while
Derek Harper added 26 points to
lead Dallas. The Mavericks
nudged Denver auto~ a virtual tie
between the teams for sixth place
In the Western Conference. Wal·
ter Davis led Denver with 24
points.
.,
Suns 129, Heat 103
Tom Chambers scored 36
points before pulling up lame
with a strained hamstring and
Kevin Johnson added 22 points
and 17 assists for Phoenix. Glen
Rice led Miami with 18 point~ ,
Including the team's first eight of ·.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI)
They had the grave all dug for
Pickerington's No. 1 ranked
Tigers Friday afternoon in St.
John Arena. But the corpse came
· back to life.
Pickerington, traiUng b~ ' 16
points with less than .a minute left
In the third quarter, rallied for a
4745 win over No. 3 North Canton
GlenOak behind player of the
year Susie Cassell and all-Ohio
Michelle Shade.
The win moved Pickerington
Into S!lturday evening's Division
I championship game ag11inst
Cincinnati Mother of Mercy, a
41·38 winner over ROcky River 1
Magnificat In the other semifinal
contest
·"Great athletes always made
the big plays," sal~ Pickerington
coach Dave Butcher, " Cassell
and Shade made the big play."
'Cassell led all scorers wit.h 19 .
points·and kept the Tigers within ·
striking distance the first three
quarters of the contest as GlenOak bottled up the 6-l Shade,
who went,Jnto the game with a 21
points per game average . . ·
Through three quarters, Shade
had just three shots and scored
only six points.
But an 18·2 .Pickerington run
got the Tigers even at 45-45 on a
basket by Natalie Bates with I: 47
to play .
After a missed GlenOak field
goal at 1:07, . Pickerington held
the ball for a final shot. Cassell ·
drove for the basket , then dlsheil
off to &lt;Iii open Shade, who banked
It · off. the. glass for the game
winner with three seconds to
play.
It was a bitter loss for GlenOak
and head coach Gary Isler, who
second-guessed himself for going
to his four·corner offense in the
final period.

•

Panaov-M(ddlapon-GIIIpoliS, Ohio-Point P1111ent

"I thought they had 110tten the.
upper band on momentum," said
Isler. ''That's why we went to the
four comers, to try to shorten the

game."

basket by Kathy Long with 4: 23
left In the third quarter. The two
teams had struggled to an II -11
halftlme tie.
Long's basket started Fenwick
on an 8.Q run and a 19·1llead. The
Falcons never led by less than
four points the·rest of the way.
Fenwick's 30 points was the
lowest winning score In any.
game In the .15 years oft he state
tournament and the combined 53
points also was a new tourna·
ment low. The previous marks

Pickerington trailed 28·23 at
halftime.
"We were down by five and we
felt like we were down by 20,"
said Butcher. "'I jumped on them
a little bit. Of the five minutes we
were In there at halftime, about
30 secollds had todowithX'sand
O's. Tbe rest dealt with heart and
courage."
In the other DivisiOn I game,
Mercy used a 15-7 third quarter In
posting Its win over Magnificat
"At the pregame meal tonight,
Krlssy Wegman scored seven some of the guys were sayl11g ·
of her 13 points during that period maybe I'd step back and try the
as the Bobcats, 22-4. turned a
first three-pointer of my career,"
23·18 deficit early in the. period Hutchesoa said.
Into a 33·28 margin at the end of
He dldn~ t' but about everybody
the quarter.
·
else In a Blsons uniform did. A
Jamie Kirch's 15 points led total of eight players tried
Mercy, which last in. the cham- three-pointers and seven conpionship game a yellr ago . .to nected on them. Darren Henrie
GlenOak.
·
hit all four of his attempts and .
Mercy led the rest ·Of the way Marcull Bodle was connected on
after back·IO·back baskets by four out of five. Back·to-back
Trlsha Penderghast put the Bob- 'three-point shots from Tracey
cats ahead 24-23 with 5:30 left In Sales and Bodle with 6: 01 left oln
·the third quarter.
the , first half erased the final
Mercy's biggest lead after that
Pfeiffer, 22·11, lead of the season,
was seven points, Which it held · putting David Lipscomb ahead
three times, and the closest 38-32. Pete Froedden had two
Magnificat could get was two.
three-pointers · before halftime
Erin Mooney's 10 points led
and Bodle added another as the
Magnificat, which bowed out Bisons' were comforiabely ahead
with a 25-2 record.
61-40 at the break:
The Division IV semifinal
They were comfortable, but
winners were Middletown Fennot done as three-point shots by
I
wick and Fort Recovery.
Froedden a~d Sales,' the latter
I
No.
5 Fenwick downed No. 8 with .9:58 left, shoved David
II
N,ew· Washington Bucl,teye Cen- Lipscomb to the 100·polnt mark
I.
tral 30·23 In the lowest scoring for the 35th time this season.
game In tournament hlstory,.and
Hutcheson left the game shortly
No. I Fort Recovery ran its after that and sat back to admire
record to 26·0 with a 60-43 win
the shooting.
over Berlin Hiland.
"Those guys can really shoot,"
Fenwick, led by Denalre Norl
he said. "And I love for them to
with 11 points, took the lead for
do it."
good In Its win over BC 15-13 on a
In the other games :
Birmlngham.Soulhern 87
S.C..Spartanburg 80
The Panthers, 29-3, broke open
a cit;~se game with a 14'2 spqrt
earlv. In the· second half. Five
'
players ' contrlvuted
to .the run
with Jack Skipper starting It with
· a three-point play and cappflng It
with credit for a basket on a
goal·tendlng call. Stacy Butler
paced Birmingham -Southern
By United Press International
over Bowling Green,
Stephen Howard scored 23
Cincinnati, 20·13, advances t.o with 24 points. Spartanburg, also
points and 'Kevin Holland and
DePaul Tuesday. Bowling Green 29-3, got 28 points from sopho·
David Booth added 17polntseach
finished Its season 18-11. Louis more Ulysses Hackett.
Wis.·Eau Claire 84
Friday, leading ' DePaul to an
Banksadded19polntsforCIQCin·
Cent.
Washln~on ~7
8~-72 J_Oll!. &lt;?fS:re.l,~t~ton 1'.' t~e first • 11a11. J:~ _
Mogre led all score~s
Mike Prasher · started an 8-0
roun1f 'of tli'e Natlonal1nvltatlon ' witH 30 p()lrits1or Bbwllntt,Gteerl
Tournament.
·
,
·
At Piscataway, N.J., Keith run with a three·J)oint play and
Hughes .' scored 24 Jll)lnts and chipped In on a deslcive 12·0
.DePaul, which · .recorded its
43rd consecutive · victory · at
Mike Jones added 18, leading spurt, shoving the 29-3 Blugolds
Into the semifinals for the fourth
Alumni Hallin Ch lcago. will host
Ru tgers 'over 'Holy Cross.
Clnclqnatl 'in the secol!(l rQund
Jon!!S scored 10 of his Jl9ints In .time. The first run gave Eau
Tuesday_
the final 3:25 to help Rutgers,
Holland scored 13 of his points
17·16, advance to the second
in the second' half for the Blue
round against Fordham Monday .
Demons, 19-14.Bob Harstad
Dwight Pernell led the Crusaders, 24·6, wilh 26 points.
scored 27 points for Creighton,
21-12. Chad -Gallagher added 20
With the score tied 60·60 with
for the Blue Jays.
7:28 left, Rutgers went on a 10·3
·Booth made four straight free
spurt . Anthony Duckett_ scored
.'
four points. with Hughes and
throws to help the Blue Demons
go ahead 59-54.1J1idway through
Rick Dadlka adding three points
•
the second half.
each during the run.
'
Wlt.h DePaul ahead 67·59, Hoi· At St. Louts, ·Anthony ·Bonner
land made a 15·footer, and after a
scored 31 points and became the
Chuckle Murphy steal, Holland · all-time scoring leader for St..
hit a slam dUnk to give DePaul a
Louis, leading the BIIUkens to an
7\;59 bulge with 6:33 left.
.
85-74 victory over the Kent State.
A pair - of free throws by, . St. Louts, )8·11, will host
Howard and a Howard slam dunk
Wlsconsln·GreenBayTuesday In
with 2:03 left gave DePaul an
a second-round game. Last sea·
83·68 lead.
son. the Bllllkens finished second
DePaul raced to a 55-48 secondIn the NIT, losing to St . John's.
half lead as Howard and Holland
Bonner has 1,901 points In his
chipped tn with nine points each.
career; topping Roland Gray,
Harstad cut the deficit to 55-54
who graduated last spring and
· with a . basket and four. free
now·plays In Spain. ·
•
throws.
·
.
Ric Blevins ' ted the Golden
· The Blue Demons then went on
Fljlmes. 21-8·, ·With 24 points and
a free throw shooting binge,
David Barnwell added 19.
ti]aklng 10 of 10 for a 65-58 edge
At Tempe, Ariz., Tyrone Mitwith 9:331eft.
chen scored 17 points to lead
Booth and Howard combined
Long Beach State over Arizona
for 11 points to give bePaul a State. The '49ers, 23·8, play
40-37 halftime advantage. ·
Hawaii In Honolulu In the second
Elsewhere In f.irst•round NIT round Tuesday. Isaac AusUn led
games: Cincinnati' defeated Bo- Arizona State, 15·15, wtth 24
wllng 'G reen 75·60, Rutgers beat points.'
••
Holy Cross 87-78, St . Lo~ls
AI Albuquerque, N.M ., Kurt
.,
slammed Kent State 85-74, Long Miller scored 22 Jiolntl, added 11
Beach State defeated Arizona
rebounds and ~nded out 6
State 8&amp;-'11 . and New Mexico asSist! tq leal' the New' Mexico
defeated Oregon 89·78.
put Ore110n. The Lbbos, 18-12;
•'
· At Clnclnrlatl, · Andre Tate will hos.t Oklahoma 'State in the
scored 23 points and Brady second 'round T\lesday. · 'l'he
Hughes came off the bench and Ducks ended their season at
made t.hree three-polnii!I'S In the 15·14. Kevin Mixon scored 21
'
second half to spark Cincinnati points for Oregon.

•
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UPI8)1011a Writer

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IUIIIIDa;
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the game. ·
Trail Bluen lU, Borueta ' "
Kevin Duckworth scored 24
points and Clyde Drexler actded
22 to lead Portland, 'Which won Its
eighth straight game, Its longest
streak of the season. Tyrone
Bogues led Charlotte with 20
points and seven assists.
Clippers 118, Rockete Ill
Charles Smith came off the
bench to score 26 points and lead
the Clippers. Smith, playing with
a hyper-extended . right knee,
shot sev.en of 10 In the first half as
the Clippers opened up· a 6247
lead. Akeem , Olajuiron was
scoreless In the first quarter, but
finished with a team-high 19
points and 12 rebounds.

I

Mlfdi 18, 1910

M.-c:h 18, 1910 ~.
•

Sixers rally to .' hand ·Nets 119-IlO loss
By United Preu laternattonal
Looking ahead to a big game
can spell trouble In the NBA. ·
The Philadelphia 76ers almost
learned that the hard way Friday
night as tbey blew a 19-polnt
second half lead before rallying
to defeat the New Jersey Nets
II9-110.
The Sixers: who moved Into a
flrst·place tie with the New York
Knlcks , travel to Chicago Saturday night. Philadelphia, now
40-25, trails the Bulls, 40·21, tor
the thlrd·best record In the
Eastern Conference.
Hersey Hawkins and Charles
BarkleY · scored 25 points each
and Barkely grabbed 19 rebounds to help send the Nets to
their fifth straight loss and their
19th straight road defeat.
"It will be tough. against the
Bulls," said Hawkins. "It's a
good time to help us get a streak
going. We (starters) thought we
could get some time off tonight :
. Butyoucan'ttakeanythlngaway
from the Nets. They played
hant"
Philadelphia also got a season·
high 20 points from Derek Smith,
subbing for Injured starter Rick
Mahorn. Mahorn ha_s a contusion
of the ·left hlp and a lower back
sprain. He is doutbful for Satur·
day's game.
"It Is a great opportunity for
me to get some minutes, " said
Smith. "I feel good out there.
This Is the first time in·four years
that I'm playing with a lot of
corifldence."
New Jersey , after trailing by 19
points In the third quarter and 14
In the fourth, had tied the game at
103 on Lester Connor's basket
with 5: 44 left.
Rut Philadelphia, which went
four minutes without scoring a
point, regained the lead on a pair
of Hawkins free throws with 5: 27
remaining.
The Slxers then went on a 10-5
run to take a 115·108 lead on
Hawkins' jumper Wlih 2:17 to
play. New Jersey could get no
closer that seven points 111, .the

.

•

Pomeroy-MidJJiaport-G..IIpolil, Ohio Point Plauant, W. Va.

were 35 points by Frankfort
Adena and 68 by Adena and
Convoy ·Crestview In the semlfinals In 1976, the first year or the
girls tournament .
Lynn Bihn, the UP! .Division IV
.player of the year, and Tammy
· Hartnagel, led Fort Recovery to
its relatively easy victory. ·
Blhn scored 23 points and
pulled down nine rebQunds , whll.e
Hartnagel added 16 points and
had eight assists. ·
.
The Indians never trailed and

NAJA tournament

led all the way after Hartnagel's
two free throws gave them an 8·6
lead . with 3: 23 len in the first
quarter.
Fort Recovery led 14·8 after
one quarter, 35·25 a t halftime and
51·34 at the end of the third
pe\IOd. Hiland , paced by Teresa
Mal t with 15 points and 11
rebounds, never got closer than
H the ·rest of the way .
.
The Hawks, who lost In the
championship game a year ago,
finished the season at 24·3.

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(Continued from C-4)

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Claire a 41·32 cushion and the flaal three-jlolnt try by Oral
second put the game away at Roberts' Greg Sutton In pos ling
5943 with 7: 181eft. Prasher had a the lone upset of the quarterfiteam high 17 points while Todd nals. Sutton was 10 of 21 from
Oehrlein added 16. Central Wa- three-point range bug his last try
shington, denied a championship wlih three seconds left hit the
each .of the record 23 times Its back of the rim and rolled up over
been In the tournament, was sent the backboard. He finished with
home with a 31·5 record.
45 points. Georgetown was more
Georgetown (Ky.). 80
liberal with its scoring, getting IS
Oral Roberta 78
points from Matt Deneen, 15
Kent Johnson sank two free from Jeff Huffman and 14 from
throws with 16 seconds to 110 and ·Johnson.'
the Tigers, 29-6, su~"v~ved one

NIT roundup

DePaul defeats
Creighton 89•72.

Su!Key Tlmae Sentin._PIIg• C·5 '

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·657 High StrHt, Middleport, Ohio

Representi:1 •
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Poolscbedule
liMadQ" -1-3 p.m., open swim;
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8:30-3:00 Monday through Friday a"fl8:30-12:00 Saturday. In
•
Rutland·callJoan May~t 742-2888.

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�C·6-Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

l'oma'oy-M~eport-GallipoliS,

March 18, 1980

Ohio-Point Pleaant. W. V•.

Toronto posts
4-3 victory
.over Buffalo
· BUFFALO, N.Y. jUPI) Vincent Damphousse was glad
some Toronto fans came across
the border Friday night :o see
him score his tbird career hat
trick.
"I thought they gave us a bit of
·a boost," said Damphousse, .
'whose three goals helped the
' Maple Leafs put down the Buf·
falo Sabres 4·3. None of. the
forward's hat tricks have come
i'n the Leafs' home tee.
"I play well at home sometimes, but it seems.when I get on
a roll scoring goals, I do 'tt on the
road," he said.
Damphousse scored a goal in
each period and Lou France!;Chetti's sqorthanded goal with
5:06 remaining gave •t he Leafs
the victory, which moved them to
within 3 points of the Chicago
Black Hawks, who are in second
place in the Norris Division.
"I'm happy the way I'm
playing right now. Hopefully I
can play my best going into the
playoffs," Damphousse said.
Toronto, which had lost two
games in a row, never led in the
game until less tha!l . half a
minute into the third period,
when Damphousse scored his
.third goal.
"I thought it was a great
character night tonight." said
Toronto coach Doug Carpenter.
"We had to come from behind to
get the two points here. Two
points closer to an objective that
we're trying to reach. It keeps us
In contention for that first spot or
second spot."
· The game-winner came when
Franceschet t1 took a Mark Os·
borne pass and bias ted a shot
from just inside the blue line
under the crossbar behind Buf·
falo I(Oaltender Daren Puppa.
"I Just buried my head and
fired it as hard as I could. I
caught it under the crossbar. I
think I might have handcuffed
Puppa," Franceschettl said.
Damphousse scored a goal in
each period. and his goal on a
slapshot just 25 seconds into the
third period gave Toronto its first
lead of the game.
Dave Andreychuk gave the
Sabres a 1·0 lead, scoring on a
power play at 11: 12 of the first
period. Andreychuk slapped the
rebound in after Phil Housley 's
polni shot was stopped by Leafs
goaltender Jeff Reese.
Damphousse !led It at 13:03
when he took the rebound of a
Daniel MaroiS shot and deked
around Puppa before sliding
!lOme a backhander.
Bob Corkum scored his first.
NHL goal at 15:59 to pui the
Sabres back up, 2-1. Corkum took
a weak backhander from the
faceoff dot to Reese's right that
went thro!Jgh the goalie's legs.
Damphouase again tied It with
a power·play goal a.t 17:14 of the
, lleond period. one-timing a nice
' cnJNolce pus from Todd Gill
l q,..t Puppa's stick.
{.
Rick Valllt' tied It at 12:14.
• Pierre Turpan won a taceo!f
to Housley, who took a shot
tram the point that Valve detlec!ted Into the net.
i

He"

even tougher the last two days."

Defend!~ champion Tom Kite
got off to a bad start Friday going bogey-double bogey on his
first two holes. But Kite, the
Tour's leading career money
winner, played the last 14 holes In
5 under for a 70-142.
.
Three-time TPC champion
Jack Nicklaus. now 50, shot
78-153 to miss the cut for the
fourth time !n thepastfiyeyears.
This year s leading. money
winner, Paul Azlnger, .at 76-149,

and No. 3 money leader F.red
them. "You have to draw upon
Couples, at 81-150, also were
your experiences . I still Jove to
eliminated.
compete, b'ut I'm not certain the
Irwin, who won Just over
Intensity Is stl!l there."
, $31,000 In l)ls foil)' previous 1990
Irwin's best finish so far this
appearances, had three birdies · year was a tie for 12th at Los
In a four-hole span midway
Angeles. where he also bad his
through hls round, then closed
best1989 showing when hepljlced
with a 10-foot birdie putt.
third.
·
"It'~ been a(good while since
"I've always felt I could still
I've been a factor Iii a tournaplay," said Irwin. who was
ment," sal!llrwln, who devotes
seventh or better on the PGA
more time these days to building
money list seven times from 1973
golf courses than to playing
through 1981. " But I don't put. In ·

RU btn
• . [eads

'T'
~

·

UCSOn

·
TUCSON jUPI) - Nancy
Rubin, who never has flnlsh.ed
higher than third in 10 years on
the LPG,A tour, shot a 2-under·
par 70 Friday to emerge th-e
leader at the halfway point of the
$300,000 Circle K Tucson Open.
Rubin, who entered the round
tied tor the lead with Marta
Figueras-Ootti. had a 36-hole .
total of 1-urider-par 137 over the
Randolph North municipal links. .
Ayako Okamoto. who won the .
Tucson event IIi 1982, was one ·
stroke back afte.r a 5-under-par'
67 on Friday.
Colleen Walker was in third
place at 139, fonowed by Kate
Rogerson and Amy Benz at 140.
Bets~ King, last year's leading
money winner, shot a 70 Friday
to move into contention at 141,
tied with
who

0 pen ·

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Lilli lll&amp;ae119tafe-Arlle• Stall! win nu
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COUNTRY
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Your Certified

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CAPTURE SECOND PLACE - Emery Sla·
rUng and Sharon Johnson (middle) showoffthelr.
second-place certificates afler bowllllg series of
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Cancer Toumamenl;'' as ' event · co-chalnnea
Mary F1oyd (left) and Betty Rees look on. Starling
and Johnson also received S25 for their efforts.

296 W. COLUGE
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Bn1t)o &amp;a. OT

-1: -II p.m.
t\.1
Buell. C•llf.

Ol~~mpto...r.lp.

issues- S~ttle them down- a11d
go to arbitration on that one issue
and have to live wjth it. Maybe
we have to take a harder look at
it."
Chuck O'Connor, whO repres·
ents the owners, said the Idea had
not been formally discussed but
admitted he dld not care for 11'
much.
"There's an old adage that
what is the union 's Is the union 's
and what Is t.he clubs' Is negotla·
ble," O' Connor said. " For us.
what is the union' s is the union 's
and what Is the clubs' Is
arbitratable."

ONLY 12 SELLING DAYS
LEFT IN MARCH.

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COLUMBUS Gallla
Academy front-liners Krlsti Thomas and Lori Hamilton, who.
recently completed their prep
basketball 'Careers after taking
the Blue Angels to their second
straight trip to the regionals,
were named to The Associated
Press Dfvtslon IIall-state team .
Thomas, a 5··10 senior forward ,.
was named to the first ieam In
recognition of her 24.8 points-pergame average. A two-time first team selection. she was the only
(Continued from C-6)
· player from southeastern Ohio so
honored this year.
McGeorge got her secona
Hamilton, a 6-0 senior center,
straight 71 on Friday .
received
special mention for her
Rubin charged down the back·
work
in
the
paint, which resulted
stretch, rolling in a 25-foot birdie
in
a
20.8
points-per-game
avet·
putt on the par-3 15th and a
age and double figures in re· · ·
22-footer for a birdie on the par·4
17th.
.
. bounds In a maJority of the
A-ngels' gl!mes. She Joined such
"All the putts I've made have
area
cagers, as Rock Hill's
beeil .aggressive," she said.
Tammy
)'dullens and Ports·
"When I've really rammed
mouth's
Belinda
Carter on the
therrt, they've gone in. I made
special
mention
list.
two putts today from off the ·
fringe. I hit the pin and they went
in."
Rubin had two bogeys- on the
329-yard, par-4 ninth hole, which
she three-putted from 30 feet
away. and on the par-5, 458-yard
18th hole, about which she said,
"I hit a real weak S-iron into a
bunker, laid out and two-putted.' '
Okamoto needed only 30 putts
as she registered the best round
of the day.
·
·
"My. putting is good. I never
misset~ any putts," said Oka·
moto. who has be~n battling a
sore left elbow for several
~
months. "I'm taking medication
and muscle relaxers."
She said Friday's weather.
which warmed into the mid 70s ,
after a cool and windy day
Thursday, loosened up the elbow.
Walker attributed 4-under-par
68 Friday to a diet loss of 10 ·
poUnds the last two weeks and a
program of listening to rellixtion
tapes every other morning.
''It's slowed down the tempo of
my golf swing and affected my
timing," she said. "I'm hitting
the ball straighter now. "
Seventy-four players made the
25
cut at 4-over-par 148 and will
•
compete Saturday and Sunday
for the $45,000 first prize.

DIVISIOS II
AI ib)tiOn
.
Daywn tolonel " 'liMe- ,lUI. Krnerln«

111-lt),t:tl p.m.

p.m.

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Division II all-state

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"The proposal they made to·
day didn't move arbitration, ..
said Baltimore outfielder Phil
Bradley, one of several players
attending the session. ·'They took
It off the .table. They took that S4
million pool away today ."
Union chiP! Don Fehr said his
side would be willing to negotiate
every aspect of the contract
except. salary arbitration, then
leave t hat maHer to an
arbitrator.
"Players want to play , fans
want to watch It and I assume
owners want to unlock the
gates ." Fehr said. " Perhaps the
best thing is to resolve the other

eral counsel for the players
as80Ciation.
The owners' latest offer removed a proposed $4 million
bonus pool to be given to·players
between two and three ·years
maJor-league service, based on
performance. They instead reallocated the money Into such
Issues as the minimum salary
and benefits. A player still would
need three years service to
qualify for arbitration.

Boy,. HllftSclloollua.thall
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PalllciiF; 01\'II IOn

Du~ "•· 81. oiollll'•· U1 15 p.m.
UCLA n . Kaa••· t: Ji p.m.
• t\.1 EMt a.dlfl'ford. SA.
·
March ft
fte . . aaJ lll'mlfi•IN
March2-l
Rt&gt;Po•l 11•1
'
Ml . ..,.t
AI .-\uu1da, TfUii
Th..-IQ'
Okahoma 71, TowMOa Hlale 111
Nordl Care~t'• Mil, SCiuthwht ~"""'"'"
Stair 111 ·
Arkan!U' 611. Princeton~
o.,. •• 101. 1111no111 Ill

DIMENSION"'
An Innovative He.at Pump ...
Only From Lennox

•Heating HSPFs
up to 8.66
•Quiet dependable
operation
•C,rtified heat ·
pump technicians

8unlla)' GameK
New dlf'r_,. a1 ISMto"

(JO.l) ,!:Ji p ....

By MIKE :rtJLLY
UPI National Baseball Writer
NEW YORK jUPI) - The
Players' Association reached no
agreement on management's
latest proposal ea(ly Saturday
but said it would consider letting
a neutral party decide the key
Issue of salary arbitration.
Players and owners. In their
first formal session in nine days,
talked for four hours without
finding a way to end the 31-day
lockout.
Friday originally was to be the
date when Commissioner Fay
. Vincent and the league presidents were to announce a ruling :
on the status of Opening Day .
They apparently held off on their
announcement pending the outcome of talks.
Instead, the session ended at
1:30 a.m. EST without a pact and
the status of Opening Day remainS unclear. The parties scheduled another session for 10 a.m .
Saturday, with the players' exec·
utlve board to confer at 2 p.m .
"I'in cautiously pessimistic,"
said Ge~e Orza, associate gen·

Tucson Open

MIIMU .... al New l'ort&amp;. 7:3t! p.m.

flt-ll.ll:ll p.m.
·
Ul Clem.o11 (lUI n. f·H La Malko-

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OaiU 114, O.•wr 17
121, JMII-IJtJ
lA CllppNI Ill. HedOI IS
Portland 114, B•I.U. ltl

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•.._.._..oren.,8&amp;1 al knlSCatMil.

BAIT FOI SALE

,,.

21 .111 -1
211 .SM II
31 .s:n I!
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!llla. .Cib. . ................. .17 -U .t'/4 tfl
Ch ......le .............. : ...... 11 l t .Ill S5
Pa.tlflt Dl\tla.. 11

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p.m.
f'enllllm .. . Bob Criiii'I-Rlt.ft'li

p.m.

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VIall ............................... 1ft .111 -

liard It

Ok·hee Ku and Mls.sle
McGeorge were tied at 142. Ku•
shot an even-par -72 and'
(See OPEN OD C-7)
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" '8ttra Collmnee

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struggled · to a 2-over·par 74,
Including a birdie on the final·

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II

A. NEW DIMENSION
IN HEAT PUMPS
American Caacer Society's. "Bowl Down Cancer
Tournament," as toumament co-chairmen Mary
F1oyd (left) and Betty ~es flank the winners.
They were among 440 bowlers pardclpatlng In the
event.

Pro resulta
..

Murau
rn ......,...... ,.
s. OrJiwN; '21. , ..........."

.

CLAIM FIRST PLACE- Darrell Hardman and
Pam Simpkins (middle) display the bowling balls
they won after bowling series of 728 and 876,
respectlv~ly, to post flnt-pl~e finishes in the

owners proposal

Baseball players' union

thenexttwodays," said Mediate, ~
still looking for blsflrstvlctoryln •
five . Tour years. "But, I'll look ·
forward to lt."
Mudd start.ed tbe day at :
S-under and stayecj within a ;
stroke, plus or minus, of that :
figure throughout hls round.
,
"I was lucky to shoot even par·'
the way 1 struggled," said Mudd,
who offset four bil:dles with an
equal number · Of bogeys. "I ,
!lldn't make anywhere near the ~
putts today, that 1 made :
yesterday."

qualttydmepractlclllgwbenl'm
aw11y from the tour. I've been too
busy doing other things."
Mediate, who bas 'n ved a
quarter of a mile from the
. Players Championship site the
past 18 months, saki be "obvlously likes the golf course. I
knew where I wanted to hit it
today."
Mediate had . three of his six
birdies in a r~ near the end of
his first nine and followed that
string wltb b~ lone bogey,"w)len.'
he three-putted from 30 feet.
"l can't tell you how I'll play

Sunday

Ohio-Point PIB&amp;Iant W. Va.

i

Hale Irwin second-round leader in Players Championship
By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Sporta Wrller
PONTE VEDRA, Fla. (UPilHale, Irwin, a 44-year-old twotime U.S. Open tltllstwho hasn't
won a tournament In five years,
posted a 4-under·par 68 Friday to
lake the second-round lead In the
$1 . 5 m I II l on p 1 ayers
Championship.
"I've had a reasonable year.
somewhat better than It has been
recently, " said Irwtn, who has17
victories - including the 1974
and 1979U.S. Opens- in23years
on the PGA Tour, but none since
the i985 Memorial. I like this
course ITPC at Sawgra$s) becau* if you hit the ball well, you
can score."
IrWin, at 6-under 138 for 36
holes, held a one-stroke lead over
first-round co-leader Jodie
Mudd, who had a 72. and Rocco
Mediate, who had a 67.
The other first-round co·
•leader, Mark Calcavecchia, the
•' tour 's . second-leading money
· winner so far this year, lost
·ground with a 7~142.
Ken Green, with a 69, and Clark
Burroughs, with a 70; were two
shOts off Irwin's pace at 140.
Burroughs stayed at the top of
the leaderboard for four holes
after going to 7-under with a
birdie at No. 10. But he bogeyed
No. 14 and double bogeyed No. l6.
Tom Watson, 40 and looking for
his first victory ,_ in two years,
went Into the wafer at the final
hole for a double bogey and a 72
that had him tied at 3-under 141
with Peter Jacobsen (67), Andy
Bean (68), David Edwards (73),
and David Love III j68) .
"The wind wasn't consistent
today, we had a lot of switching
crosswinds," Bean said. "It was
just a guessing game today.lf the
· wind continues to blow and we
· don't get any rain, It's going to be

.Mach 18, 1110

NOW IN STOCICI

�..
PIE C·B-Sunday llmet Sentinel

Mudt 18, 1180

Pomeloy- Midcleport- Gelipolil, Ohio-Point Plaawtt. W.Va.

~outh, enthusiasm highlight '90 :Redwomen
RIO GRANDE - in his first
;year aa coach of the University of
·,IUo Grande softball team. Doug
too. looka for his almost new
team to be competitive In every
lame It plays. .
''Oil every softball team, the
lll!y II pitching and catching,"
Foote commented.. "One thing
we have ·to work on Is the
i:atchlna. We have only two
Cltebera to carry us through the
aeuon, but I believe our strong
ault will be defense.
"We bave ~o work on being
fundamentally sound, to keep the
game close and to give ourselves
a chance In ·the flnalinlllngs," he
added.
. The Rio ladl~. who open
Tbursda)", March 22 against
Capital University, are looking to
Improve on the (epm's 3-23
petformance In 19119. The team
finished third In the Mid-Ohio
Conference with a 3-5 standing,
ilnd placed three of Its playersLaura Clellan. Beth Con and

J j!nnl Couch - on the conference
honorable mention list.
This season, four veterans
have returned to the team oulflelder Marlo Kistler (Junior.
Sugar Grove) ; Infielder-pitcher
Kathy Lute ~ soph,omore, Wheelersburg) ; Infielder Tracey
Hecker (s ophomore, Green
Camp) and Infielder Kathy
Snyder (sophomore, Gahanna) ,
Sllllled by Foote last summer
was Becky Fuller (freshman,
Pedro). who as a. member of the
Symmes Valley High School
team was t he Southern Valley
Athletic Conference's most valu·
able player In 19119. Fuller will
work In the lnfl~ld . Another
recruit was Renee Lundy (fresh·
man, Jackson), a softball standout at Oak Hill High Schoo) who
has been assigned to the outfield
and will double as a pitcher.
Also new to the team are Kim
Brown (junior, Tiffin) , catcher;
Missy Kitchen (sOphQmore, Gal·

lipolls, 1988 Kyger Creek graduate), outfield; Cindy Ridgeway
(freshman, Jackson) , outfieldpitcher; Robin Stull (freshman,
Ashland). Infield; and Gena

Norris (freshman, Kingston ),
outfield-pitcher.
"We will ·be very young, but
with youth comes enthusiasm, "
Foote sal~ .

KIO GIIANDB REDWOMEN

Tournaments and ·-tag fish
Jackpot are featured activities at

•a:e..,s::•

Looo&amp;Joe
March 22-Capltal. ............. .. .......... ..... A,
~aroh ·2f-Walsh ...... .... ............ ... .. ... ... A.

the lake. Fisherman will ·be
Invited to participate In the
jackpot tag game by contributing
to the "pot" which will be
awarded each week to the person
pulling In the largest fish. A $500
ja~;kpot will be awarded at the
end of the summer to the person
catching the biggest fish.
~"
There are also about200flsh ln "lf'" """"'Jit,,w~
the lake Whlcb when caught
provide a free pass to the
catcher. The lake Is stocked with
catfish every week starting April
11 while trout Is stocked In the
colder months. Las I year the lake
was stocked with 32,000 pounds of
catfish with approximately a
hundred weighing over 20
pounds.
There are tent camping !aclll·
ties, picnic areas with tables and
benches, fire pits, and a bait and
refreshment stand ..

that Is sent Is each person has to
do what they feel Is best lor
them."
Ware will need only 18 hours
after tbls semester to complete
his degree In business, and
vowed to return next spring to
graduate.

,

...

:D

Bell spends $416,
.
.
in Gallia. to· upgrade,
expand phone system.:
r

•

'

"YOUR 'COMPLETE' .
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR
STORE"

COACHES SHORTS
GYM SHORTS • SOCKS
.BALL CAPS • BAGS ·
T-SHIRTS • &amp; MORE

-Custom Tra.nsfers.
and "'''•ring-

Gi\.LLIPOL:Is - Ohio Bell, a
tlon Ohio Bell will offer a advanced electronic switcJ!es.
subsidiary of Amerltech, will separate service which allows This technology presents aervj· .
Invest -$3.75.1' million In Ohio several · different ringing pall· ces offering convenience .. for
during 1990, Including $416,000 In
erns to be assigned to a single line . residence customers and represGalllpoUs, to expand and upso that each ring will tell who Is entlng a major tool !bat ~~
grade Its telecomniunlcatloQs
being called This Is Ideal for nesses can udse to SfrYBeell t .ld
network Edward F Bell. pres!· ·
h customers an to grow, . sa ,
' ''
. •
·
•
families who want to know whlc
B the end of 1990 Ohio Bell
dent and chief executive officer,
calls are fo r the parents and wllly com lete
~cing elec.
said today·
hi h re for the children
P
rep
·
·
· More than 70 percent of this
w c a
In · hl~h will tromechanlcal switching
amount or S265 million will be
- Call Screen g, w . · · lis ment with electronic switch
• egulpment
·,
• control
·
allow customers
to be
stop ca
..... , .
.a
spent
on
to
d
systems 1n 263 cenua
....
•
~eek
lo
expand
and
Improve
Oblo
Bell
Tele·
. BELL PROJECT UNDERWAY- Ken Griffith,
and transport telephone and . from designate '::m ~~ · h will serving 3.26 million acces-,11~
phone's system: Bell · contracted the Columbuo · other telecommunications traf- · - Repeal Dla1 g, w c . at!· he said. Electronic swUI:.l!lnf
of tile J . A. Hocllett, lac., finn, Columbus..liegaa
firm Jor the $4UI;OOO . project. (Times.Seatlnel
·ltrlnpg underkt'ound
fie Including data and video ' allow customers t.ol au tom ber Improves reliability, lncreues
. . cable In GaiUpolll last
photo).
·
sltinals The balance of the
Cally reach an outgo ng num
call handling, monitors !Is own
budget 'Is for expenditures such
that was busy or dlbd not allnl s~~~: performance. and Is more cos,l
The outgoing num er w a
efficient
matlcally be retired until the call
The s~rvices made avallatile
as . building and property
plan for 1990
Is completed. C lib k ·hlch by this technology offer greater
·
.
- Automatic
a ac • w
. conven 1ence a nd f1 exlblllty · to..
Is significant to an of Ohio since
.
.
·
will ass1st customers 1n re 1urn Ohio Bell customers The ·servltel~m.munlcatlons Is a major
ing the last Incoming call ,
d' c
F..
dl -·
. factor In the state' s economic
.
d
t ces 1nc1u e a 11 orwar ng,
whether It was ancsw,:re or~~;, Call Waiting, Speed CaiHng an\1
competitiveness," Bell said. "It
- Intercom a ng, w
Three-Way Calling
POMEROY -The Ohio Feder· Is now well recognized that an
allows customers to turn the\r
Also near! $21-~llllon Will h..
home telephones ·into Intercom
•
Y d Obi . Bel:-:,1
.atlon ofSoi!'andWaterConserva- advanced telecommunications
1~
lnlrastructure
Is
essential
to
spent
to
expan
o
tlon Districts Land Use Commit- attract new businesses and to
systems.
,_
ld
t
also
statewide
fiber
optic
networif;,
tee Is sponsoring a Pasture ·
. ,
f
The Ohlo od 1 pres en
Bell said Fiber optic technology
Systems Workshop ,June 26,28,1n retain and foster t~~ growth o
said that the company's custo- uses' las~r 11 ht ulses to tran1-'
rs will reach a major milesg P
cooperation with the Ohio COOp- firms already here.
He
noted
that
other
states,
as
.
me
n
.
Ohio
Bell's
entire
mU
information
over glau
erative Extension Service,
1 1990·
well
as
Canada
and
nations
In
tone
·
d
by strands no wider than a human
ODNR, · Division of Soli and Asia and the European Communservice area will be serve
hair.
·
Water Conservation; and the
Ohio State Univ~rslty, Depart· lty, are accelerating their telecommunications lnveslments to
ment of Agronomy.
'·
make their netl'!orks more pow- .
The workshop will be held at erful
tools for economic :
the South District Office, Jack· expansion
..
son', Ohio. This office Is located
"Our network In Ohio now
on the OARDC grounds, Rou ~ 93,
" I
Incorporates advanced technol· south of Jackson. ·
Bell said . "However, the
'1111s a 'three-day seminar and ogy,"
the registration fee Is $25 per 1990s wlll see an even greater
participant. The cost of three explosion of new capabilities and
s-"uNDER8 PROMOTED - Gene Joba10n, ·right, aallllisaces
lunches and coffee breaks during services. In ourJndustry . Given
the Commitments being made by
thai Colin' ·Sauodera, left, &lt;Was recently promoted to Finance
· the workshop Is Included In this other
states and nations, Ohio
Maaaser at Gene Jobaao• Cbeverolet·Oidsmoblle-Geo. Saunders
fee. Make checks payable to must keep
pace through an even
•.
wu previously on the saleo team for the past three yearo. Ia bla
OFSWCD, Attention: Kevin more aggressive level .o(
aew pGIIItlon, Saunders wUI be ,, responsible In uatstlng all
Elder.
,.
.
lnveslment."
'
cualomers to tet the betit finance r~&amp;~e and terms possible.· He wDI
Those Interested In attendlni
The
Ohio
Bell
president
alao be &amp;be de&amp;lehblps link between the banka and Oaance
the workshop should contact the stressed that the world hiis made ' ·
~company. .
,
Meigs Soli and Water Conservli- the transition from the Industrial .
·'"'
.tk!n l)!stflct _Qfllee I!~ 992·~~; or age !\tO the Information age In
i top .ll)r the second noor of th
·r· · • · '
which .Information technQlogy Is
.
'•
Farmers·Barik bulldlng In Pome- the.
'"
&lt;.
drlylng force. for .economic
. roy to pick up a registration form
....,J
In the global
which must be In by.May 1, 1990. g.rowtp
marketplace.
.
Partjclpants ,will be accepted
IRONTON - $190,230 Is being
made to replace tax re&lt;oelpts not
"We'
ve
seen
what
occurred
In
on a first-come, first-serve basis. the· past when we lost the
· distributed to 12 southeastern
earned by counties on federally
.
.
All participants must be regis" l'.
·. Ohio counties falling wl\hln the ' owned -national· forest land. The
competitive
edge
In
our
Indus' -'-._.:
tered by May 1, 1990.
Wayne National Fo.rest pn~er
money Is distributed according
trial base," Bell said. "Now that
}&gt;articlpants wUl be expected we've entered the Information
to the acres of national forest
. !Wo programs for sharing federal
') I
to
bring . a copy of the current age; we cannot permit tbat to ,
funds . Gallla County received
land In each county.
Agronomy Guide and Weed Con· happen lo our telecommunlca' •
$11,893.
.
. ·
The money frcim · these pro· ·
·
A total of $171,536 came from
grams .Is paid annually to the · troi' Guide.
For
more
Information,
or
a tions Infrastructure."
recreation user feey, timber and
State of Ohio by the U.S govern·
This makei! It essential to
copy of the program or ,reglstrafirewood sales; ilnd the sale or ment for distribution to the
constantly reevaluate the poli·tion
form,
contact
Meigs
SWCD
use of other forest resources. counties.
·
cies that govern the telecommun'
The top three counties recelv- · at 992-6647-or stop by our office.
Twenty ,.five .percent of such
!cations Industry, he said.
'
·lncome Is returned each year to lng national forest payments In
"In
particular,
at
the
~tate
.
counties with. national .-forest' 1989 were Lawrence ($57,459) ,
.
· ··
level we continue to advocate ·
•·land.
,.
Washington ($32~ 667), 'a nd Hockpro~
new forms of reglilatlon that will
PROMOTED - Mary Grover has been promoted to assistant
' In addition, $18,694 was paid to .lng (,20,689). The Wayne Na,.
·
·
provide greater Incentives to
branch manager at the Tuppers PlatM branch of the Farmer'a :"~
cbunty governments In lieu of tlonai Forest covers 190,096acrflli
GALLIPOLIS ~ Marlon Cald- Investment In our telecommunl·
Bank. Mrs. Grover bas been In the banking business fw 28 year. ,; '
·tQXI!S lol-1989. The payments are In southe._stern Oltlo. .
·
well, GalliPolis, Angus cattle ca!lons Infrastructure," ~II
and bjWI been employed with Farmer• Bank since It ac\4111recl the ' '
breeder, has recently ~en en, said. "At the federal level, were_ Tuppers Plains branch In May of 1987. She resides near CINslier :~
nam~
, rolled In the. Anl!lls Herd lm· working hard to advocate the
wllb her huoband Kenneth, and attends the Zion Church of Cbtll~. _;;
provement Re¢!lhls program of removal of ' restrictions that
l)usi~ess
I
.
-•
&lt;
the American Angus Assoc'la· prevent us from delivering n~w
·:
, GALLIPoLIS, ~ Bob Shirey. courses to be offered, the schetion, reports Dick Spader, e/(ecu- telecommunlca.~lons services to
,.Presldent of th~Shlrey Corpora·
dullng of students, and various tlve vlce'presldent of the 08 • our customers.
t tloil, announced Friday the ap·
other duties.
t:lonal organization with
Looking ahead, Bell said that
., polntment of Teresa Whlttlngt'~;~n
· A 1980 graduate of Marshall headquarters In St. Joseph, Mo.
Ohio Bell during 1990 wJillptro·
, to the dlrector's ·. position at
University with a Bachelor of
Angus Herd Improvement Re·
duce a series of advanced new
, Southeastern Builness College In Arts degree In Business Educa- cords (AHIR) Is a comprehen·
services for ' both business and
'
)j'
•
• Ga111·po lis.
tlon, Ms. Whittington Is · now slve wlthln·herd evaluation pro,
residential customers. ThoseserGALLIPOLIS - The Preachln' . American Society of Safety Engl'
As dlreclor. Ms. Whittington pursuing her Master's degree In gram used by cattie'men to help
vices Include:
Deacon costumed In black !rock neers. He Is a certified safety
wUI be resp()nslble for the overall Adult Education. While II) col· them keep records of reproduc·
- Call Identification. which coat nat -brimmed hat and professional and a member of th~ '
operaiton ·of the college and Its. lege, , she was . an honorary tldn, and growth ·rate on lndlvldwill deliver the calling number to stri~g tie, will present his humor- Veterans Safety. He Is alsoactlv~r:
member of PI Omega Pl. ·.
staff. This lncludes ,the responslual animals
the called party through a ous and motivational talk " Put In Kiwanis International and the ·
.blllty of hiring members of lhe
She has been teaching adult
Bywelgttlng ~alves at 205days
number readout on a dcvl~e on A Happ)( Face" at the Gallia Masonic Order .
.
,;
teaching staff, determining educatlo.n· clasfies al Southeast· of age and again at a year of age,
attached lo or built Into the County Safety Councii .Awards
Annually, the Deacons optim· ·
Continued on D-8
telephone.
·
breeders not only Identify the
Banquet to be. held Thursday. lstlc message delights the young
cattle that grow the fastest and
..,. Dlsdactlve Ringing, which April 12 at 6:30 p.m. at the and the young-at -heart at over '
most efficiently, they a1so !den·
will allow customers to assign Holiday 'Inn.
250 convenuons, banquets and·;
tlfy cows that regularly produce
different ringing pat(erns to · This fire and brims ton~ Inter- meet.lngs throughout lh~ United
abOve average calves, and bulls
Incoming calls originating from pretatlon of how a country States and Canada.
'·
that sire outstanding calves.
dl~erent calling ll&amp;rtles. In addiparson looks at the world around
Tickets for the Sllfety Council'
us Is both entertatnl.ng and Annual Banquet wlllbeavallab~ ,
By Stan Evaaa
and · a 73% Increase In other
thought provo.klng.
'
-at the Gallipolis Area Chamber
. ,Income was not sufficient to
GALLIPOLIS to
"
Bill"
.
Headley,
reof Commerce office. Reserva:
Deacon
tough Industry
overcome the gross margin
tired
after
32
years
of
service
lions must be made no ~ter tha11,.
plagued Bob Evans' results
shortfall jind pre-tax Income fell
with
'
t
he
Columbus
Gas
System.
April
6.
.
•·
third
26.4%. f?hhllar ne1 Income results
group of broadcasters who beGREENVILLE,
S.C.
CUPI)
was for 26 years a safety
Call the Chamber office ~i':
fiscal
were posted; Bob Evans' afterMultimedia Inc. said Friday It lieve In this business as much as engineer and more recently a 446-0596 for addiUona.l,.
suits were
.tax. earnings fell '26. 5% to $5.92
will buy majority Interest In we do," said Wright. "We've special representative In the Information.
· t,
expectations.
mllllon. ·•
,
come to know and appreciate communications department..
Cleveland
station
WKYC
-TV
r.
'~
Total ' sales
. Earnings per share totalled
from the National·Broadcasting them through ~heir ,t hree NBC
Headley Is a member of many
;
rose 8 .5% to
$0.19 (·24.0%) as restaurants
affiliates, each of which Is a national
Company,
while
NBC
will
retain
and
local
organizations
r
•'
5114.6 million.
accounted for $0.11 and sausage
market leader," he said. ·
minority
Interest
ill the station.
including
The
National
Speakers
~~
Res I aura n t
the remalnl11g $0.08. Year-toWalter Barlett, Multimedia's Association, The · International
The purchase price was not
li'
~ales gains resulted froni 4%" date EPS equals $0.66, a 9.6%
chairman
and chief executive
released:
'
Platform
Association.
and
The
;:1·
higher average menu prices and
decline versus flscal1989. ,
The agreement, whiCh must be officer, said Multimedia bad not
5.0% more restaurants In opera.
Once again, the dlfflctllt operapproved by the boards of acquired any majOr properties
hon (232 verses 221). Real si.les
a ling environment that Bob
directors of both companies and 11Unce t1w OOIIIPIUI.V was rGCapltal·
eontlnue to be weak. Sausage
Evans faces In both of Its
..
feder ~ regulatory au tboritles, lzeclln Odober, 1985.
~les Improved as the volume. of
!J1diiatey legments Is at !he root
Multimedia,
lac.,
II
a
media
1
provided that Multimedia will
poul_ldlsold rose 7% With aUght~ • 'oflfl recent quarters' el!l'nlngs
communlcatlons.oompaliY
Which
assume responsibility for the,
GALLIPOLI~ :_ Matthew
detllnes.
blgher prices.
'.
publll- 14 dally· and 110 non·
station's
administration
and
Neal,
Patl'lot, II a new JQnlor
; Bob Evana• margJna renuitlt • • '.Given the ~rce of · these
dally newapapera, loci udlng lbe
dally
activities.
member
of tbe Afrlerlcan Aqua
ander preuure. Slplflcan'tly • dlfllcultlel, the cqntlnued control
weekly Sullday Tlmes·Seallnel,
Ro~t
C.
Wright,
NBl:'a
preslAuoclatlon, reporta . Dick
klgber bog coets and higher food "ofeiperatlogcosts, tbeatrengtbof
GaiUpolla , Dally · Trlbu~. i
dept aJid chief executive officer, ,Dally · Sentinel, Pomeroy. · Spada', eucuUve vlce-prealdent
~osta negatively Impacted both • t• the "Bob Evans" ·franchl.ie and ·
said be waa "very pleaaed" Wltb Mldclleport; POint Pleasant Reg· of the national oraanlzatloll with
fompany aegl'n1!11ts and grosa
lbe Company'uterUng financial
the
agreement.
·
marllaa contracted 230 basis " posltlob, 1, we atlll are bf the
liter and Tbe Trl·Couaty News- beadquarteraln St. Jllleph, Mo.
"When
Multimedia
ap·
Junior memben of tile usocla·
P.,lnta.
,
.
opinion that patient lnveatora
/River Currel!ts. owns a"d
proacbed
u_s
~lth
this
proposal,
·
t!On
are eligible to regllter cattle
• A notable positive In the
ultimately wll~ be rewarded by
·ojJerates four television sta11ons,
In
the
American Angus Allocla4uarter's results was a smaller · shares of tbls !laue.
we recopJZeO It aa a terrific seven radio atallons and 100
tlon
and
take part In Asloclatloa
~tlo of sales, general, and
(Mr. Evaas II • laveaane~~t
opportunity to expand our rela· cable TV franchises In four
sponsored shows and other naadmlnlatratlve expense to llalea. ,, Broker for 'l'lle,Ohlo Compnr Ia
tlllnlhlp with an accomplls~ed slates.
,.
.. tiona! and regional events.
~ Nontbelest, tbla developm~t
lbetr GalltpoliiOfftee.)
'

=ul

..

.

S&amp;WCD

~P{~~e:!:!~~~erit

June 26·28

uniqUely

tonlon

l'oundotious ...
lulcurtoully pull'y
qLilt surfllca,

BU

A BIG CATCH - Doa1 Rendenhot of Parkersburg displays a

32-pound catfish wblch be cau~:btlast swnmer at Catflaherman's
Paradlae owned and operated by James Reed of Reedsville.

IDS

'

PlllCIIASI

.-..

'

I

'.

•... '

''

'

:Grama ~.-e~es-$1-1 ':993 ·
·for national forest programs·'

...

..

.

...

. ..

Starting At

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Goldstar
Samsung
Soundesign
Zenith

59.95 199.9

Emerson
Shin tom
Multi Tech
Scott

Caldwell enrolls '

in.cattle

·ware

•

Section

workshop set

Houston's Ware announces
plans ·to en~er NFL draft
By RICHARD LUNA
.
UPI Spor1a Writer
· HOUSTON (UPI) - Helsman
TrophY winner Andre Ware, who
:JIIIIsted publicly for months he
·would return for his final season
at tbe University of Houston. said
Friday be will instead enter the
upcoming NFL draft .
'"l'bls Is by far . lhe most
dlf:llcull decision I've ever had to
make In my life," Ware said.
"I've cherllbed my last three
years here but, for a variety of
reasons, I've decided to make
myself available for the NFL
draft.
' 'There was not one fact or. I
~at It from a lot of different
~s. Basically, It was In my
blart to ·PlaY professional foot.·
l!lilL I did not want to come back
IIIII be tblaltlng each and every
db, woll!derlng what If I would
Jtve left, Jllld bave that doubt In
my mind. In making this d~l­
aloa, I bad to look deep Into my
· heart and discover what was
more lmportani to me at this
time." ·
was questioned about his
future prior to announcement of
tbe Helsman Award last December, and confirmed each
time that he was committed to
playing another season with the
Cougars.
But several factors since that
time combined to change Ware's
mind. Ia addition to the Cougars
alill being on prObation for NCAA
violations that occurred before
Ware arrived, the university lost
bead coach Jacll Pardee to the
Houlton Ollera, even though
Cltfealive coordinator· John Jenkllll was promoted to the top job.
,Of more Importance was the
po~llbiUty the NFL will establish
an eatry-le\'el wage scale before
tile 1991 sea1011 and end the flood
of b1J slping bonuses for high
draft choices.
Le881Je officials have not dlscuued tbe wage scale during this
week'• meetings In Orlando, Fla.
."Lastyear. Barry Sanders (of
Olllahoma State) won the Hels11!8D Trophy and their school was
placed on probation," Ware said.
·•'For thlil reason be was allowed
to enter the NFL draft. Also,
11mm Rosenbach (Of WashinglOa State), bls coach left and he
wu aJ lowed to tum pro. Obvloully, I qualified under both
IMR coadltiOIII,"
.
Ware pve the appearance of
tnlelldlna to return to UH. He
parc:baled an Insurance poUcy
wttb Uoyd'a · of Lolidon and
..,Uclpated In Cougars' spring
tralnlna tbrough Friday, the last
a, of practice.
.:1
to be !here," Ware
to be 1 pert .of It
ap lllle I alar led." .
.,.l._lrild to explalll wilY
publicly he wOIIId

.FatrmA Business

'
_ ,
~

Mar&lt;!h 21-WIImlngtm ...•....•...•..•.. ... ••.. H
· March 29---Weot VIrginia State ......... .... H
•prt12-Charlestt&gt;i, W.Va . .. .. .. .. , ......... H
&lt;!&lt;prti3-Morebsd Stole, Ky ................ H..
~prt16-Whe&lt;!lng, w.va. ......:.............. A
Aprt19-0tterbeln ......... ..... .. ............... A
-\Pr1112-0hlo Dominican .. ...... .... :....... H
April If-Mount vern.., ....... ....... ......: .. A
Aprt119-Shawnee State .. ........ ............ H
Aprii21-Urbana .. ... ........... ..... .. ...... :... A
April2f-Conconl, W.Va .... :...... ... .. .... .. H
Aprti27- Tiflln ......... .. ,... ....... ... .. .. ....... H
May 1-Marietta ..... ........... .. ...... .... .... . A

Reedsville man opens
fishing lake near -Belpre
REEDSVILLE- James Reed
of Reedsvtlle has opened Cpttllherman's Paradise, a three
acre fishing lake located three
mDes north of Belpre on State
Route 7 at the Intersection with
County Road 3.
Reed advises that currently
tl!e lak~ Is open for tlshlng
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
during daylight hours. Days of
-operat!O!I and hours will extend
to a ' Ml-tlme basis during the
sprtna and summer months.
Since It Is a private facility,
~ says that fishing ilcenses
are not required. There Is a fee of
S6 for ~ hours of flsblng with no
lmlt on tbe catch for adults, and
a reduced rate for children under
12 years of age.

softball t~am

AsslltlngFoote with tbecoacb·
lngdutieswlllbeAqlePackard,
a senior from Baltimore, Oblo,
andaformerplayerfortheteam.
The Redwomen are scheduled
to play 15 doubleheaders, eight of
them at home. Tbebomecontesls
will beagalnstWIImlngton, West
Virginia State, the University of
Char'"ton (W.Va.), MO{eheact_
State (Ky.), Ohio Dominican,
ShaWnee State, Concord (W.Va.)
and Tiffin.
As to the competition, Foote
said Mount VernonNazareneand
Walsh will be the teams to beatln
the conference.
"In the district, you have to
give It to Shawnee Stat~;!, since
they won tlie district last year
and are very strong on pitching,"
he added.
Dille

~

Teresa Whittington

WE REPAIR ALL MAKES
POMEROY, OHIO

ANEW
GETATLEAST

THE 1991 CHEVROLET

TRADE ALLOWANCE•

CAPRICE CLASSIC

ON ANEW SNAPPER

$251

maybe more, on a t9" push

mo.. er. Snapper walk mowers
are built to do the jOb better
and lasllonger. The ,
lightweight t9"
model l'eatures a
short wheelbase
andHi-Vac:

•

•

-Anti-Lock Brakes-New Styling
Air Bag
·- -Sea It Now!

Notwlldwllt..,olwiWUI....
.....,.....,..
m•-••• , no
...... tVry.oftlr .... ...,.

i. Umltant

,.
•

Money 1deas

·Bob.Evans Farms,.Inc~ ·
'

-Driver Side

---........

..

College •

Headley to speak at ·*
Gallia ·s afety banquet ;·~·

992-3524

TRADE ANY OLD MOWER
&amp;CUTVOUR COST

director .

at Southwtem

HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

391 WEST MAIN STREET

r

,• '

·:NOW ON·D/SPLAVI

t

•

,,

M~I~edia
buy major
interest in Cleveland TV station

.Neal new member
of aeaociadon

m

y co.

...........
17 c.t St.

446-IJ7•

·•CHEVROLET
•OLDSMOIU
•GEO

'

\I.

·'·

--- -----

.

�March 18. 1990

Times-Sentinel

7

C:lassifie

•

YardS.Ie

M.-ah 18,1980

11

ALLYMI--11-Iil
OI&amp;N . .: 2:00 p.M.

AdvMos,

11• ' d l f t a . - • w .

tho-~ - - .... oolla .. -

~-. 1:00 .....

Pomeroy,

1 . . . . . . .....
----~~~~~
CluftiJ _ ...- - uu.

45 " Fuml8hed
Rooml

Will ... ........
C::Z"'
a
1--MIII

- l o r - - - ..

.......

a VIcinity

CO~'V Of ... DLIHI -

MONDAY .APIFI

•

-

-

..........
·

I'APEIII

Public Notice

Union. lnc. 1 223 Columboa

Moigo Local School Diotrict R 1 d A h
Ohi 0
.
' t eno,
that oald BA•rd
of Education
46701
....
.
will offer for ule the follow ·
on
March
f
12:00
Noon,28.will1990,
offer at
It ·'" 9 d
I •lsi. roo
. IOCro"bod •• h'cl
and door of ell Uena and En·
public auction, · on tho pro- cumbnlncoo:
ml-. achool groundo bo- 1978 BMW
longing to said boord ofedu- Serial #2392544

°

S.ll1~

The aforementioned vehi·

bury Townahip, Village of clo4il ahall be sold by Malad
PomO&lt;.,Y. Villogo · Lot 82. bid at tho office of tho
Moigo County, State of· CREDIT UNION at 12:00
t~e Ohi,o Company Purch••

recorda o~ Meigs County;
commendng 11 In iron pin

morklng tho
aouthwut
corner of tho First Baptist
Church (Vol. 88 Page 6621
thoncoSouth62dagr-10
minutoo 05 oocondo 45.11
foot to a P.K. Nail. uid P.K.
Neil being the true point of

bllginning; thence South 62

dogr- !0 minu..O 05 aocondo WHt 237.28 foot too
P.K. Nail; ·thence North 26
dogra11 00 minutes OD ae· da W
272 6
-~
· 1 feet
along the lilt line of .t he

con

llooldng

!OUCIIono. ...

tid_
Oh!!t...~·~·
VIrginia,
,,_711.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PUBLIC SALE
·Notice is hereby given by Tho Hocking Volley . Credit

end being a port oftho 2.34
acr~ lot described in Volume
1311 Page 379 of tho Deed

noon on Monday, March 19,

1990

ThMe vehicle( a) shall be

-iloi.dOd
...........
oool and
In - IJaion.
Vlr-

glnlo and Ohio, 304-27~-M~'r.
9 Wa nted t 0 B_uy
;....,.;.:.:.:.:.::.:..:.:..,:::;::......,,.,..,.
Eloctrlc _ . - plrlna. 1141411-2714 aft•I:OO P.'"441-1100.

111101 tor

'i1i41:
liN1
. .

It+.

Pro 1140

0

Employm ent Serv1ces

n&amp;82. Athens, uptothedato

Help Wanted

servn tha ·right to accept or
reject any and ell bids and to

withdraw thou vehldefsl
from oole prior to confirmo•
tlon.
TERMS OF SALE: CASH
or CERTIFIED CHECK or fil'!lncing confirmation at the
time of t he sale.

bar pMsing e Y2 inch reb•r

Terms of sale ere cash end
the board hereby rilaervn
the right to reject any end all

bids. The board ilso atipu·

Public Notice

11

SoMc:e Ro-otlvo ot
bonollclol. ·wa ..... an 1mmodllte _..,nMy lor o org~_nlzed,
dlvklual

•tf.....-mded I,..
1,...,.....
In
developing 0 . ._
1n 0 ..,_
llninclol IOIVIc~
kleno, homo equity I

'"'"*
'"'"*
lnouronce ooloo In
oftloo odmlnlolrotlori•
'.,.
'
ceaaful cand..._ llllat tll'ijop·
challenging WDI'tl, puesee

to-

;:trulonel ltllt II Mnlflclel

. Danis ln.;lustrin CorporatG•on, Hl~ttwevl.· Construction
roup 11 10 •citing quotes

from proquolifiod MBE'a/
DBE's/WBE 's for Ohio Do-

latn that t~ Me•gs Lo~ ' partment of Tre-;'lsP!Jnetion
. ~chool Dlstnct would retain Projects 8003 end 8005
rogh.ts to park ~n !hi grqundl 'Mall quotoi to P. . 0 Bo~

bohind tho budd~ng at footbel.l g.emet and other school .
:lunctoono. Tho board olaa
,lllpulatooto tho buvor that

1722. Dayton, Ohio 4S401.
For more informetion cell
Cliff at: f513i 228 _1225
Ext. 312. Danis lnduotrioo
;the building conta101 11· Corporation it an Equal Op!Jeotos.
.
portuni1y Employer.
.. ~oard of Education of tho MARCH 15 18 1990
Motgo Locol School 0111ne1
•
•
'
:
Jane Fry, .Treaurer
(21 25; 131 4, 11 , 18. 4tc
,.
.~

Public Notice

Announcements

PUBLIC NOTICE

3 Announcements

Notice is hereby givlll that

SUE
WHITE of
•Crown City, Gallia Count\'.
~WILMA

Ohio h• filed her petition in

(he Court of Common Pfo11,
Probate Division,
Gollio
County, Ohio, 'preying for an
9rdar of said Court, autho·

~riling the

A,.1

thot

-

-II Rlan10
doyo.
............
· I eltbll
-tio11ynol•-"""
trar nr I FilliOn. Cil ......,._
17H, lrltlnl-, 10:00AIIIo
4:00 Pll. llilnclor .......
........
only.
•......

PCIIITAL .lOIS
8tort 811A111or. lor _., &amp; op-

....lon ~~~-- ... 111?INUI ......... 0H 112 I
...........
7..
.

__

PCIIITAL .IMCI Joloe. 111a1J

...._
""'-.o:~a­
-lono, Coli (tl .
-

. . . . .1(.

-

F.
:..:....--=."PPS==t"'A:-LJO=as=M-Sta~ 11 111.•1Mr. For Earn and
• .,.,a.,_tlon lntanullon cau
f~iiiii3U157, at. 1:M7. 1 A.ll.
ioiJI.II. (CST)7dlyo,
·

1 oo p
1_
· ca
1: 1

• '-

-

,.jjjjj

=

~lfiO - · •

f1eall::~, t ate

31 Hom• for Sale
2 or s lr J ocm, newly
1Jdu aNlld. Nlol,· on Unoollt
1.14-1112-

r.- . . . . .. ,.

at', ~ IIII'MI\ ·located 1 mile

rof, Nq'd • • , ....

0111 .... Dop

4414411.

44

· LA, F~ 1 I'P, DR,
KM-,&amp; - - ..A, 1 112
Gao Riot ' Coot. Air In-

3 II lpllt -

torRent

I brJ caw houlllooiOdlll: 212
llulbofry Avo. ~ .. IIIII """"""'·
lold
.._
~,. .,.
orIll'
rec.- room.
CoU 114-1111-4111, 114-1112-3431
orl1t •ma.

~~~~~~~~~~~

SPECIAL PUIICHAIE. d - to your lot UIIITID
I'ER. 3

SALES IEP

bod-. 141711 '-'"·
CJIIf.

- do: 40~:r. ·~
~ollt41.l

AP t1.21.
tiO

Troller and .2 toto $11,000.· .,_

-

tor Aoolotnoot - ·
Saito lloniiiO!' 1 T-.ikot
oooltlono In Oalllpollo Wolalll
l - Clinic. c..... oolautod.lnoorno-labla.loncfto: NutrltTon -leal, 111 -

171-TIH.

35 Lotaa Acreage
I 112 . ·ICrll lor Hla, ""'
-I
qlllot, I - .,.__
·=r.-1,
114-444-1722,
FOf -In VlllllfiO o l - lal;
wtth
-uo iond -••nte.
- .
t-.~,~~~~~

llarllyn

FOf - .

T_.,

ly

. .,.

Owlw;

Wnd1d _._
1c age.,
mlnanl
·1n with

t41

..

lnquirloll to P.O.... 121,

-

A-..; Ollie-·

· Giveaway

1 aprlcat P!IOIIIa, 11!010. At. ·1

.,........,..,.
-

· lox 310, Oalllpollli F"!')', ·3
•.m... 0111 Rodmond """'"Eborto

.tl

ioo-.

- IMtl OOIIbocl
In Oolllpollo.
Win
on.
with IOIOM
. _poymont. 11-'1172,

or

ltol-

441-:1324.

Old

owing aot -

CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank ev.eryone who helped in
any way during the ill·
ness and death of our
dear mother. Ruth Ross.
We especially want to
express our gratitude to
Dr. Mark Walker, Holzer
Home Care Nurses, Margie Rife and Lucille
Kunszabo for their love
and care.
Also pastors Archie
Conn and Alvis Pollard ,
First Baptist Church.
Betty Slam
Sunday
School Class for their
visits and beautiful service ; to Tom Kessel and
Jan Duncan for their inspiring
ministry of
music. to the pallbearers who were all special
friends of hers, to Gallipolis
Developmental
Center, Ohio Bell Tele•phone Co. Telephone Pi·eneers. Gallipolis Busioess and Professional
,pomen Club.
Provi, &gt;4ence Missionary B•P'
· tlst Church, · .to ht!
:·{lli&amp;hbon 1nd .lritnds
Third An. and to
; , Wau&amp;ft-Haii.,.Wood Fu' neral Home for their
! most efficient servi~:e.
We 1110 Wlllt to fi.
tend our thinks for the
belutiful flowers, food,
cards. t:rhone calls.
pr.,.,s
love shown
us durlfll tbis difficult
tkit, ~ sull never for·

·on

·r,..,_

.

. . . . . . llonflil &amp;
' liiJ; 1111, Dr. Jot

...........ift-lliw.

J•: IJIIIddtlldr•.

.ar-t·plfJclllldrtR.

l'ound

Lost&amp; Found
ot p,_,., Vlllogo HoH,

pair of . men'o eye glnHil

In

c1111 on WtdnMdly, March 14.
Identity 1t Sontlnll OHice.

FJ.l1 H..r ,......,_, 1
~

fMt

tinct Tundly from Rout. 1•:1,
Pomaray
114-H2a67U.

•ra•.

TWin

elu

mattrw..

I

box

'=' =-:..:t

..r, ....,

Group Practlc•
mlnlllt•
M"NNIMINa·cc~::
-leoo. -an a I
In

..Wilt ... -1o1ary
-to
T.
- Ernplor
no-

::::::-:•nil

'''*•
Cell Amy IIOn-frl, a..m.·
5p.rn. taG 121oa3
-.r

~n ~•H:;-'1:

aprlnge. Queen elze men,.. &amp;
box sprtnga. Coli bofoN t :GO Human relatioN, prabl•• ..._
vine and IINncill met 1D11M1It
PM, 304-IH-3101.
•
roqulroot. muot """ ..

Card of
or will yoaro
5 ,..,. ...
;~~~~~§;~~looOI
- - In -ool-'•101
ollnlar lifting.
i:OMinl .......,.

1714123.

1

12

The family of Claire
Boso wishes to express
their thanks and appreciation to friends and
nei&amp;hbors for all the
acts of kindness shown
durinc the loss of our
loved one.
Thanks to the Rev.
Earl Shuler foi his comforting words, the pall·
bearers. special music,
those who sent cards.
flowers, gave money,
food, also those who
visited
the funeral
home.
·.
We would also like to
tunk the Racine Unit of
EMS. Dr. Hunter, · Dr.
Witherell.
Dr. Mm·
field, entire staff of VI·
!trans Memorilf Hospi·
tal and Linda of Home
Health for htr "T.L.C."
Last. but not least, we
want to thank Russell
1nd Jim of Straicht·
Tucker Funeral Home for
canylnc
out tllllr
friend's fiul PIIPifll·
lion.

lolryolttor - I n . . , -·
-latoty.
Odd
llairro.

~

3

Wife, Children 111d

Grandchllcl&gt;1111

In oontldM•
wllh Hllry roqul- to
£mtllayment onotw, Slrlteglc
- - Inc., P.O. lao - Cho~ooton,

1

WV 25321. EOEIAA

card or Thanks ·

The family of Margaret Priddy sends their
sincere tunks to our
fritnds, nei&amp;hbors, 1nd
relatives for the m1ny
!hines they did durin&amp;
the brief illnns 1nd
delth of our loved one.
·Aspecial thinks to Drs.
Witherell, • Mize. and
EYIAI, Vtftrll11 111110rlll, Holzer
Medical
Ctnter. the
t11111f11
squid, fisher Flllllfll
Homt. 1nd
Rutl1nd

Freewilllllptist Church.
Elt11 Sjlteial thenb to
lltv. Plul T1ylor, llolar
Sten1. Evelyn lloulll
1n~ llnd11 Lon&amp; for tilt
beautiful IIIYice 111d

specl1l .sonp.
God bl•• ett of you,
Hulb1111d, Chllclr111.
Grendchlfdr111

1,1

d

21~. -lflmn. W'l,

WIN ' IIollyolt

21-. .

In "'Y '-'" :104-

Situation
W11tnted

~
.............ndr'o
Alllo
"'cai ifMU-74411.

18 Wanted to Do

Unco1n
'

1171

,.liN ,.-.

2br, i

both,
· rolllg,
- alnkl.
• ......
...,._ po
portlolly'

fumlahod.
larOO118 - -....
·
loti ol ....
· muot
illowod,
11
111,aoo,
wltlbeIll
lor tt.OOO
lnck"/.~!."!"" Contefll Air ""').:

=-~';\,:"n'~
441-0115. .

·1:.*•1·

- ,.,.. '

2

• In

Memory

muc~t.
·~.

Sadly'misaacl by
~ughtaraand

Words can10t express

101'11.

thl GRATITUDE wt fBI

" dlltllofow
wlft/IIOther,
lirJ Fern l ...r. Wt

· Wlnt to •xprna our
.,rKiltklll for your
priJII'I, food, cards,

flown, 11d •0111
support.

God Bltss,
Roy ...,,., &amp; F1mily

-74

ne 1114
5

'
Happy Ada

Slth
Annlverury .
Trldttone
8aptl1t Chareh
Mareh 18th

•..,...•.,•.•.,
3 P.M.

11 · Help Wa,n ted,,

We love you anil
miuyou very

for our 111111y rtlltlvas
llld fritndt wllo hiYI
.... I...,UrtiYI dll'ln&amp;
till illness 1nd r~e~nt

tlulldb4J

..., wllhln

forS81e

In memory of
Hettia·White,
who paaaed away
20 y11srs ago,
March 13, 1970.

1 card of lllankl

!Ji

&lt;, ..,.. · - - l l t. IO&amp;a114-

0

32 Mobile Homes
Wa- In tho Town ol "'"""- a c-. p and
Waole
Wot• ' Ttoabhlld
_..or. 111101 bo willing to

· - llaully .....

3 ta I . , _

....... rurlll•

....., tm
..........
_....

·

l""
"li

-

Loat: Black ahon-holrad !Mia
cat with knotted t•ll. Mlaslng

Men','

129 Undergarments
131 Beer mug
133 Greek letter
134 Roman gods
136~1ava

137 Damp
139 Meadow
140 In-ligation:
abbr.
141 ObeSe

142
143
145
147
.

WO&lt;Id org.
Hostelry
Armed conftlct
Pittsburgh
_1)181'11'

151 Cooling device
152 Emmet .
153 ·Han, ·
155 Obltruct
157 Domesdeal~
158 eo,t;
l591'4~ '
,180 Estrada 10
·, 181 .. -law..
183 Rise and fall
01 OCIIn: pi.
' ~85

,,.,, uiOUI

167 Diphthong
168 Teutonic deity
189Fear
171 Habituate
172 Parle's river.
173 Conductor's atlck
175 Rational
176 Hcilda on property
"117 Chemical
compound
178 Emerald 1118

2. Short jackets
3 Joan Collins
.mlnl-les
·4 Anger
5 C-F linkup
6 TV's Barbara
7 Con-ning
8 Shoohonean
Indian
9 Pertaining to
the.cheek
10 Doctrine
11 Tierra del Fuegan
Indian
12 Hypothetical

Ioree
13 Sly lOok
14 Negative prefix
15 Corded cloth ·
~8 Friends: Fr.
'-'1 7 Choir voice
18 Go aboard
!)rlent Express
19 SWord
23 Siaepl,ngsicknesa
fly .
26 "Heaven's

~"

'.!9 Bodies ol water
32 Food flshft .
33 Saucy
35 Enlisted man:
collOq.
36 Commit
depr8datlons "
37 Draws
40 Warning devices
42 "Soldier In
the_ ..
43 While. HOIJse
· olflce

45 Tracts of waste
land
48 l.arQe bird
.52 Joan 9f56 Occupant
58 "- ol Glory"
59 Having branches
80 National hymn
· 62 Statutory right
83 Negation
65 TantalUm symbol
66 "-, Sealed and '
Delivered"
67 Occurrence
68 Dude •
69 ''YOIJ - There"
71 Tlltad
73 lnltlllad a
phone call
75 "The Week That
"
76 Fem~le sheep·

79 Egger 10
81 XVII x Ill
84 Thai woman
87 Consumed
89 lrrllales
92 Heroic IIVtlnt
93 Drinking _..,;
94 Unit, of Norwegian
currency
95 Lampr"l's
97 Woodet'l pin
98 Gull·llke birds
99 Winter
vehicles
100 Poe-Hd
101 Barracuda
102 Click beelle
. 103 Nahoor siMiep
1Q6 Plnchft
109 Verve
113 Cfh dra115 Malden loved
by Zeus
116 Ms. MacGraw,
e1 al.
119 Haul
121 " Family - "
123 Equal
124 Exit sign
125 Lifted
126 Ridicules
lightly
128 "Fora Ooll!lr&amp; More"
130 Model
•
132 Locks of hair
133 Provide crew
134 Underground
priSQn
135 Hospital
physician , .
138 " All My Children' '
character
141 Novelty
144 Bond nemesis ·
146 Badgerllke
mammal
148 Mollllles
14~ Printer;~ measure
150 Renter's
document
151 More superior
152 Gold symbol
1~ Scheme
158 Kind ol skirt
158 Unuplrated
· 159 Listen to
162 Frull drink
184 Owing
168 Fruit seed
187 Lincoln nickname
170 Babylonian deity
174 Agave· plant

®CANADAY REALTY
. o ••Oif1111'1'n
\

,

.

In Memory

MARVIN
LITTl.E
who died March
18, 1989.

nme" h8111 the peln
BI!V memorlealeat
ff)rever.

THE liMY CAN
HELP YOU Gn
AN .DOl ON

HIGII-TICH
'IUINING.

If you w:m t to p:ec an ad~
un
wmnrr01l•'t 1echn oi! ~IO'
I!Kby. the Army on help. Wt
ufk1' train ing in o\'er

.,

Cl .,

r.

lOU WOULD HAVE TO HAVE A HORSE HERE! OVER 16
ACRES. BARN. JUST AFEW MILES FROM DOWNTOWN GALliPOLIS. THE HOME HAS 4 BEDROOMS. 1 BATH·WITH SPACE FOR A SECOND BATH, LIVING ROOM HAS HARDWOOD
FLOORS, FIREPlACE, NICE DINING AREA WITH BUILT-IN
CHINA CABINET, SlOE PORCH. BASEMENT LOTS OF SPACE
FOR A FAMILY $65.000.

wlfa
Juanita

~. LUMBER

MANAGER TRAINEE
84 Lumber Company, the fastest growing
national lumber chain has career opportunities today. Advancement is rapid and all
promotions are from within. First year
earnings average $20,000-$24,000. Benefits include hospitalization, profit sharing
. and much mbre, If you enjoy acombination
of sales and physical work, have completed
high school (some college preferred) then
you may qualify. No knowledge of building
materials necessary - we'.ll teach. Must be
. willing to relocate within the tri-state area.
lrnmtdiate Openings-Act Now!
See Don Wiron 1--. Mar. ·20, 9 A.M.-1 P.M.

dence ncces~ary to reach yO\.Ir
career gOals.
The furu~ can belong to
you- and Amy tkill1rainin8
can make ic happen.

For more informarion. ca.ll
your Army Recruiter rpday.

446-3343

.

•

•
•'
•

NEW LISTING- POMEROY- This neat home is ready for ·
immediate occupancy . Five tooms with 3 bedrooms, larje
iot, car petin&amp; range and 2 car garage. $14.900.

MIDDLEPORT- Are you looking lor a really neal homew~h
low heating bills at a small price? Th is 2·3 bedroom. l 'h story
home is waiting for you. Call lor appainlment!! $19,500.00.

NEW LISTING - TUPPERS PLAINS - Would you believe
yoo could find a 3 bedroom ranch with full basement in great
condition with that 2 acres yoo want for elbow room'? In·
eludes a heat pump, central air, garage and large storage
shed and lhis one is for you!! $43,000.00.

ANTIQUITY- St. Rt. 338- House and lot - Small house,
small price. rivet view w~h potential of a cabin ASKING
·$5.900.00.

NEW ~ISTING- POMEROY- Nice neighborhood, 4 bed·
1oom home. sliding glass doors in living room . oak trim wood·
work. carpel in&amp; air condi.tion1n11. apt. over garage lor rental
or workshop. ~nd much more'! $42,900.00.

-

NEW LISTING--MIDDLEPORT -1978 Modular Home sit·
t1ng on 2 lots in town. 2 car garage. N.G.F.A. heal, garden
area. also has self contained AIC un~: All appliances go with
house. $39,500.00.
POMEROY...:. Commercial Building. start your own bu siness.
On Main Street. $37,500.00.
ANTIQUilY- One story home with 3 bedrooms. and coai
l~rnace. Would make a great summer place, has 31ots. in- .
eluding riv" lrcintage. $11.000.00. ·

JUST A FEW MINUTES FROII TOWN - BRICK R~NCH. LARGE
FAMILy HOME 4 BEDROOMS. EQUIPPED KITCHEN HAS RANGE,
REfRIG .. DISHWASHER. TRASH COMPACTOR. DISPOSAL, FULL
BASEMENT WITH REC. ROOM. ATTACHED GARAGE PlUS
1n40' GARAGE/WORKSHOP. GAS FURNACE, CEN" AIR COND.
ONE ACRE LOT . UNBEATABL€ PRICE, $65.000. DON'T WAIT,
CALL NOW'

RUTlAND ~

One lloor plan with 3 bedrooms. 1\$ bath, dining area, large ievel yard. garage an d wood shed. REDUCED
$32,500.00.
'

.

· POMEROY- Older 2 story home, gorgeous woodwork, lire·
place. nice kitchen cabint!ls. 3 bedrooms. equipped kitchen,
central air, garage and storage. $39,900.00_.
MIDDLEPORT - A home to be proud ol!! This neat 3 bed·
room ranch w~h modern k1tchen. )arRe familY r~ . and ~n·
closed rear poittt on a large lot wruld be you r prtde and lOY
because of all tHe comfort it oHe~sii OWNER WANTS AN OF··
FER. $36.900.00.
~
CHESTER- NEW HOPE RD. - Anewer double wide. 3bed·
room, 2 bllh home. on over an acr e lot. Electric FA. h·eaf,
rural water and cable TV. Call lor appomtment to see this
one. $31.000.00.

,.

I-~·

'JAY DRIVE. JUST OFF RT. 35.3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH RANCH
HAS NICE fLOOR PlAN. ATTRACTIVE FOYER, VERY UVEA·
, BLE FAMILY ROOM. KITCHEN AREA WITH FIREPlACE. ALSO
OPENS ONTO OUTOOOR PATIO, DECK AND POOL EXCEL·
LENT. VIEW OF SURROUNDING AREA FROM DECK. 2 CAR AT·
TACHED GARAGE. ATTRACTIVE HOME. EXCELLENT lOCA·
TION. CITY SCHOOLS. $65.000

LONG BOnOM- 6 room cabinsittlnJon l'tl acrewith a view . POMEROY- S.R. 33- One acre building on mobile home
of the Ohio River. Newly remodeled, carpet, electric heat, ref. , lots, water and electric available. Land contract with $500
and range. $21 .500.00.
• down, 15% interest for a5 year term, Monthly payments of
$107.06 on balance of $4,_500. Total price $5.000.00.
LETART- 15. mins. to Ritchie Bride. 7 room house, 3bed·
MIDDLEPORT- 2 story brick hOme on 2 lots. with 4 to 5
rooms. I bath. carpet throoghout. tar ge kitchen, living raom;
bedrooms, 2 ~ baths, wood floors. N.G.F.A. furniCle. Garage
din fng room. Patio. Gas heat and hot water heal. 2 car ear·
' and 15'x25' storage shed. REDUCED $47.900.00.
age. $29.90000 OWNER WILL TAKE PAYOFF.

Apply ~t: 84 LUMBER COMPANY
Route 2
Gallipolis Ferry, WV.

44

CHECK THIS CUSTOM RANCH. 4 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS, ;
EAT-IN KITCHEN. FORMAL DINING ROOM. LARGE LIVING .
ROOM WIIH FIREPLACE AND fRtN GH ODORS OPENING
ONTO SIDEPORCH. COZY DEN WITH FIREPlACE, LARGE LOT
WITH RIVER VIEW. $85,000.

·.

..

ch:l.iltnp;in~ . "peci:llties

could put you un the fast tro&amp;(k
10 the futu~.
The Army offers a lot more
lhllr't jun . hiAh ~ rech l\lcilli.
Wdl train you on ' sme·of·
equipment, but
more imponant. ""'II help
you gain tM n .ptricnce,
lcnowkdge and srlf-confi·

'

Sadly milled by

.

.

446-3636J\t~

in Typing, Filing.
FULL nME EMPLOYMENT
'
BENEFns·

R811Estall
wamed

..

w•lk-in uton IMt UIM a

-llo REDKEN, NUXUI, PAUL
MITCHELL Ia 1011!11!1
LOST I month old Ceme, 1111111, filM I fPort-tlnill ..,..._ to 1o1ft
Soblo, .....,. Ia Blncl~ Flrot our wiMing tMmf W.'rw
9treet .,.., 304-171-5231 .
looking far' talantool, thuoiUtlc otyllot - hove tho
Lodv Picked-Up 0roy a_..._, clleire
to ._m In ldwanoe. W.
at llcoan.ldli, ,._.. l"'lum.
114-441-G112.

..

, eomee bac:lc

Experience~

· Cut Iron.

Card -of

6

POSITION
AVAILABLE IN
MEIGS·COUNTY

USED APPLIANCES Dr0V0i1 cradM.I 011.0111 -~~
W.ahon, dl'foro, reJrlgorltoro, Md. Opon t A.ll. to 1 P.ll. lion, •
rong10 . Sica- Aoillonon, thrvSat. CoU114410122
Upfiar Rlvor Ra. Booldo Slone
CNIIIIotat. Coli 114-448-7311.

OOOD

RECEPTIONIST POSITION'
NOW AVAILABLE,·

·I -..tho old opottld moll mutt.
1 black oyo, OIC h•Mh and dlo-

pooHion, 304-175-2320

E;xpanding product line - HV.DROTEX
a multi-million dollar National Lubrice- .
tion Co. saeklng· additional .aalea peraonnel to call on Commercial 8o Agri·
c;ultu·ral ·a ccounts it'l ' Ga.lli8 8o Meigs ·
countie• and surroundinQ irea. If you
desire auccesa - are aggre11ive and
aeH moti'!f!ted. We have .High Commis·
alona 8o BOIIuaea. P.rQduct Trillnh'lg: N,o ·.
Ovar-night travel. . ·
·
··
cai11·800-999-4n2 . j
· for an interview. ·
H:YDROTEX

linton~.

No IUWtUNI
on JM
WI '] II ....
OIOIOin
_
_

~~-,-:---::-......:;.,-....,­

Apartment

~.v.n.,..
- · 114,100.
107 - 114-441Drl..
....

:=:.::...~=._ .:::~::.
AVON • AH ...... Call

IWD ....

....

Cololegl

llpolls, Ott 4513\.

4

....,..,G..

~lallono,
c. ~T":;; - ,All

atuo

Pllool.

•

=·.,.~·.:ru·=~~OO

•

High ..- . Plq... Ott 411M.
AVON I All .lroao I lhirloy
Spoaro, :104-171-1.21.

Slngl•

---------1
Thanks
eu-tt:z.ft4o.

•

t,_

""·

oh•ge of her

.,omo from WILMA SUE
WHITE to WILMA SUE
. l'ACKETT.
caH
No.
-~9.304. Sold Petition . wil
eomo on 10&lt; h~ kofore
pldCour!onAptl 18; 1190
•t.10:00 o'clock A.M. 1lle
Court Ia 1 - 11t 'Gal hoi
'County Courthouoa, 12 LO:cult Street. GalllpOiit. Ohio
·45831 . . •
Thom11 ·s. Moulton
•
Probate Judge / Clerk
March 18
'

_,_ Coonpony . . train. . . .
tlnfj .., 81,- ~ - h lor

..

...1c queltly Wuv• 304 112.21145.
tor
meenlnaful
relatloMhlp. Confidential. Wilte:
Hurt...rr:h, P.O. Box 1043, Gl.~

'**''

llyoftl.
No·. ....
. ...·
......
tlnoo ...

·.-. ltort It ltUtlllr.
, _ _ &amp; :!f':~-1on lnlo.OIII
slve bono!Ha poclilgo. For
p!Ompl -aldl Ilion~ - · T ~ lo.m~ Op.IO, t.al-T·
call. JOHN T. BRUNTON
2tH, Ill. tot.
114-448-27U
~~~;i;~idY"!!
M~rl ·
At Ill Dl 1:11 11c1r to a1er ....

1-1:30p.m.
Box 418
Sliver Brldao Piau
OalllpoUo, OH 41131
Equel Oppottuntty EmplaJII Jll..

10 A!IIO
13 Three Rlv8nl
Stedlum player
19 Withdrew from
business
20 Schad. abbr.
21 Flnfah
22 lngredl..l
24 Make amends
·25 Actor Marshall
27 - Paeo, Texas
28 Sodium symbol
29 Exist
·
3D Liquid measures
31 Plays on words
32 Break SUddenly
3-1, l\4aJure
36 Mama's partner .
38 Painful
39 Fed. agcy.
·'· 40 Carney ID
41 Large tree! of
land
44 Hopkins 10
46 "Brother -"
•1 - garde
48 G..ldo's high note
49 Baseball stat.
50 Storage room:
abbr.
51 Hyson
53 Sanford 10
54 0·T linkup
55 Beer ingredient
. 57 Mr. O'Neill
59 Ba8oi •
60 Sandarac tree
· 61 Neon symbol .
, 62 Rolled tightly
64 P""'lnlng to
birth
66 Seize suddenly
68 Dlslant
10 French painter.
1840-1926
72 ScOttish cap
73 Trench dug lor
drainage &lt;I I t
. 74 1/enerlllon
•.
7'7 Anglo-Saxon ·&lt;'
money
78 -·American Wiu
80 Lands
82 Dog's loot
83 Writes
85 Mar.n birds
86 Climbing plants
87 Church part
88 Tal.90 Hines/Davis film
91 Moon vehiCle

WOU'I'T~- '
Unltl, From

COrt•irwollil -

Pii.... 11'4..1L ~ ful

:::..~~:;..~:;.;,;;~-"""'!

,.._, GISI M

I

qul~a.

- - - - - - - - -- 1lta~lng
ollor on otlroctlve
o!ytlng
oalary &amp; 1 .... _ . .
LEGAL NOTICE FOR
ODO
T PROJECTS

Renta ls

-.. . . --oi-·- -- t-

-··

7 Alcoholic

for Rll:lt .

2 · ·~rtiDIDM

12 Summer: Fr.
13 Slldt logelher ·
116 Dftectlon
811 IAen-fo .
10 i 8quahclers
104 Swfsa canton
105 Bo~er Norton
107 Expire •
108
WIHiam,
. Prince
'
e.g.
109 Slender ~nlal
. 110 EleCtrified
1 partlcfe
11 1 Footllke part
112 Narrow opening
114 E-..porated
• 118 Alh sauce
117 New Deal agcy.
. 118 Latin conlunctlon
~20 Fireplace part
. 1~2 Bow
123 Reel estate map
124 King 01 Bliahan
125 Burton 10 .
"127 ·"-Mice and

, Dwatl

42 Mobile Holl'l81

Filly.~·J Ia Will ...... lllllldlll:f;
- • fulrMIJJd ....... l
iilorRt, •
ffom H11
_. .. WY, .....,._
112'11.
•

Qui"•

plied or ..proooad warran·
16001 State Rt.'

.

T~

101111, -

d

311-1303• •

tin. TheaevehlcleCI) may be
1een at the Jim' 1 Body

of tho ule. ,
THE HOCKING
VALLEY
CREDIT UNION, INC .. ra-

1174 Klllcw'

JLtnk Clrll wllh Of wlthoul
moloro. Coli ~ry Llvoly 114-

Any -Mion.
Cash Pekl. CIU 114112 1117 01
114-112-2411.
.

Shop,

W.ouoito ""'- Oldar ..0... with
•.,.. or...., er·1 lleo
llaftll w .Ia I n c:-.!J. 114-

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

VOdiyoM-•oooh- . .

·'

DOWN

" AC~S

a . t o1

"AS IS" without any ima

oold to tho highoot bidder

.

.

Wlntor Aorctlon llrvlal, 11 yn

Goad , _
golf clui;MI.

bode • .,. - -

or bait ~ lutl • -

draworchootMt.--o
I, 1,110 gun. -~
13!1 I 145. Bod - -...1,
Ouoon Sla 135 • lilne For a. .., Whlrpool •lr cand., 1 $50.
Qood . .llctlon of ti dMMft
112 ton '-vy duty, 1200,1Vn an eultN,
.._...
a••lilt..
220. Call 304-t7f-4042 oftor 5 hood- 130 and up to . .. ·
p.m.

lluplna rooma wtth ~ ·
'1110 trollar opooa. All --upo.
Call ..... 2:00 p.m., J04.77J.
• t, Muon WY.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

.... .

Grace Chun:hproportyiVol. MARCH 15, 18, 18, 1990 goad COIMIUnicltlono oldllo, &amp;
28Paga13andVoi..38Pago
lilvo tho abllltv
and
7.241 to a paint; tllonco
apply
=•+"'-!alva
t....,lng
pnlgi"'IM
to perfwft'l 8UQo
North 61 degr09
coosl\ll!y In -~ ...... colloaminuteo 29 oocondo Eut
llano, &amp; odolilnlotrotlon." . Toke
221.42 feat to a V. inch ro- - ' - - - - - - - - - l t h l a -'"lillY to join tho
4.10 foot; thence South 29
dogr- 62 minutes 47 socon ds E011 314 · 48 f Httotho
boginning containing 1.530
acre more or lou.

'*'

$11, linn .... ,.nil .... oola 12711 • up, l9nfl .,.., 4

=--.. . - . . .
n-

Public Notice

10, Townohip2Rongo13of

Doolls•tQuplo
$COOl up, bunll: bMe
5' t•
wtlh mott- 1211 IIIII liP to
-

a Auction

Ohio, •nd being in Fr•ctkJn

-h.
. , _ Oalllo

Hlllel.l1t••••·

Rick Pea.- Alctlon COr f •I

c:etlon and 1Rueted in

ol

c-to=:

Nf5. lloc- · - .. 1171" - 121 .. 8111. 1101 and up
Wood
table ...
to 1711-

. . . . boby

SUNO,t, v lilt.ltlll

the Boll'd of Educ•tion of

Solos and ~ PIIID - · T - SIO onof up
to 1121. tlld• • t 1 1210 to

Public Sale

8

'THUIIIIOAV ltAfi'IEIIil
~IHDAV

---

L.l\'NE'II'URNITURE

•

lft.......... ., ••••

Mlclcllepon

TUESDAY PAPER
WIDfllfiCAY JII&amp;JIII!R

44 · Ape biWIII
for Rant

- . -114 • • • ••
. Droe ....

Fri*L::::w
......
. ....,. .. 2:10

• The Area's '
Number 1 Marketplace

__ .. __

-..
0.,~0...­
..........
11.11,
. . _ •• ...,
t UIL • 1:• ~~ 1,.._10.

Apartment

torRent

POMEROY- 2 lots with possibilities!! Septic and elec. available. Lois of shade trees. $3,000.00.

POMROY- LOCUSI sT.- Old fiame hou5110n 40x120 lot.
$5,000.00.
•

CRAll. UIDI COIIIOMI.UIIS
IIOWIOOIIIIG IISIIYAIIOIIS

POMEROY - 5 acres. vac1111t ground on lop of a hill near
lown. Great location for house or trailer. $3.900.00: .

POIEROY - Ooublewide trailer, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. cat·
pet. F.A. elec. heat. Built-in corner cabinets and bat m
kitchen. Ready to move into. $34,900.00.

OCUI • I.IYIIN . .CI

lllDOLEPORT- Here is a lot 60d13. You can set2traileri
on and have a good rental income. Has electric, water and

2 c.-o• I "IS OYIILOOIING

2 BII.'IJ 2 bethl. lleepalht. King alia beds, jacuul
In maiUt' beth. outlkll .ewlmmlng. pool. Naif
"Roauurent Row" • Golf Cou,_,
Summll' welkly rat•- 11100. (UO dl-unt for
aarly booking with deposit Nld prior to March
111th.l(t211 tllioflunt for Nrly booking with d81'0111
prior to Aptl 11th-1
·
·
lpealll Spring IIIIM lloo Avallalola.

:

sewer.

.,

POMEROY- Commercial site. Excellent locllion. All utii~ies
available. Ask tor more dela~s.

HEIIRY ( ..CLELAND ...................................... .992-6191
JEAfl TRUSSELL .................. .:........................ tt9-2e80
.10 HILL ...... ,; .......................:.................... ...:985-~
. lA£ HUPP ......................... :..........................949-2257
OFFICE ......................................................... 992·2259

'

c-.11 "" ..._col Shlppl, 1111.

L.!S!!SS~.Iuc~-~·!'llce!!=-;:!Wi!!!JP~II~"·~Oh.~-;:!44!!':!·2~20~·..:.·j

•
~

.'

.•

'IIIDDLEORT- Nice street, 2 story home w~h 3 bedrooms.
dining room, vinyl sidin&amp; concrt!le front porch and storage
buildtng. PRICE REDUCED $18,500.00.

'

CARPnll - 4 bedroom, I\\ story hame wdh 11111e on
app•. I acre lot. Shed, workshop, and root cellar. •
16.000.00, .

s

WillED untNGS ··

1

~~;~~ CREEK ROAD - 3 BEDROOM RANCH, FULL BA·

ATTACHED GARAGE. PULLMAN TYP£ KITCHEN
;;\Jit!ii:O.,)RAHG£•. REFRIG. AND DISHWASHER,
"'
ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP, CENTRAL AIR

$49,900.

Pltm 3 1£11110011 IAIICH WITH ATTACHED GMAGE.
CENTRAL AIR COND .. LOW COST GAS HEAT AND EVEN AT
THE LOW PRICE. OF ..5.000 THE wASHER AND DRYER,
RANGE AND REFRlG. AND DISHWAStiER ARE INCLUDED!
LOCATED ON JAY DRIVE, JUST A ~ MINUTES FROM
HOLZER HOSPITAL
.
filAR RIO ORAIIDE"- 3 BEDROOM. 2 BATH HOME HAS
FAMILY ROOM, NICE DINING ROOM, KITCHEN EQUIPPED
WITH RANG AND REFRtG.. BATH OFf MASTER BEDROOM
HAS GARDEN TUB. VINYL SIDING. ONLY 4 YEARS OLO. lOT
IS GENTLY SLOPING, LOTH~ BEAUTifUL TR£ES. $49,900.

THIS tS OIIE BIG HOUSt! BIG KITCHEN. BIG liVING ROOM~ .
BIG FAMILY ROOM, BIG DINING ROOM. BIG BEOfl!lOMS. Blli •
PORCH. ONLY THE PRICE IS SMALL $38,000. LOCATED IN '.
MlDOlEPORT.
·
lOVING TO THE CIT'fl THIS HOME ON UPI'£R SECOND :
AVENUE IS WITt«lUTAOOUBT THE BEST8UYONJHEMAR· •
KET. 2 StORY FRAME HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS, KITCHEN lS :
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE AND REFRtG. •MPLE DINING SPACE. GAS BUDGET tS ONLY $~1.00 MONTH. NICE LEVEL :
BACt\ lAWN. JUSt $35,000. CHECK IT DUll
SMAll FJI - MODERN 3BEDROOM HOlliE HAS lARGE
FAMILY KITCHEN .AND liVING ROOM. DEN. 1.316 SO. n.
LIVING AREA, 2 CAR CONCRETE BlOCK llARAGE. OVtR 9
ACRES MOSTlY PASTURE. K'1GER CREEK SCHOOLS.
$52,000.
1

�'•

Page--0-4-Sunday Time&amp;-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleuant. W. Va.
51

8

Household .

Public Sill
&amp; Auction

Goode

54 MI-.IIIIIIOUI
Merchllldl..

-a:=
. . . . .....

58 Pete for Slle

58

March 18. 1980

Petl for a.te

M.U.1

- --- ........AKC5-Ipoidol
, ..-·-___

PUBLIC AUCTION

llh!r

......

---

~.

Antique walnut dresser and chest of dra"!ers, antique desk
telephone, brass kettle, depression glasswa re, coffee
grinder. oil lamps, several old picture frames, copper teapot.
what·npl shell w/ pockets. iron skillets, antique 5 leg dining
table, several lamps, f1gur1nes, floor lamp, juice g1assses, old
b«loks, Carnival glass. pieces of Rosev~te. Hull and McCoy,
old. coffee cans, honey ji!f, decanlors, pair of end tables,
ant~ue chair. cuspidO/. old throw rugs, bedspreads, cur·
lams. and many other antiques. collector's items and miscel·
laneous 1tems.
Terms: Cash

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Roger James, Owners

(DO "Of HAVE TO BE A
. VETERAN TO QUALIFY)

Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256·6740
for Accidents or Loss of Property

·s

Living ·room IIUH• I1Qiwk.,
Nlvel rocker 13.50/Wic, dlnnetta/4 chalrt $7.50J!'k.1 bunk
Hde, cofnpletl I1UIWIL, Law
cOli cnh prlceti •val.-... VI' At
Furniture. Rt. 141 , 4 miiN. Open
7 dl)'ll I wMk, Mon. thru Sit. I
a.m.•• p.m.;
12 NQon .. tli
p.m. l1,....46-3111.

SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNrTUFIE. 12
Othtt·St., G•lllpolll. New I u..d
fumHure, hN11rl, Weatern &amp;
WOrt&lt; boola. 61 ,....c&amp;-31 st.
Smotr hutch 175. UYII!II , _
IUHI, coftei tlbte. .nil t•b..
1125. All IIO"d cond. :101-1712213.
2 c:halrt, &amp; ottomon, IIO"d
$1511; 814-448-2310.

ITEMS ALREADY
1.972 HAVALINE Travel
Trailer, Ford Dump True~ AKC Reg Treein g Walker Female ,
Pedigree out of Ntght Champion Stock, 2 Beagles, Lawn
Mower. Oynamark 10 hp. Ridin g Mower, Roto Tiller, New &amp;
Used Furn~ure. Tools, Plu s Lots of Misc.

AUCTIONEER: COL W. KEITH MOLDEN

Mullcal

•

Lie. in Ohio #4318 &amp; WVA. #863
Now Booking Spring &amp; Summer Sales
Cash
Pos. LD.

' ' ~.

55

.

PWIOCARE

Aegulor ....,.. lllfll!lgo oon to.
·
rt I INIIIII ate P" lhan

Silppllel
........ lorloll, -

-

Aro

241-1121.

Clltando,

. )/,'?~~trn (~ Q};,l(t,(
'· /f,f'tr
n I cr) .J~rtIt·

car ~p~a:r:~ki~n:g:~m·~~~:~

56 Pets tor Sale
AKC Alg'd le~~tla Pupe. - ·
old, 100; Aloo, 2rlr_,_~ .......
ta fit 1ny ti\ICIIIi., ..0. "114-4412711.

G:r m
"""''"'
1 111
"'"
"

L..J::I

REALTOR'
RUI!fiNTIAL · INVI:STMENTS · COMMERCIAL - FARMS

23 LOCUST ST.

...

1
1.11 acre lot
I basement with 2
building Also; mbb1le home hookup at rear of lot
schools. Priced at $33,000. VA w111 finance to q~a~ifie(j
buyer with $1 ,000 down payment for 30 years at
rate of interest ·APR 130 yrs.ll0.12'l\.
For mcire iolormation or to view, contact Wiseman
Real Estate Apncy, 446-3644, Property Manacerfor
the Admi~lstration of Veterans Affairs.

OH can 11+-

'

1

win-

- · 11n1-..... ct.u&lt;~~l Win·
~-

llolvtoeo

Flllll -~ 114-ta-7, MHI

BUilding

'

446-6806

f.,rm Supplt0',
&amp; I IV'"•IOC'

~1174

Keuword\

WE'IE GIVING
times do you gel
Owners will give yu ,
lit when you purchas~
spacious bedroom
home on city schods. Features mclude large livmg
room wrth hrep~ce, attractive kitchen and dining
area, den or play room and 2 bath s. Over 2.5acres
including large garden spot I car garage. Pr ~e
has been reduce&lt;! to $53,900. Owner s want it
sold' Call us now, don't hesrtate. this great deal
won 't last'
'· '
#402

o141-7SI.

52 Sponlng Goods
EKorcloe

Equl_.: T-lar,
Roman Ctt•lr, LCM Back-Abo

domon UnK I Rowing -lno,
New Condftton. 114--188-4241.
Oototr..

"

DAIRY FARM
HOLSTEIN DISPERSAL &amp; MACHINERY AUCTION
Located: From Pt. Pleasant, WV. approx. 11 miles,
take Sand Hill Rd. to Sassafras Rd. (follow auction
signs to farm).
95 Holstein-interstate tested &amp; precnancy exami·
ned-to sell at 12:00 noon!
This dairy herd is on DHIA test, has 16,000 lb. plus
rolling herd ave. (50 cows, 3 years and under) nice
young herd!
· 62 COWS- bred heifers -14 yearlings • 8 heifer
calves from 6 wks. to 6 mos. - 4 dry cows.
'NOTE: CATTLE TO SELL AH2:00 NOON!
"TRACTORS"
John Deere 4020 wtth turbo, diesel. wrth cab; John Deere
4020 diesel w1lh WD front end: John Deere 3020 with wide
front end, 610 Bobcat loader.
"EQUIPMENT"
4-16 JO sem i mt. plows, JD 3-16 pt. plow, JORW 12' disk
AC 4 row no till planter wrth liquid tanks, Century 500 gal.
sprayer !with hydraulic driven pump), John Deere #10 side
mt. mower. NH 489 haybine, NH 258 Rollabar hay rake, NH
315 baler, Super 717 NH chopper, NH 718 chopper with 2
row wide torn head, 121 NH one row corn heads lor Zl7, 121
JH 1065 A flat bed wagons, NH #8 crop carrier silage
wagons, 7' J.O blade HO w~h hydraulic angle, 350 Killbros
grav ity bed, NH 28 Whiri·Heed blower. Nl manure
spreader, N12 row corn picker with sheller tf~re damage) , Nl
311 2 row corn picker wolh 8 roll bed, 18' 7" 8300 JO all
grain wolh grass see;der drill, Mayr.ath 24' &amp; 32' ele:iators,
Knight 712 manure spreader, NH grass heat, 15·5·38 snaP·
· on duals, Gleaner E combine w~h grass head, pull type AO
combtne wrth auger head . NH Flail spreader. AC, 4 row 3
p'oint cuttivators
"TRUCK"
1973 Ford wnh 14' dump. 55.000 act~al mites.
AUCTIOIEERS NOTE: Equipment sells promptly at
10:00. Cattle Sflls promptly at .12:00 noon.
V«Y lew small ~ems! 8t on time!!
• RefTtshlllents Stntd
T•~ns: Cash DIY of Sale
liCIIIIII 111d Bonded in Favor of the Stile of Ollio I WV.
"Not Rls~nslble for Accidents or Loss of Property"

6

OWNER-JOHNNIE F. McDERMIT
Auction To Be Conductld by:
DAN SMITH-AUCTIONEER

last Vlralnla 515
(614) 941-2033
For Attendin&amp; Our Salas"

....,h

lfN. Wootorn oockloo
ot S1M ond up. 4-H
10.. ott. Ar.o ol»w
-hlna. b.aolo, looto. Ylta and

t534. ALL BRICK 4 BIROOMS- NOT JUSTA GRACIOUS HOMEA WAY-OF Ll FE- Chaomtngall br ick ranch, lg I&gt;Won! rroi./wdimng
area, 4 bedrms .. 2 lull baths. newcarport, k"chen, utolily rm .. also 1
car aUached garage with aut anatic door. Located in Sunk1st V1llage.
You mwy see this home tcx:lay and buy lor everlasting comfort. City

high

....

tiiUIOr'Conloccopled. II ..... ·

BROKER.·446-0008
.,

Evano • ..... Spotna
Utility TIM -

-

~

scho~.

Estate

TOWN,. IEAUTifiiL VIEW - 1260. sq ft.
home offers kitchen, living room, 3BRs· FR 21
fireplace, attache&lt;! garage, workshop' ·and a
12&gt;60 mobile home t~at would be ideal for
mom or rental. Call· for rriore details.

Sill; II' 2 cor toouror1
a$1.215; ,.
HHiolioro
TIOIIor

-----·
a re:1her

~1ct

... 1ft ICoalt. 114Opon M-rt lo.m.-

t ..... II

44~-~IIIZ

- -·-

llp.OI. Bat lo.m.•3p.m.

'•

.

Fw sa1o • liew Hoi- ·r
hlylllno. Hollontl Ort-.-

............ .....,....
~

lollornotlonol 1011 tully IOodod,

wlr'lidtar.,w/&lt;lualo.lll-3'71-23'10.
...... - · &amp; wwjghlo
J;l). llolory - · 2 amitY

WlgOM, 1 hl&amp;,":lon, eft N.H.
ltlcillw'1 TNator, J.D.
10110 Corn pta-, J.D. 4 111-. cun~m-. 400 Dol.
-lor lulk Tonk, 20ft~Potz Untoldor, N.H. . ...,.

RT. 35- CLOSETO
.
-Attractive home'" a
nice n~ghborhooo offers 3 Ms, . bath,
equipped krtchen, LR, dinette, fireplace, new
carpet. 2 car attached garage. gas heat and
central air.

ATTRACTIVE OLDER HOllE iN THURMAN$34,000-1650 sq. ft. home,offers4 BRs, LR,
kitchen, bath, 2 FP-s, unattached garage. satel·
i~e dish, vinyl sidi~' •
live

lr-.

ACRES- Good buildin g s1te. Waler tap. E&gt;c ellent for
mobi.le home. Ctty schools. Not restricted .
1.240 ACRES More or Less Some woodland. Not res·
. tricted E&gt; cell ent building site. Only $4,000.
2.150 PLUS- Not restricted. Hannan Trace School Ots·
trict.
SPRING IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER - Now is 'the
time to lake a look at this well kept home. 3 bedroom s, 2
baths, living room, family room, complete kitchen wrth
appliances, 2 car gara~e. Nice Hat yard, easy to mow.
Also top of ground swimming pool. City schools. Price&lt;!
60's.

I:OO.S:OO woolullya,

....., ,.,UIDfl MF·12 aquarti

'

,,,·""""·

...... FMnf!fiiMl"ii:R· 35,
Oolll _
II
..m;
WldetiiiCt
new&amp;u.clt.nn
lractDI'W &amp; lmpllmentL luy,

-51? acres more or less.
I bui .
. secluded and prestigious nei ghborhood.
ol the better locations. Ower/ Agent

.Ltlft-,

'

.

24x30

"PI'-.

1'14SIIII41.

0111,

-

· t'/00.

a.--.-.-oolhftorllp.m.

-

lont

lumlohlngo. All In oxcolo
-.!Kion. Aioo boat lor

Nle. 114-912-QU Iller 8::10

p.m.

Mlood hoy lor oaro. Squoro
batoo.,_1_~!- Willey Jeop; 1118t1
Food """""'' 114-3711-2150.

Ponallle tlahlod Morquto olan
W!O; Non-Tightod $11111. FREE

l.tt.,./ct.llv•!J. PlutH:- letterll

147.50 boo.
ANYTIME.

HAVE YOU ALWAYS WAITED A BEAUTifUL
HOME ON FIRST AVENUEl - Make plans to
view this home which offers 2 baths, large LR
wrth fireplace and view of river, L·shaped
kitchen, formal entry, FR. summer porch,
lovely lawn on river.

PRICE REDUCEOI-11 you havebeen
for a home that will give vou room to
out this is 1t Features in this· home are
eq'uipped kitchen, formal dinin&amp; den, lovely
living room with fireplace. dinette, bath, 3
BRs. The full basement is finishe&lt;l and offers
bath, laundry, roomy, attractive family room

. SPLENDID HOME AND lUi ACRES, 11/L _ ,
Spacious ranch style home featur~ 3-4 BRs12
baths, equipped krtchen, FR, DR, LR, fireplace,
carpel, heat pump plus wOQ(I. central heating
system, a11 cond., 20x45 pool, unattached gar·
age. Th1s could be just· the one lor you il you
' want privacy and space.

lnJ!,
no. . Nw
- ·..,...
llvo
hfdrotla,
qulak
cUDDIII!II
..... 2 - - · 14" :r pcilnt
ljltcll, I" llctde to.r - · 3
p!Dinl httcft, 114 - llot.

Wllr

wiOta ... . . . - ......
~ • .., 0 Brillion pidoor
olidor I II tM!!/300, 8 ft 3

t&gt;Oinl

llllch

•

11,150.

I(Mionl - · centor, St. Rl.
~ Polnl Pl-nl and Rlploy

Ari:Phono.- 7 4.

WI;....

Tralllrs,

LJr-;wlualt

••-· wv. 304-m-3447.
~g
Livestock

HG0-533 34J3

•
• lEW LilTING

I,..,

Beautiful couriry home 10 Langs·

pu-.

room s. LR ., D.R. elt·m ~lichen. One
car gar1ge. Good btJv in m1d 20's.

311oa. btackAnauo lull•,
Olct.l14 3M 181Q •ft8r 3p.m.

a.y
gooto,
nulllllno, no po-. taD .....,.,

VIlle, 117 story home with 3 bell·

NEW LIITttiG
30376 iUIMl HILL RD ..
IIDDLIPOIIT

Real mce one stor~ t'rome. 3 bedrooms. bath. LR. kitchen. new roof.
Leadm~ Creek wll:rr, sl!l"age bldg.,
good. vtew, a great buy in the low

20's

Itt Ill 1111 .,..,4p.m.

SWIIIIIING POOlS' 11111. -

loftovortVII1l- pooto..Hugo
1h31' ...... Incl.- clock,
ftnee, nfl• &amp; --.t:y. lnstat.
latlon &amp; llnonclng oval-. Coli

241n : 1~.

.'

.THIS COULD BE THEONE FOR YOU!- Very
attractive home soluated on 1.9 acres. Features include 3 BRs, LA, kitchen, 2 baths, full
basement, gas heat, carpet and hardwood,
utility bid~

.r: .. .... .
¥

~·

ETHIS YOUR CHANGE OF ADDRESS! ...:.
Attractive home just minutes from town offers
1368 sq. ft., 3 BRs, 2 baths, eat·in krtchen, di·
nette, family room. living room, laundry,
cathedral ceilings, fenced yard.

IIAY BE IN'YOUR PRICE RANGE- Very nice
home offers 2 BRs, LR. k~chen, bath, attached
garage. ~mall hot house, concrele block shop,
Corner lot

ono, ayr,
bullllonlw
lor - d.· Hotf
..-,
IIIIIoldluolf
Ap- . ........ l • t a . . 1100. 114-1,4N421. '

..

Pure- ·-alloul!, 1200
l(ounclo, and Zrl' old ......,. all
~ 114-1111 11114
'-tina &lt;1IOIIod
bodl.
WllglllliO lbo. 114...2-7411.

H...,_.

D. C.

Metal Sales,

Inc.·
C_,nolloutg, Inc. 4?518
Specllll&gt;lng In Polo

m-

luldlngo.
Dooigned lo
your
noodo; Any olro.

CHOICE OF 10 COLOR I

FREE ESTIMATE on
pool bldgo. ond pockogo
dooll. lwo hundoetlo,

UIOIC AT THIS! JUST 134,900! - Very nice
home near Greer\ Elementary SchooL -Attrac·
tive features Include LR, k~chen w/stove and
refriaerator, 2 BRs, balh, 2 car atlached gar·
age. ea11 today.
NEAR TYCOON lAKE- 44 ACRES. Home.on
propllltyoffers 2 BRs, bllth, lR, kttchen,Jand
ts fenced, has a pond and sprint development
SIALL HOlE w~h extra lois. 3 BRs, bath,
. $21,000.

evon lhouoondo of
dot lore.

LOCATED ON RT. 619 in Meigs County this
property contains 21.04 acres, mil, and a
!mall home. Owner anxious to sell.

O.lllpollo, Ohio 48831

NEAR NORTH GALLIA HS .. 2l 17 acres, m/1,
Mor'gan Twp,, Frank Ward Rd. - '17,500. · ·

locol Sol• ...,_.. ;,,
DONNA ClllBENIERV
E.S.R .. lo• 111

PH. 614-256-6511

ATTRACTIVE HOME AiiD lWO LOTS- 3 BRs,
bath, k~chen w/range and OW, LR, carpel,
elec. heat, I car detached garage Srtuated on
two lots. Very nice.
.
30.312 ACRES. TAYLOR ROAD- This small
farm also has a 1966 Vindale 12•60 mobile
home, small barn. Green Elementary School.
2.4 ACRE TRACT - COIIERCIAI. SITE Located on Upper Rt. 7 across from the new
shopp'•g center.
$15,000- 19.143 acres m/1. Approx. \? mile
from city lim~s. All utilities available.
141 ACRES 11/l, HUNTINGTON TWP. - Approx. 1 mile of frontage on Raccoon Creek.
Some bottom land. black walnut . ·
EAGLE RD ....RACCOO. TWP. $6,900.

.39 acres.

84 · Hey &amp; Grein .
11a round ,...._,,

11or

lor oolo,

'

36. 5 ACRES M/L, ClAY TWP.- Frontaae on
Friendly Ridge Rd. Old house on Tand
$18,000.
.

$3,500 - 4.77 acres m/1 near Village of
Eurekl. Hazel Ridp Rd.
· •

VERY DESIRABLE HOME- Now used as a double
rental located in the city at the comer of 3rd and
Spruce. Range and refrigerator furnished in both
unrts. Separate front and back entrance. Storage
buildmg and children's play area behind home.
~40 , 000 .
.
#300
40's BUYERS, BEAT THIS!! - New ListingGreat Location! - Clean 3 bedroom ranch will
make you the perfect slarll!r or move· up home.
Features include large liVing room. eaf.in kitchen,
handy utilrty room and l\1 baths. I car attached
garage. Situated on a flat lot, just right for kid s.
Nice netghborhood development that's not all
"scrunchocl" together. $49,900. Call Chr is for .
more info011at1on
#700

IIlii LIITIII~I!IDSVIUE
Grl!ll Farm. Great Locacm: 2·!«11\'

1.-m home compii!Cely remodeled. 4
bedo.,..,, ~~~~~ ,.. .... &amp; C&gt;'pMd,
W.O hOOII.up. dr1lled well. TuppefS
PI~Wts 'IIIIer close. stM. dtsl!washer.
t:oflMIOOfr included. 122 acra
approx 50 111 pl51urt. bar n. 2-c•
hw•ng
&amp;¥11!. h•gheS sjD 11 Melp Cooliy
porch.
wit~ beautiful '118, !rut trees, !tf~bJOid
errv pilcli. II you want f1 the cot.utry
thiS t"Ln.,..:····.-cc·~
at~d dose lo 8\'efYOlinQ don't miSS11115
toW 40·s. Let me , ..., ·' :. ·c:
one! Unbelievable- only m the SO's.
Need lin1ncma? We tlfl
SYilCIISI - llNOI mLE - C~se to Clty.pori; 3 bed1ooms, 2 bolhs,
kilt hen. d•n• ne room, tu lly c:arpeied. centfM K, nice livint room w/e~thfdrll
cetlln&amp; all electfic, refr lf:!JI10r, ran if, dishwasher &amp;stereo system. An unbel·
ito~tble buy '" lOw 30's.
~
•

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I

t

t

"""'*·
-·llodr
.....
CD

4

dNr, IIIIW-1
,. ~ lnloo-.
.-oo;I1-71U.

* ** * **
11·

:&gt;1·
r.l· J1-r.)~ THE REASON
l1- WE SELL HOUSES...

*)~~11-

~
ii-if

~

is becnuse we know who · wonts l:Jo.
who I! Let us place your 'home on H
lhe market and the only people 'Y'
~ parading through your home will lj..
. ~ be qualified buyers.

~

Toh il easy - let us do the
work. Our satisfied customers
~ speak for us. When YOU think of
;:., real eslale, think of us!

.lf

if
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1:f.
if

********'*****-¥87 ACRES 11/L- Vacant land located rn Green
and Spring1iefd Townships, tust off U. S. Rt 35.
Fronts on township road and old ,U. S. 35. Water
and gas available. Land lays mo~ly rolling wtth
e&gt;cellent building locations. Has high hill area
with nice view. City scho~ system. Best location'"
Gallia County to build and live. Priced at $89,900.
#340

IN THE MIDDLE OF EVERYTHING!- Small home
one·hall hour lrom Huntin gton and Gallipolis.
With in wal~ng dtsta nce to the supermarket and
post office. Needs some work. but it would be a
nice starter home for a young couple or a si n ~e
person. 2 bedrooms, 1bath, located in a nicequ1et
neighborhood. Best of all is th e price of $12.000.
Call Chris for more inlonmation.
'
#701

BIG HOUSE, LITTLE PRICE - Over 2700 sq. tt. tn
tht&gt; t.. er upper '" Swan Creek area. If you're wtl·
ling to work for a home that cou ld be a real show·
place, better make an appomtment to see this one
on 3.9 acres overlookmgthe riVerval ley. P11ced at
$21.500.
#502

PAY.IIENTS CHEAPER THAN RENT - With a
small down payment. you can be building equity
10 a h om~ instead of vour landlord's oocket. Th is
nice clean 3 bedroom home is affordabty priced
at $26,000. Good s1ze boo rooms,1 full tiath, large
eat·in kitchen, and living room. Vinyl si&lt;jingmakes
lor easy maintenance. Only $26,000' Only
$26,000! Only $26,000! Well worth the money!!

#213
MIDDLEPORT :- Turned on by "lrny AIIDrdabli\'7
It's time to get mited with this 2 story brick
located on Rutland Street Beautilully tailored
with 2 bedrooms upstairs and 2 more on the main
floor. Te&gt;tured plasll!r walls in both the living
room and diniDg room help make this one of the
truly finer homes in Meigs County. And with a
fenced in play area lor the children, it's perfect lor
agrowing family. Alolof extras built in with tender
loving care anoJ you must see to believe. Fall in
love all over again for just $54.000.
41604

OUTSTANDING 17 ACRE HOME SITE ~ Green
Township, St. Rt 588. Includes flat crop land.
gentle rolling slopes and a woooed knoll lor so
meone wanting privacy, country atmosphere and
a king's VIew. Maybe you want some ~orses or
some other animals. There' s already plenty ol
wildlife.
#174
GREAT BUY FOR $29,500! Very nice home lor
starter family or income property, etc. 3 bed·
rooms. large liVing room, eat·1n kitchen wrth mce
cabinets, I bath and separate utilrty room. N1 ce
II at lot. Convenient location.
#115
CHAIIIING VICTORIAN 2 STORY- Has lots o1
character in every room . Very well decorated
home throughout includes formal liVIn g room &amp;
formal dining room wrth corner l~teptaces, large
eat· in krtchen w~h loads of cabinets, full baths,
family room with woodburner. Upstairs is com·
plele with 3 nice bedrooms and second bath.
House has vinyl siding new plumbing and new
. wiring 174ft. deep lot. $79,900.
#210

only 15 minutes from town.
be\froom, I bath home oncludes family room,
dining room . livin g room and a mce k!tchen Has
3.5 acres, more or less. and 1s located in Gatlia
Couniy School district. This home has many e&gt;tras ·
you must see. Call today' $54.900.
#707
HERE liE OUT ON THIS ONE! Read until you come
to the part about Sum mer Cabin on the River! If
you're one of those families that would like a nice.1
2 bedroom home wrth 2 e&gt;lra bedrooms in the
half story, a really nice very attractive living room
and amodern custom buill kitchen, comeon in!ln
addition you get asecond 2 bedroom home wHich
you can sell or use as a rentaL Walch out now, I'm
going to ZAP you with the bonus' Tell me you hke
to fish oft your own pter, p!anla garden and grow
all kind of things. have a horse or two lor the k1ds.
How about everything above locate&lt;! in town on 2
acres that runs to the r i~er and already has the
cabin down at the riverside. You can buy it all for
$69,900.
#123
LIVE IN ONE. RENT THE QTHER! The house has 3
bedrooms and th e garage. apartment has· 2 bed·
rooms. Almost 5 acres ol land. Close to Rt. 1
$25,000.
.
'
#811
Attention HUNTERS!! hcellent turkey , rabbit,
sqUirrel &amp; de~r huntin g 80 acres in Morgan
.Township on Wildwood Road. Several places to
bu il d th at hunting cabin and gel away Irom it all.
Owner will divide. Asking $35,000 lor alf #800
82 ACRES OF ROLLING HILL LAND- No build·
in gs. Locat ed jusl oil Pl easant Valley on Tick R1dge
Road 4\'&gt; mtles to Rio Grande, 2 miles to Thurman
and U.S. Rt 35. ld eal.locatlon for home and part·
lime farm. Good growin g, wooded area, crop land
and pasture. Good hunting area on this land and
surrounding area. Rural wa)er lme on adjoming
property. Road frontage. All for $34,000 #301
NEW LISTING- BUILDING169 acres ol vacant
land on both s1des of Bladen Mercerville Road
wrth several bull dongs and a barn would have a
perfect spot for you. Tobacco base plus a stream .
Pr iced at $24,900.
#708.
COLONIAL STATURE - One of the lmest homes
1n the cil·y. Large grzcious rooms w~h fantasttc
views ol the 11ver and city park This well·built his·
tone home has been .cared lor by parttcular own.
ers. The 4,300 sQ. n. ollivmg space includes 4·5
bedrooms and 31h baths. Agrand home for enteo·
tain ing or for your own prtvate enjoyment. Call ...
because you're worth it'
#504
STARTER STAPLES- Thi~ 12 year old 3 bedroom
ranch has the features you value - private out·
door spa ce, 2 car garage, tu lly eQUIPPed kitchen
and an alford able pme of $53.900.
#503
40 ACRES NEAR RACCOON CREEK - Several
nice building sites overlooking Raccoon Creek
Valley. Lots of woods. 2 mobtle home·tots cur·
rently bemg rented . 2 septic systems. I county
water tap. Possibly some timber value. $29.900.
~216

RIVER FRONTAGE IN EUREKA - Thts two story
has 3 en dosed porches and 2 storage buildings. 3
bedrooms, range. dishwasher, refrigerator. Also
has a small basement. Overlooking the river, lot
runs to the river. Call on this one at $25,000.
11810

We Need Listing·s!

IUUTIFULHOII llllllCIIMEOI Sl 111. ~~ IIW WIIID llCINI

AUIOI tor &amp;ale

you'd have ·love d to have
lived here yourself as achtld No oe 2 story homeon
2.44 acres features 3 be&lt;lrooms. 2 baths, full
basemen\ and more. Easy access toRt. 35. Paved
road: City schools. Priced to sell at $54.900.
#222

COUNTRY CONVENIENCE STORE - Th ere's a
healthy business opportunity for you. Gas service
plus convement food mart plu smany other pam
bilities. 3 bedroom apartment over store for addi·
tional incom e or lor owners/manager's residence.
Lots of storage space. Established busmes s lor
many years. Only store in the area.:.. lots of po·
tential. $80.000.
#240

IIDDUPOll- 2 !lory, 2 bedroom home, kitc~en. '~'~-"J room. b1th. ut1lity
room.l6rctd .. ps tut~11ce, larte prece. Co!!!k'lt•ble. m low lOs.

n

~o-jr~~"e;;~G:~IV•E YOUR CHILDREN THE

ct

COUNTRY COMFORT - There's a splendid
country view 10 any direction lrom thi s 2 story
home near Champ ion Farms· on Rt. 554. Home
includes open kitchen and living room , 3
be&lt;! rooms. one nice bath and uliloly room . Over I
acre of fairly 1!ilt ground. Po ssible 9.5% loan
assumptton. Priced at $34,900.
#224

lEW lltTIIG - liCE - llCILLENT LOCATIOII ON· GIA'IEL HILl

LOTS OF POTENTIAL- 67496 acres' m/l, on
Crouse-Beck R4. N1ce Woode&lt;l building srtes
rural water available
'
4 SALE- Lot ot Rodney·Cora rd. Very Close to
St. Rt 35.
•

YOU DESERVE THE
.
i
you· qual~yconstructiDn, e&gt;cellent neiil!flb&lt;r.rhood
'"a conven tent looalion. Ahandsome I
b(and
newl 3 bedroom ranch which incl
a large
living room, fonmal dining, big kitchen with lotsof
cabinets and butlt·rns. Handy ut tl1ty area and 2
full baths. You'll love the decorating and the
openness ol the floor plan. On Debby ~rive and
priced to sell qu tckly by an owner that smovong
out of the area.
#112

145 ACRE FARM - $48,500 - This Walnut
Township farm includes some bottom land. over
100 acres of woods. a tobacco base and an old
time 2 story residence. Close to Waterloo. Perfect
for deer hunters or anyone else who wants to gel
away from 11 all.
#125

14-2111-1114.
Ferv.-o Troctor,
YlrHiilo StiMd. 12 ~r. 421n. Out; llurra! - ·
21" SoH Pnopollod, 304-4Y.I818

'· '

Situated on a private lot near
Featuring2 bedroom s, eat·in k1tchen,
and dryer hookups and aluminum siding.
us today for an appomtment.
#238

1530 Eo.,_
spoc~lo: til
Triollora, - ;

l!wtleR"E
. 1111;undor
W. -lollu•
tn ·
111.1 bocl ,

4.9 ACIES 11/L JUST AT THE EDGE OF

con -

General

on - . ; H I - ,Mini-lllclo,

ALL BRICK, + 2.15 ACRES + SMALL POND
and just 5 minutes to downtown - Lovely
home at the edge of town offers LR with wood·
burning
, very nice krtchen, dmette,
bath
heat, cent. air, basement, ·
many
also. Call for an appoint·
ment

BIRO'S EYE VIEW - One of the most beautiful,
panoramic views overlooking the Ohio Rtver Valley
can be found from this Y·shaped ranch . Very
spacious, liveable, and well·maintained home.
Great for entertaintng. includes 3 bedroom s.
formal sunken livin g room with lots of wmdows,
cathedral ceiling .~nd beautiful stone fireplace.
Also leatures famtly room with 2nd ftrepbce,
wife-approved eal·tn kttchen. 2!7 baths and 2 car
garage. Make an appointment to see this house.
you'll fall in love.
'
#246

lot lor $6,500.
Your Horterr ..... Virgin,la L . Smith

Spoclolo: 1111 hll
- - hoovy_ duly llvootodl troltor, ..14,11110; · now 1889
·1111 , Goauneck Llveetock
Traitor, .14LIOO; IIIII h11
Canan:.. Ahnnlnum Helvr
DutJ Llwtock Trlllor, $7,100;
....,. ........ In ...... lo

SOliE lAND TO GROW ONl This may just be
the ·ticket. 27.6 A., Green Township, close to
town. Very nice log home offers 3 BRs, bath,
LR, k~chen, fireplace, carpet Als.o offers ~
15x30 ,detached garage and a 20&gt;30 barn on
property.

BRAND NEW CONSTRUCTION- Located on Rt.
160, this home .is waiting lor its first owners. large
master bedroom with bath. Larg e great room
includes family room, dining area and eat·in
kitchen with cherry cabinets. Home has 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car garage and heat pump.
IOOdOO lot. For $59.900, you can't afford not to
look.
#220

We can arrange favorable long term linanting By the

Wlbrllloo
l1.311!;

DO YOU LOVE LOG ttOIIESl DO YOU WANT

IF YOU THINK THE
IS .
ADORABLE, wa it un til you see the new, tasll!fully
decorated •nte11or. The main lloor offers 3
bedrooms, 1 lull bath, lonTlal· living room and
eat·in kitchen with Jiantf'l . Pat1o door leads to a
screened·tn porch. Fu II basement has ~rge family
room . I be&lt;! room and complete bath, huge storage
room and spacious utiltty room . Force&lt;! air heal
and central air. One car garage wtth do01 opener.
This home has a warm. cozy and attractive
environment lor any size family. Kyger Creek
School s. Call for an appointment tooay1$59,900.
N80l

way, you can have posse~sion immediately. We will see you the extra

Real

'

.

SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1990
10:00 A.M.

c,

Enallltl oaddlo and llrfciJo.

Top Cuh pold. Old lumKU&lt;8
cubolirda,
qulne,
orient•
palntlngo,'to,a,
or ontlrtl
ootlte
cell ,. collect 304-Sa..3275, or
304-423-1854.

Location: From Gallipolis, take 160 to Wilkes-·
ville, turn left on 124 and go approx. 3 miles to
Co. Rd. 26, turn left and go approx. 1 mile.
WVatch for signs.
FARM EQU IPilE NT: JD 2 row corn planter with 3 pt. hitch,
MJ. 7ft. si~ kle mower, Mf 7 n. hay rake. Oliver 7 It grain
droll, Mf 3 pt. hitch scoop, elec. hay elevator, sprayer, 3 pt.
hitch tandem hitch plow, 3 pt hitch corn cultivator, old grain
drill with iron whe~s. pull type rake with iron wheels, galvan·
ized wash bin, Oliver manure spreader. 24" cut off saw, saw
mill V belt ptille'l. pther saw mill parts, saw blade. old feed
sc ales, woven wire. old wheelbarrow, old Simplicity garden
tractor, chairo saw; loogue and groove lumber. hand tools,
old wood carpenter boK, elec. motors, reamers. wood barrel,
hand grinder, old spollight,cutttn gt orth, sma'll Vpulle'/S, hy·
draulic jaci. ext cord; nuts; bo lts, horse collar, singletrees,
dune buggy !complete but needs assemble&lt;!) wrth e&gt;lra
parts, concrete miKer. household and misc. Warm Morning
stov~, Spee&lt;l Queen wrmger washer. milking holding tank,
canning jars, knife holders and more.
Cash or Approved Check with I.D . ·
Lunoh
OWNER: JIMMY GEORGE
Probate Court Case No. 89·16.730
AUCTIONEER: FINIS (IKE) ISAAC
614-388-9370
Experienced • Honest • Dependable
Now boqkin1for Sprin1 and Summer Auctions.
. licensed·and Bonded in Ohio end Indiana

moc1o1

culllnl- runo oacOIIOnl, 1975
Sl4-216o1tll.
DOUILE R TACK SHOP. c--

RANNY BLACKBURN
Thornpocn/Frtncr. of Ootnpollo,
OH. About 1930. In good corto
dKion. 1100. 114-112'25211. 132
BuUomut, Pomeroy, 011.

ctoor-.

.

OUlSTANDING NEW . LISTING RUSTIC
CONTEMPORARY - Tired of the regular ranch'
This 3 bedroom , l'h story cedar home will please
you. • Va~lted ceilings, skylifU\ts. open oak
staircase. custom .built oak cabinets in· kitchen
and baths give th1s home lots of appeal. 3
bedrooms, 2'h baths, liVing room,dinmg room and
family room, lar ge 2 car garage. Energy sav ing
gas/heat pump lumace. Green Township, 3 miles
from town. Nice neifU\borhood. $99,500.
.
Nl06

I,

d*, com .,..•• 1110 Ina meohlno, JD •aM. :n&lt;! .II) 'loolor
with bola,;.~;;:;, I:!J.9!111' 11110 ~D
.,.h buoh llof, A.ZBO. Owner
dl finance. 114-211 1522.
Allhl

'

Property located at 824 Deenie Dr ..
Sunkist Village. Just West of Spring
Valley off S.R 35.

tnotM, 131

'rt,IIOO. :1114-t'IWJT2
171·~
- · · aood,. ·
NIII.

BLACKBURN
REALTY

..
. ·~.
, •
.._.
.• &lt;...,,r·.. P...·-~- ... · -··•
·~-~ ....-...~·t~~~-1!~--~:'!-'.:0~~--t .
··-·

OPEN HOUSE .
2:00 .. 5:00
SUNDAY, MARCH 18th

_81 Fenn EqUipment

Miscellaneous
Merchandise
:::--:::::-

SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1990
AT 10:00 A.M.

'

s-

-·
2325, ~·
... w.nl;
114 441elal0,

'------------------..11
PUBLIC AUCTION
54
-

Real Estate General

lnltrumente

:~. .liM -

Pot Borrtod "'"""· lila. br

. 614-742-2048

~

•'57'

~ lloft.th&amp;n,llll.

•

Consignments taken ti1112:00 noon day of sale : AII
types of consignment taken. Sale will be outside
rain or shine .

57-ti~~~~"'·'Jo

Eitate General

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

'

Ohio

,..,

tr71 2 OUOII llorll traitor. $100.
114..,.UCII.
.

'
CONSIGNED:

•

,.

. old,--~~~~~ ...

••

SAlEM ST. - RUTLAND, OHIO

,AUCTION

R84111

11111Md..r
....
-.
,Joft W I - .-or, 11'UI 1077, fmhd apantnp.

AKC llog'ed - n d . ond
Rat Torrtor Pupploo, PUN il&lt;odo,
514.- 246--.
•

1:00 P.M.
SUNDAY. MA.RCH 25, 1990.

Eats

IDS

; OM __,..... . - I Yl'!'

RENT TO OWN
Top QuatKy Brand Na.,..

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
DIRECTIONS: From P~meroy, Ohio ta~e S.R.
124 West to Rutland, Oh . Sale is on main drag.
Signs will be posted.
··

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D-5

1

a......

Lee Johnson
AUCTIONEER
Not

·V.A. REPOSSESSION

.

1200.11'-

AI(C.

From Gallipolis follow State Route 7 south for 13
miles, turn ri&amp;ht on the Bladen Road and go 2 miles.
The followin&amp; will be sold:
·

w.

Ohio-Poi1t

__
.........
-tor ......
-.......... .....,....-.----.
·-·- - "'""""'·
-...-... ....

.

.1........

FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 23, 1990
5:00 P.M.

1990

58 Pota for ....

58 . Pete for Slle

To 101: - . pool; . . .

~

.

- b1fl I'IICf newtw remodeftd 4 beck'ooms. bath. IPPhlnces.l•vlftll room.
dNiirtl room, ,_hen, newlurrwce, new stee11•1Jt. new ytetlite, 4¥, acres.
l'nced obsotultly oltot -mid 40s.' l YEM IAIIMn.
01( IXTfll 111110150 TflltUI- ~I pon-od I corpeo•~ kic,hen. livLnl
room. blth. 2 111111 bechoms rn water bal:tt. new •• calllC1011er. new
$600 p11ch. Evoryttoonu&gt;~~ II. $3600! Don' Ilet ~is one cet ,.,, ~om you,
IS chuper than ttnl &amp; 101: space only $40 per 111lntb.

LIST WITH GALLIA COUNTY'S LEADER

Wiseman Real Estate
(614) 446-3644
E. 1.. Wi..man, Broker

It
:'ca":'.:'r-.!.:'=
................,••• tt.
.,._,_
' David Wlaemen, 441·3798

B.J.

.Tom

Ru~ll. 448 ·~17 5

Loretta McDade, 441·7728

~~~--~............~~...-·~c:hrl:•~E:•:•ce::•so~r,~~

�Ohio-Point Plusant, W. V8.

"

~~~~~~~~r.~mne.~~Se~m~i~n~~===lr-=======~~~~~~~~~~~~~Oh~.a~·~-~~As•swrt,VV.V8.
71 Autos for $111

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
v.n.

73 Valli &amp; 4 WD's
1M1 Pit

LaMMII

au-. .._, 1

willl

~-h

111

nti'8L

Aci.Or'IIF ''I, OH.

1114 Dodrlo Rom Yin 13000.
AIIIFII ...... otr, 11,000 Por IMN lntonMUon or to ...

1171 T~ Ce11oo QT, I opd.,
- . . . Pout .. ....
AC.IU 441.11 .
- · 114-441-n42. '

Doly

81

· Home

=
-

81

~·

Mercury .........,
Mt .
FICIOI"f
trollwd,
·
llorlno. w.
....... you. lt44IINI'II.
I

81

Home

=:: l',a..,.._
... ·;..'!." ..::: •
-1711.

~
Ctn .... Itt Ul 110' •

oonclttlon. hl00. 11....._1114.

Home
lmprcNIIIIIIIIS

lmprvvementll

::- =:.~.':r~-a:::

-ion - .

Home

81

March 18, 1990 ,

...

lmpmements

lmprovtllllnta

I'

. . . . . . .7714111 er

·
· - oocluot mllol, 371.2111.

· 114-

..
.

campers&amp;

1171 2tlt. Holldoy R o - lith
whMI UIVII tnll . . with 811nlfll
ond hitch. In o-10111

"""P"·

14eoo. eon oft., a:OOp.m. ,,._

11242U.

,._ory

11110 TD¥011 COIIcl ot oxc.
oand.,
.unraaf, 1lr,
l11001rm. 114 441 :MH.
1111 !(1Woukl7 414 LTD Will{'
cooled, belt artw, cover •nd
, .., Chwette, AJC, good body, helmet. 1200 mil•. 11•tl2·
11!12.

- --·

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

1m Shloto c-pw. 2211. Sill
Contllntd, he. concl., full bath
&amp; owning. 304-27S.f1H at4-

-..ne onor 15p.m.
1111

Roc&amp;wood

fold

-lu!.

dMion. UOOO.
I:OOoi:OO.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
lor sale

C.rto, CL Ed~lon,
PS, PI, AC, MWM eterw,

1113 -

14 Fl. .... ' 15 mo1or. 53.700. 15 A. - ....~
motor. • •. ., .._ .
cruiN,
tift, trunk, rally whMtc, puiH ,..,...., -rty 2141.
,... Ur•, Mbte brown wtth
17 R. Slollo Croft · P-rod
plddod 14300.
top, 113,000 tow 458 Olea millor. W11h trollor.
votour
Interior.

-n
8/W.l-

mU., 11W7S-2711.

1813 Oldo

d~lon.

114447·21111 .

con-

lt4-74:Z.2413,

Ev•rw llatorw, 1130 Ealttm
A..,uo, Spoclolltlng In lnototllna ,-.or hhchoo; brou controlri • ..
row -lclo lor
lowing, 1 1 8 5512.

ta

Services

81

Home
Improvements

Now tl-. H fi mllugo.

$3000. 114-1124

• 132 .....

tomut.~.

1114

11210. Alto - k croft jol - ·

c4hor brlndo. - · otto
lpt&gt;IIIIIO!t ......... WV
304-171-2311 Ohio 114-44112414• .

-n

compw. Ute. MW. $2000. 1141100. :IDUG·3711.
Moto Guzzi 150 cc 1178 "'"' 742~7e0.
11112
Cllovottc gold. 4 ....... ~· ..75, 21,000 mllol, 114- :,21:=-:ft:;..;.;;...co_m_pl:-ng-::1,.:-;;lloc:r:-.-,_:;;-C,
....... _....,_ Asking 1100.
7404. ,
_,rno. fum-, 11"0!1 , con-

,114·742-2231 - · ·
1112 llonlo C.rlo,. VI, air,
cruloet tilt, ,PS, PI, PPL. ,.,., anolcol, &amp;
bcollont - i o n . 11.000 ......
· ·12.1110 firm. 114-4444711.

-'"'lzlna

Ron'o TV Sorvlal,
In ZonMh oloo oorvlclng 111011

[B
RUIDENTIAl • INV£STIIEIITS • COIIIRCIAI. - FARIS

.•

23 LOCUST ST.
-44.6-6806

.·
.•'.

...•

STUTES REAL ESTATE

·'

.

·'

.

PRoFESSIONAl SERVICE MAUS T1l DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 388-8821
RUTH GOODY, REALTOR. 379·2121
DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR. 218-128~
EUNICE·NII!HM. fi.EALTI)R ; 441-1897
· RUTH 8ARR, RI!ALTOR, 44«1·0722
LINDA SKIDMORE, RULTOFI, 379·2886
DEBORAH SCITES, ASSOCIATE, 441·8312
LYNDA FRALEY. ASSOCIATE. ~1-7499

LIST WITH THE BEST, WE MAKE THINGS HAPPEN!

:

.'

Jud~ CQewitl - CBtto~ett
'

[H'
·REALTOR'

G:i
""'""'"

446-6624·

•'

liiiUl IIOIIItll

..'"

AVE. GALLI POLIS

NEW LISTING WITH SCENIC VIEW- 12x60 Mobile Hom es,
2-3 bedrooms, I bath, close to Wayne National f orest I acre
lot m/ t County schools. $8,200.
#203
NEW LISTING ni ADDISON TOWNSHIP- 2-1 acre lots
mil or 5 acres m/t One lot has water. other haswater ava 11. 5
acres tract has all utilities plus extra water lap l ot s are
$4,500 each and 5 acre tract is $20,000,
#206
NEW LISTING ,- RACCOON CREEK - 27 acre on Raccoon
Creek, 3-4 bedroom ~orne w~h 2'balhs, Jen,air kitchen, An·
dersen wtndows, full basement 24x40 workshop, two targe
sheds, Call today for appointment.
#20t
LOG CABIN- Situated on a lovely 3 acres m/ 1wooded lot.
screened in porch, 2 bedrooms, I bath, famtty room wtth
·fireplace, city schools, $24,400, Shouldn't last long, So give
us a call for your appointment
#189
EXCELLENT STARTtR HOME - Has 2 nice lots, back deck,
fireplace, 3.bedrooms. city.school s, Asking ~34 , 000. Can be
assumed wllh very small down payment
#188
65.5 ACRES M/LIN CITY SCHOOLS with beautiful homesite.
scattered limber, 5 acres mil tillable. Rural water available,
$24,000.
.
# 184 .

Cieri,

Bn&gt;dughln. Dlo...,,o MOM. loft

on 1r11n1t.,.w. ••rr•nty.l144414301 Aftor 3:P.M.

till Docloo Lllncor E.S. Turbo,
41'i213 mlloo, aaad cond, lt4-

31

~7052aft•

5p.m.
1111 ford Tompo G,400. 304la4770.
111M Honda, CMc Sl, P700.

et4 t41 •u.

TAMMIE DEWin

JEAt&lt;tiiE TOLliVER
446-6624

SAM HOFFMAN
379-2449

J. MEIIIl1 CARTER
379-2114

, . . Plymouth HortiiDflt Auto,
' 12411; 1111 Qodgo Artn. Aulo,
, 121H; till CheVY Novo, llpcl,
UIH; olohn'o Auto SoiH,
..._ Holkloy Inn, Kl"""''"·
tlli Cutllol Bu-. v.a,
40,000 mUn, liN lire~, movlna,
muot Hll. C.H oftO&lt; 15p.m. 114'
44H:s:M.

441-0703

PRIIIE BUILDING LOTS- Three 5 acres m/ llracts. R~ra l
water available. Frontage on hardtop road. Green school dts·
trid, Call for details.
#168

till ford T-po OLS. At-

now _.lion. 4 - · 11500

5.06 ACRES 11/L VACANT LAND in Greenfield Township,
Rural water available. Wildlife abounds, $4,500,
#180

010. 114-MW203 · -.....
tMI C.maro, 301. loeded,

$1,111. 114

ue toM.

=r -·

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For Bolo: till ChiVy

~.

JUST LOOX!
AGAIN, NOW
,
on lhts
story remodeled home situated at the edge of
town. 3 bedrooms, living room. kitchen, natural
gas heat, carport.
,
#2801

$2200• • , ..

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vohlcloo
from 1100. Fordl. Merc1d11.

a.ovro.

corvonoo.
Surpluo.
luyoro Guido (1) - ED. S.10tll.

72 Trucks for Sale

1m ford va. ,¥orr

aaao1 ....

d - S14Citl. C.l 114-"'MI-2111.
tt71 OIIC 4•4, 310 onglno,

...

-.

,,300.

~a•zo...
1144
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1910 ~ Ram 1121on, ·a c,t.
Stondonl olllft. As lo 1100. lt4H2471t.
1111 Fartl Rongor V.f, I .......
107,000 mille, exc cond, 304175.f;MII.

I
, Real Estate General
/{1 I ( -....f\ I

Ill

1/JI!{

II' II

II ....

TEAFORD
REAL ESTATE

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216 Eut Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992·3325
NEW LISTING- Gallia Co,
2 story home located on Ea s·
tern Avenue, 2 car garage
w~h an inside and outstde
entrance to the home.
NEW LISTING - Mtddleport Village. 3 bedroom,
fully insulated with vinyl sid·
ing Only $15,000.
NEW LISTING.:... 3bedroom
home with parllal basement
Fully carpeted wrth large
dining room and built-in
kitchen, laundry and stor·
age room. $18,000.
SYRACUSE - 2·3 bedroom.
remodeled on the inside,
new carpet, new roof, has a
new electric heat pump.
This is a beaulilul home
home in a nice location.
$40.000.
RUTLAND - 2 bedrooms
wrth 12• acres, Has a nice
level lot with a one car garag~. $22,000.
POIIEROY - River Vi~M. 3
bedroom home w~h 5 lot~
Has large fruit trees a{ld gar·
age and awrap-arouRI porch,
$17,500.
POII~OY Be111tiful 3
, bedroom home w~h 2 baths..
urge b&amp;lef!lertt near st~res

llld schocis. $28,000.

W£ NEED usTI•Gs

Office

R. A
.V~:~:~,;~7~
llruce_ T
Dllt E.

.

, Pl bathS. 2 car garAge, srtuated ori I ,
acres, approx. miles, (15 min,) from downtown Galtipohs,
Gallipolis city school rlislrict. Green Elem R•rl11r•rltm quick
sale., , $48,000 00

COIIIIERCIALLOCATION ALONG ST. RT: 35. near Holzer
Hosp., I acre, M, or l , wijh 2·bay bid&amp; Owner may assist fi·
nancing lor approved purch aser, Buy now for $!.15,000,00,
CONDOMINIUM: l si Floor, 2-be drm, Condo; 2 batns, cent
AI C. heat pump, cust om cabin ets, drshwasher. drs posat. util·
ity rm .. car port. Call for more information.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY IN VINTON- 6rm. house located
along Marn St Rent, or live in. Pres ently grossmg $2,100,00,
Buy now for $15,000.00.
NEW LISTING - 2 bedrm, house with upstatr s dorm .. l'h
baths. fully fu rniS hed. newly remodeled. new carpet. with
new range and retrig, Full basement Near Tyco on lak e, Buy
now for $36,900,
PRICE REDUCED- I acre wtlh older mobile hom~. county
water. no septic system , located along Rt 160 near North
Gallia school. Prtce: $13.000,
NEW LISTING: 10 acres. Pen y Twp. Some timber, Buy now
for $10 000.
6.5 ACRES. WITHIN THE CITY OF GALLIPOLIS sttuated
along Gar fi eld Ave, Site includes 2 building lots, w/city wa·
ter·seweL Buy no w for $30,000.00,
,

LOOK AT THIS REALLY NICE HOME IN OUR CITY
- II is in excellent condition, 5 rooms and bath.
storm windOWS, hke new roof and Vtpy l Stdin&amp; '
Onl, $33,900.00.
.
• #2797

NATURE'S COLORS SURROUND THIS STONE
TRIIIIIED CHALET- CHAROLAIS LAKE- lofi
wrth patio doors leading to a large deck overlook·
ing Charolais Hills lake. Gracious great room lea·
luring cathedral ceilin&amp; floor·to-ceiling stone fire·
place, master bedroom with connecting bath, efti·
ciently designed kitchen, recreation room, walnut
trim lhrooghout, central vacuum, attached gar·
age, plus 2 car unattached garage, All this
s~uated on approximately 2,44 acres, professionally landscaped. Don't miss seeing it today!
#2786

3 LOTS LOCATED NEAR TYCOON LAKE (501!15'). Can
purchase on land contract $2,000 down, 10%interest, pay
$129.69 for 6 yrs.
1.02 ACRE LOT along Klicker Rd , near Centenary. $8,000.
PRICES DRASTICALLY REDUCED on 3 properties w~hin the
Village of Porter: "I - Old Cottreli arocery buildlna. Now
S15.000.00!! H2 "- 2 storv home adiacenl to store bide. Now
$25,000,00. H3 - 3 bedroom home next to above. Now
$20,000,00. Call for more info, Will sell any or alfP.
SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE ISII8~IG~~r~~~....CALL AI
EXPEIIEIICED WOOD REALTY Sl

in Greenfield Township,
hunters. $4,500. #179

A MONEY liMING FARII! - 83 acres approx.
Twenty acres approx. level tillable land in production level of tertdily. 53 approx, acres pasture,
most of it improved and will appeal toyoureye. 10
acres tillable and pasture acres - 50 fenced .
large tobacco base and good land to raise it on,
large pond wrth two (2) round cement watering
!toughs. Average barn and country home. 6 rooms
and bath. Owner needs quick sal,e, Our staff is
farm oriented. We are ableto help you. Please call.
.
#2805
$33.500.00 - p,RJVATE - Vrnyl sided ranch,
nrce approx, I acre lawn. Very nice 24'x24' two
car garage, Call for more informlion.
#2784
LOOKING FOR A HOllE Ill THE' KYGER CREEK·
SCHOOL SYSTEII! -If so, then call us about this
listin&amp; 4 bedroom home. l.iving room, eat-in
krtchen, garage, and more, all srtualed on I acre
approx, lawn, Priced at $32,000.00. Calf latay for
an appointment.
N2793

on~

MINI FARM - Wlh 7.25 acres on Rt. 325 adrorning Gallia
County, Includ es small barn with lo~ an dattachedshed. Also
new fence as l"ell as a 1979 Wtndsor or mobde nome in
excellent shape with large fron t porch. Much more, $26,60Q,
Call for more inlp, ·
#198
PRICE REDUCED! - Not only have wereduced tne prtce we
are also going to offer a land contra ct to Qualifred buyer, 3
bedrooms, full basement wtth dnve-rn garage. Home I U~
needs a little paint and minor repall , Now only $22.900,
Lasley St .. Pomeroy,
#138
LOCATION, LOCATION!- Aquality bu il d home, too, Ranch
with 3 bedrooms. formal dinrng, famrly room , Full basement
and car garage, located rn Mrddleport.

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WAITING FOR THE NEW OWNER to have the en·
joyment of owning lhrs vinyl srd ed frame and
brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, tamoly room wtln tire- ·
place, kitchen with dishwasher bath, 2 car garage, only 3 years old, Approx. 2 1/3 acre lawn.
Separate mobile home space, ~yger Creek schools.
#2799

NICE CORNER LOT enhances th is 3 bedroom, 2
bath bi·leveL In dudes I car garage, 2 fireplaces,
large deck leading to above-ground pool area, sur·
rounded by a chain link fence. Start the year out
right wrth an appointment today!
#2806

IN THE SPRING VALLEY AREA is this large ranch home
3 bedrooms. 2 baths. 24x22 family room with fireplace, ltvtng
' room w~h fireplace, large laundry room, patto, gas heat. ctly
water , All this and more in nice neighborhood close to
hospitaL Only $59,900.
·
#200

Beautifu l rivet" vtew t an II! yours.Enjoy those
·watching !he lovelY Ohto River. 3 or 4
ftrePiaces, ottice, so many more _amenities.

·'

BUDDING. Buy now and settle in lime to view
nature's •ma&amp;ic at wort as al l the trees bud' and !
the flowers bloom. Thi s spnn g you will en1oy na·
lure's beauty around tnrs well marnlar ned 3 or 4
bedroom. home, I ~ bath s. more closets than
usual. Modern home Wtlh the usuaI coh ve nrences
'l,Ven .a large screen ed rn porch and tw o utthty ·
butldrngs. Green Townshrp. You need to see. Call
for appointment
#2813 ·

40ACRE FARII!'-AII in grassandfenceHnice
farm pond for livestock water and recrealton, The
barn is in good condition, has stables lor horses or
room for cattle, tobacco base. This house rs not to
be overlooked. Dutch Victorian style, 2 story w~h
all the beaortrtul, varnished orrgtnal woodwork, not•
patnled, Well landscaped lawn and above ground
swimming pooL Pleas~ calf us for,a shoV~ing any·
ltme.
#2804

$85.000.

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WHAT ABUY!- ,112.2acres wrlh one story frame
home. 3 bedrooms, bath. eat-in kitchen, living
room , utility, Home needs repair, hnd has been
reclaimed. Only $39,000,00 Kyger Creek Schools.
•
#2809

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

-:~.{-~~;:

1551106 ACRES 1/l located 5 m•e~ !rom townon BulavilleRoad 111 Add1son
Twp Poii!O,11 $48,000.

-·

FANTASTIC! - Pr,ice Reduced- Owner willing
to help with I he financrng of thts very attractive.•
well decorated and matnlamed 2 story home
s rtualed close toshopptng. schools, churches, etc, .
featuring 3 bedrooms, bath. eal·tn krlcn e~, hvrn2'.
.room. Gas steam he;t, mce lawn lxceptvnal value
you shouldn't miss! $55,000,00, · · #2822

OWNERS JUST REDUCED THE PIICEi:OII THIS
LOVELY HOllE $6.90Q.OO - You won't believe
your eyes when yoo step into this 2 story home,in
mel lent cond~on! 3 bedrooms, l'h baths, famtly
room formal din in&amp; nat. ga;; furnace, vinyl sidin&amp;
Call tOday, you'll be impressed 1
H2787

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BEAUflFUL RIVER FRONT- You can't beat the vtew fr om
this 1800 sq, ft. 3 bedroom home, 2 acres m/1 with a
fantastic view of the river.large highway and rivtlr frontage,
The home has family room , formal dining, 2 baths, fireplace,
central air and 2 car garage. lots of extras for only $59,500,
#148
LOCATION - 2 acres m/ in Quiet subdivision, superb
location JusiiO mrnutes fr0111 Holzer, Call for appointment
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#159
REDUCED - REDUCED - The owners have lowered the
price to $30.000. 837 3rd Ave. The home offers3 bedrooms.'
I bath, large utility room, nice backyard, ln cludrng
outbuilding has good potential ,for' rental property or starter
home.
#143
IICE...20.5 ACRES Of VACANT LAND ,~ lays real ntce.
Greallor pasture land or better yet put yourcou'ntry home in
the middle or it Greenfield Township. Pticed to sell at
$8,900. Don't miss out on lhrs one.

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APPROX. 30 ACRES of gently rolling land wrtn a barn st~ e
home, Home is only 12 yrs old and has 3 bedrOO!llS, 1 ~
baths and full basem ent, pond, orcn ard and ~uil~ings.
Country setting Asking $77,500,00,
#157
APPROX. 163 ACRES WITH TWO STORY HOME- Ex Ira nice
barn, rural water, loc ated on C-20 Rocksprings Rd. Askin g
$75,000,
' #167
GENnEMAN'S FARM- El egant country Irving on 131 acres
m/1with a lovely ced ar 4 bedroom home, Over 2.000 square
feel of livrng space includes 4 bedrooms, fireplace, fonnal
dining, equipped kitch en and mucn more. l and is level to
rolling and includes a beautrful pond, a 2 car gara ge and a
barn. You will love it. Call for an appointment. $110,000,00,
#121

LASLEY STREET- Two story wrth 3 bedrooms. I bath, Gas
heat large lot with garden area. Storage burldrng, Only
$16,000, Give us a call,
#201

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q'E'T 071'T 9V711l

$6.000.00 REDUCTION - VACANT ACREAGE.
IJlprox. U2 wooded acres. S~e cleared for mobile home or house. Loc:lled at SR 7, view of Ohio
River.
12120

NEW LISTING. APPROX. 3 ACRES wrl h 1' ' story home and a
mobilehome also, Excellenlrnvestmenl propertyonC35. Call
today , Askrng only $27,000.
#192

CMEUfUt STOllE ltAICMER will put a SMILE on your lace.
3 BR, I 1\. blths, dming room wittl frrepllce, brelktasii)Ofth, cuport.
IPit'tmet!t or hobtrf shop with 1 one car p,aregn:omes wrth this package

OWNER WANTS THIS PROPERTY SOLD IMMEDI·
ATELY! ONLY $26,000.00 - 2 bedroom fram e
home isutated in the vill age of Rro Grande,'Natural
gas heal. full basement large lawn. Call today.
#2796

@§¥8~ ~E!:~SI

RESIDENTIAl BUILDING SITU - Each tract
ranging from 6 to 6\lz acres. Exc;ellent location.
Restrtcted to protect property values.,little, if any,
excavatton needed, Rural water and electric avarl·
able. Green Township. If yoo're looking fql an
. tdeal home srte w~h acreage give us acall today!
82107
THIIIIIIIG OF IUILOIIIat - Get ajump start on
buildtn gyour new home by finis hinglhis recently
constructed 28' x70' frame home shell - 40
acres partially wOGded, tillble 1cruge. Several
feet of roed frontage. Cali, IallY for location and
more detlils,
HllO

NEW LISTING -A little overan acrewrt~ a2 bedroom home,
Al so a den with woodburn er, 16x32 tn·grou nd pool wrlh
pri.va cy fence and salellile drsh, 2 car garage witn overhead
storage. located on St. Rt. 124. Sells tor $45.000,
#193

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BEAUTIFUL FARII SETTING - Seven room brick
home wtth 2&gt;; baths. Apartment building used for
caring for elderly and handicapped peop}e. large
modern barn used as Ieeder pig busine5~ located
in Guyan Township. Approx. 50 acres tevellijlable
land surround farm buildings, Call loay for showing
·
H2758
TWENTY-TWO THOUSAND DOLLARS isall rt takes
to purchase this premanufactured home. approx.
24'x60' which indudes 3 bedroom;, 2 baths, for·
mal din in~ area, family room, living room, kitchen
with bum-m range and double ovens. Utility room.
Situated on easy to maintain fawn. Rural water,
'gam equity by doing some repair. Call today,
#2814

ATTRACTIVE BI·LEVEl HOME in A·l Condition - located
on approx. I acre in Baum Addrlton. Has 4 bedrooms, 2
bath s, central air an~ garage. $62,500
#1.34

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DOWNTOWN !~VESTMENT PROPERTY: Brick structure wijh
3 rental apartments Also, adjacent metal storage/utility
. bid~ Est gross rental income, $820 per mo. All priced for
$65,000.
.

21.5 ACRES. NEAR NORTH GALLIA SCHOOL No structures,
located along Frank Rd, $18,900,

. LOOK AT THIS- 11 YR. ti'LD 2 BEDROOM, !BATH RANCH
STYLE HOllE- 8x 16 building, L52 aaes m/ 1. Country setling. $17,000, Call for more info.
#155

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

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Village II and Mills Village. Call for more information,

ANI Estate General

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gout~eAn 9Jif~s CRea~ 8slate · ~ne.

Fifth A...,.uo,
58,000 miiH, good cond, 014-

Cult!IU

REALTOR'

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COUNTRY FAIII- CITY LIVING ..
Agentiel)lan's farm located iust a few miles from the city
limrt~ APIIrOX. 13.6 aaes. barn, storage buildings, 2 bed·
room home, farm eQuipment tra ctor. refrigerator, st ove,
washer and dryer. all induded. Thrs may be the chance
you've been waiting for Kyger Creek Schools, ,

11,• •

G,.,om Upholotory c.ntor, lOll
Hltnop Or. C.lllor • ..,...._
&amp; •tlmotce. C.tlaU 441 ~~~

Real

Chlyller

379·2721.
1N4 Oldl

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87

R•l Estate General

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Motor Homes

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X

Upholstery

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s..-..-.nur;'!t !:'

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79

iUUf

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87

II: ,.... Upholltering -~
vlclng t~ - y 24 ,..,..
Tho
In
fumMuro
.......... ~... C.H !104-171-4tl4

~.11.'1 ~ ~ lrUIII . .

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1111 Yomoho 110. •••· cond,

11 al• 1'' L Rld1
..,711.

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76 Auto Plrta 6

Motorcycles

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A•••••lll • ....,...,
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Hom•

81

85 Glnnl HIUIIng

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- PL.9l11[S 'J..{O'W! I
NEW liSniNGI - 2 LOTS WITH IIIPROVE·
IIENTS - Each .tract is over 2 acres with septic
and rt111l water on each. Good location! Call today
for more inlormation.
#2725

NEW LISTING! 100 ACRES MORE OR LESS! Qood
building sites, tobacco base. rural water available.
City schools.
#2824 .

VACMT LAND - 18.80 acres by survey. lots ol
road fronllge. Many lots could be developed.
Much of the l111d is treed. a small pond is used
much by willlife. A small stream runs lhrough
land. Rural water 111d electric lines run close by
land. II is close to Raccoon Creek Par~ Green
To111nshp. '12,000 buys it all..
*2790

NEW LISTING! - LOTTA LAND - Approx. 160
aaes, Rural water avatlabte. mtneral nghts tn·
duded, road frontage along two roads, Call !odiiY ,
for more information. •
*2115

NEW LISTING! WAIT TO BUILD AHOUSE? Than
why not consider this perfect buNdina spot! Ap·
pro. 2.94 aaes. several feet of rOid frontage.
land has already been surveyed. Asking
$9,500.00. Call todiiY.
#2119

NEW LISTING! $18,000.00! - Appr ox. 30 acres,
frontage along SR 160, partially wooded, mineral
rights ind~ded , Call today' ·
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~2823 ,

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ASH STREET IIIDDLEPOIT - This home is situated on 2
level comer 'lots. Close to Geperal Hartinger Park, A brick
home wilh 3 bedrooms. full basement, and large attic.

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$21,500.

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$15,900.00 - APPROl 42 ACRES OF LAND.
Huntington Township, rural water, Call today for ·
more details.
N2802

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D-B-Sunday Times-Sentinel

PomtWoy

.

Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

M.-ch 18, 1910

Pleasant. W.Va.

Meigs County
agents comer

'89 disaster ·payments -:an .:~
they be deferted to 1990 e : '

ly·,Joba Rice
cows. If they are sub!ertUe or
status may return as much u $10·.
sterUe the problem may go
to $13 per cow per year·. •
POMEROY - The Internal
undet~ted untO mu ch damage
Identification of superior bulll.;
Revj.'nue Service · has lsst~ed
through examination for breed- ~
guidance to farmers who re- has been done.
Some bulls that were exposed
lng soundness can significantly .
.celved payments In 1989 under
to December's extremely cold contribute to overall lifetime .\;
the Dlaster Assistance Act of
fertility or the cow herd.
· ,;
1989. These payments may qual- w~ather suffered frostbite of the
scrotum. Frostbite can decrease
Minimum Wage to Change - .:
Ity for the special tax treattneft
fertUlty for variable periods of The " Federal Mlnumum Wage" ~~
afforded other crop Insurance
time up to 90 days. A breeding wllluseto$3.80perhour e!fect1Ve ;proceeds received by farmers.soundness examination ' by a AprU 1,1990. Therull!sofwbether_; ·
' Under federaUax law, farmers
veterinarian cail identity bUUs or not employers are subject to +
who receive Insurance proceeds
for crop damage due _to fiood s, with Impaired fertility. Those minimum wage have no t.-;:
droughts, or.other natural'lllsas· 'bulls can then be replaced or changedcurrentiy, themlnbnum '7
retested before breeding season wage for farm workers Is $3.35 1..
ters or due to the Inability tt:1 plant
begins Studies have shown that per hour. This will Increase to·t.
crops becau.e of these event~
.
using
bulls of excellent fer tUity $3.80 per hour on AprU 1, 1990 and ;,
may quality to report this tncome
.as
opposed
to bulls of unknown to $4.25 per hour on April!, 1991. ··
In the year Jafter receipt. Sl~.ce
farmers o(ten repot t the Income
'J
from crop sales In the year alter
,.,
. _·_ __:C::::o:::n:::t1:::n;ue::::.d:....::fr..::o::m:;.D::.;
·l;__ _....,__-:-_ __._
the crops were harvested, this
J
porvlslon allows farmers whose
ern Business College for the past fllgh School and Cabell County I
crops·· are destroyed· to avoid
nine years. Prior 10 her employ- vocational Center In Huntington.
ment at SBC, Ms. Whittington
Ms. Whittington resides. on Rt. •
reportlpg two years' Income ·In
the same year.
worked four yea~s In the College 2 Point Pleasant and Is the ·
In ·order to quality for the
of Liberal Arts at Marshall · d'aughter of Mr. and Mrs. Homer ~
. especial treatment, the farmer
University and taught adult . Whittington.
•·
must use the_ cash methOd of . education classes at West
accounting and must establish ·•-vi¥11-..1
· that the proceedS !rom thesaleof
·
the destri!Yed crops woullf nor- · · ' ~~
mally have been reported In a · [.;7
year following the destrucfton.
\_,
The guldanee recog~~lzes that.
payments made by the federal'
· \ . .·
government for crop damage
)
serve the same purpose to a
,.
recipient as Insurance proceeds
;
and should be taxed In a similar '
manner. The IRS said the favorable tax treatment of federal
payments properly Implements
the, intent of Congress In origi· nally enacting the crop Insurance .
provision: ·
Breeding Soundness
Examinations-Breeding season Is s!lll some
h.
tlrrte away lor most beef herds,
. NAMED DIRECTOR - Teres• Whltllnltoa hu been .....-&amp;oa
but now Is stlll a good time to
director's paslllon at Southeastern Business CoUege Ill Galllpollll.
examine your herd bulls for
Ms. Whllllolton Is CODJII'alulated by Bob Shirey, prnldeat of the ;
breeding soundness. Surveys
Shirey
Corp.
have shown that · a random

Ohio Lottery

Baseball

D.U)· Number
245
Pkk-4
6121

Lockout
comes to end

Lotto: 12, 29, 31,

37, 38,39
Kieker: 7471

Page 4 ·

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*·

•
Vot.40. No.215

1 Sedlon. 10 Peg•

Pomeroy....:Middleport. Ohio, Monday, March 19, 1990

Copyrighlld 1110

25 Conte

A Muldmldle Inc. - -

~

eresa ...._

MYSTERY FARM - Tbls week's mystery
farm, featured by the Melp Soil _and Water
Co-rvatloa District, Is located 10mewhere In
Melp County. Individuals wishing 111 !;!!U'tlclpate
In lbe weekly conletlt may do so by pes!llng the
farm's owner. lust mal~ or drop offi'our guess to
the Gallipolis Dally Tribune, · 825 Third Ave.,
Gallpolla, Ohio, 454131, or the Datly)Seallnel, Ill
Court St., Pomeroy; Ohio,
. 4576B,and you may wtn

Farm Flashes

a $5 cash prize irom the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
numher wllb your card or Jetter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All \!ODiesl enlrlet should
be turned In to lbe newspaper office by 4 p.m •.each
Wednesday. In case of a lie, lbe wlaaer ~II be
chosen by lottery. Next week; a Gallla County
farm will be featured by the Gallla SoU aad Water
Co~U~ervatlon DIStrict.

.
Dr. Hunter to address
area tobaccomen Tuesday

FARM FLASHES
BY EDWARD M. VOLLBORN,

nounced on February 1 by U.S.
Secretary of Agriculture, Clay. ton Yeutter . Some local quota
numbers wlll also be explained.
·Refreshments will 'be served
courtesy of the Gallla County
Pr.lde In Tobacco Association. As
with tradition, the Hannan Trace
FFA and their advisor Mr. Tom
Pope will be the host for this
evening.' Lei's fill the gym!
Applications are being taken
· for the 1990 Phillip Morris
Outstanding Young Tobacco
.Farmer . program. Young
Farmers must be under "the age
of 35 at the beginning of · the
current year. At least75 percent
of their total income should come
from farming ·and they must be
actively engaged In tobacco
production . . Call the qallla
County Extension Office for
application forms. County entr ies are dqe at the County
Extension Office by Wednesday,
March 28. An out-of-county judge

will evaluate application forms
to name.
Applications are being taken
GALLIPOLIS - Tuesday ,
for the 1990 Ph!Uip Morris
March 20. starting at 7;30 p.m.,
Outs.tandlng Young Tobacco
wUI be the annual Gallla County
Farmer; program. Young
Tobacco . Producer Meeting at
Farmers must be the age of 35.at
Hannan Trace High School.
the beginning of the current year.
Dr. Phillip Hunter. University
At least 75 percent of their total
of 'I'ennessee-Tobacco ExperiIncome should came from farmment Statton Manager will be the
Ing and they must be actively
1111est apeaker. Dr. Hunter manengaged in tobacco production.
ages the Greenevllle station
Chllthe Gallla County Extension
where the variety Tennessee 86
OfflcP for application forms .
was recently developed.
County entries are due at the
His presentation will be prlmCounty Extension Office by Wedar Uy about tobacco production
nesday, March 28. An out-ofpractices Including: sucker concounty judge wUl evaluate applitrol options, vaJlety selection for
cation forms to name a. county
top grade, labor saving Ideas and
winner. Our nomination to the
other timely Information. The
state contest on due Aprn 1. 'This
Gallla County Pride In Tobacco
recognition program has some
Association. In cooperation with
really nice trlp!i and cash prizes.
the Gallla County Extension
There have been reports of cow
Office will give a short slide
deaths due to hypomagnesmla or
presentation on the 1990 Burley
"grass tetany". HypomagnesTobacco Program that was anmla Is caused by a lowering of
blood levels of magnesium and Is
often associated with cows or
sheep consuming lush . spring
grass, especially fertUlzed pastures or winter wheat pastures.
Early symptoms are usually
muscular weakness, followed by
uncoordlnatlon which progresses·
untn the cow can no longer rise.
Often cows · are .found dead
without observation of slgM.
While problems wlthhypilmagneseinla·llre 11nllsual this early In
the year, continued warm
whether could accelerate onset
of spring grazing. .It Is not too
early to make plans to supple- .
ment cows with magnesium.
This Is most easily done . by
adding magnesium oxide to a
mineral mix -and offering It
free-choice to cows. The goaJ.ls to
provide 60 grams (2 ounces) of
magnesium oxide per-head perFOSTER CONGRATULATED - Ohio Director of Avi'culture,
day
for cattle and one- third
Steve Mallrer, left, CODJII'atulates Joe Fosler, right, on his
ounce
per-head per-day . for
appointment to the Ohio Beef Council Operating Gommltlee.
sheep. This supplementatiOn
should continue throughout .the -.
spring until tile lush growth of
Two new members were ap- grass Is past. Some farms with
GALLIPOLIS- The Ohio Beef
Council plays an Important role pointed recently. One of those · historical problems, supplement
was Joe Foster, a cow/ calf magnesium oxide throughout the
In the beef Indus try.
year. Conditions will vary from
The council Is responsible for producer In Gallla County.
farm to farm. Contact your
of
the
Ohio
Beef
A
top
priority
beef promotion Including televiv e t e r lna.r tan for spe cific
Council
Is
to
keep
producers
sion advertisements and working
·
recommendations.
Informed
on
how
their
checkoff
wltb educators, health profesar
e
being
spent.
dollars
sionals, food service personnel,
and retailers to promote beef.
· They provide materials and
posters to help educate about
early fan·ptng techniques and
raising cattle. The council also
has a heart/ health care video
about how beef fits Into a healthy
BEfiR BY DESIGN
diet.
Another lmpor\llnt aspect of
HI-EFFICIENCY
the Ohio Beef Council Is the
Operating Committee. The Committee consists of 15 members In
··Ohio.

Foster named to committee

lf"tt!DTUrD•If

••• tn 'n~nlrtlt

HEAT PUMPS

For Mobile &amp; Manufactured Homes

•lnlerthlfm 1o found in cww •0% of
ell • - mobile Md mMufiC·
IU&lt;Id hOf!'ll bult todll'f.

•The . - P.C.S.D. Helt Pumpfll.. tur11: 100% 2-yr. pel1o e'ld
lobar werNnty; 100% 1-yr.
!*II end tebor Well Wily 011 lhl
comp,.-.. ouldoor molorand

roverolng velv!i. dlllanld and
engln-ed to m mod" lete l'tD dllliilerthli'm. Colemen &amp; Mllerfu,_,
•Low . . . fbwncino il available

•Free Eetlmetll

Call I ·100-172-5967
or (614) 446-9416
Over I~ Yean E11perlen~e .

QIJ

sampling of bulls usually reveal
10 percent or more wltli some
degree of unsoundness. This
becomes especially Important
for many ·ohio herds using . a
single sire.
A bull of subnormal fertility
can cause an extend~ calving
season and low conception rates
even lfhe Is not sterne. Multiple
sires are not' foolproof Insurance
as some bulls -establish dominance and inay breed most of the.

IIIA...G/COOUIIG . ·

0'" .

S.Selftfffll•l'll• ~~··· ............
~ lnlel'thenn, Co.l eman .t MOler F...tiwy Partl .t Senlee

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UPI) - Tbe Ohio House of
Representatives will vote Tuesday on legislation
giving Cuyahoga County the authority 10 enact.
neW taxes on alcohol · and cigarettes to help
finance· a proposed $344 million stadium In
. Cleveland.'
.
· The Idea of voter-approved "sin" taxes for a
stadium was taclced onto a simple Senate-passed
bill requiring that figures uied In the state Income ·
tax tables be rounded off to whole dollars.
The bill Is expected to . pass, and Senate
President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cinclnnatl, said he
personally favors It when It returns to the Senate
for concurrence In the change.
·The House reconvenes at 1l a .m. Tuesday and
the Senate at1 :30 p.m.
· The proposed tax blll, If approved by the .
General Assembly, signed by Gov. Richard

.
Celeste and enacted by local voters, would raise
about$155 mUUon toward' the cost ofthe stadium.
Local voters would be able to tax liquor sold In
state stores, as well as beer, wine and mixed
beverages sold In carryouts and supermarkets.
Alcoholic beverages sold In taverns and restaurants may already be taxed.
The House also Is expected to vote later In the
week on legislation calling for the refinancing of a
31-story, $150 million office building In downtown
Columbus housing the Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Com~nsat19n and
the Ohio Industrial
Commission.
The agellcles currently rent the building from
the workers ' Insurance fund for $25 million a year.
paid lor by assessments on employers. Sponsors
claim that leasing the building over 20 years with
an option to purchase will b~ a · cheaper
arrangement.
..

The House Is expected Tuesday to concur In
minor Senate changes to a $945 million capital ·
construction appropriation for 1991-92 and for,;
ward It to Gov. Richard Celeste for signature.
.T he bill contains $566 mllllon worth of projects
for state university campuses, and almost hall the
projects Involve· maintenance and renovation
rather than new construction.
A $138 million supplemental budget, which will
make up a projected S92 million shortfall In
Medicaid funds, Is scheduled for a Wednesday
hearing In the House Finance Committee and
could reach the floor the following day. It cleared
the Senate last week.
New child support guidelines required by the
Supreme Court have passed the House and are
scheduled for a Wednesday hearing In the Senate
Judiciary Commlltet'. The federal government
has Insisted that Ohio have the new rules In place

A Vinton Coun)Y man charged gauge shotgun he used to fatally
In the Feb. 28 shotgun slaying of wound himself.
his former girlfriend died Saturday In Grant Medical Center,
He shot himself after a threeaccordlDg the March 19 Colum- · hour standoff with troopers and
bus Dis patch.
of!lcers from the Vinton and ·
Richard Butcher, 33, of Wilkes- Jackson County Sheriffs departville, died at 9:45p.m. in Grant's ments. Officers surrounded the
Intensive care unit, a · hospital Wilkesville farmhouse of
spokesman said Sunday . He had Butcher's mother, Dorothy, alter
· been undergoing treatment since Butcher took refuge In ~ secondshooting hlmse)f In the stomach floor bedroom early March 8.
A relative nodfled troopers of
with a shotgun March 8.
The State .Highway Patrol had Butchers' whereabout after
charged Butcher with one count Butcher .threatened suicide. Ourof aggravated murder wllh a . lng the selge that followed ,
firearm specification In the slay- Butcher threatened to klll
Ing of Melinda Johnson, 24, of himself.
Oak Hill. Troopers said they
Jackson County Sheriff Edgar
believe Butcher shot Johnson .Rayburn tossed a tear gas
with the same single-shot. 12· canister through the open bed·

Ask a neighbor, then call me.

·BANKRUPTCY.
614-221-0118

Ave. I Stolt St.

AnORNEY~AT-LAW

PAST .• EGENTS - A hllhH&amp;hl of Frfda,y'~
Chlll'ter Day Lllacheoa of the Ret . . lollllthaa
Melli! Chapter of the Dauahtera of the American
ltevolulloa was the recopltlon of .put regents.

Gallipolis. Oh.
Phone 446·4290
Homo 446-4511

336 S. High St., Colutnbus, OH.

LOCAL CONSULTAOON
llfiiGHT,Iilul1EN LAW OFfKES,
POMEIOY, 992-2090

nut.,,,.

.A

P-or with

INIUUM ~~

AnOINEY D. AIOIAEL MilLEN

State Fll'm Mutual
Au-lnlutMCOC9"'1*'Y
HOmo Office, BloomlnQton. lllinOia

BJ Valted Press International
shoutil mostly end overnight, and Tuesday, with highs In the upper
Old Man Winter apparently Is sunny conditions should develop 30s to mkHOs, but more seasona·
determined to make up for a
Thutsday.
ble temperatures will then .
weak 1990 showing on the las t!ull .
return.
day before spring officially
Spring arrives officially at 4: 19 · Wednesday will see highs In the
arrives.
.
p.m. Tuesday., when the sun upper 40s to low 50s under sunny
Snow was falllng at dawn today crosses the equator on a north· skies. There will be a chance of
over most of the Buckeye State,
erly journey that ends on the first rain Thursday and Friday. with
with some southern and east day of summer, June 21. On the hlgbs around 50 Thursday and
central cOunties expected to get first day of spring, the length of from the mid-50s to inld-60s
as 'm uch as 3 Inches before the the day Is roughly equal to the Friday. Lows will be ln the 20s
storm passed ,
lengtl! of the night , but the day Wednesday and from 35 to 40
A snow advisory was In effect
appears to be longer.
Thursday and Friday.
lor the morning In the southwest
That 's because the atmosThe early morning weather
and lor all day for the south pheric retraction makes it ap- map showed a cold front over
central and east central regions. pear the sun rises before It eastern Ohio and a low pressure
with motoristS advised to watch actually comes over the horizon. center over West Vlfglnla. Both
lor sUppery roads·.
· ·
making the day longer by a few these systems are l!xpected to
Precipitation was expected to minutes.
slOwly move to the east coast by
taper off In western Ohio as the
The final day of winter was to early Tuesday morning. A region
day wore on, and the western · see chilly temperatures. with of high pressure that was over
counties should have clear skies highs In themld-30s tolow40sand the Great Plains early today
tonight and Tuesday. Over the overnight lows In the low 20s. The should move to the Appalachians
rest of the state, precipitation wintry temperatures will linger by late Tuesday.

""FINAL FOUR"'
IN THE 1990
NCAA BASKETBALL
TOURNAMENT AND
SMITH BUICK PONTIAC. INC.
WILL GIVE YOU•••

s1oooo

Celeste announces highway projects

e,,

N•·GI,IIIe.,/
No
Ot~1/

· According to Information· received this 'm orning, Governqr
Richard Celeste has approved
lll8.1 million In highway funds for
the completion of U. s. Route 50
In Athens County. The office of
State Rep. Mary Ab£&gt;1 iDAthens) contacted The Dally
Se!ltlnel this morning to report
the governor 1s funding approval.
Abel is extremely happy about
the governor's funding comm!t·

-RULES:(1) Uee newepaper coupon
(2) Mell or drop off your coupon to 1911
Ealtam Ave.
(3) AI entry forma mus1 be received before

.

(4) In caM of a tie we will use total cham pi·
. Onlhip ICOre
'
(6) One entry per pe;aon

--------------------------------------------~I
II) _ _ _ _ _ _ __

(2) _ _ _ _:___ __

. CHAMPIONSHIP
TOTAl SCORE --:...__,..__,.._"--Namt _ ______;:.,.....____;_

(3)---,-------'------

141 ....--- - - - - - -

Put' reaeata who were pre.oeat' for the meetlag
lnclade, from left, Befty MIIbou, Rae Beyaolda
Cwllo Ill currently let'vlag a aecond tenn as
reaeat),luae Allhte)', Pat Ingles, Mary Kay Yost,
Morla.b FQster and Phyllis Skinner.

Winter going out with a .· bang

PICK THE

3120/90'

room door alter negotiations
with Butcher failed. About two
minutes later, Butcher shot
himself.
He had been In hiding, at one
point In Columbus. since the
shotgun slaying of his former
girlfriend on the berm of Rt. 32.
Johnson had Jumped or been
pushed !rom a car and was
talking to two truckers. who had
stopped to help her when she was
shot In the face. A man !ired a
shotgun from his car window as
he passed by, the truckers said.
· Larry Johnson of Oak Hill,
father of the slain woman, said
Butcher had threatened to kill
her when the couple broke up
about a year ago. She had two
children. 5 and 2.

CAROtL .SfiOWDEN
Corner of Third

L.W. CENNAMO

In

by Aprll1.
The House PubliC Utilities Committee has
scheduled a hearing · Tuesday afternoon for
legislation establishing " lifeline'·' telephone rates
for low-Income families .
The House Commerce and Labor Committee
wUl hear Initial testimony Wednesday morning on
a Senate-passed bill l{overnlng demonstrations
against re tail products.
·
The blll originally was Intended to curb violent
protests against fur coats. but It was broadened In
the Senate to Include all consumer goods.
Sen. Gary Suhadolnlk. R-Pal'l!la Heights. the
chief sponsor, said he will try to reinsert a
provision calling fo r a criminal pen;~lty for ·
cqnsplring to disrupt a retail business with a
demonstration against a product. That provisibn
· wa:s knocked out In the Senate.

Suspect in killing dies of wound

Paying more
than you need
to for car
·
insurance?

A~~~ --~-------

r~-

.

.

I
II
I

I
I

I

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

.

.
ClU'I'D 8PEUER - Bry·
- L (...) Carter epeakfa&amp; at
1 I II I pnpllll aboat 1...
....
tlfvlll~. . .
V.I. Farm 1111, and u
itJwa vlw of the farm price

cE· .

Ohio House to vote
on
'sin
tax'
legislation
.

tment for Route 50 because
completion of this route "will be
good for e&lt;;'Onomlc development
throughout Southeastern Ohio,"
she stresses.
And even though the stardng
dat e&lt; for the lour separate
pro jt'cts which comprise the
total $58.1 million package, are In
1993 and 1995. Abel feels tbls "Is
still only a short time away.

"I'm very happy to see this
money coming Into our rel{lon.
It's · something we've . worked
hard to get and I'm pleased to
announce the awarding of these
monies for Southeastern Ohio,"
she says.
There Is also money reportedly
going toJ&gt;Ike County to complete
the Appalachian Highway, although the amount of funding
was unavailable at press time.

Protesters arrested' at abortion clinic
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPil Flfty·slx anti-abortion protesters
arrested durin!! the weekend
remained In the Franklin County
jail Sunday on~harges stemming
from a "reacue operation" at a
downtown clinic, official~ said.,
The defendants, most ch!l~
with dllonlerly conduct and a
few wllb mil dng arrest, were
amcma 123 people arrested Satur·
day u thl!)' blQCked the entrance
totliJFou...-·swomen'sHealth

"We read them t.bewarnlngs and
they cleared the door at that
time."

Kalght, supervisor of lhlt Franklin County Municipal Court.
"Ever.ythlng wu very peaceful," she uld SUnday. "The
dleorderlles
that came
through didn't offer a lot of
resl8taDCe or anything."
Katght uld 55 of tho11e arrested
had been releued with a

· The demonatratton drew actlvll ta from acrou the state and,
accordlq to ar1'81t records,
SOllie people from Weet Virginia,
Indiana and PellltiYIVBIIIa.
The 11'1'11111 ·for dllorderly
conduct at the Founder'• cllalc IUlftiiiOJII,
The ot1ten remaiJted 111 tbe
began early SaturdQ and coD·
tlnued for about three ltoun, FranlcUn CoUnty JaB. Bond tor
Matltl llkl About 100 offtcerl ObiO 1'811deall wa• Itt at • ·
were called to tlte dlllk: and They htll to pay 1ft to pt out of
rerulaed uatU tbe IJOCitesteralefl Jail, aald Torn McFertn, deputy
clerk,
atDOOD.
Tttere wu no viOleace at eltber
Sit- Doll Tltomu ..,. 56
remaiDid jJIIed at mltl-momlna
clinic, bJ uld.
'
.Calm aiiO prevailed dlirlng the Sunday.
booklq of 1111pects, uld Linda ·
(Ctildk .I d Otl Pap It)

eeaeer:

Aaotlter prOteet at Capital
Care Women's Center went with·
out ar1'8111 whelt tlte actlvflta
IIIII1IWd hill tltedoorot tile clinic.
llld Lt. WWiam Mattei of the
Columbus Pollee Pepartment.

Olldooll.

An appeal to residents ttl stop
Illegal dumping In the county was
Issued this morning by Kenny
Wiggins of the Meigs County
Litter Control office.
Wiggins said that the discard· ·
lng of major appllsnces such as
refrigerators, washers, stoves,
dryers, and dishwashers along
the country and township road·
ways Is creating a serious
problem.
''This dumping Is illegal ·and

Teachers end historic walkout
CHARLESTON. W.Va. !UPil
- Teachers agreed to leave the
picket lines and return to classrooms Monday, but union leaders
quesdoned the authority of a
court order that ended West
VIrginia's first statewide walkout by educators.
Striking educators met across
the state Sunday and agreed to
heed ~he call of the state's two
education groups to end the
11-day strike.
''Everyone will be ret urnlng to
work," said Bob Brown, executive director of the West VIrginia
Federation of Teachers, which,
represents 3,00o of the siate's
21.653 teachers.
ThE'WVFTand the larger West
VIrginia Education Association
announced a settlement Saturday, epdlng a strike that flared
March 7 when the WVEA accused Gov. Gaston Caperton of
backing out of a pledge to deliver
a 5 percent JH!Y raise. .
Brown said he heard 'from
teachers In 20 counties Sunday
night, and without excepdon, the
strikers voted to return to the
classrooms. The WVFr leader
said "there's no quesdon" the
brief strike served a useful
purpose.
'1 don't think, ever again, that
any politicians will take teachers
for granted, or not take ~~erloualy
our reeotve and commitment to
Improve education," Brown aald
Sunday nlgbt.
Kanawha County Circuit
Judge Joba Hey on Friday
ordered teaehen &amp;ei'OII tbeetate
to rettira to work, eDillltl' the
walltilut tltat dlarupled 11:bool for
3411,000 ltudllltllll .. eotllltleJ.
Browlt erltlctlld lley'a tnlllr·
fl!reDCe, IIYIIII tllllt aiiDwi.Da
jllll. . to llllilr tbt field ot labor
aeaouatloaa "II daqeroua."

Bniwn llld 1111 orallllratton

wiD .u. to bJve Hey'a onltr
•truck clowll at lite ltearlni at 10
a.m. Tuesday.
·

. ~·

(I

.,

causes big problems for . all
Pomeroy. They will be picked up
communities as well as being
there and recycled, Wiggins said.
very expensive If you are arThis Is for appliances only. It
rested and cited to court. "
was emphasized, and the Utter
commented Wiggins.
control director urged residents
He said that lor a limited time to take advantage of the opportunity to dispose of such .Items
h~ agency has worked out an
·
arrangement with a recycling · now .
:·we 'appreciate your working
operation whereby 'such Items
can be brought to an area with our program til doing your
adjacent to the Meigs County
part to keep Meigs County 'Clean
Litter ·Control office at Union and Beautiful,' Wiggins
Avenue and State Route 7 near concluded.

"It's our esdmatlon at this
hour tha 1 we likely will go to seek
to dissolve the statewide Injunction, " Brown said. " We are still
talking with our attorneys. We
have said all alol)g that when the
judicial system gets Involved
with labor management disputes
there Is always the danger of
precedents. "

Brown acknolwledged that Impending court action Influenced
the settlement.
Attorney General Roger Tomkins declared the strike Illegal,
and Caperton &lt;s uggested last
week he would seek replacements if teachers prolonged lt.
The walkout paralyzed schools In
(Coatlllued On Paae It)

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            <elementText elementTextId="35559">
              <text>March 18, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6671">
      <name>bauerle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3019">
      <name>persons</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1074">
      <name>rice</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6672">
      <name>sabo</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6673">
      <name>spradling</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
