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'

,

Friday. November 24, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

I

IHI ~ MIK 'fl'!D

ILILITIP DILll~-~
lF©If lOO@ltfiiiD~ (())umr (Q]If~Imcdl

Sunday

50 cents

Shop early,
shop locally ·

•

(())[p)~ImfiiiD~ A ~UllCC«!®~~

Ohio State loses -finale

29

Jamftl Sands:
'Boy Sooul8 of America
incorporated in 1910."8-8

C-1

Inside
Alonr the River ......... Bl·S
Buaineaa ........... .......... .D·I

Comlca- ................... luert
Claallfledol ......... ........ Dt-7
J)ea&amp;lll •••••••••.•.••••.•••••.•A--3
Sportl ...................... C·l·8

In our town:
Fonner Gallia County
residenl8 remgnized...Page B-8

Partly cloudy. Hlfh In upper
4lle.

et
Vol. 24 No. 42

-------

Season underway--

•

JunaboRoU

A MuhifMdlolnc:. N - - •

.

Two killed ·o n Mason roads
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. A Wood County woman was
ktlled and four people were
Injured Friday, shortly before
midnight, In a tralllc accident on
Route 2 belo.w Apple Grove. ·The
death marked the second Mason
County fatality In two days.
The Mason County Shertll's
Department said Darla D. Donaldson, 21, Mineral Wells, a
passenger In a vehicle driven by
Christopher Brian Long, 20,
Gallipolis Ferry, was ktlled when
the vehicle was struck head-on
by a vehicle driven by Hitler
Barr)' Davis·, 54, Galltpolls.
The department noted that
Davis was passing a vehicle In a
no passing zone when he struck

Hid/Gallon
Limit 1 Free Per Family With Any Other Purchase
(excluding
items prohibited by law)
.

Limit 1 Free Per Family With Any Other Purchase
(excluding items prohibited by law)

14 Sec11ono. 134 P -

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Ph,111nt. November 28. 1989

Copytluh-.1 1989

'

the Long vehicle.
•
Both drivers were Injured,
along with two passengers In the
Long vehicle, Christina Long, 17,
Galllpolts Ferry, and Benny
Hughes. 18, Ashton.
Christopher Long was taken to
St. Mary:s Hospital, Huntington,
where, according to the nursing
supervisor, the family requested
his condition not be released.
Christina Long was admitted
to Pleasant Valley Hospital with
multiple fractures, and was .
listed In stable condition Satur·
day. Both Hughes and Davis
were admitted to PVH, where
Hughes was In stable condition
Saturday with leg fractures, and
Davis for observation with
contusions.

The sherllrs department said
the lnj~red were transported to
the hospitals by units !rom
Valley and Point Pleasant emer·
gency medical services.
The accident remains under
Investigation.
Mason deputies were stU! ln~estigating a Wednesday night
accident that took the life of a
Glenwood yputh.
·
Christina Marte Eads, 14, · a
passenger In a vehicle driven by
Artscelene · Fowler, 34, Glen·
wood, died ollnjurles sullered In
the accident, which occurred 2%
mtles south of Point. Pleasant on
Route 2.
Deputies said Fowler's vehicle
spun out of a control due to wet

roadway around 9:30 p.m. The
vehicle crossed the center line
and struck a vehicle driven by
Ginger Campbell, 23, Point
Pleasant.
Both drivers, Eads, and
another passenger In the Fowler
vehicle, Lamorta Cooper, 15,
Glenwood, were taken to PVH by
the Point Pleasant EMS. Cooper,
Fowler and Campbell were all
treated and released. Eads was
freed !rom the wreckage by the
Point Pleasant Fire Depart·
ment's ' 'Jaws of Llle ...
Acrordlng to sources at PVH,
Eads died ol multiple trauma.
The deaths bring the Mason
County trafllc fatality count for
the year to seven.

·Abortion focus returns to Supreme Court .

.,.

Regular, Jumbo or $unsize
.

aoWta

:s

or

(4) rises above lbe defenae
offered hy three Green Local players to score on a layup durlnl
Friday nllht's ~ opene}"for both ae..,...la Frani&lt;Un Funace.
Friday nlfht markH..&amp;M&gt;Openlllr nllht of basketball action for
- Y o&amp;ber area teams aa well. (11mero-Senllnel photo by G.
. HaniUIII Trace'• Riehle

·-

1.6 oz.l.oef

Limit 1 Free Per Family With Any Other Purchase .
(excluding Items prohibited. by law)

Limit 1 Free Per Family With Any Other Purchase
(excluding items prohibited by law)

-

••I

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
national abortion debste returns
to the Supreme Court next week
when the justices hear -arguments In two cases about the
rights of a teenager to end a
pregnancy without te111ng her
parents.
.
Whtle the court has generally
supported state laws concerning
parental Involvement In t lhts
sensitive area, the cases from
Ohio and Minnesota that wtll be
, ar11ued Nov . . 29 rould brill&amp;,
drarn.atlc changes.

The court's conservative rna· but Is now ltrmly In the political
jorlty, which gave siates more arena where volatile public opln·
power to regulate abortion In the ion on such emotional Issues can
Webster decision last July, could aburptly end a promising career.
continue the process. And there
In light of that fact, Ohio
ts a posstblltty - albeit slight - · Attorney General Anthony Cele·
that the court will accept an brezze Jr., who has been sup·
Invitation from the Bush admln- ported by anti·abortlon groups
lstratlon to u·se the cases to and ts a probable candidate lor
over(Qrn the 1973 Roe vs . Wade .governor In 1990, declined to
decision that legalized abortion.
speculate about what the case
However It rules. the court Is means tn terms of the political
not likely to do anything to quiet a climate - a climate that saw
debate that for year-s. was cenj . aptl·allortion gubernalorlal .cat~·
tered ori an 'tnstilaled legal world,- ··d !dates tn .New Jersey and

propellers- cut In half, kind ol
1111eted on the spot, .. said Jody
Hoffman, ltshertes biologist at
the service's lteld office In
Elkins. W.Va.
Hoffman said an estimated 10
percent of the fish sucked into the
turbines would be ktlled and that
the toll would be larger lor sport
ttsh ..which are more sensitive to
environmental changes.
The estimate does not Include
losses to larvae or the number of
Injured fish that would die later,
Hoffman said. "It's like having
your lungs crushed. You would
live lor awhile - long enough to
crawl off !rom the accident ... he

said.
"Based on the limited dat'
.
available. annual losses of lis~
and degraded water quality on~~
WASHINGTON tUPI) -West
least 500 river miles can be
Virginia
and Ohio officials are to
expected." said Ronald Lan\meet
next
week to discuss the
bertson, the service's northeast
upgrading
of
U.S. 35 In Mason
regional director.
County.
West
Virginia,
and Gal·
"We are seriously concerned
Ia
County,
Ohio,
said
Rep.
Bob
I
that the Federal Energy Regula·
tory Commission Ignored 011r Wise, D·W.Va .
Wise and Rep. Bob McEwen.
repeated requests for baseltpe
information and issued the ~ I· · R·Ohto, also will attend the
censes without adequate data meeting In Galltpolts, Ohio.
The West Virginia Democrat
about the actual accumulatiVe
said
the meeting will be a chance
Impact of these projects," he
to
follow
up on progress on the
said.
I
Route 35 project, and discuss the
future of the project.

serv1c~ ()pp;~t;g'~hydro . pJ;t;~ts . ;~;~~ Oh7n ~·-~wls
1
j
t•
U S 35

CoLUMBUS- Millions of fish
lfHI be ktlled and water quality
wtll deteriorate on more than500
miles of rivers In the Ohio River
basin If 16 new hydroelectricity
projects are constructed. accord·
lng to objections flied by the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service accord·
lng to a story published recently
In the Columbus Dispatch.
The service, joined by a
number of state agencies, cities
and environmental critics, has
asked the Federal Energy Regu·
latory Commission to reconsider
Its decision to license the projects
on the Ohio, Monongahela and
Allegheny rivers.

Five of the proposed projects
ar~ at Belville, Gallipolis, Pike
Island, New Cumberland and
Willow Island on the Ohio River.
The five. member energy com·
mission approved the licenses
Sept. 27, .commission spokesman
Sharon Hyland said. She declined
to comment on the Fish and
Wildlife Service's objections.
Tne damage estimates were
based on a study ofltsh mortality
at an existing hydroelectric
power station at the Racine
!Ohio) lock and dam.
"Fish are sucked Into the
turbines. Some are struck by the

mee tng on

'

Family files ·suit in child's traffic death!
By DICK THOMAS
Tlmes.Sendnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - A multi·
mtlllon dollar wrongful death
suit has been ltled ,In Galli&lt;\
County Common Pleas Court as
result of the highway death Sept.
1 of Joshua Newman, 3, of
Ironton. Ohio.
Carl Anthony Newman and
Sheila Newman of Ironton, both
of whom were Injured. flied the

9% oz. Cen

1. "'· l'lcg.
Limit 1 Free Per Family With Any Other Purchase
(excluding Items prohibited by law)

suit against Sharon A. Jeffers,
Rt. 3, Gautpolls, as result of the
accident at the junction ol Routes
7 and 35 and Fifth Avenue at
Kanauga.
The complaint charges that
Jeffers· negligence, In that she
failed to stop at the Intersection
and yield the right of way, was
the cause of the accident.
Newman suffered head lnjur·
les and multiple contusions,

abrasions and lacerations, and reasonable amount along with
was taken to Holzer Medical prejudgment interest and court
Center.
costs.
'
Sheila R. Newman and Joshua ·
Newman is seeking damages
Newman were Injured and air· of $1 million for Injuries and loss
lifted by HealthNet helicopter to of earnings.
/
Cabeii·Huntlngton Hospital,
The Newmans arP seeRing
Huntington, W.Va. , where Jo· damages of S1 million Iori the
shua Newman died.
wrongful death of their son . 1
The plalntills hope they will
The pialnttlls are see~lng
recover compensatory damages damages of $50.000 for Jofhua
In the suit In a just and
(See FAMILY, A'l

GALLIPOLIS - One person
complained o Injuries In a
two-car rearend colltston at 1:55
p.m. Friday on the US 35 exit

'

driving a 1987 Isuzu pickup truck, Vinton, was Injured and taken to
was stopped ready to pull onto SR Holzer Medical Center by private
,
7 when 11 was hit from behind by a car.
The
patrol
said
Bereczky's
1974
19984 Olds Ftrenza driven by Judi
VW
Rabbit
went
off
Key~tone
Douglass, 18, of 15 Garfield Ave.,
Galllpolts: Damage was moder· Road, struck a ditch, went across
a field, struck anoth~ ditch and
ate to both vehicles.
A passenger In the Varju came to a stop on MI. Tabor
vehicle, Anna M. Smith, 65 , Rt.1, Road. There was heavy ~ama ·
Glenwood, W.Va.. suffered a ge.The patrol cited Bereczky for
minor Injury but was not Imme- fatlur~ to maintain control and no
seat belt.
diately treated.
A hltsktp accident on LDeer
The patrol cited Varju for no
Creek
Road In Racroon Town·
seat belt and Douglass lor !allure
ship,
was
reported to the patrol at
to stop within the assured clear
3
p.m.
Friday.
Troopers said an
distance.
approaching
unidentified
vehicle
Jacqueline A. Ginther, 33,
forced
Shane
R.
Smith,
16,
Portland, Ohio, Wll$ transported
VInton,
driving
a
1985
toyota
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
after a one vehicle accident at 7 Tercel stattonwagon, off the
p.m. Friday In Lebanon Town· road. The vehicle overturned·.
ship, on TR. 135, 0.4 of a mile Damage was heavy. No one was
Injured.
!
north ot SR. 124.
There were no lnjuril!S and
.Troopers said Ginther's 1989
GMC statlonwagon went olf the there was no citation In a one-car .
road and overturned onto Its top. accident at noon FJ'Iday ~n Dry
Damage was moderate. There Ridge Road, Greenfieldl Town·
ship, onemtle south of lSR 233.
was no citation.
The patrol tnvest11ated Troopers said David G. Carpen·
another Injury accident at 6 p.m. ter, 35, Rt. 2, Patriot, lost control
Friday on Keystone Road, Hun· on the tee. His 1985 Tovbta 4x4,
tilltrton Township, 2611-feet west went off the road Into a ditch and
overturned . Damage was
of Mt. Tabor Road.
1
Tina M. Bereczky, 19, Rt . 2, moderate.

ramp from the Siver br ldge to
State Route 7, according to the
State Hlghwa)( Patrol.
Troopers said Michael Varju,
36, Rt. 1, Delbarton, W.Va . .

Tally error changes
.
.
trustee race wtnner
"

From
The Deli

or
1 "'· l'lcg.

'

(

I

----- -··------ . -·--... ~

..

•·JilL

Limit 1 Free Per Family With Any Other Purchase
(excluding items prohibited by law)

Limit 1 Free Per Family With Any Other Purchase
(excludlng items prohibited by law)

I .

-

------(

Ohio Gov. Richard Celeste has
announced plans to upgrade the
highway to lour lanes In Gallla
and Wise secured · fed·

o

•

~ral

funds for a study that
recommended the road be upgraded to four lanes between
Point Pleasant and Charleston.
"W lth the West Virginia feastbllty study and the Ohio financial
commitment, this project has
made great progress In the las 112
months," Wise said. "It would be
unfortunate If the push on the
West Virginia side of the Ohio
River became bogged down In
petty political squabbling ...
Boosters In three West Virginia
counties have proposed routes
going through their areas for the
four·lane link. and the state
Division of Highways has not
made a final decision on the
route.

-.

Two-car collision injures one on SR 7

Limit 1 Free Per Family With Any Other Purchase
(excluding Items prohibited by law)

JB

earlier this month.
And In Minnesota, abortion
appears to be the No. 1 question
facing politicians. All are asked
to deltne their positions and not a
few wish they had not come down
so hard on one sld!! or the other.
Several candidates opposed to
abortion now are trying to
develop a more moderate posl·
lion by saying they would allow
abortions In cases of Incest, rape
and to save the ltle of the mother
a._nd WO!I}II yote fpr, goveriJJnent
money to pay for such a borlions.

..
~

.

'
GALLIPOLIS
- A Raccoon board ol elections to get precinct
Township man who thought he sheets lor the Nov. 7 general
lOst the election lor one of two election, before the official can·
trustee posts hi the township, vass began.
The count after the ofltclal
now knows different.
The olltctat canvass of the Nov. canvass changed things com·
7 general election, completed pletely. Vote totals were nearly
this past w~ek, revealed an error the same. however, an error was
In the final tally of votes, the discovered In order of listing the
GalUa County Board ol Elections candidates . on the final Ially
announced Friday.
sheet. ·
The unolftctal vote count In
Woodrow Hall coUected 305
Raccoon Township, tmmedtiltely yotes while Don D. Price had 270
after the election, gave Harley G. 1to · give them the two . seats.
Thomas 303 voles and Woodrow Harley G. Thomas had 248 votes.
Hall 270, with Don D. Price third Hall and Price moved up whlle
with 240 votes. According to lhat, Thomas dropped !rom first to
Tbomas and Hall were elecled to third place.
~ two posts to be vacant.
~lectlon ofltclals said It was a
)Iuman error that caused the
However, Hall discovered the mistake, not the ,Votamatic com·
mistake whtln he went to the puter that taiU~ votes.
I

J

.'

- lelf Bruwa •• .,._ •ataclleer for alloat foar
yean-· Blll ..lil •a11•1
will lake &amp;o thew..,... Wtth
more lllu 11111 h1a lruiJ flreiii'IIL Bo owa bu coMtncted a deer
altllld lbat Ill aure lo be lile ..., of oilier aerlout h..tera.

•-lie

I

�November 26. 1989

•

Commentary and perspective
AIMvt.loaof

WASHINGTON- We owe our
readers an apoloKY. In a recent
column we took Environmental
Protection Agency Admlnlstra·
tor William Reilly to task for
being too accommodating to
industrial polluters. We led you
to believe that was Reilly's
biggest problem.
We were wrong. Reilly's biggest problem Is that he is a
made-1or·TV administrator. He
haa 'been dubbed by some EPA
Insiders, "The Vanna White of
the Bush Administration" and a
"clean air head.''
To be sure, Reilly spends far
more time than his predecessors
cultivating an image as a champion of the environment. Staffers
say they know Reilly Is truly
pleased with a new Idea when It
makes the six o'clock news.
For Reilly, the camera angle
and sound bite are paramount,
some staffers told our associate
· Stewart Harris. But Is Reilly for

G . . . . . . ._"T".~d·111 Com s.., POIIH!HJ', Oldo

C.WMt ... Olllo

&lt;•••&gt; ......

(tl4)441-tso

BOBUT L. WINGETT
PubliMer

I

PAT Wlll'l'BD&amp;D
A,;·•·et Publ..._.CHaroller
. A ME)CBDI ol The Uoltod Prft&amp;lolmiAt~. lolud Dollyl'rou AuocltotiOII aDd tbe AmericaD. NewiPIPfl' PutlliiMrl Alt«latloD..

LEI'TERS OF OPINION ..,.. ~mme. Th&lt;')' -..o! bo 1. . tlllll 300 word~
lCIIll. AllletWsaresu.bject toedUIDaaadmutbealptd wttbaaJDe, addr•aaftd
tetopllooo oumbor. No u ..... lll letWr&amp; will be pui&gt;IIINI. Leller&amp; .-111 be ho
pod t~~~~~~~-~~~ •.aot ~rMulltla.
.

Backstairs at
·the White House
By HELEN THOMAS

UPI Wll~ Ho- Reporter
WASHINGTON- The cameras and reporters were on hand for the
unveiling of former President and Mrs. Reagan's of!lclal portraits,
now on view for public visitors to the White House.
But the dedication of a small patio outside the Oval Office study In
honor of Reagan and designed by Mrs. Reagan was a private affair.
Without fanfare, the president showed his predecessor a plaque put
up In the garden taken from a note that Reagan left for Bush.
It reads: "This beautiful garden has served as a welcome oasis for
sunshine. quiet conversation, fresh air and fresh thinking.
"The natural beauty a! our land is captured here In this serene
·setting which I hope you will find as peaceful and refreshing as I
have. ••.

The President and Mrs. Bush have tried to set their own style In the
White House and not emulate the Reagans.
But on one score, they are following the script laid down by the
Reagans. On their arrivals and their departures, their spaniel Millie
Is rushed out on the south lawn to distract the media and to help the
president run the gauntlet of reporters who might shout a question.
The Reagans did the same thing with their dog, Rex. Both dogs have
served as good props.
Speaking of Millie, she continues to generate much Interest. During
a question and answer session with the youngsters at Pickard
Elementary School in Chicago, Bush was asked about her.
· "HoW Is you dog doing?" he was asked .
The President: "How's our dog? Oh she's wonderful. I don't want to
say this In front of anybody, but I had to take her Into the shower
yesterday and give her a bath because·.she rolled in something bad. I
mean, really bad. And so Barbara, my wife, said 'would you mind
giving Millie a bath?' So even when you're president, you've gottodo
some stuff that Isn't too good or fun. But when she slept up on our bed
last night, she was very clean and she smelled real good."
In a follow up from another pupil, Bush was asked: "How many
puppieS did Millie have?"
The President: 1"MIIIie had six puppies and her son-she had five
daughters and a son, and the son, he's now ~lght months old and he's
much bigger than Millie, and heplayswith her. And we had her up at
Camp David and they run through the woods looking for things. But
there's some bad news. s..e that rabbit over there? Don't let him out If
Millie comes to this school. okay?"
'"The other day-I wouldn't say this, because I know they won't
report this, but the other day, running through the woods. Millie
caught something and Mrs. Bush said to the Secret Service Man 'what
Is that.' And the Secret SErvice guy said, 'A bunny.' She had caught
this bunny.''
Members of the media, some 200-plus traveling with President
Bush to Malta Dec. 1·3 have 'been told to do their Christmas shopping
at bonne. Bush and Soviet PresidentMikhallGorbachev will hold their
seaboard summit orr the coasto!Malta. butthe bulk of the reporters,
expected to number In the many hundreds, Including the Soviet and
international media, will be on the Island.
· The White House advance team, which scouted the Island, has
forewarned the potential shoppers there Is not that much to buy.
All of lhe summit coverage of the Bush-Go'rbachev meeting will be
by so-called pools, made up of a few reporters and cameramen, who
will act on behalf of the ·e ntire press corps.
Bush and Gorbachev may get cabin fever aboard the USS Belknap,
the flagship of the Sixth Fleet and the Slava , the nuclear missile
cruiser owned by the Soviets. Their talks will be below deck, unless
they want to take a stroll. The meetings will be held alternately on
~ach of the ships and the two leaders will be ceremonially piped
aboard with the playing of the national anthems.
So despite ttle Insistence that the meetings will be Informal, chatty,
11itstructured wilhout a fonnal agenda. The superpower navies will
add a flourish to the setting.
• And to disabuse the world that there will be a lessening of
~perpower mllltary pr0111ess, Bush will watch an air show aboard an
aircraft carrier, the USS Forrestal, on his arrival In the
Medlterra.nean Friday, Dec. 1.

•

: Bush may have a problem on the.Soviet ship which will be anchored
&lt;)nly at the bow, and can turn around. The Belknap will be anchored at
the bow and stern.

Today in history
I

Page-A-2-

By Unlled Preu laterna&amp;loDal
Today Is Sunday, Nov. 26, the 330th day of 1989 with 35' to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Include English poet William Cowper In 1731, air conditioning
engineer Willis Carrier In 1876, surgeon and wc:men's rtghta leader
Mary Walker Edwards In 1832, French playwtlght Eugene Ionesco In
1912 tage 77), cartoonist Charles Schulz in 1922 (age 67), singer
Robert Goulet In 1933 (age 56) , 1mprHslon1st Rtch Little tn1938tage
51) and rock singer Tina Turner In 1939 (age !50) .

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

real?
The administrator Is on a
.
- two-week swing through Europe they many never get him to pay
on EPA butsness, and, for .once, attention to details. Insiders tell
is not available for Interviews. us that Reilly often glazes over
But his spokesman said that the when starr meetings turn a
grumbling from some EPA nitty-gritty policy Issues. He
~tatters about Re!IJy"s public
would rather recount his lunches
image wUI end when they get with Washington celebrities.
used to the Idea of an agency
Some environmental leaders
head who uses the ·soapbox.
are concerned that Reilly's tough
Adminls.trators during the talk about the environment Is,
Reagan years were expected to like his cover· boy looks, only skin
work quietly or lose their jobs. deep. One prominent environ·
That gave staffers plenty of time mentalist gave Reilly ''high
to work closely with Reilly's marks on rhetoric, low marks on
predecessors, including Lee Tho- essenCe."
mas and William Ruckelshaus Rellly's aborted attempt to get
something they can't do with a limousine for home-to-work
Reilly because he spends so transportation didn't Impress his
much time on the road and In staffers who remember his
television studios.
predecessor, Lee Thomas, un~
The day· to-day administration . folding his strapping frame from
haa fallen on Reilly's deputy, a Toyota Tercel every morning.
Henry Habicht.
An EPA spokesman told us
Staf!ers may eventually get that the limo would have given
used to Relllv's hi11h profile, but Reilly an extra hour during his

commute to make phone calls
and read. That episode left some
agency workers wondering If
ReUly was truly committed to the
environment.
Likewise, some staffers were
amazed when Re1lly fell for an
unworkable alternative fuels
plan that would have forcec
Detroit to sell 1 m1111on cars a
year that run on something other
than pure gasoline. It is doubtful
that Americans would have been
wUllng to buy the cars. And 11 Is
even a mcire remote possibility'
that the federal government
would have forced gas stations to
stock alternative fuels .
·
The unrealistic proposal would
ha•e run out of gas on Its own If It
has not colitded head-on with
powerful all and auto interests In
Congress. Despite the drubbing, .
Reilly Is stili clinging to hope for
the plan.

·

President and Mrs. Bush are
among the first to participate In
our national hymn poll.
When asked which hymn Is his
favorite, the president, an Episcopalian, chose the Navy Hymn,
"Eternal Father, Strong to
Save.'' President Bush was a
Navy pilot during World War II In
the PaCific. Mrs. Bush listed
three favorites - "Nearer My
;God to Thee," "The Church's
One Foundation" and "Amazing
Grace.''
The hymn poll, open to all
readers of this column, is being
conducted to discover the hymns
America loves best. There Is stUl
time to get your ballot ln. Send
the names of your fa vorlte
hymns (up to three) to HYMNS,
P.O. Box 327, Columbus, OH
43216.
The evangelical churches,
which have recorded the greatest
membership gains In the last 25
years, are generally considered
to have the best congregatioaal
singing. Does this have something to do with their larger
memberships? Many think so.
The music director of a Bapt(?t
church In the Middle West thinks
he knows why the congregational
atr\g!ng In many evangelical
churches Is superior to that
heard to most non·evangellcal
churches.
"Born·agaln evangelicals sing
because they are happy," he
says. "They are not just singing
words and tunes. They are
putting out what Is In their
hearts. They are looking forward
to Jesus· comtnil again and being
with him In heaven."
A song leader at another
evangelical church feels that the
type of hymns sung and the
presence of a song leader on
Sunday mornings have a lot to do
with the quality of singing in his
church.
"We sing mostly lively tunes,"
he says. Some of the favorites
with his congregation are "Dwel·
ling In Beulah Land," "When We
All Get to Heaven," "Since Jesus
Came Into My Heart" and "He
Ransomed Me."
"Excitement Is contagious,"
he says. "If the song leader Is
enthusiastic, that enthusiasm
will be picked up by the people
and spread through the congre·
gation.If the person next to you is
singing, you have to sing. It's
hard to stand there without
joining in." .
This song leader has another
secret that he says Improves
congregational participation.
While he Is leading a song, he
moves . his gaze around the
church and fixes his eyes on
several different people In the
congregation.
"If they feel I am looking at
them and they aren't singing,
they will start to sing," he says.
"If they are already singing, they
w111 sing better."
Mainline churches where the
congregational singing is often
poor may lind suggestions for
themselves In these observa·
lions. But the selection of hymns
may provide the best
to the

lack of participation by members
of churches such as the Episcopal, Presbyterian and United
Chl!rch of Christ.
I attended a midweek program
one evening recently at an
Episcopal church where the
Sunday singing is lackluster.
Before the speaker got up, there

George Plagenz

was a hymn·slng. The rector
asked tliose present to choose the
hymns they would like to sing.
They piCked mostly the old
favorites rarely sung there on
Sunday mornings. The response
was inspiring.
"I think you have the answer to
your church's singing problem,"

·the visiting speaker said to the
rector before beginning his
speech. "On Sunday morning,
when it comes time for the
hymns, just ask the people what
they want to sing."
Or the clergy can consult the
results of our hymn poll.

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Arlie R. Carter
COLUMBUS - Fun~&gt;ral serv1·
ces were held at lOa.m. Saturday
at the O.R. Woodyard Co. Chapel,
Columbus, Ohio for Arlie Randall

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UP!)
- Nearly 400 people attended a
funeral Saturday for a Florida
reporter kidnapped and slain
whUe researching a story on
cocaine production in a Peruvian
jungle that Is a stronghold for
drug traffickers.
·The standtng-room·only ser·
vice for Tampa Tribune reporter
T..odd C. Smith was held at St.
Johns Episcopal Church in Tallahassee, where he grew up.
Colleagues at the Tribune and
other reporters and editors who
had· known Smith were among
those attending.
. Smith, 28, disappeared Nov.17
1!1 the jungle region of Uchlza, 260
miles northwest of Lima. The
'o!)olent area In the Upper Hual·
laga Valley is the world's larg~st
P'r9&lt;1ucer of the coca leaf, the
~in Ingredient In cocaine. and
is a stronghold of drug traf·
tiCkers and the . Shining Path
communist guerrilla movement.
Smith had been using his
vacation to research the story on
c(Jcaine production when he was
kidnapped from a local airport,
tortured and killed, Tampa Trlb·
u)le editors and authorities In
F1eru said.
: The Federal Bureau of Investi·
gat ion has joined in the investlga·
tlon into Smith's murder.
• "We're working with the State
Department and the Peruvian
{;overnment on this," said Mike
Korlan, FBI spokesman In

~~~:.oo

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There were similar demonstra·
!Ions In . several other cities
across the nation as part !lf what
they proclaimed as "Fur-Free
Friday.''
1
In Columbus, demonstrators
carried signs reading "You
Should be Ashamed to Wear
Fur," and Help the Animals
Keep Their Coats ..., Don't Buy
Fur.' ~
·
Robin Russell. 38, one or the
protesters, carried a leghold
trap. "It still has a piece of fur In
It," she said.
"I have been Involved In this
since I first saw·a. dog with its leg
trapped and swollen thr~ limes
its size.
"They catch animals. by mls·
take which are not used for furs.
Trappers call them 'trash' animals," Russell said.

..'
•

•

Our first bus is sold
out, so wJv•e added a
second bus. Call AAA
today to make your
reservation. Our remaining seats are
selling fast!

~estiva£

ofLigft.ts

at Ogk6ay Par{
'JHamju 16·17,

1989

Oglebay's Annual Wimer
Festival of Lights will be a
thrill to behold. Over ·
300.000 colcnd lights will
sparkle over breathlaking
llndscapes covering 300
acres. In addition 10 the
festival, your tour includes
an exciting Christmas production at Jamboree USA
and more!.

· ~

•
J.

Travel Agency INVITEs You
OPEN HOUSE
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1st, 1989
9:00 A.M TO 7:00 P.M.

Wa look forward to takint cara of your future travel nllds and seeing you at our
Open House. While you're in, be sure and register for a Premier Cruise ond two
frH airline tickets from USAII to ba givan away.
UO SECOND AYL
446..06"
. GAWPOUS, OH.

60°/o
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Mon.· F~ . 1 :00 am-1:00,..
a.t. 1:30 1m to 12 Noon

HOURI:

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Join me, Brenda Roush,
for a festive, fun-filled
weekend.

•

.,

•

.

SENIORS,
CLASS. OF '90

''

BELLEFONTAINE , Oh~
(UPI) - A man wanted for
ques tlonlng In the shooting death
of his grandmother In Logan
County was being held In a St.
Louts, Mo., jail Saturday.
Jeffrey PhilUps, . 18, was ar·
rested in St. Louis County Thursday In connection with the theft of
an automobile, police said.

. .;!., .

Send To :
Meiga Co. Jaycees
P.O. Box 424
Middleport, OH. 46760

•

$2900

saaoo

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
About 75 animal rights activists
picketed outside a downtown
mall Friday, chanting "Fur is

A) Employment.
B) Verifiable income (monthly).
C) Number of persons r1sidin1 in household.
0) Any other type assistance-i.e. Food Stamps, WIC, etc.
E) Directions to your residence from Pomeroy.

'·

NEW SALESMAN - Randy Challn-Hart, G.. Upolla, hal been
employed at Jim Cobb Chevrolet, Oldamob1Je, Cadlllae, Geo.
Chaftii-Hart bu been employed u a car ll&amp;leeman for nlae·yeiU'fl.
Be realdee oa Geol'lee Creek Road with bls wife, Katrtnka.

•

Animal rights
activists march

On separeate sheet please provide:

$79 00
$9900

REG. 1159 WOOD

Washington.
Kortan would not elaborate on
plans to send agents to Uchlza.
The federal Drug Enforcement
Administration already has a
large presence In the valley,
where 60 percent of the world's
supplyy of coca l.eaves Is grown.

Both presidenllal frontrunners Rafael Leonardo
Callejas of the opposition Na·
tional Party and Carlos Flores
Facussee of the ruling Liberal
Party- have predicted they w111
wtn by 5 percentage points. Many
observers consider the race too
close to call.
Callejas and Flores are U.S.·
educated, offer similar prescrip·
lions to the country's mounting
economic problems and say they
will maintain friendly relations
with th,e United States, which has
about t200 troops stationed in
Honduras. ·
Candidates Enrique Aguilar
Paz of the Innovation and Unity
Party and Christian Democrat
Efraln Dtaz Arrtvlllaga were
expected to draw less than 5
percent of the vote.
Honduran armed forces spokesman Victor Esplna said that
the army has been placed on a
"state of alert" near the Nicara·
guan border because of recent
troop movements by the Nicaragua's Sandtntsta army.

TELEPHONE#: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

IREAT II" IDEAS FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY/
•Lane Cedar

MASON, W.Va. - Funeral
services w111 be held at 1 p .m ;
Sunday In the Foglesong Funeral
Home for John G. Barringer, 79,
Hartford, who was dead on
arrival Friday at Pleasant Val·
ley Hqspttal.
The Rev. Clyde Fields w111
officiate. Burial w111 follow In
Zerkle Cemetery. West
Columbia.
·
Born June 10,1910, in Hartford,
Barringer was a son of the late
Peter and"Lulah Hood Barringer.
He was a coal miner and a
member of Fathers House
Church at Hartford.
Surviving Is a special friend,
Delores A. Cunningham , of
Hartford.

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras
(UP I) ,- Alcohol sales were
banned Saturday as troops pa·
trolled streets nationwide to
ensure safety In Sunday's presidentlal elections. the third demo- ·
cratlc contest since 1981 polling
that ended more than two decades of authoritarian rule.
"All ts well. Everything Is
normal and ready for tomor·
row ," said Isabel Alvarez, a
spokeswoman for the National
Election Tribunal.
More than 2 mUllan Hondurans
were expected to vote Sunday in
the country's third demhcratlc
election of the decade. The voters
w111 choose a president, three
v1ce·presldents,128congressmen
and the mayors of 289
municipalities .

ADDRESS: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Matters I

REG. I 129 .ASS

John 8&amp;JTinger

'"'l:),

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S·ecurity·
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Hond uras

Meigs County ·food Basket Asso,iation

TWIN-FULL-QUEEN SIZES

•Floor Lamps

Carter, 78, Columbus. Burial was
in Yatesville Memorial Gardens,
Louisa, Ky .
RetlredfromCapttalManufacturing, he was also employed at
Seagraves. He was a member of
Carter's Chapel Freewill Baptist
Church and Apperson Masonic
Lodge.
Preceded In death by his wife,
Lena. he Is survived by a
Joseph Carter, Greenfield and
Gallipolis; two daughters, Bar·
bars Bryant, Tenn and Charlotte
Young, Columbus; two sisters,
Phoebe Hayes, Tenn. and.Gypsy
Pack, Grove City, Ohio, along
with seven grandchildren and
two great grandchildren.

Slain journalist remembered

SLEEP SOFAS

All

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'

.....

On IIlii date In history:
In 1832, the firat streetcar ritlway In America started public
R!"VIcr In New Yorlc City from City Hall to 14th Street. Tile car waa
pulled by a hol'll! and the tare wu 12 ~ cents.
In lHI, German Null foreed 500,800 Jewaln Waraaw to live In a
ghetto IIUTOIInded by an ellht·foot c:oncrelf wall.
Ia J.Hl. Secrrtary of State Cordell HuU aubmitted American
propoMII 10 tile Japan- peacr nvoya In WaahiDetoa.
In ltlf, the United State~ and lr~~qrrsiOred diplomatic rrlations.
endlne a 17-year break.

'

COLUMBUS - Harold L.
Whittaker, 63, of Columbus, died
Saturday at Mount Carmel Medical Center. He retired from
Columbus Production Co.
Born Oct. 22, 1926, at Wise
County, Va., he was thesonofthe
late Thunnan Whittaker and
Lola Moore Whittaker Owens.
He was the husband of Shirley
Setty Wlllttaker. He Is also
survived by a step·daughter,
Patricia Lynn Hodge. Scioto
County, Ohio; and a grandson.
Also surviving are a sister, Mrs.
Esther Mae Mathias, Alexan·
drla, Va.; a step·sister, VIrginia
Wooten, Ga111polls; three stepbrothers, Jack Owens, GalUpo·
lis. John Owens, Pat riot and
Robert Owens In Texas.
Thrj!e ~rothers and one sister
preceded him In death.
Services w111 be conducted 1
. p.m .. Tuesday at Salem Baptist
Church, the Rev. Kenneth Sanders officiating. Burial follows In
Salem Cemetery.
Friends may call at Jerry
· Spears Funeral Home In Colum·
bus, 7 to 9 p.m. on Sunday, and at
Waugh·Halley ·Wood Funeral
Home 7 to 9 p.m. on Monday.

White House selects favorite hY!,Illls

---

A thoulllt for the day: "Peanuts" cartoonist Charlet! Schulz wrote
that "Jontng Is very helll!flclal. It's good for your legs and feet . It's
al10 veey eood for the ground. It makes It feel needed."

I

Area deaths

Harold Whiuaker ·

Is EPA chief just another petty face?

junbq linw- j~u:tintl

. . '1"'llft Aw.,

November 28, 1989

Pomlroy-'-Midd'epon-GII'Ipolil, Ohio-Point Plaa•ent. W. Va.

Willi SUPPUIS LAST
NO PIICHASI IICISSAIY

:.

..•.

'
.•

OPEN
Fll. &amp; MON. 9 to I
TUES. T1IIIU THUI.

COINER OF THIID &amp; OLIVE

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.courtf-

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9TO 5

SAT. 9 TO 5

(614) 446·3045

Season's Greetings
.

:·

:,

'

LEJII~

.....
.PHOIOGRAPIIY
•

.

FROM:

SPIIIG YAWY PUU • GAWNUS, OH.
(-14) M6·74t4 • 1·100·272-LIAI
CLO- IOIDAYS

IOWIIIOwil GAWPOUS

�I

. '-a•

NCMI'IIblr 21. 1. .

Porneroy-Miltllaport-Gr'\10111. Ohio Point PlnTTrt, W.Va.

lOlst Congtess makes little progress
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
llrst session of the 101st Con·
gress, tainted by a year ot
unprecedented scandal, completed Its work so devoid of any
great achievements that leaders
resorted to the age-old lament of
the loser: Walt 'lUI next year.
Senate Democratic leader
George Mitchell, bitingly critic·
izlng the critics who found llttl~
ot note In the past session, said
the midway point Is not the
proper time to judge the accomplishments of the bicentennial
Congress.
"I have never heard of a
football game being decided at
halftime," Mitchell said, "or a
baseball game at the end of four
and a half innings. "
"I realize the cynics a're never
satisfied," Senate Republican

.

•
•

ENIOYINGASUNDAYMEAL-Mr.u.Mrs.
WIUiam Cornell, lorei"OIIIId, and Mr. aad Mrs.
Nick Leonard, are am001 muy area reeldea&amp;s
who are ph!ased to ba'Ve llle llollllb')' Xllcbea
Restaurul ill Baeille epeniD&amp; acaln on SuiMiays.
Kountry Kllcbea did a boomillc buslnesllltls paal

SuadQ, which was Its first Sunday since comlag
ullller the new management of Paul Qualls, of
Ravenswood, w. Va. Not onty were all booths and
tables fuD, with more customers waiting, but
many people came In for take-out service.
SundQ llours al the restaurant are from 8 a.m. to
3 p.m.

Three children _die in Brooklyn fire
NEW YORK (UPI) - · Fire way .
Jose Zuniga, 35, the father of
swept through a Brooklyn house
The lire quickly spread to two Jennifer and ·stepfather of the
early Saturday, killi.n&amp; three bedrooms where Jennifer Zun- older children had fled the
sleepmg children and crilically iga, 8 months old, Timothy apartment but rushed back
injuring theirfatheras he rushed Benitez, 6, Carla Benitez, 7, and Inside the burning building In
back Into the burning building in April Benitez, 13, were sleeping. an unsuccessful attempt to
a desperate bid to save Ills Infant
April was rescued by fireman
rescue his baby daughter,
daughter.
Joseph Franco, who jumped authorities said.
The children's mother. Wanda through a window Into one of the
He was taken in critical conlli·
Zuniga, 34, was also In critical smoke-filled bedrooms and car- · tion to New York Hospitalcondition suffering from smoke rled her outside, Parrilla said.
Cornell University Medical Cenlnhalation at Coney Island Hospl- She was In fair condition suffer- ter with second- and third-degree
tal, authorities said. Her 13-year. tng from Smoke Inhalation, a burns over 56 percent of his body,
old daughter ~as rescued . by a hospital spokeswoman said.
a hospital spokesman said.
Franco returned to the apart·
The body of the infant was not
fireman who JUmped through a
bedroom wmdow and carried her ment and recovered the bodies of discovered until the more than 60
to safety.
,
Timothy and Carla Benitez but firefighters battling the blaze
Had the apartments smold! was unable to find the Infant, brought it undercontrolaround 5
a.m.
detector been working, the child· Parrilla said.
ren would have been alerted In
time to escape.the blaze at their
home in the New York City
borough of Brooklyn, Fire Department spokesman · ' Efraln
Parrilla said.
A. space heater apparently
•. short-circuited shortly after 4
a.m., sending off sparks that 10
Ignited a fireinthelivingroomQn
the first floor, Parrilla said.
Further Investigation was under

I

CVIr-1
Pllbllobed eocll Sullllay, ez; 'IldniAw.•
Golllpolll, Olllo.l&gt;y tbeObloVOIIeyl'Olbtllldq com-illlult-o. 111c. !ioccllll clalo - · pold at Galilpoll!l,
&lt;111o Ci631. Entered as 10C11J111 d •

malllaa m-r al PomerQll, (JIIo, 1'1111

Otllce.

Member: United Preu lnteraational,

OsNow

Inland Dally Pres&amp;AIIociattoaa.nd the

!rBRAIN
FRONTS: "Warn• "Cold

Ohio Newspaper AIIOt.1atlon. NatloUl
Advertising RepreseataUYe, Braham
Newspaper

Sale~,

733 Tlllrd Avene.

I :;~ I sHOWERS

_,i Stalir;

" Ocr lu ti•

New York, New York 10017.

WEATHER MAP - Rain mixed wltb snow Is forecast lor the
nortbem and centraltnlermonntat• region as well as portions ol
the aortbem and ceatral plain&amp;. Snow Is forecast for the eKtreme
nortbem Atlantic Coast region. ( UPI)

By or-·SVNIIAYONLY
SU118CIIIPTION L\1'11:1

CorrW
One Week ............................ 70 Cents
One Year .'....... .. ............... ........ 136...0

SINOU:OOPY
PBICII
Sunday .. .............................. 50 Cents

Ohio weather relative wann

No subscrlptloru; by mall pennltted ta
areas whel'e motor carrier aervlce is
available.

By United Press International
Relatively warm and windy
weather covered much of Ohio
Saturday.
Southwesterly winds of 10 to 20
mph early Saturday increased to
15 to 25 mph and became gusty
during the afternoon.
The strong southerly flow of air
pushed temperatures to the 50degree mark across the northern
part of tbe state and into mid-50s
In southern sections of Ohio.
Early morning readings Satur·
day ranged from the middle to
upper 30s.

The Sunday Times·Sentinel wUl not be

responsible for advance paymenls
made to carrier&amp;.

MAIL SU.CI&amp;IPTIONII

Sa...,.O.IJ
One Year .. ...... ...... ............ :..... . S37.f4
Six months ..... ............... ... .. ..... . S19 .~

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13 Weel&lt;s ... ... .. .. ........................ $19.!14
26 Weeks ........................•......... $37.16
52 Weel&lt;s .................................. SlU&amp;
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13 Weeks ................................ .rl0.80
26 Weeks ................................. $C0.30
.,.
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52 w..u

.................................175.40

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·'

'

Skies were mostly cloudy over
northern Ohio Saturday mornIng, but It was mostly sunny by
afternoon.
Mostly cloudy conditions were
forecast for Saturday night, with
a slight chance of showers and
the chance of snow flurries In the
northwestern area of the state.
Saturday night lows were ecpected to range from the middle
30s to near 40 across Ohio. It will
be partly cloudy Sunday, with a
slight chance of showers In the
northeast. Hlg;hs will be In the
40s.

President
prepared for
•
summit
at sea
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Es·
pausing the Boy Scouts' "be
prepared" motto, President
Bush says he is ready to do
business with Soviet PI'eslderit
Mikhail Gorbachev during their
Mediterranean shipboard sum·
mit off the coast of Malta.
But before his first meeting
with Gorbachev sln~e becoming
president, the weekend of Dec.
2-3, Bush has taken pains to
assure America's allies that
Malta will be no Yalta. Unlike
that World War II meeting of,
Stalin, Roosevelt and ChurchiU,
he and the Kremlin leader will
not divvy up Influence In resl¥'nse ·to the rapid pace of
political change In Europe.
Bush also has taken pains to
assure Gorbachev and his Soviet
bloc allies that he will not seek to
-exploit or Interfere with the
stunning transformation now.
under way In Eastern Europe.
Little did Bush know In July,
when he secretly suggested a
"get acquainted" meeting with
Gorbachev, that the Berlin Wall
would come tumbling down and
the nations of Eastern Europe
would be shrugging olf the
Stalinist straitjacket of Communist Party rule.
But the president told reporters recently the dramatic events
Inside the Soviet orbll undoubtedly would have prompted an
early superpower meeting.
Against that backdrop, Bush
and his advisers have returned to
the drawing board and presidential aides acknowledge more Is
expected of the summit than a
handshake and chitchat.
At the same time, both sides
say no formal agreements will be
concluded and arms control the traditional meat course for
superpower sessions - will not
weigh heavily on the two days of
meetings.
The 65-year-old president
leaves early Thursday morning
for the Medlteraean Island of
Malta. The summit will begin
Saturday morning aboard the
Soviet cruiser Stava ·and end
Sunday on the USS Belknap, a
guided miSsile cruiser. At the
windup of· the talks, the two
leaders plan to issue a joint
statement and hold separate
news conferences.
Bush will then fly to Brussels,
Belgium, for an overnight stay
and to brief NATO allies.

leader RUert Dolt said. ''Th~
always find some way to knock
Congrwu. They say we were
unproduc!We or lackluater.
"I do not sharetltatlimltedand
shallow assessment," tbe tarttollji\U!(J GOP leader said. "01
course, criticism Is cheap."
Yet even the leaders, In an
unuaual blp&amp;rtlsan attempt at
spin control In session-ending
news conferences, acknowledged last week that the aeaslon
somehow fell short, ·while, at the
same -time, pronouncing themselves satisfied with their
progress.
House Republican leader Robert Michel of IllinoiS said: •'The
first session ol the 101sl will not
be seen by historians as one
lnvolvlnc a dynamic and revolu·
ttonary work product ... the
Congress executed, quite
frankly, no new bold Initiatives lti
public policy."
Instead, congressional leaders
pointed to the groundwork laid
for next year Which, Indeed,
could produce landmark legisla·
tlon In child care, national
service, education, environment,
housing, campaign reform and
other areas.
''The two years put together
will be an outstanding Congress," Dole predicted.
'For a time, it appeared Con·
gress would do next to nothing
this year as a result of the
animosity between the two parties In the House over the
investigation into the financial
dealings of House Speaker Jim
Wright, whiCh led to his abdication and resignation.
In fact, when asked to name the
finest accomplishment of the
session, new Speaker Thomu
Foley, said, "I don't think It Is a·
leglalatlve rnat~r. I think It Is a
restoJ:Biion ol comity and cooperation between the two parties,
· which r lblnk Is probably at the
highest level It has been ln.
several years."
Much of ,the credit goes to
Foley, a highly respected, wellliked pragmatist, who succeeded

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·mink for bald cure
POCATELLO, Idaho (UPI) · · Baldlilg · men might take heart
, from research at Idaho State
UniVersity on -bow mink grow
their lush fur.
PbysloloiY protesl4lr Jack ·
Rose has studied mink lor 10
years, particularly the way day-Ucltt affects fur growth, but It
hasn't been easy. Rose 1s allergic
to mink.
His determination, however,
may pay off lor balding men.
''Our research . Is aimed at
discovering exactly which hormone Is lnvoi'Ved in regulating
ha,l r growth and the mechanism
l;ly wlllch the hormone does It,"
Rose said this week. "In the
future, II could be applied to
human beings."

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.

Last week Star Bank
mailed out 3126
Christmas
Club Checks
.
totaftng $1,130,188.

•

Did .you get yours?
.

Star Bank's Christmas Club Accounts for 1990
is now open. Make 49 payments. We make
the 50th Free. Start saving now for next
Christmas with a Christmas Club Account
from Star Bank.

•

I.

I

In Histot;ic Downtown Pomeroy
Along the Beautiful Ohio River
Today from 12-5
ENJOY SPECIAL ·IN,STORE SPECIALS

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GALLIPOLIS - No one was
injured In a two-vehicle coUislon
at 4:04 p.m. Friday at Second
Avenue and Pine Street, accord·
lng to Gallipolis Pqllce.
Police said Anna M. Newman,
29, 844 Fourth Ave.. Gallipolis,
driving a 1982 Pontiac Phoenix,
was attempting to turon right
onto Second Avenue when a
tractor-traller_drlven by Steven
E. Snyder, 30, Millwood, W.Va .,
pulled from the center lane to
make a left turn, and the vehicles
collided. There was no damage to
Snyder's 1987 Kenworth and
moderate damage to Newman's
car.
Police cited Snyder for lm·
proper lane usage.
Other citations by pollee dur·

lng a 24-hour period ending at 8
a.m .. Saturday were: Jonnie RMcCalla, 45, ESR, Gallipolis
gambling and disorderly conduct; Judy R McCalla, ESR,
Gallipolis, six counts of gam·
bllng; GeorgeNemoreSr.,60,655
Buhi-Morton Road, GallipoliS,
disorderly conduct and Jerry D.
Colley Jr., 22, Rt. 1, Bidwell for
the alleged theft of an electronic
pinball machine at Hills, Upper
River ROad. Hearings for the five
people will be held this week In
Gallipolis Municipal court.

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ADMISSION $5.50
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30 .

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Cuff Weights
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Jobst Support Dress Hose for Men
Jobst Support Athl!ltic Sox
Jobst Knee-Hi Support Sox. for Ladies
Arthritis Mitts ·
Butterfly Pillows
Cervical Pillows
Obus Back Forms
Beck CushiQns
Bed Treys
BF Cuffs/Stethoscopes-assorted colors .
LPN Insignia Tac Pins ·
Pen Ughts
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Bandage' Scissors
Crash Scissors
Paramedic Holsters
Necklace Pens

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565 Jacbon Pike

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Golden luckey•

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V~llEY ~INfMA

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FLANNEl SHIRTS

$899 01

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Rogistor to win Hoskins·
TanMr'~ Gift·A·R-.

67HS98orl~l

Oilton, Rt. l,
• om · 11'111 IJ)'antecl.
Jt:. Dalton.divorce
Rt. 1,

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cover auditor's aad treuurer's
fees that were deducted by the
county auditor In the October tax
settlement. It was noted that the
fees and deductions were rr.ore
than had been anticipated when
appropriations were made.
Attending the recessed session
in addition to the mayor and
clerk were Councilmen Bob
Beegle, Carroll Teaford and
Larry Wolfe. Absent were Henry
Bentz and Richard Wamsley.
CouAcll adjourned"until 7 p.m.
Monday, Dec. 4.

[DDI[ RICHARD
MURPHY PRYOR

;.: Martha J.

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446

:-rmuma•

Santa &amp; Treats for the Kids in the Mini Park
.

SPRINr.

Clerk Jane Beegle reported
over the $5,000 limit to purchase a
two members need to be
that
ne"i truck for lbe water depart·
elected
by Council to the 1990
ment, was given by Council.
Firemen's
Dependency Board.
Funds will be appropriated In
Also.
tile
lire
department needs
1990 to cover the purchase. Three
two
members,
then those
to
elect
readings and subsequent approfour
select
a
fifth
member
from
vals are necessary for passage of
community.
This
action
must
the
the or~tlnance .
In _other matters, Council ac· be certified by Dec. 30. Council
cepted the resignations of Ray will take action at the December
Manley as chief of pollee and meeting.
Finally, Council approved a
Greg Fields as deputy marshal.
resolution
authorizing the clerk
Field's resignation was effective
Nov. 7 while Manley's was to transfer funds In the General
effective Nov. 14. Mayor Frank Fund and In tbe Fire Fund to
Cleland advised that Manley will
still be a commissioned ofllcer.
The appointment by the mayor
11
ol Frederick Rabn Ill as village
marshal-chief of pollee, subject
to a state-required six months
probationary period, was approved by Council.
In -a related matter, Mayor
Cleland reported that mayor's
court Is held on the second and
fourth Fridays of each month, at
6 p.m., at the fire house annex.
Street CQillmlssloner Rizer reporled that the packer truck Is
hard to start In cold weather and
suggested that two old batteries
on the truck be replaced. Council
approved Rizer's suggestion.
Rizer also reported that the
village's tractor, brush hog and
blade have been cleaned and
painted, and that repairs have
been made to the roof of the
firehouse annex.

None injured in 2-car wreck

·the middle 40s to the lower 50s
lloodl Central Oblo .
Partly cloudy Sunday, with Monday, lp the 40s Tuesday and
in the 30s Wednesday. Overnight
blgl_ls In the upper 4Qs.
lows
will range from the inld 20s
Exleaded Foiet:asl
to
the
30s Monday and Tuesday
' Monil., lllrough WednesdQ
mornlitgs
and In the 20s early
, Fair Monday and Wednesday
and a chance of rain or snow on Wednesday.
Tuesday. HIghs will range from

' polls,

CHRISTMAS PARADE 1:30 P.M.
• r

All refuse containers are to be
placed at the curb for the
Tuesday pick up.
First approval of an ordinance
authorizing Racine's Board of
Public Affairs to expend funds

Weather

~ The plalntllf seeks a tempor•• ary and permanent Injunction
. and a temporary restraining
, order against the defendants to
:· prevent them from · coming. on
• Iter property and a jlld~nt
i,peclarlnll the fence line to be the
'*existing boundary line between
[..lbe properties. She also seeks
r;.aamages ol $4,000 along with
'&gt;atto~ney's fees aad court costs. 1
t;~ US&amp;C 'Sales doing business as ·
; ~ .Jim's Farm Equipment, 588
;Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, flied a
!:tomplalnt against Allen Woodle.
1:dolng business as Sunbury Farm
,. Equipment, Sunbury, Ohio, seek;. tng a judgment of $22,831 .~. The
•: plaintiff Is also seeking court
:-~sts and iaterest.
~l Jenny Oarst, 120~ 1'exas
· ~d. GalUpolls, and Millard
::fiay Darst. Athens, Ohio, filed a
:: petition for dissolution of
•marriage.
; , Judy M. Shriver, Rt. 2, Vinton.
~filed a petition tor a divorce from
l! lfoward Lee Shriver, Rt. 3,
:. Jlldwell.
It·. Tonda Renee )loll, ESR, Galli·
Is seeking a divorce from
_,: ~!mer Oscar Holt, Rt. 1, Lucas·
'" ~llle, Ohio.
·
·~:~ Loll Wrttesel, Rt. 1,
itf:fNtAia~ divorce .
'
·C). Wrlwtael, Rio
.
.
;••
tie. . •
·:~ A dllllol11tion of marrta,e was
•;pnted to Kimberly S. Baird,
and Michael M. Baird,
::ttu. Gallljlolll. MarriedNov.2t,

FDIC

Christmas
Open House 1989

·.

Velma Sue Bloomer, both of Rt.
2, GalUpoUs, were gr"nted a
dissolution ol their marriage.
MarUyn Smith and Thomas B.
Smith, both of 618 Jay Drive,
GalUpolls, were granted a dissolution of marriage.
John H. Shuler, Rt. 2, Patriot,
was granted a divorce from
Ha!He C. Shuler, Columbus.
Thomas M. Meadows, 98Chllll·
cothe Road, Gallipolis and Lyla
Dawn .Meadows, 31 Portsmouth
Road, GaiUpolis, were gran ted a
dissolution of marriage.

RACINE - It was reported in
Monday's recessed session or
Racine VIllage Council that the
village's 1989, Slate Issue II
project for street resurfacing, In
the amount of $14,000 plus $2,000
ox village money, has been
approved. Because of the delay
In state approval for release of
the funds , Council anticipates the
project will be completed In 1990.
Street Commissioner Glenn
Rizer reported to Council that •
there has been another Increase
In the landfill dumping fee. An
Increase of 42 cents per cubic
yard will cost the village an
additional $10.50 per load.
Residents are asked toassistln
decreasing their amount of re·
fuse by compacting and recy·
cling Items whenever possible.
. Also, residents are reminded
that under the new refuse collec·
lion ordinance rate schedule,
there Is a 50 cent per bag charge
for any bags over the quarterly
number, which, In the case of
residential pick up, would be 52
bags.
According to village ordlnance, a bag Is dellned as the3033
.gallons size. or equivalent.

l :!~c':!~o"; :~=~:~~e~~~~re.cta

Membe

Pomeroy Merchants
Invite You To Their

•

(From FAMB.Y, Al)

· l•·

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'

Rose said minks begin to grow
their . dense winter coats In
response to the shorter days of
tall. The dwindling daylight
signals the brain to produce
hormones that affect ha lr
growth. One of those hormones Is
melatonin.
Durinll doctoral studies at
Oregon State University, Rose_
found that Implanting mink with
melatonin spurs the chemical
process, which "primed" or
thickened the fur coat as much as
six weeks earlier than usual.
Rose Is also working on the
sequence of hormones that leads
to prime lur. The professor,
noting_his slightly receding hairline, said his research is more
!ban academic.

' Newman's ml!dtt:al expenses·.
Newman Is seeking damages
of $1.5 mUllon for his wife's
Injuries.
Newman also Is seeking dam·
aces. of $100,000 for the loss of ·
wife's consortium.
Mrs. Newman Is seeking damages ot $100,000 for the loss of
consortium with her husband.
A common pleas coutt jury has
.. ruled In favor of Raymond Pope
, of Rio Grande against Stale Auto
•r:lnsurance, Coi)Uilbus, in his suit
to recover damages In a fire at
1his home Jan. 7, 1988.
-~ · Final action of the jury was to
. award Pope a judgment of
; $55,*KJ lor damages to the
· resldfnc:e, tbal was Insured by
; the delelidan\.
The jury ruled that the defend' arit dfd not prove that Pope
t commltted any fraud or false
; swearing 1n relation to his
• actlyltles the day Of the fire; did
: not prove that Pope Intentionally
: set the lire; did not prove that
• Pope miSrepresented the mat~!"
, rial facts or circumstances the
• day of the fire.
• A confessed judgment of
• $29,715.17 alon&amp; with 18 percent
·: Interest from Nov. 1, 1989 was
,. entered by an attorney against
:. M.T. Construction Company, and
Maurice Toler, Bidwell, in favor
·: of Jenkins Concrete Products,
~ Inc.,
1505 Eastern Ave.,
:. GalUpolls.
:: Loretta Sexton, Rt. 3, Galllpo•' lls, filed a complaint against
; Scotty and Reda Chapman, Rt. 3,
,. Gallipolis, over a line fence
·· between their properties In Sec·
; tlon 2 of Perry Township.
f The plalntllf claims the prop' er!yllnelsmarkedbyallnefence
; which bas been In exls tence for21
;· years. She claims the defendants
, have placed iron pins on her
: property south of the fence and

.... &amp; Fri. Ill I PJI.
Tv....... lltw. II 7 PA
s....., Ill 5 ....

Smart ·
Santas
Save at
Star Bank.
.

GALLIPOLIS - The regular meeting of the Ga!Ha County
Local Board ol Education will be held at 6 p.m. Monday Nov, 27.
Amona other things on the agenda, the board will discuss the
!allure of the recent levy and the school district's current
financial situation; acknowledge Mrs. Karen Thomas for the
Roman F. Warmke Economic Education Award· pass
letJslatlon recognizing the Academic Excellence Fou~datlon
Teacbers of the Year: Mrs. Ernestine Smith, Mrs. Georgia.
No&amp;le and Mrs. Fannie Metcalf; and recognize Beth Mills and
Sandy 1'&lt;}arriner ol Hannan Trace lor scoring first and second In
tbat order on the countywide Americanism In Government test
spopnsored by the American Legion.
I
The board also will conduct an executive sesslonduringwhlch
discuss
and legal matters.

Rep. Tony Coehlo, D·Callf.,
third-ranking· In tbe Democratic
leadership, and Rep. Newt Gljl·
grlch, R·Ga., second-ranked In•
tbe GOP, were swept Into tlie'
vortex .
'
So were Reps: Barney Frank,
D-Mass., Donald (Buzz) Lukells,
R-Ohlo, and Gus Savage, D·DI.
Rep. Jim Bates, D·Callf., was
slapped on the wrist for sexual
harrassment of start aides ..

..
..
.

Racine council makes plans for Issue 2

Board
meeting scheduled

•
tbl! partisan, Imperious Wrltlrt
and who. working witb flrst·yellr
Senate leader Mitchell, shaJII!d
and guided the agenda of tlie
Democrallcally controlled
Conaress.
•
Yet, Congress. from begtnniJ!g
to end, was never able to shed Ute
pervasive hounding of scanda}s
- most dealing w]tb money a~d

sex.

Sunday T~meFSa lllii1el Paga A·5

Ohio-Point Pin rt, W. Ve.

-·-~-tFLANNEl SHilTS
IIG. '21.00

$18 99

NOW

S12''

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$.
SPORTCOATS....... 67

llG.

ftC. '79.95

SlACKS ............

$

22,$

OPIN MOII.·SAT. '
9 ..........
UNr7l. CIIII5TIIAS
CLClSm S?IIOAYS

11fT .... IMCI11S

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�Piag1 A-6-Sundey 1lm11 Sentinel

November 26. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gsl'ipolis, Ohio-Point Plunrt, W.Va.

EMS answers seven
calls for assistance

Suspicious hay
rue investigated

LOVING CARE -Lucretia SmUll, rllbt, says she wouldn't have
this situation any other way. She cares for her husband, Roy, who
suffers from Alzhe'-r's dhoease. She leelshe Is doing much better
now that be Is home than when he wu being cared for In a nursing
home.

. POMEROY- Another hay fire member, the sheriff adds.
Is being Investigated · by the
Anyone with Information
Meigs County Sheriff's Depart· which may be helpful to au thor!·
ment. This time, hay In the barn ties In discovering the Identities
was set on fire by.arsonists. The of the arsonists should contact
fire occurred Friday night on the the sheriff or Michael.
Gary Michael farm on Pomeroy
. On Friday night, deputies cited
Pike.
Edward M. Se!k Jr. , Eagle Ridge
According to the report from Road, for DWI and falling to
Meigs Sheriff James M. Souls by, maintain control following an
Michael called Chester Fire accident on Pine Grove Road at
Department to the scene at 11:24 6:20p.m.
·
p.m. When the department arAccording to the report , Selk
rived, fire was burning In two was eastbound on Pine Grove
sections of the · barn where the Road at a high rate of speed, lost
large bales were stored .
control of his 1974 Dodge Charger
The early discovery of the fire as he topped a small crest In the
by Michael as well as the quick roadway , went left off the road·
response of the fire department way and struck an embankment.
saved the structure with only His vehicle fllpped around, au·
thre e large bales being thorlties say, coming to rest
destroyed.
·
across a ditch, headed west.
Michael told deputes that he There was heavy damage to the
was ready for bed and just vehicle.
,
happened to look out a window
Chestel' Fire Department and
and saw the flames.
Pomeroy EMS and !Ire depart·
This Is not the first time the ment were called to the scene.
Michael's farm has been tar· Pomeroy transported Selk to
geted by arsonists who In recent Veterans Memorial Hospital for
months started hay bale fires at treatment. Selk Is to appear In
many area farms.
Meigs County Court.
A $500 reward Is being offered
Deputies also took a report on
by the Farm Bureau for lnforma· Friday of a gasoline theft. Dennis
tlon leading to the arrest and Parker. Long Bottom. reported
conviction of persons guilty of that sometime Th~rsday or early
theft or criminal ·damage to Friday morning, 25 gallons of
property belonging to a Farm gasoline were stolen from a
Bureau member. Souls by re· combine In a cornfield across
ports. Michael Is a Farm Bureau from Eastern High School.

Pomeroy Fire Department
POMEROY - Seven calli for
assistance were answered on was called at 3:20p.m . to a stove
Friday by units at the Meigs fire at the Rlchard. Caruthers
County Emergency Medical resld~nce on Ball Run Road. ·
At 6: 13 p.m., Pomeroy EMS
Services.
A.t 4:44a.m., Rutland went to and fire department and Chester
Pagevllle Road for Wllbur Smith Fire Department were called to a ,
who was taken · to Veterans motor vehicle accident at the
Memorial Hospital.
Intersection of Wlpple and Pine
Middleport was called at 8: 40 Grove Roads. Edward Selk was
a .m . to Page St . for Oris transported from the scene to
Frederick to Veterans Memorial Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Hospital.
Racine EMS and fire depart· At 10: .f8 a.m., Pomeroy trans- ment were called at 7 p.m. to a;
ported Robert Canaday from motor vehclle accident on Sellen "
Peacock Ave. to Veterans Mem- · Ridge Road. Jackie Proffitt "
orial Hospital.
Guintl!er was taken from the .
accident to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Jeanette Thompson
and Erica Guinther were treated
at the scene.
At 11:24 p.m., Chester Fire
By Unlled Press lnternatloaal
On an average day, $l.6 billion _Department was called ·to a barn
Is spent In shopping malls and !Ire at the Gary Michael farm on
$257 million Is given to charity.
Pomeroy Pike.

Now you know

Masterworks to present
'Messiah' Dec. 12 at RG

FAMR.Y CAREGIVERS ...Catherine Maurer, center, Is
sufferlntr from demeatla, She Is cared for by her son, Do a Maurer,
and his wife, Belly. For the Maurer'sthere's no queaUon lbat care
should be gl11en In any other way. "It's the naturallblng to do to
take care of your parents."

Sheriffs
Department takes
.
report on lot accident
.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County Sheriff's Department Investigated an accident at 2: 30
p.m. Friday on the parking lot at
Fruth Pharmacy .
.
Deputies said a 1967 Buick
driven by Robert E . Lee, 17, 632
Burnett Road, Kanauga, attempted to make a right turn Into a
parking spot and his 1967 Buick
slid on the lee, colliding with a

1980 Volare driven by Eulah E.
Kessler, S7, Rt. 1, Bidwell. There
was minor damage to the Lee car
and moderate damage to the
Kessler vehicle.
The sheriff's arrested Cindy
Sue Denny, 26, Rt. 2 Gallipolis on
Friday on a warrant charging
she failed to appear In Gallipolis
Municipal Court. Denny was not
jalled, but released with a
summon to appear in court this
week.

RIO GRANDE - The Unlver· or her orientation to music.
slty of Rio Grande Masterworks
The 60 members of the chorus
Chorale wlll present its winter are a mix of University faculty,
concert at 8 p.m. Tuesday Dec.12 staff and students along with
at the Fine and Perform long Arts citizens of Jackson, Meigs. VInCenter.· ·
·
ton and Gallia counties .
Selections from the Christmas
The chorus meets · Monday
portion of Handel's Messiah will nights from 7 to 9 p.m. throughbe featured on the program. This out the school year, presenting
oratorio was composed In just 24 concerts each spring and fall .
days In the year 1741. II was first Rehearsals will begin Jan. 15,
performed at a concert given for 1990 for a May 13 performance of
charitable purposes at Dublin, John Rutter's "Requiem." All
Ireland, April 13, 1742, with interested singers are encour·
Handel, himself, conducting the aged to participate (no auditions
performance.
are necessary), and college
This year, the performance credit Is available to those
will be accompanied by the Ohio seeking a degree, recertification,
Valley Symphony, a professional or contlnullng education credits.
orchestra centered In Gallipolis.
The concert Is free and open to
This symphony is comprised of the public. For more lnforma·
.Instrumentalists from through- · tlon, contact Dr. David Faber, at
out Ohio and West VIrginia. This . 614-245-5353.
will mark the first of what is
hoped to be a series of coopera·
tlve performances by the Masterworks Chorale · and the Ohio
Valley Symphony.
The Masterworks Chorale is an
oratorio chorus which special·
lzes In the masterworks of music
literature.
Director David Faber emphas·
ized that the term "masterwork"
does not imply music that Is
beyond the capabllltles of most
arpateur singers. A "master·
work" Is a chorale work ol
extended length which was writ·
ten by' a cqmposer who Is
considered to be "classic" In his

Quote of the day ·

ATTENTION

By Unlled Press International
Opposition leader Alexander
Dubcek toasting to the health of a
"free Czechoslovakia" after the
Communist Party's entire top
leadership resigned Friday
under pressure of huge proreform demonstrations:
'"This state was created by a
mllltary Intervention Into mat·
ters only of concern to this
nation. That Is why separation
rrom this heritage and Us policy
Is necessary ."
·

SALEM TOWNSHIP VOTERS

Novemt. 26, 1989

Caregivers are 'special peOple'
for Alzheimer's Disease victims
POMEROY -Mothers are be somewhat overwhelming.
caregivers, fathers are careglv· However there are a number of
ers, teachers are caregivers, and families In Meigs County alone
nurses are caregivers, bu 1 It that do just that.
These families have made the
takes a special kind of person to
be a caregiver tor a loved one decision to give complete and
with Alzheimer's Disease or total care and attention to their
loved ones. Some of the afflicted
other rela led disorders.
Other related disorders In- suffer from Alzheimer's disease,
and some suffer from dementia,
clude, Parkinson' s diseases
Huntlngion's disease, demen: a medical term that describes a
tlas, brain tumors, arterloscle· loss of Intellectual abilities In·
roUe disease, strokes, and tran· eluding memory, judgement,
slent Ischemic attack.
and abstract thinking, as well as
This past week was designated changes In personality that are .
as National FamUy Caregiver's severe enough to Interfere with
Week. The week was so named In social and occupational
order to give well deserved functioning.
'
These careglvlng families prorfiC()gnltlon to those tamUles that
care for a loved one In their home vide the 24-hour a day supervi·
who Is suffering from slon that Is necessary for the
Alzheimer's.
affilcted to survive. Why not put
According to a publication put them In a nursing home or
out by the American Health similar faclllty? Well, the faml·
Assistance Foundation. Alzhei- lies have made the decision to do
mer's disease occurs In roughly It on their own. The famntes do,
five percent of the people over however, receive some respite
the age of 65 and In more than 20 care through the Alzheimer's
percent of those over the age of Disease and Related Disorders
80.
. program, and the Retired Senior
According to Information pro- Volunteer Program (RSVP)
vided by Sharon Wright. case- which Is offered thru the Meigs
wl!rker for the Meigs County County Council on Aging at the
Councll on Aging, Alzheimer's senior citizens center.
One such family In a careglv·
disease Is marked by a slow,
lng
situation Is Doris Jackson's
progressive cerebral cortex
famUy
In Tuppers Plains. Mrs.
degeneration.
No one knows what causes Jackson cares for her mother,
Alzhetmers, but possible factors Bertha Wolfe, age 86, who suffers
could Include Infection, toxicity from Alzhelmers, and also her
(perhaps aluminum), blocheml· husband, Isaac. who has had two
cal deficiency' meta bollc dy s- strokes and three heart attacks.
functlon, head trauma, environ· Both patients require 24 hour
mental factors, and genetic ties. supervision.
Mrs. Jackson explained that
Some researchers suspect that
the disease results from environ· there are many problems which
mental factors as well as an have to be dealt with when It
Infectious agent that strikes the comes to her mother, or anyone
who suffers from the disease.
fetus.
The progression of the disease Problems Include hiding things,
can be broken down Into five trouble In remembering things,
stages according to Information saying things that she never said
before, seeing things that aren't
provided by the AHAF.
In the first stage, the disease there, and changing her clothes
begins very gradually, marked two or three times a day for no
only by minor symptoms and reason at all.
Mrs. Jackson receives home
mood changes. Many times no
one notices anything out of the health service three· times a
ordinary other than less energy, week, and once a week someone
less drive, less spontanel!y, from the center comes who can
slowness to learn, slow to react, care for Jackson and Mrs . Wolfe,
and the forgetting of some words. so that Mrs. Jackson can do the
Temper may be lost easUy and necessary shopping. Mrs. Jack·
with little cause, familiar things son also receives relief when
are sought and new things are needed from her sisters, Dorothy
Sayre and Betty Harris.
avoided.
When asked If Mrs. Jackson
In the second stage, patients
would do this again If sh~ were In
~an sUI! perform fl!mlllar actlvl·
tlet~ but may need help with a similar situation, she quickly
able, I
complicated taskS. Speech and stated, "As long as I
understanding are much slower won't put them In a rest home."
and decisions are hard to make. She went on to say, "! couldn't
There Is a nonsensl!lvlty to get along wlthou t the home
others feelings, and situations health program."
Lucretia Smith, of Pomeroy, Is
are avoided that may lead to
another
such caregiver. She
failure.
cares
for
her husband, Roy. age
The third stage Is character·
71,
also
a
patieut of Al:iheimers.
!zed by obvious dlsablllty. The
·
Mrs:
Smith
has been caring for
memory of the distant past may
lie very clear, bu I memory of the her husband at home since
recent past Is very poor. Patients August. Before that he was in a
may forget where they are, nursing home, but she felt she
forget dates, time, and the could provide the necessary care
season. Instructions must be he needed at. home. She also
very clear anil repeated often. pointed out that he has been
Patients ' may Invent words and doing much better since he Is
·
they don't recognize familiar home.
Mrs.
Smith
chose
to
care for
people.
her
husband
at
home
because
"I
In the fourth stage, patients
feel
like
I'm
helping,
that
I'm
need help with all activities and
memory Is very poor. They doing something for somebody."
cannot find their way around at She also stated that If she had It to
all. People are not recognized, do all over again she would do It
even family members and close the same way she Is now, at
friends. Control of bodily func· borne.
Mrs. Smith receives the same
tlons may also be lost.
help
from the center that Mrs.
The fifth and final stage Is
Jackson
does, and also from her
death.
She also has neigh·
son,
Danny.
For many people the task of
bars
that
are
good about helping
taking care of a loved one
her
when
necessary
.
afflicted with Alzhelmers would

atn

"Special Care For People Who
Are Special To You"
-.:---------.,

I was dog licked and dog bit, but I want
to say I'm reaDy thankful for your vote
and support. I'm sorry I never got
around to see all voters, but I want you
all to know that I appreciate you all.

THANKS
H. DANNIE LAMBERT
Pd. Pol. Ad by Cand., Rt. 1, Box 190
·ewington. Ohio 46888

'

".We think Overbrook is a nice place, the staff is so friendly.
When we first came, we wondered whether we. would like it, but
now Overbrook is just like home. We didn't think we would be
here long, and now we don't want to leave! We coulq not find a
better place tban Overbrook."

STARTIIG TIIS MONDAY -FOR ONE WEEK-"HUNTERS" OPEN 5 A.M.-I P.M.

SUNDAY SPECIAL
OPEN 8:00 Ul.-3:00 P.M.

WNCH
Baked Ham, Gooseneck
Roast a..f Sliced, Lasagna,

Ylllfables, Fresh
Ho~~~eMade Pies &amp; Cakes

SOME OF THE SPECIALS YOU ·
MAY AND DUliNG THE WEEK
Baked Steak, Liver &amp; Onions,
Homemade Chicken &amp;
Noodles,
Baked Potato with Broccoli,
Cheese or Bacon, Ham
Steaks, Potato Soup, Chicken
Cacciatore, Spaalsetti,
Lasapa, Pork Chops,
laked Chicken

'

Ohio Bell changing area dial tones

GALLIPOLIS - For Guyan,
Vinton, and Cheshire residents, a
new phase of the Jnformatlon
Age will start with a roar, but
Another careglvlng family Is · with the hushed sound of a
the Don Maurer family . He and soft-pitched dial tone when they
· his wife, Betty, care fo r his pick up their telephones on Dec.
mother, Catherine Maurer, age 2.
That quiet beginning w1ll come
96, who suffers from dementia.
The Maurers have been caring from a new digital electronic
switching system which Ohio
lor Mrs. Maurer for four years.
They noted their only real Bell Is scheduled to connect to
problem Is being tied down at their service shortly after mid·
home and that they don't always night on that date.
About 1,400 customers In
get to do things by themselves.
Guyan,
1,200 In VInton and 860 In
Maurer stated that " we can
Cheshlre
whose phone numbers
handle the situation, the only
problem Is that we are confined.' ' begin with 256, 388, and 367 will be
He pointed out that his mother affected.
Dave Dean, Ohio Bell spokes·
sometim~ has trouble sleeping
and sometimes she Is hyper, but person, said the construction and
other than that, she really Is not digital switches, costing a total of
that much trouble ..
$1.3 million, will Improve local ·
The Maurer 's only outside help services by replacing older elec·
Is from the center, and that is tromechanlcal equipment that
. only when they call for it. They has been In use up to 39 years.
Ohio Bell has paid $43,174.821n
feel the center's program provides the type of service they feel · personal property taxes and $935
secure about, and that they know In reasl estate taxes for the
when Mrs. Maurer Is In their care current period .
she Is alright.
The system will make avalla·
The center's program, with Its
three respite workers, Kay
OUR CHRISTMAS SAU IS
Ward, Linda Young, and Tamara
ONE WITH EXOnNG
Fry, provides care for 20 patients
SAYINGS ON EYERTIING
In the county In a month 's tlme.
IN THE STORE!
The workers are nurses aids
and they are given tratningat the
DIAMOND JEWELRY
center on different situations
that could arise as a result of
20% to 40% OH
Alzhelmers ·disease and other
related disorders.
The careglvlng famllles along
ug. •loo
· with the other, caregivers and
NOW 1240
recipients In the county wlll be
honored on Tuesday night at 6
p.m. at the senior citizens center
In Pomeroy., and RSVP volunteers at the center will provide ·
care for loved ones.
Alzheimer's disease remains a
mystery, and Its causes have yet
rog. 1995
to be discovered. There Is no
NOW 1795
known cure and It Is estimated
that over 250,000 people wlll be
afflicted with the disease this
year alone.
rog. '695

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPt) - .-!'1·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
·
numbers:
PICK-3
114.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,291,671, with a payoff due of
$1,075,594.
. PICK-4
9904.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$230,457, with a payoff due of
$85,100.

•

r

'·'

..

POMEROY, 0110

992·3524

For Those Chfistmas Toys,
Jam Boxes and Any Household
Need ••••
S10CK UP FOR CHRISTMAS RJN WITH

ENERGIZER
bo_ .......
SAlE

PIICE

ss.aa

Your Cost

Prescription Shop
992-6669
271 Nortll Second
Middleport, OH.

The Gallia County Litter Control Program would like to extend its sincere appreciation
to the following businesses, organizations and individuals whose contributions helped
to make our four f989 Community "Recycle Days" successful.
Bob Evans, Inc.
General Rental Center
Gallipolis Vault Company
Gallipolis Auto Auction
Larry Cooper
Dave Kerns
Alice May Lasseter
Carlos Wood
Larry Hemby Family
Tom ltlville
Randy Halley
Angie Shelton
Donnie McCarty
Connie White

J. P. Trucking of Rodney
New Plan Realty Trust
Gallia County Commissioners
Gallia County Litter Control Advisory Board
Mason ASsoc:iation for a Clean Environment (M.A.c.E.)
Gallipolis Area Jaycees
0. o·. Mclntrye Park District
City of Gallipolis
Ohio Department of Transportation
Gallia County Highway Department
Athens County Litter Prevention &amp; Recycling
Rio Mini Mart, Dean Rees/Owner
Ohio Valley Fooclland
The Steakhouse

GALLIA COUNTY
LITTER CONTROL STAFF
Terri Belville, Program Manager
Howard Shriver, Colleetlon Supervisor
Deputy BUI Wi110n, Law Enforcement Officer
Terry Hemby, Program Seerelary
Larry Haley, SYLC Supervieor

,

Sllf.Pay ·~~··-

391 WEST MAIN STREET

Ph. 992-2310

Approwlll alii Cwllll•.t

333 PAGE STUn
.DLEPOIT, OHIO 45 760

HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

422 SECOND AVE .
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

1

(614) 992-6472

Emerson
Shintom
Multi Tech
Scott

WE REPAIR ALL MAKES

TAWNEY
JEWELERS INC.

Come Visit and Experience First
H~nd The Overbrook Difference.

Worbn (II · · · · · AI WalAs

.Golds tar
Samsung
Soundesign
Zenith

NOW 1549

P-roy, Oh.

ces, electronic switching will
Improve rella blllty and Increase
call handling through the use or
llngernall-slzed microprocess·
lng chips , Dean said. A single
silicon chip containing 45,000
resistors processes more than a
mUllon calculations per !iecond.
' 'The equipment continually
checks customers' lines tlve
times every second and removes
faulty circuits," Dean said.
" Maintenance technicians usu·
ally are aware or any troubles
before the customers even real·
lze that anything Is wrong."

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE

ng. '69S

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES

.....,y Awe.

ble theSe features :
- Call Forwarding, which
au tomatlcally transfers lncom·
lng calls to another number.
- Call Wa!tlng, which alerts
the phone user to an Incoming
call when the line already Is In
use.
-Speed Calling, which connects as many as 30 frequently
called numbers by dialing just
one or two digits.
·
- Three-Way Calling, which
adds a third party to a conversa·
tlon already In progress.
In addition to these new servi-

NOW 1495

We Specialize in
REHAB.ILITATION
EQUIPMENT
Continuity of Care
507

Paga A-7

Special thanks to the many citizens of Gallia and Mason Counties who donated items
to our program. Because of your efforts and concern, OYER 18 TONS of materials
were recycled, and not landfilled!

The McElroy Brothers,
G~ne &amp; Dayton

•.
,•.••.......
'"'..._,,., ..

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlepon Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea11111t, W. Va.

iN HOME CARE -F~ Doris Jacboa, ce~~ter, Tuppen Plal~m,
tile 1Mil1f .. home carqh1BI .. twlee u dlfllcu•. 811e cares lor
her molller, llerlla WoUe, left, wllo .. afDieted with Alahelmer'a
and lor her lnulbud, laaac, r!lh&amp;, who has lllf!ered two
'l&amp;rokee, and three hear&amp; atlacb.

.dUe-.

..

...

·'

•

01--..

fufiCW ._, tht
oiU.. PlcTcc*'• Md Recydl,. ~
Oh6o D ;a Lac ot of Nltufal ~
ltkhool F. ~. ..........

''

••
••
•

•
•

••

�•

Point PIIIAnt.

'-g( A-8-Sundlrv TMt II Sentinel

Judge Marshall seeks
Fourth District post
PORTSMOUTH - Judge John

B. Marshall of Portsmouth has
announced his candidacy for the
Fourth District Court of Appeals
In the 1990 elect ion.
Prior to beginning service as a
Judge of the Court of Common,
Pleas of Scioto County In 1969,
Judge Marshall has engaged In
the practice of law with the firm
of Skelton, Kahl, Horr, Marshall
,and Burton for twenty years. He
received his B.A. degree from
Ohio Wesleyan University and
graduated with honors from the
:untver~lty of Cincinnati College
o! Law. where he was an editor of
the Law Review and earned a
. juris doctor degree.
· As a judge of the Court of
Common Pleas he has received
:numerous awards for superior
' and excellent service from the
•Supreme Court of Ohio and a
:commendation by the Ohio
~ House of Representatives lor
· judlclal efficiency. He Is a
member of the Board of Trustees
· of the Ohio Common Pleas
Judges Association, and has
served as secretary of the
Association during the past four
years. A veteran of World War II,
he served with the·u.s. Navy for
three years In the Pacific and
China Theatres.
He has served as Portsmouth
City Prosecutor and Assistant
.Prosecuting Attorney of Scioto
County. Judge Marshall Is a
·member of the American Legion,
.Veterans of Foreign Wars; past
president o! the Portsmouth Bar
Association; Past Exhaulted
.Ruler of the Elks Lodge; past
president of Rotary Club. the

November 26. 1989

w. v•.

This year the Postal Service Is
joining forc'es with the business
community of Pomeroy In urging
cusiOmers to shop early and mall
early for the holidays.
Many overseas mailing dead·
lines _ Including those for the
armed forces stationed overseas
_ occur this month reminds
P.omeroy Postmaster Tom
Reuter 1
Whl~ there are no domestic
mailing deadlines Reuter would
like to encourage' those sending
parcels and greetings to distant
locations around the country to
take advantage of the early
display of holiday merchandise.

"Whenyoushopandmallear(y
to far·away lriends and family,
you won't need to worry about a
winter storm that could halt air
or ground traffic and possibly
delay delivery," says Reuter.
"We are well prepared for the
volume of mall we will receive
locally, but It does help us when It
Is more evenly dlstrlbuied," he
adds.
Reuter also encoura,es mall·
ers to make certain that maills
addressed correctly and legibly,
and to Include apartment
numbers and proper zip COdes on
cards and parcels.
"Since mall sorting depends on

rtver

Marriage licenses have been
the zip code as well as the name
Issued to the following couples In
of the particular city and state,
the Meigs county Probate Court.
the use of proper zip codes ,';"ill
John Stewart Thomas. 36,
aid us In processing the mall, he
Middleport. and Jenny Jo Russays.
sell, 34, Mldd12lport; LeO Dwayne
"Mailers can get specific lnfor·
mation on International ma!l!ng Curtis, 20, Pomeroy, and Lind~
Kay Gamache, 20, Pomeroy.
dates and other matters hY
CharleS
Edward Gilkerson, 21,
calling the Pomeroy Post Office
· Minersville, and Carolyn Elaine
at 992-2235," Reuter adds.
"Last year, our customers Neece, 41, Minersville; Charles
Matthew Clark, 24. Middleport,
helped us tremendously. They
and
Tina Lucille Hendricks. 20,
mailed early In the season and
early in the day, We hope they Middleport; and Ronald Allen
will choose to mall early again Haning, 26, Langsville, and
Brenda Marie Stewart, 21,
this year so we will all have an
Cheshire.
enjor,able holiday malllng sea·
son, says Reute"lr....,...,

JUDGE JOHN MARSHALL
Exchange Club, and the Scioto
County T.B. and Health Association. He Is a 32nd Degree Mason
and has been l!sted In "Whose
Who In Ohio", "In The Midwest".
"In American Law" and "The
American Bench".
He resides with his wl fe,
Beverly, In Portsmouth, and Is
the father of three children:
Rebecca Jane Smith of Brews·
ter, Mass.; John B. Marshall Jr.',
and William T. Marshall, who
are both attorneys practicing In
Portsmouth.
Judge Marshall Is seeking the
seat on the Court of Appeals
which Is being vacated by Judge
Homer E. (Pete) Abele ofMcAr·
thur. Judge Abele Is unable to
succeed himself by reason of age.

RIO GRANDE - The Bob
craftspeopleofferlngthelrhandl·
Evans Farm will celebrate the
work tor sale just In time for
holiday season during An Old . Christmas .
Fashioned Christmas at AdamsThe village Christmas tree wiU
ville Village, Dec. 2 and 3 and
be trimmed wlth popcorn,
Dec. 9 and 10, free to tile public at
wooden ornaments and candy
canes tor the little visitors to the
the Bob 'Evans Farm at Rio
Grande.
village.
The village, located on the east
The a&lt;&gt;b Evans Fa~m Is
end ot the Farm on US 35, Is open
regularly open daily, April ·
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., all four
through October from 8:30 a.m.
days of the special celebration.
to 5 p.m., and offers horseback
Free hot apple elder will be
riding, canoeing, buggy rides
and weekend wagon tours· that
available to ward off the cbUI as
visitors stroll through the au then·
leave hourly from 10 a.m. to 4
lie log cabins that sit on theplotof
p.m.
Adamsville, first laid out by
For more Information on An
pioneer Adam Rickabaugh and
Old Fashioned Christmas . at
his two sons.
Adamsville, or the Farm, write:
Adamsville will be decorated The Bob Evans Farm, Rt. 35,
lnthestyleofthelate1800's,wlth
P.O. Box 330, Rio Grande, Ohio,
pine boughs and holly branches 45674, or call61U45-5305.
setting the stage for. costumed

TOYS AND VISION

DEVELQ~M~NT

.N
THETIME TO BUY
THOSE
SPECIAL
CHRISTMAS
GIFTS

N~nber

8

21. 1189

..

.u•
&amp;

Suit and
RKeive sso to
SlOG in
A((essories at

went to East . Letart Road for
Belva Fisher who was taken to
Ho12ler.
AI 1:09 p.m. the Racine Fire
Department was called to Buck·
town Road on a chimney fire at
the Mark Wolfe residence. The
department was on the scene for
approximately one hour and
there were no Injuries. At 4: 59
p.m. the department went to
Route 124 on a motor vehicle
accident In which Robert Bryant
was !lawn by Life Flight to Grant
Hospital In Columbus.

· Blazers

SPECIAL GROUPS OF

LADIES WEAR

On Group of
Chldrm should .....We • r~ompiD
optom .. ic eumin.tkJn ye•ly to insure thll thlir vlaualsyltlm il up to
the tllk.

Jantzen Sweaters.

DrKtt~ ............

Men's Flannel
Shirts

SOOJo OH

&amp; LAPS

lsaortsvwear .............. 1SOJo OH

REG. 117.00
NOW

Sl2.90

Haggar Slacks
lEG. 121.00

$2150

A. JACKSON BAILES, O.D.
250 SECOND AVI.
G~

Couple!~ seek to
end manti~

446-UOO

·

By LEE ANN WELCH ·
·
Tlmes·Senllnel staff
, GALLIPOLIS - Few things have tou~Ched our
: dally lives with as much impact as photography.
For some, it is a hobby. for others a llvel!hood. To
others it is informative while to some It's an art
form. For a few,people, photography Is the basis
to diagnose illness.
Photographs document history. present the
· news and freezes a moment in time.
: Nd matter in which realm you view photo·
' graphs, you do view them. and they surround you
- up to 40,000 times a day.
· In the average day, studies say we are witness
. to up to 40,000!mages- much of that in televis(on
and newspapers.
Optical prindpals were actually known by the
' ancient Greeks who new light shining through a
small hole In a wall of dar~ room created ~n
inverted Image. This was given the name camera
obscura.
The first attempts at photography were,
; however, made In 1802 by Thomas Wedgewood
and Sir Humphrey Davy, who used white paper or
leather coated with silver nitrate to make copies
of lea\'es, insect wings and paintings on glass.
Even earlier. In 1725, . a German professor
named Johann Schulze noticed a
jar of
.

No

1t 0 IIKHANK STIHT
OH.45631 POIIBIOY,OH.45769

chemical salts he was mixing had changed color
on one side, which was facing and open window. It
was then scientists reallze. d not heat nor air made
the chemicals change. but light.
InAugust,18J9, the process of photography was
made public by Louts Daguerre. The Daguerro·
type developed photographic plates by mercury
vapour, with ari exposure time of 20 minutes- a
far cry from the one-one thousandth of a second
today.
Daguerre was partnered wi•h Joseph Nicephore N!epce, who experimented with light·
s~nsltive materials and took the first photograph
In 1826.
Niepce had a Paris optician make a camera,
and used a pewter plate coated with bitumen of
Judea dlssolve&lt;jln ell of lavender. Ttils created a
hard coating that left a permanent positive image
when washed away after exposure for eight hours.
This first photograph was a poor lmage•of a
pigeon house, the roof of a barn and a pear tree,
with some sky showing through the branches.
Since then, photography has developed, to coin
a phrase. at a rapid pace.
In 1851, Frederick Scott Archer, lnven ted the
wet collodion process. Collodion was a liquid
spread on glass and coated with ·ttght-sens!tlve

The biggest boon here was the ability to create
an linage In two seconds - a big Improvement
from the eight-hours of Nlepce.
, Within the next few years, amateurs took up
photography and hit the road, despite the large
amount of equipment needed. For example, a
photographer normally had a 20 by 16 Inch plate
camera. Even one wheeled a camera welghing40
pounds.
Early news photography raised public con·
sclousness to the plight oflhe poor In this nation in
the early 1900's.
.
Jacob Rlls, a pollee ci&gt;urt reporter for the New
York Times photographed a series that Is studied
even today. It documented for the world the
conditions poor peo!&gt;le lived In at that time. It
created such a stir, the Governor of New York
Instituted social reforms as a direct result.
Even today, photographers bring history and
creativity to the masses. Magazines like Life
regularly present photo essays on many varied
subjects.
One creating a recent uproar was practically In
our own backyard. This past summer. the
publication of life in Portsmouth for a poor family
has been blasted as non-realistic, but nonetheless,
lt existed and was documented.
....
Dnrlng wartimes, photographers documented 1
the conflict. In dally life, photographers present
what's happening In your town.
Not only has the little box given you a view to the
YESTERDAY'S WORK - This bridal portrait
world, II has made life better in terms of health
was· taken al the tum of the century, with an.
care.
elaborately painted backdrop.
The x-ray was developed from basic photogra·
phic principals, and any doctor' will tel! you how
important a diagnostic tool they are.
.
flashes. Just the camera b&lt;Kiy.
Photographs by lrifra-red light reveal the veins
Lear took up photography in the eighth grade,
underneath the skin.
and
has been in the studio full time since 1976.
Infra-red photograp~y Is also useful in examtna·
He sees tht' studio photographer as being able to
lion of historical documents like the Dead Sea
bring out the best in every subject - animal or
Scrolls.
human. On the walls of his office in Spring Valley
This type of photography Is also useful In
are portraits of cats, dogs and people - some
crime-fighting. Infra-red flashlights allow law
created in the studio, some on location.
y
enforcement agencies to take pictures of
Everyone wants to look their best- to be seen in ,
criminals In action.
a special manner, not the quick snap of a shutter
What's next?
at the holiday dinner table. And Lear sees It as his
O.ne Gallipolis photographer said the newest
job to get that right look, that magic, for everyone.
wave Is In vldeo·stlllcameras. This camera takes
In addition to creating the looks, Lear Is a :
the Image as video, with each frame capable of
history
buff. He owns a vast collection cif old •
being a still photograph.
cameras, Including his pride and joy. an early
Dale Lear. whO owns Lear Photography in
1900's glass negative camera with processing :
Gallipolis, said not only Is the field changing. It Is
equipment.
accessible to the masses.
Who's to say what the next 150 years of :
Look through any advertising circular and you
..
photography will bring?
will find cameras as Inexpensive as $20. On the
But no matter what. piCture taking has changed •
other end of that spectrum, some cost thousands
significantly In the past, and be sure. it will :
of dollars, like the Nlkon F4, with a cost of more
rapidly change In the future.
', ·
than $1.000 for the body alone, no lenses, no

....

992-3279

A dissolution of marriage is
sought ·by Rpger A. Spencer,
Tuppers Plains, and Jean E.
Spencer, Tuppers Plains, In the
Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas.
Rose Marte Dearing, Pomeroy, is seeking a divorce !rom
Walter William Dearing.
Also seeking a divorce Is
Wendell H. Williams from Betty
J. Williams.
A divorce has been granted to
Krlstle A. Chapman from Barry
w. Chapman, and a dissolution
has been granted to Lester Wise
and Belinda Wise.

ONE MAN'S COLLECTION - Dale Lear of
Ga!UpoDs has been coUecllng old cameras for
quite a few years.' and plciured Is part of his
collection. Some are a hundred years old, while

others are more recent and siUI In working
condlllon. Outside his studio, Lear's persoaal
camera choice Is the Canon EOS, auto-focus,
!iulomatlc selling.

The image maker:

FROM

CENTRAL TRUST

If you've been
holding back wait·
ing for a great rate,
this is it. But you've
got to act last.
This offer from
Central Trust
•

Some of lhe photos date before the tum of the century. When
viewing some of the century's earDest work, If nol looked at
straight on, are so glossy lhe Image 18 lost.

is available for a
limited time only.
For more information contact
yo!Jr nearest
Central Trust office

all G lp l1 446.ot01
....... ,, tft-6661

7 PC.

BEDROOM SUITE

THE CENTRAL TRLST CO\tiMY
17lt &amp;« 7Jrll Mr*r ~ lll/IPla

..
c-...
.,.,.,

ooo.oo. ....._...,..,....... *_., .....,

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

4 POS1B liD

••·

...·;:;;S999

FDIC .

\)

II

,J PC.

PUB.SUITE
lEG. 12100

NOW

$1200

SPECIAL CAMEaA - This camera. a glaas negative one from
1188,1a Dale Lear's lavorlle.He wu offered &amp;his pleceofllilloryby
a friend wilo, had Lear not parehluled It, would have pullt In a
garqe sale. It came complete wllh procesling kll.

•History or hobby, photography iS 150 years old
,

400fo OFF

.,_..,. chldren. lee&amp;~ .. good viiiDn il
r.:tulred for .cholllllc .::hi~MMntnt.

· IMAGESOFTHEPAST, AND·PRESENT-TheeepholoVJlphs
from various dates In time, have been collected by Dale Lear.
Intermingled are some collectibles of cameramen he's been given.

OFF

Sportc:oats

I'Uf'(hase a

'

~-

A SPECIAL 6
MONTH C.D.

1 .......,..,..__.. ...

1rimes- _.entiattl Section

Plan old fashioned Christmas ·I'P.I1P.I

EMS has 11 calls over the holidays
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service responded to 11 calls for assistance
on Wednesday and Thursday.
· On Wednesday at 11: 44 a.m.
the Rutland unit was called to Old
Dexter Road for Burton DeWeese who was taken to Vete·
rans Memorial Hospital.
The Pomeroy unit, at 3:32p.m.
went to Mulberry Ave. for Neva
Seyfried who was transported to
Veterans.
The Middleport unit trans·
porll!d David Tyree from Imperial Electric to Veterans at 4:32
p.m.
At 4:40 p.m. the Racine unit
was called to Bashan Road for
Mildred Parsons who was taken
to Veterans.
The Pomeroy unit went to
Brick St. at 7:32 p.m. for John
Losear who was transported to
Veterans, and at 7:42 p.m.
another Pomeroy unit was called
to Lincoln Hill for Delores
Aeiker. also taken to Veterans.
At 7: 54 p.m. the Syracuse unit
went to Third St. lor Lisa Bailey
who was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
On Thursday, at 2:19a.m. the
Middleport unit .was called to
Page St. for Oris Frederick who
was transported to Veterans.
The Racine unit at 1:08 p.m.

•

MIUTi. li(ft~Se8

Mail season opens early this year

BJ:li'ORI, AND .U'IBR - Qde a dlff.-ce. Olle minute a

hard·-klnr news reporter, &amp;he -t. relldf fw a 111111111111 eever.
Makeup, and a new hairdo br Jaellle M DePaal'l, helped chanre
me from the pbolo In lhe left coner lalo 80111elhlng a little more
glamonroMA.

•

'Special look' comes through on filmi
makeaver fun, and a real surprise ~-;

By LEE ANN WELCH
Tlmes-Senllnel Staff
Can a plain, everyday news
reporter and photographer become a glamour girl?
Well, Dale Lear of Lear's
Photography In Gallipolis set out
to do just that recently.
Now, I've done a lot of unique
things for stories - learned to
parachute, rappelled off mountaln sides, become a clown,
ridden an elephant, walked a
pan !her :.... well, you get the Idea.
This was, In my eyes, qulle a
challenge.
Dale and his staff, Rita Rogers ·
on makeup and Randy Houda·
shell behind the lens, attempted
to make me a "coverglrl." And,
the results were Incredible, at
least In my eyes.
"Every woman wants that
special look," Rita said. "She
wants to look her best."
So, for what seemed like an
eternity, (In reality, a bout 30
minutes) Rita primped and
fluffed, outlined and contoured
my lace. She played up my green
eyes, and made the most of a
rosey complexion.
However...
Looking Into the mirror half·
way through the process, 1
thought It was less than
desirable.
"This ts a cruel joke, right
Dale?" I asked of the exagger·
a ted makeup - the obvious

outlines and bold colors.
He had-warned me that to your
own eye, It can appear hideous.
But under the lights, and through
the lens filters. an entirely
different look comes across.

The photos are great gifts for a Taylor or some other famous ana::
special man tn your life, and even beautiful woman, not a reporter,:
for family members - If they nor teacher, nor hOusewife.
•·
believe It's actually you.
II Is time-consuming, but boy, ·
And It's fun. For a few hours, it makes you feel like a Cheryl
there 'are three people paying Teigs or Christie Brinkley .
•
attention to your every detail.
So, every wo~an can look like .•
But still, I wasn't quite pre· It's like Randy Is Francesco Cheryl or Chrlsne or Liz.
•
pared for what was In the mirror Scavullo, and you are modeling
But then, most of us have to go :
- or what turned out from t11e · 'tor a CosmoP9lltan cover. ·
back to being plain news prople. ·
camera.
It's acting: It's Illusion. You
Back to the comfortable side of
"That's not me. You snuck are, for that time, · Elizabeth
the lens.
another picture In there. right?"
No. That woman In the picture
was me. Same eyes. same bone
structure, same smile.
For nearly three hours, Rita
primped, Randy directed and
Dale enjoyed watching another
photographer squirm.
"Not used to that side of the
camera. are you?" Dale asked
with a gleeful smile.
Nope. Not at all. It's a little
unnerving to be on the front end
of the lens after being behind It
and In Its control for 12 years. Of
course, I also remembered all
the times I giggled with pleasure
watching my frlenda squirm,
•
trying to JRI away from the
camera.
I got a whole newf appreciation
h ....
for those In tront o the I u ...,r.
Glamour photography Is ODe of
the newesttrends In thelndulltry,
partly because o! vanity, I'm
. A CI'JICil
- JUta Ra;aa flnl Ill)' hldr daltnc a pliMo
sure. But Jtlll. Rita was right,
-~~•
file
RlllkeaJ
11ae loeb Jtldeo-. al lea~~t to me, but tile
every woman wants to look her
final prodliel a real IU(Irlle.
best, to be special.

I'

l

�•

CHESTER Laura Jean
Eichinger, daughter of Mrs. Opal
Elcbln&amp;er. Chester. and the late
Henry Elchlllger, became the
bride of Jeffrey Scott Horton, son
of Mrs. Phyllis Horton, Wortblfti·
ton, and Arthur Horton, Novl,
Mich., In a double rln&amp; candlelight ceremony oa Aug. 26 at
Chester United Methodist
Church with the Rev. Don Archer
officiating.
Music precedlag the ceremony
was presen~ by Mrs. Dorothy
Karr, organist. Soloist was Amy
Murphy.
Given In marriage by her •
mother and brothers, and escorted to thealtarby her brother,
Dennis, the bride wore a gown of
white satin and deslped with a
sweetheart neckline and basque
waist accented with beaded and
sequined schlffll embroidery
lace. Tbe gown also featured
Renaissance sleeves and a
cathedral train with schlffll
embroidery motifs and trim.
The bride carried a bouquet of
cascade white mini carnation.
sonia roses, and purple statlce,
accented with baby's breath.
The couple knelt before being
served communion, and the
· lighting of the wedding candle
concluded the ceremony.
Mrs. Denise Arnold, Pomeroy.
served as matron of honor.
KEVIN RAY and DONNA MARIE (MANLEY) MEADOWS
Bridesmaids were Jackie DeLaat. Cincinnati; Jackie
Johnsen, New York; and Suzanne Eichinger, Pickerington,
niece of the bride. Each wore
MIDDLEPORT -The Wes- wore Identical gowns In peach,
Identical tea length peach
_leyail Bible Holiness Church In blue, yellow, and aqua with lace dresses, and carried loose arm
: Middleport was the setting for fans to match. ·The gowns were bouquets of roses, mini carna- the Oct. 1 wedding of Donna made by the bride's aunt, Rosem- tions, white daisies, baby's
: Marie Manley and Kevin Ray ary Hysell.
breath. and statlce.
Channing and Charla Burge
· Meadows.
Flower girl was Tiffany EIwere the flower girls and the chinger, Vincent, n.lece of the
~ The bride Is the daughter of
: Roger and Connie Manley, Mid- bible bearers were Tommy bride. She wore a tea length gown
• dleport. Tbe groom Is the son of Roush and Jessica Meadows .
of peach, and carried a white lace
Okey Meadows was the best trimmed basket, filled with
: Dorothy Meadows. Virginia; and
~ sharon and
Okey Meadows, man. and groomsmen were Pa- · peach and white petals and
trick Steele, John Spires, Roger purple stat Ice.
::Middleport.
Manley
Jr .. and Bryan Swain.
: Rev. Odell Manley and Rev.
Stephen Kruger. HamUton,
Ushers
were
Tom Roush; Middle- · cousin of the groom, was the
-Stephen Tomak officiated the
: ceremony In which Bibles were port, and Roy McCarty, rlngbearer. He wore a gray
Middleport.
·uaecl In place of rings.
tuxedo and' rose boutonniere.
The bride's mother wore a pink
~ Music was provided by Sherry
Taper _lighters were Donald
: King, pianist, with Stephen and and white dress; with a white
:Al\lella Tomak singing "Each rose corsage trimmed In baby's
.for the Other," and "The Lord's breath of rainbow colOrs with sUk
ribbons and lace In rainbow
;Prayer."
- The church was decorated with colOrs. The groom's mother was
: two heart-shaped candelabra, attired In a pink dress, and the
·which were accented with large groom's step-mother wore a blue
: pink bows. Other decorations dress. Their corsages matched
POMEROY -,- The Pomeroy:Included an archway with green- that of the bride's mother.
A
reception
was
held
at
the
Middleport Christmas Parade
,· ery and white lace and two white
Sen lor Cl liz en's Center In Pome- will be held today (Sunday),
~ doves at the top, four pew bows.
:and white and rainbow colored roy. The bride's table featured il beginning at 1:30 p.m. In Pomewhite table cloth trimmed In roy and 3 p.m. In Middleport.
-flowers on the plano and organ.
: Given In marriage by her silver and white paper bells. The Following the Pomeroy and
; father, the bride wore a floor three tiered heart shaped cake Middleport parades, Santa
-length gown trimmed with pearlS featured side cakes with "Happy Clwus wlll be on hand to distrib::and pink bows all along the train. Brithday Donna" on one, and ute treats to children In both
; Jeremy Rider served as train "Happy Birthday" Kevin on the locations.
other. ThE&gt;re was also a l&gt;rlde and
In Pomeroy, Santa will In the '
-c.arrier.
Court Street Mini-Park.
: Marjoriejo Manley, slster-ln- groom replica on the top.
Trisha Roush and · Dorothy
In· Middleport, Santa will be
· taw of the bride, served as
Older
registered
the
guests,
and
located
at llie Central Trust Bank
:matron of honor. She wore a
rice
bags
were
dlstrlbu
ted
by
drive-through.
:lavender gown, and carried a
Parade line-up wlll be at 1 p.m.
•lace fan with white and lavender Wendy Sizemore and Nicole
Roush.
In Pomeroy bo::hlnd the old
:nowers.
The couple resides at 91 Beech Pomeroy High School. At 2:30
· Bridesmaids were Debbie
Bentz. Crystal Dexter, Theresa St. In Middleport.
p.m. ; line-up for the Mlddieport
The bride Is a graduate of West parade will be the street beside
.Rider, and Sonya Steel!!. They
.
Virginia Training Schoo! In Point Dairy Queen.
·
Pleasant, W.Va. She is employed
Judging for parade entries will .
with Manley's Recycling In Mid- be held In Pomeroy with trophies
dleport. The groom Is a graduate · to be awarded In Middleport.
of Meigs High School and the
This year's parade looks to be
Peace Officers Training at Hock- promiSing, says Chamber of
ing Technical College. He Is Commerce members, with sevemployed by the Meigs County eral Doats. marchlfti units and
Sheriffs Department.
all three area high school bands
signed-up to participate.
RACINE -Something new for
area children Is tak lng place on
Sunday. Dec. 3, In Racine. The
Racine Merchants are sponsorIng a "Kids' Christmas Parade
starting at 2:30p.m. and all area
kids - ages 12 and under- are
Invited to join the fun.
"Decorate your lfttle red wag·
ons. bicycles, riding toys, or just
walk along," encourages Beverly Moore, owner of Racine Cut
'
Rate. "Or have your moms and
dads help you dress up like toys,"
she adds.
However, Moore points out,
"No three-wheelers. four wheelers or mini-bikes will be
1illowed" since parade organizers expect that many small
children will participate.
. Parents are being asked to
walk along with younger childOPEN TODAY
ren. The total walk will be two or
12 NOON-5:00 P.M.
three blocks long, Moore says.
- Anyone wishing to participate
fn the "Kids' Christmas Parade"
Is asked to register at the Racine
Cut Rate, !N9-2942, or the Racine
Department Store, !N9-2800, by
Friday, Dec. 1.
: And stay around after the
parade because not only will
Racine Merchants be offering
some specials In the way of
Christmas merchandise, but a
choir will be performing and a
viJitor from way, way up north220 '
Y.OU guessed It - the "big guy"
EAst MAIN
blmself, Santa Claus- wlll be on
lland to take Christmas orders
from little fl'lends.

Meadows-Manley

Christmas
p~rade today

Children's
parade
scheduled

Christmas
Should
Begin At

Buttons &amp; Bows

30°/o ;::....

Card Ihowe-r
MIDDLEPORT A card
Jhower Is being held for Bertha
Rite, 39004 Leading Creek Road,
MJdtlleport, who w!U be 93-yearsold 011 Sunday.

•

SPECIAL GOOD
TODAY ONLY

SPECW GOOD
TODAY ONLY

PIMIU ·
"

Elchtneer, brother of the bride,
and Rlne Horton, brother of the
groom.
Matt Davis, Worthington,
served as beSt man. Ushers were
Doug Horton and Rlne Horton,
brothers of the groom, and
Donald Eichinger, Vincent. The
eroomsmen wore eray tuxedos,
and the attendants wore rose
boutonnieres of baby's breath.
edged with greenery.
The groom wore a gray tuxedo
with tails. He wore a boutonniere
of sonJa rose, carnation, and
purple statice edged with
greenery.
Scott Kruger, Hamilton, cousin
of the groom, and Justin Eichinger, Vincent, nephew of the
bride, hand~!!! out bird seed
following the ceremony.
Heather Hartung and Andrea
Hartung, Louisville, Ky., cousins
of the bride were the guest book
attendants.
The bride's mother wore a
street length dress of peach. The
groom's mother wore a street
length dress of mint green. They
both wore corsages of white mini
carnation roses, white daisies,
and statlce.
A reception was held at the
Belpre Shrlners Club foUowing
the wedding.
The bride Is a graduate of
Eastern High School, and Ohio

A Time for

Giving ... A Time
for Sharing The
Security of
0 Membership

At a

spt~elal

State University. She Is employed by Westerville Parks and
Recreation Department. The
groom Is a graduate of Worthington High SChool and attended

Capital University and Ohio
State. He is employed by Roush
Sporting Goods, Westerville.
The couple now resides In
Worthington.

. Ifyou
have diabetes,
get 1 100 for
taking better care
of yourself.

~

.,

•0111

remals. fee-free
American
Express®
Travelers

Cheques •nd
much more.
And. for a
lim ired rime.
we'll w:1ivc rhc
enrollmenc fee for each member·
ship you ~ive- rh:n's :t 51.00 .:·"

•

FINAL COST

$35.00

@souTH
CENTRAL OHIO
GALLIPOI.IS . OH
360 SECOND AVI'. - &gt;•f&gt; -01&gt;'~1

bertson. Charleston, and the
groom's nephew, , Bllly Cook,
Apopka, · Fla., were flower girl
and rlng~arer. ·
A reception was held at the
Halifax Club, Daytona Beach.
The bride. born In Portsmouth,grad!lated from Daytona Beach
Community College. She Is as,slstant manager .of Anatole
Apartments, Daytona Beach.
The groom was born In Ft.
Hood, Texas, and graduated In
1986 (rom Clemson South CarolIna lfnlverslty. He Is an engineer
for General Electric Co.
The couple Is lMng at 1690
Dunn Ave. Daytona Beach.
Out of state guests were from
Michigan, Colorado, Missouri,
Ohio. and South Carolina.
The bridegroom's father was
Local people attending the
his best man. Ushers were David wedding from Syracuse were
' Simpson, Cassleberry, Fla., and Mark Morrow and son, Matt; and
James Covington, Spartanburg, Ernest and Joyce Sisson with
S.C.
children, Sherrl, Samantha. and
The bride's niece, Loren Ro- Pete.
·

( )frl·r jitiiiKI St.·plt.·mtlf.'r 1- l&gt;t·n·mlx:r ~I, 19Ml).
(;1.1 •c:«}t;ll:·r·t:R l!io :t n ·tr:lslnt·t.ltr.ttkmotrk c1r Mlklllm:

12:00 P.M.-5:00P.M.

.

"Free Refreshments &amp; Door Prizes" ·
Poinsettias, Poinsettia Hanging Baskets,
Poinsettia 1rMs, Christmas Cactus, Holly trees,
Folia• lalkets and Large Show Plants.

'

,,_,

".

'

..

SYIACISE, 01110

HOME VISIT - Carol Sue Reynolds, Home Health Aide on tbe
Holzer Medical Center Home Health staH,ls seen durln1 a rouUne
visit to Elmer E. Caldwell of Gallipolis, former Gallipolis
postmaster.

. 992-6669

Middleport, 'OH.

YOU'RE INVITED
As a part of the observance of National Home Care
Week, ~he Home Health Nursing Service of Veterans
Me mortal Hospital will stage an Open House from 2 to
4 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 28.
You are cordially invited to attend the event. Educational materials and favors will be available to all visitors and Mrs. Elizabeth Smith, director of the service
and her staff will serve refreshments. . · :
'
· Tuesday's Open house will be held in the quarters-of
the J:Iome J?ealth Nursing Service located in the Meigs
Medtcal Complex, adjacent to Veterans Memorial
Hosital.
Since its establishment in 1971 Veterans Memorial
Hospital's Home Health Nursing Service has grown in
l~aps an? bounds with a record high of 11.251 home
vtstts bemg made by the department's staff in 1988.

The sunday Times-Sentinel
regards weddings 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 oftlmellness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
- soon as possible alter the event.
• To be published In the Sunday
edition the wedding must have
. taken place within 60 days prior
. to the publication.
·- All material for Along the
River must be recleved by the

Community
calendar

TUESDAY
VINTON - The American
Legion Post 161 of Vinton 'wm
hold Its regular meeting Tuesday
at 7:30p.m. at the Legion Hallin
Vinton.
.KYGER - The Cheshire Township Trustees wlll hold th~lr
regular meetlng ,Tuesday at 5:30
p.m. at the township building In
Kyger.
POMEROY - Ohio Eta ~h!
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the Grace Episcopal Church In
Pomeroy.

GALLIPOLIS- Activities and
menus for the week of Nov. 20-24,
at the Senior Citizens Center, 220
Jackson Pike, will be as follows:
Monday - Chorus, 1 p.m.
Tuesday - Stop/ Physical Fitness, 10:30 a.m.; Video Matinee,
12:30 p.m. "Oh God"
Wednesday - Cards, 1-3; pine
cone trees with Jurrl Reynolds,
12:3C p.m.
Thursday - Bible Study 10:45

edltorla_l department by Thursday, 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,
If desired. Photographs may be
either black and white or good
quality color, billfold size or
larger.
Poor quality photographs wlll
VMH
not be accepted. Generally, snapFriday admissions ..,.. Wilbur
shots or Instant-developing phoSmith, Pomeroy; Oris Fredertos are not of acceptable quality.
Ick, Middleport; Pansy Jones,
Questions may be directed to ·Racine; Ruth Moore, Pomeroy.
the editprlal department fr~m 1 ·
Friday discharges - None.
to 5 p.m. Monday through Fnday·

Hospital news

at (614)

44G,-2(342:.:il~~~

a.m.
Friday - Art class, 10-noon;
Craft class, 1-3 p.m.
Menus consist of:
Monday - Sauerkraut and
·welners, whipped po,tatoes,
bread, apple crisp.
Tuesday - Chicken Casserole,
green beans, cole slaw, bread,
brownie.
Wednesday - Meat loaf, parsley potatoes, broccoli, bread,
pear halves.
Thursday - Spaghetti Creole,
garden salad, rye bread, vanilla
pudding with chocolate chips.
Friday - Cream potato soup
. with crackers, pimento cheese,
sunshine salad, bread, peanut
butter co.&gt;kles.
Make reservations by calling
446-7000 before 9:00a.m. the day
you wish to attend.

~·«.1ult
•

WE INVITE YOU TO OUR·
HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE

~oday's emphasis, of course, is on keeping people in
thetr own homes for as long as possible so the Home
!'fealt~ Nursing Service at Veterans Memorial Hospital
ts destmed to play even a greater role in the lives of local
area residents.

"TODAY"
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26TH
·1:00 P.M.-6 P.M.

STdTIIIG AT

Sl29
CURIOS
starting at only

$199
S

•

CORf&gt;IN- &amp; SN\'[)fR
fURNITURf CO.
. 955 2ND
GALLIPOLIS- 446-1171

..

~....::~. ~~......:;~, · .,_::..:.~~
•1) ' ,~~.~ - ~~·l . ·,: u~~u·O~~

Please, Come and Join Us ...

,6THTHE
BERRY
BASKET
mEn
SYRACUSE, OHIO

Raebok
Nike
Chippewa
1Daniel Green
Dexter
Auditions
~"'

Door Prizes

Gift
Certificates

Refreshments

Available

and

Gift
Certificates
Available

I Open Fri.

&amp; Sat. til

a, Open Every Sun. r• Christmas

992-2104
I

,)

')

1

20°/o-25°/o-30°/oor 35°/o OFF SUNDAY ONLY

Santa Paws is coming to the Gallia county Animal
Shelter. Bring your pet to the shelter located on State
Route 160 and have his picture taken with Santa.
Santa will be available from 2 p.m. til 4 p.m. on
Saturday, December 2nd to pose with your pet. There
wUI be a S2.00 charge for the picture.

VETERANS
IIAL
HOSPITAL
115 UST •o•AL DIIVI
POMIIOY

,..

RECUNERS

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26th, 12·5

IS COMING .••

Do come out Tuesday and learn about our Home .
Health Nursing Service.
·

f

$129 ...

CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE .1J..

GALLIA COUNTY
ANIMAL WELFARE
LEAGUE INC.
SANTA .PAWS

"Bringing Home Care Back Home Where It Belongs"
is the theme of the week-long observance, Nov. 28 Dec. 2.

Your
Choice
DECORATOR
TABLES from

.Senior Center plans aaivities

---Wedding policy·---

Prescription Shop
271. North Second

Welcome To Our Annual Chri8tma8 · ·
Open Hou8e Saturday, December 2nd, .·
and Sunday, December 3rd

LIVE NORWAY 1!t BLUE SPRUCE TREES
CUT CHRISTMAS TREES

SYRACUSE - Our Lady of
Lourdes Catholic Church was the
setting lor the Oct. 21 wedding of
Kim Melissa Morrow and Robert
(Beau) L. Catron Jr., with the
Rev. Charlie Mitchell officiating.
The bride Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Morrow,
Linden Falls. Ormond Beach,
Fla. The groom Is the son of
Robert L. Catron, New Smyrna
Beach, and Mrs. Lee Stallings,
St. Louis, Mo.
Escorted by her father, the
bride had her sister Robin
Robertson, Charleston, S.C.; as
matron of hOnor. The bride's
niece, Megan Morrow. Plcke. rlngton, and Dawn Skrzynskl
were her other attendants.

ings!

Give peace of mind - call today.
AliA Gin Membership L' ~ost 525.00

CHRISTMAS
OPEN HOUSE! '

Catron-Morrow

· with Memory
$182.76
$135.00
$100.00

physician referral to Home
Health Service makes It posslb~
for patients of all ages to be seeq
through the Holzer Medical Cen.ter Home Health program. Wh~
skllled care Is needed, elthflli
nursing or physical therapy, tlgt
assistance of Home Health pe~
sonnet means a considerable
savings In expense for famU\1.'5
who want to care for their lovell
ones at home.

992-5776

Meter

Regular Price.
Special Price
Mfr. Rebate

Terri Weier, director of Family
Addiction Center. Galllpolls; the
Rev. John Jackson, pastor of
New Life Lutheran Ctiurch, Gal·
llpolls; Donna Reynolds-Kent.
R.N., Infection control, Holzer
Medical Center; Denise Phelps.
R.N., E.T., Holzer Medical Center; Paul Stackhouse, R .Ph.;
Holzer Family Pharmacy . and
Mrs. NeaL
Mrs. Neal emphasize$ that

HUBBAIDS GREENHOUSE

~'&lt;fl&lt;.Y

GLUCOMEfER~ II Brood Glucose

physical therapist and a secre- ·
tary presently make up the
Holzer Medical Center Home
Health stat!.
National Home Health Week
A Home Health Advisory CommIt tee. mpde up of members
from the community along with
hospital members, work closely
with Mrs. Neal in the continuing
growth of the program. Dr. Reid
C. Brubaker, Is the medical
director for Holzer Medical Center's Home Health Service. Other
committee members Include
Earl Walters, vice president lor
fiscal services, who chairs the
committee; Thomas R·. Childs,
FACHE, vice president for professional services, Holzer Medical Center; Edna Russell, R.N.,
past coordinator of Veterans
Memorial Hospital Home Health
Service; Polly Darnbrough, consumer, Gallipolis; Mary
O'Brien, R.N., nursing home
consultant,__ Southeast Ohio;

'

Show you r:ureby ~ivinJ,: the prmertinn and help of an AAA membership. For an entire yc::~r your gift will
pmvide a mulritudt: uf bendirs,

"'~

GALLIPOLIS National
Home Health Week wlll be
observed by Holzer Medical
Center from Nov . 26 through Dec.
2, according to Jean Neal, R.N.,
director of Home Health Services
at the hOspital.
This year's theme, "Keeping
Families Together", Is the very
essence of Home Health Service,
Mrs.. Neal points out. Through
professional assistance, Home
Health enables famllles to bring
their loved ones home to care for
them.
.
During Home Health Week, the
Industry nationwide, wlll pay
tribute to the nurses, physical
therapists and aides who dedicate their lives to providing
In-home care to the chronically
til and disabled.
Holzer Medical Center's Home
Health Department supplies
nursing, physical therapy and
aide services to residents living
In Gallla and Mason Counties.
Three nurses, four atdes, a

JEFFREYS. and LAURA J. (EICHINGER) HORTON

price to you!

including 24-huur EmerRoad Serv 0.~. free
Triprik8
maps and
Tour&amp;.-..&gt;ksll. diso.lu/Xs
un Jodgin~ and car

Hospital to observe Home· Health Week

Weddings

Horton-Eichinger

Sunday Times-Santinai-PIIge-B-3

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

November 26, 1989

Ponwoy Middlaport-GIM~Iil, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Page B-2-Sunday nmee-Santinal

'

"

I'

.~ '

•

&amp;

�Pz.

a4

s..nt.y Tim II Sentinel

November 26. 1988 ·

Pornaoy MWaport-Gr'ipolil, Ohio- Point Pla111'1t, W.Va.

as to the specific needs of the res trlctlons on the age of recippatient.
Ients. To date thl$ year thre have
Most referrals for service been 185 patients over 65 admit·
come !rom physicians at area led to the program, 19 between 46
hospitals and Elizabeth Smith, and 64, 11 between 20 and 45, and 5
RN, program coordinator, han- between six and 19.
dles the details of assigning the
Cancer and heart pyoblemsare
required nurses, therapists, or the most prevalent medical conother health professionals and ditions which require the assistaides to each Individual case.
ance of the Veterans Memorial
As for payment, Mrs. Smith Home Health Service.
explains that most of the cost Is
Registered nurses working in
paid by Medicare, Medicaid, or the program are June Kloes ,
private Insurance, since the Claudia Thomas, Linda Vanln·
services are being provided to wagen, Tina Story, Debbie
patients needing skllled nursing Smtih, and Linda Patterson. The
care.
aides are Bonnie Dailey, Ann
While the over-65 age group · Cozart, · Janice Fetty, Linda
makes up the major portion of Fields, and Joan Stewart. H.
the patients served by the Home Dillon is the therapist, and Kim
Health Service, there are no Roush Is the clerk for the service.

IIJ CIIAIU.BNE BOBn.ICB
· 'l'la II 8•1111el Staff
POMEROY " Bringing
Healtlu:are Back RHome Where
It Be1011p" Is the theme of
National Holnl! Care Week, Nov.
2S-Dec. 3, a week set aside to
honor thoR who provide In-home
care for the chronically Ill.
In observance o1 the occasion
the Veterans Memorial Hospital
Home Health Service will have
an open bouse at Its headquarters
In the Meigs Medical Complex on
Tueaday from 2 to 4 p.m.
At that t!meresldentswlllbave
an opportunity to see the new
facilities of the Home Health
Service and to meet the team of
health professionals and aides
who contribute so much to the
care and comfort of many or
Meigs County's homebound
patients.
Few will deny that It takes an
abundance of love from caring
people to handle the health
problems and give quality care to
those who choose to stay at home
despite seriOus illnesses.
As more choose to stay home, .
quallty home health !14!rvlce is
becoming more and niore vital.
It helps keep famUies together by
bringing recovering patients
back into the comfort and securIty of their own homes.
And there is no doubt that being
home gives positive feelings and positive feelings contribute
to a patient's well-being.
There Is also significance evidence that It is less costly to
provide service to a pat lent In his
HOME CARE- Veda Davis requires some skUied nurs1D1 care
own home than It Is to provide
siDce
ber discharge from the llospllal. WhUe tamUy members take
care somewhere else.
care
of
most needs, a nurse from the Veterans Memorial Hospital
Nursing services provided in
vlalta
periodically.
Here Claudia Thomas, R.N. checks Mrs. Davis'
the home by the hospital's home
blood
pressure.
health service include such
things as changing catheters,
drawing blood for lab tests,
urinalysis, taking cultures, even
lntravenlous therapy by the
registered nurses as well as
providing personal care and
assistance by the aides.
The transition from hospital to
home care can be traumatic for
many patients. particularly the
elderly . whose hospital stays
have been shortened because of
Medicare financial guidelines.
The Veterans Memorial Hospl·
tal Home Health Services have
been providing skilled nursing
care and home health aide
service to homebound patients
with acute or chronic illnesses ~
for more than 17 years.
,
Starting In 1972, in the first full
year of operation there were 813
visits for skilled nursing recorded. So far this year through
Oct. 30, there were a total of
f
11,970 visits, Including 5571 for
n urslng, 302 for physical therapy,
5893 for home health aide, 130
supervisory visits, and 74evalua·
tlon visits.
The Home Health Nursing
program includes a pre·
discharge visit with patients at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
when It appears that some skilled
992-3671
'
nursing care will be required
DOWNTOWN POMROY, OHIO
once the patient returns home. At
-........~..- ....... a...a..."'-~-that time an evaluation is made

SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS- Mar k Sanders
preaches at Mina Chapel, Sun·
day, 7:30p.m.

p.m. at the Racine Masonic
Temple.

REEDSVILLE -The . Olive
Township Trustees will have a
special meetlnJ on Monday at
6: 30 p.m. at the Reedsville Fire
Station to dlscuu emergency
repair on the engine pump.

GALLIPOLIS - Revival at
Caanan Missionary Baptis t
Church begins Sunday. 7 p.m ..
with Rev. Kenneth Sanders.

.

RACINE -The ladles auxilIary of the Mt. Moriah Bapt!at
Church will be servtne dinner to
deer bunters beglnnln&amp;: Monday
through Saturday at 10 a.m.
There will be daily specials and
desserts· served each day .

---

RACINE -The Racine Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star,
will have its annaul installation
of officers on Monday at 7: 30

MERCERVILLE - Danny
Beaver preaches at Mercerville
Baptist Church, Sunday, 7 p.m .

..

•

CLOSEOUT

LECTA - Lecta Church of
Chr ist In Chr istian Union revival
Sunday through Dec. 2, with Rev.
John Notter; special singing;
7:30p.m .

.-

ON
AND

~ PHILCO
ZENITH
TELEVISIONS

POMEROY - The Trinity
Church youth group and choir
will practice Sunday afternoon at
3 p.m. for the Christmas program. All children who wish to
participated are Urged to attend
practice.

I·

ALL FLOOR SAMPLES REDUCED
.

t

Ridenours

MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS - The American Cancer Society will hold its·
regular meeting on Monday at
7:30 p.m . at the ACS office, 444
Second Avenue. Suite 200.

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

CHESTU

I,

woman. And while I'm at It I
would like to say that San
Francisco, which 1s 50 percent
ANN LANDDUI
gay, Is the armpit of America .
• 19M,"" Ao.,.M
Satrfnaw, Mich. : I cast my vote
T::;:.':~i.'"::::::;:::'
FOR legal recognition of samesex couples. 1 am gay, my wife Is ~;pi.~'&amp;ricrii:ev4~~~7a=!;1.:
straight, and we have been ii
never
married 25 years. The. love and moved by the unselfish love and
understanding of this wonderful devotion these males have for
woman have kept me away from one another. Such beautiful relatemptation. I know deep down, uonsblps ought to have the
however thatltlcouldhavebeen dignity of legal recognition.
legally ~arried to my flrstlove, I . Cblcaco: History Is repeating
would have bad a glorious life in Itself. The gays are where the
harmony with my true nature.
blacks were 35 years ago. Who
PhUaclelpbla: I am the father would have thought back then
of two sons. One is gay. I want · that we wouldbaveblackmayors
equal rights for both boys. Put . In more than a dozen of our
me In the "For" column.
country's largest cities?
Lon 1 Beach, Calli.: we are
LoulllvDie: Your correspondagainst legalizing homosexual ent said he didn't want to bear
relationships. II ts wrong to from any "Bible-thumping
encourage these sick people who screwballs quoting Corlnthlare killing themselves and Infect- ans, " so I'll go to Leviticus 20: 13.
lng others because of their filthy "And when a man lies down with
life style.
·
a male the same as one lieswltha
Uma, Ohio: I vote NO. Now male the same as one lies with a
there Is only one question that woman, both of them have done a
remains to be answered. How detestable thing. They should be
long did same· sex marriages go put to death without fall."
on in Sodom and Gomorrab until
Detroit: Have those dumb
the Lord told Lot and his family clucks In San Francisco who
to get out of town?
· passed the domestic partners
Santa Rosa, Calli.: I work at a legislation figured out what will
happen when the " partnership"
goes sour? Will these partnerships end up in "divorce court"? ·
That's ali we need Is to let those
fruitcakes who want to cut loose
jam our courts . .

·

-----

Angel-Powell
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Lee Angel, ESR, Gallipolis, announce ihe engagement
and forthcoming marriage of
their daughter, Kimberly Dawn
Angel, to Nathan Andrew Powell,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Wamon
Powell of Weirton, W.Va.
The open church .wedding will
take place Saturday, Dec. 2, at
6:30 p.m., at Victory Apostolic
Church, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
A reception will be held in the
DA V Building In Gallipolis lm·
mediately following the wedding.

Available
November 18

J

li

f

CHRISTMAS I
OPEN HOUSE 1~
1

Sliding ftt salle. No -

f

GALLIPOLIS ~ The third
annual free Health Fair span:
sored by the Gallla County
Health Department will be on
Dec. 13 from 10 a.m. until2 p.m.
In their offices in the Courthouse
on Locust .Street in Gallipolis.
This special event will be an
opportunity for the public to
receive some ·or the many diversifted services available. Several
community health agencies will
exhibit health-related
information.
Blood pressures and weights
will be taken by nursing students
from the Bucl(eye Hills Career
Center. Blood Iron and blood
sugar tests, cholesterol screening, breast exams, eye exams,
dental exams, and foot exams
will be given. An Ohio Department of Health Nutritionist will
be available for counseling.
According to Barbara Epling,
R.N., health educator, no ap·
pointments are necessary for the
tests; however, some will be
offered just part of the day
because the volunteer hours of
the physicians vary.
Call the Gallla County Health
Department for more information at 44S-4612 ext. 292.

•

•

RACINE- Mr. and Mrs .. Ivan
Powell, 'Racine, announce the
l!ngagement of their daughter,
Lori, to Lt. James David Black
il, son of Mr. and Mrs. James
David Black, New Orleans. La.
· Miss Powell attended Wright
State University and graduated
Jrom Rio Grande Hol zer School

Quit
smoking
class .set

'

~

l

lja~~

IT

and Shrimp.

Now you~ family can enjoy their favorite charbroiled dinners without firing
up the gnU. Just come to Shoney's for our Charbroiled Dinners. Chicken,
steak, shrimp, or steak and shrimp grilled to perfection over an open flame.
And with rice or potatoes, plus unlimited trips to our Soup,.Salad and Fruit
Bar, th!'t's quite a meal. So grill out at Shoney's tonight.

Gallipolis

Full House of Cards
Silver Bridge Plaza

446-7330

·
· -fof'Oor
' ..,..
e-ery
v...
IWatch
QrlllO,.lloulol

.$
j

I

REV. JOE JORDAN, EVANGEUST
LANCASTER , OHIO

SPECIAL SINGING EACH EVENING
INCLUDING THE HARVEST TRIO
lEY. JOHN DOUGLAS INVITES THE PUILI( 10 AnEND.

n. 124

IEIDSYIW, OHIO

OPEN EVENINGS

8 BEGINNING DEC. 4

T.JliS

!J{QLPD54.Y S'EJtSO:J{

MORE
FOR

A WHOLE LOT

LESS!·
JUST A FEW EXAMPLES:

•EVERY DRESS IS
25% TO 500/o OFF
•ALL COATSLADIES' &amp; MEN'S
25% TO 500/o OFF

OFF

•LADIES'
SPORTSWEAR GROUPS
25% TO 700/o OFF
•ALL CHILDREN'S CLOTHING*
33% TO 70% OFF EXCEPT INFANTS
"RAVENSWOOD STORE ONLY

SHOP OUR BIG
WV &amp; MARSHALL DEPARTMENT

PWS .
..... FREE GIFT WRAPPING
..... EASY LAYAWAY PLAN
..... FRIENDLY SERVICE

KIPLING SHOE CO.

~

675-7870

Iunday 1 P.M.·Ii P.M.

POINT PLEASANT

-AIDS GIDNHOUSE

RAVENSWOOD • RIPLEY• POINT PLEASANT

s ·-· Ollie
' l,

&gt;·

00

HANDBAGS
ONLY!
=-~·-----------..----- -----·-1.

0(MII D1ily 8 AM-II P.M.

tft.J7,.

414 Second Ave. 2nd Floor
446-0166
8:30 to 5:00 Monday·Friday
8;30 to 12 Saturday
Closed Thunday
ALSO: Jacklllll, cr.sapeake, Athtns, Clillicothe, Logan &amp; McArthur
236 E. Main St., 2nd Floor
992-5912
8:30 to 5:00 Monday·Friday
Closed Thursday

~-·--~---·-------·--·--·---·--~·
COUPON

Chris- C.hll, Fai\alt W.tt,

"Your Downtown Hallmark Store"
46 (aurt St. • Gallipolis, Ohio • 446·1777

POMEROY:

BEST
PRICES!!

PolnseHias (7 colon)

Candie's Bloomers
Flower Shop

November 28 thru December 3rd
7:00 P.M. Nightly

• ALL DENIM JEANS
MEN'S &amp; LADIES'
NOW20%0FF
•ALL LADIES' SEPARATE
SWEATERS
25% TO 500/o OFF

Pointtttia lltllfll"' ....... ...t Trot~

lwrilll H.j r,.. .... '-1t Show
,..,... U11 IIIII Cut Clsris''*' Ti'IIL
fat .. t.¥111 ..... """ ........

GAWPOUS:

',

NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON
••

FELLOWSHIP CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

rtfUMd .me.. bacausa rl iilability to pay.

IARG8ST SELECTION!!

GALLIPOLIS - The Ameri·
can Cancer Society announces
that a quit: smoking clinic will be
conducted on Dec. 4,6,8, and 11.
This program is tilled "Fresh
Start" and is held in conjunction
with the Gall Ia County Health
Department. These hour long
sessions, free and open to the
public, will be held on 6 p.m . at
the American Cancer Society
office located at 444 Second Ave.
in Gallipolis.
Facilitator Barbara Epling,
R.N. said the program will help
any smoker who' is seriously
interested In giving up the habit
learn to do so In a step by step
method in a group situation.
· This program was first offered
in Gallia County in 1986 and 82
participants have either quit or
cut down their smoking.
This program which will be
offered to employees at the
Robbins and Myers plant on
sitein December is available for
ail local industry and organiza·
lions as well as at the American
Cancer Society office.
Anyone wishing to register Jor
this program is asked to call the
American Cancer Society office
at 446-7479.

On November 18, at any Hallmark store listed in
this ad, you can start ycrur collection of these 4
carousel ornaments. A different ornament will be
offered each week.
·Each ornament is $3.95 with each $10 Hallmark·
purchase. The carousel base is yours for only $1.00
with any Hallmark purchase.
Please come in soon to a participating retailer,
because supplies of these carousel ornaments
are limited.

REVIVAL

HAS A LOT

I'

of Nursing. She is presently
working at Presbyterian Hospi·
tal in OklahOma City, Okla.
Lt . Black is a graduate of the
United State Air Force Academy
and is stationed at Tinker Air
Force Base. Okla .
A Februar y we dding is
planned.

Now'sthechance foranyonewho
has ever thought about making a
gingerbread house to do just that ,
and maybe win a prize In the
bargain.
There are three categories to
the contest: cottage (one-story) •
house ttwo stories) , and other
structures . Entries are to be no
larger than two feet by two feet
and must be in place at the
museum on Butternut Avenue in
Pomeroy by 1p.m., Friday, Dec.
1. The gingerbread buildings are
to be displayed during the
museum's Dec. 3open house with
judging to take place on Dec. 2
and awards to be given.
The original deadline for the
Ginger~read House Contest has
been extended so anyone wishing
to participate may still do so by
calling. the museum at 992-3810 to
register.

ALMEDA'S

OF SOUTHEAST ·0110

Powell-Black

••

r

He"lth Ra•r
..,
•
Jet in GaHi-ho/is
t'

Theiss . of Racine. wllibe providlng an antique youth bed for
display, and the handmade
wooden toys or J erry Black,
Rutland. will also be exhibited.
Table settings, prepared by the
Meigs County Garden Clubs
using the old-fashioned theme of
the open house, will be displayed
upstairs at the museum.
In addition to the many holiday
displays, Rev . Mel Franklin.
formerly of Meigs County but
now of Hamden, Ohio, will
present slides of the Holy Land.
Rev . Franklin's presentation will
start at 2 p.m.
It's also possible that a new
exhibit room -a sewing room may be ready for public viewing
by open bouse day .
Another new feature of this
year's open house is to be a
Gingerbread House Contest.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

WRI POWELL, Lt. JAMES D. BLACK II

f

Charbrolled Chicken, Steak

POMEROY - Don' t forget
that the Christmas Wonderland
Open House at the Meigs County
Museum will be held on Sunday,
Dec. 3, from 1 to 5 p.m. The
annual open house Is sponsored
by the Meigs County Pioneer and
Hlslllrlcal Society and It prom·
1ses to be better than ever.
Some of the Items which
mu~um goers can look forward
to seeing include handmade toys
wblch are being provided by the
Meigs County Grange and the
doli collection of Middleport
resident Judy Arnold. Janet

Confidential SeNices:
Birth Control
V. D. Screening
Cancar Screening
Pregnancy Tasting

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1989
12 NOON-5:00 P.M.
C
"YOU'LL FIND MANY SPECIALS
THROUGHOUT THE STORE"

·

Wonderland open house Dec. 3

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•.•

I

I

Ann
LanderS

Engagements

Collect all 4a different ornament
each.week.

A special
Christmas
·offer from
Hallmark

received a letter from a homosexual who signed himself"Walting for }us lice in Chicago." He
wrote, At present no state wtll
allow two people of the same sex
to ,obtain a marriage ,license.
Isn t It about time homosexuals
were given the same options that
other couples enjoy? This Is
discrimination of the most blatant kind in a country that claims
to believe •.~ freedom, equality
and liberty.
I told "Waiting" I doubled that
we .would see the legalization of
same-sex marriages In our litetime and then Invited my readers
todropmeallneandlet me know
If ,they were for it or against it.
,I have received more than
55,000 responses. Three sacks or
mail are still unopened. The tally
is running about 2 to 1 against
same-sex marriages. Keep read·
lng and you will learn bow
Americans and Canadians feel
about this Issue. I must say that I
~m deeply troubled by the
viciousness and lack of com passion of so many correspondents.
From Grosse Point, Mlcb: You
want an answer? I'll giv.e you
one. The way you stick up for
queers is disgusting. Bull am not
surprised, seeing as how ~ou are

Sunday Tllll8S-Sentinel-

Ohio- Point Plnnnt. W. Ve.

~~~~A~~k~~~~~~~S.~~~da

Community calendar

Home Health Week is observed

Nov8111bar 26. 1989

'f

•

.,

�Pll(le-B-6-Sunday limea-Seittinel

Belville promoted as Air Force Colonel
GALLIPOLIS- Lt. Col. Brenda
Belvllle was recently selected for
promotion to Colonel. Daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Bryant W.
Belville, GaiUpolls, she Is currently the Chief Nursing Services, 509th Strategic Hospital,
Pease AFB. N.H.
Belville was born In Gallipolis,
and graduated from Southwestern High SchOOl. She received
her nursing diploma from Holzer
School of Nursing In 1967 and a
bachelor of science degree in
nursing at Loretto Heights College, Denver, Col., through the
Air Force Ins!Uute of Technology
· program In 1977. She received a
master's degree In business
administration from Gonzaga
University, Spokane, Wash .. in
1980.

November 26, 1989

Pomeroy-Midclaport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plnsant, W. VJJ.

After working as a staff nurse
In Holzer's Medical Center's
Pediatric Unit, Belville joined
the U.S. Air Force In October
1968. She completed the basic
orientation course at Sheppard
AFB. Texas, and was assigned to
Wilford Hall Medical Center as a
staff nurse In orthopedics.
She completed the fiight nurse
program at the USAF School of
Aerospace Medicine, Brooks
AFB, Texas from February 1972
to April 1972, when she was
transferred to the Torre jon U.S.
Air Force Hospital, Spain. DurIng her two-year assignment
there, she was a start nurse to
medical and surgical units and
was an evening and night
supervisor.
From July 1974 to August 1976,

Belville served as a Nurse
Recruitment Officer and was
based In Nei(V Orleans, La. After
completing her bachelor's degree In December 1977, she was
assigned to the Fairchild USAF
Hospital. Washington, were she
was a Charge Nurse In the
Multiservice and Obstetrical UnIts. In February1981, she became
the Chief Nurse at the USAF
Olnic in Izmlr, Turkey. She
served as Chief Nurse at the
USAF Clinic at Kelly AFB, -T exas
and Assistant Chairman and
later Chairman of the Department or Surgical Nursing (256
beds) at Wilford Hall Medical
Center. Texas.
Her military .decorations and
awards Include the Meritorious

Service Medal with two Oak Leaf
Ousters, the Air Force Commendation Medal with two Oak Leaf
Ousters, the National Defense
Service Medal, the Humanttar·
ian Service Medal, the Air Force
Outstanding Unit Award Ribbon
wit one Oak Leaf Cluster, the Air
Force Longevity Service Award
with three Oak Leaf Clusters, the
Air Force Overseas Short Tour
and Long Tour Rlbbo!IS, and the
Small Arms Expert Marksmanship Ribbon. She received her
Chief Nurse Badge In August
1982.
Belville attended Squadron Officer School In 1973, Air Command and Staff College In 1976,
and Air War College In 1984.
She is a member of Sigma

Nov.mber 26, 1989

Theta Tau, the American
Nurses' Association, the Association of MUitary Surgeons of the
United States, the Aerospace
Medical Association, the Air
Force Association, and the Organization of Federally Em-

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-8-7

Pomeroy-Middlaport-Gallipolil, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

ployed Women.
Her honors Include military
nominee as 1983 San Antonio
Woman Of The Year, Texas Most
Notable Woman Award (1984)
and Who's Who In American
Nursing (1987-1988).

·aoOYER

J'AJIJI.Y DENTAL CARE
·

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JUDGING TEAM Pictured are
·. members of the Gallipolis FFA Chapter who
:- competed at the ·county SoU Judging Contest held
:· at Lawrence Burdell's Farm. They are (In no
.

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RAWLINGS:COATS

RUDY E. PHILLIPS JR.
Pvt. Rudy E. Phillips Jr. has
graduated from the U.S. Army
armor cavalry scout course at
Fort Knox, Ky.
Known as the "eyes and ears"
of the unit, scouts observe and
Jearn as much as they can about a
tactical situation and then report
their findings to their
commander.
· He Is the son of Sheila P.
Sfmplson of Rural Route 1,
Chesapeake, Ohio, and Rudy E.
Phillips of 7042 Carriage Drive,
Citrus Heights, Calif.
The private Is a 1989 graduate
of Mesa Verde High School,
Citrus Heights.

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BRETT F. LEACH
Marine Pfc. Brett F. Leach,
son of Russell F. Leach and
Carolyn S. Miller, both of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., has recently
completed the Basic Refrigeration Mechanic Course.
During the eight-week course
at the Marine Corps Engineer
School, Camp Lejeune, N.c:.
Leach was trained to Install,
operate, maintain and repair
refrigeration and air conditioning equipment systems and accessory materials applicable to
the Fleet Marine Force. He
studied mathematics and electrical theory.
A 1988 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School, he joined
the Marine Corps In February
1989.

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113 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
Invite&amp; you to our 5th ANNU4-t

holt, secretary; Denver Garber,
treasurer; Matt Church, reporter; Adam Breaklron, sentineL
Other members were Matt Davidson, Eric Lester, and Jim
Baughman.
The Gallipolis Chapter has also
been putting final touches on the
its annual fall potluck held In late
November. Shortly, chapter
memtiers and officers will be
completing officer books and
record books, making application for proficiency awards and
degree advancement. These w111
be evaluated at the district
evaluation held during midwinter.

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:: POMEROY - The Pomeroy
sesquicentennial cookbook committee is announcing the compie:uon of its commemorative
·cookbook.
:: The printing of the book wiil be
:completed after the first of the
:year and wiil be deiivered during
-) he month of February.
:· The cookbook committee does.
·however. have ChriStmas gift
~ertificates available which can
;be purchased for $6.50 which is
-.the cost of !he book.
: The book contains over 400
: recipes. some quite unique. One
:·s uch unique recipe Is for lemon
·nun from the old GuIll's Bakery.
: In addition to all of the old time
:recipes. there is a section for
· home made cures and remedies
:·fo r all types of sit uations a nd

150 years

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To order a cookbook. call or
stop by the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce office or the Daily
Sentinel. Gills certificates are
available at either place.

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Frye High SchooL Urban team
members representing the chapter In the district contest Include:
Denver Garber, Jeff Boyer. and
Tiffany Wetherholt. Agmemhers
were Matt Davidson, Matt
Church, Chad Pope, and Eric
Lester . .
At the conclusion of soils
judging, the ~hapter began Its
annual fruit sales which enables
the chapter to finance Its many
activities thoughout the year.
This year the chapter Is seiling
juice oranges, navel oranges,
pink grapefruit, white grapefruit, and tangeloes as well as
popcorn and peanuts . .
Following a week of practice
meetings during class, the chapter's parUamentary procedure
team competed with other chapters !rom Gal!ia, Lawrence and
Jackson Counties. They earned a
gold rating and placed in the top
two,.which entitled the chapter to
attend the district finals held at
Tri County JVS, where they
competed with five other teams
from District 10 and Southeastern Ohio.
Team members inclUde Roger
Evans, president and first chairman; Chad Pope, vice president
and second chairman; George
Aldertgi, student advisor and
third chairman; Tiffany Wether-

Evans, President; Staadlng (L-R): Matt David·
son, member; Jim Baughman, member; George
Alderlgl, Student Advisor; Denver Garber,
Treasurer; and Matt Church, Reporter.

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· GALLIPOLIS - members of State University, as well as talk
with various representatives
, the GalUpolls FFA Chapter have
from all segments of agriculture.
; been busy this faiL
Students
attending were: Jim
-' Ali members of the FFA
Baughman,
Paul Bradbury,
'chapter are enrolled in the VoAg
Matt
Davidson,
Eric Kemper,
·Po_rgram at the high schooL New
Eric Lester, Dean Mayes,
.students In the program have
Mickey Pollock, Denver Garber.
•been studying about the FFA
Matt Church, George Aldertgt,
:which is one of the requirements
Tiffany Wetherholt, Chad Pope,
._for becoming an FFA member .
Roger Evans, John Watson. Matt
:· Vocational Agriculture stu)!ents have been hard at work in . Angel, John Albright, and Brian
Ours.
the shop. While working on
Following the Farm Science
Jndlvldual projects in the shop,
Review,
students received train',students have the opportunity to.
Ing
and
further development of
further develop their woodworktheir
soli
judging skills. In
ing sk!Us, metal working, and
studying
soil
judging, students
shop management skills .
learn
to
classify
soils for particuPresident Roger Evans atlar agricultural and urban uses
Jended a President's Conference
by examining the physical propjlt Meigs High SchooL At the
erties, (slope, depth of soil, air
-conference, the State FFA Presland water movement of the soli. ·
:.d ent Dena Wyler and District 10
and texture to name a few) of a
:Vice President Kristin Newlon,
particular site. From thelrobser·explained a new award that will
the students decide what
vallons
.be given at the state FFA
the
site
is best suited for and
·convention. They also engaged in
finally
recommend
appropriate
:leadership activilies that
practices
which
should
be fol:enabled Evans to return to the
lowed
for
optimum
results.
j8nd make Improvements within
The students then put these
,the chapter.
.
-. Students had the opportunitv to skiils to work in the County FFA
;•spend a day at the annual Farm
Soils Judging Contest where they
-,Science Review, held near Lonplaced third in both the Ag and
~on, Ohio. At the review. stuUrban contests. The top students
)dents were given the chance to
from the chaptter were selected
view the latest technology, mato represent the FFA at the
~ hlnery , equipment, and various
District 10 FFA Soil Judging
;ttes t plots conducted by the Ohio
Contest which was held at Fort

~Pomeroy's

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PARLIMENTARY PROCEDURE TEAM Pictured are members of the Gallipolis FFA
Parliamentary Procedure Team. Sealed (L-R):
Adam Breaklron, Sentenal; Tiffany Wetherholt,.
Secretary; Eric Lester, member; and -Roger

FFA reports on tts compettttons

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~Gallipolis

Ansel,
order): Roger Evans, Jeff Boyer,
Dennis Hill, Chad Pope, George Alderlgl, Dean
Mays, Matt Davidson, Eric Lester, Tll!any
Welherholt, Mall Church and Denver Garber.

~Cookbook celebrates

family. Pleas( ..nd mr mnr&lt; inf&lt;nnalion about FomhoURht funerol

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JEFFREY T. VANDEVANDER
Army National Guard Private
Jeffrey T. Van Devander has
completed a wheeled-vehicle mechanic course at the U.S. Army
Training Center, Fort Jackson,
S.C.
During the course, students
were trained to perform maintenance and assist In the repair of
automotive vehicles and associated equipment.
Van Devander Is the son of
Billy D. VanDevander of 52 Pine
Hill Estates, Kenova, W.Va.
His wife, Beth, is the daughter
of Don E. Brown of Rural Route
3, Chesapeake, Ohio.
The private is a 1988 graduate
of Buffalo High Schoo~ Huntington, W.Va.
MICHAEL R. SLACK
Navy Fireman Recruit Mi•
chael R Slack, son of John and
Sandy Slack of Route 3, Gallipolis, OH, was graduated from
Basic Hull Maintenance Technician SchOol.
During the ll-week course at
Naval Damage Control Training
Center. Phliadelphla, Pa .. Slack
received instruction on the bastes of welding, pipefittlng and
metalsmithing. He also studied
the procedures used to fabricate,
Instal! and repair ali types of
shipboard structures, plumbing
and piping systems.
A 1988 graduate of Southwestern High School, Patriot, he
joined the Navy In May 1989.

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ANrfA W. SPRIEGEL
Pvt. Anita W, Sprlegel has
completed basic training at Fort
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During the training, students
received Instruction in drill and
ceremonies, weapons, map readIng, tactics, military courtesy,
military justice, first ald. and
Army history and traditions.
Sprlegel Is the daughter of
James E. and OmedlaSpriegelof
Gallipolis, Ohio.

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PH. 446·9721
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8-8-Sundly nmas s..tinal

Pomeroy-Midcleport-GIIIipolie, Ohio-Point Plaa•wtt. W.Va.

In our tOwn... _________.....,..__________

GALLIPOLIS - State Veterinarian Dr. Don Notwr was
recently selected as the 1989
Kentucky Vete. rlnarlan of the
year by the Ken·
tucky Veter l·
narlan Medical
Association at
Its
Mid ·
American Con·
ference at Louisville.
It marks thE&gt; first tim~&gt; someone holding the position of State
Veterinarian has received the
award.
Don Notter is the twin brother
of Dr. Dan Notter, local veter inarian, who is a Gallla County
Commissioner. They are thE&gt; sons
of Sadie Notter of Lecta and the
late Dan Notter.
They are graduates of Gallla
Academy and 1962 graduates of
Ohio State University, with degrees of veterinary medicine.
Both young m~&gt;n were pages In
the Ohio Senate, while enrolled at
OSU, when Gallipolis' J . Sherman Porter was a State Senator.
After graduation, Dr. Notter
worked from 1962 to 1965. Then he
opened a practice at Har rodsburg, Ky. with two partners. He
still lives therE&gt; with his wife,
Donna , and two daughters.
Dr. Notter became the Kentucky State Veterinaria n on Jan.

11, 1988 in the midst of a dl!flcult
struggle by the Kentucky Department of Agriculture to reduce
brucellosis In the cattle industry.
By Jan. 1, 1989, Ken~ky had
lowered the number of Infected
herds to a point where It could be
classllled as an "A" state. ·
Helping Kentucky reach an
" A" status -~· probably the
greatest acco~lsbment of the
state veterinarian's office and
the Division of Animal Health, "
Dr. Notter said. "The award is
indeed an honor. Anytime you get
re cognized by your peers, I think
It's especially an honor."
Dr. Notter has been praised for
laking a very active, profes·
siOnal role In the brucellosis
eradication efforts, especially
during the period of controversial, but highly effective mandatory depopulation program.
Kentucky Agriculture Commissioner Ward " Butch"
Burdette said "The Department
of Agriculture is very proud of
the work Dr. Notter and the
Department of Animal Health
has done in reducing the number
of infected herds fr om 120 to
eight "
Burdette had additional praise
for the Gallla County native.
"The regulations that were
passed regarding mandatory depopulations has paid off. Dr.

Notter has shown a high degree
Devils flnt SEOAL track cham- year. He's looking forward to an
pions In 19'10. From here he went invitation this year. '
or professionalism In carrying
And, he'll get It If the Rainbow
on to Musklqum and Wooster
out this program. With his
colleges. An Ohio native, Wagner . Warriors defeated Oregon State
leadership we can easily attain a
played football at Wittenberg yesterday. They would meet
'brucellosis free' status within
University.
Michigan State Dec. 25 In the
the next couPle-of years. "
Wagner was hired at the Aloha Bowl. Hawaii Is 8-2 this
Remember Bob Wagner?
University of Hawaii, according season, Tqey broke into the Top
Think about It for a minute.
to a cover story In USA today, 25 for the first time this season,
Johnny Ecker, former football
earlier this past week. He was ranked No. 24 In the USA
coach for the Gallla Academy
hired just before the arrival of Today-CNN poll.
High School mue Devils and
.
Dick
Tomey,
the
Hawaii
coach
Is
a
member
of the
Hawaii
former baseball coach for the Rio
Western
Athletic
Conference
from
1977
until
he
left
In
1987
for
Grande College Redmen, came
(WAC) which Includes BYU,
In the office the other day and we . the University of Arizona.
To make this short, last year Utah, Wyoming, Air Force, Colomade a bet on Ohio state. Now at
during Wagner's first year as rado State, New Mexico, Texasthis writing, the game had not
head coach at Hawaii, the Bows El Paso, and San Diego State.
been played. So nob'ody knew the
as they're called, finished with a Hawaii bas lost only two games
wiMers. Well, anyway, I bet a
buck on the Bucks, and Ecker 9-3 record. He's Irked that his his year- 20-15 to Wyoming and
team didn't get a bowl bid last' 3H6 at Colorado State.
took Michigan. But, then he said
he wouldn't be surprised If OSU
beat Michigan.
And, by the way, I'm solvent
for the bet after paying o!f my
World Series losses, a buck each
to Bill Gray and Bob Hennessy,
i
down at Ohio Valley Bank. I was
a llttl~&gt; bit late, but they didn't
RT.180 NORTH. GALLIPOLIScharge any Interest.
Which brings us back to Bob
w
Wagner. head football coach at
the University of Hawaii, the
land of surfers and hula skirts.
Bob was assistant football coach
ai GAHS during Ecker's first
year In 1969-70 and he was also
head track coach of the Blue

"On my honor I will do my best:
to do my duty to God and my
country, and to obey the Scout
Law ; to help
other people at
all times ; to
keep myself
physically
strong , mentally awake and
morally
straight."
The familiar Boy Scout oath is
almost as old as the Boy Scouts
Itself, appearing in the very first
Boy Scout Handbook that came
off the presses lnJuly·ofl911. The
Boy Scouts of America was
lncorporateed In 1910 with the
natiOnal office established in
1911. In 1912 Eagle Scout awards
were Instituted, the "Boy's Life"
magazine was purchased by the
B.S. of A.. there were 97,495
scouts In the United States, and
the first Boy Scout , troop in
Gallipolis was formed.
,
It was sometime in late 1911
that one of the sons of Dr.
MacKenzie, the rector of St.
Peter's Episcopal Church. spoke
at a community meeting held in

the Grace Methodist Church. Mr.
MacKenzie described the aims
the purposes of scouting. Interest
was immediately generated and
Professor Swigert, Prof. Conrad
and others asked how they could
· get a troop started In Gallipolis.
In short order there were two
troops with first scoutmasters
and assistants being O.G. Lyle,
Rev. Hugh Evans, Harley Bovle
and Elias Wetherholt. One or
those troops met In 1912-13 on the
second floor of the building that
today houses Oscar's. The room
was right over the Wetherholt
Mortuary.
In 1931 T.L. Bush remembered
early scouting in the Old French
City for the Gallipolis Dally
Tribune. He remembered Prof.
Swigert leading the boys on bikes
at 6 a.m. and also giving the
tenderfoot examinations. There
were five questions on that test,
deahng with the flag, the oath,
the law and knots. One boy was
sweating over his paper during
the tenderfoot examination when
Prof. Swigert ~ked the boy If he
was not about done. Said the
prospective tenderfoot, "All
done except for the last lour."
The first summer camping w;~s
'""-

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__:;:;By~Di::::'c.=k..:.T.:.:.:'ho:.:.:.::ma=.s

Wagner told USA Today he had
three goals this season; win
Hawaii's first WAC champion·
ship, earn a bowl bid, and beat
archrlvaiBYU, a featHawallhas
not accomplished since 1974.
The BYU j 1nx has been broken
and the Aloha Bowl Is within
reach. But the WAC title Is a
different s tory. San Diego would
have had to upset front-runner
J;lYU yesterday and Hawaii still
needs to defeat Air Force.
You can watch Hawaii Dec. 9
when It hosts Air Force In a WAC
contest on national television,
ESPN. Check your listings . If It's
night over here, It 'll on In the
"wee small hours of the mornIng," over here.

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done about three miles below
town on the West VIrginia side.
Rev. Evans was In charge
serving as cook, nurse, head
scout and pacemaker for the 5
days of camp. One night while the
boys were asleep In their tents
the Ohio River came up almost to
the tent flaps. There wa~ a great
discussion as to the sudden rise of
water since no one had noticed It
raining. Paul Shaw stepped forward to give bls explanation.
"I'll tell you what done It," he
said, "It was just like Ibis:"
Before he could finish his foot
slipped on the muddy bank and
he landed on his rear with his feet
splashing In the river. "Oh, I
see," wise cracked Lester Patterson, · "That settles that
argument."
By 1913 the Gallipolis ~roops
had uniforms and Scout staves.
These staves were nearly 7 feet
long and the Boy Scouts ·developed a drm exercise using the
staves. About summer camp in
1913 Bush wrote:
"We were busy all summer
getting ready for the Tri-State
Scout Camp at Pt. Pleasant. We
gathered old papers, baled them
and sold them to help furnish
funds. On the big day of our
departure we marched down to
the wharf and boarded a steamboat for Pt. Pleasant . There we
had a grand week of jamboree
with stunts and contests to
furnish excitement everyday and
on the last day we had a glorious
parade through Pt. Pleasant with
troops !rom Ohio, West Virginia,
and Kentucky. A triumphant
event for our troop was when
Mike Rathburn won the swim·
mlng race over boys from all the
other troops.''

. {"llr

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(FORMERLY POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER1

25TH a: JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT

C3o4) 67Sel675

iiiiiiiiiiiii

Panthers' Nelson Walker (center background)
stops him. However, the Nlttany Lions went on to
win 1&amp;-13. (UP I)

DOWNS QUARTERBACK - Michigan defen·
slve lineman Chris Hutehln&amp;oa (9'7) celebrates hla
flrst-quarjer sack of Oblo stale quarlerback Gre~r
Frey during 84\urday's rivalry In Ann Arbor,
Southwest Conference record. Texas, which at
mldseason rolled up consecutive wins over
Oklahoma and Arkansas, fell to 5-5 and 4-3. The
Longhorns end their season next Saturday against
Texas A&amp;M.
Mlchl~ran State 31, Wisconsin 3 - At Madison,
Wls;, tallback Blake Ezor ran for three
touchdowns Saturday to give Michigan State a
31-3 Big Ten victory over Wisconsin. .
Michigan State, 7-4 overall and 6-2 In the Big
Ten, was expected to receive a bid to play in the
Aloha Bowl.
Wisconsin finished the season 2-9 overall and 1-7
If\ the Big Ten.
·
.
Penn State 16, Plll13- At Pittsburgb, Pa., Ray ·
Tarasl's third field goal, a 20-yarder with 13
seconds left, lifted Penn State to a 16·13 victory
over 20th-ranked Pittsburgh Saturday In the
annual battle of cross-state rivals.
Tarasl's game-winner came 2: 10 after Pitt's Ed
Frazier kicked a 40-yard field goal, his second o!
the game, to tie the score at 13·13.
Pitt tried to come back in the final seconds, but
Sherod Ralnge Intercepted an Alex Van Pelt pass
at his two and returned the ball 54 yards as time
expired. The benches emptied for a brief brawl
after the final play.
The two field goals were the only scores of the
seconill half. Tarasi's kick gave Penn State Its first
victory over the Panthers since 1986 and allowed
the Holiday Bowl-bound Nittany Lions to end their
regular season at 7-3-1. The Panthers, 6-3-1 and
expected to accept a post-game bid to the John
Hancock Bowl, close out their regular season next
Saturday In Dublin. Ireland against Rutgers.
Illinois 63, Northwestern 14- At Evanston, Ill. ,
Jeff George threw three touchdown passes before
sitting out the second half Saturday , liftlngNo.ll
Illinois to a 63-14 rout of Northwestern, finishing
the Wildcats' first winless season since 1981.
George completed 15 of 18 passes for 232 yards

Mich. The Wolverines won 211-lBio.secure the Big
TenUtle andatrlplotheRose BowlonNewVear's
Day. (VPI)
with no interceptions.
Illinois, 9-2 overall. finished second in the Big
Ten with a 7-1 record and appeared headed for the
Citrus Bowl against Virginia.
Northwestern ended the season 0-11 and 0-8, and
has lost 12 straight dating to last year . The
Wildcats surrendered 139 points in their last two
games.
Mississippi U, Mississippi State 11 - At
Jackson, Miss., Randy Baldwin rushed for 80
yards and one touchdown and Scott Swazell
recovered a fumbled punt to set up another one
Saturday to help Mississippi whip cross-state
rival Mississippi State 21-11.
The win put the Rebels at 7-4 heading into a Dec.
28 Liberty Bowl appearance. MMississlppi State
dropped its fourth straight gamE&gt; and finished the
season at 5-6.
Georgia Tech 13, Boston College 12 - At
Atlanta, Ga., Scott Sisson kicked two field goals in
the final six minutes - the game-winner with 42
seconds to play - and safety Ken Swilling
returned one of his three Interceptions 72 yards for
a touchdown Saturday to lift Georgia Tech over
Boston College, 13-12.
The underdog Eagles led 12-7 going into the final
quarter . But Tech, 6-4, closed to 12-10 on Sisson's
35 yarder with 5:55 left, then won the game on
Sisson's second 35-yarder after drlvlng60yards to
the Boston College 18.
Georgia Southern 52, Villanova 36 - At
Statesboro, Ga ., fullback Joe Ross ran for 190
yards and two touchdowns Saturday to help rally
unbeaten Georgia Southern to a 52-36 win over
Villanova In the first round of the NCAA Division
I·AA playoffs.
Trailing 21-13 at the half, Georgia Southern,
12-0, scored 25 unanswered points in the third
quarter to wrap up its 34th straight victory at
·
Paulson Stadium.

Wheelersburg, . Cleveland St. Joe capture state grid titles

•FREF GIFT WRAr
ENGRAVINr.

•rR~F

ROBERT M. ROLLEY, M.D.

.....

punt 14 yards to his 40 and nine plays later
Graham forced his way into the end zone from the
three to make It 14-12. Ohio State tried for two but
botched the snap.
Plate's first Interception gave Michigan the ball
near midfield. Ju st when It seem the Wolverines,
who fumbled away two flrst-balf opportunities,
would stall again, Leroy Hoard burst 40 yards
through the middle to the 4. Bunch took hIs scoring
pass two plays later. .
.
The first halt was a displaY or smash-mouth
football at Its finest. Hoard muscled his way In
from the one with 3: 13left In the opening quarter
to give the Wolverines a 7·0 lead and Allen
Jefferson swept left end for a two-yard score with
2: 23 remaining In the half to make It 14-0, Both
drives were entirely on the ground.
Ohio State scored on a 20-yard field goal by
O'Morrow 25 seconds from halftime. O'Morrow
missed a 42-yard try early In the second quarter, a
kick that appeared to be deflected by Michigan
defensive back Murray.
Purdue 15, IDdlana 14 -At Bloomington, Ind ..
Eric Hunter threw a touchdown pass Saturday
and Larry Sullivan kicked three field goals,
sparking Purdue to a 15-14 upset of arch-rival
lndiana that kept the Hoosiers from their fourth
straight post-season bowl bid.
Indiana finished the season 5-6 overall, 3-Sin the
Big Ten, while the Boilermakers rose to 3-8
overall and 2-6 In the conference. Purdue now
leads the series 57-29-6, with a 43-19-3 edge In the
"Old Oaken Bucket" portion of the rivalry.
Baylor 50, Texas 7- At Austin, Texas, Robert
Blackmon Intercepted three passes Saturday and
returned two of them for touchdowns In sparking
· Baylor to a shocking 50-7 win over Texas, the
Bears' most one-sld!!d victory In the series'
68-year history and their first win In Austin since
1951. .
.
As a byproduct of the unexpected rout, the
Arkansas Razorbacks clinched their second
straight trip to the Cotton Bowl. Even a loss to
SMU next Saturday would not keep Arkansas
from making the New Year's Day trip to Dallas.
Baylor finished Its season at 5-6 and with a 4-4

141 GOlD

Oscar' sis located in lhe old Ford bulldinJ erected Ia 18418.111 1912
and ·1913 lhe Wetherholt Mortuary was located here and one of
Gallipolis' first Boy Scout troops met on the second floor of the
bulldln~r, with Charles Welherholl as scoutmaster.

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC

i'

on the left shoulder near the neck. Murray lay face
down on the field for minutes before being
removed from the field. dimming the final2: 48. It
was reported he was unconscious but had feeling
In his body when he awoke.
O'Morrow's 22-yard field goal 4: 14 Into the
second half, set up by Vinnie Clark's Interception
near midfield, pulled Ohio State within 14-6.
Michigan freshman Chris Stapleton shanked a ,

I

FAMILY PRACTICE

By RICHARD L. SHOOK
UPI Sports Writer
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!) - No. 4 Michigan
became the first team lo win consecutive outright
Big Ten titles since 1%6 when fullback Jarrod I
Bunch scored two fourth-quarter touchdowns i
Saturday to seal a 28-18 victory over No. 18 Ohio •
State and send the Wolverines to the Rose Bowl.
Mlchlgai1,10·1 overall with 10stralght victories,
. will meet Southern Cal for the second straight : ·
year In the Jan. 1 Rose Bowl. Michigan State In j
1965-66 was the last Big Ten school to win ·
conseeu tlve outright league championships.
1
Michigan, 8-0 In conference games, will play in '
Its third Rose Bowl In four years. Ohio State, •
which had a six-game winning streak snapped, Is
bound for the Hall of Fame Bowl on New Year 's I
Day. The Buckeyes finished the regular season8-3 ·
and 6-2.
1
Bunch took a five-yard TO pass from Michael
Taylor to give Michigan a 21-12 with 12:22 left,:
then scored on a '23-yard run up the middle with 80 '
seconds remaining.
Scottie Graham. shifting between tailback and '
fullback, capped an 80- yard drive with a four-yard 1
TO run with 7:04 lett to draw Ohio State within
21-18.
;
Safety Tripp Welborne blocked Pat O'Morrow's :
kick for the extra point, forcing the Buckeyes to go ·
for a touchdown to win because a tie would stilL
send Michigan to the Rose Bowl.
Ohio State regained possession at Its 34 with 3: 42~
left, but cornerback Todd Plate Intercepted a:
Greg Frey pass on the second play. It was Plate's:
seco.nd fourth-quarter Interception.
·

CHRIST AS SAVINGS SALE

C,((_. ] 3.,

304/525-7204

~

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
GAlliPOliS - POMEROY

'· ' !'I

~-

Classic Trio

W

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

Section

Michigan posts 28-18
•
·wm over Ohio State

·--------------------------------~-~~

Scouting in Gallipolis-'__
BV JAMES SANDS

November 28, 1989

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
Matt Miller passed for one touchdown
and ran for another to lead No.1 ranked
Wheelersburg to a 14-7 win Saturday
over No. 2 Warren Kennedy at Ohio
Stadium In the Division IV Ohio high
school footballchamplonshlp game.
Miller, a 6-6, 215-pound senior, passed
41 yards to Chris Risner for Wheelersburg ~ s first touchdown to tie the game
. 7-7 with 1: 10 left In the first half. It
. capped a 92-yard drive by the Pirates.
Miller, one of the twin sons of
,·wheelersburg coach Ed Miller, also
;'scored what. proved to be the winning
' touchdown with 1: 27 left In the third
quarter when he went over from a yard
. and a half out on a quarterback sneak,
· the climax of an 80-yard, six-play drive.
He also had a 34-yard run during the

drive and completed a 38-yard pass to
halfback Pete Ruby to set up the TO
run.
Kennedy, which wound up Its season
with a 12-2 record, had taken a 7-0 lead,
going 58 yards in nine plays with the
opening kickoff. The touchdown came
on a 14-yard screen pass from quarterback Tim Ryan to running back Adam
Mack.
Kennedy m lssed on a couple of
scoring opportunlties~n the second half .
The Eagles moved from the ball from
their 45 to the Wheelersburg 14, but Tim
McNeil's 32-yard field goal attempt fell
short.
·
'
After Wheelersburg had taken Its 14·7
lead, Kennedy marched the ball from
Its 18 to the Wheelersburg 19. But, on
fourth and a long one to go, the Eagles'
Anthony Naples was stopped short of

the first down by Chris Bowling and
Rich Gill.
· Kennedy had one more opportunity
when It got the ball at Its 27 with 1: 41 to
play following a Wheelersburg punt.
A pass-and-lateral play of 23 yards
gave the Eagles a first down at
midfield, but on the next play, the other
twin, Mark Miller, picked off a Ryan
pass and the Pirates ran oul the clock.
Matt Miller completed four of six
passes for 97 yards and also ran the ball
13 times for 76 yards.
Mack had 77 yards In 19 carries and
Naples 711n 12 for Kennedy.
Cleveland St. Joe 21, Fostoria 14 Cleveland St. Joseph scored a pair of
touchdowns In the first three minutes of
the second half, one coming on a 65-yard
punt return by Brian Brown, to beat No.
1 ranked Fostoria 21·141n the champion-

ship game of the Division II state high
school football playoffs Saturday at
Ohio Stadium. ·
Brown's touchdown broke a 14·14 tie
and came just 2:11 after the Vikings'
Bruce Leld~ had picked up a bad pitch
by Fostoria quarterback Derek Kidwell
and fell into the end zone for a St. Joseph
TO.
Fostoria, which finished at 13·1. had
taken a 14-7 lead with a pair of second
quarter touchdowns by Casey' McBeth,
Its outstanding senior runnlngback.
McBeth, the game's leading rusher
with 143 yards In 33 carries, scored on a
27-yard pass from Kidwell · and a
four-yard run .
St. Joseph, which won Its first state
championship, had taken a 7-0 lead on a
50-yard run on a keeper by quarterback
Tony Miller with 46 seconds remaining

In the first quarter.
Fostoria tied It on its next posession,
going 63 yards in eight plays, with
McBeth doing a dazzling bit of running
after taking Kidwell's short pass.
The Redmen came right back with
another scori.n g drive. covering 64
yards In 10 plays, on its next poses sion.
McBeth scoring from the four on first
down.
Fostoria got Into a quick second-half
hole when the Redmen got the kickoff
back only to the eight yard line.
On second down , Kidwell, a sophomore, pitched the ball behind McBeth
and Lelde scooped il up and fe n into the
end zone for a touchdown.
Fostoria had 293 total yards. 174
rushing and 119 passing, to 175 for St.
Joseph, which rushed for 156 and passed
for 19.

:Bengals push for playoffs with. today's rematch vs. Bills
toughest teams In the business
By DICK USIAK
. ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (UPI) and that's what we want right
· - The Cincinnati Bengals, last now," Bengals coach Sam Wyche
season's AFC champiOns but said. "We have to tlnd out just
: struggling near the .500 level this how good we are.
·'For us, we feel we're already
· season, will try to begin a push to
· return to the playoffs Sunday In a In a playoff situatiOn because of
. rematch of. last year's confer- our record. We're In a singleence championship against the elimination tournament ourselves. That's the way our guys
Buffalo Bills.
.
The Bengals find themselves In are preparing."
The Bengals have been
, third place In the AFC Central,
plagued
by Injuries In their
• behind Clevelalld llnd Houston, A
attempt
to
return to the Super
· loss to the Bills would just about
, eliminate them ttom the playoff Bowl. Quarterback Boomer Esl: picture, barring a total collapse ason has been hit .with several
problems, Including a sore arm
by the Oilers and Browns.
' · "They (Buffalo) are one of the and a bruised lung.
~~ ·

"

Last week, however. a heal thy
Some of the sengals are still
Eslason had his best day of the banged up, but a victory over
year In a 42-7 romp over the Buffalo would ease the pain. The
Detroit Lions. He completed 30 of mils, 7-4, have been struggling
39 passes for 399 yards and three themselves, losing two of their
touchdowns.
last three games, Including a
"Boomer started the season 33-24 decision last week to the
with his arm not totally revived New England Patriots .
from the previous year," Wyche
''We have to win the rest of our
sald. ''As the season went along, games," said quarterback Jim
he 110t stronger and stronger. Kelly, whose club Is tied with the
Right now 11e's Into a second wind MJaml Dolphln,s tor lint place in
for him In regards to hl.s arm." · the AFC East. "We've got to do
Eslason said last week "was whatever It takes to win. We're
the first time this year that I making It tough on ounelves."
really felt healthy. We've been
~Ills coach Marv Levy believes
really struggling this year with l!_l~ team did not prepare well In
Injuries. It's really killed us."

the week l~adlng up to the make theBengals slowdown. but
Patriots game. Levy has noticed
the league intE-rvened and
a dllference, however, heading
banned the quick offense for the
Into the Bengals game.
game.
"The at len Uveness was good
Levy says he has no problems
and the work was. good," Levy with Wyche. The Bengals coach
agrees, but qualifies his feeling
said. ' 'I hope that's a good omen,
because I dldn' t think It was a somewhat.
·
very good omen last week."
"He (Levy\ tried lo limit what
One Intangible will be the
we could do before the game
development of one oft be fasteststarted through legal means,"
growing rivalries In the NFL.
Wyche said. ''That week we went
The problems started before last
by Buffalo's sptrlt (of the rule).
year's AFC title game when Levy This week we'll go by the letter of
complained about the Bengals the law and that's all been
hurry-up offense. He threatened cleared up during the offseason
to have players fake Injuries to . league meetil)gs."

t

�P'l%1111.-..lC-2-aun.My Tin o I ltil...

November 26, 1989

MldciiiPClft-Gol'lrcllil, Ohio Point Plamrt, W.Va.

November 26, 1989

Ironton Tigers claim
Division Ill grid title-n
By GENE CADDE8
lJPI a~-1'111 Wrller

campbell ......................... ...... o o o 7- 7
1rcm-Cox 52 paulmn Ple111nt &lt;kick
bl ke:l)

gpw

Ol*llia ID Rate elllmplolllblp game a&amp; Oblo

Stad..... C.llnbu. ne Tl&amp;enboelledofflbe
Bed DevU. 11-'7 le claim lbe Rale tllle. (VPI)

MeDulel, ud Sarall Dldd. Bacll nw·Davld
Cua&amp;er, 111111181«· Melule Lyoa, Trlcla Wolle,

SOUTHERN TOBNADOETTES 111t·H:
Memben ef W. yeU''s Soulllen Tom ,......
bM118HIIIeam are trw&amp;, J..r, Bea&amp;ller McPUIJ,
~e Swiger, Tonya lnpla, Mica
Michele

Jue Ann WIDlllma, Went'y Wolle, Mlcllelle
Caraulben, and Jeaaller Crou. Soulllem Is

J•-·

COLUMBUS -Ironton scored
two first quarter touchdowns
'
one on a 52-yard pass from Craig
Pleasant to Danny Cox, and
made them stand up for a 12·7 win
over Campbell Memorial Friday
in the Division Ill championship
game of the state high school
foQtball playoffs at Ohio
Stadium.
The Iitle was the second for the
No. 1 ranked Tigers, who finished
their season with a 14-0 mark.
They also won the championship
In 1979.
The Pleasant to Cox TO pass
came after the Tigers failed to
capitalize on a tumble recovery
on the Campbell 22 on the first.
play of the game, with Andy Neal
missing a 37-yard field goal .
Following a Campbell punt to
the Ironton 29, the Tigers covered
71 yards in just two plays, helped
along by a 15-yard pass !nterter·
ence penalty against the Red
Devils.
On second down and six at the
Ironton 48, Pleasant hit Cox in
full stride at the Campbell27 and
he went in untouched to make It
6-0. The conversion attempt was
blocked.
On Campbell's very next play,
Ironton's J.D. Cyrus recovered a
fumble by Shawn Patton on the
Red Devil 33. Four plays later,
fullback Heath Brownstead
rambled up the middle 15 yards
for a touchdown and a 12·0 Tiger
lead.
Campbell Memorial had the
ball three times inside the
Ironton 25 in the second quarter,
but came away without a point.
After a scorless thil-d quarter,
Campbell finally got on the board
with a 15-play, 85-yard drive,
with Patton scoring on a 3-yard
yard run with 9: 47 remaining in
the game tQ make it 12-7.
leo~. bJ' ttuarteu::

~CII-Br"'"'"'ad.1~.

Camp-Palton 3 non

· '

season are to improve each time
out and improve upon last year's
8-6 record In the league. "
Besides it seniors, Southern
has four juniors led by Beegle,
Tonya Ingels, Mica Jones, and
Wendy Wolfe. Sarah Duhl is the
lone sophomore, wh!lfo five fresh·
men round out the roster.
The freshmen are Michelle
Carauthers, Jennifer Cross, Ml·
chelle ·McDaniel, Heather
McPhail, and Angie Swiger.
Although Southern was defeated In its opener, it played well
In the preview, losing to Symmes
Valley 21·16 after leading the
game several times by as much
as three. Symmes was listed as .
one or the to contenders In this
year·s league race.
SHS hopes that by learning
from its mistakes .and by gaining
some confidence and experience
that It will be ready to host Kyger
Creek Monday for the SVAC
opener.
Following are a schedule and
roster.
PATE-OPPONENT

············ ···· ·········· ·· ··;'~·A

Punts ................ .. .......... .... O:o
Fumbles-lost , ...................... .
Penalties-yards .................. 10·14
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start racing talk show
WLTP is located at 1450 on the
AM dial.

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33380 8ASHAN ID.
·
949-2206

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Molaole \.{'"" ................................. :;.!; 1

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Friday's scores.~.

Rollt'll~

. PROPANE GAS

coming in the final mlnure,
The comeback overshadowed
a 32-point performance by James
Madison's Steve Hood, who made
14 of 20 shyots from the floor. The
Dukes, however, miSsed the
front end of three one-and-one
free-throw situations in the final
31 seCQnds.

Wnt Palm Bt-.ctll, Orludo K
Wlnler 8an11l, Mt. I.Mdt I

LA Ramr~ at DaliM . I p.m .
Mlamilll Ku.n~!l Cit)', I p.m .
· ~«:"'' Orii'IUIIIIll Of-troll, I p.m.
Phlllldl'lptdllal N''V GIIUib, I p.m.
SIUI FrllllchiL'CI at A.danlll. I p.m.
Df-nwr at· LA R&amp;l•·r ~ t p.m .
NV .Jehiut San Dl t&gt; ru, .J p.m .
W•Jjnltf,onlll rh01•nb. , f p.m .
Cblc:a«&lt; at Mlnl)ll!wota , II p.m.
MOndM,V, Ot-t•. 4
Butflllo itt Sf-alllt', 9 p. m-.

Pro~dt'nc e .

~
Ferrellgas

to Kansas, scored on several
spectacular dunks in the second
hall that turned the game .into a
rout.
Stacey Augmon added 16
points for UNLV, 3-1, and Greg
Anthony had 11. DePaul was led
by David BOoth with 16 points .
Also, King Rice hit a 12-foot
jumper at the the buzzer to boost
No. 7 North Carolina to an ~- 79
comeback victory over James
Madison In the first round of lhe
Maul Classic.
·
Rice, falling. down and with
three defenders on him, hurled
the ball from the key in a
high·archlng shot that bounced
off the glass . and went in as the
buzzer sounded.
North Caronna, tra!Ung by
nine points at halftime, scored
the game's last 10 points, all

Ft:. M)'er• It, St. Peter....... 15

!!u ... IQ'. Dt--c. :1
( 'lncln.-.t I .t flt-'Vel~&amp;~~d, I p.m .
Grt&gt;rn BII,Y u.l Tampa B•y.l p.m .
HBulllllftMl PltlliiU'Wit. I p.m.
Jaclllnapoll11 IU N,.w En~"nd , I p.m .

AI

last year because of NCAA
violations, now has won 10
straight tournament games.
Kansas !J the only team to
appear in the preseason NIT
championship game twlcf!.
No. 1 Nevada-Las Vegas
routed DePaul 88-~ In the first
gamf! Friday night for third
placf! in the tournament.
Larry JohnSOn scored 32
points, including 11 In a 2~9 run
over eight minutes of the second
halt, to l~ad the Runnln' Rebels.
Johnson, the junior-college
player of the year In 1988. scored
21 of his points in the second hall
as the Runn!n' Rebels scored at
will against the outmanned Blue
Demons.
UNLV led 40-32 with 18 minutes
to go before Johnson, who was
held to 13 points In the upset loss

Fr~ Rnulh
Gold Cout :., llradellloa t

PIU!thul'!fh Ill Miami.,. I p.m.
Ntow EnKi~d 111 LARMJd(.rll,-f p.m .
('hlcqoat " 'allhlnl(a .. .l p.m.
Sl&gt;!U.IIe at Denwr • .J p.m .
Tam~ lay at Phomb., .J p.m .
LA Ramti al New Orl...nll,ll p.m.
Mo.t-,y Gam"

.

''I knew St. John's would make
a run, " Kansas coach Roy
Will!ams said. "And I knew it
would be up to us to stop it."
St, John's outscored the Red·
men 11-2 opening the seeoild"hall
an4 things were lookbtg good
when Randall was forced to the
bench with his fourth foul with 12
mlnu.t es to play .
''The team's confident," Randall said. " Coach (Williams) has
told us all the time about teams
making runs at us. Basketball is
a game of runs. It was just up to
us to stop them."
That's where the experience
comes ln. On the floor at the time
were seniors Kevin Pritchard
and Jeff Gueldner, members of
the Jayhawks' 1988 national
championship team, and Rick
Calloway, who played on Indiana's 1987 NCAA title team.
"I wasn't worried at all,' ~ said
Randall, named the tourna·
ment's most valuable player.
St. John coach Lou Carnesecca
said the Redmen "went through
a meat grinder in the first half.
They just cut us up. That's one of
the smartest teams thatl've ever
run into."
The Redmen were hurt down
the stretch by poor free-throw
shooting, converting on only 2 of 7
opportunities In the final min·
utes. St. John's went' the final
7:25 without a field goal.
Harvey led the Redmen with 28
points, including 17 in the second
half. Kevin Pritchard and Mike
Maddox added nine points for
Kansas, 4-0.
Kansas, which was barred
from tournament competition

SF.NIOR PROPEStiONAi.IA.•U!: B.U.L

I p.m.

Franci~o ,

v• ..

1

W Salem NW 'JI, llaell Bl"' •
Warren L!lttalll1, Fon P"r';Jf 17
W•m~ Hardlft114. De hhlli llay II
Wllfntleld-Goahl!a It, Uooa Tern Chr

Su nclll,)' G ~t.Jil('ft
NY Jet s, I p.m.
fln cla•ll aa Bulfalt~ , 1 p.m.
Hou!llon IU Klln!IL"' Clly, I p.m .
San Dl t'P ~t.llndlllllll.polll!l, I p.m.
Mlnne~~W. \'liGrt&gt;en Bay !U. Mllwau kr t&gt;,

!'1.1' Glanl!\at SIUI

DaJ w.,.e a

\o'M4alla Butler~

W ChRer Lall.o&amp;a Sl. Cla ... Mio~ 48
w..ellenoft 81. BaebJe

A.dantaa~

Nov .Xl.Qak Hill ................................... A

Jan.29-Waterford ................. ,, ... , .......... A

.ns

Thul'llllay Ret~utb

LOCATION

D!c.04-N'orth Gallla ... .. ..... ................... H
Dec.07-Hannan Tra~ ........................... H
Ilec.11-EIIstern .................................... A
D!c.U -Southwe!!tern ............................ A
Ilec.1S.Waterford .. ............................... H
Dec.21-Symmes VaUey .. .... ........ ....... .... A
Jan.02-Nelsmv8le York ........... .. .......... A
Jan.Of.Oak Hill ............. ..... ....•• ..•......... H
Jan.ll-Kyrer Creek ............................. A
Jan.l8-H.1Dnan Trace .. .. ....................... A
Jan.20-Nelloovlle York ....................... H
Jan.25-North Gallla ............ ~ ................ A

.11.11 ns ZIG
.lt6 ~70 11:1
.Mii %11 li:OI

Dftrak 13. arwelud 10
Ptlllal.delphl11 %'l,'Dai1M 0

nh . , o1 • owhdo
1H!- •4 .._ ..,_.,.,

PH. 378-6125

P.ndora-GIIIJN 71, lhlfHon •s

Perblm A WeMer• BrOWIIII
Portlm_. 81. QUllcodle II
Part.neu.. Eut '1'7, O.eaapea.b '23
fi'eble Sbaw•e n, Mld'IOMI MadiH11

"""'

·~

4TH • Main, RHdavHie, Oh.

20'l

Team
W L T
Pt.'l . PF PA.
NY Glafttl ......... 1 2 &amp; .111M I!U 170
Phllade lpbl6l ...... 8 4 II .161 U.7 :!IS

~

IUD'S COUfiTIY nGIE

Nil• _
II. LaBne ft
Nor'f'ib '1'1, Mllu £41 .... Sl
OIIW .. Itt, Ml Gilead 1'7

.3U 'lU lUll
.Ill! 182 HI

2 o .Sill
lA Raldeh ........ .5 6 0 .U S
kutu C ity ..... .. -1 6 I ..ftll
Sultle ............... .l 1 t
JC~
s.n Dlep ..... .... A 7 o .3f~
Nllll kl11111l Conlerentfl

. DEER CUTTING

..lo. - - lot ....Olloclri PIO lro- •4 . , . , _ ollodt-

-

o ..fn :eeJ

w...

HILLS

.

-

1

De•wr .............. 9

Heil's
Energy Efficient

..... ,... ttci4ti ....._... ,..,.......
......... , . . . •llliff•Mtl.... for
eMtitMIItectiH

s

Nf!W Ef'l&amp;lutd ... .. ~ 7 0
NY Jef:M .......... ; .. Z 9 0
Ctntral
Heult.on ............. 7 ~ 0
ae.eiMd .......... 7 ~ 1
Cl~~el•lllltl .......... &amp; ~ 0
PIII ..... Jkh ......... 3 i 0

Skinned, Cut
and Wrapped

......k.,..lllin;e•

.n·-·
......
_u·····~
.,...
,...If_.,

"""'

W L T
Pet. PF P..t
.. o .aa 313 no
Ml~mi.. ............. 'J .. 0 .131 U!l flO

Ban................. 7

Have Your Deer

(lou6tor 101 • . , , _ liD ••

w·
.......-.
............................

M••PerFJ11.11tMIII...I
Me•wd•t... O.,olefl.-•tl
Mllml E U. Milt• U11H II
Ml . .dVWIII'1, Falrfti!ldH
Mlller4ltyll, OUto¥tlleH
Mllhry LUe 7-lo .IMIWood a
Mlllrr.,.rt •· Ofl~~tert.rr7t
N-arllll, Col WHt 'TI

By United Pl'ftalnler~atla•l
I"'~~IONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Arnerl~ an Conleftntll

Team

SUIIS1' AI SlllfS GAJIDfN TIACTOOS
AwoiW.Jo in 14-16·18 &amp; 20 H.P.
• ......... hlftltltt .-Ill ....
••r·. tr· • t~~ttt·•"'•

plonship of the Big Apple Na·
tionallnvltatlon Tour!l4lment.
Coming off back· to- back major
upsets of No. 3 Louisiana State
and No.1 Nevada-Las Vegas, the
Jayhawks butlt a 15-polnt lead In
the first half, then had to
withstand a furious comeback by
the Redmen, led by Greg "Boo"
Harvey.

NFL resuhs

Iroot(ll ............. .... ..... , .. ......... 12 0 0 0-12

-

By TOM WITHERS
VPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK IUPI) - There
may have been a little luck
involved, but Kansas proved
Friday night that nothing can
replace experience.
Paced by Mark Randall's 25
points, the Jayhawks held off a
furious second-half comeback by
St. John's to capture the cham-

Scoreboard ...

ATTENTION
DEER HUNTERS

Nov.27-Kyger Creek ....................... ...... H

PIAYEII

..

Camp
12

Poueo

Kansas beats St. John's to capture Big Apple NIT crown

coacbed by BUI Baer.

RACINE - Hoping to improve and slze, lt hopes to make up with
on; last year's 11·11 overall · youth and enthusiasm. This
record, the Southern Torna· combined with the leadership
doettes' girls basketball team of · provided by its three seniors,
Coach Bill Baer have been could be a good mix for a
working hard in preparation for successful season.
The seniors returning are
the 198&amp;-90 season.
$outhern lost Its opener to Melanie Lyons. Tr!cia Wolte, and
Jane Ann Wlll!ams, along with
powerful Meigs Monday, but did
an
experienced junior Junie
well in the preview last week.
Beegle.
Beegle will mark her
Faced with somewhat of a
third
year
on the team, sharing
rebuilding year, the Tornatime on the reserves and varsity
doettes will have a big challfonge
her frosh year.
ahead as their youthful squad
Baer said, "Learning to use
w(ll lace some tough opponents
our speed to overcome the lack of
both In and out of the league.
13aer said his team suffered heighth and to play a more
controlled game will be our keys
from a case of the "jitters" in
to the season." Junie Beegle
Monnday's loss as many were
leads the SHS rebounding corps
making their first appearance on
at 5-9 on a t~am that averages
the varsity level.
just at the 5-loot-5 mark.
Southern lost seven seh!ors
Baer said, "Our overall speed
from its third place finishing
is
good and so is our depth, but
team (/! a year ago; a team that
our
size and experience could be
posted an 8-6 league mark.
a
problem,
espec!allyearlyln the
Lost to graduation were Becky
season.
Our
fundamen!als are
Evans, Dawn Johnson, Debbie
improving,
but
to be successful
Greathouse, Becky Wine·
we must get stronger in this
brenner, Crystal Hill, Tracy
an~a."
Beegle, and Lesiee Dudding,
"Since size is a problem, we must
mimy of which had played
take a good choice of shots, look
together since seventh grade.
The loss of all this talent and for the high percentage shot, and
experience wlllhbe greatly do a better job of boxing out. As
missed, but Baer Is optimistic for we get more experience will
improve in all of these areas."
the upcoming season.
"We
must learn to shoot as well
Baer said. "I consider our
In
a
game
as we do in practice,"
speed. aggressiveness. and desaid
Baer,
who said his team has
termination our strong points.
some
good
shooters in the wake.
The girlS have been putting forth
Competition looks to be tough
the effort:·
Baer cited an obvious lack of both in and out of the league this
varsity experience and size as season, but Southern's youth and
desire could keep It competitive.
the team's main weaknesses.
Baer said, "Our goals this
What Southern lacks in speed

I

tMidlilnl klck l

De
....downs
lr&lt;* 7
First
.............................

Southern girls hope to improve
last year's break-even 11-11 record

BELPRE - The area's only
radio program dedicated to the
sport of stoCk car racing debuts
Monday, Nov. 27 on WL TP Radio
at 7 p.m., where local drivers will
get a chance to make themselves
more widely known.
The shows first guest will be
1989 STARS champion Mike
Balzano. "The Floodwall Flash"
frpm ParkerslNJ'i, W. Va.
"Racing World", a half our
loq talk show prQ~Tam featur·
ing raclq expert Herman
Staats, will 1(1111! area auto rece
tans to call In a talk to their
favorite drivers or just to comment on the local racing scene.
WLTP will feature different
local drivers each week on the
"Racing World" program. Sev·
eral local drivers !ncludlnr llv&amp;time Skyline Speedway Cham·
piOn Bob Adams, Jr. of Racine
are In line to be on future shows.

'

rua ,,..nralled i;

32

Ruohes·yards ·············· ······•
Passing ya&lt;ds ........................ 30
Return yards ................... ..... ..

Suoday Times-Sentinel- Page C-3

Por-n.oy-Middleport-Galipolil, Ohio-Point P111111nt, W.Va.

-----------~~·---~-------------

2' 4

LAUGHING KEY CHAIN
Dre11 up yo~· .. n ~ le't

windowt. w ith~·

/p.-orit• cor loOn
thotOCI•"

~,.,hooo

I"~
cko111
. N...., be- w1tkout
H;· •o&lt;h
'"''"''
a good lo~kt
laHerit~

ii'\Cw.d.

. I .:J11ACH

�Ohio Poi tt Pin I

1t,

-~21,1111

W. Va. ·

~~~!!!! f?!!,!!~.. deeJ!re, ~!~~~' "~~,iJ!!!!P9Yw~~ ~~~~ ~J!~J!~!lu,.re•

Eqstern Eagles top I .ancers
82-71 for'.rirSt win of year

CALDWELL HRS LAYUP - Eaalern J"-rd
Kenny Caldwell (10) gels in the laDe aDd goes up
for a layup during Friday nl!lbl's home opener
agalnsl Federal Hocking, as Eagles Mike Frost

SVAC standings

(21) and Scol&amp; F1tcll (34) and
Randy
Shuford (:U) look on. The Eagles beat lhe Lancers

82-71. (Times.Sentlnel pholo)

Athens' Bulldogs
top Meigs, .8248

(All games)
TEAM
W L PF PA
Southwestern ....... ] 0 84 63
Eastern ....... ........ 1 I 160 161
North Gallia .. ... ... 0 ·1 52 72
Oak Hlll ........... ... 0 1 50 75
By DAVE HARRIS
Hannan Trace ..... 0 1 43 55
ROCK
SPRINGS. - Shad Pat·
Kyger Creek .... .... 0 .1 41 76
terson
and
Decaminada
Southern ..............o 0
0
o· · combined forScott
31
points
and the
Symmes Valley ... 0 0
0
0
Athens Bulldogs placed 11 men tn
the scoring column as the Bul·
Friday's conlesls
!dogs defeated the Meigs Ma, Green Local 55, Hannan Traoe43
rauders, 82-48 Friday night.
Eastern 82. Federal Hocking 71
Athens. which has four starters
Tuesday's r;ames
back
from ta:st year's SEOAL
Hannan Trace at Symmes Valley
co-championship
team, jumped
North Gallla at Eastern
out
to
a
7-2
lead,
before Jason
· Oak Hill at Southwestern
Wright
bit
a
jumper
to cut It to
: Southern at Kyger Creek
7-4. But the Marauders were ice
cold from the field as the
Bulldogs went on a 14·1 streak
TEAM
WLPOP
over the next 4\&lt;2 minutes to hold
(Ali-Games)
a commanding to hold a 21-51ead
Miller .................... .l 0 90 78 . with :53 seconds left In the first
; Vinton County ......... 0 0 0 . 0
quarter . To make matters worse
· Alexander .............. 0 0 0 0
for the Marauders, they were in
: Belpre ........ :........... o 0 0 0
serious foul trouble as at least
Trimble ...... ............ 0 0' 0 0
three Marauders had two fouls on
Wellston ........ ......... 0 0 0 0
them at the end of the quarter.
. Fed·Hocklng ........... o 1 71 82
The second quarter was more
: Meigs .....................0 1 48 80
of the same as the Bulldpg
: Nets-York ........·.......o .1 42 77· defense forced Meigs turnovers
and cPnverted on tbe offensive
end to buUd up a 41-17 lead at the
(SEO,Opponenls)
half.
(All-Games)
The yourig and lnexperieAced
TEAM
WL
POP Marauders didn't give up in the
Portsmouth ......... 1 0 88 51
second half but the veteran
Warren ............... .l 0 87 67
Athens team was just too muFh
Athens ................ .l 0 82 48 as the Bulldogs .held a lead of
: Logan, ................ .l 0 77 42 61·32 at the end of the third
: Greenfield .. .. .... .. .l 0 49 37
quarter and coasted to the 82·48
• Gallipolis ............ .0 0
0
0 victory.
: Wheelersburg ......0 . 0
0
0
·'It you don't· put the ball in the
. Waverly ......... .. ...0 0
0
0 hoop you don't win," second year
Southern.'......... ....0 0
0
0 Marauder coach Rusty Bookman
. Vlnton ...... ....... ....O 0
0
0 said after the game. "I was
: Marletta ..............o 0
0
0 really Impressed with Athens,
' South Point ..........o o o 0 but we are really . young. I
~ Pt. Pleasant ........0 0
0
0 thought that 'sophomores L. J .
; Chesapeake .... : .... O 1 73 77 Mitch and Shawn Hawley (who
Jackson ...............O 1 50 72 was playing with a · bad back)
• November 21 resulls:
played really well," Bookman
Greenfield 49· Zane Trace 37
concluded.
. Piketon 72 Jackson 50
Logan 77 Nelsonvlll~- York 42
• November 24 resulls:
• Portsmouth East 77 Chesapeake
• 73
· Warren Local 87 Fort Frye 67
· Athens 82 Meigs 48
Portsmouth 88 Chillicothe 51 .
Tuesday's games:
, Marietta at Belpre
Southern at Kyger Creek
Jackson at Waverly
Dec. 1 games:
Greenfield at Hillsboro
Oak Hill at Southern
Minford at Waverly
Wheelersburg at Valley
Dec. 2 cames:
GaiUpolls at Chesapeake
• Warren Local at Frontier

·TVC standings

;Cage standings

Athens

Patterson led the way for the
Bulldogs with 16 points and 13 of
the Bulldogs 40 rebounds . Decam inada chlppetl In with 15. The
Bulldogs hit on 29 of 53 from the
floor for 55 percent, and 21 of 34
from the line for 62 percent. The
Bulldogs shot 23 more free
throws than Meigs . The Bulldogs
turned the ball over 15 times and
committed 13 fouls.
Meigs was led by Cary Betzlng
with 14, Mitch a 6-3 sophomore
playing In the first organized
game of his career came orr the
bench to score 11 points and grab
a team high 11 of the·Marauders
33 rebounds . Meigs turned the
ball over 18 times and committed
23 fi&gt;uts. Meigs was ice cold from
the floor as 'me Marauders were
19 of 68 from the floor for 27
percent, while hitting 6 of 11 from
the line for 54 percent.
In the reserve game Athens
coasted to a 51-35 victory over the
Marauders. Reid Schaller led the
way with 13, while Scott Hlllklrk
chipped In with 10. For Meigs.
Trevor Harrison led the te;lm
with 10, Mike Cremeans added 8.
Athens was to play at Waverly
Saturday night . Meigs will travel
to Miller to play the Falcons on
Friday night.
ATHENS (8!) -

EAST MEIGS - Riding a an exciting nip-and-tuck battle
cushlo.-of sharp-shooting In the that highlighted the entire first
St&gt;COnd half, the high-flying East· halt. Although Feder~! held a
ern Ea11tes shook up the roost to narrow advantageearly, the lead
the tune of a 82-71 non-league changed hands three· Urnes and ·
basketball victory over rival was within one point six other
Federal Hocking here Friday times.
Scott Fitch ll'llbbed a couple
evening before a packed house at
Eastern High School.
key flnt half rebounds as well as
Eastern placed four men In score etgllt first quarter points to
double digits and had one near spark the Eagles offensively . 6-7
mlsswhlle exploding offensively Mike Frost came to life at the
In the second half. Senior guard 4:27Markwhenhetoograbbeda
Shaun Savoy led the charge with couple key offensively ·rebounds
a .game·hlgh 19 points, senior and drove them In for scores.
Scott Fitch ended with 16, while
Fitch gave Eastern its first
Mike Frost and Jef!Durst each lead at the2:26markatl8·17 , but
tallied 14. Southpaw Kenny Cald· two free throws by Randy Shuwell added nine.
ford gave FH the lead again at
Federal had a more balanced 1:44.
attack, but shot poorly theseCOI'\ti
Jeff Durst hit a 14 footer to
half while placing five men l.n regain the lead tor EHS 20,19, but
double figures. Nat Watson led Shuford this time hit a jumper to
with 12, while Randy Shuford, give his club the upper had In the
Brian McPherson, and Brett see-saw affair.
Lewis each added 11, and ·Jeff
Fitch hit again with :53 seMcKibben 10. Craig Jarvis ha!j 9. conds, but a quarter ending gaol
Brett Lewis gave FH, who .by Nat Wat,son gave FH the 23-22
controlled the tip, a 2·0 lead. on a score at the buzzer.
ten foot jumper. but Scott Fitch·
In the- ~ond frame, Federal
hit a baseline goal at 6:54 Wtie. edged II'' a 29-24 score, but
This was just the beginning of Eastern j.fttled of! eight straight
unansw•d points for a 32-29 •
- lead at the 3: 49 mark.

Tlnlw-Sedael !llalf
GALLIPOLIS - Will Ohio
Valley Chrtatian's basketball
team, In this, the year 1 A.K.
!Aftt:r Keenan) , succeed In exceedtng last year's 14·7 finish?
While It's true that graduation
claimed 6-4 r
nn•bnan
John Kee,
nan,i the l Defenders
all-world
d
scor ng ea er who Is now
squeaking the pine at Cedarville
CoUeie. and fellow frontman
B raely J o h nson, the No. 2 scorer
for tbe Carolina blue-and-gold
Defellders, high expectations
• abound ror OvCS's fortunes this
: :season, which begins at home on
Friday
against Grace Christian
,..

While Eastern was just getting
warmed up, Federal appeared to
tire. while also getdng several ot
its top guns In early foul trouble.
Federal led only twice more,
once on a turn-around jumper by
.Btll Boyer 37-36, and' another on a
free throw by Boyer 311-37 with
undera minute to go In the half.
(See EAGLES oa C-1)

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"Comp/ftf llfdk:ll Equlpmft For Home

Pool &amp;ehedule , .
SUnday - CLOSED ~ ~ ·~,
Mo...ay - CLOSED '· •
Tuesday- CLOSED
.Wedne&amp;day - 6·7:30 p.m.,
coUege swim
'
Thursday - 6-7: 30 p.m., college swim
Friday - 6-7:30 p.m.; college
swim
.
Saturday - CLOSED
Sunday -1-3 p.m., open swim;
6-7: 30 p.m .. college swlm

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11

446-7283

Silane Orcutt 1-0-2,

Scon Stricklin 3-2-9, Jon Reed 3·2·8. Brock
Toadvine 3·3·9. Matt JoWck 2-2-ti, Bob
Bailey 3·0.6, John Harmon 0·3-.1, Scott
Decamtnada 6-3·15, Sl'lad Patterson 7-2-16,
Nate Scllaller !HI-2. TOTALS D-U-82.
3-.. goals -1 (Scou Stricklin.)
MEIGS
Robblol'telds 3·0-7, Cary
Betzlng 4·3-H, Jasoo Wright 2-2·6, L.J .
Mitch 5+11. Shawn Hawley 3·0-6. Jay
Humphreys 2·04., James Howenm ~0 ,
Mlke VanMeter o-o.o. TOTALS l.....U._
3-pt goals- .J (CarJ Behlng 3, Bobble

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em-

Ft ...... I.)

Seore by quarters:

Athens ............. ,............ 21

20 20 21 - 82
Melg5 ....... .. .................. 9 8 15 16- 18

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:
--l"'~::•:*~:t-:•·:-:.:l·:IO:-G:·
:
:
·:UA:I~-~======::J
Or c•
frM 1·-·172·1967
Lr=~;!~
~ ··
,~----~--~~--~--~~
27 2

...
"

· 1614) 446·9416 • Gc.priiJ, OR.

our

plans throlllhout the season.
. the now-defunct Huntington
Last year tbe Defenders fin - Christian Academy and a 1981
!shed second In the West Virginia
•
Cbrtatian Education ABsocla·
,
1 - -•
ttoo'• tournament to CrouLanes
UUH year 8 crusade
Christian, who beat them 89-4~ In D/t.TE.OPP.
SCORE
the tltll! aame In March. Ohio Dec. 2-HerltaeeC.S.............. w 101 ·20
Val'-•
flntahed with a 7·2 record De
Dec. 63-Ro
.. Hlll. ..................
w 79·50
, ,;;;;~
t S
v 11
w
73 63
at home and a 6-4 mark on the Dec.
'· t•Ianey........
..... nw 111.,.
~' 30
e. •,..._.,...~thymmCh
ens ..r ..
road Ulrese records exclude Dec. IJ-Hannan. w.va . ..........: L 84-88
]lOit·season aames).
Dec. IS-at Trl-atles ............... w 63-61
6
Th'la year "I'll be happy If we Der.
Kingsport,
..... w
Dec. ll-at
20-Croos
L..,.s ....Tenn
...........
w 7~
~3
shoot 70 percent as a team at the Jan. 3-Soulhwoolern .. ........ .... L 65-&amp;&amp;
foul line," Asbury said. "HOW· Jan. 10-at Hannon, W.va ........ L 72·74
ever, I'll be expectlna certain ~···
l3-at Teafl
7.~98
an.l7-at
Kyger VaiJey
Creek ..........
.... .. .. ...w
L ~g.
Individuals to do much better Jan. 24-at c,,., Lan.............. L &amp;9-81
than that," he continued. "Dax Jan. 27 -Eik Valley ................. w ~-~99
and E.T. are excellent foul Feb.
Jan. JI-Grace
ChrJsttan ......... w '~••
7-Symmes Valley ......... W 7 2
shooters, and Greg Is. also a good Feb. 10-al Elk Valley ............. w 81-66
::Oomotelnsr ladle thaned frllnem,. tahrs \velllnas, ~=~ it::~':':,\~~~:
~m
o
ee-po
oJ

range'," he added.
.a .......,.,.

~-.

In

be

De~ s ::::::::::::::~:::::::·ovcs Jnvrtatloaat

•

A»bury,

~~.· 1~ .:

: : :
::.•• !n:~~:wes~trn
L
5 ............. .............. at "'"' anes

~

(Contlaued from C-4)
Meanwhlll!, Shaun Savoy silently rose to the spotlight with a
· good second frame, and Randy
Moore staled a late quarter blitz
~ coming off the bench to give EHS
some needed momentum going
Into the half.
Moore ll'&amp;bbed a steal off the
press and drove It In for a crucial
·score, then hit both ends of a
; bonus to ilVI! EHS a 39·38 lead
:wtth 45.seconds left
: · Perhaps the r,eal kilter or the
llf&amp;b! camil wbell Senior guard
Kl!llay Caldwell dl'llled a three- ·
;pointer witll )liSt two seconds left
lb the ball 111 ]I:IVI! Eastern a
~deled 42-38 lead.
••. Eastern made sorn~ turnovers
'With Its rll!l·and gun style, but
compensated with extra sharp
·shooting In the second half
'(nearly 69 percent) and an
Improved defense. Meanwhile,
.Federal panicked Somewhat pre. maturely and lilt a very poor 30
.percent the ~nd half, lnclud,lng a 1-~1 tbl'ee point percentage .
• The t""'llla point ot the aame
:came wllft 1eff Dunt'hlt consec. utlve ~ pelnt Junipers early
: In the secolld half, then com. pounded tl~Uunlshment by drivIng the ball,c!Own the Lancer's
!guUet with two-each fast break
drives from Mike Frost and
: Sbaun Savoy.
. Eastern went up 56-42 forciJli
FH time out.
The third period ended at 64·:56
: althougrh EHS led by more than
• 10 molt of the frame .
• Eastet11 led· most of the fourth
; framebyumllch ,as13,butwith
• 1: 55 lett Federal staged a come; b'lick and puUed wltllln four
: points at 75-n. Two bonus free
• throws by · Savoy . gave EHS a
• 77-71 advantage, then a big goal
• by Junior Mark Murphy after a
·~ missed FH attempt gave EHS
· some security.
· FH became desperate for a
• score allowinl EHS to cheery
. pick to the 82· 71 finale.
Eastern hit 4·6 from the 3 pt.
• range for 67 percent, hit 27-49 for
: 53 percent from the field, and hit
·• 16·24 for 67 percent from the
: floor. FH hltl-11, 30of63,'and8of
12 respectively .
• Eastern had 28 rebounds ted by
; Frost with 7, Caldwell with~. and
; Durst elth 6. Watson had 10 of
, Federal's 33.
: EHS had 17 turnovers, 8 steals,
· 6 assists, and 10 fouta. FH had 17
, tumovers, U steals, 8 assists,
: and 20 persoaals.
• Savoy led with 3 1teals and
, Shuford )lad 5 lot Fedl!l"al.
l Allhoqll · Eastern . p~ a
• good first half to trail jilat 20-14,
' Federal Hocklq blew It open In
the third franle to claim a 63-32
; win. Jeff Jordan led with 21,
: Mitch GtJUan had 14, and Matt
• Harris 10. Wes Holter had 8,
· Chris Carleton 6, and Matt
; Flnlaw 6 for Eastern.
• EHSls J.l on the varsity level
; and FH Is 0.1.
·•
.Jtoats North Gallta

...

~:~
L :: :: : ::: :: :::.... ~~.~~s~~J~o
Feb. 13 .......................... lrootoo 1. oe

Fe b. 19·23 .............. ............ S1a1e pJayOlf~
Mar . 1·3 ......... .............. State tournamen
cooubld'l eader s stan al 6 p.m. unless

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12811.00

t.11t II 1tr d Ill I
.... .., ... ,.,..,,

c

~:~·r~; ~i.ii:'4'5'j;:;;;:; ......... Hannan. w.va.
Jan. 19 .................... , .... at HerllagoC.A.
T
·v
Jan. :!6 ...... ... ... ................ at ears • 11ey
~~~.".'. 6 1 ~.~ .~·: . .. ... Elk vauey
!Starts at ; : 30 p.m. I
G
Ch is 1
Feb. 2 ....................... at r ~ce r 1 ~~

Mar.
M

ofHunUng·

(startsal4 p.m. I
ovcs t I !Jon I
9........................
Dec.
nv Ia a
tresumes at 9 a .m.1
Doc. 12 ........ : ... ........... at Hannan. W.Va.
tbeglnS3t ·s:•sp.m..
c L nes
O.c. lL ............................ , .., v~ui.Y

Jan.

Toumament play
2-GraceCbr!Stian .......... w 91-51
4 c
L
ar. - ross anes ............ .... L 49 .g~
(at CrCl!is Lanes, W.Va. )

trav@•..
111

·

the deer at the place where It fell.
If this Is a landowner's tag., the
hunter will make his own tempor·
ary tag bearing the name and
address and date and time the
harve11t occurred. For the hunter
possessing the 1989 special deer
permit, the temporary tag lllUst
be filled out and detached from
the special permit, and attached
to. the deer where It fell at the
time of harvest.
After· completing the temporary tagging procedure. the suc·
cessful hunter Is required to take
the deer to a checking station In
the county where the deer was
taken, or to an adjacent county .
At checking stations, informa(See DEER on C·7)

g:•· :..........................Gr~~ys valley

::: : :i

in

0 ~~~fa::

DATE

"&lt;10

con-

"

slty In Greenville, S.C.. where he
· (See OVCS, C-i)
ovcs DEFENDERS
•

:_ Eagles ...

u..·

"WE BILL MEDICARE aOTHER INSURANCE fOil YOU.

: 111

several years of

On

ByKEI'ftiWOOD
ODNR Dtvdlilon of WlldlUe
POMEROY - On Nov . .27,
hunters will take to the field In
pursuit of Ohlo's prized big game
animal - the white-tailed deer.
. The opening day of the deer gun
'· -season, which runs through Sat·
:•' urclay , Dec. 2, Is the major event
• the• year for many Ohio
· -sportsmen, Last ydr. there were
over 300,000 people. hunting deer
In Ohio. This season the Ohio
: -Deparbnent of Natural Resour• :ces, Division of Wildlife, expects
: 'the number of hunters to be even
•i:re a ter.
;! Tagging requirements: All
: successful hunters, after harv: 'estlng their deer, are required by
· law to attach a temporary tag to

,.

RIO GRANDE -The schedule
of. events for the coming week at
Lyne Center Is as follows:
Gym schedule
Sunday- CLOSED
Monday - CLOSED
.• ·
Tuesday - basketball, Redmen vs. Shawnee State, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday - 6-7: 3d p.m..;
college recreation
._
Thursday - 6-7:30 p.m., .CiJJJege recreation
1-"
Friday - 6-7:30 p.m., open
recreation
·. • ~
Saturday - baske\billl,. Red·
women vs. Concord .
Sunday 1·3 p.m., open
recreation; 6-7:30 p.m. ; coUeg~
recreation

. "We're much quicker than last forward spot, while Jeff Peavley
year's team. even though we lost
(6-3, jr.) and Kevin Peck (6-0,
some height, " said head coach sr.) wlll platoon at the other
William Asbury . "However,
forward position. E .T. vanMawe'll be a lot more balanced (In
tre a 6-4 senior holds jlbwn tbe
offensive output). and we'll score . Jo~ post.
'
more. We'llruntheballmoreand
"Wray Is probably out best
stay outorthehalfcourtoffense' ..
player t but he hilS ha·d m~no
~....
v
T~
heTh
added.
· has not been able topractlc~th
e point guard In this fastthe resf of us so far," A ry
break attack will be Dax Hill, a
said.
.
5·10 junior who played on Gallla
If Wray doesn't play at the
Aca d emy's reserve squad last level he Is capable of ~lng, the
year, while Tom Rawlings (5-10, Defenders have a detP bench
sr.), who ran the floor last year, loaded with sophomores ahd
wIII play t he other guard slot. juniors. "We've got a lot or
Manning the front line will be support from our sophomore and
junior classes," Asbury said,
"and with them, we'll have 15 on
ou.z;Mvarsltyf for th,e flrsthtimee.h d
ost o our payers av a

Deer gun . season
• 'M .day
b

FOR

Lyne Center gym
and poQI schedules

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C ·5

Pomeroy-Middlaport-GIIIipolil, Ohio-Point Plea11nt, W. Va .

.....
..
--·
...,..

15995
Ret.:nt.H

ET-393 By OU6FONE•

Cut

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Tontil)ultet dialing

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"Hangs up" on any Hat
"'"-· Welt bracket.
f43.500

�November 26, 1989

PonllrOV-Middleport-Gellipolil, Ohio Point Plel'nnt. W. Ve.

P.Qe C-6-Sunday Timee-Sentinel

G• een opens season With 55-43 win over Hannan Trace
By G. SPENCER OUOitNE
Tllnee l!eetiHI 8&amp;afl
FRANKLIN FURNACE - A
combination of Ineffective play
on the boards and a 23-point
effort by Green LoCal's Craig
Hart spelled a 55-43 win by the
Bobcats over Hannan Trace
F r iday night In the season opener
for both teams.
"We got killed oa tl)e boards,
and because we • got caught
napping on him (Hart) , he kllled
us In the. second half," said
Hannan Trace mentor Mike
Jenkins, whose cagers were held
scoreless lor 5: 15 In the first
quarter after Wildcat forward
Todd Boothe dropped In the
game' s first points on a turnaround jumper on the right half of
the key 26 seconds Into act one.
Green reeled oil five straight
baskets during Trace's drought.
In the second quarter, the
Bobcats watched their 14-point
lead cut to eight when Guyan
pivot Craig Rankin, who led the
GallJans with 17 points, drove
boldly Into the paint and connected on three straight lay ups In
less than a minute's time. The
· home 'Cats put their lead back up

to 10, where It stood at halftime,
when Hart hit a long jumper from
the lett wing with 1: 461eft .
" Rankin,.moves well without
the ball, and he got the ball down
deep on us," said Green skipper
Mike Hughes, who had a weapon
that moved well with and without
the ball wherever he wanted to.
' 'Hart plays Inside and out, and
that was a factor, " said Hughes,
who witnessed Hart, a 6-3 junior,
take advantage or the lack of
attention the Wlltlcats had on him
and score nine of the hosts' 11
points, Including .tthree-polnter,
In the third quarter. Dusty
Salyers had the other Bobcat
bucket In that frame, which
helped push the Bobcats to a 37·23
lead at the end of the third
quarter.
1n the last eight minutes, the
Wildcats hit a pair of threepointers, courtesy of point guard
J .J . Bevan and guard/ forward
Jason Black, but In spite of that,
strong Inside moves In the paint
from Boothe and Rankin and the
Wildcats' characteristically
sticky defense, Green was still
able to throw on enough coals to

keep the victory train heading
toward Hughes' 298thcareerwln.
In the reserve game, the
Wildcats started oftlhe season on
a happier note by beating the

Bobcats 40-30. Brian Unroe led
Trace with 16 points, and Aaron
Blizzard led Green with 13.
The Wildcats will hit th@ road
aaaln Tu8day nlg)lt when they

play Symmes Valley at Ald.
Seere by quarlen
Hannan Trace .. .. 6 10 7 20--43
Green ........ .... .... U 12 11 18-55
GREEN (55) - Craig Hart
9-1-2-23; Dusty Salyers 5-0.0·10;
Aaron Kouns 3-0·1-7; Jocly
Vauahters 3-0-1-7; Shane Salyers
2-0-2-6; Brian Williams 1·0.0·2.
TOTAU- U-1·..111
F1eld·aoal pet.- 25·50 (50 pet.)
Foal-line pet. - 6-6
Reboudl - 34 (Hart 12)

AMI&amp;ta _ 12 (D. Salyers 5)
TIII'IIO¥el'l - 17
HANNAN TRACE (43)
Cral&amp; Rankin 7-0-3-17; Todd
Boothe 4-0-2-10; Eric Lloyd 2-0·2·
6· Riehle Cornell 1-0-2-4; J .J ,
Bevan 0-1-0-3; Jason Black 0-1·9·
3 TOTALS - 14-H-43
. Fleld·JOal pet. -16-50 (32 pet.)
Foul-lllle pet.- 9-15 (60 pet. )
Rebounds - 27
• AUI8ta- 8
Sleala -7
Turnovers - 9

Why do so
many of your
nelpbors Insure
their cars with
State Farm?
Ask one of them, then give me a call.
CMOil 1111111111
cor- of 'lloir~
Aw.ISN!t St.
Golllipolll, Oh.
..... 446-4290
- · 446-4511
ttAJI JAIM

RANKIN SHOOTS- Haaaan Trace pl~otman Crall Rankin(~)
goes up against Green Local's Cralr Hart ( cenler) 811 he pwnps In
two of his leam·hlrh 17 points In Friday nlrbt's season opener at
Franklin Furnace. However, Hart's game·hlgh 23 points propelled
lhe Bobcats to a 511-43 victory. (Times-Sentinel pholo by G•• pencer
Osborne)

A

Stllo Form Mulutl

--.c..,...,.
, _ O!IICO'
liMo

IJfHUJtCI

Blooming !On,

With its 23-22 win over Texas A&amp;M,

Arkaitsas has virtual lock on Cotton Bowl, SWC crown
Alter Talbot's go-ahead kick,
Arkansas drove to the A&amp;M 19.
On fourth-and-three, Quinn Grovey threw Incomplete to Bllly
Winston, but Texas A&amp;M defender Larry Horton was called
for pass Interference atter going
over Winston's back. Five run·
ning plays later, Foster scored
the winning TD.
"We couldn't alford a tie to
have a chance at the Cotton
Bowl.:' Hatfield said. "That's
why wewentror the win. The last
drive was a thing or beauty.
"On fourth down , we knew they
would bl!lz, so we had to decide
between a quick pass and the
draw play. Quinn did a great job.
Billy was the secondary receiver. There was no doubt'it was
pass Interference."
Texas A&amp;M's Wllllam Thomas
Todd Wright's extra·
blocked
T~nnessee .
"Heaven Is more than we can point attempt, but the Aggles lost
fa,thoin, but we tasteq a llttle a chance to come back when a
Lance Pavlas pass was Inter·
h~aven on earth today,' ' Arkansas coach Ken Hatfield said. cepted by Anthoney Cooney at
"You couldn't ask for more In a the Arkansas 28 with 1: 32
c~.tamplonshlp
situation. We remaining.
Arkansas punter Allen Mea·
couldn't have asked more of our
cham
took a deliberate safety
defense. "
29
seeonds left to account for
with
Texas A&amp;M, 7-3 and 5·2 In the
the
Aggles'
!lnal points . Texas
conference, wlll be Invited to face
A&amp;M
got
one
more chance after
Pittsburgh In the Dec. 30 Han·
the
safety,
but
Pavlas fumbled
cock Bowlin El Paso, Texas. The
loss ended the Aggles' 19-game the snap as time ran out.
"We had a chance to win at the
SWC winning streak at Kyle
end," Texas A&amp;M coach R.C.
Field.
.The game was a bat tie between Slocum said. "It was a dlsap·
tile only two teams to have worn pointing, bitter loss. Arkansas hit
the swc crown since 1985. Three a couple of big plays early. "
Slocum and Horton were disapor the previous four meetings
pointed
with the pass lnterfer·
between the two teams have been
ence
call.
·decided by five or fewer points.
"It was a great play," Slocum
, Foster's touchdown run
said.
"Our young man broke on
enabled Arkansas, which blew a
the
ball
and did just like we
14.0 lead, to offset two Layne
coached
him.
It was ·a critical
Talbot field goals In the second
play In the game."
half. Talbot's second kick, a
The Razorbacks also scored on
38-yarder wllh 8:14 left, put the
a 25· yard run by Grovey, lineAggles on top 20-17.
By RICHARD LUNA
UPJ Sport&amp; Wrller
COLLEGE STATION, Texas
(UP!) - The Arkansas Razorbacks traveled Friday to Texas
A&amp;M and laid the groundwork for
a New Year's trip to Dallas. ·
Barry Foster scored on a
two-yard run with 2:52 remain·
lng, lifting the ninth-ranked
Razorbacks to a 23.-22 Southwest
Conference victory over No. 15
Texas A&amp;M and helping Arkan·
sas become a virtual lock for
another trip to the Cotton Bowl.
Arkansas, 9-1 and 6-1 In the
league, needs only to beat Scuth·
ern Methodist on Dec. 2 to clinch
Its second straight Cotton Bowl
trip as SWC champions. The
opponent In theJan. l contest will
be a representative or the Scutheastern Conference, llkely

Deer season...
lit§!' VANIA Oil your list
•

'itt

....!~

PROMISING FUTURE - Ohio Valley Chrlsllan cage boss
William Asbury sees a prornlslnr future for his Defenders, who
be(ln play Friday when lhey hosl Grace Cbrlsllan. "We're much
quicker lhan lasl year's learn, anctwe'll score more, because we
will nD lhe ball more and be very leam-orlenled." (Times.. Senllnel pholo by G. Spencer Osborne)

·aves hoops...

..
(Continued !rom C-5)
.. received his degree In history
and ·social studies. He Is cur-.
rently enrolled In a master's
program In history education at
Marshall University.
' He taught and coached basketball at Huntington Christian
during the 1981-82 school year
before taking a job as a computer
programmer at Creative Scfl·
ware Systems In Huntington
from 1982 to 1984. He then was
hired to teach and coach baskethall at Kingsport (Tenn.) Chris·
tlan School, where he remained
until coming to Ohio Valley
Christian In 1985.
In addition to his coaching
responsibilities at OVCS, Asbury
teaches Spanish, history and
computer science.

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12, 16 or 20 guage shotguns qslng
one ball or one rlfied slug per
barrel, (rifled shotgun barrels
are permitted when using standard shotgun slug ammunition);
or single shot muzzleloadlng rifle
.38 caliber or larger; or handgun
with live-Inch to 11-lnch barrel,
.357 magnum, .41 magnum, .44
magnum, .45 long colt, or .357
maximum.
Hunting deer during any of the
deer gun . seasons .Is unlawiul
unless the hunter Is visibly
wearing a hal, cap, jacket or vest
that Is colored hunter orange.
· Successful hUnters are permitted to assist other hunters after
taking a deer, but are prohibited
from carrying any type of
hunting Implement.
Obtain the landowner's written
permission and respect private
property when hunting. By observing · the laws and hunting
safely, Ohio hunters should have
a rewarding and pleasant hunt·
lng trip.
For more Information, contact
Keith Wood, M,elgs County Game
·Protector, at 985-4400; Terry
Hawk, Gallia County Game Pro·
tector, at 446-1967; or District 4,
Division of Wildlife, Athens, at
594-2211.

backer Mlck Thomas' 23·yard
Interception return and Wright's
22-yard field goal. Shane Garrett
scored on a 26-yard run and
Pavlas threw a 27-yard TO pass
to tight end Mike Jones for the
Aggles.
Arkansas scored twice In the
first four minutes for a 14-0 lead
and mounted 194 yards In the first
quarter to bulld a 17-7 advantage.
But the Razorbacks were held to
minus-13 yards In the second
quarter. Pavlas' 26-yard TD
strike to Jones with 1:58 shOwing
brought theAggteswithln17-14at
intermission.
Kevin Smith Intercepted Grovey to open the second hall,
leading to Talbot's 23-yard lleld
goal to tie the score 17-17 with
4: 29 lett In the third period.
Texas A&amp;M runn ing back

Darren Lewis was injured, but
his replacement. sophomore
Keith McAfee, set up the goa head score with a 36-yard run to
the Arkansas 15.
McAfee lost a yard on his next
carry a nd Pavlas was thr own for
a 10-yard loss by Shannon
Wright . Texas A&amp;M then settled
fo r Talbot's 38-yard field goal
with 8:14 left for a 20-17 lead .
Arkansas took t)1e opening
drive into winds gu sting up to 20
mph, but marched SO yards In
nine plays for Grovey's 25-yard
scoring run, the first TD scored
by the Arkansas offense against
Texas A&amp;M since the third
quarter of the 1986 meeting.
The Razorbacks scored again
three plays later when Thomas
Intercepted a Pavlas pass that
bounced off Lewis ' shoulder and

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but a few of these. They are the personal
reasons for pre-planning memorialization
with Logan Monument.

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I etroni.es

"A MEIIU SURE TO PLEASE hERYOIIE"

MilWAY TAVERN
..................._...........

SUN., NOV. 26·

's

Collell'e
Ohio Univer sity officials havE'
for med three committees to
search for a new football coach.
The university announced ear·
ller the firin g of Cleve Bryant,
whose team finished the year
1-9·1.

said coach Andrew Golublc of
McDonald, which finished with a
12·2 record. "They did a better
job of that than we did . They
IT. 71143
POMEIOY, OHIO
pounded us between the
tackles."
Newland felt his team 's playoff ,....~~~········
experience, lncludlnng losing to
eventual champ Archbold last
yea~, played a blg part In the win.
' 'The only thing I did was
remind them of the effort they
had put In lor three years." he
said. ''They played Archbold last
year, so they knew what It takes ' ··· Capb.Jre the spirit and wannth of the holidays with a deal~~ mug and
20 tea bags - fi~ each of Orange Spice, Peppetmm~ Original Herb.
to be state champs. They went
Cinnamon and Chamomile. Beautifully gift boxed. Only $9.95.
out and did the job. I think
McDonald's 'Inexperience In not
being In a big football game
might have hurt them. "
Doug Rutschllling's 95 yards
led Minster In rushing, while
Stucke finished with 77 and
quarterback Ben Ernst had 38,
Including some key runs.
Jim Gresko finished with 94 .
yards for Minster, but 74 of his
total came In the first hall.
The playoffs continued Satur·
day with championship games in
Division II and IV.
Fostoria (13·0) met Cleveland
St
. Joseph, 10-2, at 11 a .m . In
game.··
Division
II and Wheelersburg.
McDonald's !lrst -quarter
13·1,
and
Warren
Kennedy , 11·1,
touchdown, coming on a one·
played
at
2:30
p.m.
In Division
yard run by Joe Sudol. was the
Blue Devils' lone threat of the IV.
The Division I game. Sunday at
game. Of their 150 total yards , 48
2 p.m . • matches defending cham·
came on that dr lve.
"We telt coming In we had to pion Cleveland St. Ignatius. 12-0,
control the line of scrimmage. '' against Cincinnati Moeller, 11·2.
© 1989 Carlton Cm!1, Inc.

REV. PHIL PORTER

5

Sports briefs

WE WILL BE SERVING BREAKFAST
5:00 A.M.-10:00 A.M. SATURDAY,
NOVEMBER 25TH, THRU SATURDAY,
DECEMBER 2, 1989

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Wrller
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Before the season began, Minster
coach Ken Newland had a feeling
. his third Wildcat team might be
something special.
"I told some of my very close
friends we could win It all,"
Newiand said alter Minster's 16-7
win over McDonald Saturday at
Ohio Stadium In the Division V
championship game.
Newland's feelings wavered
only slightly when McDonald
struck llrst Saturday to take a
brief 7-0 lead In the llrst quarter.
But junior Jeff Stucke tied It on
the third play of the 8econd
period with a five-yard touch·
down rlln and put the Wildcats,
13-1, ahead for good less than six
minutes later with another liveyard TD burst.
''I think the turning point In the
game was alter they scored and
then we scored, we stopped
them," said Newland, whose
team lost in the semifinals a year
ago. "We went back and scored
again and at the half, we felt
secure we had control of the

Will

46"

Jones wltb 1: 58 lett, cutting
Arkansas' lead to 17-14 at
halftime.

AnENTION "DEER HUNTERS"

Minster wins Division
V state championship

7 P.M••ightly

Ylewll' lnwelwlllllftt with

returned It 23 ya rds for a
touchdown, giving Arkansas a
14-0 lead less than four minu tes
Into the contes t.
Texas A&amp;M came back on Its
next possession, with Gar rett
scoring from 26 yards out .
Wright kicked a 22-yard field
goal with 3: 45 lett In the firs t
quarter to give Arkansas a 17·7
lead. After each team blew
scoring opportunities , Pavlas
tossed a 27-yard scoring pass to

·-----------------------'

Victory Baptist .
Church
·

•

UPPEI IT. 7
"

tion Is ootatned !rom the hunter
and a permanent tag Is placed on
the deer.
This data obtained at the
checking statlons Is valuable to
ODNR for planning future deer
management and seasons. (See
PublicatiOn 86.) The deer check·
ing stations for Meigs and Gallla
Counties are:
Mel(&amp; County Baum
,Lumber Company, State Route
·248, Chester; Brown's Taxi·
.dermy, County, Road 25, two
,miles east of Meigs High School;
C &amp; D Pennzoll, junction or State
Route 7 and County Road 26 at
;Five Points; Dave' s Exxon,
·Pomeroy; Eber's Gulf Station,
:Racine; Ellis and Sons Schlo,
'Middleport; Forked Run State
:Park, State Route 124, two miles
:below Reedsville; Meek's Groc·
;ery, U.S. 33, Burlingham; Joe's
·Country Store (Mlller Brothers),
:Rutland; the Pick &amp; Shovel
'Grocery, Salem Center; Ste·
:wart's Gun &amp; Supply, Smith Run
:Road, Rutland; Sun Fun Penmoll, Racine.
: Gallla County - Ashland Ser·
;vice Station, Gallipolis; Bodl·
mer's Grocery, Rodney;
Brown's Exxon Market, S.R. 160,
)lorth of Holzer Hospital; County
Line Convenience Store, Waterloo; Drummond's General Store,
S.R. TI5. Mudsock; Elkins Gen·
eral Store, S.R. 554, Eno; Gas
Plus, S.R. 160, Vinton; MercervllleConvenlence Store. S.R. 218,
Mercerville; Timber Wolf Bait &amp;
:rackle, junction of S.R. 7 and
S.R. 218; the VIllage Market,
S.R. 325, Rio Grande.
· Ohio deer hunters should also
keep In mind during the slx·day
gun season a few other or Ohio's
Important hunting laws, lnclud·
lng the following:
; Bag limit Is one deer per hunter
per license year, regardless or
the method or taking. (There are
NO two-deer counties this year,
EITIIER SEX. buck or antlerless
deer. I
: This year's hunting hours are
one-half hour before sunrise to
sunset.
Legal hunting weapon~ are 10,

(Continued from C-5) .

REVIVAL

.

Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page- C-."/

Porna-oy- Middleport- Gellipolis. Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Novanber 26. 1989

ER
915-3301

CHESTEI

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- I

L••••••••••-•••••••••••••••~

�Pomeroy

"-'• C-8-Sundllv Thn Sentinel

Nov.-nber 28, 1889

Midclaport-GIIIIpolil, Ohio-Point Phn rt. W. Ve.

Pistons defeat Cavs· 101-82
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (UPI) -Cleveland's
lack of depth Is starting to sink the Cavaliers.
Joe Dumars scored 31 points and Is!ah Thomas
added 14 Friday night while tying his club record
with 11 first-quarter assists to help the Detroit
Pistons defeat Cleveland 101-82 and snap the
crippled Cavaliers' five-game winning streak.
Not onl,y did Cleveland lose the ball game, 11 also
lost another center for possibly a week or more.
Wayne "Tree" J;WIIIns went down 24 seconds
Into the game with a strain where the ligament
attaches to the left fibula. He will be examllted ·
Saturday In Cleveland but left the Palace on
crutches, his left leg !mmoblllzed.
Forward John Williams also left the game with
a contusion to the right knee with 5:50 left In the
first quarter.· However he returned to start the
second half.
"I can Improvise, up to a point," Cleveland
coach Lenny Wllkens said. "But all of a sudden
you become really undermanned. After a point,
there's not much you can do."
Thomas tied his own club record for assists in a
period with 11 in the first quarter, many going to
Dumars who scored 10 points in sparking Detroit
to a 35-25 lead.
The Pistons made 17 of 23 shots In the opening
Quarter, half their 16 in the second and 12 of l7in
the third to exploit their size and manpower
advantage over the Cavaliers.
Thomas added five assists In the third quarter
and ended with 16. Vinnie Johnson backed
Dumars and Thomas with 15 points while Mark
Aguirre and John Salley each hit 14.
"Assists are where It's at lor us, I'm convinced
of that," Detroit coach Chuck Daly said. "If we

get more assists than the other team, we usually
wtn.''
Mark Price led Cleveland with 14 points, Paul
Mokesk! came In tor Rollins and had p, Randolph
Keys scored 12 and Craig Ehlo 10. The Cavaliers'
five-game winning streak had coincided with
Price's return to the lineup from an Injury.
"Cleveland's Injuries were a factor," Daly said,
"but our concentration was good. We got a littlewakeup call the other night (In losing to
Atlanta)."
Cavaliers' center Brad Daugherty hasn't
plllyed a game for the Cavaliers yet because of
surgery to his rlghl loot and forward Larry Nance
Is still recoverlltg from an ankle tendon 0 peratlon.
"In about three weeks. Chris (forward-center
Dudley, who has a broken bone In his wrist) gets
his cast off," Wilkens said. "Then In possibly
three weeks, we'll get Brad and Larry Nance
back. Then our depth becomes much better."
The Cavaliers knew going In they were going to
have to make do without Nance and Daugherty tor
a while. Then they made a bold move by trading
shooting guard Ron Harper for the rights to
forward Danny Ferry.
"With Daugherty and Harper, you have the
potential to wt~ an NBA championship," Daly
said. "It was a courageous trade tor both clubs.
Cleveland may have set themselves up to be the
team of the '90s with a great plllyer."
Cleveland, 5-5, goes to Houston next and will
struggle without RoUins bokllng down the middle.
Detroit, 7-4, ended a five-game home stand and
now goes to the West Coast tor five games with 11
of Its next 14 away from home.

1881 SOUTHERN VABSm - Tlllll year's
etlllloa of lbe Sotdbem Tonadoe buke'halliiQUIUI
wll be vy!Dg for lllltth title ill the put 1~ yean.
Plduretl are team memben, ~eated, 1-r, John
Hobaek, KeviD Burgeu, Michael Kincaid, Cbad

Sports briefs
SkUni
Nathalie Bouvier of France
captur~ her first World Cup title
Friday, winning both runs In a·
women's giant sllllom at Park
City, Utah. Bouvier easily defeated American Diann Roffe by
1.23 seconds to give France Its
first World Cup victory this
season.

DURING DEER SEASON
WE WILL BE OPEN
AT 5:30A.M.
NOVEMBER 2 7 THRU DECEMBER 2
r----GAWPOUS STORE ONLY--SANTA CUUS WILL IE IN OUR LOBBY
FROM SATURDAY TIL CHRISTMAS10:00 A.M. TIL 12 NOON
.

SPECIAL PRICES-.
12 Ga. Reming!on

107 Chestnut St.

RIFLE SLUGS

W.Va.

AI Other Shells

.

1 S15 Eastern Ave.
Gallipalis,
Ohio

Henderson,

20% OH

WINTERS SERVICE
n. 35, GAWPOUS, ON.

r.,.s. st•eo. o/c.......... Sptcial priu '12,200 '269

·

Stodc #5246 PUlSAR NX2 DR.
s
s
5 sp., st-. a/c _._ ........Sptcitd Prict 12,200 269
11522$ PUlSAR NX 2 DR.__.,...._......_ S ( ( - ,
wnnllt, s ... st•to. _ ..... r-- - "''" - 253 mo.

~allia

County Junior Fair
steer weigh-in slated Dec. 9

DOWN
PlYMENT
RibUIRED
Stack #5311 SENTRA 2 DR, Sllwerfrost, S spd, stereo, ciic_....... Special Salt Price 110,000 122o.,;;,-•
Stack# S-0-L-DrA4 DR. Dark gray, 5 spd. stereo, a/c ............... Spedal Sale Price 19,500 1210 mo.
Stack #5213 SENTRA 4 DR. llack, 5 spd. stereo ......................... Special Sale Price 110,200 1225 mo.
Stock #5310 SENTRA 2 Dl. Bright reel, auto., stereo, a/c ............. Special Sale Price '9,500 1210 mo.
Steck #5213 SENTRA 2 DR. lright red, Auto. stereo .................... Special Sale Price 19,000 1198 mo.
Stack #5162 SENTRA 2 DR. lrlght red, auto. stereo _ .................. Special Sale Price 19,000 1198 mo.
SIGck #5129 SENTRA 4 Dl. lright reel, auto. stereo .................... Special Salt Price 19,500 1216 mo.
Stack #5091 SENTRU Dl. Silverfrost, 5 spd. sterea, a/c ............ Special Sale Price 19,100 1216 mo.
Stack #5209 STANZA 4 Dl, llue sage, 5 spd, stereo ............... Special Salt Price 110,331 1227 mo.

~-

Stock #5295 MAXIMA GXE 4 DR.
.
Dtwk gray, auto., "to.ltcl" ............................ Special Sale Prial 111,600 1399 mo.
St.ck #5206 MAXIMA GXE 4 DR.
C-.rnet pearl, auto. "loaded" ................ Special Salt Price 118,600 1399 mo.
Stock #5236 MAXIMA SE 4 DR.
White, 5 spd. "loadH".......................... Special Sale Price 117,600 SJ79 ....

Wmter
Act now and save on winter

fuel bills~ Install OwensComing_pink Fiberglas®
lation to increase the energy
efficiency and comlbrt of
your home. Do it yourself
and save. It's easy-to-install.

•••a••
......
...
-AIIo............
.........
------r-•r•
31.211q.ll

The cob' Ptnk 111 rqtMered lmlcm"rk oi Owens-Corning Flbcrgl:u CorporatiOn.

...

A-t1f.J.117'
&amp;12tq.l.

51 ,000 MINIMUM
TRI\DE ON ANY USED
CAR OR TRUCK IN
STOCK OVER S2,000

Nissan Hardbody 4x4
with optional trim rings

Stack 115156 H'IDIODY 414 Clbtniet, 5 spd., st•-. "to.ltcl" ........... Special Sale Prim '13,00 1287 ....
Stack #S29J ltAIDIDDY SE V-6 4X2, llilnrfrort, 5 sptl. "loaded" __ ..Special Sale Price 112,500 S276 ..._
W 15260 HII*IDY -CAl 412
·
Sl••frllt, S spll. "lots of extrll'' ..............................................,_.Special Salt Price 19,900 1219 ....
Steck #S21611AIDIODY, 412, callerilet, 5 spd............................... Special Salt Prkt 11,200 1111 mo.
Stock #5214 IIAIDIODY 4X2, bright lllue, 5 spd. stereo.-•••;..... Special Salt Price 11,500 '117 mo.

•

l'.11iiiH·r I ~&lt;&gt;il ,., ith l'"' 1 .r·
,,; •H \1&lt;11•' 1\(111._, (Jilt r lilt!·, II !i•

1 .,.,.

1

11"

Carolina Lumber And Supply Company
BOVItl: Mastq-l"rtdaJ, 8 a.m..-11 p.m.; 8aturclar. 8 a.m. to 12 noon

312 6lh Street

,

Phone 675-1160
'

I

Point Pleasant, WV

· Nissan Pathfinder XE 4X4
with opioml.Power Plus podc'8•

TAYLOR NISSAN
120()

••Monthly JMYJMnl
flglftd on till and title
down, 18 month flnenclng
. It 14.1" lntaNit.

9, 1989, durillg the Official Steer
Weigh-ln.
The Weigh-In will be held at the
Gallla County Junior Fair·
grounds. It will start at 9 a.m.
and last untU 3:30 p.m. This
requirement Is a must for all
steers being exhibited at the 1990

Weed control class
.scheduled Nov. 30
By Edward M. VoUbora
County Extension A1eat,
- Ap-Iculture lo CNRD

N1ss;m Pu'ls;lr NX Sf llalf:hh:u:k

Nissan Max1rna GXE

a S5 cash prize fi'GIIl tile Ohio Valley Publlsl)lng
. Co. Leave your aame, addre&amp;s aad teleptalne
number with yoar c~ or letter. No telephoae
calls will be acceplecl. All contest entries should
be turned In to die newapaper office by 4 p.m. each
Wednesday. Ia Cllll! of a tie, the winner will be
chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallla County
farm will be featured by lhe Gallla SoU and Water
Conaervathm District.

Farm Flashes

Coaches are Jim Oliphant aud Mike Kennedy.
Other Melp County runners not pictured were
Larry Hofbnan, Larry May, Mike Kennedy, Chad
WIDillms and Fred Baloy.
115250 PWAR NX 2 DR.

•,

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Melp SoD and Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
Melp Couaty. ladlvlduala wlslllag 1o participate
In the weeldy contest may do ao by gueula1 die
farm's owner. Just mall, ordropolfyourpeBslo
the GaiBpoUs Dally Tribune, 1125 Third Ave.,
GaiUpoUs, Ohio, f5611, or the Dally Senllael, 111
Couri St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 4~'768,and you may win

. GALLIPOLIS - The Gall!a
County Extension Office and the
Gall!a County Junior Falrboard
would like to remind all youth
who are planning to exhibit a
steer at the 1990 Gall!a County
Junior Fair, that they must have
their .steer Identified and
weighed on Saturday, December

For: Someone Special ...
Maybe Yourself
,...,.,,.,..,..,......,.,

Keep out the cold with
of top-quality pink Fibt:i-Rlas"
insulation.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Times-Sentinel Stall POMEROY - There are deer
stands, and then there are deer
stands.
But the deer stand which Jeff
Brown will be taking with him to
tbe woods this deer gun hunting
season could probably be des·
cr!bed as the "cad!llac of deer
stands."
Brown, who works at Associated Fabricators In Pomeroy
and lives on Leading Creek Road
In the Rutlllnd area, has eng!·
neered a totally portable deer
stand that Is sure to be the envy of
all serious hunters.
The compact unit Is wheeled
Into the woods where Brown
selects the perfect tree. He then
leans the assemblage against the
tree and begins the simple task of
opening It up and attaching it to
the tree.
•
The compartmenth which
rides atop the wheels swings up,
and Is then secured In an upright
position by two attached braces.
Then a top section of ladder Is
raised by hand from beside the
wheels. The ladder carries the
compartment to the desired
height where It Is then ratchet
strapped to the tree. Canvas
sides and a roof on the compart·
men! shield Brown from the
elements as he sits patlentl,y
awaiting the elusive "big buck"
which he Is determined this year
to bag.
Inside the compartment Is a
swivel chair ''on ball bearings so
It won't squeak and scare the
deer," Brown says. He's even
thinking about adding a sterno
heater with a pipe, _so he can keep
his hands warm.
The unit Is light weight enough
to be easily pulled, says Brown,
and It's only eight feet long when
both sections of ladder are
together on the ground and the
compartment Is folded down to
rest on top.
And in case Brown really does
bag that big buck, the compart·
ment can be detached from the
unit, and the deer pulled out on
''Just the ladder and wbeela," he ·
says.

Taylor, Chrill Murphy, aud Jay10n Codller.
Staocllag are Todd Grlnds&amp;aff, Roy ~ BaUey,
Jeremy Roae, Brent Shuler, Brad Maynard, and
Alldy Baer. The Tornadoes are coaehetl by Howle
Caldwell and aasilllanl Scoll Wickline.

$1.90

BeatOl' Man

D

Rutland ar~a man engineers
unique portable deer stand

Huntl" TtAl Notlu/

COLUMBUS MARATHON RUNNERS--Melp
Coanty ruaners In the Cohunbuo Marathon were
- (L-R) Nathan Baloy, Ryan Lemley, Chris Sloan,
Jeremy Heck and P.J. Chadwell. All IU'e
members of_ the Meigs crou country team.

'lima- ~adinel Section
NCNeluber 215. 1989

Farm/ Business

e. Sta1t

ATHENS, OH 45701

Phone (614) 584·3528

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Mark
Loux, O.S.U. Extension Agrono·
mist wlll be In Gall!a &lt;;ounty
Thursday, Nov. 30, at 7 p.m. to
lead a special class on weed
control In field crops. The class
will be held at the Senior Citizens
Center just west of Gall!pol!s.
Dr. Loux Is · the leading weed
control for !!eld crops In Ohio. He
wlll be prepared to discuss
herbicide control of Johnson·
grass in corn !ncl~d!ng status of
new product development and
how effective these products
have been In research plot
situations. Each year Johnson·
grass infestations cost Gall!a
County farmers several hundred
thousand dollars.
Cost-share montes for demon·
stratlons on control of Multiflora
Rose have been allocated
through the local Soli and Water
Conservation District. A short
class on current control mea·
sures will be held Tuesday

· evening, November 28, 7 p.m. at
the SCS office. Anyone Interested
In a review of currei\\COncepts In
multl·fiora rose control Is · wei·
come to attend.
Several changes w!ll be made
by the Ohio Department of
Agriculture In their pestiCide
certification program this year.
Private applicator whose certification expires on March 31, 1990
were recently se~t a card lnd!cat·
lng· their certification status.
Once recertification requirements have been met as to class
attendance, they are to submit
the bottom half o!the cover letter
with a check to cover letter with a
check to cover the new fee of
. $30.00 for the three year renewal.
Those persons who still need to
attend the county recertification
programs and obtain credits are
to submit the form and check
after they have attended ·the
training program. The CO!Jnty
training program will be held In
February (date and location to
be-announced). The certification
new fee was a part of the Ohio
budget · passed by the state
leg!slllture this past spring.

Money Ideas

In d ex 'of 12 Iead ing indicators
BY STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS- An economist
with a sense of humor once said
the stock market
predicted
eleven of the last
nine economic
recessions.
While the
market has a
history ol being
volatile and
does not always move concert
w!th 1 the econ&lt;)my, It does have a
reasonably good record of correctly forecasting the fortunes of
American business.
Each month the Bureau of
Economic Analysis of the U.S.
Department of Commerce announces Its Composite Index ofl2
Leading Indicators which Is
regarded by many as the most
Important government Index of
the future state of the economy.
Like the stock market, the
Composite Index has been help. ful but not perfect In predicting
business conditions. Included
· among the twelve Indicators Is an
Index of stock prices. The other
eleven illdl&lt;:11tors are the aver·
age workweek of manufacturlltg
production workers, the manufacturing layoff rate, vendor
performance, percent change In
sensitive prices, contracts and
orders for plant aad equipment,
an Index of net business forma·
tiona, M-1 money balance, new
orders, buDding petmlts and
change In InventorieS.
I~

This Indicator Is difficult to use
because the government con·
stantiy revises the Index. However, It does have some value as a
barometer of Investor sentiment.
Rightly or wrongly, the business
commuiuty often thinks of the
Index as a portent of things to
come.
As a general rule, an Investor
should not be buying stocks
aggressively when the Index
appears to be In the Initial stages
of a decline-especially after
many months of advancing.
Conversely, when the Index
begins to rise after a prolonged
decline, It Is best to avoid selling
stocks short. However, In most
other situations, the Index of
Leading lndlcators has limited
value as a technical market tool.
(Mr. Evana II ... lnveshnenl
Broker for The Oblo Company Ia
their Galllpolill Office.)

Gallla County Junior Fair.
One of the objectives of the
Steer Weigh-In Is to provide the
starting weight tor the weight-of·
gain contest which all, steers
exhibited at the Galllll County
Junior Fair are eligible for
competition.
The winner of last years
welght·of-ga!n contest, both the
category lor "Born and Ral~d
on the Farm" and the "Overall"
category was Jill Burdell, a
member of the Rio Wranglers
4·H Club. Jill's steer gained 3.58
pounds per day. The following Is
a list of the top 25 rate-of-gain
steer exhibitors from last year:
Jill Burdell-3.58, Troy Duncan·
3.31, 3. Kent Butler·3.09, Crystal
Mealge-3.08, Brian Burnette·
3.02, Dwight 'Evans-2.99, Bryon
Burke-2.92, Adam Clarke-2.91,
Shannon Easthon-2.82, Denna
Evans-2.78, Chris Toler-2.77,
Chris Preston·2. 75, Karl
Alderman-2. 73, David Jackson2.68, Matthew Neal-2.68, Gregg
Glassburn-2.65, Jessica Roach·
2.61, · Kim Angel·2.58, Matthew
Sanders-2.58, Scott J!v!den-2.55,
Missy Russell·2.52, Brad Shadle2.51, Nathan Belvilie-2.51, John
P!erotti·2:50, Mike Tucker-2.46.
II · you have any questions
concerning this years steer
we)gh·ln contact the Gallla
County Extension Office as soon
as possible (614·446-7007).

Brown says his Innovative
design just "grew as It went
along." He "engineered the Idea
while lying In bed" one night and
built the stand In spare time and
on weekends In anticipation of
this year's hunting season. Altogether, he estimates It took about
40 hours to construct the unit for
which an uncle supplled him with
all the metal. He guesses there Is

at least $100 of metal In the
design.
FamUy and friends have urged
Brown to patent his deer stand,
but he hasn't yet decided If he will
or not. By the time Dec. 2 and the
end of deer gun hunting season
rolls around, he should know If
his Innovative Ideals as good as II
•appears.

UP~ GO-

From a swivel chair (oaballbearlnpnoless),ln a
1lalul hlp atop tbe.ll'ouocJ, Jell !ll'own will wall
for tbeeiuslve ''biK lluek'' wblch he Is determtaed to b&amp;gthlsdeer
.gun hunting season.
one-o~ klad de~

Farni economists look at 1990
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Experts at Ohio State University
say 1990 should see Increases In
meat and milk production, and
prices of between $2.10 and $2.30
a bushel lor corn and $5.60 to $6.10
a bushel for soybeans.
Total red meat and poultry
production should be up3 percent
In 1990.
Scott Irwin, agricultural economist at Ohio State University,
says this will be the eighth
consecu live year the meat Industry sets new production records.
The big Increases will come on
the poultry side, with a 10 percent
jump In turkey production and
nearly as much In broiler
production.
New poultry processing plants
will come on Une to help handle
the Increased supplies.
Pork production should rise
slightly, thanks to Increased
production efficiency. However,
beef production will be down
again despite explinsion In the
nation's cow herd.
Irwin says the overall gains
come despite the higher feed
prices and poor!oragecondltlons
of the last lew years.
Milk production for 1990 should
be up, perhaps sharply, with
rising milk prices and decl!ntng
tel!d costs driving the expansion.

'-Longstaff honored
by OVEC for 35
•
years serv•ce
CHESHIRE- T. Hylton Longstaff, chief performance engl·
neer at Ohio Valle.)! Electric
Corporation's Kyger Creek
plllnt, received his anniversary
award for 35years' service to the
company, according to plant
manager Raymond H. Blowers
Jr.
Longstaff joined OVEC In 1954
as a chemist. He was promoted to
assistant chief chemist In 1956
before being promoted to chief
chemist In 1957. ~n 1986 he was
promoted to chief performance
engineer.

But Irwin says to look for
priCes to drop as production
grows. How much they drop will
depend on the rate of growth and
the strength of commercial demand for milk.
Both domestic and foreign
demand for dairy products has
been strong since m!d-1988, one
of the reasons for higher producer milk prices.
Processors passed those In·
creased costs along to the consumer, and Irwin says that means
1989 had the highest jump In
retail dairy prices since 1981. The
5 percent to 6 percent jump In
retail prices could cut Into
demand, driving the expected
reduction In producer milk prl·
ces for 1990. ·
Corn prices should average
between $2.10 and $2.30 per
bushel for the 1989·90 market
year.
Economist Dennis Henderson
says this reflects expected car·
ryout supp!!es of a bout 1.8 billion
bushels and continued strength
In exports.
Henderson ex peels livestock
feed use to Increase roughly 5
percent, but still not return to the
record levels of 1986 and 1987. He
says yearly price patterns In
1989-90 should foUow normal
seasonal trends, with about a

30-cent gain between post·
hai'Vest lows and late spring.
The pricing pattern could
change If the Soviet Union stays
in the corn market aggressively
through winter. Henderson says
next year's Soviet purchases
should match 1988-89 levels ,
despite a modest Increase In
their production because of a
commitment to more adequate
food supplies.
Should estlmated Soviet demand be too high, Henderson
says carryout projections will
Increase, causing comparable
downward pressure on prices.
Soybean prices should average
in the $5.60 to $6.10 range tor the .
1989·90 market year.
Henderson says South Amerl· :.
can production and 1990 crop size :.
w!l! key prices lor the year.
Soybean meal feed use should
go up In !989-90 as poultry
production expands and lower
meal prices encourage higher
feeding rates. Exports of soymeal. however, w!l! be level due
to South American crops being
funneled into the world meal
market.
Whole bean exports could move upward during the first ·
hall of 1990 as America fills the
gap created by a reduced European oilseed crop.

Indoor herbs not·
as good 'as outdoor
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Home gardeners should not fall
for catala&amp; pbotos of lush herbs ill
window-am pots.
''Herbs rallied Indoors usually
don't look as good as those ads, ....
says Barbara Williams, hcrtlcul·
turlst at Ohio State University.
"They can be lfOWD Inside but
they're more trouble to rear than
moat bouaeplants. Indoor conditions In wlnl!!f lack the IJaht and
moisture herbs need.
-

..•

COIII"LL:TB BANKING CUll - DIM II&amp;R ..... N. A.,

TriState employe• reoeull) campleled tile Amerleaa blllta of
B'Dirlal nqlllrem•tl aee•llll')' lo ~ve &amp;be FOUIItllltlaM of
Buldq Dlplama by lall... reqlllred otMI n oftendlnqlllhe
Rio Grade Commady Colle&amp;.. Tbe olul 11 were Ia camplwitll tile HUll ol 01111 Cllapter of A.I.B.IMar Bull e-urap~.

.

.

- ~

emploJeel to e Utne lhelr educatlea, aull mauagement
..-p-. • - aeblev-111. Pldtln!d above are lle\'eD of the
eta:lll&amp; wllo campiMetl the
StaadiDg left lo riPt - Barbra • •
Coleman. lllepllnle Stover, Elilabetll Rllmlel', VIckie Allie, Catlly ,
._tie, CllariiUe Marrlller aad David Sbafler. Not pictured - •- •
Doaaa Wu1h.
•

eo-.

.

'

�P'lg

Poma.o y-Midtlaport-Ga•polil. Ohio Point Plea

D-2-Sunday Trr11 Sentinel

November 26, 1989

tt, W. Va.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Tile OhioBureau of Employment
Services said Ohio's nonfarm
payroll employment reached an
all-time high of 4.816 million In
October.
Ellen O'Brien Saunders, OBES
adminiatrator, said Friday 1,000
Jobs were added In October, with
gains being reported In wholesale and retail trade, local

schools, services, and
construction.
· Manufacturing lost 9,000 jobs
from September, mainly because of labor-management dis·
putl!s In the primary metals· and
nonelec trical machinery
Industries.
Employment In the· services
Industry surpassed employment
in manufacturing by 50,000 jobs

In Oclober. Tile loss In manufacturlnc emptoym4!11t wu concentrated In durable &amp;Q&lt;Jds, where
10,000 jobs ~re lost. Nondurable
JOQds galaed 1.000 jobs.
Nonmanufacturlng employ·
ment expanded to an all-time
hlgb, with 10,000 Jobs added !rom
the 3.719 million of Seplember.
Most of the Improvement oc·
curred In retail trade, local

schools, and services. Smaller
gains were recorded In construction and whOlesale trade, Saunders said.
Employers In mining, transportation and public utilities, and
finance, Insurance, and real
estate reported no change In the
past month.
Since October 1988, Ohio bas
added 110,000 payroll jobs. Non·

farm employment has Increased
12.4 percent, from 4.704 million In
October 1988 to 4.816last month.
Nonmanufacturlng added 120,000
jobs In that same period.
The construction Industry had
the fastl!st growth rate, 7.6
percent, or 14,000 jobs, followed
by the services industry at 4.5
percent or 49,000 Jobs. Other

won

'::~~~~' '0©\\4\l~-l&amp;£!rS'
14;,.4
ClAY I : 'OliAN

Non-fa1m employment reaches all-time hi~

..

0

Reorrange the 6 scrambled
words below to moke 6
simple words, Print !etters of
egch in its l1ne of 5Cjvores.

1Ual11811
Opportunity

Industries with above-average
growth rates were retail trade,
up 3.5 percent, and wholesale
trade, up 2.8 percent.
Manufacturing employment.
at 1.097 million last month, was
9,000 below the year-ago lf'\'el.
Since October 1988, employment
has declined 11,000 In durable
goods, but has Increased 2,000 In
nondurable goods.

I

. . . --"" ...

-

-:=..*'· - ..."'!.~ion ~~~
,._,
10

lbr, tor ,..., 111 111o
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44

111

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SUPEER

11

11-7471.
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Ot ""'·
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ttl""·
Mollie hDmM tar r.nt, quW

I

COVATE

42 Mobile Hom11
for Rent

41 Hou111 for Rent

lAIII

~y

21

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- 0 ·3

Ponwoy-Middlaport·- Gellipolia, Ohio-Point Pleannt, W. Va.

November 26, 1989

.,,

--··

Apartment
tor Rant

.......

1 lr., unlum. opl., Flm -

·

.Countdown to Christmas underway
By NENA BAKER

By UnHed Press International
Scores of Christmas shoppers,
: many lured by markdowns and
• sales, Jammed stores Friday on
: the busiest day of .the year for
· retat lers .
· · Many retailers on .34th Street In
. New York- home to R.H . Macy
· &amp; Co., the store that bills Itself as
: the world's largest - attracted
: throngs of shoppers who braved .
· cold temperatures and Icy
: sidewalks.
: Unlike last year, when retail. ers avoided early markdowns to
: shore up profit margins, sale
: banners decorated many stores.
· The seasonal debut of Santa
: Claus was the main attraction at
· Macy's, as hundreds of children
: formed a line that snaked ·
: through the store's "Santaland"
· - an enchanted village filled
: with toy trains, Christmas elves
:and twinkling lights- awaiting a
· tum on the knee of St. Nicholas.
: At discounter Best Products
:Co., customer trafftc was ''about

steady with last year," said Ross
Richardson, a spokesman for the
230-store chain based In Rich·
mond, Va.
"We were expecting bigger
traffic this weekend," said Rl·
chardson, adding that !rlgld
weather In the Northeast were
keeping some customers away.
Bargain seekers packed B.
Altman &amp; Co. ,. the 124-year-old
Fifth Avenue department store
that began a . going-out-ofbusiness sale Friday, creating an
"overcrowding condition" by
mid-morning, said Efratn Parrilla, a spokesman tor the New
York Fire Department, which
sent an engine company to
monitor the situation.
Outside, stately mechanical
Christmas displays - an Alt·
man's tradition - brightened
windows of the elegant Italian
RenaissanCe structure. Inside,
elbow-to-elbow sl)oppers formed
a gridlock on the first floor of the
store as custnmers sought bar·
gains. Every Item at Altman's

~ Honda plans to more
~ than double itss imports
: TOKYO (UPI) -Honda Motor
· Co. Friday announced a sweep. lng Import expansion program,
Including "reverse exports" of
•cars and motorcycles manufac' lured at Its U.S. plants and
purchases of U.S. -made Sikorsky
· helicopters.
.
The Tokyo company said the
program calls for Imports of
products and parts worth $1.13
billion In 1992, a 2.5-fold Increase
over the 1988 value_ of $440
mUllan .
The company said It aims to
Import S580 mllllon worth of cars,
motorcycles and power products
In 1992. The plan calls for
Importing 50,o00 cars of various
models built · at Its assembling
. factories annually.
The company began to import
the Accord Coupe built at Its Ohio
plant In April last year, and
future Imports will include the
Coupe, Accord Wagon and other
models, It said.
While continuing Imports of
GL1500 model motorcycles from
Its plant In Ohio, the company
will "also develop further plans
for Import from Europe and
. $Qutheast Asia," the company
: said.
· · Honda, the world's largest
: motorcycle maker, has set a
: motorcycle production target for
· lhe year ending next March 31,
- !Jlcludlng 835,000 units at home,
with 361,000 units set aside for
exports. and an additional 1.74
million units at Its overseas
!actlttles.
The company said It also plans
to Import lawn mowers from Its
plant in North Carolina.
: The program also calls for
Imports of parts and raw matei1als worth $490 million, up SO
percent. Items will Include air·
bag related parts, tires, cata. lysis, glasses and raw materials,
mainly aluminum, the company
said.
It said Imports of foreign
products will amount to $6()
million, including Sikorski S76
helicopters, manufactured by
Connecticut-headquartered United Technologtds,of the United

.

Jloller coaster
. .
gams spot on
1nagazine list
: SANDUSKY, Ohio (UP!)
The Cedar Point amusement
Jiark 's giant roller coaster Is
named In the December Issue of
Popular Science magazine as one
of 100 things that are "Best of
'What's New ."
: The Magnum XL-200 was
darned by magazine on a list of
what It considered the year's
most significant new products
COd achievements.
· "We look at a product's lnnovatlon, cleverness, usefulness and
excitement before placing It on
she lsll of the 100 best," said
81chard Stepler, executive edt·
tor of Popular Science.
: "'l'llls Is the first time that a
Qlller coaster has earned a spot
1111 our 1181. A'coaster will only be
lkluded when It bu merit as an
outJtandtnc achievement comPared with other products tntrociUCed that year."
• Tile Magnum XL-200, which
• ad last May, II listed In the
wiliness Book of World
' u the fastest and
sllej)1ut roller coaster.
I

States.
The company said its second
U.S. car manufacturing facility
In East Liberty, Ohio, will start
operations in'mid-Oecember and
the company's car output In the
United States will rise to 510,000
units a year In 1991.
Honda said Its local parts
procurement outside Japan will
reach $4.8 billion in 1992.

was marked down as the company was forced into liquidation
by the bankruptcy of Its parent
company.
Farther up Fifth Avenlll!, toy
store F .A.O. . Schwartz was
"boomtne" Friday, said spokes·
man Rob Buntzen. "Maybe the
snow Is making people feel really
Chrlstmasy because we are
reallyupover last year," he said.
The No. 1 seller was Nlntendo
Entertainment System's hand·
held Game Boy video game, said
Buntzen. Also selling briskly
were Micro Machine miniature
cars and Batman Items, he said.
The goofy gift Item of the year
- akin to the pet ~ock of several
years · ago - are ~ dancing
flowers, which move when In
earshot of music, voices ·or other
sounds, said a spokeswoman for
Macy's.
Good weather In Chicago heck·
oned shoppers to line up as early
as 7: 15 a.m. to look at Marshall
Field's Christmas tree decorated
with 6,000 French-Inspired ornaments and 12,000 lights, a spokeswoman said.
And In the San Francisco Bay
area, merchants hoped the
Christmas season would revive
sales .. that have been sluggish
since the Oct. 17 earthquake.
Near the epicenter of the
temblor In Santa Cruz, retailers
whose shops were destroyed In
the quake opened ·for business
Friday In hastily erected tents
near the downtown Pacific
Garden Mall.
Operators of Southern California malls· extended their hours
Friday, but found shoppers already walling when they opened
for business.

BRIDGE

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

JAMES

JACOFN

NOIITB

IO

could make you glad you 'waited.
SAGtnARIUS (NoY. 23-0K. 21)

+732

Don't
be discouraged today if that which you

1

GALLIPOLIS AREA
EXCfTINCI NEW AmuMmenl
pmo. 1200 por MINIMUM
CASH
AND
your
_ _,. OUAAANTUDI
Coltifto
1·

hope to accomplish isn't achieved on
your initial try. Where you 'll really shine
will be in situations that require a con·
carted second effort. Sagittarius. treat

yourself to a birthday gift. Send lor your
Astro-Graph predictions for the year
ahead by ma"lng $1 .25 to Astro-Grapll,
c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428,
CleYeland, OH 44101·3428. Be sure to
state your zodiac sign_
CAPRICOIIN (Dec. - - 11) Good
things could happen for you today In activities - e you're exposed to lots of
people. Repartee could provide you
with valuable information that wtll in·
spire your imagination.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fell. 11) The secrets to your success today Is to want
lor others that which you want for yoursell, beCause when you try to be helpful,
you'll find you will gain as mUCh as the
recipient.
PISCES (Fell. 20-Kr ell :ZOJ The tact
that you'll ha\18 strong opinions today
could aetually tum out to be helpful to a
friend who is confident. This person wtll
benefit lrom drawing upon your

••

AND LET THERE BE (CHRISTMAS) LIGHT
- A1 Alderfer, left, project manarer of Main

Sheet, Suta Ciao~ and Etta Gheen, city clerk,
threw the switch to lllumlnaie the City of Point
Pleasant wltb Christmas lights In a cereinony

Wa... Truck · - · lor 1111'
'i142Uilll.

Friday evenlllg at the comer of Fourth and VIand
St. Many activities are planned In lhe downtown
' area, Including a parade on Dec. 9, Santa's
workshop and Kids Shopping Days. (Times·
Sentlael pboto by Margaret Caldwell).

'

2111

Thatcher, BusJt
in ~close accord'

Clllllnut

cerns you as well as an associate can be

tound today, provided each perty Ia will·
ing to mal&lt;e cer1aln ad)uatmonl1.
GEMINI (Me)r 21....,_ 20) Once you gel
things under way today you -'&lt; wtH go
a lot quicker and smoother thin you entlclpate. The secret it to get Into gear u
rapidly aspollibie.
CANCER (,_ 21..,.., 22) Be the inl·
liator today i11$tead of walling on olhen
to make social arrangement• you hope
will include you. Con..-..ly, II you do
plan something. others wilt be gled you
included them.
LEO (JIIIJ 21-Aul. 22) II !here Is I domestic di~ruption today, take Immediate measures to rectify It as quickly as
possible. No one's te.lhera will get ruf·
lied 11 It Isn't allowed to gel out of hand.
VIIGO lAIII· 2S lrpl 22) An unex·
peeled shill In COfldHiona might occur
today and you'H •Ito be trw to Iller
your coulae. To be on the ..,. tide.
don'lloek yourMII Into a rigid - · · ...
UIIIA(Iepi.2S Dei.IIJCilla i~fpur·
.... any leD you . . 11111111 .......
could r - In ....,.. to ""' ,...

IOUI'CM. Your m I Ill PIC ~ 1111 hopeful, 10 be ....,..... ,
opportunities.
ac~ 10c1. ........ 21) Today you
are likely to be bolli- end vlliDMij.
Thll ll an en Sh'l IIIAOI, Ill C0 - ft

a ••

will

giVe

to -

I3044.,.1710.
,_, -

.

room

Hor!l••
for sal
.

35

32 Mobile

pump.

go-. -'•

La1o Fa&lt; -

~·

3br,

2

Mthroome,

th""'9houl, Ill

eleCtric, wllh b• bo•nf Mat

optllt oillrc. ., with dock oil
...... b i d - OVer 2200
oq_. II. 3 cor ga- with

--··91--L
opiMI'S, ....... d1ah. lvallable

with
·75~ ted
wtth on
4Z
.._ 13 5115,000.
Roclnof Ccn Ad. 011 At. :II

• Glilipolil Forry,

ol utilillll ovaillbil

,... Jlolpilol,

11-7711

-nlngo.

'Uf• • d H•* II lnturen oe

Fum'od,

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale
untumilhld hoUie

IDDOI-.

....... -~~~~ pricld, ~ID lor
21t522all ollor 6:00 PM.
.
14al0 Cfinlon .lloblll- lor

11itby..,.r.Uioa-.211odroomt, 1-11Z blthl, utility room.

114-371-t3a.
14K70 ReciiMn EmDIN, 2br, bltll
112 liM niW concf. Por Sale or

Aont.114-2u.t401.

14x70 lr~~ller wtth 1 am. WI,
....soo. 114-448.0824.

Card of Thanks
Public Nat ice

+tct

Vulnerable: Nortlt-Soutlt

Dealer: South

-

z+

Lost&amp;Found

11

Help Wanted

11

Help Wanted

Fred and Polly
Thompson wish
to thank all
relatives and
friends who
shared with gifts,
thoughts. cards,
prayers. flowers,
a handshake or
any other way.
All are
approciated .

WoiWod Dynamic, lgarMOiVI,
highly malivliod, por-abll
mtMgW, to run lhe O.lllpolta
Wolglil
Clinic.
S.Oill
or

. ._rill ._.,_ ...-.
..... c.-

N~•

Puo 4t
All paa

Opening lead: • K

Earl
P. .

Qrtontod. Soncf
.....,mo to Nutrttlon lllclicll, Sle
Will High
Plq•. OH
4531141 • .

St-.

Pua

Situation
Wanted

Taking out
insurance

SChools &amp; ·
Instruction
AE·TAAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN
IUSINEIS
COLI.£0£, 121 - - Ptkl.
CIH lla..t46o4317. Aog. No. 11611·111558.
.

18 Wanted to Do
Qono,.l Malnllllanco a ,....,,.

114-317-41811.

•

McDaniel lutchertng II naw ae..
coplill!
- · cotll •ncl ho;•.
304 IICI 3224.

The family of No11111
M. Hysell wish to thank
friends, nei&amp;hbors, relatives and churches for
prayers, Bible cards,
flowers. food. money
and kindness durin&amp; the
death of our loved on1.
Spe~ial
thanks to
Rev. Robert Manley,
Rev. Earl Fields. Wendell Grate, doctors and
staff of Veterans llemo·
rial Hospital, Syracuse
Emercency Squad, Ewing's
Funeral Home,
also sin1ers, orpnist
and pallbearers.
The Family
In Memoriam

2

In Memory Of
STEVIE RAY
McGRATH
Nov. 28,1988
It' a been • yewagoto-

d-v.

&amp;lnc;e Ood took you
-ay.
But - thank Him for
the27yem

He...

ltay.

m~:d and

~

obtecu ....
«&gt; -~-..............-••·"'··=-~·-

••

3br,

tolol

IGOoo?al ID41.

__. · --

3 latdroom hoUM on Mulberry
1n , _ t175.-.h.

3 br., utllliy, 11"1111 ~~- 2
35.01-1:111.

c:r:

41 HouSit for Rant
40 - · 12 mlill 011lpolio, pond,
11om
• - . .... IM1tintj, ...._
2 b • l - - · z bol•oont 5

-·good

271afl«vp.m.

Happy Ads

304-1~ ~======:;:::::;

.....
.............
zm4 lleeann
1:00 Ail to 1:00

PM.

Happy 64th

Au•rey •••
Leota
With tl!aay
More

3 Announcements.

lllth Lowe,

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING

R•r

OFFEIS 3 LOCA'IIOIS TO SEIVI YOU--

HENDERSON, WV: At. 3&amp;. Adjacent to
Sidera Equipment
.;»pen Tu•.·Sat. 10 A.M.·&amp; P.M.
.C loud Sun. 1nd Mon.
POMEROY. OHIO: At Junction of S.R. 7 and
143 on the by-past.
Opan 7 Days 9 A.M.-7 P.M.

PAYING TOP PRlCES!
Public Sale
&amp; Auction .

11

lonu1

lrld MOfe.

.... monlh.

tl VOL! are 23 YNI'I of q .. h1111e a
ciMn DMY r.cetd. un P•• •

drug tcfMI'I tMI and c.. v•lty 1
~- ofOTR •'*ienCII, c .. l uut:

1·100-999-8734

Help Wanted '

EQual Opportunity Empac.,er

•

ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, DEC. 2, .1989 ·
10:00 A.M.

roe~tecl 011 Mulberry Hts.. Pomeroy, Ohio between
V.M.H. &amp; the lltechlfOVI Clmtttry. This is the per·
so11o1l pr~rty of the late Edna Cooper.
'ANflQUE OR COlllCTOR'S ITEIIS"
Martha Washinaton solid cherry bedroom su~e w/bookcase
bed, 1899 New YorM Clothing House pin, tin Me&lt; well House
coftee can, Syracuse Methodist Churoh in &amp;!!ISS. can·
dleholder Jack 1n the Pulpit, Hets!1 J1r, pr. sterling silver
candle holders. tron Terner do&amp; F1estaware pdcher Griswold H7 skillet w/lid, crysltll sherbet &amp;aoblets. Nortika,-8e·
vanan, Taylor &amp; Kent from Eniiland disha. bone china,
Johnsoo Bro. England dtshes · wMe w/gold trjm, &amp; lots ol
old Jewelry, old hats, purses, Eastern Star pin &amp;slick pins &amp;
lots of misc. dishes.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Dinette set w/6 chairs, G.E.electric range (blroven), mete! &amp;
wood cabinets, stereo, litton 5111111 miaowave, 4 loldin~
Chill's, recltner, m1sc. chair~ portable G.E. color TV, misc.
dishes, pot~ pans &amp; krtchenware, lots of linens, hide-r-bed,
coffee 1Jble &amp; more.
"IISC."
Lullllf, step slool &amp; lldder1 lots of Christmas ~ems 10
speed bicttle, skis, auto. wasner &amp; dryer ldon'l worlt) ·,.,.
den &amp; hand tools, P!lsh mowers, birdblth, wlleelbarro,; ett.
IAIWA J. WIIR£ ~ UECUlOI
'
Rtfraslle1111ts
Cllh
P011tivt I.D.

DAII SIITH - AUCTIONEER - 114·192-7301
."'lllt . .,...!Me tw,AI..._sor losa of

Pro,.,,..

Responsible position which involves: serving
as a member of interdisciplinary teams; con·
dueling psychological assessments; develop·
ment and oversight of behavioral treatment
proarams; traininc direct-contact staff; etc.
Must have experience in applied systematic behavior management
techniques. Master's
Degree in PsychoiOIY or Equivalent Course
Work.
Gallipolis Develop111ental Center is located in
Southelst Ohio (alone thl Ohio RiYir) within one
hour driYI of two major universities. Excellent benefit packaae/annual ulaty $22,672-$28,350.
Contact: Humari Resources Depsrtment. Gallipolis
Developmental Center. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Tete·
phone (614}·446-1642).
AFF1RMATIVE ACTION/EEO
"MR/DD doaa not dlecrimin.. e in provilion of sar-

vic• or employment beceu • of han ell CliP. race. color,
creed,

natio1111l origin, eo., age, or ancestry."

PRICE REDUCED TO $65.000! Beaulilul L·
brick. All rooms large. Eat·in kitchen.
formal dining, LR w/FP. 3BRs, I'.\ baths, attached garage.

~heped

PRICE REDUCED! ~II you have been look·
ing for a home lhat will give you room to
stretch out, this is it. features in this home
are equipped krtchen. lor mal dining, den. lovely living room wlh fireplace, dinette, bath,
3 BRs,. The lull basement is finished and off·
ers bath, laund1y, roomy, attractive lamily
1oom.

I
•
'
:
·

:

Administrative Assistant 11/Q.IIl.R.P. Gallipolis Developmental Center, a licensed
.ICF/MR facility, serving 300 persons with ..
mental retardation, currently has openings~
The Q.M.R.P. is responsible for the overall fa- ·.
cililation, development and coordination of : :
the delivery of active treatment to a livinc area
of individuals with mental retardation. Must
meet Federal Requirements for Q.II .R.P. and
must Obtain State Q.M.R.P. Certificate Within 6
•,
Months.
Gallipolis Developmental Center is located in
Southeast Ohio (along thl Ohio River} within one
hour drive of two major universities. Excellent be· .
nefit package/annual salary $22.901·$28.350.
Contact: Human Resources Department, Gallipolis .
Developmental Center, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, Telephone (614)-446-1642).
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION / EEO
''MR / 00 doaa not diacriininllte in provilion of services or employment becauM-Of handicap, r8Ce, color.
creed, national origin. sex, age, or ancestry." .

BROKER - 446-0008

Furniture, table stereo, coins, graniteware, iron ski!·
lets. doilies, wood boKes, student lamp, feed scoops,
late 1800's · early 1900's oil lamps, baseball cards,
powder flask. toys, pocket watch. glassware (including
depression, goofus &amp; wallen), double &amp; single trees
and lots more toming in.
Anyone wishina to sell their antiques or collactibles
call for infonnation. Consi111tn1nls llbn 1-6 P.M. Sa·
turdays. We heve out of twn and out of state dealers.
AUCTIONEER, FINIS ISAAC

614-311-9370

PSYCHOLOGY ASSISTANT

l

OHIO UNIVERSnY IS AN EQUAl
OPPORTUNnY / AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER .

RANNY BLACKBURN

Jackson St., Vinton, Oh.,. Sats. 7 P.M.

Not Responsible for Accidents or loll Praparty

The Gallipolis Developmental Center, a li·
censed ICF /MR facility, serving 300 persons
with mental retardation and/or developmental
disabilities, currently has openings for:

•

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

'' ·

"In~ At•

of

POSITION:
Assistant Coordinator of Patient Servites
Ohio University Collect of Osteopathic Medicine
Part-time tetm position endin&amp; July 30. 1991; con·
tinuation contingent upon &amp;rant funding and/or re·
turn of full time employee .
SALARY: $11,400-$13,200
RESPONSIBILITIES: To assist the Coordinator in im·
plementing a program of patient eduCJtion, patient
service and public awareness related to arthritis in 1
five-county area. To assist with diabetes eduCJtion
at the Osteopathic MediCJl Center (OIIC). To assist
the Preventive lledicine/Public Health section and
the OMC in patient eduCJtion.
MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS: RN or BSN stronaly
preferred. with one year experienc, in nursinR edu·
cation or administration. Othlr allied health dearee
acceptable with appropriate experience. Knowledge
of patient education and chronic disease required.
Knowledce of wutheastern O.hio required.'
APPLICATION DEADLINE: Credentials received no
later than Dacember 15, 1989 to Anita Dunfee, Hu·
111Jn Resources Administrator, Ohio UniYirsity Col·
leae of Osteopathic lledicine. Grosvenor West 005,
Athens, Ohio, 45701.

BLACKBURN
REALTY

992·5114

ALBANY. OHIO: At Jet. of S.A. 60 and 143.
Open 7 Deys 10 A.M.-7 P.M .

8

'RMir..n_.t pt.n

a...

-.2cai......,emt. .,.
At. 2 Harth, 1'1. P-nt, iiY,
lum'od1 _ f35D'IIIo. 114-

Reil i&lt;Jis

33 tfarms for sale

,....

•&amp;w.ty Bonus

111c. -

41 Houses for Rent

3br, 1 112 . bath, 11v1na room,
modlm klclwi, 2lhl2ll l'ltmllf

-

Will.
1 liZ mllll l1oln
lob 1 - Fll'lll, CIU 304-344-

AND I WANT... - Four-year-old LaNae Jackson, Gallipolis
Ferry, tells Saala her Chrlslmas list Friday evenlnif In Sania's
workshlp, located In the former Point Service Store on Main St., In
Point Pleasant. (Tirnes.Sentlnel photo by ·Margaret Caldwell).

"Cornp•hiw• P•v Sdaetllle

"Iii" On 8onu•

on or wtth • - ta Rt. 110 mlill W11t of - . oH Rt.

1 • Holly Parfl. 14xiD
wtt'h ~- CIII ' A,..... at I·

-:::::::::;==:::::::;

304-112-2411 •oV!I.,._

Acreage

Help Wanted

We proviOI :
"1 Y•• Round Wotll

Rell Eltata
Ylllntecl

hill ocro,

11

4-...unbulnoplllll,~
h Ilumllhlol, lilt pod, I"'
-104 4111117.
PROFESSIONAL DRIVERS
_
.....
1
11r
~~
Jotr1 •ce,....,.ny wouc.n Mp1nd
..
ColUJF, _....
•
on! H.ril Truc:liing Cotnp~v il
fli'8DIIOI. Hannift ,.,_
one on , .. n~1 and fa1•1t
1
Df.trw. .11421111' 11..-.
growtngcempMiM inttwinclit1417.
....

SOUTH

.AKJ

Footor'olllalolll Parlt, 114441-1Zbt, tralllt tlncl!yanl, IIIII at ..
''"'· 114 .,.....

, .......... 304471- 114-7450.

5-10 -

Fa&lt; 1111 IIY Qwnw, 3 otory A·
Orwpllct, corpot

~&amp;

oorpli,

city Ocl!iootl,l14-241-t371.

tramed,

. O.L

.........

bMutm1 rlvw " . ., KaMup.

1

lricli :lbr, 2 both, 2100 ...... -

+tsu
+uz

Zbr, •\~ ~I'll-,

Fumlohid, porch,
.--~=====::;::::::::::::::::::::::~::==::.----~ ,_,
-ion. -

-n.. . ,

you tile caur... to Cln'f 0U1

your corMelloiw end IICIII•..

•· I

S~'l?i'-V\I.r'tl:!lS

c:ommerc...

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplact_y

.AICSU

2 a 3 br, In Portor ,,., yo11 pay
.,.llltr' depoah, 114 111 .. 04.

pump, 114-441-7412.yard, out

3 br., utility, ...... ~~- 2
mlill Well of -.o, oil Rt.
31.11-1351.
4 bld.-n, z both with • • ltiCf
8Pfi!'l' lo help per
tM ~~· DcwrMWn NeW
IHft«- til tlni
of-. 114-IIZ7411.

strengths.

ARIES (_... 21·April 11) Gi\18 as
mUCh attention as possible to a joint
venture that can be meaningful to you In
material ways. Thill could be your moot
beneficial area today.
TAURUS (Aprllz.MQ 20) A solution
to an important - - 1 that con-

,,.,, . ·

31 Homes for Sale
..........,4-ZIWml.

LONDON (UPI) - British
Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher returned home Satur·
day following a four hour meet·
lng with President Bush that
found the two leaders In "very
close accord" on developments
In Eastern Europe and· other
Issues.
Press secretary Mar Un Fltz·
wa(fr said Friday the two
leaders "had frank and subs tan·
live discussions" that focused
mainly on the sweeping changes
In Communist-controlled Eastern Europe.
The latest development there
- the resignation of the Czech
Communist Party Politburo was reported to the two leaders
as they ended their meeting at
the secluded, snow-brushed
Camp David presidential retreat
In the Catoctin Mountains
northwesl'of Washington,

'

RPal E:slalc

U7U ·

tQI02
.QIOS

1.'

-sei!Vn!:la ott3!:1e
3SII!V30
!:130N31
3sonws
3Sn!:l3d
N008tfB
3!\tfl:JO
S131W'I!:ICIS
SlliiMSNY

. :ser~n1:1~ 01131:18 pue su100
jO I!Sodep JO:I.. 'peppa 114S
IUno;l:ll! Aw PBI!PBJO J&amp;lleJ
. 941 U94M ·~U'IIQ 941 ,01 11&gt;181
01 S9!UU&amp;d Pi04 OJ JaddeJM
peBJQ ~dwe ue pesn P84 1

I00-441-144li.

18

EAST

I t•

V!NIIINO ROUTE

•

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•Ju

.

':! ~ .

tAU4

WI!8T

•

No. 3 berow.

r r r r r r r r r 1· r.1

•=~

• Q 10 7 2

+KQJ1084

Complete the chuckle quoted
by IIIHog ;. the ml.,log w 0,ds

you davelop from step

+t7

good chances of being fulfilled in the
year ahead. What you'll be able to gel

The Gallipolis Developmental Center~ a lictnlld
ICF/IIR facility, servi~ JOG pe110n1 with IHRtll
retardation and/or tltvelopllltntal disabilities, cur·
rently has an openinc for LlfiCIII&amp;I Dtvelop-1
Specialist. Responsibilities include fonul 1nd in·
formaltestinc. formulation of specific speech/tan·
auaae/communiCJtion objectives. individual and
S111Jll&amp;roup therapies. Must be able to be a proac·
· live member of the interdisciplinary proe~ss. Must
meet eduCJtional requirements for CJrtifiCJte of
clinical competence and be in thl process of certifi·
cation.
Gallipolis Developmental Center is located in
Southeast Ohio (alone the Ohio River) within one
hour drive of two 111Jjor universities. Excellent be·
nefit packaae/annual salary $22.672-$28,350.
Contact: Hui11Jn Resources Departm1nt. Gallipolis
Developmental Center, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 , Tete·
phone (614)-446-1642).
·
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION/ EEO

" MA /.OD do• not discriminate in provision of . .~
vicea or employment beciU H of handicap, race, color,
creed, natiolllll origin, ux. age, or ano..try ."

1 bedr00111

Secret material desires you've been
harboring for quite some time have

Help Wanted

.. BRICK HOllE UNDER $50.000! WE HAVE
ONE on LeGrandewrth a full basement (par·
tially linishedl. carport,central air and much
more. Call lor appointment.

WOU(O YOU LIKE TO OWN AMINI FARM?
-Now you can. Lovely 3.72 acres offer ap·
pie trees, cherry trees, insulated workshop,
24x26 barn dh loft, .cellar house, 12121
garage. Very nice home with some outstand·
ing features, LR, FR. (!(luipped kitchen, cent.
air. Call lor more details.

IIAKE THIS YOUR CHANGE Of ADDRESS!
- Attractive home just minutes lrom town
offers 1368 sq. H., 3 8Rs, 2 baths, eat·in
kdchen, dinette, lamiiy room, living room,
llllndry, cathedral ceilings, lenced yard.

AREAL CHARliER- 1.87 acres m/1, and
an attractive country style home just a couple of miles !rom HMC on Rt. 35. Features in·
elude 3 or 4 BRs, bath, LR, kitchen, OR and
FR. fireplace, gas heat, 2 car garage.

VIllAGE OF RIO GRANDE - 6 room hOme
and .7666 ac11, m/1. Features include LR.
m. kdchen, laundry nn., gas heat, vinyl Std·
in~

ATT1ACTIV£ OLDER HOllE IN THURIIAN
- $34,000 - 1650 sq. ft. home offers 4
BRs. LR, k~chen. bath, 2 Fl's, unattached
prage. satetl~e dish, vinyl siding,

30.312 ACRS. TAYLOI ROAD -This smell
larm also has a 1966 Vind.ale 12•60 mobile
home, small barn. Green Elementary School.

LOTS OF POTENTIAL - 67.496 acres m/1
on CrDUst-Becli Rd., nice wooded bu'i ldin g
sites, rural w1ter IVIIillbie.
·

36.5 ACRES 11/L. CLAY TWP. - Frontare
on friencly Ridge Rd. Old house on land.
$18,000.

UU&amp; ACRES. 1/l. Sedion 17 &amp; 18 Hun·
ti.n&amp;ton Twp. Frort111e on Jackson Rd. and
Little Rmoon Creel

Gn AWAY FROII THE HECTIC CITYLlVING
-Very nice home located inCountry Atr Es·
tales offers 3 BRs. bath, eat·tn kitchen.ltvtng
room, family room. gas heat/cent. air. KC
school distnct.
SPLENOID HOllE AND 13.37 ACRES . MIL
- Spacious ranch style home features 3-4
BRs, 2 baths, equipped ktlchen. FR. OR, LR.
fireplace, carpet. heat pumpplu swood. cen·
trai heating system. air cond .. 20x45 pool.
unattached garage. ThiS could be ;ust the
one lor you il you want pnvacy and space.
4.9 ACRES 11/L, JUST AT THE EDGE Of
TOWN, BEAUTIFUL VIEW - 1260 sq. ft.
home offers krtchen. living room, 3BRs;FR.
2fireplaces, attached garage, workshop and
a 12x60 mobile home that would be tdeal for
mom or rental. Call lor mo1e delatls.
CAPE COO STYLE HOllE at the edge oft own
$28,900. 3 BRs, bath, LR . litchen. Owner
may help wrth financtng to qualified buyer,
2.4 ACRE TRACT - COIIIIERCIAL SITELocated on Upper Rt. 7across from the new
shllllping center.
$15,000 - 19.143 acm m/1. Approx. 1\
mile from city iim•ts. All ultltties av11t able.

514 Second Avenue! GallipoUs, Ohio 45631

�T11111

Ohio- Point PI8Mint,

Se!Winel

w. v•.

Anllquel

tor-.-

-;:t:.l"'= :::
-

IUUIIIIG- SUPPLIES - IUYOUTS
CLOSEOUTS - SECONDS

MerchlndiM

MerchlnciiM

29

I
.,.... "t .,. . . . .
_ . , ..II'S ta . •-~

-=1 I
..
,.
..
r
...
-...... a,, '..,......,.,.

BULK CANDY

Coal &amp; Wood Heaters
Sl 00 to S250
Sevl!'al

brands

to

chooN frollt:
Warm Momlng,

ICing,

A.W.y,
Sllburban,

:r·O·HHt

C

Wonder,

Buckeye.

lll"ttM . . . . ,_ ...., ....
MIMI. Cll iNI In ILIII..o3p.M.

=Jr

~~--·

NUTS

CASHEW PIECES .................... . •3.99
R&amp;S SPANISH PEANUTS ......... '2.62
R&amp;S SUNFLOWER SEEDS ....... . '2.32
PECAN PIECES .......... .... ........ .. '4.26
RAW SPANISH PEANUTS .. ....... '2.34
, . CLUB MIX .. .. .. ...... .................... '3. 76
R&amp;S PEANUTS ............... .... ...... '2.20
R. &amp; UNS~LTED PEANUTS .... ... '2.20
WALNUTS (Helve• &amp; Piece a) ..... . '4.26
RAW PEANUTS .... .. .................. '2.40

lb.
lb.

Ohio Valley Bulk Foods

-.IWI. old,-·,_,

C9fner lot. 4 bed&lt;ooms. k~ch011,
din. rm. comb., .lulv c•~ed.
ill$ heat, cent. Blr, arurn.Sidin&amp;
utilny btd.J. comfortable
roomy. Vou "' gol to see lhs

.......... m .,_.,.ot..

WANT THE lEST- PE.ICH FOI.Iti).--CIIl9- IEAUTIFULIIICIIIOIE
- 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, W
ving room. difl iflg room, blr. ~il~tien, sewinK
room. lyIIe~~ tra n•ce bisem!nt ful ycarpeted. well 1nsulated, almost ""· IP·
pl.ancts, &amp;¥ age. 5.75 acres. ext11 wel ~built sheer luxury, 001 oftown owner

55

sa1d show 11 and seH•· C111 me Jlld wt'll make your dream come true. In only
tf1e low 60's.

. - . brlcll, ....
.... daucJo WJt&gt;.
,-.., h1ollnloto,
or-,
OH C:OU l1o!-

Wood """ 1or " " ' ·" ··

Ml DDlEPDIT OllllliOWAY - IESIBU' INTOIII- Vllf AFFOIDAII.I
- 2 or 3 bedroorru, liYma room, d1nmg room. kitchen, den. I lk ba1hs, bae·
ment, vinyl sidin&amp; Pllra large lot, ptN'acy fence, close tQ aty park 'real

vatua~e

property, Grell opporturity in the low 30's.

WEEDS Af.lllll'- S.l . 124- 2 II. IEYDIO UCIIE _: 4 bedroo,.,
ba~h.

992-6910

ijving room. completely remocteled dinina room and kitchen, new fur-

me. it's ontv •n the mid 40's. 4ih ICres of pure pl--.

FMdSI-

"'"'1•~1''

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)\

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good.Jmii.IIWIN27t.

1111 Iuick llagaJ 2 tlpotl
~. Ulco now. Fully oqulpo
..... vt. f:nii.I14-IIZ-171t.
1111 Chonft• - ·· ""
ona. NGOnog. l14-2oii-IOI1 .

1111
Oldo
IOodod,
ou.- -- - ......
Vou wUI- 11o·
'-•Mdl 12.710. .,......_

-k

1711 ... . _.......
1114

!!Mol u-. v...

oulo, a~.tii; P'N, 72,000 14,100. 304-171-7101.

·

NEW liSTING KNOCKS AT YOUR
DOOR- Beaul~ul chalet home neslled in a pine
tree and hardwood lorest. 5.9 acres ol .wooded
serenity provide plenty of fli'IVacy. Wilh fealures •
hke sunken hvtng room wilh cathedral ceiling and
loft overlook. large w1ndows so lhe view doesn't
escape·when you're Inside, and large deck. There
are a lot. of amenilies to enjoy. 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, 2ftreplaces, full basement Priced to sell at
$57,900.
ll214

liSTING ON LeGRANDE - Very nice and well
kept 3 bedroom home in pleasant neighborhood.
Will' make an excellenl buy for someone. Be the
lirsllo see this charming home which has aliving
room, nice eat·in kitChen, calhe&lt;lral ceilings and
more.. Priced at $45,900.
8212

BRAND NEW CONSTRUCTION - located on Rt.
160, lhis home is waiting lor its lirslowners. Large
masler bedroom w~h bath. large gteal room in·
eludes family room. dining area and eal·in kitchen
wrth cherry cabinets. Home has 3 bedrooms, 2
balhs, 2 car garage and heal pump. 100.300 lot.
For $59,900, you can't aflord not to look. ll220

·-

old malo,

......,-lngloro

-

DN....

1 112 ,....

••tnd

old. llol-

Cllltwy

KIIIMI.

"""

.....

. . . . . 114 141 3114 .... , 7

- . . .. f t - ..........
, .,
•••polna .......... ~
Allo.,..,
'P

....
_____ .,..

FREE CANDY

The nation's \arQB$1
referral networting srstem

CHRISTMAS AUCTION

we can sell your present home

USA Tools, Furniture, Toys, Bisque. Lamps

t

h

Glassw1re. Bicycles, Remote Control Toys,'
Somethina for Everyone.

Col- 2:00 ....... - 1111.-WY.

.. Splc8 for Rent

Ells

Cash
Positive I.D.
MARLIN WEDEMEYER. AUCTIONEER
614-245-5152
llol Rts)IOnsiblt for Accidents or loss of Property
Now boollin&amp; auctions for the winter at Patriot Auction
Barn I IS IDE. Thtbarn has hmina. sntina. we can handla
any·type of auction.
lie. and Bondtd in Sills of Ohio

· - omu.
-

..........

--7411.

AGRACON, INC.
LIQUIDATION AUCTION
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1989
9:00A.M.
Located at Kanaup, Ohio (Gallipolis)
2 Miles North of Bridge on Rt. 7

INDUSTRIAL .;..... FARM EQUIPMENT
TRUCKS - MISCELLANEOUS
INDUSTRIAL: r~t Anis 70 doze-, ike new; Case 5808
backhoe; 1£. HD3 track loader. JD 450 doze- with winch.
6 way blade, mps; Bob Cat klader. ABG 8 ton aspha~ roller
1
Galion IUader. JD 3 axle trailer; 25 lon low drag.
TRACTORS: JD 3020 DSL. traclor JD 30 I DSL. indusl·
nal tractor with side mounted rotary mower; JD 4020
OSL. Traclor, narrow front; MF 135 tractor with loader·
Farmall M wilh 2372 mounted 2 row corn picker. '
FARM EQUIPMENT: JD Model 1240 4 row corn plan·
ter; IH Model 400 4 row air olanter; JD Model 300 2
row corn picker; MF Model 725 7' mower conditioner;
IH Model 990 9' mower conditioner; NH Model 679
tandem axle manure spreader; JD tank spreader; 13'.
transport disc; JD. 3 pt. rake ; Herd lime spreader; JD
Modei16A grass chopper; Shaver T-10 post driver; NH
3 pt. mower: JD side mower; post hole digger; cultiva·
tors; grav1ty bed with running gears; JD choppers for
parts; 5' scraper; potato plows; equipment tires and
rims; sub soilers; JD 3020 heat houser.
TRUCKS: 1982 Ford 700 wrth 24' Jerr Dan rollback bed.
less than 50,000 miles on new Cat 3208 diesel engine;
1982 Ford F·350 with Schwall 14' rollback bed; 1986
Toyota with 9' utility bed, dual wheels, A.C.• AM &amp; FM cas·
sette, appmxinately 23,000 miles; 1987 Toyota pickup A.
C. AM &amp;. FM rlllio; 1987 Toyota 4X4, approximately
40.000 m1les; 1982 Datson pickup, diesel, 5 speed; 1976
GMC 21on, klng wheel base; 1976 White rollltaclor Cum·
m1ns diesel; 1974 Ford F·350 witli dump bed, cilttle'racks;
1968 Chevy dump trudl with 10' bed, 5X2; 1968 Chevy 2
lon rollack, 22' bed , 5X2; 191!2 GMC 'A ton pick up· 1980
Chevy 'A ton pickup, aliomatic; 1979 Jlllp Cherokee approximately 46,000 miles; 1980 Datsun 210 SErlan; l972
VW 2 door sedan; 1970 Maverick, automatic; 1968 W/2
door SErlan; 1968 Ford f·250, new engine; 19751nterna·
tiona! single aide dump truck, 8' bed, new engine; 40' nat
trller.

'.1erchand1se

MISCELLAIIEOUS: 5 wheel commuter cart; numerous
. lawn traclo~ and mowers; garden tillers; lront blades;
weed eaters; wheel weights; air compressors; shop
tools; equipment parts; chain saws; log splitterS; lawn
baggers for JD and Toro; stanchions; 3 wood burning
stoves: numerous desks: office equipment; vacuum
pumps; plus other items not listed .
SALE CONDUCTED BY WIIITER AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEER: EDWIN WIIITER
Rt. 1, Mill.od,
PlloM 304-273-3447
Ue~~slll 111d Bonded in thl Stile of Ofllo. Licl!lsell1116
LUIICH AVAILABLE
IOTE: We ~"' 11-. r:o-isalaelll -, Jl11 H11tchln1011
IIIIa . . . . Inc. to 1111 llatlll i t - at )HIIIIIc nctlo1.
T••• far PIJIItnlll'tiS follows: Out to lil)uidlllaJIII
1111111. Alraco1, Inc. willaccapt 110 ,._1 or CIIIIJtiiiY

IJIInll ..... 1M. Cooitl.
• • •14111
PICICINIII'UIINn\1111
1J2 ...
II, WY,

wv

.il• .... ";

: •71-:.:11-=7211::·-- - - - -

:.:.
':.J•::-.:1= ~. . .";..=&amp;.good ......
runo

WELLSTON, OHIO

Will
...11 ........
lor1
Chcl&amp;bhM.
1110.
3140
........ on.ri:GGp.IO.

-

REFNET

--1-

1111 good
Dodao
• -·
.....
..._Omnt.
....447-2111.
1111 T·lllnl, good _..., low
ml'-11, MW two tone pillnt, »&amp;o

*•

$35.00 w/Moll• G•i*

A.K.C. lllnlol... lcltnouzoro. I

......7407.

Santa Claus Will Be At The Auction Bam
Friday, December 1, 1989 at 7:00 P.M.

......... lid. Plitt

t'l' ...... ,_, 114-MI-

- ·

1m01de- 1111 CO- z.al, 101 V-1 tl'OO.
II.._
4U4.
"
•uo Wlllt out'*"-,
IM, PW. T-T- ...,._
1171 T - Plcll...,, lor oolo, DIS.
1100. ,, 4441 Jilt.
1111 Fonl . _ G.T. I ...... 4

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HI!Mtayon lllllono. C"- oiUd

_lor ____ _

'

46"x76"

Com

.

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

ahowahowoluo--.ar•

From Glllipolis. take Rt. 141. tum left onto Rt. 775,
tum ri&amp;ht onto Patriot Road. watch lor siens.

I

... -= .;r,~

1111 Penl Ocln:n:l,e U.DDD MUte.

-body- ·'-r""'"'
--

-

..

..-

Rooms

01.1-~.i
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Hay &amp; Gl'lln

... ·
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4.11
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lieU.hiNn
12.21U..
,......._
plllbti&amp;ICC
........ 114 ...... ·~

1'1, N , . , . • - 1m
-';)IlL 4114,
410

lt'L N;

PENNS WAREHOUSE

814·3B4-3646

8anlor Calllo I "'"·

Fumllhed

~All

$25.00

.....

.

14

PRE-HUNT STEEL INSULATED DOORS
Pa111l or Floosh 1-G,..
$59.95 ea.
PRE-HUNG WOOD 01 HARDBOARD INTERIOR
DOORS Finitholl or Unllnishod.
$29.95 ea.
UnRIOR OAK &amp; MAHOGANY DOORS
Panel &amp; loaded Glau
$129.95 to $119.95
PINE UNFINISHED COLONll (ASING
7' PC .
·
~ $1.99 - h
MAHOGANY (FJ) 7 ' pc.
Sf.DO -h
OY£1 4,000 PIECES OF PANEUNG
Wood and M11onite
Paints. Florala, Wood Grain, Rock, Birch,
Scenic Patterns.
LOW NICE 159.95 UP
Sfa" INSULATED GLASS PANELS
32" x76"

Pets for Salt

56

71 Autoe for Sale
fi,IOO.

(.].,',.,

...

~

JMNI21.

Transpor1a110n

4-..

1-CII)*Le .... Ccse:lll

112110.

11!70 -

:=,..-.. ..., fi.OO. -

124x72-149.95)
142x72-169.95)

·

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45

lkllldlng
Supplln

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1. . 'J;M

- 1011. Dolwly
....
t' ...
.,......

I~THTUI OHI. Y!St•ll Uiloo .....•l
(PVC) White or Color
$59.95
lliNIIINUM INSULATED WINDOWS
White or Brown

124x36-$29.95)
(36x60-f49 .96)
(42x60-f49 .95)

Hey &amp; Gl'lln

....a-IU7w

$169.95 ea.

nace, new SlteiM
e, new steet P'llf. foo mi.ICh to list. 'r'ou'.e ~to'" Call

. :;1Ill'. twn.
L 11t-ID04IJII. •In
Otto

-· 2

_

All lAC! lVI COUIIRY HOU - LONG IOTTDI- POST OF ACE lOAD4 bedrooms, llh blths, INm1 room, d1mn1 room. su nroom. kitchen, fu l basement. carpeted. beMJhlulv•ew of Ohio River, Jih aCJes, ~entw ol pden area,
fruit trees, old long Bahom Scht-ol on PJOper!y lot Lon cl storage. You've got
.to see it to believe •L Gful, ereat buy in the mid 40's.

W• Ac,.t

inventory today!

Public Sale
6 Auction

lb.
lb.
lb.

Trade.
Stop and choose
from our large

114 •••

One. You won't believe in onfy
beheva ~e bur m .klw
the low 30's.
.
,1
GRIAI HOlE 011 U . 14! - 10 IIIUIES Fla. P-01- 3 bed&lt;oom
ranch style. 2 baths, livlliJ room. klchen, utdty rODm, tirerNcf • / insert,
large 2 ear p rase (heate~ . pond. woods, pd hunting lf'ld filhin&amp;. mmeral
rights, Ll acres. I year warranted home. This homewn buil d lhesite. Bttu·
tifu l locat•on. Let me show you - yoo'l love it. Only in ttle 60's.

lb.
lb.

WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS

a ": •••·

MilCH Ill( HOlE
IIDOLEPOIT - Pork St. -

lb.
lb.
lb.

We Buy, Sell or

Pcomeroy

a..,
a•.

WHIII'IIIITAI. DITIC'TORS

CANDY CLASSES STAITJIIG EVElY
n!ESD&amp;Y AliD WIDIIESDA Y UIIITIL
CHIISTMAS - 11 A.M.-4 P...

b
.a
·

lor 114 IOOIIUOII,-

Ron :"aH1:n1-...

WHITE CHOC. PRETZELS .......... '4.26 lb.
BONBONS ....... .... ...... .......... .... •3.761b.
SMALL PEANUT CUPS ............. '4.261b.
CHOC. COVERED PRETZELS .... '3.76 lb.
CHOC. COVERED CHERRIES ... 0 4.110 lb.
PEPPERMINT CRUNCH ... ......... '3.76 lb.

514 EAST MAIN

.;..7;1~AUtol;;;;;:;fo;r~S;•;;I'~;I 71 Autc» for Bile
.
llof,.,_,.,_
gsn ......
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....._ •
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:::.:•:::•::::-==-==

14

151 Finn Equipment

GA. PAINliD -.o METAL IIOOfiNG &amp; SIDING

White I C...,.

HAND DIPPED CANDY

USED I IECONDmONED

151 Film Equipment

38" wide 18'·t9.911) 110'-112.96)
112'-114.911) 114'-117.911) 1111'·120.95).
I PC. fiiERGI.ASS TUI &amp; SHOWEIS

SANTA MIX ......... .. ...... :............ '1 .75 lb.
CREME DROPS ......... ..... , ......... '2.80 lb.
BRIDGE MIX .... .......... .............. '2.86 lb.
ORANGE SUCES .. ..... : ............. . '1 .20 lb.
VANILLA CLUSTERS .......... ....... '3.96 lb.

Sunday Tma1 Sentinel- P-as D-6

Ohio- Point Pleannt, W. Ve.

54 Mlsc:elllneous

54 Mlsc:eiiiii80UI

=

November 26, 1989

November 26, 1989

a )lin:••• •st blslltllll far • ., of ... "'
- - - -lltparMIIId. Tllan•x••or e~opmln•
II tllis 1111111'. EvtrytlliiiJWMI 1111 " 1 1111111 Wbtrtl$
Jlilll .. tllllllltiiS Writtn or h!lllllld. Stlt111M11 mille
chcU.

Cllll. Clltlllllll clllel ar dlltd liNk lilt• of cndlt atatiiJ

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I

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IIIIJ of 1111 Will IIIII priCidlnCI 0111' lllf IIIII Ill wrltttn

••tis..ts. Lolllltn&amp; lnlctlll' •II lollllwa c1oct will bt
Hlllllllt.

REDUCED! OWNER WANTS THIS PROPERTY
SOLD IIIIIEDIATELY! ONLY $26,000.00.2 Bed·
room frame home silualed in lhe village of Rio
Grande. Natural gas heat, full basement. large
lawn. Call today '
H2796

Flail Tank, 2411 . - . - a....
Point: ..... .. .....714013. 10
Md 10 gal

:::. :r,.ur.m•

-~... Allltr- All

..

....... l'ood -~.

w•.CIIIfl14 uem1 .

• lOOKING
i ranch style
home includes 21? acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs.
. krtchen eQuflloecf wah range and refrigerator.
Full basement. attached garage. Heal pump/cen·
tral air, rural water, private treed sellin~ Priced to
sell!
·
82795

and we can put you in louch wilh
one of approximately 15,000 real
eslate ollicelocalionS lhroughout
the United States. qualified to help
you find the right hOme.

·-11,

SIIIIJu'o AKC IYIIIIIIII!t. Doc. 11,

will . hold
lor " " " " ' bNII!Jiul - , V I I
.-od3-lo0,1alllll

.,..., ibe, 114-:lla 1111 bot·

ween1Lm.·7p.m.

ti7

I

Mualcll

Instruments
htcllvldlllll
~
-..on.,

NEW liSTING - CHILD IN SCHOOL? Th~ 'moiJie
home wth 2 ad!Milns makes a comfortable home
localed on 'h aae ~ m/llt has hll3or 4bedroorr~&gt;,
1\\ balhs, more closets than usual. large scree·
ned·in fronl porch. Nice k1lchen wrth buift·in din·
10g area, living room, small family room or den,
plus ulilily bu~di ng rural water and smooth yard.
Gallipolis schools. Centenary area. let usshow it
lo you.
#2788

NATURrS COLORS SURIQUND THIS STOllE
TRIIIIED CHALET - CHAROl.AIS lAKE - loft
wrth patio doors leading loa l•gedeck overlook·
ing Charohlis Hills lake Gracious erealtoom lealuring cathedral ceiling floor·lo-ceilingslone lireplace, master bedroom wrth connecting bath, efficiently designed krtchen, recrealion room, walnul
lrim throufihout, central vacuum, attached 111·
age, plus 2 car unattached garage. All this
srtuated on approximalely 2.44 acres, profession·
aiiy ·landscaped. Don't miss seeing il TODAY'
.
.
ll2786

NEW liSTING! SIALL FARII FOI THE WOIKING
FAIILY- Wrth modern six room~ 3 bedt11ms,
1\&gt; balhs, basement. FA furnace and rural water.
Barn is in · good condition. Apfll'ox. 22 acres of
land, f•m pond, pasture land is fenced. Plus,
thiee room collage, addrtional unattached block
RaraRe 32'x48' dh two overhead doors. one is
16' in height. Priced only mlhe$50's. Call today'

.

YOU

you

r .Jffn

'"' I

!.'t

1

S'OCh

6.1 Fsnn Equipment
1 ,_ ldoo,
...-371-2117.

oil, good.
1271. 4 lncll plimp, ~~~~:':!

PIDP!!OR~Ia.
11200.wnl
w or ~ -··
lor
_, duty,
b

.Calnleel ......,

114 21tl03'.

446-6624
II•M fltWitfl~
DPf'OtiiiUflllt

Merchllndlsa

446-8147

VACANT ACREAGE! -Over 8 aaes. Site cleared
for house or mobile home. Road frontage alongSR
7. Wooded, rural waler availabla View of river.
#276,3

SO Different
New &amp; Used
Wood &amp; Coal

Stoves,
Furnoces .,
Inserts

$33,500.00 PRIVATE!- Vinyl sided ranch, nice
approx. I acre lawn. Very mce 24'x24' two car ·
garage. Call for more information.
ll2714

CABIN IN THE·WOODS! - 3 bedrooms, unfin·
ished bath, backporch which opens up to beauly
oflhe forest lands. Cabin insulated, wired for elec·
lricity, rural water ava~able. locale&lt;l on 'P.P.rox. ~
acres land. Good buy at $7,500.00. If inlerested,
you better call now!
12719

c-olldated,
Dutch West

Appalachian
Wood Stoves

#2771

691-6121
CARPIIIIII, OHIO
OFF n. 11. 1.u

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS! FARM - Apptox. 101
aaes, newer 3 bedroom ranch , l'h·balhs, lamily
room. formal dining ate a, storage building barn,
40'x56' approx. building wrth concrete floor.
Above·ground pool. salellite dish and gas well all
indoded with sale. Call today for more deta1ls.
. #2769

AN UIYESTIIENT THAT Will PAY OFF EVERY
IOIITHI when you own on~ trailer alreadr renled,
anolher tr1iler space rl!ldy for hookups plusalwo
car garage. Rural water. All localed on .98 of an
acre.
12785
POSSI8LE LOAN ASSUIPTIONI 2 sl.{,y home in
nice nei&amp;)lbolhood. Mom will save countless sleps
wrth this cozy breakiiSI nook. 3 bedrooms. lormal
dininJ Musl see lo appreciale.
~2782

l.AIIDI WID! LANDI Approx. 42 acres more or
less. Rural wller. Call lor more delails. N2n5

I

t •

PRICE REOUCED ON 3 BEDRII. HOlE w~h 1I? acres,
located w~hin Vinton Village. Was $25,000. NOW $22,500!
~ASONRY BlDG. Commercial location. 2 slory, along 3rd .
Ave .. GallipOliS. (Ask for Ru ssell!
NEW
.•• ;olt G: 10 aaes, Perry Twp. Some limber. Buy now
for $10.000.

,_N

•

1973- 12'·x50' -2 bedrm. mobile home, w~h rear declt.
Call Allen Wood for more info.

118 ACRES LOCATED IN GREEN TWP .. Graham School Rd.
Super view! $44,000.
PROPERlY IN PORTER - Grocery slore. 3 bedrm. home, 5
bedrm. home. Call for more information.
DOWNTOWNINVESTIIENT PROPERTY: Brick structure w~h
3 rental apartments. Also, adjacent metal storage/ulil~y
bid~ Est gross renlal income. $820 per mo. All priced for
$65,000.

2LOTS WITHIN GREEN ACRE$ SID. Oneis84'd48' andlhe
other 75'1148'. Purchase erther for $5,500.00.

..........m-

D. C. Metal Soles. Inc.
ConnMbu~lnc. 47119
SpeciMizlng In Pole

.

• DMignld 10

your

•
. Anyoln.
'cHOICI OF 10 COLORS
· FREE EmMATE on
patt blclgo. and ...,.._

, dollo. levohundt...
evan 1hau•n• of
doll OIL
local Iaiii ... _ ,.....
DONNA CRIIENIERY
E.I.R .. law 111
Golllpollo. Ohio 41131

PH. 61
•

Situaled along Alrica Road. Price was $25,000 Quick sale.
Price $21,500.00.

WE HAVE BULDING lOTS in Rodney Village II and Mills
Village. Call for more information.

COIFORT THAT YOU CAN AFFORD! - localed
in lhe Kyger Creek school dislrict. 3 bedroom low
mamlenance ranch, I ~ baths, lamily room, full
linishe&lt;l basement! lormal dining area, carport.
.
$40's. lnvesligate oday 1
82781

"liDS 1.0¥£" to play where lhlll' don'ldisturblhe
neipbors. 2\1 1cre lotapprox. w~h 2 car &amp;•age,
lar11 enou&amp;h for uti~ies such IS aarden,lawn and'
reaealional vehide. Making this more appealing
~ a remodeled 2 or 3 bedroom ranch style home.
Recently remodeled. laclted on bl.ulop rold.
Glllipolts schools. Please call for more inlormalion.
H2n6

3 BEDRII. HOllE WITH CARPORT - Approx. 1.4 acre.

NEW liSTING: 6.5 acres wrth 4 rm. house wrthin lhe crty of
Gallipolis. Buy now for $30,000.

Ashley, lrunco,

~ ACR.ES - More or less. localed in Springfield
Townshtp.

0

PRICE REOUCED: 1 acre w~h older mobile home, counly
water. no septic system, located along Rt. 160 near North
Gallia school. Price: $13,000.

REALTOR'

VACART LAIID! APPROX. 18 ACRES - Some is
cleared, but most is forest type land. Rural waler
and electric available. Green Township. Develop
into lots or as you wish. Priced al $12,000.
SHOULD MOVE FAST!
82790

~2758

ONE OF GAlliA COUIITY'S BEST LOCATED
FARIS- Close lo Gallipolis, Addison and Porter.
236 acre farm. Frontage along four roads, excel·
lenl lor subdividing or just farmin&amp; Remodeled 3.
or 4 bedtoom vinyl siding home, 2 large b•ns.
machinery sheds, tie house, 57'1120' Morton melal buildin&amp; rural water. 5 ponds, 2 ptoduction
gas wells. Plus much more. Call today for more de·
tils!
82nB

IB

$4,000.00- VACANT lOT- Wouldmake an ex·
celleol homesrte, lays very well, rural waler and
electric available'
#2773

SET"TING- Seven room brick
home wrth 21? balhs. Apartmenl bu~dinR used for
caring for efderly and handicapped people. large
· modern barn used as feeder pig business. loca·
led in Guyan Township. Approx. 50 acres ~vel til·
fable land surrounds farm bu~ding;. Call today for

40 ACRES, lORE OR lESS, of prime Ohio Ri~~~~~ 13:~
localed along St. Rt. 7 below dam. Ohio
J.bedrm. home, several oulbuildings. I lenant hoose.
$!20's.
.
ACREAGE!!! 41.9 wooded acres. s~ualed wrthtn Perry Twp.
· Estimaled limber value: SlO.OOO:oo. Deer country!! Buy now
for $18,800.00.

NEW liSTING: 2 bedrm. house w~h upstairs dorm., II?
baths. fully furnished, newly remodeled, new carpet. w~h
new range and refrig. Full basement Near Tycoon lake. Buy
now for $36,900.

379:2184

BEAUTIFU~ FARI

showin~

Stl. Ev.nlnga:

54 MlectllalliOUS

738 Second Ave.
JUI)Y DEWin, BROKER
MIIIILL CARTEl, IE~LTOI

pickor.

: Coni -~. John

For -

SOUTHERN HILLS REAL ESTATE, INC.

·G:r

com

\

.

DEWM

conslruclion, excellent nei,ghbD.rhlld
tn a convenient location. A handsome (looks
brand new) 3 bedroom ranch which includes a
large living room, lormal dining big kilchen wtth
lots of cabinets and buitt·ins. Handy ulility area
and 21ull balhs. You'll love the decoralingand Ihe
openness of I he ftoor plan. On Debby Drive and
priced lo sell quickly by an owner that's moving
oul of the area.
#112

Stlt;plifH.-

llooro, -

"We Appqc~•e Your An.tldMce"

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

ATMOSPHERE. CnY CONVENIENCE
Loc:ate&lt; jusl outside olthe city limits on Spruce
Street
this well mainlained maintenance free
home has '
Not hampered by close neighbors,
' yel close enough lo walk to town. this ranch lea·
lures 3 bedrooms, bath, living room with fireplace
and full basement. Perfect home for small family .
$49,900.
8225

luppiJ ~

-and
~

setting
highlights this
property in Perry Township. House includes 3
bedropms, large bath, living room and huge
krtchen. Viny l siding and new roof have been
added recently. 24x32 outbuilding included also.
lois of poten11al if you're looking for asmall farm.
More land possibly available. Soulhwestern
Schools.
1245

POSSIBLE lOAN ASSUMPTION- low fixed rale
on lhis 2 .story home may make buying tt easier
lhan you'd think w~h paymenls less and rent And
you'll enjoy lhe quiet counlry surroundings and
beauliful view. Srtualed on over 1 acre of ground
on Rt. 554. there's 3 bedroom~ living room, eal' in,
krtchen and bath. looking for your own place in
the counlry? Here it is al $34.900.
ll224

1.02 ACIE LOT along Kliclts Rd. near Cenlenary. $8,000.
APAITIEIIT FOR RENT- lsi ftoor, 2 bedrm.,liv. rm., "eat·
In krtchen". $225 per mo. plus util~ies. Oeposrt required.

Real Estate
Laws
Ohen Hole
"The Seller
Responsible ~l\7t)~~
For Full
Disclosure·

Let The
Seller Beware!!
A Rill E.- P1ol

$17,500 BUYS THIS TOWN HOUSE overlookmg
lhe cily. Nice, privale localion. Large enclosed
porch for relaxin~ Walk to school s, shopping etc.
~205

AFFORDABLE, ClOSE TO TOWN - localed
wrthin 6 miles ·of town, this 3 bedroom, 2 balh
home will fit most budgets. Price&lt;! al $32.500. il
includes living room, dining room. eat-in kilchen
and family room. Over 1.5 acre lol, 2 car garage.
Why pay renl when you can buy in slead' Call for
more information.
~215
OUTSIAIIDIIIG 17 ACRE HOME SITE - Green
Township, St. Rl. 588. Includes .flat crop land,
genlle rolling slopes and a woode&lt;l knoll for someone wanting privacy, counlry almosphere and
a king's view. Maybe you want some horses or
some oiMr animals. There's already plenly of
wildlife. ·
#124
RENTAL INCOME -let someone else makeyout
mortgage payments while you build eQuily. Good.
in·lown location tor rental; close to schools and
shopping 3-4 unils (dep.eodingon how ~· sused),
each nicely remodeled and conlaimng large bed·
room, nice bath, eat· in krtchen and living room.
$64,900.
ll237
SPRING VAllEY - O.U DRIVE - Rambling
ranch in one of Galli a. County's best subdiv~i.ons.
Convenient lo shopping hopsilals, elc. Home in·
eludes 3 bedrooms, 2 fuU balhs, large family or
rec. room. 2 fireplaces. eal·in krtchen and dining
area and large living room. Very nice house al
$69,900.
H242
ATTRACTIVE HOllE - Very sharp brick home in
Rt. 35 area. Immaculate care has been given to
this 4 bedroom home. Newer carpet, drapes and
decorating leave nothin&amp;.todo bul move in . lar~
living room. eal·in k~chn, dining room. ulthly
room and 2 balhs. 2 car garag~ heat pump wrth
central air. Very nice and convenient localed
close lo everylhing. low 70't
1239

21. 5 ACRES, NEAR NORTH GALLI ASCHOOL No structures.
located along Frank Rd. $18,900.
3 LOTS lOCATED NlAR TYCOON WE (50x115'). Can
purchase on lind conlrad. $2,000 down. 10% interest. pay
$129.69 for 6 yrs.

"CHARI"
"SEE" - Coll&gt;rlul
flower g•dens, stately evergreens. stone walls
peekinglhrough lhe ivy, large maples generously
shading a well kept lawn and an attracltve cov·
ered flagstone walkway creales the property set·
ling for lhts charming l 'h story loaded w~h char·
acter. Includes 3 bedrooms. formal dining. 1\?
baths, fireplace, family room, 3 c• garage. Excel·
lent location, very convenienl yet very pnvate.
$89,500.
#230

'anal

c:on-v.... - .
CALL US
When You Plan To

Buy or Sell
Real Estate
CAUGHT COUIITRYITIS7 - Here's your cure.
Take 3 bedroom home wilh maintenance free sid·
ing. Add 1 bath. living room and 2 car garage.
Throw 1n alarge II allot thai kids wil enjoy lo play
on for only $42,000.
~709

40 ACRES NEAR RACCOON CREEK - Several
nice bu1ldin gsiles overlooking Raccoon Creek val·
ley. lots of woods. 2 mobile home lois currenlly
being renled. 2 seplic systems. 1 county water
tap. Possibly some limber value. $29,900. H216
WANT AHOUSE &amp; SMAll ACREAGE? - Here It
Is!! - Hyou're tired olliving 15 feet ~om your
neighbors, you'll love this new vinyl sided 3 bed·
room ranch on 7.4 acres. Home also has 2 baths.
eat-in k~chen, uti lily room and 2car attached gar·
age. You can decorate inside home and landscape
oulside in your own slyle. Priced al $52.000.
#500
36 ACRES. M/l of VACANT lAND. Good road
fronlage for building home and smalllarm. Excel·
lenl area for hunting. Most lays well for hay and
paslure land. $21,000.
.
#319
CUTE AND COlY- Silualed on aprivale lot near
Clay School. Featuring 2 bedrooms. eal·in
kitchen, washer and dryer hookups and alumi·
num siding Call us today for an appoinlment
#238
.CHAROIAIS lAKE ESTATES- Arare opportunity
to design and complete the inlerior ol a home in
an excellent neighborhood at an affordable price.
The completed elterior of Ihis 11!, slory log home
ini:ludes a deck. 2 car garage And basement.
Buyer would own 11201h ol an 8 acre slocked
lake with full privileges. $75,000.
1140 I

HEAR liE OUT ON THIS ONE! - Read
you
come to the part about Summer Cabin on lhe
River' If you're one of lhose families thai would
like a nice 2 bedroom home wilh 2 exira bed·
rooms in lhe half slory, a really ntce, very attrac·
live living room a.nd a modern cuslom buill
kitchen, come on in11n addition you gel a second
2 bedtoom home whic~ you can sell or use as a
renlal. Walch oul now, I'm gotng to ZAP you wllh
the bonus! Tell me you like !o fish off your own
pier, planl a garden and grow all kinds of thing;,
have a horse or two for lhe kids. How aboul ever·
ylhmg above localed in lown on 2 aaes thai runs
lo lhe river and already has lhe cabin down at lhe
riverside! You can buy il all for $69,900. 1123
OLD TilE CHARI - There's not many homes
like this sl~l available. especially alan affordable
price. $29,900 buys this 1901 vintage house in
Kyger Creek .Schools. 3 bedrooms, large kitchen
(eal·in), dining room, livingroom and family room.
Home has had major improvements done, jusl
needs your fmishing touches. Callloday before
rt's gone!!
ll~ll
40's BUYERS, BEAT THIS!! NEW liSTING GREAT LOCATION!- Clean 3bedroom ranch 01~1
make you the perfect slarter or move-up home.
features Include largeliVing room. eal·in k1lchen,
handy ulilrty room and 1\? baths. I c• attached
garage. Situated on a fl at lol, ju sl righl for kids.
Nice neighborhood development thai' s not all
"scrunched" together. $49.900. Call Chris for
more information.
8700
145 ACRE FARM - $41,500 - This Walnut
Township farm Includes some. bottom land, over
100 acres of woods, a lobacco base and an old
time 2 story residence. Close lo Waterloo. Perfect
lor deer hunters or anyone else who wantsto get
away from it all.
#125
NEW HOME FOR SALE- AtiraiiVe country ran ch
w1lh spacious surroundin g;. 1 mile south of Rio
Grande on Rt. 325. Th1s 3 bedroom home offers
large living room·dining room combinalion, cus·
tom made cabinets, l'h baths, breezeway and I
car garage. Srtuated on a I acre lot wilh extra lot
available. $62,500.
ll215
ARE YOU TIRED OF PAYING YOUR HARD
EARNED DOllARS TO THE UTILITY COMPANY?
-Well check oullhis energy -m1ser home! 31arge
bedrooms, 3 full balhs, lovely oak kilchen wtl h
breakfast bar, master bedroom and balh on 1st
floor, huge living room. Oversized garage wrt h
door opener. Oualily built and ready fo r your m.
speclion. $55,900.
#808
COUNTRY SERENITY BUT CLOSE TO TOWN i lal corner building lot localed in Clearview Es·
tales. 6 miles south on Rt. 7. Countywaler avail a·
ble. Maintained public sewer s y~em . Nice view.
All of this lor only $6.600.
H600

.

LIST WITH GALLIA COUNTY'S LEADER

•

Wiseman Real Estate
(614) 446-3644

E. M. WIM.-n, .Brolctr
David Wiseman, 446-9666
B.J. Hairston, 446-4240

Tom Ruanll. 446-28715

Loretta McDade, 446-7729
Chris Ellceeaor, 448-3621

'

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lttl

Real E1t11te Generel

76

Auto Plrtl &amp;

For Solo -

PROFESSIONAl SERVKE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 388·8828
RUTH GOODY, REALTOR, 379-2828
DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR, 268·8261
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR, 448·1897
RUTH BARR, REALTOR, 448·0722
LINDA SKIDMORE, REALTOR, 379-2886

DEER HUNTERS
.PARADISE
Home

81

114 ACRES LOCATED IN
ORANGE TOWNSHIP, OFF
CHERRY RIDGE.

ollor 211 Food .,.

gino, 2 opood Fonl 0 - l c

r... MmiHIOn.

four 14" .."""'
lot F«d, 11 .........7121
IMV.T
tgl.

..

.... ......,

~

POOR BOY TIAII,

:13:11

-

-

11-

.,.,.,_..,.. good uooil '""·

...

~

CONtACT:
PAUL KLOES 01 BRUCE REED

Polto lot 1911 CUt-, lor oaJ.,

114-317-7211.

®.CANADAY REALTY

78

Camping
Equlpmen.t

992-2136

I M. 011mpor lop, It 110, I M,
compor top, 175. Coil 114-742·

271hrl14-742·31!14.

446-3636cA~

Clmperl ..

MotorHomM

Accesaorles

446-6806

.. ......

AUDREY f, CANADAY, BROKER
HOliES, FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

79

OIHftallile lop1 new u~
•
Colll1.. 211•1311 ..... 7:00 ......
BOATERS: Now Wlnt~
P.-loft Mobile llottno. ...,.
dod. 11~11871 .

23 LOCUST ST. -

S8
1111.COtto
......

75 Boa.ll &amp; Motors
for Sale
1172 17 I . . _ I I T~
- , 12I . .,Evlnnrdo=

1!£~~ - ~NTI·cdeM M~·FAfiil

lt111.11....,1071L

Real Estate Generel

73 Valli &amp; 4

· ~~~

-or lo l!lloNlic

f14411-7'141,

Ohio-Point Plenant. W, Va,

November 26, 1989
72 Trucka tor Sale

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-

Truckl for Salt

CIOYIINIIN1' IIIZID \WI '

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71 Aut01 lor 81111

71 AutOI for S.le

71 · · - for Slle

November 26. 1989

Pomarov-Middlaport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

Tmes-Sentinel

UClUIKD SP!Oil- ~i9.90UO
w/ woodburner. covrtry kltctlen.
the horse lovers, 2' 1ural wlter
country home could be all yours.

=-=--Yioa

-

campers&amp;
MotorHom8a

79

-24=14=---,,.,-.,.-:-:=or col!lo tool ~

iiowy

wollo-plotod- .,,

ond ...loo, -

1173 P,_, 2811, lull both,
front dln.U., llttpe I, wtalr 6

Dnlo
e-.
On~ Creek Rd. P...., .....
doll..,, "'"

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

corpot, 114-387·7530,
1875 Coochmon 3811. campor,
$3,500 114-387-G447 114-387· '"1'4!oTonltPu-.. ttt 110o11o
Co. RON EVAHIINTEAP IllES,
04&amp;5.
1111 Crulaealr Motor H()JM. 440
Mglno, 28ft. Very good

conclltlon, $8500.

114-112-5170,
1111 toft, go

nogotfoblo,

oloc~, OH 1-7-1121.

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

84

Payrrtenls of $3
hly with $2400.00 down pay·
buys this 6 room home in city of Gallipolis. Approx. 3
old home. 2 or 3 bedrooms, two baths, modern kilchen,
I electric. Phone for an appointment now. Just listed.
11681

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH.

446-9539

Electrtcal &amp;
. Refrigeration

A I dull ill

or

oommerolll

LIURJid Motrlclln.

""""' -

Ridenour

Of """""'
lloolrlool. 30W7fl.1711.

85 Oene111l Hauling
RIAWotw-.-clowettt. llnmul te-1,000 •

ternl,

W::&amp;:,- doliYOtY. CoM 304-

tog+long, ..,.

por, fully contolnlc,!c ~'" .. ,.
~~. oqulp. l21w. 11........,

FIVE ACIES - BEAUTIFUl 3 BEDAOOM, 2 BATH HOME.
EQUIPPED KITCHEN. OAK CABINETS, SNACK BAR. ElECTRIC
HEAT PUMP. CENT. AIR , PLUS WOODBURNER. CUSTOM DESIGNED TO CONSERVE ENERGY WITH 6" INSUlATED WAllS,
12" INSUlATED IN ATTIC. ANDERSEN THERMOPANE WOOD
INSUlATED COORS. CITY SCHOOl DISTRICT.

652 2nd AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Grohom Uohololery c..tw, 303
Hillop Dr, l:olllor itppolntCOIII14 441 3431.

"-too.

446-7101

SUNDAY PUZZLER

(Call Anytime)

SIUI.l FAll - MODERN 3BEDROOM
ILY KITCHEN AND LIVING ROOM. DEN. 1,316 SQ. fT . LIVING
AREA. 2 CAR CONCRETE BlOCK GARAGE OVER 9 ACRES.
MOSTLY PASTURE KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS $52,000.

[B

I

JUST A HW liN UTES FROI TOWN - BRICK RANCH, LARGE
FAMilY HOME. 4 BEDAOOMS, EQUIPPED KITCHEN HAS RANGE,
REFRIG.. DISHWASHER, TRASH COMPACTOR. DISPOSAl, FUU
BASEMENT WITH REC. ROOM. ATTACHED GARAGE PlUS
24'X40' GARAGE/WORKSHOP. GAS fURNACE. CEN. AIR COND.
ONE ACRE lOT. UNBEATABlE PRICE, $65,000. DON1 WAIT.
CAll NOW!
IEAIJTIFUL PROPERTY NEAR EWINGTON - SPARKLING
CLEAN 4 YEAR OlD RANCH HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS. lARGE
liVING ROOM AND KITCHEN AREA. 1.175 SQ. fT . LIVING AREA.
THERMDPANE WINDOWS. VINYL SIDING, GARAGE, COVERED
REAR PATIO, NICE SIDEWAlKS. ON 2 ACRES,THIS IS AN EXCEL·
lENT BUY AT $42,000. JUST LISTED'
QUICK POSSESSION: ROOMY CAP[ COD I.N NICE AREA OF
NEWER HOMES' 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. FORMAL DINING, 2
CAR GARAGE. FUlL BASEMENT. SHOWS LIKE AMODEL HOME.
$62,000 OR BUY WITH EXTRA LOT FOR $68,000.
41 ACRE FARI - 2 STORY HOME HAS 9 ROOMS, NEW ROOF.
VINYl SIDING. KYGER CREEK SCHOOlS. $55,000.

REALTOR,•.

SOliD AS AROCK AND CLEAN AS APIN! SlONE RANCH . FAM ILY ROOM HAS STONE fiREPlACE, WEll EQUIPPED KITCHEN,
BEAUTIFUl CARPETING AND WALl COVERING. BREAKFAST
PORCH. MUCH MORE' CARPORT. AlSO GUEST HOUSE. OON1
MISS SEEING THIS ONE! $85,000.
If YOU WORK AT HOlZER HOSPITAL YOU CAN WALK TO WORK
FROM THIS 3 BEDROOM RANCH. FAMilY ROOM IN BASEMENT.
NICE SCREENED BACK PORCH. CONVENIENT LOCATION ON RT.
35. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT.
MOVING TO THE CITYT THIS HOME ON UPPER SECOND
AVENUE IS WITHOUT ADOUBTTHE BEST BUY ON THE MARKET.
2 STORY FRAME HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS. KITCHEN IS
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE AND REFRIG, AMPLE DINING SPACE.
GAS BUDGET IS ONLY $4LOOMONlH.NICE lEVEl BACK lAWN.
JUST $35,000. CHECK IT oun
JAY OR lYE. JUST OFF RL 35. 3BEDROOM, 2 BATH RANCH HAS .
NICE FLOOR PlAN. ATTRACTIVE FOYER. VERY liVABLE FAMILY
ROOM. KITCHEN AREA WITH FIREPlACE. ALSO OPENS ONTO
OUTDOOR PATIO, OECK AND POOL EXCELLENT VIEW OF SURROUNDING AREA FROM DECK. 2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE. ATTRACTIVE HOME. EXCEllENT LOCATION, CITY SCHOOLS.
$65.000.

ACROBB

HEW LISTING- 1988 24x56 CLAYTON HOME situated on 4
aaes m/ 1. There are 3 bedroom s. family room w/ fireplace. 2
baths and much more. Secluded localion in Green School
Dislrict.
#150

FOR ACTIOit He who hesUtes, well you know the rest
·,c~.,, :_: 15 an1table. Included IS 1 2 bedrm. apt. plus a large store
many useful purposes. Owner IS ready to deal.

,
FORlOO: Compare clean brick and frame ran ch •nih
anached garage. bedrm and bath. IOYtl~ k~chen, uUrty rm . and nllil _lf
18x24 lam. rm. wlwoodburntng ~replace .. d calhedra\ ced.ng. Pole 15'xl0'
outbldg. Bu1ldtng costs have r1sen and rt would be Jmpa&gt;s1ble lo du~1Cale thiS

HOME &amp; 22 ACRES M/L - I year old ranch home located
less lhan I mile off Rt. 7. Includes 3 bedrooms. 2 bath, lormal dining heal pump, Andersen wtndow s, I car garage plus
lots more. $64,900.
#149

home at the pr.:e, $49,900.

lt43Z. PRICED FOR QUICK SALE- V1lllon ranch. 2 bedfm .. ll v. rm .. Oln. nn.
and kitchen. bath. Owner has done much w(Jk. Good Sldmg and cement b~ck
pOJch. carpclfl barn and 2 lots.
N49l.IULlRUM RD . ..- YINTC*: Remotllled 3 beOrm. 11nch w/ edra 1&amp;. kit
w/lolds ot cabmets. 2 car prage, ~u l din&amp; 3 IC. $34,900.
MU YACMT lMD: 14at. more or ~s w/ pond, nvine. woods and pasture
2 llu~don~. $14.000.
1434. JIEW FAE£W~Y lOCATION: 59 ac.more or less, 911&amp;11 pood. Can be used
as convnetCJII or tract home sties. Call for klrth!r n!Otmatiln.
1410. LOT 01 51 5~. Ytty lflod sllr to bUild. Reduced to 16.000.
H43. COUITIIJ COTTME FOI "'0: 2 be~ms.. lovely k1tchen wlnew
cabil'!et5, LR. 1 b.!th. irt1lrty rm. a~d 1 ac. mit. $16.000.00.1f you want a 1986
Redm~ mob1te homewrth 3 bedrms and balh. LR , ell·in·kit. w/riRge ~d ref.
tt IS real shwc 1nd clean. A!lthiS w~l sell tor $25.500.00.
'

ili:'i]il
'

CALL CIIERYL LENlEY Full

742-3171

Time Meigs c-ty

WHY BUILD lOUR DREAM HOllE? When tt is already built.
·This lovely home is just I year ol!iand is srtuated on approx.
3 acres wrth a river view in the Syracuse area. includes a
weeden cathedr·al ceiling stone fireplace, a sell-approved
kilchen. dining, 3 bedrooms down and o~e in lhe loft, 2
baths, lull basement and 2 car garage. Call lor appOintment.

*142
APPROX. 24 ACRES wrth colonial home overloo~ng Po,
meroy. Executive style home wrth formal entry, family room.
forma l dining room. Basement has rec. room wrth stone lireplace. There's an in-ground pool. Many more amentties, Ask·
ing $155,900.
#104

~

LOCATION, LOCATION! Aqual~y buiH home, too. Ranch wrth
3 bedrooms, formal dining family room, lull basement and 2
car garage. located in Middlepo~.
11135
BEAUTIFUL RIVER FRONT - You can't beat the view from
lhts !800 sq. ft. J.bedroom home. 2 acres m/1 with a f antas·
tic view ollhe river. Large highway and river .frontage. The
home has family room, formal dining, 2 balhs, fireplace. central air and 2 car garage. Lots of extras lor only $59,500.
#

1 VItiate; mer
6 Food llsh
10The-'10P
14- syrup
19 - City Royals
21 Hindu garment
22 Thlleter box
23 More equHable
24 Skeleton
281mmtrllng;
linking
28 Composite ol
phOiognopha
29 Chllcl'a game
30 JJn:lure
32 Kind of Iabrie
33 Painful
34 Shellac
Ingredient
35 Large bird
37V39 Contelner
40 "The lpcress - "
41 Catcher's glove
42 Juan's ship
44 Chooses
46 lnlellecl
47 "Thll - Ranger"
46 Thick slice
50 P-. of cutlery
52111111nce
53 San Franclaeo:
abbr.

BEECH Sl - .l 'h slory

IIEW LISTING - COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Start your
own business. On Main Slreet in a good location.
$37,500.00.
NEW LISTING- Here is a Lot 60'xll3'. You can set 21rail·
ers on and hiWe a good rental inC()m~ Has electric, water
and sewer. $11,000.00.
POMEROY - House on ~ acre lot, 2 bedroom~ I bath, carpeting pa~ basemen! and ·utility room. REDUCED
$10,50000
IIODLEPORT - Would make a great rental or a home for a
young cou pi~ Has 2 bedrooms, dining room, one floor, all
Cilfpeted, new roof, and 2 loi s_ $14.500.00.
ABOVE TUPPERS PLAINS ON ST. RT_ 7 - FREE gas on 8
acres. Water tap in place wrth elect11c available. Convenient
location, nice buildtng s1te. $25.000.00.
RUTLAND- 26.2 Acres 1n lheCountry. 6 rooms. 3bedroom
home. P11vale and secluded. Needs some worll $28.000.00.
PO lEROY- Nice home wilh 21o4 bedrooms, 2 baths, W.B.
F.P.• carpet and N.G.F A. heat. Full basement. nice yard.
$29,500.00.
TWP. ROAD 341 - Approx. 93 Acres of vacant land wrth 2
story barn, stocked pond, old house srte wrth well. Apfrox.
· 25 acres ltllable with balance in timber, abundance o wal·
nut. Get a return on your investment from sale of timberll
$60,000.00.
POMEROY - 1\7 story house wtlh 3 bedrooms and bath.
Carpet and wood floors. New shingled roof and nice front s~­
ttng porch. $21 ,900.00.
SYRACUSE -Quality shows tn this 3 bedroom ranch home.
I balh, beautiful family room, nice krtchen wilh all appliances including dishwasher, washer &amp; dryer. Large yard
with chain link fence. New wood storage building,
$45,00000_
STARCHER RD. - POMEROY- 64\\ Acres, vacanl ground,
gas and electric available. Spring lor development. Call for
deta1ls. REDUCED PRICE' $48.000.00.
POMEROY PIKE- Forty-one acres plus a !980 liberty Mobile Home. Beautiful view. 2 car &amp;trlle. porch on 3 sides, 3
Slorage buildings. and barn. 2 gOod sized bedrooms, bay
window, equipped kitchen. Rut Princy. $35,000.00.
HARRISONVILLE- Approx. 4\1 acres of beaUtiful nice lay·
ong hayfield now. Homesle later. Electric available, lol of
road lrontag~ $7.500.00.
ANTIQUITY- One story home wtth 3 bedrooms, and C()al
furnxt. Would mike 1 great summer 'place, has 3 lois, includin&amp; river lronlage, $11,000.00.

Midd l epo~. Has newer gas

MIDDLEPORT- 6.09 BeautrtuiCountry Acres close to town.
3 bedroom mobile home. small barn. and a 12x65, 2 bed·
room mobile home wHh all hookups. Live in one and rent I he
other. $21 ,900.00.

5DACR£FARII- RIVER FRO~TAGE- This smallla.rm has
over 17 acr.es of river bottom and 30 acres m/ 1of pasture.
TobacC() base. The log home has nearly 200 SQ ft. of living
area on main Hoor.lncludes 3 bedrooms, I I? balh; large lam·
ily room, solarium, large decks plus basemen! with finished
rec. room . There's more. so call today. Priced at.$110,000.
#147

ST. RT. 338- Riverfront property wrth a2 bedroom cabin.
Full basement, sunporch, metal building approx. 42'x30',
$27,900.00.
POMEROY- A business for sale wrth alllixtures. Achance
to own your own business. Jusl take over where present
owner leaves oH. Call for more details.

HOllE AND ACREAGE- Owner wdl sell from 3/ 41o Ill
acres m/ lwith th1s 3 bedroom doublew1de home on SR 14 L
The home has 2 baths and den and lhe interior was redecorated in 1983. Call lor all deta~l s .
#146

POMEROY- Alarge older home wrth ?.rooms. 3 bedrooms,
family room. dining room, and garage in basement Home
has a beautiful vtew of the river, central air, front sitting
porch, and a woodburner. $25,000.00..
·

NEIL AVE.- One slory w1th metal siding, 2or 3 bedrooms. I
bath. liv. rm . big kttchen. din1ng rm .. big enclosed back
porch. storage building. All .on 40&lt;139 lot. $25.000. #126

SMITH RIOGE- Approx. 35 acres of vacant ground, with a
5 to 10 acre hayfield and the resl in woods. Approx. 1500 ft.
of road frontage. $16,900.00.
LETART AREA- App1ox. 2 acre mini farm wrth small barn,
fencing to the sheds, plus a 1978 modular unrt wrth 3 bed·
rooms, Satellite dish, 2 good garden areas_ Drilled water well.
$17,50D.OO. MAKE OFFER.

.441. M!TDU lOOKIIGFOU PlACiio put your
new home? ~is OIW! acre tot could be just what yOU
II,·
wtler. U~ mile to Soultwestern sc~ . 6 miles to R10 ·
to
11,500. C.lltoda,.
ffr461. THE MAUl ST.£T DFVIIT'*: 2siii"J0der llome has been remOdeled

RUTLAND - I aae shady lot to build your dream home on.
Electric available. $2,500.00.

3Bib, LR. OR. U., l bath. All carpeted mceplllt and krtchen. 2 car garage. i
10•11. Tho • a cood buy 1113~0110.
1473. liiOIJlD YDU UKITOIOIE llllOnery de01 14•70mot.~hom. .~h
3 BAs, 1~ baths. all tlfl)eted, 3 et~1n1 t.-ts, rang.:, ret., lg. eal·•n k1tcl'len
wlbut~·m desk, ut~ity rm. fully underrnned. one 8~12 oullx11ldinp, all
~ttbolrd walls e•cept llltchen 10d hll, ~YII!I' Creek schools Call 101 mote
lnforlflllion. $12,200.
·
JUST liGHT FOI !HI COli lillY GIITLIIAII: 5acres 14 boHom)th•l
ps to lhe Ot11o R1ver. N1te lwm house wih lois ollarge rooms. l4 BRs LR
F.rench do~s . 4 W8 fir•llces jone insertj , elec. heal also. larAf e&amp;t . 1 ~
kifc:tlen, patiO w/ ded: IIIII hiS a beiUIWu I VII!W of !he rr.~er. larce back P!MCh,
utlity rm.. ptntry, plus a DRY basement One t•ge 24x48 tobicco hlrrt w1th
2kf2 s~ lttached. fhi:!i prol)er'ly is in IIOod conditiOn All this lor the pr lteol
15~1100 . WHAT A BUY!
out~d&amp;

POMEROY- Older 2 story home, gorgeous woodwork, fireplace. nice krtchen cabinets. 3 bedrooms, equipped Uchen ,
central air, garage and storage. $39,900.00.

"'I.

SOUTHERN DISTRICT- A4 bedroom ranch home wrth full
basement on approx. ~ acre lot One car garage. Also a 2
bedroom renlal house on same lot TWO FOR THE PRICE OF
ONE. $29,000.00.
HARRISONVILLE - tiice Country Home, 3 bedrooms, 1\\
bath, laundry room, eat-in krtchen, all carpeted and attached
I car aarage sitting on 1 aae. LOTS OF PRIVACYII
$42,500.00.
POMEROY- Older home wrth 2 bedrooms, 1bath, front and
re11 porches screened in. Has N.G.F.A. on approx. I acre.
$10,900.00,
HENlY E. CLELAND.,,., ,,,,,, ..,,:,,.,,,,.,, t92·&amp; It I
JEM TIUSSELL,,,,,,;,,,,.,,•.,,',,,, .. ,..,., ..•. ., ••• ,.94!1-2&amp;60
DOTTIE TUlliER ., .,,, ,,,., .. ., ., .... ,, ., .., ..,.,., .,, t92-5692
JO HILL ., ,,.,.,... .,, .. ,.,,,, ,,,,, ..,, .,,.,, .,.,, .,., 985-4466
OFFICE .,. ,, ., ..,.,, ,,,, ...,,,, , .... ., ..,, .. ,. ,,,,992·225~
SELLING A MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTY TAKES WORK, not
111 ACCIDENT. CIIIMd R111ty Works to seU y0111 RillEs·
tilt ITOt jtlst to ptt I tip in YOIII Jlrd,

f"'"'""

room and bath. Priced at $32,000.

11411.EIIS!

!OOI~M;-~~.OIJilH•*"'

situated
1140. CIIUIIIIY

apr~»; . mites trom town. rural water and electriC to
property. Cdy school dcslrd.
M"Jt. ACIEAGE: 100 1t.m/l1bout 6m~lel from tow rt Call for shOwmalor this
property.

.W3. WID COUIIIIY All AIIDPII'IAC'Il Tho oy•oppe~IOIIhree btdrm.
ranch hiS plenly of each. Loclltd bnetn Ro~ey .nd Cora m Plffy

Townsl'lp. Prad to move. Clll for ~poi_IIJMit ~.000,
.WI. 0¥11$lll0 2 STOIY-UIIIIOSIII!D riii:E.- Tho clm&lt; home hos
l&amp;•den space, a stone ~u• tel'-lnd 1 keep1n1 room 1iso •l•&amp;e bltn on
located m Bidwell Pr1c:ed to sell II $2!].000. Call lor m111e dftalls.

rm:

HUIIIIIS I'AUOISI - It&gt;~'" 47 acres ol most~ .""'&lt;led land.
Propem also 1m •o.so stee buildln&amp; with llv. qu~rters built wMhin. Perlect
tor huJnrs, troris on Rt I•J. Clll tar nun det1ils. $69,900.
~.

M4. NEED VACAIIJINIOI This could be whot ,.,.,. I&gt;Hntoo~nglor. 8.
acres m/ l ol clelnJ__n_!-'Y ~ lind utilities aVIIIIble, road trontlae. less
thin 15 ft'llnutes IT1trll town. Gtod ltCition at a JDOd pra.

!fmodeled older home wrth 4 BRs. I bath. FR. ran ge.
,
'-!fters. Clll)eled e•ctpt uU.y rm . and
' ' With llx17' _,ed attKheit. NiCe home lor

NEW ON THE MARKET - Looking for something close to
lown and affordable? Make an appointment to see Ihis 3 bedroom home located approx. 1!ol miles west ofGallipolts on Rt.
588. Has maintenance lree Siding ntce sized rooms, and car·
port. Located on approx. 1 acre Green Grade School. Priced
at $37,500.
#129

243 ACRE FARM- Rocksprings Road- Over 50 acres of
cropland. approx. 130 acres of potenlial pasture and balance in woodland, I he land lays level to rolling and includes
an older log home wilh 3 bedrooms plus an addrtioQal cottage with 3 rooms. This 1s a good one for $108,000. #137
NEW LISTING; Attractive bi-level home in A-1 condition.
Localed on approx. I acre in Baum Additton. Has 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, central air and garage. $62.500.
#134
105 ACRE FARM: Owner will sell wrth or wrthout minerals.
Contemporary slyle home wrth 4 bedrooms. attached 3 car
c arpo~. detached 2 car garage in-ground pool. Call for more
details.
11102
NORTH SECOND STREET- This 3bedroom home has beautiful hardwood floQrs throughout Large 90•120' lot. Convenient to ,stores and shopping $37,500.
#109

55 R'- In Belgium
57 .. _ No"
58 Certain
59 Datum
60 French article
82 Grain
64 Abound
86 Ulllnov ID
88 Tantalum symbol
89 Petil
700cNn
71 Steady; constant
73 Facial
expresalons
75 Slip t~~Nay
77 Roman road
78 Till
60 Turkish dltcree
81 Crimson
82 Coal-&lt;:8rrylng
car
64 Gratlty

ASH STREET, MIDDLEPORT- Jusl listed : this home is
situated on 2 level corner lots. Close to General Ha~inger
Park. A bmk home wtth 3 bedroom s, full basement, and
large attic. $21.500.
#117

IIDBILE HOllE AND 1.4 ACRES - Just lisled this 3 bedroom mobile home wilh addilions. Home is in good cond~ion
and includes nice lar gP. nnrch~&gt;&lt; ant1 a2 car ~araRe. Located
i.S miles oft SR 218 on Criner Rd. Priced $20,000.
#133
NEW LISTING- Reslauranl just wail ing to be openet:J up.""
eQuipment and almosl one acre of ground. located in CheshIre Asking $39,900.
#131
10 ACRE BUILDING SITES- $8.500 each. Land lays level
to genlly rolling, Located near Rio Grande. Mob1le homes
welcome.
#124
LOCATION. LOCATION. lOCATION- Just listed 5 building
lots to Tara Eslates. All utilities an.d Tara convenience are
available. Call IDJ details. ·
#110
REDUCED TO $34,000- Owner will sell to qualified buyer
on land contract. 3 bedroom. aluminum sided home wrth
family room, wood burner, deck and fenced lol. Located near
Rodney.
11115

NEW LISTING - APPROX. 20 ACRES wrth Sptcious fiRth
home. 3 bedrooms, I I? baths. family room and one car &amp;•·
age. Addilional trailer hook-up. Asloing only $48,000- 1151

JIM COCHRAN, BROKER,,,,,.,,,.,,,,,,,,,,, 448-7881
PATRICK COCHRAN, REALTOR .. ,,,.,,,.,~,, .... ,,., 448-86156
SONNY GARNES, REALTOR,,,,, .. ,,,,,,,,,,,,, 448-2707
PHYLLIS MILLER, REALTOR,,,,,,.,,,,,.,,,.,,-,, 448-8346
MARTHA SMITH, REALTOR,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,.,,,, 379-2661

EVE,
EVE .•
EVE.
EVE.
EVE.

®and,. trademarke ol Century 21 Real Estate Corporation.
Equal OpportunitY Empl~r

EACH OPPK:E IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPI!IIATEn
ir

I

86 More uncanny
87 TellS'
89 Greek letter
92 Frull of the oak
95 Buckets
98 Above
99Lusos
101 Analyzes, as
sentence
103 Narrow opening
104 FootUke part
105 "The - In
Winter"
106 Versus: abbr.
107 Rooaevelt ID
108 Man's name
110 Arden or Plumb
111-garde
112 Hold on property
113 Old French coins
115 Rhodium symbol
117 Quarr41
119 "Cleopatra"
star: lnlts120 Seed containers
121 Zealous; ardent
124 Narrow, flat
board
126 Wagers
127 Oscillate
128 Main dish
130 Planet
132 Prohlblls
133 Winglike
134 Conducted
135 Mountain lake
t37 Unfts of Lalvlan
currency
139 Guido's high not"
140 Unlock
141 PhiUpplne
Mollerns
143 Pedal digits
145 Beatt's stomach
146 Stated without
proof
148 Robol bomb
150 Spire
152 Hinders
153 Story
154 Memorandum
158 Cloud eecurely·
157 Fashion
t 58 Changes color of
159 Wheel toolh
160 Cubic meter

DOWN
1 Old decrepit
horse: slang
2- Canal
3 Wild asaes of
India
4 Adherent ot
suffix
5 Country of Asia
6 Struthers ID
7 Cut of meal
8 War god
9leads
10 Bring Into line
11 Pitch
12 Omelellngredlent
13 selenium symbol
14'Man
15 Be HI
16 PieCe of nut
candy
17 Ambassador;
envoy
18 Build
20 Pintail duck
23 GoH cry
25 Connecticut
uni-slly
27 Clulches
28 Frigid
31 Beer lngredlenl
33 Joan Collins
miniseries
36 Hideous
38 Want
40 Monetary penalty
41 Malorlty
43 Kiln
45 Caviled
48 Prevailing
mood and spirit
47 Intertwine
49 "The Killer - "
51 "Tile - Limits"
52 Calling
53 Mild; gentle
54 Beautllul
56 Pardon
59 Clamps
60 Condescending
look
61 Hearing organ
63 Th,...baae hits
65 Mud
67 Employ
88 Presley u;&gt;
70 "The - Cuckoo"

72 Pertaining to
the cheek
74 "-Law"
76 Paid notice
77 Mental Images
79 Permit
83 Pinch
85 Eagles' nests
86 Gaelic
87 Hitchcock movie
88 Level
89 " - 109"
90 Appetizing

91 Send forth
92 Suilable
93 Bugs Bunny's
favorite
94 Alternative word
96 Affection
97 Let It stand
100 Arllcle
102 Drinks slowly
105 Covers
109 Serene
112 Parcels of land
113 Play leading role
114 Scoffs
116 "Body Heat" alar
118 South Alrlcan
Dutch
120 Punishment
121 Graceful bird
122 Annulment
123 Chair
125 Tread underfoot.
126 Pantomimic
dance
127 Winter vehicle
129 God of love
131 More vapid
132 Trinkets
133 Imitates
134 Is defeated
136 Seines
138 European
140 Monster
141 Distance measure
142 Wild plum
144 Bishoprics
147Lamprey
148 Follows April
149 Airline info.
151 Dine
153 Danson ID
155 Teutonic deity

.•

�Ohio Lottery

Ohio-Point Plar•ent. W.Va.

Shop early,
shop locally

VIMDOI

c

We Reserve The Riehl To
Limit Quantities

Pick-3
824
Pick
7982
Super Lotto
7-14-20.31-32-34
Kicker 939413

STORE HOURS

•

•

Monday thru Sunday

8 AM-10 PM

a1

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., NOV. 26 THRU SAT., DEC. 2

No.140

1/4

'Pork •·Loin •••• ~·••• $1 39

$1 79
Chuck Roast .••~..... . ·.
Sl 29

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

.

. FLAVORITE ASSORTED

.

Lun.ch Meats •• ~.....

BALLARD'S

Bacon ••••••••••••• !2.~~

••

.

$119

--------------·
HELPING YOU
CELEBRATE THE
CHRISTMAS ,
ALONG THE RIVER SINCE 1872 - This
• aitradlve Balik One Doal feaiured an antique
· sleigh. altractlvely trbnmed large grapevine
wreaihA, and simulated snow bulls and the Ohio
River, enhaaced by employees in VIctorian

HOLIDAYS
Now thri.l
. Dec. 24
we will have a
daily drawing for
free groceries.
Sign your cashier
tape and if your
name is drawn,
you will be .
reimbursed in
cash for the
amount of your
purchase.

cootumlng. It was one of several commercial
floals entered In the Cbrlsbnas parade aponsored
by the Middleport and Pomeroy Chambers of
Commerce.

•

. .

.

Cauliflower ....~E:~ •••

$

.
2/
M
. argar1ne ••• :~!·~~·!.
.

s·

lll.

STOVE-TOP

6

• ••
•
•·····cooPm·······
•
•••••

••

:

•••

SUNSHINE

1•

:

DOG FOOD

~ 2~~

$299

Ice Cream ..•.••••s.c:. $299.
BANQUET -28-32 OZ.

Ulllit 1 hr C01t0111•
...., Otoly At Powllro Sup• v•
16 Tloro Sot, Doc. J

•. ...,. -..,,lin.
,

$

'

_Fa~ily Entree....... . 14.9
• • • • • • ',IW'T'Ill'al • • • •
• ~ • • • • \.J\JlJ C\A., • • • • • \

··· ···cmAW······ ·••

••••
•
• : DR. PEPPER

•

• TIDE DOERGENT :
6
~o~z·$299

. .................
•

1

KEMPS PAIL

Saltines •••••••••• ~•••••• 59&lt;
oz. 79&lt;
Stuffing ••••••••••••••••

· ' . DIET OR REGUlAR

• •••••

7-UP

MUG ROOT lEER
2 UTER

69&lt;

v•

Ulllit 1 hr Cust011•
GH4I IItty At Powoll'o
1 . GNol ~. Now. 16 lhro Sot, DtL I

e

•

s.,.

,e

•• • •••••••••••••••••

.

-

i

The Shady River
Sbulflers prepared this attractive float for the
Middleport-Pomeroy Christmas parade Sunday
afternoon. Sealed In the rocking chair Is Mrs. Paul

CERTIFICATE
Will be given
away each
Saturday from
now to Christmas•
NHD NOT BE PIESENT
TO WIN

Hudson surrounded by several of the sbulflers
costumed as holiday gilts. Other members of the
group shuffled behind the float as II moved
tbrougb the two towns.

•

-Local news briefs,---.

and a

69
2% Milk ........~~•••• Sl
BLUE BONNET

CHRISTMAS SCENE -

CERTIFICATE

FLAVORITE

'
Among the other marching
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
units were the Sugar and Spice
Dally Sentinel Staff
H\lndreds of Bend area resl- and Stylet\e Baton Corps In
dellts lined the streets of Middle· Christmas costuming with boll·
"ji(ii'l'iuid F'5!f'eroy.S)I!!4a¥. alter· MJ~ l!O.~I;"'~ ,' tbe Shady River
noon to ·· view· \irSat rriany Shufflers who also had a float,
considered one of the best Christ· and several units of girl and boy
scouts from around the county .
mas parades In years. ' ·
Led by an American Legion
Spoll$ored by !be Chambers of
honor
guard from Drew Webster
Commerce of the two towns. the
Post
39
and Feeney-Bennett Post
parade moved through botb
communities leaving Santa and 128, the parade Included floats
his helpers at the mlnl·park In from the Rock Springs Grange.
Pomeroy and the drlve·tbrough the United Methodist Church,
at Centr;~l Trust toglveouttreats . Girl Scout Troops and Cub Scout
Packs from Chester. Racine,
· to the children.
Syracuse,
Middleport, Harrison·
Most of the businesses were
ville,
Pomeroy,
and Letart.
open and featured special prices
were
outstanding
floats
There
on select Items. Some served
by
both
the
Farmers
Bank
,
refreshments and many gave out
favors In conjunction with open
houses.
The bands of Eastern, Meigs South Central Ohio
and Southern In full uniform
Showers and thunderstorms
played carols as !bey marched In
likely Monday night , with lows in
the parade while the Meigs
the mid 40s. Chance of rain Is 70
Junior High School band per·
percent. A chance or showers
formed from the back of the Tuesday , with the ra in changing
truck.
to snow flurries during the
afternoon, and temperatures

featuring Santa's workshop, and
Bank One, a scene In period
costuming. Other commj!rclal
floats were from Fruth Phar·
maey ..and--tbe Sears Store In
Middleport.
A float by the United Mine
Workers Auxiliary, a unit of
equestrians. a couple ofmotorcy.
cles, an antique car, a mini·
vehicle, and several·large trucks
from the Hendricks Trucking Co.
along with fire trucks from many
Meigs County communities as
well as New Haven participated
In the parade.
Winners of the trophies and
plaques will be announced later,
according to the parade
chairmen.

------Weather .....-:------

· $50 GIFT

$25 GIFT

employeea, all costumed In red IU!d IJ'een. Seated
a&amp; tbe rear ol'the floai was a IJ'OUP of carolen,
employees of the bank, who 88111 under the
dlreclloa of Lois Ann Burt wltb Ruth Durst
playing the keyboard•

Hundreds line streets for
Bend area Christmas parade

SATURDAY, DEC. 2
SATURDAY, DEC. 9
SAT~RDAY, DEC. 16
SATURDAY, DEC. 23

FRESH

SANTA '8 WORKSHOP - Santa arrived In the
communities of Middleport and Pomeroy In real
style Sullday afternoon. The Farmers Bank
creaied this a&amp; tractive workshop for Santa and his
many elves, children ud P'B!Idchlldren of bank

,,

-----

FLAVORITE

1 Section, 10 Pegoo 26 Conte
. A Multimecii• Inc. Newtpep•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, November 27, 1989

1989

Low tonight In mid 485.
Chance of rain 70 perc:ent.
Tuesday, colder. Low In mid
308. Chance of precipitation 441
perc:ent.

dropping into the mid 30s.
Chance of precipitation Is 40
percent.
Extended Forecast
Weclnesday through Friday
A chance of snow · In the
e,:treme northeastern part of the
state and fair over the remal nder
of Ohio Wednesday and Friday

Police investigate theft

•

'
.
The theft of jewelry and a jewelry box from the home of Jim
and Eleanor Thomas, · Lincoln H!ll. sometime Saturday
afternoon Is being Investigated by Pomeroy Pollee.
According to the· report, the home was entered through an
unlocked door sometime between 2 and 6 p.m. while Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas were away from the house.
Many chest and cabinet drawers had been rummaged
tbl'ough, It was reported, although nothing but the jewelry wasf
tak~. Tbe incident remains under Investigation.

'

EMS has 7 weekend runs
Seven calls for assistance were answered over tbe weekend
by units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
On Saturday at 3: 11 a.m., Tuppers Plains went to Success
Road for Clyde Kuhn who was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital.
Pomeroy at 4:14 a.m. was called to Mulberry Ave. for Ada
Hoce to Holzer Medical Center.
Racine was called at 2: 58 p.m. to Front St. for Robert
Thompson to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at 10:32 p.m.,
Racine transported Michael Rouse from their station to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
On Sunday at 1: 52 a.m., Tuppers Plains was called to Curtis
Hollow Road for Tammy Kimes to St. Joseph's Hospital.
Middleport was called at 11:07 a.m. to Page St. for Lola
Barber who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 10: 34 p.m., Pomeroy transported John Ord from Locust St.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Cold weather on way
· B7 United Preu lntematlonal
This week's Ohio weather
should be like several otber
t ecent weelts: balmy tempera·
lures to begin the workweek,
~th snow and bone-chilling cold
elldlngll.
Hlp temperatures Monday
were expected to reach Into the
mld-501 acrosa most of the state
before heading down quickly In
lbe evening. The National
WeatberServlcesaldtnerewasa

moderate chance of severe thun·
derstorms In extreme southwest
Ohio Monday afternoon, with a
.sllght rlskfortberestofthestate.
A strong storm system that
was centered just about over tbe
middle of the country was
winding up and moving nor·
!beast. As It moves toward Ohio
Monday afternoon, winds were to
come around to a more southerly
direction and become stronger
and gusty.

WALKING CRRIS'l'MAS TBBE- Numern1 bo7 aad 1trUcout

1lliiCI parttclpa&amp;ed .. tile uwal Clu'INmu puade lbroqh
MIMleport ud rom.., Sallday after-. Some were cotlllmed
• ••wmea, oae II'OUP luld aSuCamoblle,IIMIIe rode Ia decorated

vehicles, ud otben wallred. Tllee HOUIII of Middleport Troop 141
came u Chrliltmu trees, complete with ltPU.

A VJSrr WlTB SANTA - Carl Ma.er of Pomeroy wu oae of
ltu8tlnJdl of c'Utlren eajo)'lnl a vtalt with Santa fo~owlng the
pill'lldee lbroqb Pomeroy and Middleport Santa stopped al the
mild-park Ill Pomeroy ud a&amp; tile Centnl Truat drlve-tbroaP In
Middleport to live out trea&amp;a.

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