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12-n. Dllv Sandnll

Frldey. Deolmblr a. 1888

Ponaov Mldapoe1. Ohio

Kin 's ... --=.:..:.:.:::.:..:..:..::.=::..:.::.:~-----Local news briefs...- - - Snow'· · · - - - - - - - - - 1J\"ITati,..
32.8
2
of
Contlnllld rrcm page 1

'

posted winter atonnwarDIDpfor
West Virllnla, Nordl Carollu,
Tenlll!l- and Kentucky, forecas tlni from 6 to 15 laches of
snow In various spots acrou the
refkm.
Snow stretched rrorn Missouri,
across llllools and Illdlafla and
. Into Ohio. The weather service
posted snow advisories for the
entire region and warned the
snow combined with ftee21ng
temperatures would make roads
sUck and hazardous.
Llgbt snow also fell over parts
of Nebraska and South Dakota.
Temperatures drOJiped to zero In
the norlhern Plains and Into the
teens across much of the rest of
the Midwest.

eontlnued rrcm pare 1
motorists," Lleulenant Woodford added.
"1988's 0-Day netted 487 arrests statewide for drtvlua under
the Influence of alcohol or drugs. We can only (IUess at bow
many of those would have caused serJous Injury or fatal traf!tc
crashes II a pollee officer hadn't sto~ them, " he concluded.

EMS has four calls Thurs&lt;Wy
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
were answered on Thursday 'by units In the cdunty.
At 8:59a.m. , Rutland was called to to Old Dexll!r Road for
Marton Michaels who was taken to Holzer Medical Cenler.
Middleport at 10:30 a.m. went to Soutil Second Ave. for Jane
Warl)er to Holzer Medical Center and at 9:38p.m. to Cote St. for
Charlea Walker Jr. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 9: 51 p.m., Racine was called to Route 124 for OtiS
· McClintock to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

--Area deaths-Mary M. Kelly

Glen Henslft"
Illterment $1!1'vices for Glen L.
Hensler, Middleport, will be neld
at 2 p.m. Sunday at tile Letart
Falls Cemetery. Tile Rev. Lloyd
Grimm will officiate.

Mary Margaret Kelly, 91, a
resident of New Haven, died
Wednesday In Pleuant Valley
Hospital.
She wu · born April 9, 1898 In
Glenroy, .Ohio, daughter of tile
late Jobn and Sarah Davis
Charles Dye
Rockwell
Sbe was preceded In death by
Cllarles Joseph "Rocky" Dye,
her llusband, WilHam Kelly In
64, died Nov. 2, Ill Las Vegas,
1975 and two Infant brothers,
Nev . following an extended
Oran and Oris Rockwell.
Illness.
She wu a retired Mason
Born Dec. 22, 1921, In Joppa, County school teacher.
Meigs County, he was the son
Mrs. Kelly was a member of
Thomas Ferrell Dye and Elma
Father's House Church, Hart·
·Etta Hetzer Dye.
ford and the Mason County
· An army veteran, he served
Association
of Retired School
·during the World Warn and was
employees.
employed by Goodyear for many
Survivors Include two daugll·
years before retirement. He was
ters,
Sarab Gibbs, Betty Kelly,
a member of the Army Navy
both
of
New Haven; two grand·
Club, Garrison 102.
children, two great grandchild·
He Is survived by his wife of 20
years, Lydia Mae Jones Dye; , ren and several nieces and
stepdaughters, Bonnie Sue Rod· nephews.
Funeral services will be 1: 30
. erick, Modesto, Calif., Rebecca
p.m. Sunday at Foglesong Fun·
·Turner, HaYward. Calif., and
' Selma Hansen, MediCal Lake, eral Home with Rev. Clyde
Wash.; four step-grandclllldren; Fields and Rev. Mike Finnicum
two sisters, Lucy Beers, Las officiating.
Burial wlll follow In tile Gra·
Vegas, Nev., and Amy Moreham
Cemetery.
bouse, Ft. Myers Beach, F1a.;
Friends
may call at tile funeral
: two brothers, Thurman and
home
on
Saturday
from 3-5 and
•James Dye, Akron; and many
7·9 p.m.
nieces and nephews.
Cremation has taken place and
the ashes will be placed between
Veterans Memorial
tile graves of his parents In tile
Thursday admissions -Eliza·
Hetzer Cemelery In Reedsville
beth Horak, Pomeroy; Otis
· on Friday.
. Donations may be made to tile McClintock, Racine.
Thursday discharges - Hazel
' American Cancer Society or a
Ro1ers,
Burton DeWeese, Nellle
cllarlty organization.
Rose, Keith Musser.

Cold, wintry weather crossed
Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arkansas, and parts of Texas, witll
snow accumulations up to 5
loclles In northweatern Okla·
homa on Thursday. Three Inches
of snow was reported on the
ground In Amarillo, Texas.
''We frequently get these artie
surges comlua down and witll
southwesterly Iowa moving
tbrough, when tlley move on top
of the colder air, snow develops,"
said Mark Brundrett, a NWS
forecaster Ill Fort Worth, Texas.
·"It's not lhat unusual."
Forecasters Issued snow advl·
sorles for parts of Arkanssa hit
by snow, sleet, and freezlq rain
Thursday ntaht. In southeastern
Louisiana, a flash fiood watch

Stocks
Dall,y 1loell prk•
(1\a of 11:80 LDL)
Bryce llld Mark Bmllll
of Blual, Ellla A Loewl
Am Electric Power .............32%
ATItT .. .............. .......... ....... f3'jf,
Ashland Oil ............... ........ .38%
Bob Evans ......... .......... ....... 14%
Charming Shoppes .... .. ........ ll%
City Holding Co................... 15
Federal Mogul.. .................. 20%
Goodyear TltR ........... ........47~
Heck's ......... .............. ... ....... 3'!1o
Key Centurion ....................14%
Lands' End .. ........ ............... 28~
Umlted Inc.........................34%
Multimedia Inc....... :...........90%
Rax Restaurants ........ .......... 2%
Robbins It Myers .. ..... ..... ..... 15
Shoney's Inc ......... , .... ... ..... .12%
Star Bank .................. ....... .. 20%
Wendy's Inti........... ......... .... 4'!1.
Worthington Ind............... .. .. 24

Hospital news

wu llaued as to 3 Inch~ raln
fell. A. •lliht warmtna trelld wu
expected to chase away tile
precipitation and melt the snow
throqhout tile reaton Friday.
Frllld temperatures prevailed
overnlfht acr011 Pl!lllllylvanla,
where Iowa ranied from tile low
20s to the slnJ)e digits. Snow was
expected to lilt early Friday In
Delaware and southern New
Jersey, wbere overnJaht lOWIJ
were In the tow 201.
A winter storm watch was In
effect fpr portions of ce~~tral and
southern Maryland for rain
mixed with snow. Lows ranied
rrom near 20 In tile far west to
near 30 In tile soutll.
A ridge of hlfh pressure
llovered over New England Frl·
day, bringing with It clear allies
and deep cold. Temperatures In
Portland, Malne,droppedtonear
zero, breaking the old record low
for the day of f degrees set back
In 1977.
.
Central New Hampshire reported lemperatures near 5 degreeS bellllf zero, while the
wind·chW factor In parts of
Vermont was as cold as 22 below.
Rain soaked moat of the South
Friday, prcmptlng fllsh fiood
watches for portions of Mtssls·
sippi and Alabama and tbe
Florida Panllandle. Tempera·
tures were ln the 40s but started
faillng In some areas. Snow was
expected In hlfher elevations.
In nortllwes t Tenneall!l!•.pollee
reported Ice on a number of
bridges, Including the bridge
over the Mlsslsalppi·River on the
Interstate·l55 spur from tbe
Mis!lllllrl bootlleel.
Rain moved Into the Pacific
Northwest Friday, wetting most
of Wasblnaton state and Oregon.
The weather service ai&amp;O forecast · rain along much of the
northern and central California
coast.

Lottery numbers

Continued rrcm page 1

12.1 percent from 11.8 percent.
Hlspanles Improved their rate
from 7.9 percent to 7.8 percent.
Meanwhile, tile rate for wlllte
men stayed steady at 4.0 percent
and for black men rose to 10.7
percent from 10.3 percent.
White women had a jobless
rate of 4.0 percent, the same as In
October, while black women saw
their rate climb to 10.4 percent
from 10.0 percent.
Black teenagers experienced a
drop In their jobless rate to 32.8

Shop early,
·shop locally

SEE US FOR THE FINEST
USED CARS IN THE AREA!
1913 UNCOLN TOWN CAl-;............ S4695
1987 YUGO ...................................... 11195
2 Dr. 4 IPeed. Good condition.

1916 FOlD CROWN YICTOIIA .......... S6495
.

1981 CHEVY CITATION:.................-..... S695

v-e. Runs good.

1914 FOlD F·150 ............................. 'S3495

.; · .....,

8 cyl .• long bed. Runs good.

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Marilyn Meier - 11lt JlobbyhorH
Sut McGuirt - laslctts Galore
Unda Ratliff - Slate/Wreaths by LiMa

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SNOW 8VBFER8 - Whea the IIIOW comes
dowa tile kllla lalle &amp;o tlie hlllll on 'l leda, or In this
CMe, oa sufen. A liDI oa Sprtnc Avenue
Pomeroy • • &amp;be perfect lite oii Friday for Wayne
Allea Jlaraluu1, 11e t, al left, and 1111 colllla and
nelplior,. R.D. Barnhart, 11, to , lry ou&amp; their

I

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39001 IUHUIY IOAD............(Watch For Signs) ·
Hnn.; I ilh \d In

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HITJ:I·'-11'11-'1''-

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plutlc aleda called now surfen. Wayne lalbeaon
of Maralla Barilhart and R.D. II the son of Brenda
Barnliarl, all of Pomeroy. The two IDOW aurfln1
lloya are atudeala al Pomeroy Elementary whlcll
was closed oa Friday becaulll! of lhe sJtOW.
(Tlmes-Sen&amp;lael photo)

Fire destroys home in Syracuse
SYRACUSE - The mobile
borne residence of Rita Cllapman
and her daughter, Shelly Arnold,
of ,S yracuse, was destroyed by
fire Friday morning. The trailer,
owned bY Chapman, was ln the
VIsta Trailer Park· at the upper
end of the village.
Both Chapman and her daugh·
ter .,vere at home wllen tile fire
started. A spokesman for tile
Syracuse Fire De11,1rtment re-

ported that Chapman actually
witnessed the fire start when a
kerosene heater In one of the
rooms exploded.
Syracuse firemen were called
at 10: 28 p.m. followed by a call at
10: 32 p.m. for assls tance from
the Racine Fire .Department.
There was smoke but no names
showing from the .windows when
Syracuse firemen arrived on the _
scene. However, the trailer was

House Bfll 592 which was passed
by state legislators tn an effort to

place tile financial responsibility
for solid waste disposal at the
local level. HB 592 led to tile
establishment of solid wasle
districts throughouttlle state and
Meigs County Is part of the
six-county Athens, Hocking, Gal·
lla, Jackson, Melli$ and VInton
(AHGJMV) district. ·
And as the state places respon·
stblllty for solid waste disposal at
the local level, It Is also cu ttlng
back on funding to local litter

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SUNBIRD

...-·,... .......

AS L8W AS
,,

Smith-Nelson
JotUSI'IP

•,

992·2174

Inc.
•

By United Preaa International
A wintry storm that walloped
the eastern United States moved
out to wa early Saturday, leav·
lng behind nearly a foot of
powdery snow alona the mid·
Atlantic Cout and a coat of Ice
that was blamed In a rash of
deadlY traffic accidents.
In all, 15 deaths were blamed
on tile weather.
Tile second major storm or Its
kind . tills au twnn In the mid·
Atlantic reJion grew from a 'low
· pressure system out oftbeGulf of
Mexico tllat mixed with cold air
from Canada, ushering In snow,
freezing rain and Icy winds.
Tbe foul weather system
moved ln)o the Atlantic Ocean
Saturday, but the National
Weather Service Issued a statement laylnJatUI another storm
could hit the East Coast Monday
and dump more snow.
The wintry onslauJht Frtday
left up to 91nches of anow In parts
of Dellware, Marylalld, Wa·
ahilqtoli, D.C., aortllem Vlrlillla
and West Vlrll.nla. Smaller
amounts fell over most of Pen·
naylvanla, New Jersey and tile
mountains of Tennes-.
The Icy blast alao atruck parts
of tile Mldwel t and Mlslilsllppl
Valley, dumpiDi varylna
amounts of snow. Freezing rain

fell from southeast Arkansas Into
southwest Mississippi.
A dangerous slleet of Ice
formed over many areas hit by
the storm, Including roads In
most of North Carolina, where
two people died In an early
Saturday car crash In Cumber·
land County, hlfllway patrol Sgt.
D.W.,Taylor said.
"We've been Inundated with
accidents," he said.
Three motorists were killed In
two acCidents on slick hl1hways
In North CaroUna Friday, pollee
said.
A driver of a small truck was
killed In a wreck near Memphis,
Tenn., and a fatal accident was
reported In Missouri Friday,
authorities said. Eliht people
were reported killed In accldenll
on 1llppery ~dl In Arkanaaa
and Missouri on Thursday, When
the bli chiU began forming.
Roads were aUck In northern
Georala's mountains Saturday,
with sleet, SJJOW and tempera·
tures In the low 30s.
Philadelphia road crews
worked through the nlfllt trying
to plow and salt maJor roadways
free rrom tile 3 %·Inch coatina of
IIIOW, wlllch started falling Frl·
day morning and stopped about
9:30p.m.
Roadw1ys were unlllcely to

,31ectlona. ,02 P8tl•

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control programs.
For example, reports Wlnlns,
five litter control programs In
District f, which Includes Meigs
and Gal Ua Counties, lost tllelr
funding for next year. Those five
are Pike, Scioto, Hlihland,
Fayetle and Jackson Counties.
Gallla County's program was
refunded for 1990 and Gallla
County also received a recycling
grant totalling about $70,000,
Wiggins reports.
And althougll Melfa County
was refunded for 1990 at $59,475,

already burning Inside and
flames began appearing . soon
alter tllelr arrival. In a matter of
minutes the home and all Its
contents were lost
Chapman, who escaped with
only a nlfhlgown and robe, was
transported by EMS to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where slle
was treated and released. Her
daugllter escaped with tile
clothes she was wearing.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Drinking drivers and drug ahus·
ers and peddlers will be the
target of state lawmakers this
week at an end·Of·the•year ses·
slon of the Ohio House of
Representatives.
Th!! House will meet Friday, In·
what Is expected to be the final
seuton of 1989, to vote on
Senate-passed drunken driving
leaJslation and the House's own
!KJIUtion to the drug problem.
'Senate Blll131, rewritten slg,
nlfleantly In a House subcommlt·-'
tee under the dtrectlon of Rep.
Marc Gulbrle, · ' D-N~arlt, In·
creases·fines ' and driver license
suspensions for driving while
Intoxicated.
It also provides alternatives
for long fall sentences, lncludlq
house arrest, electronic Ignition
locks and ImmobilizatiOn of
offenders' automobiles.
The drug bill, au !bored by·
Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D·
Wheelersburg, has been rewrlt·
ten In a committee directed by
Rep. John Shivers, D-Salem. It
upgrades penalties for drug
abusers and traffickers and calls
for the state to devise a coordl·
nated drug-fighting plan lnvc;&gt;IV·

-

Mult-o
- - -A- - -inc.
----

the county Itself Is putting an
additional $12,000 In next year's
progral)'l "In order to keep tile
program operating at the present
level," says Meigs Commls·
slolll!r Richard Jones. A proposed recycling grant of about
$60,000 for Meigs Industries was
denied by the state, which is a
disappointment, agree Jones and
Wiggins.
Lltll!r program money Is dtmlnlslltng in Meigs County while
dumplog costs are on the rise
(See DUMPING, A7)

tng schools, communities other and requires law enforcement
state offices.
agencies to develop a system -of
The Rlffe-Shtvers bill also accounting for confiscated
requires youtllful drug offenders drugs.
One of the main points · of
to participate In counsellni pro' ·
grams, Imposes stricter penal· contention In tile llrug legislation
ties for corrupting children with Is who should retain the profits of
drugs and makes parents ac· seizures of drug equipment. Riffe
ci&gt;untable for tile abilse of drugs orlglaally called lor those proceeds to go for education, butlaw
by tllelr children.
Shivers' committee Is meeting enforceQJent agents have re·
Tuesday afternoon to put the · talned 75 percent of them In the
finishing touclles on the biU, but It latest version of the bill.
Stlll to )le worked out Is, the
Is expected · to be read)' by
quesdon of whether stiff sen ten·
Friday.
The House virtually lfnored a ces, Including mandatory min·
pair Qf Senate drug bills sent over IIJI.umjall.tennll, will completely
·
earlier. A final version will have s\nmp Olilo'a ~n system .
Shivers said attention willllave
to be negotiated by RJffe and
Senate President Stanley Aro- to be gt.ven to esdmates tllat It
noff, R·Cinclnnatl, early next · would coat $l.45 b!Won to conyear .
•truet prisons to house Inmates
House and Senate collferHtJ taken In under the provisions of
also will be put to work on tbe tile bill.
Tile Ohio Department of High·
terms of tile drunken drlvi•l
legislation, orlflnally aponaorecl way Safety Is disappointed witll.
Gutbrle's version of the drunken
by Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R· Bucyrus.
The Houlll! Is expected to agree drMn1 bill. Because or lnsuffl.
with the Senate verllon and send ctently harsh penalties, Ohio
to Gov. Richard Celeste a llltnor stands to lose$2 mUIIOnlnfederal
drug bill cleared l)y tbe Senate highway safety funds for the next
five years.
last montll. Tbat blll IJJCreaaes
Still, Guthrie said the bill is one
· the . penalty for selling druaa
of the most Innovative of lts kind.
within 1,000 feet of a school yard

Help sought in jail overcrowding
COLUMBUS. Ohio IUPI) Sen. John Glenn, D·Ohlo, said
counties should have a way to
house prisoners In scllools and
other buildings converted Into
minimum-security jails without
running the risk of a lawsuit.
Glenn met F.rl~ay state and
local officials during a field
hearing In Columbus of hll
Senate Governmental Affairs
Committee, which he chairs. He

heard local officials say that Congress to come back and say ,
Ohio's minimum jail standards · 'Look, we never lnll!nded this to
are too restrictive.
get Into jatlctype Issues,' and to
They mandate everything legislatively curtail the appllca·
from tile number of toilets and
tton of the act, " said Ohio Senate
drinking fountains per prisoner Judiciary Commltll! Chairman
to tile type of light bulbs that
Paul Pfeifer, R·Bucyrus.
must be used.
Said Columbus Ct tyCouncllwoIf the re(IUiatiOns are violated,
man Cyntllla Cecil Lazurus, ''We
counties can be sued under the
race standards that are
federal Civil Rla!lts Act.
(See HELP, A7)
· "What we need is for the

Wintry·storm in East moves to sea
Monday, Dec. 11 from 6:30 ''till:30
Saturday, Dec. 16 from 6 'till
SUIHiay, Dec. 17 frOm 5 'til 7
Wednesday, Dec. 20 from 6;30 'tll:30.
Co11)1 in and have your picture
taken with Santa for only Sl.SO or
bring your own can••·

Cloudy. Hlp aroUDd (8.
. ChiiDCe of rala 041 percent.

SpGr&amp;il ...................... C·1·8

Ohio House will reconvene
to vote on . drug le~lation

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Handmade Items For Gift Giving By:
s........ - Ohio liflf . . . c.....,

·

dumping.
'
,
Ken Wlfglns, director of Meigs
County's Litter Control Program, believes residents will
start dumping on hillsides along
Meigs County's back roads much
as tlley did In years prior to an
organized lltler control program.
Wiggins reports that In 1988, he
received 36 complaints of Illegal
dumps sites In Metas County.
This year he has received 161
complaints.
Today's higher costs for land·
fill' dumping are the result' of

,.

.-

12:00 Noon • 5:00 P. •·

POOH 1'1{111-"

wall- of garbage. Tills garbage
dumping .dilemma has county
officials more than a little
concerned - and rightly so.
As landfill costa Increase, the
fees whlcll trasllllaulers charge
their customers also Increase.
And In a county such as Meigs
where many residents live on
fixed Incomes and may not be
able to afford higher lees to have
trash llauled away or to haul II
away tllemselves, the problem of
Illegal dumps will likely Increase
right alona with fees for legal

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Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point PJam 1t, December 10. 1989
- - - - - - - -- --- ---- -------------------------

,

:..t

SA1UIDAY &amp;

-

By NANCY YOACHAM
'nmes-Seattael Stsff
POMEROY - Just trash It!
Tllose are pretty common words
In today's !brow-away minded
society - or at least they were
pretty common words.
·
In Olllo, stringent Environ·
mental Proll!ctlon Agency requirements regarding solid
waste disposal and the hlgll costs
of meeting those 11 trlngen t re·
· q ulremen ta have left small,
relatively poor counties like
Melfa up against the proverbial

4 Dr., white, fully equipped. good condl.t lon.

IGGS

Alo111 -&amp;he River ......... BI-1

..............................n·t

N--·
Dumping dllemma concerns Meigs officials

No. 44
COP\1...,_.1 . .
- -----

'l(ot. 24

"" ....

HOLIDAY
lATHER
SINDAY, DECEMIEI9 _..

happy is sood adviee.~.B-8-

•
t

A chance of snow each day,
Soalb Cealral Olllo
will be. In tile 30s Sunday
Highs
Becoming partly cloudy Frl·
and
·
In
the , 20a Monday and
day night, with a low between 15
,
Tuesday
.
Overnight lows will be
(lad 20. Partly cloudy Saturdlly,
In
the
20s
early
Sunday and In the
with lllfhs In tile mid 305.
teena
Monday
and Tuesday
Exteaded Forecast
mornings.
·
8unda.,y thrOUih Tueeday

4 Dr.

l118ide

In our town:
Let'e not pul anything
around World War I Doughboy...Page 8-6

CLEVELAND &lt;UPI) -Tilurs·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PJCK-3
PICK·3 ticket sales totaled
$1,326,657, wltll a payoff due of
$453,519.
PICK-4

Beat of the Bend;
Don't worry, be

-----Weather-----

PB. PB, Air. Whit•.

C-1

College basketball results

perceat !rom
percent while
the the rate for white teens rose
to 1"-7 percent from 13.9 percent.
Alllona llldllstrlea, the iood•·
producing sector had an unem·
ployment rate of 6.3 percent, up
tram 6.2 percent In October, ·
while the service Industries saw
joblsaness rise to :&gt;.1 percent
from 4.9 percent.
Tile conslrUCtlon Industry had
a particularly touglr month witll
Ita rate climbing to 9.8 percent
from 9.0 percent.

thaw Saturday as winds up to 15
mph were expected to keep
temperatures effectively between zero and 10 degrees, NWS
forecaster Harry Afos said.
Reports of fender-benders,
whlcll mounted durlnl a trustrat·
lngly slow rush hour Friday
flowed In Saturday, but no major
accidents bad been reported ,
state pollee said.
The storm left only a dusting of
snow In Pittsburgh.
. Ill Maryland, residents got out
their snow shovels and dug
tllemsetves out of tllelr second
major snowstorm since Thanks·
giving. Two to 12 Inches hlan·
lleted the slate.
As much as 5 Inches fell In
aouthern New Jersey and
Delaware.
In the natiOn's capital, the
federal OffiCe of Personnel Man·
apment released aovernment
wotken on a staaerecl basis
Friday afternoon, a new tactiC
deslfned to prevent the traftlc
lll'kllock.
Tennessee's first winter storm
of the seasoo procluced several
Inches of snow and rreeztna
temperature• that cut power to
as many as 40,000 llomes In
.Nashville.
Snow also fell Friday In Indl·
ana, Olllo, and Illinois.

''N¥1, 'I'OY8, '1'0!1 -

'AI a II 6 ..

OW.Iirnll C111a Ia , , . I I IF&amp;..._-.--an ' 1 ..,. 1e Jlw 1e ... laic
Pldaecl wiOJ ~ llomai rte ean, ....,...,
II

•

,;;;;.

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------~-

•

Commentary and perspective
•

December 10. 1989

Der.ember 10, 1989

1111 Tldrd Ave,, Ge!Mr "e, 0111o
(114) .......

111 Coart Si., Pomeroy, Oldo
(114) •tua

ROU&amp;T L. WJNGE'l'l'

Pulllllber
ROBART WWION lB.
ExecuUYe Edllar
A MEMBER ot Th.e U1'1.1ted Press International, Inland Dally PreN Auocla·
tlon

an~

Amerkw.D Newl!pl.per Publishers AsJOCJ&amp;IIon.

LETTERS OF OPINION are·we) come. They lbould .be h111 than Dl wcrdl

'lona:. Alllettenarembject toedltlDIIDdmustbeslped wltbname, addreuud
telepOoao number. No unalpllll&lt;tlen ..Ul be publlsbed. Letters •-Ill be lD
aoad 114J!,..~~-I!.~- n01 persCDalltl ...

sen family friend told our associate Les Whitten. Bentsen Is
seasltlve to the medical problems of children. "He lost one
little grandcblld to cancer recently, and two others have
serious medical problems . He
worries about ... drug kids and
their mothers as people."
A new Bentsen lfllilatlve
measure would provide better
health care for ll5,000 prepant
women and 850,cn&gt; children
under age 6 who have no medical
lnsu,.nce. That's just a drop In
the bucket.
The memo outlining the study

Letters .to the editor
Carriers appreciate customers
Dear Editor:
The National Association of
Letter Carriers and the entire
staff at the Pomeroy Post Office
would like to take this opportunIty to say "thank you" to all our
customers.
We really appreciate each and
every one of you!
And ·we would also like to
remind you that our Carrier
Alert Is sWJ In effect.
. What this means is that when
you are on vacation or away for a
week, we're constantly alert to
changes around your house as we

Racine home judging slated

;·Drug· babies may be fiscal
time
bomb
Jack Anderson and Dale Van A tta
WASHINGTON- A horrifying Chairman Lloyd Bentsen, Ddeflclt prospect Is being ignored Texas, to his staff. Bentsen has
by federal and local budget ordered a major study of the
planners. It is the $15 billion a impact of "drug babies" on
year It wUI soon cost Americans federal health programs and
to care for 375,000 babies born thus the national budget.
annually who are addicted to
He hopes to find . ways to
prevent . addiction of young
drugs.
That Is just the amount of women, not only as a means of
money It will take to prepare the reducing the potential $21 billion
mentally, emotionally and physi· a year outlay for the babies, but
Cally handicapped children of the untold costs Incurred by the
addict mothera for kindergarten. mothers in. hospitalization, im·
Another $6 billlon will be needed prisonment, welfare payments
annually to get· them through · and the other pitfalls of
high school.
addiction.
The alarming totals are dis"With (Bentsen) It's also not
closed In an Internal memo from just dollars and cents," a Bent·
Senate Finance Committee

make our rounds, when man
begins to stack up, we're aware
of a possible problem, particularly with elderly residents.
More than just delivering mall,
we're Interested In you, and our
goal Is to constantly Improve our
service to you and commitment
to the community.
And here's our wish to you this
holiday season - a "Merry
Christmas and a Happy New
Year!'"

Jim Pullins
on behalf of the
Pomeroy mall carriers

·Today in history
By United Press lnlernatlonal
..Today Is Sunday, Dec. 10, the 344th day of 1989 with 21 to follow.
' The moon Is waxing, moving toward full.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign or Sagittarius. They
include Francis Gallaudet, founder of the first free school lor the
deal, in 1787; poet Emily Dickinson In 18:JJ; librarian Melvil Dewey In
1851; TV newscaster Chet Huntley In 1911; and actresses Dorothy
Lamour, In 1914 (age 75), and Susan Dey in 1952 (age 36).
On this date in history:
.
In 1869. the Territory of Wyoming granted women the right to vote.

In 1898, Spain signed a treaty officially ending the Spanish·
Amertcan War. It gave Guam, Puerto Rico and the Philippines to the
United States.
In 1936, Britain's King Edward VIII abdicated to marry American
divorcee Wallis Warfield Simpson. His brother succeeded to the
throne as K lng George VI.

Bentsen wants from the Finance
Committee cites findings that
about 400,000 pregnant women
currently have serious drug
pr!)blems. Many of their children
are maltonned at birth. Hospl·
tats all over the COU11try are
making room for these babies as
long-term residents - "boarder
babies'' - because their parents
walkoutthedoorandnevercome
back for the children.
The abandoned babies are not
prime candidates for adopUon.
Drug babies are likely to spend
months; maybe years, In foster
care waiting lor them lor the red
tape to clear them for adoption
and for someone with unusual
compass ton and courage to take
them.
"The lnclden~ of sudden in"
!ant death syndrome Is ten-fold
larger for drug babies as well,"
the memo says. And, just for
Intensive care, the total cost lor
drug babies last year was $2.5
billion.
One lone baby can coat anywhere from $1,500 to $2,000 a day
In hospital charges. The ·laxpayer absorbs the lion's share of
the costs through Medicare,
Medicaid and other federal, state
and local programs.
Bentsen warns that governments at all levels must be ready
to pay for Ins tltu tlonallzlng a
high percentage of the drug
babies If, even though cured of
the addiction, they suffer Ungerlng mental problems or turn to
crime out of anger and
frustration.
"It should be chillingly clear
that combating drug abuse
among young women must become a top priority In the war
against drugs," Bentsen told his
staff. "We need to learn more
about the costs to society."

:

RACINE- Residents In and around the Racine area who will
be decorating their homes for the hollday season are Invited to
register for a house judging contest which will take place on
Dec. 22.
.
First, second and third place prizes will be awarded In both
traditional and religious categories, according to Bev Moore of
the Racine Merchants Association.
Anyone wishing to have their home Included In the judging
should register by calling the Racine Cut Rate at 949-2942, or the
Racine Department Store at 949-2800, by 5 p.m. Dec. 22.
Homes within a three-mile radius of Racine are eligible for
judging, Moore said.

:

Trustees to meet .
REEDSVILLE - The Olive Township Trustees will hold a
special meeting Monday, 6:30 p.m., at the Reedsville Fire
Statton, for the purpose of reviewing appllcatlons for township
clerk.

:
'·
·

Last week to apply for toys
·

POMEROY - The Meigs Ministerial Association will
continue taking appllct~tlons lor toys and other Items lor
children ages 18 and under, though Friday at 3 p.m .
Applications are being taken Monday through Friday, from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m., at the home of Rev. Don Meadows, 211 Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy, and on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
during regular hours at the Meigs County Cooperative Parish
office, 311 Condor St., also In Pomeroy.
Frlday is tl'l'e final deadline, and people who are receiving help
with toys from other sources should not apply through the
ministerial association.

·

.

Wreck investigated by deputiese
POMEROY - A motor vehicle accident Friday In Syracuse
was Investigated by the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.

POMEROY Sixty-three
cases were processed Wednesday In Meigs County Court by
Judge Patrick O'Brien. Among
the. 63 were 14 cases stemming
from hunting violations during
last week's deer gun season.
Fined for hunting violations
were Basll Wright, Albany, $100
and costs, lor attempting to take
a second 'deer during the season;
Rick Barringer, Reedsville, $70
and costs, possessing a deer or
parts of a . deer that was not
tagged as required!
Frederick C. Knlzel, Adrian,
Mich., $100 and costs, two-year
hunting privileges suspended,
for hunting upon lands of another
-\"fthoilt a valid non-resident
license; $30 and costs, hunting
\l'llthout a special deer permit;
forfeiture of a 12-guage shotgun
!o the State of Ohio for having
shot shells In the gun after dark;
Billy Cowles, Brook Park, $25
and costs, aiding, shielding and
harboring Frederick Knlzel;
Alfred C. Smith, Pomeroy, $30
and costs, no annual special deer
permit; Quincy Oldaker, Letart,
W.Va., $100 and costs, hunting a
deer with a 30.06 caliber rifle;
• Shane Engle, Middleport, $30
and cOSts, pre sen ling a deer at
~heckln&amp; station which he had
not killed; Charlie Geary, Middleport, $30 and costs, presenting
a deer at checking station which
he had not killed; hJe!f Meeks,
Rutland, $30 and costs. hunting
on another's land without special
deer permit; $25 and costs,
l!unting without a valid hunting
license;
• Mlck Seyler, Pomeroy, $30 and
~osts; hunting without special
deer permit; Charles Taylor•
Addison, $70 and costs, hunting
JJpon land of another without
obtaining a 1988 Ohio · nontesldea:lllcense; John Williams,
Dayton, $100 and costs, aiding
another while having In his
possession a Remington Model
870 12-guage shotgun after killing
a deer;
: Timothy R. Wamsley, Mlddlef1Drt, $25 and costs, failed to

In 1941, Japanese troops landed on northern Luzon In the
Philippines In the early daY• of W~rld War Two.
·
In 1984, the National Science Foundation reported the discovery of
the first planet outside our solar system, orbiting a star 21 million
light years from Earth.

ROYAL CROWN

Whole (14-17-lb. Ave.)

Semi-Boneless
Smoked
Ham·
s
WeterAdded
ITIIIS AID PIKES GOOD II
GAWPOUS Alit POIIEIOY.
GOOD SRDAY, DEC.1 0 THIOUGH

113 SIZE

·Naval

ilL . .

. &amp;ell

J~.

Thorn Apple Volley Somi-Bonol••

Smoked Ponlona.......... lb. ,, .19

Martha White
flour

~alifomia

KROGER IUTTEIISCOTCH, MINt OR
SEMI-SWHT MORSELS 12-oz.. . t1.18

SIZE ..• 3 FOil t1.00

IN THE DAIRY CASE

U.S. GRADE A
18-LBS. AND UP

CHILLED

Tropicana
Orange Juice

Kroger Fresh
Young Turkeys

1hz.

Ptunll

Fir

CliBP-)
Publlabedeach·&amp;.DdiiY. 8'l5'1lllrdAve.,
; c.. m.,..., Obto, 11y tbeObloVatJ~Pub­
. Ushllli Compuyl1olultlmedla, IDe Seccncl dua poatqe 'DIId at Galllpnlla, .
e&amp;.U. EDterecf u temad clau
~ :J::.C mat1er at Pomeroy, Oblo, Poat
~Ohlo

c

'·Member: UnltA!d Press lllternotlona\,
IDI&amp;nd Dilly Pnu AsaGctatloa and the

'Obto Newn;. All..._iotton, Natlonlt
-tat!Ye, Bnnhlm
.,New ... p•
•· 733 Tb1rd Avnue,
-Mew torlr:, New York l0017.
·

:Adwrtlllq

KIIOGIII 'IIEIH EGG NOG Ofl

•

111110 CUITAIID CIUAIIT ••• t1.01

,

---

.ooe Week ............................ 10 Cents

-Ole Year ....... :.............................

•

IIINOLB COPY

No subacrlpttons by mall permitted ln
~...... whc'e mater cll'rler lei'Vtce II
.available.

·TileSundlly Ttmea&amp;ntlnel will not be
·n~P&lt;Iftllble

tor advuce paymata

lllaile to earrten.

•

. LIMIT t ~ :UDITIOIAI. PUIICIWE
UMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

------

----IIMT.IIC..Ill.

-

I ll . . . . . . . ffAII t Lilli Will

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......,Oolr .

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.Six IFUllllhii ............................... I!UO

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DICAFPIIIIATIO II'OTIJGHT IIAN

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flut .

COFRI1-LI... 2 FOR ti.GO

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11'11'- .................................
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••

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Action filed in Common Pleas
POMEROY - A judgment action has been flied In Meigs
Common Pleas Court by the Amerltrust Company, Cleveland,
against Mark Coughenour, Langsville.
In.another matter, William E . Sorden has been appointed by
Probate-Juvenile Judge Robert E . Buck to a lull term on the
Leading Creek Conservancy District Board.
In the state's case against Michael Pierce, one charge against
Pierce has been dismissed.

Three calls responded to by EMS
POMEROY - Three calls for assistance were answered
Friday by units of the Meigs County Emergency .Medical
Services.
At 10:28 a.m., Syracuse was called to a structure fire at the
Rita Chapman home In the Vista Trailer Park In upper
Syracuse. Racine was called to assist at 10:32 a.m . but the
mobile home was a total loss. Chapman was transported from
the site to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 10: 56 a.m., Pomeroy transported Adam Riffle from
Chester Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

=··
.30
..0

jail, falsification; Sally
McKnight, Middleport, $10 and
costs, assured clear distance;
Shirley Hubbard , Syracuse. $10
and costs, left of center; Alexander Van May, Pomeroy, $10
and costs, failed to yield right of
way;
Lots J. Cundiff, Cheshire, $10
and costs, failed to yh\ld from a
private driveway;· Lots A. Jenkins, Pomeroy, $20 and costs,
safety belt violation; Albert D.
Hall Jr., Wellston, $20 and costs,
failure to control.
Fined lor speeding were Lee
O!fenberger, Columbus, $23 and
costs; Kent Redding, Carrboro,
N.C., $25 and costs; Janet Faddorsen, Gallipolis, $21 and costs;
Charles Boyd, Gallipolis, $20
and costs; Frank Kelsey, Chauncey, $21 · and costs; Dandle!
Kendra, Dunbar, W.Va., $25 arid
costs; Robert Lacy, Pensacola,
Fla., $20 and costs; James Theiss
Jr., Marietta, $23 and costs;
Emma Brewer, Reedsville, $25
and costs;
Jo Ellen Yeary, South Charleston, W.Va., $24 and costs; Clay
Pelfrey, Germantown, $25 and
costs; Karen Tindall, Columbus,
$25 and costs; Kevin Spaun,
Racine, $20 and · costs; Rusty
Wagoner, Belpre, $24 and costs;
James E. Harsh, Leon, W.Va. ,

Jury will get murdef case this week
COSHOCTON, Ohio (UPI) -A
Coshocton County Common
Pleas jury Is expected to get the
case Monday of a Tennessee man
charged In the shooting death of a
farmer.

The defense In the trial of Carl
Lewis, 25, Cleveland, Tenn. ,
rested Friday. Lewis Is charged
with complicity to aggravated
murder In the January death of
James 0. Steurer, 55.
The victim's son, James 0 .
Steurer Il, 24. and Sandra Maxwell Griffin, 26, Cleveland,
Tenn., are also charged In the
shooting. The younger Steurer
has pleaded guilty to compllclty
to murder and other charages
RiO GRANDE -The Univer- . and Is awaiting sentencing. Grifslty of Day ton-Graduate School of fin's trial is being held simultaneEducation will hold a · winter ously In the Coshocton City Hall.
term Information and registration session from 4 to 6 p.m.
Thursday Jan. 4, at the Jamnes
A. Rhodes Student at the UniverIn Friday's Gallipolis Dally
sity of Rio Grande,
Tribune,
It was reported that
During the sessions, students
Patrtcla
Wilson,
24, of Gallipolis,
may sign up lor , University of
pleaded
guilty
to
obstructing a
Dayton classes to be held at Rio
public
offiCial.
Grande from Jan. 5 to Apr. 21,
· Wilson entered a guilty plea to
1990. Un lverslty of Dayton faculty will be present at Rio the original charge of tampering
Grande Jan. 4 to answer any with evidence.
~!'!'!'!"...
questions regarding
registration.
For more Information, contacl
Paul Lloyd at the University of
Rio Grande, 614-245-5353, or the
University of Dayton School of
. Education, 513-229-3146.

Winter registration
set for Dayton
graduate classes

CoiTeCtion

ROTC cadet wins
VFW scholarship

PRICE

&amp;lnclay ......... .... .. ................. 1!0 Ceata

I

attach a temporary lag on deer;
Otis Johnson, Oak Harbor, $30
and costs, failed to deliver deer to
o!!lclal checking station by noon
following day of harvest.
Also fined were Luther N.
Mayle, Athens, $250 and costs,
three days In jail, 60 day license
suspension, DWI; 10 days In jail
to be suspended to three days to
be served concurrently with DWI
sentence upon proof of valid
operator's license, no operator's
license; $25 and costs, left of
center; $75 and costs, possessing
deer meat;
Thomas 0. Slone, Long Bot·
tom, $300 and costs, 90 day
license suspension, six months In
jail suspended to 10 days, DWI;
Charles D. Crisp, Glo.uster, $250
and costs, 30 days In jail
suspended to three days, 60 day
license suspension, one year
probation, alcohol treatment program ordered, DWI;
Greg W. Knapp, Middleport,
$100 and costs, 10 days In jail
suspended, one year probation,
restraining order Issued, aggravated menacing; PaulE. Wilson,
Racl~. $100 and costs, six
months In jail suspended to seven
days and two year.s probation, no
operator's license.
Kenneth Biggers, Columbus,
$25 and costs, disorderly conduct; $25 and costs, two days In

RINDAY ONLY

' IWKIIIPI'IONIIAftl:ll

, •rc.ntor•-·-

Gali1

According to the report, Robert 0 . Willis, 44, of Syracuse, was
eastbound on Route 1241n Syracuse at 7 a .m. when hls1984 For&lt;!
pickup olld on the snow. Willis went off the roadway on the left
Into the ditch and overturned.
·
There was heavy damage to the . truck. No Injuries were
reported.
Oretha Snider, Benjamin Carroll and Melo(ly Winchester, all
of Racine and all charged with arson Involving the Ford Escort
owned by Snider which was reported stolen on Nov. 17,
appeared Friday In Meigs County Court where each pleaded
Innocent to the .c harge.
Snider and Carroll were released from custody on personal
recognizance bonds. Winchester Is being held at the Meigs
Vounty Jail for Shenandoah County. VIrginia authorities lor
falllng to appear on a charge of malicious burning by use or an
explosive device.
The trio Is to appear again next week In county court.

___;,_Meigs County court

...

SAYUIDAY, DIC. 16, 1919.
WE IUBYE 1W IIGIIY TO LIMIT
QI~S. 10• SOLD TO DIAUIS.

Sunday T111181-Sentinei-Page-A-3

-Area news briefs-------------. Florida woman sues

Page A-2·

~====================================~==
A Dlvltlloa of

Pomlioy-Middleport-Gellipolia, Ohio-Point Pleua'rt, W. Ve.

RIO GRANDE- University of
Rio Grande sen tor Reserve Of· ·
fleer Training Corps Cadet Ml·
chael L. Brown recently received ·
a $500 schQiarshlp from Gallipolis VFW Post 4464. ·
The scholarship was presented
to Brown by VFW National
Commander Walters. Hopn.ID
the ceremony, hosted by Post
4464, Brown was honored by
Ho11an as well as State Commander Joseph Siebert and
trlct 12 Commander Sonny
Chandler.
'lbe scholarship Is given each
year to one deserving senior In
the ROTC WAREAGLE BattalIon at Rio Grande.
~

Dl•·

$30 and costs;' Forrest R. Barnett, Tuppers Plains, $21 and
costs;
Melissa L. Woods, Middleport.
$23 and costs; Stephen 0. Jenkins, Racine, $21 and costs;
Clara Gallagher, Charleston,
W.Va., $26 and costs; Robert
Mattingly Sr., St. Marys, W.Va ..
$23 and costs; Roher t Spradling,
Columbus, $25 and costs; William D. Davis, Middleport, $22
and costs;
David Van Vleet, West End,
N.C., $25 and costs; Scott McArthur, Albany, $22 and costs;
Charles Searles, Rutland, $23
and costs; George Szora, Chagrin Falls, $26 and costs;
· Charles Walter, San Anzel,
Texas, $25 and costs; Terri
Roush, Middleport, $20· and
costs; David Horne, Ashland,
Ky ., $21 and costs.
· Forfeiting bonds In county
court were David Cornell, Proctervllle, $55, Insecure load; and
Tommy Mathews, Gallipolis,
$60; Michael Balch, Point Pleasant, W.Va., $80; Ralph Clark,
Little Hocking, $60; Hilma
Henry, Zanesville, $60; and RObert Ward, Findlay, $60, all for
speeding.

drivers in wreck
GALLIPOLIS - · Sharon E . Township to satisfy Its judgment.
Gallla County Treasurer Larry
McKinney, Tamarac, Fla., Injured last February In an auto- Betzalsowas named a defendant
mobile accident In Gallla County, In the suit folr any taxes which
has sued both the driver of the may be owning on the real estate.
car In which she was a passenger The plaintiff asked the court to
reqwuire the treasuerer to set up
and the other driver.
Named defendants In the suit any liens the country may have
flied In Gallla County Common on the property.
Pleas were Mildred GtndlesOhio Valley Bank, 420 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, !lied a comberger, Rt. 1, Galllpolts. and
plaint seeking a judgement
Ronald Kay, Tamarac, Fla.
against
Jerry L. and JoyceTalor,
McKinney claims she was a
Rt
.
2,
Bidwell,
seeking a judgpassenger In a car (jrlven by Kay
ment
of
$24,169.88,
along with
when It was lnnvolved In an
lnterest
.
a
t
$5,520536
per
day, and
accident Feb. 1, 1989 on US 35, In
.$5.75
per
day
life
Insurance
Green Township. McKinney
charges both drivers with negli- ' premiums.
The plaintiff also seeks foreclogence as cause of the accident
sure of a mortgage on 0.766 of an
and her Injuries.
acre of land In Section 23 of ·
McKinney states she suffered
·permanent physical Injuries, InRaccoon Township to satisfy the
judgment.
curred both mediCilland hospital
Also named defendants in the
expenses and a permanent lm·
suit were Central Trust Com·. ·
palrment of her earning
capacity.
pany, Galllpolls, and Gallla'
County Treasurer Larry Betz,
The plaintiff Is seeking a
judgment, both jointly and severboth of whom may have !lens on
ally, In an amount sufflclen t to · the property. The plaintiff Is
fully and fairly compensate her
asking that the defendants be
lor damages. She also seeks
required to set up their liens or
forever be barred from asserting
Interest and court coals.
,
Paul Frederick Barker, Sr., the same.
Frances V. Bricker, Rt. 1,
Rt:2. Patriot, flledapetltlonfora
divorce from Ll·nda Irene Northup, filed a complaint,
against Clyde Hensley, Rt. 1.
Barker, Zanesville, Ohio, on
Northup, seeking a judgroent of
grounds of gross neglect of duty.
extreme cruelty and adultery. $13,000 lor loss o personal possesMarried Feb. 11, 1988, the couple sions In a fire at the defendant's
has one child. The plaintiff Is also home.
The plaintiff also Is asking or a
seeking custody and alimony :
.
restraining
order preventing the
Huntington Ch!!5apeake &amp; Ohio ,
defendant
from
spending any of
Railway Employees of Huntingthe
Insurance
money
recelvblid
ton, W.Va., filed a complaint
from
Lightning
Rod
Mutual
against William and Lillian Hall,
Insurance
Company
as
result
of
Gallla County. seeking a judgthe
fire
in
August
1989
that
ment of $14,251.88 along with
Interest at 13.875 percent from destroyed her personal helong,
lngs; and that the defendant be
Nov. 30, 1989.
The plaintiff also seekS !ore- required to pay her for upkeep
cloosure on a mortgage on 1.63 and Improvements to the house
acres In Section 13 of Guyan' while she lived there taking care
of hls.. mother mand that he be
required to pay the Indebtedness
. on a 1987 Ford Tempo.
Central Trust Company, 352
Second Ave., Gallipolis, lied a
complaint against JO!i.fph A. and' ·
South Central Ohio
Cloudy, with a chance of rain. April Hammond, Henderson,
High around 40. The chance of W.Va., seeking a judgment of
$4,.~.02. The plaintiff also Is
rain Is 50 percent.
seeking Interest at 12.89 percent
Extended Forecast
from Dec. 5, 1989 and court costs.
Monday through Wednesday
A chance of snow all three
days. Continued cold with highs
NO"' OPEN FOR THE
In the 20s. Lows from the middle
CHBISTMAS SEASON
teens to lower 20s Monday, then
the teens Tues&lt;Jay and
(7 cDionl
Prbr nb lla:1gi rg ....h n Tr•r.
Wednesday.
Clwirt11w Cod"' Feilogt ...,tr,
llorriltl Hair '"" _. W.. Slrow
l'laotr. lin _. WI Owisl11wr ,..._
f• tiro llwlt! IIM'I Gran lbtllltr,

·Weather

••••Hill•

Hosptial news

.......... &lt;-tory

VMH
Friday admissions - Mar·
garet Edwards, Rutland.
Friday discharges - None.

v-.

(Wildt liar - Chrllt- Op• Hourol
Open Oelly 9 AM·&amp;~.P.M.
Sund8y 1 P.M.-&amp; t'.M.

HI.AIDS GIIENHOUSE
H2·5776

Syr•••· Dlrio

Diamond Solitaire

SALE!
33% OFF Regular Prices
leg.

1I 20 (arot "'"'"'"'"'" 179.00
1/10...................... •259.00
1/7 "....................... S335.00
1/5 -•••••••n•••,,.., , $425.00
1/4-..................... '625.00
1/3 ....-.................. S799.00
1/2 ....................... 1079.00

SALE

•99.00
•149.00
S199.00
•269.00
•399.00
•519.00

•n9:oo

WI
1/20."""""'""'"""1119.00 •1M.OO
1110-··-"""''"""'1299.00 •169.00
1/7 .........................399.00 '229.00
1/S ...- ................. 5659.00 *SI9.00
1/4--·-··-·-••79.00 S499.00
113 _,_,, __" __ 1995.00 '659.00
1/2
S2019.00SU49.00
leg

IIEG.
SAlE
1120----·.......... 1175.00 S109.00
____ 1265.00 S159.00
1/10

111 -·····"""'_.. s.us.oo snt.oo
_ _....;.. .... •599.00 •sat.oo
----•715.00 S4H.OO

OPmSRDAYS
1·5 ....

•

�PIG

Dec:embar 10, 1989

Decambar 10, 1989

Pamelov IW:I:IIpt.AI-Gt'IC"'!llr, Ohio Polnl Pint 1t. W.Va.

A 4 Sundly lin 11 SMIIIilltll

~

CHRISTMAS SHOP
•

Su~

· Pomeroy-Midcleport-Galllpolis, Ohio Point Pleasant. W . Ve.

T11 er Se•tinei-Piga A-IS

jACK &amp; ) ILL'S

G STARTS IN

"Fni&lt; hion• forth~ YtiUII!f "

.,

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S .
OLDEST AND LARGEST
CHILDREN'S STORE
FEATURING BRAND NAMES YOU
CAN TRUST:

.

.

•Bugle Boy
•Peaches &amp;

ENJOY AN OLD-FASHIOWED
CHRISTMAS IN HISTORIC GALUPOLIS.
YOU'LL APPRECIATE THE FREE PARKING
AND EXTENDED STOlE HOURS.

COME AND SEE OUR NEW ·

Cream

Holiday Savings
ALL ~OATS &amp; JACKETS

•

-•

DOWNTOWN!

326 SKOND AVENUE
GAWPOUS, OK.
. 446-4343
OPEN SUNDAY 1·5
FlEE GIFT WIAPPING

HASKINS·TANNER'S

~

818 DEAL DAY!!

25%

•

OFF
INCLUDING:
•London Fog
•All Leather Jackets &amp; Coats
•Wool Coats from J.G. Hook,
Karen &amp; Ashley Scott

an:
Imagine, abusiness shoe that weighs
less than most running shoes. Roclqxrt•DresSports•.
Incredibly light Incredibly comfmable.
Now, imagine how you'll feel

MONDAY ONLY, DECEMBER 11

· Select A
Sports Coat .

at the end of the day.

at

·o~

20°/o

OFF

Haskins·Tanner ·

GROUP MEN'S

DRESS
SHIRTS
Yaluos to 132.00

WINTER
JACKETS

99
S12
2 $25

25°/o OFF

FOI

/...Pt.:.

LAFA YETIE MALL

lADIES

this Friday,

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

. Sweaten, Skirts,
Blouses, Slacks

Saturday or
Monday and

ENTIRE STOCK! .
OPDIILIP.M. .
rtBY IIGin
SillilY 1-5

'

GROUP MEN'S .

Get A Pair of .

We'd like
•
to pomt
out
something '
of interest
to your
~
- feet.

, 338 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
(614) 446-7171

Dress Slacks

FREE!

THOMAS CLOTHIERS

If

.
You see that little grove up there in the sole of the shoel That's called
. : the Comfort Curve'. and only the Body Shoe' from Hush Puppies' has it.
_The Comfort Curve is designed to follow the natural movement of the
-~· ._·_
· ' foot Wh1ch means with the Body Shoe, your shoes flex where your feet
· • flex, giving you more comfort throughout the entire walking motion.
So why not cry on-a ir? After all. now thar your feet know about us.
· , theywon'tsettleforanythingless.
. ~-

f

SWEATERS

........ 111.00

33\ 8h

Ir=-~~--~
~ ltHtr

____...

1,_ /.':,

$899 '

0

WRANGLER .

FASHION
JEANS

ALL WEATHER

COATS

leg. 130.00

20°~ OFF

$1799 .

I

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

GROUP MEN'S

•

FREE GIFT
WRAPPING •

p
' a

•

SON SALE 15°/o-50°/o OFF

SAVE 15% ON MEN'S
SPOilS COATS &amp; ILAZERS
SAVE

15'/o ON ••s

COATS I JACII'fS

HAGGAR E·Z

CASUAL SLACKS
leg. S32 NOW
.

$2 390

:!

•••

Use Our Layaway Plan

•

MEN'S

LONDON FOG &amp;•l.tNQ&lt;JN:TOWN

ALL WEATH£R:COATS

J,,

HDUCED 20!~ .

-

OOIIE STOCII •N'S

LEVI

FLOISHEIM SHOES_

10°/o OFF

SAVE

JEANS ~ ·

12'/0 ~25C¥o

Bonus Gift
With Purchase
A p&lt;rfect gift for all agts- thJS
adorable Stuffed animal is your free gift.
witb any Hush Puppies• pun:hase.
while supplies. last

-·
FREBGII!

-~

..........

ltgltttr For

'19

wJtl ..... . ,..... ,

w ........-:;.; -.i ,.

·FREE .PA&amp;IUNG
., ~

.

WRANGLER '

FLANNEL SHIRTS
logular 12 2.00

legister to Win Haskins-Tanner's
. Christmas Glft·A·Ramat

GIIOUP ARROW
QUilT UNED

FLANNEl SHIRTS
log. $28.00

$1Q99
2 FOR S20

S18''

1st Prize:

Wesrwood

l'lalltllulh P14fnr" DOl

Tlwmas Clothiers

ff
Ir

[iCI ,
•

•

·

OPEN EVENINGS
'nL 8 P.M.
SUNDAY 1 to 5

'
:

Color TV
2nd Prize:
Microwave Oven
3rd Prize:
AM/FM Radio

4th Prize:
Keyboard

GROUP HAGGAR

HANE'S
UNDERWEAR

DRESS SLACKS
Values to 132.99

20°/ooFF S24 99
MEN'S SOCKS- SAVE S8.50

$375 $699
3

LAYAWAYS- FREE ALTERATIONS

$1391

�------~-

I

Area deaths

Helen S. Hunl

Waterloo Gran

He was preceded In death by
one d ugbter three lste and
four .;others'
s r1
Survivors ·Include his wife
Genevieve (Justice) Woolum'
whom he married In 1925. 0 ~
grandson Larry Kingery
~
Ironton;' and two gre~t:
grad
~ sor:s. rvt
be h ld
111
S ndason ct ~ ces w t PhUI~
p.ml· 8
ps
u 1 Y Ha
Fu nera1 orne In ronton. Public
services will be Monday all p m
Phllll Fu
H
Th ·
1
1 0
~evs
Divecl::,r~

lU

Vivian Edwards
GALLIPOLIS - Pallbearers
for VIvian Edwards, whose servl·
ces were 2 p.m. Saturday at
Waugh·Halley-Wood Funeral
Home, were Chester, John, Ml·
chael and Ronald White, Charles
Stone and Kevin Kuhn.

'!'&amp;utn:

and Pearl McMasterrgwill offl·
elate. Burial will be in Slabfork
Cemetery
Frl ds.
ll th fu
homee~ nd~a~ ca
e nera1
6
1
u Y om 0 9 p.m.

M81180D C. Donnelly

W. LesiEI' Hart

GALLIPOLIS - Pallbearers
for Manson C. Donnelly, whose.
services will be 1 p.m. Sunday at
Waugh- Halley-Wood Funeral
Home, will be Chancey Houck,
Richard Wells, Gordon Lambert,
James Angel Ode Beaver
James Alva C~ldwell and Cur~ •
Shafer.
There will be a flag presenta·
·lion by Post 44&amp;1 Veterans of
Foreign Wars.
.

GALLrPOLIS - Delbert N.
Martin, 80, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, died
friday In Our Lady of Bellefonte
Hospital, Russel~ Ky.
· Born Feb. 15, 1909, In Gallla
County, son of the late A. Peter
and Margaret M. Thlvenln Martin, he was a farmer and an
employee of the Gallla County
~arage for 10 years.
He was preceded In death by
Ills wife, Kathleen Barry Martin,
on Feb. 3, 1976.
Surviving are a stepdaughter,
Marva Bailey of Patriot Star
Route, . Gallipolis; a stepson,
Larry G. DukeofRt. 2, Patriot; a
brother, Ed MarUn of Rt. 1,
Cheshire; six stepgrandchlldren
and three step·great·
grandchildren.
Alao preceding him In death
were two brothers, John and
DenniS Martlit, and four sisters,
Agusta Thora!, Addle White,
Arzelda Rite and Sylvia
Dollll8lly.
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday
In the Willis Funeral Home, with
the Rev. Alfred Holley official·
lng. Burial will be In Good Hope
Cemetery. Friends may call lt
the funeral home from 6-9 p.m.
Sunday.
VFW Post No. 4464 and Amerl·
can Legion Post No. 27 will loki
and present the fiag at the
'graveside.
Pallbearers will be Gene Duke,
Larry Duke, Jim Duke, Buddy
Dodd, Tom Walters and Dennis
•Mardn Jr.

'Roy Woolum
IRONTON - Roy Woolum, 82,
. Rt. 1, Waterloo, died Friday
night at Lawrence County Medl·
cal Center In Ironton.
He was .horn on April 6,19071n
Lawrence County, son of the late
George and Cordelia (Miller)
Woolum.
A farmer and lifelong resident
of Lawrence County, he was a
trader of roots and furs at his
grocery store In the Sherltts
community. A former employee
of the Chesapeake &amp; Ohio Railroad, the former Waterloo High
School student was a member of
. the Masonic Lodge at Waterloo,
the Eastern Star of Waterloo, tbe

SHADE- W. Lester Hart, 83,
of 40237 State Route 33, Shade,
died Friday at Overbrook Care
Center In Middleport. ·
Born March 9, 1906 at Pomeroy, he was a son of the late Dr.
W.S. and Blanche Tewksbary
Hart. He began working for the
New York Clothing House In
Pomeroy at the age of 17, and
remained there until his retirement. He was a member of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, the lndependent Order
of Odd Fellows and the Pomerey
Masonic Lodge. He was also a
veteran of World War H.
Survivors Include two nieces,
Jackie Manchlnl, of Millwood,
W.Va.• and Eloise C. White, of
Columbus; a nephew, William G.
Cooper, of Morehead City, N.C.;
a cousin, Murl Wood, Pomeroy; a
great niece, Barbara White,
Columbus; and special friends,
Aunda and Gene Klein, of
Pomerey.
He was preceded In death by
his wife, Jean Nesselroad Hart; a
son, Eric; and sisters, Elsie M.
Hart, Edna Cooper and Audrey
Maag.
Services will be Monday, 1
p.m., . at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Rev. Don Meadows
officiating. Burial will be In
Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home on
Sunday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

E.dghertMahan
GALLIPOLIS - Edgbert Ma· '
han, · 75, of "120 Tblrd Ave.,
GaiUpolls, died Saturday at his
resklhlce.
Born Dec. 25, 1913 In Walnut
Township GaiUa County, he was
a son of the late Enoch and
Garnet White Mahan.
Surviving are three brothers,
Edgar Mahan and Frank Mahan
both of Galtipolls, Charles Ma:
han of Columbus; four sisters,
Edna Sbeets, Grove City, Ohio,
Elva Dillon and Alberta Thorn·
ton, Gallipolis, and Ida Eblin
Columbus. A sister, victor!~
flush preceded her In death.
Services will be conducted
Monday, 1 p.m. at Waugh·
Halley-Wood Funeral Home,
with burial In Mt. Zion Cemetery.
Friends may call at Uie funeral
home 6 to 9 p.m. Sunday.

Enna D. Robie
BIDWELL - Erma D. Roble,
81, Route 1 Bidwell, died Friday
at Hol:zer Medical Center. She
retired from the Bob Evans
Sausage Plant In 1975.
Born May 1, 1!Hll In Jackson
County, W.Va., she was a daughter of the late John and Minerva
Randolph Casto.
She Is survived by three son,

Auditions set for production
of Dylan ·Thomas drama
RIO GRANDE -Auditions for
an upcoming production of
"Under Milk Wood," a classic
play by noted Welah poet Dylan
Thomas, will be conducted at the
University of Rio Grande on
Monday, Dec. 11, from 6-9 p.m.
The play Is tentatively scheduled to be ;lerformed Jan. 21·28
at Rio Grande and will be
dl~ed by Roger Jerome, visit·
lng British theatre artist who
directed "An Appalachian
Christmas," recenUy performed
at the university with a cast of
students and community people.
Jer11111e said he Is aeeklng a
tall!llted group ot 12 men and
women who are willing to be
coacbed In the Wel8h accent and
perform three parts each.
Tile play concerna 24 hours In
the Ufe of a small Welah fllhlng
village. Tile late Rlcbard Burton
was one ot the ortetnal per·
formers when Thom&amp;l' work wu
first staged.
For more Information, contact

Divorce granted
, POMEROY - A divorce bu
been granted In Melp Common

PI- Court to DeDJlls Tolley
from Barbara jolley.
(

'

the Fine and Performing Arts

Center at the University of Rio
Grande at24:&gt;-5353, extenslon364.
.T he toll-free number In Ohio Is
Ul0·282· 7201.

Meigs Post of the Stale Highway dent occurred at t: 30 a .m.
Patroltnvesdgated more than i. FrldaylnSuttonTownahlp,onSR
dozen accldenta Friday In the 124, 0.1 ot a mile east of milepost
wakeofthetrl·countyarea'stlrst 24, Troopers said Mark E.
major snowstorm.
Taylor,, 16, of Syracuse, lost
Two persons suffered minor control In the snow. His 1972
visible Injuries In a two-car Chevrolet went off the .road,
collision at 7:26p.m. Friday In striking a utility pole. Damage
GaiHpolls Township on Bob was heavy. Koenig was cited for
McCormick Road, 1.1 miles not wearing a seat belt.
southofSR160.
Noonewaslnjuredlnatwocar
Troopers said James D. coUislon at 3:15 p.m. Friday on
Oglesby, 43, GaiUpolls, applied Rodney Pike, 0.5 north of Kerr .
his brakes and his 1977 Ford slid Road.
len of center colliding wltb a 1984
Troopers said a 1983 GMC '
Pontiac driven by James P. pickup truck driven by Donald R.
Lusher, 42, Rt. 3, Gallipolis. Swisher, 23, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
There was moderate damage to coUided head-on with a J986
Mercury Lynx driven by Mindy
both cars.
Oglesby and a passenger In the L. Yost,l6, of Cheshire. Damage
Lusher car, Rachel Ann Lusher, was moderate to both vehicles.
.8, suffered minor visible Injuries. The patrol cited Swisher for
Neither was treated.
failure to maintain control.
The patrol cited Oglesby for
Another Meigs County accl·
len of center.
dent occurred at 4:10 p.m.
Max A. Davis, 41, of Newark, Friday In Chester Township, on
sufered a mlnorvlslblelnjurybut' CR 25, two milea north of SR 7.
was not treated after an accident Troopers saldi a 1988 Ford pickup
all p.m. FrldayonCRl,O.lnorth truck driven by JohnS. MIUer,
of CR lA, In Salem Township:
22, of Long Bottom, went ott the
The patrol said Davis's 1987 road, striking a tree. Damnage
Ma:cktruckwentofftheroadona was moderate. No one was
curve and overturned onto Its Injured. There was no citation.
side. Damaee was minor. There
The patrol Investigated an
was no citation.
accident at 10:45 a.m. Friday In
There was no citation In a Addison Township, on Bulavme
two-car collision at 6:20 a.m. Pike, 3.9 miles north of SR 160.
Friday on SR 7, in Addison Troopers said Krista L. Johnson,
Township, 0.4 of a mile north of 24, Rt. 1, GalUpoUs, lost control
on the Ice and snow. Her 1985
m Uepost 27.
Troopers said Kelly M. Koenig, Chevrolet went ott the road Into a
23, Rt.l, Gallipolis, lost control of ditch. Damage was moderate.
bls
1985 Olds and stqpped. No one was Injured. There was no
Behind him, Reva J. Stout, 60, of citation.
Syraeuse, was unable to stop and
Another Meigs County a eel·
ber 1989 Olds hit tbe back of dent occurred at 1 ~ 58 p,.m.
Keonlg's car. There was minor Friday on SR 143, 1.4 miles north
damage to the Koenig car and of SR 7. The patrol said Linda K.
moderate damage to the Stout Jeffers, 39, of Pomeroy, lost
car.
contrul In the snow. Her 1987
Brian .K. Buffington, 22, of DodgeChargerwentofftheroad,
Pomeroy, was cited for Improper striking an embankment. Dam·
passing after a two car accident age was moderate.
at 6:05 a.m. Friday In Cheshire
A 1987 Pontiac driven by Joan
Township on SR 7, driving a 1981 Tat ton, 45, of Jackson, struck and
Chevrolet Chevette,
killed a deer at 2 a.m. Saturday
Troopers said Buffington was on U.S. 35, 4.7 miles east of Rio
passing a 1987 Ford pickup Grande. No one was Injured.
driven by Charles R. Alkire, 66,
Damage was moderate to the
of Racine, aitd collided with the car. There was no citation.
truck. There was minor damage
Another accident occurred at
to both vehicles. No one was 1: 55 a.m. Saturday on Kemper
Hollow Road, 0.5 of a miles east
injured.

Municipal court
GALLIPOLIS- Hunters forfe- Ohio, $131 for spoUightlng and
ited $1,216 In bonds Friday In $131, possessing a loaded firearm
GalUpolls MuniCipal Court on In a motor vehicle.
Ronald H. Schatz, 50, Colum·
Ohio Division of Wildlife
bus, Ohio, $81 for possessing a
citations.
Forfeiting Wildlife bonds were loaded firearm In motor vehicle.
Henry ~bepberd, 42, Galves·
Frank Williamson, Jr.,48,. Totz,
Ky., $181 for hunting deer without ton, Ky., $81 for possessing a
a non-resident license and $106 . firearm In a motor vehicle.
for no deer permit.
Bill Burns, Jr., 35, Rio Grande,
Troy Hatfield, 44, Jamboree, $81, for transporting as loaded
Ky., $131 for attempting to take a firearm In a motor vehicle.
second deer, and $106 for falling
George M. McComas, 36, Proc·
to tag a deer.
torvllle, Ohio, was tined $100 and
Bennie Hatfield, 38, Phelps, costs, handed a suspended six
Ky., $106 for tailing to tag a deer. month jail sentence and placed
Phillip R. Green, 30, Rush, Ky., on six months probation for no
$81 possessing a looded firearm operator's license. A charge of
speeding was dismissed against
In a motor vehicle..
Donald D. Wilson, 54, $81 .for McComas.
possessing a loaded firearm In a ' A charge of driving under the
Influence was dismissed against
motor vehicle.
Dale E. Woerner, 54, SCottown, Eugene Plymale, 73, Gallipolis,
who pleaded guilty to a reduced
Carroll and Marvin Roble, both charge of reckless operation.
of Bidwell and Keith , Roble of
Richard H. Patterson, 51, Rt. 2,
GalUpolls; and three daughters, Bidwell, was fined $50 and costs
Mrs. Bill (Jean) Barr, Bidwell, for domestic violence. He also
Mrs. Billy (Violet) Day, VIrginia received a suspended six month
Beach, Va., and Mrs. David jail sentence and six months
(Be!ly) Briggs, Tuscon, Ariz. probation.
Also surviving are 15 grandchild·
Franklin D. Garlic, 57, Crown
ren, 16 great· grandchildren an City, forfeited a $159 bond for
three sisters, Bessie Good, Rl· being 5,550 pounds overloaded.
pley, W.Va., Elva Patterson,
Forfeiting bonds are: Thur·
Brohard.. W.Va., and Loraine man D. Bean, Jr., Largo, Fla.,
Randolph, Baldmore, Ohio.
and Arnold L. Fife, Jr., James·
.She was preceded In death by town, Ohio, both $46; and Jimmy
one son, Raymond Roble, two Covington, 43, Ponchatoula, La.,
grandchildren, one great· grand· $44.
child and four sisters.
James Martn, 43, Fort Gay,
Services will be conducted W.Va., fortelted a $35 bond for
Tuesday, 2 p.m., In McCoy- not wearing a seat belt. Charges
Moore Funeral Home In VInton. were dismissed against Donna
Burial follows In VInton Memor· M. Kelly, 22, Rt. 1, Bidwell, no
lal Park. Friends may call child restraint, and Tammy
Monday at the funeral home, 2to Freye, 24, Whitman, W.Va., no
4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.
seat belt.

L. Maynard, 20, Rt. 4, Gallipolis,
lost control and his 1975 Toyota
sUd off the snow-covered road
and overturned. Damage was
moderate. No one· was Injured.'
There was no citation.
Cora L. Yeager, 59, of Mason,
W.Va., escaped Injury In anecar
. accident at 7: 35 a.m. Ftlday on
the U.S. 35 bypass, 0.2 of a mUe
west of milepost 15. Yeager lost
control and her 1988 Ford went
off the road, striking an embank·
ment Damage was minor There
· !tall
·
was no c
on.
The patrol also Investigated an
accident at 7:25a.m. Friday on
SR 218, 0,4 of a mile south of
milepost 16, where Patricia A.
Daniels, 49, Rt.l, Crown City lost
control In tbe snow Her 1986
GMC pickup slid off uie road and
overturned. Damage was moder·
ate. No one was 'lnjured.

Lot

tEl')'

SIIOW: 7r00 P.M.
SPOIISOib St. ,,.... Ovtreac•

441·0036

=$4.00

MAGIC
HOLIDAY
FANTASY

612.
PICK·3 Uckl!t sales totaled
$1,433,515, with a payoff due of , l;ij&amp;~~~~~~~~
$1,923,826.50.
PJCK-4

7989.
.
PlCK·4 ticket sales totaled
$249,754, with a payoff due ot
$118,Ei()O.

Fumily Plannhlg
It Makes Sense•••

529 lack11n •••• a.lpolls, OH~

446-4367

elndlvlduellled lnttrucdon
•Job Plecement Alllltence
•Appeollld For Training of Yltenlne
•Finenclel Allletence To .f ho•
Who Qualify
•AICS Accrteltetlon
.

.....u. •

GALLIPOLIS - Pollee· were
called Friday .night to lnves ligate
·a breaking and entering at the
! U.S. Marine Corporation, 2150
Eastern Ave.
Ponce said an unidentified car
was parked at the rear of the
· company. The burglars attempted to break locks to get Into two
buildings · on the company's

rwfUMd 111 wicts beca• CJ1 idlility to pay.

PLANNED PARENTH - OD

grounds. Finally they . pushed
open a large sliding glass door to
get Into a building. Nothing was
reported missing.
PoUce cited James A. Conley,
28, Winfield, W.Va.,onchargesof
driving under the Influence and
failure to. display a valid
registration.
William P. Close, 130 Pine St.,

OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

POMEROY:
236 E. MaiM St• 21111 Floor
992·5912
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday

Hay listing available to SEO

Jackson County. Atourth landfill
In the district ,' the Athens·
Hocking Reclamation Center
(Klllbarger), In Athens County,
Is no longer accepting trash while
awaiting OEPA approval for a
proposed vertical expansion to
extend the facility's lifetime by
18 months.
With Athens-Hocking no longer
accepting trash, the facility at
McArthur Is being deluged with
more trash than It can legally
handle on a daily basis. For the
paspOdays, reports Wiggins. the
McArthur facility has been ac·
ceptlng trash "only by appointments." Once the facility
reaches Its dally limit, trash
haulers must be turned away,
Wiggins says.
Some haulers are willing to
drive the extra 30 miles round·
trip to Welllston from McArthur,
says Wiggins. Other haulers are
not and where that trash goes ''Your guess Is as good as mine,"
he adds.
AI a l)lonthly m~tlng ol ttie
AGHJMV Dis trlct held Thursday
night In Logan, permission was
gran led to Increase dally dump·
lng limitations at McArthur by 30
tons per day, witli stipulations
that the laclllty take "no out-of:
state'' trash and ''no new In-state
but out-of-district" trash. The
daily limitation was 167 tons tons
per day at McArthur.
According to EPA statistics,

there were 17 million tons ot
trash landfllled In Ohio last year,
and 2.8 million Ions came from
out-of-state, either because· the
other states do not have landfill
space or because It's cheaper to
dump trash In Ohio.
With landfill space becoming
so precious and costs associated
with landfllllng on the rise, those
simple words - trash It - may
have to be deleted from the
vocabulary of today's society, or
at least given a lot of thought
before said.

POMEROY - Individuals In· of the month, Information must ·
terested In buying or selling hay be turned In by the first of the
may do so In the South Eastern month to the East District
Extension Office, 16714 SR 215,
Ohio Hay Marketing Listing.
.
Caldwell,
Ohio, 43724, (614)
The lis I will be publiShed on
732-2381.
Please
call the above
Jan. 15, Feb. 15, and March 15.
office
for
Information
and a
There Is a $5charge for the listing
and In order to publish by the 15th form.

Firefighters

answer false call
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Vo·
lunteer Firemen answered an
alarm at 8: 44 a.m. Saturday to
the Gallipolis Developmental
Center, however, It was a false
alarm. Six men and one piece of
equipment. made the run, the
IS9th alarm of the year lor·
GalUpol!S llremen.

Space is limited,
call far dttails today!
DEPARTS JlmE 7, 1990

RGCC trustees
meet Dec. 13

41711CDNDAVIIIUl

Hours:
Mon.-Thur. 9-S

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
Community College hoard ol
trustees will meet Dec. 13 In the
hoaril room of the Rhodes Center
at 7 p.m., to consider bids lor the
addition to the library.

Gallipolis, was cited for !allure to
yield the right of way after an
accident at 3:36 p.m. Friday on
SR 7, at Ohio' Valley Plaza.
No details of the accident were
available at 2 p.in . Saturday at
pollee headquarters. Neither
was the accident report
available.

•

A SPECIAL 6
ONTH C.D.

POMEROY - A representa·
live from Congressman Clarence
Miller's office will conduct' an
open door session on Wednesday
!rom 11 a.m. tol p.m. in the Court
House In Pomeroy.
.
If anyone has any questions
concerning the federal govern·
men!, they are encouraged to
stop by and discuss them with the
representative.

FROM

CENTRAL TRUST

GAlliPOUS:

414 Second AYe. 2nd Floor
446..0166
8:30 to 5:00 Monclay·Friday
8:30 to 12 Salurday
Closed Thursday
Cloutl Thunday
AI.SO: Jadu011, Chesapeake, Athens, Chillicothe, lagan &amp; McArthur

Why do so

many of your
neighbors IQsure
their cars with
State I'a.1m?

Let Us Help With
That Gift Llstlll

is available lor a
If you've been
limited time only .
holding back wait·
For more inforing for a great rate.
mation contact
this is it. But you've
your nearest
got to act fast.
Central Trust office
This offer from
Central Trust
ar call G.. llis 446~2
Middleport 992-6661

.lohsl AthiHik Swc
,Jnh!1ol Suprlotl llu•o;&lt;o lit~"' ' lor M1•11
Johsl l'umrwr K111 't&gt; I hq!l' 1111 l.mll· ·~
lilood l'tt:' ~s ur~ Kit.;.
Slr~nt Pillr1W"i
Cer\licclll'iii••W&lt;:

'

Ask one of them, then give me a call.

B1•d rrays
Aut• • Back Ht•o.;t-.

Ol,uo:

HOLLY, JOLLY CHRIST·
MAS - Friday's snowiallleft
the boDy trees In the yards of
resklenls on Wolfe Drive, just
off Spring Ave. In Pomeroy, ·
dressed In beautiful hoUday
style. This tree, just loaded
with red bel'rles, Is In the yard
of Leon and Pat McKnight.
(Times.Senltnel photos)

,,_of"*&lt;&lt;

a... &amp; Steto St•

Goii...... Oh.
...•446-4HO
Homo 446-4511
UAII fUM

A

s-F.... Muluol

Aul\inoble ~ COtnptny
Homo 011iCO: Bloomington.-

::Help ...
(From HELP, Al)

FW SIZE

Calli &amp; Carry

......

....
SJ995

$169950::
....,

sun. lttail $299.95
SAVI$131

unrealistic."
,
Glenn said be would look Into
ihe Issue when he got back to
· Washington.
''You certainly ought to be able
to house somebody In something
other than an overly expensive
brick-and-mortar structure," he
'Said.
Local officials want flexibility
In hOusing minimum-security
' prisoners In order to ease over.crowding In county jails and free
up the jails for more serious
offenders.
·
Their ~uest for Glenn's help
comes as Ohio lawmakers are
considering a bill that would
allow counties to convert schools
and other buildings Into deten·
lion centers fQr tratfic and other
low-level offenders.
Pfeifer urged Glenn to push for
a law that apeclfleaUy states the
civil r181ltt law wu not meant to
apply lO llllatandards.
Pleller alia aald he will recom·
•mend that. the Ohfo legislature
allow minimum-security prison·
ers to be housed In detention
centers without paasage of a
federal law. But, he added, Ohio
would be taking a chance with
such a move.
· "I'm confident theae detention
taciHIIea can work u lone a1 they
are cleaR, llumabe places and
·there 11ft sbort·tenn kllld of folks
· there," he said.

..

•

hurn o.;
S :ll~tv

ht•m"
l1rr ,fc•'&gt;sir "' nl I:tllllll ''''' rr1

THE CENTRAL TRUSTC0\1aNY

The Medical
Shoppe, Inc.

The &amp;WI Tltat Mtks ~ /-hpfltn.

,1 •Minimum depo.lt •&amp;,000.00 . Sublt.ntW .PII'.n:-. tor Mrly wil:twtr.wal•
'

565 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis · 446 -2206

I ..

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ERRY
FTNG
PLACE

Beauty, Qualty,
Craftsmanship
in
.
.
Endoring Memorials

r-

,

(1, ,/dt•rt
Hut l•'l'•' Cmrls

WE'RE YOUR

'I

Other Sealy
IMerspring
MattrtSitS

B~rk

Bilthrnorn

CMOU~

S5995

Cleuel ·
•flltxlble lclwdule

•Smell

Then on Sept. 22, the tipping tee
at GalUa was Increased to $5.50
per cubic yard, or $16.150 per ton,
to cover higher operational coats
which are also the result of HB .
592 requirements. Add to th.a t the
state required fee of 60 c¥nts per
ton and a solid waste district
surcharge of $1.25 per ton, which
went Into effect Nov. 15, and you
bave a total cost of $18.35.
The surcharges of $1.25 per ton
for In-district solid waste; $2.50
per ton for out·of·dlstrlct but
In-state waste; and $3.75 for ,
out·of·state wasi.e, had to be
enacted by the AGHJMV ptstrlct
to cover dis trlct operational
expenses, also a result of HB 592.
And as It turns out, these
surcharges may fall short ol
providing the amount needed to
operate the district on a yearly
basis, Wiggins reports.
In addition to all these fees, It
now costs at the Gallla facility $7
to dump one passenger tire, $10 to
dump a truck tire and $5.50 to
dump a major.appliance such as
a stove or washing machine,
Wiggins says.
"There's no way hauling tees
can go but up," predicts Wiggins.
''Naturally, h.a ulers have to stay
In the black too."
Currently, there are only two
other landfills accepting trash in
the AGHJMV District besides
Gallla County - McArthur In
VInton County and Wellston In

Sunday Tmet-Sentinai-Pege A-7

.. Break-r,n
' · r,nve~tr,gate
•
• d at US
M
•
·
Open door
.. . artne session set

Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V. D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing
iltllng ftt scale. No -

W. Ve.

.

'

i
LET US HELP YOU
CHOOSE THE RIGHT
GIF'T THIS CHRISTMAS

SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS COLLEGE

which In tutn causes hauling
costs to rile, ao It's no wonder
officials are concerned about
Ulegal dumping.
Now that Meigs County no
longer has a landfill of Its own
Wiggins eadmates that 40 per:
cent of Meigs County's solid
waste Is being hauled to the
Gallla . County · Landfill. The
~ater 60 percent Is being
hauled to the ERO Landfill at
West Colllmbla, . W.Va. which
costs somewhat less depending
from which area ofthe county the
hauler Is coming.
But no matter where a trash
hauler chooses to dump, the cost
of dumping can never be called
cheap.
At the Gallla Landfill, says
Wiggins, local trash haulers are
now paying $18.35 to dump the
same amount of trash they could
dump In September for $4.70.
As explained by Wiggins, the
tipping tee - which Is what a
landfill operator charges to
dump- used tobe$1.5Qpercubic
yard, or $4.50 per ton, at the
Gal Ua facility.
With. the passage of HB 592, a
state tee of 20 cents per cubic
yard of solid waste, or 60 cents
per ton, was es tabllshed to
provide funds which could be
used to clean up hazardous waste
sites across Ohio. The addiUon of
the state fee brought Gall Ia' s
dumping tee to $1.70 per cubic
• yard, or $4.70 per ton.

MON.11
DEC.

PJCK-3

PIBIIIIF't.

&lt;From DU)fPING, Al)
~--o···----..;__..;___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

GAUOUS, OHIO
IIOITHGAWA
IIGH SCHOOL GYM

numbel'8

Pomeioy-Middlaport-Gallipolil. Ohio-Point

D·"'impin.u

I~h~~!" !,~'!!Y"'"~~!~~!~=!.~.·._k_s____...,

:Tree Baptist C::rch In Ara~la

GALLIPOLIS - Pallbearers
for HelenS. Hunt, wbose services
were 11 a.m. Saturday at Wauah·
Halley-Wood Funeral Home,
were Red Eads, Frank Greenlee,
Bill and Lawrence Tawney,
Derek .Stump and ROy Sprague.

Delbert N. Martin

and theM rile

December 10, 1989

December 10. 1989

Pon•oy Midtltport-GIIIIpolil. Ohio Poiut Pl•••nt. W. Ve.

Historic Gallipolis, Ohio
'ffie holiday season is upon us and you're invited to find the
old-fashioned Christmas spirit of giving ... right here in
Gallipolis- your "Merry Gifting Place"!
Here, you'll find quality ... selection ... fast service ... and
even free gift wrapping! No hassle, no big-city crowds or traffic
· -just down-home friendly folks who are happy to assist you.
Children will enjoy visi~ing with Santa in his house in the
park, and you'll appreciate the free parking and extended store
hours, seven days a week.
Let us help make your Christmas shopping a bit merrier by
making it a whole lot easier. See you!

REMEMBER TO REGISTER AT PARTICIPATING
MERCHANT STORES FOR THE HOLIDAY DRAWING.
You could WN a gift certiHcale for $1..QQQ, $~or $2501
HOliDAY HOURS:
Mlln.·Sal. t:30 t.m. • 8 p.m./ Sun. t.-5 p.m. ·

"

--·

@ft~

:" ,;: ·.·;

RETAIL MERCHANTS .

%e Cfiann nf tlie Past
... THE CONVENIENCr'OF THE PRESENT.

--··---·-------....:__-~--------l..--:-----'-

�Page A-8-Suncl.y T..,...Ssutinel

Pomeiot' Mldcl1pa11 Glllipolia, Ohio-Point Pluu rt. W. V•.

•

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river

'Vrilttu- ieutiuel Section

8

December 10. 1989

------

ON DISPlAY - More than
a hundred dolls from the
eo Oecllon ol J 11dy Arnold ol
Middleport are amonr the
feature Christmas displays at
the Melp Museum this
month. Moetoflhedolllwhleh
came from 38 different COIIR·
tries and represent over 411
years of coUectlng were gifts
from lamUy and friends and
acquaintances of each .

..
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'Dolls aren't just for kids
-

LIMITED TO

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$5.00 COUPO

$5 .OFF ANY PURCHASE .
OF $50 TO $1 00
Dec. 10 AND DEC. 11 · ONLY

~

.

~E.J:O_!!!O!!,.P~ C~ST..2.,M~ P~ i!!!,R&lt;2!;!A~

-

$10.00 COUP

$1 0 OFF ANY PURCHASE
OF $1 00 OR MORE
DEC. 10 AND DEC. 11 ONLY

CLASS DEPT.
170 tUG

I I

481

1102

II

• I

: $2.50 COUP

$2.50 OFF BATMAN VIDEO
SALE 15.49 WITH COUPON
DEC. 10 AND DEC. 11 ONLY

I
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L.. ,;_ ~E.J:O_!!!O!!,.P~ C~T..2.,M~ P~ i!!!,R&lt;2!;!A~

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1105

$3.00

co

$3 OFF ANY NINTENDO
VIDEO GAME SOFTWARE
DEC. 10 AND DEC. 11 ONLY

II

.

I I

710

I

- ..J . L. - ~~_£0_!!0!!,.P~ ~ST..2.,MI!!!_ P~ I!!!,R~A~ _ ..J L. _ ,2!tE..£~0!!.,P~ ~T.2,M!!!_ "2 i!!!,R~A~ _ ..J
r-- - .i - - - - - - - - - - - .- .., r- - - . 7. - - - - - . - - - - - ,
. ! I I CLA18 DIJ'T,
I CLAIS IIII'T.

r.\ - .- - - - - - - - - - - - - ."-.

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II

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:1 :1 $20.00 CO.UPON :1 :1 $10.00

:1

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II

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$20 OFF ANY UNADVERTISED
MICROWAVE OVEN
REGULAR PRICE $89 TO $189
DEC. 10 AND DEC, 11 ONLY

$10 OFF ANY 10 AND 12 SPEED
20", 24", 26" BIKES
FREE ASSEMBLY INCLUDED
DEC. 10 AND DEC. 11 ONLY

I I
I I
II

_ ...J L. _ . ~E.J:O_!!O!!,.PI!!!_ C.!!,Sl,2!111!!!_ P~ f!!!.R£.!!.A~ _ ..J L. _

~EJ:~O!!,.P~ C.!!,ST,2:\'~ P,21

i!!!,Rc:!!A!! _ ..J

celebrity or two who knew of her kind, when It was acquired and
collection.
from whom or where it came.
And now she buys her own.
Typical of little girls, Ms.
Her latest addition Is the
Arnold as a child always had a
"Gone with the Wind" collector
"doll" on her Christmas wish
series- Rhett, Scarlet, Melanie,
list.
and Ashley.
At that time she wanted the
Since dolls remain the most
"play" kind -ones Intended til
requested Christmas gift by little
hug, dress , comb and treat as
girls, and many adults have an
companions, rather than the
avid Interest in the collectibles,
collector type, ones Intended for
the Meigs Museum as a part of its
display .
holiday display have included a
The collection started in the
hundred or so of the dolls In Ms.
early 1950's with dolls from her
Arnold's collection.
Aunt Esther and Uncle Don
They'll remain on exhibit right
Alien, her brother, Jim, who at
through the 'holidays for the
the time was stationed in Gerenjoyment of museum visitors.
many with the U.S. Army, and
Each doll Is marked as to Its . Harley DeVol, a good friend from
Middleport serving in the armed
• forces In Japan.
.
Included in her collection is a
doll made by a Japanese girl
especially for her on her · 12th
birthday .
Several others came from a
woman unknown to Judy who
owned dime stores In Rio de
Janeiro, all dressed In their
native costume, while a pair of
Thai dolls were sent In 1965 from
a friend of the friend who learned
about her collection.
Then there are dolls in the
collection from several servicemen who were friends of her
brother and transferred around ·
the world.
A Brussels lace maker sent a
doli which she bought at the
Brussells Fair, Pickwick of Pickwick Papers sent one from
England, and there were two
Spanish dolls from an unknown
contributor.
PRIZED INDIAN
COLLEC110N - Seventeen Indian
One of Ms. Arnold's favorite
dolls In authendc costumlnr ln. Judy Arnold's collection are
dolls came from the late Casey
Included In the holiday display at the Melp Museum this month.
Stengel, former manager of the
Most have been In her coDectlon since the 1950's.
New York Yankees. It is auto-

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tlrne!I-Senllllel Staff
POMEROY - Wh!le many
ch!ldren outgrow their fascination with dolls, others treasure
their collections right Into adulthood.
Judy Arnold of Middleport,
whose. collection spans more
than 40 years and Includes more
than 150 dolls from 36 countries,
Is one who has never lost her
enthusiam for do U.s.
In fact, she has never stopped
adding to her col!ectlon.
The only difference Is wh!le
growing up the dol!s came as
· gifts from fam!ly and friends . even some strangers, and a

'The.·Messiah'
·Holiday tradition continues
with performance Tuesday

,.----1 CLASS DEPT.

1
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041

$5.00 COUPO

$5 OFF ANY LADIES'
LEE DENIM JEANS
DEC. 10 AND DEC. 11 ONLY

rc~

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11131

oso

328

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;;T.- - - - - - - - .- - - 0315

$1.

$1 OFF MEN'S FLANNEL SHIRTS
REGULAR PRICE 5.99 SALE 4.99
FINAL COUPON PRICE 3.99
DEC. 10 AND DEC. 11 ONLY

___.... __

CONDUCTING - Dr. David FaMr bu been conducllaJ
reb_.alor "Tile Metlllab" alnce Sep .. mber ID preparation for
lla Tuerday performance at lbe Ua._..lJ of Blo Grande. The
pi'OJI'IUII, free and open to the paltlle, wiD be pJ'eMIIRdln the Fine
aad Performing .kt• Center at 8 p.m. (Timer Senlnel photo)

-"

.~

COLLECTIBLES - Rhett, Searlet, Melanie,
and Ashley of "Go"e with the Wind" fame are
graphed "To Judy from Casey."
From her -collection, Ms. Arnold has on display at the
museum 17 Indian dolls In
authentic costume, most of
which are nearly 40 years old .
Her display there also Includes
doll replicas of Queen Elizabeth I
and Queen Elizabeth li inelegant
coronation crown and costuming
of velvet and lame enhanced with
simulated pearls and jewels.
These two do Us were a gift
from the former Sharon Jones of

By LEE ANN WELCH
Times-sentinel Staff
RIO GRANDE - One of the holiday season's most
recognizable pieces of music will be performed at the
University of Rio Grande Tuesday night.
"The Messiah," considered by many to be as much a symbol
of Christmas as the angels, Is being presented as a jolnteffortof
the university and community.
The Masterworks Chorale, comprised of campus and area
singers, and the Ohio Valley Symphony, based at the Ariel
Theatre will stage the oratorio at 8 p.m. Tuesday In the Fine and
PeFformlng Arts Center at Rio Grande. It Is free and open to the
public.
A tradition longstanding, Handel's "Messiah" has been
presented in Gallla County for more than 40 years by a
community chorus. It has been performed in many locations,
including the old Ohio Hospital for Epileptics (Gallipolis
Developmental Center). Washington School, the gymnasium at
Rio Grande College, and Grace United Met)lodist Church. It
moved to the Fine and Performing Arts Center In 1974, and was
conducted lor many years by the late Merlyn Ross.
This year, Dr. David Faber, assistant professor of music at
Rio Grande, Is conducting, and the 80 singers have been in
rehearsals since early September.
The purpose qf the Masterworks Chorale Is two-fold,
according to Fa her. First, It provides a service to the
community and campus, and secondly, It brings a quality of
musical endeavor most churches cannot.
"It give the singers more of a cltallenge than most music
presented tn the churches," he said.
Faber hopes the participants come away wlih more than just
a quality performance.
"I want them to learn something and enjoy the experience,"
he said. Additionally, Faber said, "l get a kick out of this
(directing choral music)."
The Masterworks Chorale will not end alter "The Messiah" Is
presented Tuesday. Faber said there will be a few weeks off for
the members, before starting work Jan. 15 for their next
performance. The John Rutter Requelm will be presented on
Mother's Day, Faber said.
Georse Frederlch Handel, composer
George Frederich Handel wrote "The Messiah" In 1741
during a two week time frame. A year after Its composition,
"The Messiah" was publ!cally performed In London.
A blind, 74 year-old Handel became !11 directing a
performance of ''The Messiah" and died In theellltdng weeki.
Burled at Wesmln!ster Abbey, a statue of Handel stands over

Judy Arnold's most recent additions to her doD
coUectlon.

Middleport who spent several
years in England.
And then there's the Holly
Christmas Seal doll, authorized
lor production by the American
Lung Association. It was inspired
by the 1935 Christmas seal and is
done in bisque porcelain and
costumed in red velvet and white
fur- a real beauty.
Dolls in the collection have
come from every continent'
purchased in their respective
native countries and attired in

their native dress .
And while the collector is no
longer a child and gifts of dolls
are infrequent, Ms. Arnold's ·
interest has never waned.
She admits to being drawn to
doll displays in department
stores and finds herself with little
buying resistance to beautiful or
unusual , and sometimes costly,
creations.
"! just love dolls ... that's the
way it is!" the long-time collector quipped .

his grave, depicting him working on "The Messiah" and the
score is open to the passage "I Know That My Redeemer
Liveth."
Handel Is considered one of the most brilliant and talented
musicians of history, and Beethoven's often quoted description
of him bears tes Umony to this.
·
"To him I bend the knee, for Handel is the greatest, ablest
composer that ever lived."

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CONIIULTATION - Edle 8-. ud Dr. Da¥11 Falter eo1111ult
dua'lq a ncent . rebearMI of Randel's "Mesalala." Tile
...... wwb Cllorale and the Obit Vllley Symphoay wiD combine
talenllllo perform the ontorle lhllweek. (Tlmes-8eat1Del plloto)

�...
Paga

8-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

December 10, 1989

Decllmber 10. 1989

-Engagements--

Robinson-Fick
TUPPERS PLAINS- Lee Ann
Robinson and Kirk Patrick Flck
wUl be united In marriage during
an open church wedding on Dec.
27, 6:30 p.m. at the St. Paul
United Methodist . &lt;;:burch In
Tuppers Plains.
Miss Robinson Is the daughter
of Wilbur and Marilyn Lee
Robinson, Coolville. Ftck IS the
son of Richard and Annette Flck,
Long Bottom.
MISs Robinson Is a graduate of
Eastern High School and of
Hocking TechniCal College. She
Is employed with Travel Trends
In Chicago, lll.
Flck Is also a graduate of
Eastern and of Hocking Technl·
cal College. He Is empkiyed with
the Basic Industry Research
Laboratory In Evanston, Dl.
The couple will reside In
Evanston, Ill.

Chamber to meet
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce will hold
Its monthly meeting at noon on
Tuesday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
The chamber will be discussIng the finalizing plans for the
Meigs County Chamber.
All members are urged to
attend. This will be the last
official meeting of the Pomeroy
Area Chamber of Commerce.

the microwave ovens

Sorority to meet
POMEORY - The XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will m$!t Thursday,
6:30p.m. at the home of Ann and
Richard Rupe, Wright St.
Members are to bring their
secret sister gift, an ornament,
and Items for the needy family .

,'

Band concert
POMEROY - The Meigs High
School and Junior High bands
will pre~t a Christmas concert
for the publiC on Dec.17, 2 p.m.ln
the high school auditorium.
Toney Dingess, director. will
be conducting.

LEE ANN ROBINSON, KIRK PATRICK FICK

,,.•

~

Davison-May

- GALLIPOLIS - Announce: ment Is being made of the
: engagement and appr(}achlng
·marriage of Cynthia Ann Davi:
; son and Dennis Lei' May. Shl' Is
: the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
- James L. Davison Jr. He Is the

son or Mr. and Mrs. Dalrl May.
The open church wedding will
take place Saturday, Dec. 16 at
Grace United Methodf'st Church
atll a.m. A roceptlon follows at
the Holiday Inn In Kanauga.

SUNDAY
CROWN CITY - Grubb FamIly will sing at Big Four Church,
Sunday, 7 p.m., and Rev. Bob
Grubb will preach.

Herbalists will meet Monday. 7
p.m. at the home of Lila Ridenour
on Route 248 near Chester.
Members are to bring a wrapped
Christmas ornament and one
dozen cookies for the exchange.

GALLIPOLIS - Lighthouse
Assembly or God Christmas
dinner Is Sunday, 6 p.m.; bring
POMEROY - The Disabled
covered dish.
American Veterans and the
Ladles Auxiliary will hold their
GALLIPOLIS - Appreciation regular meeting on Monday, 7
celebration sponsored by Gallla p.m. at the hall on 124 Butternut
&lt;;:ounty Arthritis Unit, Sunday, Ave. This will be the Christmas
St. Peter's Episcopal Church, 2 to dinner.
4p.m.
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP- The
'
HARRISONVILLE- The Har- Bedford Township Trustees will
risonville Lend-A-Hand So- me..t on Monday, 7 p.m. at the
ciety will have famUy night on town hall.
Sunday at the church. A potluck
dinner will begin at 6 p.m.
be
REEDSVILLE -There
followed by a Christmas a special m..etlng at the Reeds·
program.
ville Fire Station on Monday,
6:30 p.m. for the purpose of
POMEROY - The Rev. Chris reviewing resumes for the posiMeenach, ventriloquist, will be tion of clerk of Olive Township.
speaking at the Pomeroy Nazarene Church Sunday, 9:30 a.m.
RACINE - There will be a
He uses the Sunshine Gang regular m..etlng or the Southeru
puppets to present his ministry. Local School Board on Monday,
The Rev. Glen McClung Invites 7:30 p.m. In the high school
the public to attend.
cafeteria.

Saunders-Wamsley
GALLIPOLis- Mr. and Mrs.
Lowen C. Saunders of Route 2,
Crown City announce the engagement of their daughter, Angela
Saunders to Brian Edward
Wamsley, son of Carl Wamsley
and Unda McDade both of
Cheshire.
An open-church ceremony will
take place on Saturday, Dec. 30
at 7: 30 p.m. at Grace United
Methodist Church, Gallipolis. A

12 DIFFERENT
SILVER ROUNDS

Community calendar

CYNTHIA DAVISON, DENNIS LEE MAY

ANGElA SAUNDERS, BRIAN E. WAMSLEY

hold a frl'e blood pressure clinic
on Tuesday from 10 a.m. to noon
at the townhouse. The club will
me..t foUowing the clinic and all
are urged to attend.
POMEROY - The regular
December meeting ot the Meigs
County Board of Education will
be held on Tuesday at 8:30p.m. at
the Royal Oak Resort sales
building.

A Gift of Pure Silver with
your Merry Chrlltmaa
wlehet - It lam forever!

IN PIESENTAftON CASE

$995

-ALSO: Gold Coina,
Silver Dollara and
Suppllea-

~~
.

reception will follow at the
church.
Miss Saunders Is a graduate of
Gallla Academy High School and
Southeastern Academy of Kls·
.slmmee, Florida. She Is em·
ployed as manager-buyer of
Bernadlnes, Inc.
Wamsley Is a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School and Is
majoring In ceramic engineering
at Hocking Technical College.

Open Doily 9-8
8undoy 1-4

FUINITUIE GAWIIES

c - 2nd a o...,., Gellpollo. Oh.
lin AIMcllolieol Willi IllS c•sl

What about d..ep fat fryers? If
By CARL JEROME
de..p fryers were lnwnted today,
United Preu Ialel'aailoaal
thelrmanutacturl'rs would never
Look around your kitchen. It's • be allowed to foist such a
a bona fide booby trap of hazards contraption upon us. Encourage
waiting to get you.
· the publiC to cook In an open vat
One false move and oops, a cut of bOUing oU , a vat ofsplatterlng
-ouch, a burn-yuck,ascraped hot fat?
finger - or BAM, a bruised
Look at the sclmltar·shaped
knuckle.
blade on a food processor. Its
Ever looked Inside a bll'nder space-age surglcalsteel Is sharp
when It's running? There's a enough to pulverize a rock, but
Vesuvlan eruption, a maelstrom we toss It onto tb.l' top rack ofthe
of blue sparks flying around. But dishwasher with reckless a banno one looks lnskll' a blender ,cl'r- don_ and then ask someone else
talnly not when It's runplng.
to unkiad lt.
Conslde~. If you dare, that
Day after day, we culinary
conflagrant .&gt;nflguratlon, the kaml.k8zes march Into the kit·
stovetop. Blazing open flames chen, exposing ourselYes to un·
lick searing hot black metal told perUs.
braces . . Resistance cons glow
Here are toxiccleanlngcheml·
llkered-hot branding Irons. Or cals and noxious lniect sprays
worse, raging hot burners, as that make thelrway, not just
much as 500 d~grees Fahrenheit, onto, but actually Into our kit·
deceptlvl'ly concealed under a chen counters.
flat surface as white and smooth
Here are shiny scalpel ·size
as Ice.
...
paring knlws and hardened·
steel butcherlngcleavers heaped
Innocently In drawers or lying
under towels like a leopard about
to spring on Its prey.
Qbvlou~ly. no kitchen ap·
The lunch menu lor the Eastpllance, no kitchen gadget, can
ern Local School District has be 100 percent, absolutely guabl'en announced for the week of ranteed safe. Right? Right.
Dec. 11.
So what a bout the microwave
Monday: hamburger, corn, oven? Is It safe?
rice pudding, fruit , and milk.
According to David Duarte of
·Tuesday: chill, peanut butter
the office of public affairs for the
sandwich; relish tray, fruit, and
Food and Drug Administration.
.
mllk.
which Is responslbleformonltorl·
Wednesday: chicken, bread lng the safety of microwave
and butier, mashed potatOI's and ovens, ·"There are no reported
gravy, applesauce, and milk.
cases of Injury from ex!iosure to
Thursday: nacho chips and microwaves In microwave
cheese, peas, cherry crisp, and
ovens.''
milk.
But you might burn yourself on
Friday: fish, hash browns,
a hot bowl taking something out
fruited jello, and milk.
of II .
'

School menu

---

will

MIDDLEPORT - The plano
students of Kathy Johnson will
present a recital Sunday at 2 p.m
at the Bradbury Church of
Christ. Family and friends of the
students are Invited to attend. A
social hour wlllfollow the recital.
RUTLAND -The Church of
Jesus Christ Apostolic Faith,
New Lima Road, Rutland, will
have revival through Saturday at
7 p.m. nightly. The evangelist
will be Lovle Foster and there
will be special singing each
night.

SUSAN E. MOORE, TONY R. HANER

·:
:
:
•
:
•

Moore-Haner
OAK HILL - Paul and Carol
Moore of Oak Hill, announce the
engagement and upcoming marrlage of their daughter Susan E.
Moore, to Tony R. Haner, son of
Wendell and Llllla Haner of
Gallipolis.
Haner Is a graduate of Gallla

---

Academy and Is a member of the
Gallipolis Pollee Department.
Miss Moore a graduate of Oak
Hill High School and Is employed
by the Oak HUI Community
Medical Center as a nurse.
A July wedding Is being
planned.

MONDAY
CHESTER-TheRiverValley

:Judge censured for detaining
: unruly student
• CHICAGO &lt;UPI) - A judge
:who ordered ann unruly student
:- handcuffed to a chair during a
:school field trip to his courtroom
: has bl'en censured by the Illinois
; Co.u rts Comm isslon.
, Cook County Judge Glynn
: Elliott Jr. was censured Thurs. day for what the commission
: called Improper detention of an
: Oak Forest High School student
• who created a disturbance In
: Elliott's Daley Center courtroom
' Jan. 13.
: Elliott ordered the student, one
: or 20 touring the courthouse, held
· tn contempt and detained the
: youth In his chambers for 45
: minutes. Sheriffs deputies hand. cuffed the youth to a chair In
; Elliott's chambers for part of
: that time, a complaint flied with
; the Judicial Inquiry Board said.
; Elliott, 63, chose not to
· contest the charges and
: admitted he violated judicial
: rules of conduct, becoming the
· first judge to be dlsclpHned by
;the commiSsiOn this year.
The commission ruled Ell kilt's
behavior was "contrary to accep•table judicial standards and was
: unjustified and without excuse.''

KYGER - Cheshire Township
Trustel's me..t Tuesday, 5: 30
p.m., township building.
POMEROY -The Meigs
County Cooperative Parish Food
Pantry will be taKing applications for food baskets based on
low Income on Tuesday, Wednes·
day, and Thursday from 9: 30
a.m.-12:30 p.m.
HARRISONVILLE -The Har·
rlsonvllle Senior Citizens will

to its sale in Ohio.
Summit County Prosecutor
Lynn Slaby had threatened to file
charges against people buying or
selling stock In the 105-bed
Mustang Ranch brothel near
Reno on grounds of promoting
prostitution, a fourth-degre.. felony In Ohio.

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES
507 Mulllerry Awe.

Pomer•y, Oh.

Ph. 992-2310

..... .
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...-

, • .PERFECT CHRISTMAS Gin FOI SO.ONE...
GIVE A CAPTAIN mAllEI GIFT CEmFICATEI :
FOI MOa INfOIU1101

19 UCI
~~::. =~ IWL -··--·-----· $9999
CUAN SOFA .......................... 4995
2 AYG. SIZIIOOIIS -MMMMHH~NHNMO

Christmas Trees.
LARGE, TALL' - --SMALL &amp; ALL

\

STOP Ill AMD SEE US TODAYI

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES
992-6121
50 RIVERVIEW PLACE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

"I'll Be Home
For Christmas"
This is a favorite song for many people·at this
time of year. But for some, it's not because
they find themselves or a loved one ill and in
the hospital.
At Professional Care, we want to make your
Christmas special.
We can provide professional, quality care in
the comfort of your own home.

JOANNESTEWART.~rL~UAM;;~L~YN~N~S~H~E~E~T~S----------------------~-----------------------,

·Stewart-Sheets

•

...&lt; • ~····

••

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'·-4

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•

Some of the In home
therapy we provide
includes:
*Chemotherapy
*Total Parenteral
Nutrition
• Antibiotic
Therapy
"Pain
Management
"Enteral
Nutrition

.. ····-'"·"'.

-~·

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Self-Propelled
Clenrlng System
with

PowerSurge'M
• Bruahed edge cleaning
• 16Y. qt. dlapoeable beg
• Twin lamp headlight
• Automatically adapts
to moat carpet

-

AIR FRESHENER
·SYSTEM

SAVE!

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Power lor~
Roor Cleaning! ·

S120

ELECTRONIC
SPEED CONTROL

$329 95
U3323

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Wet &amp; Dry Hand Vac
5

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no cMWenge for this wruti6e

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Vacuum

Orwtlor Clulcll Ptck·Upol

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$29 95

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• WeahatM. reusable filter
• eaev~mpty 8 oz. cup

SAVEl
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Ptu9 '' Ofl, arod . ,..., ct.. . ng

• P~ul J.ri Amp Motor
•Envcord,.._M

• E"r-empty ---thru dirt cuo
•Edg.ldMnlng
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• Handy puah~button awltch

• H•no·up lor 1t!'M'age

• o.lu• '"'8 •nd floor nozde

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111••lnoldo tool otorogo
• Cerpetl hard floor

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TM

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• Dirt llndlntl hMdllgh1
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• Dull bi'U8hed edge
ctelning

Powerful
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THINKS

FOR
ITSELF!

SAVE!
"YOUR 'COMPLETE'
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR
STORE"

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

Landstrom's

S140

ORIGINAL

BLACK HILLS GOLD
CREATIONs®
SINCE

~Ut

1~19

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-Custom transfers
and Lettering-

$3493
INCLUDES
ATTACHMENTS!

•

Empire Furniture

·IMII-IIIM
US COURT ST.

POMEJWY, omo

IC1 t•D AVE.

GAWPOUS, OliO .

......I

992-5627

.,

HOOVERe
concept two'M

c.....•Ruct

GALLIPOLIS . - Tommy JOI'
Stewart and Mary Fraley Williamson announce the engage. ment and approaching marriage
of their daughter, Jo 'Anne
Stewart, to Wllllarn Lynn Sheets,
son. ·of Mr. and Mrs. William
Paige She..ts, Gallipolis.
Miss Stewart Is a graduate of
Winthrop College, Rock Hill, S.C.
and holds a B.S. lit Chemistry.
She Is employed at the Gallipolis
Stockyard Co.
Sheets Is employed by GalllpoUs City Schools as a seven II) and
eighth grade science teacher and
Junior Varsity basketball coach.
There wlll be an open-church
wedding on Dec. 23, at 7:30p.m.
at First Baptist Church, Gallipolis. A reception wlll follow
Immediately In the church fellowship room.
The couple wUI reside at 1015'tl
Second Avenue, Gallipolis.

'•
......

· FURNITURE &amp;
HOOVER PRESENT
CHRISTMAS 1989

$1800

540 West Union Street
Athens. Ohio 4570 I
(614) 594·5845

OFFER EXP. 12-30-88 · ,· 1

AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - The
publiC offering of stock for a
Nevada brothel apparently has
bef!n helped by publicity gener·
a ted by a prosecutor's opposition
•

FRESH CUT

Professional Care
Home IV Services

:Brotllel slocll Hie~~ reported
lltroll(

. RODNEY,_OHIO.

' 'Snow Leopard," by Peter MatthleSsen. Roll call will be answered with members naming
their favorite ShangriLa.

HOOVER.

BODIMERS GROCERY

For mont lnlonnatlon call Lynn
O'L-v our rwolatared nurse at
1514 8845and you too could bnlnglng.:.. "l'll Be Home For Christmas"

. ··46-4606 - JIM-675·2295 ,
CWI CAIPE1
$ M
.

MIDDLEPORT- Thl' Middleport Literary Club will m..et
Wednesday at the home Mrs.
Daniel Thomas. Mrs. Wendell
Hoover will review the book

EUREKA, OHIO

•

---

We Specialize in
REHABILITATION
E
NT
Contin_uity of Care

-- Quirks in the news: By United Press Jnteraailonal

TUESDAY
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Rotary m..ets Tueday, 6 p.m., Down
Under.

Literary Club meeting slated

L&amp;J GROCERY
DID YOU KNOW YOU CAN
FIND THE PERFECT
CHRISTMAS GIFT MADE
. RIGHT HERE IN MEIGS CO.!
•WE DO PIESSUIE DYED IMPIINTING ON
ALL WEAIING APPAIEL
•SCIEIII PlllniiG-AU WOIK DOllE 011
LOCAnOII
.
•WE BUILD CLOCKS-CUSTOMIZED AIID
PEISOIIAUZED
•PEISOIIAUZED COFFEE MUGS
w•N YOU OIDII FIOM US "WE DO THE EllniE JOB Ill OUI SHOP"

.

Sundly r.,.._s..tlnai-Pega B-3

Pcmaroy:-Middlaport-Gallipolill, Ohio-Point Plnnent. W. Va.

- -·Engagements__ Debunking myths about

.... . . . ,. ..

Stl SECOND AVE.

PHOIIE 446·1405

OHIO

'

\

..

�Paga

B 4 SUI'lday Tm• Sentinel

Ways are listed to help forests grow

--Weddings---

Br Cou&amp;ance Wbl*e
GalllaSWCD

MARRIED DEC. 4 - Patricia Lynn Tatman and John Marlin
DeMoss were united In marrlace on Dec. f ill lhe chambers of
Judce Pat O'Brien. She Is the dauchler of Rose M. Tatman,
London; aod David L, Tatman, Delaware. He llllhe son of Esther
and Rlcllard M. DeMDIIIi, PomerOJ.

'

MacClinchy-]ohnson
GALLIPOLIS - The First
Church of the Nazarene was the
setting for the Oct. 7, double ring
wedding of Wanda L. Johnson,
Wellston. Oblo and Scott D.
MacCllnchy, Ewlngton.
The bride Is the daughter of
Clyde and Shirley Norton, Well·
ston. The groom Is the son of
David and Betty MacCilnchy of
Bradenton, Fla.
The Rev. John Remmengae
officiated the ceremony. Music
was provided by Mrs. Loretta
McCarty, planolst, with Mike
Norton, brother of tbe bride, and
Eddie Davis as musicians and
soloists.
Given In marriage by . her
parents, the bride wore a tea·
length Ivory gown of satin with
lace overlay, ruffles and a Queen
Ann neckline. The fitted bodice
was adorned with seed pearls
and lace appliques and ended In
basque wals tllne. The bride wore
a matching hairpiece of Ivory
pearl sprays and baby's breath.
She carried a fan of blue and
ivory roses with matching strea·
mers and baby's breath.
Sherry Davis, sister of the
bride, served as matron of honor.
She wore a teal blue satin dress,
with a Queen Anne collar, and
teal and Ivory matching hair·
piece. She also carried a !an of

blue and Ivory roses with matchIng ribbons.
Serving as flower girl was Amy
McCoy, who wore a medium blue
dress with ruffles and lace. She
carried a basket of roses with
matching ribbons.
,
Ring bearers were Millis
Franklin Johnson IV and Jeremlali Jason Johnson, both are
sons of the bride.
Lawson McCoy, Ewlngton,
served as best man. Todd Mac·
Cllnchy, brother of the groom,
served as the groomsman.
The groom wore a pearl gray
tuxedo with matching teal tte and
cummerbund.
' Ushers were Terry Norton,
brother of the bride, and Eddie
Davis, her brother-in-law.
Patty Norton registered guest.
A reception was held In the
church social room where the
bride's table featured a blue and
white three tiered cake with a
bride and groom replica on top.
On each side of the cake were
smaller cakes decorated the
same. The cake was prepared by
the bride's mother.
Hostesses at the reception
were Kay Moore, Lisa Downard,
and Lois McCoy.
·
The couple reside at 800 Wood·
ruff Road, Ewlngton.

Sympathy for the devil
LAMONI. Iowa (UP!) - A
school board member who wants
to exorcise his town 's school
nickname, "The Demons, " Is
meeting resistance from stu·
dents playing devil's advocate.
Board member Vince Graham
doesn't like the logo of Lamoni's
middle and high schOols, saying
It casts a negative Image and
promotes Satan worship.
Students disagree. About a
hundred of them staged a protest
Wednesday In support of their
devilish mascot , carrying signs
saying "save our demons" and
"Demon Pride." They were
joined by sympathetic teachers
and parents.
·
" Evil Is in the eye of the
beholder," one student pointed
out.
The schools In the small
southern Iowa town have used
the nickname for 67 years. Jn a
student lounge, a menacing·
looking demon with eyes glowing
green and pointed ears glowers
from a wall. The devil appears on
school stationery, uniforms and
wall decorations.
The issue began bumlng re·
cently when the gymnasium floor
was refinished and the school
board decided not to put a
·llkenes• of a demon face ln the
middle. Students protested, say·

........ I •

' ,.

lng the symbol belongs to them
and that the community should
not Interfere In the matter .
Devil supporters have offered
to design a "cuter demon" as a
compromise.

The Sunday Tlmes·Sentlriel
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 of tim ell·
ness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounls of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.

School menu
EAST MEIGS - The lunch
menu for the Eastern Local
School District has been announced for the week of Dec. 11.
Monday: hamburger, corn,
rice pudding, fruit, and milk.
Tuesday: chill, peanut butter
sandwich; relish tray, fruit, and
milk.
Wednesday: chicken, bread
and butter, mashed potatoes and
gravy, applesauce, and milk.
Thursday: nacho chips and
cheese, peas, cherry crisp; and
mUk.
.
Friday: fish, hash. browns,
fruited jello, and milk.

POMEROY- The Meigs High
School and Junior High bands
will present a Christmas concert
for the public on Dec. 17,2 p.m. In
the high school auditorium.
Toney Dingess, director, will
be conducting.

s,,~'•' o~.,,,,

MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at the home Mrs.
Daniel Thomas. Mrs. Wendell
Hoover will review the book
"Snow Leopard," by Peter Mat·
th!essen. Roll call will be answered with members naming
their favorite ShangriLa.

•bi•

*Yft need to be 1dmuiMed
Wlh bright oalora•nd aoundt to •aurt
lhlt thevltual nerve~ d..,llop properly.
Choose sturdy crib mobl-. ruW.
aqu• toy a. •dl or lqe rubtt. bills. .
Toddl•• c• u• blodtl, .tmpl• puz11•. to¥' pota end PinS. rirlg ltlcka. ltr·
inglng beedl. b11n bag g..n-. .nd rtng
to• g.m•. All toys ahauld be lwoe.
bright colored lnd
hindi... .
p,..IChool. .

modeling

cl~.

••ly

c• u• fins• ~lnts.
-'mpl• aewtng c•dl.

end ••wing mltWi-'. AI pr.. tchool••
should h8ille 1 c:ompt•• optomlltric • ·

amlnllion to be sure th• their vltlon 11
d..,oloplng

pr-'Y.

u•

Old• chilc*'en ctn
jult 1bout 1ny
toy thlt th_,. ere m•ur• enough to
h•dla Atw-va be,.,,. though thlt tht
toy11re Nfe1nd will not injure the child

pt..-inu wtth the -toy or oth• ne..t.v

chil*•· Blc.... good vilion il ...
quired for echol-'ic echl•.mtnt.

.
Chll*.. should receive • compla
optom•rlc ••min•ton ye•ty to . ..
..,,. thlt thtir vliuelay ...m Is up to the

tllk.

A. JACKSON BAILES, O.D.
250 SECOND AVE.
110 MECHANIC STII£ET
GAUUPOUS,OH. 45631 POMEROY, OH. 45769
446-3300
992-3279

j

I

~~~~~~"~~"~~~~~~2~~

I

PRE-CHRISTMAS

I
I ALL SWEATERS " LADIES
I
ALL DRESSES
M

•

• • •

•

oModtl (!uo!tor 201 •Hor••••or (20 hp)
•Aut....eic tnmmiltlen
•No diJidlintlnfinitt .,... chlkt

Storewide Holiday Sale

•

CEDAR CHESTS

_
•42", U" • 6-0" thafl·4riwlft mOWM" nail·
at.~ .. A..._IIHIUnttd to ftlow f'OUM te~~­

FLOOR
LAMPS

tOIIIr.

•Tight 26" turlling r.iut
.,ui-tinlt pow•
•DIIal pill* to oitltipt tw,.. ••• trGMnll·
tion .-1111 ,_. .. •IIi tlff•Mtiallodl fof
oMtlo,_ tr•tien
tick •• tio ......
•fu tndOtld ....,.,

•••Mtg

.

6 WAY

·Ms.....
,..............
,..... .....
... "" ..,.......

.....

Tho Moot Ught
For Reading or
Sewing

~

90 Modell Now In Stock

TIUCIILOAD SALE OF FACtOIY
DEMOS AND CLOSEOUIS

Cherry Cedar Chest
Padded Top by Lone

~~9

SALE

S77

Oak Cedar Chest

Wrth Padded Top by Lone

$199 ~3 ~9
8

SALE

$199

OVER200
LAMPS IN

REED'S COUNTIY STORE

4TH 8t Main, Reedlviltt. Oh.
PH. 378-8126

51"

REG. $159
SALE

-Eitdri PTO Enfllt elli ......, •tach·
mtntl with ftip of a switch
•ttr*aulic lift ...n. ontHoWII' attodlmll'lft

..........

6·Way

STOCII AND
All ON SALE!

Custom Order At Sale Prices!

PAIN IED
ME1AL

The machine your wife always wanted.
With Ail $138.00
Without Ad $399.00
PLUS

THESE OTHER WAREHOUSE MACHINES
·

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.'
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HOLIDAY HOURS:

~2995

SUNST AI SE111ES GARDEN TRACTORS
Availabt. in 14-16·18 &amp; 20 H.P.

the sapllng stage. An Improvement cutting Is usually done by a
commercial sale or a home use
operation.
Not all trees respond favorable
to pruning, because some will
sprout again whereallelimbwas
cut off.
Only fast-growing trees should
be pruned. On slow·growingtrees
the pruning takes so long to pay
off that the retur011 are comparatively small. A dense stand of
timber should first be thinned to
Insure rapid growth and tben
pruned.
Pruning should be done prefer·
ably In the !all or winter, usually
with a saw or pruning shears, but
never with an ax.

we have the remaining inventory from the White Sewing Machi!'e
Company Warehouse Sale. These 1990 heavy duty Wh!te
machines MUST·BE SOLD- As they cannot be returnedt~thedls­
tribution center. These heavy duty 1990 zig-zag machmes sew
leather to silk - make button holes - sew on buttons - darn hem - overcast - plus much more.
·

125% TO 50%
Open
Evenings

v.

• •

Cochran of Ohio State Unlver·
slty. "A p!netum Is an excellent
place to see the beauty and
grandeur of these trees."
Cochran Is curator of the
Secrest Arboretum at the unlver·
slty's Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center
In Wooster. The arboretum ~ar­
bors hundreds of specimens of
more than 60 kinds of trees.

DAYTON, Ohio (UPI) -The
California lender that holds the
first mortgage on the Daytonlan
Hilton has announced plans to
buy the property and renovate lt.
Foothill Capital Corp. of Los
Angeles reached an agreement
with the current owner, U.S.
Hotel Properties Corp. of Los
· Angeles, to acquire the 218-room
hotel.
Foothill started legal proceed·
lngs last year when U.S, Hotel
failed to make mortgage payments. The court ordered the
hotel to be sold at a sheriff's sale ·
tater this month. Foothill said It
will acquire the property at the ·
sale.
The business will continue to be
managed by Sunway Hotel Man·
agement Corp. of ·Kansas City.
Mo., the company named by the
court during foreclosure proceedings to operate the hotel.
A Sunway spokesman sa ld
Foothill will renovate guest
rooms, and other areas such as
lobbies, restaurants and meeting

GALLIPOLIS - Your forest
can grow by Itself, lust as your
garden can grow by ltselt But
both wlll grow faster and be more
productive If they are protected
from Insects, weeds and are
thinned to allow for adequate
room !or proper growth.
An untended garden can produce a bumper crop and the same
Is true for a timber stand. In the
past few people have seen a
forest well managed so It Is hard
to realize the potential a stand
can have. It takes years to derive
the full benefits of good forest
management If you must start by
reforestlni an area.
If there has been mismanagement and the woodlot Is worn out
It can take even longer to
establish a producing site. The
worthless or undesirable, loW·
value, residual trees must be
taken out before It can be
restocked with desirable species.
Simply stated, good forest
practices consist In keeping all
the woOdland area producing the .
maximum hlgh·value products
all the time.
Often the potential Is there to
produce a good stand. Seedlings
or saplings of valuable species
often are present, but suppressed
by larger Inferior or valueless
trees. Seed trees may be there
but the chance of natural restock·
lng Is poor because of a 11eavy
ground cover pf weed species.
· When the trees get to pole-size
they are often suppressed or
deformed by overtopping cull
trees left from earlier logging
operations.
Timber Stand Improvement or
TSIIs the term used to Identify all
cuttings that are not a part of the
major harvest operation but
which are made for the purpose
of Improving the composition,
condition, or rate of growth ofthe
stand. Aspects of TSI are weed·
lng, thinning, liberation cutting,
Improvement cutting and prun·
lng crop trees.
Weeding Is an Investment In
your forest. Early In the life of
the forest weeding eliminates the
undesirable trees which are less
than 41nches In diameter at chest
height.
Thinning Is often required In
even -aged stands or groups of
trees that are 15 to 30 years old.
Whenever the crowns are
crowded or are Jess than onethird the total height of the tree,
the forest should be thinned. This
thinning sbould produce enough
room so the tree wUI not be
crowded for the next 5 to 10 years.
The rate of thinning will vary
greatly due to the different forest
types, sites, and geographical
areas. Generally, about onequarter to one-third of the wood
volume Is removed.

Fast growing trees can be
thinned more than slower growIng ones. It Is best to seek the
advice of a forester when planning to thin your forest, because
what might be right for one site
will not always apply on another.
The liberation cutting means
the removal of trees which
overtop seedlings or saplings.
Usually these trees are not of
marketable value and should be
disposed of In tbe cheapest way
without endangering the desira·
ble trees In the 1tand. Some ways
are girdling or felling and should
take Into coDIIIderatlon ways to
protect !rom Insects and !Ire.
Improvement cuttings Involve
working with a stand that Is past

.·

Your Price

TilBp.m.
Su'Ulays
Til5p.m.

.·•

Quantity

4
3

2
2

Modll

.

Prlcea

WhhAd

1523 Jeans llachines :.................................... S188
1505 •glc' Machines ...................................... Sill
2221 lotary............................"..................... S351
3300 lotary._....................................~·········· '491

Prlca
WhhoutAd

••••
..,.S499

• DAYBED

FULL
QUdN

lEG, 1399

:""""•'~""""""$19900
Opln Daily

SJ99

9toS
Mo•day &amp;
Fritlay 9 to I
0,.. Sun. 1-4

0,..
Chrlslntaa

En

FREE
DEUVEIY
'

~-~=~8*~~8~~88~"~8

•

~
~
~

Pinetum best place to
see winter evergreens
WOOSTER, Ohio (UP!) - A
plnetum holds the answer to how
a Christmas tree would look In
your yard . .
A plnetum - the part or an
arboretum dedicated to pine,
spruce, fir, hemlock, larch and
other evergreens - Is easiest to
see when all the other trees have
lost their leaves.
"Few pine forests occur natu·
rally hi Ohio," says Kenneth D.

ALL COATS

.

•

a

TOYS AND VISION DEVELOP~~'E

RAVENSWOOD • RIPLEY • POINT PLEASANT

,,

$167.32 per hundred and Thursday, December 7, averaged
$167,25 per hundred. They were
also estimating that 52.3 per cent
of the crop had been sold as of
GALLIPOLIS- The 1989 crop Thursday, Dec. 7.
production, report from U.S.D.A.
Something new from the Na·
shows average corn yield at 116.6 tlon FertUtzer Development Ceo·
bushels per acre. Ohio was ter In Tennessee. Researchers at
estimated slightly lower at 115 TVA areexamlnlngtheeffectlve·
bushels.
·
ness of gelled fertilizers In
The· November crop report gaining the most from the
Increased estimated corn yield ferttllzer whUe minimizing the
2.2 bushels per acre from last adverse Impacts on the
mpnth's estimate. That alone environment.
Increased estimated supply by
Gelled fertUizers are made by
141 million bushels. O.S.U. Ex- mtxlng
flu)d fertUizer with a
tension Economist continue to dry water loving polymer. The
expect that storage will pay little resulting product can have vary·
more tl\an carry cost unless lng levels of viscosity, from
South America experiences ab· honey-like to a rubbing-like gel.
normal loss, the U.S. has a · Methods of application have ret
drought next spring or 'tile to be suggested. Benefits Include
Soviets Increase Imports. They decreased leaching loss and
alsosaythattheremaybeashort reduced vocalization of
term drop In prices when produ· ammonia.
ces are forced to sell because of
Very moist spell' Is the official
need of cash or simply get tired of description of our weather condl·
walt1ng.
lions. The O.D.N.R. water lnven·
Second week of Burley To- tory unit use the "Palmer
bacco auction ending November Drought Severity Index" to eval·
30 estimated 39 per cent of the uate moisture conditions. Our
crop being sold. The average Index at plus 3.4 qualifies as very
season .Price through Jhose first moist spell ..
seven days was $167.05 per
The November report also
hundred . That's $4.80 per Indicates that when considering
. hundred higher than a year the past 24 month time period we
earlier.
are plus 1.27 Inches on partlclpa·
The official average for this tlon. They also reported that
week was not complete when I seismic waves from the San
called the Tobacco News Service Francisco earthquake caused a
on Friday morning but dally .22 foot fluctuation of water level
averages were a little higher. In an observation well located
Wednesday, Dec. 6, averaged near Van Wert. Ohio.

Literary Club
meeting slated

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
editorial department by Thurs·
day, 4 p.m., prior to the date of
public atlon.
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 will
not be accepted. Generally, snap·
shots or Instant-developing photos are not of acceptable quality.
Questions may be directed to
the editorial department from 1
to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
at (614) 446-2342.

· California
lender
.
to purchase
Daytonian Hilton

.

By Edward M. Vollborn
Counly Extension Acent,
Agrlcullure &amp; CNRD

OPEN EYEMNGS 'Ill I P.M.

.
•

Farm Flashes

As of Dec. 7, 52.3 % of
Gallia's tobacco crops sold

. We offer complete
tuxedo rental Hrvlce to
help you look your beet
on that special dey.

PIJCED FIOM

•

dall S. Moore.
Music was provided by Pat
Elardo and Robert Dean Gordon.
Maid of honor was Hillary
Bostic, sister of the bride and
best man was David Price.

Band concert

Fot 16tt

'•

GALLIPOLIS - '· Heather L
Shaffer and David G. Moore were
united In marriage on Nov. 5, at
Gallipolis Christian Church, The
Rev . Denny Coburn officiated the
ceremony.
The bride Is the daughter of
Stephen C. Shaffer of Columbus
and Frances L. Phlla ban. The
groom Is the son of the late
Elizabeth Armstrong and Ran-

Wedding policy

. . . . . . . . . ,. . ,. . . . . . . .
r Holiday Tuxedo Special
fr

tered guests. A reception was
held following the wedding.
The bride wore a floor length
white satin gown with cathedral
train. She carried a bouquet of
peach roses, white carnations
tipped ln. aqua, white snapdragons, accented with baby's
breath.
The groom wore a black tuxedo
with tails. He wore a boutonniere
of peach rose, white carnation,
edged with greenery.
Matron of honor and the bride's
attendants wore floor length
aqua satin gowns.
The bride's mother wore a
street-length Ivory dress. The
groom's mother ·wore a street·
length dress of mauve pink with
antique lace. They were presented corsages by the bride and
groom.
The bride Is a graduate of Elida
High School and The University
of Rio Grande.
The groom Is a graduate of
Gallla Academy High School and
attends The University of Rio
Grande.

a S5 cash prize from the Ohio Valley Publlahillg
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
number with your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All conlesl entries should
be turned In to the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each
Wednesday. In case of a tie, the winner will be
chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallla County
farm will be featured by tbe Galla SoU and Water
Conservation District.

MYSTERY FARM - Tbls week's myslery
farm, featured by lhe Melp SoU and Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
Melp County. Individuals wishing to participate
, In lhe weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner . .Jusl maU, or drop off your guess to
the GaiUpolls Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave.,
GaiUpolls, Ohio, 4!1831, or lhe Dally Sentinel, Ill
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 457~9,and you may win

Moore-Shaffer

Robbins-Hines
GALLIPOLIS - St. John Catholic Church In Delphos, Ohio
was the setting for the Sept. 30
wedding · of Christine Marie
Hines and Ralph (Rob) Taylor
Robbins, Jr.
The bride Is. the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Hines,
E;lida, Ohio, The groom Is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph T.
Robbins, Sr., Gallipolis.
Escorted by her father, the
bride's matron of honor was Lisa
Grelsheimer-Mavis, Chillicothe.
Attendants were Rhonda Mid·
dendorf and Pam Hines, sisters
of the bride, Elida. The mlnature
bride was Kerl Hines, Delphos,
niece of the bride.
Bestman was Rick Hines,
Delphos. Ushers were Gary
Middendorf, Lima, and Randy
Hines, Delphos. The mlnature
groom was Ryan Degan, nephew
of the bride.
Music was provided by Mary
Will, organist, and Greg Mills,
soloist.
Karen Hoyt, Rio Grande, and
Amy French, Gallipolis, regis-

•

DAVID AND HEATHER (SHAFER) MOORE

ROB AND CHRISTINE (HINES) ROBBINS

SCOTT AND WANDA (JOHNSON) MacCLINCHY

B-5

Pomeroy-Midclaport-Galipolil, Ohio-Point Planant. W. Ve.

December 10. 1989

W. VI.

J

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�.. .

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Pig a B-6-Sundey Tme-Santinel

D«wnber 10. 1989

Pomeloy-Miid:Japort-Gallipcllil, Ohio-Point PleMIIIrt. W. Va.

Wreath competition
'winners announced
GALLIPOLIS - The French
Art Colony held It's Annual
Wreath Competition on Oct. 28.
The wreaths were on exhibit
through November and most
were for sale. The competition
has fourcatagorles; Dried, Natural, Man-Made Materials &amp;: the
Christmas theme. The winners of
each catagory were first to third,
and honorable mention:
Best of Sbow - Maxine Rusk;
Josephine Hill; Lois Nibert.

...

-

Man Made - Josephine Hill;
Deb! Bordman; Linda Burris;
Lori Stalnaker.
Dried - Maxine Rusk; Gar!
Worley; Wanda Bush; Josephine
lUll; Marie Horner.
Christmas - Maxine Rusk;
Connie Hill; Llnds Burris; Judy
Cooley; Doris Deeter.
·
Natural- Lois Nibert; Maxine
Rusk; Connie Hill; Susan Willi·
ams; Marie Horner.

LOIS NIBERT, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

___

In Our town... ________ . .By Dick Thomas
___;,.

Don't fence the Doughboy
Monument In - It has special
meaning.
The controversy contlnus
over where to
locate.a memorIal to Gallla
County
veterans.
Local vete·
rans have been fighting since last
Spring to get a memorlalllsUng
the names of all Gallla County
Veterans of all wars. The vets
think It would be best located on
the Second Avenue side of the
City Park. So do I.
Gallla County Veterans Ser·
vice Officer James Saunders is
spearheading the effort to get the
vets memorial. The group at·
tended last Tuesday night's
meeting of the City Commission
to show plans tor the proposed
memorial.
The monument, whlclt will be
around the Doughboy Monument, Is proposed to be five teet
and octagonal, with names of
Gallla county veterans on
plaques. The walls will be con·
crete with granite finish and a
two-foot sldewalk·wlll be placed.
It Is only five feet wider than the
current sidewalk, according to
Saunders.
·
!'hope when they say "around
the Doughboy Monument," they
mean In the vlcnlty of. I didn't go
to the city commission meeting
and I haven't seen Jim Saunders.
But, if they plan to build It around
the present monument, I say
"No." Now they're going to look
at me and say "Where did that
guy come from?"
It might be appropriate to
construct the proposed memorhll
between the Doughboy Monument and the Bandstand .
'But, it would be better to place
the memorial on the Second
Avenue side of the City Park,
where It would more accessible
to more people. The traffic Is
heavier on that side of the park
than on the First Avenue side.
The memorial would be In a
more Ideal location, accessible .to
anybody who passed. A visitor
would be more attracted to It
because It would be more or less
"in the mainstream." You
wouldn't have to make a special
trip to the other side of the block.
The Issue has been batted back
and forth between the City Park
Commission and the City Com·
mission. Now they're planning to
meet again with the park commission, which by the way Is an
advisory group to the city com·
mission. I won't change my
stand ... build It along the Second
Avenue side of the park.
Ask any veteran where he or

IA'IIWI
DISIIEY IAIIES

•••••o•

I

DECOlAnON
Nfl I COUIGIATE
I Nil BOIDEIS
I WALL COVEIS

WAilPAPEI &amp;

she wants lt. You'll get the same
answer.
The Doughboy Monument has
special significance to a special
group.
The proposed veterans memorIal also bas special meaning to a
special group today's
veterans.
I met someone the other day
who didn't knowtbehlstoryofthe
Doughboy Monument. I Imagine
there are many who do not know
about the Doughboy.
Here Is a brief wrap-up: The
monument was dedicated May
30,1931 by the Ladles Auxiliary of
Lafayelte Post 27. American
Legion, 'to the memory of the
valiant sons of Gallla county who
served In the World War, 19171918.
It was erected in memory of
Johnny Oliver, a member of Old
Company F, Ohio Voluntary
Infantry In World War I. Theslte
of the Doughboy Monument was
chosen because Company F
encamped on the same spot
before leaving for Army training
camps in the south.
Johnny Oliver was as tudent at
Gallla Academy ·High School
when he wen toft to war. He never
made it back. His chair was
draped at the 1918 Commencement. Johnny Oliver sleeps In
hallowed ground, his spirit and
memory preserved In the Dough· ·
boy Monument.
In November 1939, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune printed "39
Gallla County Heroes of World
War Listed," astoryaboutWorld
War I veterans who had died. The
list which contained the name of
Johnny Oliver, was read by then ·
Gallla County Probate and Juve·
nile Judge J .S. Clark at the
American Legion's Armistice
Day meeting.
Judge Clark pointed out, "It
seems worthwhile, for the Information especially of a younger
generation, to reprint the list.
The paj)er said this Is believed
to be· the most complete and
accurate list available:
Earl Brooks, Paris, France,
Nov. 19, 1918; Rodney Chandler,
killed In action, Nov. 9, 1918;
Shelby F. Clagg, Hoffman's
Island, N.Y. , Oct. 13, 1918; Don
Fred Cornwell, Eureka , Ohio,
Nov. 14, 1922; Harrison Craft.
Walter Reed Hospital, March 12,
1919; Clarence Denny, Belgium,
Oct. 31, 1918; Earl Price Donnally. Olsene, France, Oct. 14,
1918; Charles -Emerson, Poucox,
France, Aug. 13, 1918; John
Nelson Garnes, Green Township,
Gallla County, May 16, 1921;
Eldon Gates, near Sedan.
France, Nov. 7. 1918;

Ohio Point Planrrt. W. Va.

December 10. 1989

Walter Cleo Glbeaut, Camp Damon Swisher, France, Nov. 8,
Pike, Ark.. March 14, 1918; · 1918; Howard F. Spires, Chateau
Major Edward Gatewood, Thierry, France, July 28, 1918;
France, Qct. 21, 1918; Orin Donavan H. Sibley France, Oct .
Minturn Hall, France, Oct. 16, 30, 1918; . Mlrl Vance, France,
1918; Charles R. Hull. VInton, Sept. 28, 1918; Charles R. Wilson,
Sept. 20, 1918; Stephen Helnls, France, Sept. 29, 1918; Leaton A.
France, Sept. 27, 1918; Tom Wilcoxon, Gallipolis, · Jan. 16,
Dunbar Halliday, France, Oct. 6, 1918; and William Rufus While,
1918; Thomas Jenkins, France, France, Oct. 24, 1918.
Nov. 4, 1918; John E. Jones,
England, Feb. 8, 1919; Lorenzla
D. Johnson, Gallipolis, Aug. 7,
1920; John K . Lawson, France,
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce will bold
May 28, 1918.
Harry H. Leaper, Base Hiispl· Its monthly meeting at noon on
tal No. 3, Ministerial, bet.8,1918;
Tue~ay at Veterans Memorial
Oakland Miller, Camp J{umph· ·Hospital.
:
The chamber will be discuss·
rles, Va., Dec. 2, 1918; Oley
Elwood McCarley, Camp Sher· lng the finalizing plans for the
man, Oct. 4, 1918; Charles Meigs County Chamber.
Nunnenkamp Fort Thomas, Ky.,
All members are urged to
attend. This will be ' the last
May 30, 1918; John Oliver.
Anoceril, France, Sept. 27, 1918;
official meeting of the Pomerdy
Lawrence G. Patterson, Fort Area Chamber of Commerce. ~
Bliss, Texas, March 26, 1919;
George ·c . Reed, Los Angeles,
•
Calif., Feb. 14, 1929; David T.
Reese, Bordeaux, France, April
POMEORY - The XI GamJT1a
3, 1919; Elza Rife, Chalons,
France, July 15, 1918; John Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sororlty, will meet Thursday,
Richards, Bantheville France,
6:30p.m. at the home of Ann and
Nov. 1, 1918.
Richard Rupe, Wright St.
Orville Sheets, France, Sept.
Members are to bring their
29, 1918; Benjamin Harrison
secret sister gift, an ornamel1_t,
Stormont, Mobile Hospital No. 2.
and Items for the ~eedy family.
A.E.F .. France, ()ct. 8, 1918;

HELPING YOU
CELEBRATE THE
CHRISTMAS
HOLIDAYS

We Reserve The Riehl To
Limit Quantilies

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday

Chamber to meet .

8 AM"lO PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH~ ·
PRICES 'EFFECnYE SUN., DEC. 10 THRU SAT., DEC. 16, 1989

Sorority to meet

GRADE A-12-22 LB. FLAYORITE
'

Turkeys ••••••••••••• ~•••
1'/4 por. k Lo1n
. ••••. ~·•• $139
$
199
Boneless Hams •• ~••

.-

··..
·,
'
•

·•

AT ABC KIDDIE SHOP

'

•,

.'

CORN KING-6-8 LB. AVG.

''

Boys &amp; Girls Sportswear
SillS 4·14

.•

2.0°/o

FRESH ·

'

Ground
Turkey.:..
Sl
09
9
7
Chuck Roast ••••• Sl
$ 39
Chuck Roast ••••:•• . 1

.•

CHICKEN

OFF ·

Includes: Sweatll'l, Shirts,
·.,.
Pants, Ski1s, Sluob, Jeans &amp; Mort . · ·

,

f' r\

( , [

I 1i 1

t [

CHOICE BONELESS

/_, '

Hf\f'~

SPH'If\,1

·.

... .
•

'

u•• .

.

1J.S.D.A. CHOICE

39(

'

Leg Quarters •••• :....
·
$ 49
Bologna ••••••••••••~.. 1

INTEIIOI DESIGN
128 JACKSON PIKE

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
MIDDLEPOn, OliO
TIMEX WATCHES

'
.

,.'
i

I

'

I

-25°/0oFF
SELECTED

SELECtED

CHRISTMAS
CARDS

25°/o
OFF
UPTO
50°/o OFF

:l~~HES ••••••• $6 9°0
BILLFOLDS
AND

OFF

WALLETS

MEN'S COLOGNE
"FOR THAT EXTRA CHRISTMAS GIFT"

•GUCCI
•OBSESSION

•UZ TAYLOR
PASSION

MoaT MODERN - Ve1eren1 Memoriel Admini1trator Scott
Lucao, left, end Technlci., Mike Sharp with tha vary lotelt
1tote-of-the-art whole body X-ray CT Scanner.

AMnY

•LAIDEI Gin SETS
•IIJOI
•PAUL SIBASnAN

HOUDAY
'POT POURII
lASlO

ss.oo

271 IOIJII SICMD

49
Oranges ...........o:. •• S1

992·21~4

UIIIIIPOII',
.. - o•o
(

.

$25 GIFT
CERTIFICATE
Will be given
away each
Saturday from

now to Christmas.
NHD NOT BE PIESENT
TO WIN

DOUBLE

PARKAY

Margarine ••.•••••• ~~ ••
STOVE TOP

7-9(

BANQUET

WEEK

.

TV Dinners •••• !~~.0!·••• 99 C
White Bread •••••••• $14 9

RHODES

5 LOAF PAl .

LIMIT 10
COUPONS
MAXIMUM
VALUE

soc
JELLO GELATIN

RIAL
HOSPITAL·
115 USI - · · liM
POI.IOY ·

and a

$ 69 COUPONS
Flavorite Milk...... 1 . . ALL

serve you and your family.

VETERANS

$50 GIFT
CERTIFICATE

PLASTIC .GALLON ,

Reme~ber. Veterans Memorial Hospital is hereto

Gln,.CIIASL

t9J-666t

4 LB. NAVEL or 5 LB. FLORIDA

Here in your Hometown Hospital. we can handle
your medi.cal needs - amid familiar faces and "at
home" where friends and family can visit with you fre·
quently without traveling ·any great distance.

WIIIIA'IO.IO

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

Veterans Memorial.
Your Hometown Hospital. is constantly upgrading and improving its equipment as
well as its physical fa·
cilities so that our
well~trained , healthcare staff can continue
to
handle
any medical problems
which you might have
- ranging from the
most routine to lifeSaVing SituatiOnS.

SATURDAY, DEC. 16
SATURDAY, DEC. 23

UTILEEN WEUS
IHO.A DAVIS
B. L unox
RUTH GUTE
PlUUNE RDTEI
BELVA WWRD
JEllY TIWS
lllRILYN POWEll.
CHERYL WI.LFORD
CHARLENE SWAITZ
SONYA WAYLAND
NEWE MYERS
· ADAICEESH

A state-of-the-art whole body X-ray CT Scanner is
the latest in today's most modern medical equipment
to be installed in the program of continuing progress
· at Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.

GALUPOUS. OH.-441-7333
HOURS: M-F 10 om-11:30 pm
Sot. 10-4: CloHd Sundoy

----SATURDAY, DEC. 9

DECEMBER 2nd
WINNERS

ECKRICH .

THE LATEST ·

Now thru Dec. 24
we will have a
daily drawing for
free groceries.
Sign you" cashier
tape and if your
name is drawn,
you will be
reimbursed in
cash for the
amount of your
purchase.

11.5·
19

oz.
liMit

1001 GIIY

' 0001 Sill.

·:o~z.

TIDE DETERGENT

4/99(

4 LIS.
3

l!Mif 4 PEl tUSloMEI

GOOD ONll AT I'OWIU'S SUPBVAW
lOOt SUN., DK. 10 TIIU SAT. IK•. 16

•

oz.

$299 .

UIIIIIT 1 Pa CUSIOMII
GOGO ONLY AT I'OIIIU'S SUPIIVAIII
10011 SUN., DK. 10 111111 SAT. DK. 16

IIG CHIF

GRAN. SUGAR
4 Ll.

lAG

99(

... 1 PB CU5TOIIII

GOOD . ., AI I'OWBI.1 SUPIIYAW
IK. 11 MU SAT. DK. 16

Stop In The
Store For

Details•

�.

·.
1'1¢1

B-8-Sundey Timll Sentinel

Beat of the bend

GALLIPOLIS - Ollt! of the
main attractlona for villton to
Bob Evans Farms at Rio Grande
Is the canoe ride up the Raccoon
Creek to Daniel Boone's cave.
Actually tbla cave bas been a
tourllt attraction for well over
100 years.
For Instance we read In a copy
of tbe Galllpolla Tribune from
1902 !bat a party conslattng of
Mr,. Margaret Cherrington,
Mrs. Frank Hamar, Mrs. Nellie
Bostwick, Mrs. Anna Starkey
and daughter Anne, Ora Pritchett, Laura Jenlke, Prof. James
Campbell, F .E. Cberrtngton, Dr.
Orin Mills, Verne Bostwick and
Stanley and Bert Hamer -went to
AdamsvUle for a picnic ·and a
chance to see Daniel Boone's
cave.
The cave was privately owned;
the owner charging a small fee
for a guided tour. Among the
stories the guide told In 1902 was
that Daniel Boone was trapped In
the cave for 4 weeks and 11 days.
In that ttme he ate only what
antmals came Into hls cave and
drank water that trickled
through a crevice Into the cave.
The reason that Daniel was In the
cave was that Indians had him
surrounded. Eventually "Old
Dannel" decided to give up and
walked out of the cave to
surrender to his enemy. They
were "nowheres to be found".
Daniel made for Kentucky by
walking down the Ohio side
where he swam across the Ohio
River at Bardstown. However
while Daniel was In the cave at
Adamsvtlle he did manage to
scratch out In some symbolic
form hi~ philosophy of life.
Of course to the educated mind
there were a few problems with
this story: first Daniel didn't
hunt alone usually. Second Bardstown is not on the Ohio River and
third why would he escape to
Kentucky, when between 1788
and 1798 when Daniel would
likely have been here, he actually
lived near Pt. Pleasant or Charleston. It also stretches the
Imagination a little to believe
that even Daniel could have
survived 39 days in a cave
without much food.
That Daniel Boone did hunt the
Raccoon Creek either 1791-92 or
In 1792-93 Ia certain. That he
stayed In this cave seems likely.
As to those strange drawings on
the cave walls, one owner of the
cave told hls tourists that the
markings were made by French
trappers who lived In the area in
the urly 1700's. Most ·llkely the
drawings (at least those that
were not put up there by an
enterpreneur trying to enhance
his produ,ct) can be attributed to
Indians.
Daniel Boone came to the Pt.
Pleasant area about 1788 and
opened a trading post on Crooked
Creek. Sold at this trading post
from P90 to 1794 (a time period
for which there are records) ·

problems In the first place. So
IJ lOB HOEFLICH
you
shelf that worry too. At a
POMEROY - "Don't Worry;
In life, you're in a panic
point
Be Happy,"
state
of
worry about the atom
That Is the tibomb
aetting
you. That worry
tle of a stmp~
too
big so you decide
gets
entirely
101111 which ento
personalize
your
worrying just
Joyed quite a
that
worry up to
a
tad
and
leave
pop11larlty over
our
leaders.
recent months.
After all, tllere are plenty of
The tune Is
things
on your own front step to
catchy; the' lyrworry
about.
There are the kids,
les are stmple. The advice Is
.
the
utility
b!Us,
the mor[IJage
good, too. However, It's easter
payment,
the
car
payment, the
said than done.
Some of us are born worriers. high cost of eating, the plastic
One little pop song coming over bills, your we[IJht, your health,
tbe airways isn't going to change the house catching on fire,
that. No Sir! We're going to getting run over by a truck, your
balding head, the dirty dishes,
continue to worry.
the
cluttered house, the unkind
We aatural worriers know just
remarkS
of a friend or relative,
how to make it a .full time job,
embarrassment
of falUng
the
don't we? I mean if we just have
down
with
people
watching,
your
little worries we know just the
spouse,
yesterday.
and
tomorrow
knack of concentrating on them
to make them big worries. Of and that's only the tip of the
coune, when the big troubles and Iceberg when it comes to personthe accompanying worrying alized worrying. There's unlim·
come along, we know how to iled subject matter· so you can
handle that too. We drop the little pick 'n choose.
Actually, we tried and true
ODeS only temporarlly, of
worriers
don't select just one
course.
Someone - In fact, I think a worry topic. That would he
·whole bunch of peopie - have foolish when there are so 111any
advised us that it does no good to possiblities to cover. We know
worry when actually, the things It's good to spread the worrying
we worry a bout basically never to as many subjects as possiblecome to pass. Now ,that's a good it makes for a very busy mind.
Of course, there are sometimes
philosophy but we who are
to doing prime worryhindrances
bell-bent on worrying have long
ing.
For
example, there are
been convinced that there's no
times
when
you have to concen·
magic formula for us. What the
trate
on
performing
the duties of
heck? We know that if you don't
yourjob.
Then
there
are people
worry, you must be a pretty
who
engage
you
in
conversation
Insensitive person.
Of course, there are different and how can you really worry at
age levels of worrying. In youth, your best with a lot of talking
one worries about changing and going on - especially when you
saving the world. Later. you have to give some sort of an
reallzie that you're really not Indication that you're listening?
And - even television or music
going to Invoke much change.
can
divert you from some really
You accept the fact that people
sincere,
hard ball worrying. You
are people and they're going to
and
I
certainly
know that the
stay tllat way.
qualily
worrying
can only
good
So- there goes a load of worry
be
done
in
complete
solitude.
down the drain.
So isolate yourself into solitude
When you're young you worry
and
really get Into it. You know
about the Third World Countries
how It is - when you laugh the
and all the problems. As time
,world
laughs with you - when
·marches on - and II will - you
you
worry
- you worry alone.
begin to realize that those nations
When
you
get
the worrying done
are apparently going io be
-it's
going
to
be difficult- but
constantly fighting and you don't
do
keep
smiling.
·
even begin to understand the

...;...-People in the news--

- tiillletl ...._ Wernatlonal
FERGIE'S SISTER SPLITS:
·FBOMDBVMSTOLAW: With A royal in-law is having marital
the fateofBneeSprlapteen's E trouble In Australia. Jane MaStreet Band in question, kbn, theduchessofYork'sslster,
drummer Max Welnbei'JIS think- and her husband, Alex, have
Ing about law school. A source separated after months of talk
told the New York Dally News about how rocky their marriage
that Weinberg was at Rutgers was. The announcement of the
University in New Brunswick,' split comes two weekS after the
N.J., last Saturday to take the duchess, nee Sarah Ferpaon,
LSAT, the law school entrance visited Jane on Lizard Island on
exam. Weinberg said he doubts Australia's Great Barrier Reef
Sprlllpteea will reassemble the with her daughter. Prlnc1!118
land for another tour so he's Beatrice. The Makims have been
epnsldering law school as a married for 12 years and lived on were: meat, coffee, tea, fiour,
backup career. The source told a · farm in a town that has a lard, salt, brandy, whiskey, rum,
the News that after the LSAT, population of 120. a spot that grain, corduroy, swan skin, kitWeinberg "appeared confident some11mes left Jane feeling chen equipment, scissors, viSes,
he'd done well. He smiled a lot." lonely. In November she Issued a ftles, gun powder, guns, bacon,
- IOEIIJ[Y BACK ON THE statement after speculation skins of all kinds and furs.
It was no doubt to have the
8TBEETS: Convicted Inside about her marriage was pubcapital
to buy bla stock that
trader lvu Boeslcy trimmed his lished, denying that she'd had
shaggy beard and long hair after "improper relationships" that Boone hunted for skins and furs.
being released from a federal damaged the marriage or had He traded these at Pittsburgh for
prison In Lompoc, Calif., and tried to sneak their two kids out of other materials for his store. In
1792 Boone hired a scout by the
taking up residence at a halfway Australia.
name of Fleming to hunt and trap
house In New York City this
CARSON THREATS: A Mil- with Boone on the lower part of
week. Boesky has a 6 p.m. curfew waukee man obsessed with
but II he finds work. the curfew Johnny Carson faces charges of the Raccoon Creek. Boone and
will be extended to 9 p.m. and 25 making terrorist threats against Fleming set their canoes In at the
percent of his earnings will go to the "Tonight" show host. Ken mouth of the Raccoon Creek and
ibe Brooklyn halfway house. In Orville Gause, 36, was arrested proceeded to paddle upstream.
December 1987 Boesky was sent- Wednesday in Burbank, Callt., at When the pair got to where
enced to three years in prison for the NBC studios, which he present day Thevlner is located,
securities fraud and ordered to allegedly had threatened to blow Fleming got sick and the pair
returned by canoe to Gallipolis.
pay S100 million In fines.
up, and arraigned Friday. Police It was there that Robert Safford
BEDFORD REWARDED said Gause has sent a number of
was suggested as a guide. SafPO&amp; ACTIVISM: Robert Red- letters and tape recordings
ford
was employed by the U.S.
fen wants the environmental threatening to kill Carson and
Army as a scoutfor the Gallipolis
movement to become more polit- other celebrities over the past
settlement and knew the area
ical. The actor was honored by two years.
the National Audubon Society
Thursday ntgbtl'n New York wUh
a lifetime achievement award
for his environmental activism
t.Aiot.(H}Za:lrb j.
and in his acceptance speech,
Redforil called for "a new
poUtlcal force with the power to
demand that politicians reduce
tbe threat to our environment."
Redford has campaigned for
clean air and energy conservaEQUIPMENT· SALES· RENTALS· REPAIRS
tion and against destructive strip
mining and has led grassroots
"Complete Medical Equipment For Home Use"
campaigna In Utah to stop
environmentally damaging
development.

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lit ad in••nnce ·.
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quite well. It was perhaps Saf·
ford who suggested !bat he and
Boone paddle up the Raccoon
~k to present day AdamsvUle.
It Ia from Safford's recollec·
tlons !bat we learn he and Boone
spent some months at "The
Cave" located aboutl mile above
Adamsville. They mostly
trapped beaver. One worked
u'p strum from the "The Cave"
eacb day and the other worked
downstream. The upper limit
was Strange's Run where there Is
a lluae rock formation.
During this hunting trip the
winter of 1792-93 Indians never
bothered the pair. However they
were bothered by wolves who
kept stealing things out of "The
Cave". It was then that they
rlgiJed up a trap. Safford remembered: "Bending down a stiff
sapling they chained the steel
trap to it by means of a forked
stake driven Into ,the ground.
Things were arranged In such a
way tllat when the animal sprung
the trap the sapling would spring
up."
In short order a huge black
wolf was caught. His hlnd legs
were in the trap. He was
suspended upside down so that
his front legs barely touched the
ground. As the wolf tried to dig
out of his pl[IJht, more tension
was built up in the sipltng untn
the wolf was being pitched to and
fro, up and downl Safford and
Boone became quite amused at
the animal's performance. Fi-

THE RECONSTRUcrED lo1 vlllale at BQb Evans

ne&amp;J
Rio Grande bas one 101 cabin where numeroustourlats sip up each
year to take the caaoe ride •P to Daniel Boone's cave. Boone and
Robert Safford hllnled and ~ped on the Raccoon Creek the
winter of 1792-83.
·
Boone ~nd Safford came home
nally Safford pulled out his rifle
with several hundred beaver
to end the wolfs misery. Boone
skins that winter, an\! a trap
Intervened saying: "There Is no
given to Safford by Boone reuse wasting powder and lead".
mained in The Safford family for
Boone then proceeded to take a
many years.
club to the wolf. It appears
. that
'

Pat's Posk Patch
Christmas Items on Sale 200fo Off
DECEMIIEII 12 THRU 16

Toasting Glasses, Serving' Knives.
Carved Unity C•ndlea, 1 0" Tapers,
Ct1rvad C.ndlea !different colors).
Door WrNthe &amp; Swage,
AITengemente, Tree Ol'lltlmenta,, ~~:'o~~:;rj,&amp;
Vlc:tOI'ien, Garltlnda, C•ndlea. P
Christmas Tina and much. much. more.

,.
Weekdaya 10-2 &amp; 5-9

388·9311 Ask for Pat.

• ADULT DIAPERS

• LIFT CHAIRS

• UNOERPAOS (CHUXSj • WALKERS
• BEDSIDE COMMODES • DIABETIC SUPPUES
• PATIENT LIFTS
• OSTOMY

·we BILL MEDICARE I OTiD INiicfliANCE'ioR YOU

44H1tc

''

I

1 )'

' ' '' ! " ) ' 1/1
'

I•'

11

~

Tudor's .::::-(""(. . .

BISCUIT
HOMEMADE BISCUITS

We'll add
to any
Homemade

c...... e.c."'f"'

111o11oo1 a-, .. Dir
• - • H.m...- liuuit.....

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

. ..

THUNDERING HERD

CaHilan locon

liKoit .............S1,09
Striplocan

liKuit ............. s1.09

Poole
liscoit .............51,09
Fried Apple
liKuit .................. 95
Egg
liscuit .................80
Potato
liKiit ..................80
Moltod (hatst
liKoit .................80
a-ican (hat n
liscoit ...-.......... .80

51 • 59

Grawy ""'"•
0.. llscult .............. 51.29
Two liscuih ......... ... 51.59
p.,.....
Two with Syrup.-...51.29
Tlw• with Syrup .....51,39

~=- 0:::~.~~--- 51.99
MOUNTAINEER

Egg ................... S,35

Cat~ntry

Ham.

....

E1~tot•

.

.

~ ..u::~-- ~~---· 52.09

Potato.................. 45

AOCKET
Steak.(.._, Petoto

fritd Afplll......... 40

~~:..o:h!b.~~. . . .... 52.09

20
Moltod &lt;hat ....... 35
lut.ter , ................. 10
H~y ................... 10
lettuu ................ 10
,_to,_..,........ 15
Jolly .....................05
Syrup .................. 25
Apple Iutter ..... .2 5 .
Onion ................... 10

c....- l«t11, Pototq, lgg

(hotN.................

S&lt;rlllllblool Eggt, (hoica
If . .t, frild Apples

or Petatoil, llhcuit -·- S2 .19-

P--. ...."..

GOLDEN EAGLE

:.=:..:-..o::~·.:~

. . . s1.99

AON
. _ l g g l O..oonOur $

...... - ........~ ..... 1.59
TOOTlE
(ouMrr llllm, 199 I Chi••

.• o.. ......

~~!~;:~T

Sc....lod Eggs, liKoit
with (hoica of fried '
A,,ls or Peta,tOH ...... 51.49

MICKEY

Biscuit
Sautap
.
liKoit .............s1.09
(-try Ham
liKoit ..............S1.19
St...
·
liKoilt .............S1.09

8

HOUSE SPECIALS

1 69

Homlm . . lisatit ··--..-·······- •
MAAV B

:::.~a:!...C:i:~~-~- '1.s.9
DOTTIE
Potot'
ChHio.
""·"''$
,_.... :t'...I.....
ltscuit
.... 1• 29
Mr. "T'

........ 'IWttd (hftll

:.:!:::.!:"::!........_..... S1.4 9
p.,_.. &amp; Mtltool ChHio
PEPPI

:.:.:.r.:·... . . . . . . . . . .99
EGG·N·MUffiN
lg. o.....

~':':1:.;;,'-:~m.........,.. S1,59

wlthHiim ... .. ...... .. .. ... ... 1 1.89

, with SauMge ................ '1.69

Two Cabs, Two Scra. .lod
119, &lt;hoica of .......52, 19
Supor lr...last •••--..53.29
(hoica of Moot, 2 (gas
Pr . .r_od
y.,.. Way, Tators, Applos,
Grawy, &amp; limit

SWEEl SIDE

HOMEMADE

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

(illrrJ Tunoo•• ,_....... 5 •99

......I

( i o - lol-.............5
Huna d

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

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.99

•.,.. rry Muffins.......... s .99

"--···

lisldns (...!. ......- ......... 5

.49

21•.••--..61'1 .99

Biscuits Aren't Just For Breakfast A•y•ore!
TOO TIRED TO COOK? CALL AHEAD 67 5·6166 AND WE'LL
HAVE YOUR ORDER READY AT OUR CONVENIENT DRIVE-THRU
CONVENIENTlY LOCATED NEXT TO THE POINT PLEASANT IIGH SCHOOL ON JACKSON
AYENUL HOlliS: MON.-SAT. 5:30 A.M.-7 P.M. SUNDAY 7:00 A.M.-3 P.M.

PORK BAR-B-Q
with Slaw ........................._. 52.09

CHICKEN CLUB
with loctn, lottum
·
TGIIIOtO I May..naiso-......,52,89

HAM DELUX
wltll Llttuu, , ...,.,
llayooa"!IN -·-·--·--......... 52 .29

BACON. LElTUCE. TOMATO
with May&lt;NotaiN - .............. 51,49
COUNTRY STEAK DELUXE
wltlo l.tttuu, TGIIIOII;
Maja

'11, (hatN - ......... 51,59

HOT BOLOGNA
with Ltttu., Ooian, Mild
lor-1-Q·

s.- _,................ 51.59

HOT DOGS
with Chili, Slaw,
~---·-··· ...- ................$
CHICKEN BISCUIT

.99

Po.tc ......, __,__,_$3,99

laklll Sttalc-N-Grawy......~ 53.69

Hom-----·--·--·-

lakod
S3,99
. FUiet-·-·········-~....
'
53•99
Chil:ken
(hicktft Strips (3 strips) ......53,99
Fish Dinntr -·-··------·53,69
All dinners include your choice
of lwo vegetable~: Apple.s, Cole
Slaw, Ma.shed Poaaaoe.s, Chunky
Potatoes. Ho1h Brown.t, Pinro
Bearu, Green Beans, Carroll,
Corn, Applesauce and Garden
Salad.
·
IIQ PIAnO

with Fr-h fries
and Colt Slaw ................$2.79
YEG£1 AilE PIATT a
Yow Cholco of
fTMW (41 Vogohlblos ......,_$2,69
PINTO lEANS AND (OIINIIUD

.

. .,.. lot --·-·-·-·--..• 1.99
•• Saoulwldlts Sorwlll ., ,_
(hoica If THII, lull, ., lilcuit

Try our deliciow:
._,., (....rlllll---·-·51.59

with oni- -·--·-··""" 51.5 9

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us

$.65 $.75
$.65 $.75 $.15
$.49
$.69
Or... Juicl
$.19
Hot TIO/(off. $.50
$.65
Daf. (off.
$.50
$.65
Hot Ouoc.
$.SO
$.70

-

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lcaiT10

11 ,:7.oo

llOfiDA'

.,

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c..""' firlll St•'* ....... 3.19
~~~lett Din- ...- ...... S3.19

WEDNESDAY

::.:-~~.:~:.~~~:~""'""' $3,19
S3.19

n:::,YDi""" . . . . . . . . . . .

f~hA~- ""'"' ""'"""""""' 53.19
SATURDAY

r~~··n •t&gt;rl

(Ill dayJ

All-You-Con-Eot

lismMo-N-&amp;•Oty ...................... 5

SUNDAY (u•ra~t• rl nlllltn')
Super ....., •• ...........:...... _

Duke, 3-2, got 22 polnls from
Mustaf finished with a teamLAWRENCE, Kan. (UPI)
Burns, a 6-8 forward, and
13 points and Walt W!Uiams
high
Terry Brown scored 31 points Henderson and 19 from freshman
Jerrod Mustaf combined for 20
Bobby
Hurley.
added
11 to pace the Terrapins.
Saturday in pacing a balanced
second-half points as Maryland
Taylor led all scorers
Curtis
Oklahoma
88,
UNLV
81
used an 11-1 surge late In the
· Kansas attack that set school
At
Norman,
Okla.,
redshirt
with
17
points
and Dee Brown
records lor points In a halt and In
second half to Improve ita record
added 16 to lead Jacksonville,
a game, and the No ..2 Jayhawks freshman Terry Evans scored 24 to 4-2.
rode the bln&amp;e to a 150-95 rout of points and helped Oklahoma pull
away down. the stretch Saturday,
the Kentucky Wildcats.
Kansas, 9·0 and off to its best leading the 12th-ranked Sooners
start since 1957-58, had seven to an 89-81 decision over No. 5
players reach double figures. Nevada-Las Vegas.
It was the 34tll straight win at
wiping out records - 71 points in
a half and 127 in the game - set home !or the unbeaten Sooners
last January against Iowa State. and their 65th straight home
Four of the top s!J&lt; Kansas victory over a non-conference
scoring efforts have come In the team. Oklahoma has won 97 of its
40 games since Roy Williams · last 99 games in Norman .
The Sooners climbed to 4-0,
became head coach.
having
beaten their three preThe Jayhawks led 80-61 at the
vious
opponents
by an average of
half. Kentucky dropped to to 3·2.
78
points.
The
Rebels
fell to 3-2,
The Wildcats set the tone from
the OP!"nlng tip, immediately their other loss coming against
feeding Derrick Miller for a No. 2 Kan&amp;lls.
three-pointer. Miller finished · Evans hit six three-point shots,
with 32 with 24 of those coming helping the Sooners to a 47-44
via ·three-pointers. He hlt seven halftime lead. Skeeter · Henry .
of his eight three-pointers In the added 17 for Oklahoma. The
first half and the Wildcats had 12 Rebels were led by Larry John·
In the half.
son with 29 points and Anderson
Hunt with 14.
Georptown 81, Rice 60
At Landover, Md., Alonzo
It was the fourth · straight
Mourning scored 15 of his 23 victory for Oklahoma over
points in the second half and Nevada-Las Vegas. The previous
grabbed 11 rebounds In spear- three wins came by a total of five
heading Georgetown's front· points.
court assault Saturday, as the
Xavier 78, MJaml (Ohio) 88
BAT'IUNG INSIDE- Gallla AeuemypardDeaaG- (IZ)
No. 3 Hoyas captured their 22nd
At Oxford, Ohio, Jamal Walker
battles
a Gn~enfteld MeClaln player (left) • MeClala's Mbs)'
straight home victory, an 81-60 scored 25 points and Xavier
Cline
watchl!ll
the play dnrlnl ·Saturday's pme on the Anpls'
overcame a game-opening 13-0
decision over Rice.
borne
court.
Greene
scored 12 points In lhe Angels' &amp;z..ao victory.
Georgetown,. coming off an deficit to post a 76-69 victory over
lmpresslve93-81 victory over No. Miami (Ohio) Saturday.
Xavier, 2-1,' got 17 points from
15 North Carolina in the Atlantic
Coast Conference-Big East chal- • Tyrone Hill, 13 from Jamie
lenge series Thursday. improved Gladden and 11 from Derek
to 5-0.
Strong.
Mourning, a 6-10 sophomore
Miami, 3-3, was paced by
center, matched his season high David Scott with 22 points. Tim
scoring output. Guard Mark Stewart added 15 and Craig
Tlllmoll added 18 points and Michaelis had 13.
GALLIPO.LIS Gallla bucket.
Dikembe Mutombo, a 7-2 sophoMarqueta. 80, Notn~ Dame 88
Acade!lly guard Gwen Elliott
Kelly Anderson led Greenfield
more center, added 17 points, 11
At Milwaukee, Wis., Trevor
made a grand total oftwo baskets with 20 points.
rebounds and seven bloc ked Powell scored a season-h[IJh 25 In Saturday's non-league game
In the reserve game, the Tigers
shols.
·
points and Tony Smith added 20 against Greenfield McClain, but
edged
the Angels 44-39. Amy
The Hoyas are 2-0 at home this Saturday as Marquette defeated
the 5·6 junior's second bucket, a ReynoldS led the Angels with 10
season and have not lost at the Notre Dame 80-68 to snap a
jumper at the foul line, came at
Capital Centre since the 1987-88 12-game losing streak to the the buzzer to give the Blue Angels points.
The Angels (4-1), who won
season. Southwest Conference Fighting Irish.
a 62-60 victory.
their
fourth straight game, will
member Rice, 3-3, was led by
It was the 94th meeting beWith the early offense coming host Portsmouth Tuesday afterDana Hardy and · Kenneth tween the two schools and Notre from front-liners Lori Hamilton
noon before returning to league
Rourke with 16 points apiece. Dame had a 68-25 edge going Into and Krist! Thomas and guards
Georgetown has won both meet- the game. . Notre Dame had Dena Greene and Elliott, the actlori Thursday n[IJht against
Warren.LO(:al In_Vl~cent.
. lnP. between the schools.
beaten ....M~rquette 12 straight · Angels nosed out the Tigers 14-13
·
games with the last Warrior at the end ofthe first quarter. But Quarlertolala
Mlchlran 113, Duke 108 ·
McClain ............ 13 U · 22 11-60
At Ann Arbor, Mich., Loy victory In 1982 at Notre Dame by
the Angels got nine points from
Galllpolls ............ I4 21 5 22-62
Vaught scored six of his a a score of 70-62.
H,a milton, who finished .t he day
career-high 27 points in overtime
Marquette, 3-2, also got 13 · with 18 points and 15 rebounds, In
GalUpolis - Thomas 9-0-4-22;
Saturday to lift No. 10 Michigan points from Baldwin. Notre round two, which helped them
Hamilton 7-0-4-18; Greene 5-0-2to a 113-108 victory over No. 6 Dame, 1·3, was led by Fredrick post an eight-point halftime lead.
12; Elliott 2-0-2-6; 1;oung 2-0-0-4.
with 19 and Bennett with 14
Duke.
Thomas, who led all scorers
Total• - 25-0-1UI
·
Rumeal Robinson and Sean points.
with 22 points, provided the
From tbe field - 25-54 (46.3%)
Higgins, wh" led all scorers with
The end of the game saw entire Gallipolis offerise In the
From tbe line- 12-18 (66.7%)
32 points, sealed the victory by Marquette fans flood the court to third quarter by scoring five
Rebouatla - 27 !Hamilton 15)
each hitting both ends of one-and- celebr;~te the biggest Warrior points, while McClain got eight ·
Blocked shots - 2 (Hamilton
one free throw shooting oppor- victory In years. Security personpoints from Missy Cline and six
and Huffman)
'
tunities in the final eight seconds. nel moved on the floor to clear points from Sherry Perry to
AMIIIIII 7 (Greene and
Christian Laettner, who led away the celebrating fans.
spearhead a 22-polnt rebellion
Thomas, 3 each)
Duke with 26 pOints, hit two free
Maryland 68, lacksonvllle 113
that allowed them to lead 49-40
Steals- 11 !HamUton 5)
throws to make the score 109-108,
At College Park, Md., fresh·
heading into prime ttme.
Turnovers - 25
but RobinSon and Higgins were man Evers Burns came off the
The Angels' offense came back
McClain (60) - Anderson
perfect from the foul line bench to score a season-high 12
to life in the final act, as Thomas 6-0-8-20; Cline 6-0-0-12; ·smith
afterwards.
points Saturday leading Maryscored nine and Hamnton scored 5-0-2-12; Perry 5-0-0-10; Correll
Robinson seored 22 points for land to a ~-53 victory over, five to lead the comeback, which 3-0-0-6. Totals - 25-0-10-10
Mich[IJan, -5-1 and Mills added 18. Jacksonville.
was capped off by EIUott's final
From lhe line -10-17 (58.8%)

Blue Angels win
62-60 at buzzer

WORLD

1.59 .
S
3.29

Ch,oia• of .Wrol. :.1 EK~" Pn•parr•d
Your Wny. Talun Applr•s. (;nwy.

C

-.

which fell to 3-4.
lead Michigan State to an 88-76
Geoi'Jia 82, Cent. Florida 8Z
non-conference victory over Aus·
At Orlando; Fla ., Litterlaf tin Peay.
Green scored 22 points and
The win gave Spartan head
grabbed four rebounds. leading coach Jud Heathcote his ·300th
Georgia to a 92-62 victory over career victory. He has a record of
Central Florida Saturday after300-217 in 18 year.s as a head
noon in the opening game of the · coach at Montana and Michigan
Red Lobster Classic.
State.
Alec Kessler added 20 points
The Spartans raised their
and Marshall Wllaon scored 19 as
record to 6-0, while the Gover·
the Bulldogs Improved to 4-0.
nors dropped to 3-3.
Cen lral Florida fell to 2-4 despite
Austin Peay was led in scoring
21 points from center Ken Leeks.
by Tlvis who had 29 points and
Kn[IJhts forward Bob Blackwood
Barry Howard who added 19.
contributed 15 points and six
Ohio Unlv. 7%, Marlillall63
rebounds.
At Athens, Ohio, ti!e Bobcats
Florida faced James Madison
built on a 10-potnt halftime lead
In the second half of the doubleto move above the .500 mark at
header at the Orlando Arena.
·3-2 with Its first win over the
Thunderint Herd since the deMlchlpa St. 88, Aualla Peay 76
parture of former coach Danny
At East Lansing, Mich., Steve Nee in 1986.
Smith scored 29 points-and Ken
Marshall drops to 5-3 011 the
Redfield added 14 Saturday to season.

Navy posts 19-17
••
wm over Anny
By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
EAST RUTHERFORD , N.J.
IUPI) - Frank Schenk kicked a
32-yard field goal witli 11 seconds
remaining Saturday, lifting
Navy to a 19-17 victory over
Army.
.
Schenk's kick capped a 63-yard
drive bY the MidShipmen that
began at the Navy 22-yard line
with 5: 02 remaining. The Mid·
shipmen converted their third'
fourth-down situation of the
game along the way, as quarterback Alton Grizzard plunged two
yards to keep the drive alive.
The winning kick spoiled a
84-yatd rushing day by Army's
Mike Mayweather, who became
tbe Cadets' all-time leading
rusher.
The Midshipmen broke a three,
game losing streak to their
rivals, and the Navy seniors
avoided becoming the first c,lass
In 42 years to lose to Army all four
years.
·· ..
Navy also ~egained the lead in
the all-time series, 42-41-7. The
Midshipmen had led the inter·
academy series until Army's
three-game streak tied lt .
Grizzard keyed the Navy attack, gaining 60 yards rushing
and completing eight passes for
162 yards alld a touchdown. Navy
also scored on a three-yard run
by Rodney Purifoy and a 38-yard
Schenk field goal.
Calvin Cass scored two touchdowns to lead the Cadets, and
Keith Havenstrlte kicked a 21yard field goal late in the third
quarter that gave Army a 17-16
lead .
·
Mayweather, who also became
Army's top single-season rusher
with 1,177 yards, br9ke Glenn

Davis' career rushing record of
2,957 yards on a five-yard run
with 7:30 remaining in the game.
Cass finished with 32 yards on
eight carries for the Cadets,
while quarterback Bryan McWilliams carried 11 times for 38
yards.
Navy trailed 14-9 at halftime,
but scored on its first possession
of the second half, driving 54
yards in 14 plays to Purifoy's TD
and a 16-14 lead. Army appeared
to have held the MidShipmen in
Navy territory, but Grizzard
completed a 19-yard pass to
Jerry Dawson on third-and-21.
On fourth down, Grizzard ran 10
yards on a keeper to keep the
drive alive.
Army regained the lead on Its .
next possession. driving 67 yards ·
to Havenstrlte' s field goal with
2: 06left in the third quarter. The
Cadets gotlnslde the Navy 2tl on a ·
42-yard pass !rom McWilliams to
Sean Jordan, but oouldn't cross
the goal line after gaining a
tlrsf-and goal ilf the~ :
Navy came out trying to throw
Army off-balance on its first
drive, throwing from Its wishbone formation on the first play
of the game and risking a
· fourth-and-one situation at its
own ~5-yard line.
The moves paid off, as Grizzard converted the first down on
a one-yard sneak, then fired a
54-yard touchdown pass to B.J.
Mason to give the Midshipmen a
6-0 lead. Mason caught the pass
in the r[IJht nat, then cut to the
sideline as Shane Smith sprung
him loose with a block on the last
Army defender within striking
distance.
But the snap on the extra-point
try was muffed and Schenk
whiffed on his attempt.

Knox promises no ·'Big Nash Attacks' against.Bengals
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI !UPI) - Chuck Knox
says he doesn't expect his Seat tie
Seahawks to suffer any "Big Nash
Attacks" today against the Cincinnati
Bengals. He also expects officials to
keep the Bengals "legal."
,
It was a rash of myst8ious "Big Nash
Attacks"that enabled Seattle to thwart
Cincinnati's no-huddle, quick-snap offense a year ago in a playoff game.
Each time Cincinnati's offense encountered a third and long and prepared
for a quick snap to prevent Seattle from
substituting extra pass defenders, Sea-.
hawks' nose tackle Joe Nash went down
with a leg cramp. Offtclals called time
out for the "injury," which gave Seattle
time to make Jts substitutions.
''Seems like every third down we had
a 'Big Nash Attack,'" said unsympathetic Cincinnati coach Sam Wyche.
"The Seattle Association of Physicians

may want to check It against their
medical code of ethics."
Nash quickly recovered from his
"injury" and returned to the game.
"It showed me what a tough guy Joe
Is, that he could keep bouncing back
from Injuries," Seattle quarterback
Dave Krieg said with a laugh this week.
But Knox wasn't laughing when he
talked · about what he expects from
game officials today. Knox wants strict
enforcement of a new rule that says II
the offense makes a substitution, the
defense must be given reasonable time
to make substitutions.
''I may call the league office to make
sure we:re on the same page," said
Knox. ''I'm hoping Art McNally (supervisor of NFL officials) will take care of
it. Alii want is a level playing field.
"I don't want to doanythingdeceltful.
We don't have any plans for leg cramps,
'lecause that supposedly has been
ddressed . (by the rule permitting

defensive substitutions when the offense substitutes) ."
Officials In last week's Cincinnati·
Cleveland game caught the Bengals
substituting and quick-snapping one
time before the Browns could
substitute.
Knox refused to say last year's "Blg
Nash AttackS" were Illegal.
"Last year, the substitution rule had
not been clarified," he said. "What we
used was a legal play to combat an
illegal tactic."
However, the "Big Nash Attacks' •not
only prompted NFL rule makers to
cllir!fy the substitution rule, but to also
make a new rule against Injury-faking.
If officials suspect a player is faking
·
Injuries, penalties can be called.
'The rule was brought about bY
Seattle faking injuries," said Bengals
general manager Paul Brown. "You
won't see any more of this."
But Knox isn't so sure.

"Officials aren't doctors," he said. "I
don't think anyone is ever going to say a
player isn't injured."
Knox says the Bengals' no-huddle,
quick-snap tactics are fine with him as
long as they don't try to sneak In a
substitution.
"If they don't substitute, they can
play racehorse football all day long," he
said. "I have no question about that
. being legal as long as they leave the
same 11 players on the field."
In an Interesting footnote to the "Big
Nash Attacks" a year ago, Knox pointed
out it was unfair to only single out Joe
Nash as the oft-injured solution to the
quick-snap problem.
"Jeff Bryant went down a few times,
too," noted Knox.
The Bengals overcame the' 'Big Nash
Attacks" and "Bryant Bumps" to beat
the Sea hawks 21-13 in that playoff game
a year ago and are hetty 10-polnt
favorites, mainly because Se.attle is

having a disappointing year.
The 5-8 Seahawks had lost lour
straight games before managing to
edge Buffalo 17·1~ at home Monday
n[IJht. The main reason for Seattle's
poor season, says Knox , is found in· 'one
key statistic."
"In 17 years of head coaching, I don't
remember ever having a winning
season with a minus takeaway giveaway ratio," he said. "After 11
games last (winning) season, we were
plus-eight. After 11 games this Closing)
season, we were mlnus-11 ."
Cincinnati, 7-6, isn't having as good a ·
season as last year either, but still the
Bengals have a dtcent shot at making
the playoffs if they beat Seattle today .
Wyche wants no letdown after last
weekend's big 21-0 win over Cleveland.
''This team isn 't going to get one incb
of slack from me,'' he said. "It's going
to be one whale of a preparation for
Seattle."

Struggling Browns, Colts_.battle to get into AFC playoffs

Bi•cuiu. and On,. Smol/ 8tttit•r"'ff'

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Sat., 1-7: Sun. 1·&amp;
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~.-

BISCUIT S,49

Section

O.amblr 10, 1989

..

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

Our Famous
Original

~imes- ientiu:el

•

Kansas breaks records in 150-95 rout of

~

TUNA SALAD
with Ltttu., TGIIIOta,
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December 10. 1989

Boone's trapping treks ·

Don't worry, be happy...

lUI¥II
IODGUll

w. va.

Ohio-Point Pleasant.

-.

•

INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - Cleveland and
Indianapolis, struggling to reach the NFL
playoffS, must first solve offensive problems that
have kept them from scoring crucial points and
picking up yardage In key situations.
The Browns visit Indlanapolla today In a pivotal
game matching AFC playoff contenders with
sbnilar aputtertne offenses. The Browns, 7-5-1,
win the AFC Central title by winning their last
three games. The Colts, 6-7, must win their last
three games to have a realistic post-season ·
chance, and even then must have lossea bY three
other teams to make the playoffs.
"We've known all season the Cleveland game
waa gotna to be a tough one for us," Colts
quarterback Jack Trudeau said. "They've got to
win and so do we. Their defense leads the AFC In
containment. We have to stop them defensively
and offensively, we will find a way to beat them."
Clevelsnd ts 0-2-1 the past three weeks, having
scored only 20 points In tbree games and suffering
their firat a)!utout loss since 191N. The Brcnms

,.

have not gone four games without a victory since
1985, quarterback Bernie Kosar's rookie season.
"I'm not encouraged," Cleveland coach Bud
Carson said. "We're not ruunlng very well. We
haven't gotten our timing down in the passing
game. We've not played well the past three weekS
and we're searching for something, anything.
We're discollraged. We're not 80tn&amp; to lay down
. and quit."
A sore elbow has bothered Kosar, who has
completed 242 of 399 passes for 2,698 yards; 14
touchdowns and 12 Interceptions. But Kosar has
not thrown a touchdown pass In the put three
games.
.
.
''The Injury has been a mystery," CarlOn said.
"AUI have to' go on Is what the doctors say and
they say there's nothing wrong. But the arm Is
sore. It has probably had some effect on htm, but
not enOugh that we're, considering starting

someone else.''

Cleveland's offense has managed some bright
spots. Webster Slau&amp;hter has made a career:hlll~.

55 catches for 1,001 yards and rookie running back
Eric Metcalf has 170 car.rles for 576 yards and 43
catcjles for 249 yards. Kevin Mack, who returned
last week after serving a jail sentence on drug
charges, is not expected to see much action.
The Colts offense has an AFC-low 26:58
pos~e~slon-tlme average. IndlanapoUs is f-of-27
on third-down conversions the past two weeks and
third-wont In the league on such conversions.
Rulllllq back Eric Dickerson has 1,013 yards on
251 carrlel, making him the first NFL rusher to
reach 1,000 yards In seven atralaht seasons. But
Dicker-·• four-yard averaae per carry, seasonlongrun (21yarcls) andnumberof100-yardgames
(lour) are all career tows. Dickerson haasald he
no longer enjoys football and Ia conslderina
retirement after next season. He has stopped
talking to reporters since coach Ron Meyer told
hbn to stop criticizing the team.
"We've only been hearing how unhappy he Is,"
said Cleveland defensive end AI Baker. '1 keep
saying, 'M!_n, he's got the same two legs,

,.,

regardless of what's going on emotionally.' I'm
sure Jim Brown would like to punch me in the
mouth, but I think Dickerson is the finest running
baCkl'veseen. He's one of the fewpeoplewhocan
get a team In a game, or put a team back Into a
game, alone."
Cleveland's defense has allowed 194 points.
second fewest in the NFL. The Browns lead the
AFC In rushing defense, rank second overall in
AFC defense, and are second in the NFL In
turnover ratio, with 11 more takeaways than
giveaways, Including 2.4 interceptions. Safety
Felix Wr[IJht has seven pickoffs. the most by a
Brown In 15 years.
The Indianapolis defense has allowed 273 first
downs, aecond-mostln the NFL. The unit is rated
fourth-worst against the run. allowing 137.3 yards
a eame. Unebacker Jeff Herrod, whose 131
iackles leads the team. is questionable with a foot , :
Injury. The Colts lead theAFCwith40 sacks, with
Jon Hand and Ezra Johnson making nine sacks
each.

�Peg

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RIO GRANDE - The 1954·55 Rio Grande High School
basketball team Is scheduled to play the rest of the basketball
teams from RGHS on July 21, 1990 at 3 p.m . In Lyne ~nter.
The event will be held In conjunction with the Fun Group
Weekend.
Among those expected to play for the 1954-55 team, coached
by John Wickline, are Don Cofer, Clyde Evans, Dallas Garber,
Dave Guthrie, Bill Hackney, Marlin Jordan , Bill Lyncll and
Mlck Morgan. Hank Forgey will be tile 1954-55 manager.
Opposing them will be the ''All-Stars" team, coached Glendon
(Cap) Evans and managed by Bob Hamrick.
Francis (Odie) O'Donnell and Frank Petrie Jr. will officiate
the game, which will also feature Janet Sims Jones as head
cheerleader.
,
Lynch, the event chalrrnan, will release lnfonnation &lt;ln ticket
prices and changes In the event, if any. at a later date.

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MEIGS TIRE CENTER
242

GALLIPOLIS - All first-time participants In the Ga!Upolls
Rinky ·Dlnk basketball progtam that attend Washington
Elementary will be drafted for te ams Tuesday night at the
Washington Elementary gym.
Fourth-grade boys and al} girls will be drafted at 7 p.m .,
followed by the fifth· and sixth-grade boys' draft at 8 p.m.
Anyone not signed up must do so by the time of the draft .

NATIONAL F'OOTI.U.L LEAGVE
A.marlc• C.llere.ee
Eaal

1

of overtime. The Oilers now hold -Fleury and Sergei Makarov e acll
a three-point lead In the Smythe scored a pair of goals in an
over the Ca Igary Flames and exhibition contest between the
have five points more than the defending Stanley Cup Champion
Kings, who have played two Calgary Flames and Khlm lk.
fewer games . Wayne Gretzy Voskresensk of the Soviet Union.
scored on a power· playat14 : 30of The Flames dressed two Soviets
the third period to force for the game, Makarov and
ove rtime .
Sergei Prlakln. Vladim iP E r yFlames 6, Kbbnlk 3
omln scored twice for Khlmlk .
At Calgary, Alberta , Theoren

Rinky-Dink draft date posted ·

NFL result&amp;

•FRONT END ALIGNMENTS
•GOODYEAR TIRES

LOCAIEP NIXI DOOI 10 ASII.AND lULl PLANT

P.rn,..l'll1, IIUa.rr Lallr U
Per..,. II, MIMenet•£u'llllaaJ a
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•BRAKES
•SHOCKS

nmee.:..:
!C..:..on..:..tln_u_ed_f_rorn_c_-2.;..)- -

•LUBE and
OIL

HEATERS &amp; GAS
APPLIANCES ON SALE
614-992·5097
IT. 124, MINEISYIW, 01110

Parma \'alief,..~ 71, LakeweM n
P•WI.. N.IId&amp;•B
Peelbla •• N ..W 111111 U

Clyille S1, Pori 01.._ M

whole organ!DIIon," said Patrick. "I will hire a coach
eventually, bu t I don't know
when. "
_ The Penguins struggled this
season under the direction of
general manager Tony Esposito
and head coach Gene Ubrlaco.
Player d issatiSfaction, most
dramatically from Lemieux, led
to the front-office shakeup.
" I was not surpriSed that they
fired both Tony Esposito and
Gene Ubrlaco," said Lemieux.
"It does mean that the pressure
Is on us now. I agree with Craig
Patrick that we played a bit more
diSciplined and attended to defense tonight .
"I did not really know Patrick
much before this, except to meet
him at a few all-star games and
things like tllat."
Sylvain Turgeon put New Jersey ahead 1-0 at 2:39 on a
cross-lee feed from Mark Johnson. Phil Borque tied the score-1-1
at 8: 56 with tile first of his two
goals .
Kirk Muller put New Jersey

Sunday

W. Va.

sports briefs..........._, NHL action... __

ahead j ·l with a power· play goal 6-3.
at 16: 2 when he batted the
Bed Wlap 2, No1111 Stan 1
rebound of a shot by Vlacheslav
At Detroit, Shawn Burr scored
Fetlsov past Frank Pietrangelo. at 10: 47 of the third period lllld
Bourque tied the score 2-2 at goalie Glen Hanlon stopped 26
17:39 of the first period with a sllols. Tile victorY extended the
· fltty·foot point shot tllat went Red Wings ' unbeaten strln&amp; to
through Burke's legs.
four games and lengthened the
New Jersey lost Its fourth North Stars' losing streak to five
game in a row.
games ,
.
"What worries me is that we
Jets 8, Canadien• I
have lost four stralgllt games
At :Winnipeg, Manitoba, Pat
. when we worked very hard and Elynulk scOred twice and Greg
played pretty well," silld Devils Paslawskl. capped a t~goal
coach John Cunlff. •'Tile players · rally at 18: 19 of the third period to
get down when their efforts lift the Jets. Cllrls Cllellos scored
aren't rewarded."
back-to-back goals in a span of
Elsewbere In the NHL, Detroit 1: 49 of tile third period for tile
edged Minnesota 2-1, Winnipeg Canadlens .
and Montrealllkated to a 6-6 tie,
Oilers 5, Kings 4, OT
Edmonton beat Los Angeles 5-4
At Edmonton, Alberta, Mark
In overtime, and In an exhibition Lamb combined with Jarl Kurrl
game, Calgary topped Khlmlk and Petr Klima for a goal at 2:03 :
voskresensk of the Soviet Union
(See NHL on C-3)

OPEN 1:00 I.M.-4:30 P.M.

o.&amp;ar• . . S,.ta •P~MIIIIt
Onullf! N, Wldllle II
OrntlleA 'triWIQ'II
01. . . . . ~ .........
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Ferrellgas

Oak • .,..., 1'1, 8• Per.._ II

Cle Hrs ll, P....,11
Cle lellt &amp;., 1S. Oe £ 71
Cle lle•iP• 11, Oe RltMea II
f'l e Uac~la W... Oe W Ted1 II
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Cle ···~•- 'JI, L.U !!It £1114 (0t)

Col MIHHIIII, C.l 1: Sl
CoiEum..- ... C.IWJI

,1

"I am here to evaluate the

FOR ALL YOUR
PROPANE NEEDS.

N.._.T.,Ier•.a•C~.t'7

Cl• Wn HUis 71, Ml Hull:., II 1
Cl• Ferefit Park 11, 0• 'l'tll'll• It

CoMa~ aU,

B)' lORN SWENSON
UPISpena WrMer
Wilen Craie Patrick took over
as general manager and coach Q! ·
the Pltlllburgh Penguins earlier
tbls week, his team was fifth in
tile division named after Ills
dynastic hockey family . Two
games later the Penguins won
the first showdOwn of the new
regime, beating New Jersey
Friday night 3-2 to vau It over the
Devils Into the division 's last
playoff spot.
Mario Lemieux scored the
game-winner, picking up tile
rebound of a shot by Kevin
Steven$ after It hit the post and
fell behind Devils goalie Sean
Burke. Lemieux lifted the puck
into the net for bls 18th goal of the
season at 1: 54 of the third period,
extending his scoring streak to 17
games.
"I guess you could say I was In
the right silot at the right time,"
said Lemieux.
Patrick was impressed by the
Penguins' effort. "I think we
played a bit more disciplined
than we hiiVe before," he said .

N Cu OleorOall., N Cui• . . .._., t1

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Na...., ,..., 11. Aft. . . ,.
Na¥U"te FUr .... It, 8..., \lal f'f
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ts, Pll't lle~wr)' ..

Ohio-Point

Pittsburgh hands New Jersey 3-2 loss

11M Ver-l'f, ..,_ ... , • • •
Na.llbneft'U.New&amp;lfei!IU

Cl• Ehler», O• laetal8
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Cia Wll-... 78. (1ft -'lka U
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l.

Oecamber 10, 1989

Pomauy- Micklapxt-GIIipolia. Ohio-Point Pleulnt. W.Va.

Teuslti.M•IIMiuiG

TANDY® ;
1000HX

Tnu-8• MIC1111ol1, 8W1fta• SI. 111

•'••
',.
•

,.., ... Claulc

300

Mu.. AI. Vermolll ~

....... fila C1uUc
F1n&amp;Re ...
Choi&amp;M.. M, W. Mlcllllllll H1, ZOT

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399!!'

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Tau

Mon;tor ••Ira

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W .......... 11, Ntw Lnl•lt.. 14
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. . . . . . , ....eW47
. . . . . . . . . .,l'o.... EI4

NEED A
NEW
KITCHEN

w--. •.

OI ...... I!&amp;EU

•

'
'•

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~

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.,'·

CALL (304) 871-1440 FIDMB a.M.-11 , ...
(814) 448 4810 ln'lll '···

.,

BYTARKETT
IS THE

/•

J

~·,..
,,•

ANSWER

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.C•rd• Welcome

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�flao• C-4-Sundlly Tin 11 S1 1titel

Decamber 10, 1989

Pomelor Mldd'lflOI't-G ''polil, Ohio-Point Plm'nt, W.Va.

Winter baseball meetings close, but

.GAHS edges Marietta 53-50

I

Marietta, now 0·2 and 0·1, was broken nose as firSt thought.
Galllpolls will see dQuble duty
led by Suerken's 20 points ancj 12
rebounds. Mike McKinney and this weekend when the Devils
travel to Vincent Friday for a
Jeff Smith each had nine points.
The Tigers hit 18 of 43 field goal conference tilt with unbeaten
attempts for 46 percent. At the Warren Local. Saturday, Coach
line, MHS was 13 of 20 for 65 Rick Huckabay's South Point
percent. The Tigers had 12 Pointers visit the GAHS gym.
In Friday's reserve game, the
personals, and 21 turnovers,
Blue Imps held on to post their
seven In the third period.
Gallipolis, 1·2 overall and 1·0 In third straight hardwood victory,
conference play, was led by 47-45.
Coach Lynn Sheets lads led
Murphy's 12 markers. Strait and
McNeal each had 11. Chad Neal 47-39 on Ryan Young's goal with
has stx points and five steals. 2:42 left to play before the Cubs
Strait had sevell of Gallla's 16 came storming back to pull
within two at the buzzer,
steals.
The Blue Imps led 8-6 and 23-15
McNeal led the Ga!Uans on the
boards with stx. He also had after two periods, but entered the
final period lied, 31-all.
three blocked shots.
F .J. •Hastwell, with 14 points
Williams and Neal each had
'
and
Scott Jlylden, wlth 10 and ·
five rebounds. Williams had stx
of Gallla's 15 assists . GAHS hit 23 Mitchell Pace with eight paced
of 57 field goal attempts for 40
the Imps. Adam McKitrick's 17
points led the Cubs. Chad Lincoln
percent. Gallipolis was four of 11
at the line (36percent). The Blue
added 12.
Varslty box:
Devils had 18 personals, losing
MARIE'l"l'A (118) ...,. Mike
Gene Sheets late .In the second
McKinney, 3-3-9; Mike Huffman,
half. Gallla picked off 29 rebounds, and committed 19 tur- 2-0-4; Josh McKitrick, 0.0-0; Jeff
novers, seven in . a "selfSmith, 2-(1)·2-9; Pete Suerken,
destruct" second period.
7-6-20; Jeremy Stutler, 0-0-0; Jeff
Hunsaker, 3·2-8. TOTALS 17·(1)GAHS led 17-8 with 6:34 leflln
the half. After seven turnovers
IHO.
and a four of 11 effort from the
GALLIPOLIS (53) - William
field, MHS regained the lead
Strait, 4· (l) -0·11; Josh Williams,
l-(1).0·5; Shawn McNeal, 4-3-11;
20-19 with 1: 24 left in the half by
. Chad Neal, 3·0·6; Gene Sheets,
outscoring the Ga!Hans 11-2.
0-(1).0-3; Erlc Murphy, 6·0-12;
Senior g)lard Gene Sheets
received sev.en stitches In his
Ryan Smith, 1-1·3: Mike
McCleese, 1-0.2; Donnie Haynes,
chin following the game. Sheets
0-0.0; Bryan Pace, 0·0·0. TOTALS
was knoc((ed flat on his face
foUowing a colllslpn with the
20-(1)+13.
Score by Quarters:
Tigers' Jeff Smith with 2:29
Galllpolls ........ 13 8 12 14 6-53
remaining In the first period.
Marietta......... 8 14 13 12 3-50
Sheets, who later returned and
Relerve11 - Gallipolis 47 Mahad one three-pointer midway ln
rietta 4!&gt;.
the third quarter, did not suffer a

Lut nJPt'• 1amea:

SEOAL VARSD'Y
TEAM
W L
P
Gallipolis ..... .. 1 0
53
Loaan ...... ...... o o oo
Athens ........... 0 0
00
Warren .... ...... 0 0
00
Jacklqn ......... 0 0
00
Mar tetra ........ 0 1
50
TOTAU
1 1 103

OP
50

oo

00
00
00
53
113

SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
WL
POP
Gallipolis ........ 1 0
47
4~
Warren .......... 0 0
00
00
Logan.....'...... . 0 0
00
00
Athent ........... 0 0
00
00
Jacklon .... .. . .. 0 0
00
00
Marietta .. ,.. , .. 0 1 • 4~
47
TOTALi · • 1 1
H
H

Pl''•r'• i

a.,..

Gallipolis 47 Marietta .S
Wlll'reJI Local at LOpn, ppnd,
mel Tuesday
Atllenl at Jacklon, ppad, reset
Saturday.
-

.

.....' .
.. '
...••
Vtslllng Marietta. On left Is Gallla's Gene Sheets
(2e). On right moving In Is Blue Devil guard
William Strait (14).

MURPHY SCORES -

Ji:ric Murphy
(30) led the GAHS Blue Devils la..soorlng with 12
points In Friday's 53-51 overdme victory over

TOP DOLLARS .

HOUDAY GYM REGISTRATION FORM
Galllpolll Pana &amp;lid )!eerealton
118 Seeoud Ave., Galllpolo, Oblo iltSI
Bep.&amp;ralloa Fee 01$11.00 Ia Due Wllb Belllllra&amp;loa Form

FOR

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A~nu:------~----------P~M:H~--------~~------­
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NAME

GRADE

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To The Orient

Holiday gym

planned

•
•

Chesapeake at Wheelersburg
Nelsonville-York at Athens
Greenfield at Waverly
Zanesville at Logan
Wellliton at Jackson

By RICHARD L SHOO&amp;
phla and California willing to
UPI Sporta Writer
give Davis the five years he
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) seeks.
Baseball's holiday shopping
"I doubt very much If he's
spree - the winter meetings going to get more than Langston
ended Friday with Mark Davis,
now," the per5onnel man said.
Robin Yount, Huble Brooks and
"Most teams have made other
Fernando Valenzuela stU! hoping plans. The market Isn't there."
for a green Christmas . .
Yount has to clean up hls
Of the half-dozen teams that . financial tangles before he can
stayed overnight - Montreal,
make a move. It may take a court
the New York Yankees, San opinion or another loan If Yount
Diego, Cleveland, Seattle and wants to go to the .California
Baltimore- only the Expos were Angels. H,e may end 11ptaklngthe
scheduled to remain another day easiest course - re-signing with
• at the spacious complex next to the Brewers ..
•· Country Music's shrine, the
Brooks Is being courted heavGrand Ole Opry.
lly
Detroit, whl~h lost out on
The winter meetings at the firstbybaseman
Kent Hrbek and
Opryland Hotel, so big It's a $2 then Pete O'Brien In an attempt
c·a b ride from one end to the ·to gain Instant respectability.
other, proved free agency Is back
Valenzuela may not have his
- and back In a big way.
fastball any more but he's still
There were· only five trades got good control, an exceptional
Involving a paltry 12 players, pitching mind and great competimaking It the quietest winter tive desire. He may have to Ink a
•. meetings In terms of trades In one-year pact and try free
:''. more than a decade.
agency again next year.
But a whopping total of 21 free
The big losers from the winter
, •a11ents signed - 14 of them meetings appear 1o be the World
costing $75.95 million counting a Champion Oakland Athletics,
~ three-year extension Texas gave
who lost three free agents and
. ".Julio Franco.
didn't pick up anybody to replace
Not among those was Cy Young them.
••.N award winner Davis, who had a
"Don't underestimate Oak·
: · fabulous ·y ear for the San Otego land," said Kansas CltyGMJohn
~ Padres. His 44 saves. 1.85 ERA
Schuerholz, who picked off t)le
' and 4-3 record for 70 games Athletics' Storm Davis. •'I have a
earned him the National lot of respect for Sandy Alderson
League's top pitching honor.
!Oakland V.P. of Baseball OperHe entered baseball's winter ations) . They're capable of re• meetings with hopes of beating placing those players. I wouldn't
; the flve·year, $16.6 million con- be surprised If they made a
tract Mark Langston drew from move."
·
California. He left wondering If
San • Diego appeared the big
•.. the $167.11 million clubs have winner, even lf It does lose Davis
'"·' spent ln million-dollar contracts as lt says It will. Slugging
has left them shopped out.
outfielder Joe Carter will patrol
"He's a very patient, very center field with Jack Clark
methodical person," said one remaining at first and Tony
· ·major league club's personnel Gwynn shifting back to right.
man. "He'll check out stadiums,
The Padres didn't lose one
nelgghbOrhoods, cities, just player who figured to start and
about everything before he de- also signed lefty Craig Lefferts to
cides where he'll go."
replace Davis and Fred Lynn to
But when San Diego signed on possibly play left. Lefferts, 32,
,. left-bander Craig Lefferts, It had 20 saves last year with San
::: signed off on Davis, leaving only Francisco.
'; the New York Yankees, PhlladelBoston's acquisition of Jeff

DIAN/\ CHr NG

Cage standings
(SEO,Opponeats)
(All-Games)
TEAM
W L
P OP
Southern ...... .. ...... 4 0 317 234
'Athens ........ ... ..... .3 0 233 180.
warren ................ 3 o 260 202
Wheelersburg ...... 1 0 106 !&gt;1
• VInton ........... ...... 2 1 170 170
Chesapeake ..... .... 2 1 219 182
· Portsmouth ......... 2 1 255 181
,Greenfield ........... 2 1 164 136
Waverly ....... ... .. .. 2 1 191 172
.Logan ....... ........... l 1 118 117
~Galtipolls ....... .. .. .. 1 2 1~ 167
! Marietta ............ .. 0 2 107 127
: Jackson. :.. ... ... .. ... o 3 147 201
• South Polnt ... ....... O 0
0
0
, Pt. Pleasant .. .. .. ..0 0
0
0
• Frld~~J'I resalts:
: Gallipolis 53 Marietta 50 (ot)
' WheelersbUrg 106 Northwest 51
Warren Local at Logan, ppnd,
reBel Tuesday
·:Athens at Jackson, ppnd, reset
· saturday
• Miami Trace at Greenfield, ppnd
• Portsmouth at Russell, ppnd,
reset Saturday
Southern at Hannan Trace, ppnd
· waverly at Valley. ppnd
Federal Hocking at Vinton
County, ppnd

STRArrGETSTWO- Gallla's WIIUam Strall(l4)popllialwoof
hla 11 points over MHS defeuder Pete Suerkell (118) durfllg mu~
Devils 113-M SE()AL overtime hariwood victory Friday night.
Suerken Jed all scorers with 28 points.

Gullett new Reds pitching coach

GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis
Parks and Recreation Depart·
ment will sponsor an organized
recreation program for children
In the sixth grade and younger to
be held on several dates during
the holiday season.
The program, which will feature various active and passive
games, crafts and videos, will be
held on Dec. 21, 22. and 26·29 trom
1 to 5 p.m. In the Washington
Elementary gym. Parents may
drop their children Qff or pick
them up at any time during those
hours.
Inside and outside events will
be planned In accordance wlth
the weather.
The cost for the six-day program Is $15 per child or $25 for
two or more children In the same
family.
The required pre·reglstration
can be done by mall or In person
at the Parks and Recreation
office, located on the second floor
of the Gallipolis Municipal BuildIng. The deadline for prereglstratloll Is Tuesday, Dec. 19
at 5 p.m.
,
Fo~ more Information, contact
the Parks and RecreatiOn office
at 446-1424, extension 37.

(All Games)
W L
Miller ........ .......... 3 0
Trlmble ...... ....... .. 2 0
Wellston .. ............ 1 0
VInton County ......2 1
Belpre ...... .. ......... 2 1
Alexander .. ... .... .. l 2
Fed·Hocklng .. ......1 2
Meigs .................. 0 2
Nels-York .. .... ...... O 3
TEAM

P

OP

218
149
47
170
211
218
211
86
150

189
140
46
170 ·
188
210
206
134
214

Frld~~J's

results:
Alexander - open
Federal Hocking at VInton
County, ppnd, reset last n lght
Meigs at' Trimble, ppnd, reset
Jan. 6
MIIJer at Nelsonville· York,ppan,
reset, Jan. 6
Belpre at Wellston, ppnd, reset
Feb. 3

r.-t •llllt'l ...-:
Welllton at Jaclllon
NeliODville-York at Athens

· 'J'zzrdQ'• IAmet:
Trimble at Federal Hocking
Welllton at Alexander
Nel-vUJe-York at Meigs
Miller - open
Vlntontollnty at ~pre

0

·,

.

1

1 I

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FREE

WE HAVE IT
WE~RE '

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299 UPPEI IIVU ID., GAWPOUS

WINDSHIELD POLICY
"If We Fail to
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Windshield, You
Can leceiYe Up
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·
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NEWSPAPER
WITH ANY
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PURCHASE!

AND

REGISTER TO WIN A SMITH COMBINATION TORCH
• REGULATOR PACKAGE. DRAWING DECEMBER
20TH, 1111. NEED NOT IE PRESENT TO WIN.
RETAIL VALUE 1 370. • REGISTER NOWI

Team
W
Lucky Lucy's .. ............... ..32
J aymar Coal ...... .............29
Dan Tax ........................ .. 26
Carl's Jammers ...... .. ....... 23
L&amp;J Grocery .......... ... .... .. 20
Put On Shop ........ ,.... ... .. .. 20
Fruth Pharmacy ...... ; .... .. 12
Old Brick Tavern ......... , ...ll
VIllage Quick Shop ......... .10
Over the Hill Gang .. . .. .. ... 6
Mogle's ... .... ... .... .. ......... ,. 5
Network VIdeo ................. 4

Last week's finales
L
Old Brick Tavern upset the
0 Over the Hill Gang 15-9, 15-4,
4 ~5·13
.
7
L&amp;J Grocery stopped the Put
10 . On Shop 10-15, 15·13, 15-7
13
Carl's Jammers downed Net13 work VIdeo 15-9, 16·14, 15-4
21
Lucky Lucy's edged Dan Tax
22 8·15, 15-12, 15-10
23
VIllage Quick Shop knocked off
27 Fruth Pharmacy 7-15, 15-9, 15-11
28 _ Jaymar Coal defeated Mogles
29 15-5, )5-2, 15-11
Dan Tax beat the Put On Shop
15-12, 15-6, 6-15

VCR-TV
Repair Center

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FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE

Seasons Greetings

· Goldstar
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The best to your family
from the Modem Woodmen family
during this holiday season.

WE REPAIR ALL MAKES

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA

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HOME OFFICE • ROCK ISLAND. ILLINOIS

HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

NEIL MORRISON

P.O. Bo• 3481
Rio Grando. OH. 45174
Phone: (1514) 241J.8319

391 WEST MAIN STIEET

t'

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992-3524

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Torclles, l19ulators,
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volleyball

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muscle July 28, and missing all
but one game the rest of the
season.
Hls career average Is .245 with
70 home runs.
Brookens can play third base,
shortstop, second base and the
outfield.
The Indians earlier signed
Candy Maldonado as a possible
designated hitter, first baseman
Keith Hernandez and relief
pitcher Ceclllo Guante.
And during the winter meet·
lngs this week In Nashville,
Tenn.. Cleveland traded outfielder Joe Carter to the San
Diego Padres for catcher Sandy
Alomar Jr., outfielder Chris
James and third baseman Carlos
Baerga.

those big salaries to oav .
Indians sica Brookens
Upon signing a one-year contract with the Indians. Infielder
Tom Brookens bas become the
fourth free agent to sign wlth the
Tribe during the last month.
Brookens, 36, would have been
a Type B free agent, meaning the
Indians would have had to give
up their second-round pick to the
Yankees In next June's draft, but
no compensation will be required
because New York released their
rights to him.
Brookens played 10 seasons In
Detroit and then was traded to
New York for pitcher Charles
Hudson March 23. Brookens hit
.226 with four home runs and 14
before pulling an abdominal

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The Indians probably. won't
deal Brook Jacoby until they're
sure rookie Carlos Baerga, also
obtained In the Carter deal, can
handle third. He also could spell
Keith Hernandez, DH or make
the bench stronger.
The pace of movement will
slacken, however, until the
spring. Labor negotiations will
then take over the headlines.
But owners will have one
consolation. If there's no baseball, maybe they won't have all

Reardon means the Red Sox will
soonbeunloadlngLeeSmlth. The
Yankees need one If . they're
serious about shifting Dave Rjgh·
etti back Into the starling rotation. So does St. Louis, which
won't have Todd Worrell until at
least July.
Cleveland's pickup of Sandy
Alomar Jr. In the Carter deal
leaves It with two catchers too
many. Look for at least one to go,
young Tom Lampkin and Andy
Allanson the best bets with Joel
Skinner remaining as Alomar' s

; ......................................................~

,.....

+1~ ,.-;

Snowball Open set
todny at Cliffside

' CINCINNATI (UP!) Yankees In 1977-78, going 18-6.
Former Cincinnati Reds pitching
Since retiring from pitching,
star Don Gullett will be the Gullett has been a farmer In
pitching coach for the club' s Maloneton, Ky., and also In the
GALLIPOLIS - A nine-hole
Class AA Chattanooga, Tenn., trucking business.
Snowball Open will be held today,
farm team next season, teatn
and will be the final event of the
The Reds also announced that
officials announced·Thursday.
season, according to Cliffside
next' season Rich Bombard will
Gullett, 38, complied a 91-44 .be a roving pitching Instructor ln
Qfl~Course pro Galen Herath .
record and a 3.03 earned run . t11e club's farm system, Terry
The event will be· an A-B·C-D
average for the Reds from l!i'70 Abbott will be pitching coach for
draw scramble, with a $10 per
through 1976. He finished his the Cedar R.aplds, Iowa, Class A
player entry fee, he sald. The fee
career with the New York team and Mack Jennings will be , Includes lunch at noon. Play
pitching coach for the Billings,
begins at 1 p.m., and Is open to all
Mont., rookie team.
Cliffside Go.lf Course members.

TVC standings

•

••••

Brooks, Davis, Valenzuela, Yount still on auction block

·in_ overtime for firSt victory
GALLIPQLIS-Qulckbuckets
by Jo•.h Williams and Eric
Murphy, and two charity tosses
by Shawn McNeal In a single
overtime carried host GalllpoUs
to a 53-50 Southeastern Ohio
League basketball victory over
Marleta Friday night In the
GAHS gymnasium.
. In a see-saw contest which saw
· the lead exchange hands 13 times
with 13 ties, Gallipolis led 13-8
after one period. Marietta was on
top 22-21 during the halftime
Intermission and 35-33 going Into
the final canto.
• With 5:20 left In regulation
play, It appeared Coach Ed
Paxton's Tigers might make the
• long trip back home a happy one
as MHS built up Its biggest
spread ot the game, 43-38, on a
driving layup by big Pete
Suer ken.
After a GAHS timeout, Murphy
got a layup 15:01) and short
jumper (4: 30&gt; trom the side to
cut the visitors lead to one, 43-42.
_Wllllam Strait's three-point
• jumper (3: 11) put GAHS back on
top, 45-43.
Mike Hultman's driving layup
knotted the count at ~-all (2:01) .
Then came a backhanded type
layup shot under the hoop by the
"Tigers' Jeff Hunsaker (0: 46). I
: looked bad again for the lads of
• Coach Jim Osborne.
: With 20 seconds left, Strait hit a
• two-pointer to knot the count at
• 47-all. MHS lost the ball out-ofbounds with one second left. A
· desperation shot by McNeal fell
short as the buzzer sounded,
• sending the contest Into
overtime.
Marietta unknowingly llnedup
wrong for tbe center jump (a
non-correctional error II not
. caught by the guilty party).
~ Tbe ball was lipped to Willi·
ams. The GAHS guard started
toward the MHS hoop, then
reversed his field quickly after
Coach Osborne called his atten• lion toll. Williams scored an easy
. layup.
• Seven seconds later, (2: 40)
Eric Murphy recovered a MHS
turnover and converted It for a
• layup to put GAHS on top 51-47.
Two charity tosses by the Tigers'
Jeff Smith (2: 17) made It 51-49.
Suer ken's charity toss (1:07) cut
It to 51-50. The MHS ace missed a
•second attempt with Murphy
··picking off the rebound.
• McNeal canned two charity
tosses (0: 27) to make It 53-50.
Wllllams and Ryan Smith
grabbed two missed Tiger shots
· In the closing )leCOnds and were
.fouled on each occasion, but
failed to connect. Time ran out as
MHS attempted a desperation
thi'ee-point shot.

Sunday Tem• Sentinel-he• C-6

Pon•oy-Midclapon-Gallipolil, Ohio Point Ple11ant. W. Va.

O.C.na. 10, 1989

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Uncommon .t.na.

•

�December 10, 1989

T1m11 Sa .... ,..

~Indiana posts 96-67 win over South Alabarila Friday night :

.Nine teams in Holiday Classic·
ATHENS- Nine teams which
reached at least dlstrlct competition are among 14 from four
states which will be participating
In the second McDonald's-Day's
Inn Prep Classic which Is scheduled for Saturday, Dec. 16 at the
Ohio University Convocation
Center.
Act Miles will begin at 9:30
a.m. with a cliniC presented by
former Ohio State Unlversfty
basketball coach Fred Taylor.
The first of the seven games set
during the day will begin at 10: 30
a.m. with the final contest set for
8:45 p.m. The event will feature
some of the outstanding teams
and players In the Midwest
Including several who have been
tabbed for pre-season AllAmerica honors.
The complete schedule for the
· day Is as folows:
10: 30 a.m.- Alexander (198889 district runner-up; returns 3

starters) vs. Ceredo Kenove
tW .Va) . (leading scorer Kevin
Wells, 28 ppg among returning
players).
Noon-Racine Southern (1987-88.
distriCt champions) vs. Beaver
Eastern (1988-1989 regional
runner-up with 23-2 record, returns 3 starters).
1:45 p.m.- Glouster Trbnble
(19111-89 district runner-up, returns four starters) vs. Huntington W.Va. (1988-89 sectional
champiOII$, returns 1 starter).
3:30 p.m.- VInton County
(returns four lettermen) vs.
Greenfllild McClain (returns 2
all-league performers from 1988. 89).
5: 15 p.m ..,- Columbus Wehrle
(two time defending state champiOn, returns lour starters) vs.
Cincinnati Woodward &lt;state
semi semifinaliSt In 1988-89. state
champion In 1987-88).
7:.00 p.m.- Wellston (district

finalist In 1988-89, 20-4 record,
returll$ 4 starters) vs. Wabash
(Ind) Northfield ( had 23-2 record
In 19SS.89, returnees Include 6-10
and 6-9 All-Americans who have
signed who have slggned to go to
Notre Dame) .
8:45 p.m.- Dayton. Colonel
White (district finalist In 19111-89,
features 6-8 and 6-2 All-American
players) vs. Detriot (Mich.)
Cooley (three- time defending
state champion In Michigan) .
Tickets are on sale at Wellston
High School at $4 each during .
pre-sale period. They will be on
sale at the door for $5 with each
ticket gQOd for all seven games.
Information may be obtained by ·
contacting Jim Derrow at Wellston High School or by writing to
McDonald's-Day's Inn Prep
Classic, P.O.Box 614, Wellston,
Ohio 45629. Checks for tickets
should be made payable to
McDonald's-Day's Inn Prep
Classic.

ntng, and Marsha King 4 each.
Deanna Baggy added 1. Teresa
Fouts led the Cats with 10, while
Angle King added 9.
Meigs hit 13 of 24 foul shots
good enough for 54 percent and
were called for 12 fouls. Trimble
was 9 of 12 from the line good for
75 percent and committed 14
fculs.
The Marauders completed the
sweep by winning the reserve
game 46-24. Reva Mullins led the
way for Meigs with 23 points,
J.Kooll$ led Trimble with 9.
Meigs will travel to Nelsonville
on Monday night before returnIng home on ·Thursday to play
WellSton.
Meigs ...................... 18 32 49 59
Trbnble ......... .......... 6 16 27 43

Kelly Smith
Trlcla Baer 3-~6.
Shannon Newsome 2-~4. Kim
Hanning 2-0-4, Jennifer Taylor
4-2-10, Missy Melson 1-5-7;
Kim Ewing 2-3-7, Marsha King
1-2-4, Deanna Haggy ~1-1,
Amy Rouse ~~o. Kerl Black
0--0-0, TOTALS 23-18-$9.
TRIMBLE - Melissa Slmpns
1-2-4, Alicia McClelland
1-~2. Char Peart 4-~8,
Anna Richards ~~. Kelly
Coen 1-0-2, Monica Nott
~~o. Teresa Fouts 4-2-10,
Angle King 2-3-9, Melissa
Morris 0-~. Misty MarUn
~~0. Sarah Down 2-~4.
Charlotte Jenkins 1-2-4, ToTALS 16-9--43; 3 pt IOall-2
(Angle Klft12).

MEIGS

8-~16,

,

11.

-r--

RACINE - Freshman guard Southern ........ .... . 12 11 6 4-33
Huaan Trace (45)- Mullens
Lucy Mullens reeled off a game9-0-3-21;
Triplett 4-0-0-8; Dillon
high 21 points to propel Hannan
.
3-0-0-6;
Thomas
2-0-2-6; Jenkins
Trace's girls basketball team to
1-0-0-2;
Stapleton
1-0-0-2. Tolals
a 45-33 victory over Southern
- 28-0-5-U
Thursday night.
Fouhbootlng - 5-12 (41.7 pet.)
The Wildcats got off on the
Southern
(33) - Beegle 6-0-0winning track with a 14-polnt
first quarter, In which Mullens 12; Jones 5-0-0-10; Williams 2-0-1·
accounted for eight of those 5; Wolfe 2-0-0-4; Ingels 1-0-0-2.
points. The Tornadoes stayed Totals- 1....1-33
Foullhootlec- 1-9 (11.1 pet.)
close when junior guard Mica
Jones and junior center Junle
Beegle seore four points each In
the first frame, but after that,
both teams cooled offensively.
SUNDAY, DECEMIER 10
Unfortunately for the Tornadoes·,
Trace cooled a bit more slowly .
CUFFSIDE PRO SHOP
Beegle ended the game with 12
CUFF- GOlF COUISE
points, and Jones had 10.
GAWPOUS, 01110
The Wildcats, 2-2 overall and In
the SVAC, will try to push
AU ITEMS
OFF
themselves above the .500 mark
when they play at Southwestern
ONE DAY ONI.Y
Monday night.
1:00 A.M. 1IU 5:00 p.M.
Score by quarters
"Open To The Pulllic"·
Hannan Trace ....14 13 10 8-45

CHRISTMAS SALE

.JOINS GRC STAFF- Mlck
Davenport, a reeent ll'aduaie
of Ohio University wbo malored ID •pert .cleace and
exerclae pllysloloJy, Willi recenlly hired by tbe GalUpoU.
Racquet Club. His duties wiD
IDclude per-allied Nautilus
and cardlova~~cular exercise
tralnllltr, sports nutriUon advlsiDtr. llexlblllty Improvement prOII'ams, welpt loss,
bodY fat analy!lls and exerclae
prescrlpHoll8 lor various
sports needs.

40°/o

Lyne Center gym

and pool schedules

10 GALLON
AQUARIUM

RIO GRANDE- The schedule
of events for the coming week at
Lyne Center Is as follows:
Gym schedule
Sunday - 1-3 p.m., open
recreation, 6· 7: 30 p.m., college
recreation
Monday - closed for classes
Tllesday - Redmen vs. Central State, 7:30p.m.
Weduesday - 6-7:30 p.m.,
college recreation
Thunday - 6-7:30 p.m., col·
lege recreation
Friday - 6-7:30 p.m., open
recreation
Saturday - 1-3 p.m., open
recreation
Sunday, Dec. 17 - 1·3 p.m.,
open recreation; 6-7:30 p.m.,
college recreation
Pool schedule
Sunday -1-3 p.m., open swim;
6-7:30 p.m., college swim
Momay - CLOSED
Tuesday - CLOSED
Wednesday - 6-7:30 p.m.,
co Uege swim
Thunday - 6-7: 30 p.m., COl·
lege swim
Friday - 6-7:30 p.m., open
swim
Sldurday - 1-3 p.m., open
swim
Sunday, Dec. 10 - 1·3 p.m.,
open swim; 6·7: 30 p.m.. college
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8 Louisiana State bombed Los Angeles State 82-57
and Memphis State upset No. 20 Oregon State
78-72.
AI Champaign, TIL, Stephen Bardo scored 14 of
hls16 points In !he first half to power Illinois In the
opener of thE' llllnl Classic. Kendall Gill led all
scorers with 19 points as Illinois, 4·0, dominated
both ends or the court. In the other first-round
game, .Metropolitan State ousted Mississippi
86-81.
At Baton Rouge, La., Stanley Roberts had 24
points and 18 rebounds and Schaqullle O'Neal
added 22 points for Louisiana state 4-1 which
crushed Los Angeles State 59-20 on 'the boards.
Sophomore ChriS Jackson had a career-low 11
points. Dar ron Jackson scored 23 points and Mike
Varos 16 for Cal State, 3-3.
'

At Memphis, Tenn .. Elliott Perry scored 16
points to help Memphis State stop Oregon State.
Memphis State. 4-1, bu!lt a 37-32 halftime lead Into
a 17-polnt margin with 10: 55 left. Ernest Smith
added 15 points for Memphis State. Wlll Brantley ·
netted 22 points for the Beavers, 3-1.
In olher first-round tournament play, It was:
Brigham Young 97, North Texas 68 and
Alabama-Birmingham 79, Georgia Southern 53 In
the Cougar Classic; Montana 56, Monmouth 53
andBostonUnlverslty78,EastTennesseeState73
In the Forest Industries Classic; Columbia 69,
Howard 681n overUme and Marlst81, Vermont 58
In the Marlst Classic; and Creighton 98, Western ·
Michigan 87 In double overtlme and Southwest :
Missouri 91, Southern Utah 76 In the Mazzio's •
Pizza Classic.
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:: EASTERN VARSfi'Y - These younc men
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;: 'basketball team whlcllls currently tied forflrstln
~ the SVAC with a 8-0 record. Pictured are (front
·r row, L-R) .Ju011 Hager, Keony Caldwell, Sbaun

fJ(\',

•toe

'114
'120
'120
'122
'1 22
'122
'122
'133
'134
'134
1 135
'1 35
•136
'1 36
'1 44
'146
'146
'1 46
'146
'169
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'173
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;.. Carleton, Tim Michael, Chris Adams, Mldt

Masnum
to I&lt;Om
2\\"
• "Y'"""
'""'"

Flnlaw, Wes Holler, Jeremy Buckley, Jason
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Savoy, Tim Bleaell and Chris Adams. Back row Mark Murpby, Mike Wheeler, Mike Frost, Randy
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1987 NISSAN SENTRA 6 SP .• STEREO ..... ,................ $3996
1988 DODGE OMNI 6 sp., a/c ............. ;........................'4396
1983 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS A-1 condition ...... '2996
1 983 NISSAN PULSAR 6 sp .. atereo ........................... '2996
1988 FORD ESCORT 4 sp., a/c, atereo ..................... '4796
1983 CHEVY CAMARO auto., a/c ............................... '3396
1985 V.W. QUANTUM auto., a/c ................................ '4495
1985 NISSAN PULSAR. 1 owner, 27,000 miles. S·O·l·D. *4495
1987 DODGE ARIES W/W 4 dr.• auto., a/c ................. '4996
1 986Ya NISSAN PICKUP 5 sp ...................................... '4995
1986 BUICK CENTURY auto •• a/c ............................... '4995
1988 DODGE 600 4 dr .. auto .• A/C ............................ '4996
1986 NISSAN KING CAB PICKUP auto., a/c ............... '4996
1'987 NISSAN SENTRA 6 sp., a/C .............................. '5496
1987 FORD TAURUS 4 dr., auto., a/c ......................... '5496
1988 NISSAN SENTRA 5 sp., a/c ............................... '6996
1988 NISS.AN PICKUP 6 ap ......................., ................ '6996
1 988 NISSAN PICKUP 5 ap ................................ :....... •6'995
1988 PONTIAC SUNBIRD auto .• a/c ........ S·O·l·D ......... '6996
1988 CHEVY CAMARO auto .. T-top ............................ '6895
1988 MURKUR XR4TIIeather, a/c .............................. '6996
1987 CHEVY CELEBRITY auto .• a/c ............................ '6996
1988 NISSAN SENTRA 6 sp •• 1 owner ........................ '5996
1987 CHEVY CELEBRITY auto., a/c ............................ '6996
1987 CHEVY CAMARO auto .• a/c ............................... '6496
1987 OLDS CUTLASS auto., a/c ................................. '8996
1986 JEEP CHEROKEE 4X4 ......................................... '8996
1986 BUICK RIVIERA V-8. 1 owner ............................. '6496
1984 CADILLAC ELDORADO 1·owner ........................ '6496
1989 NISSAN STANZA auto •• a/c, stereo .................... '9496
1987 PONTIAC BONNEVILLe 1~owner. loaded ............. '8796
1989 PONTIAC FIREBIRD 1-owner. T·top, auto ........... '9996

Jim Cobb

..

ON ANY NEW OR USED VEHICLE IN STOCK
DURING TAYLOR NISSAN'S TRADERS DAY SALE

Ml.nOND MOCCASINS, SUIGH
lEW, DOOI CH-S, HOISE
IIIDUS, HALTIIS, au•ns
and liD fEIDIIS.

De1't Ftrttt To Sit• Uf Fer 01r

51-46 with 16:13 remaining In the game on a Keith
· McDaniels layup, but 111dlana responded with a
13-4 burst, finished off by a Calbert Cheaney
rebound basket, to take a 64-50 lead with 11:20 to
go.
The Hoosiers put away the game for good by
outscoring the Jaguars 17-7 over a six-minute
period to take an 85-63 lead with 3:06 remaining.
The final -margin of 29 points was !he Hoosiers'
biggest lead.
.
Cheaneyscored20polntstoleadlndlana,whose
victory gave It a 31-0 record In classic play since
the tournament began In 1975. Greg Graham
added 16 points for the Hoosiers. Karl James led
South Alabama with 19 points and Nell Smith
added 16.
"I think we've escalated our play In each
game," said Indiana coach Bob Knight, who has
used a different starting lineup each game to find
a place for his eight freshmen. "We played
against excellent athletes tonight."
.
Indiana advances to Saturday's tou~nament
final against Long Beach State, 68-47 winners over
New Hampshire In the other first-round game.
Among other Top Twenty teams, No. 7 Illinois
ripped Indiana State 93-591n the Illinl Classic, No.

LOW MILES

L

Wildcats defeat Tornadoes 45-33 ·

By Ualted Press lnternailonal
After strugtrling early Friday, No. 13 Indiana
used Its physical style to pound South Alabama,
giving the Hoosiers a 96-67 victory In the Indiana
Classic.
The Hoosiers, 5-0, outrebounded the Jaguars
49-26, drew 27 fouls and committed only 17, and
shut down center Alan Stanwood, who averaged
I7.8 points but only scored two points before
fouling out with 7: 22 remaining In the game.
"This was a welcome to physical Big Ten
basketball, lind we did not retaliate," said South
Alabama coach Ronnie Arrow. "(Stanwood)
' never really got Into the physical aspect of the
game. We got bumped around in there and didn't
answer the call."
· . Indiana struggled early with South Alabama's
. zone defense, falling behind 27-21 with 6:54
remaining In !he first half. But the Hoosiers went
·on a 9-2 run. capped by a Pat Graham technical
';foul free throw, to take the le.a d for good at 30-29.
: Indiana led 43-34 at halftime.
. "It seems like when we get down we play a lot
, harder," said center Eric Anderson, who scored
)7 points. "I don't know If that's good."
~ South Alabaq~a. 2-3, narrowed the margin to

Fo1 THOSE UNSUCCESSFUL DEER
HUNTERS
FoR THOSE WHO DRIVE HUNKS
OF JUNK
F01 THOSE FIUSTIATm SPORTS
FAllS
FOI THOSE PEDDlERS WHO FIND
· TH1 WEATHEi TOO IIISIC TO
RIDE tHEIR liKES
Fo1 THOSE .RLTED Lovns .wHo
HAVE ONLY THEil JEWELRY
TO I.IIID THEM OF THE
PAST
FoR THOSE AJUTEUI PAUL auNYONS WHO CAN 'I STAND IHE
SIGHT OF TIEES OR MUSCULAR TOITUE

Meigs girls defeat Trimble, 59-43
By DAVE HARRIS
ROCK SPRINGS- The Meigs
girls basketball team jumped out
to an 18-6 lead at the end of the
first quarter and rolled to a 59-43
win over Trbnble Thursday
night.
.
The victory upped the Marauders record to 4-0 overall and 2-0 In
the 'f.VC.
Meigs Increased the lead to
32-16 at the half and was up 49-27
after three periods.
Juniors Kelly Smith paced the
winners with 16 and Jennifer
Taylor added 10 as Meigs placed
9 girls In the scoring column.
Mluy Nelson and Kim Ewing
added 7 each, Trlcla Baer 6,
Shannon · Newsome, Kim Han-

Sunday Times.-Sentinai-Page- C· 7

Porna-oy-Midcleport-Gallipolia, Ohio-Pui•t Pleannt, W.Va.

535999

APPLY TODAYLOW INTEREST RATES
CREDIT UNES TO '1500
WITH APPROVED
CREDIT!

�-~.

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...

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.... '

...... - ...

- . . ...... . -- -··

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•
December 10. 1988

Pomeroy-MidcfPict:Gallipolil. Ohio-Point Plaunnt. W.Va.

'

B)' RICHARD LUNA
UPI Sports Wrl&amp;er

HOUSTON (UPI) - It's been
more than 20 years since the
Houston Oilers were In undisputed first place In their division
after 13 games of the season. but
Jerry Glanville would like his
team to just forget about that.
The Oilers, 8-5 and holding a
sUm half-game lead over Cleveland In the AFC Central, can
tnove closer to' the division title
Sunday with a · victory over
Tampa Bay, 5·8. The Oilers are
favored by nine points.
The Oilers travel to Cincinnati
Dec. 17, then host Cleveland Dec.
23 and simply, three victories
would give Houston the division
crown. But Glanville warns the
Oilers must not over took the
Buccaneers, who have won two of
their last three games and have
been Involved in an NFL-record
three straight one-point
decisions.
'"We still have three games
left, and It's most Important that
we go out and take care of our
busln('!is this week and only
worry about that," Glanville
said. ''Being in first place rtgh i
now really doesn't matter. What

matters Is where we are in the
next three weeks. I don't think
you can get . too excited about
being where you are right now."
The Oilers enter Sunday's
game bavlng won four of their
last five games, and 17 or their
last 20 In the Astrodome, known
as the " House of Pain."
Offensively, the Oilers are
second In the AFC In scoring,
averaging 24.5 points per game,
and quarterback Warren Moon,
who has thrown for 2,972 yards,
19 touchdowns and 11 Interceptions, leads the AFC with a 60.8
percent completion rate.
Houston Is 8·1 when scoring 21
points or more and has won 23 of
its last 24 games whefltlloldlng
opponents to 20 or less POints.
Defensively, the Oilers are
second In the AFC against the
run, allowing 100.5 yards per
game. Only two rushers have
gained more than 100 yards
against the Oilers In last 20
games.
•'The big pr()blem with Houston is they have so many -great
athletes and they utlllze their
people well," said Bucs coach
Ray Perkins. "They can run a
conventional, two-back, tworeceiver offense. then come ln.

with the run-and-shoot. The run·
and-shoot offense Is In the NFL to
stay, and It's very difficult to
prepare for. But the main thing Is
not the offense, butlt's the people
who run the offensive system."
Houston's depth at the skill
positions was evident In last
week's 23-16 win at Pittsburgh.
Running back Lorenzo White
came orr the bench to rush for a
career-high 115 yards and the
game-winning touchdown .
Wide receivers Drew Hill.,

Ernest Givins, Haywood Jeffries
and Curtis Duncan have com·
blned lor 2,386 yards and 14
touchdowns. ·
The Buccaneers cannot be
overlooked despite their record.
They have beaten Chicago twice
and have been very competlt(¥M .
In all but one game.
Tampa Bay Is I~ by quarter·
back VInny Testaverde, who has
thrown for 2, 787 yards and 18
touchdowns, but has been sacked
34 times and thrown a leal(lle·

high 20 Interceptions. His - top
rectever has been Mark Carrier
(66 catches, 1,055 yards, six
touchdowns), who has had six
100.yard recelvln&amp; games this
season and needs just 122 yards
to break club record for recelv·
lng yards In a season.
"VInny has had an up-and·
down year," Perkins said. "But
he's progressed well. He's made
some mistakes, buthe'llcontlnue
to make mistakes. He has an
upbeat 'ttitude."

I I

:·•

CHARLES FLYNN, JR. ·

FIFl'EEN YEAR HONOREES - Receiving
15-year service awards during the Dec. 2 Bob
Evans Farms, Inc., Cbrtstrnu dinner In tbe
James A. Rhodes Studeat Community Center,
University ol Rio Grande, left to rllht, were

..

Charles Camden, transportation division; Sandy
l\lllllron, secretary and Dan Woodward, Bidwell
Plant sausage room foreman. The awards were
presented by Robert S. Wood, right, the firm's
ex\)cudve vice-president and director.

ALBANY
- Stephen A.
Addington. Danny L. McGraw
and Charles W. F1ynn, Jr., have
been promoted to new positions
ai Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Division.
Addington has been named
general maintenance supervisor
- longwali at the Meigs No . 31
mine, McGraw was promoted to
general maintenance supervisor
· shop at the Meigs No. 31 mine.
and Flynn Is now longwali

marketing. "With ali the corrupt
things going on In college football, it's great to see the founda·
lion stress the things that go right
in football. That's what this
award is about."
Southern Cal wide receiver
John Jackson, an All-America
candidate for his football
achievements, said being selected a scholar-athlete Is an
even greater honor.
"I was an academic AllAmerican last year, and this
surpasses that 10 limes over,"
said Jackson. who carries a 3.3
GPA in business finance. "At
USC we have a great football
tradition, but only 11 Trojans
have been selected for this
award . I'm proud to be one of

:·
•,

•

.•

.

them. ''

Also honored as scholarathletes were Ball State center
Ted Ashburn (3.788 GPA In
chemistry), Nebraska quarter·
back Gerry Gdowski (3.562 In
accounting), Southern Methodist
wide receiver Mitchell .Glleber
(3.62 In finance and television·
radio), Bostcn College qllarterback Mark Kamphaus (3.448 In
finance), Vanderbilt linebacker
Andrew McCarroll (3·.76 In English), Mississippi State defensive
back Bo Russell (3.55 In real
estate), Rutgers offensive lineman Steve Tardy (3.475 in civil
engineering) and Arizona State
linebacker Mark Tlngstad (3.43
in accounting).

FRI. THIU THUR.
SAil

·'••,•

••

.'·•••

THESE 80B EVANS employees aleo received
18-year service awards during the Dec. 2
Christrnu dinner at Rio Grande. ~ft to rl~tht are

Darrell Lovell, Ron Hill, Henry Maynard and
Warren Berry, all of the Bidwell plant. RobertS.
Wood, right, presented the awards.

•

•i

:.

••
(I

()

POMEROY - The Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service recently completed
election of community committees in Local Admlnlstratlvle
Area No. 1 (LAA 1), which
Includes Sutton. Chester, and
Lebanon and Letart Townships.
Serving In Chester Township is
Alan Holter, chairman ; Gary
Michael, vice chairman; Gary
Wolf, member; Paul Baer, first
alternate; and Dale Kautz, second alternate . .., .... . . ·Sutton Township community
· committee members are C. Tho·
mas Hamm. chairman; Charles
E. · Yost. vice chairman; Roger
Nease, member; Harry Holter,
first alternate; and Don P.
Smith, second alternate.
Serving in Lebanon and Letart
Townships are Aaron Wolfe.
chairman; Bruce McKelvey ,
vice chairman; Jeff Harris.
member; Larry Cummlns, first
alternate; and Thomas M.
Theiss , second alternate .
The chairman, vice chairman,
and member of each community
will meet on Dec. 19, 10 a.m. to
select a member and two alternates to represent LAA 1 on the
County Committee, and then will
meet at 10:30 a.m. with delegates
from LAA 2 and LAA 3 to select
chairman, vice chairman, and
member positions on the County
Committee.
The current ASCS programs
will be discussed at that time.

Hatfield ·promoted

AU'IIBII UILY

•

FIVE-YEAR HONOREES - Bob Evan•
Farms, Inc., employe"" recelvlns five-year
service awards durlns the Dec. 2 Chrlatrnu
dinner at Rio Grande were, left lo rlshl, Dave

$999

Archer said the charges of
racism has hurt his recruiting
efforts nationwide.
"This has not been an easy ·
week In recruiting, I can assure
you, because of these charges.

v

.••

ALL 6 PIECES

white."

.

..

transportation division; Larry Hardest)' and
Debra Simms, Bidwell plant. The awards were
preaented b)' Robert S. Wood; right.

'

It's (charges) been throughout
the United States ... the condl·
tlons at LSU. But I think the
meetings that we have had In the
past and this meeting this morn·
log will show people that we do
care and we're going to work to
work this thing out In a positive
way for LSU."
William "Bud" Davis, university chancellor, also said the
university as a whole would as
hard as It could to recruit more
black teachers, administrators
and students.
LSU, a preseason Top 10 pick,
finished a dismal 4-7 this season
- the Tigers worst record In
Archer's three years at the
school.

COLONY THEATRE

Meigs ASCS
completes
elections

''

TEN YEAR HONOREES - ltecelviag lP·)'ear
servlc£' awards durin&amp; . the Dec. 2 Bob Evans
Ev- Farms, Inc., Chrlatrnaa dinner a&amp; Rio
Grande were, left to richt, Dan Chapman,

Burleson, Lois Mitchell and Clarence Stout, of the
. GalllpoUs plant and Russell Potta, farms division.
The awards were presented by Robert S. Wood,
right, execujive vice-president and director.

Featu~~ a rtch pine flnlsh and most of the cabinet
makers favorite cal\'ings and rnotns. The triple dresser
and armoirechestwiNal'l1liY meet your storage needs.
Dental motdngs, shaped rails, shell carvings. add a
spedai~J~aNty. Polahed brass harct.Nare and molding
oomplment the r1ch finish.
INCLUOE8

GALLIPOLIS - Henry E.
Hatfield has been promoted to
area plant and service superviser at Gallipolis for Columbia
Gas of Ohio.
A native of Mingo County, West
Virginia, Hatfield started with
Columbia In 1972 as a utllityman
at Kenova, W.Va. He was promoted to assistant operator there
In 1973 and to customer service
representative In 1978 at Huntington, W.Va., and to warehouseman there in 1980. He was
named to his last position of area
position of area supervlser at
Ironton. In 1986.
· Hatfield served In the U.S.
Navy from 1967 to 1971. He
attended the Ironton Branch of
Ohio University.
Hatfield and his wife, Mary
Ann, reside In South Point, Ohio.

NIGHT STAND

SPRING VAllE¥ CINEMA
446 4524

. '

BOB EVANS FARMS, Inc., em•ltre• al10
reeelvlnl llve-;yell' aw.,. dulln1 Ole linn'•
annual Chrlllmu dinner Rio Grande were, 111ft.

'*

;

j

to rl1ht, Mark Dara&amp;, Put boDinphead, Ivan

Beaver, and Earnest Edwarda, all of tile
Gallipolis plant. RobertS. Wood, risht, preseated
tbe awards.

____

.....:;.,._,

Section

DANNY )IICGRAW

D

Decambar 10. 1989

STEPHEN ADDINGTON

Three.employee~ promoted
by Southern Ohio Coal firnt

••

-·5699

Archer working to ensure
equality in L~U grid program
BATON ROUGE , La. (UPI) Louisiana State football coach
Mike Archer, stung by charges of
racism in his program, said
Friday he would work to ensure
that equality exists on his team.
George Eames. president of
the Baton Rouge chapter of the
NAACP. leveled charges of ra·
cl•m against the football prO.
gram last month.
Eames said there never has
been a starting black quarter·
back at LSU. nor did blacks have
leadership roles on the team. He
also alleged there were not
enough blacks In coaching and
advisory roles at the University.
"We are going to work very
hard to make sure that there Is no
injustice at this university, espe·
clally In the football area which I
supervise," Archer said at a
news conference. "I will work
closely with George (Eames), as
I have In the past, to ensure lt.
I'm sensitive to the change and
sensitive to the needs of all of our
football players, both black and

-

This country colleCtion laatures a camel bacll
sofa and love seat with plump rolled arms,
cradle throw pllows with ruffled trim and
matched ruffled skirt. Solid hardwood frames,
leflllered steel seat spri~s. Upllolstered In

Army's Thorson _among
scholar-athletes honored
By JEFF SHAIN
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - With all
the negative news that comes out
of college football every year,
there are 11 players who are
wllllng to stand up as an example
of the better qualities of the ·
sport.
"We can provide a good, solid
role modellor today's kids ," said
Michael Thorson. one of 11
players selected by the National
Football Foundation and Hall of
Fame as scholar-athletes lor
1989. "You look at a lot of college
and professional athletes, and
they don't provide a good exam·
pie. This award gives kids
somebody to look up to."
Thorson's views were shared
by each of the other nine
scholar·athletes on hand Monday
for a luncheon honoring them and
the 1989 class of Hall of Fame
induc.tees. Both groups will officially be recognized Tuesday
night at the annual NFFHF
diMer at the Waldorf·Astorla in
New York.
Thorson, a defensive back,
recorded the highest grade-point
average among the honorees,
despite a greullng class load at
the U.S. Military Academy. He
carries a 3.995 GPA in
economics.
"It's really something to receive national recognition with
this award." said Joe Staysniak,
an offensive lineman at Ohio
State who carries a 3.49 GPA in

Leading rusher Lars Tate (515
yards, eight touchdowns) Is
expected to start after missing
last week with hlp pointer.
Perkins said the Sues have
~bounded from las I week's loss
al Green Bay In which the
Packers took advantage of a ,..
Illegal use-of-hands penalty to
keep alive the winning drive.
"We did what we. had to do to
win," Perkins said: "The game
was decided hy someone other
than the players."

'IIISC-.JIR· · .
LOVI SlAT GIVES ftiU
COIFOII •
STYLIMGI

~im.es- ~mfitte!

Farm/ Business

Ollers must beat Bucs to close in on AFC Central title

HENRY HATFIELD

coordinator at the Meigs No. 2
mine.
Addlngton joined the company·s Meigs No. 1 mine In 1975
as a general Inside laborer. The
following year, he was named
maintenance technician at the
Raccoon No. 3 mlne, and In 1977
he was promoted to maintenance
engineer.
Before being named longwall
coordinator at the Meigs No 2
mine In 1987 Addlngt~.ad h~ld
the posltlo~ of maintenance
supervisor at both the Raccoon
No. 3 and Meigs No. 2 mines.- He
earn~ an associate's degree In
electronics and hydraulics In
1974 from what Is now the
Shawnee State College in Ports,
mouth. He and his wife, Linda,
live In Bidwell with their daugh·
ters, Lindsey, Meredith and
stephanie
McGra~ jolned the American
Electric Power System In 1977 as
a messenger driver for the Fuel
Supply Dep-artment in
Lancaster.
He held the titles of junior

engineering technician, assistant construction project engineer and assistant mechanical
engineer before moving to Southern Ohio Coal Company in 1986as
maintenance supervisor· shop at
the division o!tlce.
McGraw holds an associate's
degree in electronics from Ohlo
University and currently has a
portion of work completed for a
bachelor's degree l.n business
administration. He and his wife.
Tammy , live In Albany with their
sons, Matthew and Andrew .
Flynn had nearly 20 years of
experience In coal mining before
joining the Meigs No, 2 mine as a
section supervisor In 1974. He
previously worked for North
American Coal Corporation and
the Youghlogheny and Ohio Coal
Company In eastern Ohio.
Flynn was named longwall
supervisor at the Meigs No. 2
mine In 1988. He IS a member of
the Knights of Colum~us ~nd
lives m Albany with h1s ":lfe.
Sandra. The Flynns.have tliree
adult children .

Money Ideas

Christmas Cheer

- ... '

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tors: for example, the S&amp;P &gt;OO
By STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS - It has been has advanced more than 24
percent year -to-date.
two weeks
Additionally noteworthy is .the
Worries
fact
that this performance folholiday overeatlowed
returns of 18.6 percent in
ing have been
1989.
5
percent in 1987 and 16.8
replaced by
percent
In 1988. all highly signifiworries of ho II·
cant
returns
that, at the minday overspend·
imum,
beat
the
rate of inflation .
lng. Attempts
Similarly,
we
are
quite pleased
are again m•1dP
to find the "right" gift for a with the performance of our
relative for whom tl\ere Is no Model Portfolio this year. Again,
"right" gift. Hustle and bustle, we think exaggeration is noi
holiday cheer, Scrooges and St. necessary In looking back at the
Nick; all the experience for the returns it generated- the Model
outgalned the market both yearnext month .
Now is the lime of year when to-date and In 1988. These kind of
almost everyone's behavior and returns explicitly demonstrate
demeanor improves a bit. the power of equity Investments
Whether a believer in Santa over time.
But what of the investors'
Claus or not, there is a tendency
to look back at the year gone by Christmas list for a new year and
and wonder what "the jolly old a new decade ahead? As related
elf" might think. Naughty or here, the "gifts " that investors
nice? Coal in your stocking or the have received In the form of
gill or your dreams? Everyone's r. .rns in the recent past have
memory, especially children's, been impressive. This backdrop
gets a little more selective - a is further complicated by the
three year old · does not recall tenuous path the economy faces
filling the VCR with crayons and entering Its recor~ -breaking
doughnuts. even though it was eighth year of expansion. So , can
investors expect returns as
just a few weeks earlier.
AI this time of year, everyone strong as witnessed in 1989?
likes to embellish their recent Probably not. Can it still be a
past. Importantly, looking back "Merry Christmas" lor invesat the equity market In 1989 does tors? Certainly!
As with gifts, value is received.
not require any exaggeration. In
We
think value can be realized in
ell or our writings throughout
the
year ahead with quality . As
, 1989, we have made many lists
such,
we continue to tighten our
and checked them more than
already
strict fundamental
twice. Notably, despite volatile
standards
for recommended
world events, market fluctua·
equities
.
lions and all of the warnings
Jllr. Evans is an Investment
made early In the year, the
Broker
for The Ohio Company in
equity markets again provided
an outstanding return to lnves- their Gallipolis office.

OVEC honors 3 for 35 years service
CHESHIRE - · James E.
Conde, performance technician,
Charles E. Wood, shift operating
engineer. and Gar land F.
Folden, safety supervisor, have
received 35 year anniversary
service awards at the Ohio
Valley Elecrlc Corporation's
Kyger Creek Plant, according to
Raymond H. Blowers, Jr., plant
manager.
Candee joined OVEC Nov. 16,
1954 as an Instrument malnte·
nance mechanlc-C, was promoted to the mechimle B-levelln
1955 and In 1956 was promoted to
the
mechanic A-level. In 1974
he transferred to the perfor·
mancedepartment where he was
promoted to performance tecbnl·
clan. Conde and his wife, Juan·
Ita, live at Middleport.
Folden has been employed by
OVEC since Dec. 1, 1954. He was

an lnstrumenl
maintena nce
mechanic-C in the maintenance
department , then was promo ted
to Instrument ma intenance
mechanic-A in 1955. In l9o7,
Folden transferred to the per for·
mance depar tment , where he
was promoted to performance
technician. He was promoted (o
safety supervisor in the personnel department in 1985. Folden
and his wife, Joan, live at
Gallipolis .
Wood joined OVEC as a·
tractor·dlesel operator in the
yard department on Nov . 22,
1954. In 1955. he transferred to the
operatiOns department as an
auxiliary equipment operator
and advanced to Ihe posit ion of·
shift operating engineer In 1981.
Wood and his wife, Mary live at
Gallipolis.

�.. .

~POIDimn•-ov-v-MiddiiPDrt-Gr'b)o!llil, Ohio-Point

D-2-Sundey T.,.._Sentinel

Nation's

•
•
conservationiSts

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Thenatlon'sconservatlonlstsare
eyeing the 1990 farm blll cau·
tlously, says a rural sociologist at
Ohio State University .
Ted Napier says high hopes
stemming from the 1985 farm blll
were deflated when one of Its
strongest provisions was wa·
tered down. Conser vationists
fear something similar. w!ll
happen again.
Conservation Compliance, the
1985 provision in question, was a
major step forward In reducing
son erosion and conserving we·
tlands, Napier says. It required
those who farm highly erodible
land to develop a conservation
plan by Jan. 1, and put that plan
Into effect by _Jan . 1, 1995.
Those not submitting a plan, or
at least contacting their district
Son Conservation Service by
Jan. 1 for help in developing a
plan before, spring planting. risk
losing their eligtbtlity for any
governm~nt farm programs.
If Conservation Compllance
had been implemented thewa,·

was originally Intended, It would
have been costly for many
farmers. Napier says. So govern·
ment officials changed the provl·
slon's criteria, making It easier
tor farmers to comply. The
amount of erosion allowed In·
creased significantly, he says.
"There's no question that the
original bill could have forced
people out of business," Napier
says. "For some farmers, the
cost of these conservation plans
would have been so high that they
couldn't remain In agriculture.
"Personally, I think we should
get out of the business of
subsidizing marginal farming
operations anyway," he says.
"But politically, that 's a dl!flcult
position to be ln. Noone wants the
responslblllty otforclnga!anner
out of business."
Conservationists had hoped
Conservation Compliance would
reduce erosion to less than1P tons
per acre per year, says Norman
Berg, senior adviser for Amerl·
can Farmland Trust and Washington. D.C. representative for

eye 1990 farm bill 'cautiously'

the Soil and Water Conservation
Society. That level ill called
"twice tolerance," because nature can replace soU at a rate of
about 5 t01111 per acre per year.
"Now, some Ohio fanners wlll
be In compliance even if their
land contributes more than 20
tons per acre · per year to
erosion," Napier says. Most Ohio
farmers will be able to meet the
new criteria simply by eltmlnating fall plowing.
· 'The Implementation of Conservation Compliance has been
somewhat diluted," Berg says.
"We're going to have to walt and
see how much of an Impact that

wt

~High-tech

computer---8-RIDG--1- -._moving into
·research park

~

;

~

·---Ohio
(UPii -··

DAYTON,
A
: small business own~r has bought
- a massage parlor that he says
~ has .QJ!iuged his neighborhood for
: ai!Out seven year.s in order to
·close it.
: Charles Burke, the owner of
: Davids Reliable Glass Inc .. said
• be bought the building housing
· the Empire of Caezar, another
one and some vacant land last
May. Burke is converting the
_ north Dayton buildings Into Of·
• flee space.
• Burke said buying the property
: was the only way to ensure the
· massage parlor would remain

~ closed .

' "This is one of the ones that has
: been there about seven years. It
: closed a couple of times and then
: It opened again, " he said .

.
·:Troy accountant
~ under

.

scrutiny

• DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) -The
: Montgomery County prosecu·
' tor's office continues to invest!·
{ gate a Troy accou11tant who
;. allegedly operated a real estate
·: Investment scam.
•• Court records show about 145
~ Investors entrusted Naomi Taub·
• man with $6 million. She liled for
; Chapter 11 bankruptcy protec': tlon In May. Craig Matthews, a
· r lawyer .representing her credi~ tors,saldlhe apparently has less
: ljlan S1 mUllan to pay creditors.

,

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

+A 3 2

"9 8 7

+KJ9 S

+Q86

+943

soum
+AS

"K 6 S 2
+Q874

Vulnerable: Both .
• Dealer: South
Soulb
I NT

West
Pass

North
3 NT

Opening lead: • 4

Declarer
wins by a nose
By James Jacoby

'-'....,..._ .,_,........,

o.......... .. . .

'J-y•c.N_(_ .till W.l-.

IMJ... -.Jtt~)IIW_I_III
~
.8Dt6 lte rt 0 ,., I'IMw JIIJab.
1

I

-

( - . ZI.O.C. 211
You're ...., of the 1act you've been
neglecting cerlaln reoponolbllltleo and
this has not gone unnoticed by one olle. You'd do what'a ex·
peeled of you - . you'ra c.Jied to
task.
younooll to a
birthday gilt. Send. "" your Altro-

It

r

weEVIL

CIRCULATION

59.99
UST 79.H
r... ,_ hot lit;.. .lotte •

Stltct ..... of kniYII IIIW In stock.

prhlott

..

..,.,
YOUI CHOICE 2.4

little too Hrioully. Be nice t o - - ·
. _ H you don't _,. to be there.
AQUAIIIUI (...._ ....... 11) ComparIng your atatua lll1d agolnet
thole ol your paerala not • good game
lor you to ptey today. tt could cauae you
to dlllka aomeoue
becauee of-t this
_

_....

others mey like an Innocent lark
IO you todey, but be Cll'ell,ol II whom
you lim your barbs. One of your targell
mlaht toke your joehlng oertoualy.
AR1II (........ 21-Aprll 1t) Flnanclol
mattera are rather "Ill)'" today. Howev·

er, tt looka like you'U do OK unlen you

allow..,_,. erratic to ln-.ce your

thinking.

TAUIIUI (April . . . . . , 211) Indecisive, _ could be your undoing today, so
don't prolong Import""! cteclslona. n
you do, you mey have to make a onop
ludg"*" and II might not tum out too

-·
on

informltion.
The right ia merved to re1
ject any or all bhls.
Berblra White, Executor
of Tho Elllilto of
Edna Cooper

!1213. 4. 6.1. 7, B. 10, 7tc

8'h in. diagonal pliers
8 in. adjultllble wtench
6'h in. long nose pliers

- ' d11 nlia
t .... loocl....

,......

CHARGE·
I ,

....
,·•
~
-

I

- •

-

"'

••toaot
..... STOP WASTI-tllrld ,..
~
11 hwl~cazwa;~~

,......

...... -.

4r·iiila colon .. tloi •• Iiiii ,_ ....

69.95

WE RENT

....... •

FEDERAL, STATE AND CIVIL

0 to 110 • · - 'I oltiJio
t ....... ICr1t' ho,
...............
cliiMI.

tiiMEDIATE OPENINGS! Call 1·
115·733-IOU Ell!. IF2T.I2-A For
CURRENT USTIHGI
EARN MONEY typing II .,_,
pa DOD year lncov..n~lal.
Dilallo, (1) IIOHII7
Ext. a.

••• .,.. •4 ct.. whh,.. ... .
- • - wltlo tNilw tolldo. -

5.95

VIMO(AIIf, D-la,L II) Subctuainctltot-llllioO.~t today to COIIIIadtct 0111en just
lor INIIICik ol b. CG111$ 111111
apP"K iltl your COil. I 1r If they l'*'k
,...-,. ~ IIIII 1110 • p II too.

Ads
;~~~~~~:~~-uct~.

79.95

3111.

5

_..t

their

You're F"ty Now,
Bro1ie, and Your
Cheeks Are Still
Ro1ey.

••••Y Blrt~••r

)IOidt ........
111·601

WALTHAM

Mom and Sl1ta111

GOLD
QUAITZ ·
WALL
CLOCK

,...11101.,,

aM..,IrriZNL--

.s• last . . Slr•t-,... r m-uoo
HOtliSt ~rNa,,

A.M.·"*' ....

' . Ul.-5 ....

'I I

floliws.

cards, lilts and visits
wlrile I was a pltient It
Univnily Hospital llld
Pomeloy Amlrica111. Special lhiN!s to Dr. Good·
111111. doctors, and ntn·
q $11ft II Univnily llld
ntnlnl stJII .II AmeriCitt. Your tktdness will
always be ..nembered.
Edison C. Brace

_

you develop from step No. 3 below.

_

1&amp;,::.~"

•

not .a..

.

So bl•• ll 'on Llrllllid
for llllltellrls JOI'I •lis.
.............1
lAtH,
..•• Did, llancli, ...~

I III II II I I I I

21

c..

dutioo lncluda light

ftllng,

· ward

.neWer!•

typing,

procollln9,

phone and accCM.IIt

~YIIbln.

Must have OUI·
going poroonallty and good
Working knowledge of ofllcl •
qutpmant. Shon~and a plut.

26550.

oi-

1-

.................... to.

p.on.1
Dooomllorn,
1J
Oodar"'
,.,. -rd ar ~ o1 au..
T - p . Jao E. Lantz,- E.
Uio, Ernool D. - - ·

TI\IOIM prior Ia l::til

12

SitUation
wanted

-oU,
....
-bio
prtcod.
Clii
anyti-114-37WII73.
AEIIDDIUNG INTERIOR, EX·
TERtoR PAINTING, ROOFING,

114~

OpportunHy

Rt.7, 10 ml.lout:h GnMfrDIII. 41+
acree,

tMM.'II nnd1

,,..ar.

;::::&amp;...- ·-

1-

Building I

IPORTING 000118
tt you'l ,....,. be prnldFnt of ,..._
Savo ··
- 1101
Ul Jan.
IfilL
.....
...111.
ft.
the _..,.,, you'N whh,
m:w:lllf'Clll.
Dowftllown
ltew
maybe JCIIU need 1 new com- H8vt~n, W.VL 114-112-TM1.
pony.-.tar
Coil lniormollon
- · · on
llporll,
tol
'to own and opet'lte JOUI' own
itpoot'"! . . - at....
24114f'i.

1-

Real Estate

31 Homaa for Sate

Financial

21

33 Fanna for Sale · .

pony. Call "~- llparto,
tol-. larlnloomallonon ' - - - - - - - - - to own end optr1t1 rour own 34
Busln811

11Wiii-1111.

C.ro tar otnlw aM- in ony
homl. Good con a n d RNtaMbio. 114-112....,._ ·

Bualnau

lnltor tot, 1111,1110 Cllh, 1148PORTINGGOOOS ·
H ,.,..,. ...,.. M ;noldorll ol 117-1221.
tho _......y ,....,. wlih,
mayllo you nOod I oam-

CONCRETE
WORK,
ELECTRICAL. PlUMB- UP.
HAS REFERENCES. ALL INILIIWICii CLAIMS ACCEPTED.
PliASI CALL AFTER IP.M.

Bullnau

Opportunity

anytime, II..._

1111

INOTICEI
OliO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
,_,...
thlt you do
and ,_ . ., rl
.... ..,... rou lmow,
~~pld.,
. ··~ _. NOt' to otnd monay
the rull until JOU hlva
Wo . . . lw . . - . , and ltao&gt;LJcenMd home;
board lor

room Mel

:.:!:""..:t..

Ill

Rentals

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

d=ln--21- -illY !fnu!Jt

n

10e.

VEN ~oIIOIIAitiNACK8
I10K min. ICon

LPN on cd. Low

-aftar 7:00
-p.m.
· Coiii14-1112
7S
tor more ...
lntcr-

matlon.

~·400-1111.

Wll do hDuN cleaning. •.so par
hour. Cod 114-112-37M.

CHRttiTIIA8 TANNING BEDS
1'011 YEAR ROUND TAN, FROII

15

11ft WOlFF HOllE, COIIIIER-

CIAL
UNrTS.
_....,,
PAYIIENTll LOW AS 111. CALL
100AY 1'011 A FREE COLOR
CAT~
1 «10-2211212

SChools&amp;

Instruction
RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN
lUStCOLLEGE, l2t Jack- Pllco.
Call II 4 Ul 43117. Rog. Na. l&amp;-

(-D)

l'uooololttd, pooait, yood, ..w ai

-loin.

820Cf por -~.
104 112 2111 anytirM.

IDMt

3 Announcamanta

TRI-CO.UNTY RECYCLING

town .....
1411.41ood--.•n t:OO
2'

2 tJ100iti

2722 b.All to 1:00
Pll.
2 buhcttJ. 1121 IROfltll. Cd

32 'Mobile Homes

114-tf2-1117.

for Sale
CHAIITIIAI
IPECIALI
_
... , ......
h. ..... _No

.

:1 b1droom In ~ No
,.... Cllll1 • •34..
'
I t1droos .. full'
... ..._

14171 Coli t-7:1114041, loll tar Aogar.
- . :;:;: - - ln-

-.....
IDOIIIh.
nl 114--1210
t•Sbl:
dr~

Far 12tol0 -.
,...., IWI I dtlld 011 1.1 ION fDI
Ill odgo I l l - · Aioo I ... thO tot, in u.. lri one end r.ntollhl_....
alhw,
$15,100. 114 UI-GDJ lftar

llor,. 1. 112
btlh, aodJ_
llvlna - ·
.........
-.2--lllll.aul.
At. 2 Naotit, Pl. - . . . .

4p.m.

UI••liltlrlp.a

wv:

Pllt~ fum'M. IUiliMc. 114-

OfRIS 3 LOCA11011S TO SEIYI YOU""
HENDERSON. WV: Rt. 35. Adjacent to
Sidera Equlpmant

Open Tu•.-881. 10 A.M.-8 P.M.

a. Auction

992-6114

CHRISTMAS AUCTION

Cloaed Sun. and Mon.
POMEROY. OHIO: At Junction of S.R. 7 and
· 143 on the by-pall.
Open 7 D•ya 9 A.M.·7 P.M.
ALBANY. OHIO: At Jet. of S.R. 60 and 143.
Open 7 Days10. A.M.-7 P.M.

Thursday, Dec. 14 at 7:00 P.M. ·

at Isaac's Auction House
VINTON. OH •
ALL NEW MERCHANDISE
DOOR PRIZES
AUCTIONEER: FINIS ISAAC

WANT TO GIVE SOMETHING
DIFFERENT FOI CHIIniUS 01
TO THE 1990 GRADUATE!
CALL SUSAN COLEMAN ANYTIME 742-2771
OR SUE HAU AmR 4:30, 992·3936
FOR "TANNING CEmFICATES"

614-388-9370
Not iespOttslbll tor Accidtnts or loss of Property

6 TANS s12.00 PlUS ONE "FREE"
THESE CRI..CATD CAN. PICKED

ESTATE AUCTION

UP 01 WE'LLIWL .... TO YOU.

SUN'S UP TANNING

NEW LIMA lOAD

IUILAND, OliO

SATURDAY 10:00 A.M.
DEC. 16, 1989

1015 Second Awe., Gallipolis. Ohio, third house
up on rilht from H&amp;R Block. Witch for sians .

AUIHOIIIB DU•• fOI II IN •
DUD • TOSIIA • PAJIASOIIC.

c•-

Complete the chuckle I2·IO
quoted

V' by tdling in the missing words

•c;,. . r 1· r 1· r I' r r I' 1· r 1

24110111

Y01r •IIMI Is oa-ablllall
8ut. 1 ••llltb•ll JOU

I

A

. Ill I
•
•
.I I
_

*MOVIES • SPORTS • NEWS*

FJ " - IIIII t. l'1tllipl it 1

.

EWLVEI
J..-r=-..:;;...=-,.;..."rrrr--i

SATELLITE TV =
ENTEDAINMENT PLUSII

::r,:::.!.: ln':':a! :.·.:,
STOll

pri)WS,

.

I I I I 1· 1 .

ROMAN

~ CIIIILD 0111. Ill Joint-.....

~lOY

.

ThaN!s to•h one for

llltr. ...........

.... "" ...... IICII1Ion ol the fllbtlty
fill Ill ,au.
ICGl£ Z (GilL M Nea. D1 Y- mate

.

PAYING TOP PIICES!

........

¥o wlnyl

W., tho ol . , _ _ . .
......... li&gt;illlcatlonl far tho
-nlon Of T - I p Ciook. Ail

27&amp;-

1 Card of Thenks

Net . . ., lnoltiilia;;.
lltlps tht liandy- itlte 111 txtr1
.... ef ltaMr. FolthiiWIJ t... lllf

114 io

301..

1111111

Send r11ume to Box P·17 care
of Point PINaant Reglatlf', 200
Main st, Point P,....nt, WV

llun. 1 ~:_10. lltchoRI R =

..........,... 2....,.
0

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

.

apj&gt;ll....·Alta
will
- · enytltlng,
·
......
... III!Oifl,
lltlcl,

tt-10UB.

.,11HCrltaryJI'ICtlpllonlll:,

lmmtdilta -nina tar •

CHRISTMAS AUCT10N Haotfanl

WORKMATE

ons.
Dol

11pot1t, OH 45131.

Conlnunlly lulldlng. 1:01 p,m.

Love,

ENDERES TOOLS

lox 1121 c/o Clalllpolla
Trlbuill. 825 Third Avo.

FridaY. lllonday odllion • 2:01
p.ni. Saiurdoy.

8

111-IIJ

not today.
UO l.llllr 21-A.. II) Should you get
lnvOI&gt;ed In oomethlng competttlve today, don't do any COMl~IO· II you relax
lor .,_ a minute, the compalltlon ,..
ollppeelyou.

Hl~ng,

SERVIC£ JOBS! -

THIS AREAl $10,271 Ia $14,117.

IF • •

. 4-in·l SCREWDIIYEI

noy y o u - - _ . , todey. Normally you 0111 tolerate or, at laut, cope, but

to: Kenneth A. LH, V.P.

1281. . .,

TOOL

171-111

And 1,. lnt•rllle

liA-S

X-TRA
. .H

Eltabillhad rotalt chlln ling IDDilcatlo,_ tar l l o - ol
etora · In Alvanewood, W.VL
MuM hllva r•aU mUia~t

hlet~

HYDE
SEED SILO

12.88

EARN MONEY typing at homo.
*·000 y- tnoomo potontlal.
11111111, (11 IOO-e87.aoGo Ell!. 11101 •.

Admlm.tnlflon, Wli-C.Ir Eft.
terprlMI, lno. P.O. Box: 331,
Wholiorlburg, Ohio 45114.

'

999

loiorlor ftooll~ "'otl.Woloo ,...

11 WN-

In baing
-wbmlt
yaur·
rMUml
end piiiiO
...-v

- -- -

MCm-CADAiaa.
unav CHARGEII •
c. ... loll .. ..... iloioo41•fiillooit•otrii.

11.98
UUOfl
Ooa -

.

'I

FINISH

polcod.

~uallflciUOM

ALL Yard - - It Paid In
Advanca. DEADUNE: 2:01 p.m.
tho lily Mloro tho ad Ia to oun.
!Iunday adlllon • 2:00 p.m.

The library had no air con-

. I sighed, "At last a little
:::========~ movement of air." The lib·
RA T T H0
rarian grinned, "Of course,
this is the ........... desk."
. .
0
.
g
.

Ploll-up lor HIN: will -

Dodrll't Prtnto Homo c-:
and--andofovldo 111
.. nt0111ln ony no- far 2 ...
lhe public Wllh a lop grade llaro dirt/
ildllt, Hava rat. H.-od,

lf" .... ....

I
I

0 CMI N E

1---,lr=-.:;1,..7'-'-TI'i-e...,.l...;;;.rl-1 ditioning so when I saw a fan

_
.. Doy
COntOi'.
letl1 attordlble. ahfldc -. 11-f
I Lm. • 1:111 p.on. 2 ....10.
- . tft• ........ Dtap-lna
Wl'm una. en Ul 1114

IO Jihop. if you MYI lhoiO

4.99
. . •• ,...,,..... o..

I
I

-

311-1303.

town .,.., WMkend rilghta

59.99

UTEX
FUT

Junk cent ~h or ~~
motara. C.ll Loroy Uvoty 814-

......-,toooblota--

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity

A RC L E D

11
-·
Houurlnnlng. yMI wark I
- -. 114-441-GIIII.

Help wanted

With •tarW.It

rI

I I I

B1rbl1 DrDm HouH. In good

candliion. Calll14-ila.eu-f. · .

Employment Servtces

IIQ••"••nw-.t

Pri nt leHers of

UN 8 I H S

18 wanted to Do

Btll!dlng · Tlmbor poylng lop

459.99

simp le w ords.·

eoch in 1ts. lme of squares.

GMenl ...lrttew•• I Nl!lliiN,
ala;~~ ohomltlnt a ea._u-r.

l.aadlng Crook WIIOO'ahod ortco, :JII4.e7ii-11441!J_la.m.'lp.m. EARN MONEY Raiding Boobi
A..altlon. Inc. wll hold .,,...........,a .... , ap.m.
$311,000/yr. Income potential.
h' a 1nnual miRing. Mon- UHd lumHwe •nd houuhold Dotallo. (11 D-al7-6000 !f:ll. Y·
10181.
dey. O.Combeo 11, 1889 at
-·
.......
114-742·
9:00 A..M. 11 34481 Corn 2041.
EARN MONEY typing II.,_,
Hollow , Road, Rutland.
130,000 v•r tncame potential.
Wantad
to
B..,:
Uood
tex1m.
Ohio.
Dotallo, (111105-117-GIIIio Ell!. I·
garogo · wllh hor-ro, 10111.
(12110. 1tc

JtmingtoA. ·~

WOlD

Rearrang e the 6 scramb led
0 words
below to moke 6

250 or 500 j•l. LP 0 . T•nk.
C.ll 114-NS :157.

Holp Wontad: port~tono. help
wantld In 1 rapectable dawn

. _ ,..ilf

Help wanted

11

Wanted to Buy

raaaonabiy
2211.

....

• Tile Area's ........ 1 Marketplace

114-112~1.

Announcements

~.CLAY

strongly Controlled tly genetics.
But u improves the color and
density of the foliage a great
deal.,.
Weed control helps the trees by
decreasing competition for
space water and nutrients he
says. ' Herbicides, mowing' or
mulches can be used.
"We've found that u doesn't
make much d!Herence how you
do It, as long as you do 11
etrectlvely. It Increases the qual·
tty of the trees tremendously and
reduces the time they take to
grow ,. he says.
Br~wn who ts also associate
director 'ot the research centE'r,
says that studying the ways to
Improve Christmas trees can
lead to more profit for growers
and a better product for
consumers.

autna

PUBLIC NOTICE

=~~;~' S©\\.tllA-~£trs·
- - - - - - 1 4 ..4
I . 'OUAN

studying ways to grow better trees

4112.

.......

Sunday Tmw Sentinai-Pagn 0·3
1

from the office a little earlier
each day to spend more time with
hls family .
"It's nice knowing you always
have security," he said.
The jackpot will be paid out In
20 equal installments over 20
years.

Pn 1100 quln.. Any oondnlon.
C11i1 Paid. CIIIIIWa-511117 or

Public Notice

TIUE VALUE
PICKUP TIUCI

can't accouoplloh II all. Tal&lt;e pride in the

nor,..
-....
f l - ••na...,..,,.,,.,.

9

WET/DRY
SHOPVAC

rrjgllt
erid up , _ ,..Ina youraoll bec:aule you

-'1-'youmalclngiiiJie BJIII)OII
today,
,au- ileclalallti'illile
lor yaU. For the . . . ol
b'l
blat both PI01iel rt p rat the othar'a

Public Notice

CLUIANCE PIICE

6 GAL

II (Mer 2 1 - 211) Todey you
WMt to do a tot tor othan and

tact that you tried to help.
CAMCIII (oiUne 21..,.., Ill The d&amp;mancta ole loll • vio~g lr1and could an-

Public Notice

-

25-¥o OFF

.......

•

GSSI

12•10

PAIIII IIIVES

--- -

•

SHOTGUN

zodl8c llgn,

CAPIIICOIIN (Dec.......,_ 11) Todsy's
IOdal ectlvltleo lhould be lun, but theta
.,. indlcatlona you might tllce them a

Scie~tist

IIODEl1100

CASE
KNIVES

-

Pomeeoy-Middlaport-Gallipolil, Ohio-Poirt Plrrsent, W. Va.

•

OFF

. ..

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) home. "This will help us make you can wtn so much money when
Christmas came early for a
our decision," she said.
you stick three coins tn a little
Tennessee woman whose $20
Hanzellk described herself as a . machine."
.
gamble on a slot machine
recreational gambler who visits
Of his wife's wtn, Fred Han·
brought her $1.4 million.
Las Vegas a bout once a year. zelll(satd, "I think It's fantasti c.
" I really don't know what to
Asked her opinion of gambling It really happens."
think. I'm In total shock, " satd
she replied: "I've always been
He said he has no plans to retire
Teresa Hanzellk, 34, of Chatta·
excited by tt. It's just unreal thai
but that he may start going home
nooga. She had been playing the
Megabucks slot machine at the
· Mirage Resort on the Las Vegas
. Strip about 20 minutes and put
about $20 Into the slot · before
ltural practices to grow tlieir
WOOSTER, Ohio !UPI) cu ,..
lining up lour 7's.
Hanzelik and her husband Remember the spindly Christ· best.
Those cultural practices In·
Fred, who owns a law finn, had mas tree in the TV special "A
elude shearing, fertilization and
treated the office staff or sUI CharUe Brown Christmas"?
It
dropped
·
needles
like
rain
weed control, says Brown, who
people to a Las Vegas trip as a
and
drooped
under
the
weight
of
has been Involved in Christmas
Christmas bonus. They said they
a
single
bulb.
In
the
end,
of
tree
research since 1957. A tree
timed the trip to attend Thurscourse,
the
tree
grew
lush
and
grown
without shearing, he says,
day's Sugar Ray Leonard·
"All
\t
needed
wlll
develop
long spa~es between
full
of
ornaments.
Roberto Duran boxing match at
was
a
little
love,"
Lln)ls
sal
d.
branches
and
an Irregular shape.
the Mirage.
But
an
Ohio
State
University
"Shearing
Is impo~~nt for
Hanzellk, who works as a
~ense, uniform growth, he says.
secretary at the law firm, said forestry scientist says most good
Christmas
trees
need
more
than
A Christmas tree grown only by
she doesn't know for sure what
Mother Nature would be unac·
she will do with ihe money, but that.
"Most Christmas trees aren't
ceptable to most consumers in
does not predict a drastic change
completely natural," .says
today's market."
in her ltfes tyle.
James
H.
Brown,
project
leader
Brown says fertilization leads
Some of the money will be put .
for
Christmas;tree
resea~ch
at
to
hea!thle_r trees and better·
In savings and some used lor
the
university
s
Ohio
Agncultu·
looJVng
foliage. Nitrogen Is a key
college tuition for the couple's
ral
Research
and
Development
element.
four children, she said.
at Wooster. "They're a
"It doesn't Improve height
Hanzellk said the family has Center
managed product, like corn or
growth dramatically," hesaysof
been considering buying a new soybeans, and they need certain the practice. "That's pretty

HARD ARE
GIFTS

newrpaper, P.O. Box 81428, Cteoeiand,
OH 44101-3428. Be aura to state your

PIICEI (...... .... ell •1 Kidding

East and West had done what every
good partnership should do- they bad
discussed what third band should play
in defending against no-tromp when
he cannot play higher than the dum·
my. Their agreement was that third
hand should give count- that ia, play
low from three or five cards, and play
high from a doubleton or a four-ard
holding. Consequently, wben East fol·
lowed with the two of spades, West
knew that East held either lhree Utile
spades or a singleton. When declarer
played a heart at trick two, West """
the ace and played back a ~
spade, knowing there was a good
chance that the declarer would have to
play his ace. And so it was.
Do you think declarer must now go
set? It seems so, but South had a good
nose for the location of eardl. He
played two more hearts and came to
his hand with the ace of clubs. Then he
cashed the fourth heart. West threw
the six of diamonds; Eut threw the
nine of diamonds. Dec:larer was certain that West bad started with five
spades, but he did not 1mow who had
the queen of clubs. One thlq be did
know: If West origlnally beld the
queen aDd two otber clabs, be bad
thrown a diamond from only two. 0.
darer cubed cbunmy's diamond 1ce
and got off lead wltlt tbe 11p8C1e q-.
West took three tpade trlcb willie
South threw tbe 7-8-Q of dli!!IG!!dl
West then bad to lead away from tbe
queen of clubs, and declarer made the
last two tricb for WI CGIItn!c:t.

THROAT

~.

Tennessee woman wins $1.4 million jackpot

The library had no air cort·
dltioning so when 1saw a fan
I sighed, "At last a little
movement · of air." The librarian grinned, "Of course,
thfs is the CIRCULATION
desk."

'~'fdlJE

key1t811.
IAGITTAIIIUII

Gropll predlctlom! lor the~- by
mailing $1.25 to Altro-Grapll, C/o thla

Eul
All pass

SCRAMLETS
NIMBUS
CRADLE

SPA

Generally spealclng the year ahead
llhould .be a much happier lll1d futMing
one lor you than this past year. Good
thlngo could happen tor you In - . 1

Sag-. ,,....

+AK5

adding in several more to in·
crease the benefits. 'Otis Will be
the trade world of tlie 1990s."
There's both precedence and
Interest In free-trade agreements, Tweeten says. The United
States and Canada have already
negotiated an agreement that
formalized much of the "free"
trade that bas been taking place
between those countries for years. And A.ustrai!a has proposed
a Pacific Rim agreement between countries on the Asian,
North American and Australian
continents.
Some see talks of a u.s ..
Japanese agreement or a Pacific
Rtm agreement as merely a
reaction to the planned 1992
economic unification of Western
Europe. And that's not far from
the truth, Tweeten says.

ANSWERS TO

HYDRO

O.C. -10, ....

EAST
• 872

other's products, he says.
Tweeten doesn't expect any
serious negotiations of a freetrade agreement before the end
of talks on the worldwide Genera!
Agreement on TariffS and Trade
next year.
But, In light of the apparent
stall In GATT negotiations to
eliminate world trade barriers,
tree-trade agreements could generate some serious discussion
between the United States, Japan
and other countries. It will be
easier for a few countries to
reach. an agreement on their own
than 11 Is for the 96 that are part of
the GATT, he says.
"I think we're going to see
·more focus on free-trade agreements as the GATT apparently Is
unable to reach a consensus,"
Tweeten says. "I can see tt
starting with two countries and

O'DELLS
.....

+QH
'QJ 10

WEST
tK10643
"A 43
t!O 6

mer savings would become new
purchases from U.S. farmers,
Tweeten says. Sales of American
p~oducts in Japan would go up
with the Japanese paying the
world market price for American
farm goods Instead of a price
lnfiated by their government's
farm price supports and Import
tariffs.
· U.S. beef and rtce producers
would be the btg winners stnce
the Japanese would subs tan !Ially
expand consumption if they
could .buy at competitive prices,
he says. Americans are efficient
producers of those products at
world market prices.
Tweeten and Gleckler didn't
calculate ·benefits froni free
trade of non-agricultural consumer goods, but suspect that
cu ttlng trade res trictlons on
Japanese electronics and automobiles alone would me;~n big
benefits for the America~ consu·
fl'\er. In terms of farm products,
eliminating trade barriers on
Japan's exports to the United
States would help American ·
consumers tothetuneofonly$235
mUiton, Tweeten says.
But overall, both countries
would benefit from the assurance
of reltable supplies of each

whl......... r........ t ......
154 ja~ of •M marr i1 •

!!-t-It

+J 10 7 2

year in the early 19110s. Napier
says. Tilled soU can contaminate
water supplies, Interrupt high·
way and water transportation
systems, and rob wildlife or their
habitats.
•'If these were smalllildustrles
putting effluent into a stream,
there would be no problem in
holding them accountable," Napier says . "People shouldn't be
exempt just because they 're
farmers.
•'People are get tlng fed up with
agriculture's effect on the envlr·
onment," he says. "We'd better
clean up our act."

150fo

JACOBY

_Small business
: owner purchases
:massage parlor

ASTRO-GRAPH

JAMES

NORTH

there were stnl between 5,000 and
8,000 Ohio farmers, with about
120,000 highly erodible acres,
who had not.
"Most farmers are not going to
have to make substantial
changes In their operation to
comply," Conrad says. "Butthey
will halte to make reasonable
adjustments, and that will lead to
significant soU savings."
Conservationists are concerned about erosion not only
because of soil loss on Productive
land, but because of where that
soli ends up. Damage caused by
soli erosion exceeded $6 billion a

Free trade what doctor ordered for Japan, U.S.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I) - A
free-trade agreement between
the United States and Japan Is
just what the doctor ordered for
the American farm economy,
says an Ohio State University
agricultural economist.
"You have to get your trade
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 PM EST 12·1o-89 gains where you can," Luther
Tweeten says.
Japan is currently an $8 billlon
·agricultural market for the Unl·
ted States, with only about
$232.000 worth of .Japanese farm
products being sent back annu·
ally. But in total trade between
the two countries, Japan comes
out $52 billion ahead each year.
An agr'*men t to cuI down
· tariffs and other trade res trlc·
tlons would even things out some,
Tweeten says. The.Japanese are
still likely to come out ahead In
total trade.
But on the agricultural side,
research by Tweeten and James
Gleckler of Northeastern Okla·
homa A&amp;M CoUege shows big
benefits fOr Arneric.an farmers
as well as Japanese consumers.
"For Japan, we're talking
about a $4 billion annual gain in
their national Income if they .keep
I:::::!:::J SNOW
RAIN
~SHOWERS
their current rice support proFRONTS: "
Wai'IT!. "Cold
Static "Occluded gram but allow their consumers
Map shaws maximum temperatu'". At least 50% of any shaded area Is forecast to buy rIce and other food
to receive precipilaticn irdocated.
UPI products at · world prices,"
Tweeten says. 'Take out the
WEATHER MAP - Snow is forecast for the northern
producer rice program and you
Intermountain rerlon and Central Plains and portions ol the
can double their savings."
- Atlantic Coast Sunday. Showers are forecast lor the central
Most of those Japanese consuMississippi Valley and portions of the Ohio Valley. (UPI)

~. DAYTON, Otiio (UP!i - A
computer center formed to promote high technology firms in the
Col urn bus -Dayton-Cincinnati
~rridor wl!i move into it&gt;s
;,($rporate headquarters later
tills month and may have a
full ·time executive director by
-:-J an. 1.
; The Ohio Computer Techno!·
ogy Center wm locate at a
..Dayton research park by De.c. 20,
-officers said at a meeting
Tuesday.
The non-profit corporation was
fOrmed to establish southwest
Ohio as a center for such
-capabiitties as artificial intelli·
gence, automated manufactur·
jng, telecommunicatons, systems integration and advanced
database management.
It was launched in October and
has 25 corporate members in·
volved in defense-related information systems at WrightPatterson Air Force Base or
private flrms such as NCRC!tlp.,
IBM Corp. and AT&amp;T.

has on erosion. There are quite a
few people who are concerned
and who will be monitoring the
implementation of Conservation
Compliance. The blgges t con·
cern Is to make sure these plans
are In place, and then, of course,
that there are results from
them."
About 14 percent or Ohio's
cropland, or 1. 7 million acres, Is
designated as highly erodible,
says Dan Conrad of the Soil
Conservation Service in Colum·
bus. Most of those farmers have
submitted their conservation
plans, but as of mid-November,

...... - .. ..

Dealmber 1o. 1989

December 10, 1989

Plrsarnt. W.Va.

~

ttems loa numerous to mention.

446-2411

ZENII411 VIDEO
INC.
.IACDDII ...

....... I

&lt;acr- "- ...._, ......oSIIih I• Uti
Ser11i116 Sar.llhe Cueeomerwfor 10 Y ""'"·

HOUSEHOLD: Sectional couch, 3 pc. bedroom su~!, gas
cook stove, Amao• uprilftt freezer, Kenmore wrsher and
dryer, breaklast set. 2 metal shelves, assorted chairs, chest .
of drawer~ mixer bowl sll. new Easy Touch phone, assorted
k~chen appliances, 2 H. step ladder, assorted clocks. fans,
bed linens. wash towels, mlleriai, aU potsend pans. assorted etassware, Kenmore sewing machine. 22 oifte. assorted h111d ·
toots, push lawn mowet. ·
AITIQUES AIID COLUCTfaES: Assorted stone crocks, oak
rocller w/cMie ballllii, old quift, cast iron skillets, wash· .
bo1rd, cross cut - · 2 minilllure anvils, kttchen cabinet
w/ftour bin, set of ship limps. pieces of assorted &amp;!ISS, olher

COIPLM HOUSEHOLD TO BE SOLD

ESTATE OF HESTER IGLEHEART

JO£ IGLEHEART AID VIRGINIA WOOD

flat a.IIOISIIilt for Acddlttls or l.osa of PlopartJ

AUCTIONEER, LON NEAL

&amp;14·317·7101 - DAY - 304-675·3331
RAIN OR SHINE

,,

•

�~

P'llga D-4-Sundly Tilus Sentinel

December 10, 1989

December 10. 1989

Ohio-Point Plauant, W. Va.

44

90
91
92
93

1Goaway!
soup
10 PoetM•ive
pronoun
13 Longe lor
19 Commanded
7 Split -

44 Printer's measure ·

46 Steamer: abbr.

47 Egger ID
48 Anglo-Saxon
money
49 Caribbean 50 Nibble away
51 Animal's foot
53 Running
54- McMahon
55 Fruit skin
57 Brim
59 Sailor: colloq.
60 Sheet of glass
61 Stack ID
62 Trtbutal')' stream
64 Railroad staflon
66 lmmenes; sinks
68 Lubricate
70 Backs of necks
72 Soak up
73 ."Full - Jacket"
74 Doctrine
77 To and78 Minute quantity
of liquid
60 Strive to equal
82 Barnyard cry
83 " Family -"
85s-s
86 Seat on horse
67 Football kick
66 Catch: colloq.

42 Mobile Homes
torRent

14116
dryer

~Z::i. -up,
-

Yellow ocher

DOWN

Climbing device

96 "- Wirldow"
99 Hairless

20 Hou• add~lon
21 Shott sleep
22 Integrity
24 Coloring
substance
25 At t&gt;ome
.27 Tyson bout-ender
28 Greel&lt; letter
29 Helium symbol
30 Wild buffalo
of India
31 Heap
32 Mix
34 Washington bills
36 Prohibits
38 Rool&lt;flsh
39 Poem
40 12 ins.
41 Actor

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

177 Go In
178 Ample; full

Twitching
Of the: Fr.

..... - ·

.... - · ....

101 Laat act
104 Employ
105 Seed
107 Health resort
108 Frozen water
109 Merriment
110 Sesame
111 Long, slender

9 Reserved

flsh

person

19
23
26
29
32
33
35
36

40 Intimate
42 Foray
43 Flesh

45 Machine for
Ironing
48 Unit of Norwegian
currency
52 Pee - Herman
56 Expel from
count!)'
58 Nuisances
59 Drinks heavily
60 Flower parts
62 Food fishes
83 Mend
65 Italian river

153 Support

155 Aeriform fluid
157 o.i&gt;uty
158 Vaat age
1'59 Jog
160 "-law"

161 Spenllh article
183 Capital of Tibet
165 Liquid measures
167 "Stand - Me"
166 C-F linkup
166 Babylonian hero
171 Count!)' of Asia
172 Flexible
173 Monastic
brotherhood
175 Newts
176 Detective Sam -

44

Apartment

66Merged

67 Feigns
68 Switch position
69 Anger
71 Slivers
73 Confuse
75 "Favorite -"

44

for Rent
1 Br., unfum. apt., Flrat floor.

114-448-3040.

2 I d eaa ..,... UOO ,.., month.
S110 dopod, 10447WOOO.

•·
blth,
ao. ta

Contend against
Longs for
Pinches
Male deer
Part of EST
Virginia Negative
Chicago
footballer

37 "- Tabtes"

143 Wooden pin

145C147 Letting fluid
out ,-=ctdentally
151 Crony: colloq.
152 Dawn goddess

Idle,_.,
alol'll8.

Aefawnau $171 month piUI depod . 114• - · Roqulnd. COli oller a H2-7eot.
2

10 Interior
11 Type of cross
12 Pieehette ID
13 At what time?
14 Malden loved
by Zeus
15 Nahoor sheep
16 German title
17 AnglO-Saxon
staves
16 Loud-voiced

112 Fruit cake
114Name
116 Loud noise
117 Airline Info.
118 Yes, to Marla
120 Disturbance
122 The sun
123 Promi•
124 Equal degree
125 Therefore
127 Coroner: abbr.
129 Figure of apeech
131 Facial expression
133 Exists
134 "Le11t -"
136 Above
137 Butter square
139 Nothing
140 Tip
141 Kind
142 Sun god

2 be*o.•
llkldlepott.

ar. rnottM. holM.

1 Platted
2 Roman official
3 Barf)' or
Hackman
4 Morsel
5 Neon symbol
6 Prepare for print
7 Hebrew letter
8 Antlered animal

p.IL i14 441-4527.

Apartment
for Rent

44

Apartment

for Rent

:11 w. oJII. a br., 1 bo1h, prlwolo
onotoood podo. Clolo to
a~ • - '

167 Marsh
170 Funlcello ID
174 - away with
!banish)

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

IEAunFUl APARTUENT1 AT
BUDGET P"ICES AT JACKSON
EIT~ 131 . - - Plu

SOUTHERN HILLS REAL ESTATE, INC.

446-6624

quoUfr. COlt et4-lfl2.m7.

. ~ ····

. 1.:.1
.

53

10

clluldl.

lglouo dtotgna.
-old

Anlktu-, p_,.,,
Olllo 114-1112-alll
Too CliOh pold. Old l\lmHift
ouboerdr,
qulttr, oriental,
palntlntll, toye, or rntJrr lllllatr
coli colltct ~21-3271, or
304-623o0854.
Rlvorlnt

Rooms

PICKENS FURNI1URE
Houllholcl

NtwiUHd

lurnlo~lng.

Jerricho Ad. Pl.

112

PIMAr~t,

coli 304-875-1450.

room. formal dining area, storage bu ilding, barn,
40'x56' approx. buiding wrth concrete flotJ. Above-

_-1. -.

:}/~~~::d a .~l

Good conc111on.

114o74WII2 -

BTU Worm llomlng
Hootot. Llko - · t400. 11,000

16,000

un-od hto~a:O·•
74tlorl1,.___

. . 23 LOCUST ST.
. 446-6806

.,,.._

!lOki fumltUN, 4 llftw•.e

ilii,

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
Old ook fist woll aupboord 1200.

WW I ~p. lmm IUIO. 1200.
WW1 WOI!'tr " col. rov.
1200. Old SmM~ ond Wtooon :12:10 all. rov. Mint condHion. 1700.

Merchandtse

11:507. SIW STYLE! CGIFOITl Retenlly n!modeled, eiKht l.ui(!, bi!IIUI~ul
rooms, plus si1acres more/less. Apprm.. lweNe miles out lH. 141. Call for de·
tai~.

Old 4 ook -chlng ollolrw. 110.
.....1 old oil IampL Coli ....
112-1311 '

!54 Miscellaneous
Merchandlla

Mt3. HIDDEN TREASURE - This cheerful secbonal hOme IS srtuated on a

I reed lot. surrounded ~ QUiet and beauty. Four be.drooms and two baths.

r1ver v1ew. low 30's.
ATTUITtoN lmSTORSU Three n~ee mobile oomes on enticmg l~ s overl~k·

11472. ROO WITH ORION TO lUI- MMDI IAN'S HAVfN- 4 becf,ms..

21h baths. LR wllif.eplace, huge tam11y rm. w/fifepliJCt. IOH!lil d1n. rm ., 2.178
at. w~h frontage on a tall e. Large barn. Doni' sa~ "I could have bought if'.Own

now .

*l09. COMI£RCIAI. BUILDIIIG 011 SR 7. 40'x80' cement floor, msulal10n,
48't48' buildfn&amp; Both have lwge overhead doors. 9 acres of lan d m/1. Septic
tank flslllled. Also barn and lobeco base. Close to the dam. Could be used lo
repai tn.:lls or booi:s. Owner wilt trtde.
11461 ~ll BRicK aEIIIIY OF PERFECIION - CHIRII·PERSOII~liiY­
CDMfoRT- Quatrty bu ~t new home on 3 1 ~ acres with pond. Enter through a
leaded glass dOOI' into a 16'•21' h•1ng rm. with ba~ w1ndow and glass doors to

S9900 MAY'S
13 AT $12900 MOATS
;37 AI S14900 E-1 lEST·

••

'i;(',.

S19900

AS SHOWIIIN PIOU.

LOGGERS
INSUUYED

$40
lEG. S$0.00

S4Q,S45
Toe &amp; Heel Tips
Western Straps

NOW IN STOCK

ott 18, 114 ... 1124.

2) 1/2 TON 4X 4 350, automatic, AM/FM/ca~Nttt,

3) 1/2 TON 4X4 350, 5 ..-t. AM/FM/cas-

Sierra Classic, tilt, cruise, air,
cnl mare. SAver.
4) 1/2 TON 2 WD 350, automatic, air, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM/caAtttt/equallzer, p~~l-trcx,
cnl mart. Whitt.

a••ae

.-v
414 u V-6,auto.w/ovirdrive, LOADEDIIIack/gohl. $12500 ltllattll
5) 5-15

IIIDDLEPOIT- Would make agreat rental or a home for a
young couple. Has 2 bedrooms, dining room, one floor, all
carpeted, new roof, and 2 lolt $14,500.00.
HENRY E. CLElAND. ,..................................... 992-6191
JEAN TRUSSELL. ........................................... 949-2660
JO HILL ........................................................ 915-4466
OFFICE ......................................................... 992-2259

POIEROY- Spirt Entry Home silting on 1.26 acres. 4 bed·
rooms. 2 baths, c.-pet. electric 8.8. heat. BuiH-in oven in
kitchen. $45,000.00.

OUII919SALfSVOWIE HAS lUI IOODAID WEIEED
PIOPEITifS TOSELL IIDT JUST ADVERTISED. LISTIITH
CLElAND REAlTY FOR THE lfST RESULTS!!

r

air, High Sierra Pkg. sanddaM.

settt/~t~~~allur,

RACINE- Doublswide, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, c.-pet, rekigerator, range, I car
wrth part basement and storage
building, 3 years old. $39,500.00.
·

MIDDLEPORT - GOOD STREET - PRICE REDUCED This nice I II stOI')' h.ome features 3-4 bedrooms, modern
krtchen wrth dining bor, all slll'ms &amp;many other features. In·
eludes tra1ler lot. Call tor appointment. $24,500.00.

HAVE YOU ALWAYS WANTED ABEAUTiFUl
HOlE 011 FIRST AVENUE?- Makeplanslo
view _lhis home which offers,-2 baths, large
LR wrth ftreplace and view of river L-shaped
k~chen, lormal entry, FR, summer porch,
lovely lawn, on river.

1) 1f2 TON 4X4 350, autamatk, AMIFM·
I caAtttt, work ready, smakt blui.

COOK RD. ROCK SPRifiGS- Hemlock near Rl. 33- Approx. 80 acre of vecllll wooded land. Ideal for bu~din1 and
hunting, T.P.. water available. Asijn&amp; $25,000.00.

RUTWID- Oneftoor plan wrth 3 bedroom~ I ~ baths,dm·
ing area, large level yard, garage, and wood shed.
$39,500.00.

131. 1oM,

ONLY "6" 89's LEFTI

POMEROY - PRICE REDUCED - This handicapped accessible home, ramp way~ special floor covering, special
bath fixtures, etc., all designed wrth the handicapped in
mind. 3 bedrooms. fireplace, basement, large modern
kitchen. $34,900.00.

6) 1 TON DUALLY, 2 WD 3 ..-1 automatic, 454 IIJIIIIII, air, silver.
AlL ARE PIKm TO GOI COME IN AND
TAlE ADVANTAGE OF A· GREAL DEAU
I blth. DR. ond ~- Bae·

has .4 ol.c. m/l Ownet
sOOwrng and mate u1'" of·
HAS BEEN REDUCED. Priced

Smith's GMC Truck Center

133 Pint Str•t

MJIIIIs, Oltlt

446-2532
u.

VACANT LAND! APPROX. 18 ACRES- Some is
cleared but more is forest type land. Rural water
and electric available. Green Township. De•elop
into lots or as you wish. Priced al $12.000.
SHOULD MOVE FAST'
#2790
COMFORT THAT YOU CAN AFFORD! - located
in the Kyger Creek school dislrict. 3 bedroom low
maintenance ranch, I \\ baths, famtly room. full
finished basement, formal dining area, carport.
$40s. lnvesttgate today'
. 412781
VACANT ACREAGE! -Over 8 acres. Sile cleared
for house or mobile home. Road lronlagealongSR
7. Wooded, rural water avatlable. View ol river.
*2763

·

mn

. SIALL FAIII FOR THE WORKING FAMILY Wrth modern six rooms. 3 bedtooms. I~ baths,
basemen!, FA lurnace and rural water. Barn is in
good candrtlon. ApproK. 22 acres of land, f•m
pond, pasture land is fenced Plus. -three room cottage, addHional unattached block garage
32"x48" with two overhead doors, one is 16' in
height. Priced on~ in the $50s. Call IOOay!
12791
50 ACRES - More or less. Located mSpnnefteld
Townshtp.
·
#2771
AN INVESTMENT THAT WILL PAY OFF EVERY
MONTH! when you own onetrailer alr.ead1 rented,
another trailer space ready for hookups plus atwo
car garage. Rural water. Alllocaled on .98 of an
acre.
#2785
POSSIBLE LOAN ASSUMPTION! 2 slory home in
nice neighborhood. Mom will save countless teps
w~h lhis cozy breakfasl noo~ 3 bedrooms. formal
dinin&amp; Must see to appreciate.
#2782
SOPHISTICATED LUXURY Ill NATURAL SUR·
ROUNDING$! -Almost brand new spacious bi·
level, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths. family room, 2car gar·
ag~ approx. 2 acres and more. Begin aleisurely
room-by-room tour of this remarkable home today!
412779

514 Second Avenue
•••••••
•.
Gallipolis, Ohio 4563-1
....
.
··
..
'
Phone: (614) 446-0008
Ranny Blackburn, Broker

.

Fl-lor -.114otiiH244.
F l - for 0111. 8
....

72 Trucks for Sale

MIDDLEPORT- Grand older home on a ROOd street. 3 bedrooms, large konl sitting porch. PRICED fO SELL REDUCED
$17,500.00.

ROCK SPRINGS ID. - Beauliful ranch type house in the
country. 3.98 acres wrth scenic view. TwoW.B.F.P., lull basement, garage and many other leatures. $84,900.00.

1:10

Low 1M! I """""' old, 08 ook ond ~lcllorr.
loCo!. 114-742-211411.
Maii.DO MH loll ~.00. IJ'I.1287.

REEDSVILLE- Would make a good hunting lodge for hun·
ters. 23 acres, wrth 2 mobile homes, 3to4 bedrooms, I bath,
carpeling, woodburner &amp; F.A.B.G. heat. Wnh extra hookup
for camper. $18,900.00.

TUPPERS PlAINS - Morton Addition - 3-4 bedroom
ranch in excellent condition on alarge I acre lot. Alarge lam·
ily room makes living here a joy. Elec. B.S. heat plus wood·
burner. large storage shed. Call for appointment.
$41,000.00.

,

a - · 10 gallon tonic, an

-

NATURE'S COLORS SURROUND THIS STONE
TRillED CHALET- CHAIIOLAIS WE- Loft ·
wrth patio doors leading to a large deck overlook·
ing Charolais Hills L~ke. Gracious ~reat room fealunng cathedral ceihng, floor-to-cetlmg stone lire·
place, master bedroom wfth connecttng bath, efft·
cienl~ designed krtchen, recreatton room, walnut
trim throughou~ central •acuum, anached gar·
age, plus 2 car unattached garage. All th is
srtualed on approximately 2.44 acres, professto·
nallandScaped. Don't miss seeing rt Today'
412786

CHILD IN SCHOOL! This mobile homewrth 2 additions makes a comfortable home. Located on ~
acre lot m/1. It has rt all. 3 or 4 bedrooms. l~
balhs, more closets than usual. large screened-in
fronl porch. Nice kitchen wrth bui~· in dining area,
living room, small family room or den, plus utirty
building rural water and smooth yard. Gallipolis
scho~s. Cenlenary area. Lei us show rt to you.

CKBURN REALTY

Clock, on wood,
olfll, SUodt Cor
Cclll,lllu 14, 171. 114-211-1432.
._., dtlly llr oom-or. 10
gil tanlt,-- :IOW71-3017.
_ . . . !lam Ilk Comprooaor,

17JD. or -

TUPPERS PlAINS -LOW INCOME- Very neat 3 bedroom
ranch wrth attached garage. I acre of ground. fnHa BP·
proved. $39,000.00.

PORTlAND - SHARON ROAD - 1111111 FARM Ill THE
COUNTRY- In Southern District. 14• acres, I ~ story house
wrth 4 bedrooms. 2 krtchens, 2.baths, 21iving rooms, carpet.
natural gas heat, garden and well water. $39,500.00.

$33.500.00 PRIVATE!- Vinyl sided ranch. nice
approK. I acre· I~Y~n. Very nice 24"x24' lwo car
garage. Call for more inlormalion.
#27U

a.-..~~or

MIDDLEPORT - Ranch Home wrth 3 bedrooms. I bath.
elec. BB. heat. carpet. Washer &amp;dryer plus a 10x12 shed.
$22,900.00.

FIVE POINTS AREA- Three- one acre bu ilding sites.
Elec. &amp; water available. Good lo cation for yoor new home.
$5,900.00.

· LAND! LAND! LAND! Approi. 42 acres, more or
less. Rural water. Call or more details. 412775

114 ttl 1132.

POIIEROY - Mobile home, 12x55, 2 bedroom. with frool
porch. Sitting on 71'170' lot wrth a I car garage. REDUCED
$7,400.00.

POMEROY- FLATWOODS RD. - 10.73 acres of vacant
ground. Would make nice home srte. Call for more informa·
lion. $2 1.500.00.

ONE OF GALLIA COUNTYS BEST LOCATED FARMS
- Close to Gailipolts, Addisoo and Porter. 236 acr.e
tarm. Frontage along lout roads, excellent for subtft·
viding or just far min&amp; Remodeled 3 or 4 bedroom
vinyl siding home. 2 latge barns, machinery shads,
tie house, 57'x120" Morton me!al buildin&amp; rural wa·
ter. 5 ponds, 2_producmg gas wells. Plu smuchmore.
Call today for more details!
#2778

For lolr. Harwo1 gold ....,..,.
troll tree refrtg~rator a .tOM,

MIDDLEPORT- Nice I floor homewrth 2 bedrooms. I bath.
• carpet, wrth basement and a nice block gara&amp;e. Sitting on a
double lot. $21.500.00.

We can sell your present home
and we can put you in touch with
one of approximately 15,000 teal
estate ofliQB locations throughout
the United Stales. qualified to help
you lind the right home.

$4,000,00- VACANT LOT- Would make an excellent homes~e. lays very well, rural water and
electric available!
412773

'
RACINE- PRICE REDUCED- POITIAIID ROAD- 2.15
actes and ranch home w~h IB50sq. ft. ollivingspace. Heal
pump wrth central air, 7 rooms, d~hwasher, range and relrigertor. large living room, family room and fireplace.
$53,500.00.

The nation's largest
refefral networking sysl8m

CABIN IN THE WOODS! 3 Rooms, unfinished .
bath, backporch which opens up lo beauty of I he
forestl~nds . Cabin insulated, wired forelectricitl.
rural water a•ailable. located on approx. 5 acres
land. GOOD BUY AT $7,500.00. IF INTERESTED.
YOU BETTER CALL NOW!
HZ789

~1 AT S1J900 PLUSH

27 AT

REFNET

.

'ROCKER RECLINERS

LOOKING FOR
- This ran ch slyle
home includes 2'h acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
krtchen equipped. wdh range and refrigerator.
full basement, attached garage. Heat pump/central air, rural water, private treed sell in&amp; Priced lo
sell!
HZ715
REDUCED! OWNER WANTS THIS PROPERT"f
SOLD IIIEDIATELY! ONLY $26,000.00. 2 Bedroom frame home situated in the •illage of Rio
Grande. Natural gas heal, full basement. Large
lawn. Call today!
H2796

"KIDS LOVE" to play wbere they don't disturb .
the nsi&amp;hbors. 2'h acre lot approx. with 2 car garage. 1..-ge enough tor utilohes such as ~atden,
lawn and recrealional•ehicles. Maktngthts more
appealing is a remodeled 2 or 3 bedroom ranch
style home. Recently remodeled, located on
blacktop road . Gallipolis _schools. Please call for
· more informalion.
#2776

10 AT

an ·atrRJm. The ~ltchen 15 e•tra·ordm a'y wrt h !Sian d and trosted oak cabinets
by Bedford. Master bedrm. IS'JNY huge w / wh~r lpool tub. 2 lull baths, 2 t~l
garage. Th1s home IS maintenance free. A. real ctass1c beauty. Under 100 ms.

YOU WON'T BELIEVE YOUR EYES when yoo step into
thiS 2sttJy home in excellentcondrtion! 3bedrooms,
I ~ baths, family room, formal din in&amp; nat. gas fur·
nace, vinyl siding which was recent~ added. C~y
schools. Call today for more informatton and app~nl·
ment. You'll be impressed.
H2787

NEWLY LISTED! LOOJUIIG FOR A HOlE Ill THE.
KYGER CREEK SCHOOL SYSTEM! If so, then call
us about this l~ling 4 bedroom home.. living
room eat·in kilchen, garage, and more all sttualed
·on !'acre approx. lawn. Priced at $32,000.00
CALL TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT'
#2793
LDDKIIIG FOR A FAll? - Approx. 128 acres
srtuated al Addison Township. Large barn,
57'x120' metal building lie house, tractor and
equipment shed. 4 ponds. Vinyl sided remodeled
3 or 4 betltoom home. Easy access. For more de
tails and location, give us· a call today!
12798

mg the rNer. Let you' money work tor ,ou. Call lot more rnlol'miiiOn.

It

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, _, ....... --...
Clood
lp.m. -

. No~ . IIVEStiiENl1 · C(io,tUEIICW.. FARMS.

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER. 388-B826
RUTH GOODY. REALTOR. 379-2628
DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR. 256-6251
EUNICE NIEHM. REALTOR. 448-1897
RUTH BARR. REALTOR. 448-0722
LINDA SKIDMORE. REALTOR, 379-2888
..
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............
·..".

ground pool, satell~e dish and gas well all induded
sale. Call today lor more de!ails.
•2769

10 I. Unlden utllllt.. rwno1e

mi. _,,.. Holt lull-oil fumoGo
WV, wllonk M,OOO Blu, MOO or

a

IIEW LISTIIIG! ALMOST IIEW!!!- Verv nice 1988
Mobile home (14'x70") . living room, 2 baths (gar·
den tub), buiH·in stereo system. cathedral ceiling
in din ina and livina rooms. underoinned. olus 2
porches lapprox. 22'x8' and 8'x12'). Nice llat lot.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION' City scho~ sy stem.
Ideal location. Call today fo r appointment' Priced
in the upper $20' s.
U794

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS! FAll I - ~pprox . 10 I
acres, newer 3 bedroom ranch, II! baths, family

!54 MlacallaiiiOUB
Merchandise

BOOTS

MillERSVILLE RD. - RACINE- 2 story house with 2 bed·
rooms, bath, carpet, paneling and .in Southern School District. Recently remodeled and in good condrtion.
$29,500.00.

379:~114

·-e.:-

Fumllhld

4!5

Eldtrty, Handlcopptd ond -

POMEROY- Approx. 3'h acres, vacant ground. Good build·
tng sM Close in. Water may be available. $7,500.00.'

REALTOR'

0o1t HoA h:ll;
- · Oolt
PIG;__
Oolt
a.-ory
......
Cilpboo.:i, 114211, 11H41o3227.

WALlER &amp;
CAIOUNA

SYRACUSE- RUSTIC HILLS- A hom'eto be proud of' 3.
bedroom ranch, I 'h baths, family room, formal dtning room,
garage, electric 8.8. heat, fireplace, on a ll2'x99' lot. Very
Nice. REDUCED TO $39.500.00.

ra·

e:oo ,....

1171.

. POMEROY - A 2 story home wrth alarge lol, big krtchen, 3
bedrooms, built-in china cabinet, nice deck in back, and a
part basement. $25,000.00.

.

IE~LTOI

Antique•

M:m": ,:oo

·
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Somo
oplllrnon10
avaMible
tor
non-haftdiclpped,
non-dlubled pereo• betWeen
thl at• of 40 Md U. Equal
Houolng Dppartunlty. »Ul'S-

MIDDLEPORT - 2 Unrt Apartment House. needs some
work. A fix er upper for a rental income. Corner lot.
$6.900.00

IIVM .-oWStlll
Of',IJJIIVNI1Y

738 Second Ave.
446-8U7
JUDY
.
. DEWm, 110111
MIUILL CARTEl,

Buy ot ooiL Rlvorlnt An11quot.
1124 E. lloln 81rot1, p_,.,,
Houri: II.T.W.10:00 LII.IO 1:00

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"P."on.
roi'L 1\oln l'or
opl. on 111 A......, - · Dop.
Rivero Towor Houolng for tht 114-448-1071.

Apo~rnomo

Houullokl

01111
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Wll.tiiOR.
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provldod. t265/""" ...,, 114- -moon..
CaH e11111
mr.IOH.

441-4213.

!51

Good I

- - lvlng. I 01111 2 -

89 " Personal - ..

166 "Salem's - "

HOutellold

- .,.. _ . Yl-

76 Witty remark
79 - garde
81 Mother
84 Father
87 Brooch
92 Warble
93 Carry with efforl
94 Man's name
95 Ballow
97 Suitable
98 "- the Titanic"
·99 Cullen and Cosby
100 High card
101 Store; supply
102 Illuminated
103 Guido's high note
106 Court order
109 Journey lorlh
113 Ripped
115 As far aa
116 "The - and the
Baeutiful"
119 Demon
121 Slave
123 Airplane part
124 Inquire
125 Yielding;
compliant
128 Manage
128 Auricle
130 Gave pleasure to
132 Discuss casually
133 Sick
134 Dwelt moodily
on a sub)ecl
135 Christian festival
138 Child's game
141 Author Fleming
144 Proceed
146 Stops
148 Type stze
149 Kinetic energy:
abbr.
150 Fireplace
151 Puzzle
152 Tautonlc deity
154 Shut up
158 "- of Fools"
158 Otherwlae
159 Beginner
162 - Vegas
164 Arabian garment

Poirt Plursnt W.Va.

Apaibhlllt
for Rant

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACA088

..

WOULD YOU LIKE TO OWN A IIIII FARM!
- Now you can. Lovely 3.72 acres offer apple trees, cherl')' trees, insulated workshop,
24x26 barn wrth loft, cellar houie, 12x21
Jlllle. Very nice home wrth some oulstand·
tng features, LR, FR. equipped kitchen, cent
air. Call lor more details. ·
141 ACRES 1/l, HUNTINGTON TWP. Approx. I mile of frontage on Raccooo
Creek. Some bottom land, black walnut.
CAPE COO STYLE HOlE allhe edge oltown.
$28.900. 3 BRs, bat~ LR. kitchen. Dwn11
may help w~h finanang to qualtfted buyer.

SU ACRES 1/l. CLAY IWP. -

frontag~

on Fritlldly Ridge Rd. Old house on land.
$18,000.

DUE TO THE SALE
OF SEVERAL
HOMES, WE NEED
NEW LISTINGS.
GIVE US A CALL IF YOU WOULD BE INTERESTED
IN LISTING YOUR HOME.
PRICE REDUCED! -If you have been look·
ing lot a home lhat will give you room lo
strelch ou~ this is ~- features in this home
are equ_i~ped k~chen , formal dining. den,
lovely living room Wtlh ftreplace, dinette,
bath, 3 BRs. The full basement ~ finished
and offers bath, laundry, roomy, attractive
!ami~ room.
ATTRACTIVE OLDEI HOlE Ill THURMAN
- $34.000 - 1650 sq. ft. home offers 4
Bib, LR, krtchen, bath. 2 FPs, unattached
garage, satell~e dish, vinyl siding.
$15.000 -: 19.143 acres m/1. Appr.ox. ~
mtle from crty UmH~ All ulirties available.
30.312 ACRES. TAYLQII ROAD- This small
farm also has 1 1966 Vlndlle 12x60 mobile
home, small bern, Green Elemental)' School.
2.4 ACRE TRACT- COIIERCIAL SiltLocated on Upp• Rl 7 across 11om the new
shopllina cent•.

SPLENDID HOlE AIID 13.37 ACIES. 11/l
- Spacious ranch style home lealures 3-4
BRs, 2 baths, equpped krtchen. fR, OR . LR.
fireplace, carpel, heat pump plu swood , cen·
tral heating system, a1r cond., 20x45 pool,
unattached garage. This could be ;u st the
one ftrr you ~ you wanl ptivacy and space.

A REAL CHAIII£1 - 1.87 acres mil, and
an attractive count!)' style home jusl a couple of miles &amp;om HMC on Rt. 35. Features in·
elude 3 or 4 BRs. bath, LR, krtchen, OR and
FR. fireplace, gas hell, 2 car garage.
BRICK HOlE UNDER $50,000! W£ HAVI
ONE on LeGrande Blvd. wnh 1 fuR basement
(partial~ finished], c•port, central air and
much more. Call for appointment.
PRICE REDUCED TO $&amp;5,0001 Beaulilul l·
shaped brick. All rooms laJge. Eat·in krtchen,
formal dining. LR w/FP, 3 BRs, Ill baths,
attched gara&amp;e.
VI LIME OF RIO IIRAIIDE - 6 room home
and .7666 acre. m/L Futures in dude LR,
FR, klchen, lluntlry nn., &amp;IS hell, vinyl sid-

4.9 ACRES 1/l, JUST AT THE EDGE OF
TOWN, BEAUTIFUL VIEW - 12ti0 sq. ft.
home offers krtchen, living room, 3BRs, FR
2 fireplaces, attached garage, workshop and
a12x60 mobile home lhat would be ideal for
mom or rental. Call lor more details.
IAIE THIS YOUR CHANGE OF ADDRESS!
- Attractive home ;usl minutes from town
offers 1368 sq. ft ., 3 BRs, 2 baths, eat-in
k~chen, dinette, family room, living r.oom ,
laundry, cllhedtal ceilings, fenced yard.

ina.

119.16 ACRES 11/L Section 17 &amp;18, Huntington Twp., fronlage on Jackson Rd. and
Little Raccoon Creek.

LOTS OF POTEIITIAL- 67.496 acres, m/1,
on Crouse-Beck Rd., nics wooded building
sites. rural water w~lble.

lOCATED 01 RT. 619 in Meigs County lllis
property contains 21.04 acres. mi l, and a
smlll home. Owner anXIous to sell

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Radio Shack

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Petl for Sale

· - · and thtrmoota~ $350.

$100,000.00 PLUS-large home, 4·5 bedrooms. 3 baths,
acreage, pool, etc. E&lt;tra Nice. By appointment only. If you
are looking for that special home. Give us a call today.

114 .....2135 114-4*8801.

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Surpl•, army, Clrhart, denim
camou

around
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•!c"x4'xl' Mindy Board Pning ........f4.99 ...
(4 ,......• • • · - " - '

1/4''x4'xl' Mas.itt Pantling ........ f5.99-fl.99
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4'xl' AI Waod PanelinQ ............. S6,99.S12.95
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7' PC. FJ Sl '--00UNFINISHED MAHOGANY ........
Pint Colollial 7 ' ....................................... S1.99
PmiiiiSHED DOOI &amp; WINDOW TRIM
USI &amp; U.a SJ.99 EA.
INSIDE &amp; OUTSIDE CORNER .................. fl.OO EA.
WliU &amp; IIOWN IIISIUTID ALUMINUM

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gal 101 up t14.• ond 10 gal

Deolgned to mMt your

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CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATE on

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Go- Allbraodo. AI otvloo.

post bldg&amp;. and package

Pol Daalar.
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114-441-0231.

deolt. So•• hundredo.
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PENNS WAREHOUSE
OHIO

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LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

,1111• ae:n.

Livestock

652 2nd AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.

446-7101

•

~

.~;:.flASH' 0~~. ~,. ~OIINIR
~. :~~:/}',~&lt;'~N~,.~~tWANTS TO

APPROX. 24 ACRES wrth colonial home overlooking Po:
meroy. Execulive style home wrth formal entry, fomily room,
formal dining room. Basement has rec. room wrth stone fireplace. There's an in-ground pool. Many more amen~ies. Ask·
mg $155,900.

ms

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1000 Oodga 112 ion, I ........
aut-tic, good ooncl, ono
..... - - 114-4412DTI.

711

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-.1,000 io 4.-0 Fl-·

1014-·

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85 General Hauling

· 128 lop,
HP, 1
- .upholslary.
. Enalno,
corn1110ta
,_

Clll.1._...1111 aft• T:OO p.m.

, . , 11ft. -

loot 8horo

Uno-. 1HIIOHPIIoroury

Motor. Aaadr IO 00 flohingl 1141113142.

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=:.-.c:.,s'.: :::.7

1112 31 -a.ars.r· ton, Ford tot,
- Inch, 4 aDd, loaded,
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For -

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72

" 10181.

1•TChowS.10olok"'Po :u,ooo
mltao, ...boo. Can Ev..tnga,
11to441o41230.

TIUckl for Sale

ol

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·
out Very clean and well mainl·
ained spld level home !hal's for lhe lamily. 4
levels of living space (approx. 2500 sq. ft.) in·
eludes 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths. formallivin2
and dining room and ~lly equipped eat-in krtchen.
Outstanding loweJ family levels includes large
lamMy room wdh brick fireplace and rec. room
and another full bath. Family room opens to professionally landscaped brick patio and muki·level
deck surroonding swimming pool. Great lor enter·
tainin, Close lo hospital and shopping 90's. Call
for more information.
#208

Transporlalton

111:11 Chaw•'

Coupe, Oloa•nblad for NltcnUOn. many
parto, - · 1Wo ,,,.

Cllavrolat

NEW HOME
THE HASSLE OF BUILIJ..
lNG - Attractive country ranch dh spacious
surrounding~. I mile south ol Rio Grande on Rt.
325. This 3 bedroom home offers large living
room-dining room combination, custom made
cabinets, Ill baths, breezeway and 1 car garage.
.Situated on a I acre lol wilh edra lot available.
. $62,500.
#215

SOUTHERN STYLE 2 STORY- Ownersare.being
transferred but have really enjoyed livinc in thisprivale, spacious home at the end of lhe lane.
large, open great room features a dtmng room·
/living room combinalion wrth fireplace. In addt·
tion there are 4 bedrooms, Ill baths. famtly
room; open stairway, front porch and storage
buildin~ The well-kept lawn 1ndudes a perfect
spot on a lerrace for a swimming flOOI or garden.
Follow up quickly on th1s one by g1vmg us

porto caro, tsoO. 11148

Cl1ovrolal .. In good cond.
~: IIF 10 11111roc1or In 110.

oqN. IUGOi fl4-441 1130.
3'INIII.

.

1:{1 f1"?'!

~ -·1~

1~ ......
---- 1230

CM'. 114

1"' .,,.,_,

fl!r_ PI~

- - . 11,,..,
304~-

k~chell, dtn. rm. comb., fult~ carpeted. gas heat cent ail', alum. siding,. utHMy
bid&amp;-. com forti lie. n10my. ~ou' ve eot to $N this one.You won't beliewem only

50 ACRE FARM -RIVER FRONTAGE- Thos small farm has
over 17 acres of river boltorn and 30 acres m/1 of pasture.
To-bacco base. The log home has nearly 2000 sq. H. ofliving
area on mam noor.lncludes 3 bedrooms, I \1 bath, large lam·
ily room, solarium, large decks plus basement with finished
rec. room. There's more, so call today. Priced at $110,000.
H147

the low 30's.

446·3644

40 ACREs. eRE
olrlriiileiiihiii
located along Sl.
3-bedrm. home. several
$!20's.
NEW LISTING: 3 bedrm., 2 baths, 3-car garage in-ground
pool, approx. 2 acres, located near crty 6mits. City water. Buy
now for $57,000.00.

LOCAl'IOI,lOCATIOJI! Aqualrty buitt home, loo. Ranch wrth
3 bedrooms. formal dining family room, full basement and 2
car garage. Located in Middleport.
-135

Vft · · - · ·

243 ACRE FARM- Rocksprinp Rolli- Over 50 acres of
cropland, approx. 130 acres of potentia! pasture and bal·
an ce in woodland (he land lays level to rolling and mcludes
an older log home wilh 3 bedrooms plus an additional cot·
· tage dh 3 rooms. This is a good one for $108,000. -137

CANAD•Av
·- m
M
.
MI REALTY· ., . ."".

NEW LISTING: Attractive bi-level home in A·I cond~ion .
Located on approx. I acre in Baum Addrtion. His 4 bed·
rooms, 2 baths, cenlral air and garage. $62,500.
-134

.

ACREAGE!!! 41.9 wooded acres, sdualed wdhin Perry Twp.
Estrmated timber value: $10.000.00. Deer counlry!! Buy now
for $18,800.00.
CONDOMINIUM: lsi. Floor, 2-Bedrm. Condo.; 2 balhs, Cent.
A/C, heat pump., custom cabinets, dishwasher, disposal,
utility rm , carport. Call for more information.

·•

.
HOllE AID ACREAGE- Owner will sell frOm 3/4 to Ill
acres ni/1 with this 3 bedroom doublewide home on SR 141.
The home has 2 baths and den and the interior was rede·
coraled in 1983. Call for all details.
#146

f.:':IJ
.J''tl( fJ:: (XA/1
~

3 BEDRil. HOME WITH CARPORT - Approx. 1.4 acre.
Situated along Africa Road. Price was $25,000 Quick sale.
Price $21,500.00.

NEIL AYE.:- ·one stOJy w~h metal sidin&amp; 2or 3 bedrooms 1
bath, hv. rm .• big krtchen, dining rm .. big enclosed back
porch, stOJage buildin&amp; All on 40d39 lot. $25,000. 1126

NEW LISTING: 2 bedrm. house wrth upstairs dorm., I I'!
baths, tully furnished, newly remodeled, new carpet w~h
new range and refri&amp; Full basement. Near Tycoon Lake. Buy
now for $36,900.
·
PRICE REDUCED: 1 acre wdh older mobile home, county
water, no septic syslem, localed along Rt. 160 near North
Gallia school. Price: $13,000.
MASONRY BLDG. Commercial location. 2 story, along
Ave., Gallopohs. (Ask for Russell)

105 ACRE FARM: Owner will sel wrth or w~houl minerals
Contemporary style home w~h 4 bedroom~ attached 3 c;;
carp_
ort detached 2 car garage in-ground pool. Call for more
delalls.
#102

~~~~~~~:~IT~~~

NEW and affordable? M1
town
room horne located approx.
588. Has maintenance free siding
s~ed rooms, and car·
port. Located on approx. I acre Green Grade School. Priced
al $37,500.
·
.. #129

'

NORTH SECOND STREET- This 3 bedroom home has beau tiful hardwood floors lhroughout.large 90xl20' lot. Conve·
ntent to stOJes and shopping $37,500.
#109

IF YOU WORI AT HOUEI HOSPtTAL YOU CAN WALK TO
.
WORK FROM THIS lBfMOOM RANCH. FAMILY ROOM
IN BASEMENT, NICE SCREENED BACK PORCH. CONVE·'
NIENl LOCATION ON RT. 35. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT. _ . _
,
.....

PRICE REDUCED- Twosloryframehome, 3 bedrooms, formal dining and dualed on appr011. 2.94 acres in country on
hardto~ road. $32,000.
1113

..,.
,.

~~ LISTIIG -

COOK ROAD - 24'•48' Redman home.
Siluated on !acre near Pomeroy, Has 3 bedroom~ 2 baths,
larae deck and more. $39,900.
#154

REDUCED TO $34,000 -Owner w~l selllo qualified buyer
on land contract. 3 bedroom, aluminum sided home w~h
family room. woodburner, deck and fenced lot. Located near
Rodney.
1115

NEW LISTING - APPROX. 20 ACRES wrth spacious ranch '
home. 3 bedrooms, I II biths, family room and one car farage. Add~ionallrailer hoollup. Asking only $48,000. # 51

JIM COCHRAN, BROKER ................................. :..... 448.· 7881
PATRICK COCHRAN, REALTOR .............................. 448-88&amp;8
SONNY GARNES, REALTOR ................................... 448-2707
PHYLLIS MILLER, REALTOR .................................... 448·8348
MARTHA SMITH, REA~TOR .................................... 379-2861

-

&lt;

•
•

LOCATION. LOCATION. LOCATION- Just listed 5 buildin1
lois in T•a Eslales. All utirties and Tara convenience are
available. Call lor delails.
#110

.

216 East Slcond Street
Po11aroy. Ohio
(6141 992-3325

ASH STREET, MIDDLEPORT - ·Just listed: this home is
srtuated on 2 level corner lots. Close to General Hartinger
Park. A brick home wilh 3 bedrooms, full basement. and
large aHrc. $21,500.
*117

10 ACRE BUILDING SITES- $8,500 each. Land lays level
lo genlly rollin~ Located near Rio Grande. Mobile homes
welcome.
1124

~

·REAL ESTATE

.

MOBILE HOME AND 1.4 ACRES - Jusllisled ihis 3 bed·
room mobile home with additions. Home is in aoixl condition
and includes nice Iaroe nnrr.h"' •nd a2car oarue. Located
1.5 miles off SR 218 on Criner Rd. Priced $20,000.
1133
NEW LISTING- Restaurant just waitingto be opened up. All
equipment and almost one acreol ground. Located in Chesh·
ire. Asking $39,900.
1131

IIOVIIG TO TH£ CITYt THIS HOME ON UPPER SECOND .
AVENUE IS WITHOUT ADOUBT THE BEST BUY ON THE
MARKEl 2 STORY FRAME HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS.
KITCHEN IS EQUIPPED WITH RANGE AND REFRIG., AM· PLE DINING SPACE. GAS BUDGET IS ONLY $41 .00
MONTH, NICE LEVEL BACK LAWN. JUST$35,000. CHECK
IT OUll

11611-· ., - ~

...........

1•1 Chao~. 2 Exc. body, 114-

WISEMAN REAL EStATE

JAY DRIY£. JUST OFF IT. 35. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH
RANCH HAS NICE FLOOR PLAN. ATTRACTIVE FOYER,
VERY LIVABLE FAMILY ROOM. KITCHEN AREA WITH fl.
REPLACE ALSO OPENS ONTO OUTDOOR PATIO, DECK
AND POOL. EXCELLENT VIEW OF SURROUNDING AREA
FROM DECK. 2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE, ATTRACTIVE
HOME.
LOCATION, CITY SCHOOLS $65,000

EIICII'Ical I

ion-· 114417•77al.

--

71 Autos lor Sale

llliCitlYP£ ltGIE- IIDOlEPOIT- Paik St.- Co&lt;ner bt. 4 bedlooms.

BEAUTIFUL PROPERTY ·IlEAl EWINGTOII - SPAR·
KLING CLEAN 4 YEAR OLD RANCH HOME HAS 3 BED·
ROOMS, LARGE liVING ROOM AND KITCHEN AREA.
1.175 SO. FT. LIVING AREA, THERMOPANE WINDOWS,
VINYL SI!JING, GARAGE. COVERED REAR PATIO, NICE Sl·
DEWALKS. ON 2 ACRES. THIS IS AN EXCELLENT BUY AT
$42,000. JUST LISTED!

TW

~··

room. lull ellra n1ce basement, fuRy ttrpeled, weN 1nsullled. almost new, applllllces, garage. 5. 75 acres. extra wel.,buil. shetr luxury, out of town owner
said show il and se\1 t. Call me and we'll make your dream come triM!. In only
th e low 60's.

.

alliiHIMina
F...UOalliiPTna
Gantp I ••• Ohio

&amp;llllf---..
...... -5:

Ear com, $2.50 buohal. 114-843-

W~NT THE am- PEACH FOlK RD.-CR 19 -IEAIITIFUl.BIICIHGIIE
- 3 bedrooms, 2 fu II baths. W
ving room, dining room, bar, ~itchen, sewma: ,

1

~-..

31!11--·

WHY BUILD YOUR DREAII HDME1 When rt is already built.
Th~ lovely home is just I year old and Is s~uate~ on approx.
3 acres w~h a river view in the ~vracuse area. lncluaes •
weeden cathedral ceilin&amp; stone fireplace, a self-approved
kitchen, dinin&amp; 3 bedrooms down and one in the loft. 2
baths. lull basement and 2 car glt'age. Call lor appointment,
-142

HOME &amp; 22 ACRES 11/L- I year old ranch holl)e located
less than I mile off Rt. 7. Includes 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, for·
mal diriin&amp; heat pump, Andersen windows, I car garage plus
lots more. $64.~00.
#149
BEAUTIFUL RIVER FRONT- You can't beat the view from
this !BOO sq. ~- 3bedroom home 1.3 acres m/1 wrth afantas·
t1c vrew ol th~ nver. Large hrghway and river fronlage. The
home_has family room, formal d1n1ng. 2 balhs, fireplace, cen tral aor and 2 car garage. Lots of exlras for only $59,500.

ranch style, 2 baths, tiwlis room. kitchen. ut1litv room. fireolat.e ~~~~sert.
large 2 car pnle (beale!ll. pond, woods. aood huntlna and fish1n~ mmeral
rl(t1ts, 13acres. vear wan anted home. ThiS home was built at thes rte. Beau·
tiful locll:ion let me show you .- yoo'l lowe it. Only 1n the 60's.

-

.......... alollod .. . _ ....
,.,., blu., .Uing, $3000. 114-

.,, uch. Dlllverl'
aviilolote: 114-4141-1012.

GREll HOII 01 S. R~ li!- 10 IIIUUS FRill PDIEROT- 3 b&lt;dooom

HNtlng

115 General IMullng

aoo luWia of •r of cam tor
aalo In bam $2.21 lluohal, 114-

LMga round -

- 2 or 3 bedrooms, lil'ing room, dining room, kitchen, den, I I'! baths, basement. winy I sidin&amp; ellr.~ l•&amp;e lot, prrvacw fence, close to city park. A real
waluatle property. Creal opptrturlty in lhe low.Jlrs.

Plumbing ..

Hey&amp;Graln

-

·

a .,..,. ·

r:;,;.

HorFor-:11~.

3 beOrooms. 2 baths, kitChen. dmma
room. fully carpeted. central a1r.
nice living room w/cathedral ce1~
ing, all elec.. telr igeratOf. tJnge, diShwasher and stereo system. An unbelievable bu~ 1n low 30-s.

82

LOCATION- LOCATION ·- iiir.Jjlol
anybody! "Location is most important when selectin~ a home." Here's a 6 room home on I acre
mil w1th a tueal ~iew of the river and only 5 miles
from town. Includes 3 bedrooms. fireplace. full
basemen!, garage and barn. You'll have access to
lhe river. It's priced at$59,50D, and should not be
on lhe markellon&amp;
·
#116

REALTOR•

446 3636
·

llna porlo on -. ,.dr 10 mlnue ~
·~n.
Cart.......... _,............
Car llld lrlllor, bot~ 11200. Gal
lntoroolna"":~Calll1..._
2111orlf4-M
.. . . . . ....
llld llaln In llaclnL
F ..
or le or Trade: 1114 t.a.r
~,,_,
.. - _ - 114~

PH. 446·7699 or 446-9539

[Jl
Sill BIFOII£ CHRISTIAS
PRICE RIOOCIII-Ciosetoclly I"''

Home
Improvement•

111'2 11 I. I I - Tri-Hirll
Bullltl Chaoolo 81ool1 oar, 0001! 1m l'onl F·110, lhor1 lata modal or -ltalo, 10p of baaa. 311 anglno, t opel, 31

;)ullo

IIDOlEPOIT llll.QADWAr- BEST BUr liT IIIII- VEIT lfFOIDABlE

AUDREY F. CANADAY. BROKER
IIOMES. fARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
7~ lOCUS I SIRHT
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 45631

o.;;;-.. Ana";;,

.... _,Com-,,..._,

:

'

(Call Anytime)

- btra nice newly remodeled. 4
beltooms, bath. livmg room. dm1ng
room, krtchen. new turrace, new
steel garage, new sate!tte. 4'b acres,
mOve in and start makmg money.
Priced absolutely ugh! • mid 40's.

THE BEST BUY Ill VINTON IS IIOW AN EVEN BETTER
BUY WITH A PRICE REDUCTION!
WAS '27,500. NOW 124,900!
This ~an older home that has been modernized into avery liveable. up-to-date, 3 or 4 bedroom home. It's on a quiet
street, has a large fenced lot Very nice modern Mitch en, new
large living room w~h woodburner. formal dining and 2
baths. 2 car garage and priced well under market value.
#102

-

11

OWNER FI.IMCIIIG
With Down Payment - Greal buy, 9 rooms, 3 bedrooms, din·
ing area, lots of room, garage. Only $18,900.
11622

-ian
=:-·

Cit£ IIOIIEIIII 11124
2% lllllllll'DID IIACIN£
GRUT IUSIIDS DPPOITUIIIlY

81

........

..

pupploa roodY to
go Cllrillrnu, puro llrld nc
,,00, ltrm. JOt -

P~l'lllt

76 Auto Parte r.

mUll - to appracla10, 11100.
: 1tn Ponllec La- 114-2-T or 11445MI04.
0911111Uon,-.27.1-o11· ·
~::n
:150 •lt:am•lo In
floor
- . 1o1- , _ 1tlt4 Ford F-350, ono ton Dually,
31
'I ,_,
~~''":"!:" • tlrM! - - . -~ u dloool, now roctlal u- ...
~-,;-,;.!l u.d4
o,..,., 01\tf. 114 31•
:O,~~llnt condition, 114IIMlora a lmplliDIIIII. luy, OOVERNIIENT SillED \1al.cl•
1111, trldl, l:t»&gt;:GO WMkdlye, tram 1100. P'orda. lieu dn , . Ponl Bronco I, $1500.
~~ 1111-..
Corvotl,., Chevy~.
OMC S.11 111orro Ctaalc
Pony Ia- for
Puyaro Oul* (1l Club Cab, ,1,000 mllao. 114-441lllllli.
Olio, .,...._
Ext. I
7'120.

IOO'o TO 010011111111

81 4-384-384&amp;

"

Refrigeration

inlill1hn daM hound PIIPflltt,

lfc"x4'xl' Shetting Plywoocl-....... 513.95 eo.
s.\"x4'xl' CD &amp; Sheeting Plywood
25 pa. to 44 pes.......................... S12·.95 •a.
45 pa. up ...................................... '11.95 ...
'll"x4'xl' T-111 Pine Sicling ............ sl5.95ta.
25 pu. to 56 pes....................... S14.95 •a.
57 pa. I up ............................... '13.95 ...
Prehung Still IMulated Doan ............... 569.95
PREHUNG INTERIOI DOORS
Fin. &amp; Unfini.... Clooict of Silo 529.95 oa.

~

84

,100 -h.I144'1'11-2T41.

614·256-6511

. . .,...

114-4 ..

AKC Roalalorocl a- a~ ... 1~_.ah. full blaad:ld

of

dollaro.
Lee:.. Saltl . . . . . .t ..i¥1
DONNA CRISENBERY
E.S .R., Bo• 1611
Glllipolio. Ohio 46831

WINDOWS SINGLE HIING
24'' Wx36'' H......................................... S29.9S
24'' Wx72'' H........................................ '39.95
42'' Wx72'' H.....- ................................. S59.95

til
e:!.=

-....., '='
...

--~

CollarJ - Slun
end

- . . .....114
ldtlClloW
- 7
.
4. 1144
....,.

Cannelburg, Inc. 47618
Speciollzlng In Pola
lui dingo.

. ...

....

. . _ u· 111-·h -w Hoi-II!"' ,!1'- • - lol ucallonl

D. C. Metal 5altf, Inc.

. -.

-

0

Drcpv.&gt;jlld

.

1 e l 4 - . · - 1.231, 1111
...hill!!.,. oH.., llld drag,
ti,IOO.- tiiSA

CITY LIMIT5-Lovely brick home, very private and
secluded. Sitting on 2J50 acres.

..........

.'

=·~a~:'MC
:n~~=J!'..IY!':·
......
·~t::r·

onlyf. -

BUUIIIG SUPPUES - BUYOUTS
CLOSEOUTS - SECONDS

(W.a;lat 14 hetmtr,

1 - ~ .Diaaal -

8fOVI,

, S.m loiwt ww.-..,
Juftot.
plillnoe All. Rl. 11,
Cornpulor -ERA, WY,- - _ . ,_,.,uo PM; (Yaar

....... ComDut• c-tt• R8cof.
. , Included. o..- Chrw.....
gift. NO. 114-_.._

.

81 Fann Equipment

AFFORDABLE-RIO GIAIDE SCHOOL DISTRICT-Lovely 3
bedroom Ranch, 2 baths, 1, krtchen, laundry, family room
w/woodburner, flat yard and aswimming pool. Be the first to
see this very nice home.

S.obrm1tlc

.,.

Acceuorlu

205 Kineon-Th is home is much target' than rt appears. 3
bedroom. L.R., modern kitchen, formal din in' workshop and
storage room, fenced back yard. Nice starter home .

-.WV304-*--

--

. ..

73 Van.I4WD'I

CITY PROPERTY-lrd Ave. 3 bedroom-family room-living
room w/fireplace. modern krtchen, nice flat lot wrth big
garden area. Priced 40's.

:MW1:t1.

now-

.

NEW LISTIIG-ACREAGE- Wondertul buildin g s~e. heel·
lenllocllion. Some Woodland and great view.4-5 Acres more
or les s. Crty Schools.

llulldtlg

.....

col-lp.M.I14-

"

Ohio-Poiut Plealant. W. Va.

-.-------a.u.115

.

w. va.

Ohio Point Pia •tnt.

Tmee- S antinel

'

...

®and .,. tr3demarkl of Century 21 Real Estate Corpontion,
EqUal Opportunity Employer

EACH OFFICE IS INDEPI!NDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED.
I

EVE.
EVE.
EVE.
EVE.
EVE.

•'

,.

•'

,'

lEW LISTING- Galli aCo. I
slory 3 bedroom home with
full
basement. Enclosed
breezeway and 2 car prage.
Over 2 acres in a country
settin~ Just $27,900.
iEW LISTING - 12 acres
and a 6 room farm home. All
City util~ies. 2 car garage
~nd lots of outbu~ding~ .
$25,900.
lEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
home wrth half basement
~rae lot and all ut~. Only
$20,000.
NEW LISTING - Investment - Two 6 room apartf!ients in downtown Middleport. Stays rented. Fresh~
IJiinled and in good condt·
lion. Will pay for rtsell.
NEW LJSTIIIG - 12.488 ~
( commtreii bu iding Resf!110111S and offica Call for dellils.
IIEW LISTING - Brick 10
n10111 house dh 7 bedrm~
and 2 baths. Ownor wil 9ell
ir trade.
8. lruct Tilford
992·7614
Rlcllard Vllllllln•
441-1172

OIIIC1.2-1325

NEW llsnNG: 10 acres, PerryTwp. Some limber. Buy now
for $10,000.
NEW LISTING: 6.5 acres wrth 4 rm. house dhin I he city of
Gallipolis. Buy now for $30,000.
1973- 12'x50' - 2 bedrm. mobile home. wdh rear deck.
Call Allen Wood for more info.
118 ACRES LOCATED IN GREEN TWP., Graham School Rd.
Super view! $44,000.
PROPERTY II PORTER - Grocery store. 3 bedrm. home, 5
bedrm. home. Call lor more information.
DOWNTOWN IIVESTIIEIIT PROPERTY: Brick structure wtth
3 rental apartments. Als~ adjacent metal storage/ulilrty
bldj Est gross renlal income. $820 per mo. All priced for
~5.000.
.
WE HAVE BULDING LOTS in ~odney Vill111e II and Mills
Villaae. Call for more information.
2 LOTSWITHINGREEI ACIES SID. Oneis84' x148' and the
other 75'x148'. Purchase erther for $5,500.00.
21.5 ACRES, ltAIIIORTH GALLIA SCHOOL No slructures.
L.ocaled alone Fr111k Rd. $18,900.
3 LOTS LOCATED IW TYCOOII WE (50x115'1. Can
purchese on land contract. $2.000 down. I~ il1terest, PlY
$129.69 for 6 yrs.
1.02 ACR£ lOT along Klick!' Rd. near Centenary. $8,000.
APAiTIEIIT FOR REliT- 1st ftoor, 2 bed1m., liv. rm., "eatill kftchen". $225 por mo. plus utdrties. Deposrt required .

W£ IELIM II THE ENJOYMENT and the Wis·
dom of owning your own home. If you agree and
are looking at homes on I he markel, be sure to in·
elude this one! It's a 3 bedroom 2 story wrth 2
baths, country kitchen, la~ge living room, big gar·
age. picnic shelter and 0.6 acres. Counlry almos·
phere. A very comfortable home. $54,900.
.
#400
GORGEOUS 2 STORY OVERLOOKING THE RIVER
-Interesting slylingand decor highlighl this turn
· of lhe century home. Remodeled throughout, it in·
eludes 2 bedrooms, each wdh own bathroom
surte.lorr111l dining. largeformallivingroom, eat·
'in k~chen and more. 4 working gas fireplaces, up·
stairs balcony overlooks river. Guest house bonus:
small3 room house would make nice office, work·
shop, etc. PLUS 30xl00 shop building with large
overhead doors and several other smaller outbuiltlin~. Can all be bought for unbelievable low
price of $81,000 or purchased separately. Call fur
more delails.
#104
FOUR BEDROOII HOllE FOR $49,9001- What's
more, it's just on the edge oft own. Nice large back
yard full basement, screened in porch. Couldn't
ask lor much more. Lots of imprevements have
been made lo lhis home.
#209
COlY HOME ON 10 ACRES- Locatedjustsouth
of Rio Grande, this property lays very nice. 11971
home leatures 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, eat-m
k~chen wrth new cabinets, living room and famtly
room. 21'! car garage only several years old and a
couple of other oulbuildin~. Larll! fenced yard,
garden space and lois of pine trees. $69,000.
#207
THINKING OF BUILDING? - Before you build,
even if yoo already own alot, please look at these
outstanding 5 acresrtes. We have 7oft he best lots
in Green Township. We have 8 oflhe besl in Rae·
coon Township, and many other larger lracts
close to town and around the county. Buy now before they are picked over.
#128
40's BUYERS, BEAT THIS!! NEW LISTING GREAT LOCATION!- Clean 3 bedroom ranch will
make yoo lhe perfect slarter or move-up home.
Features include larll! living room, eat-in kitchen,
handy utilrty room and I II baths. I car attached
garage. Situated on a nat lot, just right for kids.
Nice neighborhood development thars nol all
"scrunched" logether. $49,900.· Call Chris for
more informalion.
#700
NOT YOUR USUAL COUNTRY HOME!- Situaled
on approx. 4 acres, this 2 stOfl' home has been
very nicely remodeled. New wirin&amp; rool, carpet,
walls, lrim, elc. done wrth taste. 4 bedrooms, liv·
ing room, dining room,larae eal·in k~chen, large
util~y room and I balhroom. $56,000 will surely
be a pleasing price also. North Gallia schools.
1232

BEST BUY IN MEIGS COUNTY- Rlduced Price
Makes It An hen BtHer Buy! - Owner transferred .after overimproving his home. In the last
few years he installed new heating and air conditioning new walls, ceilin~. bathrodm fi.tures,
some new plumbin&amp; new insulation, new carpel,
many new Thermopane window~ new siding and
new kilchen. Here is 1900 sq. ft. of living space
that includes a large living room (woodburnerl.
family room, formal dining, big krtchen, 4 bed·
rooms. plus a nursery and 2 bath~ All nicely.de·
corated, carpeted, clean, ready to move into. Ex·
cellenl neighborhood. Close to grade school,
shopping and church. You can save lhousands,
have a nice home and not go through the hassle of
a big home improvement protect. Broker's Note:
"It's the best buy I've seen in the area." Priced
$36,900.
#114

Are You,
or Someo!"e You Know,
Considering the Sale
of a Home?
As Real Estate
Professionals, we can be of
great service in negotiating
the beet deal possible.
One Phone Call Can Prove

VERY PROFITABLE
CALL USII
SPLENDID RIVER VIEW- Houses along the river
don't come along very often, especially one of this
caliber. Here's a lrue masonry bnck house w~h a
full basemen! tllat was built to be here for a long
time. Over 2100 sq. H. of spacious living area
(plus basemen!) including larll! beautWul living
room forr111l dining room and redecorated
k~chen w~h breakfast area that will please lhe
head chef. Also 3 bedrooms, Ill baths plus base·
ment shower and sink, 2 fireplaces, coveted patio
overlooking river and another in the back. New
concrete par~ng area large enou1h for any s~e
family, new roof. Property goes lo the rwer. Boat
dock included.
1223'
COUIITRY SERENITY BUT CLOSE TO TOWN Flat corner building lollocaled 1n Clearvtew Es·
tales. 6 miles south on Rl. 7. Counh wat~ ava.tlable. Maintained publrc sewer syslern. N•ce vtew
All ollhts toi only $6,600.
11600
GREEN TOWNSHIP HOME - L.oo~ng for something out in lhe counlry but st~l nol too far
lrom schools! Here's a nice property only 5 miles
from town, I mila from Gr11n School, bul wrth
plenty ol prwic(iild a nice view. Over 1400
sq. ft. indudes 3 bedrooms, living room and lamily room, nice eal·in kdchen. 2 acre lot. Priced to
please at $54,900.
11201

IrS REAlLY WORTH
Gallia County's fine homes and we think you'll
agree lhat the li\lle brt of exira lime you spend gelling to lhis lovely oountry ranch ~ really worth~­
Very peaceful silting nestled amon~ a Sl2nd of
whispering pines··and hardwoods, lh1s home off·
ers plenty Jlliving space for any s~e family. In·
eludes family room wrth fireplace. rec. room w~h
another fireplace, formal dining and living rooms,
and an oak krtchen the wife won't want to leave,
plus 21! batt,s. 3 bedrooms, 2 car gllfage. Outside
features indude hot t4_b on amufti-revel deck. Appro•. 1 mile from Rio Grande. Crty schools. You'd
pay much more than $114,900 if here closer to
Gallipolis and not have half as much house. Discover how wonderful life can be.
#206
RENTERS, STEAL HOME- Get a jump on tther aspiring owners by calling now for an appoiiitinenl
to see this Ill slory, 2 bedroom on 2 acres, m/1.
Basement, garage and immediate possession are
features you are bound to appreciate. $34,500.
.
#501
YOU DESERVE THE BEST and lh~ one offers you
qualrty construction, excellent neighborhood in a
convenient localion. A handsome (looks brand
new) 3 bedroom ranch which indudes a large liv·
ing room, formal din ing big krtchen wrth lots of
cabinets and buill-ins. Handy ul~dy area and 2
full baths. You'lllovelhedecoralingand I he open ness of the floor plan. On Debby Driveand priced
to sell quickly by an owner that's moving oul of
~ar~

Hl2

RIVER VIEW- Watch the boats from lhe deck ol
lhis older 2 story home. New roof, new krtchen, 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths. Family room and basement. Quiet communrty w~h great neiahbors. This
home and view can be yours for onfy $34.900.
•'
•702
LISTING ON IJGIANDE - Very nice and well
kept 3 bedroom home in pleasant neighborhood.
Will make an mellen! buy !Of someone. Be the
firsllo see this charming home which has a living
room, nice eat-in krtchen, cathedral ceilin~ and
more. Priced at $45,900.
1212
QUALITY FARM HOUSE ON 16 ACRES- Abeautiful setting along Raccoon Creek highlights this
property in Perry township. House indudes 3
bedrooms, larae bath, living room and huge
kitchen. Vinyl siding and new roof have been
added recently. 24x32 oulbuiding included also.
Lots of polenlial il you're looking for a small farm.
More land possibly' available. Southweslern
schools.
1245
CHARMING VICfORIAN IN RUTLAND -There's
a liHie WOfk thai needs lobe done, but this lovely
I II story home has plenty of potential. W~h ap·
pro•. 3.5 acres of land, there's plenly of room for
garden, 4-H animals or recreation. Turn of the
century home includes 3 bedrooms. living room.
dinina room and foyer. Large screened in porch
for warm weather eniovmenl. Some of the maior
remodeling lems have already been completed.
l!eautllul O.k woodwork. Best of all is lhe$24,900
asking price.
1234

LIST WITH GALLIA -COUNTY'S LEADER

Wiseman Real Estate
'

(614) 446-3644

E. M. Wise~~~an, .Broker

mATE IS BIG BUSIIESS....CALLAN
REAlTY SAlESPERSOII.

David Wleeman, 448-9666
B.J. Helrlton, 441-4240

Tom Rueaell, 448-2676

Loretta McDade, 441-n29
Chris Ellceuor, 448-3121

�Ohio Lottery

December 10, 1989

Ohio-Point Pleuent. W. Ve.

..........

Pick 3

Shop early,
shop locally ·

ONE· YEAR HONOREES- Bob Evans Farms,
Inc., employees recelvlaa oae-:year service
awards duma tbe linn's Dec. 2 Cbrllltmu party
were, left to rlaht, Mike Bryant, tranaporlatlon

dlvlllloa; Terry Woan, Ga!Upolll plant; Jtodne:r ·
Moraan and Gre1 Grimm, Bidwell plant. 'nle .
awards were presented by RobertS. Wood, rlcht.'

...,. WALKING UNrl' Olrlaeo.&amp; Brolnlle Troop 1415
e1 o.r1p ••· was lWIHlll the
._. • .,..., Uall Ia tbe

I

!q Dee. I CbriJtmu
. . . . . 'l1le JII'I*P Ia . . . .

Preliminary
deer results
are released
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Qe.
partmeat of Natural Resources
IODNR) reports prellmtnar:y fig.
veJ lbow that 75,789 deer were
kl1led by Ohio Hunters during the
slate!• sill-day deer gun season
Nov. 27 throueh Dec. 2.
Offtclals say this figure repres·
eats a decrease of 9,053 from last
year when hunters were permit.
1l!d to kW two deer In 11 counties .
Hunters killed 84,8422 deer
dllrlag the 1988 deer gun season
ud 64,838 during the 1987 season.
'fbls year, as In 1987, hunters
_.., permitted to k!ll only one
deer.
The 1989 deer gun results,
q.uaty by county, show Gallla
County's deer kill was up over
Jut year but Meigs County's. kill
wu tbe lowest reported over the
last three years.
Gallla's count was 1,936 for
1M; 1,884 for 1988; and 1,679.
Couaty's lUll was 1,91 Ia
3,374 In 1988 and 2,257 In
, aOC'Ordlng to Division of
Wildlife figures.
ODNR'a Division of Wlldl!fe
ftjiOi Is that 19 non·fatal deer
lhultiDa·related accidents were
i\!1)01'ted last week. The 1974 deer
gua season was the most recent
Ia whlcb no fatal deer hunting·
related accidents were recorded.
Lut year, there were 22 deer
buaUng related accidents, In·
eluding two fatalities.
Preliminary figures show. the
1011 counties In which deer were
cbecked and tagged last week
were: Musklngum 2,748; Tuscar·
awaa, 2, 661: Guernsey, ~.654;
COsboclon, 2.582: Washington,
1,425: Jefferson, 2.268: Athens, '
2,242; Harrison, 2,121; Noble,
2,014 and Ucklng, 2,000.
WIJdllfe offlcal say this year's
results were lower compared to
lut year because the two-deer
lbnlt waa then In effect for
counties where the deer popula·
tiOa was above desired levels.
. "Comparing this year's
IIIIJIIbers to 1987, when one deer
IJmlt was In effect, there was a
l'141'ked Increase. This compara·
ble IIICI'ease Is due to a contlnu·
ally expanding deer herd In other
areas of the state and a tncreas·
· liiC number of deer hunters,"
aald Division of Wildlife Chief
Clayton H. Lakes.
'nil! deer longbow and cross·
bow season, which was sus·
pt!IICied d~rlng deer gun season,
remalna open statewide for deer
o1 either sex through Jan. 31,
1990. The .statewide primitive,
weapons season wm be held Jan .
4·6, 1990. Hunters may k11l only
del!r per license per year, which
ntends annually from Sept. 1
tbroueh Aug. 31.

Food Town
workers voting
MAUMEE, Ohio CUPI)
Members of the United Food and
Commercial Workers Local 954
bepi1 voting last week In three
nortlnreatern Ohio clUes on a
piop ared contract with Seaway
Fopd Town Inc.
Tile union and the suburban
Toledo grocery chain reached a
telrtattve agreement last week
and lcbeduled voting for Ia at
week In Toledo, F1ndlay and
Saadulily.
About 2,000 workers are covered under the proposed

coatract.
A pl'II!IOAI waa rejected last
nwalll, and Local W President
Gelll Kolllmall said Food Town
... made It clear that this was
die
Onal offer.

company'•

..

f
~----

SLEEP
SOFA
FOAM MAITIESS
PLAID
FULl SIIE
NOT 1449.95

IASSm OAI FIIISH

DOOR DRESSER, WIIG
MIRROR, 7 DWR. CHEST
ON CHEST, NIGHT
TABLE, POSTER QUEEN
CANOPY BED
NOT S3999.95

.S197 S1997
SWIVEL ROCKER
RECLINERS
RST, •owN
OIIBGE

110T S399.95

$·1 97
FLEXSTEEL

SOFA
LOVESEAT

MAIYE VILVD
NOT $2399.95

ENGLAND

2 PC.
SECTIONAL
BBGE WITH INCLINERS
NOT '1799.95

S797
DRESSER, HUTCH, MIRROR
IIG. 17H.95

S397

RIVERSIDE CORNER '

ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER
CHEBY FINISH
NOT S599.95

S297
IASSm

SOFA &amp;
LOVESEAT
WIITE UCIGIOIIID
MAm &amp; IUC. GIIIN &amp; RUE

ROWm
NOT $1499.95

S697

S29

FLEISTEEL

GROUP

BEIGE, BROWN, BlUE
NOT S299.95

$497

S147

.IGE, YRLOW
...,, 1219.95

BUY ONE
GET MATCHING ONE

S87

FREE

SAVE AT LEAl

50°/oo,,

~--------~~~-------.----------~,
U5Sm IIG CHEIIY
ROUND DINEnE
AU ITEMS SUBJECT TO
PRIOR SALE. MANY ONE
OF A KIND ITEMS. FIRST
COME, FIRST SERVED.

vavn
BENCHCRAFT SOFA

CHEST, MIRROR DOOR

4 IIOWN VINYL sw1va CHAIRs

NOT 1899.95

NOT $499.95

$497

$247

PINE HUTCH

CIIAiliAM COIMY COUNIIY OM

NOT 1799.95

NOT 1599.95

NOT 1199.95

$

S29

COINER HUTCH

40"

$447

ENGLAND

SLEEP SOFA

INNERSPRING MAmESS
BEIGE _
NOT 5899.95

$44·7
NAME IIANDS
TREMENDOUS SAVINGS

REXSTDL

NOT S499.95

JIOT 11~99.95

$249

$157

$547

ENGLAND

IIVEIS.E OAK FINISH

llSSm UTE PINE

. SECTIONAL

SOFA, LOVESEAT

10 .01 12 GUN

·J-COVEIS
NOT S1199.95 ·

S597

GUN CABINETS

RECLINERS

SIDEBOARD
TABLE, 1 LEAF
1 ARM, 5 SIDE CHAIRS

NOI S1199.U

NOI S2999.95

A Pomeroy man was reported
in serious condition In a Colum·
bus hospital alter being injured
by a tractor-trailer Sunday at
4:25 on U.S. 33, just north of
Pomeroy. according to the
GalUa·Melgs Post of the State
· Highway Patrol.
Michael A. Celli, 33, of 1634
Lincoln Heights, was ttanferred
to Ohio State University Hospital
from Veterans Memorial Hospl·

FIND WEA'l'REK B&lt;\LL()ON - Glenn Dou·
glas, right, and his grandson, .Jonathan Douglas,
recently found a weather balloon at tbe Reedsville

Fellowship Church of tbe Nazarene. The unll
came complete wltb a radio traasmltler device,
strlnJ, parachute, and large rubber-like balloon.

R~edsville

grandfather, grandson
find weather balloon near church
By JULm E. DJUON
like balloon.
SenUnel News Staff
Look! Up in the sky!
The name on the boil read
Il 's ·all!rd,lt'saplane-or-!s "'Radiosonde" and stated that
it a weather balloon?
·
the device was used to measure
Glenn Douglas and his grand· the atmosphere's temperature,
son, Jonathan Douglas, found out pressure. humidity, and winds at
that 11 was just that. A weather various heights. A .no lice on the
balloon.
small rectangular box stated
A coUple of weeks ago Douglas that the device could reach a
was leaving the Reedsville Fe I· height or 17 miles.
The unit also came complete
lowshlp Church of Nazarene
when he noticed an odd looking with Instructions ori what to do II
device with a box, a string, a an Individual found the device.
parachute, and a_;;~:,;r~u~b~be;!r::.·....!!2.2!~!L~~

calls and will send the small
radio transmitter device, Inside
the box. back to VIZ Manufactur·
' lng In Ph111delph1a, Pa .
Douglas' grandson. a third
grader at Riverview Elementary
took the weather balloon and all
of !Is apparatus to the school so
that the students could a ·rtrst
hand look at the device, and the
l!fth grade class went one step
further and did reports on It.
So, keep your eyes open folks.
You never know what you might
find.

CORNER TABLE
2-LOVESET t«&lt;NRS
ACnON VILYO COVEl
ILIE
NOT SJ999.95

$599 S1397 S997.

90 DAYS
SAME AS CASH
LONGER CREDIT TE,.MS AVAILABLE

Fill DELIVERY
CHRISTMAS LAY-A-WAY
.J

SUNDYS 12 110011 10 5 P.M.
MONDAY IIIII FIIDAY I Ul. 10 I P.M.
SA'IIIIAY I Ul. 10 5 P.M.

142

Awe.

OROUNDBRE.U:ING CEREMONID GroUDd waa br·allen Sunda.J tor llle aew ll:ri'8CIIIe
Churclr ol tbe ~- to be biiUt a?lll' 8)'racu1e
on 8eate Route JU, The proper1y wu pa1'Chal8d Ia
ltlll•
Olea McMIIIall expects tile claucb
to b~ eompleted Ia Sprtna UIO. Ella QuDien,

Phone 446-1405
GaiHpolis

..,_.Be\'.

cen•.
• • the im·=~~==~
,...,.., tire
tile lllillat
plow •
1o -breu
membera particlpa&amp;llaa were,
lo rla:,t,

Ellad- wat-. Raclrel (!Ia) Caadllf, Tbelma
Cundlft, Larry ~hew, Grea Cuad?ll, llle Rev. Mr .
McMII., BliP Rller, and Marilla Blur.
PltoU ......, ............... ''·

'

---

...!.----...-·---·-- - .. -

----I

re-eiectlon In 1986 by 600,000
votes while Frank Celebrezze
was defeated.
Celebrezze made headl1nes a
week ago when he said that
despite his personal oppos111on to
abortion. he would support the
right or women to choose abor·
t!on as long as the fetus could not
live outside the womb. He said he
also favors tax-supported Medl·
catd abortions 'tor women who
could not otheerwlse afford
them.
The only announced Republl·

can candidates for governor,
George Volnovlch and Robert
Taft IL are pro·llfe suporteres.
Celebrezze and his wife.
Louisa , have three sons. Anthony
III, David and Charles, and two
daughters, Catherine and Marla.
Ce!ebrezze will take his cam·
pa!go to Cincinnati. Columbus,
Canton and Youngstown Tuesday; Lorain. Akron , Lima and
Dayton Wednesday: Portsmouth, Steubenville, Mansfield
and Toledo Thursday, and to
Springfield Friday.

tal after a 1979 Kenworth tractor·
traller driven by Ronald R. •
Brammer, 53. of FrankUn Fur··
nace, backed up over a fallen
Ceill.
Cell! was admitted to OSU
Hospital's Intensive care unit lor
treatment or fractures to his legs,
cuts and bruises.
Brammer was heading south
toward Pomeroy when he saw
Celli. who . was standing In the

road, trying to stop tralflc.
Brammer stopped. backed up
and then tried to drive to Celli's
left. Then Cell! laid down In the
road and Brammer drove over
Cell!.
In addition to the patrol, the
Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment and the Pomeroy Pollee
Department were on the scene.
Brammer was not cited by the
patrol.

Pomeroy police probe ·three
"lltishaps";·~ two. -·~ are treated

SWIVEL TOP, SLIDE-OUT
TRAY, 3 FINISHES
NOT S$49.95

S222

2 Secliona. 12 Pagta 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Ntwaptper

Pomeroy man hit by semi is
reported in serious condition

TV-VCR STANDS .

6 IEIGE v•n CHAIRS
NOI 1319.95

VELVET CHA.

IIG IIAN'S

DINEnE

challenge Celebrezze In the De- and Is a captain In the U.S. Naval
mocratic primary now that the Reserve .
attorney general has become a ·
Celebrezze served four years
pro-choice advocate on the a bor· In the state Senate and then upset
t!on Issue. Others belleve Fergu· veteran RepubUcan Secretary of
son could move In as a pro-life State Ted Brown In 1978. He was
candidate.
elected attorney general by
Celebrezze Is the son of An· 800,000 votes In 1982.
thony Celebrezze, a former
Celebrezze' s political stock
mayor of Cleveland who served was questioned when his cousin,
In President Kennedy's Cabinet Frank, then chief justice of the
and Is currently a federal judge Ohio Supreme Court, received
In Cincinnati.
adverse publ!clty about his ad·
The younger Celebrezze gradu· ministration of the court.
ated from the U.S. Naval
But Anthony Celebrezze won
Academy, obtained a master's
degree from George Washington
University and a law degree
from Cleveland State University,

lASSEn

IIVEISIDE
CHATHAM COUNTY
SPRING AIR
llSSm
RESTOIIC
ILACKSMITH SHOP
IMPACT

EJIGUND ILUE AmOII

For the last two years, Celebrezze has been regarded as the
strongest choiCe of the Demo·
crats to succeed Gov . Richard
Celeste, who cannot seek re·
election next .year. PoUs have
shown him to be the frontrunner
for the May primary .
Celebrezze is the first' Democrat to officially announce for
governor. His only potential
challengers are state Auditor
Thomas Ferguson and Cleveland
attorney Joel Hyatt, founder of
Hyatt Legal Services. Both are
expected to announce their In ten·
lions soon.
Some political Insiders are
speculating that no one may

SWIVEL
ROCKERS

LUMBAR SUPPORT
6 COLORS
NOT S999.95

Low tolllald Ia mid . 2h.
Cbance of aaow 10 percent.
Tuesday, btch . In mid 2ts.
Chance of snow 10 percent.

'

CLEVELAND (UPl) - State
Atio~qey Genenil Anthony Cele·
brezze Jr. will officially an·
no~nce Monday evening that he
Is seeking the ~mocral!c nom!·
nation lor governor hl1990 - his
lh\J'&lt;l tr:Y for a different statewtd.e
oft!ce 1!1 12 y~ars. ·
The Cleveland native· s an·
nourtcemimt, 'which has been
anticipated lor months, Is scheduled for 5 p.m. at the Cleveland
Centre. It will kick orr a weeklong
string of appearances In 14c1tles.
Celebrezze, 48, has been attor·
ney general ·stnce 1983. Before
that, he served foul' years as
secretary of state and was a state
senator In the 1970s.
'.

VAC

S497

VINYL IECUNEI .

LAMPS

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, December 11. 1989

WET &amp; DRY

NOT '999.95

WALL HUGGER
RECLINER

,o

HOOVER

PICKS UP WATEIAS
WELL AS DUST

RESTONIC oR SPRING. AIR

SOFA, LOVESEAT,
CHAIR

$119·7

HUTCH

MATTRESS &amp; BOX SPRING SETS
MAnRESS &amp; FOUNDATON SITS

ENGLAND

NOT 52399.95

CHATHAM COUNTY
COUNTIY OAK
43" OAI FINISH

Empire Furniture is
Giving You the Chance ·
to Get January Clearane
Prices in DeceMber.
Now is the Time to Buy
at January Clear-•
Prices. Empire Has
lt4room, Dining loom
and Living looin Suites,
Dinettes, Recliners, a.
. Stooh, Waterbtds,
Mattress &amp; Foundations,
YCI's, TV's, Callinets, .
Daybeds, Sleepers.
Buy Now with
Days
S....as Cash.
FrH hlivtry on
ChristMas Layaway.
Sale Over D•-ber
17th, 1919.
.,,

DAH P!NI

51197
BEIGS PIINT, OAK TIIM

,- •' A CE SALE
BER

Pick 4
3619
Super Lotto
7-16-23-39-&lt;W-42

Celebrezze to announce his candidacy tonight
'

. Sat

lllll'e • ... ,_,mueh wlilllll!
.-:&amp; Pn da1, Mar:y NewIOIIIie(Jeft) ud Lena Elliott
(rfP*). Tlam Sea&amp;lael pholo
., Dldl '111omaa.

Vol.40. No.160
Copyrighted 1889

183

Three acCidents were Invest!·
gated over the weekend by
Pomeroy Pollee.
At 10: 18 p.m. an accident
oCcurred on the Excelsior Salt
Works parking toi. Joseph Mar:
cinko, Reedsville, driving a
pickup truck backed Into the
parked vehicle of Roderick Fox
ox Vincent.
According to the report, there
was light damage to the pas·
.

senger rear side of the,Fox truck
and Ught damage to the left rear
bumper of the Marcinko vehicle.
There was no Injuries nor cit·
allons In the Incident.
At 3:21p.m. Saturday on East
Main ,St. Pomeroy poUce r~·
sponded to an accident at the
Intersection of Kroger parking
Ioi and East Main St. According
to the report, Ola St. Clair,
Pomeroy, pulled from the lot Into

. the path of a car dr(ven by Ellis
Myers, Langsville. '
The St. Clair vehicle struck the
passenger side of the Myers car.
causing moderate damage·.
There was heavy damage to the
St . Clair vehicle.
St. Clair was cited for failure to
yield the right or way ·
The third accident occurred at
11 p.m . Saturday night with two
being transporte~ by the Pome·
roy unit of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service to
1:'1
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where they were treated and
released.
.
Pollee reported that Rebecca
The official purpose of the Sturm of Ravenswood was at ·
censuseachdecadetstoreappor· tempting to turn .into the upper
tlon congressslonal districts. parking lot In Pomeroy from
Ohio Is expected to Jose two of its East Main Street when Jonathan
21 congressional seats next year M111er, Pomer oy, passed on the
because of the population de- left and struck lhe r_e ar of the
cline, down from a high of 23 Sturm vehicle.
seats during the 1960s.
M1Jler and his passenger, Jill
•
Gentry, Ravenswood, was taken
Population counting In Ohio to the hospital by the EMS for
w111 be done by mailing question· treatment or minor Injuries.
nalres to each home. Aprll 1 is
The Sturm vehicle received
Census Day , the day by which all moderate damage to the rear
homes should have received and whlle the M1Jler car was heavily
returned questionnaires .
damaged on the passenger side.
M111er was charged with r eck·
People In rural areas, as well Jess operation, passing on a
as homes that don 't return double yellow line, having an
ques tlonnalres. can expect visits open container in lhe vehlcle . and
failure to conlrol.
from census counters.

Ohio population eXJ'VIICted to
• htly m
. '90 c ensus
f aII. onIy sI•g
COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI) The Census Bureau projects Qhlo

w!U lose less than one-tenth of 1
percent of its population In the
1990census, but the statewlll still
suffer badly In congressional
reapportionment.
The state's population Is expected to drop to 10,791,000 from
10,798,000 In 1980.

Environmentalists
meet with EPA
regional director
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -A
state environmentalist said Sunday a group of 15 acttvltls ts met
Informally with an Envlronmen·
tal Protection Agency director
for the first time In eight years.
VIctoria Fleming of Citizens
Against Pollution said the group
conducted a brainstorming ses·
slon in Columbus Saturday with
Region 5 Director Vic Adamkus
to voice concerns regarding
hazardous waste tnclneratton,m
air pollution and deep Injection
wells.
Adamkus has a six-state terri·
tory that covers the Great Lakes
region.
"We reiterated our concerns,
that Ohio Is the fifth worststateln
terms of air qual!jy In the United
States, " Fleming said.
The environmentalist also dis·
cussed the placement of tnclnera·
tors In Ohio.
Fleming said Incineration ·
technology Is not far enough
advanced to destroy heavy metals contained In toxic wastes. As
a result, she said, those poUutants become airborne and are
recycled Into the environment.
Fleming said a positive step
from the meeting was the pledge
by Adamkus to conilnue meeting
on ·a frequent baals. She said she
hoped another meeting could be
accomplished within six months.

_Local news briefs--..
Local firm auxrrded training grant
Rep. Mary Abel and Sen. Jan Michael Long announced toda y
the awarding of $446 to King Hardware In Middleport through
the Ohio Industrial Training Program. The grant willenable the
company to train sill employees In the are as or inventory
control, point of sale, and communication.
Long said that he Is extremely pleased that King Hardware Is
receiving this grant, stating that ,this Is another ste p In the
ever-changing business. Abel said she Is pleased that stal e
government Is able to act as a financial partner ln wel!-deslgned
projects that help create jobS and ~t!mulate economic
development.
. Administered by th,e Ohio Department or Development In
conjunction with the Ohio Department or Education, the
program provides technical and financial assistance toeUglble
companies when employee training Is required.
.
The program offers worker training assistance to companies
across Ohio that are Interested In modernizing or plan to
Implement state· of-the-art _tech~logtes .

EMS has 12 weekend calls
Six calls for assts tance were answered on Saturday and six
calls on Sunday by un!ls of the Meigs County Emer gency
Medical Services.
Pomeray at 7:07a.m. Saturday was called to Spring Ave. lor
Audrey Arnold who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 10: 52 a .m ., Tuppers Plains transportl!d Glenda LaFebre to
Continued on page 5

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