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                  <text>Along the River

Inside

Helping ht111ds
at eh,istmtlS

$1

College

Hey, Hey!

B-ban

They're still

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the Monkees

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • December 7, 1997

Vol. 32, No. 43

ESC wiris ·incentive funding
ISy KEY-IN KELLY
'nmee-S.ntlnal Stall
RIO GRANDE- When the educational service centers for Gallia and Vinton counties merged last summer,
the new organization was told innovative programming
would be a major factor in its receiving' state assistance.
: Through two proposals - a partnership with area
,educational institutions, and training for teachers and
:administrators - the Gallia-Vinton ESC has won
·$120,000 in incentive funding and is working on finding
'money for other offerings to assist area school systems.
ESCs, formerly known ·as county boards of education, contract with local school districts to offer such
wograms as psychological services, and speech, hearing
and therapy.
· · But the merger of stand-alone county ESCs, mandated by 1996legislation, has given a new dimension to the

organization's mission . .
Dr. Ann Grooms, acting superintendent of the Gallia·
Vinton ESC, said the emphasis on offering more unique
kinds of services is in line with the changing nature of
the education business.
"We have been moving toward offering services closer to the greatest need in the local area," she explained.
"Any monies we get we want directed at local schools."
Proposals that Grooms and ESC Governing Board
President Maxine Wells presented to Dr. James Van
Keuren, the state's assistant superintendent for finance,
were considered different enough to win the funding,
Grooms said.
The proposals also won support from state Board of
Education President Jennifer Sheets wben Wells outlined them and the ESC's goals to her last week.
"She was excited about what we were doing and felt

we were the ones on the cutting edge,"said Grooms.
The first concept is a collaboration not only with local
schools, but with organizations like the Guiding Hand
School, Buckeye Hills Career Center - where the ESC
is currently housed- and the University of Rio Grande.
A committee ~f representatives from those institutions has.formed and is already tackling ways the ESC
can assist with improved educational performance.
"We do not propose the coronation of a local educational czar or the creation of another fat bureaucracy,
a commitment to working together," according to
partnership's goals statement.
·
The other proposal is the "Just in Time"
education/trail\ing program that classroom educators
and a.dministrators can turn to in finding
problem solving, or to obtain additional
Continued on page A2

Jack Volgares
convicted in
·s~epdaughter's::
Ironton murder:

·News Watch
Patrol asks drivers
Join In 'Ughts
of Ufe' Illumination

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Be·s t Wishes To
Our
Meigs County
Winter Sports Programs
.

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• Meigs Marauders
' Eastern Eagles
• Southern Tornadoes

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· GALLIPOLIS - • The State
Highway Patrol is asking
motorists to join it in illuminating
their headlights while they drive
during the day and night 9f Dec.
19 in a demonstration of willingness to repo11 drunk drivers.
The observance, "Lights of
·~Life," is a symbolic remembrance
of those killed or injured in alco'hol-related accidents, as well as a
reminder of law enforcement's
determination to rid the highways
of impaired drivers.
'rnSopers will be out in force
throughout the Christmas holiday
to deter dangerous and impaired
driving. Col. Kenneth B. Mar·
shall, the patrol superintendent,
said that although only two people died over the 1996 Christmas
holiday, any death toll is too
high.
"Both fatal crashes involved
alcohol, and neither of the people
killed were wearing safety belts,"
Marshall said. "Had there been
no violations of traffic laws in
these cases, both tragedies might
'not have occurred."
_ Lt. Wayne E. McGlone, com; "t11ander of the patrol's Gallia: :Meigs Post, noted that traffic vol• umes increase over most holi: .days beta use many people travel
: to celebrate with family and
- 'friends.
: • "The higher number of vehi. des on the roads. create special
:concerns
for
motorists," .
· McGlone said. "But by observ. ing all traffic laws, driving defen: -sively and buckling your safety
:belt, you will greatly reduce the
chance of suffering a holiday
: tragedy."

Gdod Morning
Today's ~=--Jiattbw
18 Sections. 212 Pages
Calendars
Classitleds
Comics
Editorials
Nong the River
Obituaries
Soorts

C4&amp;6

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0 1997 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Rely On Us For
Compl te Cov rage Of Your
Favorite ·sport and Team

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THE DAILY SENTINEL
I

.
,
n ng, ec ng eupe 1
ant altha Gallla-V!nton Educlllonal Service Center·
ulllnld plana for suletlng area achoola during Ia
Hk'a mHtlng or the ESC Govamlng Board. Uall
ng are Board Preeldent Maxine Walla, left, end 1i
urer Dabble Rtlllltf.

IIWNTON (AP)- Jack Volgares said his stepdaughter died accidentally after he pushed her in anger, but a
jury decided that he mean to kill her, convicting him of
murder.
·
Volgares, 42, was found
guilty Friday by a
Lawrence
Com-

,_,::!1(

CHILDREN GATHERED elong Second Avanu, to get 1
glance at St1nta Clau1 who w• the lilt to !lOIII8 through
d_urlng the annl!ll Christmas parade held In downtown GalBy JENNIFER RICHTER
Tlmas-Senllnel Stall
GALLIPOLIS - Hundreds braved the 20 degree temperatures to gather along Second Avenue in downtown Gallipolis on
Saturday for the city's annual Christmas parade.
Parade participants included local high school bands,•ch~cr­
leader groups, twirlers, service organizations, politicians, the
city police and fire department, EMS and equestrian units. In all
over 60 groups participated in the festivities.
To end the parade, Santa Claus made a special appearance.
Children jumped up and down and shouted his name as he
worked his way down the street.
To get in the spirit of the season, niany children and adulls
adorned themselves in Santa hats, red and green colors and bundled up for the chilly temperatures.
The winners for the Christmas parade categories are:
• Best Walking Unjt
• lsi Place • Ohio Valley Christian Barid
• 2nd place - Midget League Cheerleaders
. • Best Theme F!qat

• 1st Place -.Howelte Twirlers
• 2nd place - Ohio Valley Bank

Program recalls

at~ac·k

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

.

llpalle Smuday. Meny of the klde waved and chHrld
beclu• Senti came to town. Following the parada, the
elly'a relurbllhld blndetend Wll i'ldldlcatld.
• Best Baton Unit

i

• French City Twirlers
• Best Old Car

• Shrine Club
• Best OcCDrated Bjke

• Ernie
• Most Original Entry
• American Legion Float
• Best Equcstrjan·
• Paul Shaffer
Following the parade, the newly refurbished bandstand was
rededicated. Over the summer, the bandstand received a makeover. The paint from several years was stripped and then, the
stand was repainted and a new light was added. All of this work
was possible due to a grant and donations from the community.
"This bandstand is the heart and soul of the this town," said
City Commissioner Carol O' Rourke in a brief rededication
speech .
·
.
On Saturday afternoon, a tree dedication honored Manning
Wetherholt, Greg Myers, Coel Wetherholt, and Melvin Smeltzer.
· Donations of dogwood and scarlet oak trees will be planted in
the city pa~k in honor of the deceased ,

murder, three counts of
kidnapping and illegal
cultivation of marijuana.
He . could face life in
prison.
He was accused of
killing 7-year-old SC!cana
Gamble and then burylng
her body in a trash can in
the back yard.
"! believe he's where
he belongs, or going
JACK
right where he belongs," said
1nd hll attorney Mike Mear: Randy Brown, Seleana 's
en 1111en a1 the jury retuma biological father.
multiple guilty vardli:tl In Defense attorney Mike
the daath of Volgares' atep- Mearan did not call any
daughter,.Sel•n• Gamble. . defense witnesses because
he said the prosecution did not prove its case.
"Obviously, ... it's disappointing," the defense attorney said.
.
Prosecutor J.B. Collier Jr. has contended that Volgares
caused Seleana's death on June 3 ·when he shoved her.
Collier said Vo!gares yelled at her because he did not like
the way she was washing dishes and became angry when
she wet her pants.
.
'
Her body was found Sept. 7 in the family's back yard
after relatives noticed the smell.
Volgares and his wife, Mona, who also is charged in
the death, and their three other children had left town
after the death. The couple were arrested in Muskogee,
Okla.
·
Volgare's pleaded guilty Thursday' morning to child
endangerment, said Vickie Payton, chief legal assistant I
with the prosecutor's office.
Two of the five obstruction of justice counts against
him were dropped, bu! that was not related to the plea,
Payton said. She did not know why the counts were
dropped.
Mearan said Volgares pleaded guilty to the child
endangerment charge because he admits that he violated
his duty as a parent.
The plea also supports defense assertions that the
death was involuntary manslaughter, not murder, Mear·
an said.
Mrs. Volgares, 28, goes on trial Dec. 15 on a charge
of involuntary manslaughter.

on Pearl Harbor
,

with each one speaking briefly on

Tim~~~~~~~:~·~
"Remem~r I. Legionnaires remember Dec. 7, 194.1\· Dewey
hisl~i~~~~r:;:~
Joe Andreoni,
Pearl Harbor"
Horton, Frank Vaughan,
That was the message members
Gilmore painted a picture. of
.of the American Legion conveyed to chaos and deva~tation where 'the
Meig~ Middle School students dur- sounds were terrifying, the bfack
'ing an assembly Friday afternoon.
smoke and flames so thick that the
· A group of 15 uniformed legion- men couldn't see more than a few
naires were seated on the stage from feet."
where the story .of Pearl Harbor was
The attack which came as a total
told by Bob Gilmore, a past com- surprise destroyed 19 ships, killed
mander of Feeney-Bennett Post 128. 2,383 soldiers, wounded 1,842 and
· Gilmore talked about that fateful left 960 missing in action.
~orning on Dec. 7, 1941, when the
"We remember Pearl Harbor,"
'd
· t'mg to the men
s~rprise attack came.
sa1 G'I
1 more pom
. "It was a Sunday morning, about seated behind him on the stage.
8a.m., most troops were still asleep,
Several fought in World War II,
. some were at church as the first ·others in the Korean War, but as the
:Japanese planes swooped over the speaker pointed out 'we all remem··mountain tops and began droppmg ber Pearl Harbor, the attack which
:their bombs," said the speaker.
started World War II and didn't end

until Sept. 2, 1945 after four years of Russ Mozingo, Don Young, Mike
the bloodiest war in history."
Flocarri, Ron Eastman, Henry Clat·
. The speaker said that while. he worthy, Junior White, Charles Tate,
wasn't old enough to be in World Bruce Myers, Carl Searls, Roscoe
War II but was in the Korean War, he Fife, and Victor B~rr.
•remembers Pearl Harbor well."
"We remember Pearl Harbor" ,
"Television hadn't yet been · said Gilmore again, and then emphainvented, neither had computers. I sized the impottance of young peo·
remember the war effoi1S here at pic knowing and remembering the
home, the gas rationing, the sugar consequences of World War II and
and coffee rationing because there the importance of a strong national
·,
wasn•t enough 1o go aroun d..... the defense.
,
war bonds and defense stamps.
"These men were m the trenches,
"I remember the headlines and wallowed in the.mud, and fought for
lhc news reels, and worrying aboul our freedom," said Gilmore, who
my two , older brothers who were concluded his talk with an appeal to
away at war."
the students to "Remember Pearl
He introduced the legionnaires Harbor. "

. While at Melga Middle SChool Friday doing the program on PMrl Hllr·
bor, the American Legion pre..nted 11 ftaga for cleuroome In the
1chool. Accepting one here tor hla aoclal atudlea cleearoom from F~J~nk
Vaughan ol Drew Webaler Poat 39, center, end Dewey Honon ol
FAney-Bennett Poat 128, !1 Tim Curlman.

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Regional

Sunday, December 7,1997

Pomeroy • Mlck;lleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

PageA2•,n•b , ...... .,
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OHIO WeJther
SundiJ, Dec. 7
Acx:uWeathe~ forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatureS .
MICH.

Clinton.·tel_ls Pentagon to keep ..
up American presence in Haiti

Tri-County Briefs:Llbrary trustees will meet Tuesday

IMansfield 133' I•
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Flutrlss

Ice

By ROBERT BURNS

Alsocleted Press Writer
WASHINGTON - President
Clinton has given the Pentagon an
open-ended order to maintain hundreds of troops in Haiti, shoring up an
effort to keep 1he destitute n~tion
from falling back into chaos.
·
" Have I made an indefinite commitment? No," Clinlon said Friday
· when a reporter asked about Haiti .
,;But I have made a definite commitment to continue to be involved
there in ways thai I think are appropriate."
Senate Foreign Relations Chairman Jesse Helms has said maintaining a U.S. military presence in Haiti
would be "foolhardy."
Clinton's decision means U.S.
troops. who were the . first to enter
Haiti in 1994 to oust a military dictatorship and restore democracy, will

sunnr Pt. Cloudy Clotldy

Les~

snowy and chilly
set Sunday
Condl.tl"ons
Press

ESC funding

Groo::~:::=e~mpageAi

Through the partnership with
other districts, the ESC has formed a
By The Associated
professional development commitThe snowfall over Ohio should slow down on Sunday.
'tee now looking at helping teachers
· h' h
'II
seeking to renew their licenses. The
. A tg pressure wt begin to move in and that will decrease the snow committee is to consist of educators
activity, especially in the afternoon. Highs'on Sunday will range from 30 to with a broad range of experience,

"·

~~~
.
"Representation is to be from all

Sunday...Cioudy and not as cold. Highs in the mid 30s. West wind 10 10
15 mp h.
.
Sunday night ... Panial clearing. Lows in the mid 20s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the lower 40s.
Monday night...Becoming clo11dy with a chance of light snow.

educational areas," she explained.
"We want to diversify it so that anybody in special education, for example, will be able to intefact with
someone on the committee who
understands their needs."
·
SC •
The E 's .our-person staff,
which is solely directed at student
services, is also working on solulions to absenteeism in the Gallia
and Vinton loCal schools, starting
with the gathering of data to target
reasons for repeated no-shows in the
classrooms.
Grooms said it's a problem that'"
taken on additional importance willt
the expected release of school district "report cards" by the statel)ext
year.
"We ~ data-driven, and from

Scattered snow showers will hit the northeast part of the state with a few
flurries expected elsewhere.
The cold temperatures will remain into the early part of next week. On
Monday, lows will range from 15to 25 and highs from 35 to 40. Lows will
be in the 20s Tuesday and highs in the 40s..
The record high temperature on this date at the Columbus weather station was 70 in 1956. The record low was 3 in i977. Sunrise Sunday will be
'I
at 7:40a.m. Sunset wt I be at 5:06p.m.
Weather forecast:

Extended forecast:

Tuesday...Cioudy with a chance of light rain or snow mixed. Highs 35 to
40.
; Wednesday.. .cloudy with a chance of light rain. Lows 35 to 40. Highs in
me mid 40s.
Thursday ...Cioudy. A chance of snow flurries or sprinkles. Lows in the
mid 30s. Highs in the mid 40s.

be the last to leave. Canadian and
Plikistani peacekeepel} withdrew last
weekend.
. His decision underscores growing
concerns that Haiti could he headed
back to dictatorship under the very
man U.S. troops returned to power in
1994 - former President JeanBertrand Aristide.
Haiti'f government is mired in a
political battle between factions that
had united just three years ago to
restore democracy through Aristide
- who was forced into exile during
the 1991 -94 military rule of Lt. Gen.
Raoul Cedras.
Clinton stressed that the U.S.
troops are there in a sup[iort. not combat, role.
.
"The American people should
know it's not a military operation,"
he said.
In the nearly two years since the
U.S. military pulled out of the United Nations peacekeeping operation in
Haiti, it has kept a rotating group of
300 to 500 troops 'there for civil
affairs work such as building roads,
digging wells, repairing sct.ools and
providing medical assistance.

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bery tas.k force ~ttempting .to serve determining their needs, she noted.
Davenport with a felony warrant,
"If you look at how children
Snowden said. P.ope was a six-year · leam, they start talking first,"
veteran of the city's police force and Grooms said. "You have to start
- Jeter was a four-year veteran.
. )'lith a dialogue. From that, as we
"Our thoughts and prayers natu- identify Solutions, the representarally go out to the familfes and all of lives will tlike it back to their disour fellow officers that ·are out triers and implement them. We'll :00
there," Snowden said at a news con- looking at improvement over a periferencc Saturday.
od of time."
The flag at Cincinnati police headquarters flew at half-staff Saturday a&lt;
the investigation continued and officers received counseling. Callers to a
·.
,
local radio show expressed their
sympathy for the families of the ofticers and asked the community to support the police.
Other details of the shooting were
not available, including' how many
times the officers were shot and what
happened before the shooting.
Three other people believed to
have been in the apartment at the time
of the shooting fled. They were
arrested Saturday morning and questioned by police.
lt-w;JS uncertain Saturday whether
any of them would face charges for
the killings Snowden said.
' '

sse
accepts winter class registration
GALLIPOLIS - Southeastern Business College is accepting. regis-

trabon for winter quarter classes beginning Jan. 5.
S~C's scheduling allows students to attend morning, afternoon or
evemng classes, or a combin,ation of all three sessions, Admissions Director Jack Henson said. Financial aid is available to those who qualify. ·
Anyone wishing to schedule winter quarter classes must speak first to
an admissions representative. Appointments can be.made by calling 446- ·
4367 or 1-800-214-0452, or by stopping by the college during business
hours Monday through Friday.
.

Carey schedules open door sessions
GALLIPOLIS - State Rep. John A. Carey, R-Wellston,.has scheduled open door sessions for December at various ·locations in the 94tti
House District.
Carey will be at the Meigs County Courthouse on Mopday from 1-i
p.m., and at the Gallia County Courthouse from 3-4 p.m. the same day.
Carey also plans to be at the Eastern Branch Briggs-Lawrence County Public Library in Proctorville from 10:30-11 :30 a.m. Thursday. Dec.
18, and at the Markay Cultural Arts Center in Jackson the same day from
2-3 p.m.
Anyone with questions or concerns about state government is encouraged to attend, Carey said.

soum POINT -

The Procurement Outreach Center for southern
Ohio has been located at the Area Commerce Center of the Lawrence Economic Development Corporation Complex, 2700 County Road I, South
Point.
:
The center works with businesses in a 15-county area. including !,lial- ·
lia.
·
I
Interested businesses seeking free bid solicitations must first complete
a shon Procurement Co•fidential Business Profile. Bid requests from fed ·
eral agencies are then sent to businesses via (ax, e-mail, Internet or mail .
Businesses receiving bids can elect to bid on any or all solicitati~ns .
The bidding service-has no initial cost.
.
For more information, contoct Connie Freeman, the center's director,
. or Patrick Dengel, business counselor, at 1-800-408-1334.
The Internet site is http://www.zoomnet.net/-procure, and its e-mail
address is procure@zoomnet.net.
.

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: Rio Grande branch meeting s!ated .

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· AKRON (AP) - The man charged in the shooting deaths ot two brothers in Harrison County last month has been cleared as a suspect of similar
deaths of two hunters in Florida in November 1993.
·
: Florida authorities were trying to determine if Danny Jenkins, 51 , of Akron,
. had anything to do with the deaths in Clay County, Fla.
·' " It didn't pan out." Clay County Sheriff's Sgt. W.A. Gronikowski told
the Akron Beacon Journal for a story Saturday. "It's one of those things where
we get a lot of calls and we track them d9wn."
Jenkins has been charged with two counts apiece of aggravated murder
pnd aggravated robbery for the deaths of Duane Lockard, 60, and William
Lockard. 61 , both of Suffield Township in Portage County.

Bleached
505,512,550,560

GALLIPOLIS- A work session to review 1998 budget revenue and
expenditul'es has been set by the Gallipolis City Commission for 5:30p.m.
Tuesday in the Gallipalis Municipal courtroom, City Manager John
LeBlanc announced.

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Troopers ticket driver In accident
PORTI.AN!&gt; - Albert L. Curtis, 54, 39518 St.' Clair Road, Pomeroy,
was cited for failure to yield by the Gallia·Meigs Post of the St.a!e Highway Patrol following a two-car accident Friday at the intersection of Coun-··
ty Road 31 (Stiversville) and Lebanon Township Road 411 ,
.
Troopers said Curtis was westbound on Stiversville at I0:20a.m. when
he turned left onto TR 411 ~nd collided with an eastbound car driven by
Dan P. Smith, 62, VanMeter Hill Road-, Racine.
Damage was slight to both vehicles.
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..Jtnnua( Percentaee 'Rate

9.95~ .

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10.83~

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Maximum term of 481110111hs and minim\DI\ loan amount of$2,000.00 available with credit approval.
(Example: Amount financed SS,OOO.OO at 9.95% • 48
ts of$128 82
Loan prcrm·ugfee of$85.00 • 10.832% APR.)
TO CHANGE.
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MEMBER FDIC

RATE~

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1 Casual Slacks
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Minor itJjuries reported in crash
GALLIPOLIS -1\No Crown City area youths were slightly injured
· in a two-vehicle accident Friday on Eastern Avenue at the 'intersection with
· the O~io River Plaza, Gallipolis City Police reported.
·
' Beauford S. Jones, 15, 13350 Hannan Trace Road, was transported
from the scene of the 6:49 p.m. crash to Holzer Medical Center by the
· :Gallia County EMS. Charles E. Crews, 7, also of 13350 Hannan Trace
· :Ro'l(l; was taken to HMC by private vehicle, officers said. Both were lat:er treated and released, a hospital spokesperson said.
• Both were passengers in a minivan driven by Cathy L. Jones, 37, 13350
• .Hannan Trace Road, that was southbound on Eastern when she turned left
. :to enter the shopping center and collided with a northbound car driven
• by David A. White, 37, 923 State Roule 588, Gallipolis.
: · . Both vehicles were moderately damaged, and Jones was cited for fail• 'ure to yiolil.

::Gallipolis man booked into jail
: GALLIPOLIS- Booked into the Gallia County Jail at5:48 p.m. Fri: 'day by Gallipolis City Police was Douglas A. Boles, 34, 122 fourth Ave.,
• Gallipolis, on a charge of disorderly conduct, according to jail records.
:; Also cited by officers Friday was Harold W. Kemp, 34, 2171 Eastern
:·Ave .. Gallipolis, for disor~erly by intoxication, inability to care for him; :self and falsification.

Sisson named interim OSU president

Ladies
Levi's

Ohioan cleared in hunting deaths

City slates budget revie.w sess;on

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:
POMEROY - Representatives of the University of Rio Grande will
: nieet with Meigs County teachers on Wednesday, Dec. 10 at 4 p.m. at the
· Meigs County Senior Citizens Center to focus on what cour!;C or program
· needs can be addressed by a local university branch.
Dean Paul Lloyd, Dr. Greg Miller and Dr. Greg Sojka from the university will atiend the meeting.
·

'

Interest ~te

Levi's®

Jeans

•aa•. •aa•

The treasurer was authorized to

purchase membership in the Ohio
School Board Association, and to pay
for a subscription to Negotiator, an
.OSBA publicat)on.
In personnel matters. the board:

Procurement Center sets up shop

•

fix

CINCINNATI (AP) -1\No plalnclothes Cincinnati police officers
were fatally shot in an apartment
while serving a warrant about mid-·
night Friday, police said.
Officers David Pope, 35, and
jtonald Jeter, 34, were shot in the
head in the Cincinnati neighborhood
of Clifton, police Chief Michael
.Snowden said.
.
Pope died at the scene and Jeter
died Saturday morning at University
of Cincinna1i Medical Center, Snowden said. Both were wearing bulletproof vests and did not fire any shots.
It was the first fatal.shooting of a
Cincinnati police officer in ·10 years.
Snowden satd. .
.
The man pohce beheve shot the
officers, Alonzo Davenport. was
spotted runnmg from the area wtth a
gun, Snowden said. Other otl'icers
!"ho d1d not yet know about the
•hooung chased Davenport, who
[atally shot htmself.
. . Davenport was about two or three
b)ocks from the scene of the, pohcc
s~ootmgs I,when he shot htmself.
pav~nport s age and hometown were
nottmmedlately avatlable.
; Pope and Jeter were part of a rob-

. GALI:IPOLIS - City Manager John LeBlanc announced that the city
continue picking up leaves through this week, upon request, as long
as weather permits.
·

Will

;

Neecf more cfougli
this fio{itfay season?

RIO GRANDE - D. Kent Lewis,
superintendent of the Gallia-Jackson·
Vinton Joint Vocational School District since 1994, was granted a fiveyear contract when the .IVSD Board
of Education met recentl y at Buckeye
Hills Career Center.
Lewis, who resides in the Oak Hill
area, had been affiliated with the
JVSD for a number of years prior to
his appointment as acting superintendent
The board also set its meeting for
. this month for Thursday. Dec. 18 at
7:30p.m., and approved the application for and establishment of a chapter of the National Vocational-T(chnical Honor Society.
Career educati on materials donated to the dimict by the Gallia County School-to-Work Action Team were
accepted, and the board adopted a
resolution for membership in the
Ohio State E-ratc Consonium.·

Leaf pickup continues upon request

•

C.1nc1nnat1
.
• po ICemen
.
th~tdatawewilldete'!"inehowwe
1
wtll
tt," Grooms satd
killed
wbi1Pb.!$er.v.ing~arrant .. . : ~·: u:. ass;:ing Sc~:::~ ~.:
'
·
·
, ·
with its representatives first and

'T.

'

. '
Some in Congress fear Haiti, with ;
its barely. functioning gyvernment ,
and shackled economy, will erupt in ~
violence at any momen.r, putting at :
risk the small U.S. contingent there. :
Security for the U.S. troops there now ,
is provided by about 150 U.S. mili- :
tary. police. Pentagon spokesman :
Tom Shultz said.
In addition to the·U.S. troops, the :
United States has been providing up :
to 50 civilian police officers M part •
of a U.N. police training mission in :
1
•
..
Ha1t1 .
•
For months, many Haitia'l grass- :
roots organizations and a new par- •
liarnentary bloc in Haiti have called :
for the withdrawal of all foreign :
troops, including the U.S. contingent. :
Serge Gilles, leader of Haiti 's •
Socialist Party, sounded a protest Fri- :
day. He said parliament had not bee~ ;
consulted.
t
"Clinton's decision shOI!IS how l
little confidence the U,. S. !Jas in the ~
capacity of the Haitian authorities t\' lj
control the situation," Gilles said.
That's exac tly the point, in the :
view of Ernest Prceg. who .was U.S. I
ambassador to Haiti in 198i -83.
:

The authorization for the U.S.
contingent in Haiti was due to expire
Dec. 31.
•
Helms, R-N.C., afrequent critic of
Clinton's foreign policy. has strongly urged Clinton to end U.S. involvement in Haiti. In an OCt. 28 letter to
Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright, Helms said it would be
"foolhardy and unco:tscionable" to
keep U.S. troops there after the U.N.
peacekeepers left.
· "How, Madam Secretary, can we
expect this tiny U.S. unit to achieve
more than a $2 billion investment, a
massive U.S.-led inva.ion and a prolonged U.N. peacekeepiAg mission
have produced in the past three
years?" Helms wrote.
·
r::alls to Helms' office Friday
seeking comment on Clinton's decision were 0ot returned.
In his remarks to reporters, Cl inton stressed that although he did not
set a date for the U.S. troops to leave
Haiti, they would not be there permanently.
"Our presence there cannot be
indefinite, and it will not be indefinite, " l)e said.

.

. GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County.Distrlct Library Board ofTruslee.s
wtll meet at ' p.m. Tuesday at the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
Library.

•'

PA.

JVSD superintendent
gets 5-year contract

Jeans

•aa•

.· COLUMBUS (AP)- An Ohio
native will serve a.• Ohio State's interiii) president. the university
announced Friday.
· : Richard Sisson,, the university's
sc'nior vice president and provost,

will take over for outgoing president
E. Gordon Gee, who will become·
president of Brown University in
Providence, R.I., on Jan. I.
"Ohio State is strong and geuine
stronger," Sisson said, "We will, during this interim period, stay focused
nn providing an outstanding experience ror our students.n
"""-·~
· University trustees announced the
appointmcni at their meeting Friday.

MEETING SANTA - This youth from Gallia County was one
.of a large group who enJoyed a Christmas party and gifts at the
Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs Division on Friday. Max Whitlatch
of Middleport brought Santa to IHa once again this year.

Miners bring early
~h~istmas to needy
children in region

• Employed Robena Duncan as
the UROG Career Development and
Job Pl aceme nt coordi nator.
• Employed Rita Carpemer as a
cook:
• Accepted the retirement resignation of Charles A. Harper, computer-aided draft ing instructor. effecli ve February 199B.
• Approved a maternity/child-rearing request for Joanne Roberts.
• Employed the fo llowing as substitute teachers for the 1997 ·98
school year: Mary McNeal, Business
7-12; and Donald Roll ins, Social Science!\ll'olitical Science .
In the Adult Education Division.
the board:
• Approved the fo llowing parttime hourly contracts: Elaine Annstrong, School-to-Work coordinator;
Lorri Hively, ABL E; Betty Finney.
ABLE/Gateway ; Gene Lyons. First
Aid/CPR ~ and Donald Rollin s. Adult
MRJDD . .
• Employed the fo llowing substitute personnel for 1997-98: Tammy .
Kostival , Nurse Aid/LPN ; Jim'
McCormick, Auto Technology/In dus-'·
tri al Maintenance: and Kimberl y
Stout. LPN.
•

P'A~N'!"GE...
LA_M_cQ_U-AI-D_.....;;;;;;;;;,;.;;
SIC GRADUATE
WINTER QTR. 1997
ASSOCIAn DEGREE IN
EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL/LEGAL

EMPLOYERS AND STUDENTS
KNOW THE VALUE OF
QUAUTY EDUCATION
"1 w11

1

young, elnglt mother who had big dream•

but no confidence to follow

Utrough with thom. All J over wonled _.., ottond Col!ego ond hive 1 CIIMI'. Then 1
hurd about Soulhealtlm 81111- Colttgo.
"t allrtad In tba loll ol11195. lly lnotructors mode nonloyoblt lo bt there. When I
hid qu0111ono, they wore olwlyo ooger lo http. Tho cl01a otzo·wu porloct. H- omoll
enough lo hove tba lnolruclor'o complete anentlon to my nooda, but n woo lito big

raised since the.program 's inception
13 years ago, making Christmas
enough to make grelllrltndo.
brighter for an estimated 1,600 fos- ,DiniC!Miciyr taot quarter became dHIIcult ror me In tho grollllt way. The Ploctmonl
helped me oblotn a lull-lime [ob with tba GotHa County Che- ol Comrnerro.
ter children in southern Ohio. This I
Wll luggllng 1 40-hour wook WHk wiUI my ochoot · Bu~ It did nol boc:orno o
year marks the first that boys and
problem blcauu of the txtrllordl111ry http I reeltved from the entire Iliff wldt my
girls from Mason County have been
ct- ochodullng.t .... many thlnkiiO sec lor helping mlko my drumo- """·.
included in the program.
ANGELA McQUAID ·ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
.This year alone. $17.680 was
GAWA COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
raised for gifts and other Christmas
spending for children served by
departments of Human Services. The
gifts presented Friday were good
ones: stereo CD players, keyboards,
small pieces of furniture , sports
afternoon to visit with children, to ' equipment. tricycles, dolls and other · Spring Valley Plaza
. · W\nm 0u11ner
hear their requests. and to distribute items that top the Christmas lists of
Gallipolis, Oh.
Begins Jan. 5, 1998
$orne impressive early gifts.
most boys and girls.
·
1-8DQ.214-0452
The program started in 1985, and
Shopping for the program was
is planned each year by the Coal Min- done by a team of four employees,
ers' Christmas Planning Committee, who personalized the gifts for each
made up of UMWA members and child.
other SOCCO employees.
The mining company's meeting
A total of $191 ,691 has been room was decorated for the ocassion.

POINT ROCK -Santa must be ·
a coal miner.
Needy · children 'from Gallia,
Meigs, Athens, Vinton a)ld Jackson
counties, and Mason County. W.Va ..
got to celebrate Christmas with Santa Claus a little early this year, thanks
to the generosity ofthe employees of
Southern Ohio Coal Co. and members of United Mine Workers locals
1886 and 1857.
·
Santa·visited the offices of SOCCO's Meigs Division in Columbia
Township on Friday morning and

BEGIN TUINING F_OR YOUR BUSINESS CAREER. ·
CALL US TODAY! 446-4367

SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS COLLEGE

ort

Dog, kennel license availability set

POMEROY - Meigs County Au~itor Nancy Campbell said ihat dog and
kennel licenses for the coming year will be available Monday.
Dog licenses are required by law. Section 955.0i of the Ohio Revised Code
notes that every person who owns, keeps or harbors .a dog more than three
months of age shall purchase a license for that dog b.cfore the 20th day.of
January of each year. .
The cost ~f each dog license will be $4 and kennel license will be $20
per kennel. If purchased after the deadline, the penalty will be an additional $4 per d,pg and $20 per kennel.
License\ may be purchased at the Meigs County Auditor's Office, Meigs
County Courthouse .. Monday through friday from 8:30 a.n:. to 4 p.m. or by
using the blank application which has been provided in the newspaper.

NEED CASH TILL PAYDAY?

$CASH

HOURS FOR YOUR SHOPPIIG

•SAT. • 10:00 A.M. •7:00 P.M.
SUNDAY ·12:00 P.M.· 4:00P.M.

' JJVINirnoumtl

10 HASSLE, 110 CREDIT CHlllK

OHIO VALLEY CHECK
CASHING &amp; LOAN
446-2404
1·888-446-2684 .
· 216 Upper River Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio
Y. Mile South Of The Silver Bridge
CC374CL271.

Puhli l hed each Sunday. K2~ Th ml Av ~: .,
Ohio. by d1r Ohio Valk:~ Puhlishinl:l
Company/Gannw Co .. ScctlnLI ct .n~ poBIIIJI.I:
paid al Gall1pollll, Dh ill •stt.ll. linlcr.:Li u
scec'lnd class mailing mauer al Pomcmy. Ohiu,
Pos1 Office.

Gall i ~is .

Buy A Suit &amp; Get

•

CHOOSE AND CUT
YOUR owN TREE

a••••• lu•l

Pair

I.,

Ia••• Iei a ·

TueldiY through
Sundey

l ' ,.

...

.

'I'WIN OAKS • t '~I
CHRISTMAS TREE t !.• i
FARM
B a

From Holaf Medlell Centtf follow llgllll north on At. 110

ONLY

IJ Cart'ler or Motor Ro.~lt
Or¥: Wf:elr. ................................ ..,............... $1 .!.~

"

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•

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Sund11y .................................... ........ ....... SI .UIJ

9ift

FREE!

: reo subscripl i~mM by mail ~rmined in an:as

•" he~ motor carrier seN itt ia available.

Tile Sunday Ttrnet·Senlinel will nt'll bt rcspon·
t\ble for Mtvanu p3ymcn1s madt to carritn.

A$7SValue
• Excludes $199.99 Sale Suits

Open Monday
thru Saturday

P..blisltcr rneNc&amp; lhc riahl 10 adJull u 1e1 duriol&amp; 1M subM:riplion period. SubKription rale
•chanaes may be hnplemcnted by chana~lng the
llirtlioft or the ~bscnplion .

·

Iii
fm .

,. .

til 8 pm ;
.- 1
h·~et~.-&amp;A.-~ti·~li"*&amp;'~fiiHiit'*:~'AAitl
.....li:.G:MAM*-:~
.~·
'
'

-·

S~ND.O.Y

One Ycu ................................................. SbS.tltl

a nice Christmas

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

• 1111 til O.rk

i..

.

SUBSCRimON RATES

1

Levi's

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Newspaper AuociatiOft.

••

OPEN

• , Al .~

"n~btr. Th e l\l.loelalccl Pkss, and 1he Oh1u

·Shirt, tie &amp; belt

WWtt. Swldl ....
Up" 16ft.

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a FREE

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on proper safety and
good health habits.
If you have questions
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concernmg
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child's healt_h, call the

Dlill)' lads. . .,
M.O.ILSUISCRIPTIONS
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13 Wec:k1.................................................$27.30
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the week • 6 am unti/2 am

�Commenta
junb~ ~imtt~ Jeadbttl
'E.stiiMi.slid in 1..966

-

P~ge~

Sunday, December 7,

Burton's buck$ come from unsavory

By Jilek Andlrton
''appear·
paign finance hearings, Bunon was mullahs who control Iran's governancc" or a
IIIICI .... fllolllr
to~ lo repay some of the money ment, lhe Mujahedeen has amassed
825 Third Awnue, Gllllpolla, Ohio
WASHINGTON - Rep. Dan conflict.
given to him by members of a Sikh a 30.000-man Briny thai sils, wait&amp;14-446-2342 • FIX: 441 3008
Burton, R-lnd.,lhe eccenaic, affable
Th(lugh
temple. The money amounted to less ing. juSt inside Iraqi aerritol)' along
111 Court StrMt. Pomeroy, Ohio
chainnan of the House Government Bunon's
than $1.000, but left many skeptics the Iranian border.
114:et2-215S • FIX: 892·2157
Reform and Oversight Committee, j!)b is to
wondering if this is the.righl man to
As the largest and most organized
wasled no time n:sponding to Janet ~sent
lead Roun4 2 of lhe campaign opposition group 10 Iran's governReno •s decision to absolve her the good
finance hearings.
ment, ahe Mujahedecn may repreWhite House patrons of wrongdoing people of
Buiton's foreign intrigue docsn 'l sent the best hope for ousting the
in the campaign finance matter.
Indiana's
stop !here. Earlier this year it was religious radicals who' ve ruled that
"I am going to have her and (FBI Sixth Cori- Molllr • Ancllnon alleged by lobbyist Mark Siegel, a counary since 1979. Unfortunately,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Din:ctor) Louie F~h --. who sup- gressional
former Democratic strategist, thai the Mujahedeen themselve~ might
ROBERT L WINGETT
ports an independent counsel •• District, his interests range far . Burton threatened retaliation against nol be a much beuer alternative.
Publisher
befon: my committee next Tues- beyond the border of the Hoosier lhe lobbyist's clients unless Siegel
While Mujahedeen allies in the
day," Burton said after Reno ren- stare. From his post a1 the Interna- helped raise a! least $5,000 for the United States have been greasing
dered her decision on Tuesday, Dec. tional Relalions Committee, Burton congressman's campaign. Among politicians, their compatriots in Iraq
Hoblit Wlleon Jr.
z. "And, if !hey decline, I'm pre- has become a leading advocate for Siegel's many clients is the govern- have become chummy wilh none
Ex8cutMI Edlklr
pared to issue a subpoena .. .''
foreign sroups with im ax to grind in ment of Pakistan -- another far-ofT · other than Saddam Hussein. NCR
It was vintage Bunon: direct, par- the capital.
counll)' lhat Burton has laken a great representatives we spoke with insisl
tisan -- leaving no doubt as 10 where
Every year or so, for example, interest in. The Justice Department that the Mujahedecn enjoys com·
he stands on the issue of alleged Burton takes to the noor of the is still investigating that matter.
plete independence from the murDemocratic criminality' during the House to deliver an impassioned
' But Burton's most shameless derous Iraqi dictator.
1996 elections. Though his commit- speech calling for a separale home- cash crusade may be his ardent supNevertheless, the Mujahedeen's
tee is supposed 10 play abe indepen- land for Sikh and Kashmiri sepa- port of the People's Mujahedeen of forces do enjoy the rent-free use of
dent arbiter in this delicate mauer, ratists in nonhero India. A good Iran.
232 square miles of Iraqi lerritory as
Bunon's mind has been made up for cause, perhaps. But some suspect
As we reported lasl month, Bur- their base of operations, thus providmonths: Janet Reno shoold appoint thai Burton's fervor may he partly ton is among a small coterie of con- ing Saddam with a comfortable milan independent counsel because the inspired by the gobs of cash thai gressmen who've been amply sup- itary buffer againsl his arch-enemios
"appearance" of a connie! of inler- grateful Sikh- and Kashmiri-Ameri- ported by the Mujahedeen's allies in in Iran. And the Iraqi mililary came
By WALTER R. MEARS
est
is enough 10 warran1 one.
cans donate to his campaigns each the United States -- led by the to the Mujahedeen's rescue lasl
AP Special Corrnpondent
Burton, of course, is absolutely and every year.
National Council of Resistance month with anti-aircraft weapons to
WASHINGTON - Auomey General Janet Reno said . long ago that
Early last spring, just as he was (NCR). According to campaign doc- defend their c~mps from Iranian
she'd be damned if she did and damned if she didn't She didn'l and she was, right. As it turns oul, he is in a beuer
by Republicans - ·who used 10 he her fans. and who once blocked lhe spe- position than most 10 judge lhe getting ready to launch into the cam- umenL&lt;, Burton has taken in $1 O,OOJ) warplanes.
A ·Burton spokesman, when
cial prosecu1or law she decided not to invoke againSI President Clinaon and ,------~--------:-----:--:------------,from NCR-allied
individuals
· in a.&lt; ked ahou1 the congressman's supVice Presidenl AI Gore.
recent
years.
A port for the Mujahcdccn, would say
The lines were predic1able.
.
.
small
Ioken
comonly that. "In a perfect world, we
She said no. thai there weren'l grounds in the law to put an independent
pared
with
the
wouldn't support a group like lhe
counsel on the case of fund-raising telephone calls by Clinton and Gore.
$132,000 raked in NCR."
They said she was catering to her boss, and called il a connie! of inlerest.
by Sen . Robert Torh shouldn't come as a surpdse
Rep. Henry Hyde, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said the
ricelli.
D-N.J.,
but
that
Saddant Hussein's muscle-ne•·
case "fuels a crisis of confidence," circling the wagons around the president
curious
nonethcing
exercise with U.N. weapons
· "I know she has a reputation of independence but she has a reputation, at
less.
·,
inspeclors lasl monlh was met wilh p
least in my mind, for inconsistency," Hyde, R-111., said.
Unfortunately for deafening sihince from Burton, who
Neither Republicans nor Democrats have been models of consislency in
Burton. the Muja- otherwise has so much 10 say aboua
all this , not in their campaign money conduct, and not in the way they've
TIIAT
hedeen has also foreign affairs.
dealt with lhe law or the results of independenl counsel cases over the past
AIRMS
In a perfecl world, Burton prob~­
attracted the allenawo decades.
tion .of the U.S. bly wouldn't be charged with leadReno has used the independent counsel law to havt outside prosecuaors
Stale Depal'tme)lt, ing an important invcsligation into
in six cases involving administration officials. more than any attorney genwhich since 1994 the fund-raising integrity of the
eral before her. By her strict - her critics say too narrow - interpretation,
has lisled the group president and his allies.
an independent counsel is not warranted by whal Justice Department inveson its annual list of
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
tigators learned about the telephone calls Clinton and Gore made for Demoterrorist
organi1.aare
writers for United Feature
cralic dollars for their 1996 campaign.
ti'ons.
Long1ime
Syndicate,
Inc.
Ironically, her earlier independent counsel requests had irked Democrats,
enemies of the
prompting signals after the 1996 election that the White House wouldn't
mind seein~ her ~o. She was not a Clinton insider 10 begin with. and she
came 10 lhe Cabinet as his third choice after two prior nominee~ foundered.
: When the anonymous sniping began, there already was controversy over
Ilemocratic fund-raising tactics. Reno had a reputation for independence,
,..--.., time."
In our e1hical behavior is still influ- a grip on Americans and the way we.
By ROBERT WEEDY
!nd Republicans would have erupted had she been replaced.
In
the
order
of
things,
the
physi·
Commons
enced by our aesthetic preferences. think?
- Soon afterward, though, the GOP pressure began for her to seek an outHave we noa succumbed to a
debate Win- The 'hero image', who I want to be
si.de counsel. Even before her decision on Tuesday. there had been GOP cal and material emanate from the
whole
ncw 'sel of "absolutes" wherestan
like.
is
more
powerful
i'l
a
child
than
spiritual.
Great
leaden
have
always
demands that she resign. even for her impeachment
by
we:
.
Churchill.
the
right
or
wrong
choices.
Thus
an
understood
this.
Philosophers
and
She says she is goin&amp;._b&gt;: lhe book, requiring s~ific and credible cvi'
1llole
With
poycl\ollljtclll"'lll!lght
like
a
voice
and
thcaler
have
greater
influence
Redefine
marriage
and family
ilence of a crime by aiop o~· !!!ere's a canriil"'an oUtsidlprosehave
had
influence
upon
the
leaders,
in
the
wilder.
upon
behavior
of
the
masses
ahan
is
responsibiliaies
.
. Cutor.
ness, began· commonly ahoughl.
- ~ay all cultures arc gond ..
: Conservatives generally )"ant statutes interpreted literally and strictly, giving them a basis for their leadership.
This
is
seen
throughout
human
his
words
Nietzsche
denied
!here
was
a
except
our .own.
tucb a.&lt; with federal judges and the laws and the Constitution.
history.
"We
have
"fixed
moralily
..
"
This
philosophy
•
Have
chosen dcalh for 37 mil- In 1his situation, though, they wan1 a broader reading. Utah Sen . Orrin
On
this
December
7ah
when
we
worked
out
in
many
ways
in
the
lion
Americans.
susaained
a
Hatch, chairman of the Sena1e luai,iary ..Committee, said that what the
Weedy
IOlal, unmiti- Third Reich. The freedoms of the
• Arc normalizing lhc perverse.
While House wanas cas1 as a narrow legal quesaion should 1!&lt;: deemed a remember America's entrance into
World
War
II.
if
we
examine
this
gated
dcfea1,"
republic
were
surrendered
to
the
• Are demonizing reli~ion . These
broad ethical question.
.
principle
we
can
sec
liow
~ajor
new
"absolutes," or politically corhad
to
stop
until
the
storm
of
prolcSI
bold
aaskmasaers
of
the
Reich.
Even
, There are indeed broad, eahical questions about Clinton's fund-raising
events
arc
conceived
and
born.
had
quieted.
Britain
wa.•
unwilling
the
children
(ne~rly
8
million)
were
reel
lhinking. arc personally an~
~onducl. and not jusl telephone calls from the White House to monied
Nietzsche
had
~real
influence
lo
hear
such
a
proclamation,
howevgiven
10
the
sll!tc
to
raise
through
the
socially
dcstruclivc. While they arc
Democrats. His party took illegal conlributions and has had to reiUrn them.
upon
the
thinking
of
Adolph
Hitler.
cr
lruc
it
was.
A
reasonable
reading
Hitler
Youth
program.
Both
boys
·
painted
as
beneficial by theater and
Clinton tied supposedly independent advcnising by the Democraaic Pany
He
insisted
thai
great
.
rulers
·were
of "Mcin Kampf' ("My Struggle") and girls groups, commonly housed appeal to our imaginatinn, they an:
tighlly to his re-eleclion campaign. Bob Dole did the same thing with
also
grea1
artists
because
they
would show the vision Hitler had for ncar one anoahcr. were under gov - placing us on a slippery slope
Reptiblican Party ads. and said so.
imposed fonn on chaos. Imagination Germany and his ways of obt:ifning crnmcnt control. Many of the girls towards serious consequences.
rules reason. he said. nol the oahcr the goal. Privaacly. Hitler held became pregnant. Parents who
When we sec lhc need for ~ov ~
way around as is commonly Chamberlain ,and the Frenchman aucmpted to prcvcnl.their daughters crnmcnttu take care (lf our children,
Barry's
believed. Those with the power 10 Daladier in conlcmpt. calling ahem from joining were subjccl to heavy to import nannies and other work er~
caplure imagination have lhc power 'lillie worms".
prison @&gt;ntenccs, cvi!'n though lhcy rrom ahroacJ because we no loner
World
to capaure governments.
The irony of all this was thai by merely objected to having their value our mosl valuable asset. arc
Reviewing "The Rise and Fall of going to Munich, Chamberlain ac1u- daughters cnlcr . a service . where· we nm in headlong decline·• Whc~
the Third Reich" by Shier. one is ally saved Hiller from a planned cases of pregnancy had reached we value life so little, why should
astounded to sec how reason wa~ overthrow. by generals and civilians ·scandalous proporaions. However. In we pretend to he appalled at hearing
weak in comparison to imagination who were opposed to Hitler's "cala· the 1ruc Nazi. there was no moral ahoul habies delivered into a com·
and will. The leaders of Britain and strophic follies."
problem.
. mode, or children thrown agait:sl q
France, in the grips of cscapiSI imagBut Hitler knew how to capture
While these events were fifly 10 wall and huried in ahc back yard ''
ination, went all the way 10 Munich the imagination of people. The ral· si•ty years old, the guiding princi The Germans ignored the
and gave Hitler everything he want- lies with dazzling visual displays, pies arc still in play 1oday. Are not wrongs, or Hiller's "catastrophic foled in order to appease him .. They nood lights, parades, and t1cry Americans swayed by acslhclics, lies," cho~sing to follow aesthetic~
ignored the reasoning of people like speeches were so choreographed show, !heater. nuff aaahc expense of and imagination rather lhan reason .
Churchill as well as the big arms that the Third Reich was viewed as substance and basic morality? Docs- Will we take a sland in America
buildup in Germany.
specaacular theater. This was as n't whal 'sounds gOod' to the car and agains1 our own follies?
.
Chamberlain went home to inlcnded. The German people were natural greed hold sway over reason
Robert Weedy is a correspon:
shouts of "Gond ole Neville'' who convinced by aesahctic, not by intel- and basic morality far too much? Is dent ror the Sunday Times-Sen·
told the crowd, "I believe it is peace lcctual \"guments.
this nol a big part of the reason that tinel.
(which lasted eleven months) in our . As people, long after childhbod. television and Hollywood have such

Reno wasn't always reviled
.by GOP on outside counsels

.wms

!7WiltH?I

Will Americans take a stand against their own follies?

- -

Tr-icky Dick still remains withQut peer
0 , . . , bv HEA. 11'11:.

Another new Barbie In the works

•n
hl•story
l
day
0

.
·By The Alloe11111d p1111
Today is Sunday, Dec. 7, the 34lst day of 1997. There arc 24 days lofl in
ahe year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 7, 1941. Japanese warplanes atlackcd the home base of the U.S.
Pacific neet al Pearl Harbor, an actahalled 10 Amcric~·s entry inlo World

W~~-this date:
In 1787. Delaware became the first stale to raaify abe U.S. Conslitution.
In 1796. cleclors chose John Adams 10 he abe second president of the
United Slates.
In 1836, Martin Van Buren was elected the eighth president of the United States.
In 1842, the New York Philharmonic gave ias first concert.
In 1946, America's worst hotel fire broke out at the Winecoff Hotel in
Atlanta, killing 119 people, including hoael founder W. Frank Winecoff.
In 1972. America's last moon mission to date was launched as Apollo 17
blasted off from Cape Canaveral.
In 1972. Imelda Marcos, wife of Philippine President Ferdinand E. Mar·
and seriously wounded bv an assailana who was then shot
cos,wass labbed
'
.
dead by her bodyguards.
In 1985. relired Supreme Court Justice Pouer Saewart died in Hanover,
N·H·• al ag c 70·
In 1988, a major earthquake in the Soviel Union devaslated northern
Armenia; an estimated 25,000 people died.

By JoHph Spur
To get a measure of just how
derelict lhe '90s are, consider the
fact lhat only about lhrce Americans
in 10 now believe that Richard
Nixon was a uniquely evil man.
There are some, I know, who will
contesl this statistic, but it is undeni·
ably lrue. A Fox News poll last June
proltved 11 · I
.
- . was a so ev1dcqt_by the number
f ·
h
11
o voewers ,w o ca ed in with proNixon comments during a recent CSPAN interview with University of
Wis&lt;onsin Professor Stanley Kuder,
who has copiod out more than 200
hours of new Nixon recordings and
has published lhc lranscripts in · a
book enlitlcd "Abuse of Power."
Some of the callers got righ1
huffy about it. Kutlcr and his ilk
should leave Nixon alone, they said,
and go after !he "real " crooks, Bill
Clinton and his henchperson, Janet
Reno.
.
. How to account fo~ such stunnina
dtsplays of so~hisll)' · Some people.
hopelessly tgnorant. I can under1 are
I d that S
I
s an
: o!"" are . oo young to
recall Nixon s turprtude. I_ can
understand that. Some arc bhnded
bY 1'deoIogy. I can even undcrs tan d
lhaa.

But
an
astounding
70 percent of
the
public
told the Fox
pollsters thai
what Nixon
did was no
"worse than
what other
presidents
have done.' '
SPMr
We inust face
facts: By forgiving Richard Nixon.
we are flouting the responsibilities
of citizenship.
This sort of thing can depress a
person Who has spent three decades
studying Nixon and fine-tuning his
aversion to the man. When I find
myself dwelling on it, I pull oua my
voluminous files and wallow once
again in his many depravities.
We , know from the existing
record that Nixon was· a profane,
· anti-Semitic, dirty trickster and abet·
tor of criminal behavior. -- Nixon
natly agreed that the gang who burgled Democratic headquarters aa 1he
Watergate complex should be paid
hush money. "They have to be
paid," he said. "Thai's all there is to
that
11

· -He met in the Oval Office with
Greek-American
businessman
Thomas Pappas to thank him for
cash conlributions lhat were used to
keep the Wa1ergate conspirators
quiet.
-- He insltucted subordinates to·
demand campaign donalions from
dairy fanners in return for federal
price su~ports .
His Treasury Secretary John Con· ,
nally knew them well, he told aide
H.R. Haldeman in March 1971,
"and he's used 10 shaking ahem
down, and maybe he can shake ahem
for a liatle more."
-- He sold ambassadorships.
" Anybody who wants 10 be an
ambassador must aa lcas1 give
$250,000," he told Haldeman ..
-- He thrice ordered break-ins al
the Brookings lnstilulion on the
asoump1ion lhat the liberals who
!Oiled there were in possession of .
documents that he could use ao vilify Democratic prcsiden1s. " I want a
break-in," he thundered in July
1.9.71. "Get it done ... I want the
Brookings safe cleaned oul. And
have it cleaned out in a way that
makes somebody else look bad."
-- He ordered spie~ to be placed
in a Secret Service de1ai I assigned to

protect Sen. Ted Kennedy.
:·we just might gel lucky ana
catch this son of a biach.'' he said.
"Ruin him for '76."
Thanks in particular 10 Stanley
Kutter, whose 1992 lawsuit forced
1he release of the mosl recent batch
of Nixon tapes, I am in no danger of
running out of such wonderful mate~ ·
rial. Indeed, Kutler's recent seuic' ·
mcnt with the Nixon estate and wiah '
lhe National Archives -- where 1hc
recordings have lain like lillie timebombs since Congress mandaaed ·
aheir seizure in 1974 -- calls for ahc
·ultimate release of all 3,000-plus
hours of the secretly recorded Nixon
conversations that have yclto be dis - ·
closed.
·
Think of it, Nixon lovers/Clinaoti ·
haters. Three thousand hours! No
mailer how . hard you try to portray
the 42nd president as the grealer vit-"
lain, lhe ranting's and ravings of the
37th will always be there to remind·
us thai Nixon has no peer.
·
Slick Willie will never be more'
than a tinpot Trick.
·
Joseph Spear is a syndicated· •
writer ror Newspoper Enterprise
Association.
,

Ohio/W.Va.

•

OICJ I

I

II 7,

1117

~·

Sharing training resources
saves manufacturers money .
·, By MITCH WEISS ·

Assoclatecl Preu Wnt.r
TOLEDO - Rick Corry had
heard enough.
· tic had listened carefully as lhe
.. ~peakcr at a 1995 training conference
m Boston lauded the virtues of multimedia tnining. The speaker told
·200 executives how using new software and ~ Internet could improve
workers' skills.
What he didn't mention was that
. -such trlining was expensive- even
· for big companies.
· Corcy knew thai from experience.
·As director of an Owens Coming
.sales training and management program, Corry was responsible for
finding training programs. Before the
conference, one vendor once told
Corcy that a particular multimedia
!raining program would cost
S150,000 - and it could be used at
only one of Owens Corning's business units. Other units would have to
· buy similar programs.
When Ihe speaker asked for com. mcnas, Corcy rose, introduced himoself, then turned to the audience.
. ''I'm just wondering, why don 't
.we gel together and share what we've
got and fund what we need?" he
·asked.
Corcy told the audience that most
companies had similar training needs
in a number of areas, including basic

sales skills and time management. So.
he said, sharing training programs
wpuld reduce costs and improve
quality.
.Uuer silence.
The speaker didn't say a word, but
after the session. dozens of execu·
tives gave Coary their. business cards.
They as,ked Corry to call th~m if be
ever formed such a sroup.
That's how LearnShare, a consortium o( nine large noncompeting
manufacturers that share training
courses, was born, Corry· said in an
interview at LeamShare's offices in
Toledo.
LeamSharc members are a who's
who of business, including General
Motors Corp.. 3M, Motorola· and
Owens Corning. Several other For·
tunc 500 companies are ready to join.
as well as government entities,
including the stale of Ohio.
"I bad no inlention of standing up
that day. But I was annoyed, maybe
gelling a lillie angry," he said. "I felt
that we were being taken advanaage
of by the system ·... where vendors
would specifically sell and copyright
licensed maaerials very closely so you
• couldn't share it with your colleagues
in other divisions."
y.'hen Corry reaurned to work, he
told his boss about his idea, and was
given lime lo develop it.
.
Corry spent several months talk -

ing 10 other companies about what
1hey were doing with training. He
found oulthat aboul75 perccnl of all
training - regardless of indusary was almost identical.
In late 1995, Corcy invited the
people who gave him business cards
al the Bosaon conference to Toledo to
discuss his proposal.
The response was positive.
On Sept. 8, 1996, LeamShare
opened for business, with five
employees and Corcy as its president
The nine companies - which
togeaher employ 2.2 million people
and have revenues in excess of$100
billion - each gave LcamShare
$200.000 to help fund the consorlium's $1.8 million two-year budget
Each company has a member · on
LearnSh\lre 's board of directors.
After two years, the board will
decide whether Corcy, who is on loan
from Owtns Coming, will stay at
LearnShare . He could reiUrn to
Owens .Coming.
The center collects courses donated by the participants and also creates
them.
When a rieed arises, members contact LearnS hare for courses. Classes
are offered via the lnlemet and CDROM. Sometimes, one company
might invite employees from another company 10 auend their chisses.
LeamSharc members avoid con·

....

.; ,
., .... ...........

-

.U.

JOINING FORCES- Judy Relno, left, senior
project manager, and Pam Miranda, administrative a81lstant, reviewed training program• at
the headquarters of LeamShare Friday In Tolesultants' expensive a~d oflen redundant courses, while gelling better
courses, Corry sajd.
He estimales lhat some companies
save as much as 50 percen1 on educational expenses.
"We're giving them an alternative
to the standard way o[ doing busi-

Chief Justice Thomas Moyer and Jusliccs Deborah Cook and llvcl}n Stratlon - dissented.
The March 24 ruling look away ·
the people's right to sci education
budgets through their elected offi'
cials, Mrs. Matia said. Some of the
plans currenaly. being considered to
replace the existing school funding
s)'stem contain statewide tax increases.
Several commiuec members
joined Mrs. Malia with "no" votes
when GOP Chairman Robert Benneu
asked for a voice vote, but ahe " yes"
side prevailed.
Afterwards, Mrs. Malia said she
would not campaign for her party's
·
endorsed candi&lt;!ate.
Pfeifer was nol fazed.
"I expected Ia be endorsed, but!
didn't e~peC\ it to he unanimous," he
said in a telephone interview. ·
He said he had heard some party

members were seeking a candidate to
challenge him in the primary, but that
aalk had died down rece~~tly.
"I've always viewed the Republican Party as a vecy big tent," he
said, adding that he docs not consider education funding a partisan issue.
Neither Pfeifer nor Benneu
expected the intra-party squabble to
hurt Pt'eifer's fund raising or his
chances in the Nov. 3 general elec. tion.
· "I'll spend what! have to to retain
the Supreme Court," Benneu
promised.
Less controversial were the commillee 's endorsement of Moyer and
1

A

do. On the well behind them are logos representing the nine non-competing companies
that have formed the conaortlum to pool trainIng Information. (AP)

Resource Management Studies at
ness;: Corry said.
E•perts say pooling worker train- Fairleigh Dickinson in Madison, N.J.
ing resources is importanlto improv- " It's part of the restrucluring of
ing productivity, especially with new business education that has been
technology.
inefficient."
"It's definitely the trend of ahc ,
He predicts more organi1.a1ions
future," said Dan Twomey, professor · like LcamShare will spring up.
and director of the Center for Human

Endorsement draws fire in some GOP circles
By PAUL SOUHRADA
A11oelattld Prell Writer
. COLUMBUS - Ohio Supreme
Court Justice Paul Pfeifer lost some ·
potential political allies when he
sided with the majority in the ruling
that declared the state's school fundIng system unconslilutional.
. "The Republican Party can and
should do beuer," Nancy Malia of
;o.shland said Friday as she and other members of the GOP state central
and exccu1ive committee prepared ao
vote on Pt'eifer's endorsement for reelection.
Mrs. Matia called P{eifer a "pseudo-Republican" and att8ckcd him for
casting the deciding vote in the
school case.
· Pfeifer joined fellow Republican
Justice Andrew Douglas and Demo.cralic Jus1ices Alice Robie Resnick
and Francis Sweeney in the 4-3 decision . Three other Republicans -

*'OTOR O I

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Slate appeals court Judge Stephen
Powell of Middletown. Both votes
were unanimous and without discussion.
.
Powell will challenge Sweeney
next year.
'
Sweeney is expecled to win his
party endorsement on Dec. 13. but
the Dcmocrals have not found .can·
did~tes to run against Moyer and
Pfeifer, said Ryan Lippe , party
spokesman .
Among those mentioned as possible candidales: former state Rep. Harry Lehman, now a lawyer in Colum'
bus, and ~tale appeals court Judge
Gary Tyack.

TAWNEY STUDIO

424 SECOND AVE. , GAWPOUS, Otf

MTS COIN SHOP - Acquisitions Fino Jewelry

NLRB finds dismi$sals unfair
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) A construe! ion worker who was told
to go home if he didn't wanlto work
withciut dus1·masks and ear protection
was unfairly fired, along with two
other workers. the Naaional .Labor
Relations Board has ruled.
Bruce Murphy. Raymond DcNuzzo and Michael George went on
Strike against Cleveland Construction
Inc . of Mentor. Ohio. in January
while building a lu•ury hotel . ·
,' Cleveland Construclion "stepped
over the line by terminating Murphy,
DcNuzzo and George, who had merely engaged on a lawful strike to
protest safely conditions," said
Administrative Law Judge Jerry Her·
mete .
When the workers offered to
rclurn to work a week later. 1hcy were
told they had forfciled their jobs by
going on strike.
Cleveland Construction will
appeal. said Mark Small. the company's senior vice president. Small
called Ihe maucr "a case of pure sailing." which refers to an alleged
practice by organized lahor of sending union workers to disrupt

nonunion business.
The job supervisor, Jack Brooks,
said he remem~rs telling Murphy
there were dust masks and car protection on site. The thr1:c workers said
they never saw anyone wearing ahem .
TI\e ahrcc then filed a ~omplainl
with lhc Occupalional Safety and
Health Adminisaration . When an
inspcc1or showed up. an01hcr worker ·accused Murphy of lying.
Moments la1cr. Murphy was struck
on the head by a metal stud.
The ahrec decided the atm(JSpherc
was 100 hostile for work and went on
strike.
The three workers belong 10 the
United Brotherhood of Carpcnacrs
and Joiners union.

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Lottery numbers
By The A11oelated Press
The following numbers were
selected in Friday's Ohio and Wcsl
Virginia lotteries:

01-110
Pick 3: 8-3-9
Pick 4: 0-1-0-6
Buckeye 5: 12-22-27-34-37
There was one aicket sold naming
all five numbers drawn in Friday
night's Buckeye 5 (jrawing and it's
worth $100,000, ahe Ohio Lottery
said .
The winning ticket was purchased
at Area Barber Shop in Youngstown.
Sales in Buckeye 5 lotaled·

PHONES
AS LOW AS
98 CENTS
·Need an extra line?.
Ask us about our

$~83.252.

There were 157 Buckeye 5tickets
with four of lhe numbers, and e~ch is
worth $250. The 3,958 tickets showing three of the numbers are each
worth SI0, and the 41.204 tickets
showing two of the nitmbers are each
worth $1.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
$1,564,606, and winners will share
$280,277. In the other daily game,
Pick 4 Numbers playcts wagered
$444,554 and will share $132,800,
The jackpot for Saturday 's Super
Lono drawins was $8 million.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 7-0-7
Daily 4; 0-1-3-8
Cash 25: 3-6- 10-14-15-16

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COLUMBUS -Ruth Burris, 85, Columbus, died Saturday, Dec. 6, 1997
in Mount Cannel Hospital, Columbus.
•
She was also preceded in dea\h by her father. Mathew; her husband, Bill
Burris, formerly of Gallipolis: and a daughter, Retha Lou.
Surviving are a son, Robert (Nancy) Burris of Columbus; a daughler, Bev- By DAVE PHII,LIPS
erly (Rusty) Daniels of Columbus; a brother. B. Epperson of Columbus; two The Detroit Newt!
DETROIT- By naming Thomas
brothers-in-law,.E.J. (Georgia) Burris and Earl Wallis; lhrce sislers-in-law,
T.
Stallkamp presidenl, Chrysler
Amanda Dowden of Palaskala, Erma Watts of Columbus, and Eslher PierolCorp.
Olairrnan Robert J. Ealon is
li of Gallipolis; and many nieces and nephews.
·
signaling
his 21st-century pri.orities
Services will be 10:30 a.m. Tuesday ~n the Gr~umlich &amp; Son Funeral
for
the
automaker:
increased innovaHome, 1351 S. High St.. Columbus. Bunal will he 1n the Glen Rest Cemetion. continued cosl-cuuing and
tery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Monday.
improved quality.
Eaton, S1, wants lo be the
automaker's first chairman in modem
PORTI.AND-Fannie M. Durst XI. 31095 Dursl Ridge Rnad, Purlland. limes nol lo resort to dividend cuts,
died Friday, Dec. 5, ·1997 in lhc Rock,&lt;prings Rohahilitaliun Center. Pomcr~y. plan! closings and producl developBorn June 9, 1916 in Portland. daughter ot the Iale Juhn and Laura Wh1le nwnl .delays when profits inevitably
sltdc m lhe ~ext ~wnlur~.
.
Wells, she was a homemaker.
·
The chatrrnan 1s tummg to the
· Surviving are daughter. Margarcl (Timothy) Wilkinson 11f Columbus; two
baby boomer ge~er~tion qf m~agegrandsons; and 1wo sislers. llah Roush of Ponland: •md M1ldred Gralhwohl
ment lo get the JOb . done tn !In
of Parkersburg;W.Va.
,
·
.·
1nereasmgly co~peuuve ·busi~css
She was also preceded indealh hy hcrhushand. Ruda Durst. 10 1980; lwo .
where lhe margm for error shrinks
sisters, Goldie Clendenin and Margaret Holter: and live brothers. John \\(ells,
wuh ~ach new m~l.
.
Clark Wells. Brooks Wells. Joe Wells and Fred Wells.
And
afler
weanng
t~ree hats f~r a
A memorial service will Oc cnndu~tcd ;\1 th.: con"cnicncc of the family.
year - .cha1rman, ch1ef execuuve
Cremation will be by the Cremeens Funeral Home. Radnc .
and .pres1d7nt - Chrysler observers
say 11 was time for Eaton to hand over
more drrect d~y-to-day operatrons to
a
Sl.~ong heutenant.
: : DURHAM. N.C.- Michael Harold Hall. ,9. 700 Beckel! Road , Durham.
.stallkamp 1s an. extremely pro: died ·Thursday. Dec. 4. 1997 from injuries sus1ained in an aulomobile accifess1onalmanager With an ey~ o~ the
aent.
The son of Harold and Darla Reyn o.lds Hall of Fon Lauderdale. Fla.. he bottom hne. He has revoluhomzed
was a retired U.S. Army veleran and was disabled . A'Spec1al Forces Ranger the way Chrysler has gone ~bo.~t pu~and a professional photographer. he was a nalive of Auburn, N.Y., and had chastng, parts ,and supphes, sa1d
Roherl Steve Miller. a fo'!"er vrce
resided in Durham for lhe pasl II years.
chairman of Chrysler, who ts now a
He was a Baplist. and a member of American Legion Post 7.
dtrector
of Federal-Mogul Corp., a
Surviving in addition to his parents are his wife, Teresa Dudley Hall; two Soulhfield,
M1ch.-based auto pans
sons. Nikolas Michael Hall and Bryan Michael Hall. both of the home; a step,
.
son. Jason Michael Hall of Chatham County. N.C.; a brolher, Mark Hall of ma~er.
And
be
s
d~ne
11
successfully by
Hollywood, Fla.; his grandmother, Ruth Clonch of Gallipolis; and several
targetJng..'uppher costs, not profit
aunls and uncles.
.
.
Graveside services will he II a.m. Monday in Woodlawn Memorial Park, martpns.
Smce
Chrysler
rehes
on
outs1d~
wilh the Rev. Raymond Johns officialing. Friends may call al the Hudson
supphers ~or more ?f the. parts. 11
Funeral Home. Durham. from 6-8 p.m. Sunday.
Flowers are acceplable. or donations may be made to the Hall Children's needs lhantts domesll&lt;: ~vals, the JOb
Educational Fuod, in care of lhe Firs! Union Bank, North Duke Streel, of purch&amp;;~mg was .ued d1rectly to ~he
company s strate~lC goal~ of cutttng
Durham, N.C. 27704.
costs and 1mprovmg quality. As head

Fannie M. Durst

Michael H. Hall

Shooting of·motorist·
·spurs filing of charge
ZANESVILLE (AP)- A hunler gunshot. The back window shatfrom Zanesville was charged Friday tered. Ms. Hankinson was hit and the
with shooting a 73-year-old motorist, passenger grabbed the steering whUI.
the Muskingum Counly sheriff's
Mahle was arraigned Friday bul
office said.
did not enler a plea, Stephenson said.
Brian Mahle, 28, was charged
In Sidney, a deer hunter was
11fith.foloRiooll&amp; t"ftt!\1 in lbo ~ wounded Friday when hi' &amp;hot111n
1lf Belly Hankinson. 73, of · apparently accidentally discharged,
Zanesville, who was in critical con- striking him in the abdomen, authordition Friday at Good Samaritan ities said.
bfedical Cenler.
Shelby County Sheriff Mark
Ms. Hankinson was shot in tlu: _ Schemmel identified the victim as
head Thursday afternoon while dri - David Milanese, 23. Milanese was in
ving. Authorilies believe she was shol surgery al Wilson Memorial Hospital
b1 Mahle. who was aiming across a late Friday afternoon and his condiroad al a deer.
lion was nol immediately available.
Sheriff Robert Slephenson said
Schemmel'said Milanese and 1wo
Ms. Hankinson and the passenger other people had been hunting nonhnoliced a hunler in an open field. As ' easl of Sidney when they returned to
lhe car passed. the passenger heard a !heir vehicle jusl after I0 a.m.

First El Nino-caused
storm·pounds
coast
.

By DENNIS ANDERSON
The slorrn 's firs! band hit Friday
Associated Pre.ss Writer
and dumped 3.28 inches of rain on
LOS ANGELES - Sandbags Golela and 2.09 inches tn Santa Barwere at the ready and holiday plans bara, the Nalional Wealher Service
were poslponed as Southern Califor- said. Fanher soulh. 1.89 inches were
nia was haltered by ils first El Nino- recorded in Oxnard and 1.02 inches
powered storm of the season.
in Woodland Hills.
Rain. high winds and heavy surf
More rain wa' expeclcd Saturday
pounded the region and were expecl- wilh the.ncxl wave of the slOrm. and
-ed 10 conlinue through the weekend, the weather service issued a flash
·!hough emergency officials vowed flood watch for some mountain and
1hcy we1c ready.
coaslal regions. Urban and small
"We've got about 100,000 sand- · s1ream · tlood advisories also were
hags salted away," said Andy Rosen- issued.
berger with the slalc Office of Emer- ·
Waves of up lo 9 feet were expectgcncy Scrvic'cs in Santa Barbara. ed along lhc coastline. and bel ween
-·we ve kind of planned it to dealh ... 2 and 5 inches of snow were preCheri Hud&gt;on al an Orange Coun- dicled in lhe mounlains. where lhe
ly sandbag pickup point urged every- snow line · was cxpeclcd to fall to
one in lhe area 10 he prepared: " ll's about 5.500 feel.
·beller 10 he safe !han sorry."

Ohio Valley Memory Gardens
sets Candlell.ghtl"ng cerem 0 nY
GALLIPOLIS - More !ban
1.500 candles will shine along the
drives and around the garden features
of Ohio Valley Memory Gardens for
its fourth candlelighling ceremony on
Sunday. Dec . 14.
The rain dale will be Dec. 21.
The custom of candlelighl glowing from loved one's grave sites started in Sweden, said Linda Johnson.
1he cemetery's director of family services. She said she believes the first
mass candlelighting in the U.S.
occurred in 4983 at Savannah, Ga.
Johnson said the ceremony at the
cemetery. localed al 1229 Neighborhood Road. Gallipolis. has heen wellreceived in the pasl, wilh over 300
families lighling candles on the individual graves of I heir loved ones.
Families with loved ones buried in
: ~he cemelery can have a candle
· -placed on the graves by making a
donation. All donations wi II be given this year to the Gallia Counly
Senior Resource Center, Holzer Hos-

.
.
,
p1ce lo help fundus scrv1ces. and to
olhcr local chanucs. Donat1ons may
be hroughl to the ceme1c? office or
ma1lcd wuh lhe dccca&lt;ed s name.
OhiO. Valley . Memo~ Gardens
employees and thctr fam1hes. volun leers from the Semor Resource CenIer, Hol zer Hos p1ce and others from
1 ~ ~ommun~f will begin placmH the
· our can es althe ¥raveSites on
Dec .. l4 all p.m. Fam1hes will begm
amvmg at4 p.m. lo hghllhem.
Th
ff'
.
e cemetery o 1ce will be open
from I p.m. Sunday for those wanting lOcome by and arrange for a candie to .be put on lhe gr~vesite or by
domg tl ahead of time. either in person or by ma1l. By 5 p.m.. all candles
w1ll be hl and will burn throughout
lhe evemng a~d into the night
. Many famthes are expeclcd to
hght candles and say :1 prayer for
those who have depaned but are not
for~o~ten , Johnson said.
11 s really a hean.warming sight,"
she added.

1

Nation/World

'
. tlletmhr 7,1187

Chrysler looking
to future with .new
president at .helm

Ruth Burris

ofpurchasinl!i, ~lallkamp, 51, showed
an acute ab1hty to 1mprove these
areas. whi~e building relati~nships
With supphers mto a strategic asset
for the company.
In recent Detroit history, it's been
unheard of for a purchasing .speciallstto n.se to lhe lop rank ofB1g Three
exe.~utJves.
.
Hts grasp of the automotive
business and of Chrysler's ~perations
and our operating style w1ll enable
him ,to mak'\ a f"!t, smoolh transition
to his new role, Eaton said Thursd~y. "I am absolutely confide~! he'll
'11111he ground runnmg. and wtll conunue .lo make even more, rmportant
contnbu~!ons to Chrysler s ongomg
success.
. If .
..
Ch rys Ier fimds ttse at a cnttca1
junclure.
After a stunning financial comeback in the 1990s fueled by stylish
minivans. bold pickups and trendy
spon-utilily vel\iclcs. Chrysler has hit
.

some rough patches.
In the last year, its Slice of new car
and truck sales in the United States
~as dropped to I S.2 percent from
16.2 percent. Profits fell because of
higher rebates on minivans and weak
car sales.
"They are not without a list of
things to do," said David Cole, head
of the Office for the Study of Automotive Transportation at the University of Michigan. "The inability of
the entire auto industry this year to
NEW MANAGEMENT TEAM- Jeff Phllllpa, left, 1 23-year Ohio
recover costs because of flat or lowDepatb•••t of Tnlnapol'tltioll employee, wa1 recently named
er pricing has raised competition to
county rnlftlger o'f uw·0.1111 County ODOT gllrlfll. At right Ia
the next level."
hie aulltlnt, Dave BUI'I'IIft, whole title Ia trenaportatlon
11111nager
.
. .
1' .
· Chrysler's solid dominance of the
U.S. minivan market is under attack
by General Motors Corp. and Toyota
Molar Co. and a forthc:omiilg model
by Ho~.Motor Co.
Jeep's cachet with baby boomers
is being undennined by flashy new
sport-utility vehicl&lt; offerings from
Mercedes-Benz, Jnfiniti and' Lexus.
GALLIPOLIS - Motorists may unit.
Chrysler's share of the u.s.car mar- not realize that changes are occurring
Phillips has 23 years of service
ket remains stuck below I Q percent within the Ohio Department of Trans- with ODOT. In recenl years. he has
and also is under attack by surging ponation garage near Gallipolis. The served as Gallia County ODOT
Toyota.
realization will probably sel in when - superintendent, before the change 10
Unlike Ford Motor Co. ·and OM, they start seeing positive results of countx manager.
Phillips will be assisted by Dave
Chrysler can't insulale itself from a those changes on the state highway
U.S. downturn with substantial over- garage syslem in Galli a County.
Burneu of Gallipolis. Burnell is a 13ODOT recently redefined the roles year ODOT employee in Gallia
seas sales. And the automaker's qualof
its county maintenance garages. County. He has also has a new job
ily, perennially Jagging behind the
i~dustry's best. remains a top priori- including Gallia.
classificalion as lransponation manGallia is one of nine garages in ager I.
1y.
Since he wa• named county man"Quality is a real issue," said ODOT District 10, including A1hens,
David Healy. auto analyst for Burn- Hocking. Meigs. Mannie. Morgan. ager, Phillips has received extensive
ham Securities Inc. "They're the Noble, Vinton and Washinglon coun- training in business and employee
third company in a three-compa'ly ties. The county facilities an: expand- management, as well .as in specific
ing their fields of operation from .ODOT practices · as leadership
race ... by almos! any measure."
By tapping Smllkamp to steer the mostly highway mainlenance to responsibilities, and snow and ice
crew, and appointing Thomas W. Sid- include highway planning, budgeting removal. Most of the !raining has
lik, 48, .executive vice president to and construction.
been provided at ODOT's Central
ODOT has also cslablished a new Office in Colum~us, using polilical
maintain a watchful eye on parts and
material bills, Eaton has elevated a job classificalion lo renee! the new science and public administralidn
new generation of executives deter- functions of the county garages. Jeff professors from Ohio University, and
mined to avoid Chrysler's boom-and- Phillips of Bidwell was recently internal instructors like ODOT Direcnamed transporlation adminislrator, lor Jerry Wray.
bust past
Sidlik, now head of Chrysler commo~ly referred lo as a coun1y
The new classification of counly
Financial and the automaker's small manager. of lhe Gallia ODOT garage. manager was created under H.B.
car operations, oflen turned down Phillips will be responsible for coor- 572, the opoT reorganization bill,
senior finance posts to get more giil- dinating all aclivities of the county approved in OclOber 1996.
ty operaling experienc.e . Likewise,
analysts said Stallkamp's long expe.rience in vehicle operations boosted
COLUMBUS (AP)- Demolition of lhc remaining five buildings althe
his quick rise to the president's
Ohio Penitentiary·could be delayed.
. office.'
J~dge David Johnson of Franklin County Common ~leas Court oh FriStalllwltp'~ oih.;r d~. P.neral.
day
ISSUed an emergency order blocking lhe demolition urilil he can have a
manager ofmlmvan operations have
he~lng
Monday. His order expires al5 p.m. and demolition is scheduled to
been handed to James P. Holde~. 46,
begrn
at
6:02 p.m.
another executive known for embrac- .
Eig~t citizen and preservation groups filed a lawsuil Friday to block lhe ,
ing risk and constant change.
demolition.
They say !he buildings are historically significant because they
Miller describes the team as "conare
the
oldest
government buildings in Columbus and the architecture style
"de
·
,, ntA p1ayers w1'th rea1gaso1·me m
was
cons1dered
progressive for the time.
·
their veins."
_
Seventeen other buildings on the site already have been demolished.
"It's awfully hard to be critical of
The
city is clearing lhe sile for a $125 million arena thai wmbe the home
!hem," he said. "Eaton has built a
of
the
National
Hockey League Columbus Blue )ackels. The expansion team
solid balance sheel. and he's now
is
to
begin
play
in October 2000.
picked a solid senior group to stage
the next act."

.

ODOT redefines role
of maintenance s·ites

Demolition at pen may face delay

HEAP, Golden Buckeye
signup slated at 2 sites

.••

Sund,ay, December 7, 1997

Meigs

EMS runs

Defense
pins hope
on jury's
inspection
of cabin
By RICHARD COLE
Aleocllltecl Preu Writer
SACRAMENTO, Calif. - The
cave-like cabin that defense lawyers
hope will save Theodo!e Kaczynski''
life has finished its 1.100 mile-journey from Monlalla.
It sits in a Sacraipento \\'arehouse, awaiting its owner - and a
. federal jury. .
· Pointing 10 the dark, wooden
shack with only two foot-square
windows and no front·door handle,
attorney Dennis Waks said Friday it
should make a powerful statement to
jurors about the Unabomber $Uspecl's
mental state.
"You've heard the word cabin
fever_.: this guy had cabin fever for
20-some years." said Waks. a defense
. auomey for Kaczynski .
The defense plans to argue that
Kaczynski suffers from paranoid
schizophrenia, perhaps since adoles.cence. They say the cabin is the·most
tangible proof 1hat Kaczynski is mentally ill.
Earlier Friday. a work crew at
Mather Field outside Sacramento
lore 1he black tarp thai had covered
the cabin while loaded on the !ruck.
· Under the watchful eyes of U.S. Mar· shals. they then gingerly righted the
. slructure and squeezed it through a
warehouse door on lwo forklifts.
Bill Sproul, who drove the cabin
from Montana on his oversized
, flatbed truck, said the cabin's exteri'.or measures 13-by-13 feet. The FBI
· had originally givel) the dimensions
• as 10-by-12..

Authorities
charge
3
•
'
in theft of jet remains
•

CABIN MOVED - Workerl prepared to
right the cabin of Unabomber auspect
Theodore Kaczynaldatter It was unloa~ from
a truck Frldly at the former Mather Air Force
The Unabomber suspecl, who has
asked about the cabin, should see it
for the first time since his arrest when
the jury tours the ·structure, Waks
said. That tour could come as late as
the penalty phaSe of the trial, if
Kaczynski is convicted of the four
bombings in which he is charged.
The defense may reslore some of
the items taken from the cabin such as a cot and a: wood stove - if
ihe judge and prosecution agree,
Waks said. But jurors will not see in
the shack the boxes of papers, bomb
parts and other evidence the FBI
hauled away after Kaczynski's April
1996 arrest.
.·
Kaczynski faces a JO.count indict-

BaH In Rancho Cordova, Calif. The 1G-by-12·
foot cabin was trucked on its side from Mon·
llina by the defense to show jurors. (AP)

menl accusing him in four bombings
thai killed t~o men and wounded lwo
olhers. If convicted in the las! of the
attacks- the only one 10 occur after
the federal death penalty was reinstated - he could be execUled.
The government believes Kaczynski is responsible for a string of
bombings that killed three people and
injured 29.from 1978 to 1995. He is
charged separately in a fatal bombing
in r&lt;ew Jersey.
.
Jury selection is scheduled to
resume Monday, wilh opening statements tentatively scheduled for Dec.
29. :
Lawyers were also working on
~greements that could shorten the tri-

al from an estimaled six months 10
lhree monlhs. the Sacramento Bee
reported loday.
The newspaper quoled sources
close lo the case lhat defense lawyers
proposed slipulations where !hey
would agree lhat many of the bombings took place. eliminating the need
for lestimony from government witnesses to prove it. The defense was
nol proposing, however, to agree lo
a statement that Kaczynski is lhe
Unabomber, the newspaper said.
The defense also would agree 10
the chain of custody of physical evidence and results of laboratory testing &lt;?f bomb parts and packing com-.
ponents.

Last Chance!

· ~·

Lead defense attorney Michael Tlgar
has said McVeigh was trying to
recruit Colbern.
In the note, McVeigh said he
couldn't be cerlain of Col bern's
molives, saying, "In short, I'm not
looking for Jalkers. I'm looking for
fighters." In a postscript, he added,
"If you are a fed, think twice about
the Conslilution y,ou are supposedly
enforcing."
·
Nichols, 42, faces the death penal-

.. • • • r~•

[:[:[[[:[[[[[~
20 Wallets

b8 Keepsakes

'

sler. their claim Timothy McVeigh 30: 1994 - less than CiXefmonlhs
was growing increasingly paranoid before the Oklahoma City bombing.
and tried to recruit others to his cause,
"A man with nothing lefl to lose
altorneys for Terry Nichols intra- is a very dangerous man and his ener-duced a note 1hey say McVeigh left gy/anger can be focused on a comon a utility lower in rural Arizona that mpnlrighteous goal," McVeigh wrote
. warned "a man wilh nothing left to in the note intrD9uced at Nichols' tri,.Jose js,.a dangerous.man." _ , .
a1 Friday,
.•.,._
.
Donald Pipins. a utility worker.
Defense attorneys have satd the
told jurors he found !he nole inside nole Pipins found. was addressed to
two sealed envelopes more than 10 "SC," who has been identified as
,feet up the side of lhe tower in the Steven Col bern. an Arizona man

~

t•.rrr "rrr•l

IF... ,.~~~·=rfl '

N!:~~~s.:!!!g~!r~~u~~'!~~~..~~"! .~~~~~. '""
'

,.•

ir
--

spiracy. McVeigh is appealing his
conviction and dealh sentence on
THE FOUOWING .KMART HAS ASTUDIO OPEN EVERY DAY
similar charges fonhe Aprill9, 1995
Moa.·Sat. I0 AM· 7 PM
bombing !hal killed 168 and injured
On Sn. 10 AM (01 siart .,.... d lot•H PM (ar stare doslog. Htarllerl
hundreds more.
. GAlliPOLIS
Defense attorneys also pounded
!heir theme thai others were involved.
Portraits Taken Throu9h Dec. 18 Back In Time for (hristmos!
. calling a bombing survivor who testified she encounlered two men next
to a car resembling McVeigh's getaway vehicle
..---------------

YovR6m·

LIGHT A CANDLE
FOR CHRISTMAS

POMEROY - Units of Meigs
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens
Emergency Services answered two
announces our 4!h annual
calls for ass.istance on ·Friday. .
Christmas observance dedic·
· .CENTRAL DISPATCH
ated. to !he memory of your
loved ones with a candle ptac~
7:34a.m., Rric~springs RehabiliCROWN CITY - Gail Smith, add $4,080). Applicants musl bring' tation Center, Emma Devore, Vcleron their g&lt;ave on December 14
Outreach worker for the Gallia Coun- proof of income, !heir most recent ans Memorial Hospital;
with a rain date of December 21.
ty Senior Resource Center, will be heating bill, and 1hc Social Security
Please come by Ohio Valley
II :46 p.m., State Route 7. Willie
Memory Gardens or fill out the
taking applications for the Home numbers of everyone in lh~ house- Jones; Camden-Clark Memorial Hosfonn
below and send to us with
Energy Assislance Program (HEAP) hold.
pital.
your
dOnation
for the candle. All
For those unable lo gel oul and .
al the Guy an Valley General Slorc on
donations
received.
will be giv•n
Friday, Dec. 12 from 10 a.m. until sign up for HEAP, home assislancc is
to local charititl8.
2:30p.m.
available by calling Smilh at 446In Hc""'J' Of
Veterans Memorial
She will also be al the Mer- 7000.
The Senior Resource Center will
cerville Convenience Slore for HEAP
Friday admissions - none.
Name o1 Deceased
signup on Wednesd.ly; Dec. 17 from also be doing .Poldcn Buckeye Card
Friday diseharges -· Raymond
10 a.m. unlil2:30 p.m.
signup at the same locations and un Lam ben.
Date of Death
HEAP is designed to assisl low- lhe same days.
income families meet the rising cos1
· To qualify for a Golden Buckeye
DOnated by
of h?mc heating. Households may Card, a person musl he 60 yean; old
Address
quahfy for thiS asSistance if lhe total or older, and bring proof of age. such
ho~sehold income falls within as a driver's license or birth certifiPhooe
income guidelines.
·
cate. Persons 18 years old or older
For example, one person cannel may qualify if they are tolally disexceed an annual income of $11 ,835. abled. They must bring proof of age
or lwo persons up lo $15,915 (for and disabilily papers.
OHIO VALlEY
POMEROY
each additional household member,
NHr Ponleroy.M.,an Bridge
MEMORY
882·2588
GARDENS
VINTON
1229
GaJtfa,County DtapliY Yard .
1115.MIIn St.
Municipal
bation and 180 ~ays license suspen3118803
Thcfollowingcaseshaverecein- Sion: charged with improper firearm
ly been resolved in the Gallipolis usage, he was fined SHO; charged
Municipal Court:
with resisting arrest, he was fined two
Timolhy F. Champer, 19, 76-1/2 years prohalion; charged with finaqVine Sl.. Gallipolis, charged with pet- cial responsibility assurance·suspen_ ty_lheft. was fined $100, 30 days jail. sion. he was fined $150.
lhree years probation- and 80 hours
Michelle L. Long, 31,2171 Eastcommunily service; charged with em Ave., Gallipolis, charged with
underage alcohol consumplion, he DUI, was fined $500, three days jail,
was fined $100 a11 d 8tl hours corn- two years probation and I 80 days
munity service.
license .suspension.
Don E. Drennen Jr., 18, Crown
C. Lindsay Easton. 18, Bidwell,
Cily, charged witlt underage alcohol charged with ~kless operation, was
consumplion, was fined $150, 1wo fined $100.
years probation and 80 h
.
ours com
munity service. ~
.
Larry R. Harshman, 19, 87 Rand
Ave .• Gallipolis, charged with under·
age alcohol consumplion, was fined
A~e•cy
$100. 1wo years probation and 80
'
\
INSURANCE
ho~rs community service.
Thomas P. Rowley, 22,2189 Easlern Ave .. Gallipolis, clwpd withdri(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
ving under the innucna, was fined
$700, tO days jail, two years proba25TH&amp; JEFFERSOII AVENUE
tion and one. years license suspenoion.
AGENCIES Inc.
Anthony W. Alcorn Jr., 24, FairII
born, charged with DUI, was fined
(104) 675·1675
$550. thre&lt;: days jail, two years pro-

NEW YORK (AP) - Authorities meaner charge carries up lo one year.
TWA said Slacey informed manexpect a.TWA pilot. another airline
employee and a former police officer agemenl Thursday nigh1 th at " he had
lo surrender now that they were been itwolved in unauthoriu:d activ;
charged with stealing wreckage from ities involving ev idence from Flig~t
lhe TWA Flight 800 to bolster a the- 800." He was removed from the
i~vestigative team and suspended
ory !hat a missile downed the jet.
Terrell S1acey, a TWA pilot who from flying .
TWA said Mrs. Sander&gt; is on
worked in lhe hangar where the
feave
and has not worked at TWA
plane was being reassembled, and
Elizabeth Sanders, another TWA since March, so no immediate disci:~~~Ioyce, were accused on Friday of . plinary action was taken againSI her.
FBI Assistant Director James
Jammg a conspiracy to help Mrs.
Sanders· husband. James. develop a Kallstrom said Friday that the thefl
lheory thai a missile hil the plane on caused "an awful lot of problems and
July 17. 1996.
senl investigalors off on a wild go~e
The malerial stolen from the Long chase."
·
Island hangar included a scrap of seat
The 74 7 exploded minutes after
fabric, according to coun papers.
takeoff from Kennedy Airporl, killing
Slacey was chiuged wilh lhefl of all 230 people on board.
governmcnl property, a misdeThe possibilily thai a missile was
meanor; James and Elizabelh Sanders to blame and even thalthe Navy acciwere each charged wilh aiding and dentally shot down the plane became
abeumg. The aiding and abeuing a favorite discussion topic on t~e
charge carries a maximum of I0 ln!ernet and elsewhere duri ng the 16
years in prison while lhc misde - months that lhe FBI invesligated.:

FRoM

DISH
1l7'.r.tlli1n7A

•

•

..

JmJwuRK,

Hospital news

' ·.

FREE
HMENTS AND GIFTS. STOP
BY TO REGISTER FOR ONE OF TWO
"BLACK BEAR" PAGERS, A "STEBCO"
BRIEFCASE, GIFT.CERTIFICATES, DESK
..
CLOCKS AND
CKET PLANNERS

Gallia County court news

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRA(TICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC ·
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�'•

Page A8 • Jt!Wq 111tmn-JtnttbW

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

Sunday; December 7, 1997·

Thousands mourn victims
of shooting at high school

Sports

Earth." Sabrina Steger wro te in a let,
tcr 10 her daughter, Kaycc. "He

graduati'on. college. marriage and a
badge," she wrote. "B ut perhaps God

allowed me to watch you grow. share

needs you to give your life lO hrin_g
more to him. And that we must com·

your Joy&lt; and your hurts."

driver's license,

ers: '' We love yoU." .. We miss you. "

"This isn't goodbye, I'll sec you
soon ." Following the se rvic~ the
girls were buried in ~eparate, private
scrv1ccs.

The Rev. Don Young told mourners that God didn 't cause the shootings. that the young man charged
chose to do it himself. "We're not
puppets on a string," he said, "and
God isn't a puppeteer."
Police say Michael Carneal, a
freshman, opened fire on his class"Love mom."
C!ne r,aralylcd from the waist down.
Quiet soils joi ned the s train s of
Ben Strong, a pastor's son mates as they wound up their daily
''Amat.ing Grace'' inside th e ~.:av­ described as a hero for persuading the informal prayers at Heath High
FINAL JOURNEY - Pellburera exltad the
UCih, Ky. James end two other girls were killed
crn ous sanctuary of the Bible Baptist gunman to stop firin g and put down School.
~
Bible
Bepllet
+leertlend
Worehlp
Center
with
In
last Mcmdey'e •hooting at Heath High
Heart land Worship Center. Class- hi s pistol, began the service . Strong,
Investigators questioned Cameal
the
ce1ket
of
Jessica
Jeme1
on
Friday
In
PadSchool
In West Paducah. (AP)
mates. fam ily and neighbors wept as a senior. h~d been leading the prayer twice a~ain Thursday night, and the
photographs of IS-year-old Kayce, group moments before the shootings. hoy inststcd ~c acted alone.
believes the boy conspired with oth· Carneal carried into the school Job- and hundreds of rounds of a~muni­
14-year-old Nicole Hadley, and 17- He praised the girls' religious devoSheriff Frank Augustus has said he ers, in part because of the arsenal by: a pistol, two rifles, two shot~uns tinn.

fort ourselves is more important than
funaal for the three young victims of any piece of paper.
"Kayce, you were my firstborn,"
Monday's shooting at Heath High
School. where a 14-ycar-old hoy is she continued. "A part of me was
a&lt;.:c.usc d of open ing fire momen ts bom the day you were, and a part of
after a ::.l:huol prayer meetin g. Five me died the day you died. What
olhcr stude nt s were hurt. incl uding remai ns is a heart f4ll of Jove for you.
Thuusandr;; gathered Friday at a

Global warming conference sharpens differences with T·hird World
dipl omat who is a spokesman 1(,.· the
South at Kyoto.
Both sides have a stake in heading
off global warming. But the South's
may be larger:

binding limits, but only for the origAP Special Correspondent
inal 34 nations.
KYOTO, Japan - Up there,
The developing world h~s been
where the gases go, 1L 's one canopy
exempted from the outset, since it
uf 'ky. But down here there 's a North
was the Industrial Revolution in
and a South. a rich world and a poor.
• British scientists reported new Europe and North America that
two halves struggling to protect the calculations Friday that rising sea lev- boosted carbon dioXide concentraatmosphere that protects them both. els from ocean warming might drive tions in the atmosphere by some 30
The outcome of their struggle, 200 million people from their homes percent since the early 1800s - and
played out in the dry prose of diplo- in the 21st century, mostly in such since it was agreed that pooter
macy, may dctennine whether the low-lying Third World states as ~ation s can ill afford the technology
planet enters the 21st century with an Bangladesh .
and the energy restraints that would
effecti ve international agreement to
• Africa is expected to be the con- be required.
combat global warming.
~t hardest hit by drought and othBut in a fast-changing world, the
Day by day at the Kyoto confer- er cltmate disruptions.
balance of emissions will shifl.
ence on climate change. the focu s has
• Warming may already be hurting
The developing economies of the
fallen ever more sharply on the some in the developing world. Amer- South •re expected to account for
North-South di spute as the key to a ican glaciologists repon, for example, two-thirds of global carbon dioxide
settlement. .
that poor highland peoples in South emissions by 2020. And some indusTo Washington. it's essentiaL-The America are losin g traditional water try leaders in the North, particularly
U.S. Senate vows it won't ratify a sources as glaciers shrink.
in the United States, fear competition
Kyoto agree ment that docs not limit
"People in developing countries from a China or India free to burn all
fuel emi ssions by Third World are more worried about this problem the cheap coal it wants.
nations.
than any politician in the United
Every step of the way, in two
" I don ' t believe it has a chance in States,'' said Bill Hare. a global years of negotiations leading to
the world,'' Sen. Chuck Hagel. R- warming campaigner for Gfeenpeace Kyoto, the Chinese have fought U.S.
Neb .. said wbile dropping by the · International. "At the end of the day, moves to put Third World commitKyoto talks.
they arc more susceptible."
ments in new treaty standards.
But the devel oping world insists
The conflict ts rooted in 20th-cenChina's emissions are "survival ,
thai. t.lw. UAited Slalell and the r..l o[ tury history and '21otoeentury· eeo· emissions," Beijing's spokesmen
the industrial North first meet co m- nomics.
have said, while those from Amerimitments they've already made to
The Climate Change Treaty of ca's big cars and power plants are
rein in carbon dioxide and other 1992 set a voluntary goal for 34 "luxury emissions."
"greenhouse" gases they spew into industrialized nations to reduce , back
Weshington, meanwhile, has pro- ,
the atmosphere - goals few arc to 1990 levels, their emissions of posed a more indirect approach:
meeting.
greenhouse gases, mostly from fossil Allow northern companies to build
·'That docs not give them a moral fuel s, which trap heat in the atmos- emissions-saving factories and genplatform to ask anyone in developing phere.
erating -plants in the South, an~ credcounlrics to take up new commitThe current negotiations. sched- it them against northern emissions
ments," said Mark Mwandosya, tile uled to end Wednesday, arc intended · quotas.
dclihcrate, deep-voiced Tanzanian to change those voluntary goals into
But that, too. arouses rich-poor
By CHARLES J. HANLEY

Iunder. Deg1mt11 7, 111f7

. CEDARVILLE - Powered by a 23·point effott by center Karley
Mohler, Rio Grande's women's basketball team tallied a 96-84 victory
over Cedarville Saturday in the Redwomen ' s first Mid-Ohio
Conference game of the season.
1lle Redwomen, who never trailed, scored the first four points of the
contest and suffered only one scare - when Cedarville forward
Summer Bennington sank a three-pointer with 17:161eft in the first half
to cut Rio's lead to 6-S.
Cedarville didn't get so close again. Rio scored seven straight points
-Mohler scored three points, and guards Shawna Daugherty and Misti
Halley scored two cac:h - in the next 3:49 before Cedarville scored
again.
In her cffon to build on the Redwomen's 19-point halftime lead,
junior forward Meghan Kolcun (Gallia Academy '95) scored 12 of her
16 points after halftime.
Rio led by as many as 27 points with about eight minutes left in the
game, but the Yellow Jackets' outscoring their guests 25-20 in the
remaining time wasn't enough.
The future: Rio Grande will host Cumberland (Ky .) College
Monday at 5 p.m.
'

1

we won' t have -

B

Redwomen ·blast
Ce.darville 96·84

year-old Jessica James flashed on tion .
By TED BRIDIS
"In a sense, they died far what
huge tclc vision screens ..
Aesocleted Pres• Writer
they
believed in," he said in a hailGov. Paul Panun. sitting in the
PADUCAH, Ky. - In a message
ing
voice.
" It hurts to see them go,
to a daughter she'll never again pews, soft ly wiped his eyes beneath
·but to them , there was no better wuy.
embrace, the mother of one of three his glasses.
The Rev. Jim Gearhart read the They were praying. As soon as they
gi;ls killed during a hi gh school
shooting took cQmfort that " the letter from Mrs. Steger to her daugh- snid. 'amen,' they saw the face of
memories will help us survive until ter. who wanted desperately to be a God ."
Fri ends and classmates scrawled
we arc reunited in heaven."
police ofliccr whe n she was older.
messages
on the caskets wi1h ·mark"There arc too many memories
'' I thank God he allowed me to
have you during your shor1 time on

Section

antagonisms, notes Argentine economist Graciela Chichilnisky. "They
fear that it's a Faustian bargain" thai by restraining their own energy
growth, Third World countries are
selling off their right to economic
growl h.
New Zealand, with U.S. support,
took the bold step Friday of formally introducing a proposal that would
start a process whereby the Tbird
World would accept emissions limits
atier 16 )'cars.
The move touched off an ~xplo-

siqn of denunciation from southern
delegates on the conference noor.

One southern observer said all the
North can do is wail.

GREAT STOCKING

Six Colors
Through Det:. 31
Celebrating 20 yean Serving the Area

.THE MEDICAL.SHOPPE, INC.
1480 Jackson

Y•wney Jeweler•

Pl~e ~-

Gallipolis

(614) 446·2206

422 Second Av•.
Gllll 111, OH

-·-

Rio Grande (6-l &amp;: 1-0): Mohler 9111 -0I0-5n=23, Carson 315-216- ·
414= 16. Halley 8114-012-013= I 6, Kolcun 518-1/1-313= 16. Daugherty
3/5-111-6/7=16, Tabor 0/3-319-ln=IO. Total,o: 28/51-7/19-19126=96
Total FG: 35-70 (50%)
Rehound&amp;: 43 (Mohler 10, Kolcun 8)
Blocked shots:.' I (by Halley)
Assists: 14 (Daugherty &amp; Halley 4 each)
Steals: 7
Turnoven: 23
Foulll: 27
Fouled out: Daugherty &amp; Kolcun

McCoy leads Navy
past Army 39-7

By TOM CANAVAN
winning streak in a season since
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . 1978. The Midshipmen arc not eligi(AP) ..:. This time there was no late blc for a bowl because two of their
field goal, 99-yard drive or missed seven wins came against Division I·
GETTING BY the Mllauchulelte Mlnutemen'f Lerl Ketner (right)
chip shot to send Navy to another AA opponents.
Je the objective of Mer1hell'e Terrell McKelvy during Seturdey'e
excruciating Joss to Army .
'' This was our bowl game ,''
game in Amheret, Mue., where the holtl belt the Thundering Herd
It wasn't even close . and that 's . punter Jason Covarrubias said. " We
Cedarville (5-4&amp;: 1-1): Bennington 5114-111-719=20, Nourse 71861-59. (AP)
.
exactly what NavY wantrd and could have gone to a bowl if we beat
010-518=19, Gombis 416-0/1-6/6=14, French 3/5-0/5-414=10. Porter
expected against Army this year.
Notre Dame, and we should have ,
4/13-011-0/0=8, Cole 115-010-314=5, Fraley 113-014-214=4. Quint 111 Chris
McCoy
ended
five
years
of
but
to cap off the season with a win
010-212=4. Totals: 16161-1112-29139=84
frustration
for
Navy
and
capped
a
over
Army is even better. I can't put
Total FG: 27-73 (37%)
record
-selling
career
by
rushing
fot
it
into
words what I feel."
Rebounds: 49 (Nourse 15, Bennington II)
" ... This finishes off my career
205 yards and three touchdowns and
Blocked shots: I (by Nourse)
adding a touchdown pass in a 39-7 the best way possible ," Navy
•
Assists: II (French 3)
win on Saturday.
linebacker Travis Cooley added .
Steals: 9
McCoy scored on runs. of one. :' It's the pinnacle of my career.
"
Tumoven: 22
two and on'c yard as Navy (7-4) People can talk about Florida State
Fouls: 21
scored on six of its first seven pos- and Nebraska and how great the
sessions in denying Army (4-7) football is, but I' d rather end it
what would have been a record-set- here." .
ry over Marhall on Saturday .
ting sixth straight victory in the
McCoy , who was only offered a
Marshall (2-1) made a couple of
series.
·
scholarship
on the national signing
serious runs in the second half, the
"I didn 't even want to imagine day after Navy coaches received
last one coming at the end with
what it would hccn have like losing videotape from his high school prin·
VonDale Monon hittins a layup and
again this year," said McCoy , cipal. was just too quick and fast for
a three-pointer to put the Thundering
whose 279 total yards were more an Army defense which struggled all
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Jeff Herd within two with 38 seconds to
than
three times Army's total year.
Sheppard and Nazr Mohammed play .
offense.
" But I was very confident
The Cadets gave the appearance
UMass (4·2) then took the ball ·
each scored 21 points Saturday as
going
in
that
we
would
win
."
this
would be another close game.
MERCERVILLE- South Galli~'s varsity girls' basketball team put a
No . 7 Kentucky survived a late and ran out its 35. seconds without
Not
ev
en
a
two-play,
74-yard
taking
a 7-0 lead on a 38-yard run
Indiana comeback and beat the taking a shot. Marshall's last shot, a four-pronged offensive attack that poked the visiting Ironton St. Joseph
touchdown
drive
by
Army
on
the
by
quarterback
Johnny Goff 41 .., •
Hoosiers 75-72.
20-foot runner by :rravis Young, fell Flyen enO\I!h limes to reconhn 88-20 victory Saturday afternoon.
It was Kentucky's founh straight shon as the buzzer sounded. ·
The Rebels earned their first win of the year in part because of senior opening series dimmed Navy's con- ,onds into the game.
After that, Navy's defense
victory over Indiana, and the
After trailing 35-15 at halftime, center ·K,Iri Clark (8-12 FGs) scoring 17 of her game-high .J9 points in the fidcncc .
" At the end of practice this week stopped Army and McCoy did the
Wildcats' first game in the RCA Marshall went on a 16-6 run which first half. Sophomore Rachel Waugh ('8-12 FGs) scored nine of her 17
we practiced the two-minute drill dirty work on the other side of the
Dome since tl)ey lost the NCAA closed the Jap to 12. UMass then points before halftime.
championship to Arizona in over- went back up by as many as 19
Abo getting into the double-digit scoring act were senior Sabrina and field goals just in case it was ball. finishing with a career-record
time last spring.
be Core Marshall staged its final Mooney (14 points on 7-11 FGs) and freshman Kristin Gibson (12 points another close game, " Navy safety 268 points, breaking the mark of
This time, the Wildcats (6-1) lost uprising·
mosdy on 4-8 FGs). '
.
.
Cervy Alota said. "But 'coach 263 set by Bill Ingram from 1916almost all of an 11-point second-half
It marked the second straight
1be Flyers, on the other hand, didn 'I have one player score more than one (Charlie Wcalhcrbic) kept saying il 18. The 200-yard rushing game was
lead against the Hoosiers (3-3), who game that UMass had held an oppo- field goal in any quaner. 1be only quaner in which they scored more than doesn't have to come down to that. the fifth of his career and his 20
had a chance to tie after Wayne nent to under ,60 points. On ·one field goal was in the third. when their two came from Melissa Fayne We felt we were good enough to rushing touchdowns were one shy of
Turner missed the second of two Tuesday, it swamped College of and Bri Nelson.
dominate them and that 's exactly the Ingram's single-season mark. He
free throws with six seconds to go. Charleston, 52-40.
Fayne led the Flyers with eight points.
what we did."
also set a record for single-season
But A.J . Guyton, who led the
Center Lari Ketner and forward
There was no junior varsity contest.
I
The numbers were staggering for total offense, finishing with 2,573
Indiana rally with 14 of his 19 Tyrone Weeks ruled the inside for
The future: This week's agenda has the Rebels ending their three-game a series in which Army won the last yard to break the mark of 2.496 set
points in the second half, missed a UMass, with Ketner topping all home stand Thursday against Huntington (W.Va.) Grace Christian .
five games by a total of I0 points, by Jim Kubiak in 1993.
l!ltall
'
Quarter
three-pointer just ahead of the final UMass scorers with 17 points and
four times rallying in the second half
A 12-play 55-yard march on
adding 10 rebounds. Weeks finished Ironton St. Joseph ................................. ...................................... 3-5-7-5=20
buzzer.
to.win.
which McCoy ran for 32 yards set
Kentucky beat ·Indiana by 34 · with 12.
South Gallia ................................................................ :...... 23-25-18-22=88
This time, the score was so one- up a 26-yard field goal by Tom
points in Louisville last year - the
UMass vaulted to a I0-0 lead,
sided that Army had no chance of Vanderhorst on Navy's first series.
Ironton SL Joseph (unk.): Fayne 1-2-010=8, Nelson 1-0-4113=6, Bryant repeating the heroics of late field McCoy rushed for 40 yards and
second· worst defeat in Bob Knight's with Weeks getting three hoops, and
27 years as coach - but seemed to it led by as many as 22 points in the 0- 1-115=4, Wilson0-0-114=1. Totals: 2-3-6125=20
goals by Patman Malcom ('92) and threw a 15-yard pass to Pat McGrew
Fouls: 17
Kurt Heiss ('94) ..There was no on the next series, which he capped
need only three minutes of all-out first half.
chance
for a game-winning. 99-yard with a one-yard run for a 10-7 lead.
defense to take the Hoosiers out of a
Marshall was 5-for-23 from the
S011th Gallia (1-1): Clark 8-0-314=19, Waugh 8-0-1/3:17, Mooney 7-0- fourth-quarter drive ('95) or having
McCoy had a 43-yard to set up
close game this time.
(icld, with Young getting II of his
Kentucky led 46-39 at halftime team's 15 points. Young ended with 0n= 14, Gtbson 4·0-4/4= I 2, Clary 4-0·013=8, Harrison 2-0-212=6. Johnson a Midshipman miss an 18 -yar~ field Cannada's touchdown run and then
but only 46-45 after two straight a !arne-high 19 points and Vince 2-0-012=4, Osborne 2-0-010=4, White 2-0-010=4 . Totals: 39/61-0/0- goal in the closing seconds, as in the Navy built a 26-7 lead at the half by
last game at Giants Stadium in 1993. capitalizing on a fumble by Army
three-pointers by Guyton. That's Carafelli contributed II for the 10/18=88
It was just sheer domination by fullback Joe Hewiu and a botched
Tatal FG pet.: 63.9%
when the Wildcat defense kicked in . Herd.
Rebounds-61 (Clark 13,Ciary 12)
the Midshipmen. Jed by McCoy, snap by punter Scot Lord. McCoy
After a basket by Rob Turner,
Miami (Ohio) 85, VCU 75
who closed his career with 15 school convened the first with a two-yard
Assists- 20 (Mooney &amp; White 4 each, Clary 4)
who led Indiana with a career-high
At Oxford, Ohio, Wally
records. Navy outgaincd Army 454- run and Vanderhorst added another
25 points, Kentucky forced seven Szczerbiak scored 18 points in the
Fouls: 22
87, held a 27-3 edge in first downs 26-yard field goal .
straight turnovers, most of them first half and finished with 31 as
and had the ball for 42 minutes, 27
"That first drive gave us a n:al
seconds. Army was 0-for-7 on third lift but it didn't last very long, "
downs, completed one of four passes Army linebacker Scou Sprawls said.
more . points before · Richard gamethatwasdcctdedearly.
for three yards with one interception "We stayed with them until those
Mandeville ended the streak.
Miarnijumped to an 8·0 lead on a
and gained 13 yard&gt; after scoring on two turnovers. That killed us and we
By thai time, Kentucky ' s lead three -pointer and a free throw by ·
its first series.
never recovered."
was seven points . The Wildcats Szczerbtak. and a patr of.loyups by
"This is a game thai you just
The Midshipmen put away the
stretched it to 60-49, their biggest Refiloc Lethunya. After that,
St. John Arena early .
have to keep playing,' ' Army coach game with a seven -minute drive to
Icod, before a three-point play by Virginia Commonwealth never got By RUSTY MILLER .
It marked the second year in a Bob Sutton said. "Ynu just have to start the second half that McCoy
Turner started lndian.a's final come- closer than six points, and trailed by
COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP)
row
that South Florida had hcatcn pcrscvcic until you ~ct your moment capped with his third touchdown. He
back.
as many as 27 in the second half.
Many bht? Stale fans looked at the
Ohio
State .
and we didn ' t do that. We Jet the added an 11 -yard touchdown pass to
: Guyton scored Indiana ~s next
Damon Frierson had 27 points for Bucke&gt;:es 4-1 st_art and dr~w the
The
49 points marked only the game get nut of hand and made it LeBron Bulls in the fourth quarter.
1
sc·vcn points, then Turner hit a three· Miami (4-1 ), and Anthony Taylor concluston thai thmgs wcren nc_arpQinter as the Hoosiers pulled to 74- had II .
ly as bleak as they ha~ expected. , fourth time this decade that an Ohio reall~ diffi cult for us."
After the streak ended .
State
team
had
failed
to
score
50
1
7i witl1 I :H to go. Indiana's Mylo Brooks led Virginia
But coach Jtm 0 Bnen wasn
Tim Cannada rushed for a career- Wcatherhic wa.' carried off the field .
points in a game, and the first time bes t 1 3~ . yards and a three -yard
However, Wcathcrhic said the
William Gladness blocked a shot by Commonwealth (2-3) with 21 taken m.
Hcshimu Evans. but Gladness then points. Melvin Drake added 15. and
In the wake of an ugly 67-~9 loss against a non -Big Ten team . II was touchdo,wn in th e most lopsided team dedicated the gam e to junior ·
missed from under the basket and Torrance Archie had 12.
to South Flortda Saturday. 0 Brtcn also Ohio State's worst Joss to a contest in the 'cries since 1973, receiver Damon Myers of Delran, '
Scott Padgett rebounded for.
Michigan 83, UNLV 59
went ·Out of hts way to say the non-conference 'team since an 84-64 when Navy won 51 -0. In 98 games N.J .. and wore a decal with his iniKentucky . Wayne Turner then was
At Ann Arbor, Mich., Robbie Buckeyes are hght years from betng setback to Nonh Carolina five years hctwccn the teams, only four times tials. He was diagnosed with cancc• .
.
were there larger margms of victory. before Thanksgiving and is undergO: ·
fouled and scored the final point for Reid and Robert Traylor each scored a c~!"pe!ttl~e teat,n. ,
.. ,. ago.
It
was
Ohio
State's
lowest
point
the Wildcats.
17 points as all five Michigan
, If I m any~~tng, I m a n:ahst,
The win was the fourth straight ing chemotherapy.
Rob Turner, a junior college statters scored in double figures and 0 Bnen sa~d. I know .our b~skcl ­ total out of the Big Ten since beating 1his season for Nnv~ . ils lnngc sl
transfcr whose previous high was I8 the Wolverines used a strong de fen- ball tea.m nght now and I beheve I Georgetown 47-46 in the Great
points against Northeast Louisiana. sive effort to rout UNLV 83-59 know some M o~r strengths and Alaska Shootout 16 years ago.
"Obviously, we're very proud of
helped Indiana take an early eight- Saturday.
what our defictenctes are. When you
our
defensive intensity," South
point lead with the first two of his
The Wolverines (5-I) were never . wm a couple of samcs, you hav~ to
NEW YORK (AP) - John had I 0 point s and I I rebounds
four three-pointers: But that's when challenged after a IS-O run midway ask why tt hap,pened. We have a Florida coach Seth Greenberg said. Starks scored 27 points and Charlie before fouling out. Chris Mills had
"We're most effective when we're Waid sparked a third -quarter surge II and Allan Houston 10 as all five
the 6· foot - l 0 Mohammed wcni to through the first half. For the game, long --:ay to go.
into
people agsrcssivcly . I wanl thai gave the New York Kni cks their Knicks starters reached double fig.
work .
they forced UNLV into 1.8 turnovers
Ohto Sta~e shot 69.8 per~enl
them
to play on instinct. When sixth straight home victory, 90-79 urcs.
Coming off a career-high 19 and limited the Runnin' Rebels to 32 Wednesday mght tn an 84-74 VICIO·
they're
playing on instinct, we play Saturday over the Charloue Hornets. · Anthony Mason led Charlotte
points in an 89-74 victory over No. percent shooting.·
,
ry over Toledo, but mustered JUSI
more
aggressively."
6 Purdue in the Great Bight on
Reid, a junior transfer guard from 27.7 percent on 13-of-47 from the
Starks had 16 of his points in the with 16 points and 14 rebounds. The
When a reponer asked Greenberg second quaner and Ward scored all Hornets have lost four of their last
Wedne sday , Mohammed hit four Brigham Young. was 5-for-9 from fteld. The Buckeyes had onl! two
straight baskets and made a steal three-point range while also adding more field goals than the Bulls (6-1) if the win had special significance 10 of his in the third, including a five after starting the season 9-3.
because it. came over a bigger pro- pair of 3-pointcrs and a layup in sueB-W men beat Marietta 73-67
that sci up Sheppard for another bas· five assists for Michigan. Traylor, had three-pomt~
.
.
gram,
Greenberg said, "Why is this cession that allowed the Knicks to
BEREA , ( .io (AP) - Amara
kcl as Kentucky closed within 15- the burly 6-9, 300-pound junior, also . Scott John',illl d C~drtc S!"tth
13. Moments later. Jamal Magloirc had nine rebounds to just miss his lell the .Bulls w~ 14 potnts apt.ece. a bigger program? We ' re in brenk open a close game.
Toure sco red 28 points 10 lead
tied the game.
third double-double of the season.
Shaddnck Jenkms added 12 po1nts, Conference USA. We' re not exactly
The Knicks righted themselves Baldwin-Wallace to a 73-67 victory
MassaehUlletts 61, Marshall 59
Louis Bullock added 16 points, as dtd Haven Jackson who c_ame off chopped liver."
by overcoming 24 turnovers and over Marietta in the Ohio. Athletic
Michael Redd accounted for most holding the Hornets to 3'5 percent Conference on Saturday.
AI
Amherst ,
Mass ., Jerod Ward had 13 and Maceo th~ be;ch to htt all three ofhts threeof
Ohio
State's offense, matching his shooting that included a 3-for -13
Marieua (2-3 overall, 1-1 OAC)
Massachusetts streaked to a 21-2 Baston had 10 for Michisan.
potnt ttempts.
average
with 23 points.
lead and led by 20 at halftime, but
Center Kaspars Kambala and
The. Buck_eyes. never got closer
performance by Glen Rice and a 4- Jed Baldwin-Wallace (4-1, I-I) 38·
Ohio State scored 10 of the final for- 15 outing by David Wesley.
had to struggle in the second half guard Donovan Stewart scored 15 than ntne pomts 10 the second half
28 al the half, and led by as many as
13
points to make the score appear
before surviving with a 61-59 victo- points each forUNLV (3-2).
and trailed by as many as 25 as an
Patrick Ewing added 17 points 12 points early in the second half.
announced crowd of 8,686 desened closer than it was.
and
10 rebounds, Charles Oakley
I

NCAA college
basketball

UftChait

''"'""'' Own 0.111 ..

Rio Grande .... .............. ........................... ..................................42-54=96
Cedarville .. ~- ........................................................................... .'. 23-61 =84

Kentucky beats IU;
Marshall loses
to Massachusetts

Holiday ~pecial

1 OZ. SILVER, GIFT BOXED

•1111( lllllla

GETTING AWAY from Army linebacker Joe Sachltano (21) Ia
Navy quarterback Chris McCoy, who heed• upfleld for a 43-yerd
gain during the annual lntar·~ervlce conte11 Saturday In
Philadelphia. ~ Midlhlpmen won 311-7. (AP)

•

Lady Rebels whip
St. Joseph 88-20

-·-

. M. Buur AI-Atale,

M.D.'~

latenal Medldne

blideNcy: Internal MediCine - Mallhall University' School of
Medicine, Huntington, West Virginia
Botud EUgibl•: Ameritan Board oflntemal Medicine

Faro•q D. Alqadall, M.D., F.A.C.P. •
Hematology/Oncology ·
Raluncy: Internal Meditine ·D.C. General Hospital, Washington, D.C.
Felluwshlp: Hematology/Oncology- University of Cincinnati
Board Cmified: American Board of Internal Meditine, American Board
'
of Hematology/Oncology
.
.

Saturday, Dec. 13, 1997 - 1:00 P.M.
In the lobby of Farmers Bank in Pomeroy
Stop In and bid on the dolls In our "Dress A ·Doll" Contest. All
proceeds will go to the United Fund.
DAN SMITH, AUCTIONEER
Refreshme.nts will bB served. Open to the public. Call 992-2136
for more Information.
·

YoufBank!n~...

Fu
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Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company
..11

WllWLf

Mem ber F....
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211 West Second Street
P.O. Box 626
Pomi!"Oy, Oti 45769

614,992·2136

•2120 State Route 7
P.O. Box339
Tuppers Pfalns, OH 45783
61&gt;1/667·3161

1~ Upper River Aoad
GallipoliS, OH 45631

614/-2265
BANK

· Joe M. Anderson, D.O. • latenal Medldne
Railkt~cy:

Internal Medicine - Oklahoma Osteopathic Hospital, Tulsa,
Oklaho'ma
&amp;Hut~ Certified: American Board oflnte:.•tal Medicine

South Florida beats
os·u men 67•49

Sports in brief

Yadwl•der Slagll, M.D. • lntenal Medldne
Resiuncy: Internal Medicine- Harlem Hospital Centef, New Yo::k,
· NewYork
Board Cerlijkd: American Board of Internal Medicine

Call Holzer Olnlc's
Internal Medicine Department
I .
To Schedule an Appointment

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446-5131
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Page 82 ......!

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Basketball

NBA standings
AtiMtkiMYW..

»:

M111m1 .......... .....

I. fi:L

........ 12

Orlando..... ...

........... ll
New Jersey ....................... II
New York .......................... 10
8011on ........
.. ....... ,7
Wuhingloo
'··· 7
Ptliladtlphia ..
. ......... 4

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7
1
1
II
II
II

6)2
.611
.588
.3~9

.389
.267

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6 647
6 .625
6 . 62~
1. .611
8 . ~~
12 .36-8
17 .0~

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HCJUIIOO ...........

. ........ 10 -~ 667
U1M '...
....... II
1 61 J
San Anh'lllio .
. ....... 10 9 . ~26
Minnesocn ........................... R 9 .471
Vnncouvc:r .............................. ? J.l _,50
· ~ 12 294
Oallu................ ........
Denver .. ..
.. .. I 15 .06)

PadlltiN•hlto.l
L.A. Lakcrs ..... . ....... .
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2
Seank .............
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4
Photnut ......
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4
Pordn.nd .... ....
. ...... II
6
Sacramcmo......
.. .......... ~ 14

L.A. Clippen ..
GoldenStnte ...

2
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176

12

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Frid•y 's sco~

New Jeney I01 , Phil.lplml 88
Mituni 117, Bos1on 97
Seanle 94. ~roilll9
MinncSOIII 101. Sa.:romcnco .90
Ponland 94. Ulilh 77
Chicago 84, Milwnukee 62
Indiana 96, De:nver 8~
P~ni1 110. Toronto 91
Clt:Yd~nd 107, Van~:ouver 9~
Golden S1nt~ \04, Orlando 89

Saturday's Games
:11

New Yurk. I p.m.

Minnc:~a 111 W!ahmgton. 7 p.m.
Houston liS. Dallas Dl M~•• co City, 9
Orlando atl.A Chppen. I 0: ~p . m .

rm

Today's 1ames
Detroit at Toronro. J p.m.
New YorL :11 Philadclph101., 6 p.m.
Seaule ~~ Milwauktt, 7 p.m
lndinna at Phoe:ni•. 8 p m
I.. A. Oippen :Jt Denvrr, 9 p.m.
Golden Si:ue Dl Sa:nuncnto. 9 p.m.
Cle¥cland 111 L.A. l..ak~r5 , 9;M) p.m.

NCAA Division I
men's scores
Friday's action

wl

Army ~7 . Bethany,W.Va. 38
Mnnllllnan 64. lona 62 tOTl
-~

Socdll
: North Corolint~68. Chnllanoo.@a -~8
• South Cnrolina 74. Virzinia Tech n

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Mid.• Buff~lo 70, NE Illinois ~9
' Minne50fa 6J, W. Cnrolinn 46

r... WEst
.• Montllllll67, W. lllinoi1 65
,•

Tournaments

A.mtH Clulk.fl,. ro~~llll
Grllflitllng St. ~J. Comell49
Nebmsb 8~. N.C. -Wilming10n 68

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~
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c,.._ c~uo~..,..-nnt'"""

. Coppin St 60, SW Texas St. 59
: lowll St 8J, Texas Southern 60

•
Fint 1bn11. Clauie-l'lnl 1'0111111
• Marquene 84. Mont ::~nil S1. 60

:. St. Bono.YCntUR! 59. OHIO 46
:
First MtrdlMls BankiCVC o-M:
•
Fint rot~nd
• Ball St . 99, Quirwpiac 46
: M111151ippi 102. LonJ Island U. 99

-:
Photnl1. Clu*-ch. . plertllllp
•· Fairf~ld n. YaLe 41 '
Third pla(r
. Hanford K~. Cent. C00111:1:1kUI Sl. n

: _.
Piua Hut Clauk.flnt rvu.d'
• Bowlin&amp; Gn:cn 89, Maine IIJ
SW Missouri St 90, Te•ns-San Antonip 54

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s""'r ctot•r s"""""'t·n"' .....t

• lowa81.Rke52

' Weber St 81. Mounr St. M~~ry'1, Md. 73
• TCIIY HoHdey Tout"'.-eflt.ftntrou...

·: Ark. -Un~ Rock 92. Miu. Valley St . 8:\
: Sou1hml Miu. 67, £1on49
•
11M' JIII'IFnl-llf'lt,......
.• CoiOfado St. 71 . Troy St. 47
; E. Wltlhinalon 68. Columbia S9

TcnR•b•nonCIIIIIk...... .._..
"' Jacksonville Sc. !16. Bethel. Tenn. 70

•

usr ln"llal. .l•ftrsl rwnd

Richmond 70, Samford 3M
San Prundsco M~ . Mllflmouth. N.J . Jh

QJiio U.S. boys' scores
•

Friday's action

: l\~~i7 , W. Umun74
AkAul Huban btl, Rlllltllh•wn :'ill
Akma St V·St.M 67 , Cuyahnr.:~ ralls li2
AllenE b4. Ad11.W
Allmocc ~I . Au ~cintuwn · Fitc:h .W
Antwl!fJI ~K . F:~ yctlc JJ
An::anum 76. Tri·CIIUnty-N. ~7
• An:hbold 71 , Wnuseon 611
; Arlington 49. Cory·Rawsnn 40
1 Ashland 118. Cl u vCT~af~J
~ Alhlalld CreSI\I1A" 71, Luc;u; ~9
• Allblo.nd St. Milo, Ckwerkolf 54
Arhtns41 , Chilhcorhc J2
Aumrgi'JJ, W. Ge:~up ~I
.
Av11n Hiah 60. lAITiiiR C:11h. ~9
Blllavla 76, Cin. Summh Counlr~ Day ~~
Bellbrook K2. Cllnlon-Muuie ~
' Bt:llevue 6). l...fel.lftJtiiO ~Q
· &amp;!lin Hiland 74. W. Holtre~41
• Blaachester 60, Willi~Mn~~burjl !'tO
: Blufflon 47. Cnlum!M Grov~ 4~
• Breck•Ytlle 49, Ma1•k Hts. :n
t Bruoluilk 7g, Bucktye 72
• 8~K:kcyt Tr.ail1l. Litke land 47
• Cllltlbrillgc: S1. c,_.. Soi14h $1
Qu\al F~alton NW tr6. Tu~earawu Val. M tOT)
Canal Winc:hcsttr 66. W. kffi.'llfln .~$
Canton M...-Kinky 64, Canton Timken 4V
Cantoo S. 49, Canloo Ca~h. 3K
COK'dinal ~7 . Blnomf.eld 4!1

I:"'J' 70. -

.•2
~Cedan•lle 68. Ma:hamcsburJ fl.l tOT)
•Ccntcrbura fl~ . Mlllefspott ~"
* Ce~tlle 96. Jdknon ~
: Chanei7M , CMmucd Fall• 64
.Owdon YJ. Gam=ntvillc ~~~
.Chc:~~peab 60. Richmond Dale Souti!C~refn
~g '

J;in. Aiken ~!'I. Cin. St Xavkt' ~I (OTI
Cin. A.ndellon 68. Villa htadanM fll
Cin. Cromry Day 6.\. Fe:lidry ~7
Cin. ~ Plwk 67. Cin. Hills tllr. A..:ad. ~~
,Cin. Olen F.- 62, Cin. NurwOOIJ ~I
•Cin..Ludm:ri. +1, Cin. Cbrit~fan 32
&lt;:in. I-aSaiie 71, Cln. Wllhwt Hill•49
C1n. Mt:Nicholas 76. Cia. Amt:li;l6~
Cin. Milford 76. Cin. l.cmon-Milflf1le .• I
Cin. Moeller 71 , Cin. Syc:amon ~9
Cin. Mt. HGI!hy 61 . Cin. N. Col~p Hill ~9
C.n. Readina61. Cin. Lockland .ll
Cio. Sc-tocn Hilll 69, Cin. Indian HiH 4~
Cin. Torpn 42, Reibel-Tate ~9
Cin. Winton Woodl6l LAkoln £. 60
Cirdevilt, 1.5. E. Clinton 61
Cle. Benedlc:rinc 9:t lkdfon:lll7
Cle. Collinwood 66. Clc. Rhodes 39
Clc. Eut Tteh 9K , C'Jt. Ktnnuly flO
Clc. OltBYillc 6ll, C~ . Ealt !i8
Cit. Joh• Hay 89. Uncoln-West48
Cle. St. lcnatiul 74, Euclid ~7 ,
Cle. VA·SJ n, HM'Iilfon (Ofttllio) C~~o~hedral

l8

Col.lkechcrolt71 , Bil Walnut68

AtlHik Ph·I!Aun

K7
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711

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7'i
72

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Just like every other oppone·nt he
hils faced, Muss !crt Toledo in his ·

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l,riday 's Sl'nres

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W;~shmt~hlll

J, Floootl11:! (tiT)
l'htlo.'Uil :! , C.rnhtiOI ! Cli1•)
llullaln ·"- 'l'illnllll llay n
l~tilmll'lphi:t ~- N.Y. Kallj!t'/'1( 4 Uil'l
l)allas .a. &lt;.'ul}:ary I
l~hmmtun J.l)..-trmt I

Salurduy's (iames
(';lrl&gt;lm;l atlk\SIIIII. 7 p.lll
Anahd111111 Pht~huri!h. 1 I' n1
ltillll.'m• m N.V. blaml1:rs. 7 p.m.
Uuii;~Iu m Ouaw;1. 7:.'&lt;) I'-m,
N.Y. K;rn)t~'n 111 Muutr~·&lt;~l. 7;,1() 11,111.
T"nq,., llay .11 New Jcr"':y, 1:.10 1• m
U.\~ All1.&gt;ck·~ ill llll\lUhl. 7 :_\() p m .
C:1lsnry U1 S1 l..tltJi~. H:.\IIJU11.
V&lt;~nL..liiVl'f al Col1x:ki&amp;1, ICUO p.m.

Amerlnn L~taltte
ANAHEIM ANGELS : Signed INF Steve Scnrsone to a minor·leaaue cllftlr.ct.
.
BALTit..tORE ORIOLES: Agreed to terms
with RHP Scou KDmieniecki on a two-year tontr.M:t.
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Signed RHP Rich
B11tchtlor to a one·ytlll' contract .
MINNESOTA TWINS: Agttd ta temu with
C Ouis Turner Mel INF Esteban Belft on·minorlaa&amp;ue tonfr.tiiOII .
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Named Jack Hut.-bnrd lint case coach and JimJ.ett bench cooc:h.

~u. ntington

Ross
beats Rebels 63-33

•

.J :

Moss.

•

"I don't want to make any excuses fnr how l played. I was there with

•

•
•

from that range in the first half)
By G. SPENCER OSBQRNE
helped
them keep their lead in douTim• Sentinel Stiff
CHILLICOTHE - In Friday hlc·digit country to stay.
In the remaining contests . that
night's opening bask~tball contest of
the McDonald's Tip-Off Classic on night, Chesapeake beat Richmond
the Ohio University-Chillicothe cam· Dale Southeastern 60-58 before
pus, the Huntington.Ross Huntsmen Fra~kfort Adena got past West Union
got 23 points from junior forward 77-74.
The tournament ended Saturday
Chris Adkins and 13 more from
senior forward Cun Shoemaker that with a six-game slate.
The shooters: Adkins' offense
helped defeat the South Galli a Rebels
63-33 in the clubs' season opener.
was built mostly on 9-for-23 field·'
· The Rebels took their only lead .•goal shooting. Shoemaker got his
after senior forward Jason Johnson points from 5-for-14 field-goal shootsank a 14-foot in-the-lane jumper 15 . ing.
seconds aftertipoff. But junior guard
Johnson led the Rebels with 15
Kyle Hauswinh created the only tie points gained mostly fwm 6-for-17
of the game on a·l2-footjumper from field-goal shooting. ,
the left wing with 7:27lcfl in the first
The future: This week's agenda
has the Rebels staying at horne for the
quarter.
That was the start of the Hunts· ~ext two games. They will host Fairmen's 10-0 run that saw Adkins fol- land Tuesday and entenain Chesalow Hauswirth's foul shot (6:56) with peake friday before heading northseven straight points before the cast to play the Eastern Eagles Sat·
Rebels scored again.
urday night.
·The Rebels' only consecutive fil)it· Quarter lldlll .
half field goals came in the first quar- South Oallia
11-6-9-7=33
ter from Johnson (three-pointer with Huntington Ross 14-12-16-21=63
1:58 left) and 6-foot-4 junior Robby
Rush (layup with S9 seconds left). Jn. -South Gallla (0-1): Johnson 5-1·
the second quarter, the Huntsmen 212=15, Boothe 1-0-214=4, r;&gt;avis 0responded by executing an 11.0 run 1-112=4, Rush 2-0-01 I=4, Cook Q.0that gave them a 14-point margin 212=2, Michael 1-,0-010=2, Queen 1before South Gallia's J.R. Boothe 0-010=2. Totals: ltl.l9·217·7/tl=33
slmk a 19-foot jumper near the foul
Total FG: 12-46 (26. I%)
Rebounds: 29 (Boothe 7, Johnson
circle with 2:52 left.
Boothe's basket; his only field goal 6)
. ,\ssism: 8
of the night, killed the Rebels' string
of eight straight misses from the field.
Steals: 6 ·
But South Galli a's scoring four ofthe
Thmovers: 2S
Fouls: 17
last five points in the last three min·
utes trimmed Huntington's lead to a •
Huntington (1.0): Adkin~ 6-3·
26-17 margin at halrtime.
Huntington, continuing thC smoth- 2/~=23, Shoemaker 2-1-011= 13,
ering defense thJ!t gave it chances to McCray 3.0-213=8, Hauswirth 3-0cash in on South Oallia's turnovers; 112=7, Harrington 2-0-114=5, Kelkept driving the ball to the baselines lough 2·0.011=4. Schultz 1·0·011=2.
and into the paint, but the Huntsmen .Vandemark0.0-112=1. Totals: 19/40also concentrated on three-point 61ll·7/11J;63
shooting in a way they didn't in the
Total FG: 25-62 (40.3%)
Rebounds: 40
first half.
The Huntsmen's 2-for-7 showing
Thmonrs: 10
from three-point land in act three
Fouls: 16
(compare with their 1-for-6 showing

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS: Named Glenn

bullpen and catt:hiag tOOt:h.
·
ATLANTA BR,._ VES; Agreed lo term• on 11
minor-lel:iaue comriCI with SS Raflicl Bellil»'d.
FLORIDA MARLINS: Claimed lNF Brandon
Cromer off waiven from the Pilllburgh Pii-lltcs.
Delian•ed tNF A.._ M• for • ....,._..
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Sia:ned OF Willie
M1.'&lt;kc co a onc:·yc:llt c:onlf'llCI.
S~doc:k

Baskeball
N1Uon11 BllktthiU Auod•tk»n
NBA : Fined Toronto Raprors conch Darrell
Walker UOOO for making an ob~tenc: gesture 111 a
fan durinc a Oct. :\ came.
.
I.MLLAS MAVERICKS : Named F Kurt
lbom111 auistant c:ooch.
NEW JERSEY NETS: WlliYed Q Steve Hen·
son. PlAced F-C Jack H:~o~jj the injured list

VANCOUVER GRI

ES: PIDC&lt;d G AmOO.

ny Peeler on the injured lilt. Activated 0
Robicuon from the injure-d h11.

Chri~

NMianll Foott.ll Ltapt

CHICAGO BEARS: SiJned WR Chri1 Miller
10 the pn~~:lice ~~:~uiKI.
·
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: Placed QB Paul
Justin ond DB Cedric Mo1his on injured te~erve.
Sianed WR Olris Doering aM RB leon Nenl fmm
the pmc1iee squad.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: .PI11ced QB S1an
Hutnptlric1 on injured reserve.

Cpllege
BOSTON UNIVI!RSITY: Su5pcntkd junit•r G
l....eVnr Folk Cmn11he n~n · s busktli-mll tl'ain fur IJ1·
1Uburdioorion.
OREGON; Anoounce\lt~ n:J~i(l.h;ltion ur Rh•h
Stuhler, ddetulve \.'Ot.'ll'iliMtur. l!lfcc:tlvc 01.-c:. 21 . •
RUTGERS: Suspended freshman F Mmtrk~
Bruwn intltflailcly rrom t~ tn.!n'~ ha.,keth.'llltc:Jitl
for ..:riminal c:hlqcs.

Eighth-grade Blue
Devils beat Meigs

could do."

Marshall quarterback Chad Pen(See HERD on 8-3)

•

DEADLINE FOR PU
ere Four Dollars
($4.00) lor each dog, male or female. ~ennel Feu are Twenty Dollare ($20.00). To obtain
llcenile by mall, complete end return application to: Nancy Perter Campbell, Meigs County
Auditor, P.O. Box 551, Pomeroy, OH 45789. Enclose • Hlf·llddreued, stamped envelope with
1 check lor the price of the license.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy's eighth-grade boys' basketball
team defeated the visiting Meigs
Marauders 47-19 Thursday night at
Washington Elementary, according to
a report submitted Saturday.
The Blue Devils, playing their
· ~cason opener, were led by Brent
Sebert's II points and five rebounds.
Eight-point efforts were recorded by
David Brodeur and Joel Elliott.
The Marauders were led by Josh
Lynch, who had eight.
Gallipolis will host Logan Monday.

Tri-Villatw 61 . Bmdfnnl n
Triwny HI. WayW1k 47
Tuduw ~~ . 001lton 4J
Twin V:llky S 6'1. A.nM~tUa6H
Twtu~burjt 76, Clc Callkllic: fl6
UniiL'I.I L.&amp;ll.'!ll ~~ . W. Brunch ~.l
UJ'Pt'r SmKiusky ~'· Wyn(tlfd 47
UtM:a 4K. Nllfthri;e .ol7
YmM!alin Butler 6-. Day. Nurthmo11t 48
Ym1lue M. Hopeweii-U.lUOOn 42
• V.ennilion 77, Firtloods .~~
W. Sn~m Nonhwet.l~n66. Black Rivl!r $~
W~mn Kenntdy 74. Ni!Wion F311&amp; 46
Wanaw RiYtr View 68, John Gknn 61 •
Wnyll(' 7(1, 1iW«aooc 61
Wnynctvil~ 6.1, l.JIIk Miami~
Wellin,too ~~. Amhmt-Sttc!k 44
Wellston 9tl, ~ Uninn 71
Well1v1Ue 67, M:r.rtiftl Ferry 66
WeNervillc S. 54. Cgl. Wattenon ·~
Wct~lakc 69, KeYJione 61
White00117J, Walnut Rid&amp;t .W
Whiteoak 611. N. Adams66
Wood~ 6~ . OIKJO ~J

$119

$109'"

.

NBdoMI Hockty Lape
NHL: Suape.nde:d Edmonron Oilers D Uryan
Man:hment ror 1hr~:e tame• without pay :md li~tt'tl
him SI.OOO for his hil on Dallll~ Stan C Mike ·
Mndlltlo in II Ore. :\ Ralrle.
ROSTON BRUINS: Ret.:nlkd G Ruht'lic T~llo1~
fromPnwitltnceortheAHL.
,
NEW 'YORK ISLANDERS: As.~i~ncJ D 7.Jc.
no Churn to Kcntu~ky or the AHL.
PHOENIX COYOTES: kecall~:1l LW Jeff
Chrhti11n from Lns VegllS ol' the IHI.. l'la~cu LW
Darrin Shannon on cht Injured li~t .

Tri-VIIIky 6~. Crtii.~YII~ 4.l

-·-

$129

Foot baD

Hockey

erage.
Moss' three scores· gave him 25
SETS RECORD- Mllrehell wide receiver Randy Moss (top) pulls
touchdown catches .this season, In • touchdown Jill" Ill front of Toledo defensive beck Clarence Love
brcaki ng the mark of 22 he shared (lett) during Frldlly nlght'a Mid-American Conference championship
with Houston's Manny Hazard, set in game In Huntington, W.Va. The catch, Moll' third of the game,
halped the Thundering Haf'!l win 34-14 end claim the conference title.
1989.
Mota
hofcja the NCAA record for moet elngle-1111aon touchdown .
Hazard 10t his record in II games,
reception•
with 25. (AP)
.
while Moss played in his 12th game
Friday. The NCAA con~iders con·
ference championship games as reg·
ular-season games for statistical purposes.
Moss was fonnally invited Friday
to attend next Saturday's Heisman
Trophy presentation at the Downtown Athletic Club in New York.
Michigan's Charles Woodson, Ten- 1
nessec 's Peyton Manl\lnflllk!'Wi!Sh""'
ington State's Ryan Leaf were als.o
invited.
"The coaches told me to concentrate on the game and nol think about
the Heisman," Moss said.
3/8' Cordless drill with extra bariel)',
Moss has 5~ touchdown catches
c•se. chafler and bonus ftashlisht.n01 u1
.OitOW\.f.1
in two seasons. His 170 yards receiving Friday gave him I,647 yards this
9.6V CORDLESS
season, breaking the conference mark
DRILL KIT
of 1,549 set by Kent's Eugene Bak99
er this year.
· In its first season in the MidAmerican Conference since 1968,
318"' Cordless drill with extra banery, case,
charser
and bonus flashlight.60'JWWU·4
Marshall (I 0-2) earned an automatic
bid. to the inaugural Motor City
Bowl on Dec. 26 in Pontiac, Mich.
10" MITRE SAW
I HI' ROUTER
Its last 'bowl appearance was the
1948 Tangerine Bowl. 11 won two
99
Division I·AA championships in the
1990s, including a 1·5·0 season in
Powerful motor
l"''" alibroted depth
1996.
fO&lt; excellent per
control rins. All boll
"Marshall football is about ·win·
form•nce. 45 and
bearin1 construdion.Hi·
90 deBFI!e cuts, 4~ X ••lu~ber. ,te990
ning cham'pionships, and that's what
$p8ld mocor.1011)J
we play here for," sliid cooch Bob
Pruett. "This is by far my most hapPY moment in football. I played here.
We never won a MAC champi. on ship, We did something tonight
that none of you really thought we

O'DELLS

NollonaiLeopo

~J

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••

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OWNER OF DOG

..
,'

ADDRESS
.

TELEPHONE

AGE

SEX

......

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TOWNSHIP

HAIR

. COLOR

!

.-

Long I Short

!

Breed
If Known

'

Fee a
Paid

'

No Credit, Slow Credit
Bad Credit, Bankruptcy?
At Dutch Miller Chevrolet,
WE CAN HEJ.P
lfYoa Hue At Leut 11,300

.

amoath J.e.e

Dolphins win BBYFL tit.le
POMEROY - The Dolphins
claimed the championship of the Big
Bend Youth Football League recent·
ly.
The league features players in
grades 5th-6th. In game one the Dol·
phins claimed a 8·0 wm over the
Eagles, then the Eagles returned to
win 18·12 over the Browns. The Dolphins heat the Browns 12·0, then 10
a rematch, the Dolphins defated the
Eagles 12-0 to claim the championship. .
Aaron Folk led the Dolphins with
20 tackles, Corey Woods had 15, and
B.J. Mamhout had 10 . Craig Ran·
dolph led the team with 53 carries for
252 yurds. Joe Clelland was 28-196
and 24 points; Mamhout was 27-79
with six points, Mike Davis 3:16, and
Will Woods was 1-10 w1th two
points.
Cory Dill led the Eagles with 19
tackles, while Ross Holter, Chns
Connolly. and Corey Longstreth each
had 18, Curtis Varian IS, Doug D1ll
1,1, nnd J;ddie Fife II.

• SAVE THOUSANDS •
Don~

Pey 'lltoM High KllniUOity

NOTICE: Ucenee mUet be obtlllned no 18tet thin J1nuery 20, 11117, to 1vold paying pen1lty. Atttr thle
dett, pe1111tty will be $4.00 lor tingle tag lnd UO.OO for Kennelllcen.,.

11111-otlto 1 - R-1
68

Milly Ythk:lell Ale Alllllla.,e With

NO MONEY DOWN!
CAU. 2A HOURI ADAY·

P.O. Box 551
Pomeroy, Oh. 45788

7DAYSA WEEK

'

'

NANCY PARKER CAMPBEl-L
Melga County Auditor

•

'

SLIPS INSIDE FOR TWO • Gallipolis' Andray Howell (44)
ellpped Inside for two of his 23 points against Southern Friday
nlghl GAHS won n-52. Others in this Scott Wplfe photo are Mike
Garten (40), Adam Williams, (24) Chris Lewis (30) and Russell
Reiber (20). Howell , lan Fanderbosch and Brian Sims each took
a charge for the winners. Southern will host Meigs Tuesday.

-Area cage standingsAll game•
Teem
W L
Portsmouth .........1 o
Greenfield .......... 1 o
Gallipolis ............ 1 0
Athens ................ 1 0
Eastem ............... 1 0
Jackson .............. 1 0
Chesapeake ....... 1 o
Fairland ..............0 0
Wheelersburg ..... o o
Pt. Pleasant.. ...... o 0
Meigs ................. 0 o
Warren Local ...... o o
River Valley ........ 0 0
Logan ................. 0 1
Marietta .............. 0 1
ovcs .................o ·1
Southern ............ 0 1
South Gallia ....... 0 1
SEOAL
Varsity
Team
' W L
Jackson ............O 0
Pt. Pleasant.. ....O· 0
River Valley ......0 0
logan ...............0 0
Gallipolis ...........0 0
Warren Local. ...0 0
Ath!lnS ..............0 0
Marietta ............0 o
Totals. .
o o
SEOAL
Reserves
Teem
W L
Jackson ............ o o
P.t. Pleasant... ... O 0
River Valley .:.... 0 0
Logan ............... 0 0
Gallipolis ........... o o
Warren Local. ... 0 0
Athens .............. 0 0
Marietta ............ 0 0
Total•
0 0

P
79
60
77
41
72
79
60
0

o
o
.. o

0
· 0
65
59
64
52
33

P
0
0
0
0
0

o
0

0
0

Athens 41 Chillicothe 32
Last night's games:
Chesapeake at Gallipolis
Belpre at Warren Local
River Valley at Meigs
Logan at V1n1on County
Greenfield in OUC Classic
Marietta vs. Canton Glen Oak at
Zanesville Classic · ,
.Portsmouth vs.Portsmouth East
o in Portsmouth tipoff classic
·
o Tueaday'e games:
0 R'iver Valley vs. GAHS al URG
o Marietta at Jackson
0 Warren Local at Athens
68 Hillsboro at Greenfield
62 Fairland at South Gallia
72 Northwest al Wheelersburg
77 Meigs at Southern
63 Easlem at Belpre
Friday's games:
Gallipolis at Logan
Marielta al Athens
Warren Local al River Valley
OP Wheelersburg at Waverly
0 Chesapeake at South Gallia
0 . Meigs al Alexander
0 · Miller at Southern
0 Federal Hocking al Eastern
o Dec:. 13 games:
o Coal Grove at Portsmouth
o Clay at Wheelersburg
Minford at Greenfield
Southern vs. Cincinnati Maderia
0 at OU (4:15)
South Gallia at Eastern

OP
59
44
52
32
64
74
58
0

°

P OP
0
0
0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

.0

0

Friday's results: ·
Gallipolis 77 Southern 52
Nels-York 68 Logan 65
Jackson 79 Piketon 74 {ol)
Portsmouth 79 Minford 59
Chesapeake 60 Ross-SW. 58
Greenfield 60 Wilmingllln 44
Mansfield Sr. 62 Marielta 59
Huntington Ross 63 South Galfie 33 ·
Eastern 72 OVCS 64

ONE ON ONE • Gallipolis' Kevin Walker (24) defends South- , . ,
ern's .Troy Hoback (40) during Friday night's season hardwood •
opener at Racine-Southern. Gallipolis won, n-52. Walker had one •·
of Gallla's three blocked shots-Chris Lewis had the other two.
Gallipolis played Chesapeake last night, and will host River Val·
ley at Rio Grande Tuesday.

Holiday Greetin8s
from

·

ATLAS

WHITTINGTON'S
309 Upper River Road

1st prize-2 ATLAS tires (valued at'$120)
2nd prize-Huffy 26" • 15 speed Mt. Bike
3rd prize-$50 Prepaid BP gas card
4th prize-Interstate battery (valued at $50)
5th prize-$25 Prepaid BP gas card
6th prize-Service: oil, filter, and lube
7th prize-BP collector truck
8th prize-Set of winter wiper blades
9th prize-BP cap
Receive tickets with your purchases! Drawing will be Dec.
24th at noon. All gifts must be claimed by Jan. 1st. Free
coffee, hot chocolate and cookies on Christmas Eve and
candy for the children.

Merry Christmas and Happy Hew Yearl
from ·
Mike, Judy and David Eblin, Jim and Dot Whittington,
Bill and Pete Cox, John Johnson, J . L. McCoy, Jr.,
Brenda Casto, John W. Clark Oil &amp; Atlas!

.1998 HEAVY DUTY

% TON 414 PICKUP
With Meyer's snow plow package, 350 V8 engine, auto.
trans., air conditioning, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cassette, 7'!.
ft. snow blade, . hydraulic 4-way controlling and much
more.

HOLLEY BROS•.
CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.
,

·-·
~
•Backhoe

011 ,,, ""'

RODNEY, OHIO

•Dozer
Work
•

JI&amp;IIDDf1'LU. • COJIOIDCIAJ.

· (Continued from B-2)
nington joined M05s in the record

.

Doug Dill was 43-247 rushing
with 12 points, Longstreth was 5-18,
and Kevin Butcher 13·32.
Joe Howard led the Browns with
16 tackles, Anthony Jodon had 15,
Ryan Fraiser 14, and Brandon Grover
nine. Johnny Banon led the rushing
attock with a IS-159 assault, Jodun
was 20-49, Fraiser 9-31, Luke Rou~h
1-25, and Grover 1-5.
Third and tounh grade results will
be released at a later date.

Herd wins MAC...
book.

WoodoidJ&lt; 43, C•yohop Hit. J6
Wootecr 71. New- Philade)phia ~
Wonhin,ron Ow. 7~. Buckeye Val. $8

Ch~~rtel

McDonald's Tlp·Off Cla~slc begins

sure on him" with one-on-one cov-

Transactions

Srring. Sm11h 61-!. Ttl.'unueh _,-H
Sprinllbl.ll'u KK, C01rll-k! 41
St. lkrnnf\1 ~7. Cin. Finncyh•w.r 49
St. Clu!inville IU. Uninn Lucal M
Sylv1111ia Nonhvi~w M. r"D!!tnria ~
T:~llmw.IJC IO·t Kent Roosevelt 7~
Thom11 Wonhinw.lon Sl. Delaware 4~
Tiffin Cl•lun"'ian ~K . Clylk ~2
Tin.~m74. Hilllllf'l ~.l
Tnl S1. l;,:.1nc1• 7J. W~aktl{tda 64

Tol Woudw;•!.l MI. Sylvaniu Soulhv~w
Torun111 K3. l.1~1 bll

FINDS THE SEAM- South Glllla'e Je•on Jahneon (center) Iinde
the-m In the Huntington Ro" defenM provided by Chrle Adklne
(right) end Phillip Herrington In the Hcond quarter of the opening
game of the McDonekl'e11p-Off Claellc on the Ohio UnMrelly-ChiiJ.
lcolhe cempu•. Though Johneon led the Rebel• with 15 polntl, they
to.t 63-331n the -eon opener for both teet ne. (Time..sentlnel photo by Q, Spencttr Oaborne)

him, hut he made some great catches. And being a .cornerback, that isn't
the way it's supposed to go," Love
said.
"He played a groat player," Pinkel
said of Love. "We put a lot of pros-

Today's ~mes
Wushingtoo at Florida, 1;JO p.m.
Edmonton Ul Olkugo, g p.m.

Soothinatun ~- MaU~ewa ~I
Sparta Htahland MI, Fn:lkrkkt..:.wa 69
Sp:ll(\.'f'Villc 76. Upflel' Sc:illlo Vnl. 7J !OT)
~·~- Nonll 77. Kcnroo Ridg~ S6

To I. Sean ~7 . MaunLY .\2

I

"This guy is a great player, and I
hope he goes in the NFL" next year,
'lhlcdo couch Gary Pinkcl said after
lhc 14-141nss.
Mnss has 53 touchdown catches
in IWO SCOISODS ·ilnd ha.~ SCOred in each
of his 27 career games.
Moss caughltnuchduwn passes of
four ilnd K(J yards in the third quar·
tcr Friday and a 20-yardcr in lhc
fourth, all against all-cuhlcrencc corncrhack. Clarence Love, who is six
inches shorter than the 6-foot-5

...'"

'",,,"'
"

·.

~akc.

II

)K

jumper) to knot the count at 19-an .;
does up by six.
Andray Howell, held to two fields Adam Williams' tapin with 3:37 lefi
goal in the first period by the sticky in the half gave Southern its final
Southern defense, canned two free lead, 21-19.
throws with 7:06lcft in the first half.
During the final 3:26 of the first
After Allen's two charity tosses gave half, GAHS outscored Southern 14-.
SHS its second largest lead, 17-11, I to take a 33-22 halftime advantage. ·
GAHS began its comeback. Chris . Howell popped in 12 of the Blue
Lewis got a layup with 6:30 left, fol· Devils markers in this period, Lewis
lowed by a tipin by Kevin Walker and Codv Lane four each while.
with 4:46 showing on the clock. ;Walker and Brian Sims each had a
Howell uncorked a three-pointer plus 'goal. OAHS hit nine of IS field goal
a free throw at the 4:23 mark (fol- attempts in the second period after .
lowing Mitchell Walker's long
(~ B~UE DEVILS on B-4)

.

1~4H .

•»1 h'l
,\.'1 M'i ' h'\
,!•1 il'l Tl
! ·I 1111 n
•1tl 'i.! 7-1

.!!

Allen combined effons to propel the
Tomndoes into a 17-11 lead with 6:41
left in the second canto.
Nip-and-tuck ftrst period
During the first eight minutes of
action, the score exchanged hands
eight times and was tied once before
Allen and Walker scored the final five
Paints of the period to give the
Meigs County Crew a 13-91ead. Troy
Hoback's driving layup with 7:42 left
in the second period put the Torna·

1

. ' 2'1 "'Kl 'II
..' " •• "'
" .. 24 "

l'uh•r:111!1 ...

RACINE- Visiting Gallipolis rallied fi'om a 15-9 second period deficit
to defeat Southern 77-52 in a nonconference basketball game in the
Charles W. Hayman gymnasium Friday night. It was the 1997-98 season
opener for both teams.
Coach Howie Caldwell's scrappy
quintet dominated play during the
first 10 and one-half minutes of
action as Pete Sisson, Mitchell
Walker, Troy Hoback and JasQn

ByJOHNRABY
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Randy Moss has come a long way.
He was kicked olf,Fiorida State's
football team in spring 1996 for vio!iA lating parole by smoking marijuana.
4Y
· After a jail stint, 'he was given
71)
7:t another chance as a walk-on at Mar·
111
shall and led the Thundering Herd to
K.l
lhc Division·J-AAchampionship as a
K\
JI
freshman that fall .
On Friday, the sophomore was
~
muncd u Hcisman Trophy finalist. He
,. capped niT the day by setting a Divi·
~j sion 1-A record for touchdown recep·•• tinns in" scao;on. And his three scores
"~ai nst Toledo gave Marshall the .
Mid-American Conference championship
"nd its first bowl berth since
liA

IN"i.&lt;IM"'

Vmll.'tllt~· ,,- ..

l..nl\blown .W
Shi:lhy _,-I. ManlfH:kl Madi10a 4ft
She~~anl.kd! M. Meadowbrook ~H
Shcn\lun 6-1, W. Muskingum·47
SiJno..'J IJ~ . Bdldont!YIII! Kl
SnUthYilk 6t KILlron Chr. 43
Sulon1Y. Brulh II*

'1

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17
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14 ~:!

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Yoo. Boardman 71 , You. Olaney

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S. Pnia.t Ml . lronton 71 ltm
Sltnl.lu~k~ St M:wys 90, Tiffin Calvert ll2 tOT)

You. Liberlv 62. S!nuhe" 61

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Xtnia Ow. .58, Mid Val. 47

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2fl

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N.Y. bl;ud.,n ............... ,.. lll .l ·4

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T:uupa ll:1y .. .

Hunm 7. Willard70
lnU.=pendc:nc:c 62. Garr~~:IJ He~ . Tmuty 54
ln~ohan Crtoel; 711. Buckc:yc Lnc:ll 6-4
Jad.son 7'J. P1kcto.1 74 lOTI
J..cl.:.s1•11 C~'n~ I01, Fa1rlawn b.J
kw.:tt·S..:••• ~. Carrolllon ~::!
Kl.'nlll'd)' (P:.) Chr 71 C:unrhell Mcmurial ~7
Kcn~mn 72. 0\agrin Falls M
Lulillta W. 60. Mawn ~2 rOT)
L;m1::1stcr ~9 . M.. non-Franklin 5:!
Lcb.1nnn 61. Day. O:.kwnOO 4J
I.Jbt:rty Chr ~I . Mt Vernnn Acrw.l. 45
L1cking Ht~ ~7 . Col. Mlllkmy ~2
L111m Perry :H . Lincolnvtew .\ti
Luna Shawno: 47, Lima Bath 40
L1mn Tr:mrlc Cht. 70. S. Cr:nlr.ll-67
L1nsly. W.Vn. IW. Steubtnville C:tth. 64
Logun Elm 70. Trimble ~li
Lomin Adm. King 71. A~oo ~ ~
Lorain Southvir:w 67, bd SH I
Loudonville ~ . Norwaync J4
Looisville Aq1.unas 61, Canfield ~7 (OT)
Luthenin W. 80, F4iriiew ~I
Mlldison 99, Ashtabul11 St. John/Sr. P:wl SO
M11chson Pl3ins71. London n
M~~ndield Sr. 61. Muriettn ~9
M3Jllcwood :'ill, Badp47
MariWltha Olr. ~8. EYIIrll~l Chr. ~I
Mar&amp;nrelt1167, Collins Westttn Reserve 60
Marion El&amp;in S7. Mnrysvme !i~
M:uion River V::1l. 69, Million Pleasant ~
M:l!lon 60. L.akrnii W. ~2 (0T)
Maynille H. Philo 44
l
McClain 60. Wilmington 40
McDt.&gt;tmou Nonhwat ~4. Port~mooth W. !i2
McDoRDid 62. Ginird 54
Mcdin11 Fiflt Bwpt. 64. Colu!Mu• Herit~~t S4
Mentor61, Vlllley Forge 44
Miamisbur&amp; 77, W. CIUTolllon 13
Middlefield C.di.a.I.57,1Uoomfacld 4~
Middletown Madison 66. Edscwood 6S
Midpark 89. Bay 44
Mil(ord 16. Lcmoo-Mo..-oc Sl
Milf«d Chr. 6J., Ctwistian Ccnler 37
Millbury.l.akt: 68. Giblonbur&amp; 6.5
Mll!on-l)nion 59, Cin. Nonhwesrem ~8
~opdor--c F'aekJ 68. C11yllhop Val. Ov. 60
Mphawk 77, Bue~rul67
Monroeville 68, Seneca E. SJ. •
Montpelier 59, Hicbvilk 37
N. D'lllkin'IOft :W, Van Buren 51
N. Colllit Chr. 54, Ofun&amp;t Cht. 40
N. OlmNed Sll. N. RidpviUe 55
N. Union 67 ,Benjamin Lopn 0
Napoleon 66, Defii&amp;OI.'e 62
Nation."!I Trail ~7, Betbcl ~4
NelllqnYillc- York 68, Lopn 6S
New Bretll(n 67. New Knoxvme 42
New Bmtnn Oleawoud 61. Sy111111e1 Val. ~
New l.elliQ&amp;ton 6:\, Morpn ~I
New Londo• 61 , Milne EdiiOA 48
'Ntw kit~l 84, Fostoria St Wendtli•48
NtwcOI'I'Im.tOWft 81, Monroe: Cent. 62
Newmn M •.MU.Iiuiiii!WII VIII . 62
Niles ~I. l..alrae 46
Normandy 7~. P..-m1 11 (2 &lt;m
NDf1hWOC'Id ~.l, Elmwood 49
Nonon 78, Cnvemty 64
Nt.II'Walk 74. PM C1iMon ~~
0n1o H....,.ll. Roulool 4l
Oak Hill 80. ~ville Val. 6lJ
Ohio Dtaf 10. Cin. St Rila 34
OkJ Fun 48, Ktn•u Lalcoca l:\
OIRtlrin 1M,
Fork 10
Orrville 66. DuJicitow• ~l
Ou•wa-Oiancklrf 79,1kyan 43
~til~iUc69, De1t11M
Pickerington S4. Marion Hurdin,g 32
PlyiTIOUih 69. M~arttw Cbr. n
Pnl01.nd 39, New Midd~town Sping. 34
Purt~mouth 79. Minford '9
Pon~nli'JUih E. 7~. Libefly Union~
Prebk! Slatlwnee 70, Brookville 47
'RitYt.''fiM S\11o1thl•nst 66, Watl!rlno 41
!Uelllvillo! E. 72. Ohio V:r.l. Otr ..64

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Fremnm N.n5~ M. Bt1wlit1~ lin.'\.'11 ~
Frmui~r 11. lk:alhwillc 4fl
Ft Lur.unit' 411, Ann&lt;~ 40
Oahanr~;~ 611 . Col . H;~rtk)' !'I
G~l•on t'l'.Cn.-,:Uil\o.' .W
G ;1 lh1•vli~ 77. Rat.· u~~: Snutlk'rll ~ .!
Caraway 611. llllli:m Val. 5!1
G~Ofj:CiilWII 77. l;ayl.'th:nlk: ~~'
Gmh;jm ;"il,l , ln~h :m L•..~· 4'J
Gr:mdv•cw 11.1, Wdlingh•n :I
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fairview 72. F..d~nn 71(()'0
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Day Stdlbuu 62. Gn:cnon ~I
Dtlnw~ Chr. 102. NunhtiW Chr. 1141
Dover ~7 , Ck. SOUih ~
Dublir1 Coffn101n ~M. Rcyoukhhur~ -14
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Easrem Ohio 72, Ohi11 Val. ('tv. o.8
Eastwood~- Gt."ffiO ~K
Ehda n Lima Cruh. -t2
El)'ria :\6. LlatrMood .\.1
Elyna Clalh. ~1 . Mid•..:w 42

EASTERN CONFERENCE

EverJR!CIII (1(), N, C~nlrnl bo&amp;

WESTERN CONnRENCE
MWwniDh·lslon
»: I. f&lt;l.

NHL standlniJS

Danville 90, Trft of Ufc 72
Day. All&amp;!r n. xe.-a 45

I

c..... ,.. ......
Allanta .................................. I.S
Clevelnnd...
....... 11
O.Jotte ...
. ....... .10
Indiana .............................. 10
Oica,o ............................... 11
Jwhlwauker: ............................ IO
Detroit ................................... 1
Torotuo ....................... I

Con¥Vy Cranotew
Dtlphot hffmt~n .l 'i
Copky 68, Notdonia ~9
Colhodon 70, I..N."ii"l V~ . ~I

JIIUdlae et--~l· Page B3

WV

GAHS downs Southern 77-52 in opener=~~

'•

Hockey

c.,...;....ll61. ,......

EASTERN CONFERENCE
~.

You. MO&lt;llliy .tt, You. Eut J7
ZallaviUe o40, Clnloa Gao.k :\4

.,.J,
14.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleasant,

Marshall beats
Toledo 34-14
.
to win MAC champion$hip

Scoreboard
Col. BriJp 74. Uniolo 70
Col. 66.
Aldet 07
Col. Watii ,Newart61
Co&amp;dw_. 62. V• Wen ~1
Colcwl Oawfonl 6!, Nonhmor ~2
ColwnbiMI '-1. J.:bol Mitton63

Sunctav, December7, 1887

Sundly,December7,1997

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaaant, WV

•••••

His three touchdown tosses gave
him 39 this season to set a Division
I-A record for a sophomore, breaking
the mark o[ 37 he shared with Ken- .
tucky'S'Tim Couch.
Pennington finished 20-of-34 for
322 yards.
'

f

LIMESTONE
TOP SOIL
RIVER GRAVEL

MUSHROOM ·
COMPOST

Open Monday thru Friday 7:30 am tll4:30 pm.
Saturday 7:30 am-12 noon
I

/l

You Pick· Up or ~e Deliv~r
448-2114 or 245-5316

•

Galllpolle' Hometown Dealer

1616 EASTERN AVE.
(614) 446-3672

•

GALLIPOUS,

OH.

· 1-8Q0.52HI084

�•

I

I

Page B4 • ~

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· Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolle, OH • Point PIMunt, WV

II•• I

.Sunday, December 7, 1897
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
......_. CI-...JI !lad • Page B5
~ ~~~~~======~~~~~~~~~~~~======~~~~~~

Sunday, December7,1997

:~One

of real life's.
j:grimy appendages

Eagles beat Ohio Valley Chris~ian 72-64
By SCOTT WOLFE
T·S Corr..pondent
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Ea~tl.es kicked off the 1997-98 camwith a 72-64 win over the Ohio

Valley Christian Defenders Friday
night in a non-league area varsity basketball tilt. Eastern opens at 1-0 while
OVC.drops to 0-1.
Eastern was led by freshman

PASSES TO TEAMMATE - Eastern's Beau Bailey (left) passes
to an out-of·vlew taammate as Ohio Valley Christian's Daniel Sizemore defends on the play during FrliJay night's game at Eastern High
School. The Eagles won 72-641n the season opener for both teams.
(Scott Wolfe photo)

Blue Devils ... &lt;Continued rrom B-3&gt;

.

:making only three of II in the first
.stanza.
Lane's trey gave GAHS a 14
point spread to open second half play,
but Southern, behind Allen Jerrod
Mills and Walker, tallied seven
~traight points within minute an five ·
:Seconds to reduce th~ Gallians lead to
.:Seven, 36-29.
GAHS hot in third stanza
: Wnh Gallipolis leading 40-31 at
the 4:36 mark in the third period, the
Blue Devils outscored Southern 217 during the linal four minutes of the ·
;period to take a commanding 61-38
lead into the final period.
" Ho111ell, Lane, Walker Lewis,
:Steve Roderick and Ian Fenderboseh
led oallia's sizzling attack. The Blue
Devils sank 10 of 15 field goal
auempts in the third period.
; GAHS built up a 25 point lead on
}everal occasions before both coaches began substituting freely in the
final period. Gallipolis hit seven of I 0
field goals in the final period.
·
"We ~ked all week on keeping
the ball from Howell," said Caldwell.
~"We knew he was their lone returnee.
';'He did a good job guarding him in
the first period, then we let him get
~12 points in the ~cond period. Then
we just lost it defensively."
Caldwell praised the offensive
display of Mitchell Walker, 5":"9 ·
junior. who led all scorers with 27
.points. Jason Allen was .he only oth~r Tornado in double figures with I0. .
·GAHS defenders limited veteran
guard Pete Sisson to two points dur&lt;ng the 32-minute contest.
15-year-old s~ries ends
. "This has been a good clean,
.hard-fought series with Gallipolis
:'during the past 15 years," said Cald- ·
::Well afterthe game. "Coach Osborne
;tuns a class program as his record
indicates." Southern, the area's most
winningest Division IV team during
that period (212. wins) and GAHS
will not meet again next year. Gal:lipolis will play Meigs in that nonleague slot according to Coach Jit(l
:Osborne. Southern's new opponent
be named
later.
:willGAHS
placed
two players in double ligures in scoring, led by Howell's
23 markers. Lane tossed in 21. Jan
· Fenderbosch and Chris Lewis added
eight apiece. GAHS played without
]hcscrvices of Jeremy Payton, _who
~uffered a slight concusston in drills
last week.
Statistics
Gallipolis connected on 29 of 56
field goal attempts for 51.7 percent.
The Blue Devils were 20 of 40 from
'he two-point area, and nine of 16
from three-point range. GAHS had
20 assists, eight by Howell and four
each by Lewis and Walker. GAHS
had II steals, three each hy Howell.
Lane and Walker.
; Gallipolis picked off 40rchounds
(seven team), led by Lewts' II. The
Gallians had 17' personals and 16
turnovers. The Blue Devils were 10
of 12 at the foul line.
. Osborne thought the Blue Devils
defensive unit did a good job 1&lt;&gt;1l&lt;&gt;wing a slow start. "Our film stats
show we had 25 deflections against
n tough and poised Southern team."
.bsbornc said.
: Osborne also felt the series
between the two schools since the
1982-83 campaign has heen a good
one. ·:we have enjoyed the competi·
tion against one of the area's top Division IV schools, and we wish them
continued success in the future,"
bsborne said. Southern .defeated
GAHS twice in the 15 year series, 504 7 at Southern in the 1982-83 campaign and 68-67 at Southern in the
1987-88season.Severalofthegames

;::~nip-and-tucl&lt;downthroughthe

· Southern connected on 21 of 59
fi~ld goal attempts (37 perc~nt) . The
Tornadoes were 15 of 45 from the
twos, picked
and six off
of 14
the threes.
SHS
23 from
rebounds,
four

each by Mills Russell Reiber an
Hoback,
.
Southern had 13 turnovers, si
assists and I0 steals. The Tornadoe
were four of nine at the line.
Gallipolis played Chesapeake a
home Saturday night. Tuesday, th
Blue Devils host River Valley at e
University of Rio Grande, and E . ay,
play at Logan. Southern wil ost
Meigs Tuesday and Miller Friday.
The . Tornadoes will then battle
Cincinnati Maderia at OU Saturday,
Dec. 13, in a 4:15p.m. contest.
Reserve thriller
In Friday's preliminary game.
Coach Gary Harrison's Blue Imps railied form a 22-21 third period deficit
to defeat Scott Wickline's Southern
reserves 40-35.
Gallipolis led I 0-8 and 12-10
after two periods, but Southern rallied
to take a 22-21 lead after three periods. Brent Elkins, who led the Blue
Imps with II points, got nine in the
fourth period to pace the GMIS
comeback. Rob Kuhn and Ryan
White each had eight while Owen
Games added seven. Garren Kiser's
13 points led the Southern team
while Matt Warner tossed in nine and
Kyle Morris eight.
Varsity box:
GALLIPOLIS (77) - Ian Fenderbosch, 3-2-3-8; Steve Roderick,!(1)-0-0-5; Cody Lane,.J-(4)-3-4-21;
Brian Sims, 2-0-~; Mike Dressel, 0- .
0-0-0:· Kevin Walker. 3-0-0-6: Chris
Lewis, 4-0-Qo.S; Alex Saunders, 0-00-0; ·Levi King, 1-0-0-2; Mike
Garten, 0-0-0-0; Andray Howell, 3-55-23. TOTALS :zo-40 (9-16) 10·12·
77.
SOUTHERN (SZ) - Pete Sisson,
1-0-0-2; Mitchell Walker, 4-1-2-27;
Benji Reibel, 1-0-0-2; Adam
Williams, 2-0·0-4; Nick Bolin, 0-00-0: Adam Cumings, 1-0-0-2; Jason
Allen, 4-2-4-10: Troy Hoback, 1-0- 12; Jerrod Mills, 1-1-1-3. TOTALS·
15-45 (6-14) 4-9-SZ
By quarters:
Gallipolis 9 24 28 16 -- 77
Southern 13 9 16 . 14 · -- 52

guard Joey Brown's game-high 20
Eastern pushed further ahead ear·points 'and seven rebounds, while ly in the frame, but OVC made a
Steve Durst canned 13 and Matt Bis- comeback.
.
·sell had I 0
·
Deem said, "OVC had a nice club
OVC was led by ·Daniel Siz.e- and made a good run at us. I felt they
ll!Ore's 14 points, Bo Pollard's 13 and may have rushed their shots, and at
I 0-point efforts by Josh Sanders and the same time we were disciplined
Andrew Meyn.
·
enough to run through our offense to
·
Eastern coach Tony Deem said. get the good shot.
"This was a good start. We unswcre&lt;t
Despite a 20-point fourth quarter
some question mark. tonight and by OVC, the Eagles won 72-64.
played tough going down the stretch.
Eastern hit 23-46 for 50 percent
Our senior leadership did a good joh from the noor, hit 2-10 three-pointon the coun and really took care of c.rs and wa.• 20-30 at the foul line.
the younger il,ls. I guess you'd say our OVC hit21-55 and 2-15 three-pointte~m chemistry really came tojlcthcr · ers with a 16-29 night ~t the line. ·
tonight."
/
: Eastern droflllCd the battle of the
Eastern took the lead right from hoards 36·35. Yonker led with nine,
the start and only hricny 11avc up its Kchl and Brown had seven each.
advantage in the second peri.od'whcn Meyn led OVC with II, and Wolfe
OVC led 31-30. Sparking the Ea.,tcrn had &gt;even, while Pollard had six.
attack was freshman Joey Brown.
Eastern had seven steals (Kchl 2,
who moved up from a spot on the Smith 2); 13 turnovers, twelve a.'sists
reserve cluh just last week after the (Bissell, Kchl and Smith four each)
pr&lt;!view with Southern. Brown and 22 fouls. OVC had 36 caroms
immediately made his presence (Meyn II . Wolfe seven, Pollard six).
known and jump started the Eagle OVC had sc~cn steals, five turnovers,
offense.
four a.'sists and 22 fouls. ·
. Brown scored 10 points in the first
Reserve notes: Eastern won the
quarter to lead Eastern to a 22-17 reserve game 53-361ed hy Josh Will
advantage. Eastern maintained the with 21 and supporting effons from
lead throughout the first period, but Jeremy Coleman with II and Josh
just could not pull away. The Eagles Broderick eight. Adam Holcomb had
worked the ball well and scored often 13 for OVC.' Teammate Brnd Bowalong the baseline and low -post.
man had 10.
Corey Yonker. Jeremy Kchl and
This week's slate: Eastern ploys
Durst did a good job on the boards Belpre Tuesday and Federal Hocking
against the taller OVC club. Yonker Friday.
ended the night with nine rebounds, Ovartcr l!!laJa
Kehl and Brown each had seven of Ohio Valley Chr. 17-17"10-20=64
the team's 35.
Eastern
22-13-19-18=72
OVC took its only lead at 31-30,
·Eastem: John Driggs 3-0-31S=9,
but a Durst goal and a free throw Matt Bissell 3-~/4= I0, Jeremy Casgave Eastern a 33':31 edge with just . to 0-1-212=4, Corey Yonker 0-019 seconds remaining. Eastern went 6/6=6, Jeremy Kehl 2-1-0=7, Steve
for one shot, but went a little too soon Durst 5-1-0=13, Eric Smith 1-0as Matt Bissell, a talented sophomore 1/2=3, Joey Brown 8-0-418=20.
prospect, hit the ~ce, 35-31. OVC . Totals 23·2·20130=72
regained possession with 10.53 secOhio Valley Christian: · Josh
onds left, setting up swishing three· Sanders 2-1-212= I O,Joseph Newbold
pointer by Sanders at Jhe buzzer to 2-0-3/5=7, Abe Abrams 0-0-1/3=1,
make the score 35-34. Eastern went Steve Rice 1.0.5/S=7, Bo Pollard 4on to dominate the third round hehind 0-5/6=13, Daniel Sizemore 7.0.0=14,
Durst and Brown, who scoi'ed. sill in Jeremy Wolfe 1-6-011=2.• Andrew
a· 19-10 drive that left the score 54- Meyn 5-0-014=10. Totals 21·2·
44.
lti/29=64

a

- - - - - Spo.rts briefs---......--NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ. (AP)
- Rutgers freshman basketball player Maurice Brown was charged with
burglary, lewdness and harassme~t
for allegedly entering a female student's dormitory room while she

was sleeping.
.
Three additional COJI\plaints .
involving similar incidents have been
filed against Brown, a 20-year-old
forward from Syracuse, N.Y.

r.r tit~ ~est aal•cllaa In ~
· 'Praii•Bitcll• · .
Deck with us

·:a, BAM WILSON

·
: ·'Jimae S1ntluel Conaeponcltlnt .
; It bas been a disturbing weeki~ 8pllrts; howev; er, it's the kind of week that produces wonderful
::discussion material for my History of Sports class
•"that begins in January. I believe Columbus Dis: -patch writer Bob Hunter summed it up hest when
· ::Jic wrote,. "Sporu used to be an escape from real
:.life. Now, it's just one of real life's grimy
. 'lppendages."
~: Aunter was addressing the recent Indians trade which sent Matt Williams
....to the Diamondbacks for Travis Fryma!l. His comment, however, is more
;..appropriate for the recent situations involving Scollie Pippert, Lawrence
;.Phillips and Latrell Sprewell. In actuality, you can use his qu.ote" almost
. ~v~ry week of the year.
:. ~ost. fans aren't aware of Latrell Sprewell, the All-Star guard from the
:Yntverstty of Alabama who has play.ed for the Golden State Warriors for the
··past five years. That's unfortunate, because he's a great player. When the
; Pacers traded for Chris Mullins this past summer, my wife and I discussed
:how we wished they had acquired Latrell instead.
;"' This past week, Sprewell attacked his coach, P.J. Carlesimo. It is no
' secret that Sprewell wants out of Golden State, a team that has been mired
:.in mediocrity for the past few years, and has won only one game this year.
:.It's a team which has been in disarray since the Chris Webber fiasco a few
' years ago. Carlesimo has been brought in the clean up the mess and make

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with general manager Jerry Krause
_ stunned his teammates and the
NBA by asking 10 be traded, Sll)'ing
· he was ftnished playing for the team
he'd helped win five titles.
Now the fans were telling him_

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•••••••••••••••••••••••--------·WV•0•1•2638-.1.
•

1

(See NBA on 8,6)

Jordan scored a season-low 13

,1' •

"arner Heat'mg" .&amp;. c00ling, Inc.
,

at least so it appeared - they didn't
want him to leave.
"I was just glad the fans hung
aroun~ to the end. I enjoyed the Scottie chants," Bulls coach Phil Jackson
said. had a pool in the locker room on
how the faps would react. I had the
fans versus Scottie. I told him · be
could walk out on the floor with me ...
In other games, Van Hom had a·
turnover- and foul plagued debut for
the New Jersey Nets as they def~at­
ed the Philadelphia 76ers 107-88.
And rookie Alvin Williams, taking
over play making chores for Portland
because of injuries to Anderson and
John Crotty, scored 13 points on 6for-9 shooting as the Trail Blazers
defeated Utah 94-77:
Pippen, in street clothes as he
recovers from foot surgery, seemed
amused by the positive reaction. He
smiled as he sat beside Michael Jordan with"two minutes left. Teammate
Ron Harper held his hand above Pippen's head with five fingers spread,
perhaps for the five titles.
Then he put Pippen in a bearhug.
"The only thing we can do is
•:~~~-a~: ~h~i~m and hope he comes
h:
said.

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By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Basketball Writer
Scottie Pippen was cheered in
Chicago, the fans at the Meadow.lands got their first looli. at Keith Van
Horn and people in Portland ·saw a
performance from a rookie that eaSed
the pain somewhat from Kenny
Anderson's injury.
It was a night of returns and
debuts in the NBA nn Friday, none
more emotional than Pippen's.
Pippen, who sauntered toward the
bench surrounded by security guards
when the lights .were out during pregame introductions, heard the fans
chant "Scottie' Scottie! Scottie'"
toward the end of Chicago's 84-62
trouncing of the Milwaukee Bucks.
The folks at the United Center
hadn't seen Pippen or any of the
' Bulls for a while because a seven-

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Notes: Prior to the game, the Grizzlies placed guard Anthony ·Peeler
(sore left knee) on the injured list and
activated second-year guard Chris
Robinson. Peeler has missed II
str.aight games and earlier this week
withdrew his public demand to be
traded .... The Cavs sent guard Bobby Sura home to have his left ankle
re-examined. Sura, placed on the
jnjurcd Iiston Nov. 19, had been traveling with the team while rehabilitating . ... Cleveland's 7·3 road record
matCheS its best Stan tO a season SlliCe
198.8-89.

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type or energy in the third quarter as
we have had in the first half."
The founh quarter was little better for the Grizzlies, who man~ged
just live points in the first nine minutes, and went almost nine minules
without hitting a field goal.
Shareef Abdur-Rahim led the
Grizzlies with 27 points.

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LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR
~9 ST. RT.

•.fact that the Warriors signed ·him to a four-year, $32 million contract. He
.wants out at any cost. During the scuffle, which produced a three-inch
~atch oo his coach's neck, he told Carlesimo, "I'm gning to kill you. You
better get me off this team, or that's what I'm goitig to do."
The team originally suspended him for 10 games. Later, his entire con· tract was terminated.
~ Am I being cynical when I say most of us can't sympathize with Latrell?
·Are we to believe it's not the money? He just wants to play .for a winner.
After all, he's willing to sacrifice $32 million in the process. Or is he just
:~nother spoiled athlete who is above the laws of society?
.
·~ He's forcing the team to move with him. He's following a precedent,
·Which worked for Rohert Horry, a former Alabama teammate, last year. All
:Horry did was throw a towel in Coach Danny Ainge's face. He was traded
:to Jhe Lak.ers the following week.
' That's the sad case of affairs in professional sports. There is· always
4mother ream willing to make excuses to get a talented player who can help
,:lbem win. Sprewell also knows there's plenty of money out there wherever
)le goes.
·' Lawrence Phillips is another case. Tlte Rams released this talented run:ning back because of numerous violations and problems on and off tbe field.
~is second home seemed to be any local jall. Dolphins Coach Jimmy John:~n, who 11SCd to periodically check "America's Most Wanted" for players
h h
hd
h u · · f M' ·
'·bT
Ph "II"
•W en e coac e at t e mverst[¥ o
tamt, wants to re.,. t ttate t •ps
:by giving him a ~cond ~hance.
·
~ I'm sure that the Dolphins·being next to last in rushing in the NFL has
:nothing to do with Johnson's decision to sign Phillips. If the truth be told,
.:Johnson would find an excuse to sign Satan if he could maintain a four-yard
• h'
1·
d h 1
· h
·
·n 'f
.rus
mg average. JUS! won er ow ong thts c arity proJeCt wt 1ast t
~Phillips fails On the gridiron?
·
.
:· Let us not forget that Scottie Pippen has decided to pout once again for
.)nedia attention. Poor Scottie only has five championship rings, but that's
)'nough to make him want to stay in Chicago. He wants to go to Phoenix or
~Angeles, where he will be appreciated. After all, thi.s strat~gy worked to
@et Sean Kemp out of Seattle.
.
: My advice to Scottie is to grow up and play ball. When ,this year is over
ftc's a free agent, so he can go wherever he desires. Until then, be an. adult
•nd try and ~elp one of the greatest team$ in NBA history win another title.
l know it will be a sacrifice, but he can persevere.
: It's bad enough to read about children killing their high school classll)ates
ln KentUcky to also discover the sports pages read like a police beat from the
National Enquirer. llunter is correct, so if you're looking for an escape, iry
lhe home and ,garden section.
·

while adding Wesley Person and ing and shaping as we're going along
Shawn Kemp.
.
here," said Fratello.
"We're all still figuring. every·
The Grizzlies, on the other hand,
thing out," said Ferry, entering his are beginning to resemble tbe team
eighth NBA season with Cleveland. that struggled in its first two years of
"We don't know what to expect."
existence. After opening the season
Friday against Vancouver, the strongly, Vancouver (7-13) has now
Cavaliers got a 30-point outing from lost six of its last seven.
Person, while Kemp scored 25 and
Lately, the Grizzlies have espeadded II rebounds.
cially been ineffective in the . third
Person went 7-for-11 in three- quarter, and Friday they gave up 34
point attempts, one ;hort of a fran- points in the period.
'
chise record for most three-pointers
"Again, the third quarter was a
in a game.
bad quarter foi us," said Blue
Person found his groove in the ·Edwards. "We stopped trying to win
third quarter, when he made four the basketball game. For some reason
three-pointers to put the Cavs ahead we failed to play together." ·
for good.
.
Added hend coach Brian Hill, who
Ferry also had a hot hand, going broke into the league as an assistant
3-for-3 on treys and finishing with 15 under Fratello in Atlanta, "I felt this
points.
was another game we had the opporCavs coach Mike Fratello admit- tunity to win, but then we gave ~p 34
ted his team is still a "work in points in the third quarter.
progress.
"It's too many times now that
"We're kind of bending and mold, _ we've come out and not ex.tended the

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VANCOUVER, British Columbia
(AP) - Danny Ferry wasn't sure
what to expect from the Cleveland
Cavaliers nt the start of the season.
And after 17 games he's still not certain.
"I think we're all scratching our
heads. Maybe we are pretty good."
Ferry said after the Cavaliers beat the
. Vancouver Grizzlies 107-98 Friday to
extend their winning streak to seven
games. "It's. a nice feeling. It beats
losing seven in a row."
The Cavaliers, who improved to
11-6, are the hottest team in the NBA,
matching the Hou~ton Rockets' seven-game streak. Cleveland's run of
victories is its longest since winning
eight in a row in 1995-96. And the
Cavs' live-game road win streak is
their longest since winning a record
Seven straight in 1994:95.
The surprising success comes after
the team went through a major shakeup, losing Bobby Phills, Terrell Brandon, Tyrone Hill and "Chris Mills,

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Third-ranked North Carolina downs UT-Chattanooga 68-38
By JOE MACENKA
CHARLOTIE, N.C. (AP)- The
routine is becoming familiar for No.
3 Nonh Carolina. Get a lillie sleep.
Cross a few time zones. Crush anoth· .
eropponent. Start the process all over
again.
"I'm still on Alaska time. We're
all tired, but we're learning how to
make the best of it," Antawn Jamison
said after he helped the Tar Heels stay
perfect on their two-week, 9,5QO.mile
road trip with a 68-38 victory over
Chauanooga on Friday night.
North Carolina, which improved
to 8-0 under new coach Bill
Guthridge, will play Virginia Tech
tonight in the second half of the Har·
ris Teeter Pepsi Challenge.
Sautrday's other game matched
Chauanooga against No. 5 South
Carolina. a 74-73 winner over Y1r·
ginia Tech on Friday night.

Elsewhere in the Top 25, No. 10
Iowa routed Rice 81-52 and No. 14
Mississippi edged Long Island University I 02-99.
North Carolina scored ·the first
seven points against Chauanooga,
built a 19-point halftime lead and was
never threatened the rest of the way.
The Tar Heels, who came in with
an average winning margin of 22
points. held Challanooga to 22 per·
cent shooting, the lowest figure
allowed by Non.h Carolina since
1981. The Mocs' point total was the
lowest given up by the Tar Heels
since 1983.
Guthridge gave the Tar Heels the
day oiTThursday after they dclcatcd
Louisville on Wednesday night in
Chicago, and he challenged his players to come out and rlay . solid
defense against Chattanooga. ·
Jamison said the Tar Heels were

able to respond to Guthridge's plea
because they're becoming adept at
life on lhe road ..
"We're getting real good at sleeping anywhere," Jamison said. "Every
opportunity you get, you're going to
find a place to take a nap."
Jamison had 21 points and 13
rehounds as Nonh Carolina moved
wilhi.n one victory of matching the
stan of the 1994-95 team, which
advanced to lhe Final Four.
Francisco Colon led Chananooga
(4-2) with 13 points.
.
The Mocs got the two biggest victories in !IChool history at the Charlotte. Coliseum in March, knocking
n'ff Georgia and Illinois to advance to
the NCAA tournament's round of 16.
But the major contributors from
that Chauanooga team arc gone, and
the latest gmup of Mocs was unable
"'.mount much of a challenge to the

Tar Heels.

"They don't have any weaknesses and we do," Challanooga coach
Henry Dickerson said. "We liked the
challenge. We learned a lot."
Virginia Tech. picked to finish
near the Adantic I0 basement, overcame a lack of size and experience to
frustrate a team that is expected to
baule for 1he Southeastern Conference Iitle.
South Carolina (4-,0) escaped by
making 35 of 47 free throws -both
school records.
The Hokies (3·1) tied it ai 73
when Kenny Harrell hit a naMing
three-pointer wilh .3.5 seconds left
But Virginia Tech's Rolan Roberts
was called for a foul away from the
hall after the shot, sending Melvin
Watson to lhe line.
He missed the first but made lhe
second, and Harrell raced down and

put up a 35-footer that hounced off
the back of the rim u lime upircd.
Wilson, a senior guard. scm&lt;~ a
carcer-hiJh 24 points and was 6 of 10
from the field. The rest of the Glltle·
cocks were II of 43.
"I think Vininia 'Jech saw this as
an opportunity 10 sneak up and heat
a ranked team," Watson said. "We've
got to he ready for teams lrying to
shoo! us down."
Freshman Jenis Grindstaff led the .
Hokies with 18 points.
"We've got to be happy to be
when: we'were- having a chance to
win," coach Bobby Hussey said. "It
was a winnable game. If we can carry this over to the Adanlic 10, it's
going to be advantageous."
No. 10 Iowa 81, Rite 52
Guy Rucker B!ld Ricky Davis
each scored 14 points as Iowa beat
Rice at the Haw keyes' Super
Shootout in Iowa City.

(5·0), whi~h led 41-18 at :
halftime, will ·play Weber Stale for ,
die championship on Saturday niaht: :
Weber State defeated Mount St: '
Mary's 81-73 earlier in the night; ..•
Bobby Crawford scored 12 pomts ·
and Rohen Johnson 10 for Rice (2· '
6). Jarvis Kelley. Sanni, who was,
averaging 17 points for the Owls, was, ·.
held to seven.
No. 14 MlsllisslppiiOl, Long Island. :
99
. . ·'
Ansu Sesay had 28 poind, II
rebounds, three blocks and two steals "
as Mississippi edged Long Island ''
University in the opening round of · .
the Cardinal Varsity Club Classic al '
1
' '
Muncie, Ind.
Ole Miss overcame a 39-point.
perfonnance by LIU's Charles Jones, ·
the nation's top scorer lasl season. ·:
Keith Caner had 16 points and 16"
rebounds for M~sissippi \4-0), which '
overcame a season-high 30 turnovers:"'

..

SEOA~

quintets capture
.wins in three of five contests . :

GEmNG AROUND St. Bonaventure'a Ter·
renee Durham (right) Is the taak of the moment
for Ohio's Dustin Ford during the 'first half of Frl·
day's first-round game of the Firat Bank Classic

In Milwaukee, where the Bonnlea beet the Bobcats 59-46 to advance to Saturdlly'a championship game. (AP)

First Bank Classic completes first-round play ,

St. Bonaventure beats OU 59-46
MILWAUKEE &lt;A!Pl - Rashaan
Palmer scored II ol his 20· points
after halftime in leading St. .BonavenlUre to a 59-46 first-round victory Fri- ·
day over Ohio in Marquette Univet·
sity's invitationalloumament.
Neithertearn convened more lhan
30 percent from the field after St.
Bonavenlure (5-1) look a 29-23 inter· ·
mission lead. '
' "We wanted to get the hall down

the coun and use our athleticism to remaining.
our benefit," St. Bonavenlure coach
Sanjay Adell, finishing wilh 15
Jim Baron said.
points, was .Ohio's primary secondOhio ( 1-2) began the second half , half offense, sinkinJ sc;ven of his
,.
by going 5: 16 without a basket while eight free throws.
Palmer scored six points. St. . Basra Fakhir scored 14 points for
Bonaventure led 37-25 on a dunk Ohio.
shot by James Singleton with 14:55
St. Bonaventure advanced to the
left.
·
championship game Saturday against
A three-point basket . by Chris the winner of a Marqueue-Montana
Lumsdon made it 46-32 with 8:42 Stale game.

and a career-high 20 rehounds.
Lakers 98, Spurs 88
At Inglewood. Calif., Nick Van
Excl scored 25 .points, including
consecutive three-pointers that
restored a double-digit lead in the
fourth quarter, as Los Angeles Lakers remained the only NBA team with
a perfect home record (8-0).
Elden Campbell added 21 points
and Kobe Bryant had 17.
Warriors 104, Ma1k: 89
At Oakland, Calif., Golden State
won for the first time in the post-

O=S; Wes Beaver 1-0.0=2; Butch

Howard 1-0-0=2; John Simmons 5·
0.2= 12. Totals: 10-3-3=32

Athens: Chad Thomas 1-0.0=2;.
Chris Roach 1-0-3=5; Brent Horst3-(See ROUNDUP on B·7)

·Congratulations, _
Mike Sergent
•

Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy-Oids-GEO
has announced
that Mike Sergent
-has earned
Salesman of the
· Month for ·
November.

•'

By SCOn WOLFE
from the big boys to the local athlete.
T-8 COI1'MpOfldent
How many high school athletes realRACINE- It has been said that Iy change schools for academic rea·
true success is measured by the test sons?
or'time.
·
Of course, before opel\ enroll·
.Last weekend, one of a few hona ment, it was legal for an athlete to
fi~ living legends closed the book on "move" into another distri,ct. Opeii
a truly illustrious career. The legend, enrollment just became a beuer
Eddie Robinson, walked the Gram- accommodation. This yew; has per:
· bling sidelines for the very lasttirite haP.S marked the most prominenl year
as ~ 78-year old college coach. The for athletes on the 'move, both local·
ma)!nilude of Robinson's Ieaacy li~s ty, and throughout the state. Where
in . the fact th.at not only has he will the chaos end?
coached since 1941, but the faclthat
Rumor has it tha!Antiq~ily will be
he pas coached at the same school for fielding one heck of a ~ school
lhat same pe~od .
basketball team next year. That is if
_,That feat ts pun~tuated by ~orne- · Stiversville doesn't get lhe players
thong that IS becommg somelhmg_ of !hey need · to dominate. And what
a mystical aura these days; something abotlt the burg of Pity Me?
beyond the realm of human grasp,
Oh, well. Back to Eddie Robin·
sop~et~m~ lhat changes as often as son. He coached at Grambling for 57
the d1rect1on of the ·wind, and often seasons. ·
just as predictable. Yes! loyalty.
He was loyal to Gramblina.
Loyalty in professional sports is Grambling was loyal tq .hi.m. How
virtually non-existent hese days. many schooli would have given thdr
Coaches and team managers often coach the boot after a pouple losing
havetotakeaweeklolearntheirown . seasons? Schools can be loyal.loo.
player's names. Having a complete But in this dog-eat-dog world, one
team set of baseball cards is about as had heuer watch the dog. Man's best
valuable as the paper they're printed friend. The dog's last supper.
on, for the team roster usually
Loyalty should not he confused
changes by the lime you collect the with opporunity. Opportunity should
last card to complete the team set. At not he confused with greed. Robin·
least, perhaps, maybe one can he son saw the opportunity; the oppor'
lucky enough to gel an individual tunity to make a difference in lhouc~rd with some value, that is befon:
sands of athletes lives. He took the
t~e player jumps ship to the "Big opportunily anil he was loyal.
,lplple" or another such metropolis.
Even in today's world. a player
All for the sake of money.
never dared-swear in front of Robin·
;: Lock of loyalty has already fallen son. The player knew lh~ consc·.
i~to the college ranks, where lhe big quences and knew it \"auld not he
~ns leave early to gain the bi~ bucks tolerated. .
1
ol, llie unloyal pros. Or the college
A recenl Sports 11/uflrattd articled
alhlete decides he doesn'l like lhe chronicled Robinson as the ultimate
cj)ach, the fans, the team, the leach- recruiter. While he was still the bas·
ep, or the color of tfle locker room ketball coach at Gramllting, he signed
teiletries, so he decides to et out a the enti~e Rayville, La, high school
~ar for a change of scenery, then starting five and· also hooked the
~wn a new uniform.
trainer and three cheeJleaders. Now,
. ; Now, with the open enrollmenl that's recruiting, isn't it'l All in one
r1Ies in Ohio, we see where loyalties trip.
.
relllly lie. Once, especially allhc high
Upon ·his dcpartufc, Robinson's
sl\hool level, a player and those record stands ·al 40q ·wins with 17
~vout fans, all bled the darkesl of Soulhweslern Confc!re.nce champi·
Iheir school colors. You know, Tor· onships. More than 200 Tigers have
n'4does bled purple, Eagles ~led . been drafted by the pros, but Robin·
Clreen, Marauders bled Maroon, elc. son's pride is reflectexl in the 85 per~: Today's blood bleeds all colors of cent graduation rate of his players.
thi: rainbow, according to what team
Eddie Robinson was loyal.
~u're wilh that particular day, right
I just completed my Cleveland

1

6.:4= 10; James Hines 4-0.0=8; Adam
~anin 2·1-2=9; Nathan White 3-0·
I;x7. Totall: 14-1·10=41
Qlllrtct lA&amp;all

'Aft

308l MAIN ST.
POMROY,
(614) 992-6614 • (100) U7·1094
SI\IURDAY 'l··l
SUIJilAY I :,

re ,. &lt;!).

'

Q)Jillicothe
5-11-5-11 =32
Athens
I 0-16-9- 6=41
•: Reserve score: Chillicothe 48,
Athens 26
~

Sprewell era and earned its first
home victory of the season with a
defeat of injury-dcpleled Orlando.
Donyell Marshall had 28 points
and Joe Smith added 24 as the Warriors won for justlhe second time this
season.
Timberwolves 101, Kings 90
At Minneapolis, Stephon Marbury
scored 22 poinls, Kevin Gameu had
18 points and 12 rebounds and Tom
Guglioua had 17 points and II
rebounds as Minnesota extended
Sacramento's losing streak ·

Indians team set with lhe addition of
my Mitt Williams baseball card.
'Docs anyone have a Travis Fryman:
Indians' card'/
One reason why Johhny Bench
has always been one of my heroes
was because. at a time when a player exodus dismembered the "Big Red
Machine,"· the Cincinnati Reds,
Bench chose .loyalty over cash. AI a
lime when Rose, Griffey, Gullett,
Foster, 'and several others mode millions elsewhere, Bench signed for
$900,000 to stay in Cincy, taking a
salary far below what his peers were
receiving in lhe City of Brotherly
Love and the Big Apple.
The Southern varsity boys lnnked
decent the first quarter ag&lt;1inst Gal·
lipolis, however, the Blue Devils put
on !heir capes and.turned on the buz'zsaw, scorching the Southern nets. In
a lune of29-54 from the focld li&gt;r 54
percent . The h1st time Southern
defeated Gallipolis was durin~ the
1987-88 s~ason. But dnr\t count
Southern out yet.
Junior ·Mitchell Walker had "
great game for Southern with · 27 .
poinls. No two ways ahnut it Soulhcrn is very young this year. The
youth \vas highlighted hy tis incnn·
siS\ency, but '' hright future l.ics
ahead.

.

:J11ckson 79, Piketon 74 (OT)
•At Jackson, it appeared that the
R&amp;i Streaks wen: going to post a
bl~w out victory over the Iron men as
th~y led by as much as 17 points in
the second quarter, but the Ironmen
raAied from a 55-39 third period
dcfjcil to tie the game at67-67 jn regulftion .play.
rBehind Jon McDona111: Rodney
c.rmpbell, and Vince Jenkins lhe
lrcinmen outscored Piketon 12·7 in
th~ overtime period to earn the hardfoaght victory. .
:The lrioofMcDonald, Campbell,
anll Jenkins each scored 19 points
an!l Mike Rouse added 14 for the
r inners, who shot over 53% from lhe

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N· Y 68, Logan 6S
J\t Buchtel, the Chicllains trailed
the; Buckeyes 41-28 at half1ime and
drew within one point. nt50-49, atlcr
three quarters .hcl'ore droppin~ the
three point contesl.
~osh Lawrence and Gerald Covert
ca()b score~ 16 points for Logan, but
cotild not overcome the overall J9%
to 45% shooting advantage posted by
the' Buckeyes, The winners' Shawn
Sc~ullz took game scoriQg honors
with 17 points as his team made 7 of
17 lhree point goals while Logan
converted only 6 of 22 from long
range.
In addition to his 16 point perl'or·
mancc, Lawrence pulled down 13 of
Logan's 42 rebounds, dished out
two assists, and blocked three Buckeye shots.
Lopn:Todd Green 3-1·1=10; Joe
Conrad 1·0.0=2;Josh·Lawrence 5-1·
3=16; Gerald Covert 3·3·1=16; Ed
Ogle 6-0-1=13; Craig Frasure 1-0·

(aaccer-maat goals) and Daniel Sizemore (socCIII'·tap defender). Newbold and Pollard set new · ·
achaal records In their raapective categories. In
the lower photo are Snedaker, Danl Jenks (vol·
leybllll·beat hitter) and Eather Simmons (volley·
ball-MVP, leading passer and tap server).

.

~2; Mike McBroom 1-0.0=2; Travis they grabbed a 45-42 lead to open the
B~iley 0,.0-h•l; J.gsh 'ful;ker 0-1- . fourth quarter, but could not p~ll out

the victory over 1he more physical
0=3. Totals: 20-6-71'65 ·
NelsonvUie· York: Ben Robey 2· alhletes from Richland Co~nty.
0.2=6; Clay Watkins 1-0.3=5; Shawn
No box score was available on the
Schultz 2-3-4=17;
Higgins 4-0- game, but seniors Joe Vukovick and
0=8; Flynt Smalhe!s 2·1·1=8; Ttev Adam Trautner led Mariella with 16
Qllver.l-1·1= 10; Hqlll McKinney 2· and II poinls while junior Jeremy
2-0=IO; Trey Wilson 2-0-0=4. Albrecht chipped iii II markers.
Mansfield was led by the Sykes
Tolals: IIM·lh•68-,
Ouarter 1111111
•••
brothers as Marquis scored 22 points
Logan ·
• (2-16-21·16=65 and Maurice added II for the win·
Nelsonville-York 21-20-9-1 8=68 ·ners.
Reserve score: Logan 59, NelIn the night-cap of the Zanesville
sonville· York 31
I
Tip-Off Classic the .host Blue Devils
edged Can10n Glen Oak 40-34 and
Mansfield 62, Marietta 59
faced Mansfield in the championship
AI Zanesville·, the T1gers from contest while Mariclla and Canton
Marieua gave the Tygers from Mans- Glen Oak met in the consolation
field Senior all they could handle as game on Saturday night.

wow

rr SURE WAS CLDSI!
THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU
ALL 555 OF YOU

TOM WOODWARD ·
GREEN TWP. TRUSTEE
Pd. by the Candldllte, 205 A!eunder Church Rd., Galllpolla, OH

Until next time, I'll sec you in
Vio1torv Circle!"

Iae

S6Jj50
en

Wal$8.950

l!l!l5
Slad&lt;

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•Ntear.an
• Power Vtlncl.t\.ticb

IDE MOTORS

tlrslta
moos

• Til Sllllilg

• Rtor Window Del.
• Custam Clolllnt.
•l.oldlcl

..

$8,850

$7.950
I

Was $J0,950

was$9,950

1!1!14 SleD
Mert,!lCIUJU
XR7
7Tt 7A
•Power~Mmn

• N1 Cordtion

• Tli/Crulst
•AI*Imllk
• Power WlndA.oclcs
•Load!
• AIWM Cassetle

l!li~·Nrn

•

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Sta:tc-.mt~A

• Relr Wllldow

•NtCadtion

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' AtM'M S1ereo
• OUttl AillagS

DeiTt18llr

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SJ0,650 SJJ950 SJ4,950

~c..ee

noor.

~Piketon's Aaron Roberts took
gajJ!e scoring .honors with ~I points
anp was backed by a120-point effort
b)' Josh Montgomery.
:Piketon: Josh Montgomery 7-2·
0=!20: Shannon Jordan 4-0-2= I0;
Aaron Roberts 1.0-0.1=21; Jason Van
Hoose 4-2-0= 14; Joel Sheppard 2·0.
Od4; Wes Breitenbach 2·0·1 =5.
Totals: 19-4-4=74
:,Jackson: Jon McDonald 1·5·
2=19: Rodney Campbell 8-0-3=19;
Vince Jenkins 5-1·6=19: Mark Rice
0-~·0=3: Mike Rouse 6-0-2=14:
Luke Downard 0-1·0=3: Casey
ChOmileriain 1-0-0=2. Totals: 21·8·
13a79.
QJ!artertlllfb
Pi~ton
.
20.18-17-12· 7=74
Jackson
8·13-IH-28-12=79
'Resen;e score: Piketon 54, J&lt;lck·
so~ 5·1 (0T)

OYCS ATHLEnC HONORI!ES- Sevet'al Ohio
Valley Chrlltlan athletn rec:elvad varlou1 awards
at the schqal's fall awardlt benquet held recent·
ly. In the upper photo from lett to right are Shake
Shoppe owner and plaque donor Jeff Snedaker,
Jaddy Newbold (80CCIII'·t110SI aall~). Bo P~lard

A rule change this year in high
school basketball is that pl&lt;1ycrs
along the lane, on lhc free thmw
atlempt, cannot move until tlic ball
hits the rim. This is the way the rule
read nearly 20 years ago, but because
of e~cessive physical hallles on the
rehound, the rule was reinstated.
Most rccenlly players could go on the
relei\Sc of the ball from the shooter's High School. Young Joey seems to
hand.
have inherited all the right genes, and
Anolher obvious change is the . if he keeps working hard, will be on
three full time outs and two twenty his way to a fine career.
second time outs that a coach has to
Coach Tony Deem welcomed
inslrucl his team.
Brown with a smile and open arms IQ
the varsity lcvci. while reserve coach
One of my finer study hall stu· Joe "Bob" Bailey suffered through a
dents, Joey Brown, a freshman at week of Brown withdrawal. Not
Eastern had a great varsity debut Fri· even lhe hesl Saturday Night Live
day when he tossed in 20 points to skits could charm the reserve mentor
lead all scorers. Brown's father and this week; not until his Josh Will
brolhers and his maternal uncles, the troops rolled over Ohio Valley ChrisBates brothers were stars at Fort Frye tian Friday ~ight.

$EOAL
cage roundup..• .,;.....&lt;c.,...on•_inu_.d_erom_B_-6.;...,)
_ _..____ _
•.
.
1616.Eastern {!l.ve.
Gallipolis, OH
446-3672

.-••~e•u •--~ • Page 87

Robinson showed _loyalty

'

NBA gaines ... &lt;_c-'-on_•in_ue_d...:..fro_m....;;B....;;·5...:..1- - - - - - - - - - Jl!lints on 4-of-16 shooting, bul he did
score eight in the final quarter'- four
Or. free throws -to reach 13, kecpiilg his double-figure scoring streak
intact at 776 games.
"Randy Brown got mad at me
b¢cause he made me realize I only
had five points," Jordan said.
· "He didn't want me to break my
string of double figures. I really wasn:tthinking about it. I think that's one
~on Phil (Jackson) left me in in the
fourth quarter. He's more aware &lt;1f it
than I am."
Milwaukee had the lowest scoring
output in its 30-year NBA hislory.
Elsewhere. Seattle · defeated
Detroit 94-~9. the Los Angeles Lakcrs downed Sun Antonio 9~·XX .
GOlden Slate stunned Orlando I04·
89. Minnesota topped Sacramento
I01-90, Indiana heat Denver 96-85,
Phoenix defeated Tinonto II 0-91
and Miami drubbed Boston 117-97.
Nets 107, 76ers 88
At East Rutherford, N.J., Van·
Horn had- only II rjoints in 27 min·
UICS but contribuiCd six points and an
assist in an early 26-4 spun that carried New Jersey over Philadelphia.
"I made some bad decisions hut
!hat's because I' vc been out six
weeks," said Van Horn. who missed
the first 17 games of the season
because of a sprained rig hi ankle . "I
think it will be another 10 to 14 days
before I'm )00 percent. Out of a 10.
I give myself a live.''
.
Van Horn also had five fouls and
seven turnovers.
Trail Blazers 94, Jazz 77
At Portland, Williams added four
rebounds and three assists in his first
NBA start as Anderson missed the
game w1th a thigh contusion.
Another Portland rookie. Kelvm
Cato blocked eight shots.
The Blazers, led by Brian Grant's
IS points and nine rebounds, used a
23-4 run in the second quaner 10
break open a close game and didn't
let the Jazz get closer than I0 points
during the last 28 minutes.
SuperSonics 94, Pistons 89
At Auburn Hills, Mich., Vin Bak·
er had 31 points and Gary Payton nar·
rawly missed his seventh career
triple-double with 17 points, a sea·
son-high 10 rebounds and nine
assists.
Grant Hill had 27 points, 10
rebounds and eighl assists for Detroit,
while Brian Williams had 26 poinls

.. '

Pomeroy • Mlddllpof't• G1lllpoll1, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

Wolfe's 'Victory Circle' returns

-~
~

lo~a

Boys' basketball season opens in SE Ohio

By ODIE O'DONNELL
OVP Conwapondent
GALLIPOLIS - Five of the
eight members of lhe Southeastern
Ohio Alhletic League opened the
1997-98 high school basketball season Friday nisht poSting wins in three
of the five non-league contests.
Gallipolis defeated Racine Southem 77-52, Athens surprised Chilli·
cothe 41-32, and Jackson hung on to
posl a 79-74 overtime viclory over
Pikelon.
In the loser's column Manslield
Senior edged Mariella 62-59 in lhe
Zanesville Invitational Tournament
and Nelsonville· York slipped past
Logan 68-65.
River Valley, Warren Local and
Point Pleasant will play their first
contests at a laiCr date.
Athellll41, .Chillicothe 32
At The Plains, the Bulldogs took
a fil'6t quarter lead of I 0.5 and were
never behind as the Cavaliers shol a
miserable 27% from the floor. made
only three of 12 free throws, and
committed 24 personal fouls.
Alheils controlled lhe contest, hit·
tins a nifty SO% from the field, con·
vened 10 of 22 at the line, and outrebounded the visitors 28-25.
Brei)IJ:!orst tal!ied H~. pPin!S to
lead Aihens while John S1mmons
paced lhe Cavaliers with 12 markers.
Chillicothe: Anthony Austin 1·0·
1=3; Josh Howard 1-0-0..2; Juslin
Brown (). 2-0=6; Casey Cox 1-1·

Sundly,~r7,1897

Sundly, December!,. 1997' ·.

Air cond.,
tonneau
bed cover,

Wal$12,950

58,000 miles.
56900

1!5 IIIli CIYir U

Stadt -.7TIQIIII
• N1 Cordllon
• Power limn
'• P1Mer Wlncbws • AWFM Cassetle
• Power Door t.ocl&lt;l • u.lod
• Power Sllnrool

'

92 IUICI WAllE 4 DR.........................~.$7995

I Was $13,950
19!17 l'lnllat Crlld All SE

15 To a- Fm
• Air C&lt;ntlla1
• TIII'CIVise
• Allomllle
• Rear- Dot
• Power Wlnd!W:b • Rear Spoiler
• AMIFU Cassette • Loaded!

was S16,950

I!IYS c•ryslrr LHS s~a 1
Sta:lc -r8B·IOA
• lodl&lt;lntot'Qr
• Po...v.t&gt;d.floclts
• Cli11lla Contml N:.
aid llimn
•lnlrily Solnl Sjslom • AU111rum Mlools
• TIICluiso
• Filly l.od!d!

Fully equipped, wilh power seats.

92 FORD ESCOIT 4 Dl............................. $4995
Auto., air cond., super sharp!

94 FORD ASPIRE..............'"..................... $5.495

Air cond., airbags, only 42,000 miles

•

.

94 HYUIIDAI....~"".........._ ................... $3995
.4 cyl., 5 speed, 54;000 miles.

·

·

1'/a$9,950

'

dual air &amp;heat: all power.

Was $10,950

1!5 Ftl11111trr Ellfnif tl• XLT

1!2 flrvy Asln C1mrs111 VII

Sta:lc !Unber 7CilOA

SloclcN-7TI363A

92 FOlD AEROSTAR Ell WINDOW YAII...... $7995
4X4, Eddie Bauer Pkg.,

.sa 950

57,850
• Air Condlllon

• N1 Cordlion
• C!Use C&lt;Jlbol
• AINFM CassiiiiO
• Til Slemg

• Power v.1ndows
'"'*""*
• -Door t.ocl&lt;l

• ~ Raar WlrQow
• Amoriean Roc;,g l'tlloels
• Berliner
•l.oldod!

19 FOlD IROIICO 114141LI PKG............. $5995
Loaded with options.

II FORD IIOIICO IIIli 414's. ................ $5995
Auto trans., air cond.,lot~ of extras. 4 to choose from.

atiUICIIEGAL 2 DR.....................- ...-$4995
Extra sharp. V6, auto., much more.
Auto. trans. Extra Sharpl

,

......
'

' . . . - ...

'

"

~

,

'

'

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• 'IIWCIUlol

• "-' Wl'lciA.odls •l.oldlcl

.-.

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~.,.

. ..,.

Wal$11,950

• Fronl 'MitlllllM
• N!r Condlllon
·~lie

Many more to chooH from. 38 mo. or 45,000
power train warranty avella~ on molt vehlctea.

.

'

~ C~ llllll Mill· VII

tl PONTIAC IUIID 112 DR................... $4695

~'

sg 950 $]5 950
-'

Was$17.950

1!5 Dnyll1zer LT 41111r 414

Stla*-tTIZM
• AINFM C....
• Nl Ccrdlart
• Tlttftilo
• " - ' wtmJlocb •lTTIIrn
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·~---

5)7;950

-·1

Was $19,950

1!1!15 K·ISIII Ellrldl'll 1:1• 414
Sta:lc

• 350 Y-8 Power

475 South Church Street· Ripley. WV lOOQ-822-{)417 ·372·2844

---·"""""'-'"''. --..--

Monday· Saturoay: 9am· 8 pm ·Sunday; 1pm · 8pm

.,.._""" ,., .......

:Jill

• Cn.iso Conll!ll
• N1 Condillll
• Cus1om Clolllnltrior
• AiAomiiiC
• Ak.mintJI1 M1HII
• AINFM C8ssel1o •l.Oidod

......

•

�•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolla, OH • Point Pleaant, WV

Sunday.~ber7,1997

Along the River

Gallia hunters
report 255 deer
kills in latest report

•

Nonhwest Territorie s.

Thi s wild co untry teem s with
wildlife, Ted Kcrasote wrote in an
article in the current issue of Sports
Afield, but not with people.
Moose in the willows, caribou on
the bluffs, white wolves howling,
Canada geese nying upriver and evidence of fre e-roaming grizzlie s
'
abound.
This mass of wildlife is partially
the creation of the Thelon Wildlife
Sanctuary. Located between Hudson

Bay and Great Sl av e Lake, th e
region, now enco mpassed by the
san cluary, was never permanently
settled.
In 1927 the area was. closed to
sport and subsistence hunting to protec t dwindling numbers of muskoxen. The oxen nourished as did the
Beverly caribou herd, and most
importantly, a large enough block of
the country was set aside so that
human-shy species such as grizzlies
would have enough room to ensure
their long-term survival.
In addition, mineral exploration
was kept out of the sanctuary and,
because of its distance from air-traf-

fie centers, only a small number of contiguous United States, the Thelon
canoeists and anglers come to run does not have trails, mileage signs,
and fish its rivers .
designated camping areas, rangers
To put the size of the region into on patrol or guidebooks describing
perspective. consider that the largest every river mile.
.
designated-wilderness area in the
In 1999 the Northwest Territories
Lower 4g. California's Death Valley will be partitioned into two new terWilderness. measures 4,934 square ritories, Nunavut on the east, politimiles. The Thelon Sanctuary is cally dominated by Inuit, and a yet20.077 square miles and lies in the to-be-named territory on the west
midst of a Texas-sized 260.000 where the Dcne will likely hold the
miles of tundra, rivers and lakes , balance of power. The boundary will
uncrossed by road or powcrlinc, and pass through the Thelon Wildlife
without a·single human community - Sanctuary.
making it the largest uninhabited
In preparation for this partition ,
area in North America.
the Thelon Management Planning
Unlike wilderness areas in the Program was initiated. Now in its
final drafting, it has - despite its
tide- tried to maintain a landscape
that won.' t !Jc managed.
It proposes that the sanctuary be
open o,nly to aboriginal subsistence
hunting, and then only while lnuit or
Dene happen to be traveling
through. It suggests that mineral
exploitation be prohibited within the
sanctuary, and that tourism be
wilderness-oriented.
The bad news is that diamond,
gold and uranium deposits are being
explored and developed just outside

the sanctuary , and the Northwest
Territories, though one of the least
populated places on Earth, has an
incredibly high birthrate, matching
that of developing nations in Latin
America and Asia.
The challenge for- northern
Canadians will be to achieve hi~ he~

standards of living without harming
that which can't be replaced: A land
that in every criterion - free-roaming·
wildlife , the presence of historic
predators, pure water, clean air; and
lack of services and safety - contains increasingly rare reminders of
the Earth's original condition.

56K INTERNET ACCESS
.•Reliable service
•Dedicated customer support
And Now •56K Internet Access

4 Dr., auto., green,
51,000 miles.

MUS,. SEE
Hubbell Smith and Nathan Holley. Behind them ·
are head coaches Gary Roach and Mike Polcyn
and aulstant coach John Polcyn.· Player Callie
Judy didn't make the photo Hulon.

94 REGAL 4 DR.

95 PONTIAC FIREBIRD

Rear air, all power,
green, 3.3 V6.

Burgundy, leather, fully
equipped, 45,000 miles.

Green, auto., V6, clean car,
only 34,000 miles.

Jal

'llr liD.

'218"11a.

BI'IH

ASII'I tllffrsiH Yll
•...,.,..lc

• 4 Ct!*N Cllaill

• N&lt; Colldllon

·-SofiBod

·Powlr~

• Fowor LDdls

•AM.fllc•C.Ccmol
• Tl Stoellng

-

•FIIIIPP Rll1niiV

•l.Gidld

$23,950*

II'IH lrr 1!7 c•'Y ~-151 Ell. c.• .
414 CUverslll T"'t~

• Vortle 350 v..

i""""

Door Loeb
• AMofll COICaslltte
l'owlr
• Ai*lmllc
• ~AWe Con!Jol
• Air Coodltlon
•lit Sllelilg
• Gllldlaklr Olnoollion •O.sllm~Pldllgt
·~11111•1..-d

.,...,_

- SIJ,850~
Bn-'Nfrl!l

CH'Y S-11 Pltkl'
•ll!lio(s Sidt IMt.tg
• Fleer Arjj,!Gdc
~

.

• Pow Sllllilg
• Powlr 8clbl

Tom Peden
Country
Monday • Saturday: 9 am • 8 pm
Suday: 1Jill • 8 Pill

&lt;

c.-. Clolllnllllor

•SlllldWhoels

•WillE~

Jaat

'24P lla.

87 CHM S·l 0 PICKUP

·V6, loaded, red, clean,
van runs great.

Red, runs good, .
standard shift.

•. . . ., .

Dldy'2,810

~~~~------~

9,450*
Nrr 1!1 tarJy

4 Dr., 'iluto., air, white,
greatMPG.

....

GUND CAUVAH LE

2.1°/a APR Up To 48 · Montlls!~*

93 PLYMOUTH """..

96 GUND CAUVAN SE

2 Dr., V6, auto.,
teal, loaded.

WE
AND USED
414'5 IN·STOCK TODAY. GET READY FOR
WINTER DRIVING AHEAD.

951CCLAIM 4 DR.

91 AEROSTAR XLT

92 ASTRO LT

V6, auto., loaded,
40,000 miles .

V6, auto., white, loaded,
clean van .

All wheel drive, auto., V6,
winter ready.

'8,880

Jut

'7

MUS'I'SEE.

Come See: Mike Northup, Dwight Stevers, Pete Somerville, AI Durst, Eric Blackburn,
Neal Peifer, Tim Conwell, Jam.le Adamaon, Jim Hamilton, Joe Tillis .

ORRIS NORTHUP DODGE, I C.
252 Upper River Rd.
(614} 446·0842.

Shellon said since the program was so successful, this ·
may chan&amp;e in future years.
Following the distribution, Shelton explained that
while packing up the final items left from the clothing
drive, a man came to the center to see if any clothes
were left. He told lier that his.family and others suf(ered losses from the flood this past spring and he had
just found out about the clothing drive. Shelton said she
offered him the remaining items and he took them all ·
·
for his family and_ others in
his neighborhood. Therefore,
what once was a filled distri·
bution center was now completely empty due to the
efforts of these students.
~
~-~~~
According to the last figed coats received through.the
ures released in June 1997,
clothing drive to the People's
those receiving aid in Gallia
Bank Coats for Kids camCounty totaled 2,667 for
paign.
dependent children and
Toy Drlvaa
adults combined. A total of
The Gallia ~cademy Key
65 recipients received disClub is cur~ntly collecting
ability assistance. Food
toys for the ToyTown Plus
stamps were distributed to
campaign. New boxed toys
5,038
people · totaling
can be taken to the collection
$329,975. Also, nearly 6,000
site at 750 First Avenue after
people in Gallia County
school throughout this week.
received some type of health
In the school, the Key Club
care assistance.
has received toy donations
Therefore, many groups
,..
along with money donations
of people are trying to help · ,_n
.:king for doMtlo,. of to ~urchase toys. ~a~y. local
the less fortunate have a betltaml 10 g/VII 10 flm/1,.1 bustnesses and mdmduals
ter holiday season.
by the ChlldiWn'• Homa. Tile EllS ool· have helped the Key Clu_b's
Colt and Clothing Drlvn /tel/on will end em O.t:elllber 20.
. . annual Toy Town servtce
People's Bank . in both
·
project be i success.
,.
· M,eigs and Gallia Counties continues its annual Coats
After the donations are collected, th~ Key &lt;?lub wt.ll
for Kids campaign. The campaign began on October 18 shop for toys for the many ne~y chtldren m Galha
and will end on December 13. The bank's campaign County. Since many people have previously applied to
asks for new and used winter coats for children in the receive toys through this program, the group has an
two counties.
Idea what age group items need to be purchased.
~~~·~~
~~.~~
ing extra coats silting around or
into the site, the Key Club will
who want to donate money to help
begin to wrap all the gifts with
by bringing coats or donations to
the help of th~ local Kiwanis
any People's Bank location in
club. Distribution of toys will
Meigs or Gallia County. Other
be on December 19 from 3:30
drop-off sites in Gallipolis include
to 5:30 and· on December 20
. K·mart, Hills, P'Dpll True Value,
•• Qullli.ty . F~!.!J.\ . &amp; ~l~et and .. '~.e
Thomas t:So-lt CCnter.
"It's coming in prelly good,'
the Ga!lla County Depart·
said Deborah Rhodes, People's
men! of Human Services proBank branch manager in downtown
vided gener4l information of
nc,rly 200 childreh that could
Gallipolis. "We still need medium
size boys coats - those are the ones
use help this holiday season.
we have trouble getting. EveryInformation released by the
thing else is going prelly good."
department includes a first
After all the coats are collected,
name, age; sex, clothing and
they will be sorted, cleaned and
shoe sizes and items that child
mended by barlk employees and
would like to receive for
local church youth groups. The
Christmas."
coats will be distributed to children
Hills and Quality Farm &amp;
• in the local elementary schools.
Fleet are placing the informa·
Last year, People's Bank along with
Tile
food
Food
tion on tree~ in their stores.
the help of other local businesses ~:,n ::~H ~ churchea, Those shopp~ng, that want to
were ab.le to collect over 350 coats. lluden,!tmd cormriunlty Ol'flllliDI/ona help these ktds are asked to
Another local group, the Gallia lnd local bualnellu. The 1:1111..- /a IIIlO take the ornament o~ the tree
Academy Key Club just completed accllptlng money do,.l/on1 10 buy IOya and s~op for that ~htld. Aft~r
:. their first annual clothing drive. for nelldy children In lh/1 11'1111.
shoppmg for the chtld, the gtft
· .. This clothing drive was in conjunc.
.
or gtfts are gtven back to the
:· tion with their annual ToyTown communtty seMce store. The store then _takes all the ttems. to the D~pa.rt­
•. project. Since this was the first year for the clothmg ment of Human Servtces for gtft wrappmg and dtstnb·
aspect of the drive, the word Plus was added to the ution.
.
.
.
original program.
.
The departmentts askmg that all gtfts be returned to
On Tuesday, December 2 and Wednesday, Decem- the store by December 16 therefore,. distribu~ion will
· ber 3, over 117 individuals came to shop at the Key happen before Christmas. For more mform.atton conClub's clothing distribution center, 750 First .A,venue, tact the store or Department of Human Servtces.
. for their family's clothing needs. Since there were 117
Lynn Gardner, social service worker for the depart: individuals that went through the distribution center, men!, explained that Shell Chemical Company m Gal• Key Club Advisor Barbara Shelton estimates several lipolis Ferry, W.Va., is also doing a similar collection
· hundred family members received assistance.
by their workers.
'
The ToyTown Plus collection site had three rooms
"When it .comes down to it, we will have helped
filled with a variety of clothing sizes. The only clothes over 200 children,' said Gardner. "It just helps ma~e
: for this drive came from students, their families, and Christmas a little bri&amp;hter for all the needy chtldren tn
: ; Rockwell employees since this is a first time activity. the area."

By JENNIFER RICHTER
Tlm. .Sentlntl Staff
GALLIPOLIS- This holiday season the less fortu·
nate in Gallia County will rt&amp;eive, a helping hand in the
· form of toys, · food and clothing. Galli a County Is
stocked full of businesses, churches, student organizations and community agencies that want to help with
the collection of these Items during this season. .
The need in Gallia County Is quite hiah as the following figures released by
the Ohio Department of
ijuman Services prove. This
department reports yearly on
the amount of welfare-related ilid received In each coun·

.

96 FORD F·350 XLT 94 CHEROKEE COUNTRY

OOMPD REDSKINS - Membera of this year's
0.0. Mcintyre Park Dlltrlct Redaklnl aoccer tlem
are (L·R In front) Dllkotl Fr11111n1n, Cody Lewis,
Nicholas Roach, lack Polcyn, Keith Skidmore,

~alhpolis, _
Oh.

Or Toll Free 1·800·446·0842

I I'll I ::1111::_!_!1111/· :il.!::ll· l.!:.'ll/11,

.,.

"Last year when we '
gifts here, it really
made us feel good," added Gardner. "It's a. good program, especially for the children."
The Outreach Center on State Route 588 is currently accepting donations to purchase toys this holiday
season. Sue Johnson, director of the center said, "We
have about $2,000 to buy new toys. We are. including
gloves and hats with all the toys given away.'
Johnson explained that $1,000 donation came from
the Harley Davidson Club and all the gloves and hats
are being provided by the United Way. The Daughters
of American Veterans is also donating items collected
during their toy drive to the Outreach Center.
·
A list of those being helped this holiday sell'i£ln has
been compiled by churches, school nurses, ChiTdren's
Services and Head Start. The money donated for the
toys will be used to shop for certain toys the children in
,need requested. Then, distribution will begin the week
prior to Christmas.
.
Food Drlvea
The Outreach Center is also accepting food items·
for the holiday '!Cason. These items will be stored in the
center's foo(l,.pantry for distribution prior to Christmas
and also throughout the ye~r. Johnson explained that
for Thanksgi\'ing, 55 fUll turkey dinners were given out
along with canned foo'd items.
Some of the places accepting food for the center
include the St. Louis Catholic Church, First Church of
Deborah Rhodll, Gall/poll• Peopll'l B1nk
God is collecting money donations, My 'Sister's Closet
branch
m•n•r. 11 In the Pf'OCftl of f11IMI1nf1 Ill
and the Put·On·Shop. Johnson explained these are the iha COlli
co/IIICtlld for 1M !Mnk'l COlli For ICidl
sites she knows of but others usually just show up with Clmpllfl/1. Thl camp1/gn will run unllf Decembar
food and money during the holiday season.
·
13.
"Usually they don't tell us they are collecting," said
Johnson. 'They just show up. Everybody is wonderful
during the holiday season."
"It can't be just one organization, we all have to
work together to meet the needs of this area," said
Johnson.
Another group collecting food items for this holiday
season is the Gallia County EMS. The EMS station is
I'(Orking in conjunction with the Children's Home to
find those in need of assistan~G.
"Whatever families they find us is who will get it,"
said EMS paramedic Wendy Cline. "We see families
out there that need this and this food drive is the only
way we found we could help."
.
Non' perishable food items will be collected until
December 20 at the Gallia County Health Department,
the 911 Communications Center, Haskins - Tanner
Clothiers, Gallipolis Police Department, Quality Farm
&amp; Fleet, and the Gallia County EMS"station. If anyone
would like to give items like a ham or turkey, contact
the EMS station at 446-1659.
Gallia Academy Key Club is still accepting applications for those in need of food items. The club is collecting non-perishable food items through the third
week of December. Distribution will begin on Decemlrlfii/II'H progrtm ' '
ber 19 from 3:30 ro 5;30 p.m. and on December 20
lrrlv/ng
from thl 1101'1 10 ba (11ft
starting at 1 p.m. at the collection .site at 750 First • wrapped by 1M O.plrtml'!!_.!f !'!!:!'n ~
Lynn Gardn.r, 1 aocllt .,, .,.....
eft,._,
Avenue.
. .
.
thlt ovtr 200 chlld/'111'1 w111 ba hl/pld through th/1
If an yon~ would hke to do~atc food ttems, they ~n ·ltld llmllar prog,..,.,.
do so by gomg to the collectiOn center any d•y dunng
the week after sehool before December 19. For infor·
Although thC$e are many of the local places acceptmation on how to apply for assistance call the Key ing food, clothing or toy donations, all the many who
Club at the high school at 446·3250 or go to the center are helping the less fortunate are numerous and unable
to be mentioned for all they do for the communtly.
prior to the distribution dates.
·
For' any information about making donations, con· These are just a few of the many ways that those able
Ga/1/l Ac1 demy'• Key Club hotllld their flrtt annuli clothing dr/VI thll ya~r. nr. ToyTown Plu• pro}ICI tact the proper collection site. Also for anyone seeking to provide assistance can in Gallia !2ounty and surassistance contact one of the above places for help. · rounding areas.
tso collect• food end toy• for their "Seeton• of Stuff" lnt,.,•llonll eervlefl projiCt.
.

....ft.,.,

1

[II[[

Iunday, Dac.mblf 7, 1•1

.

-

4X4, diesel, blue, loaded,
25,000 miles.

C

Businesses, schools, churches,
,community group.s work to assist
area's needy during hoUday season

CLAIMS 111-POINT BUCK- Bruce Young of Georges Creek Rd.
near Addiaon ahotthls 1O.polnt buck on Dec. 1.

Virgin Canadian region faces perimeter threat

Section

ristmas

1n.

160 with 26; and Bodimer' s Grocery
ai Rodney with 16.
Wildlife officials in Gallia
County are optimistic that ·the light
SIJOW cover that blanketed the area
on Friday night will attract more
hunters into the woods for the final
day of the either-sex deer season on
Saturday.
One hunter/land owner commented on Saturday morning that there
are fewer deer looking for food than
in previous years. He did note that
the adult deer appear to be larger
and are dressing out at an average of
about 140-165 pounds.
The five-day totals at the seven
Galli a County checking stations
show the Rio Mini Mart with 681 ,
O' Dell Lumber with 569;
Mercervilh; Convenience with 460;
Brown ' s Hardware with 444 ;
Brown 's Exxon/Grocery with 402 ;
BUCK FELLED - T.K. Workman of RUttand landed thil .1CI·polnt
Lilli e John 's Gas Plus at Vinton
buck
on his property on Carpenter Hill In 11ciplo Township. The
with 297; and Bodimer's Grocery at
deer
was
killed on Monday morning, the flrat day of the HaiDII.
Brown ' s Ell x·o n/Gtocery on Route Rodney with 251 .

By ODIE O'DONNELL
OVP Corre1pondent
GALLIPOLIS--Deer hunters in
Gallia County bagged 255 deer on
;Friday, pushing the total number of
deer harvested through the first fi ve
days of the 1997 deer/gun season to
3.104.
For the second consecuti ve day
the Mercerville Convienence Store
i n Mercerville led the county' s
seven checking stations with 54 animals brought in. The store, operated
by John Sanders. talli ed 46 on
. Thursday and has now accounted for
4~ through the first five days.
The Rio Mini Mart in Rio Grande
still tops all checking stations with
681. following Friday's check-in of
47 animals.
Other checking stations reporting
on Friday's kill included Brown's
Hardware at Port~r with 45; O'Dell
Lumber in Gallipolis with 40; Li ttle
John 's Gas Plus at Vinton with 27;

By SPORTS AFIELD
A Hearst Magazine
Few places remain as untouched
as th e Th elon region in th e

.

'

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Page C2 • ~ • ,.-...,. .. u,

•

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Sunclly, December 7, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point PIH•nt, WV

Sundliy, December 7, 1887

GETTING THE TREE READY • Marvin Wooten of Point Pleasant,
Ia pictured at Bob'a Market and Greenhouse In Gallipolis, securing
his Christmas tree to his van .. Like many area residents, Wooten is
selecting a live tree that can atay fresh for weeks - II some very slm.·
pie steps are tsken. Tammy Roberta, Ntall manager of Bob's Mar·
ket, suggests cutting off onato two Inches of the tree before putting
II in a stand. Water every day for the first two weeks ·less frequently
there after. Never leave lights on a tree u.,.nended, and never hang
ornaments on the strand• of lights-

•

Mr. and Mrs. Lee Houck

•
StaC)' Woolard

ami Chrl•topher Carleton

Woolard-Carleton
POMEROY -- Stacy Leigh Hawk of Tuppers Plains and the late
: Woolard and Christopher Michael Acral Hawk.
' • Carleton announce their engagem~nt
Stacy is a 1995 graduate of E¥t·
ern High School, attends t)le Univer: and upcoming marriage.
• The bride-elect is the daughter of sity of Rio Grande._ and is employed
Wayne and Jan Woolard of pomeroy at 'Vaughan's !GA. ,Her fiance is a
and the granddaughter of Edith 1993 graduate of Eastern High
, Woolard and Ernest Woolard. both School and is employed at Contract. of Washington, N. C. and the · late ed Operations, Little Hocking.
: Nina and Robert Robinson of . The open church wedding will
take place on Dec. 27 at 2 p.m. at the
· Pomeroy.
: The prospective grOQm is the son Mt. Herman United Brethern
: of Mike and Candy Carleton of Tup- Church, Pomeroy. with a reception
pers Plains. He is the grandson of immediately following the ceremofrances Carleton of Pomeroy and ny.
:. the late H311')1 Carleton, and Lester

M•l- i::arpenmr 1nd Jothua Mlmt

Thorla-Barnette

Carpe.nter-Mims

RACINE -- Announcement of
their engagement and approaching
marriage is being made by Cathy J.
Thorla and Douglas E. Barnette of
Racine.
The bride-elect is the ~laughter of
Kathryn Wildermuth Meredith of
Phoenix, AriZ- and 1he late Charles
Wildermuth of Pomeroy.
She is the motber of Corissa
Deemer of Syracuse, Chanda and
Alicia Mulford and Travis and Jonas

iACINE - Holiday activities
were review~ ' and plans completed
for the fifth annual home decorating
contest and ''Christmas in the Park"
during a meeting of the Racine Area
Community Organization (RACO)
held recently at Star Mill Park. .
The judging in the lightina con·
test will lake place on Dec. 17 from
6:30 to 9:30 p:m. Judges will select
three winners and prizes ofSSO, 530
and $20 will be awarded.
Judging will be done in the viilage of Racine and within a twomile radius of~ village's- corporalion signs. Poinsettias will be presented to the judges and winners
· will be announced in The Daily Sentine!.
Plans were also completed for
"Christmas in the Park" to be held
on Thursday, Dec. 18, beginning ·
with a candlelight walk and caroling
at 6:30p.m.
The Christmas village - a
miniature version of Racine - will
be set up near the museum building.
New buildings to be-added this y'ear
are the Racine Barber Shop, Burgundy and Brass, and the Racine
Library.
Santa Claus will arrive in a horsedrawn wagon and give out treats to
the children. ContribOting to the

Diana White and Eric Sto-

White-Stover
LONG BOTTOM -- Diana
· White and Eric Stover announce
their engagement and lonhcoming
marriage.
She is the daughter of Bill and
Carolyn White of Long Bouom. A
I989 graduate of Eastern High ·
School. she is employed at Rock

Clement Moore's
manuscript sold
'

NEW YORK (AP) :- A hand. written 1860 manuscript of Clement
Clark Moore 's "Twas the night
before Christmas ... " sold for
$21 I ,500 at auction on Friday.
Christie's said two Manhauan
manuscript dealers. Joseph Mad-dalena and Seth Kaller, bought 1he
poem, formally titled "A Visit from

We are extending our
hours for this
Holiday Season:
Mon.-Sat. 9:00-8:00
Sun. 1:00.5:00

The buyers immediately put it on
display for the holidays at Kaller's
· American Gallery. located in Macy's
Herald Square. The letter had been·
expected (o sell for $200.000 to
·$250,000.
Also sold at the American history
auction was a letter of condolence
Abraham Lincoln wrote 10 the
daughter of a man killed in the Civil
War.
A Beverly Hills. Calif.. · manuscript dealer. Profiles in History,
paid $425,500 for the leuer. Lincoln
wrote the letter to a grieving Fanny
McCullough, whose father was a
friend of the president. William
McCullough was shot and killed in
I 1862 while on a scouting mission
deep in Confederate territory.

I

OPEN

- SU DAY1:00·4:00

a' simple solution for fielping your wishes come true.

'Eacli time you visit us at X&amp;C Jewelers and see an item
you H~sli wtre yours simply asli. us to apply it to your own
personal wisli list.
_ .

'11iis allows friends and loved ones to purchase just tlie
~glit gift witliout tali.ing tlie surprise out ofgiving.

'

I4cquisitions rw Jeuie{~
. '"'" Gift W'r1ppln11
•DIMovef/MCMaa

OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00

WRAP UP YouR EXPENSES
WITH OuR SPECIAL
.,.

HoLIDAY LoAN.

99o/o
.

'I'fie Wisfi List

• The bride elect is a 19\)7 graduate
of River Valley High School. The
groom to be is a 1997 graduate &lt;If
Galli a Academy High School and is ,
currently serving in the U.S. Army.
The open invitation wedding will
be held on December27 at 5:30p.m.
in the Gallipolis park.

.

candy and fruit treats are the Racine ·
American Legion Post 602 Auxil- 1
iary, the ·united Methodist Women
and the Park BoJrd. RACO has
donated $100 for the treats and will
sponsor the Big Bend Cloggers who j
'will perfonn on the state during the I
evenmg.
The fire Department Auxiliary
and RACO will assist the park board I
mem~rs in serving cocoa, coffee
and cookies at the Star Mill Park 1
building. Donations of homemade .
cookies are ne~ed ·and anyone .
wanting to give is asked 'lo contact
Marilyn Powell at 949-2676 or leave
TWO LOCATIONS
them at the Ann Zirkle residence.
111 2nd Ava, GaiHpol..
The group commended the comt1 Jl!llll SL, Mldd!lport
munity for its geru:rosity in making
the recent' food collection for the
Meigs County ·Cooperative Parish
food Pantry a success.

Springs Rehabilitation Center.
Her fiance is the son of Leonard
and June Stover of Letan. He graduated from Southern High School in
19R7 and is employed with Jeffers
Excavating.
Plans arc being made for a feb.
14 wedding.

St. Nicholas.~

,

BIDWELL • Rick a~d Kathy
Han of Racine. Her fiance is the Carpenter of Bidwell announce the
father ofTrina and Kaysi Bameuc of engagement and upecimina maniage
Vienna,.W. Va.
of their.. Claughter Melena, to Pvt.
Barnette is the son of Dee Jbshua G. Mims, son of AI and
Spencer of Racine. He is employed Karen Cox of Gallipolis, and Olen
at Eber's Citgo in Racine.·
and Bernadine Mims of Pikeville,
The wedding will take place on Ky.
Jan. 31 at 6 p.m. at the Bethany
United Methodist Church in Racine. .
A reception will be held immedi•tely following the open-church wedding.

Racine makes holiday plans

BUnONS &amp; BOWS

.'

I

Cathy Thorl1 1nd Dougl11 Barnett.

·'

'

FIXED RATE

54o/o
APR*

Treat yourself to a Holiday Loan.
Peoples Bank is offering this special rate for
new loan~ of $1500 to $5000 for up to 36 months.
Payments wil1 be made automatically through direct
debit from your Peoples Bank account.
We wish you a joyous holiday season and all
the good things this time o/year brings.

Seventy years of marriage
to be observed by couple
Mr. and Mre. Ranford "Pete" Cox

:Open house planned for
couple's golden anniversary
Ranford Slone of Crown City. Both are
• • MERCERVILLE
~'Pete" and Ella Mae (Slone) Cox retired from the Gallipolis Develop:Will celebrate their 50th wedding mental Center.- he in 1987, and she
in 1992.
:~~nniversary with an open house.
They are the parents of six chililfhcy were married in Mercerville, at
dren:
Wanda E. (Garold) Cox of
l:he home of Mr. and Mrs. John
:%-usher, by the Lusher son, the Rev. Gallipolis; Donna (Ronnie) Waugh
.Charles Lusher on December 17, of Crown City; Linda (Daniel)
Smith and Randy (Darlene) Cox of
:1947.
Gallipolis,
Marsha (Marvin) Wick; ; They will celebrate with an open
~vitation to all friends and relatives line Jr. of Milton, Fla. and Loren
·..0 attend an open house on Decem- (Jane) Cox of Cro:-vn City. There are
:ber 14 from 2 to 4 pm at the South 16 grandchildren, eighl great grand\Pallia H.S. (formerly Hannan Trace children and one deceased great
grand-daughter.
ti.S.) given by their children.
The couple requests that familly
' He is a U.S. Army World War 11
:O.eteran and is the son of the late and friends help them celebrate with
'ames Earl and Almira (Layne) Cox memories and laughter only; no gifts
pf Mercerville. She is the daughter please. Send cards to 7883 Hannan
~fthe late Shellio and Narie (Queen) Trace Road, Crown City, Ohio

.~EAP registration for Gallla
County ·seniors continues
By ODIE O'DONNELL
OVP Correapondent
GALLIPOLIS-- All senior citizens who reside anyplace in Gallia
County and who require assistance
in paying their winter heating bills
arc reminded that the Gallia County
Senior Resource Center offers free
advice and consultation for those
seeking help.
· The Home Energy Assistance
Program, called HEAP. requires
~cessary information on the house~ld making the application for this
piogram, and Gail Smith is available
tl(rough the senior center to visit
hOmes of HEAP prospects in all 15
townships of Gallia County.
· ·
-: Smith is the home outreach coord'inator for the Gallia Senior Center
and is a trained consultant to handle
t~ ·HEAP applications.
.; She will meet with the seniors at
h¢r office in the center or, if necessilry, ·whc will visit the senior's
homc to complete the necessary
paper work.
: Any senior who lives below the..
p(lveny level guidelines established
b~ the government, and whose fixed
income does not make allowances .
for winter heating bills could
bi:come eligible for heating assist$nce through a conference with Ms.
Smith. She can be contacted by calling the Gallin County Senior
Resource Center between the hours
of 7 a.m. and 3 p.m. Monday ·
through Friday at 446-7000.
.
: HEAP eligibility is determined
b¥ the total income of the househt&gt;ld, the number of wage earners
li~ing there. and the primary source
Of fuel used to heat the home.
· In most cases where the appl icant is eligible for HEAP a.'"ist.ance.
it will come in the form of a crcd1t
·applied to your heating bill by your

utility company or fuel provider.
The HEAP program is spo~sored
by the Qhio Depanment of Developmcnt, office of community services.
Anyone desiring additional information on HEAP cao also call the toll- '
free number in Columbus at 1-800- ·
282-0880.
Geneie Plantz, title coordinator at
the Oallia County Senior Resource
Center, announced this week that the
Senior Community Service Employment Program, in conjunction with
the Gallia County CounCil on Aging.
is seeking applicants to become a
p~rt-time van driver at the center.
Anyone who is at lea.•t 55 years
of age or older. and tneets the
income ~libibility guidelines, can
apply for the position of a driver for
20 hours per week at a pay rate of
$5. I5 per hour. Seniors who would
like to apply for this job opening
should contact Plantz at446-7000 or
Donna Dodds-Rife ·in Athens at 740594-8499.
Title Vis a project of Corporation.
for Ohio Appalachian Development
of Athens and is an equal opponuni.ty employer.

--~
FDIC !ifll

' E.,.-. AliWI b' b....,. a115JDHI) lor a111011111 It UK ....
,.. willS«&lt;«&lt; t.l ~ llllllilfiiM IIWI'IIIIr ....... Gf
IIIIUI . APR Gf lO.W'Io _.ltollltwletefW9tGI IIU.K.

- To fix a small nail hole in the
wall: Wet your fingcnips. dip it into
baking soda and dab it •over the
holes.
-To keep the tears out of chopping onions, plug in a portable fan,
t~m it to high and it blows the fumes
away from the eyes.
. - Use a ·toothbrush to clean
graters. food processor discs, strainers and can openers. They work bet·
ter than sponges at getting rid of
stuck-on food from hard-to-reach
places.

They are the parents of Virginia
Trotter of Ashville, Wanda Cavinee
of Delaware, Ray Houck of Colum"
bus, and Robert Houck of Gahanna ..
They have I0 grandchildren,
two step grandchildren, I2 great
grandchildren. and one step great
great grandchild.
Cards may be sent to the couple
at 34 I 5 Kitzmiller Road, New
Albany. 43054.

Alcoholic smokers have
trouble ·snuffing out habit
Associated Press
ATLANTA (AP) - Alcoholics
who seek professional ~lp to get
sober should also be offered treatment to quit smoking, the government said, releasing a ·study that
shows the cjifficulties of going cQld
turkey twice over. ·
The federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention said Thursday that only 8 percent of 448 smokers in alcohol treatment centers in
.Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska were
able to quit smoking.
The study found that almost half
·of the recovering alcoholic smokers
tried to quit smoking for at least a
day, and a quarter tried for at least a
week, the CDC said.
''What the CDC would like to see
are alcohol drug programs that treat
nicotine as a drug of abuse just a.•
they treat alcohol dependence," said
Janet Bobo. a CDC epidemiologist.
Road map distances .
Trying to measure 'mileage on a
road map can be frustrating and
often grossly imperfect.
On the other hand, a mini-measuring wheel will determine the
exact distance . It gives mileage
when you roll it along a planned
map route. It works for .driving,
cycling, running and walking.

Treatment centers may shy away
. from trying 'o help alcoholics quit
smoking because of a fear that the
stress will push them back to the
bottle. The government is encouraging alcohol .treatment centers to start
anti-smok.in"g programs, too.
The survey, which was taken
between I995 and 1996, was conducted wilhin a year of their alcohol
treatment.
· • Treatment programs can routine·
.ly screen alcoholic patients to sec if 1
they are smokers, too, M~. Bobo
said.

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CRISISLINE
In Gallla Co. Call (614) 446·5554
Meigs County Toll Free
1-800-252·5554

Crisisline is a free of charge, 24-hour: 7 days-aweek telephone service operated by trained
staff to assist people in crisis. Your call to
Crisis line is anonymous. Aoy one,. of any age,
may call for information or referrals regarding
issues of:
• Domestic violence • Rape • Suicide
prevention • Drugs &amp; Alcohol • Child
abuse/neglect reporting • Sexually trans.
diseases • Other Mental Health Concerns

Tick to&lt;ks

Jlope all your wislies come true.

!'lEW ALBANY ~ Lee and Nellie Shaw Houck. formerly of Gallipolis, will celebrate their 70th
wedding anniversary on December
10.
Before retiring and moving to
New Albany from Gallia County in
1986, he was employed by the Gallia County Department of Highways and famiing. She was retired
from Holzer Hospital in Gallipolis.

Woodland Centere, Inc. Is an equal emptoymant opportunity, aalrmatlvt '-leigsl
emptoyet. Woodland Centers, Inc. Is Jundld In part by the gsllla, Jackson. ·•·
Board at Alcohol Durg Addlctlonand Montal Hea~h SeNtcea.

OLAND CENTERS, INC.
• Oallla
3088 State Rt. 180
· Galllpolla, Ohio

• Melg1
Mulberry Hta.
Pom1roy, Ohio
'

• Jackton

200Maln Sl
Jackaon, Ohio

ANNIVERSARY
WRAPS

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20% OFF TO 33% OFF
10. Save 40%-SO% on Selected Items.
TO

You probably have your own reasons for shopping here.
Now you can add ten r,nore. Because right now for a limited )ime only
we're having a completely 'irrational' sale on some
of your favorite things! Don't miss it!

Open Evenings
Til 8:00 p.m.
This Sunday
1:0·5:00 pm

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�Page C4 • ........_.JI •'bu!

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Pomeroy • M!ddleport • Galllpolle, OH • Point Pll111nt, WV

·Sunday, December 7, 1817

Sunday, December 7, 1117

'

By:
Jame1
Sand•

In our
article of
Jan.
20.
1997, that
concerned
bells
in
Gallia County. we made mention of
an 1882 bell hanging at Grace
Methodist Church. from 1882 to
1977. Bill and Opal Lloyd 'wrote to
call to our attention the fact that this
1882 bell did survive the fire of
1977 that desuoyed the sanctuary of
Grace Church. The bell was repaired
and is still used.
There is ,an interesting story
about how the church acqui red that
bell . In May of 1881 the church's
trus tees decided it was time to do
,omcthing about the .church's considerable debt. The church owed
nearl y $3,000, most of which was
incurred in 1875·76 when a new
church was erected at a cost of
$20,000. The 1875 building was 70
feet by 86 feet with a lecture room
that measured 45•50 feet. There

wrlttea

a

A memorable lady
·leaves the world
By:
Dolo1hy
Sayn

Like

Meigs Community Calendar
The Community Calendar 'is pub- .
lished as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a SPeCific number of days.
SUNDAY
RIO GRANDE -The University of Rio Grande's Grande Chorale,
concert Friday, 8 p.m. in the John W.
Berry Fine and Perfonning Arts
Center. Directed by Merv Murdock,
Ph.D. No charge.
MONDAY
RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs will 'meet Monday, 7
p.m. at the municipal building.

Veterans Service Commission, 7:30
p.m. Monday at the Veterans Service
Office, Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.
ROCK
SPRINGS
Parent/teacher conferences, Meigs
High School, 4 to 7 p.m.
POMEROY - Open-door session
by Rep. John Carey, Meigs County
Courthouse, I to 2 p.m.
POMEROY - Salisbury Township Trustees, 6 p.m Monday at the
township hall on Rocksprings Road.
TIJF.SDAY
SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, general
membership luncheon, noon, Carleton School. Candace Hcer, Meigs
County Health Department, Youth
Services division, guest speaker.

•

December 7"' is just another day
for many people. It is a day that has
, great meaning for our family. It was
:. }he day that our son Jake was given
·~ • second chance at life. On Decem~'ller 7, 1995, Jake received a life-savi'"'lng bone marrow uansplant.
~; Our son, Jacob Russell Waugh.
~~as born on June 27: 1995. He was
,t::ihe picture of health, with all his fin;.:. jers and toes and a very healthy
~"tppetite. In the next few months,
~ake would develop thrush that just
.-::would not go away.
!.·: His pediatrician tried all the nor·
::1na1 medications to get rid of it but to
~: no avail. After weeks passed with no
•. improvement, Jake' s doctor decided
~.; to run a simple blood test to see if
~ ~naybe there was more to Jake's
·'. problem.
.
There was much mare to Jake' s
:: problem with thrush, In fact, our son
'. was born with a condition known as
;: .SCID, Severe Combined Immun0.. odeficiency Disease. It is better
'- 'known as "the boy in the bubble"
: disease.
Basically, it meant that Jake was
born without a .working immune
? , system and would die if this was not
l- :corrected. We were told of Jake's
."f diagnosis two day s before Thanks- ·
1: giving and-were told to get to Duke
&gt;7, University as soon as possible. We
~· spent Jake's first Thanksgiving on
r' the road to Nqrth Carolina. We
;; stopped off in Gallipolis so that his
::': grandparents could see him and feed
him his Thanksgiving mtal. . ...
.~
That was two years ago and Jake
:' • is once again the picture or health.
.;: He does everything that any other 30
&lt;- ,month old does and more.
;,
Since his .Bone Marrow Trans·~ ,plant two years ago,.Jake has devel;,. oped T-eens and shows signs of also
·~ · having B-cells, both major pans of
• ~the immune system.
,
::.
For the past two years, Jake has
:. received monthly infusions of
:'"· gamma globulin. a blood by-product
••::that gave him the immunity of many
~~ people. Becaus~ Jake has shown
~ · signs of developing B-cells on his
.; own, be is currently on a trial period
!: off the infusions to. see if he can
; maintain normal levels of B-cells.
~
If he does, then he moves on to
••

'

Th" ·photo frcim th1 •rty 1100's lhoW.· Gracs Church with a
lllfge ltelple on tha ball • - ·

D•tlf444.All F~.,,A .M~4'-JR41J.,.41J.~,!Ift1j
. ·..•.. . AUNT CLARA'S COLLECTION .. .

OF FINE AMISH THINGS
6pecializing in Chri&amp;mas Wish~
Amish Made Oak and Cherry Dining
Tables, Hutches, Side Servers and Buffets,
Solid Oak an,t Cherry Bedroom Suites, Oak
and Cherry Hope Chests, Cherry Curios, •. •
Amish Baskets, Candles and Wrought Iron ·
Made by our Blacksmith. Childrens rocking •·
Horses, Tables and Chairs and Rockers.
Cherry Roll Top Desk, Oak Secretaries,
Maple Chef's Blocks
The Finest Selection of solid wood furniture
in the area
Cookie Crates and Amish Food Crates
Available for Delivery

,.

Aunt Clara's Collection
Of Fine Amish Things

-

SECOND AVE.
614 446-9020
DOWNTOWN GALUPOLIS (Aci'OA from tha City Park)
Open 7 Days A Week

10 To 6:00P.M. Mon.·Sat.; 12 to 5;00 Sundays

.

~ ·.

Monday thru Saturday 10:00 am- 5:00
Sunday 12:00 Noon- 5:00 pm ·
Extended Evening Hours After Dec. 15th
614-446-Q205

.•. ~

~~~ati· ¥t1l.itiuu-w&amp;:•wliaf11•q
,.---~-- ·--..:.._

__ ---

Robert rayengco,

HOL IDRY SPEC I RL

79

$
·

Round
&amp;:llitaire

Ensegcmenl
Ri!JS

1/25 CT.. .......... $7.9
1112 cC .......... $99
1/7 ·CT............ $159
1/5 CT............ $239

t /4 CT •••.•••.•••• $299
t /3 CT............ $399
3/8 CT............ $459
1/2 CT............ $739

M.D.

Office:

(Old Post Omce)
11 North Second Street
Mason, West Virginia
,.

Hours:

Monday - Friday
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Appointments:

TAWNEY JEWELERS

422 SECOND lYE.

(304) 773-5195

IILUPOLIS, OH.

• Anrwl MedlcoiiPr~ployment Check-Up
• Asthma, Allergies &amp; Skin Problems
•

• Diabetes. High Blood Pressure
&amp; Cholesterol Management
• Headaches, fHhrltls &amp; Sack Pain
+Immunizations, Pap Smears &amp;Birth Control

.,

• Stomadl, liver &amp;Kidney Diseases

+Hearing &amp;VIsion Saeenlng
• Cardiac Slress Tests

/
ACCEP11NG NEW PATlENTS
WALK-INS WELCOME

rnft Pleasant Valley

ILII
JSlll Valloy.,... •

Hospital

r.r -.n:w.t ~ :155!10 • (!lOti 6'1W3.111 ,
'

F_
Livingston

paved
~ way for Africian
f. missionaries
• By DAVID BRIGGS

~

you have to have wOrking B·cells,
which Jake did not have in the
beginning.
Many of you may remember
hearing of Jde back when we were
at Duke for his uansplant. We were
born and raised in Gallia County
before moving to Cincinnati. Our
families still live in Gallia County
and we spend the holidays here.
Jake's
Grandparents, Doris
Henry and Bob and Donna Waugh,
are still often asked about J~ and
how he is doing. They enjoy being
able to say that he is doing so well
and will break out the pictures to
prove it.
We wanted to take this special
occasion for us, the two year
anniversary of Jake's transplant, to
share &gt;Nith everyone the news of our
own little miracle.
Not all SCID klds survive, not
all that make it do as well as Jake
has. Some kids develop various
complications that can last for
years, .
We feel Jake's success is in part
due to all the love and prayers that
were sent his way from our family
and friends here in Gallia County,
Thank you all for the love and support that you sent our way when we
needed it and God bless you all.

•

e

Jake Waugh

First female doorman makes history
By TIM WHITMIRE
Associated Prua Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Sheila
Connors is breaking one of the last
barriers to sexual equality, whistling
dqwn taxis and muscling suitcases at
the elegant Plaza Hotel.
The 31-year-old aspiring actress
and fonner police officer was hired
for the busy holiday season,
unaware sbe was·blazing a trail as
the first female doorman in the
hotel's 107-year-old history.
"I had no idea until once I went
down to wardrobe to get fitted for a
uniform." Ms. Connors said. "Patsy,
our wardrobe woman, told me
they'd never had anything but
men." ·

Ms. Connors, who stands 5-foot6 but t'ooks taller in the black greatcoat and cap. had already proved her
toughness in seven years working as
a police officer in the Buffalo suburb
of West Seneca. At the same time,
she earned a degree in theater from
Niagara University.
Afl~r graduating last May, she
came to New York to try acting.

&gt;rlvAThru
Now Open!
~necK

Out These Holiday &amp;vifi8S!

Delta (Uitlm·a Tool Boxes) .. $179.00

Bedllners............................. $135.00
Diamond Plated Bedralla (lnllallatlon Available)
Leer Truck Caps................. $599.00 &amp; Up
HraH
*St. Rt. 7

Owner • Bill Pooler
985-3700
Chestar

; - He was a Scottish mtsstonary
0: who converted only one penon · in
;, his 30 years in Africa, and even that
·tribal chief reverted to his old way of
life.
As an explorer who discovered
Victoria Falls in 1855, he never did
find the source of the Nile or a navigable river that cut across southern
Africa; the primary goals of his two
final major expeditions.
But David Livingstone's extraordinary, travels through the heart of
Africa paved the way for some of
the greatest missionaries of the 19th
and 20th centuries, and as much as
any person he may be responsible .
for Africa being the only continent
tu become mostly Christian in a single centuf'/.
In a complete issue devoted to the
, famous explor~r. immor1111ized by
• journalist ·Henry Stanley's greeting
: ''Dr. Livingstone, I presume" upon
their meeting along the coast of
Lake .Tanganyika, Christian History
magazine e•plores the complex life
, of the man some Afripns said had
: thr~c wives: the Nile River, the
: struggle. against slavery and religion.
• · Livingstone was born March 19"
: 18B" in an .industrial town ncar
; Glasgow. At ' age 10, he worked 14
• hours in a couon mill , then auendcd
: classes for two hours . At age 27.
: under the in•piration of veteran mis: sionary Robert Moffat, he set out for
• South Africa.
' ·The first 10 yean, according to
.: Christian History. Livingstone tried
: to he a conventional missionary. But
· his only convert, an African chief
: named Scchele. reverted back to
: polygamy, and Livingstone went on
: to t&gt;ccomc an e•plorer.
However, Livingstone viewed his
explorations as missionary travels
that prepared "God's highway " for
those who followed . historian Alvyit
Austin ofToronto writes in Christian
History.
His faith showed in both his
' staunch anti-slavery efforts and the
way he treated Africans. who often
•were dismissed: as "savages" by the
.West.
' Toward the end of his life, after
·he had been presumed missing for
two years. Livingstone reported he
'had been too sick .to write. But he
was able to read the Bible co ver to
cover four times.
.
: When he died on May I. 1873 in
a mud hut in Zambia, kneeling
beside his cot in prayer, his African
friends - some former slaves he
had freed - buried his heart under
an impundu tree.

FALLSWORTH
Suggested Retail $2155
Golden Oak finish
Westminster chime with
auto shut-off, 83" tall

s1

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400/
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;,. AP Rell1ion Writer

BOARD CERIFED INTIRNAL 111ED1CN

-.

Dorothy Sayre and her husband, George, formerly of Meigs
County, moved back about
three years aao and now reside
in a house facing the Ohio River
just below Syracuse. ·

•·'

1

~ Crafts &amp; Antiques .

At

'••

·J

SYRACUSE - Program, "Carleton's Christmas Spirit", to be presented Monday, 7 p.m. at Carleton
School. Refreshments will • be
served.
POMEROY - Meigs County

Starting

proa..-followlaa a bolle manvw
' tnluplut tw.o yean qo.

r"j.tt&gt;

~

MIDDLEPORT - OhKan Coin
Club. Monday, 7:30· p.m. at the
Riverbend Arts Council building,
Middleport. Meeting open to public,
refreshments,

.!1 FRENCH CITY MALL

J1 ' 1 Ciatn-Jitldbwl • Page CS

r· Two years after bone marrow transplant, Jake Waugh is truly a miracle child
:
Edlter'a Note: 1'JM followlaa the next step.. immunizations. Jake
: letter ,...
by Stew aad could never be immuniud before
~
fU RNITURE GALLERIES
Lila Waualuboutthelr-JIIke's because in order ror the.m to work,
I

Grace UM Church bells still- ring
were six classrooms and vestibule Opera House and the departments opposed to more modem fish ponds
below. Tile sanctual)l on the second 'included in this early venion .of a when: you throw your line over the
noor was 70 feet ~uare. It had a bazaar: a post office department, an sheet and Rei in a toy, this 1881 fish
seating capacity of 700 plus ISO ice cream stand, a fancy and fair pond gave the winners a ljsh. Some
depanment, flower stand, lemonade won salmon but others cOIIId win
seats in the gallery.
Because the church was built dur- stand, a New England kitchen, and cafnsh, trout, or perch.
ing a national depression brought on the dinner room. Food served for the
Bntertainmeni ii!Clluded 1 fan
by the "Panic of 1873", many per- two day festival included: pork and drill,. a tableau, a broom drill, the
sons who made pledges on the new beans, baked chicken, roast pig, Mulligan Guards, and assorted
church were unable to pay or paid doughnuts, mince pic, pumpkin pi~. music. lbe Festival was a great suelate. In addition the church was mush, smearcase, molasses, honey, cess, as was the work of the solicitforced to install a different kind of oysters, mutton, beef, cbeese and ing committee. Tile entire $3,QOO
heating system in the late 1870's. The New England kitchen was .. debt was paid in full by April of
Hence the official board appointed arranged to look like the kitchens of 1882. True to his word Mr. S'mithen
three stewards, three trustees, the the 1820' s.
had the hell placed and hung, It was
pastor and the church ueasurer to be
There were women running spin- rung for the tint time on Sunday
a soli citi ng committee to rilise funds ning wheels, other women dipping May 28, with the pastor Charles. F.
10 pay off the debt. The women of
candles and some drying herbs. The Creighton doing the honors. That
the church · pledged themselves to room was lit with old fashioned can- particular Sunday was called Jubilee
raise $500 of the total. D.Y. dlesticks rather than the fancy lights Sunday and it was observed as a day
Smithers agreed to furnish at his of 1881. By the way lights in Gal- ' to celebrate the new church bell and
expense a I 500 lb. bell on condition lipolis in 1881 were supplied by coal the Methodist work in Gallipolis.
that the ch urch· debt be paid off by gas pumped through underground Hanging from the middle chandelier
January I. 1883. Mr. Smithers along wooden pipes. Electricity for the was an evergreen bell, interwoven
with John T. Halliday and J.W. Old French City was still some 10 with flowers. Grace ChurcH in 1882
Gardner had formed the building years off in the future.
had about 500 members.
committee for the 1875 building.
The steamboats Ohio and
The inscription on the bell reads:
The women wasted no time goi ng Potomac donated two large cakes "Presented by D.Y. Smithers, May
to work on their share of the debt as baked by the boots' expert chefs. So 28. 1882~ "The spirit and the bride
they planned what was called the far as we. can tell the fish pond and say, come." Ironically Mr. Smithers
"Methodist Festival" in December the post office .ideas were new to died just a few months after the bell
of 1881.
Gallipolis. The post office had to do was first rung.
The event was held in the Betz with cupid and St. Valentine' s. As

Pomeroy • Mlcldlepor1• Gldllpoll•, OH • Point Plea..nt, WV

·Aholiday gift for yow-sel(. ••
... Respite,Care Services at the Arbors at Gallipolis.
With the hustle and bustle of the holiday season, caring full-time for a loved
one at home can seem especially difficult. How can you find the time to make
the holidays special? Like baking cookies? Sending cards? Wrapping gifts?
Whether it's for a long out-of-town weekend or jusra day or two to finish
your shopping, Respite Care SeiVices at the Arbors at Gallipolis may be the
answer: Our special, short-term care program includes:

FREE CHRISTMAS DEUVERY AND SET-UP
(SO Mila Umlt)

CIVIL WAR SfiHTfi
OF GfiLLifl COOHTY
- LIMITIED EDITION -

• BeautifUlly decorated andfurnished rooms.

Our traditional San'ta Claus hccamc vastly popular

• Pbysician-directed 24-bour nursing care and supervision.

during the late IKOO 's . This early re ndition depicts
him in an IH60 '~ Civil W 1H uniform carrying gift s

for the citi:tcns uf Go. Ilie. County.

• Three delicious meals/snacks served daily,
with special diets tis needed.

$

Red or
Blue Cape

.... $St.OO Onl3r

• Recreational and social service activities.

4500
·

8'h Inches Tall

Individually Boxed. Gift Card Included

• Companionship.
We invite you to join us for acomplimentary luncheon so you can see our center
and we can better assess your needs. If you're caring for a loved one at home,
consider giving yourself a gift this holiday season - the Respite Care SeiVices at the
Arbors at GaUipolis. for more information, call Amb€r johnson at 446-7112, or
simply return the convenic:_nt coupon below. We're here to help.

--------------------------- -:-·-1
0 P!ease send me information on the Respite

GALLIPOLIS
BAND STAND
THROWS

Bl::.u~:,~~~:Y

or Green

34'5

$

leg. $59.95

Care Program.

0

fur~iture Galleries

Please call me to a11111lge for a complimentary
. luncheon and personal tour.

O Please send me your Medicare Facts Brochure.
Nmne __________________________
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Phooe _________________________

ARBOR
ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS
Skilled Nursing Center
170 Pinecrest Drive

Corner of Second and Grape
Gallipolis
446-()332

Sunday 1-4
9:30-5 Dally
9:30-7:30 Friday

Gallipolis, O!ii 45631

(614) 446-7112

Shop at home...

Buy from the Classified$!
I

�lilitCI•,f t , ....._. n

Pomeroy •lltcldleport • Gllllpolle, Ott • Point I'll 1 nnt, WY

11

----~---

I

·rravels with Max... part three

Max Tawney, right, Ia pictured
his trip to Jamaica.
be sure to come and stay with me a
few days. We shook hands wirh that
promise.
Irhoughl I had made a good deal
concerning the cigars until that
night. Back on the s~ip I heard this
message over the loud speaker "Do
not buy any Cuban cigars because it
is a $500 fine if you are caught with
rhem. It is against the law because
rhe United States is not allowed ro
buy from Cuba."
That really shook me up. so I
took a handful of cigars, filled my
pockets and went from deck to deck
selling my Cuban cigars . The first
person I saw was my friend Gordon
Roth from Gallipolis. I asked him
$1 Qfor one cigar and he gave me $5,
then he said he would buy me lunch
at Bob Evans when we got home.
I then went to all of the other men
on rhe ship and tried to sell th~m
some. Finally, I did get rid of them at
$7, $8 and SIOeach, but I surely did
no~ get back the amount they had
cost me. .
While 1 -didn't get my money
·back, 1 was able to sleep that night
without worrying about being
caught taking Cuban.cigars home:
Sure enough, two men on the
ship were caught ·at customs, and
they were fined $500 each and had
their cigars confiscated. That cost
them a lot. By tho time they had paid
for the cigars, and then raid the fine,
they had put out about ~800-$900.
Dogs had sniffed all of the luggage
d d'
d h
Th
d
an rscovere .t em.
ose ogs
wefl' well-trained and well-takencare· of. They looked well-groomed,
and well· fed.
Jamaica has some of the best golf
courses in the West Indies, and some
-of the finest diving waters in the
world. Visibility is usually anywhere
·

buying fin. Cuban clgara during
from 60-120 feet. It is abOut the size
of Connecticut.
The first people known to have
reached Jamaica were the Arawake
Indians who paddled canoes from
South America about a thousand
years a-er the death of Christ. Then
Christopher Columbus stepped
ashore in 1494 after he was blown
off his planned course at now what
is called Discovery Bay. I don't
• know what it was called when the
Indians first arrived . ,
When the slaves were given their
freedom. the English brought in
other nationalities to help on the
plantations.
While Jamaicans came from a
variety of backgrounds, their cultures have blended to become a
Jamaican culture. Their motto is :
Out of many, one people.
Jamaica was ruled by the Spanish
{or 161 years, bot they were never
too impressed with the island
because they never found precious
metals, so they let the island fester in
poveny for the 161 years.
When 5,000 British soldiers landed in 1665 and took over, the
Spaniards did not put up a fight. The
island got its freedom in 1%2 when
it became an independent nation
with loose ties to the Commonwealth.
You cannot imagine how much of
the world is covered by water until
you take a cruise. It is unhelievable ..
We sailed 24 hours before we saw
any land.
Tandy and I had a great time on
this cruise. Everything was first
class-our sleeping quarters were
great and the food was plcntiful .and
grand. We'll be looking forward to
taking another trip soon.

weigh- in 8JO - 9:45a.m.; meeting
10- II a.m. Call Janet Thomas 367
-0274.

•••

By VEJlENA DOBNill:
AIIOC ..c.d Pn. Wrtt.r
NBW YORK lAP)- Kathie Lee
Gifford is fi[Cing new allesations her
clotbina line wu made in sweat·
,hops,- under conditions that the
state's top prosecutor said "resem·
bled somethin1 out of a Charles
Dickens novel."
The owner of three factories in
lower Manhattan that made Kathie
Lee clothing for Wal-Man w•s
arres~ Thursday and charred with violatins labor laws accusing him of
failing to pay minimum wage and
ovenime.
Through a spokesman Friday,
Mrs: Gifford acknowledged her line
· wa~ m~e ·~· the factories where
Chtnese 1mm1grants allegedly toiled
60 to 80 houn a week for low wages
and sometimes no pay at all.
She satd ·her own monitors
looked into the factories months
ago. but fBi led to tum up abuses
because they couldn't speak Chi-

ne~rs. Oilfo~ "is mJing every

effort possible to fisht sweatshops."
said her spokesman Howard Ruben·
stein. "She will cooperate ... to help
stamp out these abuses."
Last year, Mrs. Gifford was criticized when labor activist~ revealed
that some of her line was produced
in a Honduran sweat&amp;hop. Her husband, Frank Gifford, later visired a
grimy New Yorkfactory with checks
for workers who said they weren't
pard.
Mrs. Gifford testified before
Cong~.ss. attacking ~~eatshop owners as cockroac~s. . .
In the latest mvesttgat•on, State
Attorney General Dennis Vacco said
conditions faced by workers making
Kathie Lee clothing and other labels
in New York "resembled something
out of a Cliarles Dickens novel."
Vacco said employees · at the
Manhattan factories worked at times
24 hours straight and wercn:t paid
for one 10-week period.
As many as I00 workers at the
shops were being paid below the
minimum wage of $S.IS per hour,
with no overtime - cheating workers out· of at least $300,000, Vacco
said.

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

file Perfect Gift
·Your Choice
&amp;pphire ~ Diamond .

.i
I
I

•••

GALLIPOLIS · Rev. Duane and
Charma Malhias. missionaries with
World Gospel Mission to Kenya,
101ill speak al Gallipolis Christian
Union Church, 10:30 a.m.

•••

KANAUGA - Worship service at
Silver Memorial FWB Church.
land Ave .. with Rev. Charles Neece.
6p.m.

I

'

OALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Retired Teachers Association dinner at Grace Unircd Mcthodisr
Church, noon. RSVP to 446 . 3628.

59

•••

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Warren and
Cathy Frankel to speak at Light·
•ause Assembly of God. 10:30 a.m.
and 6 p.m .

•••

Monday, December 8

•••

$

•••

'

'

State labor . authorities began wages.
investlaatinl the factories after a
"But we . were uncomfortable;
complaint by the· Union of Needle still had suspicions and placed the
and lndllllrial ~~tile Employees.
factories on a watch list," Lewi said,
Rubenstein said Mn. Gifford was
A day after the monitors' Septem·,
notified in All&amp;~t !hat there seemed ber visil, state labor investigators
to be "iiTCIUiarities" in the facto- entered the factories with translators
ries.
fluentinMandarinChinese "and the.
A monitoring service she hired employees revealed the problems to,
after Jut year's scandal first checked them," Lewi said. ·
the factories Aug. 22 and said they
RepresentativesoftheKathieLe~ ·.
"failed, j;)ased on incomplete line stopped doing business with tho ,
employee documentation," said factories Oct. I.
,
another spokesman, Gary Lewi.
Asked why there was a gap ,
AI the end of September, he said, between the Augusl revelations and ,
the monitors returned and found the any action taken, Rubenstein said ,.
record-keeping in order. They also the monitors "dido 't have proof of
demanded that the factories auaran· the violations. They had very serious
tee workers would be paia (air suspicions.''
, ., . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , .
·
~
·
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GAWPOUS

At.,

ly MAR8HAtl. FINE
OltillltlllubulbM Nelli....,_
There an: a number of ways to
read the tiUe of "Good Will Hunting," but the ambi~uity stops tbere,
If you're not in on the joke, then
the title seems to refer 19 someone
hunting for good will. Which, in its
own w,ay, is true.
The joke, however, is that the
central character's name is Will
Hunting. So there's a double pun
lhere: It might refer to the good Will
Hunting (as opposed to one who's
conslanlly wrestling with his inner
demons). Or it might mean thai
someone is hunting for the good
Will inside the defensive, angry
Will.
~ Undoubtedly, actors Matt Damon
(wha plays Will) and Ben Affleck
. (who plays his besl friend, Chuckie)
t9med this phr~ over and over as
tlley wrote this script, in which they
star. Still, as ·intriguing as il is, it
can't ~uite flesh out what seems like
Uumliir, if touching, story.
,. Damon plays Will Hunling, a
IIC 'er-do-well from south Boston,
whO worka as a .janitor at MIT.
Oiphaned and abused as a child, he's
sjtipped college to move straight
into the menially employed bluecicllar ranks his friends inhabit
: He divides his lime between
~ork and drinking with Chuckie and
his other pals. The drinking, howevignites Will's ferocious temper,

.

trUatW

~

~

er,

1\Jesday, December 9

•••

GALLIPOLIS · Gallia County
District Library Board of Trustees. 5
p.m .. Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memo·
rial libJary .

...

Thursday, December II

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MASSAGE"
Gift Cerrifu:ate• Auailable

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Pastor &amp;Lar•an

the world! (New York Furrier)

1i

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Artist Series

Call 446-l8911oday

Happy Holidays From Rocksprings
Wishing you and yours a wonderful holiday season.

••

The Point Pleuant Artist Serlel will be hosting the
· ~kip Peck Quartet" on December 9,1997,7 p.m., at
lhe State Theatre u part otthe 1997-98 season. The
poup which rawres plano, bus, drums and vocals also
hlppena 10 be a family. They perl'onn .. e~lensive jazz
JqiCI10iJe from the pat~ like Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonius

Rocksprings Rehab
36759 Rocksprings Ad.

Pomeroy, OH 45.769'

Director Gus Van Sant is known
forhisownstylistictouches, in films
such as "Drugstore Cowboy," "My
Own Private Idaho" and "To Die
For."
In this film, however, he seems to
get out of the way and let the mater·
ial speak for .ilself.
Damon has exactly the kind of
winningly cocky persona as Will,
but also finds the vulnerability that
keeps all of his dealings with olher
people superficial.
But the emotional heart of the .
film belongs to Williams, as the
therapist in need of a reason to
reconnect with life.
Restraining his natural flamboyance, Williams instead plays with
his anger, whether at Will's reluclance to be honest or at Lambeau's
urge to manipulate the budding
geni\JS. But Williams also taps into a
heartsick, soul-deep pain that
informs every movement this man
makes.
Driver and Affleck are fine in
support, though the characters are
less clearly defined.
Skarsgard captures the arrogance
and insecurity of the math superstar
confounded by a talent greater than
his own in someone who treats it so
casually. ·
"Good Will Hunting" seldom
surprises - but it always connects.
Though 'il occasionally drags. it still
manages lo hold the viewer with its

t"·

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exciting new ways to do everyday tasks. Stop by and
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lion again,
The irony here is supposed lobe
that Sean, who has cut himself off
from the world, is trying to show
Will how he, too, has built 1 wall
between himself and his feelings.
Will pushes people away before they
can hurt him, a reflex buill on years
of abuse in a string of foster families.
, Even as Will is showing Sean the
value of reconnecting with life, he is
also making his first tentative steps
into a romantic relationship. The
object of his affection is the amiable
Skylar (Minnie Driver), a pre-med
sludenl at Harvard who falls h.W for
Will's boyish charm and unassuming but all enCompassing intelligence.
The underdog lheme has been
worked long and hard in other films.
So, has the notion of the therapist
who gets a therapeutic benefit from
treating a young person in pain,
from "The Miracle Worker" to
"Equ~s" and beyond. For that matter, so has the idea of the brilliant
young savant whose talent is jeopardized by his own self-destrucliveness.
Yet Damon and Affleck, in their
first produced screenplay, hh all the
right emotional notes. If their slory
isn't particularly original, their characters are well-drawn and full-bodied, wilh a depth lhat makes the
emotional issues immediate.

Veronica, Dharma and Ally show·us

CHESHIRE · TOPS meeting at
Cheshire United Methodisr Church:
•

leading to fi&amp;bta dial lead 10 anat!J.
Fortuutcly for Will, he has a
photographic memory and an
appetite (and aptitude) for law
. booka, so he' can arpae hla WIY oul
of jail time.
' He also has an inluitive understanding of the most compHcated
mathematics; w!len an award-winning profasor cballts a secminaly
unsolvable problem on a blackboard
in the MIT. hallway, Will casually
solves it while buffing the Door after
hours.
.
The professor, a bolshOI •anted
· Lambeau (Stellan Skmgard),
decides to make Will his reclamalion project. So he bails Will out of
his latesl scnpe with the IIW and
begins to work with him.
But one of the conditions for
Will's release is that he get therapy
to deal with his temper, w,hic:h maska
past problems. After unsuccessfully
pairing him with several prospective
shrinks, Lambeau hits oa the idea of
getting Will to talk to Lambeau's
college roommate, Sean Maguire
(Robin Williams).
Sean has problems of his own. A
widower and Vietnam veteran who
used to counsel other vets, he has
hidden himself away from life,
teaching psychology Ia the walking
dead ala community college. But, as
a fellow native of the Southie neighborhood himself, he sees something
in Will that forces him to pay atten-

Monk llld George Oenhwin.
Tickeur for the production are $10/penon or ·
$1/itenlon and atudentallld can be purchased atlhe
State 'I'beaJre priof 10 and the night of the perl'ormance.
Seuon tictcta are IIlii available. Pricina is u follows:
$!0/two ,_-yeti sail or $301one ra1n'ed seal
Pleue call (304) 675-3746 for more information.

By MICHA~ UcWILUAMS
becomes a woman, like Gigi, or a
Tbe Datrolt tt.we
woman re013ins a girl, like Peter Pan
; Is il an accident that three of the out of costume. A Veronica, for all
bl:st show's of the new fall season- her problems, is very nluch a
'Weronica 's Closet,"· '' Dhanna and woman, more malure than she somedreg" and "Ally McBeal" - .an: all· times seems. She's a high-functionabout women with unforgettable ing messed-up person, carrying lhe
njunes? And unforgettable hair. And scars of her gender with pride, espeu~fo'llellable clothes.
cially if covered
Apd unfut8ettable ...
with a swanky .'do.
essences, and 'I don 'I
A Dharma, by
mean perfumes.
contrast, wooders if
Not since "How 10
it's worth all the
~arry a Millionaire"
uouble; what's the
has there been IIIICh a
value of a great
c'arming triad or
haircut if it's raindistaff wonderment,
ing all the lime?
!'Q much so it ~ms
Her disaffection
al!fla~l , iJ~Cvilable,
Pfj~JCIS bet Into
fiied, ill if'tbese three
activism, Wherever
women bubbled up
she goes, she's a
f~om
a collective
diiSOnant presence,
unconscious where
an ' eccentric, an
archetypes
merge
anarchic: force. Her
. with flesh and blood
strong
point-ofto yield meanings for
view makes her
a specific place and Celllta flockhart 11 "Ally" woman, bllt her
time.
refusal to conform makes her child.
• : But even though Veronica, Dhar- "Growing up" isn:t a top priority.
ma and Ally are bracinaly contemAn Ally never fully grows up,
porary - independent but insecure, even though she wants to. Plagued
IO:vesick but longing, cunningly cou- by the conflict, she seeks refuge tll)'ed but no Cindy Crawford in home and family or in cosmetics
th~y suggest vie"':s of women that
or in the anns of a male protector.
transcend time, class, age, race and All her life she has bem told that
sexuality to arrive at fundamental she's a "good girl,~ but she still
images of varied WomanhoOd.
feels she isn't good enough. She's
: After all, apan from humanity the prom queen, Ihe belle of lhe ball,
~self, what runs deeper than gender?
an anxious overachiever. She's a
· Basically, the similarities of magnet for heanbreak.
Kirstie Alley's "Veronica" (ThursSo much of the Veronica-Dhardays at 9:30 p.m. on NBC), Jenna ma-Ally schism has to do with sexuElfman's "Dhanna" (Wednesdays al fluidity, the point .! t which the
at 8:30 p.m. on ABC) and Calista female meets the. male, the yin
Flockhart's "Ally" (Mondays at 9 !ouches the yang. A Veronica often
p.m. on Fox) are less telling than seems masculine, despite the great
t~eir differences, their contrasting
makeup, because her power Is
ways of dealing with self-definition . unmistakable. For a Dharm~. it's ·a
: Veronica, for example, is a mag- non-issue: If she's butch, she's
nate with all the money; Dharma is a bulch, if she's femme, she's femme,
flower child with no money, except and if you don't like il, tell il to lhe
through her husband; and Ally is a Marines. An Ally, though, inlmost
lawyer with enough money, if she always self-consciously hetero,
can keep her mouth shut Ions scoping for Real Men. She exudes
enough to keep her job. But no an exaggerated femininity.
amount o€ money can buy you love:
II 's amazing how primal these
Veronica's estranged husband js a archetypes are, and how frequenlly
philanderer; Dharma's is ·uplight, but they surface in popular culture: In
willing to let his freak flag fly; and
rf- Ally's ex-sweetie is a married co"),;orker wbom she can't get oul of
cv1.er blood.
\
In other words, each situation is
.more different than il is the same,
partly because each woman has to
sleep in the bed lhat she has made
with her own hands, her own personality. If Dharma, ·for instance,
had Veronica's husband, she'd be in
Reno by now. If Veronica had Dharma's, she 'd be bored. And if Ally got
married to anybody, she'd find a
way of mucking il up.
: The beauty of this semi-Holy ·
Trinity is that each woman is locked
i~ta her 0wn senslbilily. for better or
for worse, whether she's at the altar
or not. Together, they represent a
range · of women that rivals
StiRliNG II
Chekhov 's "The Three Sisters."
Separately, they define varying
aspects of what a woman is.
So what is a "Veronica"? A
"Dharma"? An "Ally"? Well, I
wouldn't ask Freud, Marx or Jesus,
although Veronica, in her lyrical
neuroticism. suggests Freud; Dharma, with her defiant · contrariness,
hints at Marx; and Ally, in Iter childlike innocence, is ripe for picking at
the hands of Jesus or other gods.
What we 'rc talking about here,
really. is the extent to which a girl

$179'

•'

shows as dissimilar as "Dynasty"
and "Friends," "Mei!OliC Place" and
"The Golden Girls," "The Brady
Bunch" and "The Beverly Hillbillies"; in first ladies and writers and
fictional characters; in cartoons and
news shows and movie stars.
·
ll's also remarkable how individual figures can evolve fro!ll one type

to another. ·Barbra Streisand, for
example, staned off as a Veronicaa powerhouse basket case - moved
to a Dharma (all that disruptive
social concern) and wound up an
Ally, cooing over her · hunky
prospective husband and warbling a
duet with Celine Dion, a conspicuously nauseating.AIIy.

(

5

a nice tale

emotional truth in examining the
ways people hide from their own
pain.
Rated R, profanity, violence, sexuality. ·
GOOD WILL HUNTING (R,
profanity, violence, sexuality) Three
Stars (Good) A moving, if familiar,
story of a janitor at MIT who turns
out to be a math genius - and the
people who try to help save him
ftom himself. Starring Robin
Williams, Matt Damon, !len

f

..__. 'l•rl • Pege C7

Affleck. Directed by Gus Van Sut.
Miramu Pictures. 12S minulcs.
(Marahell FIM _ . . ......
talnmtnt fOr thl Gannelf: .......
ban NIWIP'P"' end OIIIMit
Nne Service.)
A cotiiCIIon of Mlrahlll l'lne't
film ravlewa II IVIIIeble In
Weetc~MaWr Today, Gannelt SUb- ,
urbln Newlpapara' World Willi~
WebeHe,ll
·•
http://WWW.ny~

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Entertainment

New film 'G.ood Will

lfow Fo liang Wallr:per
. VIdeo A11allab e

GALLIPOLIS - St.· Peter's Episcopal Church special Advent prayer
GALLIPOLIS · Gallia County
i\l!.o Available
service, I0:30 a.m.. with C.L. · Gcnealogicnl Society meeting at
"Johnnie" Ecker as vocalist.
in Ruby
Historical and Gcneulo)!ical office, 7
p.m.
REVIVAL
MIDDLEPORT - Oh Kan Coin
Club
meeting,
7:30p.m.
at
Middle·
Sunday, December 7
CROWN CITY . Revival mccr422 Second Ave.
port Arts Council Building. Open to ing at Big 4 Ch~rch. Novcmher ~0 Galllpolle, OH
ADDISON · Rick f!arcus to public.
Decemhcr 7, 7 p.m. nightly. Special
preach at Addison Freewill Baptist
•••
singing nighrly.
CADMUS - Walnut- Township
Church. 7:30 p~m .
Neighborhood Crime Watch .Meet·
•••
Elite Look Full Service• Salon
CROWN CITY · Ralph Work- ing ar township hall. 6:30 p.m.
Now Offers
lnon 10 preach ar Mt. Zion Mission· Crime prevention movie and
refreshments.
ary Baprist Church, 6 p.m.

...

-

ore Kathie ~ Lee clothes were
ade in Manhattan sweatshop

Gallia Community Calendar'----The Community Calendar Ia publahed •• 1 lnHI service to non'rotlt group• wtahlng
to
announce meeting• and apeclal
tventa. The calender Ia not
..algned to promote · aelea or
lunckelur1 of any type. lteme ara
trtnted u IIJIICI permlta and canilot be guarantaed to run • apeclfle number of days.

Sunday, December 7, 1817

---

an~

, Conclusion of Three-Part Series
•

.IAMAICA
lyMaxTawney
, This is my last article of three
llbout my recent Caribbean crUise,
"hich took my granddaughter Tandy
Flint and me to Cozumel, Mexoco,
()rand.Cayman and Jamaica. I have
..en to Jamaica several rimes and
enjoyed it each time I visited . II is
flo third-largest island in the
' Caribbean, after Cuba and Puc no
~ico. Jamaica is unusual because in
addirion 10 such pleasure capitals of
_,e north coast as Monlego Bay and
()cho Rios. il has a real capital in
kingsron. Monrego Bay is where
.,ost of the tourisrs go. bul I Joke
()cho Rios besr.
· The very Brirish 18rh century
101as a time of prosperity for the
Island. ll was the age of lh~ sugar
baron, who made the island rhe
..rgest sugar-producing colony in
1fte world. When the slave labor
ceased in 1838, production became
less profitable.
' Jamaica is English-speaking and
~an be very tranquil and inrriguing.
tlut it is also plagued by crime.
~rugs, and muggings.
.
, However, mosl visirors have hnle
lo worry aboul because they are
escorted lo their horels and then arc
largely sheltered by tours that are
conducted in heavily patrolled areas.
We were told nollo wander off into
the more unprotected areas.
• When my granddaughter and I
lot offthe ship in Jamaica, I went to
one of the largest cigar stores there.
I made friends with the owner and
lold him I sold cigars in my store,
and that I would like to buy a box of
•ood Cuban cigars.
' He showed me the cigars that
were the most popular and the best
· ileller. He said the retail price was
$350 for a box of 20 cigars, but that
k would lei me have them for $300
kcause I had told him I was a deal.r.
' They were beautiful and I could
iot tum that offer down. I shelled
'"' the $300 and he handed me 'one
cigar to try. I lit it up and it was the
~st cigar I ev,er smoked.
lrold h1m 1f he ever came to the
Vntted Srares, ro come ro sec me. Ho.
aard he had plans to come to the
states next July, and that he would

~----

..••
--~----------------.-----------------------------------------------~.
DIC
7, 1tl7

stiRIIIIG IT

$39995

Thanksgiving Parade took on new
~~:::::~ to those of us who just returned
(C
from New York city on our Peoples
Choice Tour. To see the streets that we had walked only a shon
time before brought back some good memories!!
'
Our fully loaded Molorcoach took off early- and after
inlhe '_'Big Apple" had a wofndherfMul ~innHer at • ThehVie w;·. ~revo1vmg roootop restaurant o t e anon ate1. 0 ur ole1oor b"'
three nights was the Hotel Millineum on Times Square. The next
day a few of us walked several blocka carrying signs to be seen on
the "Today" show and yes, of course we lnade il on lhe front row,
because at 4 a.m. there is nol much competition!! Whal fun,
standing in the freezing rain, talking to olher strangers who came
along for the same purpose. So if you saw a lady in a red cape
holding a sign saying "Hello, Poinl Pleasant, W.Va. from the
Peoples Choice Travelers, Yes, I'm afraid it was me. Becky
Benson, Jim and Ralph Stewart were my partners in crime. We
!hen had some hot coffee in a deli and met many "interesting"
people oul and about
.I
Our lrip consisted of a city tour including a boat trip to the Stalue
of Libeny and Ellis Island, a visil to lhe Empire Slate Buildina,
sho~ing at Macy 's, of course, Pre-thealre dinners at Tavern on the
Green and Sardi's, and reserved orcheslra seats for "The King and
I" and Radio City Music Hall's Christmas Show featuring the
Rockettes and a grand finale ·of a live na)ivily scene. We were also
given a personal lour of Carnegie Hall and a private audience with
an oper~ star who sang,several selections for us. A great trip, and
one that we willrepeat10r sure.
We had a great turnout for our 7th annual Peoples Choice
Christmas party which was held last Monday e~ening at the Moose
Lodge in Point Pleasant Over 300 members and guesls from
Mason County, Gallipolis, Ravenswood, Parkersburg, Ripley,
Pomeroy and Middleport altended . Jewell Steele of Point Pleasant
was the grand prize winner of our firsl 1998 trip to the homestead
at Hoi Springs, Virginia, Jan . 27-28. Several gift certificates to be
used on any trip next year were also drawn as doorprizes. The
Point Plqasant High School Stagehand, dancers and singers, "The
Swingin Squires'' under the direction of Gary Stewart, provided
entertainment, and party foods were served.
This past weekend we had a trip on the ·"Santa Train" which was
our annual grandparents trip. The children who anxiously await our
arrival home (with the shopping bags) throughout the year a.re
invited to board our motorcoach and come along. We enjoy
movies, snacks and games along the way and always have a great
time. This year we molorcoached to Charleslon, boarded lhe train,
had lunch, and a visit from Sanla with gifts for all . We arrived at
the White Sulphur Springs for a visit to lhe lrain depol which had
been converted into a Christmas Shoppe, and toured the Greenbrier
holel for shopping and viewing the decorations. Our motorcoach
was waiting for us and enroute home we made a stop at Tamarack.
A lovely day!!
I want to wish all of you the best of holidays, and thank those
you who have helped Ia make this our best ,year yel!! Our 1998
schedule is being mailed out to our members this week and if you
are interested in joining us, stop in for coffee and look at
serapllooks: join us, and again in 1998 we 'II...
LET TI-lE GOOD TIMES ROLL,
~4Nf"'

do.

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•
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point PIHaant, WV
•

aft~r 31 y~ar~

Hey, hey they're still The Monkees
By A.J. FLICK
Tllceon ClttDn
· Rock •n." roll purisls scoffed at
The Monkees when the prefab pop
group hit the scene in the '60s.
Yet hen: they an:, 31 years since
''The Monkees" sitcom premiered
on ABC and spawned a bona fide
music group. Th~ Monkees are still
touring, recording and hoping to '
make a movie.
The Monkees (minus Mike
Nesmith) have been performing
around the country for several years,
but there migbt not be many more
chances to see the group perform.
"I don't think we'll be touring
next year," Micky Dolenz, 52, says.
" I, for one, am fed up with the
tpuring, the traveling part of it. I
mean, it's a 24-hour commute for a
two-hour job. It gets a bit old. And I
have other things going on."
That's not to say The Monkees
will never work together again .
"It's like Yul Brynner coming
back to do 'The King and 1,' to
reprise his role," Dolenz says. "People were always asking him how
often would he keep doing 'The
King and I' and he'd say, 'As often
as they ask me.'
"Well, The Monkees will keep
doing things as often as someone
asks."
One thing in the works is a

'

movie. Nesmith, 54, who hates touring, is writing a Monkee screenplay.
When asked how the script was
going, Dolenz says, " You 'll have to
ask Mike. I don't know. But know·
ing him, and knowing how good a
writer he i~. it should be a good
movie."
And presumably, it will make
more sense than the twisted, Jack
Nicholson-penned movie "Head"
that The Monkees made in 1968.
"1 hope so," Dolenz says, laughing. "That was a pretty strange
movie. A very strange movie."
Until then, Dolenz, Davy Jones,
51, and ·Peter Tork, 55, are singing
all the hits- "Pleasant Valley Sunday," .. I'm a Believer, " " I Wanna
Be Free," etc. - as well as picks
from the quartet's 1996 Rhino
Records album, "Justus. "
Dolenz once again has taken up
the drums, something he hasn't done
on previous tours. Playing the
drums, which he learned for the
filming of "The Monkees" in '66,
makes touring "infinitely" more
fun, he says.
"It's more fun because it makes it
more demanding: It was getting to
the point that I was coming down·
stage and just standing there, singing
songs.
"They're great songs, don't get
me wrong. But some of them don't

take a whole lot of vocal dexte~ity.
But I wa1r doing a whole lot of
singing. And if you've sung the
songs 15,000 times or God knows
how many, you get tired," he says.
· "I wasn 't being pushed as artist
anymore. But thanks to Mike (Mike
Nesmith), ... talked me into playing
the drums again. And now it's won·
derfuf."
Dolenz hils been in show busi·
n~ since he wa~ 6. At 10, he land·
ed the lead role in the TV series
"Circus Boy" under the stage name
Micky Braddock.
After Tork left The Monkees in
December of 1968, Dolenz, Nesmith
and Jones recorded a couple of fastdisappearing albums. Then Mike
quit. Dolenz and Jones went on to
make one- album. Then they had a
falling out.
In his .1993 autobiography, cowritten with Mark Bego, Dolenz
described how hard it was to go
solo.
·
"Just like the other guys, I had
deluded myself into thinking that I
would be able to continue my career
as a solo artist and maintain the
same level of success that I had with
The Monkees;"' Dolenz wrote in
"I'm a Believer: My Life of Monkees, Music ~nd Madness."
He ·couldn't find work as an
actor, either. Everyone thougbt he

Farm Business

Sunday, December 7, 1997

•

Pit Ban1tar
After being discovered by
Chrysalis Records talent scouts
while singing at Catch A Rising Star
in Manhattan, she was immediately
signed to the label. and released her
debut album, "In the Heat of the
Night,'' in 1977.
From that point on, Benatar was

on a roller-coaster ride of ovemigbt
success with chart-topping singles,
sold-out shows .and thousands of
screaming fans.
"It was very lonely and very difficult antl it wasn't as lofty as people
would think," she SI!YS· "I put up
with a lot ... but it was mostly really
good stul'f. ·:
That includes the first time she
heard her songs on the radio, her
first Gra.mmy Award and platinum
album, seeing fans blocked by
police barricades and playing
Madison Square Garden for the ·
first time..
Benatar has toned down the hype
of her success through the years,
including very shon and to-the-point
quips about her hits in the '80s. She
continues to re-channel her efforts in
different directions.
"It's not about the race and the
game any long~r. jt's just abput the
music," she says. "There's more
power in words than in action. I
don't see ·the point of flamboyancy. I

can speak softly and get just as much
attention.''
Benatar still gets the respect she
deserves from the incredibly successful, younger set of female rockers and pop icons. ·
.
She was asked to perform at last :
summer's Lilith Fair, the darling of !
lhe summer theme festivals. That's :
where she finally felt at home with 1
her music.
·
·
"The two dates at Lilith were
amazing. It was the best 48 hours in ·
my ?0-yearcan:er.lt was jtist so wonderful and supportive," she says.
The vision of women having the
courage to change the face of music is
heanwanning to Benatar, ':Yho is overwhelmed when included in this club.
"When I staned, it wasn't about
sisterhood and comradery. But when
I sat down with all those young
wo111en, it was so inspiring," she
says. "It's what I always wanted
music to be- a 'celebration of being
1 woman and of being in the
moment.''
·

Purple."
Samuel L. Jackson stars as Louis
Batiste, a much-respected community physician, loving husband and
father, with one disturbing flaw:
He's an unrelenting womanizer.
Louis' philandering is a source of
frustration and pain for his genteel
wife (Lynn Whitfield), hi~ adoring
teen-age daughter, Cisely (Meagan
Good), and his affectionate but more
skeptical to-year-old, Eve, who narrates the story.
Eve is depicted as a youngster of
innocence, curiosity and guile by
remarkable newcomer Jumee Smollett.
Althougb tbe relatively higb-profile Jackson is top-billed, "Eve's
Bayou" focuses more on the world
of the women in his life - and the
complications that arise among
them, because of the way they. perceive his behavior.
·

In her confusion, Eve seeks guid-

In this case, the perceptive writ-

ance from two mysterious and pow- · ing and directing are by Kasi Urn-

Glover makes 'SwitchBack' worth watching
By JACK GARNER
G...n ,._Service
"SwitchBack" is a serial-killer
thriller that works much too hard to
be clever.
The results an: an overworked,
overly contrived narrative whose
only lasting appeal is a mysterious·,
. colorful performance by Danny
Glover.
He plays an eccentric drifter WhO
somehow holds the secret to a crosscountry murder spree.
Pursuing an unknown killer is a
relentless FBI agent, played by an
especially glum Dennis Quaid.
"SwitchBack" is the directorial
debut of Jeb Stuart, a screenwriter
whose hit script credits have included "Die Hard" and "The Fugitive."
For his initial bow as a director, Stuart chose the first script he ever
...
..... . - .

wrote.
interest into the character. It's a ·
And "SwitchBack" features all the gloomy, one-note, teeth-clinching
convoluted plotting and over-the-top performance.
melodrama of a freshman project.
Glover is far ·more appealing as
For one thing, ",SwitchBack" Bob Goodall, a one-time railroad
masks its biggest surprise- the iden- employee who drifts in and out of
tity of the killer- througb.a complex, the film as we impatiently wait to
poody explained dramatic device.
learn his purpose.
(I'm sorry to be vague, but I don't
Along the way, he picks up a
want to give it away.)
young hitchhiker, another underdeQuaid plays FBI agent Frank veloped character, played by Jared
LaCrosse, who has been actively Leto.
pursuing the killer for several
It takes forever to . learn· . if
months. As the film opens, Goodall or the hitchhiker are conLaCrosse's son is kidnapped by the nected to the serial killings; and
killer, so the bureau takes him off the once we have the answers, we aren't
case.
sure we believe them.
But we know that won't work;
Among supponing players, charhe' II be even more relentless as a acter actor R. Lee ·Ermey is at his
free agent, because now it's personal. best as an Amarillo sheriff, dealing
The usually reliable Quaid does- with a bloody murder in the midst of
P't have a clue how to breathe life or In election campaign.

~.. ..

~

Ptn: All Your

v,...N•••r
lns•anee,

Weddl~gs,

Special EYtlfS.
let ts pit tWs on
Yicleo tape.
446-6939 or
446·1370

VIDEO
TUNSFERS

Come see .
our large

displayo~

~·· todayl

•

7}etudi.
300 SECOND AVE.

FOR

MEN'S ONLY NIGHT
THURSDAY, DEC. 11
6·8 P.M.

erosion along the ban!c caullad by the spring
flood• of 1997. Scheduled completion data by
the Alan Stone Co. and the Ohio Department of
Highways for the reatoratlon project Ia Jan.
1998.

Total cost of the project will amount to $400,000-$450,000 and involves
moving 12,700 cubic yards of stone (about2,600 loads) from the Davison
farm to the construction site
Richard &lt;;:ampb~ll is the job superintendent for Alan Stone Co. and Larry
Ruff is the ODOT project inspector at the site, wh~re traffic flow has been
maintained through the use of "flaggers" . who prevent accidents with their
"stop" and "slow" signs.
Campbell stated that the scheduled completion date for this project is
"sometime after Christmas, or around the first of th~."

OVP Correepondent
GALLIPOLIS - It has been nine months since the Flood of 1997 struck
Gallia and neighboring counties in early March, causing millions of dollars
damage to structures, roads, vehicles, an~ other perso~al property.
A major reconstruction project as a n:sult of the flooding is now underway on State Route 7 South, less than a mile below Gallipolis. Designated
as "Project 6005" by the Ohio Department of Highways, employees of the
ODOT and the Alan Stone Co. of Chesterhill in Morgan Co. have been busy
for over one month rebuilding the river bank that supports State Route 7.
Two other FEMA funded flood projects involvingG a County include
Funded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) the
massive project involves the collection of mud and graveltha1 the flooded one at Buzzards' Roost iri Crown City and another just off State Route 141
Ohio River washed away from the supporting ·bank. This waste is trans- near Cora Mill, along Raccoon Creek. Work on these two flood da10aged
poned to a specially designed dump site about two miles south at Clipper areas is scheduled to begin in early 1998.
Mills.
At the Davison farm. workers are removing the rock from a 20-foot thick
Six large dump trucks owned by Alan Stone Co. haul the waste·away and · wall covering .approximately one acre of land by drilling down 23 feet,
then replace it with a type of sand stone being excavated from property tamping the holes with explosives, and blasting it out. When the last of the
owned by James L. Davison Sr. on State Route 141.
rock is removed the entire area will then be reclaimed.

Family Night Is
Back ... Only Better!
EVERY TUESDAY liGHT

4P.M. ·9 P.M. OILY

well. ~heck cords for frayed and
By JENNIFER L. BYRNES
. : GALLIPOLIS · It is always worn spots. avoid overloading cirencouraging to see the Christmas cuits, and always tum tree lights
spirit sneak in the day after Thanks· offwhen you leave the house. Keep in
mind that the longer the tree is
giving.
Lights, bows, wreath's and Christ· indoors, the more combustible it
mas figurines are going up day by becomes. It is true that a live tree may
d3y and those folks who lead the way require more work and caution, howin holiday spirit are truly Sai]Ja's ever for those who value the tradition
Elves Bringing the Christmas spirit to of a live tree, it is well wbrth the extra
the office this week were callers effort. ·
For many, selecting the tree and
requesting advise on Christmas tree
enjoying it through the season is the
selection and care.
. There are a few simple procedures highlight of the holiday preparatl\at can make selecting a live Christ· tions, especially for children. In
many families the live tree is a
mas tree easier.
. Before leaving for· the shopping strong symbol of tradition that is
spots, determine where in the home passed down and valued by the entin:
• Insufficient sunlight! Poinsettias temperature. Direct tap water is too etable School" on Thursday. Decem.
.
the tree will be displayed and take family. Enjoy the sights, sounds, and By HAL KNEEN
POMEROY- Do your p01nse1t1a like lots of bright sunlight. Place cold and will shock the plant's life ber II, from 9:30a.m. to 3 p.m.. It is
note of the height of the ceiling and ·scent of Christmas and have a safe
being held at the Washington Counplants quickly drop their bloom (reai- · plants in south or west facing win- support system.
area in which you have to work. To and happy holiday.
•
Air
temperature!
Avoid
drafty
ty
Extension Office, 206 Davis
dows
for
maximum
light
exposure.
AG
NEWS
Iy
col&lt;ired
br~cts)
during
the
ho;&gt;liday
avoid cutJina off portions of the tree
areas.
Watch
out
for
placing
poinsetAvenue,
Marietta. Ohio. Registration
fro.p
the
approximately
eight
inches
which will alter Its naturaj taper, be · HOG PRODUCERS: The swine season? Check these five points
tias
too
near
windows
and
doors.
fee,
includes
lunch, $5 per person. ·
window
glass.
You
can
move
th~
to
sure to select a tree that fits the space nutrition meeting Js scheduled for before declaring yourseU a "black·
. "Third Annual Forage and Grass .
chosen. Look for freshness jn your December 15th, 7· 9 p.m. in the Cor- thumb" gardener and giving · up on other spots in the home when visitors Freezing temperatures can quickly
are expected or at night when you are rupture the plant cells causing a Management Review" on Thursday
selection with needles that are ral Room off of the Cafeteria at beautiful living decorations.
white latex sap to exude from the Dec. II. from 2:30 to 8:30p.m. at the
resilient, but not brittle. Shake or Buckeye Hills Vocational Center in
• Buy a healthy plant! The poin· at home to enjoy them.
• Too much water! Watch how plant. Placing plants too near the hot OSU Extension, South District
bounce the tree to check freshness. If Rio Grande. Tony Nye. Extension settia should look perky, with leaves
just a few needles fall off, then the Agent in Clinton County will discuss and flpwer bracts upright not wilted. much water you give your poinset· air return ·or . a lamp can create Office, 17 Standpipe Road (off S.R.
tree is fresh and should retain its farrow to feeder nutrition, baby pig · Check the root system. The roots tias. A six inch pot should be able to extremely dry air, which may quick- 93 south) in Jackson. Registration
freshness through the holiday season. diets, and sow and boar nutrition as should be white, not dark brown or hold twelve ounces of water (a nor· ly cause leaves to wilt. Keep plants costs $5 per person.
. "Regional Agronomy Meeting
Limbs should be strong fot;;lecorat· well. Tell your friends!
black. Check for insects, especially mal size water glass). Eight inch pots between 65-70 degrees .
Check
out
the
multitude
of
colors
will
hold
twenty
ounces
on
Wed., Dec. 17. from 9 a.m. to 3:30
ing and the tree should have a good
CATTLE PRODUCERS: If you whitefly. Whitefly look like little
.
.
.
avai1ablc
m
pomsetuas:
mauve,
mar
~
water.
Do
not
allow
your
plant
to
of
p.m. at the Fayette C&lt;;~Unty Extension
green color for the species as well as didn't make the December 5 deadline white fruit flies and are normally
a strong fragrance.
to register for the Forage Manage· found . on the underside of older stand in water. This will suffocate the ble, peppermint, pink, white and tra· Office, 1415 U.S. Route 22 SouthIf you buy your tree sevenll days ment Review coordinated in Jackson leaves. The plant should not be root system. When watering. allow ditional red. So if you need a gift, for west in Washington Courthouse. Regbefore you set it up, store it outside. by Ed Vollborn, call the office on exposed to temperatures below 55 the pot to drain freely of water then that special someone. don't be afraid istration is'$1 5 in advance, $30 at the
Cut the butt of the tree at a diagonal · Monday December 8th at 614-446- degrees especially when being. car- put on the pot cover again. Remem· to give a poinsettia, just follow the door.
ried out to your car. Make sure tt has ber to put a saucer underneath the pot few care tips.
about one inch above ihe original cut. 7007 anJ see about registration.
Harold Kneen Is tbe Mei11
SHEEP PRODUCERS: Don't a plant cover and if really cold, place to protect your furniture from mois· .
Immediately place the tree in a conCounty
Agriculture aDd Natural
Farmers,
there
is
still
time
to
reg.
tainer of water. The diagonal cut will forget your whiter dinner meeting at it inside another sack. Don't leave ture.
Resources
Agent, The Oblo Stile
ister
for
upcoming
local
agricultural
• Too little water! A six inch potaid in water absorption. When the Dales in Gallipolis on December 9 poinsettias in cars whil.e you fimsh
Unlvenity
Extension.
tree is brought indoors, saw the butt from 6- 8:30p.m .. The program will your Chnstmas shoppmg on cold ted poinsettia should be able to hold educational classes, just call 992again squaring offthe angel, so the include Extension Sheep Specialist, days, pick them up as you are going twelve ounces of water (a normal size 6696. • "Meigs &amp; Washington Veg·
water glass). Water should be at room
tree sits securely in the stand. Refill Roge~ High and local veterinarian, home.
the water container daily for the . Dr. Bill Crank. ALSO - if you are
entire time the tree remains !n the interestedinauendingasheepshearhouse. Sprinkling water on the ing school ·please call the Extension
GALLIPOLIS -' A new business. of advertising specialties, promobranchesand needles before you dec- office for details.
4-H STEER EXHIBITORS: ,Buckeye Imprints, located at 648 tional products, custom computer
orate will help the tree retain its freshness. Always place the tree away Make plans for the Steer Weigh-In on Second ·Avenue, Gallipolis, is now designing, small print jobs, lettel"'
heads, business cards, labels, address,
fro111 fireplaces, radiators, electric Saturday, December 13th 7 a.m. - 2: open for business.
Office hours are from 9 a.m. to 3 shipping, business forms, stoc~ and
heaters. televisions or any other p.m.
.
p.m.,
Monday through Friday · custom designing, j!ift certificates,
DAIRY PRODUCERS: Call the
source of heat. Scented candles are a
. cenificates and awards. check printfavorite at Christmas, but open office to receive a free copy of the (evenings by appointment).
Owner Harmony Campbell sa1d ing, ID cards, membership cards and
flames are extremely dangerous near monthly Extension Dairy Team
business services include a selection mlscellaneous services.
newsletter.
a llve tree.
Jennifer L. Byrnes Is Gallla
Care should be taken not to use
candies in the same room as the tree. Coun~ extension aaent In agri·
Of course, tree lights are a hazard as culture 1\\d natural resources.
Leeann er's compensation
· PORTSMOUTH
at
Lemon Sammons was recenily coordinator
!
King's
Daughter's
named director of Occupational
HOST VITAL LINKS - The Gallla County Soli and Watar Con·
Health Services at Southern Ohio · Medical Center in
servatlon District recently hosted the VItal Linkl atudanta from
Ashland, Ky.
Gallie Academy. Shown above are tha VItal Linkl atudarlta, along
Medical Center in Portsmouth.
She is currently
with Troy and Mike Hughes at the Hughes Dairy Farm. Studanta
She is a 1988 graduate of Gallia
pursuing
a
master's
participated In several functions that are normally performed !Jy
Academy High School.
in
occupadegree
the
staff, and vlaltad working dairy and working beef operations
In 1990, she received an associto
learn
all the dlflarent aspects Involved .•
!:
ate degree in legal assisting and in tional, health and Sammons
1992 she received a bachelor's safety.
Sammons resides in Greenup,
degree in legal studies from MarKy.,
with her husband. Mike. and
shall University.
daughter,
Raigan.
Prior to joining Southern Ohio
Medical Center she was the. work-

A few pointer's on poinsettia plants

..

the
of
the holiday
season
I year long.
A cellular phone is the
perfect hol_iday gift for
retired parents · who
spend their leisure lime
traveling.
Or why not give
mom a Cellular One .this
holiday season. It's also
an ideal gift for a
teenage driver or college
student. You 'II be giving
the gift of safety and
security - essential .in
case of car trouble or
other emergencies. And
. you'll be receiving the
gift of peace of inind.
Stop by the local store
at 1502 Eastern Avenue
and see Mendy, Rose or
Karen to find out more
about our "Free Gift of
Gab" Sale.
Select just the right
"Free Gift of Gab" for
your special someone.
We are offering our
"Free Gift of Gab..''
promotion now thru
Dec. 25.

441-0547

CELLULARONE
2t79 PIEDMONT RD.
HUNTINGTON, WV • 421-4788
M·F 9:30-5:00o9:30-2:00 SAT.

HOLDING THE OHIO RIVER • A large hoe is
shown · apraadlng some of the 12,7.00 cubic
yarda of 1tona baing used to shore up the rivar bank just lOUth of Gallipolis on State Route
7. The project Ia funded by FEMA to repair the

By ODIE O'DONNELL

Jumee Smollell and Diahann Carroll
co-star. Trim ark Pictures. I 09 mins.

erful older women. First, her father's mons, who is also an actress with
sister, Aunt Mozetle (Debbi Mor- roles in "Silence of the Lamb$,"
gan), a vital, exuberant, thrice-wid- ''Candyman•' aitd'more.
(Jack Gamer ofthe Democra~and
owed spiritualist; then Elzora, a
Blending the top-fligbt images of Chronicle in Rochester, N.Y., is
spooli:y, neighborhood voodoo cinematographer Amy Vincent, a chief movie, reviewer for Gannell
· priestess (Diahann Carroll).
robust score of period R-and-B and News Service.)
Both women fuel Eve's active jazz, and her superb ensemble of
imagination - and are partly to actors, Lemmons makes a most
blame for the tragedy that ensues. impressive debut behind the camera.
But along the way, filmgoers are
Rated R, with profanity, sex and
privy to an emotionally complex violence.
study of tlie affections and near·
EVE'S, BAYOU (R, profanity,
seductions between fathers and sex, violence) Three and One-Half
daughters, and the special ·bond Stars (Good-to-Excellent) Kasi
between sisters.
Lemmons' thoughtful, atmospheric
Coming on the heels of the . family drama, sel in a backwoods
refreshingly successful "Soul Louisiana community in the 1960s.
Food.'' "Eve's Bayou" is another Samuel L. Jackson stars as a physi. example of a long-hoped-for wave cian, husband and father whose phiof mainstream films with universal landering pains his wife and daugh-·
themes, created by and about ters. Lynn Whitfiel~, Debbi Morgan,
African Americans.
·

gomary, county commluloner; Shirley Angel, ·
county comml•lonar; Steve Wilson, 911 diractor; Tarry Hamby, county EMA director and ~ri­
an Wood, 1111 dispatcher. Railr • Sheriff J. D.
Taylor, Sgt. Pat McDonald, Ohio State Patrol ·
and Roger Brandeberry, city pollee chief.

Christmas tree 'Project.6005' underway on SR 7 South
considerations

'Eve's ·Bayou'·......,. a fam.i ly .drama that .wUI ·draw you in
By JACK GARNER
G1nnett ,._ Service
"The summer I killed my father,
I was 10-years-old."
It's hard to imagine a more
intriguing opening line for a motion
picture. And it's just !he thing to
hook viewers into "Eve's Bayou," a 1
~houghtful, atmospheric family
drama, set in a backwoods Louisiana
community in the I960s.
Although such a voice-over may
lead viewers to expect a murder
mystery, "Eve's Bayou" has I)IOn: in
common with the Southern gothic
tradition and the stories of William
Faulkner and Harper Lee than with
conventional mystery storytellers.
Add Alice Walker to the mix of
influences, simply because "Eve's
Bayou" tells of a black family and
their friends and neighbors in an earlier time and in a rural locale that
migbt remind viewers of "The Color

Sundly, o-nbtr7, 1117

&lt;.
.il" · #
·..

GAWA 911 DEDICATION CEREMONIES •
Thoae taking part In the 111 f ribbon cutting cer·
emonlee Thuraday for Gallla County's 911 ded·
!cation program were, left to right, Harry
Smathara, VInton fire chief; Harold M; Sailn·
dare, county commissioner; Dr. Keith Brandeberry, Holzer Medical Canter; Harold G. Mont·

Settling down has softened Pat Benatar's edge
unplugged set.
"The new album sounds distinct·
ly like us. It sounds like me,''
Benatar, 44, says over the ~reams
of daughter, Hana, 3, who IS upset
with her hairstyle one recent Friday
morning. "The album is acou.sti.cal·
ly dnv.en, !he scope of th~ mstrumentation IS strong and 11 s really
lyric heavy."
Songs like ~·only You'' and
"Purgatory" are reminiscent of what
Benatar did in the '80s with hits like
"Shado~s of the Nigbt" and "Fire
and Ice. But they also show a level
of maturity in the _lyrics acqufred
thr?.ugh the years, Gtraldo says.
Not that much has change~. but
we've learned we can put our point
across in more ways than we did
before," he says. "We're still
rockin' hard, but the music is much
more a reflection of us at this time in
our lives, not the early days of fast
pace and chaos."
, Those years of "chaos" started
out peacefully enough for Benatar.

D

...--u11 dedication ceremon

was a drummer.
.
"But I'm an actor! I was only
playing the PARr of a drummer!'
They couldn't, or wouldn't hear," he
wrote.
Eventually, Dolenz found his
way to London, where he appeared
in a play written by pal Harry Nilsson. Intending to stay thn:e months,
he ended up living there for 15
years.
In England, Dolenz delved into
directing and producing.
·.
Eventually, he built up a solid
resume that includes commercials,
music videos, TV shows, plays and
films.
The Monkees reunited in the '80s
after MTV (a Nesmith "invention,"
by the way) revived the 1'V show.
More recent showings on VHI and
Nickelodeon have helped Increase
the group's fan base.
Dolenz continues to foeus on
directing and producing, having
most recently acted in and directed
episodes of USA network's '.'Pacific
·
Blue" ser;es.
"It's my day job aside from the
Monkee business, ·which doesn't
really take up much time,'' he 'Says.
His daughter from his first marriage, Ami, is an accomplished
AROUND FOR YEARS -The Monkeea (mlnua Mike Nesmith) have
actress. Dolenz says though they've
gotten close to working together, it bMn performing around the country for aeveral year~, but there might
not bt m1ny mora chanc• to aN the group perform.
hasn't happened yet.

'

By RAND OTTEN
Poughkeepsie Joumal
·Pat Benatar refers to her mega hits
fro?.' th~ 1980s as the "big_n;onsters."
1 smg them because 11 s a lot of
bistory for the audience and I love to
~ a lot of them. There's a history
there for me, t':"'," Ben~tar..says from
a hotel room m Ontano. But now,
it's 20 years down the road and things
lite totally different. Th'ings are setded."
But that's not to suggest Benatar
~as lost her_ra&lt;;k 'n' roll edge. Tourmg. yet agam, 1n support of her new
album, ."Innamorata," she may be
settled m her hfe as a sm~er: w1~e
and .m?ther of two. But mus1c IS st11l
a dnvmg fo~ce.
.
.
Benatar IS currently t~un~g WI£!'
her husband-producer-gullanst, Nell
t;Jiraldo. She's performing hits like
"Heartbre~ker," ;;Hit ~e With ;~ur
Best Shot and All Fued Up, as
well as a few blues standards from
her "True Love" album, songs from
"Innamorata" and a special

Section

"Clearly The Best"·
1502 Eastern Ave..
•
Gallipolis, OH .

.......... .

'•
•
'

i

New business opens in Gallipolis

Sammons named director of OHS

I

I

I

!

Dr. St. Onge becomes board certified

FFA MEMBERS IN KANSAS CITY· Members of the South Qal·
Ua Future Farmers of America recently attended the National FFA
convention In Kenaas City, Mo. Soma the highllghta of tl'le trip
were the John Deere combine aaaambly plant In Molln.•.JII~ the
bass pro shop In Springfield, Mo., Jefferson Memorial (Arch) In
St. Loula and the Harry S. Truman Library. One of th" hlghllghtl
of the convention was the American Royal Livestock Show and
Rodeo Front row, left to right ara J. R. Boothe, Dusty Johnson,
Ashll Montgomery and Nikl Mlll1. Rear-Scott Law! a, Mlchaal C.r·
pentar, Kayger Kingery and Tommy Sanders.

GALLIPOLIS
Holzer Clinic obste·
tricianl gynecologist,
Dr. Rick D. St. Onge,
has recently become
· board certified by the
American Board of
Obstetrics and .Gynecology. Dr. St. Onge or. St. Onge
has been a Holzer
Clinic physician since 1994 and is
currently the chair of the OB/Gyn
department.
Dr. St. Onge earned his medical
degree at the ·University of
Saskatchewan in Canada. While
completing his internship at Saint
Thomas Medical Center in Akron.

Dr. St. Onge was awarded "Resident
of the Year." His residency training
in obstetrics and gynecology was
completed at the University of Cal·
gary in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Along with his recent cenifica·
tion by the American Board of
Obstetrics and Gynecology, Dr. St.
Onge is board certified by the Royal
College of Physicians and Surgeons
of Canada. He is a member of the
Canadian Medical Association,
Alberta Medical Association, Society of Obstetricians and Gynecolo·
gists of Canada, and the American
College of Obstetricians and Gyne cologists.

•.

''

l
GUEST SPEAKER • Clint Carter, center, repraaanting Agrl·
Plan/Agrl·Biz, was guastapaakar during the NoV1111btr tMatlng
of the Gallia County Farm Bureau Board of Dlractore which wa1
held 111C8ntly In the McKenzie Agrlcuhura Building. Carter spoke
on agrl-planlbiz-plans. A public mMtlng will bt held 1t the McKenzie Agriculture' Canter on Monday, Dec. 15, 1t 71p.m. to dlacuaa
the agrl-planlbiz-plana. Carter Ia flanked by Paul Shoernalwr, left,
public affalra coordinator for Gallia'a FB, and Kim Harla11, organization director. Qther topics Included dlleulelorl of 1 po•J.
ble fund-flialng golf tournament, dlta for the youngfannar Jaa6.
arahlp conference (Feb. 27-28) and 1 review of the November
southeast cabinet meeting In Jaclcaon.
l

�Sunday, December 7, 1897
P8ge 02 • ~ " 1 s-...Jt "-'
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plu•nt, WV
Sunday, December 7, 1897
~;:~;;~~==~~;;~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ :

spaces
. Home features sunny
.
.

DISTINGUISHED BY DECOI\A.TIVE KEYSTONES, a multi-layered roonlne, tunny wlndo" arrangemenlo and a stucco llllterior, thll one-atory detlp hu real curb appeal.
By BRUCE A. NATHAN
foyer, which shares a 12-foot ceil- built-in boo""helves. Slidi'l! f!lass
AP Newofeatures
lng with the formal livlnl! and doors to the backyard provide a
A dramatic columrled entry

dining rooms. A tray ceiling

view.

highlighled by a window arrangemenl that imites the sun greets
visitors to plan G-8~ by llomeStyles Designers Network . hs
living area has 2,593 square feet
of spat-e.
llouble doors open to the tiled

crowns the dining room, and slidins glass doors in the llvlnf! room
open to a covered polio. The
opening to the living room fea lures a decoralive display'niche.
The secluded family room
Includes a fireplace flanked by

An bland .. erving bar links the
family · room to the kitchen and
the lfreakfast nook. A bullt· ln
menu desk and a pantry are
among the kitchen's hlghll_ghts. A
striking wall of windows bathe'
the nook In sunlight.
Two nearby bedrooms Include
private access to a split bath.
Across the home, French doors

----------7~'------------------,

...
--·

·

open to the master suite, which

-..

By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS finish, then recoating the entire piece
By AP ~lal FelturM
with a new, light finish. This process
Cle~nmg llld touching up a piece . disguises blemishes and enlivens
of fumuun: thai has seen better days some finishes, but it can ruin Olbers
can often literally transform it. And if it dissolves too muc'h of the finish
you don't need to spend a lot ofmon· ·or affects the stain. Always test these
ey to do 11..
products in an inconspicuous area
. Most dings, scratches and Olher first and wear vinyl gloves.
s1gns o~ use ca~ be touc~ up easi-•• Don't try to fix deep scratches ,
ly. A.lltt takes.ts a few mmutcs and on table tops. 1liese require a hard
the nght supphes. What you'll need durable melted-in shellac finish and
For ~ic low:h-up-you'll need a are_best.lefl to a professional.
few spec1al supplies. Hardwi!R stores
•• Work in a space that can accomsell ultrafine 0000 steel .wool, oil modate a small mess and has adesoap, mineral spirits, ·pumice and quate ventilation.
wet-?r-dry sandpaper.. You'll. find
•• Before starting, thoroughly
rubbmg alcohol and mmeral oil at a clean your piece with mineral spirits.
~rugstore. Darfc paste wax may be a Otherwise, silicone from old polishhttle ~arder to locate, but you. can es will cre11e unsightly blemishes.
order 11 through the mall. Furn1ture aptly nanled fish eyes, in a new fintouch-up pens are available from isft.
·
larger hardware store~. (Although
.. When you finish, set rqs out·
touch-up pe~s look hke. ordmary doors to let mineral spirits and other
markers, don t U)' to subsutule).
products evaporate, then dispose of
Some useful lips . ..
them properly. Tackling minor dam·
. , Here are some gmdehnes to keep age
m mond whatever the JOb:
Here's how to fix white rings.
·· When 1n do~bt. test the product worn edges, scratches and nail polish
or process ?n an mconsp1cuous area spills:
before nskmg the whole p1~ce .
.. Remove white rings by first
-- 1.\se reJuvenators wuh care. removing the wax with mineral spirAiso known as refinishers, tMCse so- its and a soft cloth. Then wipe with
called restorers ~~ a can .cla!m to rubbing alcohol and a new cloth. If
rev1vc fimshes wnhout stnp~mg or the ring remain's, sand lightly with a
!ouchm~ up. They work by d1ss~lv- very fine 600-grit wet-or-dry sand·
mg a th~n layer ~f the ong~nal finiSh, paper and mineral oil. Wax 10 restore
combmmg 11 wnh tung oil or other

has private patio access and two
walk-In closets. The maoter bath
otTers a plush garden tub with a

--...
.::..

.,

toilet and dual sinks to ease the
momlnf! congestion.
A study · off the foyer could
accommodate overnight guests.
The 'hall bath nearby provides •
patio access.
Unless otherwise noted, all
rooms have 10-foot celllni!S.
'

"'
~:,,-.

\·;.

G-83

• ··". ,.QS
.. ··l'j• .
.:S.
,
.
::r.JSU_'
... l
:~-··'*"'"' '"' 'k :.U~·&amp;.iti'-'.•:k,o,;;.....,.,....t,-~*·

GM;
·.. . •·

~5 ,.-,' . '
·

D

&lt;

·~
···.•c" •

' .

._-if,

eolf!n G-85 has a llvlnl!
room,

dining

room,

. . den/study, family room, .
breakfast room, kitchen, three
bedrooma, three baths and a utility room, totaling 2,5115 square feel
of llvlnl! space. This plan Includes
a slab foundation, and is desi11ned
with 2x~ and 8-lnch concrete
block exterior wall franllng. The
auached, lwo~c•r 8•ra8e covers
508 square feet.
DOUBLE DOORS open l'rom lhe covered entry ldtb the foyer,
"hlch now• Into both lhe llvlnl! room and the dlninl! room. 'l'o the
rif!bl of the l'oyer II the den or etudy. Tucked into the rear of the
home, the kitchen, brellkiUt area and l'lmUy room • ..., all open to
· each other. Two aeeondary bedrooma and a full bath alao are In lhll
tide of the home. Aeeeta to the two-ear garage II ol1'ered ·lhroush
the utility rooin. The maater bedroom and Ita private bath ar~
acroaa lhe home.

(For o mnre dt!t&lt;Jiled, scaled plan
Qj' llais lmuse. includin~ gUide$ tn
euimaliniJ co111 and .financing,
send $4 to Hooue qf the Week. P. 0.
Box IJ6Z, New York, N•.r. 10116·
IJ 62. lie ,,.,.. to include the plan
~~Umber).

Variety of fasteners and nails
are available at ·hardware stores
•

By POPULAR MECHANICS
Manufacturers test maxomum sus- I inch. It handles medium- to heavyFor AP Special· FHtur•
. tainable loads in terms of tension (a duty .loads depending on size. A pack
Have you ever wondered why a load in line with the fastener axis) and of five one-fourth-by-1 3/4-inch
nail works so well in wood? It's not shear (a load perpendicular to rhe fas· anchors costs about $2. CQntact Star
the nail that's doing all the work-- tener axis). Loads are also based on Expansion Co., Pleasant Hill Road,
it's the wood. Because wood is the base material and safe working ·Mountainville. N.Y. 10953.
resilient, it grips the nail, not the oth- • loads are rated at one-fourth the maxA threaded spike is driven into a
er way around. 1lle trouble is, there imum load. In general, light-duty hole that matches the shank diameter.
are a lot of building materials that are loads are less than 400 pounds, medi- The bCnd in this fastener exerts
not so cooperative. While hanjened um-duty loads range . from 400 to tremendous force against the surspiral nails will stay in concrete, their · 4,000 pounds and heavy-duty loads rounding wal). Available in sizes
holdin~ power isn't that great. And,
arc above 4,000 pounds. For demand· ranging from three-sixteenths to I
for~et about drywall. Nailing to a
ing structural uses, discuss the prob- 114-inches in diameter, the manufac·
wall really means getting out the stud lem with your dealer. ·
turer rates this fastener with up to a
finder to find a 2-by-4 that's hidden
Here are a couple of examples of 4,000-pound working load depending
inside.
the many specialty fasteners avail- · 011. size and the base material. The
Fonunately, there's a wide assort- able:
one-half-inch-diameter Threaded
ment of fasteners 1hat don't rely so
An eXpansion anchor is a concrete Spike costS about $1. Contact The
much on the gripping power of the fastener. that features a carbon-steel Rawlplug Co., Inc., 200 Petcrsville
base material. These devices provide band that fits over a reverse taper at Road .. New RO&lt;!helle, N.Y. 10802.
their own. gripping power and are the end. The top half is threaded to
A nail anchor is the ticket when it
designed to suit specific applications. accept a standard nul. In use, a hole comes to such light-duty tasks as
There are concrete fasteners that is bored and the fastener is driven in . securing junction box.cs, conduit or
exPI'fld to grip the walls of a hole, and place. When thC nut is tightened it not ductwork to concrete or blj&gt;&lt;k· Availa myriad of hollow wall fa&lt;tcncrs that only draws the connected ll)embcr able in three-sixteenth~ one-quarlacch on to drywall with a vengeance. toward the concrete, but the taper at ter-inch diameters. this fastener has
You'll find most of these fasteners, or the end drives the steel band outward an expanding body that contains a
close. variations. at your hardware to grip the hole. One model is called steel driving pin. After being insertstore. Bear in mind that each design a Wedge-Grip anchor and comes in ed in a hole, the pin is driven flush
has specific ~apocitics.
diameters ranging from one-fourth to with the anc~or to grip the base material.

Wanted

•

why the combination is more
clfcct1vc than the two ~paratcly . Furthcrmorc. sulfam1c ac1d has a h1gher
1nmznuon constant than the aceuc
ac1d found on v1ncgar. And th~ h1gh·
cr the constant.. the .more rap1d and
~ompl~tc the ~~rmauon ~f 10ns on the
chem1cal reactiOn. Ac1ds w1lh a h1gh
constant attack scale more v1gorously than those wnh a lower constant,
even if the lower-constant acid is
more c.oncc~trated (more acidi~).
Sulfam1c. ac1d d"':s not produ~e
harmful fumes and IS safely used m
appliances. '\ IO·ounce bout. of
cleaner costs about $3 at grocery
stores and appliance repair shops.
Q: Our house, covered by asphalt
Shingles, ts shaded by three large
trees. lri the winter rainy season, moss
appears het~een lhe separation. in
ad1acent shmgles. A very th1ck
growth of moss appeors on the north
and west sides of the roof. During a
period of rain lasting several days,
moisture oozes up under the shingles
''

on::

Uindod T - Of PloyerL Our En-

tr!lo'MI UaniCitl!llrlt

Po~tiono

Supp~

co..,........,

AnliQuH· no 111m 100 largo or 100
.amah. Alto tttattl, appraltala,

··Clean worn edi&amp;S WI!~ 1111neraI ,. I'
spirits and a cloth, and scuff the edgr ; I
with 400-grit sandpaper. Usc a touch· ·I
up pen of the ~ppropriate color to : 1
draw along the edge. Blend tile repair : l
by rubbing gently with your finger. :

BEE: JOHN KOPV!ICIAHIIKI

Clean late Uodtl Cars Or
Trucks, 1 teo Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, t900 E•••ern ,_,.., Galipolla.

!

J &amp; 0 A_
uto Pans. Buying
, wrecked or aalvagecl vthic:lea.

Alto buying junk automatic
transmilliona.. 304-173-5033.

Gallle County CommluiDnltnl Shlrlay Angel
and Harold M. S.underl, 18ft, look on 1111 Commiulon Preaident Herold G. MontgOIIHIIY

a

unveile tha Gellla County 911 plaque during
Thur.clay'a dedication caramoniea at the new
center,loclted 1111191 on State Route 160.

. Non ·Warki~ Washer, Dryera,
Stoves, Refrigerator•, Freezers,
Air Conditioners, Color T.V. '1,

VCR'o, Aloo Junk Caro, 614-256·

1236.
W.:ntad To Bu1 : SJandlng Timber
Bigl0ollnfl61...~ .

·· Filllorger gouges with soft filler
stick. Smooth with a soft piece of
wood and buff lightly with 0000 steel
wool. Fill scratches with dark furni·
ture wax.

'

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-~..:

.We Bur Junk Allto'o In A"i Condillon, Coli 114 381 11012, Or 114•oe PARt

,,,

3-1 P.ll.

APPLV·AT:
14 LUMBER ~V
2200 /&gt;CV AVENUE
.W::KSON, CH

EMAIL ADDRESS:
JOB41NLUIIIIEA.CQ!I

An Equal OpporiiJrity Employer
MIFDV
Drug Free Environment

GOOD FREIGHT
UARAOUND
Up To .~Per Ulol
HorrieMoSJWeei&lt;ondsl
COL·A &amp; 1 Yr. OTR
Coli lion 80Q.395.1045

· n;...,;ngs
JIOO.i93.8792

Poaltlon: Jackson · Vinton Com·
munhy Action, Inc:. Ia Starching
For A Ouallfted Individual For The
Posiriort Of Execulive Director.

1

Thlt Is A Ful Time. Fun Vtar, E•·
..... Pollilior\.
Salarr-: Basad On Expe,I40GI I
Educational Background: SatarrRangos From 117.75 • 120.75 For
Hour.

Quallflcatlona: Mir]lmum Of

Bach&amp;lor't Oegr•• In Social
S.rvictl, Public Adminiatratlon,

31S, Gallipolla, 01'!&gt; 45«11 .

Bulin111 Of Addldonal Rtlt~~ant
Experience .May Be Subatl_
tuted
In lieu Of A .Degree. Expert~
In Buaine11 And Peraonr.el Man·
agement, A Working Knowledge
Of And E xpelience In Govern~
mental Funding. Budgeting ,
Grantamenahip Arid Other A•·
pe'tl Of A Community Action
Agency. Be familiar Wilh The
Operation Of Programa Such Aa

The Deadline For AccepUng Applications Ia Friday, December

Health Programs And SOCial Pro- •
crams.
:

~pplictnll For This Potition May
Submit A Reaume To Jeannie
Williams. Human Rnource Man·
ager, Acce11 To Human Resource Development, P.O . Box

ntUAS,DEC11TH

retlnllhlng. cu atom orCS.ra, 814-

1192-415111.

'

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:

JTPA, WIC . Head Starl, HEAP. ,

19, 11197 5:00 ~u . For Additional
Information Call G14·•·n ·301D.
800 ·5:00 P.U .• 'Monclar Thru Fr•

day. ACCIII To Human Resource Developmenl Is An AAI

EEO Employer.

Help Wllh Elderly Lady, To:
CLA501, c/o GallipoN&amp; Dally Tribune, 825 Third Avenue, Ga.Nipolia,

OH 45«11 .
lmmedla1e opening br lull or patl
time registered x-ray technologllt
Work days, evenings, weektndl.
Call 81-4 ·992·2 104, extenalon

237.

•

Application• Are Available At
The Jackson -Vinton Community
Action, Inc . Agency locattd At
'14333 State .Routt 327 Nonh.
Wellston, OH 45682. Deadline
For Apptiutionl Ia 4:30 PM .•
Dec. 10. 11197. Tho J .V.C.A.. Inc.
Office Phone Numbet Ia 114-38-45119.

J.V.C.A.. Inc. Is An Equal Oppo&lt;·
UJnioy Empoyet IPtovtdor Of

;
~

:
,
t
1

:

I
I
!

S...·l

ices. Auxiliary Aida And Servic.a 1

Are Available Upon Rtqutlt To t
lrKiividuals Wi&amp;-1 Disabilities. Ohio I
Relay' Service, 1-800·750.0750.
:
I

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BULLETIN BOARD

I

I
I
I

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY
ACROSS

1 Sandal part
6 Newsstand item
11 Discarded piece
16 Spheres
21 Terra-. Indiana .
22 UnaccompaFiied
23 Mr. Lopez
24 George or T.S.
25 Apportion
26 Beguiling tricks
27 Kind of numeral
28 Yard divider
29 Gypsy Rosa 30 Bury
31 Facilitate
32 --Magnoo
34 Water barrier
35 Composrtions
38 Coals wHh gold
40 N011111 god
41 Hirt and Pacino
42 Fann animal
44 Not well
45 Aclr!IS&amp; luplno
47 Precious stone
49 Book lor snapshots
52 Posh
54 Make possible
56 "Not guilty," e.g.
60 Chamber
61 Indistinct
62 Nervous
63 William Tell and
others
65 AGabor
66 Breakfast meat
67 Mr. Kristolferson
68 Hurry
69 Acquired
70 After deductions
71 Employer
72 Wild commotion
73 Use a spade
74 Stage whisper
76 Takes on
78 Receptacles
79 Great Gerrrum
composer
80 Actor Uslinov
81 Predecessors of
COs

82 BaH
83 Naked

DOWN

84 Cry at bullfighta

1 Layered rocJc

85 Biblical mount

2 Stories
3L.awa

88 Narrated

89 Meal variety
90 Step-by-slap
94 Uable
95 Scrap ol food
96 Membership
organization
97 Desert in Asia
98 Overly
99 Permit
100 "For Pela's -!"
102 Chimney dirt
103 Rustic dwelling

4 From--Z

5 Animal friend
6 Ch8881118n

Sallied attar fllghi
8 Warsaw native
9 Give power lo
t 0 Legal matter
11 Fine violin, for Shon
12 Places for
·
pa:leslrians
13 Hoarfrost
14 Ularary collection
15 Very tittte bit
16 Ere
17 Baely beverage
18 Evans or Lavin
19 Not Widaepread
1

104 Allempt

105 In a bungling way
107 Not present
108 Bedspread's
cousin

109 Phi - Kappa
..• 110 Examination
111 Tastyb~
113 Flal·lopped hill
114 Wall painting
115 In the past
117 Mimic
118 Club charge
119 Ooiong, pekoe, etc.
121 Fond du -,Wis.
124 Again
126 Goes quickly
128 Stick
132 Building extension
133 Paved ways: abbr.
134 Pulple vegetable
135 Candle
139 Commercial vehicle

20 Stalka

r..- ao Doctl••

31 Antlered animal
33 Moore and Maris
36 An astringent
37 Sweet potato
39 Frigid
40 Bar bill
43 Taeth-stralghlaners
44 Aslonith
48 24 hours
48 Speed tim~ abbr.
49 Hippodrome
SO Adores
51,Tugs and bargae
53 Composer
Stravins)&lt;y
54 Revise a text
· 55 Giggle
57 On lhe up-and-up
58 Wear away
59 Aflower
61 Containers for

140 Audibly

142 Youthful lime olllfe
144 Ralricoat part
145 Make ballet
147 Rich dough
148 Young bird
149 Blunder
150 Mammoth
151 Brightness
152 Pome lruils
'153 Breaks suddenly
154 Carried

flowers
62lo\18 god
64 Militaly clergyman
68 MOst uneven, as a
road

73 Gloomy
75 Spore
•n -Bator
78 · Rivet
79 Pointed remolrl&lt;
82 Clinton's VP .
83 Boxing rnalc:ll
84 Circta the ea'*-

Santa's Christmas Circus
Ariel Thealre
December 11 • 6 &amp; 8 pm
Advance Tickets $6.00
at these outlets
Chamber of Commerce
Criminal Records
Haskins Tanner
Peddler's Pantry
That Special Touch
$7.00 at the Door

•••

85 Divide '
T
' 88 Peace goddella
87 Short letters 1

88
89
90
91

City in Japan 1
Stratagem
Glass with a stem
Say
92 Great &amp;rlfiiY
93 Steadfast
96 Aloasil fuel
97 Manner ol walklog
101 A nut
102 Sugar or honey,
e.g.
103 Slices ·
., ~ .IQII· ~. ,grp, r·
J".
107 Snake
108 Interrogate
109 Low shrub
·112 Uncooked
113 "None -the brave·
114 Angry
116-ofEden
118 Small round marl&lt;
120 Hearing organ
121 Springs ·
122 God, in Islam
123 Shut
125 Bar legally
127 Sleeps
129 Chris - Lloyd
130 Extent
131 Came to a close
134 Bartok
136 Dancer Pavlova
137 look cautiously
136 Goes wrong
141 Western Indian
143 Female sheep
144 Maasures of wt.
145 Height: abbr.
148 - Tse-tung

...

RIVERBANK RECONSTRUcnON PROJECT
• An overview ehot of the maulve raconelructlon of the aupportlng Ohio. River bttnk along
State ROU18 7, juet eoutlt cf Galllpolle,la ll)own
above. Employee• of the Alan St- Co. of

.

are·bootlng up, logging on and surfBy ~ERRY NACHTIGAL
ing the Internet in increasing numAssociated Prall Writer
·bers. Experts say older .people arc
SUN CITY WEST, Ariz.
Can't teach an old dog new tricks,
huh? Then try eJ(pJaining ~omputers
West, by far the largest of the nearly
200 chartered social clubs· in this
retirement community outside
Phoenix.
Bernardine Ginsberg expects
membership to hit the 3,000 mork
soon, up from 1,600 three years ago
when she becar.1e club president.
When the club recently held an ori- ·
entation class for new members,
organizers expecting a few dozen
p&lt;;oplc were stunned when more
than 300 showed up.
"For a community of 30,000 people to have 2,600-plus as members of
'the computer club-- 10 percent of
the population- just think of it."
said Mrs. Ginsberg, 65 . "The intcr·cst has been phenomenal. "
In Sun City West and around the
country, seniors who once thought the
\'{cb was something spun by a spider

18

•'

67 Monarch
88 Cereal grus
72 Outer layer

ANNOUNC EMENT S
005

Personala
ANXIOUS?

TO IEET SOMEDNE?
1111ED DFTHAT OLD BAR
8CENE7THEN CAU THE

.

DATILINE

-2J6.1111 EIT. 1740
Clnly $2.119 Air Mlnula
• Mull Be 18-aOid.
s.r..u 611-1145-8434.
· 47 Wtatwood Drive Will Nol Be

"

.. 1

·~

, .,;·'

.

005

PersonalS

SWF seeking SWM, mid 40'1,

Dailr Horoac:apt Up To Date
Soop ~ouno Call Nowllll1·100213·1100 Ell. t 301, SU9 Per
Min. Mu11 Ba 18 y,., Stri·U et9·

30 Amouncemente

40

Giveaway
1 ltmalt Call&lt;o ca1 a 1 male

Slllosman, OWner In Hoopllal. Un·

Found 5 Polnll: S/lephofdmlx, gr..n collar, friendly, go to
pound II nol claimed, I14-GIG27IISO.
Founcf.. miniature Co!Ut br Meigs
Vol Clinic, bribl. &amp; wliJO ml~ 814·

Adorable pupplea with regiatered
perentl 10 good hQme, 6 I 4·085-

8t.,.....t-t707.

' '·..

1-1100-2115-111 g
Enll442
U119 For Uln 118 • Sllrv·U 811·
1145-8434.

..' '.

LDYE
Ftrnele 2 Year Old Germ•n
AWAml¥0\1
1--28S·tl077, En 8382. 12.1111· Shephard &amp; 3 Female l'llppios To
Ptr Uln. Uull Be 18 YrL Serv·U, Gooct Homo. 81.,.....1·1335.

18 • $2.1111 Min.
En3278.

ALL Vord Saloo Uuol

a. Pllld In Advance,

PfAQL!bE: 2:00p.m.
lhe day bolon the od
lelo run. Sunday
odhlon • 2:00p.m.
. Frldal'. Uondoy odhion
• 10:00 Lm. Situ...,.

Sllvor Tame Rabbll 614·446·
9290.

Lost and Found

Eight weal&lt; old puppieo, two lemaln. one malt, Husky/ Lab mt1,
114-143-5131 . •

Four month old malt Siamelt,

11...11112·1014.

-·

FMI call., thtM monfla old, 814-

Gray ·cata, mate, female, AKC

mole-·

sale

Gallipolis

One gray and one black kitten to

60

Yard

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity
All Vard S•l" Muat Ia Paid In
Advanca. DeHIIne: 1:00pm the
day before the ad Ia to run,
Sunday l MondQ tdlllon·
1:OOpm Frtcloy.

80

Auction
and F.lea Market

:.119:.:2-&lt;:.:'1255=:......----------tChrlolmoo Auction !Junday Doc,
FOUND: Near Salem Church on 7th . 1prn. Hartford Communily
Uevln 1
Rd. mil ..a.Building Rt. 33 large load of new
e """"' part Coltle. , exciting, ,guaranteed merchan ·
1

"

:::304---7.,.13-.,.m,-a_I_•_,.:.:..
=":.:'::;OO.::.__Idise. Sa•el sa.. l Savel
Found: Short Haired. Medium Siz. Something tor everyone on your
ad, Friendly Whitt Male Dog, Christmas littl Even Crartaman
· With Red Collar, Vlnclnily: Rl. 141 , tools &amp; porcelain dolls. Ed Frazi·
a 775ArM, 114..-77.
"'1930. Brenda Frazlorl1315.
:---::-':-:-,--.-,..:......--·1 Ill AKo Auction 12/hoor Chrlal·
Loat Grar Haired Fluffy Fomalo mao Sa(e-llal. Doc. 1111. 12/non
Dog, Poodle &amp; Schnauzer Mlk to 121-l(lhl.
W..rlng Red Colllr, Anawers To
Name : Mule, VIcinity : Rio
Granda, 125 Reward! 81.t-245-

51144.
loat: Orange &amp; White 5 Month

Old Ualo Cal Orange Uu11a&lt;ho
Marking Around Moulh Laat
Seen Frldar No•. 24th, Planto
Subdlvilllon, 114-4441·15SO, Allar
4:30-nll

Gentlemen this
of .beauty
the
lady in your life.
certificate at Mane
F:ull Service
We offer: Facials,
cures, Manicures,
specials
Package deals available
760 FirstAve. Gallipolis
614·446-2933
BOOTS
All L.aalher Western Boots
Reg.

~149. 00

Sate Price $59.00
Large Stock
i:ngineer ...... ...... ............ $49.00
Wellinglon ...................... $49.00
Loggare :........................ $50·55
Harness ......... ,.......... .. ... $59.00
C$rollna-Georgia · H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gonex
SWAIN FURNITURE

"ATIENTION"
.Joanne's Kut &amp; Kurl
47 Westwood Drive
will not be open until late
January.
I am currently a1ill doing
business on 3rd and Pine.
Call for Christmas Perrn
SpeciaL
Joanne Fillinger
446-9496

&amp; VIcinity

31)+812-3111 S al1or 5pm.

814-388 tll42.

Chrillmll Puppieo, Will Hold
You• Puppy Till Ctltlotmu Evo,

Horo-

Nice Christmas git11, 7 black/

able To Care far Them, Phone:

LOOKING FOR A DAlE?

Financial
Cafl1·tl00·2115-11413

70

kit· To A Good Home : Mid Slzo Male
Dog, Aflectlonate, Loves Peoplv,
Owner MOIIOd, 614-446-3210.
3 Monlh Old Preny Femala While

Btllck Friendly Pup N81da Home
ForChriolmll, 114-t&lt;ti·ZIII.

Uovlol,

GiveaWay .

40

ten, ts14-lil82-1107.

frH Pltatn Acrlvatlan Required
1-8811-1136·8774.

.,..,•• E...,....iiMUt

GALLIPOLIS
Andrea Canaday, a graduate
of Nonh Gallia
High School
ard Buc)&lt;eye
Hills Career
Center, recen1ly ~c_,::....____...:__.J
joined the staff at
Canaday
Summer Image,
Hair, Tanning and Nails.
The first-time new-hire is a· nail
technical specializing in artificial
nails, men's and women's hot oil
manicures and pedicures.
Ms. Canaday recently graduated
from the Class Act, Chillicothe. a
design school for hair, skin and
nails.

niQht on Charles Yost or Robert :;;.:.;_..:;_..;..-:-:--::-:---caughl will bo ~PII.:pple::::::.'.:.e1:.:4..:-88.:.2:..·52::.;&lt;0::.._ __

Smllh farms anrone
fi"'OOCUIIIG.

3504.

119 015 813'.

Joins staff

No hunting or lr81pllllling daY or giveeway, 111.,986-3504.

eos.&amp;t34.

SO AMI

gradually losing their fear of lech:
nology and embracing personal computers.

hlo own car. ro cNiciltn, br lun • white puppies, to g_ood home,
motblf pan black Terrier. Cal l
blandollljo. 3114-1-.

Open Until Lata January. I Am
Currently SliM Doing Buainesa On
Third Ancl Pine Call For Chrilt· · German Shpaherd, Haa Shota,
mal, Perm Special, JoAnna To Good Home Only I 81.t ·448~2W .
Fillinger, 814--114~
ChHDntl Ol&gt;lo Wiveo f'o t-800· 8 Puppiu To Good Homta :
285-9077 Ell. 4585 $2.99 /Min, Mother Lab, Father Traveling

1e+ s.r.-u 810-645-8434.

Cros~r~ · Puzzle Answer on Page B-5

Cheaterhilf In -Morgan County, and the Ohio
Department of Traneportetlon are repairing
damage to the bttnk caused by the flooding of
March, 1997.

Membership is growing quickly at
computer club_ ~n retirement commun'ity

Attention: JoAnne'• Kul I l&lt;url

lifted by the moss and leaks down the
house. In the summer, I scraped off
_ all .the moss and glued the loose
edges of the shingles down with roof.
ing cement. However, came winter
rhc moss quickly grew back and the
roof is leaking again. Is there any way
to keep th1s moss from reforming. If
1 have the house re-roofed, will the
problem recur?
·
A: If the moss takes the fonn of a
thin layer ·on the shingles, you can
remove it by wetting down the shingles with a copper sulfate solution
(one-quanertoone-halfounceper 10
gallons of watet) or a zinc chloride
solution (10 percent zinc chloride and
90 P,Crcenl water). Copper sulfate has
a long-tenn residual effect and will
kill future moss as it fonns. This
chemical ~an damage shrubbery and .
corrode metal. To avoid problems, be
· careful with rhe overflow and make
sure gutters and downspouts are
clean and clear before you stan.

to Buy

Tht Hatlon'a Largest Priwtetr
OWned Building Ualorial ~llllief
Is Soeklng An Energetic, c a -

-·

!

•• Sand small scratChes with the ; l
grain, using 600-grit wet-or-dry sand- • 1
paper and mineral oil. For a satin fin- · '
ish, rub with 0000 steel woollubn· ~
cated with oil soap. If there is streak· i
ing, add a lillie pumice. For higher I
shine, use wax and then buff.
.~

Help WlntiCI

IIAHAOIEAliiAINEES

otfor A Comblnadon 01 ua,_
mon1, Soloo. And Phrtlcll ActM·
Cllfllll(tlt Hou\IOhold Or Eollteal
oy.
M i l - t lo Ropld AI We
To Human Resource
Aroy T1pe Of Furnituhl, Appllanc- Ale One Of Tho Nalion'o Ftlo- ACCESS
Dovolopmoni Ia kcopong Appli·
oo, Anlique'o, Ell:. Aloo ApPfOioal Growine
Companlea And We cations For The FoUowing Poli·
-i814-3le-2720.
.
Proma• Fram Wllhin. Opportunl- lion:
tlea Are Both Local And NationAbooluto Top Dolfi!: All U.S. Sil ·
Facltltlea
Coordlna·
Ytr And Gold Coins , Pr-Oolaers,
tor: AppUcan11 Mutt Ha't'l An
Olamondo, Anllque JfWOiry, Gold
s..rung Componaalion $23,000 . UndergraduaiO lloQrH In l*lated .
Ringa, Prt· 1t3CJ U.S. Currency,
$211,000 Hooplllilzalion
Field. P'tvlout E:xptrltnc,e In
Sllfllna, E1e. Acquisitions Jewelry
•
Ute
Insurance
Facllllloa Planning, Slalo And
· M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second
Otntal' Prolii .S hlrng' &lt;01K
Federal Regulation Pertaining To
Avenua. GalliJ&gt;o11.114~2842.
Tlllnlng Pmgrarn
Safety, tcnowled_ge Of OSHA
Rules And Regulations . And
Antiques, tap prlc.t paid, Riverine Antique•, Pomeroy, Ohio, II You Are A High SChool Gradu- Ualntained Yain11nanee IUp
Run Moore O'fl'ner, 814-902- aiO (Son Col• Prelorrod) And l(,oop Ot Facilou. Boainnino Raoo
Hawo AFolijw v.lming A~lldo
Of Pay II $14.00 /Hr.
25211.

.• If you spill fingernail polish on
a surface, don't uy to wipe it up. The
solvents in it sof!en mos~ furniture
finishes. If you ,w1pe, you II take off.
the finish. Let the spilled p&lt;&gt;lish dry:•
completely, then gently scrape it
with an old plastic credit card or sim· •
ilar tool. If the finish underneath has .
dull~, use paste wax and ultrafinc
0000 steel wool to bring back the :
shine.
.: 1

Homes: Questions and answers ·
n~t su.rc

Rick Peareon Auction Company,
full tii'M IUCIIOnHr, CO"'PIIll
auctfon
nrvict. Llctnatd
na.Ohlo &amp; Wilt Vir\1&gt; 1nta. 304·
773-5715 Or 304-77.H+47.

t

I

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Futures
Q: Our automatic drip coffee
maker is feeling its age and taking
longer and longer to brew our mo~n­
ing coffee. l'v~ heard . of several
remedies to rev1ve an allmg coffee
maker, such as running vinegar
throush it Does this really work?
A: Many an automatic drip coffee
maker has been discarded when its
water flow slowed to a trickle from
calcium and mineral deposits (lime
scale;) in its plumbing. Running vinegar through the machine may help,
but vincsar stinks, works slowly and
is not effective on a wide combination of lime and minerals.
Consider regularly using coffee
maker cleaner lo remove scale. We
tried Whink coffee maker cleaner and
found it effective. It contains two
scale-fighters: sulfamic acid and
hydroxy acetic acid. It seems that the
combination of these ingredients acts
synergistically. though scientists are

110

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areaa I Shlrllf

SUNDAY PUZZLER

separate sl10wer, plus a private

110

Wldomeyor·o AucUon Stf•lco, l :":::ol'0"="':.:304-1::.::.;75-:.1;.:ot:IA:::.._ __
.GIIIpollo. 011io014-37$-27Z).
MW.al

•'

the srune. (Don't use alcohol on shellac; alcohol dissolves shellac. If
you're not sun: of what the finish is,
test the alcohol in a hidden area ftrSI).

110

80

Unveils plaque

l

••

Damaged furniture finish can be restored

The House of the Week

II

••

....... tEu--JI,mtlad • Page D3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea•nt, WV

Best Christmas Sale!!
Get special prices on
• Gibson guilars &amp; Gibson
Wear
• Band instruments 25% off
• Crate, Peavy, Bently, Alverez
packages ready for Christmas
Brunicardi Music ln_c .
Downtown Gallipolis
446-0687

· Ariel Theatre presents
"A Christmas Carol"
December 12 &amp; 13 8:00pm
December 14 3:00 pm
''Tickets $5.00 at Door"
Creative Memories Christmas
Open House
Grace Episcopal Church
326 Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio
Friday, December 12, 1997
3:00 . 9:00

The Art School
presents

Holiday Bells
Are R.inging
December
at

13,·1997

7;00 p.m.
at the

University of
Rio Grande
Call (614) 441-1988
for Ticket Information

Pels Picture with Santa
Dec. 13th 12:00 til 3:00
Quality Farm &amp; Fleet
Sponsored by Gallia County
Animal Welfare League.

THE CANDLE
COMPANY
Weekend Holiday Salel
Buy 1 crock @ regular
price
Buy 2nd crock 50% off!
4 oz. Jar Candles 4/$12!
FREE Votive wilh
purchase!
Register to WIN Candles ...
Daily Drawing 'til Christmas!
Open Sunday 1·5
THE CANDLE COMPANY
"we make scents"
1591 SR 160, Gallipolis
C rafters interested in
booths at new Craft .&amp;
Antique Mini Mall North
of New Walmart

Empire Furniture &amp; ·
Appliance
842 Second Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio
Holiday Hours
Monday lhru Friday 8 ~m Iii 8 pm
Saturday 8 am til 6 pm
Sunday 12 til 5 pm
Free financing,
Free delivery· Dec. 24

For Information
About
THE SERENITY ..
HOUSE ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
PARTY
Call 446-6752.
GRAHAM'S
UPHOLSTERY

t

•

Why buy new furniture
when we can make y~ur
furniture as good as new.
We offer a large selection •
of sample fabrics, new
foam and quality
craftmanship. Call 446·
'·
34'38 for a free estimate.
2l05 Graham School Rd.
Gallipolis, Oh 45631
Now accepting Visa &amp;
Mastercard .

108 Uberty Street
Kanauga, Ohio
Phone 446·9051
7:30·10:30 pm
Ho8-Down, Two-Step, Clogging
2nd Sat of the month· Adams
County Pickers
3rd Sat. of the month·
Country Grass
41h Sat. of the monthLiberty Mountaineers
BINGO
Wed. &amp;Thurs. 7:00.10:00 pm
Country Une Dance lesson's
every Friday' Night at 7:00 pm
wLh
&amp; Debbie Moore.
THE CHESHIRE CAT
ANTIQUE SHOP
Route 7 Cheshire, Ohio
Cherry drop leaf dining table with
4 lyre back cha,irs, old brass bed,
cherry windsor rocker, cherry
sewing rocker, tiger oak dresser,
oak flatwall cupboard.

OPEN HOUSE
Monday, December 81h
' '
410 8
Merle Norman Cosmetics
Head/Quarters by
Juanita
Have fun, door prizes, comp.
refreshments
1\l% discount on several
items. Great Christmas Gifts.
313 Third Ave. Gallipolis

446-2342 or 992-2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

1 'fT., ., a good home
""" .......1802.

J

•

I '

,

�Page D4 •, ,• ; . ' - " ,
110

Help Wlntld

; 110

SUnday, December 7, 1917 .

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt • Galllpolla, OH • Point P11111nt, WY

Hwel

Help Wllltld

I

180

I ;, 1 I

I,'.

11

420 Mobile Homes

----~----.
~~--~~~~-~~~~
DRIVERS · OIO"o .•• llakt Your Rotaii-CIIandiHrl N-.. In FurriMO - · · rotnlah and ,_ 1Bull..., A SUCCOH In HI OTR

Or Regional Ruoa Available.
Tnmo l Soloa. 111.5 CPII, FrH
Baaa Plato, P01mlll &amp; So•Uito.
A..tgned Driver Wanat•' To
Allure Profitability. Good Horne

Tlmo. Roopoct. Call Dave 800m-0565..

llrivlri-AIIIntion: SOiol I bMd/Wit Telm fld»ed I

Vlnllri¥orll

NEW F!Y PKG-HsN; 1 tMn
Good
P"'/. homo limo I
booafits ...... W/110% no tou&lt;:h
ITeight,auiPJdequip.)IQ\ICM
lllce honw, lui-lime rider prog.,
direct dopOeil, ,.,..,.. dapaiCII,
sateiM• &amp; ITlleh mote. COL (A)

•tannv

wiHazM&amp;l r~ Coil ¥
1-1100-ZI0-2421
CAROINAL FREIGHT

Also c;onttacting OIO'al

EOE 11.4'

Experienced Hair Ort11er, 114·
..,.,_1880, t114--25e-6336.

COUIITII'f 110111
GlltMliiD.
310 HciiMI tor Slit
ICXII IGWN.OMIO.
Yout AIM. Full &amp; ,.,_,,..... 1'1111· van- Rtflnlohlng SIIOP, Larry
-WOIUIWCMIDIliono A,.itltblo. Plonlgram I Ro· ~"' 11 ._-~•11.
180S 441121 with 2 nr garage, t IIIIH F""" ProciO'II... 3,400
FI&gt;ronUI f4ll( Pll' .. 110K FT No 11ts
aat Eaparlofw:o Holplul. Top l'oy, •••i!llo
on r level acttl, .t mu.. Sq. Fl Living Araa, 2 Story, 3
Coli Now 1·800·832-11755, e... G-gea Portalllo Sawmill, don, ~ Accounll Pnatidld S.V- North ot PPHS. tlt,ooo. 804· ledmma. 2 112 8alhl. Firilhld
a.. -.... Fn.Mce, UU Nw, 4
497.
haul JOUf
tt» .,. min jutt cal ... ,_, S10r01. ...lifO - .. 175-7185.
man1 Secured l O.lcldy RoVnra Old •175,000, 114-a.:l31)4.175-105 .
Salol Engi-r: So. Ol!lo HVAC
:1124, Or 41U42122.
-•m4t41 ...
Co~ Hat An Opening For A Haa COL-8 Orivera Llctnll,
Galllpoll4· lour bedroom ranch,
Rnldontitll &amp; Commorcial HVAC Looldng For Ful~ Time Wortc. EaINOIICII
Saloa Enginoor. Condldoto Hoods porloncod, Call Colloct. For Bill,
... .., · ""' land. .,._.
........
OHIO VALLEY PUIII.ISHING CO. 311r home, 1 1010 lot, localld In MO.ooa.
&amp;14-112-1084
To Have A BA Otgrtt In Ut- 814-4n-llMSO.
recommend• th8t rou ,do bull· GaiNpolit flf'fY ICfOII from &amp;4 - . ......,52!5ogMt
chanl&lt;ol Engineer 0&lt; A Minjmum
Of 5 YNrt Experience In HVAC Hoult tleanlng lti"'ICII. 304· ,..., whh people ,ou ~~;now, end Lumber. Price tHuced, nice.
NOT ., lind monor Utroupllltlt
Price roducld on cuotom buill
Saloa And Duct Doaign. we Offot flfl2-2710-or - - mall until you have inftttiglllld ::104-&amp;7r.!D10 -lf&gt;m.
brick I vtnyt Ronclt, 1yr old, apEacollont l'oy, Hoalltl Insurance,
JWGL aeoo ~. 11.. 3.22ocroo mil,
Paid Vacation, "01K Plus Fring· Hoo••••pl~g.»4-185-3$1.
IUV
HOIIII
AI
LOW
l
l
"'~
11. II You Are LooklnQ For An
''·.:r
t4,oatt 1 ·5 lldnn., Locol CltH't. ' In poved oddilion, cloubio COKEIP£PBI II
Eaclting Challenge ~lh A Saouro
Bank Ropo'l Call . 1·800·522· w/storaga, 4bedrooms, 2 11
Excellent Locations 11.200 +
2botho. LR, DR, K, UR, ounraom,
Future, Send Resume Ta: Sales
Wkly Pllutntial .100% Fin Avail, 2730, X11QO.
~;ustom kitchen, lilt, HW, berbef,
Englnoar P 0 Bo• 806 Jocks on, Robyn'• Homo Cleaning -ly, Must
Have A-1 Credit, 1-1007 walk-In clol~ll. CA, LP gu,
OH •5640.
Bi-WNktv, E•cellent Referencet 817-8430
Elllt 553A
Andtraon winctowt. hickory trim,
Call Anwtlme, 814-•0B-2315, If
GOVT FORECLOSED Homoo covorld porch, uklng •175,000.
Soclll Wonter
No An- LeavellFREE
From
l'onnloo
On
•1
Delinquent
Cl&lt;llllil)l. Commiarw&lt; .. !flO KlyS
::104-&amp;75-6314.
TaJI, Repo'1, REO" a. Your Area.·
b Our Su«oaiMonogomont
Will &lt;:INn attict, balti"Mntl, gaCIRAN!St
Toll Frto ill 100·218-0000 Ell. Thrtt bedroom houae In Syra·
raQtl, cild building, etc. Haul
1M opporturity alrftilable reCollego. Scholatohipl.
H-21114 For CU"'"tliltlno•
cu11, buemtnt, aaragt. new
quiring a BSW degree flDm an
away I dlspoae of refuge. 304·

............. ......,....._0hlo

c-

accrwdiled prOQram ot SOCial
He lp wanted at comoenlenct work. Must haw currentlicinll
store. Send resume and refarenc:- ID practice IOCial work in West
81 clo The Dail)l a.enlinel, P.O.
~~ria and e!lpEirience in madiBox 729-56; Pomeroy, Ohio col ....,,_.., gorontologt Cl
45769.
heallh care fleili!y is r&amp;qUI red.
Tuition reimbursemen~ healta.
Need 6 Laches To 5ell Avon Call
dental, ...... httring; ~le &amp;
61-4·446-3358.
~1(K) with omployer contribu·
tion. Please c:on!Bct (304) 875OAK Hll.L COIIIIUNTY
3005or Mhe:
MEDICAL CENTER
Point PINIInt NurWng &amp; ·
AM\abllltltlon Center
Full-Time Respiratory Tharapsit
Rt1 , Box 3211
Position Available At Oak Hill
111. Pltaaant, WV 25550. A QCommunity Medical Center. 8:00
INJrlr-Gonnlt Fotlllty EOE.
A.M. To 8:00 P.M., Wilh Var~ing
Hours . Responsibilities Include .
r,.n.:riptlonhll
All Modalities Of R&amp;spiratary Ca...
And Pe rfr ominu EKGs, ABGs, Jackson General Hospital, Rip·
And PFTs. The Qualified Can- ley, WV has a lull·time opening
didate Must Have A Uinimum Of lor evening shift. Previous me&lt;li·
CRTT With Current CPR Certifa- cal transcription experience pre·
tion. lnlerested Persons Should !erred. To apply send resume to
Send Resume To: Oak Hill Com- Human Resource Director, PO
munity Medical Center, Attention: Box 720, Ripley, WV 25271.
Brerlda McKenzie, 350 Charlotte EOE.
AWI)Jt, OM Hill, OH -45656.
Wanted: Per•on Ttlat Can Do
Methanical &amp; Body Wor.k On
EOE
Auto's, 614--HS-8172, 614-256Oak Hill, Ohio Based Trucking 8251.
'
Company Is SE!Ming ElJ)tfienced
180
Wanted
To Do
OTR Se-mi-Tractor !frailer Drivers. Ellcellent Pay &amp; Insurance Care Fo' Eldtrly In There Home
Pactcaoe. ca11 &amp;14-682-66 t 3.
live In Oay1 Or Nights,· ~~Years
Experienced, ExcellenJ RelerencOccupatio nil Th01apll1
ea, Call Collect For Becky, 614·
Jackson General Hoapllal, RiP·
ley, WV has an opening tor 1
contract Occupational Thtrapfsta Ctrtltitd child care, Bailey Run
to perform home Htallh Yilita Ad., ltmilad spacing, 614-992·
and consultations and hrapy tor 3509.
hotpital swing bed patienta.
Graduate of an accredited pro- McCoy's Construclion, Commergram in Oc~;uparional Therapy. cial &amp; Re&amp;idenliai , Free EsliSend resume to Human Ra~aurc- malel, 814-4 46-1923, 614-24581, PO Box 720, Ripley, WV
Stl94

•n-- .

25271. EOE.

-

lor

Wilt haul junk or trash

May. 1351

plclwp lood. 304-175-5035.

210

HARTS IIASONARY • Block,

Business
Opportunity

brick &amp; itone work. 30 yean ••peri•nce. rea10nable rates. 304-

8G5-35g1 after 1:00pm, no job to
srnollor to BIG. WV-0212041

e••··········
VICKI. KEN

Are Their Own Roues, Work On
TheW Owl'! Compula' AI Home
Lesa Than 1S Hra!Wk,

Livingtton's ba.. menl wattt·
proofing , all buement repa111
done. fftt tltlm&amp;ltl, lilttime
guarantea. 10yra on job experi·
enca. ~15-2145.

lla~~ Over
$7,!00 PER .MONTH

Procalling Dental &amp; I!Odical
lnour1rlCt Cllimo. No Sajling.

Rog--

Jackaon General Hoapital, Ripley, WV. has opening br full-lime
Step-down, Crilical cart~ an ER
RNs. Current WV State licanu
&amp; previous relevant experience
required. Reply 10 HR Director,
Jackson General Ho1pilal, PO

•••••••••••••

Card of Thankl
The Gamet
Smeltzer family
would like to thank
the following:
Our many friends
for the cards and
expnssion of love
shown toward the ·
family.
Dr. Sholtis, Dr.
Subbiah and 4 East
for the care and
compassion shown
toward Gamet.
Holzer Home
Health for their fine
care and concern for
her.
"
Card of Thankl
: The family of Charles
Wise, 340 Page Street,
Middleport would like
to thank everyone that
helped in any way
during his death.
· We especially would
like to thank Bruce
fisher
and
his
associates for all their
help and compassion in
such a sorrowful time.
Also the emergency
squad for their help and
patience.
· Thank you Ralph
Butcher for presiding
over the funeral and
special thanlcs to
Tammy Taylor for the
~~eautif~l song.
,
To all the people who
brought food and sent
flowers, we thank you
very much. everything
was greatly appreciated.
May God Bless Every
One of you.

Wife Geneva Wise &amp;
children.

- , Wtchon .....

uilhy room.
bulldno; with
cellar, one car garage. Localed
on•S., Alit - . 8th 11ou• on
loll. Raduold 115,000 firm, call
814-314-21lt7 ot814-14!1-2831.

Announcements

RUTLAND ·
AMERICAN LEGION
SLUG MATCH
SAT., DEC. 6
STARTS 7:00 P.M.
BEACH GROVE RD.
GUN SHOOT SUN.,
DEC. 7, 1P.M.
Announcements

110

6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST
$600.00
$50,00 OIMOH
PEl lAIII

lEECH GROVE
ROAD

t;telp Wanted

STATE TESTED NURSING
ASSISTANTS
The Arbors at Gallipolis is seeking carin~ professional
indlviduals to work as Nursing Alalstantl. We offer the
following benellts and more:
•
-Shift diffeJ"fntial and flexible schedules.
• Excellent health beneflts including dental,
viskm and prescription card.
- Paid holidays and vacation.
- Paid orientation.
- 'Free uniforms.
Please apply in person.

,Ot.

Saturday, December 13, 1997 10:00 a.m.
Located st 50 Cha~es Street, Crown City, Ohio. To
settle th~ estate of Margaret J. Hardesty. Probate
Case Number 971 063 tile following will be sold:
Gibson refrigerator, HolpOint range, maple dining
table w/6 chairs, glass cupboard, . oak china
cabinet. woOden rooking chair, wall mirror, living
room suite, coffee end end tables, Seth lhoflllll
clock, RCA color TV•. solid State radio, oak hail
tree, 2 beds, dresBer, chest of drawens, sevBral
pieces ot collectible glassware such aa: Cranberry
jar, pressed glass, glass baskets, Fenton, llllmble
and basket, carnival Avon bottles, cobalt blue,
brass bell, brass kBttle (5 gallon), flat iron, Roget:S .
Silver set, ~and painted p~cher, thimble, kBrosenB
lamps, approx. 20 quilts Including "Diamond:,
Wedding ring:, "Star", and others, antiquB
cuspidor, wardrobe, cedar chest, linens, antiquB
frog, many many kllehen utensils and dlshBs,
depression syrup pitcher, butter mold, pressure
cooker, cast iron skillets, cream &amp; sugar, straight
razor, pictures, clocks, ' RCA Victor radio (works), .
figurines, glider, wringer washing machine, small
iron kettle wtstand, side saddle; ker.osene heater,
one lot of hand tools and other miscellaneous
nems. Antique and collectible Items too many to
mention.
Terms: Cash
larry Shong, Executor

AIIOI

1?0 Pinoc,..t Orivo
Qd~polis. OH 4563t

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:179-2720

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M•rlln Weclom-ver, Ao.octloo-•~
CON810NMBNT AUCT10N .VIIIII'V'
8ATUftDAV AT T P.M.
.

htll. underpinning &amp; block,
t"¥dY 10 move. $2,500 OBO, oiill
-far 1Nc11.304-e7S.2e18.

Servle&lt;s, Inc., a )CAHO non profit agency providing
behavio.-.1 health services in Southeastern Ohio, has the
following openings:
Full or n Time Cliqidao netded in Hocking Counry
Outpalient Clinic. Primary focus is chemical dependency
recovery. Counselor Trainee,
preferred. Some evening
hours required.SkiU areas include assessmem, individual,
*""'P work and treaunem infonnation.
PI Q!pld•n v~ncy available at Alhens County Outpatient
Clinic to work with subsun(e abusinpnW!y iU patlcn!S In
the Parrlal Hospitalization Program. Paniclpation in
treatment teams; delivtry of eduationalitreaunent modules
Hours: M 9-S: T 12-5; W IO.S; Th 12·5. Counselor 'll:aJn(e,
LSW with CD knowledge base preC.md.
Please respond with len&amp;ir of interest, resume and three
professional references to H1liiWI llaoun:es Maaaaer,
Healtb llecom'y Stmces, lac, 100 Ho•pltal DriYe,
Athens, Ohio 45701. WE

eeoc

~eo----------'

5858.

1t70 12XS5 london trail•r. two
btdfoom, StDYI, refrigerator, eltc-to¥ &amp; goa wrre 11ay' $3,000, 81&lt;1-

7&gt;42·2etl0.

....;:;~~~P~u~b~ll~c~S;I~II~IIICI~;:Au;:ctl;;o;n~;::;:;;:;~----,

~-3409.

ESTATE AUCTION

10flfl Clayton 14a70 3br, 1 bath,
htat pump, exc. cond. 304--875-

SATURDAY., DECEMBER 13, 1997 10:00 A.M.
Located at 2618 Uncoln Avenue In Point Plea. .nt, wv
WE WILL BE SELUNG THE ESTATE OF GOLDIE LOVE.

1f8• Brandywine llobllo Homo,
HHt Pump I Central Air, Largo
F,ront Dtck, Monthly Payment

304-755-7191.

Dtck, 818,000, Call Alter 5 P.M.

,,

8(~3853.

, 1NIDou-Ropo

•NIMH' Uvtd in, owner finandng

• avallablt. 30&lt;1-755-56tle.

Public Viewing· Friday, 10 am • 2 pm
For Private Viewing- Call n3-5'785 ·•

Blautiful 19a5 Norris Covington
1{aBO 2br, 2 bath, very good
cond. Reduced to $23.~00. Fl·
Nl.nclng ovallablo with low down

· Beautiful 5 room house
completely remodeled kitchen and dining room
combination, living room, 2
bath, enclosed porch, basement, plus garage, new
heat pump and electric furnace, gas available, last 2-4 yeara- new roof, guttets, doors, new
carpet, - on two 50' rn/1 x13D' rn/1 ft. lola.

!MfrmtnL CaM Krlttl al 1-800-78781183.

FURNITURE; OUiatandlng 9 pc. French Provenclal dining room sW&amp;- table, 6 chairs, and
matching 2 pc. hutch; beautllul 5 pc. French Provenc:ial bedroom suite; beautiful wrap ar011nd
sola, roclter, Aldlner, 3 pc. brass and glan CQIIee table"and end table !181, 311er table, 3 pc.
a.-. Anne CQIIee table end end table !181, Sylvania 19" color TV with remote, L-shape
executive dell&lt; and chair, chests, dressers, S8Y8ral portallla TV'e, M icrowave oven, Hot Point
washer and dryer, S pc. wrought iron patio 181, 4 pc. wrought Iron sola end chair set. and

891·1777.

NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3

E-ZFirwtd~

2orsw ....

-~Par llonlh

Fiftl Time Buyera E-Z Financing

2 Or 3 Bedrooms, Around S200J
Mo., 1·1100-251-5070.

GLASSWARE: 8 ~ setting ol fine china l1yfe House PompadOur penam, 8 place setting ·
milk glasS dinnti!Wtlre, Haviland Chlna. Desert Rose cool&lt;ware by Francilcart, Hal Jtiwtl ,
Teapot, candlewick gobtela, Pink Depmalon- plates, bowls, and cookie jar; large setect1on o1
milk glaaa, Redwlng bowl, Bradford cat COllectible plates, Fenton, COllection o1 birds,
Comingware, hen on nast, punch bo!M, : a : l e r bud vue, Weier 3 footed bowl, Weller
· basket, cherub lampe, large figurine tam,.,
more. .
.
MISCELLANEOUS: Antique pielure framel, 8
atltlng William Rodgers t 847 (ExMrnally
Yours pattern) silverware, flatware, McGull)r 4th Grade Reader, Ray's -Arlthmellc bool&lt;t, large
gltted mirror, baskets, beauUful linens, large amount of costume jewelry, large amount ol
towata end blankets, dati housa,. Dirt Devil Sti&amp;8per, Kenmore caniater sweeper, sewing
mlscettanaous, goapel tapes, small kitchen applances.large room 8lze hooked rug, cotlectiO(I
of metal pencil sharpeners, boxes ol material, tatephotle&amp;, fane, Chriolmas decoratione,
ladder, tawnmower·llke new, end more. .
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: AN EXTRA CLEAN ANO GOOD OUAUTY AUC'TION. DRESS FOR
THE WEATHER· AUCnON IS OUTSIDE. BRING A CHAIRI

~air, free Min, 14X70 3 bed·
•110m, ,1,055/down, $188/mo.
CoN 1-IIOCHI81-en7.
fl'9e alr, frH tkirt, HlliiO 3 or 4
btdroom S1,350Jdown, $288/ma.

C4~ l-eDO-e91-tn7.

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Auctlon·Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
Mason, W.VA.

..

614-448·4110.

HAYES

Heney E. Cleland Jr ..992-2259

11ove in, assume loan, no pay.
ment till February 19g8. 1-304·

722· 71 .a Of 304-722-7140.

. Us&lt;td &amp; Rtpo Sale
As little As $500 Oown .
And $150 Par Month
Free Oelivlfy

1·800-251·5070

Westwood Home Show Used &amp;

Repo Solo AI Lllde AI $500.00
Down And $150/Mo., Free Deltv·
ery, 1-1100·251·5070.
350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Lake &amp; Aaccoon CrMk.
Now Going To Sell
Campt.le &amp; Camper. Buy 11 Now Broker owned.
And Be Prepared For Spring
"1998. Sot.II Now. Phone Today

Malgl Co.:

1731

--Owned

PHONE 446-9539
WIWS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 446 9539

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

NW Meigs 5 Acres

REAL ESTATE

992-2259
NEW USTING· Syracuae- THIS 1 t/2 Story home is
located on a corner lot of 175x100. It has 3 bedrooms, 1
beth, LA. OR, kitchen w/oak cab!neta &amp; appliances. Heat
pump &amp; electric furnace, air, new akSing, windows, roof,
wiring, plumbing. Interior is In process of re-modelingowner will finish. ASKING $47,500

NEW LISTING· New Lima
liwel with 3 bed1ooms, bath, LR, eat-in kit.
,
fam rm, ullllty rm, panlry. New vinyl siding. New electric
fifrnace and air. 1.86 acres m/1. NEW 3 car garage with
ooncrate lloor plus t car garage in basement. NOT in high
'!ater. ONLY $69,500
'

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Friday, December 12, 1997 8:30 pm
Lemley's Auction Barn

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MIDDLEPORT·· Immediate Poss8881on. Reilly ·
cute, well maintained homa, 2-4 bedrooms. •
hardwood floors, now paint. Level tol, Iron! '
POICh, PM basement. Gotta see thla one II l
ASKING m.aoo
. ·

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Thla One ta Gorgooualt Located on tho
corner of SR '7 and·Locust Grove Road. Qloso
Tuppers Plains. Approx. 1 Acre with a 1
atory brick ranch home. In ll~e new condhlon. 3
badrooms, 2 betha, lilaplace, tully carpeted
abundance of closet ~pace . H.P/C.A. Futi
basement with office and recraatlon "room. A
batter living peflo room, 2 car garage. Paved
·
Much, Mueh, MOttl! You must ' "
this home. Meko Your Appointment Todttyll

high boy, 35-40 pieces of green depression
glass, blue &amp;white swirl granite plus several
other

pieces,

large

amount

of

kitchen

collectibles, adve_rtising tins and boxes, milk
stoneware, Iron beds, oak bed, wash
slone jars, paper mache Santa Claus,
selection

of

country

carpenters boxes, old tools ... a
much mor!l not listed!

2
with

antiques,

full

sale

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Happy Holidays from us at the Auction Bami

POMEROY- Rocksprings Ad.· 2 story home with 4 BR, 3
tiaths, LR, .OR, kit w/range, ref, OW, fam rm, study, den,
bsmt, heat pump &amp; air. Unvented fireplace. Pool table,
IQCated on 2 acres m/1. Lis1ing realtor must be present to
show. Musl have 24 hrs notice. Price $140,000
SYRACUSE· Very nice brick homo wllh 125 ft . ol river
lrontago. Tltla baauliful brick hOme has 3 BR, 2 batha, LA,
OR, large family ""· patio, and nice front porch. Four Iota
total1.4 acres rn/1. Price reduced to only $89,500.
TUPPERS PLAINS· Great location! Just off SR "7. Tltis
pjc!uresque eehing offers a stocked pond on 8 acres rn/1.
Large living rm. w/fireplaca. largo family rm. w/fireplace. 2
BR, beth, attached garage, addt'l bldg. FREE GAS. Price
reduced to $85,000. Talk to ua about this onel
RACINE' 3 fireplaces &amp; beautiful woodwork. Downstairs in
LR, Or, Kh, utility rm, 2 SA and 2 full baths. Upstairs you'll
find 3 BR &amp; 1 bath. Full basement. Oulbuildlng. Price
reduced to only $54,000.

SYRACUSE· Nice corner lot, 3 bad1ooma. living room.
beth, basement. Vinyl siding. Make an offerwill consider! ASKING 23,000

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VISIT US ON THE INTERNETII
hHp://WWW.qulkpage.CCinllc/cle!and

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Happy Holidays! Helpl Wantedl

...._-----.------J l....--:!f.We2,!N~eed~~~

2:!1i:.S~!,__

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POMEROY- Cozy hOme on 9 acres rn/1. Located on US 33
lust outside corpo1alion lltnlts. It offers 2 BR, LR, aat·ln
kitchen, bath. Alao a trailer lot &amp; addt'l storage bldg. In the
mid 40'1.
POMEROY· This anractlve 2 story 3 BA home with
approx. 1400 sq. ft. on a more than a fourth an acre lot.
Located on Llturel St. Owner says sell. Call Ua. $25,000

~C§Jiok

Main Office • 388-11826
958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

PRIME LOCATION
414 Third Ave. Gallipolis
Beautiful two story Colonial has 3 BR, 2 1/2 bath,
LR &amp; FR. Formal dining room with hardwood
floors, oak doors &amp; trim . Fireplace, 1 1/2 ear
garage. Eligible lor tax abatement ~179,500
1-304-273·2940

Branch Office
23 Locust St.
Gallipolis, Oh1o 45631

12887 PICTURESQUE HOME ON A HILL
10.44 Acres m/1 approx. 3.900 sq. ft. vinyl &amp; slone
exterior, formal entry. 4 BR's, 3 baths, finished 1ec.
area In bsmt, WM/FP in game room &amp; den atnum rm,
oak cabinals &amp; trim in kit. 13 total rms, 2 car garage .
Professionally landscaped . Qual &gt;ly and Luxury
through-out. Appt. only Virginia L. Smith 388-8826.

Remodeled Whllf'e 11 Counls 1

l-800-585-7101 or 446-7101 ~

Rtad~

For Y()u To Move tntou

Very ntce vinyl Sided ranch With 3

bedrooms. 2 baths, large l111ing
room, beautiful oak kitChen,
dining room and par11al basement
located on approx. 79 acres of
seclusion on a blacktop road .
Hard to lind at a price of anti

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
446-4618
Judy ~Win., ..:, .......... .,..,.,., .... 441·0262
J. Memll Caner..........., .............379-2184
Tammie DeWih .........................245-0022

$135,000, plus additional 1 acre

lot for $5,900. If you 're look1ng for
an affordable home w1th acreage
that does not need work, 11'1en you
better hurry and call on this one!!

NEW USnNGI 517 FOURTH
AVENUE. ..You will find this
charming home that offers
You gat 31 acres
toads of character. Living more or less wllh this one. 3
room, dining room, 4 bedrooma, 2 baths, laundry
bedrooms, 2 belhs, lo1s of room, living room, dining
closets, wine cellar In area &amp; kitchen. Front &amp; rear
b'senient, privacy fence, decks. Private, excellent
:._.
close to schools. Home has ·
had Iota of remodeling .
·
Owners accepting offers! Call
II --:---~·---·...._
us today for your private tourl
-.,; ~.....,
1971
AFFORDABLE!
You
bed ... $30,000. Cozy one
atory homo that is jus a few
minutes of town. Nice
with attached car1~~1

DON'T THIIDW MONEY
AWAY IN RENT! When you
could spend your money
$37,500.001 Georges Creek
Road- 3 bedroom hOme that
has easy to maintain lawn and
large d~tached garaga. 1925
LOTI Ready for a mobile
home! Approx. t .acre.
complete with water &amp; electric.
Paved Aaod. Cheshire Twp.
11180

NEWiJ~~~
&amp;
A

~ -"

.. ,., nice living apocel W«h the

TOWN,
Raised
consisting

living room,
room,
kitchen, basement with
garage, over 1 acre lawn.
And to help make thos.e
mortgage payments is the
rental income from this
14'x56' mobile home. Make

Q~~~':~

an appointment lo see this

home situated at 1325 SA
588.1967

~ included, theta is 4,140
sq. ft.t 4 bedrooms, tarve living
room, very nice lcltehen, formal
dining room, large tamrty roomtrec.
room in basement. Second kitchen
in basement for' entertaining and
much, much more . Outside
futures include large deck with
gazebo, brick pat~ with watertall
and
a
large
separate
garage/workshop, in addition to a 2
car attached garage. Situate-d on
2.4 acres in Springfield Twp. 1 ,0,,derful
$217,00012011
'"

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Who1'a Maa1

ONE OF THE BEST VIEW
OF ~AWA COUNTY from
this lovely spaciOus newer
home. 2 story with full
basement 5·6 bedrooms.
AFFORDABLE! $44,900 city living room, kitchen &amp; lots
schools, raised ranch with 4 mate app1ox. 3.000 sq. ft. of
bedrooms. 2 baths, garage, living space plus full
approx. 1.6 acre lot, could basement, large spacious
purchase with 3 additional rooms. 40' x 44' metal
acres. 1944
building , pond, fencing and
app1ox. 1B acres m~ . Very
LOOKING FOR SOME NICE well constructed . Want
PASTURE LAND? Over 71 space t~en tat us show lhe
acres with lots of road home to you. 1947
frontage on two roads.
county water -available. 11
ACRES
approx.
Exceptional tract of land. comple1e wllh water lap.
C011ld be divided easy into Wooded, cleared off site for
smaller tracts, pond, fencing mobile home or house. Call
&amp; mineral lights Included. today Cheshire Twp.1951

1942

MEIGS COUNTY
Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
MIGHT AS WELL CALL
THIS ONE NEWI Well
almosll 1996 Oelcwood
home set up on a level lot.
Includes 3 nice sized
bedrooms, 2 full baths, den
with flraplace, family room,
equipped kitchen. Very
convenient • location
to
shopping, atc... SSO'a 11186

A LOI Of HOYle Hetti We're
lalkln' over 4,000 equare teet of

1

LOOKING
FOR
A
PRODUCTIVE FARM?
Many acres.of level tillable
land, lots of good pasture,
nice farm pond &amp; some
developed sprinq · plus
county water. A SIZeable
amount of Umber. Several
pieces of faim equipment
including 2 traC1ors, 1 just
like new. Some 20 head of
cattle. II
want a nice
farm ::.~NJ~ER
onel U'
WITH FINANt;INI:il

$45,000 One floor
home that has 3
beclro•oms,, living room &amp;
room combination.
kitchen, 1 car attached
garage, flat city lot. 1962
CHEERFULLY · COZVI Put
down rots In this euy to love
3 bedroom ranch. KHchon &amp;
dining room, den, 1 car
attached garage. Nice sized
lot w/fonced-ln back lawn.
More. l911
·

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I kltch•tn,

FPOd Available

responsible lor accidents or lost property!
.. Next Sale· Friday, Dec. 19, 8:30 pm
-No Sale Friday, Dec. 28, 1997

Clll814·~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

31838 Lltehor Ad, Rutland· 92 acres m/1 of nlc8' land
aboul ha~ illlable and ha~ woods. Good Hunting. Good
Road. Has liarn but no h011ae. Worth much more that lho
uklng price of $72,000. Call us on this one.

AUCTIONEER: LESUE LEMLEY
814·245-9056 or 814·246·9866
Licensed &amp; bonded by State of Ohio

CBIIh/Approyed check

9D2·5084. Equal Houoing Oppor-

e-mall _us for Information on our listings:
blgbend@eurekanet.com

NEW USTING I ACT FASTI
173 Greenbriar Drlvel Large
sized lot, country atmosphere.
Ranch ttyle home with full
basement, large sized living
room &amp; family room each with
a fireplace, 3 bedrooms. 1 t/2
beths. double cer ga1age plus
detached 24'x26' · building,
enclosed rear porch. &amp; moral
19611

992-6191

Office .......................... 99.2..2259

oak

eu-~2-

Real Estate General

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oak sideboard, Victorian washstand,

440-7101 Dr 1·80().585·7101

&amp;partmenta at Vlllaoe Manor and

sewer, natural gu, "edric, all
are available at thlslol. Prepare
NOW to build your dream home
In thlt pleasant, quiet and nice
. subciMalon ju~t a ahon distance
01.11 of Qalhpolls. Lot 117.

BRUNER LAND
·81&lt;1-l711-t173

Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-2357

35)

Appllcatlono Ovttilablo at: Villago Rlverolde Aportmtnllln lliddlt·

facilitiea, doH to achool in 1own.

LOT..sPAING VALLEY
SUIIDMSION
One large lot approx .
101'x171', City water, city

Owner moving-Mak8 2 payments,

WITH A WINNING TEAM!

·COLLIC I IlLII
AICftOI
(old Rt.

OWNER WANTS AN OFFER NOW.

BIG BEND REALTV
INC,
• I T 1•

&lt;./~~ ~·

ONLY-DOWN
ON SELECTIVE SINGLE WIDES
Free Ooliwry &amp; Sarup
OAKWOOD HOMES. NITRO
304-755-5885.

10

Public Slle and Auction

588

#933

NEW LISTINGSII

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2 miles south of Rio Grande, Ohio on St. At.

Large living room with fireplace . Dining room ,
kitchen, 2 baths, partial basement &amp; attached 3
car garage~ Less than 10 miles from Gallipolis.

Rusaell D. Wood, Broker
510 Second Ave.

Pold, 814-448-21211.

Lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER'
Crown CJtY, Ohio

Do it in your own wooded 45 acres m/1 that
comes with this pleasing 3 bedroom .home.

Depoaif Required, 1·881-840-

Oakwood 28x56 3 bedroom, 2
bath, starting at $199 per mo .
Cal Hoo-onem.

$7,000 . $1,000 Down $128/!olo.,
Llirgo solaalon of uold 1tomoa. 2 l'old In 5 Vaars. Danllllle, Nice 17
or•3 bedrooma. Swtlng at $2195. Acres $18,000 Or 9' Acref
Ooick delivery. Call OH-385· $17,000, Coulltj Wato&lt;.
~1.
Gallla Co.: Gllllpollo, Nol8hbor.
ltood Rd., 10 """' Loll Of'-ll
LI ITED TillE ONLYI 48R, 2 118,000, Or 22 Ac,.1 With Pond
lATH l1,44t DOWN tzU NOW $24,000. Ftiondly Ridge 8.5
~;Frat air &amp; sldrting. Only Acreo $7,500 Or 19 Aoreo
~akwoCNI Holl'ltl Nitro, WY $18,000, Caunly Water. Teena
~.
Run, La at One t 10 Acres
Mobile Homo, 2 Gar.goo, On Lot 110,000.
ll1&gt;tllblo Llrtd Contract, 81 &lt;1-250- Call Fo; FrH Mopo + OWrto&lt; Fi-11+~-·- - - - - - - nancing Into. Tallo 10% on Uotod

TERMS ON PROI'EITY: I0" OOWII DAY OF SAl£ NON-IIEFUNDW BAWICE DUE IN 30 DAYS.

OFFICE

I :B::E::A~u=T::IF:::U-:-L-:A-::PA:::R::T::-M::E::-N::T-::5-A-::J
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Wootwood Drl••
from $280 1D $33olc Walk 1D ohop
&amp;·movloa. cau s"·4•B-25ss.
t·E"'q_uat_HD&lt;l-,-omg_
· ..:.....Oppor..:....._"'n~~y_
· ::..·-o-•talr• Apattmont, • Roomo,
Water Paid, NO PETS, Dt Cedar
SttMI.81&lt;1-3f11.1100.
I :E::-tt::-icton..:.....cy-:-Apo-rtm_en_tRi:.: 0--::G-ran-d,-•
$240/Mo., All Utilitieolncludod,

304-722-714.

I Prlcoo an ca.. Pu,.,._,

Ucensed &amp; bonded In the State of Ohio and West Virginia
R11ldeMe (304)_773-1785 or Auction Clnter ~t 773-5447
\
EXECUTOR:STEVELOVE
Terms; Cash or Checl&lt; w/ID .

Fu,nlshld, Wa1tr Sewage, Garblgo, Paid. Dooolit &amp; ......
Roqulrld, 131 f r i l l - Roor,

deliver &amp; aet· up •t no charge.

1·800-251·5070

more. .

Unlurnlol&gt;ld Apartment. Rango,
RtlfiOtralor, Garbage Dlopoool

New doublewide-1
want fit on my lot. muat Hll,

WE91WOOO HOlE SHOW
FIRBT1111E BUYERS

I

Green Ap11. ••a or call
Port
. From $236-$304.
tunitiaa.
•56 112 Second Avenue, Galllpo· I,-.,-,-,--,--,,--,-Iii. 2 Btdroorna, AC, Applianctl, In New Haven 1br furnished apt.
Trailer For Rent: 2 Bedrooms, S-425/Mo., 1225 Oepoall, Utllitiel dep,oah &amp; relerencea·. 30,.-882·

New 211.80 3 ar •
$30,QD5 . Free deliver~. 1

31100. 11-S.

• · 114-4-41-37'80.
1494 Sut-. Dtlu~e ,..72 2 Bod·
rQDml, 2 Baths, Refrigerator,
Range, Electric H..t Pump, And

HOUSEWIUBE
OFFERED
AT AUCTION AT
12:00 NOON WITH
RESERVE

Kathleen M. Cleland

Don't Have To Travd HYou Like To Hunt!

2bclrm. ap!l., total electric. ap- 1.0_52_'_·-~---'---plianc11 furnlsllod, laundry room Graclo&lt;JO llvl~. 1 anct 2 bedroom
37ft . EOH.

1870 Model 3 llodroomo, 1 Oolh,
Good ·condition, Mull Still 304·

Not
' Responsible For Accidents Or Loss of Property

Profcnional Y,cagdca Ayailablc; Htalth kcovery

LimiiOdTitno Onyl

UUCSO wlexpando, 2br, fuel oil

Phone~740

INCOME DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR
The American Cancer Society, Ohio Division, . a
statewide not-for-profit organization is accepting
resumes · for
the
position
of
Income
Development Director of the areas of Ross,
Pike, Vinton, Athens, Jackson, Meigs, Gallia &amp;
lawrence Counties.. This se11 motivated
individual will be responsible for all aspects of
income -development. Requirements include
college degree, proficient computer word
processing knowledge and excellent written and
verbal communication skills. Travel necessary.
Flexible schedule. Forward resume and salary
history to: Susan "Schneider, 311 1/2 W. Water
Street, Chillic¢he, OH 45601·2432. No phone
calls please. Non-tobacco users only. Deadline
12/21/97. EOE

8411DOWN
on II o1nQ1o t«11ona
IIIIDOWN
on al mJiti uc~ons.

--~~~·ANallatM Aflel' 12/lth, 1 81 doom

Estate General

Gdi!M&gt;Iio. 11 ......·2581.

1 Oodroom Furnllhod Aporlntont
918 Second Avenue, Galllpolla,
All UUiitleal'old, $200/Mo.• Call
814--•5.
1 Bedroom Unlu Newell &amp;
Cleano11 1n Tho Area Near Holz·
"$2111/Mo., Pluo UUiilleo &amp; Sa·
curlty Dopolil Required, No Pt11,
114·448·2957.
2 bedroom apartmtntln Pllmeroy,
utilities poid, no poll. 814-992·

fltEEDOIIIIOIEI ot Nitro, WV.
-722-7127.

Llaenaed end eoncled *M1.

114-002-2216.

fW\
ARIORS AT GA&gt;LU~?tts

1

VIllage of Mld'dleport: alaa two

largo lot. 304·175·&amp;115 leave '
. . . _ .. ::104-&amp;75-2011.

ESTATE AUCTION

~·

tot cleUIIIe.

lovwl loll tor aalo; t55,000 090,

nice

Public Sill and Auction

MISSING:
Red &amp; white Siberian
Husky. Neutered
male- blue eyes. Six .
· year old family pet.
Missed terribly.
Reward
992·2189,
992·2343

.

Two 3 bul::oom homes lor 1M In

~==~7:::~
bl11ment.

Homes
tor Slit

,

tcir

082-2218.

~ Mobile

1111.

-tr.

Blctwlll Auction HOUM
Tuelday, December 8th 7:00 pm
Open Tueldey 10:00 1m to 8 pm for
conllgnmenta
For aarly con11gnnl1ntl phone
387.Q418, 388 0488 or 387·7802.
Antiques, collectibles, glassware, tools, cast
peanut bank, ~ iron truck with bell, Markin
rifle, Wagner skillets, Gulswald damper,
moll, small collectiQn pocket knives, plenty
Christmas Items.
A u c t l - Cm. Stanley
Apprentice Auctlpneer Larry Saxton
Aoor manager Cliff Rhodes.
Song fest for Dec. 13th with Rev. Calvin Mlnnus
at Auction House
·

·

wlndowt, dick lnd ell remodtltd
lntldl, 814·742-13•5. 114-082-

Houoo
and
-o•. 41· 1 _ _ _
ern. Ideal ttarttr hotn11. Be.c:h 1
gar~ge, lull lile

~ntl
Rent
1 and 2 ,.....,. ttpttrtmonu. fur·
nllhed and unfurnlahed, HCLttity
dopotlt roqulroct, no Pill, 01 4·

440

Wa will hold the auotton •t voour •
,...ldenoa
If you deal,.. we hold auatlona
tor aatatea. r.rma and houaehold.

PUBLIC AUCTION

Do• 720, Ripley, WV 25271
EOE.

""""'·

Two ,....... vallot In llldc11oport. I:----,.-..,..-.,.....,....Apattmentl Far Renl On First

e1-..8e2-5038.

. .rvtoe to .,.ak. plok up, ancl h•ul

~·14)

Rtll

......2200.

Don't let the oold, wet '!fl'. .lher
atop you from hevlng an •uatton.
Colt tho Petrlot Auction Barn. We
hav. heat:ac:l, Indoor taollltlea .. We
hllve ample parking, -ang. ancl a •
ooneoeaalon atand. W• have

C.lt

Aparlmentl
lor Rent

Ont bedroom aprarament in Mid- 2,BtdtOOm aprartment far rWIIIn
diapor~81~·2171.
Pt, Ploaaant 304·•75-2174 or

........ a. o•••

Public Slle and Auction

CLIENTS PAOYIDED
800-937-4821 Ext 994

30

a-

c-:

Home in countrr wllh 31 acre1.
only 1
old, wtlh two bed-

BINGO =========f:========:;ll
MON. &amp; WED. ;

And Corfi)Oilitvo Cornponution.
Please Respo~ld To:

Part-Time (20 Hours IWNk) Receptionist Needed. Duties Include
Ans¥ferin9. Telephone, Op~ming
And Oi&amp;tnbuting Mail, Dally 0.
posltl, Filing. Pout-Tima Benefit&amp;
Include Sick Leave And Ohio
Per:s. Send FJeaume To Human
Resources Director, SEOEMS
District, P.O. Box 527, Kerr, OH
•5643 By 12112197.

Professional

5ervlell

30

OR &amp; ICU E - -RN'I
Wanted FOf Newly O..eloplng
Nur~ng Registry. Sail Scheduling
P.O. 8o&gt;t 828, •
Marlotta. OH •5750.

.-.:us-oooo Eat a- 211...
230

FINAN CIAL

.

Ohio Baaed Trucking Compan-,
looking For OTR Drivers. Single
On Team Drivers, Must Be OYer
25 Years Old With 2 Years Expe(iente And Good MVR. All
Equipment Ia Late Modal Con·
vantianal Tractors Wltn Reeler.
Weakly Pay, Health Insurance
Awilabiel.soo-.37-8764.

==

Bus-IHckaiBIIa.

IQ5.,1038.

PATRIOT
AUC:TION
•
BARN

your Item• tor you.

440

for Rent

RESTAURANT already setup
and ready for a new owr.er,
building,
equipment
&amp;
Inventory Included In setea
price. Plenty ot P,Brklng &amp;
· room tor expansiOn. Great
lrivestment. Call for deteilal
1911

SERIOUS
ABOUT
SEWNG. This
roomy
American
Home
mat
Includes 3-4 bedrooms,
large living room, dining
area/family
room
combination,
loft
area.
equipped kHchen , large
deck on rea1, nice lawn
being approx. t 2 acres.
342eO CREW ROAD 1940

lmpor1tont~

ramlly? Is being I
where the kids can
to school
Important? How about having 4
Brs, 3 1/2 baths, 2 famil~ rooms
and a screened in porch sO
everyone can have their space?
Doea buying a home in great
condition with a brick eKterior lor
Ytt very
the very low maintenance have any appeal?
and dining If you answered yes to an of these I ~;:r~~:~":
questions, call us. We have just I t
or. kiCk back and relax In
jisted the perfect house for you and
large comfortable family room
vour family. $149,900 1213
with huge stone lireplace. This
gracious Mme lets ~ou do both
with ease. There's a tleaulitul
kitchen tor the family chef, as well
as, a private screened in porch for
evening enjoyment. And the 1 ;...~-ii!
master bedroom has one ol the
most outstanding baths we've
seen. located en a beautifully
landscaped lot with lots cf mature
hardwoods and pines. Close to
town and hospital. Green schools.
$229.900 1218

lr,.

t

'

!

~·!~7f?IT' ..6.;,;_
'

1728 Chatham Avenue 2
bedroom house on 2 large tala
located in the city. Needs a linle
Improvement, but overall 8. nice
house. Also Includes living room,
room. 1 balh, eneloled
. Fenced yard .

·(B
'""o''

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC. C=)
(614) 446-3644
b";""'~""
E-Mail Address: wiseman@zoomnet.net

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555
Lorella

McDade • 446·77Z9

Carolyn Wasch.

Ganes ""''·'"'m

'

441-1007

�..........

AI* biiiw'ltl

440

-m,

-orn 1 Bedroom Aport,..n1,

11111 ue

c•

4hra NFL Starter Jacket Size

- - 114 -1217.

. . . c:toon
Wid hOOk·
ttl Rer.rencea. Deposit. No

t! ~75-5112.

-·

3ld Avi In lliddlotloll. 1br

5 piece rwln alze Hdroom se1
with mattr••• anti bor ;rtna•.
1110, Clll 114·117·11
after
1iprrl

furnJII'Itd or unturnlahH. Aluminum IWN1t S,OIIo ca..ro
Whatll; Tlrea

-

rw.

S-10

Aalley

81..3711-27...
. . Taking Appllca tlona- 35
i!Att 2 Bedroom Townt~ouae IEANIE IAIIII 114-2411-1332,
: ; :_tm.nta S205.1Mo.. 814·448· $1 IACH Baldy, Barrio, ·
Bllzzerd. 8ont1, Buc:ky, Chocolate, Crunch, Dt~by, Doby,

Cit bedtOom apanm.nl In Mid·

~t. AI utiltitl peid, &amp;270 per
=~1'1, $100 depoait, 814-GD2·

,_.,. Rivera Tower, now atceptlng
ejpllcaliona for t br. HUD aubald·
bt&lt;l apt. lor elderly and handlEOH 304-67S-86XI.

fJP!*I·

00

FurniShed
Rooms

Ctrclt Motel Lowest Ratts In
~n . Newly Remodeled, HBO,
Cinemu , Showlime &amp; Olsney.
W'wkly Riles. Or Monthly Rates.
Onatruction Workers Welcome

..4....1·51188, 814-.. 1·5187.

... ep inQ roomt with cooking.

4Jao lrtJitr sptce on river. All
ftook-ups . Call alter 2 :00p. m.,
IOH73-5851, Mason WV.

46o

Space for Rent

lfbbllt home aile available bet·
••n Athens and Pomeroy, call

114-385-4367.

•

lMiltr lor for rent, references re-

&lt;fliod.304-875-1076.

rox·,

lraller lo! For Renl, 5100. ApAae, 614 4.6 1665.

For Lease

•

FORLEASE

•

Ear• Floppi!l. Goldlo Inch, Jolly,
Lizz,, Lucky, Mogle, Millie. lltl.
Nip, Patti , P..nuta, Pinchtfl,
Pinky, Pouch , Quackers , Ringo,
Rovlf. Scoop, Sc:onle, Seawaed,
Sly, Snip, Snor~ Stripoa, Wrinkle•

Zlggy, Zill
B11nie Bablea. hard to Qet spo~J
Clrd interta, l'&amp;rt comics. hard to
lind ICtlon ligures, Priced below
current nwMt 'lllue. Juat in time
lot Chrlstmu. C1Mktr latest prk:e
quorat and delllh, 814-04!»-30G8
• • meuaae betore 5:00pm. Of
5:30·g~

0or .....,

S&amp;iiJ

I

---up

llrond -1 Grwot Clfld CDMdoo
storage un11. Black and cl'*r1.
ou1 of bo1. 1121.
10 840 GIICI, alto holdt lapot.
Call 81HD2·8138 ar1er I pm.
COal-no•IUY CAlli FCIIIS100111

Concrttt &amp; Plaa11c Sople Tonko,
300 Thru 2,000 Gl.llon• Ron
Evant EnttrpriHt, Jackson, OH

HI00·537-8528.

Christy.

1838.
Beautiful Buck Stove Instant UnFl~eplaces, Several
Modell to Cl'laose from. PAINT

vented Gil

PLUS ~75-ol084.
B&amp;autilul Kimball Piano With

1818 PM. On -kdayo.

Drrer, (SIIII Utlng Tholl') f100
E~ 814-..1-04811.

'For Solo Packard S.ll 7isiiZ
Pentium Mulllmtdla Compuler
Witl'l 15 Inch Color Monitor.
Windows 85 and Mlcrotoft
Worlts. Excelltnl Syttem.· Price
Reduced, HK.OO 81.,._1155

Frigidaire d l - S50. 2 121t
-G laddttl $20. Ptrlor 110vt,
.... Iron 150. 304-e7$-4021.

Ltke Ntw 12 lnc:I'II&lt;ICktrs Compelltlon Subs $200; NTX Thunder
280 Amp 1200; Brolhtn Word· Gre11 Christmll Oltll Computer
Procenor, 1100. 614 ·-4-48·7550 Pickard Bill CD 11011 Fu lllo·
Altar 5PM . .
dem $1 ;700 Software /Monitor
81 .. _7{[wt .....).
Monument Sale: Quilling Bull·.
neaal Jol'ln'a Monuments ·113 on Gtubb't Pilno· tuning &amp; repalra.
Unlil Stock Is Sold, 130 Bul1viHe Pmblorna? NHd Tuntd? Call 1ht
~... Galipolil, Onlo.
piano Or.814 448 4525

•

~wntown Gallipol is. Office New 45 Inch Snowblower t.IITO
lpoco. 3400 Sq. Fl. Willl Porkinll Trac:tDrs H50, e1.ot ......D-1758,
"'' Rermdet. CaM Wlaeman Real Nordic Track Sell Propelled

E••
'

814-446-3644.

~14·-7....

MERCHANDISE

Pin Ball Machines, $300 To $500

Slol Machine 1350, SpHd Boll

r

polil,814-448-1815.

Treadmill, $200, OriQinalty $800,

'

5,10

Han.:l M1de Clgs~ra Wllh Cuban
Seed •22 Socond AVI&lt;IUO, Gall·

Household ,
Goods

AERAT.orIIOTOAS
Rapalrod, Now &amp; Robul• 1n
Cal Ron Evam, 1-8()().537-K28.

s-.

Game $100, 81Hol&amp;-3227.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

w.. herl. dr~8rl, refrigerators,
rang•• · Skagga Appliances, 76

1----.

\llno StrH1, Call 81•·448-7398,

YninQ Sale! Used Furniture

$ato, 130 BulaYIII&lt;t Piu. Gaillpo111, Ohio 50% on Gill Shop And

~
' llofrivorator, Wllhe&lt;, Dry~&lt;. Color
1\V.. VCR $50 Eacn, 814·258-

Sealed bldt wMI be reoelved untH 4:0D P.M. on tho
1111h doy of Dlcomber, 111117, lor the real tttlltloctted
~·
at 20 VInton A,.nuo, O.lllpollo, Ohio, and being Lot No.
28 In lleall'o Flrot Addition to nld City tnd bel"ff more
Sporting
partlculorty dHCrlbod In Volumo :lOt, Pogo 4113, DNd
Goods
Rtcorde of Otlllt County, Ohio. Stld , .., ttllilt It
f2 Ga. llhiCI Pump With Slug owned by the hllllw of Jolin D. AIIIJer, deoeooed.
.. rreiL Western Saddle, Good ·
Said ......le lppraleod .. S4Z,IOO. •
Shape, Dan Hershberger 11583 ·
Minimum tcetllllibll bid It S3t,OOO.OO. .
·, lA 1•1. Porlol,ln CodrRJa.
' EXECUTOR RESERVES THE RIGHT TO REJECT ANY
011-ALL BIDS. In the everit' of • lit, • drewlftjl will be
I
001.1' CLUBS:
held IIi c1Mtrml1111ht tuc ctttful bidder.
Modo Tonrny Armour Elc.
licit alloilld ., Mnl to: D. DNn Evtnt, 1-utor,
UIIO'" Built Clubs, Indian
&lt;loll, 814-245-5747.
P.O. lo1 _,., OaHipollo, Ohio ~1, or moy be lift II
otnce located ot 413 Steond AvtnUI, OtiHpollt,
Nordic Track 505 $489 Now
al31.
t:!OO; 11o111ngot Trim Rldor $ea.OO
may bo made by oelllng 0 . Dean Evano,
(ti41UII-1737.

ljow-11--.
~

Deck: Prtacher's curl, 114•

l)lbular olool, htaVI
ilotlt, 114-7.:!·3113.

du1~:

-.wv
Sll1. T-

811)',
U'Otll An1lqutl

Fumllllte.
304·773-15341.

Klunt 176,

Somerville Army &amp; Camouftage,

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gtllon
Uprlgh~ Ron Evono Enitrprlno,
JocMort, Otllo, I.«JJ.S37-e528.

DMn

$500

a••

Sea Thl1 One To A,preclatel

14,800 Nog., 11~100.

1012 Toyota Corrolla Tercel. no
N11,

c-··"'"'

·~· 814-742-8613.

11114 Chevy
$400, 814-GI2.s&amp;21.

good.

ropa &amp; unopy, 4wd, 111,500.

472 T haybine $7.800 . •n g• 1111 Chovy . Suburban 414
hayblno $8,500. 834 round bllor ....100, 010. .,. . . . . . .
8!101 tltcl ao $9,800. 844 round
" " " f()()gl auoo Ut 113,500. 451 18115 Mercury Cougar, Good
71~- 1!1C1W1111 13,050. 130 142 Condlllon, Aoll.lng 11,300. 814·
84 manure 'lpreadtr $4,300. 145 448-0531 .
111111 Oklo j::ullau Bra. All Sunroot &amp; Keystone
s;,goo. 2-Niw Smldloy 11oor Whh
v.ttooio,
Sl,2115, et....W52&gt;4.
11u11oro 100 au $750. z uotd
$~00 each. 8. 75% Financing 1888 Nove, 1885 ·Lutr, 1817
awailable. Kttter'a Servlce·cen - Corolca, 187g Chovy Pickup,
ltr St Rl 87 Phone 304·881· 1DB 7 Do dOt Da~ola, 814·250·

A Groom Shop ·Pel Grooming,
Featuring Hydro Bath, Don

Shttll. 373 G-goa Crook Rd.
814-448.0231 .

3174 .

constructed and put Into a Homeowherahlp Program
23 lhr• and four·badroom hJirilee In Galllpolla. Two
have been sold and 12 others are occupied by
faml"'s who are or will be able to purchase them. 9 of
the homes have never been occupied due to the lack
Of eligible applicants.. Two of the 9 are equipped for
the mobility imp!lired.
ARE YOU ELIGIBLE?? .
All home will be sold to eligible lamilles based on
income. No home will be sold for less than $45,000
and no home will be sold lor more than the appraised
value .
Families must live In the unit and pay rent to the
Authority for a LEAST three (3) months before they
purchase. ·Renlls also based on Income.
QUALIFICATIONS
Eligible applicants lor the Program must,
1) be a Rasldent 61, be WOrking In (or have been hlrad
to work In) Gallla County
2) hava at least three (3) pareona In the houaahold
3) have EARNED or EARNED plus· PERMANENT
disability Income not In excess I of the Authority's
Income Umfts BUT at least enough to qualify lor a
loan (minimum of $17,599)
4) have good CREDIT rating, OR have . cradH
rating that could be improved in a reasonable time

=·

=.,pod ~~
com

=

Livestock

GAS Call Vlrglnlt for tn
wf1t1 Vlrgi&lt;&gt;t L. Smt1l1 U&amp;eloe
=~w::: 8R 1110
1111111 SUR-LY LOW Oldar :i .11'1 4 bodnnt1 1 bath 3
PRICE lalt lot on LakeYiew Ct. acres mlf ·plus a la~ga bl;n.
Locrdod w1tn only 111o ·II
Coli VI.S 388-882111
110011 """"'''t 2.W ac11&gt;1. Sulllocl
rorllltlc1IVecovonan1o.VI.S«&lt;1!108S21 ,500

1173 PAlMI DIVILOPMENT
LAND 117 Ac . MIL Clooe to
freeway &amp; hoapital. Old home
and bam. Gallia Co. VI.S

188Q Wtrcury Marqula Excellent
Concldon, 12,1115, I14-00UI87.

~ Yeor 112 ~.
Quartor 112 Arable $6,SOO; 18711 Oidamobllt Torona·
........._
do Good Condition, 81,000 lliiH,
-,.814-.-11384.
NewTirooiPalnll2,000, 080,
•lock Anguo bull lOr ult. 1700, 1.8::.:1:::,._.=~:.1::.·- - - - 914-742·2105.
111111 Dodoo ShadoW Convorlblo.
84CJ Hay &amp; Gl'lln
"REO', AT, PS, PB, AC, Sltroo,
80,000 IIi., $4,200, 814 048 8050.
Alpha &amp; Orchard Ora11 Mixed,
one : 614·-448·1 104, 814·4•1·
50

10'K80' Outtttndlng mobile
home with a deck, 1~al
cabtnets, wlndowa, and bullt·ln
mualc center, 3 BR, 2 bathe,
bolutiful 11 IC. 11111. Cloet 1o

~

·

Firewood , Ear Corn. Ha~. 114·

179-2785.

1own~~s.iii~fil

!ollxed Round Btlta or Htl For
Salt $18.00, SIOrod lnofdo, 814·
· 245-5508 Aller 81!M.

12034 Exceptionally smart
ranch. 3 bodrm, OBI&lt; clblntla In

• lg. '"· I 1/2 bltlta, 8 ... 11111.

Mixed square bales, $2.00, 81 4·
~49-2754.
.

112031 Like new 314 bodrm,
ranch home, ivoly LA. huge kn.

Round Baltl Barn Kopt. 814-4481 4

.

11111 Lincoln llark VII Grtol
Shape &amp;1,000 Mlloo Aoll.lng
110.1110.114 441 IH'I ~-Car,-·
17,000 ...... 114-HZ·7014-

Crodll ~bltmt? W. &lt;:111 !flip. 1912 Clto¥r 314 Ton .,., po, pb,
Eaor, Btnk .Financing For Uoocl AuiO 113800 (814) 441 m•
Veh olea. No Turn Down1, Call
V\1~1~1,~8~1_!4:!4•!:;:-~7~.---·'11114 Fort:1 F1!11 0111, 12200, 01 ..
~
1182·5742.
Dotltlo 8 '''· motor &amp; lronomlt1iprrl
llon, runo good, t200 Inn: 2 _. tel5 Dodge Rlftlehtrgtr 311,
lotiOI· 1 lldt S80, 1 lop poll, 414, 321n. IUpot IIWIInpor Ortl.
1H1 P1yrnoo11n . , _ RM, 2
$25: 11oro..,. ,...... 121: 814-S·;:l,ooo:::,;:nou-:.::.;304::.;,-l:;;l'H714.:..;;;,;.;·:....._;__
Dooro. 4 CyMndtr, I Speod, AC, 1182-8107.
CooMIIO, 71,800 MIIM, S3,550 .;,;.;.~;.;.;..,..------·I1DI7 Ford Atta Star Exctlltnl
080 114·2$1·tl40, 110·258· Upton U10d Can Rt. 82·311Un Condllor\ 13.-.814 4410887.
$0uln of Loon, WV. Financing
1417.
... '11111 -10111.
1H11 GMC sOlar! CullOm, 14,850
1H1 Thunderbird IUNOOf, MW
81 ....411 .. 222
tlre1, 3,1 V· l, eac. cond, pow•~
brik81, PGw.tr wlndawl, power

720 ll'uekl for Sale

1141· OLOIII I
....

1810 Wltmebar. Warrior t.ll~tar

---·

4'MIIOSO.

car-· X.,-

1982 Chevy 112 Ton 4 WO Sll·

&lt;Ilion, " 2,300, 81......e-37e.o.

1814 DODaiiHADOW 1-4,485, 1871 GMC 1 Ton Dulr Good
Soli Slralgn Oul Or Trodt, eu- Sltfpo, Now: Port~ Tireo, Bodlln·

1883 QIIC Saltrl XT ca11UOrllon
van, fully lotdad, only 88,000
or, Flltlt Wheel Boll, Pluo R - mlloo, ptlcod ttductdl U,500
Hitr:l!, ....50. 81-3100.
0110. ~75-7U38.

1184 ~ Spltl1 215,000 AciUal ·
Mll&lt;to. Exctllonl CondUion, 1\C, 1878 GIIC Pick· Up • Rtbulll
Ca-814-446-3548.
Trans., Brak01, Tltel. Body I
8td Ftir Condition. 3&amp;0 Englnt.
1185 SiiUrn SC2, Au-fie. Air, Runo Good, $700, Con 11H48·
Crulae, AIIIFM Ctlll111, Trunk •51 4, 114-448-3703.
·
R1' II 112.000 Coil Allor 5 P.ll.
(So&lt;iouo lnqulriH 0n1111 814· 11188 Cnrorrottt 112 ton 4xo Pick·
up, automatic, air, V·8. MIOO.
446-4015.
814-1182·7014 .,.., 5pm.
fH? Tarot• Camry, ere. cond .
$17,8112. 30ol-o468-1072 af1or 5j.&lt;Tt.
18110 Ford F150, - · 1191, alanD1 CIIIVy Cevaller. 2 door, AC.
lmlfm COIMUO, 52,000 acUI!Ii
mlln uctlltnl condlllo~. call
81~7151.
.

-Y

1ge3 U"'ltd Ford Explorer, Dlt.
Cronbtrr,. loaded. 74 ,000 Ill.
111 .......7310

Clmpers &amp;

Motor Homes

1144- A - Nloll Brlok·
on o quill- o11tro- 4
bltl"'l , full baatmenl thll
l*tillly · 10

Hamo, 27 FL, ord 480, All Optlonl lncld. Generttor, 32,000
1111., Ex. Condhlon. $18,000, 814-

Sl

....-y badll'lftl.

Grnl Silo lo&lt; •
Homo. L.o4 bllrtg 111. Coli,., """"-

HviC~S

1GD4 Joop Cnoroktt c~unlrr.
••4, Odr, all power, hlleh.
$13,200. 304-175-5&gt;421.
a~1o,

18D4 R1nger 4WO tlllend cab,
low mil11, loaded, RHJI l"'ltch,
cargo ~er. $15,000'. 814·88i2·
3112ai'Or5pm.

dard trans , 11•.oaom11••· good
cond. 304·576·2119.

--·

1885 Jeep Wranaler 414 5
1991 Ford F-250 Super Ceb 7.3 Spud, Soli Top 45,000 Aaltlng
Dleool Good SMpo, S8,000, 114· 111,900,814-258-10114.

A Nood A Cor? No Crodll, Bad
Crodlt·Bankrup!Cy, Wt Can Hllp 1i191 S·IO, bod' lair, runa good,
RtEalillllon Ctedl~ Mutt Make 814-7.2-3513.
S150
Tlkt Homo, oo.,n
Pajmenll Ao Low Ai U8, To 1g94 Ford F-150 4•4 blaciVaokl,
Eddie Bauer w/clm!*' top. ••c
Ouallfr For Thlo Bank Fnnclng, eond
.
81 ......1-01107.
59,000 miles, has transferable
Ford ESP eJierflled lltVict poH··
NHd A Car, No Credit? Blld cy, totaJ coveraQ'e w/$0 deduct~

Cttdlt? Ban~ruplcy? Wo Can
HIIpl Rtttlabllllt Credll, llu11
llau 1150 WM1r, liolw Home 10
To .aD% Down 12 llonlho &amp;
12.CXID MUoo, l'llrrran11 Avalloblo,
Thlolo ..,k Firlancing. 814-44881'12. Or814 314 8002.

f ..

........

llotrinG. 300,875-55N Prlco re- 1088 GMC 1 Ton Truck Dual vorado, 5 Spood, E•coUtnl Con· 790
-.$1,1100,111-5.
-1 .
245-sen,

•

~1:-.

=

4
~lbf:-"-::·':-15.-'000C-;:-·30
-_ _882
=·2112.:.1·- -

.lht Price ot Dnt. Main -

1888 Jotp Cnorokoo, Sporl,
17,000 lllool14-448-1110.

hoult. S50'a .

W!tat a Deal, Two ltomM

hrlrl21o3Br'o, 11/21*1ht.Uf
bornl. omallor noutt hal 2 In Town,__,.,.
Br~. could be - 1 or gut~~ Bldg on main 1loor

1513.

740

MotorcyCles

1ga2 Honda 850 CB 1800. 304-

89 C........ S.tO piclou~ Soo.. rutlll
looks good, wlladdtr rock a 1001
box, will otH wltltlw11ftou~ 12700;
85 Kawaoa~ 185 • wheller, good
condiUon, 4 now Urea, back
brakol, new pari&amp; In molar, $700,
304-882-31121.

11:111 IN TOWN L04:ATIOII-

1H5 Toyola TIOO, 4 WD, llany
Opllona, Llu Now, AT, AC, CD,
•s.ooo Mlloa, $14,800, 814·2•5-

875-3000. 8-5. •.

-lor.

C&amp;C Qenllfll Home
tenence- Pllnling, vinyl lldlnt.
c:arponuy, doort, '"'"""""· batha,
rnoblo ~ ropolr and ...... For

r,.. ttti..'O call Clttl, 8 14-H2·

'3 Honda 300 4
13650; 63Zl
yard can.l500;814-742-o4205.
Go carl with 150 Yamaha nlotar,

1400, 114-742-2730.
750 Boats &amp; Mot0111
for Sale

Stlzocl Cart From Sl75. Porocl&gt;
oo, Cadillo«, Chovra. BIIW'o, 730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
Carvtttll, Alao J..pa, 4 W0'1.
'rl&gt;ur Alto. Toll FrH 1·800·218· 1877 CJS 304 Englnt, Good Con1000 Ext A-2814 For Currtnl dillon. Elect Treadmill &amp; Soaro
lJollngo.
- · 814-448·2105.

111Q7 l.andua Pm 17 40 HP Forco
Fully Loaded, Mull Sail I 814·
367·7117.

840 Electrical and

Refrigeration
Reahitndal 0t I:DIM'IIfcial wiring,

new Nr¥lcll or repairs. Waller U·
cenud electrician. Ridenour

Electrical, WV0003Ge, 304·875·
1788.

OU1IIdegarago,3

'Cell for rour
1140 BRICK IN·QIIOUIID Ullftow you 1hO
HOUlE loc:aled on S.R. 180.
.... boon "" 101WO

living units. could eull~ be
c9nverted back to ont

-·

dwelling, twO M.H. hook upa.
NEW LIITINGI

1141 Tbtt llaneh ltylo Homo
ttaa had aome up·datta .
Newet olrllng, , _ roctl, p1ul
~ oWora kltr:hen appllanc:aa, 3
Br'o, 2 bolito, locoted in R.V.
aehool dlrdrir:t. I&lt;O'o.

Excollen1 Condition. $4.800. 814·
448·051g Or 814·440·3407 Con
Ba Satn 3t4 Wliia Road.

.

1880 ·111110 Cera Forl100111
Seized And Sold
IAeally Tltlt Mollltl.
TN&lt;i11. 4x4'o, Etc.
1·1100-522-2730, X31101.

·ea.., 1o Ronr, ~nlo.-

•

inivan Events
.

.

$92,000VLS

preclude the lamily lrom qualifying lor housing under
the Authority'aregulatlons. .
INCOME LIMITS
EUglbla applicants for the Program must not exceed
the following income·Um118

fumact&gt;r/a~ car

a

front porctt, ~1g1, new

111, fonctcl

8

27 .~
31 ,050
33,500 3e,QOO 38,500 40,950
Loans are available through HV8f'al Federal and
State programs (also for down payments) and 118\itrll
local bankl. have loan mon.y available for pa11011e
who fall ~In lncQme limits (not lclenUoal to lhe

205 North Second Ave.
OH
MIDDLEPORT· North 5th Ave.· A 2 o10ry ttouee co[.11plelely
redone end lookll new uptlllrs and a llrge living room with
newer carpet, dining room, ~ porth, large utility room, and
k~chen. $35,0DO

Authority's)
H you have earned Income of at laut $17,500, ·at
laut 3.parsons in your family, good oradft, little dabl,
and no criminal record, you chance of buying one of

'

POMEROY· Wehe Terrace· 2 corner lola and a two el!lry
1tome with 4 rooms and 1/2 balh down &amp; 3 bedrooms and

a

· lull bath up. Hu a newly remodeled kllclten tnd ma'!l bath
and a newer root. Beautiful flreplace, wraparound porch and
French doors. $40,DOD.

.

.

'

1998 Plymouth Grand Voyager SE ---.........................._............. . .... _...-.. .............. :......... ............................... :........... ......... -·-· ·:..·-··--·· ......1

"' or sell. Riverine Antlqull,
4124 E. M1in Street, on Rl. 124,
Pomero~. Hour1: M.T.W. 10:00
~m. 11 8:00 jlm., SundOy 1:00 10

1:00 p.m. 114·112·21tl, Ruu

~.-..o
Mllcelllneoul

•:

Men:hlncllll.

,. 1 EltcVIC Fur...l fSD5: 1 Gao
rumooo 100,000 BTU teeo, 814·
....... 1-100-211-ooll.
~~ Ft. Chnt l)pl
~ . Ft Chool lfpo

FrHZit &amp; t 0

FrHzor, a.E.

· 'Autom.do 3 Vear Old Wa1h1r,
• ~IOmatlc Dryer, Frlaidlire Re·

rt..raler Wllh leo Mokor, All

,r-l,....

oG Condlllonl 8U·37e·2720

ANER FRONT PROPERTY is hard

minutes from Gallipolis, you should
not let this flow by without a look.

Prtclcllll$811,900
OHIO TOWNSHIP· 82 Aaes more or
len, located in section 28 on Green
Rd. Some tillable land but mostly
pasture and wOOds. Old house and
pond on property. $47,000

1750 STATE ROUTE 7 NORTH·
Commercial Site. Not many left in this
area. Approx. 5 acres ftat land. Ideal
for almoal any type Biz.

INYENTORY
CLEARANCE
"Cabin Grade" Loge
6x8 White Pine
Borate PreHure
Treated
12.36/linear fool

Milled D-Los with
To"811e 4 Groove

Sold "Alia" by
the bundle.
350.450 Unear
feel/bundle
Ideal for huntlq
eampe, prqet or
outbulldlap.

RIO QRANDE· COMMERCIAL
LAND- FARM .LAND- HOME SITES..
YOU NAME IT. 147 acres mft with
approXImately 1 1/2 miles of road
frontage on State Route 325 &amp;
Pleasant Valley Rd. Broker owned.

$450,000
IDEAL SITE FOR APARTMENTS:
150 X 207 lot II ~aterl .tlhe comer

'ol Spruce &amp; 5111. All utllttie8 avalable.

$19,900
RIO
GRANDE
SPECIAL·
Apprmdmallly 42 1~ acres on State
Route 588 adjoining Bob Evans
Farm. Woods, pasture &amp; cropland
surround thll 4 BR 3 bath aecllonally
home. The home- bui~ In 1988 &amp;
flleturel LR, ldlchen wtlh apptillntee,
family rm, dining rm &amp;. much more.

1-800458-9990

3

extra large family rm with buin in
shelves, completely equipped kilchen
with sun light, 15 x 17 sun nn finished
In cedar &amp; glass &amp;. a 2 car garage.
When you stap out on the patio, you'll
notice the gazebo, shop &amp;. another
gar~ Lois of fun living here. Cali

for

ntment.

PRICE REDUCED- Enjoy your
weekends, vacations or all your
lime fishing, siding, or watching
the barges float by. This like new
eye catcher Is ready to move into.
From the kitchen &amp; the living room
you can enjoy the view of the
large cedar di\Ck &amp;·the Ohio River
through the . rear of the home
which . Is mostly glass. Also
Included I&amp; a 2 car garage.
HOMESITE IN THE CITY· This
large level lot Is located a1 the
dead and of Nell Ave. Utilfties
available. Home builders or
lnveators call about this one.

FISHERMEN'S DREAM· Two miles
below the dam you'll find this older $19,500
completely furnished 2 BR mobile
COMMERCIAL USnNQ. Fllo
home. There's an 8 x 24 deck
Grande
area. 1.6 acres ·111/1,
overlooking the Ohio River with a
IOCaled
on
the NE comer ol U.S.
storage building, Sl8p8 going down to
· 4 lane 35 and SR 325. Lots of
thli beach &amp; a large dock. $17,900
potential. $49,900.
GUN STORE: One of 110utham
SPACIOUS UVING ABOUNDS
Ohio's largest dealers.
THIS
COUNTRY
CLASSIC.
Established In 1968. Large
historic
two
BIOI)'
hou98
one.. 3
·VOlume. Owner retiring.
bedrcoms,
1/2
bath,
LR,
DR,
FL,
Contact Ranny Blacl&lt;burn.
lull besement and detached
E.X1'l'IA NICE BUILDING OR workshop. Bring In the outdoor~ in
the window covered knchen with
MOBILE HOME LOT· Mature Pine
attached walk-In pantry.
Tr- on the three Bides. Access 10
Raccoon Creek. Located In Hobart
RODNEY VILLAGE II- LAND
Dillon eubd. $11,900
• CONTRACT· 3 BR ranch with LR,
kitchen, bath, laundry and an
attached gar~~ge. Bicker owned
RACCOON CREEK PRIVACY· thl8
$49,900
aimoal brand new ranch etyte
r8818 In over7 ICI88 ol woods with
PLANTZ SUBOM·ION· setting
apprO&gt;&lt;. 800 ft. of crllll frontage.
.on 2 Iota at 193 Wlncltor you'll
Some ol the many flalutes are 4 ftnd IIIII 3 bedroom l'lnch. The
BRI, 2 beths, 16x21 LR W/lrench
extra
large .LA,
ldtchen,
doors, 2 111ge trealed deekl, ~
buemeul, carport &amp;. gu hell~n
aiding &amp;'an undachad 2 Cll' gnge. Included at the bllglln price of
$42,000
.
H you don't want to look II your
neighbors. YOU MUST SEE THIS
ONE. REDUCED TO tl-.aGO

home

You'N love the view tram
overlooking Rio Grande.

a high knoll

IlEAL SITE FOR Af'T'8.

150x 2071ot is ~II ad 1111111 comer of Spruce &amp;5th. PM ulllltleiiMIIIable. $19,1100

~r me.

4 olyleo
available

SPACIOUS FAIILY HOME· This

10 find but you have 7.66 acres mn BR 2 1/2 bath charmer is IOOatad next
wllh this 2 story farm house. With 3 to Holzer on Lariat Drive. All you walk
BR, 1 1/2 bath, city schools and a through, you'll view the large formal
view Ill for .a king all located JUSt dining rm, LR with stone fireplace,

VINTON VILLAQE· 4 ICI88 of M land PM. with frontage on SA 325. Wat8r &amp; electric available. Home builderB or
lnveetorl call about this one.

I

'·

$299/mo~

AntlqUH

39 mos., $1,642 due at signing

J

Iplus tax, title and license).

With air, 7-passenger seating, anti~lock brakes, rear window defroster, fourth door,
pawer ~indows, pawer locks, tinted glass, AM/FM cassette and more.
CHECK THIS ONE
.RAINIOW RIDGE: 16 8CI88 with
alleast Two NICE building aitel. One currently I1U a l'fl!)blle
home on lt. 12 x 12 shed ataye. Owner aaya aeHII Prlol
Reduced $18,500.

12111 Great LMna in • 3800 IQ.
ft. ranch wJflnilhed blalflltnt. 2
1/2 balha, (2) firaolaou, kit &amp;
Qreat rm. combO. 2 car garage.
$175,000 VLS

•

·

-

...'

I

.-

"
Grandt area. 3 bedroom
12t

0

r~ncn

on 2 acres more or leu, n ew
detlched 2 car oversized garage·~
tl'lat Ia lnaulated. prl~;:ed at

153,000.00 call Wilma.

l

"

RACINE· A corner lot wllh a 2 bedroom mobile home that
2 bedrooms, one balh, dining room,ullllty room, and a
sior~[,e building. Vety near lhe river. St2,0DD

$1~245

~a~~~~~~;~A~!v~ery
nice large
mobile
nome with
a heat
pump,
2
one bath,
attached
81orage
building
and
.
very

n~oar

after ·

lor lhal bualnen al home. Has a large lot
boal ramp. 1120,0DD

$750

fR,~CINE·

A 2 .slory frame home on a corner lot wllh 3
bedrooms, one balh, big kHchen and living room. Hae a lronl
porch and rear carport. Near lhe river and convenient to

cosh bock'

I'AIIM, Just oft .
180 wtlft new 3 bedroom
hOult. 1011 or PllfiUIO iancl, Clll
Wilma ,., fufl12tl3 NEW
HOME 2

l~$i00()~--

-IL£

bedroom with beautiful carpel
and cattndlll ceiUnga, never 1
picture l'lung on the wall, ~;:~.11

cosh back

Wilma.
121t7 FARM IN THE RIO
OIIANOE AAEA. 105.5 acroo
wltlt 2 -~-~nor wiNing 10

The Ultimate
Luxury Minivan

...... W11ma.

u~n..-

l2lf:l GROT BUILDING LOTS

oa 51. At, I so and Thein Rd.
,lllictd 01 only ST500 per lot, caN
Wilma.

1998 CltrY$ler Town &amp;Coun~y LXi

·

110M 10 acree m/1 of prime
·development land clott to
lrliewly •nd State · Route .
Eflc•llent for development or

Offer expires December 31.

commorciiiUH.S1541,000
-WHAT A IIAIIGAINII 4-8
badrm, brldl ltomo wfltt 2 full
bolito, 3 lola. Polly Haro «e'

-

1M3 3 10

See your local Chrysler and Plymouth dealer.

4 bedroom brick

~. 2fulbtiM.2~~
ely aeftooll P111y Haro ~'3A4

$240,000.

•

-

•

_,

IM UniYelolly. Call lo&lt; more

.

Holiday

-

lnv11tor1· t 112 1tory unit
conallt of 3 apta, IIIICf'l unit
baing 1 BR, plul a 2 BR II.H.

Chrysler and'Piymouth

181u Euro Lumina NIW Tires,
Ntw Br ailoa, PW, PS , P.. Sa all,

ITOIII'

110111, 11M 7 ....... and
21100
sq.
"
·
ol
living
partial bemt. s..,.ral out·
bulldlngo- on 111111121&lt;188
lot , c111 today tor your

w/cablnets galore, · flnfshecl
basement, -2 car garage .

12tl2 PRICE IS RIGHT
131,1100 S BR, 1 balft, sun poroh

.

--

~ Hona I Gobbltr 125, Big i98D Oklomobllo Toronarlo Vory
~urkay' 814-38&amp; 9335.
Good Condlllon, S5, 0110 111101,

IIGII NEW 08116 Sunonlno

VLS

11181 Dodga- f1,800, 814-1800.

lltquipment. Carmlcf1tel'a Ftrm I 1988 Chevy Cevallor, 2 Dooro,
L)iwn Gallipolis, OH 81•·••8· Rod, Au101111111c, 11,400, 81.. 3711-21112. 1-1100·514-1111 .

• kit, .llklrw WBFP. BR 1 ·tc. M/L level lawn. FREE

P&amp;rlod. ·
·
5) not have any CRIMINAL convictions on record that

7

cbunta On Hay Equipmenl And
L1&gt;w Ratt Financing On Now Or
Used Tractors. Always A Good
Stlec1ion Of Now AnG Uood

-a

c';:·

.,.....-.

1g87 Grand Am S1,100; 1817
Fl&gt;r Reaidonllal And Commercial Floro S2,QOO: 11187 S-10 S1,200,
I.Alwn Equipmtnt Compael Uti!lll
Trtcloro From 20 To 39 HFI ~II
Slzoo or • wo And 2 wo Fotm 1987 Subtril GL wnllo. below
Tfoc1oro, Hay Equlpmtnl, Jahn otrage mlltl. runs good. exc
Dioare Skid s- ..-.. ~ ln'Orlor. SI,OOCI 080. Talk., DotV
With Ua About Our Winter Olt· .... m
a• 114-317-7128.

IIAIIIUHO TAioLIVEL
PEAFICT
FOR ' THI
IIXI!CUTM! 4 Bro. 2 1/2 bolitO,
llt1l HIIIDt1oally lor~~tal LR, w/gat log 11ono
IIIC1orlari hori1o 4 ft~. Formal OR, vory nlct
Clblntll In lilt ki!Chtn. Hugo
LR. '
ldt, ~ ontonalnlng rm, mulor 8R Is
FIA btm1 - 1~eallv U~ro·, Appmx. 0500 .sq.
1
·
ftHteck In lhl rear, 2 Clr ~··

a

8

e&amp;ol4.

Vbur Area John Ottrt Dtaltr

AIIC Chihuahua Lor~ Haired Ft·
malt, 1 Months Hou18lrlined,
GOOd Wl111 Kldl t150, 11•·21141·

GAWA METROPOLITAN HOUSING AUTHORITY

. 5

1t74 Volkowap Supor BetUt
With Sunroof, N. . Tlree, Too
Many New Parte Ta llall Muat

1r1 B4 . . ,..,e oprftdor ...300.
1~5 217 84 manure apreader

RNI Eltlte Gtntrel

4

1170 8ubaru ~~~~ ftnd,
380cc, 2crl w1o11 1 den, runo
&amp;110od.
• Mull 110
.,..,...
304-e~ M

11114 Oldo Omoga, • Crl., "-·
1omaUc, 111,000 Original Mlloo
New Holland Special Deala : 1100, 15 11lr41111 From GoHipoll'
3430 Ford 40 PTO HP, 1 ..... 814-3711-21111 .

881)4,

3

710 Autos fcir Sill

Sldt(o Equlpmtnl ~75-7.:!1 .

1eu ue eses.

-

Jr. Sizto. By Sandyville Poll or.
fico. Aflornoono 1111 5pm. 304·
273-51155. 11uo B1bll1910.

TWenty Seventh Year In Tl"'e
Hetlng &amp; Cooling BoBIMal 814·
...... - . 1-800·2Q1.01)g&amp;

HFdraullc oll-loW811 price In
town. Vent frH
htlllt's. pro.
pano &amp; nawral ga, on 111&lt;1 now.

Conoolo Plano Elcelonl Condl·
~.......~.lion. eu 448 OCI2.
-~- ~. Born Sop(, 8111,
1887, Full-Blooded, No Plporo, Klmblt Plano 8 YHrt Old, Eacol· , '
c:M::1111~1;:21:;'::.:'·1~1::4:;84::3::;17:.:,10:::,.___ 11n1 Condlion, $2,8115, Allor 5:30, .

Sauder Curio Cablnol 8 To 7 Ft
Tal, BI~....S-$708.

WAIIItl UP: High Efflcloney NoiU·
ral And lP 'Gao Furnocoo, Lifo·
time w.rtamr On HM1 E•cllangor. 'If 'lbu Donl Calf Uo Wo Boll
Loael." FrH E11ima1011 Add·Dn
Hill Pumps Only Sllgltly Hlghor.
Call Uo Todar. 1987 lo Tho

•'

MUIIcal
1n1t1'1111111111

570

a

lr.to11 Furniture. Mon -Fri. Hta. 1Q..

dloall. 115,sao. 4 Wllott drive
equipped aamo war l20,toO.
Hoooton 130·1110t round balor
17,H5. Hooolan S40·1000t
round balor f 10,1100. HOMtOn T
hayblno S7,900. Round btlt Sl·
logo wroppor S8.500. 17' V pull
rau ... 200. Tro Pllflllte Ploanr
12 hH no-till drill SS,IIOO. - 1·
er's .Service Center St. Rt 17
Pl1ono 304·1115-3874.

A&amp;i,__

Selzecl And Said LCICII/y Thll
Monttt. Trucks, .tJ4's, EIC. Being

Liquidated In 'rl&gt;ur Aroo - · All
llakaa &amp; llodllo Avollob\t. Ctll
Tol FrM 800-522-2730 x ..20.

........,.--.aif-

•••o.

PriMHtar, 170 tr. . channtll

Book Goo· Dr.FtH
At' ftrol monlll. Don'! W\fl. Ouicto lncorMndM,
110·401·1
8112
slllllation. (FrH bonua). 1·100.

Fistt.r Price Pool Tllble f75; Gas
Po- Mini 81111 $100; 20' llo)&gt;a
Bilte 140; Hotpoinl Washer &amp;

Beanie Blbltt. $10ea. 30-4-675-

Agco·AIIis Tractors &amp; Hey Tool
Solo: AIJCO·AIIIo 08eO ltwd 52
PTO HP radial !lroo, 1 ,_,.
volvo, 12-opood eyncllo 110n1,
ropo. 4rr. or 4,000 ht. 1rlln

-

··---~ u (eP.D7 -

t

710 Autoa tor 8118

710 AutoiiOI' Slit

1 111\tJ~I'OH ltd IOtl

AKC CoCker lpolllelo, I WMIII
Old, Biadl &amp; Wllllt, 1150, 110·

IDnUD WILL - I l l LOIE

Up To 111 Paundo, 111

Call-

Bunie Babies· several curren1
ones, 110·$20, 814-898·1 802

AIIC CocUt ....nlel Foftiole I!
-•CI
, , . , , . . . . ,...
brO.n &amp; V•y Fri...Ur 1100.

lt ........

Fi,_od, $40 A Truck Load 0.
livorod Coli no~....sez No An...,., l .........

Bonen, $1 ,895, 81H48·2875 AI·

lhbile Home Space For Rent.
CJ•..e.e&amp;-3617.

490

~~~

Mllca1•1110111

101' Rtnt

In-

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