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                  <text>Pomeroy--llldd~le!fpo!2!:!rt~,O~h~lo2.,__ __:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _!:.Frl:,::da~y,~Fe,:bnla::;,;;::;;.£..;;.24,;,;.;,1;o;9i!i-.

Page--12-llle Dally Sentinel

Teenagers tod~y taught it's o ·ayto do anything to win
one

Woodville High School. I was
of
many
who
siOOd
by
helplessly
and
Ann
waldled an FFA student murder his
Landers
pigat the Tyler County Fair in Texas.
"This is what I saw. During the
·,~, l08~lel
swine
weigh-in, lhc student in _front
Twne~ SyndicMI W
CfNKn&amp;~·
or me was told that his pig was
several pounds light This meant he
Deat Aaa Landen: Is it any would not be able 10 show the pig
wonder some r:J our young people are unless it gained some weight in the
10 heartless?Thcy are taught it is OK
next20 minutes. The boy and four.of
·10 do anything 10 win. AduiiS are his buddies rook the pig over 10 the
supposed 10 set an example for kids. water hose and put the hose down the
This letter 10 the ediiOI' appeared in hog's lluoat Water began 10 run out
our·weekly paper. Please print it •• of the pig's nose, and his eyes rolled
•A.B.M., WOOOVU..LE, TEXAS
back in his head.
"Dear Editor. I would like 10 know · "The boys then rolled the pig back
what kind ofFFA (Fuwre Fanners of over 10 be weighed again. That poor
America) we are runnin~ at animal weighed 10 pounds more than

it had a few.minutesearliel: Everyone did nothing. Ten rn inuLeS Ia~. llic pig
was appalled that ~- boy~ were lay down and died. The boys carried
allowed 10 he 10 cruel and that the him off and went on to enjoy the
FA\. teacher stood by and' did night.
nothing.
"I can\ believe this was 10leraled.
"I continued to watch this an.imal I was stunned that the boy was
lfltr they put it back in the pen. His allowed to continue to comptle in ille
hind legs were stiff, and he was activities of the fair. To me, it was a
obviously suft"ering. The boy and his prime example of why our children
are the way they are. If the aduiiS
friends seemed unconcerned.
"Several people wen: outraged and around them tolerate cruelty and are
told the boy his pig wu about 10 die. unconcerned. why should they be any
He then became worried and starled different? ' -- Susan Lambright,
10 squeeze the pig, !lying to get 10me Woodville, Thxas"
DEARA.B.M.: Susan Lambright's
of the water out. His friends
letter has made an excellent point I
continued to.laugh and joke.
"The FFA teacher made no eft"on c&amp;Mot understand why such brutality
to help save this animal's life. The was permiued. If anyone in authority
high school principal walked by and at Woodville High School ';"Ould like

·-

•'

.

'

Dianna Ellison, March of Dimes
walk coordina10r, made a presentation at a recent "Business After
Hours," to kick-off the Tri-County
WalkAmerica set for Sunday, April
30, at Harmon Park in Point Pleasant,W.Va
Organizations can participate by
becoming sponsors or by pulling
together a team of walkers to raise
money. SponsGr dollars arc used to
pay the expenses of the walk, so
that all the money raised by participants goes directly to the March of
Dimes. Apart from cash donations,
businesses can also become sponsors through contributions of other

goods and services such as refreshments or advertising. Various levels of sponsorships are available:
Gold sponsor - Cash or equivalent of $1,000 or more. Silver sponsor • Cash or equivalent of $500 or
more. Bronze sponsor - Cash or
equivalent of $250 or more. The
logos of gold, silver and bronze
sponsors appear on the t-shirts
given to aU walkers raising $75 or
over and on various printed materials. The organizations are also
mentioned in publicity and
acknowleilged at pre-walk activitic.s. Sponsors are fealured in the

-------- Comf!1unity calendar----FRIDAY
POMEROY - All single people interested in fun and company
arc invited to meet at the old
· Sundry store at 106 Main StrC?t at
6 p.m. F'iday to go 10 Galhpohs to
watch a movie and go to a rcslau·
rant. QueStions, call 985-4 312.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Coy Bacon, former NFL player, will be speaker a~
First Southern Baptist Church Sunday, 7 p.m. Public', especially

youth, invited.

MONDAY
POMEROY - U.S . Coast
CHESTER - Meigs County Guard Auxiliary meeting Monday,
Chapler of the lzaac Wallon . 7 p.m. at the Carpenters' Hall on
League featuring Ray Zcyler, state ' Main Street. All people interested
director, Monday, 7 p.m. at the in forming new floulla urged to
Izaac Walton Farm on Sugar Run attend.
Road near Chester. Business meeling. All members and interested
POMEROY - The ' Meij!S
people invited to attend. ·
·
County Veterans Service Commission will meet Monday, 7:30 p.rri.
PORTLAND - · Lebonan in the Veterans Service Office in
.Township Trustees regular meet- Pomeroy.
ing, Monday, 7 p.m. at th·e 1own-

by Bob Hoeflich

--

---Military
. .news--

Timothy C. Wright
Navy Seaman Timothy C.
Wright, son of Anita Wright of
Coolville, has served half of a sixmonth deployment aboard the
amphibious assault ship U.S.S .
Nassau. This ship is currently serving off thti coast of Bosnia-Herzegovina.
· ..
Wright has spent most of hiS
time deployed in the Adriatic Sea
working with NATO forces. ._
He ruadualed in 1993 frol)l Federal Hocking High School and
joined the Navy that July.

DeDDII E. Matbenf

Navy Petty Officer Third Class
Dennis E. Matheny. 1 1-980
Alexander High School graduaJe.
has setved lhree •months of a s~x­
rnonth stin~ off the coast or Bosma·
•

EXPLAINING SPONSORSIDPS • l)iaaaa Elllsoo, coordlaator
ror tbe Trl-Couoty WalkAmerica rut''tbe March or Dimes, is
lbiiWD above as sbe tells tbose attending tbe recent ''Bu&amp;ioeu After
Hour&amp;'' about various spoosonblps available to businesses.

Crow's on top of things.

Hoeflich's 'round the bend.
· Sands' in the past.
Freeman's out in the woods.

POMEROY -Lenten breakfast
and quiet hour, 7:4S a.m. at Trinity
Congregational Church. Anyone is
welcome to the fellowship. For
reservations, residents mlly -call
99.2-7569 or 992-7765.

Times-Sentinel

·, (!)

~PRING H(j~ ~PRUNG

Congratulations are in crder for medication and oliservaiion until a
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Rowley who hean transplant could .be uranged.
observed .their 60th wedding He remained confined to lhe hospi' anniversary yesterday, Feb. 22, al _ tal for five months awaiting a heart
·which might work in his body.
their Pomeroy home.
In October, last yea(, the heart
Mr. and Mrs. Rowley are par·
ents of three children wbo are came through and the operation
Laura Harrison, Pomeroy; Kate toolc place. Harry was confined to
Parker of Mesa, Ariz:., and Junior the hospital for only about a week
Rowley or Ininron. The couple hu following the transplant since he
seven JU&amp;ndchildten and 12 greal- lives only about IS minutes from
the hospital. He reported back to
grandcliitdren.
the hospital once each week for
February is Heart Month so it's testing, and now reporiS then: only
·probably fitting that I mention a once every two weeks for the tesiS.
native or Racine, Harry Cleland, On Monday following Chrisunas
who is (Iaing well following a heart Harry's stepson brought him down
transplant at University Hospital in for a visit with his mother in
Racine and he's still doing okay.
Columbus. Harry will be 49 on May I. He
Harry. the son of Geraldine Cle·
was
reared in Racine and is a gradland of Racine, was·serving on lhe
Columbus Police Force when he uate of Southern High School.
became ill. ·He was taken to Mount
Carmel East and it Was at first
BiU Hudson· recently suffered a
believed that he might just have a stroke at his Pomeroy home. He
virus. However, testing indicated was taken 10 Grant Medical Center'
serious heart problems. He was in Columbus and has now been
moved to Mciunt Carmel West and moved to the rehabilitation center
then to University Hospital. This at the Holzer Medical Center in
was all several years ago and he Gallipolis. Cards will reach him at
was piaced on medication. Howev- Room 715.
er, as in the case of Carolyn Korn,
Pomeroy, who recently underwent
Meigs Countians could purchase
a heart transplant at the same hos-· gasoline at the !,lUmps Thursday for
pital, the effectiveneu of the medi- 1.049, qliile a b1t under the nauonal
cation wore off and Harry was con- average. Now that makes for
fined 10 University Hospital under another reason 10 keep smiling.

Herzel!ovina. Mathen'y is aboard
the gu1ded missile destroyer U.S.S.
K.idd.
· Matheny's ship has enforced the
no-fly zone, stopped and searched
international embargo violaton,
and made humanilarian effOIIS. ·
The destroyer is a member of
the ejght ships in the U.s.S.
Dwight D. E1senhower baltic
group.

What is the
Holy Ghost?
A free, one hour, in
your home, Bible
Study will give you
insight in the
scripture concerning
the Holy Ghost. Call
992-4178, Leave
name and number
after the preretor&lt;;led message.

y

•

308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio
1-992-66141·800·837-1094

1994 CADILLAC FUETWOOD

29,988

1

1994 BUICK CENTURY
1

1994 BUICK REGAL

4 cylinder, automatic, air cond.,

stereo,air conditioning,
power steering

. PICKUP
516

17 us
1994 OLDS.
ACHIEVA
.1

1994 PONTIAC
SUN BIRD

SERIES 4X4
lransfar case, alum . wheels, till,
cruise, air cond., cass, purple
metallic.

13,606

1994
CHEVY
CAVALIER

995 CHEVROLET
LS trim, 4.3 VB,' electronic shift

629

•

•

AT DON TATE MOTORS
·AND THE VALUES ARE CROPPING UP ALL OVER!
COME AND PICK ONE FOR YOURSELF!!
NEW ·1994 MODELS
THESE MUST GOI

. stereo, p,ower steering,
' power brakes. Hurry!

·,

995

$

4 Door, automatic,

.
99 5

5189Dow•

5)89 Ptr Mo.

1994 CHEVY
1BEREnA

4 door, air, auto., air bag,
stereo, cassette, P. windows &amp;
locks, bucket seats,
intermittent wipers, cruise, tilt.

2 Door, automatic, air bag,
cassette, power windows &amp;
locks, V-6, power steering,
cruise, tilt.

'

$10,995
1994 .·
CHEVROLET
CORSICA

1994 OLDS .
CUTLASS
SUPREME

4 Door, automatic, air,

Auto.,. air, power windOIYI &amp;
lOCka, stereo CB!I&amp;ette, air
cruise, tilt, V·J:!,

ball.

cassette, V6; air bag,
tilt, cruise.

$9,999

$1 995
1994
·CADILLAC·
FLEETWOOD
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cruise, stereo, cassette, more.

$21,995

Detail a
on Page

Cau ht in a lie:.

•
nn.es..

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

Geu

Beat of the Bend ...

Harold W. Bird
Navy Petty Officer Second
Class Harold W. Bird, son of
William aru1 Judy Bird of Racine,
recently wu promoted to his present rank.
He servea on the guided missile
frigate U.S.S. Robert 0 . Bradley,
based in Charleston, S.C. Bird
graduated ftom Southern Local
High School In 1990 and joined the
Navy that Au~sl
,
.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m ..
Pomeroy library. Mrs. Roy Holter
will review "My Theodosia" .
Response to roll call will be to
name women in history.
·

ship building.

Low: 408

WE HAVE ·1995 CHEVY
BWERSAND
.1995
. GMC JIMMY'S

IN .ST9CK NOW!

7 To Choo-e From!

Hydro plant
at-a-glance

· $153 million hydro-electric
plan_t will produce power
for 42 .0hio communities
.

health agencies can also apply to
state March of Dimes chapters for
grant money for programs that help
to prevent birth defeciS.
Sponsors include three local
radio stations, Big Country 99.5,
Magic 101 and Lite 92, Shell
Chemical, Subway, Peoples Bank
of J;'oint Pleasant, The Image
Gallery,. Point Distributing and
AVI Foodsystems. Also assisting
are the Gallia and Mason County
Chambers of Commerce.
·
For more information on sponsorships, conlaet Qianna Ellison at
(304) 675-1607.

walk video ·and are also inviled 10
include advertising or a promotional item in the finish-line packet
given to each walker. ·
Checkpoint sponsorships are
also available for $150, which entitles an organization a place along
the walk route 10 prov1de refreshments or other material. For $50,
an "Own a Piece of the Walk" sign
will display the organization's
name at the walk site.
The majority of money raised
by WalkAmerica goes to fund
research and to develop educational
programs for healthier babie. Local

HI: 60a

Company awards $74 million contract

WalkAmerica sponsorships available
.

College basketba11-Pagec1

I too wou.ld • ....,.:.,... stand his.family. - WEARY IN TilE
'
...-r·-some answers.
WEST
h
Dur Ann Landers: My
DEAR WEARY: Hav~ t e
sweetheart and I have decided to wedding. You'll be glad youdid.And
marry. ·o.n· wants to elope. I can please try to impr~ve y~ur
understand why. He knows that his relationship with Dans family.
motherand$isterbothdcspisernelllld Battling with in-laws puts I dead
!hall don't want to inviic them to our hand on a marriage from the starL
Do """ h4ve q~srions obolll&amp;l!%,
weddi ng.
,' • '---'-(
Dan's mother ruined his sister's .bUIIIO one ro ralk ro. nllll '""""": .
wedding because she hated the boo/del, "Sex twJ rhe Tte11-Ager. IS
groom. The problem is that I am my frank twJ ro rhe poilll. Seltda self· ·
fa~·r's only child, and I feel it is addressed, lo11g, business-sire
important for him to walk me down tltVtlope twJ a check or miHil'J Older .
the aisle.
.
for $J.75(this i~~Ciu4u postage lllld
I don't want a lonely elopcmcnt, but handling) to: TuiiS, doNut Lartders,
neither do I want to sulfcr through a P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, 111. 60611·
Jerribly tense wedding. P.S. I can't 0562: (fii ·CQNJI/JJ. ~tui $4.55.)

1.0 -pond

·1994 -0LDS
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Ext. Cab , 4.3 V6, SLE Decor, 2
VB, auto., cruise &amp; tllt,,alr. . ·
tone paint. cass .. auto. trans., stereo, air bag, power windows
P. win. &amp; locks , anti-lock
&amp; toe~$, intermittent wipeta, '
cassette.
·'
brakes, air bag, keyless entry.
•' )"

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must

$16 269
Go~

Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc •.
IT'S WORTH YOUR

I

•AJI prices Include
rebates to dealer.
Taxes &amp; t8ea not
Included.

$11,9-95·

~

Membecdtscoatentcoarmuu

,.

Co-op•s trustees
~t. Gov. Hollister c.hallenges
place regional
·
manageronleave students.to •get inv·olved··
By KEVIN KELLY
Tfm....S.ntlntl Stan
GAlliPOLIS -· Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative trustees have placed the regional ulilily's
general .manager on administrative leave, allhough
member discontent with BREC operations continues
to brew.
·BREC issued a briefannouncement that said Walter
V. Truin Jr., who also holds the position of BREC
executive vice president, .bas been asked 10 take the
leave ..Jeffrey Tackell, the system' s'engineering manager, bas temporarily been named officer in charge.
· Spokeiman Wayne King said no further information aboutth~ moye will be rofeased alibis.time "in
order to prorect 'the integrily Of the board's thorough
iaquiry iilto various issues."
·1 .
Service anoj business operations are cOntinuing as
normal, King added.
Truitt hiid been a component in the controversy
between BREC management and rnejllbers. At the
trustees. regular monthly meeting last week, a group
of Lawrence County members mel with the trustees
caiiiJig forTruill's dismissal, in part due to comments
Truitt reponedly made ala recent public meeting.
The group said tbal what if calls Truitt's "lack of
respect" for members "have proven him unworthy to
serve in an official capacity within this company-!'
Members unhappy with BREC's price and rate
structure·who carne away dissatisfied from the truslees' meeting have scheduled a public information
meelingfor Thursday at7 p.m. in lhe Gallia County ..
Senior Citizens Cenier.
"The purpose is to inform the public, determine
what our legal standing is, and see what can he done,"
a member spokesperson said.
Slate Rep. John A. Carey Jr., R-Wellston, is to be
on band for the meeting, lhe spokesperson said. Carey
has been researching member concerns since the
public meetings in eastern Lawrence County were
held nearly three weeks ago. .
'
A new billing procedure that temporarily increased
monthly rates for some BREC members prompted
the heated meetings between members and management. Aboul40 members anended the trustees' meetContlnuld on p1ge A2

By GEORGE ABATE
nmee-Stntlnel Stan
1UPPERS PLAINS- Lt. Gov .
Nancy Hollis1er challenged 140
Tuppers Elementary students to gi:l
involved in their communities Friday.
' .
The Marietta nalive visited her
first elementary school since becoming the first woman to bold the post
of Ohio Lieutenant Governor ·six
weeks .ago. Her visit came in conju~cticm with the scl\ool's observaof ~Right to Read" week.
.
spent 10 months in a big blue ·
van" during, l~sl yea(s c.~mpaign,
Hollislertold the students. "That van
covered SO,OOO miles in 10months."
Hollister emphasized .the students
can not read enough. She said each
day she reads and must make deci-

sions. .
' ..
"Be serious about wbat you do and
no1 about yourself," Hollister said.
"Keep your sense of humor." '
Even the highesl public officials
are really just ordinary people, she
added.
The lieutenant governor fielded
questions from the studenls \hal incl.uded:
• whether she would like to be
governor;

SCHOOL- U. Gov. Nam:y Hollister mixed anecdotes about her
position; her family and Sout~teast Oblo history Friday afternoon. The first woman to hold tbis
post, Hollister addressed nearly 140 Tuppers Plains Elementary students as the highlight oftbe
school's "Rlgltt to Read" week. The students learned about Ohio h~tory, government and
geography.

• what she thought of former Presidenl George Bush, whom she

"I' m ·a river ral from down along the Ohio River," Hollisler said.
She also urged child to learn more about their own history.
• how much money she makes;
Hollister explained she oversees the stale department of agricullure
• how many meetings she must anend;
and would fill Ihe posl of lhe governor in an emergency.
• what she lhinks about the baseball strike;
Nexl week, she will leave for a trade mission lo Mexico City, she
• whal she does on an average day; and
added.
• what iiS like 10 ride in a limousine.
Sandy Needs, lhe special math and reading leacher for Ihe sehool,
Hollister also related her own family history which originales invited Hollisler before her inauguralion Jasl month .
more lhan 150 years ago with Rufus Putnam in Mariena. History,
"I assumed they couldn'l come;'' Needs said. "This week we lried
as·lold lo her by her grandparents, was an important part of her to telllhem who lhe lieulenant governor was, 1ha1she was like the vice
y\)unglife.
·
·
Continued on page A2

met;

Appeals court upholds News capsules
confidence man•s
19-year prison sentence Jobless
r~tes up

By JIM FREEMAN
nm....S.ntlneletllff
· POMEROY - The senlence of a Nigerian man convicted of swindling
southeastern Ohioans out of $672,386 was upheld this week by the Fourth
District Coun of Appeals.
·
Oldalun Fasheun, 39, who posed as owner of lhe Athena Ttading Company
of Athens, conned people with a get-rich-quick scheme promising quick relum
on investments.
·
'
He was sentenced to at lcasll9 years on one count of corrupiion and five thefl
charges in January, 1992, said Athens allomcy Robert K. Toy who served as
special prosecutor during lhe appeal. ·
.
Fasheun lold his viclims he Wlll; owed $15.5 million from the Nige~an
Nalional Petioleum Company ' as a commission oil a $61 million sale of
computer equipmen~ but had to come up with a one percent currency
differential to free the money, said Pomeroy allomey Steven L. Story who
originally prosecuted Fasheun.
'He asked his victims io helphimcomc up with the money and promised them
a high rate of return, sometimes to double tbeir money within 30 days, Story
explained. .• .
"'The more outmgeous 1he lie, the more believable it becomes~ especially
if you repeal it enough," said Story.
Fasheun had at least 10 viclims in Meigs, Vinton and AI hens counties, said
Story. "He may have laken money from people who were too embarrassed to
admit they had been fleeced," he added.
.
S1ory described Fasheun as "very intelligent, very personable.. . a great con
man- but a lillie arrogant."
,
.
. Fasheun was likable, Story said. "He was engaging... but he was crooked."
The son of a f01mer railroad executive, Fasheun graduated from high school
al the age of 15 and earned a bachelor's degree and a master's degree in
business administration from Ohio Universi!Y·
'
Special prosecutor Robert K. Toy said he was pleased wilh the decision and
added the Ohio Supreme Court would lik~ly refuse to hear tbe case due 10 the
appeals court's unanimous decision.
.,
"II has come out since then that a large portion of (Nigeria's) gross national
producl comes from fleecing foreigners," said Story. "I'm pleased (with the
decision). I hope irgels broadcasl in Nigeria."
:

.•
'

+

I

·. By GEORGE ABATE
San Bruno, Calif.- had th~ lowes! bid for the plant al Wesl Virginia- will produce 42 mcgawans of power.
"If we have
· nmee Sentinel Stan
$73,873,000. The firm can begin working nr.ar lhe site
Groundbreaking for the plant should occur sometime in to go lo court
BEUEVILLE, W.Va. -The Belleville hydro-electric March 2, Daggell said.
lale March, Daggen said.
we •11
give
A$6millioncontracl was soldforlhe gates and the lrash · AMl'-Ohio-a non-profit company- is a colleclive of whalever price
plant contract was .sold to a California company for more
!ban $73.8 million Friday afternoon, a power company . mke more than a week ago. The tmsh mke cleans trash these smaller Ohio communities. This hydro-eleclric the court says"
· official said Friday.
away from the dam, Daggell said. The 42cornrnunilies- project is formally known as 'the Ohio Municipal Electric which may be
This plant is the cornerstone 10 lhe $153 million hydro- located mostly in northern Ohio- also agreed to raise Generation Agency Joinl Venlure 5 (OMEGA JVS).
lowerlhan cur·
electric project that will eventually provide power for 42 their rates to pay for the investment.
.
The entire hydro-electric proiect shoul&lt;j he finished by re-nt offers,
Ohio communities, said E. Leon Daggell, execulive vice · The project includes the hydro-electric plant on the Oct. 1. 1997. The power lines should be buill and land Daggen said.
presidenlofArnericanMu- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ohio River near the cleared beginning in April1996, Daggett said.
No Meigs
111icipal Power of Ohio
"Once the COntract has been Belleville Locks and Dam The Fedeml Energy Regula lory Commission will prob- Counly resi :
Inc.
.
.
and 25 miles of power ably license this coun'ty roule lhis July, officials said.
dents will gel l~~~~~~!!!~~==:J
"Once the contract has
signed there'S nothing going tO lines from Reedsville to "!think people are realizing that this is lhe route," he eleclricily from
been signed there's nolhan American Electric added.
· lhis project, bul the plant and line construclion shou)ij
ing going to hold us back,"
hold liS back."
Power substation in
Aboull7 of lhe 25 miles, or about II oflhe 168 pa;cels employ counly residenls, Daggett said.
Oaggell said.
E. Leon DIIJlletl, txte:utlvt viet pruldenl
Rutland. ·
already have options, Daggell said.
'
The lhree-year projecl will employ about 225 workers
Guy F. Atkinson ConAmerican Munlc:l(llll Power of Ohio lne.
The plant - which
The ~om~ny will negotiate with Olher properly owners during lhe conslruction phase and aboul a dozen perm a. slruction Co. - based in ::;:~:-----;::=:::========:,_;_!!is~t~ec~h~n~ic~a~lly~loc!!at~ed!_!in~~a~Jo~n~g~l~be:!ro~u~te~,~he:;,!ad~d~ed~·:..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,!n~e!!nt~!!J!!-2!~'· he added.

GALLIPOLIS
- Following a
slale trend and lhe
normal December
to January seasonal
change, unefuployment rates

Personnel
matters:

Meigs·commission
reclaims control .
over DHS hiring
By JIM FREEMAN
ntnea-Sentlneletan
.POMEROY - The Meigs County
Board of Commissioners reclaimed
its conlrol on persomiel matters at the
Meigs County Deparlmenl of Human
Services during lhe board's regular
meeling Friday. afternoon.
The boardvoieHio rescind a ri:solulion adopled April 7, 1993; which
granted authorily to lhe DHS director
lo hire new employees and handle
related actions such as promotions,
defi!"olions, transfe~, '1ISJ?Cll$j.9ll(land
lflngs.
·
·
The new resolulion stales commis·
sioners "shall have lhe final yes or no"
on lh~ Meigs County Department of
Human Services director's appoint. menl of employees.
Furthermore, the resolution slales
no employee may be placed on the
payroll, suspended or dismissed with·
out a resolulion of the commission.
· "I think we oughtlo go back 10 lhe
way il was 10 star! wilh," said commission President Fred Hoffman.
"We were tnisled," said Commis-

sioner Janet Howard Tacken who,
along wilh Commissioner Robert
Hartenbach originally approved the ·
resolution, but this time agreed to
rescind·it
Ohio Revised Code says county
commissions and lhe DHS direclor
are the hiring authority, said Hoffman.
Hoffman also clarified last week's
aclion by lhe commission lransferring Ihe coun1y's slale-mandated share
of $104,069 for public assistance.
The money is ilsed for Aid to Dependcnl Children cash benefits, GenContlnued on p•ge A2

GOOD MORNING

Investigator probes possible
conflicts In constructlon'contract

,.

in-

creased throughoul
southern Ohio-and . 'i' ·
across most of the
,,
slate · last monlll.
. Regionally, lhe
OBES reported a
January rale of 8.6
percent for Gallia
County • up 1'.8 percent from the December figure of 6.8
percent.
,
In Meigs County, the jobless mte increased 1.8 percent
·from 8.8 percenllo 10.6 percenl- during the period.
According 10 lhe OBES, 900 members of Meigs' 8,300
work fo~ce were jobless in January. In Gallia County,
1,200 members of the county's 13,700 work force were
without work during the period.

GALLIPOLIS - A special investigator has been
appointed to look into allegations of a conflicl of inler·
ests in a conslruclion cqntracl wilh ·the Departmenl of
Children Services.
Meigs Counly Proseculor John R. Lenles was ap•
pointed by order of Common Pl~as Court Judge Joseph
L. Cain.
The appointment was made althe request of ProsecUI·
ing Allomey Brenl A. Saunders and lhe Gallia Counly
Commission, according 1o court records.
Lentes said Friday lhal Jim and Harlan Northup asked
for the investigalion, alleging lhat two members of lhe
Children Services Board had an unlawful inleresl iD lh~
conlract.
·
Jim Northup said Ihe contracl involves the annex built
in 1992 allhe children's home on Shawnee Lane near
State Route 160 in Gallipolis. He declined 10 commenl
furlher oul of concern of interfering wilh lhe investigation.
l..enles also did not provide any further details, other
lhan lo say the preliminary investigation would be completed within two weeks.
,
Saunders and members of the counly commission
have repeatedly declined lo comment on lhe invesligation.

Today's Times-Sentinel
16 Section.• • 96 PaaH

Business
Calendars
Classifleds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports
Alon11 the Riv~r
Weather

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Dl
BS&amp;6
03'5
Insert
A4

AS

A3
Cl-6
Bl

Al

Columns
lark Apdersog
Fred Crow •

Bob HgeQich
Jim Sapds

c '"'·ow., v...,. ......... Co.

One killed, four injured In early Saturday morning mobile home fire

GALLIA - A fire th~l swept through a
.GreenfieldTownshipdouble-widemobilehome
eluly Saturday killed one occupant and sentfour
olhers to lhe hospilal with minor bums.
The viclim was identified as larry Clarkson,
45, 436 Cambria FurnaCe Road, Oak Hill. His
body was sent to the Franklin Counly coroner's
office for an autopsy under the directiol. of
Gallia County Coroner Dr. Ellward Berkich.

"AI this time, !here is no suspecled foul pl~y
involved in the fire," Slale Fire Marshal Robert
Uwless of-Ironton said. Lawless added Ihat the
cause of lhe fire remains under investigation .
~less said lhe Greenfield Township Volunleer Fire Depa -nenl was ~Jer1ed to the blaze al
5:12a.m. The mile home was located ncar the
Gallia-Jackson ounly line.
With mutual aid from the Madison-Jefferson

VFD, the fire was soon brought under conlrol "but
Ihere' was nothing left but the frame and the ~f •
Lawless said,
'
Clarkson was found in a bedroom in lhe nonbweat
comer of lhe res1dence, lawless laid Four other
occupants ofthe mobile home- William Sitnmcn
37, ~~ara Chapman, 32, and two juveniles _:
were. IDJured and taken to Oak Hill Communily
Medica
lcl-AILwere-later-treated andTI!Ieased. 1~--

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A2 Sunday nm11 Sentinel

P!gl

OH IO

W t:c~ltll . .

Hearings set on .vou·c her proposal

Acai-Wealbt:r" forer.t for

By JOHN CHALFANT
Auoclated Pms Writer
COLUMBUS - A pilot program that would let parents use.
P!!blic money to send children to
pnvare school should be expanded
to cover more pupils, a legislative
b~ker of the proposal said.
House Education Chairman
Michael Fox, R-Hamilton, said his
commitree will open hearings this
week on Gov. George·voinovich's
$12.5 million Ohio Scholarship
Plan. . .
.Voinovicli's school voucher
·program would apply to pupils in
ldndergarren through third grade in
one or more pilot school dislricts.
· Dislricts would compete to participate. A lottery would select eligible swdents. The governor would

MICH.

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· : · · IND.

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•, ·
•

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• !Columbus! 50"

I

appoint a commission to administer ·
the program .
Parents could .use the · state
money to cover tuition at private
elementary schools.
,
. Fox said he would like to ,
expand eligibility to include pilpils
through sixth grade. .
"I think it gives a wider range
of choice to more kids and to more
parents. In terms of what ullima~ll.
happens to this proposal I don t
know. I'm for it, and will be for it
after the cast of thousands come," ,
Fox said in an interview.
He referred to the State Board of
Education and groups of educational professionals who have lined up
in opposition.
Prior to Fox's committee hear-

W.VA.

· .Rain expected to follow
' ~:warmer Sunday temps ·

"

station was 73, set in 1957. The

recOrd low is minus 7, set in 1900.

Sunrise on Sunday will be at
.7:10 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Sunday ... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of rain in the afternoon.
Highs from lhe lower 40s northeast
10 the middle 60s extreme south.
Monday ...Rain likely. Lows
from the ·upper 30s north to the
middle 40s south.
ExlePded forecast:
. Tuesday ... A chance of rain
southeast. Pry elsewhere. Lows
from around 20 northwest to the
Jower' '30s extreme south. Hi_ghs
from the middle 30s north to
around 40 south.
Wednesday... A chance of rain.
. Lows in the 30s and highs in the
40s.

.

:).. Ohio, W.Va. lottery picks

By MARCY GORDON
displayed among members of the
Associated Press Writer
House Judiciary Committee, which
WASHINGTON - Nerves is handling roughly half the'legislawere frayed as the House Judiciary · lion in the Republicans'. ''Conttact
Cornmitree wrestled into the night With America."
over legislation, so much on the
Wednesday's drafting session
edge that Rep. Sonny Bono bought began badly as Democrats accused
pizza to restore civility.
the GOP majority of r11shing
That peacemaking move last through without adequate debate on
week calmed .thin~s for a little a bill to limit damages awarded in.
while bet~ sparnng Democrats lawsuits. ·
·
and Republicans, but invective and .
At· lunchtime, the Democratic
vilriol are more the norm than the committee members huddled in
e1teeption in the House these days.
their. office and seriously considMidway through the mjljfrity ered a walkout, according to severGOP's 100-day deadline for ouse a1 DeThmoc~uh·c sofurcesh.
f draft
.
action on maJor bills, lawmakers
at mg I, a ter ours o
-·
are tired and cranky, Democrats ing and debate, Bo'no, a freshman
feel desperate, and _the customary Republican from California, had IS
civility has gone by the wayside. pizzas brought in. The former pop
Tempers fliu-ed in-key committees singer and l'alm Springs mayor,
over an array of issues: legal . who also was in the reslaurant busi· reform, welfare restructuring and 'ness, apparently subscribes to the
· cuts in programs' for low-income old adag\l about enemies breaking
people. .
·
bread together. .
·
"They're working harder over a . "I'd like to move that we
concentrated period of time than adjourn," Bono told Judiciary
they ever have," said Nonnan Om- Chairman Rep. Henry Hyde, R-Ill.
stein, a veteran Congress-watcher "The pizza is here and it's warm. I
at the American Enterprise Insti- even bought some for the other
tute. "The stakes are high and side." The pizzas - cheese,
they're talking about some highly cheese and pepperoni, and the
controversial things .... The pres- works-.smoolhed the raw edges.
sure on those committees, particuBy the next morning, the bickerlarly on Judiciary, is intense."
ing 'had startec! again.
Much of the hostility has been
Rep. Xavier Be.cerra, D-Calif.,
arrived breathless from another

Meigs commission
mil- ·

'H0 11•1S·te-r

are

.NO decision until summer

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Timbers testified before the
energy and power subcommittee of
the House Commerce Committee
about plans to sell Shares in the
company to the public as part of a
privatization plan.
· :·we are financially and organizatiOnally prepared to sell the corporation when authorized to· do
so," Timbers said. ''lt's time for
the ~overnment to get out of the
uranmm enrichment business.''

Continued trom page A1
ates uranium plants in western
ing.Feb. 20 al BREC headquarters, . Kentucky and southern Ohio will
and wbile some met priv•tely with the not make a decision whether to.usc
board to discuss concerns, dissatis- a new uranium technology until at
faction remained strong. ·
least after July I. ·
"We have lhe highest electric serThe disclosure came Friday durvice in the state," the spokesperson in~ testimony in Washington by
said. "We haven't received any an- W111iam Timbers, president and
swers to our questic;ms. They won't
·~~~~ec;!r~h~~~~~~e Unit·
tell us anything."
BRE.C, which services 16,000 customers in so~thern Ohio, has taken
:several stepS to remedy problems with
the billing procedure, including al·
lowing members to read their melers
·every other month.
.
Announces th~ Opening of His Medical Practice In
Members are looking into the possibility of, breaking away from the
cooperative_and getting_service from
.SURG.ERY ,
another utility. ·

DAVID

~aura · F. 'Mutt' Circle

Roy M. 'Chip' Wiseman

ALBANY - Roy M. "Chip" Wiseman, 80, Jellico Road Albany died
Rac~C= - Laura F'un "Mutt" Circle, 79, Apple Grove-Dorcas Road, ·
5
Saturday,
Feb. 25, 1995 in Holzer Medical Center.
. ',
'
·
•
BIUrday, Feb. 25,1995 at her residence.
.
Born May 15, 1915 at Dortas, daughter of the late Marion and Nellie
~om Dec. 17, 191~ in Scip~ Township, Meigs County, son of the late
Ja~ Johnson, she was a retired cook for the Southern Local School
[ijsuicL

·

She was a member of the Bethany United Methodist Church the East_.
em Star, OAJ'SE., the Seni~ Citizens, AARP, SE.ROand the Gringe ..
. She·was also preceded m death by ber hummel, Wesley Circle; fo..brolbers, Roy Jobnson, Douglas Johnson, Waid Johnson and Howard
Johnson; her foster parents, Arthur and Mary Jane Beegle; and a nephew
Paul Bostick.
.
'
Surviving are a twin sister, Lizzie Wood of Racme'· two sisters-in-law
Edison Johnson of Racine, and Pauline Johnson of Carrollton Texas· ~
brother an~ sister-in-law, James and Phyllis Circle of New Hav~. W.V'a.;
.a.brother-m-law, George Circle of New Haven' and several nieces and
nephews, great-nieces and nephews, and great-~ nieces and nephews. ·
. Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
.w1th the Rev. Kenny Baker offic1ating. Burial will be in the Greenwood
' Cemetery, Racine. Friends may call at the funeral home Monday from 4-9
p.m.
.

G.

bill-drafting session, a few minutes
too late to cast a .key vote. He
implo~ Hyde 10 order a second
roll call. but the Republicans voted
him down even though his vote
aga'inst the bill wouldn't have
reversed its adoption.
·
"I thought it was a disgraceful
action in a place where.we're supposed to be le$islaling," Becerra
said later in an mterview. ''They're
on Ibis political race against time.''
Hyde brushed ·off a complaint
about the action from Rep. John .
Conyers of Michigan, the panel's
senior Democrat, saying: "The
business of the committee has 10 be
done and, unfortunately, comity is
a two-way street."
Down the hall, at the House
E.~onomic and Educational Opportunities Committee, a bill-drafting
session on ·weUare reform was ·
marked by Chairman ~ill
Goodling.!.R·Pa,t_banging the gavel

amid s~outing by Rep. George
Miller, D-Calif.
"You ought to be embam!ssed
at w)!at you're doinf to the children
in this nation,' Miller told .
Goodling in one heated exchange.
The week before, a vote oil the
welfare reform plan in a House
Ways and Means subcommittee
brought an explosion of rancor ·
betw~en the panel's Republican
chairrilan, Rep. Clay ~haw of Florida, a!ld its senior DCmocrat, Rep.
Harold Ford of Tennessee.
At a six-hour session Thursday
night of the subcommittee that
oversees health, education and
other social programs, there were
repeated lense moments as Republicans voted big culs in job training
and other Democratic programs.
"I think it's just uncon-,
scionable, it's reprehensible," Rep.
Louis Stokes, D-Ohio, said of the
housing reductions.

Gr.een's landscapi~g &amp; Construction
·

The grass cutting season is almost here.
Sign up now, before March 21st, for a .,
season mowing contract imd receive
FIVE flowers that are 12 to 15 inches in diamat ·
This will add instant full color to any lan c
That's a $25.00 value for · t si
g up.

-7766

ROBERT M. HOLLE I M.D.
. FAMILY PUCTICE ·

Ollie Wallace and Ehzabeth Nicholson Wiseman he was a graduate of
Columbia ':U!lh School and attendC(I Franklin Univ~ty.
A machlDISt and ,tool and die worker for many yean he retired from
the Federal Mogul Corp. Gallipolis. He had also been ~ployed at several other ma_nufacturing Ymns,·incl11ding the former Kaiser Aluminum .
Corp. P!ant m Ravenswood, W.Va. He was a member of the First Church
.
of God m Athens.
Surviving are ~is wife of 56 years, Wilda Mae Starkey Wiseman; a
daughter '!"d son-m-l~w, Joy E. and Larry Clark of Middleport; a son 111;1d
daughter-m-law, Dav1d J. and Jane Wiseman of Rutland· and ,six grandchldren, four great-grandchildren and four great-great ~children
He was also preceded iri death by two brolhers Jolin D. Wiseman and
Willis M. Wiseman.
'
·
·
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the First Church of God Athens
with the Rev. Willi81)1 Sheppler officiating. Burial will be in the Wei~
Cemetery, Pag~town. Friends may call at the Bigony-Jordan .Funeral
Home, Albany, on Monday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
.

.Deaths elsewhere .
· MIDDLEPORT -Edward C. Evans, 80, Middlep!Xt, died Saturday,
WiUiam M. Clements
Feb. 25, 1995 in the Veterans Administration Medical Center, Chillicothe,
. TUCSON • Ari~. (AP) -'
following an extended iUness.
,
William M. Clements, ch1ef execuBom Sept. 13, 1914 Pomeroy, son 'o f the late Joseph and Carmon -tive officer of Golden Eagle DisCasseU Evans, he was a retired poultry business owner. He was a member lribu!Ors and a member of the Musof the Middleport Church of Christ. a u.s. Navy veteran of World Warn, cular Dystrophy Association's ·
and a qJember of the Feeney-Bennett American Legion Post No. 128.
national board or directors, died
Surviving are his wife, Edna Evans; two sons and daughters-in-law, Thursday of a brain tumor. He was·
Edward and Marianne Evans Jr. of Simi Valley, Calif., and John and 58 ·
.
Linda Evan's of Norcross, Ga.; a son, Ronald Evans of Columbus; eight
. Cl~ments founded Go!de~ Eagle
grandchildren and five great-grandchildren; a brother. Charles Evans of DIStributors , wh1ch d1stnbutes
Colorado Springs, Colo.; and several nieces and nephews.
Anhe~er-Busch pr?&lt;~ucts th~ugh• He was also precedtlll in death by a sister, Frances Cole.
·
.out AriZD!'a, and beca'!'e pres1de~t
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middle- m 1974 m partnership w1th h1s
port, with AI Hartson officiating. Burial will be in the Riverview Ceme- · father. Mich 1V G
·
tery. F'riends may call at the funeral home Mon&lt;,Jl\y from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
LOS ANGE.LE.Sa(~P)
Michael V. Gazzo, nominated for
an Academy · Award for his supporting role in. The Godfather Pari
RACINE - Charles E. Grueser, 76, Racirie, died Friday, Feb, 24, II and author of lhe 1955 play A
1995 in Holzer Medical CeQter.
·
Haljul of Rain, .died Feb. 14 of a ·
B&lt;,im Aprill5, 1918 in Parkersburg, W.Va.. son of the late Adolph and stroke. He was 71.
Clara Mcintosh Grueser, he was a boilermaker and a cal)lenter. ·
Known in Hollywood for hi.s
·A U.S. Navy veleran of World War II, he was a member of the Mid- · .gangster roles, Gazzo played ·
dleport Masomc Lodge and.the Fceney-Bennen Post of the American Fran_kie Pentangeli in the 1974
Legion in Middleport. He attended the Minersville United Methodist Godfat~r sequel.
Church.
A Haljul of Rain, about a drug
Surviving are his wife, Ruby Smith Grueser; a daughter and son-in- addict struggling to overcome his
law, Becky and Jim Baker of Fort Worth, TelUIS: sons and daughters-in· · habit, opened in New Yorlc with
. law, Jon and Angela Gruescr of ReedsVille, and Ed and Sandy Grueser of Ben Gazzara, Shelley Winters and
Reynoldsburg; 11 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren; sisters and Anthony Franciosa. It was made
brothers-in-law, Mary and Bill Russell of Pomeroy, and Ann and Howard into a 1957 film, with a screenplay
Tucker of Cheparhet, R.I.; and a brother and sister-in-law,· Walter and by Gazzo and Alfred Hayes and
Mary Gruescr of Pomeroy.
.
starring Eva Marie Saint and Don
He was preceded in death by brothers, Richard and Adolph Gruescr Jr.; Murray.
·
and by a sister, Clara Frances McMaster.
Richard Gun.n
Services will be !p.m. Monday in the Ewing l'uneral Home, Pomeroy,
NASHVILLE, Tenn . (AP) with the Rev. Wesley Thatcher officiating. Burial will follow in Min- Richard M. "Pek" Gunn, whose
ersville Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday from homespun verse earned him 1he
2-4 and 7-9 p,m.
.
. designation poet laureate of TenMilitary graveside rites wiU be conducted by Fenney-Benneu Amen- nessee in 1965, died Thursday of
can Legion Post No. 128. ·
·
.
· congestive heart failure. He was ·
. A Masonic service will be performed in the funeral home 'at7:30 p.m. 91.
·
Sunday.
·
Gunn wrote about plain folks in
a co.nfusing world. His frrst book,
Tumblin' Creek Tales; appeared in
1963. His second, Keep on Laughing,
was published in 1975.
GAlLIPOLIS -Carrie Louise Swain, 87, Kanauga, died Saturday,
His
syndicated column, ·:The
Feb. 25, 1995 in Pinecrest Care Cenful'.
. .
Born Jlin. 13, 19&lt;MI in Kanawha County, W.Va., daughter of the late Peekhole," appeared in 32 newspaJoseph C. and Nettie Carrie JohnSon, she attended Gallia Academy High pers_across the country. He also
wrote "Little Mischief, ' the offiSchool and was a member of the Kanauga United Methodist Church .
cial
poem on Tennessee's wild ani· SU!Viving
a daughter, Eva S. Hughes of Columbus; and two gratl!lmal,
the raccoon, and "The Tenchildren and two great-grandchildren.
.
· .
nessee
Salute," the state's bicenServices will be II. a.m. Monday in the McCoy·M091'C Funeral Home
tennial
march.
Wethertiolt Chapel, Oallipolis, with the Rev. Lelaitd Brehm offiCiating;
Wallace J. Jorgenson
Burial will be in the Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may call at
CHARLOTTE,
N.C. (AP) the chapel Monday from 10 a.m. until the hour of the service.
Wallace J: Jorgenson, former Jefferson-Pilot Communications presi.dent, died Thursday of cancer. ·He
was 71.
Jorgenson served us the broadPOINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Qkey Randall Wlittmon; 80, Apple
casting
company's president from
Grove, W.Va., died Friday, Feb. 24, 1995 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Nov. 20, 1914 in Apple Grove, son of the late Floyd and Minnie 1978 to 1988. Jefferson-Pilot Com· Carter Watterson, he was a fanner and was retired from the West Virginia munrcations owns WBTV and WBT.
,
Department of Highways.
. .
He
was
inducted
into
the ·North
He was also preceded in death by )lis wife, Maxine Dunn Watterson;
Carolina
Broadcasters'
Hall of
and by two sons, three sisters and three brothers.
·
Fame
and
served
.as
chairman
of
Surviving are a daughter, Wanda P9tts of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.:
the
National
Association
of
Broadthree grandchildren; and two sisters, Faye Connors of Columbus; and
Opal McCloud of Orlando, Fla. ·
.
.
· casters for four years.
Jorgenson is survived by his
Services wiU be I p.m. Monday in the Wilcoxc;n Funeral Home, Point
wife,
Solveig; and· five children,
Pleasant, with the Rev. Odell Bush officiating. Burial will be il'l the Beale ·
Kristin,
Peter, Mark, Philip. and
Chapel Cemetery, Apple Grove. Friends may call at the funeral _home
Lisa.
Sunday from 7-9 p;m,
·

m

Charles E. Grueser

Okey·R. Watterson

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WE ARE OPEN 'TIL -7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
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IRTO \SPRIRG S(JLe
1993 LINCOLN CONTINEN,.AL _4 DR.
3.8 V6 eng.; PS, PB, auto. trans., air
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locks, P. moon roof, casl alum .
wheels , rear defroster, one owner, low
miles.

WAS$21:~~

819,999

'

'

THIS WEEK'SSPECIALS .
1990 LINCOLN

'rOWN CAR

owne'r. ·-'

SPECIAL

•a

•

1993 FORD

1987 JEEP

·EXPLORER Xur

CHEROKEE 414

4X4 4 Dr. , 4..0 V6 eng., PS, PB,
aula . trans , air · cond , · AM/FM
slereo cass., tilt &amp; cru11se, on•••rl
windows &amp; power locks, I
rack, extra clean, local one
owner, low miles:
WAS $22,995

Limiled 4 Dr. V-6 ·eng·: . power
s1eering &amp; power brakes, auto.
lrans., air cond., AM/FM stereo
casselle, till &amp; cruise, power
windows &amp; power lo~ ks , rear
defroster, local one owner.
WAS ~7995
"

8,495

&amp;,995

1988 AMC

·1981 FORD

PREMIER 4 DR.

PICKUP F·IOO
It 7 wheel ba,se;-needs l!f'olor.:
Power ' steering, power brakes,
automatic transmission, AM/FM
rad10, ·rear slep bumper, goOd
1ires .'

SPECIAL

8

4,995

NOW ON THE SPOT FINANCING AND LEASING
Bring in yo~ best d~al on a New Car or Truck ·a nd .• •,.. . .
will try • meet or Beat the Deal.
FOR A -GOOD -DEAL••
~ SERVICE DEPARTMENT IS OPEN MON.~FRI.

·•

B-5; SAT...12
• MUFFLER SHOP MON·.-FRI. 8-S; SAT. 8-12
NEW HOURS IN SALES MON.•FRI. a.e;' SAT. 11-3 P.M.

614·446·2412.

•

t

--

.

8

21,

8

WAS $5996

8

.

See Jack Roush, VIctor Armt or Bob Roa ,

Carmichael's Farm&amp;. Lawn
.. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO I

PHONE 99~·2196

1\fn:&gt;otEPORT, o\'\ ·

WAS $99S5

Annual
Percentage Yield

through l"'rrday

(304) 675·5971

,.

EXT. Length XLT. 7 passenger, V-8 engine, power slee ring ,
V6· engine, ·power steeri ng and· - power brl'jRe'S, air coMIItonl n~
power brakes. :'aulo. · lrans- AM/FM stereo casselle, lilt and
mission. AM/FM stereo cassette , cruise, power windows and
lilt and cruise, air condilioning, power locks, clolh interior, good
.good tires. Extra clean, . rear ttres, rear defroster. local one
delroster.
owner. •

7%

2907 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant. West VIrginia

Fun for the
· whole family/

..

AEROS'rAR

II

ror appolntmt!lta c:alh

"'1:\
..
county
.,). 9i#d .

1990 FORD

NOTHING RUNS
LIKE A DEERE'

Monc:l~

Pilot survives crash of older plane

DouBLE CouPoN CD!

rre.tJng. vllrloty of Joint and muocle dlliOrdera,
knee and hlp replacements,
fractu.~ and ..Suit reconstruCtive surgery ·

Oflke Hou111: 9 a.m. · !p.m.,

.

eng ., PS, PB, auto, trans .. air
con d., leather interior, AM/FM
stereo cass , power windows &amp;
i&gt;ower locks , rear defrosler, tilt &amp;
sruise,-cast alum . wheels, local

A BIG

-

. W~SlflNGTON (AP) - Ward
Smclarr, who covered agricullure
for The Washin~ton Post before
POMEROY - Gary P. Norris, School of Banking at Ohio Univcrgiving up journalism to become an 47245 Bowman ' s Run Road , sity. He serves as cashier and a' a
organic farmer, died of cancer Racine, has been honored for hav- di'rector of th e . Racine Hom e
Thursday~ He was 61.
ing completed nine years service as National Bank.
·
Sinclair joined the Post in 1977 a member-of the Veterans MemoriHe is a.member o.f the Racine
after workmg in t~e Washington al Hospital Board of Trus1ees.
First Baptist Church and is a pas t
bureau of the Louisville Times and . Norris was named to the board master of Racin~ Maso nic Lodge
LouisviUe CouritJ·lourfllJI.
m January 1986 and has served 461. He serves as a yoi1th b&lt;~SC b a ll
He was assigned as agriculture three consecutive three-year tenns. coach in the summer months.
reporter in 1981, but gave it up Byl11ws prohibi!longer consecutive
Norfis is married to the form er
seven yean later to take up.farming service on the board.
.
Donna M. Cross. and the couple
in Dolt, Pa., selling his organically
The son of Marie Norris; Syra- has lwo children, Kendra, 17, a
grown produce at farm markets. He cuse, and the late Howard Norris, ·senior at Southern High School, .
also wrote a column, "Truck- Norris is a past chairman of the and Kyle, 13 ; a stud ent a t 1hc
patch," for the Post's weekly food . board. -He graduated from Southern Southern Junior High School.
section.
High School in 1970 and received
Recently, Norris was honored
Survivors include his wife, Cass . his associate degree in busi,oess- by the hospital with a dinner held
Peterson; two children, a .grand- ·. management from Hoclling Tee~ - in Racine. He was presented with
child, a brother and four sisters.
nical College in Nelsonville.
an engraved plaque in appreciation
• OJin U
'He has since completed lhe of his services on the hospital
TOKYO (AP) - North Korean · Ohio School of Consumer Credit at board.
·Defense Minister 0 Jin U died of Kent Slate Univcrsily' and the Ohio
.
cancer Saturday. He was 78.
.0 was the No.' 2 man . in the
secretive Communist slate's hierar'
~'
BELLAIRE. (AP) - A pilot was destroyed.
/
,
rhv after Kim Jonl!; n. .
headed to Maine had engine trouThe pilot. Miguel Utiilnenti, had
. Woodrow Williams
APPOMATTOX, Va. (~) ­ ble and crash,Janded in Woods near stopped the six-scat plane for fu el ·
in COlumbus but.apparently lost oil
Woodrow Wilson Williams, who this eas1em Ohio city.
Thc pilot was treated at a hospi- at about no6n Friday as he was
tied a National League record with
10 straight hits in 1943, died Fri- tal for a broken rib and released. nearing Bellaire.
The 194!. P!&amp;ne, valued at $38,000,
day. He.was 82.

VB

Sportit 11\lurles • Practu,-es • Worl! 11\lurles

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions -none.
Friday discharges - ()pa) Qe.
means, Pomeroy; Stanley !.ambert,
Rutland.

VMH trustee
is honored .
.
for nine years of service

Ward Sinclair ·

are

SURDYKA; M.D.

left, Is preNORRIS HONORED - G~ry P.
sented an engru·ed plaq_ue by Veterans
Hospital
Administrator Scott Lueas m appreciation of bis services as a niueyear member or the hlli!pital's board or trustees.

Carrie L. Swain

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC .
WEIGHT CONTROL

ORTHOPEDIC

Hospital news

Dally and Sundar

MAILSUasCRJPTIONS

said in a news release last week..
"To argue such a pilot program
would provide any Jcind of meaningful comparison· with public
schools is ludicrous since, by law.
put-''.· schools must accept all studc
' she said.
·
t-ux said opposition to the pro- .
posal was a fundamental article of
faith-with public education gioupS.
"They view it as an inherent
altilck on them, as a statement that
they can't get the job done. It's not
in~nded 10 be. It's unfortunate they
have that defensive, siege mentality .. he said.
'He called the pioposal "a simple'idea" to ~ve poor children the
same educauonal choices as chil·
dren from wealthier families.

Give w a Call: 614-

Continued from page,A1
tom submitted a $1,000 bid:.The board
:: By The A!sociated Press
Super ·Lotto drawing was $20
era! Assistance cash benefits and tabled th~ bids for review by the county
·
The following numbers were lion.
medical service, Disability Assistance · prosecutmg altorney.
: · chosen in Friday's Ohio·and West
WEST VIRGINIA
cash benefiis and medical service,
In addition, the bOard met in .an
: :: Virginia lotteries:
Daily 3: 0-7-7
'
Medicaid, Food Slamps and for ad- hour-long · executive session with
"
OHIO
Daily .4: 4-3-7-2
ministration cosls on those programs, Veterans Memorial Hospital adminPick 3: 5-3-1
Cash 25: 2-8-12-14-22-23
according
to the Ohio Department of istrator Scotty Lucas· and Lentes to
.. Pick 4: 8-1-4-l
Human·services.
·
.discuss,conlract negotiations.
Buckeye 5: S-9-13-36-37
· The county's share comprises only
In other business, the board:
.:
The owner of one Buckeye !!·
a
small
amount
of
the
$24
million
•Paid
weekly bills of $177,405.30
: ·ticket with the correct five,number
needed
for
those
programs
in
Meigs
consisting
of 112 enlries:
.
:: . _combinati.on may claim an Ohio
.
COunty,
according
to
Ohio
DHS.
· •Viewed lhe recorder's office to ·
Continued from page A1
. :: L&lt;Jttery pnze of $100,000, the lot· .
: The board opened bids on a new examine planned renovations:
:: tery ann&lt;li!nc~ I.O!iaY-.
president." ·
'
.. . The wmnmg bck~t was sold at
The students learned aboul Ohio lruck for a hot meals program admin- . •Approved trading two sheriff's
.: :: V1Uage ~Center 10 Brookf1eld. history during this annual reading istered by the Meigs County Council cruisers for. a used slation: wagon
on Aging. Hot Shot Delivery Systems owned by Hysell's Used Cars
::. Sales m Buckeye 5 totaled week, she added.
·
'
of
Elkhart, Ind. submitted two bids- Rutland, for the litter
.. $533,280.
v· 'tst h 1 1w
f hh
contro office'
The 166 Buckeye 5 game tickets
'~' o~ oo sa aysre res er,
a Dodge for $29,000 and a Chevrolet providing the old cruisers
···nled
" 'th ,
f th
bers
h Hollister sa1d.
for $28,000. The board tabled the bids and approved paying $650 fo a · t
.. , WI
.our o e num
are eac
"Y
t lk bo 1 d
· ·
... · worth 5250. The_5,916 with three
. ou. can a a u e ucat10n 10 pending .consideration by MCCoA
: 0r the numbers are.each worth $10. COlumbus but when you really to talk direclor Susan Oliver and the county . b;lr and radio for the vehicle;
•Noted that aboul 30 · ca h ve,
. ' The 58 800 with two of the num- to staff and students and then you get prosecuting attorney.
been
received from firea deale
:::::hers each worth $1.
the real picture," she said.
The
board
also
opened
bids
on
the
nationwide
interested in urchasing
· · The Ohio Lottery will pay out
After her speech, she praised the sale of county-owned property on
about
I
,400
guns fort: ted to the
$2,067,221.50 to winners in Fri- sludentsfortheirinsightfulquestions.
Hiland
Road
near
Veterans
Memorial
counly.
:· day's Pick 3 Numbers daily game.
"Whatever you do make sure you
Present were Hoffman, Tackett a
·': Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled enjoy it," Hollister she told them. Hospilal. The Disabled American
Veterans,
which
seeks
to
build
a
new
Hartenbach,
Clerk of Commission
: $1,519,311.
"There'salwayssomethingnewtobe
'post
at
lhe
site,
submitted
a
$1
bid
Gloria
Kloes
and Prosecuting AttorIn the other daily game, Pick 4 leamed. Andalwaysbeproudofwho
while
Deborah
Ingels
of
Long
Botney
John
R.
L..entes.
:Numbers players wagered you are because you come from an
: :$352,762 and will share $179,700.
:ueli steeped in history."
·
The Jackpot for Saturday's
· ·

.. .

ing Tuesday night, the Ohio Parents and Teachers Association and
Citizens Against Vouc-hers will
hold a public briefmg.
. The pwpose: examine the status
of the legislation and emphasize
the need to remove it from
Voinovich's proposed two -year
state budgeL ·
Opponents say the program
should not be included in the budget, even though the proposal was
assigned to lhe House Education
Commitree for hearings apart from
the HoUse Finance Committee.
"Clearly, that action does not
meet the public's demand that
vouchers be debated as separate
legislation and not just one p1ece of
the multifaceted slate budget bill,"
Sue Gatton, Ohio PTA president,

Sunday nme• Sentinel P8ge ·A:S

----......;_,-Area Deaths..;....'-"- - - - -

as-GOI!-pushes its· agend~

VII A110CiatrdPIMI

ByTbe .usodated Pms
.·· · The cloudy skies that returned .
to Ohio Saturday were expected to
• ' bring lftclpiwion Saturday nighL .
· · ,The clouds were anticipated to
move to the east and thicken. Snow
:was expected to develop 8Q'OSS the
north with accumulations of an
· inch or less by Saturday nighL
·
The _PreCipitation was 10 contin. ue durmg the night as the rain- ·
snow line gradually shifted nortbeasL The DQrtbeast was e~ to
receive only snow Satwday. After
a brief break Sunday morning, precipitation will return Sunday after.
... noon in the form of rain.
, Highs on Sunday will range
·· from the lower 40s in the nonhcast. em tip 10 near 65 across extteme
southern Ohio.
The record high temperature for
c - ,Saturday at the. Columbus weather

'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pf=•nt, wv

Febnlary 26,1885

Pome,. Middleport O"llpolll, OH Point PIM•nt, WV

Sunc187, Feb. 26

•

.r.

.

....c-----

�••
•

Commentary

February 26, 199!1

Regional
Meigs ·co~ missioners approve new golf course lease
February 26, 199!1

Sunday Tunes-Sentinel/A4

.,
u

••

Chopping back environmental protection
ADlYlllODof

ROBERT L WINGE'IT
Publllber

HOBART WILSON JR.

MARGARET LEHEW
C4Woller

Ell.ea.U.. Editor

·
.A. MEMBER of The Ao110eialed Pren, Inland Daily Pren
Anociation and tbe Aalerican Newapaper PubliJIIen Alaoc:iation.

. LETTERS OP OPINION ..., ·wek:ome. They obould be lea lhaa

300 wordJ long. ~ le~ ..., aubject to editin&amp; and mUJI be oisned witb
name, oddre11 ond lelepbone nll!llber. No unaianed letlen will be
publiabed. Utlen obould be in good tnte. addreooins i11ueo, not

penonalitieo.

Washington Today:

·

·

Commission taking
·worry out of cutbacks
ByWALTERR.MEARS
AP Spedal Correspondent
WASHINGTON- With a Senate voce due oo 1be balanced budget
amendment. wh!le ~ Republicans ll'y to fill in apeoding cut bJris,
IIIIOihcr opbOO IS betng Jli'OIXlSCd: Set up a commi_., . Let diem lll8kc
politically tough calls when Congress doesn~L
That's a tried, although often failed route aronnd lbe risb thal go wilh
unpopular votes. This lime, it would be based on one that wuU, lbe military base closing commission.
For 12 years before lhat system was created, not a base· was shut
because: Ccngress couldn't agree on whllse sltonld stay and whose should
go. The commission system broke lhe impus9C by reducing lbe political
dangm. C011gress bas agreed since to close or CCliiSOiidate mOfC lhan 250
installations.
A new base closing panel is about to begin wcxt; it will consider Pen. tagon recommendatipns and put togelher a Shutdown list by July I, for yes
or no votes in Congtess, no changes aUowed.
Sen. Connie Mack, R-Fla., and Reps. David Minge, D-Minn., and Dan
Miller, R·Fla., have inuoduced bills to apply a similar~ to lbe budget cuts it would take to get to balance by 2002,1be aun of lbe helanced
budget measure,
.
: The amendment easily passed lhe House, a month &amp;gO. It's closer in
the Senate, which is to vote laJe Tuesday. It will lake two-lhirds, or 67
Voles there, to send the amendment to the states for ratification. Approved
by three-ijuartm, 38 states, it would become part of the Constitution.
The White House and Democratic leaders oppose lbe amendment, saying the. way to balance lhe budget is to cut it and do it, not write an aim
into lhe Constitution. But advocates insist that without constiwtional discipline, that won't happen.
Democrats tried and failed in the House and the Senate to require that
Congress spell out in detail how the budget would be balanced over the
next seven years, which would. talce a reduction of men: dian $1 trillion in
projected spendinjl.
' .
.
Rep. John Kastch, R-Ohio, chairman of lbe HOUSII BUdget Committee,
said spending actually will be increasing anyhow. but at a slower rate, by
about $2 trillion over the seven
inStead of an anticipated $3 trillion.
House Republicans arc waking now ori a $17 billioo down payment in
quick redilcuons, with lhe long term ·plan promised later. Their leaden
argue tllat to issue details on spending curbs and cuts in advance would
have opened the whole process to attack by lbe inlele8ls that stand to lose,
itnd could have cost crucial votes on the balanced budget amendment, facing a close count in lhe Senate anyhow.
·
It's easy to embrace the concept of a balanced budget amendment, hard
to cut a favored p~ or government benefiL
"Our fight is gomg to be wilh the lobbyists and special interests who
are fat and happy," Kasich said in a TV tnterview. But there also is an
instii,Uiional problem when cuts hit home and voters.
Ec;onomist Joe Cobb of lhe Heritage Foundation said the proposed
commission "would Insulate lawmakers from the 1;10lltical fallout they
fear (rom budget cuts.'' Cobb told the Joint &amp;:onomic Committee ''there
may be no other way" to get to a balanced budgeL
TJie seven-member Spending Reduction Conunission would be bipartisan, wilh a new panel appointed each year, to propose spending cuts to
mak4 sure the deficit is reduced by $45 billion a year.
.
· TJie cut list would be sent to the presidefll each 8UIII11Iet'; he could seek
chanies, reject it, or send it on to Congress for up or down votes wilh no
ameridments aUowed. The current budgeting system wouldn't~e; any
cuts !'lade the old-fashioned way would count agaiRSl the commisstOD tar·

rears

~ccording ~ Clinton administratton sources, Lou informed
Browner that he routinely puts
holds on nominations and only

WASHINGTON - Shortly
befcn: Republicans captured con·
trol of Coollas with !lelp from the
"Contract With America,'' Senate
Majority Whip Trent l.otL R-Miss.,
sought a seamy side deal with the
Environmental Protection A'ency.
Lott now says it was all JUSt a
t'jote.''
For Clinton administration officials, il was a deadly serious omen
of how Republicans w~U~t to ride
roughshod over an agency whose
public health agenda is targeted for
dismantlin~ by conservatives.
One thmg that's clear is that
Fred Hansen was innocently caught
in the cross'fire last fall as his
nomination to be deputy administrator of the EPA hit a snag in the
Senate. Lou had placed a "hold"
on Hansen, who enjoyed bipartisan
support and has served both Democratic and Republican 'presidents.
With time running out in the last
Congress, Lou got a phone call
from EPA Administrator Carol
Browner, who was looking for
answers.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
later determines if he bas a problem
with the individual ,agency or
depanmenL Lou said in Ibis case
he bas no problem with lhe EPA or
the oominee and would remove the
hold - wilh one catch.
"I just want you to remember
this when I do have a problem,' •
Lou told Browner. One administration official, who says Browner
was affronted by the conversation,
descr:ihes Lott's intentions as: "I'll
be back and you'd better be nice to
me." It wouldn't be unprecedented
for the wheeler'&lt;lealer Republican:
Lou rePQne!l)y intervened with the
EPA during' the 1980s on behalf of

companies with records of environmental violations.
A Lott spokesperson says he
was merely "answering in a very
jocular waf' and bein' "light·
ltearted" w11h Browner. 'He said
lhe proof is there is no quid pro
quo," said the spokesl'erson
adding that Lou denies pulling rou:
tine holds on nominations and
thinks White House offteials "are
reaching and need to get some
s1 ." .
~ will be liUie ·time for rest
in lbe last half of the GOP's 100day deadline for ~ng lhe "Contract With America" - especially
since lhe Job Creation and Wage
Enltancem~u Act before Con~
is a fight Clintonites arc spoiling
for. The bill's euphemistic label
belies its lethal danger to public
heallh. It raises lhe specter that a
generation of important Jaws
. ~hich. stopped lhe flood of sewag~
mto nvers, cleaned up hazardous
waste disposal and reduced lead in
lhe air- and in children's blood
- may be gutled.
.

I!DSibN It~~..

1 WANl 'tO ~STABI..ISN A
IWJNTIILY tO~TiON DAY... ON
WHitlt WE TAlC~ 1"t Dl.IM~ST
1HiNUS TW' 1=1;~0\1. GOvtRNKNf
1~ tUWtNTLY DOiNG AND
,...........·

ABOL\~

TUtM 1

'

~~~

POMEROY --: An amen~ed
contract for leastng the Metgs .
~byGoJ!:CMeOIJ!'SC Cwas approved
•gs ounty Board
n 'I . .
of CommiSSIOners.
·
The amended contrac.t between
lh!' boBfd •. and Paul S1mon and
Mike 0 Bnen of Pomeroy, aUows .
lhe count&gt;: to lease the ~olf .~
to the S1mon and 0 Bnen tn
exchange for $1 each year. . .
On Oct. 1, 1990, commtSStonerS
agreed to lease lhe 54-acre golf
c~ur~ to Simon and Patrick H.
0 Bnen. Under lhe contract, the

Lott and. H01110 Speaker Newt,
Ginllrich, R-GL, I~ lbe ruse;
of •Trisll: assessment' and "cost~
benefit" analysis to carry out the·
contract on the EPA. 1Under. their
plan, bean countm would be ovet· ·
ruling biologists in setting public ,
health standards by forcinf EPA to
quantify how the bene its will '
"justify lbe COlli" of any cency'
initiative. As a recent SIUdy by lbe.
Nallnl Reaources Defalae Council ·
concludes:
·
"No light is Shed on bow agen- ·
cies are to place dollar values on
such imponderables as: preventing
a child's learning disallility, avoid- •
ing cancer !If birth defects, reduc- ;
ing infertility, presaving an endan- :
ger~d species, protection of a :
National P!trlf. or any of the other •
benefits of environmental protec· :
lion J1'081'31DS:'
~
Gingrich has plunged into this :
critical public health debate wilh •
vintage vitriol For example, he has :
seized on San Diego's years-long :
negotiations with EPA over the ;
building ofa secondary waste 1rea1- •
ment facility to prove the agency is :
out to bankrupt cities. In fact, by :
interloping withOI!l first being :
properly informed, Gingrich may :
have helped scuUie a deal that was .
aU but sealed.
:
The city was sued during the :
Reagan-Bush yars for not comply- '
ing with the. Clean Water Act. An ;
agreement was enten:d into to 1rea1 ·
its waste-water before it is dis· :
charged into lhe Pacific Ocean. :
Browner's EPA realized there was •
a better way to handle tbe Situation :
lhan a court order, so it supponed ;
legislation to aUow San Diego to be :
one of the cities gnrnted a waiver. ' .
That was before Gingrich met ~
with San Diego Mayor Susan : ·
,Golding- who will be hosting the ;
1996 Republican convention and is •
entertaining a challenge to Sen. :
Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., in 1998. ;
Now the city believes it can evade :
the EPA by taking its case direcdy ;.
to the Speaker's office. San Diego :;
no longer wants to apply for lhe •
waiver, preferring instead to be :
exempted from lhe Clean Water :
Act.
•
Welcome to the wonderful '
world of "job creation" and ;
''wageenhancement''

-----

Gallipolis trooper wins promotion

GALLIPOLIS-TrooperPatrickW.McDonaldoftheState
Highway Pauol's Gallia-Meigs Post was promoted Friday to
sergeant and ~ ~n transfernxl to the Eaton Post. where he will
serve as a lraltiJDg inStructor, announced Col. Warren H. Davies,
·llBIM1=~:::Lthe
,
·
c
JO
patrol in Febiuary 1981 as a member of the
llOtb academy class and received his patrol commission the following July . .He was fust assigned to Gallipolis, where he served three
years pnor to transferrin~ to Jackson in December 1984. He
re~~~~!:h~~forex~llenceon severaloccssiMs.
He was chosen post trooper of the year in 1987, 1991, 1993 and
1994, as well as trooper of the year for the Ukounty Jackson district in l994.
Originally from Jackson, McDonald graduated from Jackson
High School in 19n. He currently resides in Jackson County with
his wife, Trudi.
·
'
.

Detroit man injured in crash

I

Letter to the Editor .
Time to pull together

sure

11'

RACINE .- A IS;year-old Racine boy was cited for no opera·
tor's license and failure to yield in a two-car accident near the mtersectioo of State Route 124 and County Road 28 (Dolqts) Friday, the
GaUia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Pauol reported.
Troopers said Larry B. Willis, 47810 Greenwood Drive, 11Jmed
off Dorcas to head weslhound on124 111 7:10a.m. wilhout stopping
. for the stop sign. The car he was driving was rear-ended by a westb\&gt;IJnd car driven by Gregory A. Duvall, 28, 54716 SR 124. Portland.
The collision forced lhe Willis car off lhe right side of lhc road,
where it struck a sign.
Both cars were moderately damaged, troopers said.

:

Tire theft reported to deputies

seen on the Rae property. For this '
reason the rooster decided to leave ;
and find a nesting place on the :
Reynolds' property. The foxes :
seared lhe rooster and lhat most ;
· have been the reason for his exiL :
For some period of time, the ,
rooster lived happily on the ;
ReYnolds' real estate and got quite :
friendly with their dog. A3 a matter ;
of fact, lhey became pals. Just a •
short time ago, however, Homer :
~ntiy met an untimely dealh. ·:
It ts believed that a cat was lhe :
cause of his demise. So, if you see •:
our friends from Miftcmoille wear- :
ing long faces, you will understand. ;
PooroldHomer.
:
There is an organization called •
Pearl Jam. This organization is :
fighting for the rights of frogs. It is 1
agat'nst lhe dJ'sseciJ' ng o f fcogs m
· 1
school
lab
'
Th'
''
·
S 1or any PIJCl!Ose.
IS_,
means that thev .are Aa,unst scien- ·
·
ho
&lt;
-...-lh frogs ,•or-.
llstS w expenment wt
medical reasons. It would als~
appear th a t f rog 1egs cou ld no~"·
longer be a delicacy at a meal.
What do you think about thi•
Rupe?lf you wish to
Ibis o,.P-"'
nization, call 1-800-9
OGS.
.;;
In God

GALLIPOUS- Gallia Connty sheriff's deputies were infonned
that a tire was temoved from a parked car and replai:ed wilh another
tire Friday.
·
.
Jackie Saunders, 437 Lariat Drive, Gallipolis, told the department the tire was removed by unkown persons from his daughter's
cJU' while parked at his residence sometime Friday. The incident is
under investigation. •

Authorities place two in county jail
GALLIPOLIS -.GaUia County sheriff's deputies booked James
A. PaUerson, 24, Xenia, into the county jail at 8:25'.a.m. Saturday on
a charge of attempted aggravated vehicular assaulL
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol placed Jeffrey T. Ash, 28, Tarlton, into the jail at4: 18 a.m. Saturday for driving under the influence, driving under suspension, no operator's
license, no seatbelt and failure to drive withitl marked Janes.
Editor's note: Names, ages and addresses are printed as they
appear on off~eial re110rts. All newsworlhy tJCtlou will be pub·
llsbed wllbout exception.

.

John Cunniff
cast more.
For ~uch fe!ISODS more ~ople
are castJDg a cntteal eye on Ibis latest phenomenon, aware that financial creations from time to .time
seem to turn on invesiOfS and
deprive tiJem of what they seek
most, a good return.
·
RErfs offer current income - It
percent rate in January- and capital growlh. NAREIT puts ihe combined annual return of equity
REITs (as opposed to mortgage
and hybrids) between 19n and lhe
fust qUIIltCJ' of 1994 at 13.32 per- ·

m\rror

II

.cenL

i

'

..

'

But REITs carry the blemiSh of
being in real estate, which over ·
rece111 years has gooe from boom to
bust and is now seelrin$ to recover,
in part wilh lhe infuston of funds
from adinary invesl.tn. ·
Any secwity is only as good as
the underlying value of its assets
and the management of lhem, and
there are questions about both.
The REIT format is suictly a.
·Jegality, and it does nothing to
change !he coodition of the property or us prospects. In _some
instances, properties that couldn't
· succeed before becoming RE!Ts
~·tmuch better off today.
Security analysts and those
closely affiliated with the indUSil'y
seem to agree that the larger equity
RBITs are supported by strong
JHopertiCS in good areas and that if

c':,.y~ ::

Fred w.. o
·
EDITOR'S NOTE_ io':{;~
time attorney Fred W. Crow ~
tile contributor or a weekly col·· ~ •:
umn to Tb. e Sunday Times-Sentlael. Readers wishing to
.applaud, c:ritldze or commeat on ..l
any subject (ucept religion or
politics) are encouraged to write· i
to Mr. Crow in care or tbls newspaper.

•

•

managed correcdy have a suong.. ,;;
future. But not all are well-man-• .
aged.
••
Allen Cymrot, a real estate ::
adviser IU!d former head of a large ::
real estate investment firm, :;
observes lhat some REITs were ' I
formed primarily to rescue overex- :j
tended owners, and that some of '•
diem still lack management skills.
Original property qevelopers ::
still arc in effective management ;.:
control of some REITs and, says !•
Mathias DeVito, chainnan of the ,;
Rouse Co., "they've got a lot to :•l
learn about running a pubHc com- ;
pany."
,

..

•

,,••

~

Prosecuting Attorney John R. Simon and O'B~en will be responLentes, who wrote lhe new lease, SJble for taxes, licenses and fees.
pointed out several problems wilh
The proposed lease will last for
tlte existing golf course lease. five years, wilh the board granting
including the lenglh and cost of the the two first con ':ration when
lease.
lhe leaseexpir.:
·"The-problem is, lhe lease periCommission nesident Fred
od is too long ... the statute says Hoffman said !he new lease would
five years," Len~s said. Another represent a "good deal" for the
problem is the cost of the lease, he . county.
added.
·
Simon and O'Brien have made
Anylhing over $10,000 would many improvements to the course,
have to be let out for bid, Lentes in~lu~ing lhe construction of new
said.
buildrngs, Hoffman said.
As far as taxes are concerned
It is better for the county to
Lentes said he is seeking to hav~ lease out the course lhan to try to
property made tax-exempL Under operate it itself, Lentes said. He
the proposed amended lease, added that he checked wilh olher

municipalities that usually lose
money running golf COUI1CS.
"There was no wrongdoing with
the contract," Lentes said. "It just
needed brou~ht into (compliance
wilh)statutc.'
~
"This is the right way to do it,"
he noted. ·
One provision of lhe new lease
provides for county to · hold an
· aanual golf tournament at no cost,
wilh the money going to charity or
to help fund county projects.
"T:iOJ have put more than
$100
into the course" Lentes
said :'It has been run rea1' well and
is an asset to the community."
Lentes said Simon and O'Brien

POMEROY _ Ground ·wm be ·
broken for lhe first section of the
Meigs u.s. 33-lnteratate n connector road, from Rock Springs 10.
Five Points, during 1 p.m. ceremonies on Monday March 6 .
Nancy Yoacham, pubHc infonna:
lion officer District 10 Ohio
De.P!J!ment' of Transpo;tation
(ODOT) announced Friday. ·
Ronaid Zook, OOOf's assistant
director and chief engineer will be
among lhc dignitaries i~ allendance Yoacham said.
Sh~ said that the ceremonv will
be held atlhe end of the ex'lsting
State Route 7 four-lane near Meigs
Hi~h School.
·
'This is a big event for OOOT .
and Meigs County." said John
Dowler, deputy director of OOOT
District 10. who expressed hopes
that many area citizens will tum
out for the ceremony.
·

"What has een lhought of as
lhe area's future in transportation,
is becQIJling lhe present," he continued. · .
.
•• In keepmg w.'lh lhe lhoug.ht df
future becomtng present, the
official ground.break~rs at the
March 6 event wtll be SIX students
from Salisbury Elementary School,
the closest school to the site. .
ODOT-sponsored drawing and
essay contests to determine a child
from each of Salisbury's grades 1-6
to turn the ceremoniaf groundb~ng s~ovels. The names of tbe
chil~n.wlll be announced Ia~.
Principal Don Hannmg satd that
weather permitting, all children
from the school will attend the
evenL
.
The fust section of the connector road is 2.25 miles in len$1h and
will extend from Rock Spnngs to
SR 7 at Five Points. The contractor

on th~ project is Kokosing Construcbon Inc., Fredericktown, wilh
a ~id of $12.~ million. The contract
w1th Kokostng was sold in late
December, )'oacham S8Jd.
The enure length of lhe propos.ed new highway (rom R.ock
Spnngs to the Ravenswood Bridge
and 1-77 in Jackson County,
W.Va., is 18.6 miles in length.
State- and fe¢rally-required environmental studies pn the remaining
16.3 miles of proposed roadway
continue, according to the public
. information officii!'.
Yoacham sa1d that ODOT
expects the consultmg ftrm of URS
Inc .. Columbus, to complete the
neede~ en~ironmental document
sometu~e 1n late. I 995 .or early
1996.• wtth a pubhc heanng to be
held m the SJ!ftng of 1996.
The rematnder of the connector
· is expected to be built in three
additional phases, with the next
phase to be the section from lhe
bridge back towards Racine.

H
. EAP application
dead I ne scheduled March 31 sa~:.ac;;tt~~:~~ r~~~: ~~~~~~
Emer~ency

CHESHIRE -The Emergency
HEAP ~lication period for 1994·
95 heaung season that began last
October continues lhrough March
31 and applications arc still being
taken by GaUia-Meigs Community
Action Agency.
Emergency HEAP aUows a one· lime paymeni per heating season of
up to $175 to restore or continoe
home heating services for a 30-day

Moot ol our b...U.O. mmoo
lhlo\•llh people we'W
lhoug'hlfully -..d. Tho
IUSOn- undonwldlns,
llncorw pdanco and

depondoblllty
in htlplnJYou
oolect • llno

monument

period.

To be eligible for the program,
both lhe income ~idelines and the
emergency requ.'rement must be
met. Household rncome IS defined
as gross income of all household
members, except earned income of
dependllm minors 18 years of age.
Allowable annual income for a
one person ~ousehold is ,$11,040;
two persons $14,760; three persons
$18,480; four persons $22,200; five
persons $25,920; six persons
$29,640; and add $3,720 for each
individual member of the family
.
after thaL
To meet the emergency requtrements of the program, lhe .bo~hold must be !'n'eate.ned w•lh d1sconnect of lhe1r heatJDg·source, or
already disconnected, or have a
bulkHouseholds
fuel supplywith
of 10heat
dayssupplied
or less.
by PUCO-regulated utilities must
be enrolled on the Percentage of
Income Plan (PIP) to be eligible for
emergency benefits.
Home visits can be ananged to
assist homebound or elderly peOple
unable to get into one of CAA 's
intalce sites.
APJ&gt;Iieations are also available

from

flo&lt;k of Agos.

POMEROY
Meigs County Display Yard Near
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
KaUe Miller, Manager
992-2588
VINTON
Gallla County Display Yard
155 Main St.
&amp; Joe .Moore, Managers

2

8
.ftiODSEBS

BLOUSES 3~
8

$25,000 A YEAR
ALDI, a fast.growing
chain, is looking for Allslatant Managers for a faallrack
training program and hands on management approach. No grocary experience Ia
necessary, juat the drive and enthuaiaam to succeed.
IF YOU HAVE THESE MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS
• Muat be willing to pertorin physical work: atocklng, m•lntenance, cleaning,
caahierlng end price memorization with or'wHhout reasonable accommodation
• Good management background preferred
• Grocery experience Ia not necessary
• High School diploma o• &lt;i,ED

-·

CHECK OUT THE BENEFITS
• $25,000 average yearly Income based on 40 houre per week
• Full benefits including major medical a dental inaurance, retirement plana a
vacations
• Fast promotions pouible to $42,000+ average yearly .income

..

Rock of Agee offara you a choice of 6 dlffe111nt colored granites.
Whatever your requirements fii8Y be, complete satisfaction Ia
assured With Rock of Ages.
·
·
lfoura: 9:1KH:OO M-T~Th·F. Others by appointment
593-6586 or 446-2327

Apply In person from 6:00a.m. to 8:00p.m. on Tueaday, Feb. 28, 1995 at:
li .. c~
'
Holiday Inn ·
577 St. Rt. 7
·.r
, II .. ·-/I
Galiipolia, OH.
I

1' \'

1

EQUAl OPPORTUNITY EMPlOYER

!:

.!l

'

ALDI

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS

!3:5:2:T:h:lr:d:A:•:•·:::':h·:44:6:·2:3:2:7:::G:•:II:Ip:o:ll:•·:O:H:··~!::::::::::::::::::~=========

tional
six tntnsports.
Transfer
units handled an ~
•ad:di:·

(D{f/!lJ (jJ@IJf (k®,IJIJ~
IJ/!Jrl !IJIJfllU!IJ~
'

IJ

·.

-•

(JJU~ ~!P(!JJ~{)(J1-.

,.

(Jobn Canal" .11 a baslnen ::
analyst ror The Assodat•d ' •
Press.)
~

-

104 Years Of Service

for the Regular HEAP program ,
availability, Dowler added.
which is additional heaung assis·
tance of a non-emergency nature.
Income guidelines are the same for
bolh programs. The deadline for
Regular ·HEAP applications is
March 31.
Both Emergency HEAP and
Regular HEAP applications can be
completed at the Cheshire CAA
office, the Gallia Outreach office
and the Meigs Outreach office. The
GaUia Outreach office is located at
. 863 .Porter Road, Porter. and the
, Meigs Outreach office is located at
39350 Union Ave., Pomeroy.
Applications will be talcen from .
9 a.m. to noon and from I to 3:30
p.m. Monday lhrough Friday at the
two outreach offices. The central
· office in Cheshire will accept
applications Monday through
Thursday, 9 a.m. to noon and I to
3:30p.m. No applications will be
taken at the Cheshire office on Fridays. ·
·
·
The telephone number for the
Cheshire office is 367-7341, the
GaUia outreach office is 388-823f, ·
and the Meigs outreach office IS'
992-5605
·
·
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

·'

'

have reyiew~ the amended lease
and are m baste agreemenL
The )Hoperty was donated to lbe
county commissionm by Jay Hall
Jr. and Lillian Marlene Hall on
Dec; 2, 1984, and was formerly
known as the JayMar Golf Course.

ODOT slates gi6undbreaking
.#
ltM
h6
.or
connec torehase frffllfC

LARGE.SELEC,.IDN

EMS runs

son, VMH.

i:

I

'

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service answered five calls for
assistance Friday. Units responding
included:
.
POMEROY
9:04 p.m., State Route 7, Diana
•
Bauserman, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.
SYRACUSE
12:58 a.m., Cherry Street, David
Lawson
·
·
•
• VMH·•
8:23 ·a.m., College Road,
Eleanor'Wingett, VMH;
.
7:54p.m., Dusky Street, Rhonda
Stover, VMH;
· 8:38p.m., Pomeroy Nursing and
. Rchablluatioo Center, Goldie Law~

!'iJR

Real estate in·vestment trusts: how valuable? :;·
themselves," reported John
McCann, tbe 1993-1994 chairman
of the National Association of Real
Estate Investment Trusts. He fore-

GALLIPOLIS - A Detroit, Mich., man suffered minor injury
when the car he was driving overturned on State Route 160 near
GaUipolis early Saturday, the Gallia,Meigs Post of lhe State Highway Patrol said.
·
·
Michael H. Tabor. 22. was not ~ted at the scene, the patrol
said
According to the repon, Tabor was southbound· at 3 a.m. when
he failed to negotiate a curve, swerved off the right side of lhe road,
came back across and went off lbe left side.
.The car struck a ditch and overturned onto its top, the repon said.
The car was severely damaged, troopers said. Tabor was cited
for driving under the influence, driving under suspension and failure
to control.
··

Area youth cited in accident .

(Jack Anderson and Michael :
Binstein are columnists ror Unit- :
ed Feature Syndicate IJJC.)
.•
•

noise. If this is true, and I am
better lhan being inside. The last
it is, you arc fortunate that a cat • time I ssw the cat she was very
does not snore loudly. J would sick. She did not want to be held.
· question Susie about th1s because I S~ went n11tdoors and we did not
see her again. It is my feeling that
r: d W. C
she went away to die. 1 have heanl
rfe
· TOW
that cats will do this. Is lhere any
8lso feel that a snore is a loud noise trulh in Ibis?
If you want to give your pet
that only humans make. A purr is a gifts, here arc a few examples: Cat
sound of contentmenL However, if pet seat for your car; nev~ spill pet
Susip says it is a snore, then it is a food dislt wtlh non-slild bottom and
snore.
engraved with your eat's name;
She also Qtentioned that catnip Scratch'r cizet for yourcat's claws;
is an herb dlat the cats love.lfa cat a pet grooming glove; Kitty Klean
gets too much of Ibis substance, it !-ittcr mats lftat keep kitty litter in
has ~tende~ to get high. You tts place; a barber shop quartet
:Ljailyeif~
yourcatoutoflbe brush/comb that cuts, combs and
tl gets too much catnip.
styles your pet; cat and dog
If you arc· not careful, cats will umbrellas and T-shirts for the
· ~ctate to you rather dian you being lucky eat's owners. There are also
10 charge. A good swat now and
~or your eat's dinm·g ~leathen Wt'II gJVe
. be"d
Its to the plates
...,r
resu
sure
which
read,· ""'at
at' beha '
"' ca•·"
., • na
c s
VJor.
Breath," "Royal Highness" and
.
I If you have
tha any more problems, ".C at..__
""'" Hell."
sug,est 1 you should contact
For the information of those
Dr.PIK s office for advice.
neonJe who love antm'als, •"--IS·
a
bor
r·-.:
u&gt;Q~
ease contact
othea Fisher terrible tragedy lhat happened in
and I am certain that she can lbe Minersville area. There was a
answer questions 7 and 8.
rooster that frequented the homes
Did you know lhat one of the of property owned by Don and
definitions of a cat in Webster's Marie Rea and Ron and Rae
Dictionary is "a spiteful woman?"
Reynolds. The roosiU's name was
Did you know a cat is distantly Homer. Homer liked people, but
related to Lion, Tiger and Lcopanl? also liked 'to fly into trees to roost
Did
·
· youh'1mow that in Burma a, cat '"-m'
u"'" .
ts woes 1ped by lhe ~r,le? That
For lhe past several years
lhere arc less cats inC onia than Homer would start crowing as ooly
in Rhode Island? Catalorua
' ·
east a roos' the mom"" can do at 4 rn
of Racc0011 Creek.
ing. Don Rae' told me that tbe
I once had a cat by lbe name of rooster came lin their JHOJlCiiY and
Pukey. This cat lived for many wail there for about a yesr. At that
years in my bome, but was very time Homer was fed by tbe Raea.
Ulifriendly. She liked lhe outdoors Suddenly, bowevet, two foliCS were

boardSlO would pay Simoo and JOI!CI
•000 a ~ear ~:0
years, With
the two havmg the .
to extend
the lease ~0! up to y .
In add•ll~n. the boat'd in 1990
agreed to ptck up lhe tab for pe•·
s.oJ!al property taxes and other
hcenses and fees - a ,part of the
dcallhe county ~ not kept: lhe
county has not patd any property
tax on ~property, which consists
!Jf ~ pteces of land, since entermg mto the lease.
To date, the county owes
$12,589.
According to county figures, the
property has a total worth of
$105,937.56.
.

,...-fri-County Briefs:

On cats, a rooster named Homer, and Pearl Jam

This past week I received a let·
ter from one of my readers which
read as follows:
"Dear Fled: I am about to add a
cat to my household. Since this is
the fust cat I have ever owned, I
need some advice as to how to
nise it properly. I thought I would
write to you for an answer to the
foUowing questions.
·.
· I) Besides milk, what does a cat
eat?
.
2) How do I potty train him?
3) Does a cat snore?
4) I have been advised to get
lhe cat some camip. Where do I
obtaJ};:"ip?
·
wdoyoutalktoacat? .
6) How do you telllhe cat you
are lhe boss and not him?
7) Does a cat have nine lives?
8)
How long do. cuts
geL
h lh'live?
You may pu b)1s
IS letter. I
Tllat would spread the pain and lhe blame for unpopular budget cuts, if ~
eft
that
if
you
do
not
know,
some
it all worked.
.
of
your
readers
might
be
able
to
B!'t along with the successful base closing model, there arc more ·
give
me
the
answers.
At
this
time
I
eX8J11ples of commissions that couldn 'I ag~et, most recentiy on ~Cform
do
not
wiSh
to
have
my
name
made
and qost control in entidement programs. In 1983 a commission dealt with
public, but you may sign me, One
P.Obtems then loo!ning in Social Secwity f111811C~,IIId &lt;;:ongress agreed. ofyourRupettes."
A·commission meant to make federal pay l'lllses automatic so that
Dcar Sylvia Jane: I do not know
C T i wouldn't have to vote on its own salaries. worked at first but where
I gave you lhe impression
co
in I989. Ronald Reagan set up a commission to cope wilh bud- that I know
it all, because I don'L
get
lems; it ended in deadlock.
In
COMection
with cats, !.have only
alter R. Mears, vice president and columailt ror 1be Aslloc:lated
PreSif, bas rel'orted on Washington and national politics ror more had one cat in my lifetime and 11
was an outdoor caL I assume you
than 30 yean.) .
are getting an indoor caL
I took the liberty to discuss this
matter wilh Susie Grueser, who
works at Dr. Krawsczyn's veterinary offitee. She advised lhat she
owns several cats, as does
Dorothea Fisher of the Humane
Society. Susie told me that, yes,
We have Atart.ed the ball rolling
$68,640,000 is a lot of mooey to cats do snore and it is a purring
wilh local politicians, other digni- pay out above the rest of Ohio ill
taries and groups from our area. the last 20 years. Our state and
ao~ to 75 caDs have been made
local officials will be attending
to our attorney general, Betty both meetings.
MoJtlgolllery, Anti-Trust Division,
'fl!e West Virginia attorney gen- NEW YORK - With more
CoiiJIIIbus.
~ral JUSt s.tarted an investigation lhan $70 billion of assets, many
Npw the most important part is mto gas pnces because of a petition thciusands of individual and instituthe people of Gallia County pulling with 10,000 signatureS for the state. tional investors and billion-dollartogether and using the First The city of Gallipolis and Gallia a-year money ·raising ability,
Amendment of lhe Constitution, County can do bellel' lhan 10,000 REITS have become a major factor
the right to petition.
si$natures, and make lhem notice in both real estate tind sccwities.
Meetings are being held Mon- thiS part of lbe state.
They have rescued owners from
·
day. feb. 27 at 6 p.m. and Tuesday.
See you at the meetings. and financial problems, provided
Feb. 28 at 6 p.m. for your conve- thank you. for caring and giving up investors with good returns and
nience, at lbe Ga1lil County Court- your everung to attend.
aUowed developers to proceecl with
. house. ~titions, signup sheets and
EllenSaundm what they do best, such as the creinfonnation will be passed OUL If
855 Jacbon Pike ation .of ,::laborate, state-of-lhe-art
you can't be there, make sure a
GaUipolis · regional shopping malls.
friend or neighbor will be, 10 bring
In Jess than two ·years, the
(EDITOR'S 'NOTE - Ellen
a petition back to your area to be Saunder.. ts spearheadl18 IO'Cal industry has raised more money
signed. At each meeling, time will e"orts to Jet a state lavettigatloa than it had in lhe preceding lhrcc
be made fot queBiions and answers, Into gasollae prices Ia Gallla · decades, $18 billion in 1993 and
and to discuss what we want to County.)
, $12 billion through August 31,
accomplish.
1994. REITs are a rage.
''Almost no one foresaw the
~ught for Today: ".When y&lt;iu ~k into a
you do not see 'your fury at which the gro.wth and
reUccuon- your retlecaoo sqes YOU· - Anonymous.
·
. chaRging dynamics 1manifested

Sunday Times-Sentinel/AS

,.

OHIO VALLEY

ANK

r
~- -....!.'~--:-~~---~- -~---~-

(614) 446-263\

1-800·468-6682

�Nation/World

Fetnary 26, 199S

Alohg the Rive~

.

"

Key O.J. trial witness skirts
jail for lie during testimony
B1 MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Allodatecl Prea Writer
LOS ANGELES- The'witncss
who OJ. Sim~hopcs will give
him an alibi
a jail term of
her own and
y &amp;gnled to testify next week - in the middle of
the prosecution's case - rather
than flee to her native El Salvador.
"I will do ii for you, your
honor," Rosa Lopez told Judge
Lance Ito on Friday night after a
long and tumultuous day of emotional testimony.
Lopez. a maid who worked next
door to Simpson's estate, is expected to testify Monday that Suilpson 's Bronco was parked outside
his house.about the time that prosecutors claim he murdered his exwife Nicole Brown Simpson and
her friend Ronald Gotmn.n.
Even lhough l..opcz is a defense
willless, Ito will allow her to take
the stand five~ into the prosecution's case because he's afraid
she'D carry out her thrc:at to flee to
her homeland to escape hanlssment

him she ·couldn't work late because
by rc:porters.
During an all-day hearing, of child-care problems. Attorneys
Simpson's lawyers pleaded wilh for the defense and Lopez argued
the judge to make sure they unsuccessfully against the delay.
wouldn't lose the testimony of one
"I don't want to be here any
of their IIIOSl imporwu willleSSeS.
.longer," Lopez said, speaking
The prosecution argued that lhrough an interpteter. "All these
Lopez was bluffmt, and - while reporters have destroyed my life. I
questioning her - caught her lying can't go out anywhere. I am so
about booking a one-way plane afraid oho many things I don't
ticket.
know what to say. I promise to
At first the judge agreed to a come today because I was
defense request to put Lopez's tes· promised this was going to rmish
timony on videotape in case she's today and then I coukl go 10 El Salnot able to testify when the defense vador~··
prc:sents its case. The videotaping
. The judge explained to Lopez
TEARFUL API'EAilANCE - WJtDs Roea
was to take place Friday night,
lhat she could promise to returni::~--~~~O,:~~~~~~~~;;M!~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~ ~tflrpn~.,__~~--without the jury prc:senL _ _
But then-Ito ctr.mgoo liis
jail for
weekend. Lopez ~...,f.. t.
imd hastily summoned the jury
Iy promised to return as long as the
a nighttime trial session at .which judge kept the media away.
Lopez would have taken the stand.
Ito's ruling was a setback for the
Prosecutors called the video
CONGRATULATIONS
Most of the jurors showed up in prosecution.
putting ~ On . idea a ploy to avoid having her
sweatpants and T-shirts.
the stand now, ~of dUfliiJ the confront lhe jury, and sousht to
tolE.'~~
Ito changed his mind again alter defmse portion of the case, Sun~ show that Lopez had no plans to
Deputy District Attorney Marcia son's lawyers can interrupt tile leave and should be compelled to
Clark - the single mother of two story the prosecution is trymg to testify when the defense case
boys, ages 3 and .5 - reminded tell and blunt its impact
begins, perllaps in April.

ByNITALELYVELD
Asaoc:latecl Prea Writer
WASHINGTON· - Surgeon
11encral nominee Dr. Henry Foster
ts •$•in defending details of his
medical background, contending he
learned only after the fact about a
federal study that left black m'en
with syphilis untreated.
Foster and the White House
·rc:leased swcments Friday seeking
to explain the nominee's connec·
tion with the experiment in which
the U.S. Public Heallh Service had
told lhej poor Alabama sharc:trDJ7·
pers it would bC8l their disease, but .
gl!ve them placebos instead.
· The new questions were raised
by the Family Resean:h Council, a
conservative group that opposes
Foster's nomination to succeed Dr.
Joycelyn Biders. President Clinton
ftred her following a furor over her
comment that schoolchildren
sliould be taught about masturba~
tion.
.
The council circulated excerpts
rrom a 1981 book about the Public
Health Service experiment known
as the Tuskegee !"rojecL
Council president Gary Bauer
Said lhe book reported that Foster
had served on a 10-member local
medical society board in Alabama
that was briefed on the project in
1969 by lhe Public Health Service. The board gave the service its
"surrogate informe!l consent,"
allowing lhe experiment to continue, according to lhe 1981 book Bad
Blood, by )ames H. Jones, a history
professor at the University of
HoustCJn.
Foster said Friday he did not
know about the experiment until
1972.
·~1 was oullllged in 1972 when,
as the president of the Macon
County Medical Society, I first
learned the facts of the Tuskegee
Syphilis Study," he said in the
statement released by the White
House~

"Had I learned the facts of the
study any earlier, I would have
been equally· outraged lhen, and I

would have insisted on appropriate
treabtlent, as I did in 1972.''
Presidential aide John Podesta
said "Dr. Foster has · stated
'unequivocally that he 'Was not
informed until 1972 that the federal
government was conducting ·its
,studY. of untreated syphilis."
' While we have ilo doubt that
those opposed to this nomination
wiU try 10 distort the facts and use
the actions of the government
against Dr. Foster, we are confident
that fair-minded people wiD reject
those distortions,'' Podesta said.
Fred Gray, an attorney in
Tuskegee, Ala., who represented
the black men in a class action suit,
said, "We found no evidence whatsoever that would indicate that any
local person or any local doctor
was legally responsible for the

edge of the experiment
·
The Public Health Service conducted the Tuskegee Project from
1932 to 19n.
The nomination of Foster, an
obstetrician-gynecologist. and former medical school dean, has been
under fire from anti-abortion
groups and conservative lawmaken
since it was disclosed that be ·had
performed abonions. Some have
also que~ioned his credibility for

giving varying answera aboUt the
numben of the ·abonions he has
performed.
Foster also wrote in a medical
joumaltwo decades ago that be bad
performed hysterectomies on
severely retarded women in the
1960s and 1970s. The White House
sought to minimize lhe sterilization
procedure as being within the
bounds of standard medical practice at the time •.

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The Meigs County meal deHverr program provides more than
nutritious food for area senior cibzens. The volunteers and paid
employees, who took·40,598 meals to 311 different seniors, also
monitor seniors' health, said Susan Oliver, director or the Melas
County. Council on Aging. Many elderly residents cherish the
friendships built witb the drivers, Oliver said.
Above, volunteer Sonya ParsQns and Rutlimd's Emma Smltb
share a joke. "You just want to take them aU home with you," Parsons said. At right, Parsons listens to Marie Priddy. At ten, carrier
Mike Gilmore stops to greet Chester'·s Fred Smith. (T-S photos by
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February 26, 1995

--'-"-...-'--,--~:-

Grandmother

Surgeon general nominee again under fire

Section B

Meals
on
wheels

a,.

Mona
Hartley

eurintts- itntintl

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P•\'"*'IIINII ol Rei. Ct"!l f I ,125 CIO
AlluncNillll '*"""W OIPO'!I
ano.oo
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CUhtlwAII5Igr*"'l
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By GEORGE ABATE ,
Tlmes-SentlDel SIBIF
Standing straight, Eva Dessauer said she doesn't get tqJionely.
At 93 years old she's outlived her two husbands. She has been able
to take can:.of herself and her family her whole life, said the 20-year
volunteer of the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center.
She drove until last year.
This January she fell.
,
"I've had prc:tty good health up until this," Mrs. Dessauer said.
Though she wanted to cook, she couldn't
.
· "A, lot of people are not able to coolc:,justlike I wasn't." she said.
. Mrs. Dessauer lhen began receiving county-delivered meals. She
and more than 300 other seniors get at least one meal each day, five
. days a week.
'
''They serve quite a few of them," Mrs. Dessauer said. "I eitjoy
them."
These warm meals keep many seniors healthy and independent, said
Susan Oliver, director of the Meigs County Council on Agmg.
· "It's difficult when you get to the point where people arc making the
decision between food, medicine or heat," Oliver said, "People
· shouldn't have to make that choice."
Healthy seniors - who eat regular, balanced meals - save taxpayers money, she added. The meals preyent the high costs of invasive
surg~ and nursing homes.
·
·
,
MetgS&lt; County's 4,543 senior citizens make up.atleast 20 percent of
lhe population. The content of the county's seniors has shifted to older
and older ciUzens, Oliver said.
Many of the oldest residents- above 85 years old- remain fiercely independent, wanting to live'in homes !hat have been in their fami · .
lies, she added.
These individuals often have family that have moved away or !hey
have rewrned home from surgery to mend, she added .
The meals serve as a base fiJI' !hose people who may not be poor,
but may have family that are too busy with life, Oliver said.
Whether federal and state funds will be available for this program
rc:mains uncertain, she added. But, during her tenure no one has.b!:en
turned down for !his food.
·
While the number of seniors seJYed has tripled during the last 12 ·
years, more seniors can stiU be reached, Oliver said
'
"There's a lot of sadness, but there's a Iot .of good," she added.
"This is a good program."
·
Mike Gilmore, a deliverer for the last six monthS, sometimes takes
his son along who is amazed by some of the homes. Some are not ·
much more'lhan sheds.
.
"People tell me every day, "I don't know what I'd do if it weren;t :
for this food"," said Gilmore, who worked at the Meigs mines for 16
years befon: being laid off. "Some of them -if I'm having a bad day
. ....,. wt'll cheer me up, ..
_
,
, Some seniors' hands are crippled by arthritis, so the drivers help
open the sealed packages.
,
Sonia Parsons, who has delivered meals for the last II years, volunteers one day a week bringing 25 meals to Rutland and Harrisonville
residents.
She said she gets upset because some families who don't seem to '
care. The saddest pan is watching these seniors worsen.

Meigs meal delivery expands
fAealsi'Y85'

1983

12,432

t;osts
$10,956

1986

16,914

$14,442

.,

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'East State Street, Athens, Ohio '

.. ..

' 593-6641 '

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ISOLATED SENIORS- The drivers' daily visits
remain many'!lt!niors only' personal contact. Many family
members have moved away or died, Oliver said. The
seniors who get these meals tend to be the "old old" -over
80 .years old,&gt; she added. Here, Gilmore returns from
delivering a meal to Syracuse's Marie DiVietro. She lives
in .lhe
smaU trailer in tbe background.
'
'

fun4\nQ

$15,104
$23,116
'

1990

26,923

$23,000

$38,106

1994

. 40,598

$23,800

$41,684

. .

,INDE~ENDENT SURVIVORS - By maintaining
tbetr nutntlon, many seniors can maintain their overall
health. The goal is to keep seniors in their own homes
reducing expensive nursing home and surgery Olive;
said. Many seniors, such as 91-year-old Pearl Ha~thorne
- do not want to be' lied to nursing hoJIIes, Hawthorne and
h,is dog live outside Reedsville with a radio but no televi·
s1on., 1 ·
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Sentinel

19115

oH Point

WY

Sunday Time• S1ntlnel

Pial 13

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LAST.C-HANCE TO
ENTER TO

TANYA STOBART AND GARY COLEMAN

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Stobart-Coleman

DIANA COWDERY AND STEVE MAYO

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Mayo-Cowdery

.••

TUPPE~S PLAIN ~'- S\CVC

Mayo and Diana Cow~ of Vien-

,.

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na. W.Va., 8IIIIOUDCe their engagement and iiJIPI'*')linl.marriage.

&lt;

.~

Cox iS"the gr3ndson of Carl and
Opal Cox of Chillicothe and the
late John R. and Ev~mgcline Petm
of Waverly. He is a gradua~e of
Huntington High School in Cl!illi·
cothe and a gradll{lte of Asbury
College in Wilmoil, Ky. with a
degree in sociol.o11 and business
adminislnllion. He IS employed by
Buckeye Communily Services as a
program coordinator.
"
The wedding will be Sept. 23, at
the First Church of the Nazarene in
Gallipolis.

GALLIPOLIS • Mr. and Mn;
Ron Allison ~ Gallipolis 8llliOUDCe
the engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Jill, to
Douglas A. Cox, son of Mr. ·and
·&lt;• Mrs. Carl Alan Cox of Chillicothe.
~
Allison is the granddaughta" of
· ~ Miriam and the late Henly Wilson
., Allison of Gallipolis and the late
Coy and Maggie Barr of Eno. She
.: . is a 1991 graduate or Gal1ia Acade·
., my High School and will graduate
., . from Mount Vernon Nazarene Col: lege in May with a bachelor's of art
•
in social

MIDDLEPORT Tanya
Luann Stobart of Middlepon and
Diana is the daughter of Tony Gary Alan Coleman of Pomeroy
and Shirley of Tuppers Plains. announce their engagement and
, ·
Sieve is the son of Paul and Olwyn approaching marriage. ·
Tanya is the daughler of LucreMayo of Vienna. W.Va.
. tia Cornell Stoban of Middlepon
and the late Anhur Allen Stobatt.
She is a graduate of Meigs High
School and is employed at The
Peoples Bank and Trust Co. in
Middleport.

.

Gary i.s the son of Loren and

.
Mary Coleman of Pomeroy. He is a ·

WIN A·

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111 POPLAR FORK Ill.

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MIDDLEPORT - Brenda TatlersoD of Pomeroy and Ron Tallerson of Columbus announce the
engagement of their daughter, Lisa
Tatlerson, to Bobby Moodispaugh,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Roben Moodispaugh, Middleport.
Lisa is a senior at Meigs High

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·: . classes w1U be held at the Meigs
::; C'?unty Health Department starting
;. · thiS week 6:30 p.m., Tuesdays and
• Thursdays.
::
The classes, free to Meigs
::: · Countians, will provide nutrition,
· · : education and other phases of
: · weight control. For more informa·
: : tion call Jacqueline Starcher, 992• :•..:
exlension 281.

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Donna Je111 Wlllgh ~ Mm:aviUc
Clay is a 1989 graduate of
and Tom iDd Nalley Midd1ekJa of Lehman High School and was a
Sydney an?CJUDCC the CIIPF""DI 1994. graduate fron_llbe Univcnily
of thear cbildrc:o Cymhla Jeaa and of ~to Grande w1th a degree in
Clayton Thomas.
busmess ·management; He is,
Cynthia is a 1992 graduate of employed by Wagner Reality in
Hannan Trace Hip Scbool iDd is Sydney and IS attending the Engicum:ntly a senior at IIi Universily · neer Officen Basic Coone at Fort
of Rio Grande, majoring in psy- Leo1181dwood Mo. He will gradu·
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S1 .50 on ONE 24-Roll Q8 $1 .00 on ONE 12·Roll OR
FOUR 4-Aall ""'*IQI(I) of Chormln Or Chlrmin Ultq.

7Month

APY

(PIHu pu n! only

Pfoper ,.......,. ~ on • comp1«1 8110 COif.el Md.-_a )

QTY.:

I I I III I II 1. 1 I l l I I ITW
STATE:
'
ZIP
0 I I I II I I I CLLLJ r'
l r-1'I TI"D

JIOIIIeie&lt;1IICIMfQt) nl mllrl Ill &amp;....., O.Up To U 00 ~ 011w
":'=:--1
PO lloo t~Sn

c~~n~on, ~~ ~r• Mn

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~"'a- uP 1o $2 00 Rorfuod on.
(taln ..a.ti!IJ(Iot! ....... 11100 ut ,,,
Pl..lAS£ NOTE TH[SE -'QOflOI'W. TERMS
1 UMIT ONE OfT Uf&gt; TO t&lt;'OO l'tEf\Hl PEA NAAI:: . ADDRESS OA ENVf:t OPt: I HIS

CEH flf' K: AU! IAJST ACeOMPAN't' fOUR R£DUES1

2 ·o.. ~onty.., ~he'll

s"

) ,...... .... 6-ll••• "" ""'*Y

4 ~ocM'I&gt;an . ..... 1fedl IN p..-cr - ot Tnll CIIUIQII Ollllool'(lj •uf ·~ . . ~
Proaf{l) -ol -ll'ol't:fl-.
atllllllld t10111 p Odud purchHidby yo..

,.,,_.til

C. I/ BCI0-374~1.23 to open the

5 Aelparldlni•~-~Ye t~.nPIGm.....,..
II No 1...-11rom 910Up11. tkml 111 otg....,IIU..
J U.. olmulople ....... _.:.-PO buo .. IO otJt...lldicMIOflolf"""'*., ..IUCI
prolle\IIIOfl Mulllpll ...n.llllnll,.,.. Itt

I IACOI!Iplflll Of fll9lllll '"""'I 11111
~ ... nat blllonollld

• c

account or rtqUNI more Information.

VELVET SUPREME ICE CRIAM

plete details and to see how·easy it is

__...

.to get your free Jeanie Plus card.

I I I I I 1" 1 I I I I I I I I I I I U .J
ADDRESS ;
APT I
IIII I IIII I III WII I I I

1 on.. ••P"•• ...,ch~~ ·J ""l

6111' . ,.. MINh 3t .1tH.

·"

PteA&amp;e mail my Ger Up To S2 00 Reltlld to
NAME:

'~~~»., 1 .,..,PIG ...,... I_

.ever MasterCard is .accepted; you can use

.. ..

SEALTEST

•

:I

~·

School where she is enrolled in the.
business offiCe education program.
She plans to atlend Ohio Stale Uni- '
vers1ty in the fall.
· Bobby is a 1994 graduate of
Meigs High School and is
employed at Wesll%n Auto.
Wedding plans are incomplele.

FRESH SEALTEST

.2% MILK

,·'.

Waugh-Middleton
.•

,

..

WAUGH AND CLAYTON MIDDLETON

;:
:·
:.
:·:

SEE STORE FOR
MORE DETAILS.

· FOODLAND

1031 OUARREII STREET

Tatterson-Moodispaugh ·

,•'

.

20 lb. bag

CHEVY
TRu·c •I

YOB DDftiiD II 011 DAY

..,.''

DOG FOOD

•

graduate of Meigs High School,
Pomeroy, and received his bachelor's degree in political science and
a minor in Russian from Oltio Universil}', Athens, He is employed by
The Kroger Co., Pomeroy.
The open church wedding will
be 1:30 p.m. March 25, at the Middleport Church of ChrisL A reception will be held following the ceremony in the church fellowship
hall.

.TRAILMASTER

•·

..

Yt
GAL•

..
I•

•

EASTMAN'S
• OHIO VALLEY • GALLIPOLIS
• BIG .BEND - POMEROY

$ 99

·..
. $179
·velvet S•per
Saver
Pops 11 ct.
'
.
.

'""*

lltld....,

IWIIII.,
1Clf10WII09M 01 rlblrned
~ dllln!lintd by tt. U S P011111

.. I

.

the

•

.I

•

,.

•

10 Urn~ Quanlitlae • Prices Eflective.lhru Sat..

• USDA Food

andWIC

• Not

or Pictorial
•

�•

Page 84 Sunday nm• Sentinel

Pomeroy-Uiddleport oampolla, OH Point PI-nt, wv

·

Pomeroy-llllddleport Gallipolis, QH.-'ft

George Carlin brings his act t9 Wheeling·
WHEELING, W.Va.- George is sure in the second half of the
a fairly common name, but add 1960's his stand-up career took a
Carlin to it, and the meaning differenl turn when, in 1970, he
changes drastically, Carlin's come- , grew his now familiar beard and
dy is contemporary, controversial began doing material of a more
and topical. George Carlin can personal and political nature. A
make you literallr sit up and take recording cootract led to the rei~
notice at one oi' his shows. Moot of of "FM &amp; AM," an album which
his material hits a nerve at some won a Grammy Award in 1972
point with the audience not only after "going gold." It wns the first
with being funny, but factual.
· of f!Jur succes~i~e g!)~d albums
Sunday, March S George Carlin. Carlm bad on Little Davtd Records
with special guest Dennis Blair will during the ftnt half of the ·1970's.
perform at the Capitol Music Hall · Ten of his "original" albums have
for one show at 7 p.m.
been nominaled for Grammys.
· As a teen-age "class
The next medium for the wide
clownMre.et-corner comedian," exposure of Carlin's Bland-up rouCarlin !aid out a career path for tines wu to be Clble TV; specifi.
himself thai included three specific cally Home Bait Office. In 1977 be
steps: disc jockey, stand-up come- taped "On Locatioo: Geolxc Carlin
dian and comic film acta. Ironical- at USC" on the California~
ly, his ultimate goal of acting wns initiating I Siring of eigbtaugbl
delayed by the 91!=S a! !IJs st"and- ~0 ~omecly .coacen lxoadcurs,
up COII\Cdy, ongmally mtended UICiuding the~ regarded "Caronly ns a stepping stone. ·
lin al Carnegie, taped at New
After anmitial period of exten- York's Carne8ie HaD m 1982. Carsive television and nightc:lubexpo- lin's seventh cable c:mcen, "Doio'

It Again," produced in 1990, wa
the n:cipicut c1 • ACE AWII'd, the
cable industry'• highest bonor. In
April of 1992 his most recent
show, "Jam min' In New York" was
broadcast live from Madison
Square Garden in New York City,
,, and Carlin received ·bis second
straight ACE Award in addition to
an Emmy 110111ination for his per.
formance. The CD from 11w show
won him the 1993 Grammy Award
for best spoken-word comedy
album.
·
January 1994 saw the premiere
of"Tbe Georp Carlin Sbow "witli
Carlin's own weekly sitcom 'on the
FOX TV networt.
Carlin sees little men to prove
in the stand-up field, but will continue to tour and work in front of
audiences because, ns be puts it, "I
love ~reating ancl !lcvel~g ~w
material, and the direct, immediate
response from a live audience is
like nothing I can explain."
·All seats for the show are

•

the magical secret garden, a place Winner Lucy Simon (composer).
whcle anything is possible.
Tickets are now on sate .at tne
The Secret Ganlen is literally a ·Auditorium Box Office, from 12 to
family show. Two of the actresses S:30 p.ni., Monday through Friday.
in this production are mother and For more information on tickets, or
daughter Carolyn and Rebecca to order tickets with a Visa or MasStevens. Carolyn plays Lily, the . terCard, call 593-1780.
.
ghost of the uncle's beautili!l wife,
and Rebecca portrays the story's
main character, Mary Lennox.
The Secret Garden is a collaboration by Pulitzer Prize· and Tony
Award winner Marsha Norman
(book and lyrics) and Grammy

SOMERVllLE, NJ. (AP)- A·
grand jury declined to charge
"Frasier" star Kelsey Grammer
after hearing a girl's allegation that
they had
sex whil~
sh~ was a
minor
a prosecuta
swdFnday.
Ne~ Jersey authorities plan no
further action in the case, Somerset
County Prosecutor Nicholns L. Bis-·
· seU Jr. said
The girl claimed she had sex
with Grammer while baby-sitting
his 9-xear-old daughter in a Somer. set Hills hDICI suite in 1993, when
she was IS. She also claimed
• Grammer had se:t with her at a
resort near Flagstaff, Ariz.
Charles Hastings, the county
attorney•in Yav~ Countr, Ariz.,
said his office wtU meet wtth New
Jersey officials regarding the case.
Hastings ·declined to elaborate.
Bissell said the grand jury heard
testimony Thursday from the girl,
now 17, and from others, whom h~
would not identify. Grammer did
not testify. ·
Grammer, 40, who gained fame

ences.)

£L
;,·~1895
~.

Isn't it great to live in Meigs

.

Cou!lty where the suppon always

'

i~ms

est residents lo feel the Meigs
~uplift.

• Throuab the efforts of the

~Band and others a bene-

Saturday

7: 00,91JO DAILY

March-25, 8 p.1n.

CI»&gt;IIIG 1101::.1 JD'f'

Ariollll ..tro 428 2nd. Ave. Oolllpollo, Oh

1 CUYY CIUI

I i II

oor•r• i• ..DUM.,.
.tn -.u. or ,_ ~

GIFT CEA'I'1ACATU AVAULAI&amp;.EI

-

25th anniversary celebrated

~;

FAMILY NIGHT
EVERY
TUESDAY NIGHT

eo'ldiaU'f .2~tllites }lou
to

You Can Enjoy Any Style
Personal Size ...

Here's The Long And Short Of It.

a

~'loht . 75'lu~tch ,

~-/'-i~~

Sa.tu'ldttl(, /11a.tch 4
10 a.m. - 1 p.m.
•

"lhe111 our ~teat itt-stock colltctl.ott
uJ st¥ll.sh '95 dresses leaturtd ltt
sud. ttatlottal »Ja,a:Uttes as

FAMILY LIFE
CONFERENCE

{'l:Juss ~egistt~ 6~ School}
We ttlso can¥ 4 lu.llll.tte ol ttcassotles:
Shoes, '5t.Oves, ;}tl11tl.tl(, etc.

For Only 11.29
or With 16 oz. Soft Drink

For Only '1.99

"Design for Successful Living"

Tux RENTAL

4 PM-9 Pt-4 ONLY

'

407 Main St.

Point Pleasant '

Pastor Keith Wiebe, Senior Pastor

4 Door, V-8, Auto, .
Air, PS, PB, AM/FM,

T~lt
Wheel, Cruise,
- 51,000 Miles .

$3 49500

·

NOTHING

,

No monav down
.,_, No Interest &amp;
v No DIVID811S
v

Did you catch the McNeilLehn:r House on television Thurs·
day nighJ.?
.
· APJ)Cirlng on the pi"ogram was a
f2rmer ~lddleport resident, Jo
lttcblrds Keel, daughter of Florence and the lale Arnold Richards
of Middleport.
.
Jo was involved in the discussion on funding f&lt;r the arts and she
represented the National Endow~
ment for the Arts in her appearance. She has served on the board
of thi: national organization for a
· number of.years.

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER .

446-9971
264 Upper River Rd.

Gallipolis, OH
l

••

't

'·

MOW DOWN '1111 COMPEmiON
New TROY-8/L'T~
Lawn Tractors ·

Powerful .l3-l (? HP engines; exceptional maneuverability, easy
controls, much more! JROV"r

Nieman to
recreate
Sousa
stvle
RIO GRANDE • Marcus Nie-

••

••

150 UPPER RIVER RD. (across from K-Mart
GALLIPOLIS
. 446-7826

•

•

* Illness .or Injury

...".
...

O'DELL LAWN &amp; GARDEN CENTER

•,

I•

MOST WITH
WARRANTIES FROM
· 5 TO 20 YEARS I

* Phy$ician Referral

..

-

*Health ·Care Events .

.
\

'

.

'· •

...

•

..•

•
'•

*Support Groups

STOR~

HOURS·
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Mintmum lkpo11l of $500 lo Oflf !l. Aulom•l o'fl ly ""rw• bl1.
lnlrh'sl nlll' o~rtd APY tdlqlllll ilff u ol 2' 16195 m d •ubJtcl lo ch.t.nQf.
Ptn.alty for urly wtlhdnwll .

lnlntll: tb.te

lntrresl Ratt

lntc rnl Ctlmpoundtd Quut trl ~

lnttrut Compoumktl Monthly

•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

.,

r----------------,
. miPLE COUPON

I

' '

I

. '' .

1Coupon
I

1
1

I
·1..

Good For 5 Triple 1
·
I
Vendor·Coupons of 1
1
soc. or· Less. ;
I

'

\

Brown Leather
Not $2999.95

Not $'799.95

$

MAHOGANY
QUEEN BED

5 PIECE
BEDROOM SUITE

Nol $1199.95
99
5

Soulhwest Pine
Not $4999.95 .

499

52199"

OAK TOP GREEN LEGS
TABLE &amp; 4 CHAIRS

OAK
SIDEBOARD

Not $1199.95
99
5

Nol$999.95

499

39999

5

BLUE
SOFA &amp; CHAIR

ROCKER RECLINER
Teal

Not $899.95
99
5

Not $899.95

399

... 5299"

RESTONIC QUEEN
MATTRESS SETS

OAK
TABLE &amp; 4 CHAIRS

$3.9_! "

3 .

Not $1199.95

Only

-

Set ~

Geod Feb. 26·27·28

..

''

!.

From: 8 ~.m. to 11 p.m., seven days a wee I~,
. ..(.-·a specially tl'lained R.N. is on duty to .
answer your questions on .health ca~e and
· to inform you about available services.

Holzer Medical Center:

•
'

Your .community,parlner hi .cha~g_e ·;,· , .
As continue the Holzer Tradttwn ·
1

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

\

.

.

.

•
",

'•

'

we

FDIC

SWIVEL ROCKER
OnOMAN

"

•

ME~II3ER

SOFA· CHAIR
OTTOMAN

Not $949.75

\

·LaToya refunds
after quick exit

..

.

,, .•

7.00%
1\nnuJI 1\ ht' Tll"l!l I'' IJ

51299 99

~· I

more

The .. entertainer wns ordered to
pay that much to the Paris nightclub because she abnlptly ended a
1993 performance run with several
months left on her contracL
Jackson bdd asked State
Supreme Coun Justice Carol Arber
· to delay enforcement of the French
court's · judgment while she
appealed, but the judge said in ruling made public Friday that under .
Frenc~ law. Jackson's 90-day
a~ jJeriod bad expired.

•

••

,.,,IJ

'

}~

',

f'1 r 1 n!JJ.!t

Mason (304) 77~-5 5 14
New Haven (304) 882-21 35

Call614-44l-0914 for Information

·health care quesJtons.

••

"

man and the SoundS of Sousa Band
pe~lixming Mlal:h S at the
University of Rio Grande. Show·
time at the Fine and Performing
Arts Center is 2:30 p.m.
Nieman jlortrays Sousa, and the
concen is designed to accurately
' reflect the style of the concerts
Sousa perlormed all·over the coun-·
try. There is very little pause
between songs, and the ro.using
march music builds to the closing
"Stars and Stripes Forever."
Nieman hns toured extensively
in RX:ent years, performing before
than 140,000 people in Illinois, Indiana. Ohio, Nonh Carol~
and New York.
· .. For more information call Cannie McNerlln at 245-7364.

March 1st through 4th
Wednesday-Friday 7 pm
S,a turday 9 am

'

'

7.00%
,\ nnuJI

13-Month CD

· 1Y, miles from St. Rt. 218 on Teens Run Road

· for answering your

.

····~·''

will be

.

•'

•••
•

From $1999

Providence Baptist Church

iiolZer Health Hotline
·ha.s ~11 the right ingredients

•

. $550,000 wonh.

36-Month CD

Huntington, WV

..

NEW YORK (AP) - LaToya
Jackson's premature adieu caused
much adO at the Moulin Rouge -

ofDiinois. .
.
Jo has been a professional
dancer· for I good !DIJIY years and
is the founder and director of Euli·
pions, the cultanlma caller in
Denver, Colo., wllere lbe resides.
She no loop perfOIDII but does
~=:OIIDIDY ci the etA·

PORTLAND Lebonan
RACINE - Megaskills work fil w11 beld last Sunday in the
Township
Trustees
regular
meet- shop at Southern High School cafesocial rooms at the Eagles Club.
ing, Monday, 7 p.m. at the town- teria. 7 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, for par-·
With the band on hand there was
ship building.
ents, sponsored by Vemurc Capital
plenty of music DOl to mention a lot
Funds and from th e Effec tiv e
of food llld • very successful aucJ o is 1 gr1duate of good old
MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH .RHOADES
MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN Schools monies. Free baby sitting
. lion. As of Wednesday, $6300 had Middleport Higb School, Obio
Coil Club, Monday, 7 p.m. '!"8ding services will be available.
been raised on Carolyn's behalf Univemty and did graduate wort
session followed by meetmg at
and another $1,000 came in on in Colorado.
Burkett Barber Shop. New memPOMEROY - TOPS Club, OH
Thursday. Of cowse, donations are
riage, RiUa Srniih of Pomeroy, and · bers·welcome.
570,
open house, 'Tuesday, 6 to 7
still being accepted and are still
Joseph of Columbus. ·
·
p.m.
Ill
the Carpenter's Unilln Hall
coniing.
If anyooe blow the lyrics to the
The couple celebrated their
POMEROY - U.S. ' Coast on Mai11 Street, Pomeroy . More
.SuMly butcher and Cheryl Wal- old song, "Let's AD Siaa Ub the
anniversary with a dinner at the Guard Auxiliary meeting Monday, information, call 992-2774 or 992lers, sisters, who sin.g with Birdies Sing, " ~ please
Red Lobster in Parkersburg, W.Va.
7 p.m. at the Carpenters.' Hall on 2973.
Croisovcr were very helpful in $Ill- get in touch with Paul SIOIY'I
lin¥ the smooth-running fund nuser She's unable to come up witb the
gotag 10d they, along with their words and it's getting to her. Did
mother, Betty SteWart, visited with your education about the "birds and
Carolyn in Columbus on Wednes- bees" include them?
.\lay and report lhat Carolyn is
domgwell.
It wns hoped that she might be
Easter bonnets seem lo have
able to be on hand for the fund rais- faded fnim the American scene so
Deposit rates may be going up. Or they may be at their peak.
er but she just wasn't up to it so a there's one more lhin.J you won't
No one knows for certain. That's why we now offer an
video of her in Columbus was · have to worry aboQL Sec bow.sim·
PHOTOGRAPHY
attractive 7% annual percentage yield on both short -term
ina4e and wils shown Sunday in pie life •s bec:oming. Do keep smilProfessional Wsdcfing Photography
Pomeroy. By the .same token,·.a ing.
and long-term certificates of deposit.
video was made of the Sunday
activities so that Carolyn could
enjoy the action at the fund raiser. I
If yo~ think rates will go up, our 13-month certificate is
•••
understand that Charles Mankin did
the right choice for you. If you believe.rates are peaking, lock
both Yideos--Md that wns a great
idea. Mike Martin, who was a
in for the long haul with our 36-month certificate.
school classmate of Carolyn,
served as auctioneer and did a commetfdable job with that, Sandy
,.--....~ No coupons. No gimmicks. Just
~· Thanks to all of you who
rate, low $500 minimum
cootributed in any way to the sucand your cho
terms.
eess~ll (uDd raiser Sunday.
Those' still wishing to contribute
!nay send their do1111tions directly
· to C11rolyn and the address is
· Conducted By:
Unvet(erth Souse, Apartment A,
190 King · Aveilue, Columbus,
43201. .
Incidentally, Sandy ·says that it's ·
Grace Gospel Church
probably going to be quite a while
before Carolyn gets to come home.
Point Pleasant (304) 675-11 21

I I ( .I '\I h

lllt.UIIDI IAT I 1W
1100 , 3110
li'G - U)

Morrlo lo Dorothy Haoklno

HENDERSON, WV
GALUPOUS, OH

on the current level were Sen.

Kam of Pomeroy. Is one of the lat-

•

as the self-important psychiatrist on
"Cheers" and went on to star in
"Frasier," bad maintained that the
girl's family wns after his money.

Appearing on the same program
to disciL'IS the pros and cons orcontinued national funding to the arts

Hcan llllllplant patient, Carolyn Dodd of Connecticut IIIII Sm. Blair

OHIO VALLEY
SYMPHONY
Call 446•ARIS

to come forth. when you

oeedit?

SgrJ£/InUN - }IO"UR jb'R0;1t

"';::~7,;;;-;;-;;;:;;::;;;;:;;-;;;::;::;-;:;;:-;-;--;--,
1,

SUNDAy
. Main Street All people interes ted
POMEROY - Coy Bacon, for- in form ing new fl otilla urged to
mer NFL Dlayer, will be speaker at attend. ·
First Southern Baptist Church Sunday, 7 p.m. Public, especially
POMEROY - The M e i ~s
youth, invited.
County Veterans Service Comm ission will meet Monday, 7:30 p.m.
MONDAY
in the Veterans Service Office in
CHESTER - Meigs County Pomeroy.
Chapter of the lzaac Walton
League featuring Ray Zeyler, staie
TUESDAY
director, Monday, 7 p.m. at the
~PER~ PJ..AINS - Tuppers
lzaac Walton Farm on Sugar Run . Pla1~s Reg!onal Sewer D1stnct
Road near Chester. Business meet- · pub he hearmg on grants 7 p.m.
ing. All members and inlerested Tuesday a:t the Orange To wnship
people invited to attend
Hre DcpartmenL

by Bob Hoeflich

Grandjury declines to indict
,, {Frasier' actor in sex case
·

Beat of the Bend ...

restn'ed It $20 IIIII can be dlarRed
by Dhone It (304)234-00SO 01 8006i4-S4S6. (Some coocett 11181Crial
may 1101 be suitable for young audi-

'The Secret- Gardens' set for OU

ATHENS- The Stcrtt Gardens,
the Broadway musical that caeturedothree 1991 Tony Awards, will
be at Templeton-Blackburn Alumni
Memorial Auditorium 8 p.m.
March 2 ns pan of the Performing
Arts Series.
Inspired by the classiC" children's novel by Francis Hodgson
Burnett, The Secret Garden tells
the story of a young girl sent to live
with her uncle on the English
moors in 1906. On his large, lonely
estate she discovers an entrance to

Meigs community calencjar

,.

•

•

FREE DEliVERY
FREE SET.UP
FREE REMOVAL
SAVE ON ALL OTHER
. ITEMS
AT EMPIRE
·
,.
.

APPLIANCI:S
. ELECTRONICS
SWEEPERS
CARPET
NOT INCLUDED

!499"

�'I'

Page--86-Sunday nmes SenUnel

_Pomeroy-Middleport Gllllpoll., OH 'Point PI-nt,

BARBARA AND CHRISTOPHER MONTGOMERY

Evans-Montgomery ·
GALLIPOLIS -Barbara Ann
Evans and Christopher James
Montgomery were untied in marriage Dec. 23 at St. Peter's Episcopal Church in 6allipolis.
Barbara is the daughter of Jimmie and Nancy Evans of Gallipolis.
Christopher is the _son of Dan and
Connie Vance of Gallipolis ..
The double-ring ceremony was
performed by Father John Good.
Music was provided by percussionist Hayden B. Lloyd ·ilccompanied
by Jan Betz on the ·ocgan and piano.
Maxwell and Alexis Bruce were
the ~~CGlytes.
The bride was escorted to the
altar by her father and given in
marriage by her parents. She wore
a traditional white full-length gown
with a fitted bodice and sweetheart
neckline. The bodice and sleeves
were accented with pearls and
sequins. The sleeves an&lt;! skirt had
an overlay of tulle. There were
flower appliques with pearls and
sequins on the skirt and shon uain.
A large satin and tulle bow was
attached to the back waistline of
the dress.
The bride wore a beaded and
pearl headpiece with a short veil
and mate)ung pearl earrings and
necklace. She canied a cascading
bouquet of white and red roses
accented with holly.

Garrett~G ray
'

.

CHESHIRE - Beverly Ann Gar-

-

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•••

...

.

ADDISON • Special singin~ 7

Commodities to
be distributed in
·'Meigs, Galli a
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Mcigs Community Action Agency
will be distributing pears, green
beans and bu(\er to persons holding
valid fwd Commodity Cards on
Feb. 28 at the following locations:
In Meigs County at the Meigs
County Fa!qcrounds, Tuppers
Plains FU'C Station, PageviUe Town
Hall and Racine Fire Station. Distn'bulion will be from 9:30 a.m. to
12 p.m. or until the supply is
exbausted, whichever comes first.
· - In Gallia County at the Gallia
County Fairgrounds, Gallco in
Cheshire, Mt. Carmel Baptist
Church in Bidwell and Crown City
Fire Station. Distribution will be
from 12 to 2:30p.m. or until the
supply is exhausted, whichever
comes fl!SL
\.
Persons picking up for Others
must bring a signed note from !he
person in addition to "lheir Footl
Commodity Card and.-a bag for
their commodities.

_

JIMMY AND BEVERLY
GRAY
.

-

Along the River must be received
by the editorialdepartment by
Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the date
of imblication.
Those nat making ' the 60-day
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories· if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold siie or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted.

The
O~o
Company

POMEROY - The Meigs Min- '
isterial Association announces the
81Ulual 'Lenten community worShip
service to be held at 1:30 p.m on Thunday nights over the next six
weeks.
The services will be held at the
different churches each week with
ministers from other churches
bringing the message.
The schedule is as foUows:
Thursday, March 2, Trinity
Congregational Church, the Rev.
Dawn Spalding, Lutheran church-es.~g.
·
March 9, Grace Episcopal
Church, Sister Fidelis of Sacred
Heart Roman Catholic Church,
~ng.
.
March March 16, Pome'roy
Nazarene Church, the Rev. Kenny
Baker, Southern Cluster, Meigs
United Methodist Cooperative
Parish, speaking.
March 23, Pomeroy United

rather die lhan go baCk to Virginia. Davis moved tluougb the: heavy fog
Glenn lmew the penalty f&lt;l' arming a of night lo the: side of the house.
slave was very sewre, but he did There he plaa:d 1 long ladder, on
relent lA&gt; giving the runaway slave a which the tWo runaways "''''ped the
com cutter. UncleDavisSIIY,edatthe Glenn house. Uncle Da~ took the
ferry that night waiting for Glenn lA&gt; pair to the creek, paddled two miles,
bring the slaves back to the creek, but and handed the pair over 1o a man
Uncle Davis was surprised when the waiting with a two-horse express.
MAs feared, theDeJ~tmomingthe
slavehWJters appeared demanding 10 ,
search the area. Meanwhile back at hunten all returning wilb.aconstable
the Glenn farm, a stnlllger showed up and a search warrant which could not
wanting lA&gt; ~ the night there. It beresiSied,sean:hedtlowg~yevery
was suspected by the family that this · nook and comer to find any 1n1ce of ·
strailger was in fact a spy for the fugitives." Glenn wrote.
slavehunters. It was his job 1o detect
Butnoevidence-found.Later
if there were slaves being hidden on word was reeeived that the pair had
the Glenn farm.
made it safely lA&gt; Albany. The fate of
But without discussing the mat- . the captured runaway was never
ter, the GleiUl family knew what to do learned.
James Sands is a spedal corre·
in such cases. F'li'Sta very late supper
was planned, after which all the chil- spondentoltlle SulldayTimes-Sen·
dren went to the sitting room and tineL His llddraa · is: 65' Willow
madeasmucb~aspossible. Uncle
Drive, SprinRboro, Oblo 45066.

•••

•••

•

...

•••

•••

•••

•••
•••

On Good Friday, April 14,
beginning at noon at the Sacred
Heart Church, the county is invited
to meditate on the stations of the
cross led by lhe ministers under thedirection of lhe Rev. Fr. Waltir
Heinz.
.
'J!he J;lllblic. is invited to attend
all Service&amp;. Further information
may be obtained by calling 9854312.

PLANNED PARENtHOOD
or SOUtHEASt OHIO,

Confidential Family Planning Services
for females &amp; males.
•Medical Exams
•Pap Tests
•Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
•T..ests &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
•Anonymous HIV tests &amp; counseling
•Methods and supplies for birth control anci safer sex
DepoProvera-injection
Birth control pill
Condom/Spermicide
Sliding Fee Scale
We accept Medicaid and private Insurance.
414 SECOND STREET .GALLIPOLIS
446·0166

MELANIE HASKINS
SBC GRADUATE
WINTER
QTR. 1993
'
DATA ENTRY SPECIALIST

•Stocks
•Corporate Bonds
•U.S . Treasury Securities
•Mutual Funds
•Insured Tax-Free
Municipal Bonds
•Insured Money Market
4-ccounts
.•IRA 's
Contact:
Jay Caldwell A ccottlil Executive

509 S. THIRD STREET
MIDDLEPORT
992-5912

-~~

. ·raJT ;t\.

441 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OJ-I. 45631

(614) 446-2125
1-800-487-2129

KNOWS THE VALUE
OFA QUALITY

BEGIN TRAINING FOR YOUR BUSINESS CAREER.
CALL US TODAY! 446·4367 .

SOUTHEASTERN
Spring Valley Plaza
Gallipolis, Oh. · ·

ESS COLLEGE

-year unbeaten at home
COlLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) Joe Smilh matc_hed his career high
wilh 33 poi!tts Saturday as the No.
7 Maryland Terrapins finished
unbeaten at home for the: first time
in 1S years by de~ting Clemson
84-68.

.

and Indiana held a 48-33 ;wvaniage
following a lip-in by Todd Lindeman with 14:05 to play.
Penn State (15-9, 7-8) cut its
deficit to 48-37 when I ohn
Amaechi made his team's second
field goal of the half with 13:27 to
go.
Penn State was unable to draw
any closer although Indiana lost
starting center Andrae Patterson
with 8:2lto go and Evans sat out
much of the final eight minutes
with four fouls.

Smith had 20 points in the second half and finished with 10
rebounds. He made 10 of 13 shotS
and was 13-for-22 from the line,
breaking Tom McMillen's school
record of 20 free lhrows in a game.
Smith, an All-American sophomore center, is considering entering the 1995 NBA draft. Many fans No. 5 Massachusetts 77,
carried signs lhat read "Don't Go St. Joseph's 58
Joe," and aftu the game the MaryPHILADELPHIA (AP) -_Lou
land student section chanted the Roe· was 9-for-10 from the field,
·same words.
·
scored_24 points and grabbed nine
The Terrapins (22-5, 11-3 ACC) . rebounds Saturday to lead No. 5
moved in tie for fli'St place in ihe Massachusetts to a "77.-58 victory
conference.
. over SL Joseph's.
The Minutemen (21-4, 11-3
Bruce Martin had six 3-pointers
and 20 points, bolh career highs for Atlantic I 0) pulled away to the Win
Clemstm (13-11, 3-11.).
.
with a \3-0 run after the Hawks
·
(IS-10, 8-7) tWI closed within 53Indiana 73,
48 with 7: 12 lA&gt; play. Roe had eight
Penn St. 60
_ points in lhe run that gave MasBLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP)- 'sachusetts a 66-481ead with 3:38 to
Alan He_nderson had his seventh play.
.
cpnsecu~ve ~o.uble-double, nearly . Sophomore center Marcus
compleung It m the first 'half, as Camby played sparingly because of
Indiana defeated P~nn State 73-60 an upset stomach, bllt the: MinuteSaturday.
men, who had split lheir last six
Hen~rson h~d 23 points, IS games, didn't need him as the
before mtermiSSIOn, and 10 Hawks struggled· from the field
rebounds~ eight in the nrst half, for throughout the game.
the H~1ers, w~o h~ve _never lost
Massachusetts, which struggled
to the Nittany Lions m e1ght meet- from the outsid\l in a 72-63 loss at
ings.
Temple on Thursday night, had
Indiana too.k cpmmand w!th a trouble with its shooting again in .
12-2 run early m the second.half as · the first half but still managell to
!he Nittany Lions went nearly six take a 29-25 halftime lead.
minutes without a field goal.
SL Josephs's, which has lost II
The Hoosiers (16-10, 8-6 Big of its last 12 games with the MinTen) led 36-31 after Glenn Selcun- utemen was within 38-34 with
da completed a three-point play for 17:06 play when Massachusetts
Penn State With 19:25 to play: A 3- went on a 9-0 run with Roe scoring
pointer by Brian Evans, who scored four of the points.
13 for Indiana, ignited the spurt

w

MUNCIE, Ind. (AP) - Steve Uiliversity_defealed Central MichiPayne scOred 21 points; including gan 78-53 Saturday.
five in overtime, as Ball State beat
Ohio (21-7 overall, 12-4 Mid· ·
Miami of Ohio 61-57 Saturday to Americ&amp;n Conference) led 37-21 at
snap the Redskins' 10-game win- halftime and outshot the Chippening streak.
_
. was (3-21, ~ 16) 64 percent to 37
Payne also lnade a larup with percent from the floor in the second
4 7 seconds remaining ,lO tie lhe half.
game52-S2andforceovertime.
Ohio led by as many as 33
The Cardinals (IS-9,10-6 in the points in the second half, 65-33,
Mid-American Conferenc;e) held· after Gus Johnson hit a 3-pointer
Miami (19-S, 13·2) to 37 percent with 9:19left. He finished with
shooting (21 of S7) for the game. nine points.
Ball State made 22 of 53 shots for
Jason Terry added 10 points for
42 percent.
Ohio.
Ball State led 42-30 with 12:58 -Saint Louis C,
to play be(ore lhe Redakins went . Dayton $l
.
_
on a 20-8 run to tie the game with . ST. LOUIS (AP)- H Wald1:29 remaining on a layup by Der- man scored I&amp; points and David
ri~~Wells scored 15 points Robinson grabbed a career-high 14
and ""'-bbcd 13 rebounds for lhe reboundt as Saint Louis overcame
i'"--:
a horrible start and beat Dayton 63Cardinal
s.
51 Saturday afternoon.
Oblo u. 78,
, Robinson and Scott Highmark
Cent Mlcblgu 53
added 10 points each for the BilMOUNT PLEASANT, Mich. _ likens (19-6 overall, 7-4 in the
(AP) - Gary T~t had IS points Greal Midwest).
·_
and Mike Reese added 14 as Ohio
Chip Hare scored 19 points and

BRADENTON, Fla . (AP) Pittsblirgh Pirates player representative AI Martin says his own union
is wrong to strong-arm minor leaguers into boycotting exhibition
games .
Martin is one of the fli'St striking
players to criticize union chief
Donald Fehr's policy that any player who
· · s m an exhibition
- even a m1
eaguer wilh no
chance to play in e majors this
season - is a rep
enL
The hard-line.s
mi~hl ham- .
per the: careen of on-the-nse playen whose careers often accelerate
by catching the attention of the
~-league staff in spring training games, Martin said.
Martin himself was such a player only a few years ago, buried
deep in the Atlanta Braves' farm
system behind a wealth of outfield

make it work. You can't do lhat surprising.
ROCKING~. N.C. (AP) - here. I can tell myself that, but I
Earnhardt was 21st at 154.221,
The hardest thing for a young can't make myself drive any easier. followed 'by Bi II Elliott, Ted
charger like Jeff Gudon is to""""
- r That'sj'ust pan of my driving Style. Musgrave, Jarrett, Jimmy Spencer
th
his foot Off the gas when fmesse IS
"But, today .... my fool came Off and Marlin. Others not among e
better than h&lt;nepower.
the throttle when I needed it lA&gt;, and top 20 included fjve-time
On Friday, Gordon, driving a it usually doesn't do that here at Rockingham pole-winner ~yle
Chevrolet Monte Carlo, earned the Rockingham. : .. II felt too smoGth Petty and three-time Winston Cup
lhirdrf::le of his buddin~ career, and clean to be that fast."
champion
Darrell30Waltrip.
• started
and Irst at a track ot er tban
Rudd, driving a Ford
'We
thor so here Iast
Chari_ot1e Motor s~::way. His lap Thunderbird, was the only other fall when we won the race,"
· "Ma ybe I JUSt
· can ,t
of 157.620 mph roke the North driver able to approach his own BarnhardI said.
Carolina Motor Speedway qualify- !rack 11111rk, turning a lap of hold my breath as long as those
·
ing record of 157.099 set last 157.062 to take the outside pole for younger guys." . ·
October ·by Ricky Rudd, shortly today's 500-mile race.
' All of the drivers who didn't
after the 1.017-mile oval was
"When Rudd ran as quick as he make the lineup in the opening
repaved.
_
did, I didn't think anyone could round got another chance Saturday.
The 23-year-old wunderkind beat lhat," Gordon said. "I knew
was amazed to win the pole at a that was the lap to beaL llhink the
Here is the lineup for today's
track where be has struggled in biggest thing for us is the Monte Goodwrench Soo NASCAR Stock
quallfying during his brief Winston Carlo. It reacts differently. I've, car race at North Carolina Motor
CUP,career·
never had a car with so much Speedway with driver, rj:sidence,
'I Slllllbd on the outside pole in downforce here.''
type of car and lap speed in mph:
my fust Busch (Grand National)
This was the first pole for
I.Joll Oardoa, "'"'""'rille, N.C.,
Moote
Corio, il7.620, tn&lt;k quot~ytna - d ;
race here in October 1990, but I Chevrolet's new model. It debuted oi4,..,....ll7.099,Rlt:kyRIIdd,Oci.I994.
didn't know what I wy doiDJ!," last week at Daytona, where
Z. lllclty Rudel, Loke Nonnon, N.C., Ford
m .o~2.
Gordon said. "Since then, I JUSt Sterling Marlin and Dale Earnhardt ~iftl,
. S. Bren Bodia1, Hanl•bura. N .C., ford
haven't been able to getlhe job finished 1-2 in the race after Dale ~iftl, 156.168.
.
.
done here.
Jarrett -· won the pole in a
4. Oooff Bodine, hlioa, N.C., Ford
''I found out that every time I Thunderbird.
~:S:~~:: coocon~, N.c .. a...,..1,.
0
for the pole here at " . On Friday, Brett Bodine was Moote Corio, 15~.663 . 6. Denike Cope.
. d • an d 0 ld er brot her Geo ff Chor'-N.C
. ockingham, I end up about IOth IhII'
7. John .,Fon!Thlmderblnl,ll5.6t0.
Andretti, lndionopolll, Ford
or I Sill, so lhis time we did the fourlh. Their Fords turned laps at lbtlldabiftl, I~l.4l9.
. I . Rltky Croven, Newburah. Moboo,
Opposite. We ran a smooth lap;- 156.168 and 156.101, respectively. Chom&gt;
.. MooteCarlo, ll5.109.
especially through (turns) one and -Next was the Mopte Carlo of
9. Ri&lt;k Mut, Roclr.brid&amp;e 8 , 1111 , ·v•.. Font
two. It's a tight comer and you Gordon's teammate, Ken Schrader, ~inl. m.oso.
1..-p the car Jow at 155.663.
10 Todd Bodine, Ho11i1bura. N.C., ford
need .to be ,notl-nt
_ _ ... ..,.,
'l'buoderbiftl, 154.919.
011 the track, come off two hard and
The top 2.0 places were filled
IUiidloel Woltrip, D.. ldoon.N.C.. "'-dae
~-•
thro b thr and Friday for what is ex"""ted to be a or...IPii•, 154.8$1. 12. Mora•• Shop~ord,
.,....e your way
Ug
ee
!&lt;'""
c-.., N.C., Ford 'l'buoderbinl, 1,.,795.
four.
42-car field today. Some of the
ll. Joe Neme&lt;hek, Mooreo•iilo, N,c..
''Norma,lly, I attack the race- driven who didn't lock up starting OJmvieiM..,teCorlo.I54.7BB. 14· Dicit Tricltle,Iroo s~auoo , N.c., Ford
track, Jet on top of the car and spots in the ope11ing
round were · 'l'bttatlorbinll54.709.
•

1

Sales - Rental - Service

HOME OXYGEN THERAPY
Respiratory Therapist - 24 Hour EmergetJ&lt;y Service
We Bill Medicare, Medicaid,,etc., for the patient.
'
Home Owned
and' Operated

Gallipolis
446-7283

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1-800-458-6844

.

Jackson
286-7484

N.o. 6 Kentucky 71,
Vanderbllt60
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Tony Delk scored 22 points and
No. '6 Kentucky used a 13-1 run
within the final four minutes as the
Wildcats pulled out a il-60 victory
Saturday over Vanderbilt.
'-Mlilik--Evans 5if two fi~ws
with 3:54 left that cut Kentucky's
lead to 58-56' at the 3:54 mark.
Rodrick RhOdes started the spurt
with a pair of free throws, and !he
Wildcats (20-4, 12-2 Southeastern
Conference) sealed their fifth
straight victory in the series.

Xavier, Obio 81,
Butler 66
-INDIANAPOLIS {AP) - Jeff
Massey scored 27 points and

Tavares Johnson added 20 Satur- .
day as Xavier of Ohio beat Butler
_81-66 to complete !he Midwestern
Collegiate Conference season
undefeated.
:
The Musketeers (23-3, 13-0 ill'
the MCC) are the rust team sinCC:
1980, when Loyola of Chicago was:
· 5-0, to go undefeated in league
olav.

Saturday's scores .
By The Associated Preas
EAST

American U. 103, George
Mason 101
'
. Canisius 65, Man"'hattan 58
Colgate 104, Lafayette 71
Rordham 84, Army 45
Hartford 60, Nociheast.em S9
Holy Cross 73, Bucknell 61 .
Long Island U. 113, St. Francis,
NY 109,0T

Pittsburgh 56, Providence 48
Winthrop 64, Md.-Baltimore
County 63
SOlTfH
Appalachian SL 92, VMI 89 .
Bethune-Cookmaq8S, Florida
A&amp;M73

talent before signing with Pitts- exhi-bitions to be replacement ward position by forcing them to
burgh.
games, he said.
. plar in the spring train in$ games.
"I think it's terrible to put these
However, the Pirates have
'The owners are gomg to use
(minor leaguers) in the middle," declined to take the play-or-be- . !he players they have no intention
Martin told lhe Pittsburgh Post- gone posture of teams such as the of taking (north) with them," MarGazene. "At this Jl?inl, they have Cincinnati Reds and New York tin said. "I don't think tlwy'll use
nothing to do with either side. Yankees, who are sending minor their top prospects. I don't think
They're innocent bystanders.
leaguers home if they refuse to _they want to put those guys in that
"I'm sure both sides have bar- play. The Pirates have not. decided position. But if you don '1 do it for
gaining reasons for doing this, but how or whether to discipline any ever~ body, why do it to any of
it's not right for liS to tell them not player who balks at playing.
them. ••
to play and it's not right for ownerBonifay said it win be his deciBonifay will develop a list of
ship to play them. They should be siOii who will play in the exhibi- who will play in the exhibitions
left alone and not· be paw!IJ. tions who won't.
and who won't so manager Jim
They're young kida. They haven't •
''We're n oing to use and not Leyland won't have io wonder
done anything wrong to be put in use players on an bBJlis other than from day to' day who is available.
lhis position."
what I think is best for the players
"I think we have enough playGeneral manager Cam Bonifay and the organization," he said. "If ers who have told us they will play
met Saturday with the 50-plus I don't feel it's in the best interests that we can' play the exhibition
ininor leaguers in camp to explain of a player u'nder these circum- schedule," Bonifay said.
the Pirates: policy on exhibiuons. stances, he won't play."
The Pirates' exhibition opener is
Farm director Chet Montgomery Thursday in Bradenton against the
The Pirates will play minor leaguers in exhibitions, as they always said recently the Pirates wouldn't Minnesota Twins.
have. because they do not consider put their top ·prospects in an awk-

15. llobOy . _ Trtolty, N.c.. a.....Iot
~~!:i~~ollaee, Chorlouo, N.c .. ford
Thwldertlinl. 154.592.
•7 · Bobby Hamilton, Noohvllle, Teoo.,
PoallacOnndl'rU.I54.S20.
18. Jell Bun on. Sou Ill Bollon, Vo., Ford
Th"':."'~~~~~ Daytona B...... FIL, Fonl
Thunderbird. 154.m.
20. Randy l.Liole, Norwolk, conn., Pootio&lt;:
Onnd PrU. 154.227.
21. Steve Oriuom. Llbelt,., N.C., Dlevrokt
MooteCvio,
m.•s2.
n . Sterllna "!orlln, Columbia, Teaa..
~vrolet MoniC Car)D, 154.821.
21. Dole Euntttrtlt, Doolio, N.c.. tbe.,...,
MorneCorlo,I54.22I.
0
Th~;r ~~·:~~- Blolravllte, •·· Ford ·
25. Ted Muor.ove, Troulmoo, _N.C., ford
~g~:~;~~it. Hi&lt;kory, Nc.• Ford
'lltuodorb~n~, 153,987 _
:
'rl. Kyle Peuy, Hiah Pala~ N.c .. Poattoc
Onodl'rll, lSl-987·
~~~r .s.,.
_ ..,...
_ , M""""viUe, N.C.. Fonl
·-·~ 1 , 1 929
29•X'""Y wouoeo, c...,ord, N.C., Ford

~~=-.N.C.,C&gt;em&gt;let

-c.to. m .6n.
ll. Mikl Wolla&lt;e, Coooord, N.C .. Ford
Thundcrt&gt;inl, tll.664.
12. Jimmy H•••lel, Rldaewoy, Vo.,
a.evroletMooteCorlo,ll .sol.
33: Lake Speed, Coaoord, N.C., ford
Thu.dcrblrd, 1!13.407.
·
l4.JtmDy MoyOeid, Ooodleaoville, T-..
Fon!Tb..-lrd, lll.'rl8.

~~f~~P:t Wint« Put, Fla., l'ondoc
36. Do•y J..... Alloa... ford Tbundcrt&gt;inl,
ll2.849.
) 37. Dorrell Waltrip, Frootlio. r .....
CllovrolecM-Corlo, uuu.
l l. RobOit Preuiey, Ashoville, N.C..
Owom&gt;ietM••IIoCorlo, ll13ll.
19. S•••• Xinler, Bloomtn1ton. In4, Ford
'lbuoderblnl.oospeed,provillonol-.
40. Loy Aileolr., Rolelah. N.C., Po_
rd
'IIt.-1tlnl, ao speed........... - ••· ww Bunon. Sootuliura, VL, tbe.,....
MoaloCorlo..Ospeed,pmbicaolo-.
42. Dove Mords, Avorr'o Creek, N.C.,
Cllevrolet Monte Corio, no opeecl, provioioool
-·

•

f.

'

I.

LIGIITING UP - Kyle Petty of _Randelman, N;c. nres up a claar

be~ore beading I!Ul-to practice Saturday for today's Goodwrencb
!

'
Reg. I90-05-1Z74B

.-

Shawn Haughn had 13 for the Fiy_ers (7-16, ~9), who lost their sixth
straight and their 26th in a row on
the road.
The Billikens drew a crowd of
20,930, their sixth time over 20,000
this season.

Players starting to criticize Fehr's policy

a........

BUSINESS EDUCATION
"Attar baing a homemaker and a mother ol two, I decided to make the
commitment to return to collaga and update my employment skills at
Southeastern Bualnaia Collage. Class time was convenlsnllor my lamllv
while I developed a great deal olaellaateem by completing all my cours~
work-with a 4.0 GPA.
Gaining skills In computer• and accounting g~ve me the knowledge
· and confidence r needed to perform well in the bu11nn1 wo~d. ·
·
I would suggaal to anyone whO hal ever thought about returning to
school, to consider the benellta ol a buslnoiss education. SBC gave me the
skills and self eateem I needed to aucceed."
MELANIE HASKINS, SECRETARY AT F.A.C.T.S.

-· Maryland five finishes

a good team ," Etzler said. "We
beat. a team today that's contending
for the NCAA tournament. We
know we can play with these
teams.··
Vi&gt;shon Lenard led the Gophen
with 18 points, while Townsend
Orr had 12 and Jayson Walton had
12.
Haskins said he didn't thinlc the
loss would cripple his team's
chances for an NCAA tournament
berth.
"We have so many good winS'
that have to overshadow this loss,''
he said. "We are physically banged
up. We have proven ourselves; that
was not a fluke winning the championship of the Great Alaska
ShootouL AU we have lo do is get
healthy."
Minnesota had won the firs(
meeting teams, 81 -61, on Jan. IS;
while shooting 58 percent in the
second half. This time, the Gophers
made just 13-of-37 shots for 35
percent in the second half.

Ball State upsets Miami Redskins; OU romps

By MJKE HARRIS

SIPC

OFFERIN_G:

INDIANA WINS • Alan Hmdtntlll (44) ullodlan1 and Peu11
State's Pbil WDllams (roreground) and Jolin Amaec:hl (13) battle
for a loose ball Ullder the basket at Aslletnbly Hallin Bloomln)ltoa,
Ind., Satuday.IndlamJ won the Big 10 cage battle, 7J.60. (AP)

By RUSTY 1'dll.LER
year we've been able to put 40 Gophers are 15-64 on !he road in
AP Sports Writer
minutes of good basketball togeth- the conference in Clem Haskins'
COLUMBUS - Through a er," Ayers said.
nine years as head coach.
long and dreary winter - .and
Ohio State led 35-33 at the half
The Buckeyes, who had lo:it
that's inside St. John Arena ~eir last three and 12 of the last 13, and was on top 53-SO with 8:49
Ohio State coach Randy Ayers and 11/!d a'big day at the line and a rare left. But the Buckeyes scored lhe
his players had come to doubt allvanrage on the boards (34-33). _ next eight points- six by Yudtwhether they might ever win again:
Ohio State hit 17-of-23 free IA&gt; take a 61-50 ·lead with 6:55 left.
But just when it seemed the throws in the second half tO just 2"A big thing was we came in at
Buckeyes had forgotten what it was of-3 for the visitors. For the game, halftime with a lead," Yudt said.
like, Rick Yudt and Dou11itzler the Buckeyes were 25-of-33 at the "We usually come in trying to play
catch up." ·
supplied the firepowe-r as the Buck- - line to Minnesota's 1~f-17.
Yudt' s first points of the surge
eyes shocked No.- 22 Minnesota
Yudt scored 18 points, including
Sa&amp;urdt!y afternoon, 73-65.
lbe rli'St six in an important 8-0 sec· Cllllle when the ball slipped out of
"You get concerned at times ond-half run. Etzler added 16 Lenard's hands after a defensive
when you're losing lhat you don't points and was 8-for-8 at the line. rebound and into Yudt's, who
think the kids can play with a Rickey Dudley added 14 points and popped in the layup. After a
lead," Ayers said. "We talked dur- Tony Watson had 10.
Gopher miss, Yudt hit a 3-pointer
ing that second-half timeout about
"Coach Ayers always says there and later added a free throw to
playing with the lead.... It was hus- are three pqssessions that are the · make it 59-50 with 7:13 left Dud- .
tle plays that got it done for us."
turning pomt in games," Yudt said. ley, who hit 8-of-12 free .throws,
The Buckeyes (6-19, 2-13) were "Today ·there were some big pos- made a pair to cap the surge and
able to avoid tying the school sessions where we made the defen- push !he lead lA&gt; 11 .
· "7.
record for losses in a season, set by sive stop. That was the key."
Minnesota never got closer than
the 1975-76 team that finished 6Minnesota (11-9' overall, 8-6 in seven again as Etzler scored nine of
20.
Big Ten) lost for lhe second Ohio State's finall2 points.
.., think that's the rust time all the
"It's important becasue we beat
time in four days on the road. The

Gordon g_
e ts pole for Goodwrench 500 -

Man ob!l r New York Stock E-change
M em b~l!

February 26, 1995

TOURIST ATIRACTION • The 'nllrOIIII cl'OIIIiq at tile edp
of Glenn Summit was a tourist auractloo in the 19th century for at
least two different reasons: the train trestla aDd stop.No. :Z on the
uoderground nllroad.

•••

vices.

Section C

.Bucks ·shock Gophers 73-65

•••

Melhodist Church, the Rev. Paul
Stinson of First Baptist Church,
speaking.
March 30, St. Paul Lutheran
Church, the Rev. Fr. David
duPlantic;r of Grace Episcopal
Church, spe,aldng.
·
·
April 6, First Baptist Church,
The Rev. Bill Hoback of the
Racine Pentecostal Assembly,
speaking.
Refreshments and fellows!lip
will be offered .following the ser-

eatimts ~ imtintl

•

p.m . .Addison. Freewill Baptist port Group 7:30 p.m. New Life
RIO GRANDE - Buckey!l Hills
Chll!Ch with God Ambassadors and Lutheran Church.
FFA Alumni_meeting 7_p.m. Ag.
preaching by Rick Barcus.
Mechanics class room at BucJceye
ADDISON - Eating Disorders . Hills Career Center.
GALLIPOLIS - Songfest 1 p.m. Support Group 1 p.m. Addison
Gallia Baptist Church wilh Friends Umted Methodist Church.
GALLIPOLIS - Grace United
of Jesus, the Good Samaritan and
Methodist
Women's brunch 10
Larry Rose.
CHESHIRE- TOPS 10:30 to a.m. in church dining room. Jane
•••
11 :30 a.m. Cheshire United
GALLIPOLIS - Multiple Scle- Methodist Church. For more infor- andBobSchnarretospeak.
•••
I
rosis Support Group 1:30 p.m. New mation call 367-0274.
RIO GRANDE • Open Gate
Life Lutheran Church.
Garden Club 7:30 p.m. at Barbara
Tuesday, Feb. 28
AllCJl•s. Program "Attracting Bum
PORTER -Rev. Steve Rollins 1
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.VA.
•
to
Our Backyard."
p.m. am Chapel Church. Narcotics -Anonymous Clean and
•••
Free Group 7:30 p.m. Episcopal _
Revivlll
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.- Church.
·
GALLIPOLIS • Faith Valley
· Narcotics Anonymous Tri County
Church, Feb. 19 through 26, SunGroup 7:30p.m. 611 Viand St.
GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics day, 6 p.m.; Monday-Saturday, 7
Anonymous
8 p.m. St . Peter's ·p.m. Special ~\%s and Pastpr
Monday, Feb. %7
Episcopal Church.
Rocky Jeffm
g.
GALLIPOLIS - Divo~e Sup-

Meigs Lenten community
worship services scheduled

--Wedding policy-.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards the weddings of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason COWJties as news
and is happy to publish wedding
stories and photographs without
chargee
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeli _.
ness. The ,newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
!he publication, and .may be up to
600 words in length. MateriiU for

the Gl_enn hill leading three AfricanAmericans, a flll;her. mother, and a
The community of Glenn) - son, the latter bemg about 20-years't . Gall' County . the late ~ old. The founane had Cllpected lo
IDl ID
Ja
ID ,
,
fiJid IIOmCOIIe at the a'CCic wilh I
cen1111y~asa~tourtst~non dugoutcanoewhichwasWJCdtolakc
~anse of the twm trestle railroad runaway slavea 1o a place abow
bridge localed ncar there.
Ewingtoo. Since the canoe was not
TheareabetweenRaccoonCRc:k there and they had heard the sh8rp
~ Glenn Sumblasts, they headed for that large
mit was de~
_sycamore tree. Thesharpblastscame-scr_ibed .~Y one
from the hom belonging ro three
wnter.as a~ge
slavehunters. These men were prco~ high hills,
ceded by three large bloodhoWJds.
fnnge~- at the
M.E. Glenn wrote, "The man ·
base With a nar~
and the woman went in but the young
row v~ley covman refused saying that he would
ered With a dense
take his chances outside lhat tree.
growlh -pawpaw• .
Father on the west bank Uncle
dogwood and grapevmes through
.
.
•
Davts,~g~ythesy~retree,
, which wound a township road."
·
Intheearlypartofthe 19thcen- ~hunters Sltn~g-- ~n theu hones,
tury ua elers also came to Glenn - with dogs cro~hing 10 the rood, was
.v
Th
somewhat trying on the nerves."
Summitbl!tnotforthescenery. ey
Just then the 2~year-old run011
were S::~om the Under- away slave started up the hill. He was
g-ro;,roteR.E.GleiUlabouttheGien punued by the bloodhounds. He ran
Summit station of the undergroWJd about 200 yards when he was caught
railroad, "Upon the summit of the and pulled down by the dogs.
·hills extended a well-worn path,
By lhis time the bunters came
·which dropped down to the road, up, jumped from their banes and
opposite our house, at which point puUed the dogs away! but DOt before
father lre(ll two 'dugouts' for the use they had wounded bim I!JCVc:l'c:ly on
of any who wished to cross there. the arms and~ 1be barting of
instead of at the bridge two miles the dogs and j'kadings of_die salve,
above. Upon the east bank near the and the canm•nds ~blows !3f the
path which led down to the water owners made a fcafulllDJftSSlon on
stood a very large sycamore of per- me, being only a child. _
haps a century's g-rowth, and large
While the sla~eh~ters disapenough to contain several persons in peared over the: hill wilb die one
its cavity. Facing the creek near the slave, the other two slaves, and
g-roundwasanopeningthroughwhich membersoftheGlennfamilywentto
' a large man could enter."
the Glenn farm house.
_
In September of. 1857 while the
''They were immediately taken
Gleim family was at the supper table, upstairs and my mother attempted lA&gt;
they heard three shrill sharp blasts comfort the licartbrokat woman, but,
from the top of the hills. Mr. Glenn with little success as the: wound was
rose from his chair recognizing what · too acute; she soon sobbed bmelf to
he thought were ·the sounds of sleep," Glenn wrote.
_
slavehunt.ers. Reaching the creek he
The man asked for somethmg to
saw Uncle Davis coming down over defend himself saying that he would

· GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley
Ostomy Association 2:~0 p.m.
Holzer Medieal Center French 500
Room with speaker Phyllis Brown.

Beverly is the _daughter of Nellie
and Ray Mitchell of Cheshire.
Jimmy is the son of the late Emma
and Marvin Gray of Laurinburg,
S.C.
.
The bride was given in marriage
by her · f~. 1be matron of honor
was Paula Garrett. The best man
was Brjan Garrett. Roger D. Gar.rett II served as the usher . .The
wedding had a Olristmas theme. .
A reception followed in the
reception behind the cbureh.
_

By JIM SANDS

Spedal Correspondent

---------Gallia community calendar-----

WJited in maniage Dec. 23 at Litl.le
Kyger Church with Rev. Richard·
Vmson officiating.
.

Underground railroad tracked through Gallia County

Matron of honor was Janice
Williams, sister of the bride.
Bride's maids were Lori McGuire
and Mindy Cornette. They wore
floor-length hunter green satin
dresses and carried baskets of poinsettias.
Richard Scott, was the best'man.
.Groom's men were Tony Vance,
·step-brother of the groom and Darren Blake. Ushers were Mark and
Allen Evans, brothers of the bride.
The reception was held in the
church parish hall. The five tiered
wedding cake had white poinsettias, red roses, holly, pine and
white lights between each tiers.
The cake was topped with a porcelain bride and gjoom in a gazebo
with a white veil cascading down
the bac~ of the cake. Sandy Slone, .
aunt of groom, Alexis Bruce and
Erica Curnette were servers.
Hostesses for the reception were
Diane Bruce, Jan -Doolittle,
The C~mmunlty Calendar is
Kathryn Wiseman, Karen Berkich,
published
a free service to
Debbie Compton, Nanna Good and non-profitasgroups
wishing to
Maureen Brown. Sylvia Evans, sisannounce
meetings
and
ter-in-law of the bride, registered events. Tbe calendar special
is not
guests.
designed
to
promote
sales
or
The bride is a graduate of the
·
fund-raisers
of
any
type.
Items
University of Rio Grande and is
printed as space permits and
employed ail' a substitute teacher in are
cannot
be guaranleed lo no a
area schools. The groom is
specif'IC
number
ul dllys.
employed by the Ohio Valley
Bank. The couple resides in GalSunday; Feb. U
lipolis.
GALLIPOLIS • Christian Messengers singing Donnie Donahue
preaching 1 p.m. Bell Chapel
· Church.

rett and Jimmy Wayne Gray were

ports

February 26, 1995

.

'

Weddings

wv

'at the Nortb Carolina Motor Speedway In Rockinaham. (AP)

• I

500

�•

C2-sunday nmee Sentinel

Pig I

..

•

Pomeray-Middleport C'•!Upolla, Ott · POint P!eeMnt, WV

:;Rock Hill boys g.e t past Gallipolis 59-57 at ·.t he buzzer·
; RIO GRANDE - Gallia
: .Ac:w!emy Higb Scbool'a, ha....,.,!
· 'ICUlll came to an lllrupl end PJi.
•:C.y night as Rock Hili rallied from
:a 14-point fourth quanec def'Icit to
'defeat the Blue Devils 5~57 llthe
· buzzer at the University of Rio
: 'Grande's Lyne Center ·
: CJu:is Loog. a 6-0 ieruor, scored
· on a baseline la~ with one sec: :ond left to give Rd: Scarberry's
: Redmen the Rio Grande Southeast
· District lower-bracket sectional
;title, and a trip to tbe Division n
~ct tounwnentll Ohio Univer' :aity's Convocation Center. The
~ Jtedmen will play the winner of last •
: night's Portsmoulh-Jackson game ,

117 p.m. "on Sanuday, Marth 4
Gallipolis bowed out with •. 7;
14 record to end the Blue Devils
fm~ losing~ in six years.
It was a IP!\ for tbem. We gave
it away," wd .GAHS coach Jim
Osborne followmg lhc heartbreaking setback. "All we had to do is
make our free throws down the
streldl, gel a rebound or, two, take
c~re of the ball and we're still
alive," he added..
,
The Blue DeVIl~ w~n table to
do .BPY of lhose thmgs m the final
penod.
.
GAHS was 0-S at lhc line, w~
out-rebounded 14-3, and committed six lllli\Pvers during the final

"We've scouted Gallipolis four or
five times, watched ~veral game
films and at no time did lhey play
zone,:. he added.

eight minutes of play.
"We ":er~ caught off gu~rd
when Gallipolis came out early m a
zone defense," said Scarbe~ry~

lJul

lY. L II! Slf

Wbedersburg ...... l8
Logan .................. 15
Marieua:..............1S
Warren Local ...... l4
Fairland ............... 1S
Greenlicld ...........14
Rock Hil1 .............13
x-Cbcsapeekc ......13
Portsmouth .......... ll

"Our boys finally settled down
and didn't quit down the stretch.
We told lhcm to putlhe pressure on
in the flnai!Je.!iod because we felt

In Division II

the Gallipolis boys .were gelling
tired. II ~a great wm for us." .
Rock Hill led 14-12 followmg
(Se&amp;BLUE DEVILS OB C-3)

Cage standlngs._______________

t&amp;M-85411 gamM

31688 1321
51351 1176
S 1366 1089
6 1166 1M3
6 1495 1350
61317 1139
8 1340 1180
81302 HOB
7 1271 1175

x-Soulhem........... J3 9 1470 1391
Point.PieasanL..... ll 10 1259 1217
x-.Me~gs ............... lO 111289 1363
River Valley ..........9 12 1311 1393
x-Aihens...:········-.. .8 13 1213 1256
x-South Point ........8 131344 1309,
Jackso!' ....:.............8 131246 1297
x-~alhpolis ...........7 141116 1222
Vmton County ..... .S 15 1190 1478
x-completccl season
.
Tbunclay'sresult:

8lia1Da 66(

)

Meigs 68 W.
mu
.
Frid~s results:
PomtPieasant Ravenswood42
Federal Hocking 51 Soulhem 49 .
Ironton~ Athens. 74 .
Rock Hill S9 Gallipolis S7
.
~ersbur&amp; 80 ~outh Webster 64
Fuland 97 Oak Hill68
Feb. 25 ~m~~
Logan vs. Miami Trace, at Alhens
· Greenfield vs. Vinton County, at

Cbiiii'c~·•-

"""'
River Valley vs. Warren Local at
Rio Grande
h
= n vs. Portsmout at Rio
March Jgames:
Ironton vs. Warren-River Valley
winner. 8;15 p.m. at OU
March 41ames:
Rock Hill vs. Portsmouth-JacksOh
winner, 7 p.m. at OU

Today'~

'flmpe Bay at W

NBA standings

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allllnllc 01-

Alloolle-

HowYad&lt;. _ __ _,. II .654

~----.lf I~ WI

,Iii
6

31 AIS
:13
AOO

11.'1
IP.S

.315
IS 39 .211
.231

20
26
21

C.lnl0 d 01--- -..34 3) .630
CLIIVELAND .......ll 20 .615

I

------..2:1
_ _, ___. 2:1

-·----..211
\'I
.. n

JlhO ,

w

1

I

aw

~-

--12

«)

:.»
Al1utltt -----..16 :II
Oriaao ...........-..u a
Mil-.__., ....21 :13

~ . . lf H

13
143

Ohio B.S. girls' scores

Ml •. ~·- ..-~13

Wl
.616

01-1

50

,_,,_,, 9 6 I
Mon..t ..... ... 7 5 4
Bulfolo............. 6 6 3
Jlartfonl ............ 6 I 3
o.u... """"""" 2 ' 3

41
41
33
42
47

A:M

.391

l4~

SLI.uW. .......... 10 !
TOflllno............ I I
W".WP'1 .......... 6 I
llllllu ..:........... , 4 9

DI.W•D

Cin.--B-75,llodlei·Tate35

.712
.667
35i
.549

3
5.3
. II
113

Ooldon , ........ _ ,16 35
LA 01,_ ... - ....9 45

.314
.161

:13.3
32

.759

Cin. Tuirrin 46, Cin. Northwea 31
Spdna. Sha ..... ~l. Ea""' 33 .
Tw Clly 50. Balllanlalno 41

Dl...lonW'

- . 41, a.. Wioamlna30
Smtinia Eutan sa. Roamn1 43

Va141

C&gt;dmd I ,lkilkia-tOl

Lancu...

MWai 91, Otloa.. l3

43,

c~

s.. -'-ia 114, Doln&gt;l!. 9'1

l'booaiaiii,LA. ~106

45 (2

47

55
59
41

53

37
43
"'

40
SO
55
56

46

''

60

Frlday'ucores .

Wuhiqtm It N'oW ,_,., 1 p.m.
Buffalo • Hutford. 1 p.m.
Bonm 11Quebec. 7 p.m.
P\UaburahatN.Y.Ii~ 1p.m.

'"·a..

0.. /uta 53,Cio. Scitnoo II

Tbey played Saturday

p.m.

Ooidal Slate .. """-.1:30 p.m.

LA. Lat. . at LA. Cllppori, 10;30

p.m.

Today'• I -

Oria., 11 Od&amp;Mo, I p.m.

~·t-...2;30p.m.

MUmi .. - . . . . 3;:JOp.m.
lhah " - - · 300 .....
Otulutte atl'butotU. 3:30 P.&amp;

Philado1oltU 11 Nn YGdt, 6 p.m.
Oa&amp;d.n S..te n Sill~ 7 p.m.

are Soldl
...,

Toumi!Dtall
Cl'

lllul!too61,W'~59

......

'lliGmu Men 6 4 . - 54

_C_A_Cool,

lftulo

Wlaoobartt 19. ~on,... 71

W-G'I.OhluWodoyan50
Oh6oAihkacc.r.
_._.
"rid
13,~70
0

Ohlu N:t.;;; 13, OaoiiJola 76

Ohio women's
· college scores·
Regular·lle-n adl011

BlaT•
Pwduo 5!. au. St. "

Toumomeall

Mldeul Conreren~:e ~a~~Hiull
~co 53, Bluntq, 45
n.-. Mcn93, w~ 16(111)

SJI J495

2 door, low miles,
an, cassette.... ...... .... ...

88 Ford Ranger SC 4x2. XLT. 5 speed .. ...:.. ......... ........ s4995
89 Chevrolet Corsica 4 door. compact sedan ....... ...... s4995
85 Lincoln Town Car Clean, a.ffordable lu~ury car .. .. .. .*4995
86 Mazda RX-7 Automatic, air, cassette .. ...... .. .. .. .. ..... .. .. .. s4995
86 Uncoln Continental Leather,loaded ........... .. ......... s5995
88 -Ford Aerostar XL Automatic, air, cruise , ti1L .......... 55995

Ntinh C_, Alhltllc C""'.-lftn...

90 Chevrolet Cavalier 4 door, automatic, air, red ....... .s5995

OhluW-aa73,AII-69

WlaooboaJ U, w-.'lo ·

· 91 Chevrolet S-1 0 Local trade, 4 cylinder, 5 speed ... ... SS995

Ohio B.S. boys' scores

90 Oldsmobile 88 Brougham, leather, loaded ........ ......s6995

TOUfDIIDIDII

.

01 .... ,

0.. LaS.no Y7, Cia. W-111111 44,
Ca. W. HiiiiY'/,0111!-55
0.. WiiiJmw 70, Cin. llupco,SS
B. Li"'II"'Otl. c...l1toti 51

-D

AN ADJUSTAitE RATE MORTGAGE THAT QIVfS 'IOU THREE
fJPPORTUNITifS TO CONVERT TO A FIXED RATE MORTQAQE.

V6

92 Chevy S-10 5 speed, AcyL , sport stripes ..: . ~s7995
92 Mercury Sable GS V6, auto ,loaded!. ... ~. . .. ... 57995

-IIi

90 Oldsmobile

vs s1 0,495
90 Ford Bronco II XLT, s speed, 4x4, air .... ............ s1 0,995
93 Ford Taurus GL 4 dr, vs. auto., loaded ...... ....... .. 512,995
-·-·

~5l,Racloo-

89 Ford Bronco

o....1 ss,lodlaavaL46

-AIM-

ar-m.63,-51
o,,..=.,;;j,•lor,;w 52. Wo-:11
:II, a.-tow Hu. 37

45

•

=·

IW

MWaol61.-46

yourself

N, CGII. . llilll6. Folldty-l'lutlio

agliinllt

-l'oidond 97, Colt HiD 61
P * 1111d OU. SE 61t Z... r..c. 59

rising rate•

N. A&lt;lamo 65,1MaWlo VaL :19

55

1

Calal~ SL 55,000 miles, great shape .. '9495

~4 Escort XL Wagon Auto. air, cruise, tilt.. .... ............ ..*9995

Door-

MiNim ... MaiiUiOii S9 , ,

6, 9 9 5

llllnmatiC Cllf CO'ld111001ng

92 Mercury Topaz-4 dr, aut9 .. air, cruise. tiiL ........ ...... s7995
91 Nissan Stanza Local trade.... ... . . .. .... .. ...... .. .57995

. Alouodlr 41. Boltn 47
- 5 6 , B. Oin~m 55
a..
66, Oocq-. "
~~-71,Pnllloa.-~

Lktio&amp; Hta. 65, Nw hddp43
lWi•JU... vaL S3, 'Wr'·le4l

s

89 BUICK REGAL GS

Col SL o..daa 79, Col - 7 2
.....,IO,A-74
Now U.in..... 66, Mcllorm,.. NW
43 •
-Hill 59, OaUi..U. 57
Wuhin... C.H. 14, Shaidul45
Walkina MamuriaJ 93, Lundan 17
Whildoalll4, Fairlltld Union 66

49

,.-t

...,.

Available ·
for any

Ironton detested Athens 80-74 and
Grande. . .
.
. Maxwell 7-2-0=20; Mjke Boyd 3Rock Hill shaded Galli&amp; Academy RioBoth
winners receive automabc 1-2=11 ; Everett Gathron 1-0-4=6;
59-57 in Division II sectional tour- berths in lhc Southeast district tour- Milce Grippa 1-0-0=2; Tom Keirns
nament action at the University of ·nament to be held at Ohio Univer0-2-0=6; Jeff McAllister 3-1-3=12;
sity's Convocation Center next Brian Horst 1-0-0=2. Totals: 21-6week.
IZ=74
Several games involving
SEOAL teams were played Satur·
IRONTON
day at Rio Grande and Chillicolhe
(22-24-16-18=80)
with all of the winners scheduled
Marq Davis 6-1-8=23; Pat
for district competition next week.
Mahlmetsler 0-1-1=4; Travis Wylie
Ironton 80, Athens 74
'At Rio Grande, the defending 0-0· 1=1; Jason Cliclt 1-2-4=12;
Williams 1-0· 2•4; ~ike
district champion Tigers tried to Cary
Freeman
1-1=14; Mark Whtte 3run away from lht,: Athens Bulldogs 0-6=12; 5'Troy
Sands 4-0-2=10.
early, but consiant foul trouble, Totals: 20-5-25=80
combined with some hot Athens
shOOiing in the rmat period made it
BLOCKS SHOT - lrontoa's '
interesting until the game's final
Travis
Wylie (22) blocks a shot
lhree minutes.
attempt
by Athens' .Kahieem
Tlie Tigers led by quarter scores
.Maxwell
(U)
In Friday night's
of 22-14, 46-29 and 62-49 because
·Division 0 sectional tournlllleat
of numerous Bulldog errors .
game at Lyne Center In Rio
• Athens turned the ball over 18
Grande. the TIJiers held on to
times in the first half, made just
edge the Bulldogs 80-74 and ,
one of eight free thr.ows in the
advance to the district tournaopening period and concluded fll'st
ment at Ohio University.
half play with just eight of 18 charity tosses.
.
In the third quarter, Athens
scored 14 of the first 17 points
PARKERSBURG NISSAN INC.
while limiting Ironton to just lhree
1G:U Mu rdoc k Ave
free throws: That cut the Tigers'
485 -8451
lead lO a 49-43 margin with 3:26
'93 NISSAN SENTRAXE
left. Ai the two minute mark, the
d
.._.. 1 •-5
2 '93
r., 5FORO
'""""''ESCORT
a r. -··
deficit was just five poinls (52-47) ,' .
on two stra1ght buckets . by
4dr., ruby, auto., air. $7995
Kahieem Maxwell. The Bulldogs
'93 NISSAN REG. CAB
canned 10 of 14 shots in lhat torrid
2x4 Trk., oliver, 5 opd., olr, $51195
·~ MITSUBISHI MIRAGE
third quaner. but the Tigers snuffed
4 dr., black, auto., air. $7995
out the rally by scoring the next
'92 PONTIAC LEMANS
eight poinls for a comfortable 62·
2 dr., white, 5 ap., $41195
FRY GIVES AND GOES • Rock Hil's Brooks Fry (S) passes
49Jead after three quanei'S.
'91 PEUGEOT 405 DL
off ud goes inside GaDia Academy's defease dlirillg Friday's Dlvl·
4 do.. gray, 5 ap.. air, caao. $51195
slou 11 sectional tournament ga111e at the University of Rio
In the final period, the Tigers
'91 NISSAN SENTRA
Grande's Lyne Center. GAHS defender Is David Rucker (20).
saw Mark White and Troy Sands
4 dr:, red, oir, Sopd., ca11. $7995
Rock HW won at tbe buzzer,59-57.
'foul out while Shamel Maxwell
'91 CHEVROLET s1o
weniiO lhc Alhens bench wilh five
2x41rk.. gray, 5 sp., olr. $5995
personals. JroniOn convened I 0 of
'90 PONTIAC LEMANS
, 18 free throws down lhc stretch.
2 dr...blue, 5,op,, air, cau. $3995
'90 NISSAN SENTRA E
2 dr., red, 5 ip., air, low miiOl. $5795
Marq Davis of Ironton led all
scorers with 23 points .. Kahieem
'90 NISSAN SENTRA E
Ouertcr fllllll
Maxw~ll
paced
Athens
(813)
wilh
2
dr.,
blue,
ai;, 5 ap., low miles. $5395
,.
·
57
Gallipo\is (7· 14),.................................,.12 17 18 10 =
poinls,
.
'90 SUBARU DL
20
59
6 13 26
Rock Hill (13-8) .................................. .14
4 dr., blue, auto., air, cau. $5995
0
0
0
-~-1-·~ ~- c90cSUBARU DL
--~--'-! ~-~- - - - -~~~-'--r.GliWjiOiisBiue bevlli
- ATHENS- - 4 dr,. blue, auto., air, caoa. $5995
(14-15-20·25=74)
'
'90 NISSAN 2•4 TRUCK
fill.'
Player
·
~
J:m.
EI
Bryce Lonas 1-0-2=4; Shamel
Moroon, 5.op., cau. $4995
20
Terry QuaDs .......................................... 10
0
0-0
Maxwell 5·0-1=11: Kahieem
'90FORDMUSTANG
16
Dave Rucker ............................................5
0
6-8
5.0, V-8, LX, loaded. $6995
0-1
10
Josh Cook ............................................~ ...2
2
'89 PEUGEOT 505 SWB
7
Station Wagon, ailver, auto., caaa.
1-1
Richard Kuhn ......................................... ~3
·0
16995
4
Ryan Barnes ............................................2
0
0-0
'89
PEUGEOT
405 Ml16
0-1
Seth Davis ...............................................0
0
0 .
Sports Sectan, 5 ep., leather, eunroof.
7-13
57
Totals
22
1
S5995
'89 HONDA CIVIC
Total FG- 24-44
4 dr., 5op., ca-no. $4495
Rebounds- 31 (Qualls 16)
'89 DODGE DAKOTA 2x4 TRUCK
Assists - 12 (Rucker S)
While, auto., air. $4495
INZELL, Germany (AP) Steals-4
'88 HYUNDAI
Bonnie Blair won her SOO-meter
Turoovers-15
MECHANIC'S SPECIAL, 4 dr., brown,
5 op. $1195
Fouls-12
race Saturday for the second day in
'88 PONTIAC SUNBIRD
Other noa-srorillg players- Mark Clark, Breu Cremeens /k:
a row at a speedskating World Cup
Silver, aulo., 4 dr. Reduced $3495
Dylan 'Evans
meet
,
'88 NISSAN REG. CAB 2x4 TRUCK
Blair, a five-time Olympic
Block, 5 op., tall., bedllner. $3995
Rock Hill Redmm
champion, clocked 40.73 seconds
'87 SUBARU 4x4 DL WAGON ~
. Blue, 5 ap. Reduced $2795
for a close victory over Canada's
fill.
Pbooq
- .~
'87 NISSAN STANZA WAGON·
Ralph Cox ..................................;....,.......8
Susan Auch nt 40:76. Blair won
22
Auto., air, blue. $2995
Brooks Fry...............................................3
I
3-4
over lhe same distance Friday in
12
'86 BUICK CENTURY
40.56, while Shiho Kusunosc of
Jerry BI'OW1linJ ........................................3
0
0-2
6
, 4 dr., blue, auto., loaded.
1
Japan was timed in 40.82.
Randy Crank ...........................................0
1-2
4
· Reduced $1995
'86 PLYMOUTH RELIANT K
Blair will retire ·after the sea·
Chris Long,.............................................. I
0
2-2
4
4 dr., aulo.; Y.tllow. Reduced $1295
4
son's fmal races in Calgary, Cana·
Bill Henderson ........................................2
0
0-0
'85 NISSAN SENTRA E
da, where she won her ftrst medal
0-0
Drew Fry ..................................................0
I
3
2 dr., maroon, 5 ap. Redu~ed S15ts
Anlhony Allen .........................................!
0
2
0-0
in 1988.
.
'85 DODGE 600
o· 0-0
Japan's men took tl)e top three
2
TJ.Howard ............................................. I
Aulo., air,'radlo, 4 dr., blue. $11195
'95 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER MINIVAN
Totals
19
5 :6,11
59
places in the 500-meters, with
. Maroon, auto:. air, $3995
Hiroyasu Shimizu finishing in
'84 OODGE ARIES K
36.75 seconds ahead of Junichi
Total FG - 24-64
Wagon, gray, auto.,
Rebounds- 32 (Cox 9)
lnoue at 37.05 and Manabu Horii at
Mechanic'a Special $795
Turnovers- 12
37.11.
'
Fouls-IS
Non-sroriug players- Dan Brown &amp; Jeremy Morris

The 1994-95 basketball season
came to an abrupt bait for two
members of the Southeastan Ohio
Aihletic League Friday night when

,..

114 WD

94 FORD TAURUS GL
2 1o choose !rom, a&gt;r, loaded

Red &amp; white, auto., air,

$

14,9

Blue Devils lose...&lt;continuedrromc-2&gt;
: one period after falling behind 6-0
· early in the contest. GAHS
• outscored the Redmen 17-6 in lhe
. second period 10 lake a 29-20 hldf. time lead. The Blue Devils
: increased their advantage to 14
,: poinls. 47-33, following three quar- ·
· Jers of play.
·
· Then the bottom fell out for
GAHS.
·
Anthony Allen, Ralph Cox l!fld
· Brooks Fry hit four consecuuve
goats iri tess than two minutes to
reduce Gallia's lead to six. 47-41,
wilh 6:031cft to play.
,
Terry Qualls and Ryan Barnes
hit back-to-bacl&lt; goals to Pl!t
GAHS up 10, 51-41, with 5:04
remaining.
·
Taking advantage of GAHS
turnovers, lhe Redmen kepi ch tpping away at lhe Blue Devils ICII!'.
With 2:10 remaining. Fry tapped m
a rebound 10 cut Gallia' s advantage

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10 two, SS-53.
Qualls hit a layup with 1:SO lefl,
but missed a free throw after he
was fouled on the play. It was 5753.
Fry canned two clfarity tosses .
with I: 191eflto cul Galli&amp;' s lead to
51-SS.
Dave Rucker missed a front end
of a one-and-one with I :09 left.
Cox then tied the score at 57-ail
with 51 seconds left on a tapin.
Josh Cook missed a front end of
a one-and-one with ·42 seconds lefL
Again Rock Hill got the rebound.
The Redmen then set up the game's
winning shot with Long scoring at
lhc bUZ2Cr.
Qualls paced the Devils with 20
points. Rucker added 16, while
Cook bad 10.
Cox led Roclt Hill's auack with
22 poinls.Fry added 12.

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·Blair wins
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IUIIIt-N. Uoioa56.-46
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Ironton hands Athens 80-74 setback

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ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
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Stc;nnMniO II Wllhinpcm, 7:30 p.m.
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· ·

GAHS-Rock Hill stats

They played Saturday

Reaular...ason action
o..
Mdam.
M.L. Klna4J'S
30

can

12

.

Bay 4, Pluabuqh 2
Hartfanl :1. N.Y. a.. ... I
WinnJt&gt;e14, Anaheim 2
v......... 3,1l111Lu 3 (U.)
Calpry 3, S.. Joac 0

.

p;,~~a

63
51
53
42

35

T~ampo

~- Clwloalon SE 72. Now Miami Z7

latliaao91,Milwa-16

ll
19
15
II

II

lAO.....,.. ...... 4 • •
Anaham ...... .... 5 10 I

Dlnville 70, Bcmo Uniqn 19
Fnnklin Monrot S6, Miuit1inawe

N.., ~II • Dol1ao 104
A11uoa
.W-91

I
3
3
3

P1clfk:DI.WO..
c:.Jauy ............ 8. 6 3 19
SanJ............... 7 I 2 16
Edm&lt;a""' ........ 7 I 2 16
v..............;. 4 6 6 14

01-IV

Frlda'l.'siiCOrOI

r..daatll14,\hah 101'
S..lllo 90, o..-16
LA Lair.. "· a...t..,

47
44
31
42
32

~
""""""" ~ ~ t ~ "a 'b
a.;a.............. IO 5 I 21 61 36

to,47
.·
W, a...... LU'* 49, Cift.llu.,.. 41 .

16.5

13
15
17
:13
:13

19
II
15
1!
1

Ctnlral INYIIIGn

Ploila-

13
•
143

.635

hdllcliMa...

..

Plllobuqh "'""" 13 1 1 11 73

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Cia. Prit .. 51, Amolla 31
RaytmdB-59,z.-ille31
N. C..~m46. O....teat40
New
63, B.l.i&gt;WJ100144
Mulilkm Jacban M, CIUI&amp;on McKin-

ga

4CJ .245

l'hoatU .. - .....,_,AJ
S..alll.-...............37
LA, Latr.. ............:M
l'on1utd
·--____
.......,,11
.29
Sw

36
53
50
57
43

Toumameata

WESI'ERN CONFERENCE
.
Mltbo•t-

~----·---~ 16I~
·-···---33 19
Dtm,.. -"·----..23 30
llllllu •...... - ......... .70 31

3S
43
43
44
31

Quoboc.:........... 13 3 I 27 66 40

)
I
1

.319
- - -·- -- 19 ,. .351

s.a-··--..35

'If "A51 ~51

I 9 I 17
6 7 3 15
6 I 3 15
6 I 1 14
6 II I 13
Wultin... """ 3 9 3 9

TompoBay ......
Ne•ltney ... ..
N.Y. lallllldon. ..
l'llillclclphia .....
P1oDdo ..............

Noriii..O Dl ...lon

.615
All
Mt

lnclimi __ O_ON.Ioo..ll

Mi

1:30 p.m.
CaJaUy11Aalhoim, p,m.
Vanoauver tt San J~ S p.m.
N.Y.
c Baffllo, 7 p.m.

NHL standings

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Pomeroy-Middleport . (;llllpolle, Ott Point PleaMnt, WV

26,1995 .

~

.

·~

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·

r
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--

.••

•• .
•
••

�•

/&gt;-\

Page C4

Sunday nm•

81ntlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport Ga'llpolla, OH

Polntr•nnt,!"'

In the Division Ill sectional finals,

February 26, 1995

Febi'U8ry 26, 1995~

THE PLAINS ~ MTbe third shot but Ryan Williams stormed
lime's a channl--Tbal is if you are the br,e and lipped the ball into the
"'-~-· Hockin 1
fan
caner whtre lie beat Jeremy Doda~ ~~ ~ ~ a tip son to' recover the ball for Southin with 11 seconds left to smite the em.
Southern T~-49 Friday
Southern elected to go for the
night in the Di · ·
boys• sec- last shot, running the clock to 1:42
tiona! champio ship game at from its lbfte..guard rotalioo. At the
Aihens High School
28 second mart. Nathan Gilders
Southern had previouslr won got a liUie too close to Jelemy Hill
the two regular season meettngs in and drew the foul: Hill missed the
dramatic style - a 77·73 overtime lxinus attem)ll. and Mark Whiting
win at home and a nail-biting 68~ hauled down the rebound to initiate
win just one week ago at Stewart. a Federal fast break. Dotson Gfl!le
. In that game. it appeared ~t the down the left lane amf drew the
game was gomg tnto overume on lone Southern defender, thus openKevin lhle's last second bucket, but . ing up a man right under the buck·
a scorebcard error acbtally had two eL The ball went off the unidenliextra points on the Lancer side ll1d · fted SHS·player's foot, but saved a
the bucket was the game-winner sure ~L
inSiead.
With 21 secoads left, Federal .
· Southern bows out of tourna- ran an out-of-bounds play under its
ment play after gam.ering second goal. Gilders g~ off the shot, but it
place in the Tri-Valley Confer- fell short into a crowd or players.
ence 's Hocking Division. Federal Southern had the inside track for
Hocking, the. Hocking Division the rebound; but a battle between a
champion,wil advance to the dis· Southern player and Whiting
trict tournament at Ohio Universi- resulted in a double tip. The second
ty 's Coovocation Center to play the tip went off the Southern players
Waverly upper-bracket winner hands and into the buctet for what ,
Thursday at8: IS p.m.
proved to be the winning basket.
Tbe rmlsb
Southern quickly ran the ball
Not only was the game script · down court, butFHinitiatcdagood
ironic, but also how the game was perimeter defense to take a way the
won. Tied at 49-49 with .2:03 left three. SHS missed a three point try
on the clock, the Lancers, under and Mason Fisher grabbed the
their own bucket. almost got a five- rebound and drove down. the left
second call and called a despera- side, where he was fouled with 6
tion time· out. Federal got off a seconds lefL Fisher went to the line

where he missed both ends .of the
two shot foul. FH got the rebolmd
and SHS fouled immediately with
four ticks oo the clock.
.
After a Southern lime-out. Olad
Nelson went to the line and missed
the bonus. Williams drove to half
court ll1d released a long desperatioo jljlllper that was on target but
about a foot. short. thus ending a
good Tornado season.
Williams led the assault with 25 .

ason · with 51-49 win

points for Howie Caldw l's ·laSt lhree miautes IXOCklccd a 1illle
charges. Jeremy Hill ended the more offense ~ 1eremy Hill put
night with II.
Southern up S-3, lbeo Dodson ll1d
The winners wm led by Jeremy Whiting mado it 7-S wilh consecuTolson's 13, Mark Whiting's 12 tive bUckets. Two moo: lies and a
Jm:my Hilllbfte..pointer gave SHS
arid Jeremy Dotson's 10.
a
12-9 idvantage, plus Hill was
The game
fouled
00 the shot, but miJsed the
Several blocked sboiS intimidaisafety.
Whiting
bit OliC with 49 sec.ed the Tornaodes early, but their
oods
lefi
for
a
12-11
scm: as SHS
defense lcept them in the 3ame.
At the 3:34 mark the Sloppy first went for the last silo$, bu~ missed.
The Tornadoes had a liale head
qtiarter stood at 3-2, Federal. The
or steam in the second quarter,
leading 24-20 on Williams and
Martin. three-pointers. Everything
seemed to be going.their way when
Whiting was whislled ror an offen·
sive foul, but a SHS player was
Wbislled ror a technical. Instead of
going for a six point lead, FH had
two sbols and the ball.
'
FH missed the technical sbotS,
but got the baD and Mitchell drilled

a three-pointer,. Aftet a Southern
miss, 'Tolson drilled a three-pointer ·•
to giw: Fcdcnla22-20 lead.
·
With SS JCCOIIds left, Williams
hit a trey to cut it to a 23-22 margin, but Whiting bit two free •
throws to tepiD the lead, 24·23. In
the last 40 seconds. SHS went for..
the last shot. but IIJlllCI=I to go for
it too early and missed. .
Dodson got the rebolmd and hit ·
Mitchell for the breakaway, but he ·
was fouled, mating the second of
two at the line with three seconds
left. The score stood 25-23 at the
half.
Southern hit only 8-32 from the ·
field, wltile Federal was a hol9-18.
Southern offset the shooting defiCit
with by f~ eiJbt FH turaovers .
while t0111111itbng Just two. ·
.•
Although the gave was very ·
(See TORNADOES on C·S)
.

'

$21589

Southem(l3-9) .... :............................... 12
Fedeml Hocking (13-S) ....;................... I.J

Southern Tornadoes

Z:id.

Player

15
15

II
14

Jeremy llill .................................~ ............2
Ryan Williams ...:........................~ ...........4
Ryan Martin ............................................0
Mason Fisher....................,................ ~;.;.4

J:111o
2
4

11 =

II=

49
51

fl:

ElL

-1-2
S-S

~

~

.
__K.e_yjn Ihl.e.-•• .-.qru.o..uouv~
'; uou_u .u. uouu.oouooo.LJ~~•0-·_ (),(}_

_

Totals

.

11-39

. ..

( '

7-U . 6-10

12,000 mlln P"' )'ell, z• .ooo I04a! rnllcqe leue rate lac tar .00310. rtddual hind on 71 %_Flott F"ymen! Mid
tMUfiiY6eJIO'II pl1111a. due, at~ l'OO«pllun. eto.ll!d ~eml

~ -

te- oil" good rhru-2:,28-95.

Rebowlds- 23 (F'IShel' 8, Williams 7)
Steals- 12 (Williams 6)
Turnoven- 14

·

Fouls-19 ~

..

Federal Hocking Lancers .
1:Jd, J:a1.
Mark Whiting ..................................., ......4
0
Jeremy Dotson ........................... ..._.........4
0
Adljm Mitcbell ........................................O
I
· -Chad Nelson ........................................ ~ .•.2
I
Plavcr

Jeremy Tolsorl ......................................... .2

2

Nalhan Gilders ....................:...................0
ll-26
Totals

5-11

I

2-2
1-2
0-1
3-8
2-2
12-ll

io

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1901 OEp TRACKER LSI4x4 1 148M, alloy wheels. air.
automatic, AM/FM eassene,.LSI pact&lt;age, removable top ·:· .. 11720
1183 CHEVY WMINAAPV, ••ns, white . ~utomatic, air,
AM/FM cassette,tlll, cruise, power windOwS ................ .. ....... 110.5&amp;4

111113 CHEVY LUMINA EUROSPORT, 14775, black. air.
automatic, AM!FM cassene.

ve. tilt, cruise, power windows .... $1895

111113 NISSAN TRUCK. 14785, King Cab. red, automatic,
AM/FM cassette, re8r flip seats, bed liner ... ..... ... ...............~ $11 ,995
111113 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER, 1471111, 7 passenger, V6,
air, automatk:, NI!/FM, tilt , cruise .. ................ ....... ............ ,... $12,389
111113 PONTIAC GRANO AM SE, t4805, wnne. V6 engine,
air, automatic, AM!FM' cessene, tilt. power locks ................. ..... Si870
1HZ TOYOTA COROLLA, 14786, blue, automatic,
air, Awf'M. ClOth interkJr .................................................... ....... St200

Pe.ymen\s figured with down payment of S1,000 cash
.
See salesman lor details!

446.0303

OPEN MONP.AY·FRIDAY 9-6; SAtURDAY 9-5
!'t'alterCt1rd'VIIIIIIDiaeover

dates.··

Harrington, who took over as
lead negotiator from Richard Ravitch last November, saia owners are
prepared to stan the regular season
with the replacement players
thev ·~ signed.
. ·
''It's not a bluff"
he
said
of the
'
.
owners' resolve to open the season
with replacement players if needed
Harrington said he was optimistic the sides would move
toward a settlement next week, but
said he didn't want to create false
hope. '
"I have a personal feeling tha!

Ruggeroli told the commission
that lfolyfteld's enlarged heart following the Moorer nght Drtlbably
was caused by giving him too
many liquids in the hosjJital emcr- .
gency room to combat fe1rs he
would suffer kidney failure.

replacemeniS by Ontlrio labor laws .
and intends to play regular-season
games at Dunedin, Fla., its spring
home.

guers home tf they won't play. said in Onawa. .
Most top prospeciS appear to be
Toronto is barred from using
following the union's wishes.
"Major leaguers are losing mil·
lions of dollars in thiS' dispute to
maintain a system whose principal
beneficiaries will be those who
come after tltem,'' Fehr said.
"That is the way it has always
been for players, both young and
old. We are confident that all the
STATE FARM
minor leaguers who see for .themselves a future in the major leagues
will also see thaL"
·
In another strike matter, C&amp;nadi- ·
an Immigration Minister Sergio
Marchi said his government might
.· INSURANC
lift federal reJiulalions that bar the
Montreal Expos from using
·replacement players.
''Our regulation is intended ftrst and foremost- for the protec·
tion of Canadian jobs and there
have been discusstons opened up

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'

1

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J9941UICK REGAL

• Jones played with the Browns
'H(ire is the schedule for the
lrom 1991-94 and signed a deal
~rted for three years and worth week of Feb. 26-March 5 at t)Je
$,4.5 million, coach Mike Shanahan Universi~ or Rio Grande's Lyne
announced Friday. The 6-foot-2. Center.
Fitness ceater,
2!10-pound starter for the Browns ·
gymnasium
made 43 tackles and three sacks
racquetball
courts
and
last season and has 13 1/2 sacks for
Todayclosed
his career with the Browns.
Monday- 7 a.m.-II p.m.
Perry, 29, is a 6-foot-1, 2go.
Tuesday-?
a.m.-II p.m.
pOund plarer from Clemson who
Wednesday
-7
a.m.- II p.m.
-.ilill be gomg into his eighth NFL
Thursday7
a.m.-II
p.m.
~in 1995. He was drafted in
Friday - 7 a.m.-9 p.m. '
the second round by the Browns. in
Saturday - 1-6 p.m.
IV88.
· Sunday, March 5 - 1-3 and 6: The five-time Pro Bowl player
11 p.m.
·
(lllSted 68 tackles and four 'l,uarterblck sacks last seaon, bringmg his
Pool
cltteer lotals to_505 tackles and
· Today-c.Josed .
51.5 sacks.
.
.
Monilay - 6-9 p.m.
~ A third-round draft choice in
Tuesday6-9 p.m.
1991 from Northern Iowa, Jones
Wednesday6-9 p.m.
h(IS been a defensive regular, post·
Thursday6-9
p:m.
ing 178 total tackles and scoring a
Friday
1-3
p.m.
tauchdown in each of his ftrst three
•
Saturday- 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, March 5- 6·9 p.m.
tornadoes lose ...
,.

Per

. ·'29,98l

1994
CHEVY
CAVALIER

'

; (Continued from (-4)
.
.
Free-weight room '
·well-called and well-played overtoday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Moaday- 3!30-8:20 p.m.
all, one stretch of the third quarter
got a little rough as Federal
Tuesday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
etlipsed a 33.32 SHSJead. South·- - Wednaday~3:30-8;30 p.m..etn was called for a charge, which~
Thursday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
drew vehement displeasure. from' ·
Friday - 3:30-8:30 p.m. .
SHS coach Howie Caldwell. SHS
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
·
sot the bench technical, while
Sunday,Marcb 5-6-11 p.m.
CaldweU continued bis displeasure,
stopping just shy of another. Tol·
Home atbletic events
son bit both ends of the technical,
Saturday - baseball vs. Lee's
but Federal did not capitalize on College, I p.m .; men's and
the ~ssioo.
. women's basketball playoffs at
The Southern crowd and bench limes to be announced later
&amp;l!l ftred up and Jeremy Hill led his
Notes: A Lyne Center memberclub back to a 38-38 tie. Dodson
g()t a rebound and put it )&gt;ack in ror ship is required to use the facililies.
a 40-38 tally going into the fourth Facul~, staff, studeniS and· admin. istrators are admitted with their ID
Wllad.
• Pedeia1 had a 47-421ead and the ~'
Racquetball court reservations
bill at the four minute .mark, as
gloom spread over the SHS hopes. can now be made ,o ne day in·
Bpt SHS fought back. A Willi31'1s' advance by calling 245-74,95 localsteal and lay-in, a Fisher jumper ly or llill-free at 1-800-282-7201,
arid a Williams' three sandwiched e~rension 7495.
·
.I
All guests are lei. be accompa·
around a Nelson back-door cut
kilotted the score at 49-49 and a pied by a Lyne Center membe?hip
~older ll1d a $2 fee.
/
pelude to the finish.
. 1

1994 PONTIAC
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stereo, power steering,
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sa 995

·'17 115

--

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automatic, stereo.
,

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· THESE Mllsr GOJ

: DENVER (APj - The Denver seasons. He also scored twice while
'roncos worked on their defense playing on offense for the Browns,
1111 Friday. , signing defensive·tiick- ccatching a touchdown pass in 1992
Jes James Jones and Michael Dean and ~shing for .11. l·YW ~Jli.e ilL
· Rerry, both unrestricted free agents 1993.
t'ho played for the Cleveland

90 FORD RANGER

seses

992-6674

are threateninj! to send minor lea- based on that regulation," MarcIii

13roncos
sign Jones &amp; Perry ·
.
.

$13488 Pe~r..,.._,;;,__•.;L.;:;
· 8~·3:;_2_1,; ; :~; :. ~~

1D92 CHEVY S·10, 14872, Ted. 35,000 miles. dual mirrors,
"
rear step bumper, sport wheels, raised le!lerlires .... ......... ... ... .. $7805
1893 CHEVY CAVAUER RS WAGON, 14825, aulomalic,
air, AM{FM cassette, tilt, CfUISe, luggage rack ..........................
1892 FORO TEMPO GL. 14811, blue, a1r,
automatic, AM/FM. lfll, clot.h interior .... ......... ...... ..... ... ............ .. . S8525
1H1 CHEVY CAPRICE, 14852, light pewter, V8. automatic.
air, AM!FM cas$8tt8, power wiMows &amp; locks, cruise, tilt .......... $8295
1102 CHEVV BERETTA, 14863, 2 door, aHoy wh&amp;ets.
air, automatic. AM/FM, tilt, cruise .. ......... .... ... ...... ... :............ 18495
1992 FORD T·BIRO, 14$69, air, automatic, 1111, CfU1se,
power windows, locks &amp; seals. rear dehost. cloth interiOr ........ 18870

GALLIPOLIS
SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE

we'll get cootlng this week in Ari·
'
The fttst use of replacement is
scheduled for Wednesday, when
the elthibition schedule opens with
a game between the California
Angels and Arizona State at
Tempe; Ariz.
., ·
.
Teams want their minor lea- .
guers to play in elthibilion games .
against the wishes of the union,
which would consider them to be
strilccbreakers: The oWners' opemtions committee issued a statement
Friday urging minor leaguers to
play but left it up to individual
clubs to penalize.those who n:fuse.
''It is unfortunate that this union
of millionaires would threaten
mipor league players who live on
shoestring budgeiS for performing .
their jobs,'' the commis~ioner's
office said.
Some reams, sueh as the Cincin~
.nali Reds and New Y~ Yankees,

zona,"he said.

g _

alr,AM/FM, cloth interior. litl, cruise .................................... ..... $565

111112 MERCURY TOPAZ, 14854, automat~.
air, AM/FM, cloth intefior, rear defroster ................ ................. $7415
111111 CHEVY CAVAUER RS, 14884, 4 door, white.
alloy wheels, air, automatic. AM/FM , rear defrosler .
.... $6905

I'll

from Dec. 23 to Feb. S while owners had.imposed a salary cap. Since
withdrawing the cap, tcarils have
refused to sign players.
.
"I don't disagree with the
notion that it'll talte eight to 10
days to~·" unioo head Donald
Fehr said. 'I agree with John. But I
d'o n't wani to get into precise

despite a recomm~dation from!?"·
Charles Ruggeroh, a. canhologtst
who siiS oo the commtssion's med·
ica1 advisory board, to allow Holy·
field to flght again.

•

1993 FORO ESCORT, 14871, Gold 1 23,9QO miles,
,
AM!FM cassette. cloth interior .... ... ...... ...... ............... ................ $6720

POMEROY
618 EAST MAIN ST.

By RONALD BLUM
. NEW YORK (AP) - The lead
negoliaa for baseball owners says
there must be a deal by March 5 .if
Slriking mllior leaguers are to play
on opening day.
.
. : Tal!ts resume in Scottsdale,
~-. on Monday - the 200th day
Of the strike. The regular season is
llill scheduled to stan April2.
• "I think we need about ·three
Weeks of full spring uaining for our
lllayers,'' Red Sox chiefexecutive
Dffteer John Hartin
said in Fort
Myers, Fla., whtre
uains.
\_ Harrington also said that if a setDement is reached later in March,
the awl of the season could be
delayed and the number of.games
aecre.sed to avoid starting the
World Series In November.
: Just 324 of the approximately
t,IOO players on 40-man rosters
!lave agreed to contracts covering
1995. the union banned signings

Carasali said.
Dr. Elias Ghanem cas1 the only
vo~ against lifting the medical suspension saying he was not convinced that problems Holyfield had
with his heart after losi!lg his titles
to Moorer had disappeared.
"I feel strongly there is. abs~lutely something wrong wtth hts
heart somewhere." Ghanem said.
•'If he was my brother or son or•
someone ·related to me, I would not
let him in the ring."
Ghanem ·s comments came

~PRING H(l$ ~PRURG:

92 FORD TAURUS .

4
7
13

Rebouads- 31 {WJiiting 18, Dotson 14)
Blocked sbots- S (Whiting 3) , .
Assists - ll (Gilders &amp; Whiling 3 elich)
Steals-,6
Turnoven-15
Fouls...;_ 13

ner, the commission 's executive
director.
Also at Friday's meeting, Holyfield had been seeking a license to
box, but hls attorney withdrew the
request at the last minute without
explanation.
Commissione~s ind!cated that
the former champton mtght.have a
tougher time getting licensed than
having his medical ban lifted.
"In my mind, there's other
questions that need to be answered
for licensing,'' commissioner Nat

Ge&amp;J

n fla.
4-7
12

.

The 4-1 vote to lift the:: suspension imposed oo Holyfield after he
had heart problems following a loss
last April to Michael Moorer. That
action clears the way for Holyfield
to~ licensing in anr state.
The former champton, who was
not at th~ meeting, re~y plans
to do so tn New Jersey, wtth a pro~ fight May 20 at Atlantic City
agamst Ray Mercer.
"It's up to where he may go in
the world whether they want to
license him or not.'' said Marc Ral·

'

49

.

.

C5

~ CINCINNATI (AP) - Despite
Canoll said the Reds must stay
The eight-member task force vatc Riverfront Stadium.
apeculation that the Cincinnati in downtown Cincinnati.
includes fouf lawmakers and four
In Columbus. a !aSk force crcat·
iieds might be looking at stadium
"I'm not a promoter of them rep~nta~ve_s of the Voinovich ed by Gov. Gllo/ge Voinovich is 10
Sites outside the ci~. an investor being in nortbem Kentucky," Car- administration
meet for the ftrst lime Wednesday
(aroll Snowden, Agent
sroup headed by owner Marge toll said in a recent interview. "I'm
It is to determine a potential to discuss how the state might.help
Schou is concenttating on a down- a promoter of them being in stare source and fonnula to provide Cincinnati and ~levela~d pay for
342 Second Avt.
lbwn ~te.
.
Cincinnati. That's where I think money for stadium and arena con- new sports stadmms. Art Modell,
Gallipolis, Ohio
~ Schou, lawyer Stanley Chesley thel' ought to be." . .
·strucuoo, and possibly recommend owner,of the Cleveland Browns.
.00 Turfway Park racetrack owner
Schott's group hired HOK last legislation to giv.e local govern- has saJd he _wants a renovauon oL
-·-Phone-446•4290
1erry Carroll have hired HOK- · year to-draw-u,- a redesign o~ments new •u options to help i)ay- 64-year-old Cleveland Stadium.
'
Sports Facilities Group of kansas Riverfron:t Stad1um. The group for stadiumS.
which could cost $150 million.
Insurance Companies •.Home Offices: Bloomington, Illinois
Q~. Mo., to produce drawings of a examined the possibility of buying
f,IOfential site along the Ohio River.
Riverfront, but that no longer is
-: It is just west of Riverfront Sta· · being considered, Carroll said.
clium, the 2S-year-old dual-purpose
"I've said a hundred times {ladium the Reds share with the because people think I'm trying to
G;incinnati Bengals. Both teams move the Reds over hm (to north'll(ant the city to build them new, em Kentucky) and I'm not- there
one-sport stadiums.
are certain things that need to be in
; "We've got HOK looking at certain places. And the Cincinnali
'10w things would fit in," Carroll Reds need to be in CinCinnati,''
t9ld Tlu! Cinci1111llli Post for a story Carroll said.
Aiday. "I think we're down to the
Some business leaders have
pbint where we're trying to formu- urged that the teams stay down1.4te something.".
.
town because they boost the city's
'. HOK has destgnecl new baseball eCOfiOmy and are accessible to
~ums for Ballimcre and Clevemajor highways.
.
lind.
_
The city and ·county govern- _
: Schott· did nonetum ~ telejjljone · ments aie heading a regional ·t.aa
1:)11 to ber office Friday. Others force of government and business
have promoted the riverfront site representatives exploring ways of
.308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio
COr a possible. new baUpar_k, but paying for.one or possibly two new
1·992·6614 1·800-837-1 094
SChou has declined to commtt.
stadiums, as well as ways to reno-

Leadership LeasingTM.,. ,,t:c"'il

._2 _ _

Pega

Schott group seeks new Cincinnati stadium

TAKES AIM - With Federal Hocldag's Mark Whltln11 In Ills
race, Southern-'s Mason Fisber (33) takes aim at the boop durin&amp;, Friday Dlgbt's Division m sectional tide lillie at Atbells Hlgb Sc:bool,
. wbere the Lancers won .51-49. ·
·

II
25
3
8

he fiad no CUimlt heart problems.
: Members of the Nevada State
Athletic Commission, bowever,
stopped short of eadorsing Holy·
field's J?lan to fight again, saying
thm still wm qucstioos that need·
ed to be answered before he could
be~~ in the state. . .
Thts 1s not to say we willwue
Evander Holyfield a license,'_' ~d
Dr. James Nave, the commtsston
c!Wnnan. "lt_is 10 say we will not
Sit up here bemg pompous and say
another state can't''

'

lor 24 months

Ogartcrm&amp;ldl

By TIM DAHLBUG
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Fonner
bea~lgbt champton Ev~d~r
Hoi
woo IIIOiher round m his
clforl to return~ the ring: con vineing N"':ada boxmg.officials to lift
his medical suspenston.
But Ho!yfteld '!ill needs to fiad
a state to license him before resuming his boxing .career. . . ·
·
State boxmg offtc181s gave
~lyfield a split deci~on.F~day ~
hts bid to fight agatn, ltfung hts
Slispcnsion after hearing testimony

ro"ston

2 door Civic OX

Southern-Federal stats

SenUnel

Ascctorrdl.lkngeto mownuerss'1n6fiotef8to$r,ettled ,
:D
by March 5 for baseball to ·start on time

,
eres.
lOwdown:
.

1

Sunday nmes

Nevada boxing officials lift Holyfield's medical suspensi~n

•

Federal H·o cking ends Southern's

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1994 OLDS.
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--

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February 26, 1995

USIDeSS

I•

Sunday Thnes-Sentinel /C6

Seychelles officials trying to keep 'Garden of Eden' intact
By SUE LEEMAN
edge.
CERF ISLAND, Seychelles
Although this scattered
(AP) - People in the Seychelles archipelago of 11 S islands is set in
have a saying that translateS into the azure Indian Ocean 1,000 inilcs
"Look, Don' t Touch, but Appm:i- from anywhere, dozens of species
ate.''
of flora and fauna have been eradiSo it's ~opoia~ that' signs in cated since the fast French colonizC~eole 11n Englis!l on this tiny
ers, the first human inhabitants,
island in the St. Anne Marine appeared in the 1750s. The extinct
National Parle say thal, roo, under· include the sluggish dugong and
lining th11 government"$ commit- the Nile crocodile.
ment to preserve what's left of its
Dozens more species are endan·
exotic natural heritage.
gered. including the hawksbill and
Gen. Charles Gordon, who visit- green turtles, slaughtered for their
ed the Seychelles in 1881, depiacd shells which, wrongly taaccJ tor·
the islands as the Garden o( Eden toiseshell, have been Used to make
and its extraordinary fan-shaped everything from spectacle frames
c~o de mer palm trees with their · to jewelry.
&amp;•ant nuts as the Tree of Knowl"They arc very lliObile tbrough-

out the islands so we don't really
know how many there arc, but a
census in 1982 showed 2,000
bnleding 8JCC11 turtles and less than
100 hawksbills," said government
scientist John CoUie.
The turtles now are listed as
endangered by the Conference on
International Trade in Endangered
Species (CITES). In 1991 the Seychelles government stopped issuing
licenses to catch them.
It now has a program to retrain
and compensate craftsmen who
make their living carving the sheUs.
All sales of "tortoiseshell" have
bccri banned.
·
Tile World Bank has given
$800,000 for research into the
hawksbill and aboiJt_$300,000 for

the~turUe.

·

·
snake.
"Part of the mone~ will be used
Although not endangered, the
for stock assessmen1, ' said CoUie. i~da' populationa of giant tor" We will also draw up a plan for toiSeS, IIOI1le of them 160 years old,
managing turtle stocks over the live wild only on the southern
next five years.' •
island of Aldabra.
Collie said 13 bird species arc
. Annette Carlstrom, a Swedish
on tile j~Ovemment's own endan- · botanist who is ,workins in the
gered hst, including the magpie islands for two years, said some 30
robin and the black paradise fly- plant species are considcrcd by the
catcher.
government - ~ be in danger and
The govemm~t's environment others are vulnerable.
division offers $6 bounty lot
The Seychelles lost most of its
IeiDing European o Is, which were indigenous rain forests to ship
broul!ht in to the islands to kill building in the 18tb century,
rodents but instead slaughter although small pocketS ~C~Dain on
indigenous owls.
the main island· of Mahe and on
Also on the. government's list IIIIOtha' island, Silhouetie.
arc Caecilians, a Slllall amplu'bious
More ~tly, creeping development and the ovcrcultivation of

POMEROY -Spring will soon
. be here and the Meigs County Park
District is getting in gear for recreational soccer.
·
Meigs County spring soccer is
open to children five to 12 years
old or in grades K-6 (ages based

on-as of SepL I, 199S) in Meigs
County elementary schools. Tlie
season begins the fast Satunlay in
March and ends lhe last Saturday in
April.
Registration forms are now
available and may be picked up at

each elementary and the Meigs
County Park District office. Last
year, Meigs County's first roc soccer, was very successful. Students
from each elementary participated
last year in a program that had few
·stumbling blocks, ·

There were seven teams berded
into 5-6, seven, 8-9 and 10-12 yearold age groups. They were divided
in the manner because of the numbers ofs~nts desiring to play in
each age group.
Coaches have been trained and
certified throdgh the National
Youth Sports Coaches Association.
. The mission is "Better Spans For
Children." The certification program .covers the psychology of
coat hmg youth sports, to help build
break of rabies in southern Texas west is more closely linked to self-esteem, ma'!imizing f!thletic
has.been blamed in part on coyotes. record numbers of raccoons, rn:~~~:.-e~~ndnh:c~~
The spread of rabies in the Mid- skuriks and opossums.
.
. •
organ!Zil.un pracbccs.
Coaches must si'n a Code of
Ethics Pledge. These •deals arc also
passed on to the parents and parents are encouraged to sign a Code
of Ethics Pledge. A combined
effort between the Parts and
Recreation sponsor, coaches and
parents is also pledged to work
against drug and alcohol abuse and

New DOW rule calls for captured wild
furbearers to be killed in 56 Ohio counties
. By JOHN WISSE
Ohio Department of WUdllte
Coyotes and other forbearers
carry ~ . rat!i1:3, which is easily
transmitted. to other wildlife and
domestic animals such as dogs, cats
and h&lt;nes.
A rule that went into effect Nov.
29 tequiml that any raccoon, opossum or skunk C8ptured in a county
wherermbies or distemper has been
confirmed during the previous year
must be kiUed.
There arc 56 Ohio counties with
a recorded presence of rabies or
distemper, although the .presence of
rabies was foun\1 onl)' in Delaware,
· Hamilton, Lorain, Morrow,- San- ·
dusky and Van Wert counties.
''In Ohio, we have forbearer
populations today that arc at record
levels of abundance," said Paaick
Ruble, executive administrator of
wildlife m~ement and research
for the Ohio Division of Wildlife.
"Because of concerns involving
· the spread of rabies and distemper
in these expanding fwbearcr populations, we bad to change the rules
governing trapping and handling of
nuisance forbearers."
Coyotes are iri the forbearer
group but are not included under .
' the new wildlife rule. concerning ·
nuisance animal trapping. An out~

'IROY.BIIJ~!ii.AWN 'I'RAQORS

MOW DOWN THE CONIPmTIONI
Priced from

·,

6 Months FREE*!

••

7-

tions their readers make to tbe
sports sections of these papers, and
they will continue to be published.
However, cenain deadlines for
submissions will be observed.
The deadline for photos and
related articles for football and ·
other fall sports is the Saturday
before the Super Bowl.
· The deadline for photos and
related articles for basketball (summer basketball and related camps
fall under the summer sports deadline) and other winter sports is the
last day of the NBA finals . The
deadline for submissions of local
baseball- and softball-related photos and related articles, from T-ball ·
to the majors , as well as other
spring and summer sports, is the
day qf the last game of the World
Series.
Tl\ese deadlines are in place to
allow contributors the time they
need to acquire their photos from
the photography studio/developer
of chpicc and to·give the staffs the
chance to publish these items in the
appropriate season for those sport,_

• Powerful Bri~ &amp; Stratton
• 13- 16H P Engtnes!
.
• Welded Steel. Frame!
• Tight 21-lnch Turning Radius!
• Optional Deck Suspension!
• Superior line Of Sight!

• Four Gallon Fuel Tank 1
• Easy To Get On And Off!
• Easy To Service And
Maintaint..
·
• Save time year 'round with
·handy attachments!
• 7 Year Warranty' ·

t Freight additional on tome rnodet1.
• knpoiWc lnfi:N nllllor, I'IIPfding ~"""' b qulllflld TROY-BIL~ EIQ Pty Plln n• ' rne1 1; Aflet 1/llt5 ~
APR ., baed on 'fOAl staff Oil i'esidinca, B a5 tolows: N&lt; - 1h on firR 1 1 000 rlbalance 7 927. on 8li:OIIII' AR· 7 ~­
AI.. CT, Fl, LAW.. ME, MN, NC, NO, PA. At WA. and Wl - 1~- KS · 18:95%on h$1,000ofblllnce 14ft gj, i '
ttflu; NE · lUW oolnl$.500ott.llncl, 1811.ont~CC~M; SC :..._ 16.9211.: TX - 1764" WI/ - lh 0nrfttt150d
beilral, 12'1.onucess; DC ardaiOCherltinl - 18.~. MnrTun 11nrct ctwge il$.501orMCh billngtvdli'l whld1
.
•fnance ChlrgliiPI)'IbllllarUO (enp!lof raiderac(CT, IX:, HI, IO, KY. LA MO. f£, NM. NC. r..o.OR, rod Rl)
F9-B95

O'Dells Lawn &amp;Garden
150 UPPER RIVER RD.
(Across from K·Martt

GALLIPOLIS

446·7826

ACROSS

1 Rough
6 VO!lUSde10 Excavations for ore
15-Falher
18 Hawaiian greeting
19 - Split
21 Tum aside
22 Large: prefix
23 Bolt
24. Schoolroom item
25 Staircase part
26 Body structure;
·' abbr.•
27 -out (get wilh
difficulty)
28 Broken-arm suPPQrt
30 Men .
32 Green, as fruit
34 Untidy stale
36 Sharpen
37 Bitler
38 Raged
39 Exact copy
41 Very pale
42 Raison d; 43 Venturesome
45 Entreaties
46 Talk wildly
48 Recipe amount
52 Retitle
53 -l.ama
54 Funny movie
56 Luau fare
57 Run off to marry
58 Hookah or calumet
59 Mob member
61 Eschew
63 Whitney and
Wallach
64 Makes calm
66 City in France
67 Horse's headgear
68 Devotee
69 Cock-and· - story
70 Throw in the towel
72 Humming sound
74 Pigpen
76 "Little Women"
name

77 Scalds

78 Cow sound
79 Dir. !attars
82 Porformed on stage
84 Chimed
85 For !oar that
86 Academic degree
88 Hockoy position
91 "Oh, woe!"
93 Tho Rolling95 Achooso
96 Man from Mars
97 Land
99 Liberal - ~ 100 The Pine Tree
State
101 Do wrong
102 Philadelphia 104 Sour substances
106 Angle
107 COOking vessels
109 Lads
11 0 Blueprints
111 Summer wear
112To-(unanimously)
· 114 Walle top
115 Fry quickly
116 Fate
119 Hag
120 Welshman or
Irishman
121 Adeadly'sin
125 Harsh
126 Explosion
127 ·-of the Field"
129 Sailor
130 Commotion
131 Pacific or Atlantic
133 Anumber
135 - and kicking
137 Head: Fr.
138 - Dame
139 Mechanism
140 Claw
141 Time periods: abbr.
t42 'Drenches
143 Slant
144 Put forth effort

DOWN

1 Seraglio
2 Similar
3 Travels aimlessly
4 That girl
5 Caps
6 Soldier on a ship
7 Pointless ·
BEndure
9 - In a million
10 Large fish
11 Like college walls
12 Loch 13 Belore. poetically 14 W!llked pompously
15 J.eans fabric
16 Wide open
17 Old-fashioned
19 Be a member 01
20 Upholstered seat
22 Impaired
29 Call
31 War god
33 Where Oslo is: abbr.
35 Discarded pieces
3? Lost
38 Disconnect
40 Juicy truit
41 Passageway
43 Singer Reese and
others
44 Smear with oil
45 Olthe bishop ol
Rome
46 Repetition ·
47 Chimges 19 lhe
Constitution
49 FootleSs creature
50 Dirt
51 Conceal
· 52 Coral ridge
53 Dawdle: hyph. wd . ...._
54 Paint layers
".
55 Kni«ing es"'lntial
58 Feather
.60 Frostings
: 62 Contends
64 Die down
65 Flatten
67 Winter footwear

''

GOOD DEALS ... AND A GOOD DEAL MORE

accounts,-auto b!ns. pmonalloans
and student loans.
The program uses interactive
video to simulate loan interviews,
students role play the job of a
lender, analyzing loan applications,
reviewing acdit reports and calculating disposable income.
The projl111!11 is sponsored as a
public semce by Bank One in Gal. lipolis for· local area high schools.
"We feel it is important that young
adults have a chance to practice
money management in the classroom, where mistalces won't cost
real doUars," said CornetL
"Surveys indicate that 80 percent of high school students want
instruction in financial matters and
that such education is among the
lop three subjects parents want

taught to their children,'' Cornett
added.
l.ocai educators concur; faculty
members volunteer to teach the
program within their consumer
economics or business education
curriculum.
"By sponsoring this program,
we arc reaching our young people
as they arc entering the work force
and first needing financial services.
U ~ can raise their level of fini!Dcial responsibility and help them
learn good money habits ri~ht from
the. start, it will pay big dividends
for them and the community alike,''
said Cornett.
Barile One, Athens operates I 0
offices in Athens, Gallia, Hocking,
Meigs and l'erry counties.

...

\
MYSTERY FARM -This week's mystery
farm, featured by tbe Meigs Soli and Water
Conservation District, is loated somewhere in
. Meigs County. Individuals wishing to partici·
• pate in the weekly llODiesl may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mllil, or drop olf your
guess lo tbe GalUpolls DaBy Tribune, 825 Third
Ave~ GaUipoUs, Ohln, 45631, or The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, and

you may win a $5 prize from the Oblo Valley
Publishing Co. Leave yonr name, address and
telephone number wilh your card or letter. No
telephone calls will be accepted. All contest .
entries should be turned in to the newspaper
orr~ee by 4 p.m. eacb Wednesday.ln case ola tie,
the winner will be chosen by lottery. Next week,
a Galli&amp; County farm will be featured by tbe
Gallia·Soiland Water Conservatlon District.

~sian

Lady Beetles
active once again

'

&lt; '

'..
•,

.'
'.

:t

GRAND OPENING SET • Pictured Is the
new Holzer Sealor Care Center, loalted at 380
Coloolal Drive, just west of Gallipolis. Grand

opening .ceremonies are slated for Sunday,
March 5 from 1 to 5 p.m., featuring a ribbon
cutting all p.m. Tbe public Is Invited.

Grand opening set for new
Holzer Senior Care Center

GALLIPOLIS - The official
grand opening of the recently completed Holzer Senior Care Center
will be held Sunday, March 5 from
1 to S p.m., with a special ribbon
cutting ceremony at 2 p.m.
The 27,000 square foot structure, located at 380 Colonial Drive,
just west of Gallipolis, will accommodate 70 residents and has been
designed to meet the special needs
of elderly individuals in Gallia
County and sunuunding areas.
Cqi{tracted by Holzer Medical
· Center, Centunon Management
Group of Dayton will manage the
facility. CMG also manages nurs-

LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS
Limited
resoun:e farmets can be eligible for
a waiver of all fees for catastrophic
(CA11 crop insurance.
A limited resource farmer is one
who had a gross annual iricomc of
less than $20,000 from all sources .
(farm and off-farm) in 1993 and
1994 or a producer on a farm of
· less than 2S acres, of all crops,
where crops constitute the mlliority
. (not to ex~ $20,000) of the producer's income.
All farmers who receive U.S.
Department of Agriculture benefits
from crop stabilization and certain
-other programs (Including burley

ing centers in Jack son and quality nursing center that witl .
Pomeroy.
meet the needs of area families and
The center's staff includes Dick their loved ones who requ ire such
Huffer, administrator; Mary services." , ..
O'Brien, director of nursing; Deb- '
"Nearly 70 to 80 jobs will be
bie
Eleam,
director
of created as a result o( this new faciladmissions/social services; Gwen ity," said Huffer. We have had a
Phillips, assistant director of nurs- tremendous re sponse from area
ing; and Rosita Bauer, officer man- individuals, and I would like to
ager.
point out that position s will be
"Much research, time and effort filled by local people."
have gone into the planning of this
Huffer invites th e public to
facility ," said Charles I. Adkins, attend the grand opening, featuring
Jr., Holzer Medical C~n_ter presi- ent.e_rt~inm_e nt and r c fr cs h~cnts
dent and chtef executive officer. regmnmg at I p.m.
"We feel it clearly represents our
The ribbon culling is se t for 2
sincere endeavor to bring a hiRh p.m. and guided tours will be from
. 2:30 to 5 p.m.

•

tobacco price suppon) must have at
least the minimum, called catastrophic or CAT, in.surance to
receive benefits. Producers can get
CAT insurance from the county
Consolidated Farm Service Agency
(formerly ASCS) or from a private
insurance agent for a nominal fee
of $50 per_crop, _per ~roducer, per
county: This fee IS waiVed for hmited resource fanners.
Limited resource farmers must
provide P.rnof of qualifying income
OR cerufy on the application that
he or she qualifies ror the waiver of
fees. Produce!S are urged to ch(:(;k
on the free insurance option at their
CFSA office.

The deadline for applying for
CAT insurance and waivers is
march 15.
To date les~ than 10% of the
producers required to obtain coverage for program benefits have
applied. The CFSA office is anticipating long lines as the deadline for
obtaining coverage approaches.
Producers are urged to call
ahead for an appointment at the
Gallia CFSA Office at 446-8686 or producers may obtain coverage
through a private agent by the ·
March 15 deadline.
L.iso · Meadows is the ,\ctll)g
County Executive Director of the
Gallla Consolidated Farm Service Agency.

~ · ~~ ­

Champion Industries
earnings show gain ·

} /f. -

l

HUNTINGTON - Champion
Industries, Inc., announces that net
inc;ome for its first quarter ended
January 31, 1995 increased by II
percent over the same quarter of
1994, rising to $553,000. Net
income for the first quaner a year
ago was $501,000.
Champion's board of directors
also declared the company's regu·
lar quanerly dividend of 5 cents per
share. This_represents a 25 percent
dividend increase for shareholders
·who received the 25 percent stock
dividend (treated and accounted for
as a 5 for 4 split) on Jan. 23, 1995.

This event is respected throughout the region as one of the top preview shows. It is also one of the·
few "winter" events to attract attendance from outside the community.
An enormous amount or time is
spent by local volunteers to make ·
the event run smoothly. Contributions from several bUsinesses malce
Johnson heads group
It possible to offer cash awards that .
attract the quality and numbers
necessary for long-term success. A
' '
.J
PROMOTED • V. Lynn
special thanks to all who participatGALLIPOLIS - The Super
Swain was promoted to cllemlst
ed.
&lt;;heY}' Dealers advertising associaallbe Ohio VaHey Electric Corbon announced last week that Gene
poration's Kyger Creek Plant
Several programs are coming up
Johnson of Gallipolis Chevrolet·
on Feb. 13. Sw&amp;ln joined OVEC
this week. ')be Ohio Valley Sheep
Olds-GEO Inc. has been elected
in 1991 as an ilssoclate claemlst
Association will have its inonthly
president of the group.
·
In tile cbemlcal department.
Once inside the home, they will · meeting Monday, Feb. 27 at 7 p.m.
. "Iohnson will lead the dynamic
Tbe following year, she was
continue to be a nuisance until in the C.H. McKenzie Agricultural
and diverse group of community
removed. They arc really just look· Center's extension conference . promoted to asslstut c:hemllt,' business leaders to advance the
ing for a nice, warm, dry place to room.
She Is a graduate I)( the UniverSuper Chevy Dealers into the mid·
sity or Rio Grande with a BS
spend the winter, lilce the rest of us.
The annual Tobacco Grower
1990s, and set the stage for
degree In biOlDJIY. She and her Chevrolet dealers association to the
Probably most of us will be more Producer meeting is Tuesday, Feb.
husband, Nickle, and two year 2000," said J. W. Messnet, a
careful next fall in preventing their 28, 7:30 p.m. at Hannan Trace Eleentry into the home.
dauabters reside In Crown company spolcesriuin. ,
Caulking around windows, mentary ~chool. The .flrimarl
City.
screening ventilation openings, and speak~r will be _Dr. W1 I Snel_,
l-i--1- - -sealing-around utility' pipes would_exte~StoD-CC(lllOmlst. fros;n the_Uru~
.help in the fall, 1 fool many are now vemty .9f Kenbleky. Lees get out a
· d h
·
all ~~ce and good
OR "HOW ABOUT
~nst e t e atbc. or w
A aiiCildancel
emind r of the Pesticide
JUst move out mto the hvmg area
~
c .
.
REFINANCING THAT HIGH INTEREST LOAN?
on warm days. In the fall months, Applicator testmg sesuon on
Fmha, FHA, VA and CONVENTIONAL LOANS
good night light discipline could 'I)tursday, Man:h 2 at the McK~n­
help avoid attracting nuisance bee- ~·e_Cef!leZ, star11~g at 3 p.m. Partie· AVAILABLE
ties in and around the house or . lparl~ should arnve no later !han 6
structures.
p.m. m ord~r to complete les!ffig by
• Low or No Down payment
Entomologists say that future 7 p.m. Calltf you have quesuons.
• Special Financing Programs Available
populations should decline, based
The
1995
West
Virginia
·Farm
• Programs for Your Individual Needs
on reports of 20-plus percent natuand
Garden
Show
will
be
held
at
ral parasitism in southern popula• Low Fixed &amp; Adjustable Rates
the Cabell Coun.ty Vo-Tech School
tions. The county Extension OffiCe on
Saturday,
March
4
from
9:
IS
• Evening Appointments Available
has a two-page fact sheet (HYG
a.m.
until
3
p.m.
A
wide
variety
of
2158) available for mailing. topics (30) to choose from will be
• Local Representative for 10 Years
Beyond this, we really don't have a offered in one--hour segments
• Free.Prequalification
magic long-term solution.
throughout the day. Iohn Morra,
Cabell County extension agent, is
The 199.5 Gallia County Cattleone of the organizerS of the evenL
FIVl STAR
men's Association Preview Show Call
CALL VICKIE HAULDREN
for
a
program
agenda.
last Sunday was a success. Some
MORJ&amp;AGf
(Edward M. Vollborn Is tbe ·
(614)' 446·4042
84 calves from all over Ohio, as
CDRI'fMAnDN
agricultural
extension agent (or
well as a few from West Virginia
Galli&amp; County.)
and Indiana, participated~
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
. GALLIPOLIS -The multi-colored Asian Lady Beetles arc still
making a nuisance by their presence. Recent warm days have made
them more active again.
AccordinB to Dr. Bill Lyon,
OSU Extension entomologist, the
adult beetles do not bite, sti g or
carry human disease. They do ot
reed on wood, clothing or fo .
They do not reproduce indo s.
Although they are benefici by
feeding on aphids, spider · and
scales, they are not an endangered
species prolected by Ohio law.

Farm Flashes

..

'

Crop _
insurance waive.rs available
for limited resource farmers ··

..

Carmichael's ·Farm AND Lawn
614-446·2412 ~

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'I

GAlLIPOLIS, OHIO·

A·rea students learn banking ·skills

..

:·
71 Samovar
73 Fragranlflowers
75 New Haven school ··'
77 Boasts
80 Run·
81 Complains
....
83 Motion picture
85 Men ol rank
87 Hoofed animal
,,.
88 Struggle for air
·'.
89 Hodgepodgl!
90 .•- Misbehavin'"
92 "True-·
94 Pollute
- 95 ~K!!9
97 Great suffering
I
98 Gifted
1oo Debatable
103 Leaves in lhe lurch
i 05 Instance
106 Slide
108 Lampoon
11 0 Paid alhl.etes
111 Salty
113 Hr. part
114 Hoisting devices
115 Pick OUI
116 Otrty, in a way
117 Stage direction
118 Unle plays
119 Kent or Gable
120 Kind of rights
122 Serviceable
t 23 Enjoy the taste of
124 River in England
126 Greek letter
· 127 Son ot Jacob
' '
' .
128 Glut
'
132 Bill and 134 Permit
136 Slack

February 26, 1995

insurance agency.
Upcoming events
• March 4 - West Virg inia
Farm and Garden Show at the
Cabell County Vocational School.
• March 7 - · "Getting Started In
Dairy Goat Production" at the
Athens County Extension Office, 7
p.m.
• March 17-19 - Beef Expo at
the Ohio State Fairgrounds,
Columbus.
• March 28 - Marketing
Opportunities for Southeastern
Oh10 Beef Producers, 7 p.m. at the
Athens County Extension Office.
(Hal Kneen is the agricultural
extension agent for Meigs County.)
'

•
•

•••

Wateh .For Details On O..rMareJa Openi~fl···

the government helps producers
achieve fmancial protecbon against
unavoidable losses, i.e., formally
called Federal Disaster Aid.
For Meigs countians growing
com, soybeans, wheal and/or oats,
. Y&lt;?U m~st sign up before March 15
with e1ther your local crop insur,ance agency and/or the Consolidated Farm Service Agency (formally

..

'

A COMPLETE LINE
FOR ALL OF YOUR.
lAWN-AND FARMING
NEEDS•• ~ AND A
COMPLETE SERVICE
PROGRAM.

-~ The act has overhauled the way

stamina with the &lt;mount of cori:stant running it talces to play the"·
game. The .stamina also helps in
other sports.
·
A schedule of practices an!l
gmes will be given out· to eac!l
child at the lint practice oo Satur-.
day. For lliOIC infOiliiiMioo repnf-·
ing Meigs County Recreatim Soccer, contact the Meigs County Paik.:
District at its new location: Unidh :
Avenue, s•R. 7 , pomeroy, Oh"'
•u
4S769 next to the Meigs CountY.
Litter Control building. Furth~r .
inf&lt;?rmation can be obtained by .
calling 992-2239.
.
·
A donation from the Farmer''&amp;. ·
Bank to develop soccer fields haS
been accepted by Meigs County '
Park director Mary PaweD and the :
board of commissioners (lame!.
Pape, Roger Williams.and Randy
Butcber). This donation will go· a •
long way in aiding Meigs Counl}'
Youth in their athletic futures and
in their soccer careers.

See Answer to Puzzler on Page, C-3

,.

-programs.

.
known as the Agricultural Stab1lization Conservation Service,
ASCS). There is an administrative
filing fee due.
Note that other surrounding
counties may have additional crops
needing to be signed up by March
15, so check with the local agencies. Crops not covered by the
Catastrophic Crop rn·s urance
(CA11 will be covered by a NonInsured Assistance Program (NAP)
through a later sign up period, as
the final details have not been
released yet by the federal governmenL .
.
For further infonnation, please
contact your local Consolidated
· Farm Service Agency or crop

SUNDAY PUZZLER .

. $19991

Sports deadlines
Tbe Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
fhe Daily Senrinel\and the Sunday
Times-Sentinel value the contribu-

child abuse and neglect. According
to a survey talcen, 70% of the ldds
were quitting SJXX1S by the age 13
because it ceas~d bemg fun and
theirneedsweren'tbcingmeL
Labeling a child as a quitter is
an immense insult that destroy~
self-esteem. As a result of this data,
the National Youth Sports Coaches
Association was created in 1981 to
tum sports into a fun activity for
children.
Because of its positive effect,
chapters continue to increase
through parks an.d recreation
departments, Boys and Girls Oubs,
YMCA/YWCA, church recreation
deJ:&gt;artments and military youth
actiVities worldwide.
·
Fields are begin expanded to
Harrisonville, Bradbury, Salisbury,
Chester, Reedsville, Sr,racuse and
Rlr.ine. Other fields will be designated if nccdcd.
.
Soccer is a fun game especially
for .young children and it builds

. By HAL KNEEN
. POMEROY - Crop farmers,
make sure you understand the
.:e:ffects of the Crop Insurance
Reform Act of 1994 upon your risk ·
management protection plan, and .
your use of the various federal farm

. Although the palms are oot
endangered, the government .
recently SCI up I register.
Endangered species include the '
jeU_yfuh tree, whicll bears brown,
fruit shaped like jellyfish, and a
giant timber tree known by its ere,
ole name of Bwa-d-Fcr, said Dr.
Carlstrom, who is setling up the· .
..
island's rust flora data ba9e.

Meigs County Park District prepllring for youth .soccer's second .season

Section D

Crop farmers have unt!l
--March 15 to sign up for ·plan

coconuts have cut the lllllllbcrs f1
the coco de mer, which takes ncar
ly 1,000 years to reach full size llld
produces nuts which resemble
human female genitals. Local legend ·bas it that male and female ·
bees mate oo stormy nights and it
is unlucky for humans to be pre.
senL

~imes.-ientinel

OlflO BIG TREE WINNERS- • Mr. and Mrs. Teddy J, Bailey
not only won tile GaiDa County Big Tree Contest in 1994, but also
had the biggest shagbark hickory tree In Ohio according to Cindy
Jenkins, diStrltt forester of the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation Distrltt and Debbie Elliott, manager of the Raccoon Creek
Park wbo nominated the tree for the Ohio Forestty AMoclaUoa, a
spoosor olthe Ohio Big Tree provam since 1955. The tree Is loalt·
ed close to tbe juiiCtioa I)( State Rt. 141 and County Road 71n Walnut Twp. It has a clrtumference or 140 Inches, a beighl or 110 feet
and a crown spread of 75 feet. II will hold tbe number one title
' untO a larger tree Is nominated.

Crop Insurance For
Tobacco Producers
The 'new" crop 1risurance program tS almost
free tfyou enroll for it! The government
pays the premium . Your cost for
administrative purposes can be as little as
$50 per crop. For dctatls con tac t me today.

W. R. "Dick" Brown, CLU
Nationwide Insurance,
386 State Route 160, Gallipolis, Ohio
614-446-19,60 " ...
--~ Crop Insurance Serviced By ·
'! ;f
Rain and Hall Insurance Service, lnc.
, MPCl• ~ a"a1lablt to ~·11. productr) rtgaTdlm bf race
color. nttuonal ong1n. \U, age or d•sab•l! rv 1

•

t·
,I

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ott
ahead by ma1hng S2 to Astro·Graph. clo have to contend wllh diH1cutr cond111ons 11

BERNieE
BEDE OSOL

th iS newspape r. P.O Box 4465 . New
York . NY 10163. Be sure to state your

today . don·t be disconcerted or thmk of
Qu•lhng Cons1stenc')! can turn th1ngs to

ZodiaC SIQO .

your advantage.

cally today . Let assoc1ates do the heavy
hftmg wh•le you des1.9n the levers and

in your favor tor JOint ventures, especially
1f you 're in~Jolved with· a group you were

start receivmg returns from thmgs you
have paid for already . Eventuall¥ you
should get everyth ing to wh 1ch you 're
entitled.

11

not likely to ignore or discount the good
1deas of others You will, however, find
ways to expand and improve upon their

~AGI.TTAR IUS

(Nov. 23·Dec. 21 1Today

you 'll know eJCactly what nee ds to be
done , and more Importantly, how you can
accomplish a ll the. th1ngs you set ou t to

Sunday. Feb. 26, 1995
· Ideas.
Favorable career changes could be 1n the CANCER (June 21·July 221 There is a do.
off1ng for you 1n the year ahead . Two possibility you m1ght reap hidden benefits CAPRICORN
obstructions might be removed from your today from a situation someone else erepath, it~~:posirly a new route to success .
ated . He/she will profit from this as well.

8

~

t:;ftii,~~·~~
1'

...

t~~ T:::• • Cou illr

=-~·
RITE Alllt

Selling ,
Financial
Security For
MetLife&lt;t Can
Make You
Financially
Secure.

•
22·Jan. 191 You are

(Dec.
apt to be clever and prudent with dollars
and sense today . Th1s is a combination

secret. ambition today. Wait for the green • chance for succe~s today. T~1s IS a y~e
. light, then move full speed ahead. Pisces, when everyone mvolv~d m1ght ga1n 1n
treat yoursetf to a birthday gift . Send for some manner
.

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 221 Even If you

It you
want to be the center of attenflon tod8y,
underplay your role. You come across as
more charisma tic and appealing when
you're tow·key.

Tho
Jut c.-.
Lam.....
All ..........
01 ,.. __Wll
_
14 rrn1a' r.. •ore ., ..,...,..
tloi!And lonklngP-

-Iol

Fat c.... ......._
....... 01 ta:litndlnfll '

w.

ambitiun, Because,

9

Giveaway

4

Wanted ·to Buy

11

Mel Life Sales Reps can
make more than our own

Help Wanted

1::=======::.

-

.

"'*'·

;. ~~

••ta

:=

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

..,.,.

,. r:L
._.tit!:'

fti40"L - - -hoi oho
.-rlod.Thl"-oltho
...._. ..,_, tnlutii•tlon from
...,.,.. I I dill! 111J A&amp;lnt
wOuld . be ~'I JlYO:IMed.

IN,Ohlo •· ~ 7l':J.11711L

T- -

Golllpollo, Ohio I1W7W720.

r3 ...

...

Doo born, II.

4205,

,

MICtion

Ua II

Mf'¥lce.

II

I

,....... -

Wrdrmew«'• Auclon

Blfvloe.

-

9

~~o~...r Dill sr-tom. Eat Tha -;;;;;;W;.a;-ntH;ed~t~oidBuyci"E;
You ~ Wltlloul Tho Comi""Jo Hoo l:olcl Or Eo,.
.:.~lorn': .... Any 'JYpo 01 ....
tlon, 114 2111150
~=-·== El~

All
-

=....:-Fat

TI!E Po\IIPERED CHEF

"Tho KJtchon sr... Thol eom..
To Y- Door.• "-1 Conoultont
A..t-AI:
~~
LooV8IIMUg!.

. •

-1-•
c..,..,._
_
.., ·---Dr.

_ . . l o r - ........ onol
- I n tt.

P.-.,-.

,_..,. .....

1'i110IIII...-.

C n;AwU... ......__.
-lloura,llltoiDIIIp. ::14 .....

CUITOIIIIIMCE
IOIJIII'IIEP

Docorolod oiCM
rw, • I phonM, old l o - old thoot
momotoro, ·old ;;;:;d.,_

-

llooord

-::v..::;

allllquo i!Jiii?M~r:

tumnwo. Rlvoiiftl~lquill.

At

......... ,._..

.....

.. . . . _ ...... Olloo....
Col ""' ~ton On Ordor· . Rua .._., - -· 1~4-t~ao
lng
Or fo&lt; lluol- 2526. Wo bur • -·
tlan.Prw11 . . . . . . . . . . .
unltlw.
Fr• CINn Laio 11oc1o1 Coro Or
8Nchtn volloltll.
Trucka, 1181' Or
R -To:
.
Smhh Buick Pontloc
.IIWITCORP
. ·4
Giveaway
Eootom ~......., 011111Piii1L

w=ortloo

""iilils

1

v.. Ok:l c.&amp;tco Kltt111

Houu

- · 114-441·1131.
- . old bolfll Lob puppr,
good
to
oniJ.
, flOOd homo

:.C:::·;'so

Don, Ju,. ~I Soli Uo y...,....,.
Worldng

II*'

-r....:::

~zano T.v.~c~
Dry..., Etc. 114-

Applla

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

No.I

IM•ollo,OHAIIn: L a r t 0rca1

1~·1710

iZII.

W.ntod: 1.1111r 50 To 114 y..,.
Old To U¥1 In For R-.. lloonl,
Smoll W.goo, 114 •• :1418.

..._.'"*'·
='s

W.ntod : El.porloo "~
Aulwaeullwe lqdy
R-lo: CLA ...

Holp

_ t_
obuy.,.- ...
- ,llorl-=-~-..._ ""' Ooii!PQIII D!!IIY ,._,
t Whlto llolo &amp; 1 t.!r~ ~t:':nf"1~ -A-VON
- · .. dollpollo,
Block -.o,IM-44t·1861.
trucq, AI , poilo lor - . dopondont rop. - ·
or TNnl
4M31.

2 AduR Clto:

_

2Old Dog 11:1 Lob 11:1 ...,••
...........,.,..•• Good Home, 814- -

. JM5.11H Allor I P.ll.
4 pl....... 2 ..... 2 ~lo, port
QOrmon Shoplnl' H..ky. 2311

......

773-5343

7l':J.5033.

011

1-100oll!l2-e3M.

Old butt- - - lroooirY,
old light... Iron okl-, p10.

AVON US SALES

Avoror:.: .f111Hr - " turoo. Stor Worw, .U'-· chino, tic D
nlol Sol · AI lumhwo, t - ar : : ' : : " _. oltomo. Torrltory Optl-. IIJ.
tot••Dolly Millin,
11141. .clop, Rep. 1-1112-4711.

: 1 -ltlol.o!lnt Pv!llliN, Vor•
· . touo~llck dr Black &amp;
' • ._,., 112
lotorod Lob, 11:1

Anytlmo, 814-

' · ,Coon Hound,

. . I7NlDI.

2

lnMemory

old ~ cot, good
wlchlldR~o. to good home onty.

· -

The family of
Marion R. "Tex"
Harrison wishes to
express deepest
appreciation to all
who sent carda ,
food, and flowers.
The phone calls,
visits, prayers, and
!:Ontrlbutions to the
memorial funds in
his name werearso
greatly appreciat-

~

.

looutllul Colo To Good Homo,

. et447WII2.

: -on IUU Tonlor, lll•od, llote,
· · a Yoorollkl. ~11111.

cagoo- bo -""chic". . ar ioiJitlto, .W'II-6354.

:

: Dm11

T?T"M

Mixed

to

Gaod

=-~-~.114-

: Hill _

...... Sliophonl . pto1, 1 . . . old, -r trlondly,
...... -

--

304~75~156

' ill* S:SG _ . . ...,., Ill cloy

~.: .=--:;_::-:=:;;_=::;::=:1

CJrc:l ofThanks

ed.
The family of Hurley E.
Borden would like to
ex press their heart felt
thanks to the many friends,

- .._,.,- ...
t,.... Pllrt·Time

&amp; the
Bidwell , &amp;

ent ire
GallipPiiScommunities for
th eir support. The

Our lives have greatly changed
si nee God called you away.
And what a tremendous loss
we experience every day.
Not a day goes by
·
we don't think about our "love",
But we know·you are with God
playing sweet music up above.

expressions of lOve in the
·form of cards, n ow ers,

food also prayers helped
greatly durmg this time of.
sorrow. We would also like
to thank the minister s,

churches &amp; also the staff
of McCoy Moore Funeral
Home and Holzer Medical
Center for their help and
caring durin g th e loss.

The entire .•.nliy would
like to thank everyone

·Sadly missed by Marcella, Mark, Cindy,
Emily, Beau, and Ory Harrison and
Tom, ..,,"""'" Chelsl,
. Joshua

again Tor thei r l o ~J e &amp;

pr~y e rs.

•

•

And

Drt~and b'a, _HIVe

R•ln•
,
,.._...._... .,. Or'tadt Or

•Jdllcn ~ . .Cd ¥11 . . .
lolww: '1'1 P.ll. 114-441-1012.

--'"a -lor""
DoeiUon Of DerUI *FIIr'ML
Eotpo- prolouod bu1 "hoo

...,......p__ _
to: Don1o1 Aoolooont. P.O.
110, - . WY 2111110.

om..

Only,·--

ARor I P.ll. 114-241-

ABSOLUTE AUCTION
March 4, 1995 9:00 a.m.
Going out of bu~iness auction. This is a. 24 yr.
coUection from D&amp;D Equipment. Located from
AThens, Ohio take St. Rt. 50 West to Co . Rd. 12.
Watch for auction signs.
"TRUCKS"
1976 Ford 250 four speeq, 1971 Ford 700 w/361
VB engine,. 5 and 2 speed w/Henderson till
wrench bed, 600 Ford w/Hyd. packer, and
Loadstar for parts. .
"TRACTORS"
J.D. 1050, 33 H.P. B speed, 4x4 diesel, M.F. '240 D.
8 speed, L.P. , P.S. Ferguson T030, Satoh 650.
"EQUIPMENT"
5800 Hesston round baler, I.H. #40 P.T.O. spreader,
M.F. 41 &amp; J.D. mower parts, MM350 picker 2 row,
12 roU husking bed, #41 Dyance balance 7' M.F,
mower, 1129 M.F. wheel rake', 8"x24' auger .w/gear
box, '702 ·unl Harvester V6 super sheUer w/40"
head, Nl 324. two row picker w/3/4 sheUer, round
bale ·unroUer, H. cultivators, wagon hitches for
balers, bush hog tail wheels &amp; ·hitches, 6' bush
hog,single chain elevator (JD &amp; AC hay conditions,
rotary cutters, lH 45 &amp; Ford bales &amp; M.F. 119 &amp; 124,
haybine, Hesston mower plow parts, blade
parts).
·
wN4 Wise. engine, 3 pt. 7 112' · MB
sweeper, Sweepster 3 pt. 6' PTb broom, Steam
Jenny, Chain S!IW sharpener, metal schoo( desks,
shaking machine, exercise bike, micronfish viewer,
M.F., M.H., MM and IH operation &amp; parts manuals,
mise, 6 &amp; 12. voll rebuill generators &amp; starters,
Splitting Jack for tractor. 3 pt. cut off saw wlbelt
pulley, advertising signs Briggs, Bush hog,
Jacobson, Yardman, and New Idea, AC G tires,
new disc blades 16", 17" &amp; 20", level kit for N.l. 3 pt.
com picker, acetylene oulfit, new 6 bolt AC D17
wheel, Nl double chain 42', Nl conveyor for
spreader, Forney 180 AMP welder, New 4x9 front
wheels. MF"1.65 "hOud;-en-glnlJ sta(ld, lawn tires &amp;
wl:l eels, used ~art s of all kindsc
·
·"something Just For Youll Too much to (ist.
Come p'repared for weather."'
"USED ITEMS"
Lawn tractors, chain saws, string trimmers, sheet
metal, Homelite water pump, PTO shields, boxes &amp;
buckets, bOI!S &amp; U jOints. Piles of Junk!! I
.'
"NEW ITEMS"
New Idea and Hession parts. Toys &amp; Hesston belt
buckles .
.
Owner • D &amp; D Farm Equipment Inc.

THURSDAY,

MARcil 2, 1995
AT 7:00P.M.

From
TurnGallipolis,
Right Onto•;;,,,';;;i'C.;I;;;~,
r

TRUCKLOAD OF
CARPET
NEW FURNITURE
Living Room St;~ites, l)inette
Sets, Lamps, Recliners.

11

And Not As Nerdy.
Happy

Rachel

American Legion
Auxiliary \,Jnil..27
Special meeting
Feb. 28, 1995 7:30p.m.
Election·for Secretary and
Amendments to

ANGELL ACCOUNTING
For Complete, Prolesslonallr\lllvidu~
and Business Tax Preparation,
ASK US ABOUT ELECTRONIC
FILING.
'«6·8677
736 Second Ave.

•'

ATTENTION
Cliffside Golfers
Annual Membership Dues
March 1st, 1995
After that must pay green fees

.' '
For all your Video Needs
Transfers, Video Taping etc.
Call VIDEO TRANSFERS

TRUCK"

Marlin Wedemeyer,
Auctioneer ·
(614) 379-2720

licensed &amp; 'Bonded Stale of Ohio, Lie. 13615
NOT IIESPONIBLE FORACCIDIM'S OR Loss OF I'ROPEIITY

•

'
BOOTS
All leather Western Boots
Reg . $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
Engineer........................ $49.00
Wellington ................... ...$49.00
Loggers ........... ,,............. $50·55
Harnf;)SS ............., .......'· .$59.00
Carollna·Georgla·H&amp;H .
Insulated, Safety, Gortex
Swain Furniture 62 Oliv.e St.
Gallipolis
All U.S. Made

." . mnr-------------~
..'

a

.

61 4-446-3401
A Precious Gift
From God To Me,
· How Time Flies···
You're 33!!
Birthday Blessings Carla! t

On Our Menu
Saturday &amp; Sunday
Roast Beef &amp; Pork·Chop
Dinners, BBQ Beef Ribs

Cancelled/Rejected
• DUI • No Prior
Insurance

Pirate's Cove
Restaurant

All Ages, All Risks

St. At. 160 Bidwell, Oh

We try to insure

388-9823
.

AUTOHIO Insurance

LAYNE FURNITURE
NEW SHIPMENT
LIVING ROOM SUITES·
SOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRICED $450 TO $H)gs
LANE MOTION SETS
SOFA &amp; RECLINER
$1195
Mon. thru Sat. 9,5 p.m. 446.0322
3 miles Qut Bulavilte Pike

NEW BULBS
are in our Wolf facial
tanning beds. Unlimited
tanning forthe'month pf
March for $30. Also
come and s~e Joanna
Allbright for hair cuts, .
perms , and manicures at

,_ . . .

Col :nt-J'M.G010 IJtL 1710, I
AJI. To 11 P.ll. 7 OoyL

-lim·-·-·-

Livestock Hauling
Arrowoods Farm
·245-9254 or 682-7263
ALL-STAR Waterbeds
has movectto 266
Upper River Rd. next
to Kenny's Auto

Salon of Beauty

44

Clrlltl
pa'o •tdlr
- In _...
-Mel .Athena
.._

-n
ooo nU

nUt,.lilw -

onc1

~Ocuvlooondr;:::ot
7,

' :tl):;-:~·c::...-••..:
Up In

Plllt, Air, N':: ,.,.

,,,.....,.tor,

~
1111 lc-

-.

2 .....

~~·Hal

.....
-__ . . . ., ....rs.

....

monthly

1::"',_~

,IDO

•

4Awtllcl.! I 1 owe*'......
. . -. .

~~~-· , . -

......._.11ft

1984 Mxl'O -

wll'tl12 ox•

... Port- 81-'1~ _ , 3br., 1 """ .,""""" . ..
r
lmrnocllatoty,
tto,ICIO. :IQ4.Il5.
.....
1ho "'"' ··- •
.•
1124
clowa,
JIM.e71-4417
...'
K • C Pump lnol-tlon, - .·
ropolro.
Free.014-oo,
M
tr
r . - 1~Forw11Po~M~, ~.z
both, CA. ax12 - . b10 '
1104472-4:111.

~~·

Sugar Free Bulk Candy
Assorted Easter Candy .
melting discs
Assorted varieties
Candy Bars
Coca Cola Products
24 pack $5.75
Ohio Valley Warehouse
Old At. 35 Across from
fairgrounds Gallipolis

: GaOia County ·

now on SALE!

Democrat Chili Dinner

~top in today.

Feb , 27th - 6 pm at

at

$245

Comm1,1nity

AJC,

on-site

room,

laundry,

Management,

Maintenance provided.

614-992-3055 TOO 1-800-750-0750
~

Equal Housing Opportunity .

Ill

•Ponl• ·-· - -

..........

~---------=---=-------------------Real Estate Genaral

1o1..._~, ~==============:::;
.....
·
77W711...,.,
Ctovl011 MilO tot Aolo Lot.
t1i,OOO 080. 3D+r~ lftlr
rontod
wv,

I BR, 1 lotlt, CA, Coii!Nol
Colli,., 2 Dooka. ,__ Yonl, 1
On Loll,

sa.ooo,

DOUILEWIDE

IPI"*•

lito Oul

11t

~

uttaa

18M

OFFICE

992·2886

REPO,

never lived In, no d
to qu.lllld tMw: llw Mu&amp;J

a ... up. .....l'SI-4111

.

Oou-~.
-­
ln. Coli R-11-1-.
-~

101'0. ""'""""" ........
- t i l l Rod_, MIIM, llllllo
- , Tolol Eloolllo, U........

205 North Second Ave.

f!lnt. ll'!odJ To On
CoriwLot_IMw_
Coull.' PMM 111 ••

-7'187.
LIIIITED

Bualneas
OpportUnity
F.....

ttl1ll

~

bPfERI - Mll8 J.
DOWN. No Pavn•u

oftor lyro. -

letup. 304-711 . . .

-NOrto--1
alth poop1o rou=·~ond
,...
_ _ ,.... ...... -

od

.

1.o0111 Vendlna luMnen For
.....
All C:.oh --. 1~101111

llolhtory 1

lnol--

........

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

.,._

3br.., SUI

• INOilCEI
OliO VAWY PUIUIHINO CO.
n

'

-18M Mtm,
!ng, · ......... 1
homww:
.... .........,
·FAD tot ron1.
SI20 ....... ond ..... ,..

--

Middleport, OH
MIDDLEPORT· Rutlan d Sl. · A 2 story house with 3
bedroom s, 2 baths , dining room, front porch w ith a river
view and a heat pump. Has full basement. ASKING 20,000
MIDDLEPORT· North 2nd Ave. · a 5 uni1 apartment

building . The on e apartment could be a businese location .
Has a great income and a great location. Has a
Jn.~e_ and a g[eal- loca lion- to r- a- bus,iness.-~ lmiMCIIa~d
poss~;tssi on .

NEW IIANIC - 1 Onll 4 Ioiii

-llvod ln. -1'111-nk

Rea l Estate

1Ycoon Loka- .... lol,
'12110 - . county
~- '!"WW'·
114-.......
117. -.... fiZ,IOtl,
.
All real estate advenlsl og In
thiSne wspaper Is 5ubjec;:tto
the Fede ral Fair Houslng Act .
or 1968 which makes It Illegal
to advertise •any preference,
limitation or dlscrtmlnation
based on ra~e . ooJor, religion,
sex fa milial status or nalional
origin, or any intention to
make any such pre ference,
llmllatton or discrimination."

38

ReiiEilale
wanted

Wloh T o - - Joto- 01
Htlo •

w- en ...... c.n.

1Joo1,114-m.M.

Rent als

PINE GROVE ROAD· II you have always wanted

a nice

home and mini , f arm . Here it 1isl The house has 2·3

bedrooms, Cen1ral Air, Heal Pump, and equipped kitchen.
~ppro• lm ately 5 112 acres with most olltlenced and a nice
barn and other buildings.
ASKING $55,000
RACINE·

Rt.

124- Waillill you see this 3 bedroom home

with beautiful hardwood floors in living roam a detached 2
car garage w ith ~ bedroom apartment over lt. appr ox. 5

acres.

115,000

POMEROY· Main St. · A commercial building with 2,000 sq.
fl. and 3 apartments above that was remodeled recently and
has newer furnaces .- The upstairs rents for $800.00 a month
and the downstairs is leased on a tong term lease . SSI,OOO

LANGSVILLE· You'll love to come home to rela• In the

This newspaper wli1 not
lcnowllngly accept
advertisements tor real estate
which Is in violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
actvenlsed In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunl1y basis.

"Country in this 2 bedroom ranch with equipped kitchen
sitting on 13 acres. U you en joy hun.ting this is the place for

you.

.•

$35,000

McCUMBER RD. · Buy ellher 48 acres and the house and

outbuildings or buy 98 acres and the house and outlbullcllngi,
2 story home has 8 rooms, 6 bedrooms, 1 112 bath s, 2 bay
win dow s , ne wer yinyl si ding , 2 car garage, ce llar with
storage ~bove and a 24x30 metal barn .

I

HOUSE • 48 acreo $711,000
HOUSE • t8 acroo $81,000
POMEROY· Beech Street· A 2 story 15 yr. old colonial

AmVets Building in
Breath Easy Meeting
March 1 , 1995
Wednesday 2:00 p.m.
Holzer Medical Center
French 500 Room
Speaker:
Dr. Rick Boone, Ph. D
Title: Catching Your
Br,eath: The
P~ych.ologicai.Aspect of
Pulmonary Rehabilitation
For More Information
. Call Holzer Ho~ine

starting

refrigerat()r,

- - Cllonod Light HouUng. ·

0

rent

. Basic

'IIGDdiii11W', ~

tem.

,._.,..... , Stnt~:

Handicapped.

Resident pays electric only. Range,

-YW Wartl
.. - Wlndowa
...... W
~~

&amp;

11112 Mtm, Ioiii - . bsd OOMJ OM bMh, Mdl

do : ;

Pol~

Middleport, Ohio
'
Now accepting applications for one
BR_apts. · FmHA subsidized. Senior,

Di~bled,'

'"'_..
1IICIIIIOblkl----,

WIN

STONEWOOD APARTMENTS

1177 - . . .. 1 - . -

_,.., ...'t:.~ -fdrr!rl.-==" ...,""'

....,.ncee
...-.114-'1112-MOS.
lodr

·1'1011• ' nlng,

Apartment
fOr Rent

480 State Route 7 N.

· Center.
Everything in store

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

18 Wanted to Do
- IM44U111.
1111 ~•. 2 bodroomo, t
AM'INo-.crqtot•- lwllt,- • • -· ._.,., or 1 - :::=:::=:~:::::..-:::"":':';_-..,.....,.
. . 1117.

me.

Lissa's River View ·

446-4660

•

.:-:z:

,. ...,.

A.K.C. Reg. Airedale puppies
8 weeks old. shots and
wormed . Good with children
excellant watch dogs.
. 614·388·8692 Bill Race

Gallipolis

'

1

There was gossip going around ttia
neighborhood that reall y bothered
V\'hen I told my Mother how concerned
1 was, she said, • Don't worry, when·
gossip grows old it will soon BECOME
a MYTH."

Ina. on

Gallipolis, Ohio

"

=...
"u

"ffJ .:. ~~

Phone (614)446·6111

' .

THROAT
CYMBAL
GEMINI
FACADE
RADIUM
KITTEN
BECOME a MYTH

21

SR-22 ·
'

ATTENTION LADIES!!!
Only 3 months to go
until swi msuit season
C all
Ladies Preference
Health Club and ask
about our
Valentine Special

ANSWERS TO
SCRAM-LETS

There ,will be
ogen door
meeting of Buckeye Rural
Electric Corp. for changa .
March 2nd 7 p .m. at the
WAYNE'S PLACE
.Senior Citizens building in
Middleport, Ohio
Gallipolis, Ohio St. Rt. 160
Presents
State Rep. John Carey will
·"BLITZKRIEG" .
be in attenaance. Ail · ~1-~L-=-~-,
members are urged to
Fri. March 3 9:30 pm till
attend .
· 1:30 am 2.00 Cover

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

home w ith a fantastic vie w. Has 3·4 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces,

3 1/2 bat_hs , family room , form at dining room , finished
basement in ground swi mmi~g pool , solar hea t, satellite
dis h. 2 car garage, and lots of privacy, sitting on 25 acres.

Kanauga.
Everyone Welcome

$133,000

$1 0/person, children
under 12 attend free.

POMEROY· F1sher Street· Almost an acre lol with lots of
frontage co uld ha ve 2-3 building sites . Has an older house
that needs lots of work.
S1 1,000

MIDDLEPORT· !' large lot with lots ol flowers and trees. A2
story stone home with 2 bedrooms. dining room , and 1 1/2
bath s, f ull basemen t. Has nice cabinets in k itchen a"nd
kitchen is equipped.
$35,000.

44

DEWI.TTS RUN ROAD· A t 2 year old 3 bed10om 1anch

. ' ~Ridln!lnt
for Rent- . .

home with- 2- !5aths, 2 ca r garage, securrfy

pumQ; and 2 a_ares ol !!e~uti iJ,JI Ia~dsQBPQ.

~

WATERS EDGE APARTMENTS
Syracuse,

1-800-462·5255

Now "SVallble

Ohio

systinl,

.

hea t

151,000

POMEROY· Willow Creek Ad. Just off Rt 7 &amp; 33 close to
Pamida. II has 3 bedrooms , ranch, with 2 bath, equipped
kitchen , heat pump, and detached 2 car garage on appro•:

2 acres. WAS 551,900.00

NOW ·150,000

FmHA One BR apts.

Se.nlor, Disabled, Handicapped,
Basic monthly Rent

·'

~

$269.00. .

Resident pays electric only Range,
Refrigerator,

Call 446-2342
or 992-2156

Aft; on -site laundry,

Community Room, Management,
Maintenance provided
SEE MA~AGER FOR RENT up SpECIAL
' 614-992-6419 TOO 1
.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

LAINGi&gt;VII-LE· Crouser Road· A nice 3 ·bedroom
style home with heat pump, all&lt;iched one car garage,
one car detached garage, abOve ground pool and storooO:
building on nice laying lol
ONLY $45,,000

'
Equal Housing Opportunity
'

•
.... .. .. ... . .....,...
~

-~-

Kyger Creek Rinky Dink Assoc.
will hold final baseball/softball
sign-ups on Thursday, March 2,
from · 6:00 • 7:30 pm at
Cheshire·Kyger Middle School.

446-6939 or 441 ·0547

1985 GMC 7000 VB gas, 31 ;270 miles w/Pitman
Hydra Lift WL900. This truck is consigned by bank.
(Sold !illbject to confirmation)
·
CASH · POSITIVE 10 · REFRESHMENTS BY
ALEXANDER LIONS CLUB
DAN SMil'H AUCTIONEER RACINE OHIO
·.
57681344.0hio # 515 W. VA. '
" ~Tractor, Eq. &amp; Trucks will sell at 12:00 Noon"'
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property
"Anno11ncements by Auctioneer take precidence
over printed matters"
·

Also: Sale Every Saturday At
7:00P.M.

Guess Who 's 30

WARREN BUILDERS
We .specialize in custom
decks, roofs, remodeling ,
landscaping &amp; fencing .
Meeting the needs in the
Ohio Valley,
·Free Estimates,
reasonable rates
441 -1046 or 256·6998

everyone!

-

~~~~~~=
Eoolllllit Poy, Ell·

We especially want to thank th!! slalf at
McCoy·Moore, Pastors Hogg and Lusher, Bill
Lloyd, Margaret Evans, Seaford Jordan, the
Veterans, the Pallbearers, and the Masons
lor their involvement in the service. .

rel ative , co · w orkc rs

. ISAAC'S AUCTION SERVICE
. •springlime Special•
In appreciation for our most successful year yet
we will be charging only 10% commission for the
entire month of March!! Now's the time to clean
your garage, attic, outbuildings etc. We hope to
make !his year even bigger!
With weekly sales since 1965 we've sold most
anything you can come up with!
Our huge advertising budget draws more
buyers to get you more money for your
merchandise! If you have quality goods our
advertising will draw the buyers to get you top
money!
.
No sale too large • we can handle them all!
Year 'round price on public auction at your
location we charge 10% commission &amp; help set·
up your sale· you pay advertising 5%
commission on anything motorized that you ride
or drive.
Schedule your outside sale early so we can
have plenty of time to advertise.
Jt.you live "anywhere" in Ohio, Indiana or West
rglnia we can handle your sale.! Licensed in
Ohio, Indiana, W. V. #1030
Auctioneer- Fin.ls "Ike" Isaac
Phone 614-386-9370
Or check with Virgil Isaac at.Isaac's Feed
Store Phone 614-386-8880
Monday thru Sat. 10 am· 5 pm

"MISC."

NMd p

'

Saturday March 4, 1995, 10 a.m.
CHARLIE'S &amp; CO. is going out of Business and
selling the.contents of their restaurant.
DIRECTIONS: 35 Court $1. Gallipolis, Ohio
PARKING: Available -around park front across
2nd avenue from s11le.
RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT: 3 tub stainless steel
slnk.wlth prep table (12" x 14" tubs): 3 pc. 7 up
menu board, high chair, 2 booster seats, chip racks,
Pepsi mirror, 6 ft. + 8 ft. Kelvinator Ice cream
freezers, 15" x 8 ft. wall sheltnegs, 2 side tables, 3
booths, stools, 2·38" x 7' bar sections, small
appliances, National cash register (#6127612),
Stoelting Slush machine, Nestle's. hot cocoa
machine , "Unle _$quirt" fountain dispenseG small
white sink, Scotsman ice machine (auger doesn't
work), Steamro + Star steamers, Commer. 2 lamp
heat lamp, 2 gal. Wells deep fryer, Commer.
Toastmaster .electric griU (31" x 20"), Hamilton
Beach 3 mixer milk shake machine, toaster oven,
Nestea ice tea machine, Bunn coHee maker, coffee
pots, GE refrigerator, large comm~;~r. 4 door
refrigerator, Hot Tote warmer, 3 hot display cases, 2
tier table, Old Hickory knives, 31" x 7' vent, single
hot plate, loads of misc. supplies.
MISC: :2 ceiling fahs, GE air conditioner, oak coat
rack, pictures, hanging light, wall oil lamps, metal
step stool, weather center, bubble gum dispenser,
cloths dryer, clock, door bell, 4 h. light, elect. +
manual cash registers, 5' x 15' awing, 2 appl.
compressors, and other mise Items.
AUCTIONEER: FINIS "IKE" ISAAC
Licensed and bonded Ohio #3728
West Virginia 11030
"PHONE (614) 388-9370, or 388-8880
.
Charlie: 446-4052 or 446-1030
Available for household, estate, farm and charity
.
auctions.
Not responsible for iostitems or accidents.
· TERMS:-0ash or approved ch,eck with ID
All items so(d as is and where is. ·

quite:

CEO does.
PUBUC NOTICE
Eftoctlvo 03..01-115, Golllo
WoniOd To Buy: JUnk Aulae .. t7 llouotv i"'"
We will train you to sell
Motropollttn Houolng
our
financial products and
With
Or
WitMoten.
Col
ond
·
~
1.otry Uvetr. 11W" 1303.
or~ OftorUOpm.
1
Authority will rooumo tho
services. Once we teach
LIFEGUARDS
Top PrieM Pokl: All Old U.S.
taking of appllcallono lor
you how to se'lect target
Rental Aulatenco ond
Applications
are
now
eotno,
Gold
Collie,
markets,
you can choose
Gold Cotno. II.U. Coin lhop,
Public Houalng Aparlmen...
your clients. And our
111 SecondA~GilltJaiiL
being
accepted
at
the
, Tho Authority Ia located at en.1 • - F-lo Cockor
trai ni ng allowance will
Ollloe llllng Clorll
Park &amp; Recreation
• 381 Bucli Ridge Rd. Bidwell, Stoonioi/T- t Y•r Okl Good W.ntod To lur ~ help
you get staned.
' · Oh, 45814, (814) 448-0251, 'Mih Clllldnn, To Countl'j', IM- Homo, Coli~
Wloolectionl. ooruputer
~
a den- Dept.. 518 2nd.Ave.
211-1U7.
~
'Jiille R. WlllllliiiJ, ExiCutiVt
til blllnf ........... "'"' .
As a Met Rep, you con1rol
Gallipolis, Oh 45631.
Dl..ctor,GMHA. · .
-tolol~cloPt.
6
Lost&amp;
Found
your
succ ess. ""': o, if you
PI
n1 R Dl''"i,= 111o1n tit,
:: February 28, 27, 11195
Applicants must be 16
have the dri yc, we have the
Pt. P-,'WV
l.aol: ......... INC! clog, Wontod: ChlcMno, ou~~
yrs ..of age or older.
opportun'it ies for you. Call
'.
A 11110 U ll CCill en! S
• - • • lo ..llt!!l LAiarl erea. Ducko, Robblto, Ooolo, l.*d 10 Eom up t o . - - , olulflng
:IOW75oHIS 4:.....,:30, or 875- ln. Toblo a-, Aloo!J!l:r"' Chlck- enull F E II holM. Start naw.
us no~ to sfart a rewarding
•'
_,dor8:311. .
.ono &amp; Robblta For
•~ No ~·a. F,_ Miff'
caicer.
'
Free lnlonnotlon. No Obllgilllon.
eeeo;1 A.ll. To 10 P.ll.
3
Loll:
Ooldln
llblewa,
Sind II.A.S.E to tltorltng, Dolll.
.,........,._~ .. -_tean..Arw..aa. ;we:... Wontod: Lll1lo Tylta O..door
POOL !JIAN~G~R
Metllfe ·
Tovo Fo&lt; Age 'Group t~ 114- ~~· lol ~ Orloildo, FL
114 4tl 2:2.
Desired qualifications
245-6117.
.
P.O. Bolt 87
include: Red Cross
........ Cotnmunlly /Itt;
7
Yard Sale
W.rttod: Stoolllltlll - · 114- lion AaoiiCJ A-tile A
Lifeguard, Trainer
Parkersburg, WV
:J711.Z751.
Llmltecf AmOunt Of Dlrl crtld
certified,
POOL,
valid
26102
Roi~Fundo. n..
F - con 1o UOod To ~r Tho
1st aide/CPA,
Ph:
(304)
428·7146
Galllpolla
COOt
01
Rolrotnl,.
111111on,
W..nlild: l.*d lArgo~­
Management and
t=e., TaiL aDill) At ArM
Or
KMMI
A
Prtcat
•'
&amp;VIcinity
Fax (304) 428·1834
Scheduling skilts . Send
Sc-SuchAoThiUnl•• ..,
114-441-M11 Aftrllmo.
•
01 Rio lo ckrc,. Hilla
• • • Fat
""
oporto, ALLYIIII-- lo-In
Resume to: Director of
•.
•• d
(buket.. U,
Parks
&amp; Recreation. 518
.-.,... "!"~ onll much, muclt tt.
Employment
Services
~::-~
· DEADIJNE:
. . . "'" 1111 2:00
to to ......
run.
JOIN MET. IT I'A~S...
morw. ,..... now 1400 12e eooo - •r bo
2nd
Ave.
GaUipolis, Oh,
• IM ......
.... 114171, 82.1Wmln. lluol bo llundoJ OMetUW
Frldoy,' lllondiJr • 2:00
45631. Applications
. .. C:0.(102lll4 11120.
p.m.._r.
11 Help wanted
excepted until 5:00 pm
....._,_
..,, ,__ '-•·
New Y..... fl Y 10010
J Wll Hoi h A-.anefble For
AVON I AI ~~ I ~
Public Sate
=::,::Thin IIJ OWn. 8
L.._;.:M:::a::,:rc~h.:;3~,:19:9:5:.=~_:=~":""':::
'-""
Spooro,--.
&amp;AuctiOn
•rtl&gt;--thooloter
8
Public Sal~
Coli-One
.....ld.. tx.lnn- Md .ft.
ullvlna
WI In Pae•QI
Henry · - tho
durlng
&amp; Auction
clvkluolo - o d In bol,.

R--

.

- Cakes- Cakes
Birthdays, Anniversaries,
Showers , Weddings Bring
Sally your Logo or Emblem
she will duplicate it in your
special order. Also wedding
mints and chocolates
Ca~es by Sally at
D .J.'s Craft Shop
2390 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Oh 446·2134

PUBLIC AUCTION

simply, if you make big
sales, you'll get big pay.
.Public Notice .

BULLETIN BOARD

-·~~- ·~~~~·:
All you need is
delermination and

SUndlty

See Scram-Lets on P age D-5.

Public Sale
a. Auction

L.C. Tiffany signed Jack- In -PuPil Vase
(12")Faunile, griswold rabbit &amp; Lamb cast iron cake
molds, .Carnival glass, snow baby, pink depression,
Fostori a candleholder &amp; goblets, fenton, nippon,
westmoreland d.egenhart, flow blue, shirley temple
carnival tea sets, chocolate glass, slag glass, brooke
bond tea cast iron del. truck, cast iron squire!
nutcracker, cast iron horse &amp; .wagon (transfer) cast
wagner miniature waffl ~ iron, cast iron banks (city
bank &amp; mail box) cast b ~ ld og bot!le open, giswold
ashtray, griswold square, py skillet #2103, paper
weights (glass), crocks, silver dollars, foreign coins,
cowboy kn ives (Hopalong Cassity, Roy Rogers, etc)
Fenton's Louise Piper Student lamp floral paHem.
More merchandise arriving daily as we clear out
space frQm weekly sales,
For more info. call
614-388-9370 or 614-388-8880
· Auctioneer: Finis " Ike" Isaac
Licensed &amp; Bonded OH, IN,. WV #1030
Not responsible for accidents or lost items
Now
sales - call
!

How

Ott Point Plellarit, WV

1985

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE
Antique &amp; Collectible Auction
March 4th at 7:00 p.m.
Partial List

;o.;;;.i" ...;;;o.

PISCES (Feb. 20..March 201 Conditions LEO (July 23·Aug. 221 Arrangements 1n that spells profit.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 1!il
could be propitious for advans ing a wh1ch you work w1 th others ha~e_ a str?ng

your A6tro·Graph predictions lor the

Help Wanted

pulleys.
mg
TAURUS (April 20-May 20l The 1rend IS SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 221 You may
successful w1th '" the Past.
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 201Today you're

-

Help Wanted

-;:;j;;~~;;~;;j

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 191 One ol your UBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 231 You are bener
greatest asti&lt;!ls today W+~ be your skill at eqwpped~o. opetata merually tban phi's"
gen1ng your pomts across. To your credit,
you'll. do thiS by teachtng, not by preach-

26,1995

Point Plelllnt, WV

,

I

I'

�Sunday Tlmes--:.senunei--PIIge-05

__ ...
·--51

Houlehold

NORTH
•B 2

BRIDGE

Good a

........

WEST
•A Q J

PffiLLIP
ALDER

Ollf..l'lt :I4UMI

Ad·
. ..ClllfllCNIIIIIII.
-.-.
tt.n.CNIII

2711.

EAST

¥AQ86 5 4 2
• 8 5 4
6 3

By Phillip Alder

~--­

- - . . . N. .,.._
0112, IIIII'- o1A - -

-DIIhwr·
_.....,
,.....,.._............,,..,..
fllel(£111 RJAIITUII£

~

.....
2 -

.... --.-.

112 1111. .lollloho Rd. Pt.

~

Untwa•t

no• aoeo To
Of Mo a.-.-. ....,.

--.1011122111.
-.~~ad - .
.........

,..,._--.
.

SWAIN
MJCI'IOH 1 RJIINITIIR£.

Zbr., ., - . - Uplond
a
OIW•.• onRIII=IIa. ,._, Ueld
Ad
•••
.......
.
~
~ . . . . · ~ lflf ,,

..... .._. 2 Rntcxw•, ca.

~c:z:

-

Porldng, Nloe I ltdroom MJ7'D $310111o.
• ElectriD IWM•, 1M SIR I~

P.M.I14 4412111.

44

Wcftboae&amp; ,l 1ttilltiL
VI'IIA FUIINITIIII£
... 4411111

Ouolly .... •..............
And ApPlE nCIT GrUI 01111 On
Caoh lind Cer'l'! AEHT4oOWN
Ancf ~---~~ All
t'Q
n

-DIIhwr-·54

Apllrtment
for Rent

Mlscellaneoua

Merchandlae

Lag--

Farm

SupplieS
&amp; Livestock

John Ruskin, the English author and
art critic, wrote, "Value is the life-giving pcwer of anything; cost, the quanti·
ty .of labour required to produce it;
pnce, the quantity of labour which its
pcssessor will take in exchange for it."
In bridge, sometimes exchanging one
trick for another has great value, mak·
mg the difference between success and
failure. ·
On today's deal, West led the club
king against four hearts . Then he
switched to·his singleton trump, which
South won in hand with the queen.
South saw that, from the auction, West
held the spade ace . And diamonds
would have to break 3·2, so that South's
spade losers could be discarded.
· South's first thought was an avoid·
ance play in diamonds. He could lead
twice through West , ducking in the
dummy if West had to play the queen.
However, as · you can see , this line
would have failed. East would have won
a diamond trick and switched to a
spade, defeating the contract.
Then South saw the right line. After

61

Real

-Ford~...:;;;:
Bill.
Good CGndlllon,

0327.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West
South
West North East
••
11
Pa•s

63

~-

c-- Coi-

VM, 1 Hereford 711on1M; 1 lull

3•

Pass

Pass

3•

Pass

4•
All pass
lead: • K

winning the trump switch at trick two,
declarer entered dummy with a trump,
called. for the club queen and discarded
a diamond from hand. West was wei·
ci&gt;me to the trick, but now dummy's di·
amonds could be established without
letting East get the lead. As a trump
. entry remained in the dummy, West
had to cash his spade ace to stop the
overtrick.
Hopefully the cost - the quantity· of
labor - required by South to produce
this play wasn't so great that he made
ti~d errors on ·later deals!

==--7 . . .

·-sI llonoho,
~ For ..... - .

0111,

Estate General

Wood Realty, Inc.

MY L C A B

.Phillip Alder's new book , "Get
Smarter at Bridge," is available,
autographed upon request, for
$14.95 from P.O. Box 169, .Ros1yn
Hts., NY 11577-0169. .

.-.._ -............ . =-..
""""· -

Jhqulld.~

'"'"
-

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

,.,... . -

•

.

lllllfiiiY

10-.;!

:,;;r~~n:.~
1.
.

·-?n'.
~

,._1' ':aLL Ell I OGJ,

4lol,

-

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

e....m.

._we.

411

Plok.U, Porto lltdo.

Colli, Dooro, .. ' .......
- · 4x4 Drl¥o Train Porto. I
....., Iouth 01 OoHipollo AI JIJOo
lion Ill. 7 I At. 211. NEW

PHONE-lEA: 1114-44~

¥4. • """·

Condition,

...... 111110, · -

:.r~4WD,I

~---~

_"r"_...,._,_..,.....;.......,.-1"'
"'

~ There was gossip going

:--JL..:-.1--L.--L-.L.....J around the neighborhood that

A RMU D I

really bothered me.\Nhen i told
t--r-_,.-,..:;..-r~~ my .Mother how concerned I
9
was, she said, • Don't worry,
~=~=====~ when gossip grows old it will
soon------ a----."

.

;.,..· ~ ·

HOME FOR SALE 3 bedroom, bath, living room, ream, kitchen, fenced in back yard. REALTOR OWNED
PRICED AT $45,000.00
'

VACANT LAND · Approximately 10 acres located
Bob McCormick Rd. Call lor mere Information.

OoH

Atbull

·

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER ........ 446·461H

79

C8mpet'11 ~

Motor Homes

Judy'DeWitt ...........................................44l·Ol6l
J, MerrUI Carter....................................379· l651
Ruth Barr............................................... 446· 01ll

.'G)
LE,.,...

Tammie DeWill .. 24S·0022
Martha Smith ........ 379-2651
Cindy Drongowskl245-9697
Cheryii A! mley....... 742·3171

1117 P_.. llopl 27.1 Fl. Fifth
- . Awnlna. ·11oo1,. ollt, 114:IIWP, 11444WOZ1.
Exctllonl
Condfdon, Air Condh-,

lllllllt
- c.n
114110
:.-::'
t'\"' -c:.o:..
.. _,.,.,_ co._

T I KNE T

O

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling In the missing words
you develop from ~ep No. 3 below.

-

- r-

n:aoo

4x4

1IT7 WIIJ mere 21' $4,000.~

-1111.

· - · 1......, olr, hi,OoO, IMM14411.tenlm
· go
llole. '1111- GS, Sl8l
......., ...... 11f"tll 3811.

74

Serv1ces

MOtorcycles
Home
lmproviiTienta

run,..........~1171 Cl '110
lor poilll.

con no!
bo
oJ111 ...

... Spin.

Horter Do........- .
-.-wsor.

FltA .Iow
klb of

rkllr, ~~ww•

e&amp;C · Oo!WN
Home
ltaw · tt l.,ou 4 llalnl...,_. ond llobllo Homo
wt I tier~ Uke tMw, - MHn On Aopolr. For frM Mllmoll eoll
Od=miCw~ 12.7!10. 1......aa2-eeeo a-1,114-8121321.

1113

COno IIIIo r.- Thurmon)

A

Aen'o TV Sorvlco, opocloi::S
In olio owvk:lng
olhof ........ Ctllo, 1llll).mGOII, wv -.a71-2311.

+-~'·ee Answer to Scram-Lets on Page D-3~~------~----·------~----------Real Estate Generat
Real Estate General

~OR SALE· VACANT LAND· approxlme1oly 200 acres
M or L located in Gallia &amp; . Jackaon Counties. Priced ai
$225 per acre , REALTOR OWNED. CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION.
.

304-773-5346 &amp;
614-992·3541

1J2 -

~

N E I MI G

kx:s1aci

PRECISION POST

........ IJMcl And

--JL1104114~­

ON RACCOO~CREEK·bedrooms 2 balh8
living room, dining r
·
car garag'.
on approxim~l .
as more or less. City
Schools. CALL~SEE!

• NoDopooll
.....

=~

, . , - - . . . - · Cuh And

11Wll-2t31.

::.t:t --·--. .....

LOT IN GREEN TWP FOR SALE· 156 X 100, City Willi
&amp; sewer, electric to pels. Priced at $14,000. Will st1t on
Land Contract· $5,000 down. payment, payments of
$191.23 per month for a period ol 5 yrs. Call for IliON
Information.

lloill1 112
...
....., ~~
c.
'CA,
2 ,_,

"" ..... -

,._,

NEW LISnNG· 2 homes located on approxlmetefy 1 112
acres. One home has 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms 1 112 balh8
living room, dining room, family, kitchen. One home hli
8 r~ms, 4 bedrooms , 2 baths, living room, kitchen,
lamtly room. Both have rural water, LP gas Furnace, and
more. Call for ai!P"'ntment to see.

t.. Tmlla- Ap.rtrnlllla.
'My .....1 ..... ~-. 2

Refrlgii'IIIOII

~

,._,--a.-.-

-

6

noo., _ _ olt.r.-

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

EI.I Ctrlcal &amp;

-.--~

-a...~ Von.

Hay &amp; Grain

~

84

Uoooi ............ l y - otut-

" ' - 1M -lntllM, .0.

Ad.

.,.. .
--·•:--

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

~.

~~~.:r--=

8

M

a.

llolot ~y ,,....

Llle

-Oi.V.~

... .........
______

Plumbing
Heating

---.
.
.
.
.
.
=T--.
-- ............
_. -... lout- ·BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
.-·--------

-6'-.....-,_--..,.

.32 Locust Street, Gallipolis
Allen C. Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Rea"or/Broker-446-0971
Mose Canteltlwy, Rea"or-446-3408
Jeanette Moore, Rea"or- 256-1745
Tim Watson, Realtor-446-2027

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

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Rearrange the 6 scrambled
words below to make 6
words. Print letters of
In Its line of squares.

446·1066

Uvlltock ·

2 Poll -

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Opening

Fann Equipment

AccesiOrlel

EoiltH loy CLAY I. POUAN - - - - - - -

IJioo To 'I
For ....., Trootot, - - . .

82

Auto Parts &amp;

"BtfSe

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Intriguing

Autos tor Stile

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Knit one, purl one

LAYNE'S RJAIITU,RI:
.....

71

C.O~Ton · -­
Soll

• 1096543
¥7 3
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6A K J 10 9 7 2 68 6
SOUTH

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Autoa for Sale

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71

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Autos

Sale

71

Autos lor Sale

on

FOR ·YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
- .~' 1-81J0.894-1066 ~

Transportation

180 Cherry St., VInton· 1
1/2 story, 3 BRs, '1 bath,
lull basement. $35,000

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENnRE USnNQS
PICK UP THE FREE QUAUTY HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS,
RETAIL STORES, SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS.

Real Estate General

~uophoM

Henry E. Cleland Ji-.. 992-6191

.-.oD.,...

~-lon~To

254 Circle Drive· 3 BAs. 131 Oak Drive- 3 BAs, 2
bath, LR/DR combo., 2 1/4 baths, full basement,
ac., mil $43,000
11404 32x35 deck plus 10 x 20
covered patio. $98,500

Hummlnablnllllllolc

Jociloon, OH, , _ , ·I

Tracy

l. Brinager .. .... 949-2439

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

Estate General
Henry

Kathleen M.

LOG HOMES
llpolalr8 Apoltmont, 20ii
,._,..
A - OoiHpolla, ·No

Pn, p.po.it I Refuw
qulred, 114 441 1017.

~II

A.

Comfort, convenience,
energy
efficiency,
durability
and
Oexibility in design are
.a few of the reasons
why 20,00 families wiD
build a Jog home this
year!
Appalachian

VALLEY VIEW
APARTMENTS
RIO GRANDE, OHIO
Now Auopllog Applcatlons:
1 &amp; 2 bedroom
apartments, wall to wall
: carpeting, new kitchen
• . appliances, on site
l,llundry facility, lenced In
. playground, on site
manager &amp; maintenance.
Water, sewer &amp; trash
paid by owner.
614·245-9170

45

SWEET DEAL
a Mobile Home with Two (2) Extra Rooms built on Plus a
screensd ln. It has 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, 8
.
up. Located on 3.75 acres with several
N1ce
Location. Ph. for appointment. 1735

Log

Structures has been a
leader in the log home
industry for over lS
years. Choose from
over
70 standard
models or •.we'll custom
design one for you.

. OWNER MAKES IT EASY III

PERFECT FOR EXPANDING FAMILY .
1.6 Acres +Or·, 3 BR, 1 1/2 bath, full
basement, 24x30 detached garage with
10 ft. doors. Great lor large trucks. Low
maintenance vinyl siding. Includes an
above.gro~nd pool. This is a must·see.
FHA approved .

Aaclng ao«a~. 5.1 HP onglno,
114--11 ., 114-8411-

baths , 1728 sq. h . 1..569
ac., mil $59 ,900
#506

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC. ~
446-3644
"""""""
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER - 446-9555

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.

. bedr~m mobile. home with heat pump, covered
le~~rpclrt and pat1o on mob1le home, rented lot in Gallipolis.
.'or. ret1red couple or first lime home buyer. Call now for
app01nlment.
• - t725

Call or write for .more
infomation.

VIAGINIA
SMITH,BIIOKEA ....... :.. 31M12ll
I

WILIIA WIUIAIISON .................... 286-4031

EUNICE NIEHM...............................-11197

f) ~palachian l;og

MTRICIAROSS ............................. 245-t575 ·

.Real Estate General

MEIGS COUNTY
BIG BEND REALTY, {1/VC.

1-800-458-9990

Real Estate General

1-800-585-7101
2
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley.............. 742-3171

11477 • LARGE BUILDING WITH LOTS
OF O.FFICE SPACE AND GARAGES
FOR TRUCKS ,. Frontage on Third Ave.
and Grape Street. Call lor details.

'B ;ooo
o,ooo

Goodl

·:~_llkAwo..,
-,.DrJof, - llolllgorotor,
T.V. Cl
·~-· ·
.

..

.

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•

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9L r/md

~&lt;75~

446~6806
Mai11 Offiu -J88-&amp;6l6
95~ CIDrll Cll4ptl Rd.
Billw~ll.

Ollio 45614

:~:~J~!~~:i~!~11::~

Mc~lichclls

31 on
+ acres a nice
quiet
i
~.,,,,,.... a two story h9me
lull basement,
with 3 bedrooms,
utility area, out buildings, well water, newer
lurnance &amp; shingle roof . Large garden
area. Mostly wooced wilh an abundance
of deer &amp; turkey also just minutes from the
Racine Locks &amp; Dam . Great spot lor
anyone who likes to hunt &amp; !ish &amp; just
. enJOY t.he outdoors! ASKING $49,900.

Brandt Officr • 446-6806

l l l.txllst Sr.
GotliJK!Ii.r, Ohio 45631

OLD LETART RD. • Beautiful country
setting. 1+ acre with nice modular home. 3
bedrooms , bath, added room on back ,
large enclosed . front porch , nice
lev·e l/sloping yafd with garage and
outbuildings plenty of room for a garden
spot. ASKING $49,500.
·

·..

.·,'
·,••
.

.. _.

1421 • OFFICES, OFRCES, OFFICES •
That's whal this 3,000 sq/11. IIUikllng
offers. Located on SR 160 near HoiHt
Ideal lor many uses. Call · lor
Information. .
.

·.....
•

BLAZER ROAIT · Ranch home, 3 BAs, 1
1/2 baths; LR, kitchen , 16 x 28 garage.
River Valley school district.
33 ACRES • M/L .corner of SA 325 and
Woods Mill Road, recroational land Only
$16,500.
$111,800 47 acree, mn, Harrison Twp.,
Elliott Road.

1453 • OHIO RIVER PROPERTY •
locsted at end o1 White Awnue
Garfield. Several lots $20,000.
lt411 • LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN
PEACE AND QUIET - Tllls could be 49.68 aetas, Andrews Rd., 8
home wltjl . ~ BRs, 2 t 12 ba1hs, LR, OR,
FA, heat pump, 2 car garage plus 24 K
48 detached garage.

orr

WE NEED
LISTINGS
·. WE'RE ABOttr
SOLDOIJT ,

... .

lormal dining
I. /'1. \/)/\(
bove ground
: •• · .
' I t t .00
1744

'
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•

yeer-oki

.I
.~ • ., ,

-·--

LOCATED IN THE CITY OF OAWPOLIS
Two story home, fu ll b89ement and garage has a great
deal to otter. Designed for great living . First 11oor has
formal entry with open stairway, formal ltvlng room wlih
fireplace, formal dlninQ room, Cherry cabh1ets line th e
walt of the extra large kitchen . Breakfast room and
powder room . Second noor oners tour bedrooms and
bath. Bedrooms are king size, carpet over hardWOOd
ftoors, bath haa q,lt ·new fb&lt;turea and Love Tub. Basement
has huge family room w/flroplace. bedroom , exercise
area, taundr; room and storage room . This hOme Is of
superb quall1y as the plumbing has been replaced. AJt
new all covering, beSutiful new carput thro ughout, new
windowS installed. Spacious kitchen with cherry cabinets .
Island for Jenn· Air range . Only private . shOwing will
decide the valools here.

•

'•
•
•

•

••

•••
•
•
•
•

CAlL VIRGINIA L SMITH «e-6806 or 388·8826

•
••

'' •.•
•• "'-e

RACINE • l'ackerville Rd. · Spacious
modular with 2 bedrooms, 2 Ml baths,
added room , family room with fireplace,
h acre with large 3 boy pole barn. Some
recent remodenng completed. ASKING
$64,900.
RACINE
ALOT OF H-OUSEl With
plenty of room to move! 1 1/2 slory home
features spaciou s living room, 3·4
bedrooms , facnlly room with stone
fireplace. hardwood flooring/ basem ent,
newer siding &amp; roo!, large ol , one car
garage &amp; outbuilding . ASKING $~0 . 000
MAKE AN OFFER I
. ,

I

·.•

rnclni

471511 EAGLE RIDGE ROAD! Aluminum sl~ed 1 1/2
story home, living room, kHchen, over sized detached
2 car garage. FA electric lurnance. Additional mobile
.home hook-up. Must call today lor an appointment!
.
1558
FIVE POINT .
area, family ,.,
pool. 21 ' x 24

.

•

tttzi4U(l,

·.

CffOR1IJI«&lt;Y

LOOKING FOR A NICE LOT? THEN CONSIDER
ONE OF THESE:
11
4.507 acre• mn
112
4.015 acre• mn
1
13
4. 702 acrea m/1
9,000
14 3.881 acree mn
1,000
15
4;190 acree m/1
5,000
18
5.442 •~rea mJI
10,000
17
11.141 acr. . m/1
11,000
18 10.320 ICrel m/1
11,000
19. 7.253acr. . m/1
.
7,000

.

·

Real Estate General

·.

NEW LISTING! IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY! For Ibis
1 1/2 story .home, 3 bedrooms, living room , dining 'room
k.ilchen complete w/refrigeralor &amp; range, 30' • 32' garag~
suuated al College Avenue. $20's.
1'746 ·

HouHhold

cu

SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFEREHCE

LYNDAFRAL£Y .......................... ... ue 11101

Ripley; WV 2527~

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

PH. 446·7699 OR

P.O. Box 614

441-1007

Sonny Garnes • 446-2707

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

~tructures, Inc.
Dept. GDT,

Carolyn Wasch.

Loretta McDade • 446· 7729

BUSINESS OFFICES &amp; SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE
KENNETH AMSBARY, REALTOR, PH. 245·5855
WILUS LEADINGHAM, BROKER

""nnl ·.....

•

Clela~d 992-6191

0FFICE 992-2259

154 Merrln Rd. • 3 BFis, 2

~~~~~:r. will finance with mcderate down payment. Lovely 2

IIDomo
or month.
-~~~~·
$120/lllo.Hoi •.
114 , ••••.

Sl

1119~2- 6191

Office ...... .................... 992-225,-

Furnished

Rooma

E. Cleland

\

1

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AFFORDABLE • STOP PAYING RENT!
No need to with this affordable . ready for
occupants home! Located on edge ol
Racine . 2-3 bedrooms , balh, t + acre
outbuildings. Close In yel private . NOT
BAD
FOR THE PRICE'! ASKING
$19,900.
NEW LISTING! Gold Ridge Rd. ·
Beautiful 8+ acres of · nice , cleared.
level/sloping land. TPC water &amp; eleclric
available. Pertect home or modular site. If
you• lookinQ for a building site ... check
this outl Ask1ng $12,000.

I

MIDDLEPORT . 2 story ,!ramo home that
has had some newer work completed
including siding &amp; roof, 3 bedrooms 1· 1/3
baths , appliances, fireplace, an additional
3 room building that could be used for
storage or rented as an apartment , cellar
area. NICE 'HOMEI Qu iet street. ASKING
$37,000.
.

JUST OUT OF TOWN I •Modul.::a;rl~·ippedl
wrth 3 bedroom s, 2 lull balhs, u'
kllchen, heal pump, 2+ acres
an
above ground pool. A little country . yet
ciQse 10 town . ASKING ~9,900.
VACAIH GROUND! · RIVER YIEWI
affordably pr iced 23.68+ acres mostly
wooded , ulililies available. Approx . 9
miles south .of the Ravenswood Bridge.
ASKING $17A500 OWNERS WILL
ACCEPT.A RE SONABLE OFFER!

IT'S GElTING CLOSE TO
SPRING! HOME BUYERS
WILL BE OUT IN FULL
FORCE! IF YOU WANT TO
,SELL NOW IS THE TIME
TO GE'F YOUR HOME
LISTED • WE'RE WAITING
TO HEAR FROM YOU!

�Pomeroy-Middleport

Pag&amp;-n6-Sunday Tlmee

-

Ohio Lottery

•

February 26, 1995

C'•lllpolls, OH Point Pleaxnt, WV

Eastern
eliminated
by Beaver
Eastern

F-36 Statistics

House of the week-· -

Design F-36 has a living room,
dining room, family room,
ki~chen with dinette, five bedrooms, two baths and a two-story
foyer, for a total2,196 square feet
of habitable space. Finishing the
standard basement option would
add a further 1,553 square feet of
living space.' The re is a two-ear
garage with a storage area .

Ample Space a Bonus in Traditional Style

Doors from the .master suite and
the family room lead to separate
terraces. The overall dimensions
of 46'8" by 54'4" include th e
garage. Foundation optio n s
include a standard basement. a
slab or a crawlspace foundation.
Generic foundation conversions
diagrams may be requested
when ordering the blueprints.

253
Pick 4:

2957
Super Lotto:
3-20-24-35-39-45
Kicker:

'Low,tonlghtln 40s. Rain.
Tuesday, rain. Hlgb In 50s.

5

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14 • 11 -4

Pick 3:

lhU·4

·,

·..

~-

l

II

•
nar ro w lap sidi ng , repeating
gables with half-ro und windows,
a sid e lig hted fron t entry and a
coverer! front porch. The roomy
in ter ior offers a tot al 2, 196
square fee t of space, with as
many as five bedrooms and large
. areas perfect both for fa mil y
activities ~nd entertaining.

To Order Study Plan

Inside; the luminous two-story
foyer includes a plant shelf over
th e front door and an open stairway with a balcony overlook
. above. To the left is a spacious
formal area that combines the liv-.
ing artd dining rooms. A fireplace
and .a cathedral ceiling are featured here. To the right of th e
foy e r. doubl e doo r.s open to a
cozy study or an optional fifth
bed room.
At the bac k of th e home, the
informal areas focus on an expansive family room with a combination fireplace and media center.
French doors on either side of
th e fireplace open to a backyard
terrace.
The kitchen, which adjoins the

II

Full study plan information on this house is available in a $4 baby
blueprint. Four booklets are also available at $4.95 each: Your Home-How
to Eluild. Buy or Sell It, Rancfl Homes. 24 of the most popular from this
feature, Practical Home Repairs, which tells how to handle 35 common
problems ; and, A-Frames and Other Vacation Homes, a collection of 24
styles. Send checkor money order payable to the Associated Press and this
label to: House of the Week. The Sunday- Times Sentinel. P.0 . Box 1562,

family room. feature s a .sunny
sink. a handy pantry and a bayed
dinette.
The master suite has its own
quiet corner on the main floor.
Double doors open to the suite,
which has a private terrace and a ~
bath with a dual-sink vanity , a
skylighted whirlpool tub, a separate shower and a large walk-in ·
closet. Nearby, a mud room with
a storage closet and laundry tacitities open to the two-car garage .
An open stairway leads to the
upper floor, which offers three
additional bedrooms and another
bath . A window with a plant shelf
brightens the stairwell and foyer
below.

F-36 UPPt:R FlOOR - ' - - - - . / f r ' - - - - - ' -'

FAMILY lUI

16·4 • IS· I

DNNGDI

~c..L

Clip thi s order and return label ·

Enclos~d Is $4 for plan No. - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - -

Enclosed Is $4§ 5 each lor ?t.e booklet(s) _ _ _ _ _ __,__ _
' Name __________________~------------------Street__________~~----------------------City _ _ _ _ _ _- : - - : - - - - - - - - - - State (ZIP) ______.__;___ _ _

~

_ _ _ _ _ _:.._

--

MAS1ER SUil'E
16 • 12·4

'

13. 25

Firm to relocate offices

New York, N.Y. 1011 6-1562.

POMEROY ~The, Hockman with attorneys and minimizes
Group will be moving its offices death-related taxes and administra~
from a home-based operation to a tive costs, he added. The company
new site outside Pomeroy.
, also offers help with health•insurThe HockQian Group, estab- ance claims.
lished in 1991. helps administer nappla B
.
-·.Wills, truSts and eslati! J?1pnnin~~. I"
8 an~orp~
Owner Dennis Hockman IS a ceru- ShOWS diVidend gain
lied paralegal.
·
The new office is loc·ated at
MARIETTA • The Board of
42994 State ~oute 124 outside . Directors of Peoples .B!I"c~ Inc.
Pomeroy. Th1s move was made declared a quarterly diVIdend m the
possible through a Small Business amount of $0.16 per share for
Administration loan from the Common Stoek. 1be dividend will
Enterprise Development Corp. in . be paid on April 1, 1995, 10 StoCk·
Athens, Hockman said.
hofders of record on March 15,
The firm coordinates contact 1995.

UVING 11M

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. ./1.- ; 'fl'- .

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I

·· F-36

· I 1-Jt. MArN 1LOOR
lliE 1WO-SI'ORY foyer is an elegant entry, suitable for this spacious hom Th f 'ly
·
I'
· r
1 th ·
e.
e. ami room 18 a sp~aw mg mto~a ga e!'ng
area, and convement to the roomy k1tchen. The dmette enJOys
bayed windows and views of the rear terrace. F'we bedrooms mak"
this a practical design, with one of the bedrooms able to function as
a study.

WEST VIRGINIA'S
LARGEST CONVERSION VAN DEALER WITH OVER 300 TO CHOOSE FROM!
.
~

$17988
'

No! ; Fees

~19'e&lt;r

'

BRAND NEW '95 CHM ASTRO EXTENDED
CONVERSION VAN
• Edended Chass1s
Power Brakes
o Trll Steerrng
o Crurse ,
o f1M/FM Cnssene
Power Wrndows
o Power Lock s
o 4 Captarn Charrs
o

• Dnver S1de Arr Bag

• AnHCO Brakes
• A r Condrtrofl
• AJtomatlc Overdn'o'e
• Vrsta Bay Wmdows
o Power Steermg

r

o

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S·SERIES.PICKUP
• Rear Anh-Lock Brakes
• Power Steenng
·Power Brakes

• SolaJil€d
• lndrrect Lrghtrng
• Premrum Wood Pkg . ·
• Fu!l Conversron
• Alummum Aunnrng Boards
• Loaded!

lr.cenh~e

• S~11erado
• 350 V-8 Power
o Automatic
o A11 Condition
o Power Steerrng

• Power Brakes
• Power Door Locks
• Power Wmdows
• AMIF~ Cassette
• Tilt Steenng

No Doc Fees. De!M!IOO'

• PowerBrakes
• Power Door Locks
• AM!FM Stereo
• TIH Steenng

.• Tilt. Crurse
Alurr,num Wheels

Air CondHion
• 3800 V-6 Power
·• Dual Airbags
• Anti -LOCk Brakes
o

• Power Brakes ·
• Powef Door Loctts
· Power Wrnoows

·PIS. Pill

• AMIFMCassette
·Trlt

• Trl! Slectino
• Ouise CoolrOI

o

• Power Steering
··Power Brakes
• Power Door LoCks
Windows

• AMIFM Stereo
o Tilt Steenng
• Cuslom Clolh lnlerK&gt;r

·loadeOt

TOU FREE 1·8011·822·0417 • 372·2844
344-5947. 422·0156"
• Taxes. Tag5. T~le Fee! ertra. Rebate ntU:Ied 10 sale poc;e ol f'IE'W ~etide ~sled .-hefe

.

Ohio's poor getting poorer,

I

II OuilldtEid

BRAND 10 '95llJISMIIILE cim.Ass SUPREME Sl.
CIJII'fS &amp;smAllS• AM/FM Cassene

\

• Alummum Wheels

AMIFM Cass~tte

'ESH SHIPMENT!
lS AND LT'S

WE'VE GOT '"EM ALL!

'
.111 ·1-.IAJIIIII Ill· III.IT

-11:-·IPI

~dvocate

says

Report finds missing records
delay hearings for parolees

. Updating system
'real expensive
pr/Qrity': official

BRAND NEW
'95CHEVY
4x4 BlAZER'S
2-

Reluctant witness
may make, break.
Simpson
case for _
- -·

• Trailer~ng Package

BRAND NEW '95 PONTIAC BOIINEVUE SE

Delay Wrpers
o Custom Cloth lnleriOf
• Loaded'
o

Hollister
updated
on needs

By GEORGE ABATE
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Assoc~
· led Press Writer
·
.
Ll- Gov. Nancy Hollister lauded
LO ANGELES - Despite all the· fancy_lawycrs. .with their snazzy
the state's recent efforts to improve
-=
co"'urtr
~ ·m graphics and top-Oight DNA expcrts, the outcome of the OJ.
sChools, particularly cxtta funding
Simpson trial may rest on the credibility of a housekeeper who says she
for the state's poorest schools. ,
doesn't even want to be here.
"
\
But, more school spending will
Rosa Lopez, a· potential alibi wimcss who used to work next door ro
not. solve all the problems, Hollistef
Simpson , reluctantly and tearfully agreed to return to court today to testify
said during her visit 10 the Tuppers
for the defense rather Lhao carry out a threat to nee to her native El SalP~ns Elememary School.
vador over lhc weekend.
\,..l
· "Thai commitment is not necesSuperior Court ludgc Laocc ho agreed to interrupt the prosccutioo's
I '
sarily more money," she said.
case with her testimony rather !han take a chance one of lhe trial's most
Both Hollister and Gov. George
important witnesses would hop on a Taca Airline flight and never be seen
1 again.,
·
·
·
Voinovich intend to improve primary and secondary educstion, she
____ Lopez' jeS\iiTlOny c_Quld put Simpson where prpsccutors say he wasn:t,
as well as funher sully lhe reputation of Detecuve Mark Fuhrman, whom
added.
'
the defense may try Lo paint as a racist bent on framing Simpson for the
· •. "First and foremost, the govermurders.
·
nor has put forth a program that
Lopez told defense lawyers that Simpson's Bronco was parked outside
will bring $3,500 for each pupil,"
·
acquired computers, Sbue said. The school dis. Hollister said. "I suppon that"
HOLLISTER TOURS SCHOOL -Tuppers
his house June 12 about the time prosecutors claim he murdered his extrict tries·to rocus on the basic needs of the stu!&gt;astern Local Schools c~ently - . Plal!'s Elemel)tary Principal Donald Shoe, right,
wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldmao.
dents ·since tbe ·Iocallevies raise such little
spend a total of$4,162 per pupiL _ fool!: Lt. Gov. Nancy HoUis~er on a tllill' or tile
Lope~ also told them she nilayed this information to Fuhrman lhe day
money, he added.
The state gives $3,035 to each stu·
-scbOQI Friday. Tbe scbool library has recently
aftcr the killings, yet nobody ever followed up with her.
dent during this fiscal year.
But in lhe grueling daylong hearing Friday, the prosecution caught
Hollister toured the Tuppers said she has visited numerous Shue said. The program is ~urrently not seen schools with as deplorable · Lopez in several lies and by the end of lhe day she was an emotional
Plains building asking questions schools aeross the regic;m.
wreck. Prosecutors said they looked forward to 'cross-examining
her In
· handled strictly by lhe county. not conditions as has been claimed.
1
front
of
a
jUly.
·
·
and hearing schools needs from
Shue showed Hollister the each district..
Hollister emphasized that
Principal Donald Shue.
· upgrades the district has made,
Still, the JUdge wasn't convinced Lopez was lying when she looked
"We focus on the basic educa- improving the· schools will rely on
him in .the face and said she would leave for El Salvador Saturday night.
This visit marked the frrst time including new ·COmputers fo( the tion. We don't have all the frills, " developing the local economy.
·
Hollister has toured a school since school's library.
"It may take until the next gen- He even lltrC&lt;Itened to jail her over the weekend until she agreed to remain
he added.
More funding would help, partaking office nearly two months
Allhough current funding mech- eration," Hollister said. "That's the in the United States at least through today.
"I will do it for you, your honor,'' Lopez told Ito on Friday night
ago, but the former Marietta mayor ticularly for the gifted program , anisms are·ur\fair, Shue said he has
(Continued on Page J)
·
Ito's ruling was a mixed bag for the prosecution.
By putting Lopez on the stand now, instead of during lhe defense portion of the case, Simpson's lawyers can interrupt !he story lhe prosecution
is trying to tell and blunt iiS impacl.
At the same time, though, it means ihc defense has to call her ·before
said.
COLUMBUS (AP) -· The fare reforms, especially ·changes in incomes below the poverty level.
adequately
setting the smge for her lestimony. in the way lhe prosecution
"Our
best
cfforl~
at
placing
welstate's poor are becoming poorer at Medicaid, the federal-state health . In written testimony to the
has
gingerly
prepared for Fuhrman's appearance on the stand.
fare
recipients
in
jobs
will
still
House Finance Commiuee last
· a time when the government can care program for the poor.
•
In
othpr
developments,
Ito has lentatively decided to dismiss a juror
with
no
leave
thousands
hving
Voinovkh l'(.ants to transform week, Frech sai~ .!here were probafford to do something'about it.
who
failed
to
disclose
an
incident
of domestic abuse on his jury question- -'
hope
for
a
job
and
bencfiiS
tbat
are
That is an unpopular message at Medicaid into a program called lems in Voinovich's proposed state
nairc;'
the
Los
Angeles
Times
reponed
over the weekend.
inadequate
to
meet
basic
human
the Statehouse where welfare is a OhioCare in which recipients budget for the next two fiscal years
ho
has
LOld
auomeys
he
plans
to
dismiss the juror - a "46-year-old
needs for food, clothing and sheltarget of cuts. But it is one that would enroll in private health starting July ·I.
black
courier,
the
Times
reported
Saturday,
citing unidentified sources.
"The governor's proposal docs ter," he said.
Jack Frech, director of the Athens maintenance organizations.
Meanwhile,
Newsweek
reports
that
a
black'
police officer testified a
The federal poverty level for a
· Savings from such a managed not include any increase in Aid for
County Department of Humao Ser!hat
Fuhnnan
questioned
her
qualifications,
sayin~ she should
decade
ago
care system to control cosiS would Dependent Children benefits for typical ADC family of a mother
•tices, waots to deliver.
go
to
work
as
a
"secretary"
or
a
"dancer
on
Soul
Train.'
Fuhrman's
Frech applauded some of Gov. help pay for extending coverage Lo . hundreds of lhousands of lhc poor- and two childten is $1,027 a
attorney
denied
the
allegations.
George Voinovich 's proposed wei- about 500,000 Ohioans with est children in the state," Frech mooth.

• Cruise Control

No Doc Fflll. DelnefJd'

BRAND NEW '95121EVRII.ET WMINA

the budget, he said Sunday night during a radio interview by Ross PeroL
He called the balaoced budget amendment "a last resort" and said that
without pro'Vsions tbat would prevent the judicial branch from determining taxing and spending issues he would have difficulty voting for it.
"The last thing we wanl to do is tum over taxing and spending questions to the federal courts. They already have too much authority," he
said. · ·
"I don't lhink we want to vest. !hem with spending and tax decisions. I .
think tlmt would stand the Constitution on its hC&lt;Id .... I think the taxpayers of !his country would be in revolt the fust time a federal judge came
down and said, 'you're mandated to increase taxes by $50 billion."'
But House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga .. said Saturday that he aod
House Judiciary Commiucc Chairman Henry Hyde, R-'111 ., arc prepared to
craft legislation in the House 10 address Nunn's concern.
·

'

$17,888
• Arr Condmon
• Aulomahc
• Dual A1~s
• Powef SteenllJ

. 2 Sections. 30 Pages 35 cents
A Mulllmodll Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 27 •. 1995

emers Sam Nunn of Georgia. Wendell Ford of Kentucky and John Breaux
By JIM ABRAMS
of Louisiana.
Associated Press Writer
Conrad, interviewed on CNN's Late Edition Sunday, said he wants to ·
WASHlNGTON ....:.. After a month of debate, the Senate this week
,
votes on the balanced .budget amt;lndment, )&gt;robably its most momentous balance lhe budget, but was unhappy wilh the amendment
" You've got wording of this current amendment !hat presuines .YOU arc
decision of this Congress. And a single vote could make the difference.
Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., said Sunday that backers of the constiwtion- going to loot lhe Social Security trust fund," which is now running a surplus. to make up budget shonfalls, he said. "I lhink !hat's wrong. I think ·
al amendment now have 66 votes, one shy of the two-thirds majority
that just delays lhe day of reckoning."
·
needed for passage.
All but one of the 53 Senate Republicans are committed to supportiog
After quick approval in !he House last month, the bill bogged down in
the amendment, so supporters must win the votes of 15 of the"47
the Senate, where Democrats tried, unsuccessfully. 10 force Republicans
10 explain how they will balance the budgea by 2002 and to insen lan- , Democrats. Sen. Mark Hatfield. R-Ore., is the only Republican opposed.
Nunn said his main problem with the amendment was the possibility
guage removing Social Security from future budget calculations. A .final
that controversies arising from budget balancing Tequirements would get
vote is slated for Tuesday.
.
The fate of the amendment rests largely with five undecided Senate thrown into lhe courts.
He
to propose ao amendment that would lim it coUrt authority on
Democrats: Noith Dakotans Kent Conrad and Byron Dorgan and soulh-

350 V-8 POWER/SILVERADO

"Sale PrtU! h :ll..ldeSGW!C F~
T.rne BLP!t'l

988

'94 CHEVY SUBURBAN .. ·

• Custom Cloth lnterror
• Steel Belted Tires

u

•••

Single vote may-decide balanced budget

'- By PAT LUKAS
AP Newsfeaturcs
Traditional homes suc h as th is
can take on a unique appeal with
the addition of a few de s ign
touches.
Design F-36, by Homcsty les
"Source 1" Designers' Network .
is en hanced by I he addit ion of

45, NO. 211

Copyright 1!195

CINCINNATI (AP) - Ohio's
parole board handles thousands of
cases each year wilhout access to
computers, resulting in missing
records that. can delay hearings,
The Cincinnati Enquirer reported
today;- · "
-.
Of the 14,836 regular parole
hearings in fiscal1994, 3,169 - or
one-fifth '- had .to be postponed
because some information was
missing, the newspaper said.
The major reason was an ''antiquated system" of record-keeping,
.parole board member Raymond
Capo!S sai.d.
Parole panels have no access to
computers,
only
obsolete
microfiche machines and paper
files, as they consider each case.
"Steve Van Dine, the research
chief for the Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections, said "it
has been ·a ·matter of pulling teeth
to get this far" in his efforts to
computerize the department,.
. Until about two years ago, the
department had only three programmers. lt since has added four.
Giving the parole board imme:

diate computer access to files has Since the early 1980s, lhc state has
been a priority, he said, but a "real freed more than 500 murderers,
some of whom spent only five
.expensive priority." .
The board also appears to be years in prison.
·
overworked and undersLaffcd, the
Inmates who were sentenced to
newspaper said. .
· life and were paroled during the
In fi scal 1994, the board's nine 10-year period served an av11rage
members each heard an average of of about 14 years, according tO the
3.500 cases, the newspaper .said. newspaper's examination of 36.000
Allhough 15 hearing officers assist parole cases.
board members, at least ·onc board
The Legislllllire created the
member.must be present at each Ohio ~entencing Commission in
hearing. .
·.
1990 to study "Uhfo's senienCing
·A National Institute of Corrcc- and parole laws and recommend
lions consultant hired by the board improyemCll!ts.
concluded in a 1993 report !hat lhe
"The current system underboard "!las attempted to maintain mines public trust and seems disits traditional way of conducting honesL We lcnow something needs
business, which is not working."
to be done,'' said David Diroll,
Parole officials say !hey are try· . commission executive director.
ing to ease lhc workload. One way
The commission and some legis by identifying hearings "with no islatois suppOrt so-calle4 "truth-inpossible positive outcome that arc sentencing" laws that would
fruitless for the board to conduct," • require convicts to serve ou.t the
said Jill Goldhart, deputy director. sentences they r.cceive. The state
of parole aod community .services.
parole board ·would have less disThe board also recently added crction to release prisoners before
two "'embers, for a.IOtal of II.
completing their mi~imum senQn Sunday, The Enquirer tences.
'
.
reported !hat convicted murderers
Margarette Ghee, chairwoman
patoled in Ohio between 1983 and of lhe parole board, said it has got1993 spent less than 12 years ten tougher in recent years for viabehind bars.
.
lent offenders to gain parole. They
Sixty percent of those parolees typically go throul!h several hear·
spent less than the average 11.8 ings now before bemg released, she
years in prison, lhe newspaper said. . said.

~,,I

CHESTER RENOVATIONS - Tbe Chesler Country. Kitcben,
rormerly Keebaugb's, is seiiO reopen March 11, new owner
·William Pooler said recently. Above, Denn~ Parker of Cbester fln·
lsbes putting siding "on the store's CKlerior. The inside or tbe buDd·
lng bas· been remodeled wilb new paint, nooring and drop ceilings,
Pooler said. The ~IaUer will cootmut to double 1as reslaunnl and
ice cream parlor, be added. (Sentinel
photo by. George Abate)
.

.,

·'

Ruling limits options to aid .
needy schools .
· COLUMBUS (AP) - While
Ohio's schools wait with their
ha!Kis out, lawmakers find their
hands tied by a state Supreme
.
Coll!l decision,
The ,,Supreme Court last year
upheld a claim by long-distance ·
carrier MCI that iiS personal property tax assessment should be 25
pertent of the property value .-- the
same as other businesses - ralher
than 88 percent of the property
value paid by all utilities.
·
To comply with the decision,
"the gov.cmor's ~33.8 billion budget pr~poscs reducing the personal
jlropcrty tax assessment rate applied to machinery and equip.
ment - for both loog-distance and
.local phone companies.
That would cost schools $86.2
million over the next two years. ·
The decision came at a bad time
for Ohio's schools. ·
"There is a consensus on both
sid~s. of lhe aisle to CQme up with
add1iional support for educatioo to
suppl~m~nt the losses,'' said Rep.
Pat Ttberi, R-Columbus. "As far aS
where the additional support will
come from ... ther.e is no consensus
even on our side of the aisle." .
· Rep. Wayne M. Jones, D-Cuyahoga Falls. said the proposed cut in .
wes for phone companies means
district~ that stand to gain money ,
from the proposed ed)lcation bud·
get would gain less !han anticipat·
ed.
~

I

•

•

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