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                  <text>•

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'Fiddler
on the

Owners now at bat. P~g. c2

Partly sunny

on

B-1

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. ousepa
~ands

Masters tournamen.t prev.i ew -P•g•C1

ily JOHN CHALFANT
. What docs the budget hold for you?
Auocllted Preu WrHer
.A proposed boost in state aid to schools and universi.• COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The House Finance Com- ties; computers in every kindergarten througll fourth
"DDittee recommended for passage early Saturday a state grade classroom; expansion of homestead exemption
budget bill that banded Gov. George Voinovich a stinging property taxrelieffor"seniors; and hope of a state income
.defeat over control of the State
tax cut for parents and seniors .
"Board of Education.
'For more ·cuts In
in 1996 if the economy yields
Approval of the $33.5 billion
taxeS and spending...
the $140 million to pay. for it.
"It's a budget that .J believe
s pendingplancameshortly after
la.m.ona19-10votethatcleared
"This Is the largest dollar In- servestheneedsofOhio,"said
the way for ~tion in the full
crease In spending In the history Rep. Thomas Johnson, R-New
· House this w .
Concord, the committee chair.• Three Dem rais joined 16
of the state of Ohio. I guess It's man. "I'm proud of the prior:_.Republicans to seno the twoappropriate that It pass on April itythatweputintoeducation."
::yearpackageou~ofthecommitFool's Day."
Noteverybodyagreed,includ: tee. Two Republicans joined
.ing Rep. Robert Netzley, R: eigllt Democrats\in opposition.
Rep. Robert Netzley, R·Uiura Laura.

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· 8y KEVIN KELLY

5-10 m. .h.

· :;

governor stinging de·feat over school control

incumbents will
.$eek re-electi'on
:to
.city,commission
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lilld wlnda:

"This is the largest dollar increase in ·spending in the
history of the state of Ohio. l guess it's appropriate thatit
pass on April Fool's D.ay," Netzley said. He wanted more
cuts in taxes and spending.
.
The final vote came 12 1/2 hours·'and 132 amendments
after the committee began a marathon session Friday.
. House Republicans gave Voinovich most of what he
wanted in the budget, but not control of the State lloard of
Education.
. .
Representatives voted 18-11 to remove from the bill a
provision that would have let Voinovich appoint the 11
members of the board who now are elected.
- Rep. Kerry Metzker, R-New Philadelphia, offered the
amendment to retaili an elected board.
· .
"I come from a rural diStrict ... and being rural my
concern has always, been that an appointed board would
representmoreoft~einterestsofthe urban school' districts

J.ail construction .alternatives:
Commission explores
lease-purchase option
By JIM FREEMAN

..
than it necessarily would
rural ones, " .
By The A,.oclated
Metzger said.
The HOUH Finance
1~10
vote early Seturday that recommended
Voinovich
for pueagea $33.5 billion, ~year ltlrte
saidhewasexbudget bill:
tremely disapREPUBLICANS FOR: (16)
.
pointed.
Johnaon, Amstutz, Corbin, Core,
~' I will conDamac:hroder, Fox, Haines, Lawrence,
Mead, Metzger, O'Brien, Pen, Thomas,
tinue to fight
Thompson, White, Womer Benjamin.
this battle for
DEMOCRATS FOR: (3)
Ohio's public
Jones, COlonna, Troy.
school chilREPUBLICANS AGAINST: (2)
Netzley, WIM.
dren and I vow
DEMOCRATS AGAINST: (8)
to raise this isAbel, Beatty, BOyd, Campbell, Cera,
sue for as long
Kozlura, Tavares.
as it takes to
get the le~islative approval necessary,'' he said in a
statement.

Veterans
spending:

Tlmea..S.ntlnel ataff
: ,mea-Sentinel Staff
Court ·d ecision in ~wrence
POMEROY- Meigs County
GALLIPOLIS 1- Cit.ing their desire to remain '
commissioners and Sheriff James
County encourages Gallia's
involved with new directions in Gallipolis' govemM. Soulsby met with a Logan
ll!ent, two incumbents on the Gallipolis City Com·VSO in budgetary ·dispute
mission have decided to run in this year's municipal · contractor Friday afternoon to
discuss an alternative method of
By KEVIN PINSON
· election.
jail
construction.
lilmea-Sentlnel
Staff ·
·
Bill Davis and Herman Koby
Scott Massie, president of Gei- ·
GALLIPOLIS- A Lawrence County judge's decieach feel the city is heading into
ger
Brothers
Mechanical
Contracsion
on a budgetary dispute lifted the mood of the local
what Davis called "exciting" artors Inc., said his company would
veterans
Service offlce Friday.
.
·
eas.
design,
build
and
finance
a
jail
on
"We're
fixing
to
go
through
the
same
thin.g(5o
it
They hold the two seats on the
a lease-purchase arrangement, a
makes
me
feel
good,"
Veterans
Service
Office
Director
five-member commission that are
method that avoids.the hiring of
Steve Swords said.
·
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to be decided this fall.
consultants and bidding.
Lawrence County Common Pleas Coun Judge KenCity Auditor Deborah Hughes
Oile of the benefits of leaseneth
A. Ater ruled.that the county commission could not
·said candidates interested in ruo'
purchase
is
that
it
speeds
up
the
"dibble"
in the
VSO's 'budget, V!'.O secretary/office
ning for the commission can pick
. Mflrris
building process, said Massie.
manager
Lottie
said.
up declaration of candidacy forms
Massie
proposes
a
jail
con"The
county
commission
is not right to. say, 'This is
in her office starting Monday. The
structed of modular, pre-fabriwhat we're.going to give you and this is what you're
forms, which require a minimum
catedsteel
buildings
which
would
pn!selllt,lltio·n
on
going
to do,'" she said. "We can set up a budget of up
of five signatures from registered
be bolted togetb.er on site to the
discusSed
Friday
with
county
officials.
Examinto
half
a mill, but not more than that, as long as we put
city voters, are duetiackJo her by
sheriff's
specifications.
log
proposed
plans
are,
from
Commisslonen
Robert
Hartenbach
and
Fred
in
the
budget
what is needed and necessary."
April 11 at 3 p.m.
He
said
he
decided
to
approach
Hoffman,
Sheriff
James
Soulsby
and
&amp;ott
Massie,
the
Hocking
County
contractor
The
local
VSO
is pleased with the decision. because
"It's been a learning experience
Meigs County, iri addition to Jack- who made the presenta~on.
they
may
be
looking
at their own future.
and I enjoy it," said Davis, who
son and Vinton counties, after ttle
•
·
The Gallia Qlunty Veterans Service Commission,
was appointed to the commission
Sdutsby
said
counties
were
denied
funding
for
a
regional
jail.
he
would
submit
a
list
of
his
department's
which
governs the Oflce, pjans to ask a judge to order
in December 1992 to fill the
needs
to
Massie
for
the
drawing
of
a
rough
floor
plan,
with.·
.
·the
county
..:commission to honor its whittled-down
"Just because the. funding fell through doesn't mean you
unexpired term ofP.D. McCreedy.
no cos't or obligation.
budget request of $169,000.
.can't have a facility," he said.
"In talking to folks about the city, I've noticed there
Soulsby has repeatedly stressed the need for a new jail to
The commission granted a 1995 budget of only
An
added
plus
is
a
modular
jail
would
be
cheaper
to
build,
is a renewed spirit about the community," Davis
replace the existing 100-year-old facility .
$127,500.
he said.
added. "I think We're in an exciting time now in terms
Continued on page A2
of development. I think we reached a pla1eau for
awhile, but now we're climbing the mountain again."
Koby, who sa.id being commissionerbas been "a
. great deal more work than I thought," said seeking
another term "represents the potential to accomplish Tlmea..S.ntlnel Staff
·
· ·
situation under control."
'
AcCording to .Lentes, officers encounter two typical
something."
POM_ER~Y - Meigs Cou~ty l~wmen ·are making more
." It~s a seriou~ probl~.m," O'Brien commented. "We deal
domestic viol~oce scenarios in Meigs County: a drunk
"We have just started a few things, including the domestic v1olence arrests- assisted 10 part by a new state law. w1th 11 ·very senously.
.
. husband gets mto an argument and then strikes. his wife
beautific;ation of the city, identifying the need for a
The law, w~ich took ~ffect Jan. 1, says no one can com.mit . A typical s_en~ence fo'r3 first offense n O'Brien's court is or other family me~ber;or a divorce situation involving
new city puilding, and evaluating water and sewer an assau~tagam_st a fam1ly or house~old m~mber and requ1_res s1x m~nths m Jail ~uspended to 10 days an_d two yea~utes over stalkmg, threatening, custody or visitation
breaks down into a physical confrontation.
improvement$," added Koby, who was also appointed that an Immediate arrest be the fust ophon of respondmg proballon ... dependmg on the seventy of the mc1d,ent.
.to fill an unexpired t~rm in April 1994_when the late office~s, said·Prosecuting Attorney !ohn R. ~.;t:nt_es. .
, Although the Mei~s C:Ounty ~ail _has a backlog of people
One of the problems faced by officials is the frequent
Dovel T. Myers Sr. resigned from the commission.
~~1gs ~unty ~urt Judge Patnck H. ~ ~~•en has also ~a1tmg to serve theu lime, 0 Bnen-.Schedules domeshc lack of cooperation by domestic violence victitns. In one
Davis and Koby indicated they ;ue impressed with ~oh~d an mcreas~ m the num~&gt;c:r of dom~shc violence cases v1olence offenders 1mmed1ately to get the perpetrator out of· recent incident, il woman refused to testify against a man
the household.
because she feared reprisal.
the direction Matthew Coppler is taking Gallipolis 10 h1s court- due m part to the mcrease m arrests.
"The new law is a definite deterrent," said O'Brien. "It gets
"With (Judge O'Brien) the jail is never too full for a
·
Continued on page A2
, Continued on P!lge AS

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~!!~E!Nnforcement, c~h~pe~~r!~r~~~ft~~e~~-~~h~i· ~m~!2e~!~~'~nt~c~~n!~

Attorneys fo·r !nJstee, News capsules
chi~f deputy argue
If
forgot; you•re an hour early this·J!lOrning
against public release .
Spring
forward
of.· taped conversation · Daylight-saving time begins;
. By KEVIN PINSON

· Tlmea-Sentlnel Staff
•
. GALLIPOLIS .....:. N'ot only is a taped phone con-.;ersation between two
public officials not public r~cord, two attornen·ar~ued Friday, but it may also
have been obtained illegally.
David Evans and William Eachus,
representing Guy an Township Trustee
Roger Wat5q11 and Chief De put&gt;: DennisSalisbury respectively, said the tape
was made without their clients' knowledge~ either inadvertently or intentionally.
·
The attorneys hinted at the possib.ility of pro~cution if the tapes were
made intentionally.
"We may be talldng about some criminal violation here, your honor," Evans
said. "We're talking about something
someone could go to prison for."
The hearing was the result of a reT APE HEARING -Attorney questbyco~ntywatchdoglJamesand
David T. Evans, left, and his client, Harlan Northup for the coun to deterGuyali To\llidllp Trustee Roger mine if tlie tape is availibl~. to .tiJe
Watson, await Judge Donald Cap- public under the state's availability of
perFrldayforahca~gcoacernln&amp; public records law.
. .
i recorded pboae conveA~ttioa beVisiting Judge Donald R. Capper
tween the two pubHc .oMcials.
said he would make a decision in about
two weeks.
f
•
The Nonhups were present at the hearing and gave a brief st.atem~nt, but
were not represented by council. Citizen John Loye of Crow~ CJty also
beseeched the judge to release the tape.
.
Eachus and Evans gave similar arguments against the release of the tape: The
·
Continued on page A2

"

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remember to set your clock
forward one hour Sunday inomiog.

.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Incase you forgot, it's time.- past time,
actually - to switch to Daylight Saving Time.
For most of the nation, that meant moving the clock ahead one
hour, as in "spring forward, fall back."
Daylight time officially occum;d at 2 a.m. today.
A few places exempt themselves from daylight time, including
Arizona, Hawaii, part of Indiana, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands or
American Samoa.
' ·
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.
For the rest of the 'ilation, the change means later sunsets, so
people can enjoy working on gardens or outdoor projects, playing
. sports, having barbecues or just idly relaxing out~rs .
And safety officials are reminding Americans that when changing the clocks it's also a good tim~; to change the batteries in smoke
detectors, to make sure they are always ready in case of fire.
Some historical facts about Daylight Saving Time in America:
•In 1918, Congress adopted DST as part of the World War I ·
. effort. Congress scrapped DST in 1919.
•In 1942, Congress put the nation on "WarTime"- selling clocks
ahead on!l hour, In .1945 Congress repealed War Time.
•In 1967; Congress adopted the Uniform Time Act, which
instituted DST for the nation, starting on the last Sunday in April
and ending on the last Sunday in October.
•In 1974, until1975, DST was extended to conserve energy.
•In 1986, President Reagan signed a billth•l moved DST up to the
first Sunday in April.

'

GOOD MORNING

Today's Times-Sentinel
21 Sec:tioas -152 Paps

Business
Calendar$
Classifieds
Conitcs

Dl
82&amp;5
03·5 '
Insert

Edito~~/

A4 "

Local ,·,
ObituatitS
Sports
Along the River
.Weather ·

A3
A(;
Cl-6

Bl
AS

Columns

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Jack Andeljion
Fred Cmw
BobHoeOicb
J_im Sands
CI

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c.i.

Oltio V

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Commi.sslon OKs,grQup·~ request !~-~~e~. grant for_homeless shett~r
' POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of Commission-ers Friday
afternoon gave the green light to a group seeking a transitional housing
projkt for local homeless people.
·
·
The Meigs County Coalition for the Homeless, headed by Outreach
worker Janet Downie, approached the board for a resolutiori supporting the
group's project ~bich would also inc.lu\'C support services and counseling.
With the commission's blessing, the cOalition will now try to secure a
three-year supportive housing grant through the Department of Housing and
Urban
. Development. Th~grantwill pay.75 percent of the project's costs the"

.

first two yeats aild SO percent the tliird year. 1 ·
·
•
Downie estimated the shelter's first yeaT's\lcosts would total aro11 nd
$146,000 including acquisition of a house and operating coslli.
· She elqllained the coalition may approach the commission la,er seekmg
additional financial assistance to which commissio11 President Fre&lt;\ Hoffman·
responded the board would carefully consider the request.'
.
Hoffman c&amp;curred that rural ·areas &lt;uch as Meigs County ~n ·have
homelessness problems.
'
"Ws just not as v1sible in rural areas," he said.
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P•• A2 Sunday nm11 Sentinel

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~---·~~·=.2~,l~~~S----------~~------~----It~·-e~~~i_()_ll~:~--~-~--~--~~--------------SM_~~yT_~s·_~_noo_·c_II~A-3~~·
- .· Tri-County Briefs:Attorney files motions _:-

Aprll2, 1185

Pomeroy-Middleport-G..IIpolla, OH Point P11111nt, WV

__

a ha veterans-weigh ·Lawrence ruling on sptnding ·
Conllnuecllrom page At
The Galli a dispute began in·January when the county commission refused to fund tbe VSC's original budge~request of $206,800 for 1995.
The two groups disagree: on the
interpretation of state law. The VSC
says House Bill 448 requires the
county commission to fund the office
at whatever level the VSC deems nee·
essary, up to onehalfmill oftaxes$250,000.
_
Th~ county commi~ion says the
•state is only establishing a ceiling on

_VSO budgets -~nd that tlie funding get, then re-appropriated only eliOugb
Swords and Lee baveappeaied their
amount is at its diseretion. ,
to cover the pre-increase 5!1lary lev- •rai~ to tbe State Penonnel Review
:The two counties' disputes are al- · cis.
Board.
,
most mirror'image. Morris said the ' "TTiey've made -this out to be a ·
Judge Ater ordered that the
Lawrence, County ysc requested a salary issue," Morris said. "It's not a. Lawrence County VSO be given a
budget of $130,000 and__ w~ given salary issue, it's a l:!udgetary issue:~
temporarybudgetof$!50,000.Morris
$150,000.
The dallia County dispute also m- said tbe additional funda are for the
When the county commission ap- volves pay increases. Swords and his purchase of a transportvanandtobire
proved a temporary budget in Janu- secretary, Rhonda Lee, were given adriver to take veterans to area hospiary, the VSC gave pay increases to $6,600and $5,700 raises, respectively. tals, a service mandated by tlte state.
VSO Directpr Bob Griffith and
The increases were implemented in
Morris said she is pleased with -the
Morris.
'
· January, but revbkcd in mid-Fcbru- . co.Url's decision, but sorry that tbe
·Morris said the county commission ary during qudget negotiations be- \WO groups could not sit down with
opposed the ~Y ra.ises and pulled a11 . tween the VSC and county comm1s- open minds an~ negotiate.
fund.~ out of '"1' office's salary bud- sion.
.
'

"It should never be that the office to get something dooe," abe said.
; &gt;1
should fall apart and get a court order
~ and ~wrcacc Oluaty com., '
miiiiOOifl did 1101 retura pbooe calla '
•
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Road closing slated Monday I

.
GAUJPOLIS-- CouDty Rl*l 102 (WilHam• Hollow) In Clay
TOWIIIIIIp will be clolei11l8 a.m. Mooday, COUDty Eoglacer 1osepb

...

Police enforcing window tint law
· GALLIPOLIS -

chose to call Salisbury, Evans said.
Because he did not Know the chief
deputy's home number, he called the
sheriffs office and asked to be transferred.
,
The call, patched through the
dispatcher's switchboard, was taped ·
by the office's recording system.
"All the time this call was made,
my client was under arrest," Evans
said. "Yes, it was on arecorded line.
. However, I think there can be little
doubt ... that Mr: Watson has an expectation of privacy."

Co'l'lnued from page A1
That fear is a very real concern, he
said. A judge can issue a restraining
·order, but that doesn't do .anything
until after the fact.
Another problem is that domestic'

(USPS !l$-800)
Published ~och Sunday, 82S Third Ave ..
Gallipolis, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing
Compa.ny!Mullimedia. Jnc. Second da.u post·
age paid at Gallipolis, Obi o 4563 1. Enle:red as
second class mciling mauer at Pomeroy, Ohic;».

Posf Off1ce.
' Member: 111e Associated Pres~. and the Ohio
- ..___.. Newspaper MW&lt;:iiltion,

violence generally occurs only in pres:
ence of the victi![l and perpetrator.
The witnesses, if any, are usually very
small children, he added.
__I,entes al~o notices a pattern of
abuse. "We have seen abused women
get oui of relationships only to enter
other abusive relationships,'' pe said.
In addition, a majority of domestic
violence incidents go unreported,
O'Brien commented.
O'l3rien and Lentes challenged the
notion that domestic violence is a
problem affecting mainly poor or low-

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"It is an officer safety Issue, a public safety issue, and it is the
law,"'Brandeberry added. "It is important tbat drivers be able to see
each other, and it is Important for ofracen to be able to see into a
vebicle that bas been Stopped. These factors were all considered by
the legislature w~ it passed the law."
The state allows up to .a SO percent tint on side windows. Vehicles coming from the factory should all be within this tolerance
level, Brandeberty said. Only when tinting has been added should
there be a problem, he ·addecl. '
•
City police are now attempting to give people a warning prior to
citing lhem into court, the chief said. Since obtaining the tint
meters, police have issued 32 warnings and cit¢ two drivers.
QuestiOI)S about window tint can be answered by s~pping by tbe
police department and baving an omcer check tbe veb1cle, Brandeberry said.
·
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Free immunizations set Tuesday..r-

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GALLIPOLis - ·Free immunizations for children aged 2
months and up will be given by !00 Gallia County H~t!J Department on Tuesday from 4-6 p.m. tn the lobby of the Giiltia County
Courthouse.
·
·All children must be accompanied by a paren.t and have a current
shot record.
SJ.

FREE lBO AID C

80DOWN

FREE INSTALLATION

If you don't h11ve a system, ask how you can invesras.littte as
.

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8~ Carrirr or Motor koute
'·
One Week ...............~ .. --.:.......................1.. 51 .00

County board plans public s-ession

CHESHIRE - The Galli.a County Local Board of Education
wiU meet in special session at 7 p.m. Monday at River Valley High
School.
.
·
The board will-consider action on establishing a Tommy Kemper ·
Memorial Scholarship Fuhd, and then open the meeting to public
participation.

ODNR slates reclamation meeting

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29.95 a month* and have the biggest selection of channels' available.

5

SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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not true.

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Thought for Today: ''If men could foresee the future, they would stiU
.behave as ·they do now." - Russian proverb.
·
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JACKSON- A public-meeting to'discuss mining and reclamation programs in the state's coal regions·has been set for Tuesday,,
Aprjl 18 at 7 p.m. in the Jackson District Cooperative· Extension
Office, 17 Standpipe Road, Jackson.
•
. The meeling is one of three scheduled by th~ Ohio Department
of Natural Resources' Div\sion of Reclamation and the federal
Office of Surface Mining. The other two wiU be held in Zanesville
on April 11 and in New Pili !adelphia on May 2, each at 7 p.m. '

•

Update _
your old system for as little as 519.95 pr. month'

011e Ycnr .........:..................................,.... •$52.00

•
SINGLE COPY PRICE
· Sunday ...................................... ,............... $1 .00

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Articles of incorporation filed

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Remember:
""all premium and basic . programming is received from a
satellite in space, not from. cable companies."
.

' No subS(;riptioQS by mnil permiued in ureas
• where motor clltricr se rrice: is ava.iloble.
' The Sultdll)' Lim=s-Stnlinel will not be respon·
; sible fOC' odvam:e paymcnls made to carri en .

GALLIPOLIS - Articles of incorporation have been filed with
Secretary of State Roben A. Taft 1r. 's omce for J. Eric Jones, DDS,
Inc.; 230 Upper River Road, Gallipolis . . ·
Jones is both lhe incOipOClltor and agent

BEST RECEPTION SERVICES ALL.MAKES.

DIIIIJ and Sunday

MAILSUBSCRtPTIONS

Gallipolis City Police cruisers are now

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City Commission meets Tuesday

Inside Gallia County
13 Weelra .............................._.... - ............. $23.92

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis City Cominission meets at 7
Tuesday in the Gallipolis Municipal courtroom.
·
Copies of lhe agenda are available at the City Building, SIB Second Ave., .arid at lhe Dr. Samn&lt;;l L. Bo,ssard Memorial Library, 7
-Spruce St.
.
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26 Weeks ......... ,....................................... $47.06

~p.m.

S2 Wcelcs,................................................ $92.56
· Ral~lll Outside .Gallla County
13 W~eelcs ............ ,.................. :......... ,........ $2.5 .61

.26 w.............,................. ,...... ,............. $49.66
.52 Weelcs.~ ......... .' ....................:................ S96.20

tlve ....,retary of the GaiDa County Cluomber of Commerce, ftnalbJe
plans for the 58th annul c:luunber banquet Thursday at 7 p.m. at
the University of Rio Grude, with valet parking to begin at 6:30
p.m. Ticket. are.stUI available J&gt;y calling the chamber at 446-41596
before n\)On Monday. The ev•nt's guest speaker· wiU be MarsbaU
T. Reynolds, chairman of Cbamplon Industries Inc., and president
of Chapman Printing Co., Huntington, W.Va •

'

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&lt; GALLIPOLIS - A 15-year-old
rnale was apprehended Friday by
Gallipolis City Police in connection
·ivith an alleged shoplifting at CrimInal Records. 46 Coun St.
·
·. Police said they were notified
' at11 :50 a.m . that the store's management bad stopped the youth
, before be left the store, where be
teportedly had a tape in his posses•
sian for which be bad not paid.
:: The youth later admitted to have
taken two other tapes from the
~tore . He was later released -to lhe
~ustody of his mother. police sai_d.
·• Cited by police Friday were
Tanya J. Lewis, 27, 3198 Kerr
Road, Bidwell, driving under suspension an~ window tint; Cberyl L.
!.ohnson, 19, 2610 Garland Road,
Scottown." underage consumption;
fames M. Polcyn, 19, 315 1obnson
(!.idge Road, Gallipolis, possession
.of marijuana and underage consitmption; and Joseph S. White, 20,
Wellston , assault and underage
lionsumption.
-: Cited by pol{ce early Saturday ·
was Steven M. Martin, 21 , 30674
Murray HU Road, Middleport, driving under the influence and driving
imder suspension.

'•

Have You)Had Problems

Gelling L.P. Gas S~rvice
· In ,.he Past?
.
'

Call Burlile Oil•••
Our. 'ranks Are IN.S'OCK

.
Fishing ·material,
j.ewelry stolen
'•

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614-446-4119
.-

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•

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Galli

A Center-

~ill e man reponed the theft of jeweJ~y and fishing equipment from

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lis, Ohio·

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bis residence Friday to tbe Gallia
County Sheriff's Depar1ment ·
:: William R. L;unbert, 13 Broad
St., said the fishing items were "
tillc.en sometime betWeen Marth 18
and Friday from a building on his
property. The jewelry was removed
from his bouse sometime during
tl;le same period, deputies said.
· The incident Is under investiga·
tion, deputies said.
• Booked into tbe Gallia ·county
Jail by deputies' were .William A·. Revels, 25, 14205 State Route 7,
Gallipolis, domesti c violence,
1 ~:3 4 a.m. Saturday; Charles P.
L;ewis, 27, 3198 Kerr Road, Bid·
well. disorderly by intoxication
after warning, 12:51 a.m. Saturday;
Rlld James K. Morfis, 32, 120 Market St., Bidwell, driving. under the
irifluencc and no operator's license,
3:4l a.m. Saturday .

'·

Its Allin 1lJe WAN!ADJ

. HINI/IHHIIIIIIHIIH/IIIHHHII/HIIH/J//IIJIIUHI/IHIII/I/IIII!IIfi/1/IIIJII!/1/H(IIII!IIHIIIIH/11!/irl!t&gt;/1,

.
Eggleton to be r.eleased from 24
hours of bis contract as PALS
instructor.
•' Employed David Dunn as a
substitute in Corrections in the
. Adult Education program.
.
• Approved the foUowing Adult
·ABLE substitute personnel: Ann
Boyd, Betty Finney. Helen Higgins, Ramona Ryan, Loretta Saylor
and Doma Smith, instructors; and
Ri
. 'ta Allen. Becky Bay, Betty lordan, Fred McGowan and Cindy
Wilson, aides.
. • Approved !be following · to
attend the ABLE workshop April
1: Rita Allen, Becky Bay, Ann
'Boyd, -Betty Finney, Helen Higgins, Betty Jordan, Fred McGowan,
Ramona Ryan, Loretta Saylor,
Dorna Smith and Cindy Wilson. • Approved the .resignation of
MJrY Juanita Clark, due to retirement effective May 31.
··
~

RIO GRANDE - A recommen!lation that all make-up calami. Jy'time for the 1994-95 school year
be made up on 1une 1 and each
succeeding weekday as required
was approved by· the Gallia-Jacklion-Vinton Joint Vocational Board
of Education at its recent meeting
·at Buckeye Hills Career Center.
The board afrumed Superintendent Kent Lewis' decision to close
school on severe weather days and
adopted the 1995-96 school year
calendar.
. In _other action, a ~esolution
adoptmg the O.luo Pubhc Employees Deferred Compensation prog~ was approyed. as were ':~~solutwns. opposmg a governorappomted S~ate Board of Educauon; Professional Pracuces Board,
youchers and inclusion vouchers
m the state budget and m support
of adequate school fundmg.
In other matters, the board:
. • Approved Adult Education
program budgets for Basic EMT-A
and Volunteer Firefighter.
• ApprOVed part-time hourly
contracts for Andy Fisher, Timothy
MiUer, Michael Null, Jimmie Shato
and Steve Wallis, firefighter
instructors: Diane Hamilton. Robin
Lyles and Patricia Reese, computer
instructor; Roy Jones, EMT -A
instructor; fred McGowan, ABLE
aide; Steve Walli~, Confined Spare
Rescue; Steve YateS, EPA Testing; .
and Christine Williams, PALS
instructor.
• Approved a request from Ira

or

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·TAWNEY STUDIO

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424 SECOND AVE.

_., I .·

GALLIPOLIS

Lovely Is The Night ...
With a tuxedo selected from
Hoskins-Tanner's large selection ·
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PRIC.ES SlARTAT

Meigs EMS runs
p'o MEROY - Units of the
Meigs-County Emergency Medical
Servil;e logged six call~. for assistance Friday. Units responding
included:
· MJ[)DLEPORT
1:12 p.m., Page Street. Freda
McFann, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
'
2:45 p.m., North Second Street,
Luella Orlggs, VMH.
· 7:14 p;m., Overbrook Nursing
Center. l!dward Preston, VMH.
. TUPPERS PLAINS
4:24 p.m., Long Bottom, June
Griffin, Holzer Medical Center.
. RACINE
5:57 p.m., Fourth Street, Florence Smith, HMC.
POMEROY
7:44 p.m., Cole/Walnut Streets,
· Barney Hiles, VMH.

2995

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Prom 1995
"Moments
to _
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·
co"h!!ider the' followin g...
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psychiatric problem s.· Psychothe:rapy is al~o---abouL
personal· growth , self-awareness, and an indivjd::-'
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thorough exploration of your li fe, could hold the
key to solvirrg matters in. life_ which bother you
most.
To ·leam more about this process of change and growth contact
Dr. Ric hard Boone of the Holzer. Clinic Psyc hology .service .
Dr. Bo~ne would be glad to answer yout q uestio ns or to ,arrange
aconsultaiion. . ···. .--'·- . - .~ ,~
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·
Gallipolis, Ohio

Pike,

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NEW STORE HOURS
MON.,THUR . 9:3o-&amp;:oo ·
- FRIDAY 9:3()-8:00
s-ATURDAY 9:3()-4:00

•

404 SECOND AVE
446-1647

_.....,,;,;;;;;ili....,.__...........---------~~----........:

. .!. .

'
'

four-year
term as mayor. H ~ is being
opposed by Democrat newcomef
George Vaughan. The city election
isMay 20.
·
·

cbarge
the plea
the other two
charges were dismissed.·
Holland allegedly cashed the
check made out to the city w;~ter
department. He then kept the

JVSD Board approves
make-up day schedule

Youth accused
In shoplifting

t

'

gently enforced In
"Since we

than-3 weeks. -1--------'-----Capper said he has not heard ~-+1'he-ffiioHJ~eon,tl'ill&gt;liti•oFHieattllin,e-is•-less
11
away. Be sure you are taking advantage of the power
tape and will not review it. Its content
is iitelevant to his decision on whether
of tax deferred compounding .on your savings- the
the recording is public record, he said.
IRA is the way to go.
· LenteshasappealedCapper'sdeci- .
sion to suppress evidence in the arrest ,_
'
For more information
including legislative updates on
case. The judge ruled last month tbati
the expansion of IRA benefits or for an individual conWatson did not flee Gallipolis Police
Office Greg-Frazier. · ·
sultation to review your retirement savings plan, call:
The prosecutor is arguing that the
decision is unclear as to what is slipMark or Bryce Smfth at 614-446·8899 or 800-=446--0226
pressed and tbat the ruling may be
contrary to state laws regarding traf·
· fie stops.
Advest, Inc.
'
.
CLAS!IFIEDS
416 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
income families.
Bright Ideal
It takes place at all socioeconomic
levels, Lentes said.
,
More arrests doesn't mean the num.'
ber of Incidents ha~. increased, said
assistant Prosecutor Chris Tenoglia.
"The Meigs County Sheriff's Of.
fid: along with other local police departments have stepped.·up th~ir enforcement; more victirns are awareu
they have a remedy and are reporting
If you own an older satellite system you have the means to view more
(domestic violence incidents) more."
channels than any other system available. all you need is an update
More reports equals more arrests,
he added.
package from .........BEST RECEPTION
.

New law-boosts domestic violence arrests

.

cquillPed wilh window lint meta'S In ordet to enfon:e slate Jaw on
windOw dnting,l'llllce
Brandeberty said.
Due to lack .or
In
the Jaw bad not. been strin-

· In November, the tape was turned
over to the court as possible evidence
and to insure it would not be l~t or
tampered with.
·
The tape was never entered into·
evidence. Special Prosecutor John R.
Lentes said Fl'lday it would not be
used and recommended releasing it
from court.
"Even if the matter gOIIs forward, I
don't believe either (side) has any
intention of using it as a matter of
evidence," he sai\1.
·

POINT .PLEAS ANI', W.Va. money in his desk. and said it nevet ·
Two motions have been flied with left 1be city hoilding.
•
Circuit Jud~e James Holliday on
· stein said Friday be had nol .
the. sentencmg of Point Pleasant received word from the judge on ll
Mayor Russell HoUand.
day and time for arguments on the ·Holland's attorney, Ron Stein, motions he· filed. He said Prosecut:
said be tiled motions for reoonsid- ing Attorney Damon Morgan lile4 •
eration of sentence and work a IOIIitten motion opposing the wm ;
release after the mayor was sen- release motion. Stein said&gt;-Morgan ·
tenced to 60 days in jail and two argued work was a cause of Hoi- ·
years probation Wednesday for a land's problem.
-'mi¢emeanor cbarge of embezzle- . The mayor is to report to the
meot by a public official.
Mason County Jail at 9 a.m. MooIndicted during the January ses- day to begin serving his sentence.
sion of the Mason County Grand 'JAil we can do is keep trying, ..
Jury on three misdemeanor counts Stein said.
Even

-

A sttucturally deftdent ooe-laDe lxidge will be teplaced by 1be
Gallia County Highway Deplnment and' weather permitling, 1be
road will be rcop:ned by 4 p.m. m Friday, Aprill4.
.
1 Tbc liridge Is lncMed slx-tenlli&amp; of a mile. soudl of lbe intencclioll willi SIIIC ROUie 218. Local traffiC will need 10 use olber county lind fOWDS!IIp ~ u de~ dur!Dg OOnstruclion,l.eadl said. .

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on_ma_.Tvor's
sentencing-..·_
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;.eam lmoonJMW!

~~ttorney$ di~pute tap_e as public record
Continued from page A1
phone call was-a unofficial con versatimi between two people who were
not aware that they were being recorded.
"This 1ruly is not a public record,"
Eachus said "It is a private ccinversa·
tion between two individuals."
Evans said Watson made the call
following his Nov. 8arreslfor speeding, fleeing, resisting arrest and assaulting a police officer.
At the police station, Watson was
told he could make one phone call and

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Commentar

1995

Aprll2, 1885

\
'I'imes-Se0tinel/A4

The quiet peace.m aking of Bill Ri

in&amp; 011 Mlrcb 20 wltb Krajlna Serb
Pre•jdept Milan Martie lllld'bls for- .
eian mlabrer. Soun:ea say MlJose.
vic urged the two leaden to wort
closely widl lbe U.N. envoy to the
region, Yasusbi Akasbl. Ill deveJo.p
~reeable language for lbc new
.N. PeaceJreeping resoludon.
Richardson's March mectlna
was promptCd by a Ian. 26 letter
from Mllosevlc: "I have learaed
from (a) muiUal good rrtend ... tbat
)'011 are illterestcd In and conc:eined
about problems facing lbe Balka- ns;" Miloscvic wrote."[ would
wck:ome the oppllllllllity for you 10
visit Belgrade ID discuss witb 'you
our effllftS to solve tbe problems in
tbe region." After a Sl,. Patrick's
Day , meeting wilb Tudjman in
Washington, Richardson flew to
Belgrade lbe next momiDg.
This isn't tbe fmt tinUi
son bas stridden into tbe intema:
lional spodight. A member of lbe
House Democratic leadersbi
Ri cbardson bas carved out an avop,
C~_
cation as diplomatic envoy to dictators and despots !hat bas earned
llln
. ;;... ,..,..,....,;,., ....:... ~~r him a long-sbol nomination for Ibis
""'~ """"''"""'' ....,.,,.,. year's NobelPeaee Prize.
Last year, be met for five hours
. wltb Haitian diclalor"Raoul Cedras
in an auempt to avoid bloodshed. A
few_ months later, be happened to
be 10 North Korea when a U.S.
Army belicopler was shot down.
Richardson •s diplomatic efforts
helped secure tbe release of a
tured American soldier - and lbe
remains of one wbo was killed in
LJA~
tbe accident.
• ")bere are some folks tbat
you're wary or because you don't
know if !here's going to be freelancing or self-aggrandizement,"
one Stale Department official told
us. "The admiDistration bas never
ba~ that problem with Richardson.
..[He s easy lo work with because ·
' 'be's not a showboat.''
··
(Jack Anderson and. Michael .
l Blostein are columnists for Unit·
ed Feature Syndicate.)

.

·

J:ndo~sements

help,
.put _don't always win

WE SIPJL.P
)EQOESTE~ THE kiDS Pli!N5
THE 0tJ TRIAL

By WALTER·R.MEARS
JI,P Special Correspondent
.
• WASHINGTON - In the campaign Cor big-name Republican
endorsements for the White HousC, Sen. Bob Dole is the landslide leader. .
rbe last cballenger·wilb so many pre-season backers was Edmund s.
Muskie.
: · The political history lesson is tbat endorsements can bclp, but tbey
Oon't win. When Muslcie slumped from_Democratic front-runner 10 alsoran in 1972, his early allies couldn't do a tbiDg for bim.
: Dole lmows !bat record. He's seen 35 years of national campaigns, is
(\Inning in his fourth, lbn:e for presidential nominations, one as viee presi·
dcntial nominee. What .really counts comes after !be enttorsement show,
when if$ lime ID follow up public suppon
organiulional backing,
networking, and fund·ralsiDg belp.
·
Dole, the Sl:nate majority leader, is tbe favorite in tbe poDs, tbe man
~ilh tbe contfcts, tbe former party cbllrman, the best known ftgure in the
$rowing GOP field.
• He's collecting endorsements one after another as be nears the ceremo~ial sendoff of his third bid for tbe Republican presidential nomination on
April 10, when be announces in ·Topeka. Kan.; what everyone already
mows. He wants lo challenge President Clinton in.l996.
; Sen. Phil Gramm haS bis share of endorsements, collected even earlier,

'fib

1

=~~f~:O:e:7~fi~:~~~F:~n!.!:e.sr~r~:n::e ao~

tamar Alexander may well get a boost from Michigan Gov. Jobn Engler.
Gov. Pete WilsOI) of California is tryiDg to. line up coUeagues like Gov.
.. · William Weld of Massachusetts and Gov. Christine Whitman of New Jer"'Y to help him.
'
·
""
• But there's a certain skepticism about lbe valpe of all !hose names,
e:vcn from one of them, Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampsbin:, latest party
.
fig ure to declare bis suppon for Dole.
• "My view of endonements is !bat !bey are of marginal value," Gre~
sltid in an interview. In New Hampshire, wbeR: !he· opening presidential
P.fimary will be held next Feb. 20, Gregg said vo1ers want 10 see and bear
" Qne, and support
· •s
· not tran.,.,
· '...
-..
oond1.da tcs be'.ore cboosmg
..,le.
: "We'D work organizafionally," be said. "We can tum out die crow$,
~~Bob's got to sign them up. 11 got 10 be tbe message tbat..be bas tb3l
e~&lt;cites them."
; While he's pushing Dole, bis colleague, Sen. Bob Smith, bas come out
r9r Sen. Phil Gramm of Texas. "It'.s a plus for Gnunm," said Gregg. "It
helps Phil organizationaUy.'' Smith bas a strong following among conser~)!live Republicans; and he'll be on the ticket campaigning for a new term
trimself in 1996.
'
: Dole also got an organizational lift with the endot!iements of GOv.
T.erry Branslad and Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, wbicb bolds its presi· hI da ys be'.ore th e New Hampsbin: vote. Dole wc;m
de• nu'al. caucuses e!g
Lltcre m 1988, and 1s !he early favorite to repeat.
_
;· He's got big state governors on his side, 100, in New York and Obio,
· Dol e sru'd Obi o' ts
· a b'tg one, and Gov.
·· .er
' exampIc, wt'lh more commg.
George Voinovich says his mission is to deliver it for bim. Sen. Alfonse
· h'ts en dorsement mto
·
D•'Am ato of New York ·•s tummg
tacu'cal be1p an.d drawing com_ plaints for a plan to usc !be state's intricate petition systern to guaranlee Dole the delegates in tbe biggest· of the early primaries.
' 1}1c night Dole formally announces, D' Amato and Gov. George Pataki
· b'tm ratse
· campatgn
· fun ds in New York City.
are be IptQg
: For alllh
. ~1, II· •s early, very early. Muskie's organization lined up
endorsers dunng !he SUII\mer of 1971, and staged their announcements
llun
, ·ng the fall, closer 10 pri91'\•rv time. Tb.e Republican endot!iements are
comin~ monUts sooner.' -~-~
. In regg's view, lesser known competitors, "what you might call the.
•sterislc candidates" get more out of endot!iemen•• tban ·the estabUsbed
"
...
entries. •'F&lt;ir a perspn who is already a national figure like·Bob Dole or
... .Pbii .Qramm, .it givcs . yQ~ some press for a day or so," be said.
·
ill be •·'aded chppmgs
· ·
~ Tbose nouces w
wben !be primary voting begins
·
Th
•
'h
th
·
tJext wmter. al s w en e commttment
behind Ibis spring:s endorseincnts will get the real test.
·
.. (Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist ror ne Associated
•·
has repor.e
t d on . Was hing to nan d naIIon al poIll
t es •oor more
rress,
than 30 years.)

•

Davicl H. Cumings: eulogy of an · old comrade

.
•
. (Tbls illlbe first or a two-pari bridge, every wbat·bave-you, Ibis
column by Mr. Crow. Pleue old friend remains abimdoned read ned week's Sunday 11mes· left to peiisb in tbe faceless WaStes
f b · ·
Sentinel for Its c:oneluslon.)
o o scunty.
Throughout my lifetime I bave
Diet many Individuals with interestFred
C"ow·
''
·mg stones.
· Tbo Iate David cumings of Salisbury Township was
. ~pace a~d good manners pro·
one of them.
bibtt menuon of most, but Its
David was a self-educated man. names alone
are . sufficientro spark
f tal
He only attended eigbt·years of pangs o nos gta for all wbo were
·school since he bad to quil iD order once obliged to negotiate the bumto help support bis family. I blve ble patb out back. Tbougb comnever met a man wbo bad more of monly referred to as just plain out· 2- command of !be Englisb lan· house or backhouse, there are those
guage !ban David. Here is one of who preferred more intimate or
his stories, which commences with endearing titles ... Jake, John and
his lcuer: ·
Jenny were always popular.
·
·
Peo 1 ·
"Dear Counselor:
·- .
P e wttb a flair for propriety
Recently wbile · rummaging seemed to lean toward privy. Privy
tbrougb some of mY o ld prose, I had somew_l!at
- of a noble twlmg, as
chanced II POD an article I wrote well it should, since it was born as
several years ago concerning an a direct result .of one of England's
element
Henry
himportant
.
b' b of
. our national famous
VI' . monarchs.
(p. ) It seems
. bee
entage, w •c • m my mind, .
·S pnv31e nvy counet 1
arne
should
be,a
.
warded
its
rightful
place
so
offensive
to
tbP
co.
m
moners
that
fb
th
d"'atl d'
o onor iunong our more publiey commence
u mg to their
·
t01'Ie1 ract·1·lUes,
· as pnvtes,
· · an d lhe
cized ttems
of memorabil'13.
As a champion of worthwhile name stuck.
causes • perhaps Yo u, as Cb amnan
·
, Evidently tbe name Jake was
of a Meigs County 0 uth ouse Com- also of English ances'"'·
_, Sbakemittdeed, could engender the clout speare used !he term in King Lear
nee e to fulfill my dream -·
II: "My lord, if you will give me
D.C."
lea¥e, I will tread Ibis unbolted viiE uIogy or an old comra d e
lam' into mortar an·d daub the wall
"In a time wben tbete's a craze of a Jakes with bim." Jakes = outrytb'
r
h
M rtar r
to preserve eve mg rom the log
ouse. o · = une. .
· cabin to Grandpa's collar-bulton
Outhouse designs were even
for posterity, I'tn a lillie saddened more varied tban outhouse names.
tbat we continue to ignore an old They ranged from tbe -."'"des~ most
· andaltlaiblhfulk codmrade. I refer 10 the p,rimitive shack to the majestic
sm
ac yar sb11cture which at 'four-holer'' wb.icb boasted a size
. one
time
n..-rner- sui'led
to. every
b'
. bsiOOd in obedient ,.-,-·
d
di .need,Cand ,were,•to• a
s •P Wit every dwelling of our
egree, m cauve o one s postuon
land- the outhouse.
on the community social ladder.
In the writer's judgment. no
I can recall only one family in
· hborhood (wbo s.,..,..
'"""' sev-·
1'I em s hon o f t he r·t.g 1ear ever
o.ur netg
played a larger role in 'man's rise to era! rungs higher than we) fortu- .
·· cultural development. Few. if any, nate enough 10 possess one of these
"y
The
Associated
Press
'
·
·
·
.
·
fathered
more mcmones.
·
y
D
.
et, pre.su·g·tou s models . As a small lad •
: ~Today . is Sunday, April 2, tbe 92m:I day of 1995. There are 273 days wbtle we struggle to immortalize it was bigbligbt on the rare occa1 every water wheel, every covered
left in !he year. ·
sions I was permitted to pay visit. ,

. .:' I

o.da'y •. n

h. ••

W.

1

story

'·

Resplendendy clad In colonial ball of fame, if there is one, cour- ,
whitewash and lacework of red tesy of tbe generations of jack· ·
-ramblers, wilbJan interior finished
·
knives wbicb engraved its surface
in decorative wallpaper, it could witb an array of verbs and verse, ~
only be described· as a b11e classic ~ ·
tb rk
f
of its time. A liberal supply of old · oreagn to e 1 es 0 8 William '
Holmes
McGuffey.
Saturday Evetting Posts, lime
- During
recess, it often doubled
buckel, and a fly whisk rounded as a jail or fort where in mock ·bat- ,
out a decor tbat .placed its bomey
atmosphere second only to 1·ts ver· rustlers·
ties tbe or
cowboys
could
imprison
stave off
!he attacks
of J·
satility.
·
.marauding Indians.
.•
Many outhouses, however, were
. In real life drama, it sometimes •
not symbolic of easy living. With served as a welcome refuge for the .
Ibis 10 mind, I feel obligated to meek. who could bljfficade tbem- ,
mention another backyard edifice selves against a}!gressives, armed :
whicb graced our modest comniu- with snowballs or olber missiles.
•
nity. II,, moSI assuredly, left an
Of
impression on me and as far as rm
cout!ie, outhouses maiDiained ;
their fair share of liabilities too. ·
concerned, left its proprietor with a M
'
social rank of zero.
·
. p aanky t wereb easy prey . f r ·
11
I' ve a1 ways been puzz J"~
r 0 5during
ers w Halloween
o were. especta
"" as IO . actlve
season.Y '
wheth~r its design was the result of And, lbe most confused man in .
some sadistic impulse on tbe part
·
of the builder or wbetber i".
arcbt'.
·seven
states
was
tbe
man;
wbobis
by
..,
dawn's early light, found
teet exercised a bit of homespun bel
psychology.
.
. in aoved
comfort
nearby
creek.station bottoms up
I.n lieu of a compass saw. the
Th
·
ere· were other hazards. Paper .
seat was fashioned by boring a
series of boles in a circle. Con- wasps regarded tbc outhouse as a
-· u· on s..,.,,......
•o""-~ at lb'•s pomt
· 1 No natural
usually
SuuC
se · d habitat.
ti 1 Though
dd
r'r·
ca e tbe
ue to
tra •c.
ef'.ort wbatsoever was ed.ges 1efl by · onmttbeomes
occasion
varmints
tbe auger.
become riled, be who by luckless
Needless to say, Ibis was not a
b
b
st~le popular among daydreamet!i. c an~e appened 10 be c:illing at ·
0 vtous
. Iy, an engagement witb embarrass
tbe ume, (for
speed alone)
the modern
streaker.could .
Ibis barbaric device would soon
0 tber forms of wiJ.Illife might :
make the most distasteful chore include spidet!i, field mice and an .
appear as refreshing as dry socks.
.
1. bl ack snake. Any of ,
Like others of 1"ts 1·Uc, -tbe one- occasiOna
whi~b could t'nduce m•I d t 0 ·
room school 1 attended was gather
• her ,..,.tticoats and ah a dY·~
equipped wilb dual accommoda- tbe tali limb;;_ poslhas~t·~a . or
tions. Out-of-doors, and located a ·
EDIT
goodly dt'stance east and ·west of time attorney
OR'S Fred
NOTE
Long.
W.- Crow
istbe bumdrum classroom, tbey repb
resented a Promised Land to the t ~ coptrlbulor or a weekly col·
wearied scholar whose raised band umn to The Sunday Times-Sen·.
was a passport 10 glorious freedom. tlnel.
Ia d Readers wishing to
SiDce my Mecca lay east, 1 can . •PI! u • criticize or coii)IDent on
Iauthoritatively speak only for the
any subjecl (except religion or
polillcs)
are encouraged
to ·write
Qne 9C the masculine gender. If pre- to
Mr. Crow
In care of Ibis
news- ·
served, I'm quite sure its inner
~.
wall.(! would now rest in tbe graffiti paper.
• .

°

The City Board of Ballot Commls·

~-BO'FOOM-i:nor-"Jaek'l
· =i~~-t~~~~~-~
~~ B0110111, djed Thursday, March 30.~~rv:
1995 In · :!::~
Hospatal.
·
,
Born March 13, 1929 iD Partcrsburg. W.Va~. son of the lale William C. and Effie Statts Kennedy, be was an el~cian. He was a veteran of
tbe Korean Conflict, a 44-ycar member of the mEW Local Union 968,
die Drew Webster American Legion Post 1139, and tbe Nati!lnal Rifle

~

Association ., · ·

::':\

.

Edward S. Preston
.

I

;.t

.

i~(;~~;~t;nm;r~;-~;h send~

l

'

'

c

R~turn to fair weather seen .
as new work week begins·

CHESHIRE - Edward S. Preston, 89, Cbeshire, died Friday, Marcb By .Tbe Associated Press
The cbance of light snow coil·
31, 1995 in Veterans Memorial Hospitlll.
·
·tinue.in
tbe northeast and northwest
Born April 14, I 90S In MiiiOII. Ky.. son of !he lale Stanley and SaUy
Saturday
afternoon and evening,
Mulligan PresiOn, be was a retired machinist for the Marieua Manufacturbut
no
accumulation
was expected.
. ing (:o. and die New Yodi: Central Railroad Co. He was a member of tbe
Sprinldes
or
flurries
were possiCheshire Baptist Church.
•
ble
across
the
central
!bird
of tbe
Surviving are his wife, Helen Noble Preston, wbom be married Jan. 9,
state
Saturday.
Partly
cloudy
sides
1932 in Newport, Ky.; a son, James Edward (Nancy) Presron of Cbesbire;
prevailed
in
the
south.
·
two daughters, Constance. Wise of Cheshire, and Linda Sue (Herston)
A
return
lo
fair
weather
will
Jarvis of New Carlisle; and six. grandchildren and three great-grandchiloccur on Sunday. Mos.tly cloudy
dren'.
skies will begin !be day,over tbe
He was also preceded in death by four sisters and three brothers. ·
east
witb the clouds detteasing in
Services will be l ·p.m. Monday in the Cheshire Baptisl Cburcb, witb
·
!be
afternoon.
Skies will be partly
tbe Rev. Harold Tracewell officiating. Burial wiU be in !be Gravel Hill
sunny
in
!he
west.
Higbs'will range
Cemetery. Friends may caD at tbe McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wether·
· from .tbe upper 40s in the northeast
to the upper 50s in lbe southwest.
The record higb temperature for
Saturday at !he Columbus weather
·station was 80 iD 19~3. Tbe record

area woman to.,hospital ·

Iss• I

I

THAT ENDURES

·

Surviving are his wife, Vivian Randolph Kennedy; and a brother
WilliamS. Kennedy of Long Bottom. _,.
.
·
'
He was preceded in death by a brother, Clifford "Sidp" Kennedy.
Services will ~e al 2 p.m. Sunday in tbe Ewing Funeral Home
Pomeroy. Burial will be in !be Meigs Memory Gardens.
'
·Military graveside rites wiU be cpnductcid by Drew Webster American·
Legion Post #39.
·

was filed by James
·
•
sioners voted 2-1 Friday to exclude
tbe names of Democratic candi·
Our customers
dates Brian BiUings for councilmlln .
appreciate
at larae and Cheryl Ritne. for city
cleric on ballots for lbe May 20
perhaps the rarest
municipal electioit.
quality of all:
~ City Clerk Marilyn McDaniel,
who led tbe meeting, said tbe. two
candidates bad been challenged and
made a motion 10 uphold tbe challenge. Board member Clara ~ae
liall seconded and Cbatles "Rea"
LiDgerfell
voted against.
Columbus
McDaniel lljen moved to accept
lbe ballot without tbe two names.
was again seconded by Iiall and
opposecfby Lingerfelt.
. . The issue will be argued llefore
~me West"VIrgllllrSopreme-euurr
Wednesday. after a petition for a
writ of mandamus was filed by
• Billings against !he city and several
QUALITY
of its officials.
The controversy began when
Billin~s and Riffle changed !heir
pany affiliation from Re_Publican to
Democrat at the same time they
filed for oCfice, tbe final day 10 file.
A formal complaint· was filed
against the two by R. Mi.J;Ioael J
Shaw, chairman of·tbe Point'~
ant City Republi-can Executive
Committee. In the complain!, Shaw
alleged that Billings and Riffle
should not be allowed on ..the baUot
low te!Dperature was 15 in 1923.
because both switched from one
POMEROY
. Sunrise on Sunday will be at party lo another within 60 days
Meigs
County
Display Yeni .Near
. 7:56 a,m.
before filing for the offices.
Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge
Weather forecast:
West Virginia Code decrees !bat
Katie Miller, Manager
Su~day ... M;ostly cloudy in tbe a candidate's eligibility can be
992·2588
morn ng easl wilb decreasing challenged if the candidaie changes
VINTON
'cloudi ess (II the afternoon. Partly affiliation from one pany to anothGallla County Display Yard
sunny. west. Highs from the upper er by changing voter registration
155 Main SL
40s northeast to the upper 50s within 60 days before filing for
· southwest.
office, Shaw said. A person who
Monday ... Fair. Lows from tbe switches ,from one party to another
lower 30s to the lower 40s. Highs within the 60 days could be disfrom the middle 50s to middle 60s.
Extended forecast:
.Tuesday ... A:.cbance of rain. :
Lows 35 to 40. Higlis in the 40s. ·
Wednesday... A cbance of snow
showers northeast. Fair elsewhere.
Lows in tbe 20s. Higbs in lbe lower
-D.ECORAT-I.ONJJA~ELA'.EBY
3.Qs to the Iower40s.
.
' .

•I

·. Leroy 'Jack' Kennedy

cap- .

-

rna- fOieC8St fer ·

.POINT PLEASANT, W. VL -Graveside servieea
beld
MICH.
Slllmdly, April I, 1995 ill die
Memorial Gardens fer
dl · r--1---~C.....
Clark Sbaw Benz, 90, Point Pleasant. formerly of New York, N.Y., wbo
died Thursday, March 30, 199S In the Pleasant Valley Nursi!lg and RebabilltationCeniec.
·
·
Tbe Rev. Louis A. Hussell officiated and IUillllgements were by !be
. Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant
Born Dec. S. 1904 in New York. daughter of the late Robert A and
'1
Myrtle Wilhelm Sbaw, sbe was a retired arcbltec:l in New York and
IND.
. _ a.!tended tbe Riverside Baptist Cburcb iu New York. A -graduate of
Wellesley College in MilssacbusetiS. sbe also attended Harvard and
Colombia universities.
. ·
.
Sbe ~a_s also preceded in death by her husband, Fred Benz.
Survtvmg are three cousins, Roberta "Bobby" Ho~ of Gallipolis
Nedra JOIICS of Point Pleasan~ lllld Joanette Drake ofYeDow Springs.
'

rucm'ro

UAR

SIIJICbr, Aprill
Accu· w

Mayo Monumen·t Co.

Ohio, .W. Va. lo.n ery picks

GALLIPOI'..IS - A Bidwell
The patrol also investigated an
woman was taken 10 Holzer Medi· accident on the eastbound U.S. 35 By The Associated Press
· of $100 000 tbe Ionery announced
cal Center Friday by the Gallia approach 10 the Silver .Memorial
Tbe followi'!g numbers were
today. ' '
·
County Emergency Medical Ser- Bridge· at 2:46 ·p.m. Friday, but
in F~y's Ohio and West ·
The winning ticket wits sold in
vice with an injury received in a delails were not immediately avail- ; se_le~~
V
argm~a loUeries:
Middleburg
Heights.
two-vehicle crash at tbe intersec- able Saturday.
OWO
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
lion of Stale Route 160 and County
Racine ftlan jailed
3:
9-2·6
$529,084.
·'
Pick
Road 6 (McCormick), the GalliaIn other action; !he palrOI placed
Pick
4:
2:7·2·1
The
216
BuckeyeS
game
tickets
Meigs Post of tbe State Highway Henry P. Price, ~5. 27318 Apple
· Buck9ye 5:.1-16-24·26-28
wilb four of the numbers are eacb
PalrOI said.
Grove-Dorcas Road, Racine, into
The owner of one Buckeye 5
worth $250. The 5 974 witb three
· Paula 1. Garrett, 26; 28 Gavin !he. GaiUa County Jail at 4:08 am.
ticket
f
ro!!'
~riday
night's
drawing
of
the numbers are ~ach worth. $10.
St., was treated and released for Saturday for driving under tbe has tbe wmnmg five-number comThe 59 307 with two of tbe numbruises, a ~Ospi_tal spol!:esperson influence, driving under suspen- bination for an Obio Louery prize
bers
each worth $1. '
said.
··
.
•
sion, obstructing- an officer. no
'Troopers said Garrell was south- seatbel( and left of center. .
bound on 160 at 2:50 p.m. wben a
Citation issued
pickup truck driven by Harold D.'
A Gallipolis man Wi'S cited for
Dillon, .21. 336 Bladen Road , . failure 10 yield by Gallipolis City
Cr_o\\'!!_ City. pulled from Police following a three-car acciMcConnick into her patb and col· dent at the intersection of
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) ·claims in lbe proceedings. ·
Dick Daugherty, hired by the
lided.
Portsmouth Road arid Evans - A .former cemetery owner bas
Both Dillon's and Garrett's H~ights.
been charged with fraud allegedly bankruptcy referee to opanage tbe .
'pickuJ?s were se_verely·da.maged
Officers said Harold G. Copley, committed.during federal bankrupt- cemeteries until !hey are sold, said
and Dtllon was Cited for failure to 56. 33 Evans Heights was south- cy proceedings, Assistant U.S. Rooney routinely used COIIJpany
funds to pay personal expenses.
yield.
I'
bound on Portsmouth ~1 11:06 a.m. AtiOmey Paul BIUups said.
including
onbodontist bills, jewelry
··
Area woman cited
when be auempted to turn onto
Francis Patrick Rooney Ill was
and
aips.
Troopers cited Candy S. Arix, Evans Heights and coDided with a named in two criminal information
26, New Haven. W.Va., for assured northbQund car driven by Sheryl ~ges file~ Tu~y in U.S: Disclear distance in a two-vehicle M. Gilben, 32, 14380 SR 554, Bid- . tn~t Court m Hunungton, Btllups
accident on SR 7 near Addison Fri- weD
said.
· day. .
• T~e collision forced Copley's ,, I An information allows fed~ral
Continued from paga A1
Anx was soutbbo.und at 7:30 car onto a van driven by Lisa T. prosecut~rs t.o bypass a grand Jury
since
Copplef became city manager
a,lll. when she was unable to stop Woods, 36. 39325 Bradbury Road, ~b~n bnngmg a charge. It also
last
Ociober.
i~ time and str~ck the rear of a Middleport, who was stopped 6n m~cates !he pl!rson plans to plead ·
"You have a guy who's ready 10 go
ptckup truck dnven by. Thurman Evans Heights, according to the guilty.
.
.
Smitb, 38, ~501 SR 554, Cheshire. rcpon.
Rooney, who hves •.n Safety and a.s a result, !here are a lot of neat
S~ith had slopped in trat:fic at
Minor injury was reported 10 Harbour, Ra., has an unlisted tele, things getting slarted."' Davis said.
tbe tune of the crasb, accordmg to Gilbert. but !lie re rt did not indl- ~hone number and could not be
Davis is a senior recreation special, .
tbc repon. Dan1age was moderate
if b
poled
D
reached.
isl al Gallipolis Developmental Cento Arix's car and slight 10 Smith's cate s e was trea or no~ amRooney operated cemeteries in ter, while Koby is vice pres.idenl for
pickup.
.
a~e w~s severe lo Copley s an~ Huntington, Milton. Hamlin, DunDetails Incomplete
Gtlbert s cars and slight 10 Woods . bar, Clendenin, Calvin and Lexing- facilities and long-range planning al
van.
ton, Va. before filing for bankrupt- the University of Rio Grande.
Should'•iTitiie than rwo· candidates
cy protection in 1991. He.earlier file for the co,mmission seats, peti.
.
bad sold four cemeteries in Ohio.
•
Rooney fraudulently concealed tions will be filed with the Gallia
, BEVERLY (AP) - A body found in !he Muskingum River may be a property from creditors in 1992 County Board of Elections for the
Lancaster man who disapperued while fishing on Nov. 29.
·
during tbe bankruptcy proceedings, May 2 primary. If not, Davis and
Robert Tipple, 47, disappeared wben a fishing boat capsized near lbe. prose-cutors said.
Koby will receive a complimentary
Stockportdam.
Abou't 1.200 creditors filed vote in Ihe November eleclion,'
Terry D. Keister, 31, of Lancaster, drowned and bis body was recovered. Mansi! Hurlbu~ 47, of Circleville, was rescued.
A resident saw !be body Friday in debris near tbe river's edge about 10
miles from Stocktlort. authorities said.

m
Ex-cemetery owner faces
charges of criminal fra~d

Incumbents

/ .

•

NEW YORK- From outoftbe their interest. But it is in your inter~ of daily events: You can earn a
GeneraUy speaking: tbe big bro- ~
_clip
con!usion. of '!ally eve111S est.
·
.
.'
.
million mor~ quickly witb small · kerage firms don '1 follow these
there anses some maftera1Jieb11ihs - A- byperbohc-- tllustrauon - stocks lhan-wath big-name stocks.
small companies; they're busily •
;Jbo,ut.s ne's personal finances lliat' demonstrates lbe power of lime and
Tbat is,· tbe 1'eturn on small tracking and publicizing tbe big, :
tend to be overlooked.
stocks. tbe kind you .do11't bear mature and·slower-growing con- =
• That, for example. there is no
much abou~ is bigger tban that of cem·s lbat can accommodate tbe big • ·
jnvesltnent without risk,'no. mallet
I1
big stocks, whose names are trades.of institutions.
bow bard you seek it and despite compounding:
referred to dally. and it bas been
That 2.9 percel\f...difference
tbe assurances of some investment
Which woul(l you rather have, thatwayfordecades.
•
·between big and smalr~ muladvisers. You can limit risk, but $35,000 for 30 days' work, or 1
And. of course, so is lbe risk. tiplies over time. For .example
you t:annot elimiDate it.
cent paid on the ftrSt day only, but Still, tbe risk can be reduced -$10,000 atl5.7 percent compound:
• Equally true is that investing doubled_ or compounded at 100 tbrougb prudence- by avoiding ed annuai!'Y becomes $1 iniJ.Iion. ~
isn'ts~ulalion.
. .,
percent- eacb day for 30 days?
s'peculative initial public offerings, within 35 yetl!'s. With big-cap :
Tbe speculator, said Be~jamin
. Cboice 'qne would assure you of penny stocks and illiquid private stoclcs It would·lake 49 years.
•
Graham, tbe Mose~ of prudent $35,000. a pretty good wage even investments, and investing only in
• It is far better to save and ;
investing, seeks to profit fm11! mar- for a· ballplayer, but tbe second quality companies.
'
invest - get. off to a Cast start in Y
ket movcme111s, without pnmary . would give you millions of doUars
To illusttate: Between Ibe tbe race- tban to borrow indul'e ~
regard to intrinsic values.
more. Compounded. investments beginning of 1940 and tbe end Qf and bope tbat fulure income wtll
;
In con#~ the prudent investor become sb11nger witb lime. Incred- 1992 tbe Standard &amp; Poor's 500- help pay tbe bills. In short. it is bet- •
buys at prices supported by llllder- "lbly Sll'obger.
stock lnCiex ot blue Cblps renuned · lllr to ba~e .money ·Coming in tban ..•
lyint.value, and even pares bold:
Advisers somelillies use another an average of 11.8 percent a year. money going out
.
:
1
inp wben spt;CUiation becomes the example: Beginning at age 19 save But small-cap stocks earned 15.7
Tbe lesson is especially perti· :
markcl's domi~t force.
.
$2,000 a year for elgbl years in an percent in die same pel'lod.
~e':ll tbese da~s, _when f'!JD!IICS are •
• True also as tbc fact that time Individual Retirement Account
Gerald Perrin one of lbe b11e bvmg to tbe limil of lbeu- IDComes :
and compounding are f!S important earning 10 percent a year. Add
autborides 1111 die ~ubject, describes and, lbrou§b die use of easy credit, '
as perbaps any other investment nothing thereafter, lei compound- small-cap stocks as tb·o se witb -far ~?eyond. Consumer installment ~••
fa&lt;:Ur.
•
ing and time do tbe wor'k, and equity capital under $120 miUion, credltfjses as·!be savings rate falls.
You ·won 1 find Ibis advenised become a millionaire by retirement Many are bigh-quality companies,
(lob Cunniff Is a bu1lness
nor probably even mentioned by age.
•
tbe Wai·Marts. Home' Depots and a11aly1t for The Assodaled
vendors whose income is made on ~An that brings upanotbel'fact Miaosoflsoflbefuture.
Press.)
commissions, because It Is not in of life 31 qften is lost in lbe swirl
,

t·

!

MONUMENT GARDEN
OF RESUR

j

'

,.

&gt;

Large Selection!

OPEN 9:00A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 5 DAYS A WEEK
CLOSED SATURDAYS
OPEN SUNDAYS 1:00 PM. - 6:00 P.M.
Located on Rt. 141 at Centenary,
3 miles from Gallipolis, ()hio
. '. .
Phone 446·7039

,Minimum
Qpening Deposit

·ohio Valley Memory Ga~densj.S
proud to announce the opening of

=
=

~

As .b ighas

and

John Cunni"

'Quality Higliiri But Prices LoWER

Body may be m_issing fisherman

Lf~~f!·~C'~~~~7~~~eCoinageAct,wbicbautborized On the ine$capable .f acts of personal finance ~

In 1513, Spanish explorer Juan !'Doce de Leon landed in Fl~
" ln I80i, storyteller lians Cbrisu~? Ande~ ~s _bom m..Q&lt;Jense, _
Denmark.
..
.
: In 1834, Fredenc Au~uste Bartlloldt, tbe sculptor wbo created tbe Stat~e of Ltbeny, was born .m Co~ar. France.
: ·
.
In 1860,-tbe ftrSt ltai18D ~liamentmetat T~.
.
.
In 1861, Confederate Pn:stdentJefferson Davts and mos.t of bas Cabtn~tlled the Confederale capttal of Richmond, Va.
.
.
·: In 1872, Samuel F.B . Morse, developer of the electriC ielegrapb, died
m N.ew York, .
.
.
.
In 191 ?· Pr~~tdcnt Wtlson asked Congress 10 declare war .~gamst Germany, say1ng, The world must.be made safe fordem&lt;&gt;a'a'&lt;Y·.
-'
In 1942, Glenn Mi~er ~ bts orchestra recorded "Amencan Patrol"
at the RCA Vtctor st~«J!os m Hollyw~;
..
..
In 1956. lbe televt.ston soap operas As the World Turns and The
Edge of Ntght'~ preouea:c&lt;~ on CBS.
. • ·. . _ s
Jn 1974, French President Georges Pomptdou ~ed m l'arfS.
In 1982, several thousand trOOps from Argenuna seized tbe disputed
._f~!&lt;IJ!Il.d !sla,nds, localed in tbe_s~lb Atlanlic. from Bri~ . (~rilain
~IZed the islands back ilte Tollowmg June.) .
In 1986, fo~ ~encan passengers were lcilled when a bomb eXJ)Ioded
.~boar~ a lWAJetlmer en roule fro111 Rome to Athens, Greece,
• . .
. · In 198~. ~abama Gov. George C. W~ announced be was retiring
fronipubhc life.
.
.'
Ten years a~o: l?restdenl Reagan ann?unced tbe .ni&gt;D!ination ofCp~ '
Yeutter, president. ahd cbtef execuuve of _the..Cbtcago Mercl\nllle
Exchange, to ~e tbe U.S .. '!'Bde repre.;enrauve.
. ,
.
.
. : ftve years .ago. In a conciltam &amp;esture, ~e. preSide~! of Litbullll!llmvtted Kremlin officials to dtsems tbe republic s SCCCSSIOII drive. The
Ub!ve~slly of Neva~ at Las Vegas won tile NCAA college basketball
cljamptonsbip, dcfeaung Duke 103-73.

Sunday nmea Sentinel Page AS ·

Point Pleasant ballot battle·.:
heads-for
state Billings'
Highwritcourt
~~
POINT PLEASANT. W.Vi. to
lliah court:· -

OHIO Weather

)

t'TAU
I
'?f1n j.t,l\.

-~YBE

-Pomeroy-Middleport G~llpolla, OH Point Ptuun~ wv

Area Deaths----Elizabeth Clark Benz
were
:,;cIClrt18!ld

rdson

WASHINGTON. - Rep. Bill of(iclals say Mlloaevic Ia now enma to ellpd lbe 12,000-membcr
Ridllnlsoo, 0-N.M., rec.=ndy toot expressing private sappon·for die U.N. fO!CF llccause be feared tlllt
a lnak from die panlsan warfare In . pact. wbicb was hammered outla the confronlllioli llae was ~&lt;ioogrcss to tty to MCBpime peace Copenhagen, Denmark.
ing 1 de-facto border that would
In the former Yugoslavia.
'
prevenl cro.da fian ever JTd;m.
In doiDg so. be kame die lalest By Jack Anderson ing iU 1aDcL
In a string of part-lime diplomats
·
- Tudjmu alglied on to lbe
,
from
Jimmy
-Carler
to
Vice
and
·
'
Copenhagen
a~t becauae It
ll5 nlrd Aft~ GaWpollt, Olllo
Ill c-t St._ h
0)0 01a1D
-~sldent AI Gore- wbo bave
would cullbe U.l'l. force Ia balf
(614) 446-l.Wl
.
(614) "l-1156
ttied-10 broker an end to die tbrce-Michael Blnsteln and shift SOIIC of die peacekccpen
year-old carnage. •
to Croalia's.lntematkioal borden.
ROBERT L. WINGITJ:.
Publlolier
Ric;bardson met qul~dy .ff8 IS · · "Richardson did"'nove Milose- Bul tbe new mandale cannol be
boors witb Serbian President Slo· vic toward a cooperallve lllii.U!Ie" approved wilbout an endorsement ·
. HOBART WILSON JR.
bodan Mllosevlc on March 18, a on lbe Cppenbagen agreement, ooe · from the Krajina Serbs, wbo bave
.•~.Eua~tl'" Editor ·
meeting wbicb a top Stale Depart- State Departmelil official con· ballced at !be deal tbus far.
ment offiCial says may blve helped · t"lfllled. •'DiU did a good job In preMtcr meeting with Ricbardsoo,
prevent tbe
"from exploding seiltin4 tbe merits of lila! llll3l!&amp;e· Milosevic agreed !O lean on KnUi·
MEMBER of. The A.,ocialcd Preo1, lllland D~Uy Pre11
-~and~:~·~_II:~~-~Croa~~ua~·~an~d_!cl~se~-::.:____llment.' _
·
'
· ,na Serb leaders, even tbouab refa..
Tbe-lsfl!C-i~l'itlc:al--becliust--dons..belween..tb!: two "'!!!pS.I!ave
LETTERS OF OPINION ore welcome. They 1bould be lea ·IJsaa
·Prior to meeting wilb Richard- most of !he U.N. peacekeepers are been stormy. "Wbat Mllosevlc
300 wordo long. AU Ieben ore 1ubjoct 10 odiW., ll!d must be liaood 'witb
sOil, Milosevlc bad refused to sup- currently stationed along !he 5QO. lndicaled.to Rlcbardson was tbat be
name, addr&lt;11 and lelephooe number: No UDiilneol Ietlen will be
pon a crucial agreement berwcen mile confrontatio~ line between would uae all bis influence with !he
published. ~tten . abould be in &amp;'10&lt;1 tule, addrellln&amp; w1101, 1101 ·
Gore
and Croatian President F!anjo Croat government forces and rebels Krajina Scrllsto suppon tbe deal,"
personaliti... /
•
.
.
Tudjman to keep United Nations laiown as K.rajina Serbs, wbo e;o~- one American official told our
peacekeepers in Croatia. Knowl· trol_about 30. percem of Croaua s assc&gt;c!ate ~Henry.
edgeable Amerian and Serbian temtory. TudJman '!_ad been tbreal·
MtloseviC followed up by meet,..- - - - - - - - - . . . . .

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286·7484
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Pomeroy-Midd~llpolla,

Aprtl2,1815

OH Point Plu11nt, WV

tbe trial ... (II
tbe vc;rae ol moviDa iDto a pbue
iDvolvlng evideDc:e collec:tlon and
scleattifJC issuel.

outside at ll:2S p.m., told pollee
Simpson' a ri&amp;bt ann waa-lbe
open ina or tbe trul! c:aa, ABC

)IIOICCIIIm jUil ..

... Charlea Cale, • Simpeon
neighbor, teellled M dldn,
- Slm~'a Bronco oulalde
hill 8llale IM night ol two
murdera but did 1pat It pRed
at tha curb NJty the next
morning.

reported bucd oo a copy of die ·
statement 'Junia aave pollee

~~

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W~y.

The News Hotl-I ne

446

2342

-

o?

eron

-:::::::~
-Sodti):EKL%0

.

• Ext.U

-- --

..

Ill&gt; Aller jurora were cf~amilaed for
tM weekend, the defense
q'!.IJIIoned two police
pi!Oiogl'lphera and one
detec:llve ebOut a videotape

~ - WHAT

To HoP

INTO.TH-IS

takan aa police -c:tted

· SlmpaQn's estate laat y•r.

.

that n:collec:tlon, even as
pJD'.
·
.
lawyers lricd to raise doubta about
Cale, wbo desaibed b~lf as
bls ability to n:mcmber cveata !bat a self-employed investor wbo lives
bappenediltlne mOIIIbs ago. .
· witbin a quaner:mile of Simpsoa •s
"Could it have been 9:2S7" estate, was c:alled uncx!lC(:tedly by
defense .attorney Robert Shapiro. , ..

asked.
"I don't tbinlr:lt was. Is it possi'
ble? I guess it's ~ssiblc. I don't
tbink so, !bough, •' Calc responded.
''Do. yo~ walk .your dog at ~

SPRING

'

,

Gretchen

••
~ -·
·
~·~St·n'de· R·~
h.e.

•

fllte Sltoe eate

"Living
Pictures
of

i

Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, Ohio

Thvye (Ed Roark) has one of hiS many conver8ations with God.

-.

1

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By JAMES H. RUBIN
cbascs of durable goods such as
Associated Press Writer
cars, computeu and l!ome appliWASHINGTON - The ecooo- ances.
my grc\\( more rapidly anile close
The revision in GDP .caught
qf 1994 tbao it bali in a year, analysts by slll'l.'rise. Mos'thadpreflligniting inflation fears and help- dieted tbat tbe rate of growth would
.I
ing to send tbe stock market tUI!I- be unchanged from tbe earlier esti·
bling Friday.
mate.
Three performances to make more room.
Stocks later recovered some lost
ground, and most analysts insisted
The Federal Reserve over tbe
Ne~ drama and expande'd cast.
:tbe growth figures are old news and last 14 months bas raisc!d sbortNew, exciting music.
:lhat tbe economy is slowing to a term interest rates seven times to
-speed limit tbc Federal Reserve is try to stifle inflation by lowering
Join us for Living Pictures!
economic growth. The contra!
' trying to enforce.
·: The Commerce Department said bank's policy-making Federal
Qie gross domestic product surged Open MaJket Committee left rates
:at a 5.1 percent annual rate in the unchanged Tuesday. The panel
·fourth quarter last year, tbe fastest next meets May 23, lind private
:growth since it advanced at a 6.3 economists ate divided about wbal
. . ~ercen_t clip in the final three 1 the Fed will do next ·
.
Despite tbe potent fourth-quarter
:months ofl993. .
.; The economy gr~w 4.1 percent . expansion, inflation remained well
Aprll13-14, 1995
Presented b) ...
·.for all of 1994. That s tbe strongest under controL One measure of
The Saocluary Choir
7:30 P. \1.
. · performance since 1984; when it inflation tied to GDP was revised
and Dr:uful Ministries or
: ~~panded 6.2 per~ent during ~e ·. upward sllgbdy to sbow a gain of
Fl111 Church ol doe Nwrent
. :fmal year of Prestdent Reagan s 2.6 percent, instead of a previous
April16, 1995
WitneSs
. (irst term.
2.5 percent estimate for tbe OctoTI.e l...:ln.e Walk and the mind See
1 0:00 A.M.
. · In:ve~tors already troubled by her-December quarter. The same
The: Lord's.Supper
. :the smkmg U.S. dollar went on a index rose 3.5 percent in tbe !bird
The Garden
·
: ·Selling spree, but tbe losses were quarter.
Jesus Brouchl &amp;rorc Pi kite:
· :lrimmed later in IIJe day. By mid·
The P:t.inM Walk aO Cal\·ary
: ·:iftemoon tbe Dow Jones industrial
The Commerce Department also
NaillnJ of our Loid tolhc CrOss
·average ~as off nearly 20 points repo.rted tbat after-tax ~orporate
The CruciD..xion
while tbe yield on long-term bonds proftts of U;S. corporations rose
Takin1 Jesus Do•·n From the Crou
climbed to 7.44 percent The dollar 2.5 percent m t~e fourth quarter,
The Celebration or His Resuncction
fell io a record low against tb(\ ~arne as m the lb1rd q.uarter. Profits
Japanese yen and sank nearly 3 JUmped 7.3 percent m tbe second
percent
ag~t
the German
11)3lk.
quarter._ _ _ _ _ _..;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _- .
Private
analysts
saicHiiel'll'i&gt;lir--

"

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••

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·,

Gooolfu•
TIEMPO
0111 KOIIOIIY S1EB
lllnDUDW

.,
-~.;.-

tle reason to fear innation or tbaf · · ~""
tbe Fetteral Reserve will n:sume
raising interest rates because !be
signs point to slower consumer
spending Ibis year.
"I think the market is mistalcen." said Roger Brinner, chief '
economist for DRI·McGraw Hill, a
Lexington, Mass., forecasting finn.
"This.is not news. This is a revised
record of the economy three to six
montbs ago. This economy already
has shifted to a lower g~."
. The Commerce·Department also
reported Friday tbat orders 10 U.S.
factories fell 0.2 percent in Fcbru-.
ary, the first decline in four
months. Demand for big-ticket ·
durable goods was off 0.8 percent,
also the first decrease since Octo· ·
ber.
.
The GOP figures were revised
upward from the government's
montb-old estimate tbat sbowed a
4.6 percent annual rate gain for tbe
fourth quarter of 1994. Increased
business spending on aircraft and·
'
Ilea vy duty trucks and higher net
exports due to smaller imports
were big contributors to the
change. .
.
·
''The basic message 1s that the
economy went out of 1994 with a
. .,.hoosh," sll.id ~conomist Robert
Dederick of the NorthC!'Il Trust Co.
in Chicago. ''Tbat, of course, is
behind us. The economy seems to '
have slid -out of the fast lane as
soon as tbe. page was turned, witb a
rather dramatic doWrlsbifting."
He and others pointed 10 recent
evidence of slowing in the interest·
sensitive housing marlcet and in car
. sales. ·'Ibfo-epesu'Crisis in MexiCo is
also exp ted to be a drag on the
U.S. eco 001y, cutting into exports.
Consumer spending accounted
for about two-tbirds of tbe fourtb-

.'

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Mendel (Kerry Shelton) tells the Rabbi (Jason
Stou_t) about the "Rumor" in town. ·
:

-.,...

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UlfOD.·If .........

......
6000/YEJtR

Call Today!
614-372-2801 or 800-852-2687

Ask about our 95 gallon ~te wheel8rsl

•

II
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NAME

•

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. I ·--· .

'
c.

Between scenes. elementar)' inatli teacher P.itsy
Schuldt, tutors Tevye's youngest daughter
(Dusty :Roush) with her math lessons.

Chava (Amy Roush) and Fyedka (Gus Petrie) have a chance
·meeting at Motel's Tailor Shop. A meeting strictly forbidden
by her fat)ler Tevye. ·

"1 IN JIHI S

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RUMPKE, 811A Arion Road, Mdlermott, Ohio 45652 ,'614-372-2801 or 80().85
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2·268_7. II

1

Villagers (Susan Nickels, Suzanna Bapst and
Josh Preston) discuss the new arrival at Motel
and Tzeitel's.

- ..... , -........... Nit .....

10

-ADDRESS
1 CITY/STATE/ZIP
1 PHONE

Yente (Josie Bapst) explains a·"vision" to Golde
(Jean Ann Vance) .

YMfiEWAI1

r--------·
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Tevye's daughters (from left; Charity Collins, Kelly Pope, Amy
Rouse and Amber Dronkowski) yearn for husbands in "Matchmalcer,
Matchmalcer". .

Around the tum of the century, a popular Jewish author named Sholom Aleichem penned a
few tales built around a gentle Russian dairyJnan named Tevye who, in dealing with his everyday existence, carried on extended if one-sided discussions with the Almighty.
. Aleichem (real name: Sholem.Yakov Rabinowitz, 1859-1916) became ·known in the U.S. as
the "Jewish Mark Twain' and his stories abou.t his people and their detennined struggle to
.
survive in a hostile environment became an integral part of the Yiddish experience.
It was in the early 1960s that three musical comedy ct&gt;llaborators -Joseph Stein on book,
composer Jerry Bock and lyricist She\don Harriick- took upon themselves .the task of translat·
ing the story of Tevye into a Broadway extravaganza.
· The end result was "Fiddler on t,he Roof,' which debuted in September 1964 and would run
nearly eight years straight for more than 3,000 performances to establish a Great White Way
record.
· Revived several times, filmed once and performed throu&amp;hout the world, "Fiddler on the
Roof' comes to the stage of the University of Rio Grande's Fine and Perfonning Arts Center April
6-8 under the auspices o£RSR Enterprises as this year's show to benefit Rio Grande scholarships.
"Fiddler,' whiCh starts each night at 8, is set in the Russian village of Anatevka in 1905, a
time when persecution of the community's Jewish residents was a regular oc.currence under the
czarist regime.
Tevye deals not only with that issue put more domestic matters as his five daughters approach marriageable age. One, Tzeitel, has been promised to the iichest man in town, but she
Motel Kamzoil (Jim O'Brien) can't believe that Tevye has
opts' to wed a poor tailor. Another, Hodel, marries a revolutionary and follows him to,Siberia.
given him permission to marry hls daughter Tzeitel (Kelly
And
Chava, a third daughter, marrjes out of her religion.
Pope) .
, Eventually, a pogrom is visited upon the village, disrupting the family's lives. But true to his
optimistic nature and trust in faith, Tevye gafhers '!P the remainder of his.Ufe and sets out for a
new existence. in America.
.
.
While heavily rooted in the Jewish experience, "Fiddler' w~s a, hit with audiences due to its
~niversal themes of tolerance, family and romance. The humor and music found in such tunes
as "If I Were a Rich Man' not only put the original show over, but made a star out of its Tevye,
the late Zero Mastel.
'
·
The RSR production, under the direction of Ed Roark, maiillains the production's charm and
provide~ a showcase fot a number of community performerS .. Many of them are veterans of past
RSR presentations, including "Man of La Mancha," ·camelot,' "Music of the Night' and selections from "Les Miserables.'
'
·
,
Roark, a veteran Rio Grande faculty member, assumes the role of Tevye, while jean Ann
Vance is Golde, his wife. Their five daughters are played by Kelly Pope, C::l)arity Collins, Amy
Rouse, Amber Drongowski and Dusty Ro!!sh·.
·
.
'
Other major roles are essayed by James O'Brien (Motel), j!Jann Bapst (Yente); Kurt Ludwig
(Lazar Wolf), Allen Ross (Perchik), Gus Petrie (Fyedka) ·and jay Sheridan (the Fiddler).
The residents of Anatevka are played by Seth Argarl:lright, Suzanna Bapst, Kathleen Deal,
Bob Dunlap, Lynda Dunlap, Raymond Lynn Boothe, Lori Bullion, Erica Hanning, Marlene Hoffman,
John Holstein, Aaron Hoover, Philip Mollohan, Marie Mulford, Mike Mulford,. Tajana Mullins,
Standel a Mundell, Janie Nickels, Susan Nickels, Joshua Preston, Teresa Preston, Vinton Rankill, '
Student Perchik (Allen Ross) says farewell to Hodel (Charity . Sequoya Redman, Wendi Rollins, Bambi Roush, J?atsy Schuldt, Doug Sharp, Kerry Shelton, Fred
Collins) before departing to participate in revolutionary acts
Sites, Joshua Sites, Mar¥ Sites, Jennifer Skidmore, John Sowers, Jason Stout, Becky Woodyard,
against the Czar.
Graham Woodyard and Andrew Woodyard. . ·
•
Other members of !be Russian community, who also serve as stage crew include : Benjamin
Barksdale, Quinten Ch~:stnut, Bob Huffman, Carmelo Olivems at;~d Aaron Weisbinle, (Chery.l
Brenller -·Stage Manager).
.
·
.
Edith Ross is the musical supervisor for the production, with Hayden Lloyd as con,ductor for
the vigorous score. Orchestra members include: ·Edith Ross, .Haydcn Lloyd, Dorothy R1epenhoff,
jay Sheridan, Barbara Thomas, Cynthia Long?na, Kenni HOrlOJl, Vicki Bush, Lori Bullion , Barbara White, Winston Sheets, Mary·J~etty, JY~dy Sigman, Keith Koby, Bobby Dean Gordan, and
Patrick Riepen)Joff. Serving as assistant director for the production is Patsy Schuldt.
RSR, an independent non-profit production agency, was founded in 1986 as the Local Artists.
Concert Series and assumed its current name in 1989.
.
· Tickets for "fiddler' will be available at th~ door at a standard rate of $5.00 per licket. For
more information contact Ed Roark (614) 245-7361.

• Senior citizen discount IIY8llat&gt;le

I

Tevye (Ed Roark) and Golde (Jean Ann Vance)
.~are a tender moment In "Do You Love Me".

____
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_ c-..
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ls:¥n*--.
.........

when you sign up for thrael

. • No extra charge for pick-up of
appliances, fumilura or large Items.
(Limit of one par week) ·

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'

Economic growth ·spurs
more inflation worries

quarter ,growth in GDP, led

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

,

at .Sim·pson alibi .

Simpson · ·
trial update

Ill&gt; The hearing on the videotape
. continues ,II 8:30 a.m.
· Monday. Thajudaila a.Jso
axpacted to ruhl illridetense
motion to reopen a c:halanga
... to DNA avldanca.

.

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In "The Ruiner", the villagers discuss Tzeltel's.wedding to Motel Kamzoil.
- -Aaron Hoover·(center)-as Avram, the bookse~ler..
- ~ ~ --,- -·

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S.S.#

LazarWolf(kurfLudWigJani:fYenie (Josle . Bapst) contemplate their future as Russian
oppression runs them from their home.

by~p:ur:·:...===·=-=-=-=·=-=-=-=-=-:;-;==-=-=-=-=-=-=-;:-=-=-:;-;::-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=·==:L~~~~~~:.:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Holzer Medical .Center's

'

Your FREE membership i1lc/udes;

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• Speakers bureau ,for
civic organizations ·
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LIFELINE information

.~ Di1countl in t~e Hospital Cafeteri,a,Oift Sltop and Holzer'family_Pha,rn;ac:y

50

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• Quarterly new1letter

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· for monil information or to. N~gistllr
caD Ma:eW,.,H ·SO at 446-5.392 or thfl
Hol-zllr Health Hotline. dt 1-S00-462-5255

1An excithig new FREE ·membership program·designed to provide iiulividuals
50
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· - . 1be orchestra tunes up to master the famous Bock
and Hamlcls score (conductor Hayden
seen
at left).

Edith Ross, musical· supervisor
for the show. Fiddl,- is ~ ninth
RSR prOductlop.
_
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Reb Mordcha (Raymond Lynn Boothe) fills
up the viUagcrs mugs during "L'Chaim! Tb
Life".

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P I

Pomeroy-Middleport-GIIIIPoJia, 0H Point PIIINnt, Wv

82 Sunder 11m• Sanllnel

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·Meigs communitY calendar
n. eo--mty Caleadar ..

LETART FALLS -Letart
Township Trustees meeting Monday, 6 p.m. in tbe oflice building.

pabllabed •• a free oenlce to
DOD•profit aroapo wlolliDI to
•-oallCe meetlna and opeclal
••entt. Tile calendar I• not
de•lanltd to promote
or
l'llnd ralaer1 1or ,any type. lte111'11 printed u .....,. permlb llllll
c:a-ot lMi aauanteed lo 'raD D
.-cAftc number or clays.

n!ESDAY

••1••

EAS1ERN- Planning meeting
of Eastern High School senlcr JIIU·
ents for the dinner theater, Tuesday, 7 p.m., high school cafeteria.
Committees to be named.

l_c,l'~ll

color

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LETART FALLS- l.etartPortlaRd PTO, Monday, at 7 p.m. at
.the Letan Grade School. Plans will
be made for a spring carnival.

Crow'a on top of things.
Hoeflich's 'round tbe'bend
.Sands' tn the put.
Freeman's out in the

RACINE - Organiz,ational
meeting for .reunion of Class of
1970, Southern High Scbool, at
Kountry Kitchen, Racine, Thursday, 6:30p.m.
REEDSVILLE0 b i o
Association of Public School
Employees 11448 meeting Tuesday,
7:30 IJ.m. at Eastern High Scbool.
..
,
DARWIN - Bedford Voluhteer Fire Department Comiltee, 7
p.m. Tuesday at Darwin town ball.
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport .
Masonic Lodge, 7:.1Q p.m. Tuesday. regular meeting at lodge.

The Sunday TiWlts·Sentintl
reaards the weddins• Qf Gallla,

Mel&amp;&amp; met Mason counties u news

,nella happy to pnblillb weddiDB
stories and phoio1rapha without

~~ever, w~ding

news must
meet leneral standardl of tlmeli •
neu: Tbe newapaper prefers to
pubhsb ac;counts of weddings as

.

across tbe IIebe will am.. Ibis . •

'AiJUTOI'E AND TIMOTHY TOMUN

Tope-Tomlin
GAlliPOUS - Mr. and Mrs.
Paul E. Tope of Gallipolis
. 11nnounce the engaaement and
· . upcoming marriage of their daughter, Paula Jo, to Timothy David
Tomlin, soo of Ms. Sarah E. Jarrell
of Rutland.
The bride-elect, a registered
radiologic technologist, is a 1994
graduate of the University of
Charleston, Charleston, W.Va. and
a 1989 graduate of Gallia Academy ,

.

GROVER, JR. AND ELSIE WHITE

Heidi
(100) 322-4871eil. 5407

40t_h anniversary celebrated

..

: Cancer videos ·at library
- answer questions about
: prevention, early·detection
r

GALLIPOLIS •
B~ssard
Memorial Library is one of many
library's throughout Ohio to
receive· a series of cancer videos
.: p~ovided through the ComprebeG·
nve ~ancer Center-Arthur .
• . James··· Gaqc~r , Hospital a~d
~ .Researc_h In~tllute at The Ob10
~- State Umverslty·
.: . Cancer experts fro~ T)je James,
•. one of only 26 Nauonal Cancer
~: I~stitute-designate~ Comprehen·
:. s1ve Cancer Centers m the co~ntry,
-: developed t~e seven_-to....e•~ht• minute educational and mstrucuon:
1 'd s to address the public's
.
,.
a VI eo
, ' fears and misconceptions ab?ut
• _ cancer. Tbe ta~,~CS prov1de spec1ftc
~:· information abOut how to ~~venf
}• cancerand how to. detect II m ~ts
'.: early stages. TOO VIdeos are available to borrow f.ree of charge-and
•• t
the. following topics· skin
,.• ocus on .
.
·
• cancer; cancer prevention; women
~· and cancer; men and ca.ncer; and
• breastcancer.
"Through more widespread
•· access to cancer info"'"ation, we
-. hope to not only educate people
.- about cancer, but also help them
•
•
•

&gt;

•

Ohio University
Osteopathic Medical Center
Parks Hall614-593-2516
Coolville Medical Center 614-667-3134

'
'
\

+ Carol Gaines, D.O. + Lenard G..Presutti, D.O.
+Gerald Rubin, D.O. + Donald G. Spaeth, D.O. ·
' + David Stroh, D.O.

New Personalized
Children's
Book
SOME

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BUNNY'S

EASTER

TAU

•

!Puirch'""' any mattress at

(614)
245-0030

the original price and get
the matching box spring
for jusl $1.00!

ATHENS, Ohio (AP)- Demoem! Harry Truman had his two best
years after the Republicans cap1. tured Congress, his biographer
says.
'•
But David McCuUougb does not
'• think that PresideJit Clinton '· despite his "taugh hide" and
;; .comeback ··record - wiD ·llave the
same success.
McCullough, whose book "Truman" won the l993 Pulitzer Prize,
;.:. said during a' speech at Ohio Oni~ersity this week that be docs not
.-ee Clinton declaring war on the
•::GOP in the style of "give-'em!-h~ll" Harry.
.
::::: Truman wrote io his wife after

the 1946 Republican swe~ and I
said that. "I'm going to do as I
please from now on, ,and to hell ·
with all of them."
· The next two "years were the
best of his presidency. McCullough
believes.
They were matked by the Marshall Plan for European recovery,
the Truman Doctrirle to resist communism in Europe, civil rights legislation, the desegregation of the.
armed services and the Berlin airlift. '
.
McCullough. 61, said Clinton
more closely resembles Democratic
PresidenC Franklin D. Roosevelt.

.

.

Truckload
Meat
Sale!
.

::-: ,

·--6MO.

::

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.
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:
;j·Thmg§ are hoppm .mhere! :
.: I
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OFF

.

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6-8 oz. T·Bone Steaks
8-6 oz. New York Strips
12-4 oz. Ribeye Steaks

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SPECIAL#2.
&amp;--a oz. T-Oonet

1'2-4 oz. Pork Cho~
16-4 oz. Hamburgarll
• 1 oz. Cut Up Chicken Fryer

4-ComQnCob
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1-2 lbs. Hoi Wlnga

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SOLD SEPARATELY

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2-2 tbs. French Toast Sticks
3-1 lb. Bacon
3-1 lb. Sausage &amp; Gravy •
60 Sausage Patties
~
. 20 HashbJOWM

12-4 oz. Rlbeye Steaks
_6--8 oz. T·Bone Steaks ~ .
10Hot Dogs
30Corn Dogs
32-4 oz. Hamburgers
5 lbs. Frehch Fries
&amp;-Pepperoni Pluas
12-Egg Rolls
1+-4 oz. Ribeye Steaks
1-2 lbs. Hot Wings
&amp;4 oz. T·Bone Steaks
3 lbs. BBQ Wings
92 Chicken Nuggets
.'
92...Chicken Nuggets
10 Hot Dogs
·
16 oz. Beef Siulers
""--'oz. Hamburgers
1,
60 ~ausage Pdttles
5
lbs.
French
Fries
~
· 5 lbs. Tyson Wlng Fingers .
2
lbs.
Hot
Wings
2-2 lbs. Cobblers:
6 Pepperoni Pluas
Cherry &amp; Peach
3 lbs. Faf!!llx. Brand Sausage
31bs. Family Brand Sauliage

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1-800-229·64~6.

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.-

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•

At the Foot of the Pqmeroy·Mason Bridge
· Visit our retail showroom or call

..

OFF

RETAIL

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·.
POMEROY - RT. 33
MARATHON RIVERSIDE FOOD MART
8:00A.M. TO 4:00 P.M.
APRIL 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10 &amp; 11, 1995

40%

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In Stock
High Leg Recliners

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Chaise
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with beat1tdif1UlllBUNNKE§ #
&amp; hilaldo1\J1§ HARES #
te1Ul
esome CO'FTO ~TAKL§ . #
&amp;. woruderf1Ull W AJBI!UT§·!
I

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.-

I

·Continu~s to Make Room For ~ew Patio Shipment

'

·-

[ill Gallipoiis ·

Lafayette Mall

INVENTORY REDUCTION

~·································

.,-:"

JACKETS _
. 1/
AND COATS ........ ta OFF!

Lifestyle Furnitures

· ;· *
204 N. 2nd Middleport, OH 614-992-4055
:
:19-4-Weekdays ~ •
iiiC Layaw
_ ay 10-5 Saturday 4

Ohio Steak &amp;Barbecue Coc

AL~PRING

Biographer says Clinton's .
style different than Truman's

J

Call for
FREE
BROCHURE

6565 Slate .Rouie 588
Galli lla, Olt45631

AND NEW PANT SETS

LONG BOTTOM - Mr. ~nd Joshua, Stefan and Courtney
. Mrs. Grover White, Jr. of Long Robinson ofMt. Gilead, N.C.; SerBottom were honored on their 40th ena B.J. and Cameron Robinson of
wedding anniversary with a rc.cep- Racine; Ruth, Bill and Tony
tion held at Royal Dale Resort. · ·
BOSTICK
Perkins, Kyle, Cindy, Bri)tlmy and
the affair was hosted by their Kylia Perkins. Deana and Spencer
four daughters, Sonia Circle, Sheila Hudkins, Maxine Critcbr~eld, all of
Spencer, Synthia Robinson, and Pennsboro, W.Va.
Shadyside; Jack Leroy Bostick of Serena Robinson.
Wilma and· Ralpll Ballard of
Racine; and Angela Lynn Bostick·
A buffe.t dinner, cake, mints, · Long Bottom, Doris Hill, Thelma
nuts, punch and coffee were served Eddy, Dorma Jean and Paul Baker,
of Rio Gnmde.
Jack is employed by Ohio Val- to the guests.
.
all of Killbuck; Karen, Melissa and
ley Electric Coml?any K;yger Creek · Attending were Woodrow Fort- Josiah Pauley, Aaron Jones, all of
Power Plant. He IS president of the ney of Long Bottom Thelma Wai- Charleston, W. Va.; Michael Jones,
Local 430 Union and. a mem'?er of ton of Portland, 'Sonia, Jeff, Audley and Pat White, all of
Executi~e Board of Nat~ai~· Christa, Jeffrey and Tyler Circle of
Wooster; KeUi, David and Kristen
Union.
. ,
Long Bouom; Sheila, Dan, Kirt,
Ballard, Pomeroy; Ken, Beverly
Danielle and Tiffany Spencer of and Nathaniel Davis, Langsville .
Tupoers Plains; S'yn'thia, Vince.

·········:····
:·g;···············~··
.1 Hey ,~ We're neady
for spnng :

Your
goes ;
mag•cal
egg hunt with his or her friends
·.and meets a talking bunny.
Personalized information Includes name, address, relalives
and friends.

Diversified Computer Cancepts-

•

30th anmversary observed

RACINE - Jack and Pauline
Bostick of Racine celebrated their
30th :,vedding anniversary Marcb
,• 26 with a party thrown by their
cbi~dren at Hazel .and Bob Roy's
·: res1dence.
Tbey were married
''•·
March
26,
1965
Meigs County.
''·· . They have in' four
,::,, Christopher Jay Bostick ofchildren,
Dunbar,
... W.Va.: N.icbolas Lc:e Bostick of

Refreshment~ .

prevent the dise~e f~om de~elop·
mg altogether, s_a1d Dav1d E.
Schuller, M.D., director of the
Comprehensive Cancer Cent~r~:~~~~::J:S~~~:,cer Hospital
The James ope~in 1990 as
the Midwest's ftrst lly-dedicated
cancer hospital and r arch centef'
and today is one of only nine hospitals in the country to be recognized with special sta!Us by the
. Federal Goveminent.
'rbis video program was ~ade
possible by The Huntington
.
·
·
d
· Nauonal B~nk, Wh1cb donate
$5,000 to d1str1bute the tapes to
public libraries throughout tbe
. tate
,
5
· •r\ve appreciate the effort put
foflh by The Huntington National
Bank to help The James educate
.
people throughout Oh1o about cancer,:· srud Schulter.
'
The gift was donated in memory ,
of John w Wolfe the late Columb b . . l d.
b h I d
us usmess _ea ~r w o e tpe
spearhead the bu1ldmg of The
James.

•

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

~

When you .choose your medical care, come
where we can care about you
as well a.s care for you.

RACINE - Regular meeting
~cine Chapter Order of the East- .
em Star Monday, 7:30 p.m. Mock
initiation. Visit by the deputy.

EASTER
DRESSES

.•

·after delivery
·
+for you and your growing family

CARPENTER - Columbia
High Scbool. Her raance, a graduate of M~igs High Scbool ,and four- Township Board of Trustees, meet
year member of the U.S. Air Force, · , 7:30 p.m. Monday at fire station.
is employed as assistan.t manager at
MIDDLEPORT - OAPSE.
Rutland Fuinirure Co., Rutland.
Tbe Open cburcb wedding will Local 1~0 p.m., GQntract mtift- .
be 6:30 p.m. April 22 at the Rut- cation meeting, Meigs Junjor High
School cafeteria.
land Nazaren~ Cburcb, Rutland.
A reception will follow tbe wed·
RACINE - Racine Village
.ding in the fellowship ball located
Council, regular session, 7 p.m.
next door to the cburcb.
Monday, Sial; Mill Park.
.

10011 as possible after tbe eveai
To be published in tbe Stlllday
edition, the weddina must have
taken place witldD 60 days prkw to
tho publication, IUid may be up to
609' words in lensth. Material lor
Along IM River must' be received
by ·tbe editorial department by
TljW1day, 4 p.m. prior to the date
of publl(atic&gt;ri.

Just Arrived At Bernadine's •••

•

••

+ for you during your pregnancy .
and delivery ·
+ for your newborn immediately

83

.:

MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Garden Club wiD meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday night at the home of
Mrs. William Morris.
POMEROY -United States
Coast Guard Auxiliary safe boating
class Monday; 7 p.m. at the Carpenters' Hall on Main Sl!'eet.

Sunday nmes--Sentlnei-Page

Wedding policy

\

Without Crossing An·Ocean~'
ascmtl&amp;c:ronycaruan

..

'

1195

DISCOVER.NEW WORLDS

I

SUNDAY
LONG BOTTOM -Weekend .
s~rvices, Red Brush Churcb of
Cbris1; Basban Road, Long Bot·
tom, Sunday 10 a.m. worship service, evening service, 6 p.m. Denver Hill, Foster, W. Va., speaker.
Public inviled.
-'
MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters, 7 p.m. Monday in the
!y,-and room.
.

~12,

FREI!
10# POTATOES

.••

(614) 992·5724

,

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FULL SERVICE. POOL
. . OPENINGS

Reclining

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35

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Sof~ 's ·

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""T

35~I

% OFFREGULAR
RETAJL
·

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4 lbs. $15.99
81bs. $28.75
16 lbs. $48.99
25 lbs. $64.99

Occasional Chairs
24-fT• .
.ABOVE GROUND__.-:...:'-..t.~~aJ
. POOL

35

% OFF

~GULAR

OFF ·REGULAR
RETAIL

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•.Free Parking'!
• Free Delivery · ·

•

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:&amp;................................................................

fill Credit Terms.

'

9to·5

Friday
9to 8

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·Elil

3880 LOCKBOURNE RD.
COLUMBUS, PffiO

--~ ~

,. '

--~

Third &amp; Olive

'.1

.. 446-3045

• Sales and
Service with
Low, Low Prices

i·

�--

J

.

Aprll2,1895

.

Pomeroy-Mlddteport-Gifllpolla, OH Point Pleaaant, WV

)'

Sunday Tlme...-Sentlnei-Page 8$

First Avenue home boasts city's first modem bathroom .
· ·

•

wu
of·-·
UOCXllllf'litlblt

Jlocded Of cot1t1e in tbe
it ""'-tme a vezy
p1aee. 1be Nee tam
IIOIIIC Wll al.!o probably tbe flllt

·

room
bel&amp;

OeDipoUuaidmcetoba~ubower

lbltfttOYe,rtbewb.lbewoollworkin
lhobedbOOinwaorigialllyinbilck
walnuL 1befawreswereniclreland

sllver plaled,
T&amp;e~~Mrs.NOC4IIam
had also erected the fmestmonument

To OrderSNdy Plan
''

.
·In a S4 baby

Full study plan information on thla house Ia aval
bMprint Four boOl&lt;lals are also avdlble at $4.95 each: Your ~How
to Build ·Buy or Sell It; Ranch Homfi, 24 of the most popular from INa

fealure-' "'*ticM Home RB(Mirs. which teUs how to handle 35 c:om111011
~1; and, A-Frames and OthtH Vacation Homes, a collection of 24
atytee. Send check or money order payable to the Associated Press and INa
• Ito: House oltheWeek, TheSunday·TunesSBntlne/, P.O. Box 1562;
New Yor1&lt;, N.Y. 10116·1~.
'

•
I

.,I

Clp this ordtr and rtiUm label_
,,

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

I

EnciOeed 11 $4 for plan N o . - - - - - - - - - - - -

i

Enclo&amp;lld 18 $4.85 each for the booklet(•l-....,.......--'-.:.._~-

~~~~B~ATHROOM • When Florence Needhlllll bad a complete:
lnlt.lled In thll bo- at 2111 First Avenue In Gal· · ,
llpolls1 there w•s still • !ot of controveny over tbe practice of
bathing. The house was lang the home ot lhe llllrry Maddy family •• ,

Nlm.•---------~-----------~-------=-

~~~--------~--~----------~----c~--------------~-------------

GAlJ,JPOUS-Probablylhefirst

modem bathroom .In Gallipolis his·

torywaslheone
plsced in the
hoi)Se at 228
F'itSI Avenue.
Thai sii'Ucture
was built in
1884
· for
F I o r en c e
Needham, the areattachedto~tanks.\Oberebylhc ·
_/ widow of Dr. depthofwaterlinlhetanksismarked.
Needlwn who died two years previ- In the kitchen/is a sink for washing
ous in Columbus while serving in lhe dishes."
.
The kitchen sink was also de·
State Senate.
According to the Qallipolis B!JI- ·signed to carry away the wasre 'Yater.
letin, Enos, Hill and Company .m· . Hellt from the wann water lank m the
stalled there a Philadelphia improved bathroom kept the bsthroom so warm
closet, a 6 foot copper bathtub Oined in winter that no olher .heat in tbat ·

s~·~~~---~~----------------------

-......
'

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, ..

'

(I • ~

•

ellehw IIIII a rear wbidow wall that etrek:ha Into the

By BRUCE NA111AN

AP Neoaruah•res

Detajl~ make the difference in
the facade of this sophisticated
one-story design, which is
accented by a hip roofline,
arched · dows topped by keyatones d a recessed entry. The
open flo plan of this home
· makes an
· · interior state· ment with m . ern conveniences
you11 apprec!fte. .
. Plan F-4t:' by HomeStyles
Designers' Network; comprise~ a
sPacious 2,457 square feet of liv·

ing space that sets the stage for
gracious one-story living. The
foyer, with its 12·foot ceiling, ush·
ers in visitors and allows instant
views of the study and dining and
living rooms.
In the living room, a window
wall captures sunlight and offers
views of the backyard, w1\iJe the
hearth adds warmth. Built-in
bookshelv.es complement the
fireplace, and atrium doors provide access to acwered patio.
The living room flows into the
morning room, which features

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

2973 Piedmont Rd., Huntington (304) 429·4718

floor.

.

Help will be needed to decdmte
for tbe affair and if you are willing
to assisl please get in touch with

Mon.-Fri. 9!30·5 Sat 9:30·2

'

TWHUIZE-SAVE $87
95 SotaOnty
5
-.pc.

access to the covered patio and a dow.
convenient snack bar to the The master sUite is impressive,
kitchen. The island kitchen is · with its large sleeping area, priefficient, featuring a large walk-in vate .access to the patio and ~
pantry and a built-in desk. The ?f wmd?ws that bath~s the room
formal dining room is located .m sunlight. The lavtsh master ·
just steps away. The high-caliber ,-bath has a marble spa tub, a
kitchen also features easy access curved glass-block shower, a
to a half-bath a utility room and compartmentalized toilet and a
an large tw~·car garage. The · duaJ.siilk vanity with knee apace•
si!le-entry garage is disguised A huge walk-in closet provides an
from the front lw the arched win- abundance of.atorage space.

129..

s. Retaii21U5
-POSTUREPEDIC

.Ful Size .Sef.$399.95
Size Set 1499.95

THE H·EARING CENTER
. Better Living Through
Better Hearing

APRIL SPECIAL!
I

30%oFF

GALLIPOLIS -Jim Patierson to
!!reach 7 p.m. Liberty Chapel
Church.
·

GALLIPOLIS • Veteran's Ser·
vi.ce Office meeting 3 p.m. at Vet·
eran Service Officer.
Tuesday, Aprll4

-GALLIPOLIS ·Jack Parsons
:preaching ll ·a.m. Keith Eblin
;ereaching 7 p.m. Debbie Drive
:Chapel Church.
·

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.·
Narcotics Anonymous Clean and
Free Group 7:30p.m. Episcopal

•••

...

'

•••

, CENTERVILLE • Thurman
Grange special meeting 7:30p.m.

O,.ICE

will

M.

FOLLOW 7BEIE DIREC71011...
-to boost your !nergy level
~o lose unwanted pounds
(' and inches
-to create a new body
-to make new friends
•
,'------· -to inuease self est,em
-to decrease stress
~-to have fun
&gt;.
~ · /cP~/
Call
-

253 N. 2ND AVE.
MIDDlEPORT, OH. 45760 .

.

l

.

1---'

GALLIPOLIS - Com onity
Cancer Support Group 2 p.m.' New
Life Lutheran Church. ·

992-2289
I .

Se~

Our lArge .
Selection of Ceramics
USign UP for
Classes!
Tuesdqy &amp; Friday
10:00 AM· Noon
AND

7:00 PM·9:00 PM

&lt;!:

j r.:':l~_~_;.,l__ _--1 lADIES PREFERENCE
'
Health Club
446·3401

•••

"We cater to a woman's
fiiness needs"

. ADDISON • Eating Disorders
Support Group 7 p.m. Addison
United Methodist Church. ·

•••

•••

· Church.

Monday, April3

1

\

'

GALLIPOLIS • Sunbort Group
for Grieving Parentsl:30 p.m .
Ney; Life Lutheran Church.

REVIVAL
French City Baptist Church
Located on St. Rt. 160
l/4 Mile Nonh of Holzer
Hospital
·
April 2nd ·April 7th
7:00p.m. N1ghlly
. Evangeli~t. Jerry Neal
of Grove City, Ohio
Special Music Nightly

A CHARI11"G

Ranch llka tht

GREE"FIELD

3 Bedrooms. 2 baths,
finished wrth full
foundation. ,

2
or a BEACITIFOL
Capo Cod llka the

. HARTFORD

When they tell :you this
is .all you'll need •••

3 bedrooms, 2'/, baths, 2
do~mers. full foundalion.
WITH FINISHED UPSTAIRS

$

Added
help
you stay financially fit

1

TO"

$11

~
QUALITY l:iOMES
MASON, WV-

lnhearing, we offer much more lhan just hearing aids. We offer a professional

'--

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'
•

no E. Main Street
Jackson, Ohio

•

.:.... - .6.

....

:.r.

Ot41992·1t36

M6n.·Wed. 12-6

Tues.· Thurs. 12·6
Sit. and Sun. 1·5

'

'·

ao~~. J:J9~

l:.t

61•1M7·l101

•

Momb&lt;lr F.O.I.C.

HOLZER
HEALTH
HO-TLINE
7

Route 7

,

,.j'

•

Fr~m S a.m. to 11 p.m~ , seven_days a wee4,
a specially trained R.N. is on duty to answer
your health care questions.

.

.

1-800-462-5255

•

446·7619

-- -·

•

' .

~est 624
Second Street
o-ao.
_._.__ -p-o
.. .,_ - -.o;,~UV fl'omeroy OH ~1M
fuPt:*S Pto•ns. OH 45763

' - - - " · 2t1
-

Model Homes Open Dally

.

CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-967-3277
Veterans ~emorial Hospital
Pomeroy, Ohio

RH Reodal HQmes •
IIOOEL HOII£5
lOCATED-JUST SOUTH OF-THEfi&lt;»AE.AOY-MAS&lt;»f" BRIIXiE.

.

\

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company

..

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INHEARING
•

Fo

. AuthOt!zed Builders ol Ouptttv

BY

relationship where we'll help you find exactly whal is besl Ior your particular hearing
healthcare problem . We offer a full range of ,services from diagnoslic audiological
.. :
evatualions, sile of lesfon testing, comprehensive immittance
measurements, and rehabililation through the use of hearing
instruments. For !hose in need, we are a leader in state-of.
lhe·art hearing aid technology offered al very competitive
prices. We don't promi$e 'miracles": ..We guarantee satis·
faclion .

435 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

.

304·77J·5001

~~'

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Your BankPt~~ ..

4 bedr ms, 2112 balhs,
PORCH, GARAGE and.
FULL UPSTAIRS

ALL
YOU'LL
~~

Call tor details

or a SPAciOUS Two
Sl~omallka th1...

It's probably

AIDS
CALL 441-1971
TODAY!

ATHENS • Narcolicyony·
mous Walk of Life 9 p. . 8 N..
CoUege St.
·

.

ALL HEARING
Hearing Jostrumenl
I 548 WtflTE ROAD
GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631

· The Community C~endar Is
published as a free service ld
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and spedal
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund-raisers of any type. llems
are·printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
. specific number of days.
Sunday, April 2

KcmerSIIildllldCiayCompany. AII IICiiptiOn for olcl age was half~ sponclmtoftbeSutldayTlmes.Senthe grMI in the padt Wll dug up in half," half ale and _!laiC porter . ' lint!. His addrts~ is: 65 Willow
1945,andiO)'heaaswcteplaniedlhae · ShealsoatemuttononaregularbssiS. Drive, Springboro, OWo 4SOU.
soonafter.Thnoybeansweretobuilcl-.
uplheiOilforgrasswoulcl.grow. Prior
to 1946, there were fiiOie bare spots
than pus in the park. II was in 1945
that ,the bench fences., reaweare&lt;1
around the park, thanks to tiiC park
commission.
,
Persons having Taxi Tokens can
As to having a bsthroom and
taking a lotofbalhs, 301ne people still
redeem them at Middleport Village
believed In 18841hst too mtuiy batbs
were hannful. In 18831he Gallipolis
Hall starting Monday, Aptil 3, 1995
Journal surveyed a number of olde:
resiclenisconcemingthingslhatmight
thru April 30, 1995. Nq tokens
have· conaibuted 10 longevity and
discovi'J'ed !hatmany bslhedvezy linle
be redeemed after April 30th.
and some not ar au.
Oneladyproudlyboastedthatno
Village of MiddleJ&gt;ort
one could accuse her·of "tbe habit of
. Dewey
Horton ·
bathing." Several men said that regu- ·
Ia' balhing was necessary only in
Mayor ·
regard to tbe feeL Srephen Curry,.84,
stated that he had not bathed for 20
years. Even in 1884 much batfling in
wann weather was done in lhe Ohio
River, '"d several of the elderly had
mixed feelings about the potential ·

'

Gallia community calendar

AN OPEN. Door plan Ia the haUmiork ol the Interior. lbe Ioyer 1w
ln-t fteM or the cllnl... _. JMnc - - . wldle the llllll1linl
room loo.. to the liviDc room llreplace, the la!encl klldle" .,.. the
covered ~ patio, 1be =n lei llllce bu plwa ec 1!41 to the
pado and a IIIU'den batb 'IWitb a clual-aillll vanlt,y llld m ovenbecl
..alk·ln ebet.

By DAVID GERMAIN
.
Assoclaled
Press
Writer
by Bob Hoeflich
. .FREDONIA, N.Y. (AP) When Scott Aldrich's ice cream
L,.~;;;;;;:;-";J}t"Noo::;i;~~;;;;;;;;,Waj~~~;.;~;;:
parlor offers customers vaniUa ice
·- Members
RACO-the
Walburn, "Pooch" Brew· cream blcndCl) with cbe~e nachos,
Racine Area Community Organiza· er or Grace Abbott.
it means only one thing: April
lion-report that plans are going
fool's Day.
well for tbe second annual Flower
·some of the Meigs High School
This is · the 12th year that
Festival. to be staged this montb on Class of 1985 members are trying Aldrich's Beef and Ice Cream Par·
Saturday, April 22. 10 a.m. to 6 Ia ge,t a 10 year reunion of their lor has celebraied the day for prac·
class going.
. , tical jokes by offering customers
P.m., at tbe popular Star Mill Park.
That will be held in May and if tbe chance to eat food .concoctions
A numl)er of craft people as
we II as flower growers-SOlll~ . You are a graduate of tbe class or that would turn ·tbe slomachs of
from quite a distance ~have know the name and address of a most gounne1S.
already signed 00 to participate
member of tbe class, please get iii - Aldrich bas made eating bowls
You can reserve your space ~y touch with Debbie Werry Evans, · of 'his vile concoctions an annual
sending a $10 fee to RACO, P.O. 992·7562; Betty Ann Loftis Wolfe, rite of spring. This year, he
Box 428, Racine, 45771. This tear 949-2999, or Cathy DeLong whipped uP 25 g:Ulons of his nacb()
there'll be a paradcl, ,the cro·N!ling ~dwards, 992-6174.
surprise, enough to give free sam·
,
·
•
pies today to about 700 people.
of a 1estival queen, an antioJe tracThe unheavcnly bash commin·
tor display, a wide variety of musi·
You just might have wondered gles langy salsa' witb bland vaniUa
cal entertainment. and f~od booths bow Carol Bachtel Tannehill is
·
which is slteaked
1·n add1·11·0 n to the craft .·md nower coping wtt· h retirement smce
she ice cream, tb
bl
b witb
be
'eatun!s. ·
. fi ld h' h k pt h
an orange at resem . es s er t ·
1efl tb e nursmg
I'
te w tc e er but bas the taste and consistency of
on the move for many years.
CheezWhiz.
Want to help the Women's AuxWell, Carol is loving retirei;Dent.
Aldrich said the cheese actually
IJiary at Vererans Memorial Hospl· She says she now has time to do so blended well witb the icc cream _
tal to go to the top with_their Easier
many tbings'-especially at
, b
d ·
d
· "Honey of a Bunny'' project?
bome-'tbat sbe couldn't get after all. they re otb 1!11')' pro •
is to sell
.
ucls - and the .nachos added a
Goal for tbe I''und·raiscr
Th
h
worked into her scbedu 1e m ear11er ~ty crunch. But the sals;1, witb its
12 dozen bunnies.
c group , as years. She's not only doing some spicy bits of tomato and 'onio,n, was
· now bit eight dozen with two painting on ber 'own, but she has another matter.
weeks yet before. Easter. 11te way taught a couple of art classes for
"l really !bought it tasted pretty
· the fund raiser works is that you tbe Middleport A!tS Council and good till 1 got to the ·~;al'sa',"
send tbe Auxiliary $5 and the name
enjoyed tbat tremendously. More Aldrich said •'The cheese came
of your "Honey of a Bunny" and classes will be forthcoming-but out pretty smooth and tasted all
· tbey will place a pastel, nocked maybe not until falL And you know .gh
_ bunny bearing a name tag of your what? She's still as jovial as ever!
n t.
"Honey" on one of three trees fea·
tured in the hospital. The trees are
Not being a David Letterman
quire atltactive and are located in fan-and.! know a lot of you probthe cafeleria, lobby and tbe extend· ably are-! felt tbat be.wasn't at all
ed care unit. You can.indicate the
right for emceeing tbe Academy
tree of your choice. Mail will re~h • Awards sbow. But you gotta hand
tbe Auxiliary at 115 E. Memonal it to him. He does keep smiling.
prive, Pomeroy.

- -

HOLIDAY POOLS. INC.

Dessert dish
for April Fool's

·Beat of the Bend ...

Tbe Middleport High School ·
Class of I 950 will again lake
· charge of staging the annual bigb·
Jcbool reunion this year on May
27. The group bandied i~ las_t y~ar
but Ibis year holds a spe~•al s•grufi.
cance for class members since it
wiU he tbi:ir 45tb anniversary..
' .-Evangeline Cbapter,-0rdcr of
Easiern Star, wiU prepare tbe b'"·
quel Ibis year and it will be served
; lndoora-another year outdoor,
could be risky- by. the youth of
' tbe Hope Baptist Cbufcb: A disc
• j~y wiD provide music flK danelug and a social room will be set up
In lhe cafcte!ia for alumni who jusl
want to visit snd avoid tbe dance

$1,850

IIAQIIM:II

,P"

...

Price•
Start AI

Fun for the
whole temily!

with tin) and aaachments, two.tanks
for !Kit and cold water, a range, plpes
ani{ globes.
''The pipe$ CllrY the water from
the cistern din:c:t to the cold warer
tank, froni lhence thiough pipe to the
heaterenclosedinlberange,andfrom
there to 111e hot water tank. The range
isusedforcooking,andhencetbereis
noexpense'forhotwaier. Two weights

in the Mound Hill Cemetery to tbe
honor of her late husband The stone
is Hll1owdi p!lllitc. Dr. Needham,
who died Jan. 12, 1882 WIIS born in
Groton, Mus. He came to G~
to woit for Dr. Uvesey who built tbe
bouse tbat is today the French Art
Colotly. The Neeclhams al.!o Jived
therefoneveml years. Mrs.Needhan!
built, in 1883, whatCllllletocalledthe
Needham FlaiS on Pint Avenue. For
inanyyesrsnurseswhowereiniiChool
attheHolzerSchoolofNursinglived
there.
The other well-lmown resident
·of this house was Harry Maddy, a
long time ~bier at the Ohio Valley
Bank. Maddy was the son of Capt.
Edwin Maddy, a well lmown steam·
boal man. He worked the river in his
youngerdays.Hemayalsohavebeen
the only Gallipolis person to ·be a
batboy for the Cincinnati Reds for a
full season. Perhaps Maddy's most
lasting work wa as treasurer of the

din~ m cloiDI thtiL The poHUIJal m Nancyltiddle,91,.Piiuaillllldcbt*
!twain 19421batal'altCom·\ ~nva'lutd~aproblanf'7~ alhhewhisteyshccouldset.SbeW.
millioa wu xt up to beautify the 1880's.lnlerellia&amp;ly IIIIIIJ 0 u"'""' al.!o a "b1ood wilch• a perfon wbo
City ~ Their finl task Wll to cut "old II a• wa-e coftee ~ llld could step bleeding by laying on of
dpwniODIC2AOelmlnlel,leaving
""'*'ro_llltll. ~111M claimed_ be hands. Nancy also lived wilh the
jtiii4Sin tbeput.ln 1945 and 1946 owed hilloq life 10 ~er ~ Indians for five years.
sycamore , lnlel wac pla,nted ·by ~.breld. Hamah~ •pre- __ . JamesSudsisupedaleorreGallipolii.PIIt Commiaiolt

Another community s~rvice of the Holzer Medical Center,
100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH 4563J:.1561

.

'

• Illness or Injury

Phy~ician Refe:rral
• Health, Care Events
•

• Support Groups .

111111

�•

•

•

April2,1995

wv

· Pomeroy-Middlepor1 Galllpolll, OH Point

televillon jollfllllilt- IDCl in die
proceuleam to~berllld Helen
(''Mild About You' ) H1111t

Maybe you'll 10 fot "Bien
House." • - sitamlllming
a mellowed Alldrew (no "Dice")
Clay IOd Catby Moriarty as a married couple who fight loud IDI presumably tmmy.
- -~
Viewers will have to wait until

~:Mel ntyre chr-oriiciEf

•

~:

&lt;WLIPOLIS ·- 0.0, MclntyR:,
:.ayndicated columnist, magazine
•:writer, 8lld publicist of the ~Os IOd
~-30s Is bact iD the ~bile eye. ·
=~ A video titled,' 'The 0.0. MelD•:tYJe Story, Cbroniclc of a JDIII'D81ist
:·orNate" wiD be cin lbe big saeeo 8
•p.m. April 8 at tbe Morris and
Dorothy Haskins Arlcl'lbeattc.
The 30-minute coloc documeolacy is the work of Gallia County
bistorial! and writer Edna Whiteley.
._The video tells the life story of
Mcintyre through memorabilia and

.'VICKI AND CHARLES CiRIJBB

Arnold-G rubb

GALLIPOLIS-:-- Vicki Lynn accents and a black bow tie. His
CHAD AND CHRISTY VANCO
Arnold and Charles David Grubb boutonniere was a wbite rose
were uited in marriage Feb. 18 at accented with royal blue. ~Ark
the Fellowship· Baptist Church in Coleman served as a. best man.
Gallipolis with Rev. Roben Grubb, Groom's men were John Grubb,
GALLIPO~
- IS - Christy Dawn were putty rows of twinkle. The
Short
and
Ch
Aaron Vanco were opel) back was draped with a ttiple
father
of
the
groom:
officiating.
.
brother
of
groom
and
Scott
Fraser,
JEFFREY AND TABITHA CAMPBELL
united in rna riage Feb. 4 at St. row of pearls. They carried white
Vicki is the daughter of Barbara brother-in-law of the groom. John
Arnold and the late Henry Arnold Grubb II served as junior grool!l's Louis Catholic Church in Gallipu- roses with purple pansies, iridescent baby's breath and pearls on a
of Southside, W.Va. Charles is the · man. Sco.t Ward served as rmg lis. ·· ·- RACINE- Tabitha Jo WiUford pearl teardrop earrings, gifts of the son of Rev. and Mrs. Robert D. bearer. They all wore black doubleThe bride is the daughter of Mr. white, heart-shaped doily.
·
.md Jeffrey Scott Michael Camp- bride .
and
Mrs.
Troy
W.
Short
of
Crown
·
The
flower
girl,
Brittany
CumGrubb of Gallipolis: Music was breasted tuxedos with royal blue
Jessica Willford, cousin of the provided by soloist Scott Fraser,
bell wete united in marriage March
bow ties. 1'beir boutonniere con- City. The groom is the son of Mr. mons, wore a floor-length, white
11 at the Racine United Methodist bride, was flower girl and wore :1
The church was decorated with sisted of a royal blue rose accented and Mrs. Charles Vanco of Gal- gown with twinkle and lace, andfull length white satin dress with white wicker baskets filled with an witll white.
Church.
lipolis.
puffy slc!iYes matching the bride.
Rev. Kenny Baker performed pearl accents, white pearl earrings arrangement Qf-royal-blite and
The ceremony was officiated by
The mother of the bride wore a
the ceremony for the daughter of and gold and pearl bracelet, gifts of white roses, carnations, gladiolas, _ royal blue suit with royal blue Monsignor William Myers. Music
Marc
c brother of the
Gary and Jo Ann Willford, Racine, the bride -and groom. Sbe carried a . orchids and greenery. Royal blue accessories ~ Sbe wore a royal blue was provided by organist, Rutb groom, was'the beS man. Groom's
and the son of Bob Campbell, wicker basket of purple and white bows v,:ere placed on family pews.
Ann Fellure and soloists, Tracey men were Jason M 'nitic, Jimmy
sillc rose corsage.
.
. Athens and Georgian Compagnl flower petals.
Escorted to the altar by her
The mother of the groom wore a Burnette, Mark Jenkins and Atnan.. Byrd and Justin Zelek, cousin of
1bC groom was in a black tuxe- brother Gene Arnold, the bride cream colored dress with royal blue
.,. Whited of New Knoxville.
daZelek.
.
the bride. Ushers were Brad Cre' . lj'or her wedding, the bride wore do with tails, white vest and tie, wore an Alfred Angelo \)ream accessories. She wore a royal blue
Escorted .by ber father, the bride meens and Robbie Rider. The ringa fgll) length satin gown with a and had a boutonniere of white Maker gown of white satin. It rea- sillc rose corsage.
wore a white satin, lace collar bearer was Casey Love. The guest
Queen Anne neckline, fitted bodice roses with purple and pearl accent tured a high neckline and long
Guests were greeted and regis- gown with puffed, fingertip, sbear· book attendant was Elizabeth Lane.
and tapered sleeves accented with Garren Giusto was best man . applique sleeves with shoulder tered by Diane Roush. Following sleeves covered with pelli.IS and
A reception followed at the
lace appliques. The full skirt fell Groom's men were Chad Dlddle, puffs. The bodice was decorated the ceremony a reception served by sequins. The bodice was d~rated Alberican
Legion in Point Pleasant, •
· into a semi-cathedral length grain. Ryan Adams and Nick Adams. with pearls and iridescent sequins the ladies of the church was held in with lace, pearls and sequins with a W.Va.
.
The open heart-shaped back was They wore black tuxedos with ·pur- falling into a Basque waistline. A the fellowship hall.
waistline of layered twinkle ruffles.
Following
the
reception,
the
adorned with strands of simulated ple bow lies and cummerbunds . heart cut-out back was encircled
The ·three-tiered heart-shaped The back was cut out with a triple
Jeremy Woodhull, nephew of the with pearls. The cathedrat train was wedding cake was decorated with pearl drape. Her fmger tip veil was couple left for a honeymoon in
pearls and double bows.
Gatlinburg, Tenn. The couple now
The bride wore pearl .and rhine- groom was ring bearer and was covered-with a lace applique and royal blue and white roses and covered with pearls.
reside
in Gallipulis.
stone earrings belonging to her also in a black,tall outfit with white • accented w!th pearls and crystals.
carried a cascade bouquet
positioned oyer a fountain. Stairpaternal grandmother, Libby Will- ·best and tie.
rple Lianthus, white star
She earned a c~cade bouquet of ways connected four smaller satel- wi
Musi ~ was provided by Carla royal blue and wbtte roses, lcarnaford. Her bouquet was of white
rose
descent baby's breath, ri~lite cakes. Figurines of the attenbon
and
pearls.
roses, white lilac, lilies of the val- Shuler, pianist and Richard Butch- tions, ~rebids, ivy and pearls. .
dants lined the stairs.
ley;! p~rp[e ·and Javende.r flowers er, Sandy Butcher and Cheryl WalTanya Shon, sister' hf the bride,
Matd of ~onor was Dt~na
Following the reception the couters. Rachel Graham, cousin of the ~ol~. sts~er-m-law of the bnde. pie flew to Jamaica for a week-long was maid of honor. Bride's maids
with pearl accents. 1
Alisha Caldwell served as bride, registered the guests.
Bnde s matds. were Susan Knapp honeymoon. They reside in Gal- were Leslie Rider and Traci BranA
reception
was
held
at
the
Roy
nen and Amanda ·Zelek, cousin of '
matron of honor for her sister.
ru_td Pam Holsmger. Sarab Fraser, •lipolis.
Oak
Resort.
Hostesses
were
Megan
Bride's maids were lonna and
me~e of .th~ gro~m. served as
The bride is a 1986 graduate of the bride.
Manuel,
aunt
of
the
bride,
and
The bride's maids all wore
Aimee Manuel, cousins of the
)Untor bnde s matd. They wore Point Pleasant High School and an
Nicole
Woodhull,
sister
of
the
bride, and Brandi Mallory. The
matching royal blue tea-length employee at the K-Mart Corp. and matching none-length, satin purple
attendants wore V·hacked purple groom.
~resses featun~g scal.loped neckJ .C. Penney in Gallipolis. Tbe gowns. The open neck lines were
The couple went to Tennessee hnes. The earned whtte lace fans groom is a 1987 graduate of Gallia adorned with an applique of lace, '·
satin tea length gowns, atcented
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
with satin bows and sheer lace Cor a honeymoon. They reside in decorated .with royal blue roses, ·Academy High School and a 1993 · pearls ~~sequins._ Their sleeves
446-0923
sleeves ~d satin cu(fs. They wore Syracuse.
tulle and mmmture tvy. .
graduate of Ohio State University
Racbael Fraser, n1ece. of the with a bachelor's of science degree
••
groom,
scr:ed as !lower grrl.. She in pharmacy. He is employ at K•
••
wore a white satm dress with a Mart as a pharmacist. .
{c.~:~u;.-:~
••
••
royal blue sash. She carried a white .- · - -·..;.-'1"'"'_____~
BOYSON THE
•
-SIDE~
basket decorated with royal blue
:.:
•
flowers and bows.
.
·
1:00,9120 DAlLY
IVITl"ZBS SAT/riuM
The groom wOre a black double·
I
::
1:00 l:20
•
breasted tuxedo with royal blue
T.sta6f..md 1895
••
••

Short~ Van co

show 11 dead before it's ever alive. more hours of new prosrammmg
Nevennillcl. Milly more are poised are vying for a place OD the scbedtojumpiolothebreacb.
,uJeasCBS plots!ts~.
So no matter bow much you
Development IS feverishly afoot
root foc the fOIIDCI' "Miami Vice" at all the networks, more or less
beMtthrob or the fOIDiel' DiGeman, behind closed doors~ One ~log
no one-hctrs you : For ~ow, you last week, CBS preVIewed Its roster
must stand by for updates on
also

sc:!ttS

crossed.

_....

For Only

For Only
I

· But as the equipment was shut
off Friday some veteran radiomen
complained that satellites and·automatic navigation beacons don't
have the same personal touch as the
lcey~d "dots" and "dashes" tlle
Coast Guard has sent and received
since the early 1900s.

·VALUE

L009

Rx ·

14 X 52

EVERYoHOME IN STOCK IS ON SALE .
15X80's
AND SECTIONS
14 WIDES
..
NOW ON DISPLAY
JUST ARRIVED 28X72 CLAYTON REGENCY

PRESCRIPTION ·CARD
YOU ·ONLY PAY THE CO·PAY

-0 )

'

...__.,
", ,,

. ..
-·

..-lo

If

·: News policy .
In an effort to provide our read:ership with current news, the Gal•fipoli.s Daily Tribune and 'I'M Daily
:sentinel will not accept weddings
latter 60 days from the date of the

,_

_,...

_

·•. , ,,

...........

SWISHER LOHSE

.

• All material submitted for publi:CStion is
to edittins.

.'

..,.

.

~~~ :·
~~

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph; C~artea Rlftte, R. Pli.
· Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
· ·
on. thru Sat. 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Sunday,O:OO a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRES
PTtON
PH. 992-2955
E. Main Friendly Service Pomeroy, Oh.
Week
'

•: All club meetings and other
:Dews articles in lhe society section
)Rust be submitted within 30 days
&gt;Of occurrence. All birthdays must
:be submitted within 42 days of tbe

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

··~a::

Pharmacy

~event

:occurence.·

Chuck, ·Ken or Ron ._
Your Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacists.

1220WASHINGTON BLVD
BELPRE, OHIO ·

Fri. 8 am-8 pm; Sat 9 am-5 pm
.Sun. 1 pm-5 pm; Hours This Sale

PHONE
(614) 423-7521

JUST

~

1:10 l:lO ·

•••,:

.,.

~

....;

'

..,..'

'

•

·~

Hilton Head Island/Savannah, Georgia

May 15-20, 1995
With OPernight stops in Charlotte and

Every Thursday Night

3.9¢

each

Umit10

Wi&gt;~sto11-Salem,

North Carolina

This Peoples Choice Tour Includes:
0

Reception

a~

We have all size
ttnks ready lor
·· immelmte
installation.

.,, Mere
Servke Is
Guanmteef

•

·'

..

•

Peoples Bank prior to departure wirl1 valet parking upon your arrival

-

4 PM-9 PM ONLY

Henderson, WV
Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grande, OH

0

Deluxe motorcoacll transportation with baggage handling

Guided ~ours of Hilton Head ~nd Savannah

a

Admission to Old Salem Moravian Village: .

No
d a&lt;Ntrtiled
YCMJrc:hoict Of poet and~
With no ODiigation kl purdlaM_P6itttlWt lll.. IPPft)~.

'

THIS AREA KMART HAS A PERMANENT' STUDIO OPEN 5 DAYS
Wednesday • Saturday, IOAM·7 PM
On!Sun. 10 ·AM (or slore opooilt. if lattrl-6 PM lor store desiftt, dearlier)
GALliPOliS

.

'•

.

•

·:

""

,

...

•

Shopping at the Lo~untry Outlets, Harbortown on Hilton Head and River
Street in Savannah
Four dinners, including a diimer cniise at Harbortown on Hilton Head, dinner at
the Crystal Sands Hotel, dinner at the Pirate House in. Savannah and an Old Salem
Feast at the Hawthorne Inn

a

Four full breakfasts, plus one continental breakfast deliv\.r ed to your room with
- the m-orning paper (Hawthorne In'n)
.
. ',_-··. · - , .
· --

'

M.lft ReliaJtfti,
lilflttl'v-iae-?

'

J

~ ltrM&lt;lrll'he~
~~.,_,g~~~~~~~~g~.,.I*..._..

.

.'

a

a
.a

•

'•

CALL 1·800·837·82l7

)

·-----

a

,

•

Five nights accommodations, including:
2 at the Crystal Sands Hotel, located on the beachfrom at Hilton Head
1 at· the !Uddison Charlotte', former home of th\! PTL Club
·
1 at the Hawthorne Inn in Winswn ,Sal.em
1 at the Hyatt Regency in Savannah

you ltllllt ~ • FREE

cattaln of what yoo ordered

.

OCOfOOM '

,+
.

•

Cheeseburger
Lovers Night

PROOf SHEET, oo you're

Adli10'WIII p:~M~llll~tn

MASUR

•
•

GIFT CEAnACATES AYALILABLE!

'1.99

NOT IN WEEKS.
l•fTIII,.

--,--...;.._,

-~

(R)

7:10,9!10 DAlLY
MT,JMEES SATfSUM

Call 446·ARTS

$1.29

SEE SELECT &amp;-·
ORDER INSTANTLY,

'

'""' "

Morris &amp; Dorothy Haskins
_
Arlo! T11oat,. 426 2nd. Avo. Golllpollo, Oh

a

. .. . .

-- ---

.

Goodbye to
clicks~ clacks "'

~ ~r

"'~p .. ..-.S':'-....... ""-..--.:'::"=-----==
1""
•r&gt;~To01'1• ·-----'wo ~ HR'Cfi1U:--·- • - - - - •
......
_... _ - -. - .

'

•

n~r~

~novm~n
..... ' ' ' ' "

· Sat~ AprU 8, 8 p.m.

0

~nd .

~·,.. ~·TI&lt;

or W•lh 16 oz. Son Dlink

Tawney of Chillicothe; four sons,
Christopher. Jeffrey, Richard and
Anqrew, of Gallipolis; and nine
grandchildren.
As employee of the month,
Wbaleyreceived a $100 U.S. Savings Btmd,' a special parking place
designated in her name, a complimentary meal in the hospital, her
picture in the lobby, and her name
engraved on the 1995 Plaque, also
displayed in the Hospital's Main
Lobby.

ByJ!)l,':TAYLOR
Associated PreS. Writer
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -The
Coast Guard turned off its Morse
code equipment after nearly a century of monitoring telegraph distress calls such as the Titanic's
1912 collision with an iceber,g.
·
Tbc reason: "Modem techilo1ogy," says Jim Wren, a Coast Guard
master chief who bas been a
radioman for 23 1/2 years. "We've just round more rapid and secure
wavs of communicating.··

12--' 999

DELIVERED TO.
YOUR LOT

.

Whaley named HMC March
-Employee,of the Month
GALLIPOLIS - Kathleen Ann
Fisher Whaley. Inpatient Account
Representative at the Holzer Medical Center, was.named- March
Employee of the Month.
A nali ve of Springfield, Wbaley
graduated from St. Bernard School
and Springfield High School. She
came to the Gallipolis area in the
faU of 1973, and started 1her 2f year
career at the hospital Jan. 3. 1974,
in the emergency deparllhcnt. In
September, 197~. she transferred to
the finance departtnent where she
contilmcs to be employed.
She and her husband, Charles,
whom she married in 1956,' live in
Rodney. He is associated with
Phillips Supply Company . of
Portsmouth . They have three
.daughters, Kim Painter and Karen
Caner of Gallipolis, and Lisa

8

FOR
ONLY

&lt;'

,r ·~ 1

TOP EMPLOYEE - ·Kathleen Whaley receives her March
Employee of the month certificate from Charles I Adkins, Jr.,
president and CEO.

March 31 - April 1st - April 2nd
· And We're Not Foolin' ,.
You Can buy A New 1995 14' Wi~e
.M obile Home From Miller Homes

.·

ADocalllllfary VIdeo Premiere

You Can Enjoy Any Style
Personal Size ...

quarte~.

himself in hi;s botellivin.g
He sigped w1th an organ1zed syncbcate in 1922.
.
Tickets for the prem1er are $5
and. are available at Haskins Tanner, 332 Second Ave., That Special
To~ch, _340 Second ~ve. and the
Ariel pnor to the sbowmg.
.
An array ~f. ~ly seen ~~Intyee memorabil,ia will be e:dnbtted
7 p.m. at the (lallia County ~istori­
·cal Soeiel&gt;: before the p~uer. The
exhibit w1ll als_o be_ dtsplayed at
Bossard M~morial Ltbrary through

.
.

0. 0~ ·Milntyre
EVERY
'TUESDAY NIGHT

invited reporters to come see
wbat'scooltillg.
·
If you peek into the oven at this
early stage, you find things that
may &amp;eem - . well, half-~ed. It
was up' to Peter Tortorici, CBS
Entertainment president, to convinCe his audience of bis pro~'
appetite appeal.

WE HONOR THE

****I
,.,

DANCE CLASSES
Starting Aprd J0 gmlll

PIZZA LOVERS NIGHT

-

APRIL. E .O OVS SALE3 DAYS ONLY

'PJm-of-the-century
to present day ::p:ri:l..-;_~_ _ _ _ _ _ _::::!:!!::::~~~:::.
"SJaUia Coun'r.
.- Whiteley s supporting staff in
the project _were technical director
Randall Comm; artist, Jon Stone;
.imd Earl Tope, wbo provides Mclno!l· tyre's voice.
·
Mcintyre, formerly of Gallipolis, wrote the column "New York
Day by Day" wbicb appeared in 1
'550 newspapers in the nation when
·be died in 1938. He also conttibut.'ed an essay to Cosmopolitan
'monthly for nearly 16 years. His
·Jncome, in his prime, made bim
one of the_ three highest paid
'columnists of his tilne, along with
Will Rogers and Walter Winchell.
· Mcintyre was the ftrst to write a
New York syndicated column. For
you have a:riy ·questions see
!learly a decade be syndicated it

Wilford-Campbell

•

to , -

So,mewbere along the way, a whether either hopeful's sbow ~s
given ~canes aaoppet. The a tilne slot. These and at least.20

next fill to find OUL
You'D have to Wilt undlMay to
even find out If these serlea will
lll8ke it to die air.
They aod dozc;oa more are In ·
development, under whose -rubric
coru:epts are hatched,
are
writiCII, .casu are assemb
pilot
episodes are shot and fingers are

t:premier at .Ariel Theatre

ARl

-

What next? CBS previews progr-f1ms.that might bow next fall
attaJabL
: next
J• This
: BJ nAZJEil MOORE
~ APT.,..dm Wrlta' .
• NEW YORK (AP) - Maybe
lellliD you'll lllllke Don
!:,-'anew cop allow "Off Duty"
• aD ID111Dt s.mub, u lowly CBS
;: n:cJalms the ratings crown it owned
~ the put tbree years.
•
Maybe you'll get booked OD a
t ·oew JIOIIIIie Hunt sitcom about a

.

Sunday nmes Sentinel-Page 87

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Aprll2,11115

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Plenty ofleisure time to enjoy rlle beach

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Pomeroy-Middleport-GIIIIpolla, oH Point Plaaaant, WV

Pag1 88 ·Sunday lim• Sentinel

Aprll2,1~ :

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CAKES
s 39

By MIKE HARRIS
PHOENIX (AP) - Paul Tracy is
• !Jeginning to get a real homey feelmg aboul the new Indy-car season
: as be gets .ready for today's Slick 50

EACH

CBECKOD7 'BESE GROCERY SAVI GS

sauanNE BATH
4 ROI.LI!AI;K ,

tiSSUE

3 ·sIll!,. ,
·

Purc hase

He is definitely more comfort-.
able - anil vice-versa - wilh the
Newman-Haas team after winning
tbe race two_weeks ago in Au$tralia.
Now, be w~l be running at Phoenix
International Raceway, just a few
..... miles from his newly adopted home
in the suburb of Paradise Valley.
In fact, the 26-year-old Canadian
racer, along wilb bis ·wife and
daugbler, moved inlo their new
. borne Ibis week.
" It seems like things are happening real fast for us," Tracy said.
''' And now they're all good things.
" I feel a lol more confident now
.about my position with the team."
added Tracy. who gol off to a bad
statt witb a crash in the seasonopener at Miami. " I showed' lhe

, ' sauRnNE APPIIE-- JUICE

WIOh .....
'

1401. ·
~.

age

.•

.

By VICTOR SIMPSON
PALERMO, Sicily (All) Tennis may have found its drC~UD

·teamrie 1-2 puncb,oO::te s~

- and Andre Agassi, the No: 1 and
No. 2 players in the world, and
their top-ranked doubles te3mmat.Cs
beat overni:alcbed Iraty Saturday
and moved the Uniled States inlo
lhe Davis Cup semifinals against
Sweden.
·
.
Playing a matcb delayed a day
by rain, Sampras defeated Renzo
Furlan 7-6 (7-3), 6-3. 6-0. Then,
Richey Reneberg and Jared Palme~ &gt;"
defeated Stefano Pescosolido and
Cristian Brandi 6-1 , 6-7 (2-7), 64,
6-3.
Following Agassi' s straigbt-sei
victory Friday. it gave the United
States an unbeatable 3.0 lead in die
besl-of-fl ve series, malting today's
final two singles meaningless.
YES! - Connecticut's Kara Wolters (right) joins
of ber
Tbe decisio.b by Sampras and
teammates, Including Jamelle Elliott (leU), In celebration of the Agassi t6 pufaside their rivalry lo
Huskies' 87-60 win over Stanford In the second NCAA women'·• semifi- be Davis Cup teammates adde~
nal game Saturday In MhineapoUs. Tbe s't ill-unbaten Huskies will face sucb strenglb and prestige to !be
U.S. team lhal even the 5,100 partisecond-ranked Tennessee In today's Dnai.(AP)
san
jamming the Palermo TeoStanforci~ s le~ding scorer, sopbo- .• ,Tbe 27-point defea\ was tbe .nis fans
Club
often applauded thei.r
more Kate Starbird, was scoreless worst tournament loss for Stanford
shots.
1
until only 10 minules remained in since its first -ever appearance, an
"
W
c'
re
good,"
Sampras
said
the game. She fmished with jusltwo 82-48 loss 10 Maryland in 1982.But wben asked bow tb e Davis Cup
points, 14 below her average.
with a roster lhat includes 11 freshcompared to the star-studded
Kristin Folk! and Anita Kaplan men and sophomores, Stanford has team
basketball " Dream Team" that
led Stanford, one of the youngesl the potential to continue its impres- won the gold medal at tbe 1992
teams in America, with 12 points sive slfing of NCAA tournamenl Olympics.
performances.
apiece.
" The Amt:Ocan team is altnosra
dynasty ." Sampras said. He listed
1 sucb Americans as Jim Courier,
Michael Chang and Todd Martin,
who have played in re cent Davis
flew borne, bol others slayed to was a cubic zirconia of a spring Cup matches.
.
...
a wail ' the possible early-week training - no real gems, bul a lol of • Rencberg said the presence
arrival of tbe regular players.
fakes,
Sampras and Agassi was a great
"I've given up guessing what is
Rodriguez, exiled to lhe Mexican morale-booster to the U.S. team. '
going to happen,' ' Leyland said. league lasl summer, was the Bany
" Il showed we thought the Ital"I've been wrong all spring." ...
Bonds of replacemenl ball, hitting ians were good play~ and we had
The Pirates were one of lhe bet- for average and power wilh a .480 to bri ng our bes t to win ,' '
ter replacemepl teams, winning II average, seven homers and 17 RBis. Reneberg said.
of their last 15 eshibitions.
· Sio\mons was nearly as good, with a
Clay is Sampras' least favorite
''This team is il talented .417 average and seven homers, surface and be showed some hesi(replacement) team," pitcher Brett including four in a span of eight al· tation against Furlan, allhougb be
Grebe said. " I think we've got a bats.
bc nefilled fro m a dry court after
very ralented tC31!1. I( tbe strike had
A couple of the pitchers, notably 'Agassi •s soggy experience I;riday.
gone on, we w0 uld have done a Mike Walker, Bill Melvin and Bob
Furlan, ranked onl y. No. 67 in
the world; played grittily during ~
good job."
Ayrault, also had good springs.
Tbe Pirates were one of a handAnd, for six weeks, the pseud'o first se~ rallying from a 4-1 deficit
ful ·or teams lhat took the threat of Pirates enjoyed the luxuries of big- and saving fi ve set ))lints to force a ·
replacemenl baseball seriously, league life: spacious locker rooms, tie breaker. Bilt he losl tbat and
spending th.ousands of man bours . f lubbouse food sprJ:ads and nice never lhreatened again; beaten by
Sampras' big serve and complete
scouting and scouring the country hotel rooms.
·
for unsigned players.
" I'm alinosl scared to twn on !be game.
It was onl y the second of II
As a resu \l. Bonifay and his TV and walch the news,'' catcher
scDuting staff' uncovered some of Mike Daniel said. " I don't want this tiebreakers lhat Sampras bas won
lhis year, and he said-it "gave me a
the real jewels in wbat ralent-wise to end."
lol of momentum and confidence''
for lhe rest of the matcb.
"Once I got the first set, I could
sense
the air coming out of his bal..
9.
Robby
Gordon,
Ounae.
Calif.,
Reynard·
loon,'·
Sampras sai(l.
the first two events. is leading the Ford. 171.108.
•
Furlan
said there was litde that
season points going into tollay's
10. Oil de Ferran, Bruil. Reynard-MmedeS.
could
do against tbe tough 1 ~2
Italy
1
1~.no.
'
opening of practice. He is followed
1I. Mauricio Gugelmin, Bmzil, Reynard Forrl,
by Mauricio Gugelmin, Scott Pruett, 178 .422..
U.S. combin3\ion.
12. Adtlan Fernandez, Mex.icoJ Lala-Mereedts,
Miami winner Jacques Villeneuve
.
and Tracy.
·
· 178 .248
13 . Stefan Johans.son, Sweden, 1994 ~nske·
Unser , who won ei ght of 16 Mcrcedea, 171.18S.
14. Bobby Rahal , Dublin. Ohio, Loll,
races and bis second series title a Mercede5,177.08.S.
year ago, is ninth. Fittipaldi, second
l~l. Andre Ribeiro, Dutil. Reynard-Honda,
.
in the 1994 points, has yet to score a 176 .948.
16. Too Fabi, hair. Reynard -Ford, 176.729.
point.
17 . Al Un~ t Jr., Albuquerque, N.M., ~n~k.eHere is the lineup for today's Mercecb, l76.638, •
FLORENCE
Ky · (AP) - Sere18. Ed4ie CheeYer, Aspen; Colo., Lola-Ford,
'
•
Slick 50 200 Indy-car race with res- 176.479.
,
·
na's Song scored ber firsl viclory
idence or home counuy, !YJlC of car .
19. Chri1tlan Attipald~ Brazil. Reynard-Ford. against colts Saturdfly, winning tbe
174.789.
., .
000
and qualifying speed in mph:
20. Atie Luyendyk., The NetherlandJ , lola- $600.
.Jim Beam Stakes at Tur- .
1. Bry" Hw. Dublin, Ollio. R•Yn"'Hord, Ford, 113.94l.
-~
·
fway Parl&lt;..

CORNER OF GENERAL .
HARTINGER PARKWAY
AND PEARL ·STREET
· MIDDLEPORT
OPEN 24 HOURS
7 DAYS A WEEK
.

•

"I sort of expected it, .. said . only meeting they will get lbe
$5,000 bonuses promised them for
starter Monday against Montreal. "I making the opening-day roster.
wasn't going to believe it until .we ·-: At least five or six major-league
were acwally on tbe plane. I wasn't teams ·apparently will pay the
going to believe it until we were $S,OOO bonuses. However, lhe playacwallys!alldiog at~omep\ate."
ers will not get the $20,000 in S!lVThe pl.ayers, ~xtous to at ~~ erance pay they would have earned
. work out m a maJor-leag!IC ~~um. bad tbey .played even Ol\t regularseemed depressed and dispmted by season game.
the news. Som&amp;"planoed to go oul
"Tbal $5,000 means a lot to us,"
together later Saturday nigbl Evers said. "It tells us we're nola
~use, as pitcher Troy Ev~ said, piece of meat. But it still won' t
It U probably be the last thihg we make up for nol playmg at Tbtee
do together as a team."
Rivers Stadium."
Minutes before, pitcher Bill
Bonifay said calling off the tligbl
Melvin b•~ pass~d out tillS of and workout "was besl for everychocolate chip cookies be had baked body ... unul we see what happens.
bimself fW: his replacement team- This gives us !"ore flexibili~."
. mates the ~tght ~fore..
Manager Jun Leyland, h1s coachIf they re bemg d;sbanded es and other from-office staffers
and nearly to a man, tbey believed were given a choice of remaining in
they were - they 'tton't go away Florida or returning bome for a coubroke. They were lold in a play.ers- pie of days. Leyland, amoog others,

ot

guys on the team I can be patienl Penske, which still boasts AI Unser
0111d take care of tlie equipment, and Jr. and Emerson Fittipaldi. the only
I think now we've gol something to drivers who finished ahead of Tracy
in last year's PPG Cup standings,
build on."
·
If tbe Penske drivers aren' t ready
Tracy, who now bas nine wins
to
step
aside and let new Newmanand 21,top-three finishes in just 49
Ha&lt;~S
teamma~racy
and Michael
Indy-car st~t s - a percenlage of
42.8 - added, "Now I think we Andretti take lhe initiative, today's
can ge·t on a roll and nol worry race is probably a good lime to
prove it.
·
about that fusl win.
A year ago, Penske' s Filtipaldi,
" The 20 points we have now is
lhe most I've ever had this early in Unser and Tracy began their domi·
· the season.' '
nation of tbe PPG lndyCar World
Series
at Phoenix iii what was then
Adding to bis confidence is the
tbe
second
race of the season.
fact tbal he bas been a major force
Fittipaldi
and Unser finished 1-2
on lhe one-mile Phoenix oval tbe
181.952, tra~:k. quali fy!o&amp; record; old record
·10 the 200-lap even' wbile Tracy
last two years, leading 151 of lhe
..,
176.266, Paul Tnscy, April l994.
Jed
43
of
the
rust
62
miles
before
2. Emenon Fittip• ldi, Brazil, Penske200 laps two years ago before loscrashing
Merce&lt;:~e~,J80. l86.
ing control while trying to pass a
•
J. Jacques Villeneuve, Canada, ~eynard- Fard,
"I don 't think anybody is going 110.ol6.
lapped tar. Then be set a qualifying
it like they did lasl
4.PIW!Tracy.Conada,L&lt;&gt;Ia·Ford.l79.l6l.
record of 176.266 mph and ran out to dominate
,
.
.
S. Michael ADdH:tti, Nuarelh, Pa.~ h.ol~.oFotd.
. front until being caught lip in an year," srud Andrelll, a domma~ l'l'l.lll.
6. Soon!flr\ien, Cry1tal Bay, Nev., Lola-Ford,
accident trigge red by Hiro driver in the ftrSt lWO races this S
1?1.958.
Matsushita
. SOD.
1. Jimmy Vuser, Di1covery Day. Calif.,
. Three-lime PPG Cup champion Reyuor&lt;·Fonl.l78.~.
.
.
This race could a)so be a key for Bobby
Rahal
third
and
second
in
8.
RIUI
Boesel.
Brazil.
Lola-Mercedes,
Tracy's previou s team·, Team
118.86],

Serena's Song
captures Jim
Beam Stakes

Fori\?r.~~~ SulliYan. Aspen. Colo., Reynwd22. D&lt;an Hall, Olympl&lt; V~ley, Colli.. L&lt;&gt;la·

The

top-ranked fl.lly.

trained by

D. Wayne Lukas, ran lhe I 1/8F""ini:! s~ ..... Chile, L&lt;&gt;••·F&lt;rd,l1o.916. mile race in I :49 3-'5. three seconds
24. Hiro Matsushita, Japan, 1994 Reynard - . off the track record set by Hansel
Ford. 168.919
.
in the 1991 Beam Stakes.
_
2,.
RobertO' GuerrerO", San· Juao. Caplltn.l!O,
Te' ano Run made· a run from the
Calif., ~994 Reynard ·Merc.cda, 168.539.
J
.
26 . &amp;-ic B.chelart. Bel8ium. ·l99&lt;6 Lola-Ford,
middle of the eight-borsc field, but
168
-~f-AIU.sandro Zampedri, Italy, 1994 lola - could get no c_lo_ser ~han 3 1/2
Font.IIS.\.389.
.
lenglhs at lhe flmsb hne. Mecke
was another fiv~ lengths back. .
The winner paid $3 .80, $2.80
and $2.40, Tejano Run returned
$3.40 and $3, while Mecke paid $3
to sbow.
By HOWARD SINER
So the lead golf analysl for CBS
Norman •. who's been at it a bil work wilt end with a live lelecasl ''I hate 10 say it-'- I hate louse lhe
Serena's Song had four Grade I
NEW YO RK (NEA) - Ken won't single out defending champ longer, might be pressing even (4-7 p.m. ET) from Augu~ta on word - bul I was choking. The 80 wins going into the Grade II Beam
looked ugly. Bull bil 15 greens. I and ·became the first filly 10 win tbe
Venturi !mows just how they fe1;L
Jose Maria Olazal:lel or anyone else harder lO don the Greerr Jacket. He's Sunday, April9.
Tbis is tbe '40th consecutive lhrce-puued six times . I jusl race in its 14-year history. Tbe
Some of today's best golfers- as tlie early favorite al lbe 1995 played in tbe Mas ters 14 times.
Nick Price, Greg Norman, Corey Masters.
Norman's best efforts came in 1986 Masters loumamenllo be shown oo couldo' t gel !be ball in lhe bole."
$360.000 winner's share put lier
Two years later, Venturi. tbe career earnings above S1.2 million.
CBS. It's lhe longe"st-running such
-Pav_iri, tobli Daly alid Tom Kite, _ ·~Ventu r~ says: "I-root for- lwo and 1987_wben lie tied for second:
among others - have never won players tied at lhe 18tb bole, having
As foreign-born golfers,- Prlce relationship in network TV sports;- leader after the first lwo days, bad _ Lukas, who also !l'ains Triple
No wonder. Theters is pop- pulling trouble again on the final Crown hopefuls Timber Counu'y
lhe Masters.
lwo 15-foolers apiece, and its 10 and Norman bave a chance ·lO
back nine at Augusta. He wound up and Thunder Gulch; had· said Sereularly
!mown
foc
its
fmishes.
But Venluri, the former PGA star minutes lo six. One makes, .one extend the recenl alien domination
tied
for founb at the 1958 Masters, na's Song would be pointed IOwan!
In
fact,
the
fi
ling
TV
now !mown as CBS-TV's "Voice misses. And we gel off the air and of the Masters. The only American
only
two suokes behind Arnold lhc Kentucky Oaks in an effort io
finale
came
iii
1956,
when
CBS
of the Masters,'' owns tbe record · we're gone. That's a good bne."
victory in lhe last seven outings al
Palmer,
lhe winner.
inttoduced
the
picturesque
tournawin an Oaks-Kentucky Derby doufor frustration a1lhe presligious
Al;tording lo Venturi, lhis could Augusta National was by Couples in
Palmer
mounted one of hi!l'trade- ble.
ment to its viewers.
event.
~
·be
year that one of tbe veternns, 1992.
·
During tbe final round, Jack plark charges to heal Venturi by one
Mighty Magee bad a necl:. ln
· Despite three near misses (by a Price or Norman, or even a·comparCBS will also keep an eye ·on
c.ombined total of only four alive newcomer sucb as Ernie Els, Eldrick "Tiger" Woods,. tbe Burke Jr: 'Came from an unprece- stroke and win ll;e 1960 Masters. To froql of ~crena's Song when the
strokes), Venluri haS never gotten !0 wins bis fmt Masters. Past winners acclaimed U.S. Amateur champion dented eight strokes back - five of do it. Arnie ~!Pitied the lasl two field went undet the wire lhe ftrsl
lime. Bul Serena's Song, a conwear the legendary Gre1;n Jacket, Fred Couples and Nick Faldo are wbo is making bi§ debut in major them on the back nine - to edge holes.
Despile
band
ailments
lhal
cut
fume&lt;} front-runner, bad taken lhe
Venturi
by
one
stroke
and
win
the
wbicb is presented annually to the highly rated, too.
·
·
golf. Woods is an Africansbon
bis
career,
Ventwi
went
on
to
lead going into the clubhouse turn
Masters.
Thal's
the
biggest
winner of the year's fmt major golf
"You can P!ck lhem as easy as I American. His lint Masters comes
win
a
torat.
of.14
PGA
tournaments,
and
was never beaded the rest of
turnaround
ever
at.
Augusta
tournament.
can going in, ' says Venturi aboul on the 20th anniversary of !be 1975
lheway.
·
includiilg
'
l
he
1964
U~S.
Open.
But
After
opening
witb
a
66
(an
ama"I lost it.by one stroke in 1956, lbe hottest prospects for the . ·appearance by Lee fllder.. lhat broke
be
switched
eventually
to
broadcasl·
Migbly
Magee
was soon done
teur
record
that
still
stands
at
the
lWO in •~8 and one ilr'60~says-:Masters. ''Everybody is going to tbe oolor harriet at tbe tournament.
arid
local
favorile
Car
Dealer also
ing
with.c;IJ!I
ever
l'utting
on
tlle
Masters),
Ven!IJri
led
the
1956
tour-.
• Venturi about tltose Masters i:ham- pick the $arne players - .Couples,
In the traditional ·palring of the
·
faded.
leaving
Tejano
Run
the lone
Green
Jackel"
"
·'
nament
for
th~utt
three
mimds.
He
pionships that mighlhavebeen.
Norman, Els, Price, Faldo.".
defending champ and U.S. Amateur
of"tbe
challenger
from
the
bead
What
does
it
lake
to
win
the
Venturi will return once again to
Lots or attention will be focused champ, Qlaxabel and Woods will was f«Nr shots in fronl of Cary
.
Masters?
.
·
stretch
• the Augusta National Golf Course on Price; lhe 1993 and 1994 PGA · play Logetber in the first round of Middlecoff as lhe final day began.
.
"You've got to be in the right
But the lben-24-year-old Venturi
.
wben CBS televi.se~ the 59th Player of.tbe Year. He will be trying tbe Mastqs.
VenturJ
Masters, .wblcb wUI start ThUfSI\ay. ' to win bis third straight major golf
Taped highlights of the first lWO nervously finished lhe windy after- place at the right time,"
·
'1
. "Years ago, I said that tbe tour- crown, following victories al ·last rounds, scheduled to be played noon with an 80. Burke, a veteran, says.
Several of the biggest names in
SEATI'LE, WasiL -In the fmt
. nament begins on Simday afternoon year's British Open and POA ThurSday and Friday, will be shown fm:d a one-under-par 71.for'lhe Vicgolf
have
to
agree
with
h~
.
tory.
ll
was
the
only
sub-par
round
game
of Saturday's NCAA men's
·on thl!"bai:k nine," Venturi says. "It Championship. ,
(at 11:3S-11:50 p:m. E'I/ by CBS. Il
Copyrigbtl9~5
NE,'NSJ'APER
oflheday.
tournament
semifinal. UCLA beat
, bas proven that time and time
Bul Price's besl finish in bis nine will co¥er the third round live
ENTflRPRISE
ASSR
back,
Venturi
a.timits:
Old
ahoma
State
74~ I .
Looking
again."
Masters tr!es was fifth in 1986.
/ p.m. ET) Satur48y. The netI

Frustrated Venturi nof pi~king ·favorites ·in the-Masters .

-·~-

I .

.foot-7 center, ck&gt;mina!ed down low
on her way lo 31 points and nine
reboUDds, working Oaw!essly with
6-4 national player of the year
~becca Lobo in an g7-60 vlciOry
over fOII'Ih-nmked Stanford.
· The Hu&amp;kies {34.0) advanced to
their first-ever NCAA title giiiiU:
and will try to repeat their 77-66
January victory over then-No. 1
Tennessee, which also used a stroaa
Inside game to beat Georgia 73-51
inSaiUr!lay'sfmtsemifmal.
Scoring from tbree-.,Oint range
as well as in traffic, Lobo bad 17
points and nine rebounds as
Connecticut moved within one vic10!)' of just tbe second perfect season since tbe women's NCAA tournament began in "1982.
If the Huskies can beat tbe Lady
Vols, tbey will join the 1986 Texas
leaJD ~the only unbeaten women's
NCAA champions.
Jamelle .Elliott added· to
Connecticut's front line power,
equaling ber season bigb with 21
poin\S.
·
But as ·awesome as the Huskies
were inside; they were even btiuc;r
on defense. Connecticut held opponents to 31.4% shooting lhis season,
!he best in the nation, and was even
beuer in the fml balf on its way to a
24-point halftime lead.
Stanford (30-3) sbot just 22% in
lhe flm balf and 31% for ibi: game.

.

.

. 200.

'

Sampras.
·and Agassi
down Italy
in Davis .Cup ·

;Tracy getting comfortable heading into Slick 50 200

\

.

...

· .Jason Pfaff, the Pirates' scheduled

By ALAN ROBINSON
BRA PENTON, Fla. (AP) The Pittsburgh Pirates all but pulled
the plug Saturday on their replacement team, calling off a charter
flight to Pittsburgh barely an boor
before its scheduled takeoff and
canceling today's workout in 1'hree
· Rivers Stadium.
· ~disappointed replacements,
dressed in coats and ties for tbe
flight norttl, were shuttled 10 a nearby hotel and were told by general
DWiager Cam Boliifay lo await furtber instructions today.
·The 'players, many of whom
wore their opening-night best for
their rust trip logelher as a majorleague team, were about to board a
bus f()f the aiJport wberi lhey were
- ,Biven the had news. ·

' LB. PICK

s 89

·SLB. BAG

.

.'

·Will newest Pirates see •field of dreams• fade away?

lloli. OR

TROI!.ICANA
SEASON'S BEST

P07AIJ'OES ·
, FRENCH
.
.
FRIES·

LB.

WILSON'S

LB.

SBURFINE

BOILED
HAM

SectioD c·

UConn. &amp; Tennessee earn
-right to _battle for crown·
By CHUCK SCHOFFNEit
Iolmloo. 64 Tiffaol Iobnson aad 6MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Driven 6 VOnda Wan!. Geoqia' s problems
all season bY. Its one goal, were further complicated by foul
Tennessee is one victory from troubles, which at tiDieS forced
n:acbing it.
coacll Andy Landen to usc three
Tennessee sailed into the clulll- juanls -..,.IIOIIC tallec than S-8.
pionsbip game of tbe NCAA - The si~e advantage helped
women's basketball tournament Teooessee to a S 1-33 rebounding
with another dominating victory edge and kept Geoqia from getting
Saturday, beatlna Southeastern easy shots inside. Tbe Lady
Confereru:e rival Georgia 73-51.
Bulldogs sbot 36.7% in the fKU balf
The No. 3-rarikedLady.Vols (34- IIQd 32.8% for the game.
2) did it with their two staplesJohnson bad 11 points for
strong inside play and defense Tennessee and Latina Davis scored
plus a sparlding game at both ends· 10. Tracy Henderson, playing in ber
of the floor from senior All- hometown, led Georgia with 12
Amc:rlcan Nikld McCray.
·
· points. McClay held Georgia's leadTennessee began the season with · ing scorer, La'Keshia Frett, to 11
the motto "One Team, One Goal" points on 5-for-12 shooting. Sbe
- that goal being to win the nation- was averaging 16 per game.
al championship. Tbe Lady Vols
Saudia Rouodln:e also scored 11
will get a chana: to win tbeir fourth fOr Georgia, 'while Kedra Holland
Iitle urnler c:oacll Pat Summitt today had 10.
Tennessee, wbicb bas won its
wben tbey meet the winner ·of
Saturdlly's other semifinal game . five NCAA games by an average
margin of 2S.6 points, led 40-25 at
. between Conpecticutand Stanfonl.
McCray scored 22 points to lead halftime and never let Georgia get
the way in a ,game that was similar closer tban 12 points in the second
to Tennessee's 83-61 victory over balf.
Georgia in the regu18r-sen5on fmale.
No. 1 O&gt;nnedlcut 87
Wbile talented, tbe sophomoreNo.4 Stanford 60
.laden Lady BuUdogs (28-5) simply
Too tall for Stanford on
weren't strong enough to stay with Saturday, No. 1 Conneclicut gave
their bigger, more experienced the women's Fmal Four its marquee
opponent.
match up: a championship-game
Tennessee bad little trouble get- rellUilCb with No. 3 Tennessee.
_ling tbe ball inside lo 6-foot-2 Dana
Kara Wolters, tbe Huskies' 6-

.

eathnts ~ Jetdintl

April 2; 1915

In·NCAA women's Final Four,
•

- ...,.

.

me

/

...

UCLA wins

.'

•

�,,

.

•

lnjUr1Ction ends
·baseball strikeLpckout vote

se.t for today .

.In the NBA,

~agic

Buying .ANew Or Used Car

It Will Be If You Shop

.
'

request and a motion for an expedited appeal.
In the appellate brief, owners
claimed lbe injunction was catastropbic for them.
''Major league baseball will
likely suffer its second consecutive
year of no playoffs."

MOildoy'aca-

Moatr.._llt. Pi~ 6:05p.m.

tm Anaet• Ill florida. 7:05p.m.

i;Jiue Angels exp~ri~ncing

!!itchirs,
seniors on band and three of four_ but junior Mandy Mullins and
llittermen not.due to graduate until · sophomore Julie Merry will be
1996 and 1997, youth is what char- backing her up.
aderit.es Gallia Academy's softball '
Behind the plate is junior
team in the 1995 season.
Kristin · Howell. Sophomores
· : However, if the Blue Angels Valerie Spence and Kim Kerns will
want to avoid going lhrougb anoth- back her up. .
'
,
er season !:ike their 4-15 showing in
The rest of the infield portrait
1?94, lhey need to make a few consists..ofDarstat first when she's
adjustments in the wake of losses not pitching, sophomore Joy
td Marietta, Minford, J.ackson and Haynes at second, Mullins at third
. Fairland last week.
.and sophomore Tiffany Foster at
The Angels will have to avoid sbonstop. ••
Uie btizzal'd of ell)lrs that plagued
In the outfield, the Angels have
thell\ in the Minford. (four) and senior Marie Kuhn in left, Spence
Jackson (seven) glunes. They will in center and junior Tiffany Van1ey
also have to cap})alize on their in right.
·
chances to score and· ·avoid situaThe Blue Angels are coached by
· tions 'like leaving 10 runners Oil Brack Houchens and assisted by
. base, as they did against Jackson.
reserve coach Garry Adkins and
Sophomore Bridget Darst and volunteer Joe Hannon.
,enior Megban Kolcun are expect-

'\

}

SeAttle

Automatic~ air, stereo caa-

VI.

1:05 p.m.

Per ' ·
llo.

199~

36
44

~II

Todoy'sgames

EASTERN CONFERENCE

'~~

. AllUde Dlrilloa

lt J. I llldiE llA

I.um '

7
10
II
19.S

Philadelphia ...... 11 ll -4
WllhiDgtOG ...... 14 12 7
New Jeney ....... 14 11 6

31 107
3S 11
34 96

19
92

Flrwida ........./.... 1316 4
N. ~· Rangers .... 13 16 3

30 12
29 IS

90
81

96

·

BuebaU

1. ..•.•

Nti,.ntl Lo,.t
PHILADELPHIA PHILLtES : Re-·
luted Pete Conlia, Gary Braha, Bob
Crutey, Jeff Hull, Steve WUrd, Joe
McCaDD, Bill Phllllpa, and Jim Rll·
muuen, pitchen; Carlo• Diu: 111d Joe
. Staaley, catr;:han: 'todd Cruz. Mike
Huyler, 'and Alu Ojet, illfieldtn; John
Olbbans IOd Steve Sabo, olollficldcn. Reanisned Todd Cobuin, cateher· Tu
~aldrid&amp;e and .a rea Dunn, pi~)m: and
J1m Freemu, Ulfielder.oulfielder, 10 u·
tended sprin.a train in. a cwnp.

Northtut DI•Won
Quebec .............. 'l3 1 3) 49 131

Piltsbura,h ......... 'l2 9 · l
BoctoD .............. JJII2 2
Bu((ala..... .... ..... l4 12 S .
Hartfm-d ... ......... l3U J .
MontreaL ......... II U S
Ottawa .............. 4 2l •

lill

.739
.722
.600
.416

.S •

• 20
21
l6
31 .«9
3:Z .261

95

17.S
20
33

94
46 133 101
36 - 9'5 n
33 II 74
31 IS 92

21

79 102

Football

12 65 112

N.....aiF... b.ULo....
ARIZONA CARDINAl.&amp; Slped Dll·

val Low, offe~~~~lve IIRTniD..
,
DETROIT LION~ : Re.-alaned Mike

, WESTERN CONFERENCE

·.s

Joluuoa, lineb.Cbr.

, Ctn._-al DI..Uion

6.5
13.5
11

Ium

28.5

St.l.ouia ........... 1910
Toronto ............. t5 12
Dalloa................ IllS
Winnipea .......... 9 II

Friday's atoros

46 ll9 ·10
41 Ill 71
40114 I]

•Hockey ·.
NallonU Boeker Le•ue

BUFFALO SABRES: RDC&amp;Liad Viklor
Gordiout, left wlna. from Roehe1ter or
the Amerlcaa Hockey Lequc.

NEW YORK RANOEltS: R~-i~

Friday •s scores

Jon Hillebraadt~ aoattender. a.nd' Sy\ VllD
Blouia and Andy Silvennan, defeDJemen,
from Olariot~e of tho EMt CoBI,I ~od:ey
Leaaue to B•nahamioa of the American
Hock.ey League. -

Tall'q'la Bay 2, Hnnlord 0
Wlllhinstan 6, Q.lebec 4
Toronto 3, Chicaao 3 (tie) .
S'L Lou ia 4, Sati Jose 1
Calgary 6, Edmonton 2
VantCiuver 6, Anlihclm l

They played Saturday

Amttlun Rocker Luaue
FREDERICTON CANAOIENSo
Signt:d Brady Knamt:r, center.
ROCHESTER AMERICANSo Slgned
Scraei KlimeoUev, defenseman.
·

Saturday
1 p.m.
:JOp.m.
1:30tJ.m."

-locks,

,

~~,.....,

~ble.

.

,.,_.&amp;locks.

red, 5 speed.
/W./FM,
real clean.

College

NAVY: Named Ken Niumalalolo
nina bacb r;:oach.

ntD-

D'ON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

cassene, powBr wtndows
.&amp;loct&lt;s

1993 PONTIAC TRA~SPORT VAN SE, 14962,
Red , air, automatic. AM-FM cassette, tilt, crutse. power
wl~dowsllocks, VS e'ngine, rear de1roster ..... .... .. ............ S11 ,i7S

GENERAL MOTORS

eantn

rtn

Per
llo.

CHEVY~UMINAEUROSPOAT,

93 Plymouth
Voyager
7 passenger .
van .................. ..

B4HONDA

89HONDA

760 GLE turbo diesel,
1 owner, Bir,
loaded I

Civic OX, 4 speed,
stereo, great gas
· mlteage.

CAX, automatic,
stereo,
nlce 'car,

1995

·

12,995

GMC.
JIMMY
4X4

88 Plymouth Reliant auto, 4 dr.,air.................. ...... ...52995
87 Ford Ranger S.C. 4 cyl., 5 speed, XLT... ................. 13995
88 Chevy Cavalier 2'door, s speed .......................... 53995
86 Chrysler,Laser Red, turbo, 5 spd., air, s.ooo mi ....... 13995
89 Nissan Stanza 4 door, extra
. clean .......................... '4495

$21,849
PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX
SEDAN

Aerostar XLT, air,
automatic, power windows
&amp; II)Cks.

Taurus,
air, automatic,
AM/FM '

Per
Mo.

4x2, tu·tone, very clean ......15995

WAS $18,984 .

$17,89,
1995
Corsica LT, white,
one Qwrutr. air,

- stereo cassene.

Ranger pickup, V6, automat·
IC. rear sliding window, bed
llnef.

Lancer,
air, automatic,
stereo cassetle.

CHEVY

•

%TON PICKUP

•

Per

V-8, air and more.

Mo.

94 HONDA CIVIC

$14,695
.
. . . 13163

194225, air, 5 speed,
-.stereo. - - ·

10,4 9 5

1995

GEO
METRO

legacy l, one owner,
automatic, air,·

stereo cauettt.

cars we'd buy
ourselves!"'..;:~

195.14:

5

84 HONDA
AcCOfd, s speed~
st8reo ca'nette, gray,
• • hatchback.

~1

East State St~eet

, Athens, Oh1o

.

593 6641·
•

Tht 10m Compomy

I

$9,'69:.9"~-

DODGE

Monaco 4 door, air, automat"
lc, power windows &amp; locka,
cruise, orte owner.

2995

TryThi&amp; Gas Sipp~r On'
For Si::e! . 1113180.

5

·

..

NOW

$16I 99

#3104

1995
PONTIAC
GRAND
AM

.

WE ARE .OVER
STOCKED! ·
WE MUST
.. .REDUCE
OUR INVENTORY
IMMEDIATELY! .
..
''

OVER 75
PROGRAM &amp;
PRI·OWNED
CARS &amp; TRUCKS
IN STOCK!

1990 CHEVY LU... INA, 14829, a~r. automallc,
AM/FM ; cloth interior, tiH, cruise ............. ~ .
. $5995
1994 OLOS CUTLASS SUPREME·s, lf4964, Green . automatte.
air, AM-FM cassette, tilt, cruise, power windowS/seats,
air ~ba~. alloy.wheels, clolh interior .....:.
· ..... ............ $13,400
1990 OLOS CIERA, 14884, bufgundr. AMIFM cassette,
&lt;fir, automalic, till, cloth Interior, rear delro~ter ..................... $5495
1993 CHEY.Y CORSICA, 14889, while, air, automatic,
AMJFM'cassette, till, cruise. rear de~Oster , ololh interiOr ....... $74~
1992 CHEVY LUMINA, 14894, dark pewter. air, automatic,
AM/F'M cassette, till.' cruise, rear defroster .............
·

$14,799
1995
CHEVY CA'MARO
.Z28 .·
Loaded!

.

$'2.0I 995
,

Just In Tirne For Summer

1994

1994 CHEVY
COJSICAS

CHEVY
CAVALIERS

All loaded -All Value .

6 TO
CHOOSE FROM

Low miles. Must see!
Extra clean.

. $9,999

. $9J4·9 9 .

1992 PO.,TIAC GRAND PRIX LE, 14917, green. air, aUiolMtic,
AMIFM Cassene, lilt, crujse, power wtridows, alloy wheels ...... 18995
1993 CHEVY CAVALIER RS WAGON, 14919, red, air, automatic
AM/FM cassene, tilt, cruise. luggage rack, reardelroster . .. S8915

•

1992 CHEVY CAVAUEA AS, 1:4933,2 door. red, a1r,
automatiC, AM/fM cassene , dual inirror s ... ...

....... $6265

1993 PONTIAC GRANO AM SE, 14934, V6 engrne. atr,
aulo(Tlatle; AMIFM , tilt, cru1se, rear defroster ..
S9620
1992 BUICK LeSABRE, 14935, blue, VB eng•ne . air: automatiC,
AM {FM cassene, 11\t, crwse. power w1ndo'NS &amp; locks ..... . $11 ,820

1992 DODGE DYNASTY, 14959, V·6.
arr, auto. power locks. crwse , tt!t , air bag

.... .......
'

......... $7815

1991 FORO PROBE, 14946, bluE! ,.
a!r,'AM {FM C;SSSelle , stereo ..... ,..,., ....

$741~

1992'FORD TEMPO GL. 14817, blue. air, sutomahc,
AM/FM, 1111, cloth Inter ior........
........... ..... . ....
,,

$8525

1193 OOOGE DYNASTY , ~4965, Whtt{!, 811, automatic. AM FM
cessette , rear defroster. lilt. cruise, air beg, power locks :.
$847~
1992 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM, 14874,11ght pewter, a1r, automahc.
AMfFM . 1111 , cruise, rear defroster, cloth \n,tenor .
$6226

1992 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE, 14918, •ad, rur,
AMfFM c~;~s:mtte. '~'·
a1r
bag, dual m1rrors rear defroster
»
•,

17985

1990 DODGE DYNASTY, 14929, V6 engrne, air,
automatiC, AM/FM, lilt, CfUISS, err bag

. $4595

IMPORTS
1992TOYOTA COROLLA, *4866, blue,
·~utomatic, arr, AM IFM, cloth In tenor .....

$8995

1991 NISSAN ~EN'IIlA, 14870, rod
a1.r!Ofl'ltUIC, AM/FM, rear delroster. 4 door, cloth •nterlo~ ..

S6220

1992 GEC STORM , 14897, white, automEittc,
a1r, AM/FM. cloth 1nler101' reru defroster, dual mmors

S7567

!990 NISSAN STANZA, 14904, red,
,
AMJFM cassene, rear defroster, dual m1rf0f•. cloth tnteJIOf

5865

.

~

Pat1Tlei'IIS l .gured filth dO¥tn payrneflt of $1 ,000 caSl'l or

•ade plu&gt; "" i I.U. See~""!(

~

Taxes and title fee not included.
..
·• All payments.subject to credit approv~l

$79t5

WAS $111,150

'

NO JOKING·OUR LOT·
'
. . IS SO FULL
·WE CAN'T JUGGLE ANOTHER CAR!

$21,432
SAVP3015

COME IN . RIGHT NOW FOR THE.
BEST ~EAL ON A NEW •
GM CAR .·OR TRUCK.

DON TATE 'MOTORS, Inc.

•

Phone 594-8555

V6, auto., .air, air bag,
power windows and locks.

1993 CHEVY CAVALIER RS WAGON, 14825, aUtomatic . arr,

,AN"•~ cassette, tili, cruise. luggage rack ............................. se5e5

.. AILUsed ·cars &amp; Trucks Must G~ •

810 E.. STATE ST. • ATHENS, OHIO ·

WAS$24,447

... /
.I

DON WOOD
"Where Better Really Matters"

9

1995

'

s

4 Door, V6, au19matic,air,
stereo, air bag.

$15,995

]995
LESABRE

CUTLASS
SUPREME

OLDS CIERA

1993 OLDS DELTA 88 ROYA~ 14956, green,
I a~tomalic·. At:4/FM cassette, power windows &amp; locks .. $11,950
OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 5, 149!i4, red, air,'automallc •.
AV,•F'M "ca!isel!:e~ p&lt;lwer wil1doWS &amp;JIJCi(!i, li[t•,&amp;s~~i_:&gt;_:_.. ....... $11,500

1995

1995

•

!'9JIIiJIII

1991
14944. blue. air. automatic,
lilt &amp; cru,lse , 14t/FM cassette, power,windows &amp; tocks ............. $7995

OUR LOT IS FULL AND WE ·MUST MAKE ROOM!
84VOLVO

1192 CHEVY S.IO TAHOE, 141102. white, long bed,
AMIFM cassette. sport wheels, rear slider, V6 eng1ne _........ ~--· $7975
1093 DODGE CARAVAN, 14911, red, air, automaU&lt;r,
vs, 7 pasSenger. air bag , tin, cruise. AM!FM cassette ......... $11,690
1993 DODGE CARAVAN. 14916, dark pewter, V6 engine ,
1 automatic, luggage rack, lilt. cruise, air bag ....... .. ........ SWEKJ
1989 FORO RANGER, 14922, red, XLT, rear slider,
'.
$519!
spor1 wheels. AM/FM cassette, 2 tone paint ..........
1901-·00DGE DAKOTA, 1•923, red, rear step bumper,
rear slider, AM/FM cassette, sport wheels .........
.. 17480
1t90 CHEVY S-10, 14924, dark peW1er,
AM/FM cassette, dual mirrors, sport wheels .~........................ $6t00
1190 FORO RANGER, 14925, red. AM/FM, ~
rear b4mper, dual mirrors , sport wheels ................... ;, ............. $6100
1993 DODGE CARAVAN, 14942, V6 engine , air, automatic.
AM/FM cassette, tilt, cruise, a!r bag, rear defroster ............... $-11 ,650
1991 FORD RANGER XLTLONGBED, 14!145, air.
L4: AM'!'~ cassette, rear slider, Tonneau cover ~
.................. sn15
1993 PLYMOUTii VOYAGER VAN, 14955, blue,
V6, 7 passenger, air, automatic.AM!FM cassette ..... ........ 111,995
1992 DOOGE CARAVAN, 14953, wtiite, 7. passenger, V6 ,
air. autornaiic, power windows &amp; locks, tilt &amp; cruise ... :, ......... $11,150
1993 DODGE CARAVAN SE, 14952, green, VS, 7 passenger,
AM/FM cassette, power windows &amp; locks. tilt &amp; cruise ......... $12,495

I

I

900$, automatic, air, stereo

CHEVY 5·10, 14891, black, sunroof,
$8489
cassene. rear slider, spor1 wtn~ets, dual mirror
1991 TOYOTA EXTRA CAB, 14901, red, rear slider,
spot1 wheels, AM/FM cassetie. lilt. air ..................................... $8420

·

NEW YORK Jm'S: Aareed. to terma
with Man Brock., dereuive lineman.
PmSBURGH STEELERS: Sign~d
Johii.Die Barns, wide recti vet.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS : Signed
Truy Wilson, defensive tad, io a oDe-year
r;:o ntraet.

2
7 'J7 9S 9S
S 27 ·93 ll
3 23 92 l20

t

.. ............... ~...... $5495
1193 NISSAN TRUCK KING CAB, 14785, red, automat~ .
AMIFM cassette, rear flip seats, bed liner ...............
... S10,D95
1993 NISSAN TRUCK, .f4867,1ow miles .
AMIFM cassette rear Stld.er, cloth interiOf', bed liOer .. .. :. ......... $8955
Hi CHEVY s.i o. 14872, red,'35,000 miles.
a:&gt; .....l mir.rors, rear slep bumper, sport 'lo11eels ........... .. .......... $7604
FORD RANGER, 14883, long bed;·
.. $4995
V6 engine, 2 tot:~e paint, air ................... ;.......... ·

coaonct.

Sanlose ............ l217 2 26 78 110
Anaheim ........... 9 19 4 22 80 119

Philadelphia at Chicaao, 8:30p.m.
Milwauk.ee a1 HoustOn, 1:30 p·.m.
Ulah vs. L.A. Clippers at. Anahe im,
Callr., 10:30 p.m.
.
Minnesota at Golden State,·l 0:30p.m.

1H1_.CHEVY 5·10, 147841 2 tone paint,

1'1 •'Mir'M cassette, rear Slidlf, new tires ...

Parmale'e, runnina b1ct, tQ a twO-year

P1Kinc Dh•blon
Calpry~ ............ l613 S r1 111 · 96
Vanoouver ........ 11 13 8 30 98 103
Loa An'gelee ...... II H 6 28 102 121
Edmonton ......... l2l1 3 27 91 114

Boston 100, Miami 99
.N~w York 101. Dallu 90
Philadelphia 86, Portland IS
CLEVELAND98, Wu.hlngton 88'
Denver 107, Indiana 9'2
Orlando 101, Utah 98
San Antonio 118, MilwautM 102
Pboetlil 106, MiMCIOtl96
Seattle 120, Saeramento 95
L.A. Lak.en 121, Allam 101

PRICE

MIAMI DOLPIUNS: Signed Bernie

.!! J. 1: l'la. .Gt! llA

Detroil .......... .... 22 1 ,2
Otlcago ............ l9JO 3

·1-clloched playoff berth

Gee

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.......

Ott.wa11 Quebec, 1:30 p.m.
'FI.oridlat TIUllll Bty, 3 p.m.
N.Y. Rupn It Rl.iladeliltia. 3 p.m.
Bolton It ~llhlnpa. 3 p.m.
St. Lou~ at Detrott., 3 p.m.
· Dallal atOlitaao, 3 p.m.
San ,klae MAllahe1m, 6 p.m.

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Ookkn Sta10., ........ 22 41 .314

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l'&lt;lrtlaud ., ............... 37 33 .S29

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Kans•City Ill Oetruit.l:lS p.m.
O.icap Ill. BaltimOre, 7:33p.m.
New 'Yort at Tex;u, 8:03 p.m.
BoliiOn at MinDNOil, I:OS p.m.
O.EVELAND at OakJand, 10:35 p.m.
Milwaukee 11 Calirornia, 10=35 p.m.

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1-Ssn Antonio ....... 51
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Denver ...... :.... ,.. ...... M
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Atlutllt'SeitUC.4 p.m.

Ootr- "Milml, 6 p.m.
Dea•• • CLEVELAND; 7:30p.m.
Orludo at L.A. Labn, 9:30p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Athmtllat San DieJO,.lO:OS p.m.

Seattle va. Tomato at DUnedin, fla.,
l:OS p.m.
•
Milwau~ee at Catiroi'!lta, 4:0S p.m.
Boston II·Minoeaoll, 8:05p.m
CLEVELAND at Oakland, IO:OS p.m.

Rect. one owner,
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Not:to mention bow t&gt;lqsant it
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O'Neal, .wbo had 28 points and
tbe teams. previous meeting in
Florida . •
(See NBA oa C4)

II CINCINNATI,7:lS p.m.

Su FruciJco 11 Houlloa, I:OS p.m.
Philadelph!• at Sl Uull, 1:0$ p.m.

Tuesday's games

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92 "Mercury Topaz 4 dr., auto., air, cruise, tiltwheei... $;J6995
92 Ford Tempo GL 4 door. auto .. air ..........................17995
91 Buick Skylark 4·door, auto., air, clean ................... 57995
92 Dodge Colt Vista wagon, auto, air, local owner ...........18995
91 Dodge Dakota Long bed, very clean ........................18995
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Colondo •New Yort.l:40 p.m.
Los ADaelea a Florida, 7:05p.m. ,

KanauCity at Delroit,l:OS p.m.
Sea.nle vs. Toronto at DuncdiP. Fla.,
1:05 p.RL
• O.icaao at ~tirncri, J:OS p.m. .
CLEVEJ.....\N&amp;.at OU:laacl, 4:05 p.m.
New Yorlt at Tn•. 4:0S p.hL

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AUaDta at Su Dleao, 4:05p.m.
Loa All&amp;eles • Florida, 7:05p.m '
Cbk:qo at CINCINNATI, 7:1! p.m.
Su Frauc~co ll HOUlton, I:OS p.m.
Philadelphia al St. Louil. 1:/Jj p.m.

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Phl!adolpblo di. ~Aoo!o, 2•15 p.m.
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-

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1.-New Yort...........u
........................28
Mlomi ....................28
Now Ieney ...........27
l'hi!olelphla ...........20
Wllhlaatoa ...... - ..1I

Today'I gameo
New Yort (Stoddard 0..0) at Florida
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'

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.
.
Be A
amble
.
6

Jablea oo Ullh frillay Digbt wllh a
101-98 victory II. the Delta Center,
where the JU2 bad been 27-7 until
Friday Digbt.
'"fbls wai really,a chinctcr win
· for this baskclhall ICIM,'T OtliOOo
.coai:b Brian Hill said. :·we bavtill't

EASTERN CONFERENCE .

Southern girls defeat N-Y 9-7

· Acting commissioner Bud Selig
Said the decision by U.S. District
])14ge Sonia Sotomayor was ".disa,Ppointing and may represent a
step backward in our negotiations
fpr a meaningful agreement with
tile players· union."
· "Representatives of the 28

.

4

u;

..

hand

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• With a wave of 111 Magic Wllld;
Orlaodo bad Utab dlmc:lng to a different tune.
.
• :COO Magic. wbo bave struggled
~ bit ~ Ill? road deapile )lOlling the
.NBA s best record, tuned tbe

.

By RONALD-BLUM
clubs will-meet fD discuss legal aild
NEW YORK (AP) - Afll:r 232 practical ~ons '1&lt;lW available liiM/
days, the baseball strike is over. will certamly gtve the play~rs
'Now owners must decide if a loclc- union a timely answer to their oft'er
out begins. ·
.
·
to return to lbc field," Sel,ig said.
"After a few hundred days of "The two sides still have tli settle
t.bis, 'it's nice; to be lalking about thefr disagreements at .Jbe bargaillputting on a uniform again," ing table."
Kansas City Royals pitcher David
Febr said a lockout "would not
Cone said Friday after a federal stun me. Anything is possible. ... I
judge issued an injunction that hope they don't go lhat route. I
caused playe~s to end the longest don't expect itto."
walkout ever m,u.s. s~. ·
.
In issuing the preliminary
The sport Ism labor hmbo today in.junclion against .tbe owners,
as the players '!fld fans wait for lbe Sotomayor Oll)ereillhem ·to restore
owners tO' decide whether to Joe~ free agent bidding, salary arbittathe players out or .welcome lhe•r tion and the anti-collusion provire~ . after nearly e•gbt months. .
sions of baseball's expired collecAbsent a lockout by the clubs, . tlvc bargaining agreement
The union •s executive board
we can get real baseball on tbe
field in a sbort period of lime," ./ \'olell Wednesday to end the strike
union head Donald Febr ~· ''We if Sot61Ql1yor issue&lt;! lhe injunction.
co~~ put togethc.r a qu1ck spring
Sotomilyor;-wbo ,.g_rew up ~
IT'S OVER -Major League Baseball Playen AlloclaUon aecut1111nmg, and openmg day would be miles from Yankee - Stadium tlve olnur Donald Fehr faces reporters to aiUIOUnCe the end of the 7
delayed a little bit. We'd hope ~~ 'waxed eloquent about the game
In-month-old strike after a federal judge ruled. against the owners
the players would play the max•- her decision and confessed she was Friday. However, It's not certain when the players would return. (AP)
mum number of games possible.'~'
a . t sbe was stem when she
Owners will meet today i
dressed lhe owners' lawyers.
Ch1cago and are expected to v.
"Even though opening day DII!Y
.whe~er to stan a lockout, wb•cb . need to be delayed, the parties still
reqUU'eS 21 votes from amon.g the · have lime to avoid unduly abbreviRACINE ~ Howie Caldwell's gles, ~isson 1wo singles and a
28 clubs. Six clu~s were sa1d by aling {be season and to save it. Soulhern softball team have opened triple, Manuel a single, Jennifer
~~e~~nt offi~1als I? be proba- Without an injunction ... it· is lhat . the season wilh a 2-0 mark, defeat- Cummins a single and Brandy
ble no vot.es. Balumore, Los possibility and its benelit.in foster- · ing Nelsonville 9-7 Friday night Roush a single.
N-Y was led by Coffey, Davis,
Angeles, the New York ~ets, New ing continuing good-faith negotla- afJer previously defeating Trimble
Shumway
and Hall.
·
York Yankees, San D•ego and. lions which will be greatly dimin- 13-5.
·
Moore.
too
picked
up
the
win
isbed if this season is lost because
This sets up a battle of two
·toronto. .
agains
Trimble.
T.
Love
and
Man,r manageme~t !lfficial.s of the unfair labor practices com- league unbeatens Monday when
TaraneUi shared in lhe 13-5 loss for
have srud owners won t nsk poss1- mitted by the owners."
Eastern lravels to Racine.
ble damages of $5 million a day if
If owners accept the players'
Andrea Moore was lhe winning Timble.
Southern hitters were Janna
t.bey lock out players and lose a unconditional offer to return to pitcher for Southern with five
with a triple and three
trial over the unfair Ia~?or practice work, opening day proliably will be walks and seven strikeouts in a Manuel
walks,
great
for a lead-off bitter;
Charge filed by the Nauonal Labor pushed back to the week of April good effort Lindsay Shumway sufCummins a !loul)le and single, SisRelalions Board.
24.
fered the loss for N-Y.
son
a single and two walks, Kendra
At a news conference, players
AHer N-Y took a 1-0 lead,
: "~ings. will move ~w. I th~.
Norris single, Codner a double,
and Its go~~g to be an mteres~ng ·were happy to~ talking about get- Sleaoudth•·n·emthecambotetombacokf thtoetaklilfset awb3e·n1 Lisle a single, Turley .two singles,
l!feekend, Colorado Rockies ling back on the field again but
chairman Jerry McMorris said. "I also were wary of what the ~ers' Jonna Manuel;· Amy Weaver and Jennifer Lawrence a single and
to get this thing ncxt.move would be.
Jess Cndner each singled. Then Tassie Cummins a single. .
Southern basiS Eastern Monday.
resolved."
Later Friday, Judge Roger J.. Moore and Sammi Sisson bad RBI Inning
totals
.
· Tb6 season is still sclicduled to · Miner of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court singles to put Southern on top for
tjpen tonight with replacement of Appeals denied the owners' good, despite the Buckeyes' five- N-Y: 100-015·0= 7-5-1
Soulhern: 303-021-x = 9-11-0
t&gt;layers, with the New York Mets applicali9n for an immediate stay. ·run sixth.
"' WP-Moore
playing the Florida Marlins at The appellate coun set a bearing
Southern bitters were Weaver
LP- Sbun\way
Miami in lhe opener.
for Tuesday on both the stay with two singles, Codner three sin·

.:

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SHOULD. BE FUN!!

,

''

Pomeroy-Middleport G'llllpolla, OH Point Pleaunt, wv · .

Aprll2, 1~

=P=eg=•=C2=-su=="=de=y=TI=m=•=S=e=ntl=ne=I======~P;ome~r;;;;oy-Middleport--Gelllpo;;;.;;;ll;;;i,;;;OH;;;====~~~=y===--------.;..............~;.....iiiiiooiiiiiil

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·All prices lnck.lde
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Taxes &amp; fees not
Included .

.IT'S WORTH YO(JR DRiVEi
••

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•

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•

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'

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'

•

•

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. Pomeroy--Middleport-GIIIIpolla, 9H Polni _Pfeeaent, wv

.P~~ge C4 Sunclliy Tlmee Slntlnel

Apr112,-1111

/

..~~12,1986

,·capit~ls, Maple ~eafs · and Blue~.:am~ng. NHL .winn~rs · ~
_: _

By KEN RAPPOPORT
· .
_
.
AP HOCkey Writer .
.
;
The ~rec Nordiques wen exhausted. It wasn 1
a g~ tiOIC to play 1be WIIII'ID1100
It 1ust com~ down to ua.!'e~&amp; a filtle ~·We
couldn t ~I! up '\r,oillllbem, said. Quebec s Owen
Nola!! ~ollowmg a 6.41oss Friday 01ght to lbc boUest
team m the Eastern COI)fen:nce.
The Nordiqucli, who have lllc best record io tbc
NHL, were plarmg lbelr ftftb game in seven nights
and fourth straight _on tbc .road. An~ II sho~ed. as
they blew a 3-2lead iD the second period.
.
Tile capitals scored .four of the game's next five
.goals to impr6ve their_~ to 11-2-2 in March
. .
·
Peter Bon&lt;Jra e~tended his ,~,scoring streak 10
sev~ games. hig_h m the NlJL \!liS season, to key 1be
. .
Capnals' latest VIctory.
Bon&lt;lra's second goal or 1be night and 21st of the
season gave the Capitals a two-goal lead with 11:44
left He has 10·Joafs during his streak, scoring twice
'in a game on three occasions.
·
Dale Hunter scored the go-ahead goal in tbc second period for the Capitals. The six goals was a season-high for Washington. The Capitals' hot monlll

Cal!'tals·

•J

•

.!

·•
:
.
:
:
·

colnc11led wllll 1be debut of IQ!lkle soallcndcr Jim
Ctrey, wbo lllrted ~viJI')' pme. c.ii:y stopped 16
sbot&amp; Friday nlJbl despite belnJ pulled ror nearly
~minute~ midway lbrouJb lbc JIIIIIC.
.
•
In Olbcr NHL pmea. it~ T&lt;Jnl!IIO 3, Olicago 3:
~ampa Bay ;z. Hanlotd 0, St LouiS 4, San Jose _I,
alpey 6, E!lmonton 2. IDd Vancouver 6, Anahcun
1.
.
~p(e l.elofa 3, Blackhwb 3 - Dave AndRychlik s seco~ goal of tbc game,_scored !rom 1!- Soal. m~lll saamble with 48.1 secoods ~~ m res- .
ulauon and goaltender FeU_x Potvm on tbc bench,
gave 1be ~Leafs a tie Wllllthe Blactbawks.
Mat1 SundiD
score\1 for tile visl~lng M~le
Leafs, oull~ 19-S by the Blackbawks an llle third
pcriodL and 42 24 for~ game.
·
.
lnemales Bernie NichollJ and Joe Mwpby each
had a goal and ID assist for ~ Blaclcbawks. Tony
Amonte also scored for the Blactbawks, 19-10-3 and
five poiniS behind first~place Detroit in the NHL's
Central Division.
.
Llgbtnii!Jil, ~•len 0 - Daren Puppa stopped
2~ shots for his farst shutout of the season and rookie
Alexander Selivanov scored his eighth goal as llle
Lightning dcfealed llle visiting Whalers.
1
_
1 s o

..

0

LNBA action~.~contiouedtromc-3&gt;

.

·.

11 rebounds, supplied the last and Denver' 10'7, Indiana 92; Phoenix
Glen R,ice scored 26 points, and
biggest stop when he blocked 106, Minnesota 96· Seattle 120 Khalid Reeves had 22 for Miami.
Adam Keefe's shot Underneath Sacramento 95 and
Los Ange: · Teamn\ate Kevin Willis added 20
with five seconds to play. Karl ics Lakers 1~1. Atlanta 107.
points and 20 rebounds.
Malone had llle ball near.~ foul ¥
Spun 118,Bucb102
~nicks 101, Maverkks 90
line but opted to throw msade to
At San Antonio, the tllll crowd
At New York, Derek Harper and
Keefe instead.
of at least 30 000 this season saw John Starks hit two three-pointers
"If I had it to do over again," David Robin~n collect 26 points apiece in the tliird period as the
' : Mal.\)ne said, "I would have shot it. and 10 rebounds as tbe SplitS won Knicks ended Dallas' six-game
; Thal's what it came down to. I tbeir·10th straight
. winning streak.
.
San Antonio's balanced attack
The KnieP made seven of ei'ght
· should have shot it."
:
Malone had 26 points and 10 featured six players in-double fig- · three-point attempts in the third
· rebounds for the Jazz, who slipped ures !Deluding Sean Elliott with 23 quarter while missing II of 15
; to· second In' the Western Confer- · poinis and Avery Johnson willl19 . inside the arc in pulling out.to a 77: ence with a'S2-20 record.
·
points and 11 assisll.
S!! lead.
·
·
Sa~ Antonio took ~ver ~ir~t
The Spurs scored the game's
Patrick Ewing had 18 points,
•
• place m the West, movmg walllm first nine poiDts oo the way 10 a 21· Harper 17 and Hubert Davis 14.
t; one game of Orlando in the overall 4 lead. Robinson hit his farst seven
76ers 86, Blazers 85
: standings, with a 118-102 thrashing shots and San Antonio shot 68 pet·
At Philadel.phia, Clar~nce
of Milwaulcee, In other games Fn- cent in the farst quarter.
Weath~rspoon hat a 17-fooljump
day night, It was Boston 100,
Cellics 100 ·Heat 99
shot With 3,l seconds left to give
Miami .99; Ne~ York 101, Dallas
At Boston, Din'o Radja dunked , Philadelphia the victory. .
90; Phtladelphaa 86, P_ortland 85; off a pass from Sherman Dougtas ;,
Dana Barros had 26 1;10mts ~d
Cleveland 98, Washmgton 88; with I. 7 seconds remaining as Weatherspo~m 22 for Ph~delphia,
Boston overtook Miami. Radja w~ich won 11$.-Second sllllight. The
SCOred the deciding basket after WI~ was Only the 11th at borne
Brad Lobaus had given Miami a agaa.nsl tS losses.
.
Jerome K.e~sey bad 1~ pomts
RlO GRANDE - Here is the lead with a three-pointer with 6. 6
and Buck WaiUams 14 J;K&gt;IDIS and
schedule for the week of April 2·9 seconds rlliD3laling.
Douglas had 29 points and 10 rebouilds for the· Trail Blazers,
at the University of Rio Grande's
Radja 24 as Boston beat Miamf for whose -road record f~ll to 19-20.
Lyne Center.
the fourth time in five games Ibis
Cavaliers !IS..Bulle~ 88 .
Fitness center,
season and moved ·ahead of the
At Cleve!and, Chns M1.lls
gymnasium
Heat in the battle for the eighlll and scored 24 rmnts and Mark Pnce
and racquetball courts
final playoff spot in the NBA's· took c~ntro down the slretch as ~e
TO!Iay- 1-3 and 6-11 p.m.
"••tern Conference
Cavaliers ov_ercame a 19-pomt
Monday- 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
...,..
.
fltSt·half defiCit.
Tuesday- 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 atn.-11 p.m:
Thursday- 7 am,-11 p.m.
Friday - 7 a.m.-9 p.m. '
Saturday~ 1·6 p.m.
Sunday, AprU 9 - 1-3 and 611 p.m.
.
·
:
:
:
·
:

ihe

oa.

Theoren

Lyne Cen.t er sIat e .

..
·'

Pool
Today -1-3 and 6-9 p.m.
Monday- 6-9 p.m.
· Tuesday- 6-9 p.m.
' Wednesday- 6-9 p.m. ·
Thursday- 6-9 p.m.
Friday - 6-9 p.m: .
Saturday- closed
Sunday, April 9- closed

,
Free-w.eigbt rooin
Today- closed
Monday- 3.:30-8:30 p.m.
Tuesday3: 30-8:30.p.m.
•
Wednesday - 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Thu.sday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Friday ....., 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Saturday- closed
"Sunday, April 9- closed
· Home athlet.ic events
Today - baseball doubl~der vs. Pikeville at I p.m.
·
Friday - baseball doublebead·
er vs. Georgetown a,t I p.m.
·
Saturday -baseball double·
header vs . Urbana at I p.m.
Sunday, April 9 - baseball
doubleheader vs. Alice Floyd at I
p.m.
Notes: A Lyne Center member.. ·s blp is required· to-use the facilities.
·. Faculty, staff, students and admin, .. isiilltors are admitted with their ID .
· cards.
··
Racquetball. court reservations
· · ca n now ·be made one day in
·. advance by calling 245-7495 local. ly or toil-free at 1·800-282-7201 ,
extension 7495.
·
All guests arc to be accompa. nied by a Lyne Center membership
bQlderand a $2 fee.

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373·3155

593-7761

423-7516 896·2369

MIODLUOIT

N£LIOIO'ILI.t:

NEWAIK

992-6661

753-1955

788-8820

THI! P'LAI NS

TDO ONLr

797·4547 376·7123

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to._wing pkg .. 8 foot bed, chrome rear
sM!p bumper, 4 new tires, running
boards, extra clean.
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$

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II

4.0 6 cyl. engine, PS.• &amp; PB, ·auto .
trans ., air cond., AM/FM stereo
• cassette, lilt and cruise, P windows &amp;
P. lock~ . electric. s hift, 4 wheel drjve,
· luggage rack, rear wiper &amp; washer.
WAS $21 ,9'95
. .

THIS WEEK'S SPEC14t;s ,
60
54
48
48
42
42
42
42
42
42
42
42
42
36
36
36
36
36
36
36

,:j

Ji:

Stalokebadthelone~-Yhii.

••• Southern scored fltSt m the ftrSt
:,:, when Williams led off with a sin:1:: gle, Hill singled home Williams
· ;;;.and then came home aboard a May•••: nard triple.
;;:: SHS ,scor~d .~ice more in the

8,995

~~~; ~e~~~~~l~~b:':'s~ bit~~.!~ ~:eru~~~~:;r ~~;

GAHS tht"ncladS .take ·fl"fth
and sixth·in season_Opener

seal the -game, fanning none and
walldng three.
McClelland suffered the loss,
.
allowfng 10 hits, four strikeouts
and one walk.
Southern bitters "lere Martin
VINCENT_ Here are the-GalFourth: long jump relay
with a double and single, Williams lia Academy varsity track teams' (Caner, Blair &amp; Katie Shriver), 36two singles, Jimmy Randolph a results from the March 25 Fair- 2 1/4; 4 x 400-meter -relay (Hastdouble and single, Lisle a double weather Relays, held at Warren well, Knight, Kate Gills &amp; Walkand singles by Hill, Jones and Local HighSchool.
•
• er), 4:51.3; throwers' 4 x 100Smith.
. .
.
Boys' session
. ·
. meter relay (Amanda Davis, Sarah
J.R. Reynolds and McClelland
Team scores: Warren Local Danner, Stacy McCalla &amp; B.eth
eachbadtwobitsforTrilllble.
(122), Jackson (84), St. Mary's Skinner), 1:07.
·
~
Southern hosts Eastern Monday. (66), Waterford (46), Gallia AcadeFirth: sprint medley relay
Inning totals
my, Federal Hocking (bolll 42) &amp; (Shriver, Nichelle Graham. GiUs &amp;
N-Y: 000-010-0 = 1-1-0
Fort Frye (24).
Blair), 2: 18; distance medley relay
Soulllem: 220-100-x = 5~ 11-0 ·
First: sbot put relay . (Burt (Boggs; Carolyn Skinner, Liz a
WP- Williams (Deemer save) Wodd', Jason CMey &amp; Allep Holeski &amp; fiaccmire), 16:05; shot
LP..:.. Reeves
·
Enyart) (meerrecord 1304) ·
put relay (Beth Skinner, Danner &amp;

Jcrrn.'s
Heating and Cooling
•r ·
PLUMPING AND.REFRIGERATION
SALES SERVICE

\

'"\1.

'

.u·

'

\\,th' ! .11•11 I tl,

lh·· ' ·~:' '•lti•"

;,. '" !~"':

'l

State Farm IRAs
are backed by a
company that has
the top fmancial
ratings from four
ratmg
. serVIces.
.
•

,f

•

.

l

'

Lo' g"an hands 'RVHS 12-7 los·s

Second: discus relay (Wood, Holeski), 70-5 1/2; aiscus relay .
Enyart &amp; Joe Donovsky)(360 feet)
(Beth Skinner, Danner &amp; Davis),
I
Third: 4 x 1,600-meter relay 2194.
LOGAN- The host Logan James and Edwards ail had one hit team (Eddie Nebus, Seth ThompSixth: 4 x 100-meter relay
::. · Chieftains erupted for six runs in each while Blake had a RBI single. son, Bob Magnussen &amp; .Bo Davi- (Stacy Slagle, Beth Miller, Summer
ill• the bottom of the fourth iDniDg Fri- Jason Jenkins had a double and son), no timcjiven
Yates &amp; Beth Skinner), 1:02.2.
.:;. day ~vcnlng to defeat River Valley RBI.
·
.
Fourth: x 800-meter relay
'"' 12-7m a Southeastern Obio AthletSwart paced the winners with (Dan Magnussen, Aaron Salisbury,
MCKA
• :~II ic League baseball game.
three bits in ~our trips. Slack. Bob Magnussen &amp; Thompson),
:. · The game was called after four Dustin Dennis and Tucker each bad 10:40; 4 x 100-meter relay (Sam
;; and one-half innings because of two base hits.
Garber, Donovsky, Caset &amp;
.
-;:: darkness.
·
The Raiders will host Gallipolis Wood), :58.4.
ROCK
SPRINGS -The ,Meigs
...
At Logan, B&lt;lb Fink starfed on Monday at 5 p.m.
.
Fifth: 4 x tOO-meter relay (Erick
Competili9n
Karting Association
::; the mound for the Raiders. He was
·
· Jeffers , Chris Bowman, Adam
will
be
operating
races at the Meigs
·:: relieved in the third by Kevin
Tbe Raiders dropped to 0..2 Clark &amp; Mike Soles), :48.9; 4 x
County
Fairgrounds
lllis season as
·• Edwards. Buck ·Reynolds tossed inside the league and 0-4 overall, · 200-tneter relay team (same aS 4 x
a
non-profit
organization,
begin~. two thirds of an inning.
pending a league decision on the IOO·meter team), 1:43.5; long jump
ning
with
opening
day.
today
at I
•i ' Brooks went the distance for · outcome of the River Valley·
relay (Bowman, Salisbury &amp; Mike
:; L11S. He fanned five and did not Athens game last Monday.
·
· Fisco), 48-S. .
p.mAII divisions of Karting includAthens scored two runs in the
Girls' session
;; walk a batter.
ing
stock, stock appearing, modi"'
The three RVHS hurlers fanned . seventh inning, but RVHS never
Team scores: Warren (104),
:: three and walked four.
got a cban.e e to bat because of Federal Hocking, Waterford (both • .lied and unlimited divisions will be
racing. Last year, after two out-of'::
River Valle¥ bad seven runs on darkness. The game was s.,.,pend- 62), Fort Frye (49), Jackson (43),
town promoters started the season,
'" nine' bits and four errors. The ed, but Raider coach Jack lames GAHS (39) &amp; StMary's (14).
several locals promoted the races.
Chiefs bad 12 runs on 12 hits and l~arn~d Friday the score should
Second: 4 x 1,600-meter relay
This year, as an organized group,;., committed four errors.
have reverted back to the sixth team (Susan Facemire, Andra
lhe
MCKA will host a full year of
't: For ihe Raiders, John Browning inning with River Valley leading 2· Boggs, Jencie Haner &amp; Becky
Sunday afternoon racing.
,;; was two for three with two RB!s , I . The contest may be appealed by Knight), 26:24; 4 x 800'mcter relay
To race costs $6 plus entry ,
':' while Jamie Gruber bad a single RVHS .
team (Knight, Sara Walker. Haner
f:!DS can watch for general
while
;:;and an RBI. Matt Jenkins, Greg
&amp; Wbimey HastweU),- 11:19.5.
admission
tickets. D&amp;M Pizza in
·i'
Third: high jwnp relay (Kristy
Syracuse will provide the refreshCarter, Kelly Cal.dwell. &amp; Sberri
ments.
'

1994 TOYOrA

T·IOO PICKUP

1992. FORD F·IBO
XL! 4X2 PICKUP

*12,

NOW

;, GALLIPOLIS • Ga!Ua Academy
':: High School's tennis team blanked
:;;; visiting Vinton County 5·0 o~ the .
;!!; Haskins Park Courts Fnday
·,J evening. I,t was the Blue Devils
1
~~·se.cond.
triumph in three outings
. ,,· thiS spnng. _
•:: Singles winners were Andy
;.,
Brad Baker, and Chris Smilh .
:
winners were Greg LloydSaunders, and Nee~ Kool·

Cbris Wascb.
Bo Bush posted a victory in an
exhibition si ngles match. Doubles
ex hibition winners for the Blue
Devils were Cary Shinn-Andy
Dehainaut, Richard Stepbens·Tipl
Epling, Brandy Bahr-Chad Briggs
and Frank Davison-Todd Sanders.
· GAHS. will open Southeastern
Ohio League play at '!'-thens Toesday evening.
..

140.61
143.88
238.82
238.82
101.32
101.32

Brtna In )'OUl" be~ t deal on a New car or Truck and we
will tl')' to meet or Beat the Deal.
·
FOR 4 GOOD DEAL•
See Jack Rousb, VIctor Arms or lob Ross
'

MODE~ PP2050

13-8.

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MONTCLAIR &amp; PYRAMID.......................

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• so·'

CARTON

' .. $930

DORAL, GPC &amp; MISTY............................
CHEWING TOBACCO

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• 20 HP, commercial
eng•ne
3blade mowing deck
• 6 forward speeds. 2 reverse speed transaxle ·
• Dash-mounled electric PTD swilch
• 2·year llmiled warranty

CARTON

MODEL PP722
~.75 HP, Briggs .

&amp;Slriltton •.•

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11,995

NOW ON THE SPOT FINANCING AND LEASING

W1th special deals on powerful Poulan PR(!
tractors. miJwers and tillers, there's no
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RED MAN SELECT ...............................~....
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Pumps Furnaces

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V-6 engine, power steering, 6 cyL engin~. PS , PB, 5 speed
4 cyl. eng., 5 speed trans .. long power brakes; 5 speed trans ., .trans .. air cond., tilt &amp; cruise, P:
bed, air cond ., AM/FM stereo AM/FM stereo radio, rear step windows &amp; P. locks, 8 foot bed.
cassette. rear step bumper. bumper, like new, 2,000 miles.
bed liner. rear step bumper.
WAS
37 ,000 miles.
$13,99_5
WAS
WAS
$12,995
$9995

NOW

'

second when McKelvey singled . including two doubles, to push the Kelly Mickelson, .who had three
and rode home on Williams' RBI Bulldogs (1-2 overall &amp; 1-1 in the. hits, including a double. Team&amp;
triple. Williams then came home on Southeastern Ohio Athletic mates Krin Goodwin, Elizabeth
)lofartin's single.
League) to their frrst win.
Legg, Helen Smith and Ange1.a
22 SMITHERS AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
Southern score4 again in the .
Senior s.o uthpaw Brett Cre- · Y~til bad two hits; including ·aou-/ •
BUSINESS HOURS
-fourth and N-Y got tiS only_run off meens struck out eight for the Blue blcs by Goodwin and Legg.
JERRY L. BLACK ' '
MON.-FRI. 8:00 TO 5:00
two walks and a Staloke smgle in Devils (0-4 &amp; 0-3). He and fellow
The Blue Angels had eight bits,
(614) 446·82~0
8:00 TO 12:00
·the fifth, the first ir.ning for classmate Ryan Barnes also had with two-bit efforts by Joy Hayrres,
Deemer. Deemer then settled in two hits each.
Kristin Howell (she bad a double)··
anddidl!greatjob.
Gallipolis will head north 10 and Kolcun leadng lhe way. Marie
In a game played Tliursday, face River Valley Monday at 5 Kubnalsohadadooble.
_
:Southern edged Trimble in an p.m.
Gallipolis will host River Valley
•. exciting game 6·5 as Eric Jones , Inning totals
Monday at 5 p.m.
.. . .
.
•
and Maynard combined for the · Athens:
020-101·3 = 7-S-1 Inning totals
•-"'""~~· ~IR·8ftGI
Southern win. Jones gave up five GARS:
000-100·0 = 1-6-S GAHS:
300-000-2 =
' bits, two rups, fanned 12 and . WP- Wetzel
Athens:
· 500433-x c IJ·•~·
;sa sound reas(m to buy a ~tate Farm
walked two in 6 2,/3 innings of
LP- Crctl)eens
WP- McGarvey
Retirement Annuity? . ·
work. Maynard came on in relief to
LP- Kolcun • •

G
·
:·..: " AHS nette.J?S post second win

Now~l9,999
PVMTS.
$221.69
122.16
Hl5.89
109.44
150.56
341.08
151.19
94.08
128.35
293.97.

~

·

racing
to start today ·

1989.FORD F-250 XL,. SUPER CAB

1991 FOISD
RANOEBXLT

::: Reeves suffered the .ioss for N. ,. Y, giving up 11 bits, fanning. two
::' and walking three. .
,
:•:: Additionally, Williams went 34
•;with two RBis to lead the offensive
II,,'·charge as well as score two runs.
Ryan Martin singled, Jeremy Hill
::: singled, Jesse Maynard tripled.
:;•: Travis Lisle singled, Deemer sin·
,,:, gled, Jeremy Smith singled and
:•!; designated hitter Jay McKelvey
:::·singledtwice.
.
:.

I

$13:~JI2

• . . . . . .~~·~iijiiiijiiil~-

~

'

leas~ seasons.

:f

1993 FORD XL,. EXPLORER 4 DR. 4X4

LOI'ELL

RACINE:- Behind the no-hit
'':: pitcbrng from starter Ryan
WjUiams and effecliv!l" relief from
::;,Kevin Deemer, the Southern Tor~:: Dadoes roUed to a 5-1 victory over
:~; the NelsonviUe-YI)fk Buckeyes in
l ' lllc farst game at 1be newly-dedicat·
U:ed William D. Wickline Memorial
:.- Field in Racine.
· ::: Soulllem is now 2-0 overall ;md
"·:in the Tri-Valley Conference's
::. Hocking Division.
~V Senior hurler Williams picked
,,;: up the win in four irinings of work,
1•· giving up no hits, striking out niue
1
,:: and walking four, while Deemer
::::allowed one run, on .one hit, ran::• ning flve and walking five.

·.'.h,',:

Ask your dealer about
Peoples Bank financing for a
new lawn or garden tractor
of.your choice! .
IIIAIIIITTA

. Southern diamond men down
~iiNelsonville-York ~nd Trimble

,,

AftDOLEPOR1", 0~

one minor-league season:
• Kris Quillin- 23, right-hander,

"

- i·:
PHONE 992·2196

·· ,

Call Us Today!

terence playoffs, posted Its first ·
victory at Market Square Arena
since March 13, 1988. Iodiana had
won six in a row siDce then.
' _The inshle-outslde offense of
Denver proved· tOo;much for lndiana's defense as lllc Nuggets shot
60 percent fiom1he faeld.

~-

'"1 SOUTH THIRD

·

GAHS diq.mon
, d .crews drop
decisions to Athens Bulldogs

.
At Indianapolis, . Dikembe
Mutombo scored 13 of bls 22
points in llle first quarter, sending
Denver ahead to stay as the
Nuggets snapped the P,acers' fivegame winning streak. ; ·
·
Denver, baUiing Sacramento for
the eighlll spot io the Western C«?D- .

. ··

·Check With Us•••

";b

Tyrone Hill had 20 points and
11 reboundl for Cleveland, wliich
beat Washington at home for the
ninth sllllight timil. The BulletS lost
their sixth in arowovCfa!L Chris Webber scored 27 and
Calbert Cheaney 22 fer lllc Bullets.
·
Nuaets 107, 1'1tcen 92

'

Sunday nmea-Sentlnel Pege C5

---!"'"1--·--------------..

aPmst U:S:..: _

.

••

World Series) and for Texas in
chance to be replacement in March. field wall as he chased a hmne nm.
Donal!l Broach - 23, CincinJnllelden·
1988.
Dan Rohrmeier - 29, first
DO pro experience. Went to Reds .
Chad Akers- 22. second base- 'It Dan Kopriva - 25, tlllrd . ' ba~ema~/out~ielde'f', Cincinnati nati natlv~, two minot-league sea·
·
tryout but failed to get colttraet. llllll!i. ~minor-league seasons.
baselfarst base three minor-league
natlve, eaght DIIDOf-leak seasons. · sons.
Cobi Cradle - 23, two minor.
Pltdlen
Was a waiter at a restaurant in
lilll1S Brnwn- 33, third base·
seaSON.
'
·
. Oulfielden
BlaiDe Beatty- 30,1eft-hander, Sarasota, Fla., wben Reds offered • man, played for 'San Francisco
Frank Kremblas - 28, utility · Matt Bragga- 22, one minor- league seasons.
Eugene "Motorboat" Jones -"- ·
IIJI)CIIIed In seven ·pmes for New lllechancctobecomereplacement.
from 1984-87, for San Diego in .player, born in Columbus, six
league season. Made mark in
'l:'Ork Mel$ in 1989 .ancl1991.
Rick Reed- 30, right-hander,. 1987-88, Detroit in 1989,. Ounif minor-league seasons. .
sping traitiing by running into out· 26, seven minor-league seasons.
Jolin llurgos - 27, left-bander, has most major-teague experience baseball for four oi last five years.
James Lofton- 20, utility play- . .
nii)C minor-league seasons.
on pitching staff. Appeared In 53 The often-iDjured Brown came to er, two miDor-league seasons.
·
Chad Connors- 23, right-han- games for Pittsburgh, Kansas City camp. with Detroit as repllicement, .
Ricky Magdaleno- 21, shortder, from Dayton, two minor- ' 8ndTexas.Careerlf-14,4.4SERA. • Tigers gave him ' to Reds after be stop, two minor-league seasons.
· league seasons.
Rich Sauveur- 31, left-bander. sat opt a week with a sore back.
Most prominent Reds minor tea·
Brendan Donnelly - 23, right· Appeared in 21 games for PittsBarbaro Garbey - 38, first guer to cross over to replacement
bander, thr~e minor-league sea- burgh, Montreal, Ne111 YM Mets. basemao. Cleveland ~ave him to team. Second-round draft pick in
sons. ,
.
·
KansaS' .City. Career 0-1, S.79 Cincinnati when Reds minor lea- 1992.
~abby Robertson - 23, first
Tom Doyle - 25, left-biDder; ERA. Failed to mak~ final rounds guers walked out of camp. Out of
five minor· league seasons. Was of cuts,in Reds' training camp last baseball since 1990. Played for base/outfield, two miraor-league
cmvened from first-basemap iDto a year.
.
Detroit in 1984-8S (only Reds seasons. D(ivlng bread trut*""l~~-"''11
pitcher in 1be minors.·
Mike Smitb- 31, right-hander. replacement who has app;ared iD Alabama when Reds
Howard Farmer - 28, right- Appeared in 45 games for Balli·
·
bander, a~ in six games for more in 1989-90. Career 7-10, SJ4
.Montrealm 1990.
ERA·. Played for Mexico City
&amp;
Billy Fultz- 37, right-hander. Tigers iD 1992-93. Out of b~ball
three, minor-league seasons.ft.uns lastxear.
· industrial. packaging busitji!ss. in
Marcos Vazquez - 2S, rightGALLIPOLIS - The Athens
· AI The Plains, the Athens soft.; Alabama.
··
bander, eight minor-league sea- baseball team kept Gallia Acade- ball team erased a 3-0 Galli a
' " , Rusty Kilgo- 28, left-hancler, Sons.
• .
my.'s Blue Devils scoreless in the Academy lead with a five-run
~· six minor-league seasons.
Catchen
,
fitS I three !Doings 111hile cruising to rebellion and stayed ahead en route
Mike Knapp- 30, nine minor- a 7-1 victory -Friday at Memorial to a 15-5 victory Friday.
Pete Magre- 24, right-hander,
l· two minor-league seasons.
league seasons..
Field.
.
··-On llle mound, Katie McGarvey
- · · · -Tciny Nieto- 21, right-=bander,
Rick Sellers - 28, six minorEric Wetzel fanned 13 and and Meghan Kolcun werit the dis.
HEAnNG &amp; COOUNG PfiOlXJCTS ·
walked two in his complete-game tancc for Athens (1-2 overall &amp; in
I
effon. He struck outllle side in the •the SEbAL) and GaiUpolis (0-S &amp;
•
sixth and seventh fram!s. At the 0-3),respcctively.
~An (AI')- Here are
lhumbllillls of 1be OncinnMI Reds'
32 terlacement players, lncludins
qe, position and pro experience. .

·a\":

,

•

Only six ·players have.-previous major-league.e~perience

r/,11int

W:

•

'

Pomeroy-Middleport-GIIIIpolla, Ott Point Pleeunt, WV

On th• Reds' replacement roster, .

· · 'It w.; 1be 12th shutout iii 10 IQm 1Dd flftb.
Fleury, wllo·h ld 10 poiDIIID lix pmea epnlt 1be
.wilb 11
'B for i'lall. wllo 1111~ 10 12• 14011en last~ laRd In 1be final tecmda ollbe
2. His : f : i . u : . - Feb. 23, I99-41D a 4-0 victory •• lint 10 live 1be Flames a 2-1 lead. His lcc:oad came
at Calaary. ·
at 10:54 of die dlird to make 1be game S-2. ~beldon
It wu only the second hmne vlctO In 1be last
Kenaecly had llle sixth Aames' &amp;oal four punutea
eiJbt pmes for the UpiD£ It was
iou in . later as Calgary won for llle fourth time In five
~~~games ror 1be Whalen. _·
. games. •
Fonner Whaler Mikac1 AJideruon 1150 scored c.
r Reicbel's 12th and 13th goals gave Calgary a 4-l
Tam Bay.
·
or
lead midway through tbc second period, puuillg 1be
4,
-&amp;bark•
1
_
At
St.
Louis,
BrendiD
c
e out of reach .for the Oilers. The loss was
81
. Shanahan had two goals and AI ~nnis IDd Adam
ontoo's fourtb in a row and ld't lbem iD fourth
Cn:ishton one each as 1be Blues continued tbclr
_ ·~10 po11111 behind 1be PacifiC Divlskll!&lt;leadlns
the Shaab The
mas
· ·
•
·.
3:.0
f~e:lifeljpl
lllls season,
·
Sh•n•ban, · w~o bas scored a
iD each of his
c.a;.a. 6, Mighty Ducb 1 -At Vancouver,
1
last folD' games putlhe Blues ahead 2-1 at S·S4 of Trevor I illlko and Jyrld Lummc scored ~Y powerthe lllird period ' lth his l3th aoal of lhe
'
play goals as 1be Can liCks beat the Mighty Ducks.
The •
fourtb lllligh ft lbc~·
The Canui:P also got a goal from shDllping Pavel ·
1 or ,
· .!jn
~~
ues, who Bure 10 put the Ducks down 3-0 and. ton far back to
~un ha toall0ut ed onl .fi ~~ts.;::ense. The mount a rally. It was only the 11th goal or the season
ues ve
'!"
Y •ve ·a-s an If last four
for Bure, who scored 60 goals last season forllle sec~:l!"cs ll!'d goalae Curtis Josepb faced only 19 shots pnd sblllght season.
.
. ·
n~~ mghi dU
Martin Gelinas added two goals .cor Canucks and
R . he~ ;.
·~~ j
d h:;;euzy ~d Ro~
Gino Odjick scored once fcr the Canucks. Defense·
elc
eac
scor . . w ~ an ·
an assast as
man
Rob Dirt had the Anaheim goal.
A runes beat tbe vls1ting Oilers.

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NEW I{OYAs IN SALES UON.-FRL N; SAT.'w P.M.

Mliln
992·2164
"
Pomeroy, Ohio
The Store With "All Klnda of Stuff" for Pets, Stables,
&amp; Small Animals, Lawns .&amp; Gardena ,

Puzzle on D-2
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Outdoors

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Horse-tripping b~n endangers charr.~adas

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lnthe·Ope~

~1 LYNN a.JNE

~o:-----~~,..~=~i(.J

.CeS
not.,
·I •
ang11ng
p h•enomenon..
.

It's a sure sign of age; I suppoae.
Likewise, my buddies and I bad
. I've discovered , a troubling
no idea of bow to ldjust the drill
.inverse relationsbip:·my tac1t1e box on our reels - we usually just sci
aiJd fisblng gear is getting smaller lbem tight enougb to permanently
·v , .U&lt;J. Iigbter wbile certain part&amp; or
avoid !hat cUcklng noise.
my body seem to be gettl,ng larger
I did a Utdc aauaer fisblnglasl
and bcayier.
week below lbe Radnc dsn.
In my fisbing heyday, before my
Anyone familiar with this parbuddies ·and I'discovered girls and
tlcUlar dam knows that yqu bave to
can, It was a status symbol.to bave descend about2 ml!lloo s • to gel
a taclde box deemed too large to be to tbc lure-snagging jiiU below. So
~oosidered for carry.,on luggage.
down I went, fisblna pole, taclde
Stuff I bad not the slif= box (containing 2,000 plastic
intention of ever using was
grubs), 5-gallon bucke~ snacks and
into my taclde box to give it lbe ·. pop in band.
~cluttered look." Eighteen years
1 forgot I'd bave to walk back
later, most of it is stiU !here - still up lbe steps - Ibis time catcying
in its original packages no less.
about 20 pounds or Oblo River
l ·suppose before too long my water and s veral filleting-size
taekle box will be about lbe size or :s;;;au~g;.erv-··... s about 1,000 o( my
your average sandwich.
·
,.1
•
Since most of our fisbing took
I suppose before too long I'll
place on pleasant summer days have to invest in a pocket fisberwben our parents were at work- a man. .
.
fate we considered worse than
As of Thursday evening, :~;r
4ealb {and still do) - · we usually
were still biting· below the
e
~ to walk to reach lbe good flsb-. dam. Try using a white plilstic grub
ing spots. siX-foot landing net slung fisbed SLOWLY just above !he
over one shoulder, lhree fishing . bottom in places were lbe current
. poles (suitable for deep-sea fishing) cbiDacs and eddies.
slung over tbe opposite sboulder,
The color of !he grub doesn't
!aci&lt;Je. box in one band, minnow seem to be as Important as the prebucket in tbe other.
· selllaliOD, bnt you may need to use
A five-mile walk seemed to be severaf different jigs UDtiJ you fmd
about lbe average.
· tbc p1oper weight - Hgbt enough
Coming home WliS even worse; to sink, but not so beavy to snag
add to tb~ abo.ve li~ several pounds consllindy on lbc bottom.
·
or 'fish, wet clolbes and sneakers
Boaters seem to be doing well
vertical jigging wllh plastic grubs
cbock fuU of m~d and sand.
My fishing pole is _getting or minnows ncar tbe end of !he
tighter, too. Nowadays I
a llgbt lock wall.
Anglers are allowed to take I 0
action rod and reel with 8-10 pound
. -test line. .. ·
of tbc fiS,b pei day, but It may take
It used 1o be I carried a heavy a Hide time to fmd 10 filleting-size
duty rod and reel, more suitable fc. fisb. ·
· ·
6cean ·surf casting, anc! used a minimum of 20-pound-testline.
Tbe ·Obio Division of Wildlife
: It wasn't Very sporting, but lbe will be stocldng almost 3,000 raln~dea or "playing" a fish was
bow lrout in Forked Run LaJce on
unknown 'to me at lhe ·time. Tbe April12.
Most of lbe fisb to be released
goal, as far as I was ~oncemed, was .
to bring ·tn fish so fast !bey
average 10 to 12 inches long, but
bled stones skipping in TOW~ some may be, larger, according to
!be bank.
division spokesman Jim Marsball.

' .
IIIII cullure.
•
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, den llld ae~ lllllles ~ aiiUJhtet peai, accordlns to the
"Part ·of the excitement of the dona. MilBY nea ue rendered hone )liOiedicn INOdallon. They
SANTA FE. N.M. (AP).;...Jt'a a
Spalala tndltloa lllaldmla 11 years cblrreada II
with the tttp. •mllliJDd
prefer PD'""' lionel IUCb M Alaold ~ ltill practlccd It IC:Oia ol Jilq of ID 'Dime!,' lllid J01e LW.
"'l'be IUdeo Ia filled with a lot · bi1ns IIIII qlllr!tl borie ...a 111M
Mc•Dn-stylc IOdcol: Cowlloya; or Garda, ID El Paao, Texas, dla~ of c:u11uae, bcrltqc, gwtitiOn food, are'Hghtet IDd easier to fell.
. ~ 1uao the leJa 11. a~ - ~?eke~ and part-time cbarro. maalc, fUIIJy ud dteaa, •'• said'
FQr many Hillpl'lca, bone lrip. •n1 bone and throw 11 to the
They re .taJdna away one or the C•hJee!a D!IY~ or the Callfomla piDJ evokes conflktiDJ cmod0111.
pound.
·
biK&amp;eat acd!)IIS'of the cbam:ada."
f4IIDe Lqllllltve Council, whlcb While it Ia a part of their c:ulture,
Now, .bowever, me tradition
Cbarreailas originated In 1&amp;11- supported 111e lrlppina baD "But lheyataobelleveitisauel.
ltsclf Ia II\ daoger of beiDJ bipped century Sala11.1anca, Spain, and lhe pointofdda lelll•Wlnn ~DOt
"Wben 1 finally voted on lbe ,
UP. aa more IDd m~ states COD·
were brougbt to Mexico, wbere 10 atop or cloM ifoWillhe cbl!1· bill, 1 bad to be sure that It
front cbarg~a !hat It a cruel and c;b~ festiyals ue .amonJthe . readu. It'.ajuat to baD bone bip- .'wouicln'taffectlherestoflhecbar·
· h!Jwnu~
·
country s most celebrated acdvlreada -the colorfUl JliiiCIIIIIIY,Ihe
California baDned lhe practice
to 'tbe toUDCil, dlar- artistry,:• said 11a1e
lilt year. The New Mexico LcxiaTbe Mexican-style r(ldeos readas ue eld in at lcaat eight GarclL ! 'I bid to
romlse. I
lature pass eel a similar bill thai cropped up In lhe United. States atltea ~ New Mexico California, love the chaneadas bnt also Jove
awaits action from Gov. Gary during lh_e ~950s and 19~0s.
Cololado, luinol&amp;. Neva- · animals aiJd If !hey ue breaking
Jobnson. And bans ue being coa- Today, according to the American da, '1'-IDd Wyomina.
. . l)ones' legs, lbst's DOt righL"
sl~ in several olbcr states.
Horse ~n Association, !here ·
In ·addition to !he tripping
A lot or~ are lppllled by are m01e !ban 84 U.S. cbano feder· evt:nts, Other competitions test roptbls practice, ' said·EIIsabetb Jen- ations IIIII sanction the competl· lng stiJia _similar to teUI roping
" Sugar ~ay'' Robinson was
nlng~ of lhe Humane Horsemen lions, whlcb ue usually held on ·in u
western todeos _ and born in Detroit In 1920 under bis
Coalition, a non-profit umbrella weekends during !be Sllllllllet.
~p
·
real name of Walker Smilb.
group i~.New Melti~o for borse·
Three of lbe rodeo&amp;' nine events
The cbarrtis, wbo bold regular
.
.
assoclllflom, veterinanans and ani· Involve bone !ripping. Cbarros (the jobs, usually lease horses for $4().
Tbe one-time we1terweigbt
mal rights groups. . ·
name means "loudy and flasby" in
$65 a weekend from stock cootrac- ' \ champion, Jimmy McLarnin, waa
Cal!fomla Gov. Pete Wilson, Spanish) are judged on ·sucb stantou, who buy .them from tbe nicknamed' "Baby Face."
wbo s•gned tbe state's ban last dards as wbat's esiJed tbc "flouryear, calli:d bone bipplng "a cruel ish" - lbe expertise they display
and abusive practice lhat terrifies, witb lbe rope. They can lose points
maims and aometlmes fatally if tliey rope lbree legs instead of
ULTRA HIGH EFFICIENCY
mjureshorsea.'.'
·
two, J)IIIJ up lbc slack too .qulcldy
But Hispanic communities that · orpufl lbc borse over i&gt;n Its neck.
HEAT PUMP SYSTEM
sponsor Mexican-style rodeos.:.... or
The American Horse Protection
c~ -and olber supporters As5oclation says common Injuries
The Most Efficient Pump In the
argue lbat ~-bipping events arc In tripping events include broken
Manufactured Houslng.Jndustry ..•..
an lmporllint part or their history necks, koten legs, fractured sboul-

aeoriop

· By Jim _Fr_eeman

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. . SUDday Times-Sen~ /C6

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d:Jane

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Section D.
Dollar's deciineJnflicts little pain in U. S. .

By RICK GLADSTONE
APBIIIIneuWrlter'
.
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NEW YORK_ An assault 011 America's mooey
in lbe currency trading pits of lbe world bas raised
fmanclal11181i:et alarms about maybem and gloom,
but to most ordirulry uS citizens, a dollar still is a
' doU..
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They're right. . ,
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Despite !he latest dollar selling spree Ibis past
week, wbich pummeled lbe B .S. currency to new
lows against tbe Japanese yen and German marlc, it's
an. event that's inflicted little obvious jialii in the
United Siates.
Unlike a stock crash, wage freeze or bank panic.
. the dollar's .drop doesn't easily uanslate into a
national crisis. Prices at lbc gi'OCCI'l' s1ore baven't
sbot up, nobody's burning worlbless dOIIltr bills, and
!he U.S. currency remains the best-known and most
widely used fonn of money anywhere. ·
· "This is not one of those lblngs lbst bites you"
said David Becker, a currency trader at Ezra za~
Associates, a money-management ftrm jn Norfolk,
Conn . • •Regardless of bow low the dollar goes
against the mark or yen, it's not lbe kind of thing that

~

wlll1lc seen very quickly.' '
some limited price -increases In !he UDited States,
That doesn't mean tbe dollar's slide IS. ~anlngnotably among lm)forted goods ranging from
less Its relative value plays an enormous role io
Japanese luxury cars to European wine. It also bas
wheiher foreigners inve~t in lb~ United States, wllicb
p.~vid~ some leeway for American companies to,
is aitlcalto Americaq econonuc be.at~.
.
~·
. The latest bout dollar aneiJ!la, m lbe v1ew or
' Higb pnces from compeutors are a shelter for
some economists, Jllrtly reflects the nalion's
you to raise yours," said Sandra. ~baber, an
unbeallhy babir or buying more lban it can afford.
~nomist at lbe Wefa Group, an forecasting concern ·
.Tbat bas given foreigners enormous amounts of dolm Ba!a Cynwyd, Pa.
.
Iars, wblch !bey sell for their own currencies, creatSun. one of t!'e ~aJor at~~ sou_oded ,over ,a
lng a dollar gluL
·
weak dollar- spiraling domestiC •.nnauon - ~ t
To defend !he donar·~ va!ue, tbe U.S. Fede.ral
happened. On lbe contrarY· mflali~n bas rerruuned
Reserve may bave to ra1se mterest rates, wb1cb
bemgn for lbe ,Past tbret years. 1bat s partly ~use
would make lnveslments .in dollars more .alluring.
tb~ dollar decUne bas been largely confmed to •ts reiBut it also would translate~ m01e ~xpensiVe mort,abve loss of value vs. lb~ ycn.and mark.
.
gages, student loans and .cred1t card bills.
,
. . When meas~ ~gamst. a broad. range curren
U.S. travelers overseas Invariably find lbe doll~ s.
c1es from Amenca s foretg.n-tradmg partners, lhe
prottacted deprecia~on over the years can mate life
dOIIar has only fall~n margmally. When m~ured
in other counbies .very expensive.
• ,
agamst tbe currencieS of Canada and MexiCO, lbe
" A dollar isn't a dollar anymore when YO\! travel
doUar bas nsen.
abroad. That's _where you get stick;cr sbock," said
" Reports of the ~rl:!l~back'~ demise have been
Ri~ard Berner, senior econonust ')'lth Mellon Bank · ·vastly exaggerated, said Rudiger Dombu~cb , an
in Pittsburgh.
ecoDOIIIICS professor at lbe MasSachusetts Institute of
The doUar's drop also bas played a subtle role in
TechnolOgy, writing in lbe April tO issue o'Business

nusc;

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ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

. IIUDUIIUIIfl.

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1391 Satroril' S&lt;Moi·Rd., Gallipolis, Oh~

W'l/ 00162 CTA Lie.

'®IAL

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April 2, 1995
iiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;

Week.::gnne. ''There is notbin~ tbat ca'JJ be dooe
- or
to be~."
.
. .
Pa1t of tbc dollar s underlymg strength rests m 1ts
status as tbc ~fflcial interiJ3tional currency, a role
_it bas p~yed smce the asce~dance of America as an
econonuc superpower early m lbe century.
P.l?Uars are accepted for payment'everywbere or
are easily converted into lbe local species of inoney..
More gov~ts keep spare assets salted a~ay m
doUar-deno•m?ated U.S. Treasury. bonds~ many
o!he~ type of mveslment lntemauonal ~ng organiZalt~s such as OPJ?C pnce tbe~r goods m dollars.
This ~ lbere ·~ a constant demand for dollars
that bas little to do wtlb lbe strcng!i' or weakness of
lbe U.S. economy. B~t lbe ,dollar s s~clity as .tbe
global CWTCncy of cbmce 1sn.t necessarily secure.
As lhe .dollar. bas fallen , fore1gners lbat own U.S'.
. Treasury ~tie~ bave suff~~ losses. How long or
mllf~ ~Y. re willing !0 lose ISII t ~lem;., ; .
·
Th1s IS a comphcated s1tualion. sa1d Berner.
"What it underscores is lbat the world's fmancial
markets are connected to each othet:. Global mvestors
look for .opportumues, and !bey get out of markets
where lblngs are_getung risky. That's one of lbe big
dangers of a declinmg currency."

Gallia County's Foster named
Young Cattleman of the Year

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~-·- Jentiattl

u·s iness

GALLJPOr:tS.. - Joe Foster of
Gallia County received the 1995
Young Cattleman -of the Year
Award during the Ohio Cattlemen's Associatiorr Annual Awards
·Banquet held in conjunction with
the Ohio Beef Expo Friday, March
17 at the Radisson Hotel Norlh in
Columbus.
Foster currently serves as a
member of lbe Ohio Beef Coun•
ell's operating committee whicb
bas oversight authority for Ohio's
checkoff program . In 1993 , be
Served as tbe cbairman of the oper. ating coll)lllittee. After be graduated from Ohio State University In
1'9861 be returned to GaUia County
to flum with his grandfather, falher,
uncle and cousin on Pope and Pope
f.
l
£:..
..
FOSTER HONORED· Joe F;oster, center, and his wire, MeUnfarms. The farm' s cow-calf operafrom
160
to
202.
Work
&lt;111
the
expansion
project
da,
right,
Kcept bls Ohio Cattlemen's Association Young Cattletiojl consists of 220 mother cows.
EXPANSION UNDERWAY· Bob Evans
got
underway
last
month.
Targ~t
date
for
comman or the Year award from Ray Ra!Mey, left, or Michigan LiveTbby also grow 30 acres of tobacco
Restaurant on 315 Upper River Road, GalllpoU.
· .
stock Exchange.
pletion Is Thursday, Aprll6.
and raise Holstein bottle calves to
is .e xpanding its seating capacity for customers
400 pounds on the farm.
· In addition to his responsibilities and served as president for two mittee.
T he You ng Ca ttleman of tbe
on the farm, Foster has been years. He has also been a member
Yea
r Awa rd is presenied to an .
designed to make sure consumers Federal Deposit Insurance Cor;p. ~ involved in other leadership roles of the American !'arm Bureau FedWASHINGTON (AP)
innovative
cattle producer who is
Before buying lnvesbllent products; understand lbat bank investment · The Fed is bolding a series of and education. He was enrolled in cration Tobacco Commodity Com39
years
old
or younger and bas
such as mutual funds from a baQic, products, which. also Include annu- free seminars, entitled " Mutual the LEAD program atlbe Universi- mittee for two years, He currently
been
significantly
involved in tbe
retirees and those about to retire ities and municipal securities, are Funds: Undersllind lbe Risks, ... for ty of Kentucky from 1987 to 1989. serves as tbe agricultural chairman
promotion
of
the
beef
industry and
might weU listen to what lbe Feder- not government-Insured.
retirees and those planning for He also served M lbe chaner ~ si - for the Gallia County S trategic
Surveys bave sbown that many retirement. lbe 12 Federal Reserve dent of the Gallia County Cattle- Priuming Task Force, Green Town· in commun ity activ ities. Tbi.s
al Reserve bas to say.
The central bank is kicking off a . consumers are not aware tbat those regional banks across the country men' s Association in 1986. Foster ship clerk and as a member of tbe award is sponsored by Michigan
bas served on the Tobacco Com, · Dr. Samue l Bossard M emo rial Livestock Exchange and tbe Ohio
nationwide education program products are not insured by the wiU spoqsor lbe ~inars . . · · ·
modlty Committee for eight yel!fS . Library long range planning com- Cattlemen's Association.

..

Federal Reserve to ~educate consumers

.

COMFORTASSUREO ..

'NV 01 02 12 M.H. lie

'.

Preliminary burley tobacco ·
Middleport Farmer's Market to organize AprU 11 .
referendum results released .llyHAROLD
H . KNEEN .
·
·. .
open, possibl e crops to grow , Ohio Performance Tested Bull Sale

RDAY, SUNDAY &amp;MOND.AY
.

'

APRIL 8-

.TO 8 P.M.

...........

I

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,

LRRGE SELECTION
.Of JOHN DEERE®
LRWN TRACTORS
ON SRLE !·

•

.Special lawn IIIII Grounds Spe&lt;iallaw~ and Grounds
Etplipillllt Financing
Equipt~e~~t Financing
Financing Tlraugh Financing lhrough
. AprillO
7.9% ·Fixed Rate · 24111. 6.5% • Fixed Rate • 24 mo.
April 3D
S.9'/o - 36 monlh 4.9'/o - 36 months 9.9% ·Fixed Rate- 3' 111. S..S'!t • Fixed Rate • 36 tao.
T.S'Io - 60 month S.9% - 48 mOnths 10.9% • Fixed Rate • 48 liD. 9.5% ·Fixed Rate· 48 tao.
Speliai.Tradar

9- ·1 P.M. TO . ~

APRIL 10 - a·A.M. TO 8 P.M. ·

SPECIAL FINANCING

1

AP.~IL

Special Hay

10% OFF JOHN DEERE• OILS!
.

Regular

SALE PRICE

·Slx38 Gear Drive- 38" Cut · 12.5 HP •••:..........~.~!.!:"..,Price · $1999
STX46 Gear Drive ..;.·46".Cut -14 HP .~...............~.~.~.!:'..,Price $2499
LXI72 Gear Drive- 38": Cut -14 HP:....................~.........S3299 $2979
GT262_Gear Drive - 48" Cut ·17 P......................~............. s4549 · .$4099
- mc·E SELECTION.OF JOHN DEERE• CAPS!
•
I
325 Hydrostatic- 48"·
· cut • 17 HP............................
~.ss999 $5399
.
.
Also, Power Take OH Components, Parker Hydr-.ulic
34.5 Hydrostatic- 54" Cut· 18 HP~........................:....s7099 $6399
Hoses Made To Order,
Battery
Ca.les
Made
To
Order.
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·2·wlinder
Parts Department Manager - Rob Massie
445 Hydro~tatic - S4'~ Cut • 22 ·HP....~.~.......................s9499 $8599
Service Department
2Cylinder ·
'
Tony Carnahan and Phillip Fraley
.

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.

By LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS - Tbe U . S.
Department of Agric ulture
·announced lbe preliminary results
~recently of tbe nail referendum
.held Feb. 27-Maidt 2.
The results sbow burley tobacco
, growers voted to continue marketing quotas on a poundage basis for
Ibe 1995. 1996 and 1997 marketil)g
years.
Re sults show 108,288 of the
' 11 2,716 producers wbo voted in
; !he referendum - or 96.78 percent · voted to approve quotas. ·
·
A vote of at least two-thirds in
favor was nec essary to continue
marketing QI!Otas.
,
In the las t referendum , . he ld
February, i992, 96.72 percent of
lbe voting growers favored market·
· ing quotas on a poundage basis for
lbe 1992, 1993 and 1994 marketing
' years.
The state-by-state results {state,

votes cast, yes, no, and pe~cent . P0~1EROY :- Forsylh1a ~Dd
favoring listed in that order) were:
flowenng almond are blo? mmg
Alabama, I, I, 0, 100; Arkansas, and soon more .or our deciduous
2, 2, 0,100; Georgia, 7,7,0,100; !Ui- spnng sbrubs will bloo~ . Do you
noi s, 1,1 ,0,100; Indiana, 3,711 , wan~ to reduce tbe be1gbt or th e
3,493 , 218, 94.13 ; Kansas, 10, mul~tudeofstems ontheseplants 1.
10 ,0,1 00; Kentucky, 64,873 ,
Fust. prune out lbe oldest {nor63 ,336, 1,537, 97 .63; -!vfi ssourl., malty lhe largest) one·thlrd of tbe
664, 616. 48, 92.77; North CaroU- stems at tbe base or t!'e shrub as
na, •1-;551 , 4,382, 169, 96.29; Ohio, soon as tbe flowenog IS. complete.
4 ,882, 4,616 . 266, Q4 .55 ; Ten- Then prune back tbe be1gbt of lbe
nessee, 27, 192, 25.340,1 ,852, remaining ste_ms to s~;t to 12 inc~s
. 93.19; Virginia, S, 562. 5,296, 266, below lbe be•ght desired. Tht~ Will
95.22; Virginia, 5,562, 5,296, 266, aHow for the normal a dditiOnal
95.22; West Virginia, 1,260, 1.888.. summer growlh or lbe shrub.
72, 94.78. Totals 112,716, 108,288. ·
4,428, 96.78.
There were 1,805 eligible voters
in Gallia County. 487 votes were
cast, 447 voted yes, 40 voted not By Bruce WiiUams
.
for a 91.'79 percentage.
My father recently passed away
Lisa Meadows is tbe county wilhouttelling anyone where his
executive director or the Gallia life insurance policy is or from
Consolidated · Farm Service · which company it was purchased ..
Agency.
Is there any place pr person I can
contact wbo can help me? -ll.L..
LoweU, Mass.
DEAR BL.: You might give me
some more detail. If your father
positive nwnber. Even a simple list was paying for this policy, tbe first
such as tbis shouldprovideyouwitb place to look would be his checkaclear visionofwhcreandhowyou ing account. See if you can find
can save money and reallocate those some canceled checks !bat indicate
funds into your savingslinves!fllCnt where bis money went.
program.
If lbere are policies for other
The more detail you give to Ibis family members, check with those
exercise, the greater the actual indi- agents or. companies. It may well
, cation of your fmancial condition. be that there is a family pattern
But even a quick analysis will 'give established. If tbe policy exists and
you !he footing to begin a serious is paid up, there will be occasional
evaluation of your fmancial objec- communicatjons·· from .the insurance
lives.
.
.

=~~~tf~~~th is no different. Kn:;::ry~!vingmoney?Why

Financial expCrts recommend start-

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on Saturday, April 15 at I p.m.
being held at Ohio State University' ~ Ohio Bull Test Station in Belle
Valley: ·
·
More lban 150 of the 193 b)Jiis
on tes t are expected to ~II. Statis·
tics, romparing tbe (ma 84 days of
the testing, are currently available
and a sale catalogue wiU be ready
as of April 10. For a copy; write to
Gary Wilson 2825 Wilson Place
New Concord. Ohio, 43762. ·
'
In addition, the annual "Preview
Continued o n 0-8

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carrier to your dad, so keep his · sure souiui s nice.~ What do you problem is that at ·the lower levels
address open to receive mail. ·
know about these deals? - S.G., there are often amateurs who are, at
Take a look at your dad's past Eureka. Calif.
·
best. over-enthusiastic and in
DEAR S.G.: My opinion of many situations, downright mis:.Cp.
tax returns. The insurer may have
paid divi dends, on which taxes · multi- level marketillg is well resent what could happen to
were due; these would show up on known: While a few people have encourage others to get involved.
his returns.
·
made a great deal of money, the In any case. I don't think Utis is for
This is just anolber illustration vast majo ri ty do not. In their you. .
·
of why it is so important to entrust defense. however, there is nothing
Bruce Williams is a syndicated
someone with tbe locations of your wrong with being materialistic and writer for Newspaper Enterprise ..
bank books, ins urance poli Cies,
"flashy." As for aggressiveness. Association.
safe-deposit boxes and so forth. you'd be tter be prepared to be
(Send your questions to: ·
O therwise, you leave noth ing b ut. aggre~sive in business, particululy Smart M'oney, P.O. Box 503 .
grief behind for those you love the in sales, or you'll be out of busi- Elfers, FL 34680. Questions of .
most. ·
• .
' · ness before you begin.
gener al interest will be an•wered
Given your sensitiveness to in future columns. Owing to tbe
DEAR BRUCE: I appreciate these characteristics, I have a suspi· volume of mail, personal replies
your comments about multi-level cion that selling. would not be your . cannot be provided.)
marketing. I am thinking about forte. I have no quarrel with multi(For information on how to
signing on, but tbe aggressive tac: level 'marketing companies !hat are comnumlcate electronically witb
tics and materialistic flashiness are on tbe level and explain the reality Ibis columnist and others, contact
,. a real turnoff. But fmaocial security behind the risks and .rewards. The America Online by calling l:SOO.
827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Gallia .County has champions at Ohio Beef Expo

are yoo investing? The often com· . By E DWARD VOLLBORN
·
:~,wA~~:':~~.f :~ ~ ~~:s ~':70::::::~::::
GALLIPOLIS • Th~ 1995 Ohio
dtweloping the short· and long-term· •mination of your investment gOats.
Beef Expo is now history. People
and cattl e from Galli a County
1
~~:~;';: ~~t7~~h to meeL
gO:.~f~ ~o~~~:~:~;"Ji;;!f. played a big role in this year's su~cess. A breed c;hampion plus ~':"e
Assessing your current financial retirement health care for a loved reserve cbamptons and class wm·
opndition is little more than accumu- one. A stropg dll$.ire to send. Y.Pur ners were .born and raised in Gallia
lating tbe financial records that will children to a good college is yet · ' County·.
1 spent most of my time work·
give you an acell(atC indication of 11/lother.Short-rangegoalsareequally
your curient net income. Start by aommon, such as the purchase of a ing in tbe OSU booths in the trade
taking outa picceof paperanddraw- new car or truek. or a downpayRJCnt sbow area and missed most of the
. ing a line down the middle.
on a home. .
•
sbows and sales this year,~ thus
' On tbe left side, begin to list all of . Your goals will defmc the "hold- don' t hav.e a complete list •f lbe
ybur expenses~.including your mon- · ing period" yotir investments, or, winners. Congratulations to all the
.
gage, food anaentertainmenl Next, lhe lengthortirnefor whichyou stay winners!
list !he taxes you pay and, fmally, tbe lnvested in anyonevehicle. You could
Results are back from the 1995
premiums on all of your insurance discoverthalyourholdingpenodrnay Expo Judging Contest. A Gallia
p(llicies.
be quitc ·loftg- 10 or 20 years, for County based adult team,
Totalthcsecostsattbebottom.On lnstance,for'a ooupleintheir30sand Riverview !'arms. brought home a
the right-hand side of !he pq~r. jot 40s with agoalofplanningforretife. second. place plaque in a contest of
down your combined household in- metiL
~
16 ooult teams. Som~ 2l ·FFA and
come and compare this figure w~m ..........The important issue is lbst, you 4•H Yopth from Galllll County par·
your expenses. Hopefully, the differ- . must be COIIIfonable with your In· ticipated In the contest
ence between !be two figures is a ContlnUid on D-8

or

•'

where to obtain help in growing
crops an!J what needs to be done to
improve tbe success of the market.
A.ll interes ted gro we r s can
obtain more information by calling
·Tom Dooley at 992-5458· (1eave a
message. with name, address and
phone number) or Hal Knecn at the
M . C
·
An organizatioQal meeting for
elgs ounty Extension Office,
the Middleport Farmers' Market 992•6696.
will be held at 7:30 p.m. April i 1.
.
Topics to be covered include lfl&gt;W·
Cattlemen, are you looking for a
::s' input into !he starting times, new bull to impr,ove .your herd's
Saturday dates for lbe market to · bloodlines? Don t m1ss lhe 26th

Father dies, leaving a policy of grief

Investment viewpoint
By JAY CALDWELL
GALLIPOLIS - There is little
mystery' to the accumulation o(
wealth. With a solid financial plan,
you can systematically foUow a path
thatwill allowyou
to meet important
financial objec·
lives.
ltwas oncesaid
that tbe journey of
l ,OOOmilesbegins
I"ith the f~rst step,

A correctiOn IS ,needed to be..
made to last week s column on
planUng potatoes. Please note !hat
potatoes should be planted only
~. and one-half to four and onebalf mcbes deep. Several r~aders
commented to me lbat 31 m~~es
was too deep. It most c.ertamly 15 •

Three of the Gallia County to Gallia County's Joo Foster. Fos·
~emucky, re)&gt;Orts that researchers
teams placed in the top one-lbird of 'er is known throughout the state in Kentucky pred ict tliat aifalf~
!he Senior Division with ,99 teams for his service to tbe Ohio~ weevil acti~ity will be up Ibis year.
In contentioo.
Council. He is past presiden f
A deta1led survey process in
Hlg.b scoring senior individual Ohio Beef Council Operation
Kentucky, taking into account tbe
from Galli a C~unty _was Steve committee, wbic;b is responsi~le for number of eggs per square foot and
Stout, represenung R1ver Valley administering tlie' Beef Check-Off tbc esttmated percent hatch would
FFA. lbe top five scoring individu- Dollars for Obi b.
indicace a I )3% · population
als in the senior youth division
The final 112 day Ohio Bull . increase over last year.
Included:
Test results are complete . Some
Begin watching for weevil
1.) Steve Stout, 2.) Beth WaJk:er, 192 bulls gained an average of 4.2
activity in fields after a 190 degree
3.) Adam Clark. 4.) Paul Hutcluns pounds per day. Bulls that ration 90 day accumulation. Scleroilnia stem
and in fifth place a tie betw.een and above will be eligible to scU in
rot in alfalf~ is an increasing prOO·
Tony &lt;fcorge and Jason Wellmg- the Ohio Bull Test Sate on Satut- !em. Yellowing and wiltin!lof tbe
ton. High scoring Gallia County day, April 15,1995. Sevenil olber foliage is normally tbe fust symp-youlb In the·Junior' Division was minimum standards must also be. tom, followed by a dead planL tbc
Clark Walker. Entry fee for the met. Sale catalogs will be out disease infection period happened
youth division was provided by tbe around April 5 and can be obtained late last fall, but the plants are now
Gallia County Cattlemen's Associ· by calling Gag Wilson a.t (Cl4)
in various stages of decline. Late
ation.
872-34C8. Some 14 bulls gained at
fall seeded alfalfa will be !he most
A bighli'gbt of the Friday or above the five pound per day
severely damaged.
'
evening (March 17) Ohio Cattle- markc
·
Edward .Vollborn is Gallla
men's banquet was the awards preDr. Lee Tpwnscnd? Extension County's agricult11re extension
sentations. The "Young cattlemen Entomologist at the University of agent. ·
..
of tbe Year Awards was presented

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Pomeroy ,.lddleport Gallipolis, OH Point Pleulnt, wv

D2 Sunday Jlmaa SantiM!

.

Aprll2, 11115April 2,

Ornamental ponds Clinic physico~~2.a~~~~ejL!cu~!"uni~!':22m!!'B~~~~uector of:
~ysical
are bopming ~·~
~~~~~~~~~~R.
11111 Humao SttVIces in Cnllllllbus.
unit.
Pacr Somoni, MD., J&gt;IJector of ry=inglo Dr."Biacl&lt;. "I have
the Obio Dep8rtment of Health, ,.00 beel1 invited 10 speak wltb the
p~eaenled lbc stete'a role olleader- ;Ohio State Medical Association'~
ship in providing for b~th com- 'Industrial Medi~ine Committe~.
munities. Dr. Somooi also The coDUDiUees will shape Oh1o
addressed Obio's uninsurect, bealth medicineforthefuture."
care costs and the quality of beallb
·
care delivenxl.
.
·
Dr. Black was one of tbreej
phy&amp;lclans, who along wltlt hOspital .
, administtators and insurance repre1 seotatives throug"out the state,
expressed areas of interest and concern in health care.
Rtipresenling Holzer Clinic, Dr.
Black presented concerns specific
to health care provision in runil
Ohio. He requested that the state
lessen their restrictions on cerlifi·
cates of need and specifically
addressed Holier's prospect for a

·mushroomed
·· Water Is the rase in gardeoina
"A great thing to do il a con·
these days. From simple CQI1tainers IJiiner water garden," McKaslde
to ornate ponds,· people are having said. ''These have become very
a romp with growing water lilies popular, and they're &amp;.r eat for
and lotuses and nurturing fOidfiSh.
decks, patios. You can get some"When we garden w1th water thing 36 incbes in diameter, a
we caq indulge our fantasies," says polyethylene pot. There are also,
am1tor JIUDeS Van Sweden in a new some terra cotta (pots), in color...\ .
book on the subject. "Water can
"And you can grow water lilies,
play ·a role in any garden, no matter dwarf lotuses and even have one or .
the budget, no malter the garden's two goldfish. I've seen a lot of peosize...
..
. ' ple do thaL And thai's a grea1 start.
Tbe. 20S-page book, "Garden- · You can even put a small pump In
ing with Water," is published by there and gel the sound of water."
Random House, New York, hard ' ·' McKaslde said most of the pots
cover, $40.
now •'are sealed or they have a
''All you need are a faucet and a plug. So no liner Is necessary·for a
hose," says another writcr,llayden con!Jiiner that's made to be a water
McKaskle, describing the usual garden."
source ot the water,
He emphasized that .you need
McKaslde, publisher of "The fQW' to six. hours of:direct sunlight ' ·
DR. D. R. BLACK
Lily Plid," a bimonthly m:wsletter if you want water plants to bloom.
devoted to the pastime, enjoys Another thin~ to consider is
th.ree varisized orn81Den tal ponds "entertainment. '
which be created himself at his
"If you have a deck or a patio
NE
. W YORK (AP) _ Moneyplace in Nashville, Tenn.
and spend a lot of lime' out there
In a telephone interview, McK• with company,, y11u need to locate losing Mirabella magazine bas
aside said the water fad took off in your water garden as close to that been sold to Hachette J:illpachi
the last five years as containers, area as possible," he said. "You'll Magazines, the publisher of Elle
equipment, plants and fish became enjoy it a whole lot more than if · and Woman's Pay.
easy 10 fmd. "The Lily Pad" ($15 you put it 50 feetaway."
Hacbette purchased Mirabella
Yearly, P.O. Box 3309, Brentwood,
Moving up from containers to from News Corp.'s U.S. publishing ·
Tenn., 37024) now bas subscribers
v -·•·•
arm, News America Publishing Inc.
iri 29 states and also abroad, McK· small ornamental ponds, Mc .........c Terms were not disclosed. News
aside said. Hobbyists formed clubs, said he bas see'! hund~eds· i.n the A erlca had said last week that
usually known as koi clubs- from last few years With typical dunen· .M~bella's May issue would be its
the Japanese carp, and these bav(l sions of 6-by-8 or 8-by-10 feet and last if no b.uyer were found. The
a depth of 18 inches to three feel. · deal was announced late Thursday.
POUND RIDGE, N.Y. (AP)-

Magazine sold

$6,900
/

1985 OLD CUTLASS BROM
V8 Dk 'blue in and out, 92,000
careful 'miles, 2 Owner Car
A Nice
Car

. $4,500

. 1989 LINCOLN MARK
VII LSC
White w/Red .Leather, loaded,
recenl service,,new tires .

11 CiJY in Georgia
6 Refer to
10 Hat part
14 Vaulted church part
18 Pressed
·
94 "- Frome"
20 Weaving machine
H Nevada cily
96 Untruth
22 Bete97 Insert mark
24 Ketchup ingredient
99 Flying saucer
25 On lhe summit of
(abbr.)
26 News item, for short ' 102 Oeclare openly
27 '1'axi Driver" star
104 Hearing organ
29 Gov. agents
105 - Aviv
· 30 Buddhist priest
106 Teacher
32 Not high
107 Imperfection
~ Region: abbr.
108 Ev11 spirit .
36 Light shade
110 Toothed wheel ·
37 Perched
·112 Sumn;&gt;er clothing
36 Somersaun
114 Start
39 Code name
115 Time of day
41 Baseball's Durocher
117 Thick slice
and others
119 Merely
43 Jet letters
120 Metric measures •
44 Trench around a
121 Pilcher
castle
123 Science branch
45 Source of vegetable
125 Bdgus
'
oil
126 Actor Steiger
47 Heap
129 Catch sight ol
49 Eat
131 Lock of hair
52. Rural way
: &lt;··~·.132 Far-reaching
53 Notal all interesting .. · 133 Wager
55 Dedicate
, \
136 Article
59 As clear as - 138 River 1n England
60 Fries
r40 Scottish river
62 Ancient instrument

141 Country

64 Sofa's cousin

142 Poison .

66 Geologic period
67 Make- wh ile the .
. sun sll,ines
69 Final:'\bbr.
71 For fearthat
72 Emmet
73 Divert
74 Cram
75 Pointed
77 Itinerary: abbr.
78 Citified
eo Direction finder
82 Sword
84 Instruct
\
85 Red and Yellow

145 Fashion
.
147 Manner of walking
149 Develop gradually
151 Strict
·152 Landing place
153 Monster
154 Think logically
15~ Baxter9r. Bancroft
156 Annexes
157 ~ and tear
158 Salvers

·as Musical sound

.GET READY FOR SPRING
AND SUMMER
.i

DOWN

·Gingrich looks to future·'
efforts to balance budget

143 EnvirOnment

1 catcher's gloves
2 Smell
3 Celestial body
4 - - even keel
5 After deductions

· 75 Beast of burden
' 76 Dishearten ·
79 Tried for omce
eo Jin
81 Skill
83 .eakery item

( II:P'ise

·

'Y-Jot
8 Excessively
9 Hired hand
I 0 Looked casually at
bOOkS

11 Johnny12 First: abbr.

Goplace~

Frightens
Long, long time
Knife part
Artist's colors
Paid athletes
Crone

97 like some hair

98 A.B.A. member
100 Equitable
101 Has
103 Used a loom
105 Characteristic
I 06 Grasping tool
107 Elaborate party
109 Tidings

13 Inn's cousin ·

14 Human-like robot
15 "Raven" poet
16 Trig funct ion
17 Clapton and
Sevareid

19 Wallet item
· . 23 Goes wrong·
28 Ump'scry
31 Island
33 Sphere
.35 GOP memtrer: abbr.
38 Disgusting
39 Period of time
·40 "-to bed .. ."
42' Toboggan
'\4 Burrowing animal

111 Priest's vestmenl

113
114
116
1.18
120

45 Hollandaise, tor one

46
48
49
50
51
52
54

84

85
86
89
91
92
95

Negative vote
Wicked
Information
Black
Daring
Place in Asia
Black-and-blue

mark
56 Eat or drink too

much
57 Flavors

58 Stage direction
60 Whirled
61 Counterfeit
63 Shade tree.
66 Flow lorth
68 Electrical unit
'70 DOg breed
73 Tole(ate
74 S~ove

'

Jail: sl.
Motorcycle
Planet before l'lulo
Margins
Something for
climbing ·
122 Caviar
124 Sheltared side
125 Fish paddle
126 Edge
127 Redding or Skinner
128 Burke of TV
130 Cily in Arizona
132 tnigate
133 Lighl ·wood
134 Ambassador
135 .Youthful ones
137 Bearing
139 Make dirty
141 Money in Italy
142 Swine
144 Sea eagle
146 Punta - Este
148 Grow older
150 Former Gl, for short

Suspected gunman ·wounds 3
officers in weekend standoff·

By M.R. KROPKO
Associated Press Writer
BRUNSWICK (AP) - Three of
this city's police officers w~re
wounded in a standoff that conunued into the early morning hours
Saturday in a normally placid residential area of northeast Ohto.
Specialists from several area
law enforcemeRt agencies joined
force s late Friday. But patie"nce
became the key after an attempt to
· storm the house about 8:30 p.m.
left two Brunswick amcez;rwounded· six hours after another officer
was wounded by shots outside .of
the same house.
.
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer
Saturday identified the suspected
gunman as John M. Lekan, .54.
Some neighbots and a clerk 10 a
nearby medichl supplies store also
identified Lekan as the apparent
suspect, saying he had become well
known in the neighborhood for
· eccentric behavior.
.
· The Plain Dealer reported that
Lekan's wife, Bcv, 49, said from
an ups!Jiirs telephone Friday afternoon that her husband became
enraged by a request from visiting
health care workers that be keep bts
. guns out pf sight. She said her bus-

'

DIRECTOR • Holzer CUn·
· k recently opened Its spine and
palo center. Tbe director Is
Sballen K. Mehta, M.D. Dr.
Mehta earned his medical
degree from tbe University of
Texas and oomrleted a reslden·
cy In physlca medicine and
rebabWtalion
at Baylor
slly
Medical Center.
Dr.Univer·
Mehta
received his post graduate fel&gt;t
lowsbip training at The Texas
Pain Center In Houston.

Three Galllana honored

another officer went to the home to
check on the condition of the man's
bedridden wife. She reportedly bas
multiple sclerosis.
Puzella was in critical Condition
at MetroHealth Medical Center in
Cleveland with a bullet wound to
the chest, nursing supervisor Cynthia Hoehn said .
·
Police would not explain how
the other two officers were shot.
Reporters, kept about a half mile
from the scene, overheard police
scanner commuriications indicatinl!
an assault was made on the house
about 8;30 p.m., although police
later would not comment.
Stukbauer identified the offi~ers ·
as patrolmen Steve Karthan and
Dean Weinh.art, both 30. Kartban
.was in stable .condition at Southwest General Hospital in Cleveland
with a wound to his right thigh,
said nursing supervisor Bec,ky
Mowry.
Weinhart was in fair condition
· at MetroHealth with wounds to ·his
left arm and left side, Hoehn said.
Police evaCuated residents from
several homes as a precaution. Jennlfer Stockford, 25, said she ' lives
just a few houses away.

FOR SALE: 3 bedrooms,
LA , K, dining area, FR.
swimming pool, level lot, Gity
sc['lools.
614·441·0628

FLEA MARKET
AMVETS BUILDING
A,PRIL3 &amp; 4
OPENS 8A.M.

A New Retail Clothing Stor~
looking to locate in the
Gallipolis area will b'e givin_g
applications &amp; interviewskm
Tuesday &amp; Wednesday, April
4th &amp; 5th at the Red Rooster
Restaurant on Jackson Pike..
from 2 p.m.-5 p.m. both days:
Full lime &amp; Part Time
positions are available. No
experience necessary, but
helpful. E 0£_

Court Street Bakery ,,

Garage Sae MQn . &amp; Tues., 95. Couch, 2 chairs, furniture,
vanity, dishes, clothes sizes Jr.
5-7-9, girls 10, 12, _14, boys 5,
toys, wood crafts . Rain
cancels . 1 mile past Big Lots.
2nd Subidivison_9fl...rfght, 2nd.
house on l~ft .

e:

the TOPS. way.
Tops OH 1895
CARLETON SCHOOl
5:00 p.m .·7:00 p.m. Thrusdays

Lost

For more information

call

PURCHASE .ANY N
. EW Ton-0
WHEEL
n;

•'

BE~ORE MAY 31ST· AND MAKE NO,

GALLIPOLIS • Three Gallia
Countians have been named new
junior members of the American
Angus Association.
They are:
Robert Woodward, Gallipolis; , .
Rodney ,Alderman, Vinton and
Morgan Woodward, Gallipolis.
Tbe AAA is the largest beef rer;·
1suy associatiOn in the" world, with
more than 27,000 active adult and
' junior members. Headquarters an:
located in SL Joseph, MQ. ·
Junior • 10bers of the associ~­
tion are ehgible 10 register cattle m
the AAA an ~ par In association
State Route
sponsored shows and other national
and regional events.

AnENTION TURKEY
HUNTERS

-

HORSE LAWN OR GARDEN TRACfOR

•

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For Qualified Buyers

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~

248 985·3301

.

Chester, Ohio

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Answer on C-5

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

2002 ·

&amp;6~

42 court St, located
in Lafayette Mall.
Come in and register for Easter · ·
Basket giveaway. No purchase
necessary. Breakfast. Lunch,
Cakes. Breads, Donuts.
All maae from scratch!
WE DELIVER 446-9372
Mon.-Fri. 6:00 a.m.-5:00p.m.
Sat. 6:00 a.m.·3:00 p.m.

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
NEW SPRING HOURS
Mon.-Thurs. ,
9:30 am-6:00 pm
Friday 9:30 am-8:00 pm
Saturday 9:30 am-4 :00 pm
"Always Looking for Better
Ways to Serve You"
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
1970 Graduating Class of
Southern High School
Kounlry Kitchen Restaurant
Racine Thursday,
April6, 1995

Holzer Medical Center and
Paint Creek Regular Baptist
Church announce the
MINORITY HEALTH MONTH
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
All PROGFRAMS ARE FREE
AN DOPEN THE PUBLIC.
IUESDAY, APIRL4
Cholesterol Screening, 6·8 p.m.
F~sting Is Not Necessary.
TUESDAY, APRIL18
Healthy t:'ating Class 6-8p.m.
TUESD,AY, APRIL25
Healthy Cooking Class, 6-8 p.m.
Events will be held at Paint .
Creek REgular Baptist Church,
8.33 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
BirthRite Childbirth Education
Classes will oegin Tuesday,
April 11, 6:30 p.m. at PVH.
For more information or t.o

ATIENTION ELKS
STAG DAY
APRIL 29, 1995
12:00 NOON-6:00 P.M.
COST- $20/Person
Pay when yo.u register. Sign up in
the Lounge. Limit to 80.
NOTICE: must .have 25 signed
or event will be cancelled. Last
day to sign up is April 20

CHSALUMNI
If you are interesled in .
continuing wilh the
Cheshire High
School Alumni Association,
PLEASE plan to attend the·
meeting Tues., April4,
1995, 7:30 p.m. in the
Cheshire Village'Hall. Your
Presidence is important.
Your Help is needed.

V.F.W. POST 4464
[\!om inations of Officers
Tuesday, April 4
7:30p.m.
"Choose to Losse Class"
Annual Open House Tues.,
April 4, 1995,9:00 a.m. Grace
United Methodist Church
(Cedar Street Entrance).
l;'eaturing· a covered dish
luncheon consisting of FatFree and Lo-Fat foods.

AMVETBINGO
SPECIAL NIGHT
STARTS AT 7 P.M.
WEDN~DAY, APRIL 5
$40 person includes 2
packets &amp; $45 worth of
Bonanzas plus, and $1000
coverall. PH. 446,9051 .
Seats reserved until 6

WANTED
Fill Dirt, Rock or
Concrete Only
in Syracuse.
614-861-6118
•

..

'"'•

BAUM LUMBER

on muDinl•

We now have the new
ADVANTAGE by Realtree.
Real soft ahd quiet. Great
camo pattern fa tutkey
hunting. See at Wilson's
Army Surplus, Peach Fork
Rd., Pomeroy, or call 9927093 . 1-800-346·8176

~

PAYMENTS OR FINANCE CHARGES
BEFORE OcrOBER 1ST, 1995

.

band was in the basement with
their 9·year-old son .. ·
She told the newspaper that her
husband kept three guns in the
bouse for personal protectiOn .
"He's ready for aitack if necessary," Mrs. Lekan said.
John Lekan's business card had
heen left with a nearby mercbant,
The Plain Dealer reported. It
shows that he opemtes the Lekan
Manufacturing Co., Lekan Oil &amp;
Gas Co. and the Lekan Consulting
Co .. although the telephone numbers for those busines·ses are not
listed in the area phone book.
Detective Sgt. John Stukbauer
would not identify the man, but
said he was armed and inside the
home with his wife and young.son.
Stukbauer also would not identify ·
the weapons the man was believed
to possess.
.
"We believe the woman m the
house and his young son .are still
OK," ·Stukbauer said shortly
before midnight.
Police updates throughout the
evening were scarce, and Stukb
f ed 1 give any more
d:t~~~~.~e us ~
.
Patrolman Sam Puzella; 51, was
shot about 2:30 p.m. as he and

~-~

vative De

BULLETIN BOARD

thJ

•

87 Gaelic
88 Wrecks
89 Lee or Vaccaro
90 Twist
92 Yearned
93 -Vegas

Sunday Tlmas-Sintlnel Page D3

tJCb..,rr

rem:

SUNDAY PUZZLER

1991 CHEVY CORSICA LT
V-6 - Auto - Air -· Tilt · Cruise AM/FM w/cassette - 56,000 miles •
maroon w/clolh Int.

•

1~

. CINCINNATI (AP)- West·
MYSTERY FARM.:.... TbJs week's mystery (arm, featurecl by
eni-Southem Life Insurance Co. the Gall,la SoU and Water Conservation Dlilrlct, Is located lOIRe•
said it plans to move its Columbus
where In GaUia County, Individuals wishing to Jlllrlldpate In ..e
Life Insurance subsidiary and 290 weekly contest may do so by gueulng the farm's owner. Jut mall,
jobs to Cincinnati by mid-1996.
or drop orr your guess to ..e Galllpollo Dally Trlbpne, 825 Tllnl
Columbus Life, which bas $1.6 Ave, Gallipolis, Oblo, 45631, or Tbe DaUy Sentlael, 111 Court St.,
billion in assets," will maintain its
P.omeroy, Ohio, 45769, and you may win a~prize. fro~ tbe Ohio
identity and independent sales sys- Valley
Publishing Co. Leave your name, ddreu and telephone
tem, John F. Barreu, president and number with your card or lettp, No telep
caDs will be acceptchief executive officer of Western- ed. AU contest'enlrles sbould be turned In to the newspaper omce
Southern, said Thursday.
by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case of a lie, the winner will be.choTlie move will reduce costs and sen
lly lottery. NeJJ:t wee)&lt;, a Meigs CoiiJIIY farm will be featured by
inake better use of Western·South- the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation~District.
•
ern's technology base, Barrett said.
It will be made in several phases
between now and mid-1996, slild .
Robert Starnes, a Western-Southern vice president.

ACROSS

Pomeroy-Middleport-GIIHpolla, OH Point Plelllnt. WV

By DAVE SKIDMORE
be a lot harder for Sena1e Repu'?;
, For the Jdcdy a pb"e 6Ut or for tbe
credit to aions, a third faction - defic!t
A'IOdated Prf• Writer
ltcans to make those arguments,
the 1993 taxe.
' 1111
famlllea
,
or leu bawb In botb Jllrlles- II compliWASHINGTW- More than be said.
~
' citing !,be debate. A coalition or
any Other pan of the "Contract
The two parties agree on one Social Secunty redpients and an
~ith America,'· the proposed $189 p,oint: that they eacb have radically l!!~ase in their outside earnings
btllion tax reduction - House different notions of who should get . llm!LF b sinesses, a steep reducSpeaker Newt Gingrich's "crown- a tax cut. Democrats argue that taX .
or ~
ing j~wel'' - defmes the divisloos cuts should be aimed toward meet· ~on in capital gains taXes,
d.
between and among Democrats and ing needs, such as oollege educa- uye t~ the start of the .Y~·
Republicans.
lion for the. young.
!"ore generous depre~1~11on for
Gingrich and his lieutenants
. "Democrats believe in investing · mv~~tme~t in new buildings and
were m~uvering .over the weelc- in peopl~. We. belie.ve ~ trickle up. eqi:.~e~emocrats also would
end to urufy a fracUOU$ Repubbcan We do.n 1 believe m tr!ckle down ·ex and eligibility for IRAs. And
caucus to COf!Clude .the 100-day and th1s tax debate ... ts probal!ly -41 ·thf offer deductions for college
For all your Video Needs
GOP revolu11?n th1s week and ~e greatest d!fference and the ~ost tuidon and interest on student loans
Auto Insurance
wrap the party m the mande of tax 1mportant d1ffe~en~e t~at c.x1s~s and special interest-enhanced U.S.
Transfers, video Taping etc.
Low Down
relte.(.
.
between our parues, srud Mmon· Savin 5 Bonds for education.
.
Call VIDEO TRANSFERS
Democrats have thetr own !llucb ty Leader D1ck Geph~t, fl·Mo.
Th~y say aU the benefits of their
· Payment
narrower and less expens1ve pro- , But many .Repubhcans say the · t b'll would go 10 households
446·6939 or 441·054 7 .
posal, co~ting $24 billion over five govem':llent does"!' I need a reason . e~i~g less than $:100,000, while
SR-22
years. But mostly, the goal. of the to refram from taxmg anyone. ~ey . only half the benefits of the GOP
Cancelled/Rejected
Democrats w11l be to dep1ct the are unanologelic about cutung
ckage would go 10 f8lnilies mak• DUI • No Prior
GOP as intent on lining the pockets ~es for th"e wealthy, as well as the Fn~ at least that81Dount
·
Fresh shipment of Merckens
of the rich at the expense of the m1ddle class.
Ways and Means Committee
Insurance J
Chocolate for your Easter
poor. .
.
• "It's the people'~ money. It's Chairman Bill Archer, R-Texas,
Candy Making. Nice selection
· All Ages, All Risks
jl will be a set-piece battle of not the govem~ent s money.. ... com lains !bat Democrats are
of Easter Candy making
more than symboliC importance, We're not talkm~ about g1vmg lgno~ing the fact that wealthier
We try to insure
according ro J.D. Foster, executive them anything. Were talking about Americans pay more taxes. Tbe top
supplies in 'stock!!
everyone!
director of the Tax Fou~da~on, a not taki.~g a.way. the money th~y 10 ercent (those earning more
D.J.'s Craft Shop
non-profit research organtzauon.
earned, GIDg.nch, the. Geo~gla
$99,000) pay 47 percent of the
AUTOHIO lnsur~nce
2390 Jackson Pike
Fo~ the tax cuts'«:' have a chll!lce R~publiean, satd m an mterv1ew ' nation's taxes and that would no~
Gallipolis, Oh 446-2134
at bemg adopted 10 the Senate, w•th Davtd Frost. .
change -if the GOP package were
Phoria (614)4:46-6111
House Re.publicans will not unly
Reflecting that philosophy, the enacted, be said.
2 m~es west of
Gallipolis
have to WID the vote on the !louse Republican package offers s~meStill, tbe Democratic rhetoric
Holzer Medical Center
floor. they :VIII have to wiD the thing fornearlyevety !B"~yer.
has made many Reppblicans nerde~~te, he srud.
.
• For families ant\ m~viduals, a vous. More than 100, led by Reps.
. The House Republicans are $500-per-child Ia!' credit, a reduc· Greg Ganske of Iowa am! Pat
HOLZER HOSPICE
HOME HEAL~H
gomg to have to lead .... If they tion in the marnage pen~lty and Roberts of Kansas have signed a '
don't make their arguments con- expanded Individual Retuement .
'
·
VOLUNTEER TRAINING
CARE
vincingly and effectively, it's going Accounts.
.
' ··
Third Series of nine (9)
Medicaid/Medicare
sessions begins
approved, disability
Tuesday evening
approved .&amp; passport
April 4, 1995
approved.
7:30-9:30
p.m.
In
most
cases the care we
1
provide to you or your loved
5th Floor Classroom
By DAVID ESPO
in a-lengthy briefing paper he has less support last month.
ones can be provided at no
Holzer Medical Center
:Associated Preu Writer
been writing in hi&amp; Capitol oflice.
He also said Republicans can
cost to you.
WASHINGTON -Looking
• 'Med"icare must be trans- enact the cuts necessary to balance
Scheduled Tuesday
Al~o Hiring CNA's, HHA's &amp;
beyond the "Contract With Ameri- formed" and costs cut to head off the budget while preserving their
evenigns
April
•
June
· ca," House Speaker Newt Gingrich reductions in services and. financial new majority in 1996 "if we have
PCA's
intends to convene a two-day .crisis, the. document argues. Social a genuine dialogue with the Am.e'riEOE
614-446-3808
Call 446-5074 for
retreat for Republican lawmakers· Security is off the table, it sars. .
can people and they believe we're
Potential Clients May Call
information and
this spring to help forge agreement
The document pamts a gnm piC· listening and not just'talking."
· 1~aoo-7s9-s3a3
on the steps needed ·to balance the ture of the nation's future if deficits
"It can't be a secret plan to parregistration .
budget. · ·
.
aren't eliminated. It holds out the I a!Jel the Clinton secret heOlth plan
In an interview,' Gingrich said promise of a "balanced budget div- or we're dead," 'be said in a referPAST &amp; PRESENT
he believes the GOP majority will idend" if they are, consisting of ence to the administration's 1993
"BREATHE EASY"·
21 BThird Ave,
reach a consensus easily that ''the lower taxes' and lower interest rates proposal. Many Democrats have
An educational support
Will be open April 1st, 3rd,
adult thing to do" is to wipe out for consumeu oti car loans and sharply atlaclfed Republicans in
group for adults with
. 4th &amp; 5th 9-5.
the deficit by 2002. Still, he fore- mortgages.
rec.ent weeks, chargmg they are
cast "a lot of tension and a lot of
The document is expected to cutting social programs such as
chronic lung diseasB will
Like new stove plus
dialogue and a lot of conflict" as form the basis for Gingrich's school lunch to finance tax cuts for
else.
meet Wednesday, April 5
lawmakers spend months working speech to the country Friday night, the 'wealthy.
. ·
at 2 p.m. in the
out the dc!Jiils..
. an appearance unprecedented for a
A Time-CNN poll released Sat·
PREMIERE
Fench 500 Room at
Among the proposals under con- congressional leader.
·
urday put Gin!rich's disapproval
lhe 0.0. MciNtyre Story
sideration, he said, is to "collapse ·
In the intewicw Friday, Gin- rating at 47 percent, although 58
Holzer Medical Center
Chronicle
o I a Journalist of Note
at least three or four departments.'' grich said he hopes for a bipartisan percent rated the job performance
Speaker:
Nancy
Smith,
RN
A Docmentary Video
Republicans have previously men- majority behind the plan that of the Republican Congress as
8 p.m . AprilS
and
Patient
Represenative.
tioned the Departments of Energy emerges to balance th~ b'udget. "goOd" or "very good." The poll,
· and Housing an~ Urban ·Develop- Seventy-two Democrats voted for of 800 Americans, was conducted
Topic: Patient Rights,
ment as candidates for extinction, the balanced budget amendment in March 29-30. 11 had an. error marResponsibiliti~s and
ANGELL ACCOUNTING
with Education possibly to be January, but a $17 billion package .. gin of 3.5 percentage pomts.
Advanced Directives. Fo~
merged with Labor, Gingrich notes of actual spending cuts drew far
For Complete . Professional Individual
and Business Tax Preparation.
more information call the
•
ASK
US A!l"OUT ELECTRONIC
Holzer Health Hotline at ,
FILING.
1-800-462-5255
446-8677
736 Se(:ond

!•.•

. '8,900

•

iees

CongresSional GOP, Democrat! to ~~~e..2~!"~2~~t..=

Holzer Clinic's
Mr41ciM
and Rebabilitalton Departmeat.
Black, who b.u been With II!'~
sine~ 1989,
board cer'!~ed
phys1cal.med1C1De and rehabilita·
lion specialist
·

Western-Southern
plaos office move

1991 FORD T-BIRD
While/Blue Cloth, Only 51 ,000 jjji;;;....,.
miles, Tennessee Car

•

.-

I:

HONORED ON RETIREMENT -June
Wickersham, an employee In the Crow,&amp; Crow
law linn for more tban 20 years was honored on
her retirement .Friday. Cake and punch were
&lt;I

'

served. Tbrougb
years sbe ba~ worked witli
oil three attorneys, from left, Carson Crow,
Fred W. Crow and Judge Rick Crow.

Cail446-2342
or 992-2156
~OR MORE INFORMATIO~ .

~

'

�•

'

.'

•
Aprll2, 1115 .

Pomeroy-Middleport QeiRpolls, OH Polnl Pitt lint, WV

~~Y Times

11

Hllp Wtnted

AUCTION
Thu1'8dliy evening, April S. 1895
• PUBUC

(

5:3oP.M.

..2

WANl

In

...........

'

I

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUIIUC NOTICE
TM Sout!Mm· ConRr11um
lor 8o1Nrvlorol Hoolthcore
(SCBH)
Ia · onklng
propoulo lor tho purpooo
or conducting Stots Flocol
Y01r 1110 oudlto lor
conuoct ogencl11 ol tho
Alcohol, Drug Addiction ond
Montal Hoalth Sorvlce 0
lloordo aorvtna Adamo,
Lawrence 1nd Scioto
CountiH; AtiNrno, Hocking,
lnd VInton Countlea; Gellle,
Jackaon
and
Melga
Countloo; and Wuhlngton
County.
Elght11n ogoncloo with

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE .Is hereby given lhat
on Saturday, April 8th,
1995, at 10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be hold at 211 Weal

contract•

Air Canclll.._, ,._..
-, 'illid.l1tt•ntt

Winds

Public Sale
&amp; Auellon ,.

AUCTION

s F...tlr: =~.
-SAIM,

5

and Savings Company
reservao the right.to raject
any or all bids submitted.
Further, the above collateral
II be aold In the condition

HappyAds

BEAITIE ~L vD.® by Bruce Beattie

.,.y

lulkllna.

attend

b:~~::;•: muet

~

1

conference to b1

on Aprll24, 1985. at to
a.m. In tho olllco ol tho
Athono, Hocklng; Vlnlon 317
Board, 7990 Dairy Lane,

For Ohio additional
~~~~~~~~~~111 lnform1tlan,
Athena,
45701 .
cant1ct Etirl

Cocll, Chief Flacal Officer, at
&amp;14-5i3-31n.
Aprl12, 18115

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Kerr

•1- ,...

bom up. o.tdco8h, 101M t~ ..
women"• ~~ ..... d i tim,.'

. "My turn to tell a deep, dark secret? OK,
goes .. .I'm wearing a toupee!"

Rd :,

Bidwell, Ohio 45614. ·
Aprll2, 1985

The family of

1

,..,.,

Ill M .

I
kitchen I

suddenly heard a horn bl&lt;lw and
lOOked 0111 the window Tl'lerll you

were alttlnsJ_lt'rfie in you1 pretty red
Camaro. My rears 11ar1ed rolling
down my chtek• lind at I I06ked
CloMr I ..w that your lace was wet1.,.
thM ml~ wu a joyous morn+ng

and I kne"' that aflhOugh ot was
ru.ppening t~rangely, lt\8 Lord me11nt

tor.. u. lo be t~lhrtr and I hugged
you and yoor 11m1 were like a ~ilrm

btankltt anct I waa. once agatn a
complete person. The ntlll 24 houn
WWI OOM I lflfill cherill'l llwl'fll and:

a •you drove

away 1mabt. to barely
bf..lhe tor crying, I vowed that I

-

would hold on as you uk~ me to
;,nd wa+t for that day when once
again we

wo~o~ld

blend our toula

Remember 'tlll'hen we went deep ·
••• f11hing ? I got 11ck an~ wa~
SC4fed to death You 1atd y.ou weoren I
btJI afterwards ,.ou told me that you
dktn 't think wt would eover get back
How atlout wMn vou tooM me
canoemg at Wt•kwa Springs In
FIQIIda? We went several t1mes and
you w11r8 1u&lt;:h a handsome
rfavt0atol1 We saw tnat Gar l1sh and
you CQUI&lt;!n't baheve il: you thought If
some ktnd ol an alt1gator Oh
, t
so t:IJ18. I love you
tpec•al limes

•

Nancy and I hllve.become c:I05e
W~ i1 didn't h.ppen bafore . I dOn'!
know. She d!dnl IIIJIM with how YQUf
was going 1:1u1 she didn't know
'fO'I' plans I am 'hankful that you
atways tcnaw that,. no maner wnether
yvu two quarreled Of not, you hlod f'ltr
IOP90f'l and &amp;he had )'0\1(1 She Wlolll
now. at I do , to ue you tn her
dr..,.
'
I'm IOU)' . that )IOU I I lOll
arrangemants were msde by y01.1r
par•nts. I knew, 11 everye)l'le atn
dOM wfiO
you , lhaf ypu W9uld

would like to thank
everyone tor all the
lood, · flowers &amp; cards
sent at the time ol our
great loss . Thanks to
Rev. David Hopkins &amp;
Church of Christ ol
Christian Union,~ .Fred,
Joan &amp; Gene Wood &amp;
1he . funeral home .
Thanks to the Johnson
Family for their special
songs.
Thanks to
Holzer Home Health for
their home visits &amp; care
they gave to our
mother.
A very special thank
you to Holzer Hospice
Group1 without Hospice
we could not have been
able to keep our mother
at home where she
wanted to be. May God
richly bless each and
every one whom helped
out with care &amp; th e
visits you gave to our
mother. You ·gave us
your time &amp; that' s
something that can't be
bought &amp; it will never be
lorgotten . Our mother
was a .very special lady;
she taught us a lol.
She'll be greatly
missed.
Sadly missed by
children, grandchildren
&amp; great-grandchildren

not h...,.

•new

waM~

tl'lal Na~y WOlild

haW D:ed to h-ave \&amp;ken charge but
ah• 1)01: Only le lt overwhaii'Y\ed by
pafltllanu, aha wa1 also too

cMYutal«l to
I "W810'1

From Gallipolis, Take Route 141, Tum

HEAL'IM RECOVERY
IEAYICU, INC.

· '

1-P.N. Full Or Port Tlmo, Third

TRUCKLOAD OF

w- Co•••

-N. AAnrlA11ld1IWIII
Or
TtMtm1111 1
FICII!r In AIIMrnl c-.ty. D!!ra
And Alcohol AI ChiiJ EX·
Jmportarw.
E.O.E.

salary

. NEW &lt;;:ARPET

""""*

Emplofor.

SOME NEW FURNITURE

-

LIIIW And
..._,,.9anrl
· To Ccwor
Heltlh Recau,.r

'

~iving Room

- - . Inc. Altn: Noncr Dol·
~-0.

Bo1 724, AI- 011

JOIN A WINNING TEAIIII
lmnrodlato _,tng lor

Giveaway

==·

ono oiOIIIo'elo-'11~

Card of Thanks

7:00P.M.

1

'!""

Marlin Wedemeyer, .
Auctioneer
(614) 379-2720

::;~ =-r.::re:

Ucensed &amp; Bonded State of Obio, Lie. 113615

..--ry lor clrMng.
Send ..-.me •IPPIY In pereon

. NOT RF.sPoNIILE FOR ACCJDEHTS OR LOSS PF PROPERn'

w1l bo

The tamity ot

An

Paul Ragan
would like to extend a
special '.'Thank You" to
Pastor Joseph Godwin
~nd all the lriends and
families who sent
food , cards and
· flowers at the time of
Paul's death.
It was all greatly
appreciated.
Mary Ragan;
Marty, Pam and Heidi
LindamOOd;
Florence Ragan ;
tom &amp; Sue Ragan: .
Frank &amp; Joan Stewart

Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency has
funds. These funds can be used to pay
of retraining (tuition, fees, textbooks) at
lst:ho•ols such as The. University of Rio Grande ,
IBuclceye Hills Career Center, Hocking College,
IU)unty JVS, and Ohio University.
To qualify for these funds, individuals must u~uall)ll
·1 h·' "" become unemployed due to a business closfng
I re,du•ction in force type layoff. Income is not USIIally
lfa,crr~r. Certain additional restrictions and requm·em''""' 1

Tllanks to all who
llelped to make my
"93rd'' so special.
103 Cards
Mabel
5

1

11;· ~~~i~l;,; · a limited amount of dislocated wo,rkr:rl

1•

~~;:p~~f;,;~' Priority consideration will be given

HappyAds

I'

already enrolled in training.
believe you may qualify, please call~"'-'·"··'
•~ ''A~ or 614· 992·6629 to have a pi·e-applic:ati•onl
1marre:o to you. Pre·applications' are
available
JTPA offices at 859 Third Ave ., Gallipoli~ and
05 Highland Rd ., Pomeroy, and tire Job
·
!office at45 Olive Street, Gallipolis.
Gallia-Meigs Community A.;tion Agency

Happy 35th
An~iversary,

Jim &amp; Elsie·
Folmer

Excellent Benefits

"A piece of the action" with Stock Purchase and
Savings lnvestmen~ P~ans
0

limitation or discrimination.·

CONTACT: Eric Ellenberger
Monday April3 . From 9:00 am to·s:OO pm
Hn 4·446·2142

This ne~per. wiU no'
knowllngly accept
advertisements for real estate
whiCh Is In violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basts. ·

1

269S. EOE

JTPA Programs
8010 North Stat~ Route 7
PO Box 272
Cheshire, OH 45620-0272
614-367·7342 614~992·6629 .
Equal Opportunity Employer

Love you,
The Kids I

L0GHOMES
Comfort, COI:~~::~~:.I
energy
durability
flexibility in design
a few of the reasons
why· 20,00 families will
build a log home this
year! .

CONTRACTORS SOUGHT
FOR BIDDING

Announcements

NOTICE
Beginning Monday, April :J, 1995, the Gallia·Meigs
Community Action Agency. acting on behall of tne
Gallia County Commissioners, will accept applications for .the county's Housing Rehabilitation
Program in the Villages of Po&lt;1er and Bidwell. The
Housing Office is located in Porter in the rear ot the
old United Methodist Church at 863 Porter Road.
The hours fol taking applications are ~:00 a.m. to
4 :30 p.m., Monday through Thursday. This is a
target area program designed to rehabilitate
substandard homes and improve 'them to meet the
State's R~sidenlial Housing Standards. The target
area is designated for the Villages ol Poner ·and
Bidwell only. To be eligible, applicants must be
homeowners ~esiding within the target alea and
must riot exceed the income efigible guidelines.
Interested persons should call Dotty Hill at the
Housing Office at 388-8232 for more information
and/or an appolnt"'!ent to complete an application.

due lo rapid

Attractive Bonus Plan for Store fy1anagers

new

Gallia· Melgs Community Agenpy is administering a housing rehabilitation program lor the
Gallia County Commissioners lit the Villages of
Porter and Bidwell. Contractors interested in
bidding lor the rehabilitation work shoula ·c ontact
the housing office.

1

•

HAWK Missile Team.
Missile Team in Mc&lt;:oonetswJe, Obio with the Obio Army Nalionai'Guanl.
.. The Obio ~ National Guard is the bes\.part-time jOO that will train yoo

Is

The housing office
located in the old United
Methodist Church, 863 Porter Road, Porte~ Ohio.
ThEi office Is open 8:00 a.m. through 4 :30 p.m .,
Monday through Friday. The. housing rehab
specialist is Dotty Hill and can be reached at 614388-6232.
•
.

'
'

I

With 00 ezpel Jella! necessary.
Uyoo are looking to learn avaluable sl:ill in the electratics or medwrial
field. this is an opportunity yoo can not afton! to pass up. GiYe us a ff!W weeks a
year and wt11 give yoo a future. Limited poaitioos mnable, caD lllday. Hlong
. distance - caD collect:
.

.

.,

design one for you.
Call or 'write for mo...,
infomatlon.

•• •

Appalachian ·Log

In McConneiiiVille
962-5484

•

70

standard
models or we 'II CIJ!itom

over

We need a few select men and wmten ages 17 to 34 to train for the HAWK

Therefore, interested contractors should · vi~it ihe
housing office to receiv~ an ·update on upcoming
construction activities ·and to complete the
contractor's application.
•

.

Appalachian
Log
Structures has been a
leader in tbe log honie
industry for over 15
years. Choose from

-

The· primary purpose of this activity is to rehabilitate
substandard homes in a designated 1arget .w ithin
the villages. · The rehabilitation work will be bid out
ta local private building contractors.

Structures, Inc.

~pt.GD1,

P.O. Box 614
Ripley, WV

25271
1-800458·9990

.Americans At Their Best
•

.

. .,

Dan Smith - Racine, Ohio Auctioneer

Ale

expansion

challenges, an excellent
salary and ~nefllt package.
and growth opponunlty. For
lmmedl~ll consideration ,
contact: Chrlatlna 0 . Palik,
RRA, Regional Recruiter,
Community Rehabilitation
Centers, Inc.; lil18 Younge·
town-Warren Rd .• Suitt C.,
Nlleo, OH 44446. (8001 8&lt;6·

adv~ncement

.

Now availble FmHA One Bfl apts.
Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,
Basic monthly Rent $269.QO.
Resident pays electric only Range,
on -site laundry,
Refrigerator,
Community Room, Management,
Maindmance' provided

AvOIMIO, Golllpollo, un 4M3!.

All teal estate ad\4ertlsing In
thiSnewspaper Is subject to
"the Federai "Falr Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It illegal
to advertise- "any preference,
llmnation or discrimination
based on r8ce, colOr, religiOn.
sex famUiat status or national
origin. or any intention to
make aoy such preference,

l

I.

'

'

Saturday, April 8, 1995
10:00A.M.
Located from Rutland, Ohio on St. At. 124. Take New
Lima Rd. approx. 3 miles to Loop Rd. C. 60, lhen next
rd. Macumber Rd. Co. 4, then 3.5 to !arm . Mr. Brogan
has sold larm and will sell the lollowing:
"Household"
65,000 BTU Warm Morning gas heater, watertall bed,
twin beds, large metal trunk, full b~ds, misc. tables ,
tamps, chairs, dresser base, kitchen table, misc. linens,
wardrobe, electric sewing MJIIChing, bar stools, stove wl
oven on top, el~ctric adjustable bed. hospital bed,
humidilier &amp; dehumidilier. dishes. pols &amp; pans. ·
"Misc.n
Myers shallow well jet pump, lawn chairs, fruit jars,
electric water heater, fans , appro•. 100 pieces .ol Avon,
new sewing items, ice cream freezer, log chains, tool
ch~SI, gas carw. small air compressor, misc. hand loots.
lumber, rabbit ~age, overhead gas healer. bartled wire .
36" storm doors &amp; stor"l windows. grill &amp; lots more.
Own&lt;!Wohn Brogan, Jr.
These items have b{en consigned by neighbors:
"Tractor"
W.O. Alii Chambers
"Household"
4 pc bedroom suite, sectional couch w/ reclining end
pieces, J.C. Penny green dryer. Kenmore while washer,
green velour love seat, corner tables, dresser base,
night .stand, writing desk , Sears eleclric sewing
machine in cabinet, · blonde coffee table , misc. chairs,
ea~y American chair, photography eq~ipment , new ski

MACHINERY AUCTION .
MASON COUNTY F.AIRGROUND8
· RT. 82 N OF POINT PI F•i•NT, YN·--··
SATVAOAY,APRL 8, 1 10:00A.M.-? .

..

• No Mollxlzed T1INcl Yrohlcln Ol'llll*t nlr ·
. •M F11111 Rel.r.d ~ '•'Vtlcoml
• Conllgnmenta ~w; eptec1 Friday, Aprtt 1, 19115
From 12 Noon • 8:00 P.M. And Salulday, Aprtt 8

From 8:00A.M. Unlll-&amp;rle Time.
• For Mora lnformlllon Cell 773-5898
·• ~ M~ ~Tax Elc8mpt""'mber Or
Pay Sales TIX • No ExceptiOIII
.
• Clllh or Check Wflh Proper I. D.
• Not RespoMfbfe For~
.• M Commlnlcors Go To TheM- County Fllfr
A•ICing 1111' tie lhroUgh Wllll'l•gUa Flim
· Q ... ACA AIIII•ICinglllbJid ID llfiPIOWII ··
~ Wllt\11glrtla Firm Clecii,ACA
AUCTIONEERS
Edwin Winters

N334 and

Rick Pearson

N66

HUTCHINSON AUCTION, INC.
.ANTIQUE AUCTION
SUNDAY APRIL 9 AT 10:00 A.M.
.. . ALBANY OHIO
PREVIEW 8:30A.M. DAY OF AUCTION
Take US 50 and
west ,of Athens, Ohio and exit
onto 50 west toward McArthur. Auction is a quarter
.
ol mile on left signs posted.
Oak knoc.kdown wardrobe w/ mirrors in doors
2 dra·wers: oak Jelly cupboard; oak hoosier style
cabinet; unusuar oak • table w/ 3 t.eaves; oak
.sideboard · w/ claw ' teet ; oak secretary bookcase:
unusual ice box wl water cooler and spicket in lront;
picture frames ; 2 pc. depression bedroom suite;
stands; wal. 3 drawer • washstand ; beds; ·early
rosewood piano prior to 1890 old batten board rol)e;
dressers w/ mirrors; colt model 1861 .58 cal musket
w/ bayonet: n~wer hand woven rugs: 84, 5, speed
Dodge Charger wl 2.2 hire. bearrngs; glassware ;
smalls and colleclibles . Hocking· Valley Long Girl
picture, 1916; mission oak grandlather clock; mission
oak sideboard, 2 sl!lck bookcases. Partial listing,
see lull ad in Apr il 3 Antique Week . Taking
consignments . Term,s : Cash . check, or travelers
check w/ positive·tO. Clean facil~y wl food available.

32

Auctioneer Mark Hutchinson

614-698-6706
Licensed and Bonded in Ohio
Business Partner Frank 11utchinson
6.14-592-4349

Real Estate General

.,.so
•

REALTY COMPANY
M ichael Watson, Broker
Office 675·3433 - 675-71 09 Home

Serving Mason And Gallia Counties

WE NEED LISTINGS!

Cash
Positive 10 ·Refreshments
"Not ~esponslble lot accidents or loss ol property "

Syracuse, Ohio

· llpollo Drolly Trlbu".!1,82! Third

lmmedi3te compensation on self· performance
consi~ting of commission with minimum guarantee

Our busy, dynamic and
supportive envlronme~nt
continuous

a.

Program

Ample opportuoity fN

'

, Apanment

VtiMERS EDGE APARTM~NTS

lle&lt;ICIII Ex·
A Pl.._ldool
ltoelllon For AN, LPN, AT, 01', Or
PT l..ool!lng Foi A Clranga. ~
AU Aapll• Conlldontlil,
Aooumo To: CLA 3411, c/o 0.~

.....l"y. All)'
• .oortonce Would

PUBLIC AUCTION

typewriter, typewriter table, Yenecian blinds lor car,
misc. pictures, dishes: etc.
·

for Rent

SUCCESS PACKAGE
Comprehensive Retail Management Training ·

Rehabllltallon Centera, lne .
haa Created excellent career
opportunities at · oUr Galli·
polia, OH facility. Join one of
the leading providers . df
quality rehabilitation aer·
vleea and take your career to
the next level.

offers

44

already make you a'n excellent candidate.
JNe seek Success-driven women and men
with a desire tb use their sales talents,
work hard, and achieve.
·

LICENSEO COTAs
$3500 Slgn-on·Bonus
$35K+IYr. DOE
Continued growth and
expanalon at Community

Ohio 1344 WV 515
Not responslble.for accidents or loss of proper1y.
Will be held Inside buildfng - Come early
·
and stay late.

exerciser, large owl, Hoover upright sweeper1 manual

.. Rlvordalo HcrmriO, tn2i irHI Drive, Logon Ohio 431:18,
·~·~ 1367.
.
Local -leal B - Buolno•
. - - T o · - Sol•
/Morbllng -totlcrno To
Phpdone And HMith Core
Foclllllolr. Muot Hovo Good
Communlc.lltion Skllla, Sel~
llollvotod, And PlooNnt P•

Your college degree or sales/
sates managemenl experience may

.

Announcements

Opportunity Employer

Join the Leader In
Consumer Electronics
·Installing

OCCUPATIONAL
THERAPISTS
$5000 Slgn·on·Bonus
$55K/Yr. OOE
3

Eq~a)

Suites, etc.

Also: Sale Every Saturday At

Drl-rvlc:e Tochnlclon with

-·-

Left.

Onto Route 775, Thrn Right Onto Patriot
Cadmus Road. Watch For Signs.

HELJI WAHI'ED

..,.nr:o, 401K and bo ..rd worldng, Mel OIN about the cu.tomer.

m.-

3

. . -Jon. •"!!lnn.

llipwtonco wlh - 11om. pefw1ud. COL Me.,_

Edna Kingery
· tha lied to walk ltlrough

4

Card of Thanks

including

-:::::7:c':=-====:-c:=

Elrm up 1o f1000 -.v llulllrrg L
- II Homo.
-·
No -~~~F,..S!.rt
.,,..._
~
No Cli&gt;N(iOtlon.
ti.A.S.E to
Dool.
o ~.lu~~FL

Shell Chemical Company
Human Resource Dept.
State Route 2
Apple Grove, WV 25502

....

M1rch 24, 26, 21, 1995

1

s.to. sat

Aprl 1. 111
Pt...ant •· Glt18 Mlmmtr, win•• ciDI:t..l. ~.

Pallo

APRIL6, 1995
AT7:00 P.M.

~

Please send resume
requirements,to:

Dan Smith - Auctioneer .

THURSDAY;

This Is a first line supervisory position and
requires . a background in all phases of
instrument/electrical work ,from power
distribution to distribuiive control systems. A
strong management· background with basic
computer skills would be beneficial. An excellent
benefit pac_kaga is provided.

PUBUC NOTICE
The Sprlngllsld Townahlp
TruatHa will receive ae1led
blda tor 1 1885 GMC dump
truck model C70 until 7
p.m., April 5, 1995 at which
limo they will bo publicly
ope.,ed and rea.d.
The Townahlp Trua\ooa
reeervea the right to accept
or rolact any or all blda.
All bldo ohould be
aubmlltod In Iotter form ond
marked Truck Bid. Sond
blda to Herman Sprague,
1474

wantld

Area Manager
. Instrument - Electrician

PubliC Notice

Clerk,

Further item listing in
next SundaY's paper

u.8.

Shell Chemical Company's Point Pleasant
Polyester Plant located at Apple Grove ~ in
Mason County is seeking qualified applicants for
the following position:

In the office ol the Southorn

~i

Cadmus Crossroads

----~

11.

OWner - Osby Martin
,.
Cash
Posnlve 10
•
Relrelhments by W.M. Youth of Melgo Co.

Jack &amp;Shirty Miller

CoinL M.T.I. Coin 8hop,
111111ondAwrMue.Ooi'J "e ..,

.

2136.
(3) 2, 4, 7, 1995 3TC ,

Three coplea of your
propoeal mJ,~at be r"celved
no later then the cloee of
bualneat on
19, 1195,

~-

FIN llartrol • -

It s In, with no express or
1. lied warranties given.
For further Information,
contact Mike Kloes at 992·

toter tiNrn thirty deyo sltor
the completion ol !laid
work.

eo. Ill' ;. 114 Mllll7.
!op Plolrl: AI ON

- , . , 4 t h , - ....... 114'
2M-1m, 114 .........

~

be completed no later then
Soptembor 30; 1885. All
reporta muat be. la1ued no

Hnlthcoro, Attn :, Chlol
Flocal Olftcor, P.O. Box 132,
Dolry Lono, Athena,
45701. All potantlol

""'*--IXTa7-

Wlllilld to 'Buy .

,.

coll8teral prior to sale.
Furlher, The Farmera··Bank

$22,.52,000 w111 bo oucllt~·d.
All field work Ia oxpectod to

,. . . .,

9

April15
Farm·&amp;Antique

WoJlur: Wlh Or To
WllroUI
Col
Lany Uwly.'t11 TTIS ·
Wonted To Jlur:- l.lllo 01rtrr

Second, Pomeroy, Qhlo, to

sell lor cash tho following
collateral:
1989 Chevy Cavalier
11G1C11t8KJ118991
'tho Farmera Bank, and
Savings company, Pomeroy
Ohio, reserves the right to
bid ot thla sale, and to
withdraw the abov.e

totalln

Cctn1ortlum tor Behavlorel

-nrl.-

...... . . _ •¥. nrln ..
........
1rooooo-Ad.,
'"' loll, llor. t\ Apr. \ I a

WORK!
~

HappyAds

KIT 'N' CARl.YLU by Larry Wrflbt

Aos-~

In loving memory of
Curtis and Jim
Jones.
CuniS passed away on
April4, 19&amp;4. Jim passed
away March 13, 191is.
They are gone lrom our
midst, but not lrom· our
hearts. Though many
yaars have passed, we've
not lorgotten the many
times they've made us
·
laugh.
Sadly missed by
""'""'"'· Ayward and Mae
sons
and
brothers and
nieces ·and
neptJews.

5

Located at St. Rt, 7 &amp; 33 lnterchailge atthe Meigs
Co. Fairground, Porlreroy, Ohio. Watch tor signs.
"Antique or ColleciO&lt;S Items"
Large Victorian Walnut whatnot stand, W.F. Slvera
Bidders bottle, square. oak dloing IOOI'(t table w/large
tumed legs, walnut 6 legged ~lnlng room table, oak
drop teal table w/4 chairs. oak country kHchen table,
oak dresser, dresser base. &amp; chest, Jenny Lind bed, 6
ff: oak counter top, slant glaS$ showcase, spinning
wheel balancers &amp; misc. assry., 5 she~ whatnot stand,
mamle top stand, picture trames, stone jar$ &amp; jugs,
clock &amp; mouse cookl~ jar, records, lard press, several
old canes, wash boards, Iunny books, glassware
(Depression, Fenton, China, etc.), carniv~l glass piggy
banks; tools, irons, boHies, martlles, pocket knives,
·kraut cutter: oak printers table, smoking stand, trunks, ·
16 oak restaurant chairs, 2 oak church pews: kitchen
•cabinet w/roll , d~ll cradles, G.l. Joe action, Batman
toys, costume jewelry, etc., coppsr wky still.
"Household &amp; etc."
Magic Chiel gas range , baby bed, 6 metal bar stools,
27.1 cu. It Kenmore Freezer, wood kitchen cabinet ,
misc. stands &amp; tables, 2 pc living room suite·, dresser, 3
wheel bicycle, bicycles, several lawn mower$. child's
rocking chair, lloor lamp, etc . .•.

Ptgt D5

Sentinel

SEE MANAGER FOR

1
1

HIUo N~l Conler, Ia
ng
Appllc.~tiontl From
at• T... ed

-

Nursing A••lltanl For FuiJ.Time
Midnight Shift And Pa~·Tlmo All
Shlfta. If You Are lnl.,.llod In

Real Estate G"neraf

DALE t TAYLOR

a

POMEROY: Good starter
home or investment. 3

bedrooms, approximately
3/. acre, nice garden spot,
recently remodeled. Excel·
tent price ol $13,500.

'62,500

good price

Mike Watson, Broker 67S·71o9
"'Pam Muncy, 675·2415
Nick Rogers, 675·7933

·

Leonard Cornell, 615.3964 ·

Equal Housing Opportunity

~-

Real Estale General

OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY 1-3

• Convenient Location
o New equipped kitchen wHh custom oak
cabinets, tile coantertops and hardwood lloor
• Beautitul woodwork throughout home
• Well·maintained
o City Schools
• Patio &amp; Approx. 1 - acre yard

614-245-5399
Shi•rtev Loeoer will be your hostess for lhis new three
bedlroo•ml~•o bath · home nl3sMd on a wooded 2-acres.
first-time buyers. $65,000. Additional acres
are
I
. Directions from Pomeroy: At. 33 to · 681 to
Vance Road. From Athens: 50 Wast to 681 thru Albany to
Vall\~ Road past Snowville. Follow signs .

ATHENS REALTY
I MAKE IT HAPPEN

592-1146

--

Gl
LEHOI:ft

LETART·RACINE ARE.
6.33 acres, nice 3
bedroom home. Country
se,tting, mobile home site .
Large .yard very accessible to state highway.
Great
po1e9tial.
Only
$25,500 .

·We Need Your Ltoltng
David 1- Paroont
AIIOCIIII
892-2237
Dale

·w:
NEW LISTING· CIRCL:f.: DRIVE · offero; !hi~ lrkc new ranch
style home, 3 BR, I tn tiaths, fu ll ba..ement, 1 car go._ragc: ..large 1~.

.

POMEROY: 4 bedrooms,
2 tots, private location.
Close lo schools and
town. Just$t8.500.

MEIGS-GALLIA UNE: 50
secluded acres ready to
be built on or use tor a
private getaway. Very
spaclous road frontage .
Asking $22,600.

·Attractive, 3 BR Honie in Rio Grande

'

137 Butlernut Avenue.
Pomeroy,Ohio 45769
(614) 992-5333
LANGSVILLE AREA: A
great buy. Counlry living at
an affordable pnce in this
3·4 bedroom retnodeled
home. Nice yard, garage,
heat
pump
and
a
SWIMMING
POOLo
Comes with many extras.
Asking $29,500.

FOR SALE

RENT UP SPECIAL

614·992-6419 TOO 1

I

Reat Estate General

· FOR SA.LE -HOME
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car attached
' storage bldg.,_ he.a't pump,
garage,
.kitchen appliances.
Price $58,000.00
C~LL 614-367-7504

MEIGS COUNTY

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
(614) 742-3171 or 1-800-585·7101

lB. RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER ..::!!l
.

Cheryl Lemley.............. 742-3171

;am;:;

PRICE REDUCED -Tuppers
Plains- lmrtmd1a.te poSS9SIOO Is
possible in this 3 bedroomr ancn
home Th1s home is located In a
good netgh·borhood on a lot
that is 100x400 that panlally
fenced rn LA 1s set.up lor you to
hOok up a woodburne~ il you
choose EaHn k1tctlen ·1s
charming and has a dishwasher
fcir your convemence. One balh,

lltllity room, 1 car garage,
carpon, crawl space. Insulated
Le fUs sJ'low you th1s home right
away'

IMMEDIATE ·.OCCUPANCY! For this 1 1/2 story
home, 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room. kitchen
complete w/relrigerator &amp; range. 30' x 32' garage
situated at College Avenub. $20's.
1746
LOOKING I'OR .A NICE LOT? THEN CONSIDER
ONE OF THESE:
.
'9,000
11
4;507 acre• mlf
12
4.815 acrea m/f
. 1Qd)OO
13 • 4. 702 ocrea nVI""
tf/000
14
3.881 ocr•• iiM"'
8,000
15
4.190 acree m/1
5,000
16
5.442 acr. ._m/1
10,000
17
6.148 a~r. . m/1
6,000
18 10.320acra• m/1
11,000.
fi
7.253 acres ln/1
. 7,000

.

47159 EAGLE RIDGE ROADI Aluminum sided 1
story home, living room, kitchen, ovet sized detacl1ed
2 car garage. FA electric furnance. Additional mobile
home hook·up. Must call today lor an appolntm&lt;~ntl
1558

.

4 ~UILDING LOTS situated in Pomeroy. Lots ran1le.ll
trom appro•. 2.808. acres up to 6. 726 acres, Call
for more information.
·
1751

PciMEAOY - 4 mi. nonh on SR
7 On~ of. the ltnest homes in
the area ts now avallalllel Tt11s
.Quality home otters a lg Ioyer.
LA. w/1p, FA wlfp, oat-1n k!lchen
w/appl., tormal DR. Ig Ulillty rm,
2'h ballls , 4 BR jmaster BA
w/dressing rm &amp; batt\), lull .
bsmt.. 2 car gar, pnvate
blad!.top dnvew&lt;Jy. pool. 3 stg
btdgs .. &amp; lots ot privacy 2 acres
.mil Call &amp; let us quality youlor
this home

0·

Your home
could be
pictured here!
POMEROY - ,Trlls nice stone
hOrne Is tocated on Unioo Ave
on 3 lots II otters 3 bedrooms. a
bath, a large living room, eat·
tnkltOhen. lull basement and 2
car gB.rage 1 lloor plan. o
ASKING $2,800.

LIST
WITH US'

MIOOLEPORT- N Sec .~ 4 BR, bath, LR. kit . alum lldtng Would
make a good hOrne or rental prope~ Alduet&lt;l to StoSOO.

'

LANGSVILLE - Great Hunllngl S"eauhlully r6modeled (almost done)
plus re acres 111~. ~BR. LR, FR. DR Nlc ehome
us todoif Only

S2u.too.

ca•

.

SYRACUSE - Beautiful oldor 2 story house on a comer lot Wtlh an
tlttra gardel"\ 101 Tt"lis hom&amp; features I! large bly wlnoow, big front
porcn 6 patiO. Appliances tnclueled w/klt . 3 BR. 1~ bath, lR, FR.
basement.
'

•

�..

'

.

.

~

•

•

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Pege-07
Pomeroy-Midd~Upollt, OH-Point Pleaunt, wv-

2,

• l'

Renta ls

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1ve stock

41 HoUIII for Rent

45

61 Farm Equipment

Fumlshld

Rooml .

-m--.. . . . . .

lnllmol- - .
.,....1147.
llollr -"1
1171

lllrll.. 0 1 - - . - Helol.

1111 ...1110.
'

campers&amp;
MolorHomn .

Truok
Club - ·

,.

.

r:::"'i" ·::: ='~

Wood Real'ty, Inc ..

,_..,.,.. ~
atlor Z:OO P.IILo
304-77'Swlllt, ....... wv.

3~ Locust Street, Gallipolis

46 Space tor Rent

446-1066

. "·
f.zt410
XLT lMIOI
· IIW
F 1 INII'dltve, ~ 'ottPI', .. 1ha ..._
111,000.

-_ . .-,

Trill.- Lal Eloctrlc /Wator -

......

Up,t~m.

42 Mobile Homes

Sun Valloy N~.. .,
ClllkfcarollloF --..:.30pm Agioo
2·K. Young So- AaO !luting
Sum-. J Do~ por WHII Min''
lmum 114-441-3157.

I •

~

-

tor Rent

-.U,OOO

.,Jroh,..w ,.,..., r I . . And
~And­

........

Tax' • ra AM, c.h Anlll
-PU, I
~ lllloe, III.IOo, 1 - Carry T,.,._latlant, 1'144112281

-

MdO Z lr, 1 rnllo Iauth of
Eurollo, on St. Rl.l No pOlo,

,...,. a••.t14

~

a• tote.

SARAH -WINDS
NEW HOME
DEVELOPMENT
Restrited. Green Elementary
Schools. located on a paved
road. Call for more details ,

liM Ft.
- 1141.Cottlo
Trellllr,
$'1,M,I14
311

,o

Allen C. Wood , Realtor/Broker-446-452:'1
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Bro~er-446·097 1
Mose Canterbury, Realtor·446·34G8
Jeanette Moore, Realtor- 256·1745 ·
Tim
Realtor-446-2027

-

Cho"J'
- _,
:MR
homO, .,.__
OOOd condMion. 304-456-iau.
-Tony R..a.t tmolt-.
22',
lurnoco,
lllce - . · - · 114-

*• -....

=t

c.r.-lblo 8 1 - T- For

""' 8lzo Pick-Up Will Hold •

Chllclron Or 2 ,AduMa, 814-448-

4138Afti(3P.M.

~.

NEW
• LOVELY HOME
8 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 balhs: Family room,CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT.

...

HOME FOR SALE • View of River. 3 bedrooms, bath,
living room, kitchen, In-ground, pool , ·2 ear garage, city
schools. CALL FOR

Fmanc1al
21

HOME FOR SALE 3 bedroom, balh, living room, family
room, kitchen, lenced.in back yard. REALTOR OWNED.
PRIG EO AT $45,000.00

Buslll8SS

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
IB 1·8"o0-.585-7101 or 446-7101 a

I

I

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER.446·4618
Judy DeWit\ .................................. 441-0262
J. Merrill Carter............................. 379,2651
Ruth Barr.............:.........................446-0722

Tammie DeWilt .... ,,,'"·'""",, .......... 245·0022
Martha Smilh ........................ """" J79-2651
Cindy Drongowski ........................ 245-9697
Chcryll.cmly ............... :................ 742-3171
WHAT ABOUT THIS? 2 large
lots and this very nice ranch
home witt:l living room, dining
ream , kitchen , 3 bedrooms.
There Is an electric heat pump,
black to~ drive, 24' x 32'
detached msulated 3 car garage,
plus two storage buildings and a
complete satellite system. 1740

.

Real Estate

'

Ook Hulcll, Couch, Air CondMionoro • 2100 BTU'o,
SWJoa
Glklor, Golf iron

w-.
4411224.

~-.,.

NEW LISTING- 2 homes located on approximately 1 tk
acres. One home ha~ 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, I 112 baths,
living room, dining room , family, kitchen. One home has
·a rooms, 4 :bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, kitchen,
family room. Both have rura! water, LP gas Furnace, ;;md

more. Call lor appoinlment to see
LOT IN GREEN TWP FOR SALE· 156 X 100, city water ,
&amp; sewer, electric to pole. Priced at $14,000. Will sell on
Land Contract· $5,000 down paymenl, payments ot
$191 .23 per month lor a period of 5 yrs. Call tor more

information.

L

•

HOME ON RACI:OON CREEK· 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,

~

liVing room, dining.room, kitchen, 2 car garage located

on approximately 1 1/2 acres more or less. City Schools.

CALL TO SEE!

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

VACANT LAND • Approximalely 10 acres located on
Bob McCormick Ad. Call lor more information.
~ FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
!:i::! OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER IJl
Ll':~=
1~800--894-1 066
'
ot...... -

m

'

.'

beautiful view. Large living room
and famil~ room each with a
fireplace. '3 bedrooms, 1 112
baths . Lots of cabinets In

13-And Bam I Houoo3
Bedi'OCHM, 1 112 latM, LA, l
Pavlld Or:ttMWay. a1 t 118 0136.

kitchen, large dining area. Super
location close to hospital and

shopping.

11811 14170 CO!!!- ....
U. An Olfor, :104-4175-3341.

N71 5

, 2-olory gorogo, booklo · Hovon 9-morlcOI, floor compa.tety ,.., ad1l1d, 2
bl~: {Iron! bly 40'1128'.
bty u·xn·,, 100'x40' lot,

RL 143- A 1 1/2 story, 4 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath home·
that has a beauiHul stone fireplace between living
room and dining room, has spacious eat-in kitchen, a
large 2 car garage with workshop, cel)ar w/storage
above, and is all silting on approx. one acre. $49,!100

·.

-r

Prime Huntlng, Priced To s.m
814-:IN-2240.

~3;_,Bod=n&gt;Ot=m=-=Soc1::=;:1on::o::;I-;A;:p::pro=•.~1
YNr Old, Approx. • Mil•• Ofl35

On Bulavlllo Pllce, ~~-2118 .

Squoro Baloo 01 Hoy
Road, Spngu.

2585.

S21,000. :J!M--82-:I'IU.
3 Bedroom ttom. In Country
For Solo By Ownor, Soiling On 3
Acrea, Rural Water. ~ted
Bl'twMn Patriot I Northup,

..----

IS LEFT - Everything you could ask lor
and more including extra land when 'you buy this
picture book beauty. This is what awaits you when
you see this beautiful Country Home that includes 4
Bedrooms, 2 1/2 Baths, 2 Car Garage, very well
const'.!'cled with features too numerous to menlion.
A ver~ convenient location only minutes from
shQpping &amp; Holzer Medical Center. don 't wait until its
too · late to see this outstanding Home.
#71B

227 LARlAT DRIVEl Exceptional
2,200 sq. ft. ranch. vinyl siding,

31 Homes for Sale

..........

INFORMATIO~ .

on

Korr

a-., 114-441-

,,
8 31-oo on Tobnor M-. Rd.
318mllo oil Jorry'o Run. Bordorod on 'MIMHo Crook. Ercollent -'t• for home 6 1 couple ot
ho,...., MUit .... tts,ooo firm.

Transportation

304..75-11837.

patio. Close to Holzer. $70.000

Tracy L. Brinager ..•... 949-2439

.. BLACKBURN REALTY
~ 514 Second Ave .•
45631
'•

Sherri

11002 CLOSE TO TOWN 3/4 bedrm, bl·
level home, range, dishwasher, retrig. washer
&amp; crye'r. Family rm ., 2 tult baths, 2 car garage.
beautifullrees . PRIVATE
. ;.

£., HarJ ., ......:... 742-Z357
•

IJl Runny Blackbu~n. Broker, Phone: (614) 446·0008

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191

Joe Moon, Associate 441 -Ill 1

Office ................... :......992.-2259

MIDDLEPORT - NORTH 2nd Ave. - a 5 unit
apartment building . The one apartment could be a
business location. Has a great income and a great
location for a ·business. Immediate possession.
.
.
ONLY $35 000
'

RI~'ER STREET · Gallipolis, $69,900.
rooms , 3 bedrooms, 2 fireplace$·natural
gas heat large storage building, full
basement .

2 ANDREWS ROAD · Vinton area, large
brick home offers 3 BAs, 2 1/2 baths, LR.
'DR, FA, lull basement, firephloo, 2 .car
garage, heat pump/cent. atr, garage
24x48. 49.66 acres of land, approx. 43

DEBBIE DRIVE •
E V E R YONE
SHOULD OWN A NEW HOME AT
LEAST ONCE. This 2 story beauty
fealures 3. or 4 br's, 2 baths, beamed
ceilings in the LA &amp; tamily rm, cherry
cab1nets in kitchen, 6 in. outer walls &amp;
much mora. Fantastic view.

'

RUTLAND - A recently remodeled home with new
vinyl siding, new roof, and textured walls , Has 2
bedrooms and one bath and altic space. that, could be
used for mbre room, Comes with equipped kitchen
an.d washer &amp; dryer.
WAS$30,000
NOW $28;000

NEW L!STING - West Main Stroe1 Pomeroy - Nice 1'/, story lrame home, 3 building on coiner ol
bedrooms, 1'/, bath, full basement with 2 car Street. Currently houses 2 bw;ineoSSEIS.
garage, ulility area, N.G.FA 1um,ace. Unit air, and church. Excellent rental
· cable, new decking. Asking $38.000.00
fo,Your appoiAtmenl lo see
$60,000.

acres rn hay. Very nice.

,.
'

· Beautiful Country Capo Cod
offers 63.75 acres. m/1, moslly pasture,
tobacco base, 40 x 60 barn, 22 x 44
block milk house. 750' road frontage for
possible bldg . sites.

SEI~EC:A

OR. - Pomeroy .Brick/Frame ,split Ioyer home wllh 3
bedrooms, 2'/, balhs, appliances, beautiful
lamlly room with fireplace, cenlral ·,air.
Attached garage. Very nice home. Nice lot
close to elementarylhig!l schooL Asking
$65,000. Come seet~is one todayll

NEW USTING - McNichols Rd. - 5&gt;1· wllh
frame block building. Currently used as Bait POMEROY - 'I• Slory lrame home with 3
Shop. Sleek and Equipment being sold bedrooms, bathr.f..oi.tt9, heat, cejlar area,
separately. Older ·mobile home on stte is
.:;hil)gle root, paneVcarpe1 Interior. paved
opllonaL Asking $12,000. Make an OIIGTtStreel: Immediate Possession!! Great starter

'

11401 • f:OUR LOTS • 4 Bif home,
reduced to $44,000, 2-bath&amp;, LR, OR, fUH
basement,' gas heat/Cent air. Comer lo-.- RACCOON • . CREEK CAMPS
I
GARDENS Located at Ewlngton. Short
or long tllrm leases. Cheaper t.han
owning.

'·
'

·

WE NEED LISTINGS
WE'ftE
ABOIJT
'
"SOLD OUT···

TWO LOTS on Curtla Hollow - GreJll hOil)e or rental inveslmentll Aski"jl $12,000.
buildi~g or camping sites. Jus.t minutes trom
Forked .Run State Park, $51000 each lot TUPP~RS PLAINS AREA- Modular locat~!l
Make an oflarll
on ChrlsJY Rd. This Is a handyman's fixer·
upper: Featuring 2 be~ooms, bath, space lor
LETART- Manuel Rd. -+I· acr.. vacenllot llreplaoo insert. Part basement w/utillty
perfect lor building or mobile home site. TPC hookup. Wooden outbuilding, garden area,
water available. Asking $3,500, '
covered deck area. TPC water. Nice country
lccatlon.
Home has many possibilities. but
REEOSVILEL - 1 +I· acre of river !rootage
does
need
wor1&lt;. Asking $22,900.00.
localed near Forked Hun Slate park. Lovely
area and viedw.Asklng $15,900.

IIItll

586 Jay Drive - For
$69,900, you can have this
3 · BR, 2 bath ranch with
large LR. kitchen &amp; large
FR or DR.
BONUS:
lnground pool!
#603

MIDDLEPORT - GRANT . STREET • A 1 1/2 story
home with 3 bedr6oms and..2 baths. Has a newer
roof. Close to schools arid stores.
$26,000
POMEROY - CREW RD. - A large 1.5 Acre lol
w/Blurington Doublewide, silting on· lull basement
Home has 4 BR. , dining &amp; family room, &amp; In ground
pool, back deck . N481
$49,800

Groom ~ ·-Pet Groomlna.
Foatu~ng ·
dro Balh, Julio
Wabb, Colli ....1-0231.
AKC . Dolomotlon Pupa, · I

,,

ANTIQUITY • Approx. 13 acre~ ·with one of the most
beautiful undescribable views ol the Racine loeks .the
river, bonoms', and hills. You can see for miles. A 9
room home with 3-4 bedroo'ms, 2 baths, family room
with fireplace, glas.sed in 85 f\. por~h and a 97 It long
'leek to see the view. A 4-car garage and 2 heat
pumps. Very private at the end of the road . S120,00o
DOTTIE TURNER, Broker ...............: ..•....••• 882.fi&amp;e2
BRENDA JEFFERS.....................t ............... 882-3056
JERRY SPRADUNG .......................... (304) 882-3486
CHARMELE SPRADUNG ................. (304) 882-34!18

OFFICE ........................................................ 992·2886

CHAROI-AIS HILLS '-""" 1
ESTATES
• . Newly
constructed 1 112 story
Cape Cod o"rfers quality
Inside &amp; out. Approx. 2,000
sq. ft. of living area.
Breathtaking view of the
lake. Reduced
of
. Call
I f616

f'tmal.., 3 M•'-· v• Checked,
Flrol Shoto I Wormocl. 8200.
114-388-1112t Or 114-381-1t01. '

-n.

4i(C
blond_!l1 molo, 14
- · 1150.,504-llllo......
-Icon Cocllor Sponlol p,._
ploo, AKC RogiOiorod, Chomplon

._H..,1144711'2728.

E.atter

'·

'

MIDDLEPORT - RUTLAND ST. • A 2 story house
with 3 bedrooms, 2 beths, dining room, front porch
with a river view and a heal pump. Has lull basement.
. ASKING $20,000,

LAKEVIEW EST, 5

Pets for S&amp;le

56

POMEROY- MULBERRY HTS. -A nice 4 bedroom 1
1/2 story home with full basement, breezeway and 1
car garage, comes with equipped kHch~n heat pump,
C.A. and a large lot
'
$57,500
MIDDLEPORT- S.'SECOND 'An older 2 story hOme
with lots of possibilities. Has 3 bedrooms ; 1 · 1/2
baths, dining room, and full basement Large corner
lot ~nd an older 2 car garage.
, $45,000

184 Myrtle Avenue Suprisingly affordable 3
1 1/2 bath ranch on a 1ar11eJI
level lot. Vinyl siding .
. $58,500 .
#504

1M4 OUTSTANDING 5 acres TRACT build
your masterpiece on one of the LAST lots In

RACINE - RT. 124 - wail till you see this 3 bedroom
home with beautiful hardwood floors in living room a
detached 2 car garage with 1 bed~oom apartment
over it Approx. 5 acres.
$65,000

CHESTER - Summer Ad. - Fantastic Viewll ·
Just o~ SR 7. This older mobile home has
two addilions including- utility area, 2
bedrooms, appliances, porch, rear decking.
Out buildings, 34+ acres wilh well water. TPC
watger available. Private - on road setting.
Asking 529,900.00.

1995 COMMERC.IAL LOT, readv. for"i)uilding
on, nasa 2 bedroom hotne that is being rented
at present t1me.
HANDY MAN'S SPECIAL - Large 7
1933 BUY ' THIS DOUBLE HOME for an room , 2 story hOme, 3 BR, -large kitchen,"'R, 3 .
investment, or ll\18 1n 1l2 &amp; let the rent heJp SA forced air furnace . Beautiful treed lot
w/the
Located in nice little town
'
1
Mobile Home Hook -Up

IUNQIJEST WOLFF
TANNING BEDS
Hew Camm~rc'-1, Home UnHe,
Tanning From 111111.00. Uimpo,
L.atlomi, Acc.aart.. Payment•
Low Ao po.oo, Coli Today FREE
NEW Calor C.toloi- HI00-412-

..

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.•

.........

ATTENTION LADIES • combine a great
view ' of the lake and the wonder of a
great room that combines your kitchen,
family room, and dining room. 5 minutes .
from Holzer Hospital and 8 minutes from
town. The · sun sets are freellll . 2 car
garage, 2 1/2 baths, very spacious.

18i4 LOTS AND LOTS OF ROOM, for
everyone in this 4 bedroom 2 story hOme
located,in the Ctleshire area .

Henry E. Cleland III 992.-6191

Gallipolis, Oh.

"'
#1473.

NEW USTING • BRICK RANCH 3 BA,
2 BA, fUll casement w!F~ &amp; outsk1e entry to

1997

"

'

BunniM

acres $33,000. 2.348

acres $25,900. 4 lOis on White Road. Subject
to restrictive covenants.

•1001 IMMACULATE/AFFORDABLE CfJZY 3
bednn., Green Twp. LR. w/Fireplace, futl
bSmt., new windows, cabinets, Jenn ~r r~,
ref., dishwasher. Lovely treed vard.
·
·
LOcATal IN CITY OF GALUPOUS .·
Eleganl Blick Beauty . Located in the cily. 2
sto&lt;y, ~~ buemerrt 5 garage. Designed lo&lt;
graatiMnQ. Fl"tlloor has formal ontry w/LR 5
formal DA. Cheny cabiinets In the kitchen.
BfastR &amp; powder room. Second noot. oners 4
BA &amp; beautiful SA. Basement nas •
. BA. . FA w/ftreplace,
room;..," -"'•'

for · Sal8:

lot•

GREAT BUY FOR lliE LARGE
FAMILY Of the small family ltla! noom space,

4 beOroom with a large lot with a new roof ,
siding and 1\.tnaca, call today for m0f'9 mto

11001 NEW USTING · LOT·· 100' X ,70'
$10,000 - Great loo.::lion. ,•

..,..

• 11 ooe NEW USTING . 60 1\c. m/1 close to
town and next to HoLzer Hospital and the new
troeWa~. Can be a beaUtiful building SAO' or

'

'
11005 JUST
$Urefy

'I• • ' '

ImpreSs jot.;

change to commet"Cia!. ·

I
and haS lOtS arid lOIS Of

·~

.,:·.

,_ troewav. hOSpital, ~ng ctr Water,
gas, . . -. AdiolniOQ Pinecrest Nuning

'

lfl5 LOCliTED ON SA 150 CIOS&lt;I to 1110

873 REDUCED PI!ICE • 117 N;r8$

,,

-

11131 NICE FARMLAND, !his 50 acr8s Is level

to slightly rolling and all cteared. a 4 bedroom
farmhouse that needs repa1r, call Wtlma and
make your orrer today.

lt73 OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELJ., m1s Is a
lovely .3 belclroom , 4 x 70 1993 mobile home
on 112 acre lot close 10 town ancl prieed to sell
fH5 COMMERCIAL PftOKRTY • JUS1m ttne
building and at a graal price, call
'

8p30&lt;1, 3 I&gt;8Cittloms, 2 bl¢1s, 10 X ·76, 1993
ll!ld gooa ,.;th .,......,.._ STOYO refrigerator,
w~. dryer and arr conditk&gt;oor.
•

....,.-

.......

to

Home

LOretta McDade - 446-7729

•·

,_

11001 NEW usnNG 10 ac mtJ orr SA ,·so
on Kelton Ad close to town. Hilltop view
wflots of rraes, Ve"'ty seclu&lt;led.

N.I:Mrland Dwarf, Dutch, Ho+lon&lt;l Loi!,_Minl
Fronch Lop,
.,. 38ol 8177.
.

..

'·.''

1174
3 bedroom rahc:h, 2
firepLaces; full basement comfortabte IMng
rm, 2 car garage. Rental t10m9 alSo

Carolyn Wasch- 441-1007

Sonny Games - 446-2707

...

·.

~y

nioe

exH. Make 'an appointment lo see thiS
~ BR, k~chen &amp; SA - l t d.

ranc;h ,

H30 INVESlliENT 3even Unit Apts. Pri"'*

1
aero VIrginia L Smdh 388-8826. SolO,COO.
~~==~~mm::~~room~:
·
=
~~~:::~::~n~~::~·
.
·
5
~~::·:~~·
~
c
a~
~1o~mom~~~::~~....·..~~~::................~.J I"_.
l

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�..
•
•

Pomeroy-Middleport--G8111polla; Ott Point Plea•nt, wv

Pege Dl Sund•y Tlma-Sentlner

••

of~ Bulls" wW be held at5 p.m.

fromD-1

Apr112, 1M

UConn

Business briefs :

.

timely basis, to sbare a meal with
~
of the Raelne Soulbem
NEW YORK (AP)- ~
Apri!IO at the Ohio Bull Test Sta· ~at(614)286.2177,blonday·
"
and
~
insP_inttlooal
message
Airlillcs
and ~ Air Ullea. lbe
tlon. A. hamburger fry is planned ~Y. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. This semiMr
tesen~d
by
tbeu
guest
speaker,
nation's
laraest carrien, jumped
~d seve':8! commercial.exbibits IS be~ng COnd~Cied by !be Ohio
ll:pbanic
Sa~.
·
..,
abead
of
lbe competilion by after.
will be on display.
State Unlvemty Extension Sea
Upcomi~~~:
Enntl
ina
dlJc:ounU
of up 10 SO perceat
Grant Program and co-sponsored
•
April
22
Racine
Area
Aowon
all
domeldc
fiiJbiS boobd by
A_ L~e Erie Walleye Fishina by the OSU Extension·South Dis· •
er
~estlval,
sponsored
by
tbe
AprillO.
Seouaar IS planned for April 2A In lrict.
'
J?cine Area Cummunity Organiza.
The promotion by tbc alrliDoa
Jackson. Two Sea Grant specialists,
lion
will
~gin
at
10
~.m.
in
downcame
Friday. a day after Norlb-r
Dave Kelch and Fred Snyder will
town
~acme
and
!inisbillg
up
at
.
announced
a summer fare llle In
be present and will have an uj,dare
Sw
M1ll
Park.
some
U.S.
llllllteU.
on lhe Lake Erie fishery, pre-spawn
(Harold H. Kneen Is the agrJ.
and spawning tactics. drift/cast and
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M, (AP) · '
cultural
extension agent for
- uolling t~chniques for walleyes, ·
- Horizon fleallhcare Coip., 1be
Meigs County.)
f1sh contaminants education and
nursing bonie chain wbose $1.8 bll•
catcbing late fall walleye from lhe
lion buyoul, offerfor a competitOC:
•
shoreline ..
.some age and mellow like a fine was rebuffed Ibis mootb, plans to
Also, facts about lhe new fisb
wme. Othersjl!sl get l'!'lse,in the cork. buy a strugjfing medical rehabillta: consumption health advisory will
.lion eom)laDy fur $502.1 miUion: ~ .
....... be passed out
Tbe seminar will run from 7-10
p.m.
at the OSU Exrension-Soulb
' JOINTLY OWNED' • Bobby Hoyt, McHenr; N D and
Champion HOI, BldweU, own tbls reserve junior buD 'calf cb:..U.,J.
District Facility, 17 Standpipe
on wblcli look put In the i99S North Dakota winter sbow's An s
Road, Jackson. Seating will be on a
Sbow In Valley City. Tbe reserve entry Is Dllnted Ctiamplon "II
reserve(! basis only, at a cost of $5
General Stone. , .
·
per person. '
•
Reservations are required 1

P1Case call Sontb District ExteDSion

•

..

captures
NCAA title-

'

)

PageS

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.•

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HOLZER CLINIC
.

Investment...
· C?ontlnued from 0·1

vesl;'llents. Why make investment
chotces that place your money at risk
levels that keep you awake at night?
Of course, every invcsunent- even
acertif1C81eofdeposit-carricssome
degree of risk, and risk usually increases )JIOpoltionally with returns.
There are many types of risk. Two
~xamp_lcs ~inflationary risk, which
IS thensk of your money being worth .
less than you need due to inflation
absorbing its accrued interest over
time, and investment risk; the risk of
· your im;estment not.perfonning up to
-~ level you had anticipated. An
mvestment advisor can help you
identify all of lhe risks associated
with your investment choices
. In shon, the higher the yield of an
mvestmcnt, the higher the risk to its
principal. With some help from your
myestment adviSOI', you can determtne the ~ount of risk that you feel
IS appropnate for the level of return
you need to meet your objectl ves.
What follows will be a systematic
plan for developing an asset-allocat·
ing strategy Or mix of investments
which can best suit your need~.
While the development of a fman
~ial plan wiD cross a multitude o :·
1ssues, few are as important as th~ :
start today. Even at.a nominal6 pe :c~nl compound interest ·rate, ilid·
v1duals who start saving $500amouth
at age 55 will have actually have l·ess
by the time they reach 65 than indi·
vidualswhostashaway$100amonth .
at age 30.

Seventh/Annual

..

•

SPORTS MEDIOINE
CONRERENCE.

Out of the
·Red-Brush
and To
The Big
Apple!

•

Price includCs:
·a performance of "OUt ofthe Red Brush,;
dinn'e r at Tavern on the Green, guided '
tours of New York atuactions, and tickets to
.
one of thes~ Broadway hits:
:·
.Phantom of the Opera, Mtss Satgon or Les Mtserab/es

.

'

Saturday, AprilS

LiCMISedJCertified Athletic Trainer Lori Ward

Holzer Clinic Invites all physicians, nurses, therapists, _co_a._cb-es...__a._th. .le. -ti-c....l
·trainers and individuals involved in athletic programsl
.

.

I

REGISTE- BY CfiWHG
LORI WARD fiT

Submit reservation m~nies by Aprll 12
To Larry Spees, University of Rio Grande
Questions? (614) 245-7223

614~'-6

5244

REGISTRfiTIOH FEE
$10

On{y 40 pe!'ple can attend, so caU todayt

.. ... \•

""""'~·@'ri-a:.

Spe~ker

.State grant will
bring cultural
slant to schools

Shallett&amp; ~.M.D.; Certified Athletic Trainen ~-~
·~Fox. Rusty McKune and Ann Newett; ·

Rese~ations: $347.50 to $387.50 per person.

I

~~ ~ ~

carr
~~~~·

P.s~-: This express m·eans- business

~::tfffi\~~

· EHS students

·

·

l'!.~t"h!.!'.l ~~ing
WI

.,... ·

• Extended Chassis
·Driver S1de A1r Bag
• Antr-Lock Brakes
• A1r Cond1ll0n
\'::}'\utomatiC ~erdn'We
• V1sta Bay W1ndows
• Power Steer1ng

• ~ower ~rakes ·
• T1lt Steenng

• Crwse
• AMIFM Cassene

• Power Wmdows
• Power Lodis
• Captatn Cha1rs

·Sola/Bed
• lnd11ecl L~hling
• PremrumWood Pkg.
• Full ConverSion
• Alum!Ou mRunntng Boards

· Loaded'

• 350 V..S Power
• Extended Chassis
• Dnver Side Air Bag
• Anti-Lock Blakes
• Air Condition
• Automatic Overdnve
• VISta

.

• ower SteerinQ.
• Power Brakes
• Tilt Steering
"Cruise
' AM'FM Cassette
. • Power Windows
• Power Locks

'

$20,988
• Captain Chairs
• SolaJBed. .
• lndlre,ct Ugtltlng
• Prem1um W~ Pkg.
• Full Conversron
• Aluminum Running Boards
• Loaded'
,
,

$11,888
.
N? Doc Fees Oemoe!!!:r

.

BRAND NEW '95 PONTIAC

·ms~een~

GRAND PRIX SE COUP~ .

•GnJJSe Corirol

·AI"""'" Whoels
·Steel Be~aO Tires

.

Special Aero Grollld
Effects
.

.""""'

• Air Condition

$17,488

• Automatic
'
·V-Hower·
• illlo Airllags .
• Powor Steenng

NoOoc fees. DIIM!recl'

• Powor Bral&lt;es
1 • Powor Door Locks
• Powor Wir&lt;lows
• • At.\lfM Cassette
• TIM St&lt;ering
• Cru1se Control

APVVAII

·Console
• Cuslom Spon Bidet Seals
• Pass-Key II The~ lleli)(fent
• Rear Deck LJd Spooler
• Special Aero Ground Effl!&lt;ts
and Wheel F~"'

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY -

. q,,.. SK!o Airbail S.sEiliES PICKUP
·Rear AntRod! Brakes • Cus10m Cloth~nterior
• Power Steering
• Steel Belted TIf~ !I
• , . .., ~,..,
IJI'

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- P01NT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Lawyers representing !be
opposition ofa planned Mason
County pulp mill have to~d a feder·
al permitting agency they plan 10
sue it over· its West Virgillia water
.policy.
Lawyers Jim Kringl~n and Perry
McDaniel on Thursday sent the
notice to U.S. Envirorunental Pro·
tection Agency Administrator
Carol Browner .. Tbe notice is
required 60 days prior to filing a
lawsuit against the EPA.
Kringlen and McDaniel allege
the EPA bas not forced !be West
Virginia Division. of Environmental
..
(Continued on Page 3)

•

...

STUDENT ·RUN BUSINESS - Eastern Local School students are learning
business
operating tbelr own venture. An entrepreneurial spirit to solve problems is instilled "' the stu•
dents, coordinator Nancy Larkins said. Above, Larkins, right, helps nnallze anniversary
announcements witb EHSjunlor Brian Bollman and fresbman Amanda Buchanan.
Action Learning began in the
late 1980s in the southeast.
P.S. Ex press produces book
mark:s, business cards, labels,
calenilars and color photuCOpies
with its· computer, scanner and
printer. Last school year, !be
company produced a 75-page
awards book with pictures and
copy for a national extension
borne.
·
· "It's as much like a business
as we can make it," Lark:i ns said, adding that lhe company
even pays taxes.
. .
Computers, are advanced
enough so anyone could create
these products, said junior Brian
Hoffman, the company's com·
puler specialist
·- ·
,

over her.regular classes.
"I like it more. You. don't
have people teliing you exactly
· what to do and bow to do it:''
~exton said of running lhe busi·
.ness.
Tbe program is si111ilar to
Junior Achievement, something
students don't get credit for and
devote on their own time, East·
ern Superintendent Ron Minard
said.
·
"The students get a weallb of
uaining and put out materials
peers.
that
are quite professional,"
"It's fun -and something we
Minard
:;aid. "We oughltu have
enjoy," Buchanan said. "It gives
more
programs
like that to give
us an opponunity to learn about ,
kids
worthwhile
skills." ·
·
business."
~
(EDITOR'S
NOTE:
To
Sophomore Erin Sexton said
contact the student-run busi·
she actually prefers Ibis work:
ne..S, call 985-3448)
~But, · P.S.

Express differentiates itself by personalizing the
computer graphics to fitlhc cos·
tomers' needs, Hoffman said.
Tbe program also relies on commUnity members, such as Steve
FroSI, wbo helps solve computer
problems.
.While learning about computers, advertising and book·
keeping, freshman Amanda
B ucbanan said she's also
learned bow to work with ber

, WASkiNGTON . (AP)
Republican dissenters will fall in
line and belp Ibis week ill passing
the GOP "Conuact Wilb Ameri'
ca" tax cut, House Speaker Newt ·
Gingrich predicts.
I
Tbe Georgia Republican
acknowledged Sunday that tbe bill,
aimed at cutting taxes by $189 bU,
lion over five years, faces numer·
ous obstacles - no compromise
bas been reached with Republicans
seeking to scale back i~ benefiiS,
the Senate is lukewarm to tax cuts
and President Clinton may veto it
But in the House, Gingrich said
sunday .on ABC's Thif Wet!: will!
David Brinkley, "I think there will-· -- '· .
be a surprising· number of folks
who decide voting yes is a good
idea."

.

take

The House is txpected to
up !be tax cut bill at tbe end of lhe
week: as the last item in ,the 100·
day agenda of·lhe Contract. Lawmalcers are scheduled to leave
WJlshingt~ at the end of the wee\;
for their spring recess.
But like the term limits bill that
went down to defeat last week. the
GOP leadership faces division in_
its ranks. wi!b more than 100 lawmakers having signed a letter urg·
ing that the income ceiling .for
. those families eligible for a S5p0:
per-child tax credit be reduced
from $200,000 'annually to
$95,000.
1 .·
·
The Republicans, in part, have
responded to Democratic charges
that the GOP plan mainly benefits
tbe ricb and is foolbanly at a· time
when Congress needs to concen·
trate on reducing the deficit
·~The argument there is almost
entirelY symbolism," Gingrich
sa!d· "They !JIIY into the Washington, you know, mentali~ that sud·
denly screams you can t really let
these people keep t.heir own
money. And we· re having an argument. I don't know what !be out·
come will be.' '

1n area man's -murder
trial
-

Poi'ice began searching for
GALLIPOLIS - Jury selection
Wbite
shortly after midnight Dec. 2
began Ibis morning for !be trial of a
wbep
his
wife's body was found at
Gallipolis man accused of shooting
!beir
Chatham
Avenue residence in
his wife.
..
Gallipolis.
Bonnie
White died of
Johnny White was taken this
multiple
gunshot
wounds.
morning from the Gallia County
White also faces charges in
Jail in the basement of the court·
Mason
County for a shooting and
bouse to the third floor common
attempted
robbery,
. pleas courtroom of Judge Joseph L.
After
allegedly
shooting bis
Cain to view the selection process.
wife,
Wbite
reportedly
traveled to a
He bas· been in jail si nce the
bar
in
Henderson
and
shot his
t::leC. 2, 1994 'shooting in lieu of a
3
7, in the
cousin,
Donald
White,
$200,000 cash bond.
face
.
Tbe
victim
survived
tbe
The trial is beginni.DJ! after only
one delay- Cain granted a con tin· shooting.
The murder suspect also is
uance in February after the couri
accused
of attempting 10 rob South·
rejected White's not guilty by reaside
residence
at gunpoint. The res. son of insanity plea · '
idenu;
reponedly
beat While and lit
The ,ruling wali made following
scene.
a psychiatric evaluation that found · nedlnthe
January,
the Mason Couniy
While fit tu stand trial.
grand
jury
indicted
him _on three.
Wbite surrendered to authorities
- malicious assault. burat a relative' s home after holding charges
glary
and
attelllpled aggravated .
police and shcrifC:-s deputies ai bay
robbery .
for more than four hours.

O.J. prosecution to unveil scientific case

Buyer lrcentrve I

Ouali!IEIIJ.

· LOS ANGELES (AP)- Prose- to pro;eibai ~;';;.psonleftb~own,
1bidefcnse will seek: to sb'Ow
cutors thus far have tried to show ' -unmistakably unique blood at the !bat police were so sloppy in pickmat 0.J, Simpson bad !be inotive crime scene.
ing up blood. hair and fibers that·
and oppoltunity to kill his ex-wife
Other pbysi_c:al evidence even, if the subsequent DNA tests
includes blood stains in Simpson' s were properly done, tbe results
andber frie1,1d.
• Now, they plan to produce sci- Bronco and on a pair of socks in were botched because of contami·
entific evidence directly linkfng hi s bedroom !bat prosecutors say " nated samples.·
him to the murders.
.
match the blood of Nicole Brown
The defense '8lso will argue tblt
.· Tile next Jew weeks- and pos· Simpson. Aulbodties also say tests !be tests themselves were conduct·
s1bly montlls--: of the~ promise . found blood from Ronald Goldman ,ed improperly and !bat·many of the
a parade of poltce tecbnietans, lab-~ m tbe Bronco and on the glove techniques are too experimentlllto
oratory workers and expen scien· found beSide Simpson's bouse.
be 1rusted in a cofut of law.'
lists, slalting wi~ ~~·s teslim&lt;?- · . '''!,his _is the crucial phasi: of the
Until now, p-osecution. testlmo,
ny by pollee cnmmahst Denms trial, SaJd Loyola Umverstty law ny centered on motive and opportu·
Fung.
professor Laurie Lelienson, "Wit· nity .
. They will delve into the intrica· nesses may forget or may be
Deputy DistriCt Attorneys Mar·
c1e~ of evidence collection. C!\ta· .. biased, bot scientific _evi~ usu- cia Oark ~ Cbri~topber Darden
lo~m~ and Sl~ragr:. as well as '\be 1 ~ly l~ves a strong un~~on on called. 39 witnesses to suggest,
p urors if !bey unde~!andiL,_ ,
fust, that Simpson.was obsessively ounuuac of nuaobtqlQgy. ,
I~ a w«f~. dull. But that s not to
In thiS case. that sa b1g if.
jealous of bls ex-wife and had a
say 1t wont be important.
• Prosecutors have tbe challenge motive to kill ber and, setood, that
Tbe prosecutors' case is built on ·1 of uying to keep jurors interested a careful examination of' the events
the suenll!h ~f _its scientific evl·--J lJ'bUr ~eading th~ through techni- on June 12 sbows be bad time to
dence- stlpbiSbcated genclic tests , cal, setentific ev1dence..
.
commit tbe murders.

S21,488

•SPoa Suspension

• t6' Ga~ Alumrnum Wheels

·Loaded!

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•

344·59,47,; 422·0756

predicts
tax cut
approval.

~ury S!!lection ·underwayr

• •.SJJI Dual Exhaust

'(OU FREE 1·800•822~11417 •372·2844

·Pulp mill
'
opponents
to sue EPA
(AP) -

''Sale Pnce lrdudw
GMAC F1rst Time

'.

'

own '"m

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Stall
Some Eastern Local High · ·
School students are learning
about business tbe bard way.
The customers' needs come
first, said Nancy Larkins, an Eastern teacher wbo guides lhe
students in operating their busi·
ness out of her math classrQOm.
About 25 EHS shldents own
and run a print sbop called P.S.
Express. Any mistak:es that·slip
throu gb undetected, .the customer is refunded and students
fix lhe mistilkes.
"If !be customer's not satisfied they don't pay," Larkins .
said. "!t first (the students) did
it like their homework - bap·
bazardly." .
- But, tbe students have .
improved the quality or their
product, while becoming more
proficient in running the busi · ness, she added.
·
The stu1nts may· not get
Jlaid, but the kills they learn are
invaluable, ark:ins said . Tbe
students must troubleshoot \heir
own problems, .relying on their
own judgment and common
sense.
'. Any income generated is
turned into upgrading equip·
ment and replenishing supplies,
Larkins said.
Also, the students have to
. learn to exceed the customers'
demands;·Larklns ~d.
This business incubator pro·
ject started about two years ago
after students surveyed the .area
and designed a business plan.
Rural Enuepreneurship through

BRAND NEW '95 G·20 3/4 TON RAISED ROOF
· CONVERSION· p-VAN Wllll350 V-8 POWER
·RaisedAool
-·

• BRAND NEW '95 CtEVY ASTRO EXTENDED
CONVERSION VAN

A Multimedia Inc. Newapeper

Instilling prid~

PresentlllJieas by Physjatrists Daniel R. Black. D.O,ud

June 29 to July 2, 1995. ·

'

Copyright 199$

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER FRENCH 500 ROOM
Registration at 7:30a.m. Program begins at 8~00 a.m.

Follow our Red Brush actors to New York City
for a fun-packed bus trip

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 centS

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Mond~y. Aprll3, 1995 .

Vol. 45, NO. 236

be spread out into lhe community,
lbrougb civic events, at parks, and
. ~ywbere else where people of any
age are gathered..
However, ibe early emphasis
will be on school programs and .
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
London said be expects !bose pn&gt;SenUnel News Stall
grams .to get underway later Ibis
· An Ohio Arts Council grant to monlb.
fund programs of Appafacbian
Consultant for !be Middlepolt
music and storytelling In all Meigs Arts Council for the past five years,
Cotmty schools bas been awarded London credited Mary Wise and
to the Riverbend Arts Council.
feaneue Thomas for the consistent
. Announcement of funding for growth and .direction of tbe local
the programming, to ~ presenll:d · llfiS group. Bolb served on the stale
by local folk entertainers Roger . committee for the ApP.alacbian
and Mary GUmore. was made Sat· Arts Initiative, and contributed sig·
urday night by Michael Lon!lon, nificantly toward getting the pilot
consultant for the Minority Arts project on heritage in Meigs CoonCouncil of lbe Ohio Arts Council.
ty, according to~·
It came during a reception
Tl!e Gilmores have been per- ,
marlting the blending of the Mid.· forming across the state for arts
dleport Arts Council into a new councils and under sponsorship of
'
urday. He Is seen· here with Mary Wise, local
llfe3 organization called Riverbend.
other culwral agencies for the_past
London explained that Meigs 18 years . They play a variety of
ANNOUNCES FUNDING - Michael Loncouncil president; Jeanette Tbomas, vice presi·
don, left, Ohio Arts Coundlconsultant to ltlver·
County was selected from among instruments, sing Appalacbi11n
dent; and Barbara Bayless, coordinator for
!be Appalachian counties for an songs, and tell tall tales and ghost
bend Arts Council, announced the Appalachian
Minority Arts, Oblo Arts Council.
Obio Arts Council Appalachian stories.
Arts Initiative pilot project funding at a recepArts Initiative pilot project.
.
.. Barbara Bayless, coordinator for
lion at council headquarten In Middleport Sat1 eport .or
the Minority
Program of the · 0 r M'ddl.
• subst'd'tzing lhe including !be Arts in Education Big Bend Colnmunity Band, com·
,.. The
till goal
.,. of d!bat program is to. Ob'
A c.e\tts 'I
posed of musicians from both
ms nnue an create a positive
to rts ounc1 , was among arts
·1
lh
fi
.,
identltyf• for residents about their those attending Saturday night's ·
~unCI
over e past tve years program,· where a creative writer Meigs and Mason cotmtles.
Appalachian heritage, London said. reception.
·
·makmg it possible tor growth,. was funded for a week at Meigs
Entertainment for the evening
The pilot project, be said, will
In her remarks, Mrs. Wise · expansion and now independence Junior High School, lhe Appalachi- was provided by the Gilmores .
. ed
'
d
. d
tbe v·
from village support
an Children's Theater Wl'th perfornot be restnct to schools, but will expressc gratitu e to
tllage -.
Sb e note d accQJIIIpI'1s b ments mances In several schools, and tbe Refreshments were served.

.

.

•

,.

•

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TAXI JUBBON CUTIING- Tbe Commu·
nlty Cab Co. opened tor business Saturday .
morning. Tbe Cllb owners are Bob Barton and
ilarry Clark. "l'hue - n sh!lwcJ be congratulated for continuing this Immediately and also
do!ng It as • private enterprise," said Pomeroy

•

Friday &amp; Saturday: 9 am ·10 pm
Sunday: Noon.· 8 pm · _

)
I

Mayor Jobn Blaettnar. Also pictured are Chuck
Kitchen, Scott Dillon and Joe McCloud. The tu1
service will operate out of the Ashland gas sta·
lion on Mulberry Avenue. For more lnforma·
lion, call 992-6471 or 99:t-9949. (~entlnel pbolo
by George Abate)
,

~

'

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